{"id": "enwiki-00175538-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian football\nThe 2003 season was the 98th season of competitive football in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175538-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian football, National teams, Norway women's national football team\nSeptember 20: Norway \u2013 France 2\u20130, World Cup 1st round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175538-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian football, National teams, Norway women's national football team\nSeptember 24: Norway \u2013 Brazil 1\u20134, World Cup 1st round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175538-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian football, National teams, Norway women's national football team\nSeptember 27: South Korea \u2013 Norway 1\u20137, World Cup 1st round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175538-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian football, National teams, Norway women's national football team\nOctober 1: United States \u2013 Norway 1\u20130, World Cup quarterfinal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175539-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian music\nThe following is a list of notable events and releases of the year 2003 in Norwegian music.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175540-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Norwegian television\nThis is a list of Norwegian television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase\nThe year 2003 is the 11th year in the history of Pancrase, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2003 Pancrase held 14 events beginning with Pancrase: Hybrid 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 1\nPancrase: Hybrid 1 was an event held on January 26, 2003 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 2\nPancrase: Hybrid 2 was an event held on February 16, 2003 at the Osaka International Convention Center in Osaka, Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 3\nPancrase: Hybrid 3 was an event held on March 8, 2003 at the Differ Ariake Arena in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 4\nPancrase: Hybrid 4 was an event held on April 12, 2003 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 5\nPancrase: Hybrid 5 was an event held on May 18, 2003 at the Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 6\nPancrase: Hybrid 6 was an event held on June 7, 2003 at Differ Ariake Arena in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 7\nPancrase: Hybrid 7 was an event held on June 22, 2003 at Umeda Stella Hall in Osaka, Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: 2003 Neo-Blood Tournament Opening Round\nPancrase: 2003 Neo-Blood Tournament Opening Round was an event held on July 27, 2003 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 67], "content_span": [68, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: 2003 Neo-Blood Tournament Second Round\nPancrase: 2003 Neo-Blood Tournament Second Round was an event held on July 27, 2003 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: 10th Anniversary Show\nPancrase: 10th Anniversary Show was an event held on August 31, 2003 at Ryogoku Kokugikan in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 49], "content_span": [50, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 8\nPancrase: Hybrid 8 was an event held on October 4, 2003 at Osaka International Convention Center in Osaka, Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 9\nPancrase: Hybrid 9 was an event held on October 31, 2003 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 10\nPancrase: Hybrid 10 was an event held on November 30, 2003 at Ryogoku Kokugikan in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175542-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid 11\nPancrase: Hybrid 11 was an event held on December 21, 2003 at Differ Ariake Arena in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2003 football (soccer) season in Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Torneo Apertura\nThe Apertura tournament was played in a single all-play-all system. At the end, the top six teams qualified to a playoff stage to determine the Apertura champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Torneo Apertura, Apertura playoff stage\nThe top six teams qualified to this stage and were divided into two groups. The top two teams in the Apertura points table (Libertad and Cerro Porte\u00f1o) were given two bonus points to start the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Torneo Apertura, Apertura playoff stage\nLibertad wins the Apertura tournament final by an aggregate score of 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 92], "content_span": [93, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Torneo Clausura\nThe Clausura tournament was played in a two-round all-play-all system, with the champion being the team with the most points at the end of the two rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Torneo Clausura\n*Since Olimpia and Libertad tied in points and goal difference at the end of the Clausura, a championship game playoff was played on November 30, with Libertad winning 6-5 in penalties after a 0-0 tie in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Championship game playoff\nSince Libertad won both the Apertura and Clausura tournaments they were declared as the national champions and no playoff game was played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Championship game playoff, Runners-up game playoff\nTwo games were played to determine the 2003 championship runners-up between Olimpia and Guaran\u00ed, who finished in second place in the Clausura and Apertura respectively. The winner of this playoff was guaranteed a spot in the 2003 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Championship game playoff, Runners-up game playoff\nGuaran\u00ed runners-up of the 2003 first division tournament by winning on an aggregate score of 4-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 103], "content_span": [104, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Relegation / Promotion\nTacuary finished second-to-last in the aggregate points table, so had to participate in the promotion play-off game against second division runners-up 3 de Febrero. Tacuary won the playoff game by an aggregate score of 4-2, so it remains in the first division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175543-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 in Paraguayan football, Paraguay national team\nThe following table lists all the games played by the Paraguay national football team in official competitions during 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175544-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Philippine television\nThe following is a list of events affecting Philippine television in 2003. Events listed include television show debuts, finales, cancellations, and channel launches, closures and rebrandings, as well as information about controversies and carriage disputes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175545-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Polish television\nThis is a list of Polish television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175547-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Portuguese television\nThis is a list of Portuguese television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC\nThe year 2003 is the 7th year in the history of the Pride Fighting Championships, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. 2003 had 6 events beginning with, Pride 25 - Body Blow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Debut Pride FC fighters\nThe following fighters fought their first Pride FC fight in 2003:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Pride 25: Body Blow\nPride 25: Body Blow was an event held on March 16, 2003 at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Pride 26: Bad to the Bone\nPride 26: Bad to the Bone was an event held on June 8, 2003 at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 43], "content_span": [44, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Total Elimination 2003\nPride FC: Total Elimination 2003 was an event held on August 10, 2003 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Bushido 1\nPride FC: Bushido 1 Is an event held by the Pride Fighting Championships at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan on October 5, 2003. The card was billed as Team Japan Vs. Team Gracie, with five bouts featuring a Japanese fighter represented by Hidehiko Yoshida and a member of the Gracie family represented by Royce Gracie. In the main event, Dos Caras, Jr. became the first Hispanic fighter to compete in Pride and the first to wear a lucha libre mask during a bout. He is now better known as WWE pro wrestler Alberto Del Rio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Final Conflict 2003\nPride FC: Final Conflict 2003 was an event held on November 9, 2003 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan. This event was host to the semi-finals and finals of the 2003 Pride Middleweight Grand Prix tournament. The first round of the tournament was contested at the Pride: Total Elimination 2003 event the previous August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175548-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Shockwave 2003\nPride FC: Shockwave 2003 was an event held on December 31, 2003 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football\n2003 in Russian football saw the first title for PFC CSKA Moscow. Spartak Moscow, the Cup winners, had the worst league finish since 1976. The national team qualified for Euro 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, National team\nRussia national football team qualified for the Euro 2004. After finishing second to Switzerland in group 10, Russia overcame Wales in play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, Leagues, First Division\nThe First Division was extended from 18 teams in 2005 to 22. Amkar and Kuban won the promotion on the dramatic final day of the season, leaving Terek and Tom in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, Leagues, First Division\nAleksandr Panov of Dynamo SPb became the top goalscorer with 23 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, Leagues, Second Division\nThe Ural and Povolzhye zones of the Second Division were merged because of low number of clubs. The following clubs have earned promotion by winning tournaments in their respective zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, Cups\nIn a newly introduced Russian Super Cup Lokomotiv overcame CSKA 4\u20133 on penalties after the match ended 1\u20131. The match was held at the newly reconstructed Lokomotiv Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, Cups\nThe Russian Cup was won by Spartak Moscow, who beat Rostov in the final 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2002\u201303 UEFA Champions League\nLokomotiv Moscow participated in the second group stage of the 2002\u201303 UEFA Champions League, where they finished fourth with just one point in a group which included A.C. Milan, Real Madrid, and Borussia Dortmund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League\nCSKA Moscow were unsuccessful in the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, as they lost in the second qualifying round to FK Vardar 2\u20133 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League\nLokomotiv Moscow beat FC Shakhtar Donetsk to qualify for the group stage. They finished second in a group with Arsenal F.C., Internazionale Milano F.C., and FC Dynamo Kyiv. Lokomotiv were level on points with Inter but qualified for the knock-out rounds thanks to a 3\u20130 home win and away draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup\nTorpedo Moscow beat F.C. Domagnano 9\u20130 on aggregate in the qualifying round. In the first round, they needed a penalty shootout to overcome PFC CSKA Sofia. In the second round, Torpedo lost 1\u20132 on aggregate to Villarreal CF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175550-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup\nSpartak Moscow knocked out Esbjerg fB and Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti in the first two rounds and qualified for the spring phase of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175551-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Rwanda\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in Rwanda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175553-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Scottish television\nThis is a list of events in Scottish television from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto\nThe year 2003 is the 15th year in the history of Shooto, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2003 Shooto held 17 events beginning with, Shooto: 1/24 in Korakuen Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 1/24 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 1/24 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on January 24, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 2/6 in Kitazawa Town Hall\nShooto: 2/6 in Kitazawa Town Hall was an event held on February 6, 2003, at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 2/23 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 2/23 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on February 23, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 3/18 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 3/18 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on March 18, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Gig Central 3\nShooto: Gig Central 3 was an event held on March 30, 2003, at The Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 5/4 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 5/4 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on May 4, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Shooter's Dream 2\nShooto: Shooter's Dream 2 was an event held on May 30, 2003, at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto 2003: 6/27 in Hiroshima Sun Plaza\nShooto 2003: 6/27 in Hiroshima Sun Plaza was an event held on June 27, 2003, at The Hiroshima Sun Plaza in Hiroshima, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 7/13 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 7/13 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on July 13, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 8/10 in Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium\nShooto: 8/10 in Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium was an event held on August 10, 2003, at Yokohama Cultural Gymnasium in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 59], "content_span": [60, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 9/5 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 9/5 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on September 5, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Gig Central 4\nShooto: Gig Central 4 was an event held on September 21, 2003, at Port Messe Nagoya in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Gig West 4\nShooto: Gig West 4 was an event held on October 12, 2003, at The Namba Grand Kagetsu Studio in Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Who is Young Leader!\nShooto: Who is Young Leader! was an event held on October 31, 2003, at Kitazawa Town Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0015-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Wanna Shooto 2003\nShooto: Wanna Shooto 2003 was an event held on November 3, 2003, at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0016-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: 11/25 in Kitazawa Town Hall\nShooto: 11/25 in Kitazawa Town Hall was an event held on November 25, 2003, at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175554-0017-0000", "contents": "2003 in Shooto, Shooto: Year End Show 2003\nShooto: Year End Show 2003 was an event held on December 14, 2003, at The Tokyo Bay NK Hall in Urayasu, Chiba, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175555-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Singapore\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175556-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in South Africa\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175556-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in South Africa, Incumbents, Cabinet\nThe Cabinet, together with the President and the Deputy President, forms part of the Executive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175557-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in South African sport\n'See also: 2002 in South African sport, 2003 in South Africa, 2004 in South African sport and the Timeline of South African sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175558-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in South African television\nThis is a list of South African television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175560-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in South Korean music\nThe following is a list of notable events and releases that happened in 2003 in music in South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175561-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Spanish television\nThis is a list of Spanish television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175562-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Sri Lanka\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175563-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Sudan\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in Sudan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175565-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Swedish football\nThe 2003 season in Swedish football started in January 2003 and ended in December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175566-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Swedish television\nThis is a list of Swedish television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175567-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in S\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in the Democratic Republic of S\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175568-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Taiwan\nEvents from the year 2003 in Taiwan, Republic of China. This year is numbered Minguo 92 according to the official Republic of China calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175569-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Thailand\nThe year 2003 was the 222nd year of the Rattanakosin Kingdom of Thailand. It was the 58th year in the reign of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX), and is reckoned as year 2546 in the Buddhist Era. The war on drugs of Thaksin Shinawatra's government was launched this year, resulting in almost 3,000 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175571-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Turkish television\nThis is a list of Turkish television related events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175572-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in UFC\nThe year 2003 is the 11th year in the history of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United States. In 2003, the UFC held five events beginning with UFC 41: Onslaught.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175572-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in UFC, Debut UFC fighters\nThe following fighters fought their first UFC fight in 2003:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 31], "content_span": [32, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175573-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Universal Reality Combat Championship\nThe year 2003 is the 2nd year in the history of the Universal Reality Combat Championship, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the Philippines. In 2003 the URCC held 2 events beginning with, URCC 2: Night of Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175573-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in Universal Reality Combat Championship, URCC 2: Night of Champions\nURCC 2: Night of Champions was an event held on April 12, 2003 at Phil Sports Arena in Pasig City, Metro Manila, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175573-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in Universal Reality Combat Championship, URCC 3: Siege at the Fort\nURCC 3: Siege at the Fort was an event held on September 20, 2003 at The Fort in Taguig, Metro Manila, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175574-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in WEC\nThe year 2003 is the 3rd year in the history of World Extreme Cagefighting, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United States. In 2003 WEC held 3 events beginning with, WEC 6: Return of a Legend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175574-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in WEC, WEC 6: Return of a Legend\nWEC 6: Return of a Legend was an event held on March 27, 2003 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 38], "content_span": [39, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175574-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in WEC, WEC 7: This Time It's Personal\nWEC 7: This Time It's Personal was an event held on August 9, 2003 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175574-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in WEC, WEC 8: Halloween Fury 2\nWEC 8: Halloween Fury 2 was an event held on October 17, 2003 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 36], "content_span": [37, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175575-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in Wales\nThis article is about the particular significance of the year 2003 to Wales and its people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175577-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in anime, Accolades\nAt the Mainichi Film Awards, Tokyo Godfathers won the Animation Film Award and Winter Days won the \u014cfuji Nobur\u014d Award. Internationally, Millennium Actress was nominated for the Annie Award for Best Animated Feature, the third consecutive year an anime was nominated for the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 24], "content_span": [25, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175577-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in anime, Releases\nThis list contains numerous notable entries of anime which debuted in 2003. It is not a complete list and represents popular works that debuted as TV, OVA and Movie releases. Web content, DVD specials, TV specials are not on this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175578-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in architecture\nThe year 2003 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175580-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in association football\nThe following are the football (soccer) events of the year 2003 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175582-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in baseball\nThe following are the baseball events of the year 2003 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175582-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in baseball, Champions, Major League Baseball\nClick on any series score to link to that series' page. Higher seed has home field advantage during Division Series and League Championship Series. American League has home field advantage during World Series as a result of the American League victory in the 2003 All-Star Game. American League is seeded 1-3/2-4 as a result of AL regular season champion (New York Yankees) and AL wild card (Boston Red Sox) coming from the same division. National League is seeded 1-3/2-4 as a result of NL regular season champion (Atlanta Braves) and NL wild card (Florida Marlins) coming from the same division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175583-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in basketball\nThe following are the basketball events of the year 2003 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175585-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in comics\nNotable events of 2003 in comics. See also List of years in comics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175586-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in country music\nThis is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175586-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in country music, Top hits of the year\nThe following songs placed within the Top 20 on the Hot Country Songs charts in 2003:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175586-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in country music, Top new album releases\nThe following albums placed within the Top 50 on the Top Country Albums charts in 2003:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175587-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in film, Highest-grossing films\nThe top 10 films released in 2003 by worldwide gross are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175587-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in film, Highest-grossing films\nThe Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King grossed more than $1.14\u00a0billion, making it the highest-grossing film in 2003 worldwide and in North America and the second-highest-grossing film up to that time. It was also the second film to surpass the billion-dollar milestone after Titanic in 1997. It currently ranks as the 24th-highest-grossing film of all time, unadjusted for inflation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175587-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in film, Highest-grossing films\nFinding Nemo was the highest-grossing animated movie of all time until being overtaken by Shrek 2 in 2004. It is currently the 13th-highest-grossing animated film after its 3D release.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175588-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in games\nThis page lists board and card games, wargames, miniatures games, and tabletop role-playing games published in 2003. For video games, see 2003 in video gaming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175589-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in hammer throw\nThis page lists the World Best Year Performance in the year 2003 in both the men's and the women's hammer throw. The main event during this season were the 2003 World Athletics Championships in Paris, France, where the final of the men's competition was held on Tuesday August 25, 2003. The women had their final three days later, on Thursday August 28, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175590-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in heavy metal music\nThis is a timeline documenting the events of heavy metal in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175591-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in hip hop music\nThis article summarizes the events, album releases, and album release dates in hip hop music for the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175592-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in home video\nThe following events occurred in the year 2003 in home video.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175592-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in home video, Movie releases\nThe following movies were released on video on the following dates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175592-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in home video, TV show releases\nThe following television shows were released on video on the following dates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175593-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in ice hockey\nThe following is a chronicle of events during the year 2003 in ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175594-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in jazz\nThis is a timeline documenting events of Jazz in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175595-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in literature\nThis article contains information about the literary events and publications of 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175596-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in machinima\nThe following is a list of notable machinima-related events in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175597-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in modern pentathlon\nThis article lists the main modern pentathlon events and their results for 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175598-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in motoring\n2003 in motoring includes developments in the automotive industry that occurred throughout the year 2003 by various automobile manufacturers, grouped by country. The automotive industry designs, develops, manufactures, markets, and sells motor vehicles, and is one of the Earth's most important economic sectors by revenue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175598-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in motoring, United Kingdom\nThe Aston Martin DB9 was launched, replacing the nine-year-old DB7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175598-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in motoring, France\nThe Peugeot 307 CC was launched after replacing the 306 Cabriolet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175598-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in motoring, Japan\nThe Mazda RX-8 was the precessor to the RX-7, it is a 4-door quad coupe. The Nissan 350Z is the replacement of the old 300ZX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175599-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in motorsport\nThe following is an overview of the events of 2003 in motorsport including the major racing events, motorsport venues that were opened and closed during a year, championships and non-championship events that were established and disestablished in a year, and births and deaths of racing drivers and other motorsport people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175599-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in motorsport, Annual events\nThe calendar includes only annual major non-championship events or annual events that had significance separate from the championship. For the dates of the championship events see related season articles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175600-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in music\nThis is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175600-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in music, Awards\nThe following artists are inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: AC/DC, The Clash, Elvis Costello & the Attractions, The Police, The Righteous Brothers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology\nPaleontology or palaeontology is the study of prehistoric life forms on Earth through the examination of plant and animal fossils. This includes the study of body fossils, tracks (ichnites), burrows, cast-off parts, fossilised feces (coprolites), palynomorphs and chemical residues. Because humans have encountered fossils for millennia, paleontology has a long history both before and after becoming formalized as a science. This article records significant discoveries and events related to paleontology that occurred or were published in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Conodont paleozoology\nGerman paleontologist and stratigrapher Heinz Walter Kozur (1942-2013) described the conodont genus Carnepigondolella.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Parareptiles\nThis was one of the largest herbivores of their time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 59], "content_span": [60, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Non-avian dinosaurs\nNomen nudum; possibly a junior synonym of Giraffatitan or Brachiosaurus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Non-avian dinosaurs\nNomen nudum; possibly a junior synonym of Giraffatitan or Brachiosaurus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Non-avian dinosaurs\nNomen nudum; possibly a junior synonym of Giraffatitan or Brachiosaurus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Non-avian dinosaurs\nNomen nudum; possibly a junior synonym of Giraffatitan or Brachiosaurus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Non-avian dinosaurs\nNomen nudum; possibly a junior synonym of Giraffatitan or Brachiosaurus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Non-avian dinosaurs\nNomen nudum; possibly a junior synonym of Giraffatitan or Brachiosaurus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 66], "content_span": [67, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Newly named birds\nA Sagittariidae, relative of the secretarybird. The type species of Amanuensis Mourer-Chauvir\u00e9, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Newly named birds\nThe type species of Amitabha Gulas-Wroblewski & Wroblewski, 2003. Placed in crown Galliformes, but only compared with Phasianidae, not with other Eocene birds from North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Newly named birds\nInitially thought to be an Idiornithidae, Cariamiformes but in 2011 reinterpreted as an Opisthocomidae, a relative of the hoatzin. The type species of Namibiavis Mourer-Chauvir\u00e9, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Synapsids, Non-mammalian\nan anomodont; replacement name for Lanthanocephalus Modesto, Rubidge & Welman, 2002, preoccupied by the cnidarian genus Lanthanocephalus Williams & Starmer, 2000", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 71], "content_span": [72, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Synapsids, Mammals\nA Caracal. Boscaini et al. (2016) considered this species to be a junior synonym of Lynx issiodorensis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175601-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 in paleontology, Vertebrate paleozoology, Synapsids, Mammals\nA catarrhine of uncertain affinity. The type species is K. morotoensis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175602-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in poetry\nNationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175602-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in poetry, Works published in English\nListed by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175602-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in poetry, Works published in English, New Zealand, Poets in Best New Zealand Poems\nPoems from these 25 poet s were selected by Elizabeth Smither for Best New Zealand Poems 2002, published online this year:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 88], "content_span": [89, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175602-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in poetry, Works published in English, United States, Poets included in The Best American Poetry 2003\nThe 75 poets included in The Best American Poetry 2003, edited by David Lehman, co-edited this year by Yusef Komunyakaa:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 106], "content_span": [107, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175602-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in poetry, Works published in other languages, India\nIn each section, listed in alphabetical order by first name:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175602-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 in poetry, Deaths\nBirth years link to the corresponding \"[year] in poetry\" article:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175603-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in professional wrestling\n2003 in professional wrestling describes the year's events in the world of professional wrestling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175603-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in professional wrestling, Title changes, WWE\nRaw and SmackDown each had a world championship, a secondary championship, and a tag team championship for male wrestlers. SmackDown also had a title for their cruiserweight wrestlers. There was only one women's championship and it was exclusive to Raw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175605-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in rail transport\nThis article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175606-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in science\nThe year 2003 was an exciting one for new scientific discoveries and technological breakthroughs progress in many scientific fields. Some of the highlights of 2003, which will be further discussed below, include: the anthropologic discovery of 350,000-year-old footprints attesting to the presence of upright-walking humans; SpaceShipOne flight 11P making its first supersonic flight; the observation of a previously unknown element, moscovium was made; and the world's first digital camera with an organic light-emitting diode (OLED) display is released by Kodak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175606-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in science\nThe year 2003 is also notable for the disintegration of the Columbia Space Shuttle upon its re-entry into earth's atmosphere, a tragic disaster which took the lives of all seven astronauts on board; the Concorde jet made its last flight, bringing to an end the era of civilian supersonic travel, at least for the time being; and the death of Edward Teller, physicist and inventor of the hydrogen bomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175607-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in spaceflight\nThis article outlines notable events occurring in 2003 in spaceflight, including major launches and EVAs. The Space Shuttle Columbia disaster occurred on 1 February 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175608-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in sports\n2003 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 73]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175608-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in sports, Mixed martial arts\nThe following is a list of major noteworthy MMA events during 2003 in chronological order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175609-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in sumo\nThe following are the events in professional sumo during 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175610-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in tennis\nThis page covers all the important events in the sport of tennis in 2003. Primarily, it provides the results of notable tournaments throughout the year on both the ATP and WTA Tours, the Davis Cup, and the Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175610-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in tennis, WTA, WTA Tier I\n\u2020 Henin became the 13th World #1 in the history of women's tennis after her victory in the Zurich Open final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175611-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Bahamas\nThis article lists events from the year 2003 in The Bahamas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175612-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo\nThe following lists events that happened during 2003 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175613-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the European Union\nThe year was designated the European Year of People with Disabilities by the Council of Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175614-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Netherlands\nThis article lists some of the events that took place in the Netherlands in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175615-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Palestinian territories, Events, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent events related to the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict which occurred during 2003 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175615-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Palestinian territories, Events, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent Palestinian militant acts and operations committed against Israeli targets during 2003 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175615-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Palestinian territories, Events, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent Israeli military counter-terrorism operations (military campaigns and military operations) carried out against Palestinian militants during 2003 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175616-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the Philippines\n2003 in the Philippines details events of note that happened in the Philippines in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175617-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the United Arab Emirates\nEvents from the year 2003 in the United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175620-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the decathlon\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by JJMC89 bot III (talk | contribs) at 21:10, 9 April 2020 (Moving Category:Years in the decathlon to Category:Decathlon by year per Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Speedy). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175620-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in the decathlon\nThis page lists the World Best Year Performance in the year 2003 in the men's decathlon. One of the main events during this season were the 2003 World Championships in Paris, France, where the competition started on Monday August 26, 2003 and ended on Tuesday August 27, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175621-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the environment\nThis is a list of notable events relating to the environment in 2003. They relate to environmental law, conservation, environmentalism and environmental issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175622-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in the sport of athletics\nThis article contains an overview of the sport of athletics, including track and field, cross country and road running, in the year 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175622-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in the sport of athletics\nThe foremost competition of the year was the 2003 World Championships in Athletics, followed by the 2003 IAAF World Indoor Championships. At regional level, athletics was featured at two major games that were held that year: the 2003 Pan American Games and the 2003 All-Africa Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175623-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 in video games\n2003 has seen many sequels and prequels in video games and several new titles such as Beyond Good & Evil, Manhunt, Call of Duty, Mario & Luigi Superstar Saga, PlanetSide, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, True Crime: Streets of LA, and WWE SmackDown! Here Comes the Pain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175623-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 in video games, Trends\nComputer games continue to lose ground to console video games with a US sales drop of 14% in 2003. Total 2003 entertainment software sales in the United States grew slightly to US$7 billion; console sales increased to $5.8 billion and computer games accounted for the remaining $1.2 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175623-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 in video games, Trends, Handheld game systems\nAdditionally, two new handheld consoles were introduced in 2003, the Game Boy Advance SP (an enhanced GBA) and Nokia's N-Gage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175623-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 in video games, Trends, Video game sales\nThe top 10 selling console video games in 2003 in the United States ranked by units sold, according to , were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175623-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 in video games, Titles with notable critical reception\nMetacritic (MC) and GameRankings (GR) are aggregators of video game journalism reviews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nThe 2003 invasion of Iraq was the first stage of the Iraq War. The invasion phase began on 19 March 2003 (air) and 20 March 2003 (ground) and lasted just over one month, including 26 days of major combat operations, in which a combined force of troops from the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia and Poland invaded Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0000-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nThis early stage of the war formally ended on 1 May 2003 when U.S. President George W. Bush declared the \"end of major combat operations\", after which the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) was established as the first of several successive transitional governments leading up to the first Iraqi parliamentary election in January 2005. U.S. military forces later remained in Iraq until the withdrawal in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nThe U.S.-led coalition sent 177,194 troops into Iraq during the initial invasion phase, which lasted from 19 March to 1 May 2003. About 130,000 arrived from the U.S. alone, with about 45,000 British soldiers, 2,000 Australian soldiers, and 194 Polish soldiers. Thirty-six other countries were involved in its aftermath. In preparation for the invasion, 100,000 U.S. troops assembled in Kuwait by 18 February. The coalition forces also received support from the Peshmerga in Iraqi Kurdistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nAccording to U.S. President George W. Bush and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair, the coalition aimed \"to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction, to end Saddam Hussein's support for terrorism, and to free the Iraqi people.\" Others place a much greater emphasis on the impact of the September 11 attacks, on the role this played in changing U.S. strategic calculations, and the rise of the freedom agenda. According to Blair, the trigger was Iraq's failure to take a \"final opportunity\" to disarm itself of alleged nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons that U.S. and British officials called an immediate and intolerable threat to world peace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nIn a January 2003 CBS poll, 64% of Americans had approved of military action against Iraq; however, 63% wanted Bush to find a diplomatic solution rather than go to war, and 62% believed the threat of terrorism directed against the U.S. would increase due to war. The invasion of Iraq was strongly opposed by some long-standing U.S. allies, including the governments of France, Canada, Germany, and New Zealand. Their leaders argued that there was no evidence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq and that invading that country was not justified in the context of UNMOVIC's 12 February 2003 report. About 5,000 chemical warheads, shells or aviation bombs were discovered during the Iraq War, but these had been built and abandoned earlier in Saddam Hussein's rule before the 1991 Gulf War. The discoveries of these chemical weapons did not support the government's invasion rationale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nOn 15 February 2003, a month before the invasion, there were worldwide protests against the Iraq War, including a rally of three million people in Rome, which the Guinness Book of Records listed as the largest ever anti-war rally. According to the French academic Dominique Reyni\u00e9, between 3 January and 12 April 2003, 36 million people across the globe took part in almost 3,000 protests against the Iraq war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nThe invasion was preceded by an airstrike on the Presidential Palace in Baghdad on 20 March 2003. The following day, coalition forces launched an incursion into Basra Province from their massing point close to the Iraqi-Kuwaiti border. While special forces launched an amphibious assault from the Persian Gulf to secure Basra and the surrounding petroleum fields, the main invasion army moved into southern Iraq, occupying the region and engaging in the Battle of Nasiriyah on 23 March. Massive air strikes across the country and against Iraqi command-and-control threw the defending army into chaos and prevented an effective resistance. On 26 March, the 173rd Airborne Brigade was airdropped near the northern city of Kirkuk, where they joined forces with Kurdish rebels and fought several actions against the Iraqi Army, to secure the northern part of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq\nThe main body of coalition forces continued their drive into the heart of Iraq and met with little resistance. Most of the Iraqi military was quickly defeated and the coalition occupied Baghdad on 9 April. Other operations occurred against pockets of the Iraqi Army, including the capture and occupation of Kirkuk on 10 April, and the attack on and capture of Tikrit on 15 April. Iraqi president Saddam Hussein and the central leadership went into hiding as the coalition forces completed the occupation of the country. On 1 May President George W. Bush declared an end to major combat operations: this ended the invasion period and began the period of military occupation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nHostilities of the Gulf War were suspended on 28 February 1991, with a cease-fire negotiated between the UN Coalition and Iraq. The U.S. and its allies tried to keep Saddam in check with military actions such as Operation Southern Watch, which was conducted by Joint Task Force Southwest Asia (JTF-SWA) with the mission of monitoring and controlling airspace south of the 32nd Parallel (extended to the 33rd Parallel in 1996) as well as using economic sanctions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0007-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nIt was revealed that a biological weapons (BW) program in Iraq had begun in the early 1980s with help from the U.S. and Europe in violation of the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) of 1972. Details of the BW program\u2014along with a chemical weapons program\u2014surfaced after the Gulf War (1990\u201391) following investigations conducted by the United Nations Special Commission (UNSCOM) which had been charged with the post-war disarmament of Saddam's Iraq. The investigation concluded that the program had not continued after the war. The U.S. and its allies then maintained a policy of \"containment\" towards Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0007-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nThis policy involved numerous economic sanctions by the UN Security Council; the enforcement of Iraqi no-fly zones declared by the U.S. and the UK to protect the Kurds in Iraqi Kurdistan and Shias in the south from aerial attacks by the Iraqi government; and ongoing inspections. Iraqi military helicopters and planes regularly contested the no-fly zones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nIn October 1998, removing the Iraqi government became official U.S. foreign policy with enactment of the Iraq Liberation Act. Enacted following the expulsion of UN weapons inspectors the preceding August (after some had been accused of spying for the U.S.), the act provided $97 million for Iraqi \"democratic opposition organizations\" to \"establish a program to support a transition to democracy in Iraq.\" This legislation contrasted with the terms set out in United Nations Security Council Resolution 687, which focused on weapons and weapons programs and made no mention of regime change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0008-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nOne month after the passage of the Iraq Liberation Act, the U.S. and UK launched a bombardment campaign of Iraq called Operation Desert Fox. The campaign's express rationale was to hamper Saddam Hussein's government's ability to produce chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons, but U.S. intelligence personnel also hoped it would help weaken Saddam's grip on power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nWith the election of George W. Bush as president in 2000, the U.S. moved towards a more aggressive policy toward Iraq. The Republican Party's campaign platform in the 2000 election called for \"full implementation\" of the Iraq Liberation Act as \"a starting point\" in a plan to \"remove\" Saddam. After leaving the George W. Bush administration, Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill said that an attack on Iraq had been planned since Bush's inauguration and that the first United States National Security Council meeting involved discussion of an invasion. O'Neill later backtracked, saying that these discussions were part of a continuation of foreign policy first put into place by the Clinton administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nDespite the Bush administration's stated interest in invading Iraq, little formal movement towards an invasion occurred until the 11 September attacks. For example, the administration prepared Operation Desert Badger to respond aggressively if any Air Force pilot was shot down while flying over Iraq, but this did not happen. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld dismissed National Security Agency (NSA) intercept data available by midday of the 11th that pointed to al-Qaeda's culpability, and by mid-afternoon ordered the Pentagon to prepare plans for attacking Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0010-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nAccording to aides who were with him in the National Military Command Center on that day, Rumsfeld asked for: \"best info fast. Judge whether good enough hit Saddam Hussein at same time. Not only Osama bin Laden.\" A memo written by Rumsfeld in November 2001 considers an Iraq war. The rationale for invading Iraq as a response to 9/11 has been widely questioned, as there was no cooperation between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion\nOn 20 September 2001, Bush addressed a joint session of Congress (simulcast live to the world), and announced his new \"War on Terror\". This announcement was accompanied by the doctrine of \"pre-emptive\" military action, later termed the Bush Doctrine. Allegations of a connection between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda were made by some U.S. Government officials who asserted that a highly secretive relationship existed between Saddam and the radical Islamist militant organization al-Qaeda from 1992 to 2003, specifically through a series of meetings reportedly involving the Iraqi Intelligence Service (IIS). Some Bush advisers favored an immediate invasion of Iraq, while others advocated building an international coalition and obtaining United Nations authorization. Bush eventually decided to seek UN authorization, while still reserving the option of invading without it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nWhile there had been some earlier talk of action against Iraq, the Bush administration waited until September 2002 to call for action, with White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card saying, \"From a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in August.\" Bush began formally making his case to the international community for an invasion of Iraq in his 12 September 2002 address to the United Nations General Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nKey U.S. allies in NATO, such as the United Kingdom, agreed with the U.S. actions, while France and Germany were critical of plans to invade Iraq, arguing instead for continued diplomacy and weapons inspections. After considerable debate, the UN Security Council adopted a compromise resolution, UN Security Council Resolution 1441, which authorized the resumption of weapons inspections and promised \"serious consequences\" for non-compliance. Security Council members France and Russia made clear that they did not consider these consequences to include the use of force to overthrow the Iraqi government. Both the U.S. ambassador to the UN, John Negroponte, and the UK ambassador, Jeremy Greenstock, publicly confirmed this reading of the resolution, assuring that Resolution 1441 provided no \"automaticity\" or \"hidden triggers\" for an invasion without further consultation of the Security Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 969]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nResolution 1441 gave Iraq \"a final opportunity to comply with its disarmament obligations\" and set up inspections by the United Nations Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission (UNMOVIC) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Saddam accepted the resolution on 13 November and inspectors returned to Iraq under the direction of UNMOVIC chairman Hans Blix and IAEA Director-General Mohamed ElBaradei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0014-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nAs of February 2003, the IAEA \"found no evidence or plausible indication of the revival of a nuclear weapons program in Iraq\"; the IAEA concluded that certain items which could have been used in nuclear enrichment centrifuges, such as aluminum tubes, were in fact intended for other uses. UNMOVIC \"did not find evidence of the continuation or resumption of programs of weapons of mass destruction\" or significant quantities of proscribed items.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0014-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nUNMOVIC did supervise the destruction of a small number of empty chemical rocket warheads, 50\u00a0liters of mustard gas that had been declared by Iraq and sealed by UNSCOM in 1998, and laboratory quantities of a mustard gas precursor, along with about 50 Al-Samoud missiles of a design that Iraq stated did not exceed the permitted 150\u00a0km range, but which had traveled up to 183\u00a0km in tests. Shortly before the invasion, UNMOVIC stated that it would take \"months\" to verify Iraqi compliance with resolution 1441.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0015-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nIn October 2002, the U.S. Congress passed the \"Iraq Resolution\". The resolution authorized the President to \"use any means necessary\" against Iraq. Americans polled in January 2003 widely favored further diplomacy over an invasion. Later that year, however, Americans began to agree with Bush's plan. The U.S. government engaged in an elaborate domestic public relations campaign to market the war to its citizens. Americans overwhelmingly believed Saddam did have weapons of mass destruction: 85% said so, even though the inspectors had not uncovered those weapons. Of those who thought Iraq had weapons sequestered somewhere, about half responded that said weapons would not be found in combat. By February 2003, 64% of Americans supported taking military action to remove Saddam from power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0016-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nThe Central Intelligence Agency's Special Activities Division (SAD) teams, consisting of the paramilitary operations officers and 10th Special Forces Group soldiers, were the first U.S. forces to enter Iraq, in July 2002, before the main invasion. Once on the ground, they prepared for the subsequent arrival of U.S. Army Special Forces to organize the Kurdish Peshmerga. This joint team (called the Northern Iraq Liaison Element (NILE)) combined to defeat Ansar al-Islam, a group with ties to al-Qaeda, in Iraqi Kurdistan. This battle was for control of the territory that was occupied by Ansar al-Islam. It was carried out by Paramilitary Operations Officers from SAD and the Army's 10th Special Forces Group. This battle resulted in the defeat of Ansar and the capture of a chemical weapons facility at Sargat. Sargat was the only facility of its type discovered in the Iraq war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 951]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0017-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nSAD teams also conducted missions behind enemy lines to identify leadership targets. These missions led to the initial air strikes against Saddam and his generals. Although the strike against Saddam was unsuccessful in killing him, it effectively ended his ability to command and control his forces. Strikes against Iraq's generals were more successful and significantly degraded the Iraqi command's ability to react to, and maneuver against, the U.S.-led invasion force. SAD operations officers successfully convinced key Iraqi Army officers to surrender their units once the fighting started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0018-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nNATO member Turkey refused to allow the U.S. forces across its territory into northern Iraq. Therefore, joint SAD and Army Special forces teams and the Pershmerga constituted the entire Northern force against the Iraqi army. They managed to keep the northern divisions in place rather than allowing them to aid their colleagues against the U.S.-led coalition force coming from the south. Four of these CIA officers were awarded the Intelligence Star for their actions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0019-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nIn the 2003 State of the Union address, President Bush said \"we know that Iraq, in the late 1990s, had several mobile biological weapons labs\". On 5 February 2003, U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell addressed the United Nations General Assembly, continuing U.S. efforts to gain UN authorization for an invasion. His presentation to the UN Security Council contained a computer-generated image of a \"mobile biological weapons laboratory\". However, this information was based on claims of Rafid Ahmed Alwan al-Janabi, codenamed \"Curveball\", an Iraqi emigrant living in Germany who later admitted that his claims had been false.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0020-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nPowell also presented evidence alleging Iraq had ties to al-Qaeda. As a follow-up to Powell's presentation, the United States, United Kingdom, Poland, Italy, Australia, Denmark, Japan, and Spain proposed a resolution authorizing the use of force in Iraq, but NATO members like Canada, France, and Germany, together with Russia, strongly urged continued diplomacy. Facing a losing vote as well as a likely veto from France and Russia, the US, UK, Poland, Spain, Denmark, Italy, Japan, and Australia eventually withdrew their resolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0021-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nOpposition to the invasion coalesced in the worldwide 15 February 2003 anti-war protest that attracted between six and ten million people in more than 800 cities, the largest such protest in human history according to the Guinness Book of World Records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0022-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nOn 16 March 2003, Spanish Prime Minister, Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Aznar, UK Prime Minister, Tony Blair, President of the United States George W. Bush, and Prime Minister of Portugal, Jos\u00e9 Manuel Dur\u00e3o Barroso as host, met in the Azores, to discuss the invasion of Iraq, and Spain's potential involvement in the war, as well as the beginning of the invasion. This encounter was extremely controversial in Spain, even now remaining a very sensitive point for the Aznar government. Almost a year later, Madrid suffered the worst terrorist attack in Europe since the Lockerbie bombing, motivated by Spain's decision to participate in the Iraq war, prompting some Spaniards to accuse the Prime Minister of being responsible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0023-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nIn March 2003, the United States, United Kingdom, Poland, Australia, Spain, Denmark, and Italy began preparing for the invasion of Iraq, with a host of public relations and military moves. In his 17 March 2003 address to the nation, Bush demanded that Saddam and his two sons, Uday and Qusay, surrender and leave Iraq, giving them a 48-hour deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0024-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nThe UK House of Commons held a debate on going to war on 18 March 2003 where the government motion was approved 412 to 149. The vote was a key moment in the history of the Blair administration, as the number of government MPs who rebelled against the vote was the greatest since the repeal of the Corn Laws in 1846. Three government ministers resigned in protest at the war, John Denham, Lord Hunt of Kings Heath, and the then Leader of the House of Commons Robin Cook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0024-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Prelude to the invasion, Preparations for war\nIn a passionate speech to the House of Commons after his resignation, he said, \"What has come to trouble me is the suspicion that if the 'hanging chads' of Florida had gone the other way and Al Gore had been elected, we would not now be about to commit British troops to action in Iraq.\" During the debate, it was stated that the Attorney General had advised that the war was legal under previous UN Resolutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0025-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Attempts to avoid war\nIn December 2002, a representative of the head of Iraqi Intelligence, the General Tahir Jalil Habbush al-Tikriti, contacted former Central Intelligence Agency Counterterrorism Department head Vincent Cannistraro stating that Saddam \"knew there was a campaign to link him to 11 September and prove he had weapons of mass destruction (WMDs).\" Cannistraro further added that \"the Iraqis were prepared to satisfy these concerns. I reported the conversation to senior levels of the state department and I was told to stand aside and they would handle it.\" Cannistraro stated that the offers made were all \"killed\" by the George W. Bush administration because they allowed Saddam to remain in power, an outcome viewed as unacceptable. It has been suggested that Saddam Hussein was prepared to go into exile if allowed to keep US$1 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0026-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Attempts to avoid war\nEgyptian president Hosni Mubarak's national security advisor, Osama El-Baz, sent a message to the U.S. State Department that the Iraqis wanted to discuss the accusations that the country had weapons of mass destruction and ties with Al-Qaeda. Iraq also attempted to reach the U.S. through the Syrian, French, German, and Russian intelligence services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0027-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Attempts to avoid war\nIn January 2003, Lebanese-American Imad Hage met with Michael Maloof of the U.S. Department of Defense's Office of Special Plans. Hage, a resident of Beirut, had been recruited by the department to assist in the war on terror. He reported that Mohammed Nassif, a close aide to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad, had expressed frustrations about the difficulties of Syria contacting the United States, and had attempted to use him as an intermediary. Maloof arranged for Hage to meet with civilian Richard Perle, then head of the Defense Policy Board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0028-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Attempts to avoid war\nIn January 2003, Hage met with the chief of Iraqi intelligence's foreign operations, Hassan al-Obeidi. Obeidi told Hage that Baghdad did not understand why they were targeted and that they had no WMDs. He then made the offer for Washington to send in 2000 FBI agents to confirm this. He additionally offered petroleum concessions but stopped short of having Saddam give up power, instead suggesting that elections could be held in two years. Later, Obeidi suggested that Hage travel to Baghdad for talks; he accepted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0029-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Attempts to avoid war\nLater that month, Hage met with General Habbush and Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz. He was offered top priority to U.S. firms in oil and mining rights, UN-supervised elections, U.S. inspections (with up to 5,000 inspectors), to have al-Qaeda agent Abdul Rahman Yasin (in Iraqi custody since 1994) handed over as a sign of good faith, and to give \"full support for any U.S. plan\" in the Israeli\u2013Palestinian peace process. They also wished to meet with high-ranking U.S. officials. On 19 February, Hage faxed Maloof his report of the trip. Maloof reports having brought the proposal to Jaymie Duran. The Pentagon denies that either Wolfowitz or Rumsfeld, Duran's bosses, were aware of the plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0030-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Attempts to avoid war\nOn 21 February, Maloof informed Duran in an email that Richard Perle wished to meet with Hage and the Iraqis if the Pentagon would clear it. Duran responded \"Mike, working this. Keep this close hold.\" On 7 March, Perle met with Hage in Knightsbridge, and stated that he wanted to pursue the matter further with people in Washington (both have acknowledged the meeting). A few days later, he informed Hage that Washington refused to let him meet with Habbush to discuss the offer (Hage stated that Perle's response was \"that the consensus in Washington was it was a no-go\"). Perle told The Times, \"The message was 'Tell them that we will see them in Baghdad.\u2032\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0031-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nGeorge Bush, speaking in October 2002, said that \"The stated policy of the United States is regime change. ... However, if Saddam were to meet all the conditions of the United Nations, the conditions that I have described very clearly in terms that everybody can understand, that in itself will signal the regime has changed.\" Citing reports from certain intelligence sources, Bush stated on 6 March 2003 that he believed that Saddam was not complying with UN Resolution 1441.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0032-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nIn September 2002, Tony Blair stated, in an answer to a parliamentary question, that \"Regime change in Iraq would be a wonderful thing. That is not the purpose of our action; our purpose is to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction...\" In November of that year, Blair further stated that, \"So far as our objective, it is disarmament, not regime change \u2013 that is our objective. Now I happen to believe the regime of Saddam is a very brutal and repressive regime, I think it does enormous damage to the Iraqi people ... so I have got no doubt Saddam is very bad for Iraq, but on the other hand I have got no doubt either that the purpose of our challenge from the United Nations is the disarmament of weapons of mass destruction, it is not regime change.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0033-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nAt a press conference on 31 January 2003, Bush again reiterated that the single trigger for the invasion would be Iraq's failure to disarm, \"Saddam Hussein must understand that if he does not disarm, for the sake of peace, we, along with others, will go disarm Saddam Hussein.\" As late as 25 February 2003, it was still the official line that the only cause of invasion would be a failure to disarm. As Blair made clear in a statement to the House of Commons, \"I detest his regime. But even now he can save it by complying with the UN's demand. Even now, we are prepared to go the extra step to achieve disarmament peacefully.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0034-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nAdditional justifications used at various times included Iraqi violation of UN resolutions, the Iraqi government's repression of its citizens, and Iraqi violations of the 1991 cease-fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0035-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nThe main allegations were: that Saddam possessed or was attempting to produce weapons of mass destruction, which Saddam Hussein had used in places such as Halabja, possessed, and made efforts to acquire, particularly considering two previous attacks on Baghdad nuclear weapons production facilities by both Iran and Israel which were alleged to have postponed weapons development progress; and, further, that he had ties to terrorists, specifically al-Qaeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0036-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nWhile it never made an explicit connection between Iraq and the 11 September attacks, the George W. Bush administration repeatedly insinuated a link, thereby creating a false impression for the U.S. public. Grand jury testimony from the 1993 World Trade Center bombing trials cited numerous direct linkages from the bombers to Baghdad and Department 13 of the Iraqi Intelligence Service in that initial attack marking the second anniversary to vindicate the surrender of Iraqi armed forces in Operation Desert Storm. For example, The Washington Post has noted that,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0037-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nWhile not explicitly declaring Iraqi culpability in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, administration officials did, at various times, imply a link. In late 2001, Cheney said it was \"pretty well confirmed\" that attack mastermind Mohamed Atta had met with a senior Iraqi intelligence official. Later, Cheney called Iraq the \"geographic base of the terrorists who had us under assault now for many years, but most especially on 9/11.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0038-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nSteven Kull, director of the Program on International Policy Attitudes (PIPA) at the University of Maryland, observed in March 2003 that \"The administration has succeeded in creating a sense that there is some connection [between 11 Sept. and Saddam Hussein]\". This was following a The New York Times/CBS poll that showed 45% of Americans believing Saddam Hussein was \"personally involved\" in the 11 September atrocities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0038-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nAs The Christian Science Monitor observed at the time, while \"Sources knowledgeable about U.S. intelligence say there is no evidence that Saddam played a role in the 11 Sept. attacks, nor that he has been or is currently aiding Al Qaeda. ... the White House appears to be encouraging this false impression, as it seeks to maintain American support for a possible war against Iraq and demonstrate seriousness of purpose to Saddam's regime.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0038-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nThe CSM went on to report that, while polling data collected \"right after 11 Sept. 2001\" showed that only 3 percent mentioned Iraq or Saddam Hussein, by January 2003 attitudes \"had been transformed\" with a Knight Ridder poll showing that 44% of Americans believed \"most\" or \"some\" of the 11 September hijackers were Iraqi citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0039-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nAccording to General Tommy Franks, the objectives of the invasion were, \"First, end the regime of Saddam Hussein. Second, to identify, isolate and eliminate Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Third, to search for, to capture and to drive out terrorists from that country. Fourth, to collect such intelligence as we can related to terrorist networks. Fifth, to collect such intelligence as we can related to the global network of illicit weapons of mass destruction. Sixth, to end sanctions and to immediately deliver humanitarian support to the displaced and to many needy Iraqi citizens. Seventh, to secure Iraq's oil fields and resources, which belong to the Iraqi people. And last, to help the Iraqi people create conditions for a transition to a representative self-government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0040-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nThe BBC has also noted that, while President Bush \"never directly accused the former Iraqi leader of having a hand in the attacks on New York and Washington\", he \"repeatedly associated the two in keynote addresses delivered since 11 September\", adding that \"Senior members of his administration have similarly conflated the two.\" For instance, the BBC report quotes Colin Powell in February 2003, stating that \"We've learned that Iraq has trained al-Qaeda members in bomb-making and poisons and deadly gases. And we know that after September 11, Saddam Hussein's regime gleefully celebrated the terrorist attacks on America.\" The same BBC report also noted the results of a recent opinion poll, which suggested that \"70% of Americans believe the Iraqi leader was personally involved in the attacks.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0041-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nAlso in September 2003, The Boston Globe reported that \"Vice President Dick Cheney, anxious to defend the White House foreign policy amid ongoing violence in Iraq, stunned intelligence analysts and even members of his own administration this week by failing to dismiss a widely discredited claim: that Saddam Hussein might have played a role in the 11 Sept. attacks.\" A year later, presidential candidate John Kerry alleged that Cheney was continuing \"to intentionally mislead the American public by drawing a link between Saddam Hussein and 9/11 in an attempt to make the invasion of Iraq part of the global war on terror.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0042-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nThroughout 2002, the Bush administration insisted that removing Saddam from power to restore international peace and security was a major goal. The principal stated justifications for this policy of \"regime change\" were that Iraq's continuing production of weapons of mass destruction and known ties to terrorist organizations, as well as Iraq's continued violations of UN Security Council resolutions, amounted to a threat to the U.S. and the world community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0043-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nThe Bush administration's overall rationale for the invasion of Iraq was presented in detail by U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell to the United Nations Security Council on 5 February 2003. In summary, he stated,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0044-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nWe know that Saddam Hussein is determined to keep his weapons of mass destruction; he's determined to make more. Given Saddam Hussein's history of aggression ... given what we know of his terrorist associations and given his determination to exact revenge on those who oppose him, should we take the risk that he will not some day use these weapons at a time and the place and in the manner of his choosing at a time when the world is in a much weaker position to respond? The United States will not and cannot run that risk to the American people. Leaving Saddam Hussein in possession of weapons of mass destruction for a few more months or years is not an option, not in a post\u2013September 11 world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0045-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nSince the invasion, the U.S. government statements concerning Iraqi weapons programs and links to al-Qaeda have been discredited, though chemical weapons were found in Iraq during the occupation period. While the debate of whether Iraq intended to develop chemical, biological, and nuclear weapons in the future remains open, no WMDs have been found in Iraq since the invasion despite comprehensive inspections lasting more than 18 months. In Cairo, on 24 February 2001, Colin Powell had predicted as much, saying, \"[Saddam] has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbours.\" Similarly, assertions of operational links between the Iraqi regime and al-Qaeda have largely been discredited by the intelligence community, and Secretary Powell himself later admitted he had no proof.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 934]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0046-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nIn September 2002, the Bush administration said attempts by Iraq to acquire thousands of high-strength aluminum tubes pointed to a clandestine program to make enriched uranium for nuclear bombs. Powell, in his address to the UN Security Council just before the war, referred to the aluminum tubes. A report released by the Institute for Science and International Security in 2002, however, reported that it was highly unlikely that the tubes could be used to enrich uranium. Powell later admitted he had presented an inaccurate case to the United Nations on Iraqi weapons, based on sourcing that was wrong and in some cases \"deliberately misleading.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0047-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale\nThe Bush administration asserted that the Saddam government had sought to purchase yellowcake uranium from Niger. On 7 March 2003, the U.S. submitted intelligence documents as evidence to the International Atomic Energy Agency. These documents were dismissed by the IAEA as forgeries, with the concurrence in that judgment of outside experts. At the time, a US official stated that the evidence was submitted to the IAEA without knowledge of its provenance and characterized any mistakes as \"more likely due to incompetence not malice\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0048-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale, Iraqi drones\nIn October 2002, a few days before the US Senate vote on the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution, about 75 senators were told in closed session that the Iraqi government had the means of delivering biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction by unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) drones that could be launched from ships off the US' Atlantic coast to attack US eastern seaboard cities. Colin Powell suggested in his presentation to the United Nations that UAVs were transported out of Iraq and could be launched against the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0049-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale, Iraqi drones\nIn fact, Iraq had no offensive UAV fleet or any capability of putting UAVs on ships. Iraq's UAV fleet consisted of less than a handful of outdated Czech training drones. At the time, there was a vigorous dispute within the intelligence community whether the CIA's conclusions about Iraq's UAV fleet were accurate. The US Air Force denied outright that Iraq possessed any offensive UAV capability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0050-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casus belli and rationale, Human rights\nAs evidence supporting U.S. and British charges about Iraqi Weapons of mass destruction and links to terrorism weakened, some supporters of the invasion have increasingly shifted their justification to the human rights violations of the Saddam government. Leading human rights groups such as Human Rights Watch have argued, however, that they believe human rights concerns were never a central justification for the invasion, nor do they believe that military intervention was justifiable on humanitarian grounds, most significantly because \"the killing in Iraq at the time was not of the exceptional nature that would justify such intervention.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0051-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, US domestic law\nThe Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 was passed by Congress with Republicans voting 98% in favor in the Senate, and 97% in favor in the House. Democrats supported the joint resolution 58% and 39% in the Senate and House respectively. The resolution asserts the authorization by the Constitution of the United States and the Congress for the President to fight anti-United States terrorism. Citing the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, the resolution reiterated that it should be the policy of the United States to remove the Saddam Hussein regime and promote a democratic replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0052-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, US domestic law\nThe resolution \"supported\" and \"encouraged\" diplomatic efforts by President George W. Bush to \"strictly enforce through the U.N. Security Council all relevant Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq\" and \"obtain prompt and decisive action by the Security Council to ensure that Iraq abandons its strategy of delay, evasion, and noncompliance and promptly and strictly complies with all relevant Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq.\" The resolution authorized President Bush to use the Armed Forces of the United States \"as he determines to be necessary and appropriate\" to \"defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq; and enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council Resolutions regarding Iraq.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0053-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nThe legality of the invasion of Iraq under international law has been challenged since its inception on a number of fronts, and several prominent supporters of the invasion in all the invading nations have publicly and privately cast doubt on its legality. It has been argued by US and British governments that the invasion was fully legal because authorization was implied by the United Nations Security Council. International legal experts, including the International Commission of Jurists, a group of 31 leading Canadian law professors, and the U.S.-based Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy, have denounced this rationale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0054-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nOn Thursday 20 November 2003, an article published in the Guardian alleged that Richard Perle, a senior member of the administration's Defense Policy Board Advisory Committee, conceded that the invasion was illegal but still justified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0055-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nThe United Nations Security Council has passed nearly 60 resolutions on Iraq and Kuwait since Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The most relevant to this issue is Resolution 678, passed on 29 November 1990. It authorizes \"member states co-operating with the Government of Kuwait ... to use all necessary means\" to (1) implement Security Council Resolution 660 and other resolutions calling for the end of Iraq's occupation of Kuwait and withdrawal of Iraqi forces from Kuwaiti territory and (2) \"restore international peace and security in the area.\" Resolution 678 has not been rescinded or nullified by succeeding resolutions and Iraq was not alleged after 1991 to invade Kuwait or to threaten to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0056-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nResolution 1441 was most prominent during the run-up to the war and formed the main backdrop for Secretary of State Colin Powell's address to the Security Council one month before the invasion. According to an independent commission of inquiry set up by the government of the Netherlands, UN resolution 1441 \"cannot reasonably be interpreted (as the Dutch government did) as authorising individual member states to use military force to compel Iraq to comply with the Security Council's resolutions.\" Accordingly, the Dutch commission concluded that the 2003 invasion violated international law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0057-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nAt the same time, Bush Administration officials advanced a parallel legal argument using the earlier resolutions, which authorized force in response to Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait. Under this reasoning, by failing to disarm and submit to weapons inspections, Iraq was in violation of U.N. Security Council Resolutions 660 and 678, and the U.S. could legally compel Iraq's compliance through military means.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0058-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nCritics and proponents of the legal rationale based on the U.N. resolutions argue that the legal right to determine how to enforce its resolutions lies with the Security Council alone, not with individual nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0059-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nIn February 2006, Luis Moreno Ocampo, the lead prosecutor for the International Criminal Court, reported that he had received 240 separate communications regarding the legality of the war, many of which concerned British participation in the invasion. In a letter addressed to the complainants, Mr. Moreno Ocampo explained that he could only consider issues related to conduct during the war and not to its underlying legality as a possible crime of aggression because no provision had yet been adopted which \"defines the crime and sets out the conditions under which the Court may exercise jurisdiction with respect to it.\" In a March 2007 interview with the Sunday Telegraph, Moreno Ocampo encouraged Iraq to sign up with the court so that it could bring cases related to alleged war crimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0060-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Legality of invasion, International law\nUnited States Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich held a press conference on the evening of 24 April 2007, revealing US House Resolution 333 and the three articles of impeachment against Vice President Dick Cheney. He charged Cheney with manipulating the evidence of Iraq's weapons program, deceiving the nation about Iraq's connection to al-Qaeda, and threatening aggression against Iran in violation of the United Nations Charter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0061-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Multilateral support\nIn November 2002, President George W. Bush, visiting Europe for a NATO summit, declared that, \"should Iraqi President Saddam Hussein choose not to disarm, the United States will lead a coalition of the willing to disarm him.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0062-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Multilateral support\nThereafter, the Bush administration briefly used the term Coalition of the Willing to refer to the countries who supported, militarily or verbally, the military action in Iraq and subsequent military presence in post-invasion Iraq since 2003. The original list prepared in March 2003 included 49 members. Of those 49, only six besides the U.S. contributed troops to the invasion force (the United Kingdom, Australia, Poland, Spain, Portugal, and Denmark), and 33 provided some number of troops to support the occupation after the invasion was complete. Six members have no military, meaning that they withheld troops completely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0063-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Invasion force\nA U.S. Central Command, Combined Forces Air Component Commander report, indicated that, as of 30 April 2003, 466,985 U.S. personnel were deployed for the invasion of Iraq. This included;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0064-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Invasion force\nApproximately 148,000 soldiers from the United States, 45,000 British soldiers, 2,000 Australian soldiers and 194 Polish soldiers from the special forces unit GROM were sent to Kuwait for the invasion. The invasion force was also supported by Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters, estimated to number upwards of 70,000. In the latter stages of the invasion, 620 troops of the Iraqi National Congress opposition group were deployed to southern Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0065-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Invasion force\nCanada discretely contributed some military resources towards the campaign, such as personnel from the Royal Canadian Air Force who crewed American planes on missions in Iraq in order to train with the platforms, and eleven Canadian aircrew who manned AWACS aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0065-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Invasion force\nThe Canadian Armed Forces had ships, planes, and 1,200 Royal Canadian Navy personnel at the mouth of the Persian Gulf to help support Operation Enduring Freedom, and a secret U.S. briefing cable noted that despite public promises by Canadian officials that these assets would not be used in support of the war in Iraq, \"they will also be available to provide escort services in the Straits and will otherwise be discreetly useful to the military effort.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0065-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Invasion force\nHowever, the Department of National Defence issued an order to naval commanders to not do anything in support of the American-led operation, and it is not known whether this order was ever broken. Eugene Lang, chief of staff to then-defence minister John McCallum, stated that it is \"quite possible\" that Canadian forces indirectly supported the American operation. According to Lang, Canada's military strongly advocated to be involved in the Iraqi War instead of the war in Afghanistan, and Canada mainly decided to keep its assets in the Gulf to maintain good relations with America. Brigadier General Walter Natynczyk, of the Canadian Army, was Deputy Commanding General of the Multi-National Corps \u2013 Iraq, which comprised 35,000 American soldiers in ten brigades spread across Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0066-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Invasion force\nPlans for opening a second front in the north were severely hampered when Turkey refused the use of its territory for such purposes. In response to Turkey's decision, the United States dropped several thousand paratroopers from the 173rd Airborne Brigade into northern Iraq, a number significantly less than the 15,000-strong 4th Infantry Division that the U.S. originally planned to use for opening the northern front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0067-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Preparation\nCIA Special Activities Division (SAD) Paramilitary teams entered Iraq in July 2002 before the 2003 invasion. Once on the ground they prepared for the subsequent arrival of US military forces. SAD teams then combined with U.S. Army Special Forces to organize the Kurdish Peshmerga. This joint team combined to defeat Ansar al-Islam, an ally of Al Qaida, in a battle in the northeast corner of Iraq. The U.S. side was carried out by Paramilitary Officers from SAD and the Army's 10th Special Forces Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0068-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Preparation\nSAD teams also conducted high-risk special reconnaissance missions behind Iraqi lines to identify senior leadership targets. These missions led to the initial strikes against Saddam Hussein and his key generals. Although the initial strikes against Saddam were unsuccessful in killing the dictator or his generals, they were successful in effectively ending the ability to command and control Iraqi forces. Other strikes against key generals were successful and significantly degraded the command's ability to react to and maneuver against the U.S.-led invasion force coming from the south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0069-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Preparation\nSAD operations officers were also successful in convincing key Iraqi army officers to surrender their units once the fighting started and/or not to oppose the invasion force. NATO member Turkey refused to allow its territory to be used for the invasion. As a result, the SAD/SOG and U.S. Army Special Forces joint teams and the Kurdish Peshmerga constituted the entire northern force against government forces during the invasion. Their efforts kept the 5th Corps of the Iraqi army in place to defend against the Kurds rather than moving to contest the coalition force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0070-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Preparation\nAccording to General Tommy Franks, April Fool, an American officer working undercover as a diplomat, was approached by an Iraqi intelligence agent. April Fool then sold the Iraqi false \"top secret\" invasion plans provided by Franks' team. This deception misled the Iraqi military into deploying major forces in northern and western Iraq in anticipation of attacks by way of Turkey or Jordan, which never took place. This greatly reduced the defensive capacity in the rest of Iraq and facilitated the actual attacks via Kuwait and the Persian Gulf in the southeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0071-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Defending force\nThe number of personnel in the Iraqi military before the war was uncertain, but it was believed to have been poorly equipped. The International Institute for Strategic Studies estimated the Iraqi armed forces to number 538,000 (Iraqi Army 375,000, Iraqi Navy 2,000, Iraqi Air Force 20,000 and air defense 17,000), the paramilitary Fedayeen Saddam 44,000, Republican Guard 80,000 and reserves 650,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0072-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Defending force\nAnother estimate numbers the Army and Republican Guard at between 280,000 and 350,000 and 50,000 to 80,000, respectively, and the paramilitary between 20,000 and 40,000. There were an estimated thirteen infantry divisions, ten mechanized and armored divisions, as well as some special forces units. The Iraqi Air Force and Navy played a negligible role in the conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0073-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Defending force\nDuring the invasion, foreign volunteers traveled to Iraq from Syria and took part in the fighting, usually commanded by the Fedayeen Saddam. It is not known for certain how many foreign fighters fought in Iraq in 2003, however, intelligence officers of the U.S. First Marine Division estimated that 50% of all Iraqi combatants in central Iraq were foreigners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0074-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Military aspects, Defending force\nIn addition, the Kurdish Islamist militant group Ansar al-Islam controlled a small section of northern Iraq in an area outside of Saddam Hussein's control. Ansar al-Islam had been fighting against secular Kurdish forces since 2001. At the time of the invasion they fielded about 600 to 800 fighters. Ansar al-Islam was led by the Jordanian-born militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, who would later become an important leader in the Iraqi insurgency. Ansar al-Islam was driven out of Iraq in late March by a joint American-Kurdish force during Operation Viking Hammer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0075-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion\nSince the 1991 Gulf War, the U.S. and UK had been attacked on Iraqi air defenses while enforcing Iraqi no-fly zones. These zones, and the attacks to enforce them, were described as illegal by the former UN Secretary General, Boutros Boutros-Ghali, and the French foreign minister Hubert Vedrine. Other countries, notably Russia and China, also condemned the zones as a violation of Iraqi sovereignty. In mid-2002, the U.S. began more carefully selecting targets in the southern part of the country to disrupt the military command structure in Iraq. A change in enforcement tactics was acknowledged at the time, but it was not made public that this was part of a plan known as Operation Southern Focus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0076-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion\nThe amount of ordnance dropped on Iraqi positions by Coalition aircraft in 2001 and 2002 was less than in 1999 and 2000 which was during the Clinton administration. However, information obtained by the UK Liberal Democrats showed that the UK dropped twice as many bombs on Iraq in the second half of 2002 as they did during the whole of 2001. The tonnage of UK bombs dropped increased from 0 in March 2002 and 0.3 in April 2002 to between 7 and 14\u00a0tons per month in May\u2013August, reaching a pre-war peak of 54.6\u00a0tons in September \u2013 before the U.S. Congress' 11 October authorization of the invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0077-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion\nThe 5 September attacks included a 100+ aircraft attack on the main air defense site in western Iraq. According to an editorial in New Statesman this was \"Located at the furthest extreme of the southern no-fly zone, far away from the areas that needed to be patrolled to prevent attacks on the Shias, it was destroyed not because it was a threat to the patrols, but to allow allied special forces operating from Jordan to enter Iraq undetected.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0078-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion\nTommy Franks, who commanded the invasion of Iraq, has since admitted that the bombing was designed to \"degrade\" Iraqi air defences in the same way as the air attacks that began the 1991 Gulf War. These \"spikes of activity\" were, in the words of then British Defence Secretary, Geoff Hoon, designed to 'put pressure on the Iraqi regime' or, as The Times reported, to \"provoke Saddam Hussein into giving the allies an excuse for war\". In this respect, as provocations designed to start a war, leaked British Foreign Office legal advice concluded that such attacks were illegal under international law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0079-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion\nAnother attempt at provoking the war was mentioned in a leaked memo from a meeting between George W. Bush and Tony Blair on 31 January 2003 at which Bush allegedly told Blair that \"The US was thinking of flying U2 reconnaissance aircraft with fighter cover over Iraq, painted in UN colours. If Saddam fired on them, he would be in breach.\" On 17 March 2003, U.S. President George W. Bush gave Saddam Hussein 48 hours to leave the country, along with his sons Uday and Qusay, or face war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0080-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Preceding special forces mission in al-Qa'im\nOn the night of 17 March 2003, the majority of B and D squadron British 22nd SAS Regiment, designated as Task Force 14, crossed the border from Jordan to conduct a ground assault on a suspected chemical munitions site at a water-treatment plant in the city of al-Qa'im. It had been reported that the site might have been a SCUD missile launch site or a depot; an SAS officer was quoted by author Mark Nicol as saying \"it was a location where missiles had been fired at Israel in the past, and a site of strategic importance for WMD material.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 77], "content_span": [78, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0080-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Preceding special forces mission in al-Qa'im\nThe 60 members of D squadron, along with their 'Pinkie' DPVs (the last time the vehicles were used before their retirement), was flown 120\u00a0km into Iraq in 6 MH-47Ds in 3 waves. Following their insertion, D squadron established a patrol laager at a remote location outside al-Qa'im and awaited the arrival of B squadron, who had driven overland from Jordan. Their approach to the plant was compromised, and a firefight developed which ended in one 'pinkie' having to be abandoned and destroyed. Repeated attempts to assault the plant were halted, leading the SAS to call in an air strike which silenced the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 77], "content_span": [78, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0081-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening salvo: the Dora Farms strike\nIn the early morning of 19 March 2003, U.S. forces abandoned the plan for initial, non-nuclear decapitation strikes against 55 top Iraqi officials, in light of reports that Saddam Hussein was visiting his sons, Uday and Qusay, at Dora Farms, within the al-Dora farming community on the outskirts of Baghdad. At approximately 05:30 UTC, two F-117 Nighthawk stealth fighters from the 8th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron dropped four enhanced, satellite-guided 2,000-pound GBU-27 'Bunker Busters' on the compound. Complementing the aerial bombardment were nearly 40 Tomahawk cruise missiles fired from at least four ships, including the Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS\u00a0Cowpens\u00a0(CG-63), credited with the first to strike, Arleigh Burke-class destroyer USS\u00a0Donald Cook, and two submarines in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0082-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening salvo: the Dora Farms strike\nOne bomb missed the compound entirely and the other three missed their target, landing on the other side of the wall of the palace compound. Saddam Hussein was not present, nor were any members of the Iraqi leadership. The attack killed one civilian and injured fourteen others, including four men, nine women and one child. Later investigation revealed that Saddam Hussein had not visited the farm since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0083-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nOn 19 March 2003 at 21:00, the first strike of the operation was carried out by members of the 160th SOAR: a flight of MH-60L DAPs (Direct Action Penetrators) and four 'Black Swarm' flights \u2013 each consisting of a pair of AH-6M Little Birds and a FLIR equipped MH-6M to identify targets for the AH-6s (each Black swarm flight was assigned a pair of A-10As) engaged Iraqi visual observation posts along the southern and western borders of Iraq. Within seven hours, more than 70 sites were destroyed, effectively depriving the Iraqi military of any early warning of the coming invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0083-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nAs the sites were eliminated, the first heliborne SOF teams launched from H-5 air base in Jordan, including vehicle-mounted patrols from the British and Australian components transported by the MH-47Ds of the 160th SOAR. Ground elements of Task Force Dagger, Task Force 20, Task force 14, and Task Force 64 breached the sand berms along the Iraqi border with Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait in the early morning hours and drove into Iraq. Unofficially, the British, Australians, and Task Force 20 had been in Iraq weeks prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0084-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nOn 20 March 2003 at approximately 02:30 UTC or about 90\u00a0minutes after the lapse of the 48-hour deadline, at 05:34 local time, explosions were heard in Baghdad. Special operations commandos from the CIA's Special Activities Division from the Northern Iraq Liaison Element infiltrated throughout Iraq and called in the early air strikes. At 03:16 UTC, or 10:16\u00a0pm EST, George W. Bush announced that he had ordered an attack against \"selected targets of military importance\" in Iraq. When this word was given, the troops on standby crossed the border into Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0085-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nBefore the invasion, many observers had expected a longer campaign of aerial bombing before any ground action, taking as examples the 1991 Persian Gulf War or the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan. In practice, U.S. plans envisioned simultaneous air and ground assaults to incapacitate the Iraqi forces quickly which resulted in the Shock and awe military campaign attempting to bypass Iraqi military units and cities in most cases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0085-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nThe assumption was that superior mobility and coordination of Coalition forces would allow them to attack the heart of the Iraqi command structure and destroy it in a short time, and that this would minimize civilian deaths and damage to infrastructure. It was expected that the elimination of the leadership would lead to the collapse of the Iraqi Forces and the government, and that much of the population would support the invaders once the government had been weakened. Occupation of cities and attacks on peripheral military units were viewed as undesirable distractions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0086-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nFollowing Turkey's decision to deny any official use of its territory, the Coalition was forced to modify the planned simultaneous attack from north and south. Special Operations forces from the CIA and U.S. Army managed to build and lead the Kurdish Peshmerga into an effective force and assault for the North. The primary bases for the invasion were in Kuwait and other Persian Gulf nations. One result of this was that one of the divisions intended for the invasion was forced to relocate and was unable to take part in the invasion until well into the war. Many observers felt that the Coalition devoted sufficient numbers of troops to the invasion, but too many were withdrawn after it ended, and that the failure to occupy cities put them at a major disadvantage in achieving security and order throughout the country when local support failed to meet expectations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0087-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nThe invasion was swift, leading to the collapse of the Iraqi government and the military of Iraq in about three weeks. The oil infrastructure of Iraq was rapidly seized and secured with limited damage in that time. Securing the oil infrastructure was considered of great importance. In the first Gulf War, while retreating from Kuwait, the Iraqi army had set many oil wells on fire and had dumped oil into the Gulf waters; this was to disguise troop movements and to distract Coalition forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0087-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nBefore the 2003 invasion, Iraqi forces had mined some 400 oil wells around Basra and the Al-Faw peninsula with explosives. Coalition troops launched an air and amphibious assault on the Al-Faw peninsula during the closing hours of 19 March to secure the oil fields there; the amphibious assault was supported by warships of the Royal Navy, Polish Navy, and Royal Australian Navy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0088-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nIn the meantime, Royal Air Force Tornados from 9 and 617 Squadrons attacked the radar defence systems protecting Baghdad, but lost a Tornado on 22 March along with the pilot and navigator (Flight Lieutenant Kevin Main and Flight Lieutenant Dave Williams), shot down by an American Patriot missile as they returned to their air base in Kuwait. On 1 April, an F-14 from USS Kitty Hawk crashed in southern Iraq reportedly due to engine failure, and a S-3B Viking plunged off the deck of the USS Constellation after a malfunction and an AV-8B Harrier jump jet went into the Gulf while it was trying to land on the USS Nassau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0089-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nBritish 3 Commando Brigade, with the United States Navy's Special Boat Team 22, Task Unit Two , as well as the United States Marine Corps' 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit and the Polish Special Forces unit GROM attached, attacked the port of Umm Qasr. There they met with heavy resistance by Iraqi troops. A total of 14 Coalition troops and 30\u201340 Iraqi troops were killed, and 450 Iraqis taken prisoner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0089-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nThe British Army's 16 Air Assault Brigade alongside elements of the Royal Airforce Regiment also secured the oil fields in southern Iraq in places like Rumaila while the Polish commandos captured offshore oil platforms near the port, preventing their destruction. Despite the rapid advance of the invasion forces, some 44 oil wells were destroyed and set ablaze by Iraqi explosives or by incidental fire. However, the wells were quickly capped and the fires put out, preventing the ecological damage and loss of oil production capacity that had occurred at the end of the Gulf War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0090-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nIn keeping with the rapid advance plan, the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division moved westward and then northward through the western desert toward Baghdad, while the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force moved along Highway 1 through the center of the country, and 1 (UK) Armoured Division moved northward through the eastern marshland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0091-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack\nDuring the first week of the war, Iraqi forces fired a Scud missile at the American Battlefield Update Assessment center in Camp Doha, Kuwait. The missile was intercepted and shot down by a Patriot missile seconds before hitting the complex. Subsequently, two A-10 Warthogs attacked the missile launcher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0092-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nInitially, the 1st Marine Division (United States) fought through the Rumaila oil fields, and moved north to Nasiriyah\u2014a moderate-sized, Shi'ite-dominated city with important strategic significance as a major road junction and its proximity to nearby Tallil Airfield. It was also situated near a number of strategically important bridges over the Euphrates River. The city was defended by a mix of regular Iraqi army units, Ba'ath loyalists, and Fedayeen from both Iraq and abroad. The United States Army 3rd Infantry Division defeated Iraqi forces entrenched in and around the airfield and bypassed the city to the west.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0093-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nOn 23 March, a convoy from the 3rd Infantry Division, including the female American soldiers Jessica Lynch, Shoshana Johnson, and Lori Piestewa, was ambushed after taking a wrong turn into the city. Eleven U.S. soldiers were killed, and seven, including Lynch and Johnson, were captured. Piestewa died of wounds shortly after capture, while the remaining five prisoners of war were later rescued. Piestewa, who was from Tuba City, Arizona, and an enrolled member of the Hopi Tribe, was believed to have been the first Native American woman killed in combat in a foreign war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0093-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nOn the same day, U.S. Marines from the Second Marine Division entered Nasiriyah in force, facing heavy resistance as they moved to secure two major bridges in the city. Several Marines were killed during a firefight with Fedayeen in the urban fighting. At the Saddam Canal, another 18 Marines were killed in heavy fighting with Iraqi soldiers. An Air Force A-10 was involved in a case of friendly fire that resulted in the death of six Marines when it accidentally attacked an American amphibious vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0093-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nTwo other vehicles were destroyed when a barrage of RPG and small arms fire killed most of the Marines inside. A Marine from Marine Air Control Group 28 was killed by enemy fire, and two Marine engineers drowned in the Saddam Canal. The bridges were secured and the Second Marine division set up a perimeter around the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0094-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nOn the evening of 24 March, the 2nd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, which was attached to Regimental Combat Team One (RCT-1), pushed through Nasiriyah and established a perimeter 15\u00a0kilometers (9.3\u00a0miles) north of the city. Iraqi reinforcements from Kut launched several counterattacks. The Marines managed to repel them using indirect fire and close air support. The last Iraqi attack was beaten off at dawn. The battalion estimated that 200\u2013300 Iraqi soldiers were killed, without a single U.S. casualty. Nasiriyah was declared secure, but attacks by Iraqi Fedayeen continued. These attacks were uncoordinated, and resulted in firefights that killed many Fedayeen. Because of Nasiriyah's strategic position as a road junction, significant gridlock occurred as U.S. forces moving north converged on the city's surrounding highways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0095-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nWith the Nasiriyah and Tallil Airfields secured, Coalition forces gained an important logistical center in southern Iraq and established FOB/EAF Jalibah, some 10 miles (16\u00a0km) outside of Nasiriyah. Additional troops and supplies were soon brought through this forward operating base. The 101st Airborne Division continued its attack north in support of the 3rd Infantry Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0096-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Nasiriyah\nBy 28 March, a severe sandstorm slowed the Coalition advance as the 3rd Infantry Division halted its northward drive halfway between Najaf and Karbala. Air operations by helicopters, poised to bring reinforcements from the 101st Airborne, were blocked for three days. There was particularly heavy fighting in and around the bridge near the town of Kufl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0097-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Najaf\nAnother fierce battle was at Najaf, where U.S. airborne and armored units with British air support fought an intense battle with Iraqi Regulars, Republican Guard units, and paramilitary forces. It started with U.S. AH-64 Apache helicopter gunships setting out on a mission to attack Republican Guard armored units; while flying low the Apaches came under heavy anti-aircraft, small arms, and RPG fire which heavily damaged many helicopters and shot one down, frustrating the attack. They attacked again successfully on 26 March, this time after a pre-mission artillery barrage and with support from F/A-18 Hornet jets, with no gunships lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0098-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Najaf\nThe 1st Brigade Combat Team's air defense battery moved in and after heavy fighting with entrenched Iraqi Fedayeen seized a strategic bridge in Najaf, known as \"Objective Jenkins\". They then came under fierce counterattacks by Iraqi forces and Fedayeen, who failed to dislodge U.S. forces from their positions. After 36 hours of combat at the bridge at Najaf, the Iraqis were defeated, and the key bridge was secured, isolating Najaf from the north.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0099-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Najaf\nThe 101st Airborne Division on 29 March, supported by a battalion from the 1st Armored Division, attacked Iraqi forces in the southern part of the city, near the Imam Ali Mosque and captured Najaf's airfield. Four Americans were killed by a suicide bomber. On 31 March the 101st made a reconnaissance-in-force into Najaf. On 1 April elements of the 70th Armored Regiment launched a \"Thunder Run\", an armored thrust through Najaf's city center, and, with air support, defeated the Iraqi forces after several days of heavy fighting and secured the city by 4 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0100-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Basra\nThe Iraqi port city of Umm Qasr was the first British obstacle. A joint Polish-British-American force ran into unexpectedly stiff resistance, and it took several days to clear the Iraqi forces out. Farther north, the British 7 Armoured Brigade (\"The Desert Rats\"), fought their way into Iraq's second-largest city, Basra, on 6 April, coming under constant attack by regulars and Fedayeen, while 3rd Battalion, The Parachute Regiment cleared the 'old quarter' of the city that was inaccessible to vehicles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0100-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Basra\nEntering Basra was achieved after two weeks of fierce fighting, including a tank battle when the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards destroyed 14 Iraqi tanks on 27 March. A few members of D Squadron, British SAS, were deployed to southern Iraq to support the coalition advance on Basra, the team conducted forward route reconnaissance and infiltrated the city and brought in strikes on the Ba'athist loyalist leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0101-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Basra\nElements of 1 (UK) Armoured Division began to advance north towards U.S. positions around Al Amarah on 9 April. Pre -existing electrical and water shortages continued throughout the conflict and looting began as Iraqi forces collapsed. While Coalition forces began working with local Iraqi Police to enforce order, a joint team composed of Royal Engineers and the Royal Logistic Corps of the British Army rapidly set up and repaired dockyard facilities to allow humanitarian aid to begin to arrive from ships arriving in the port city of Umm Qasr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0102-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Basra\nAfter a rapid initial advance, the first major pause occurred near Karbala. There, U.S. Army elements met resistance from Iraqi troops defending cities and key bridges along the Euphrates River. These forces threatened to interdict supply routes as American forces moved north. Eventually, troops from the 101st Airborne Division of the U.S. Army secured the cities of Najaf and Karbala to prevent any Iraqi counterattacks on the 3rd Infantry Division's lines of communication as the division pressed its advance toward Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0103-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Opening attack, Battle of Basra\nEleven British soldiers were killed, while 395\u2013515 Iraqi soldiers, irregulars, and Fedayeen were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0104-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Battle of Karbala\nThe Karbala Gap was a 20\u201325-mile wide strip of land with the Euphrates River to the east and Lake Razazah to the west. This strip of land was recognized by Iraqi commanders as a key approach to Baghdad, and was defended by some of the best units of the Iraqi Republican Guard. The Iraqi high command had originally positioned two Republican Guard divisions blocking the Karbala Gap. Here these forces suffered heavy Coalition air attacks. However, the Coalition had since the beginning of March been conducting a strategic deception operation to convince the Iraqis that the U.S. 4th Infantry Division would be mounting a major assault into northern Iraq from Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0105-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Battle of Karbala\nThis deception plan worked, and on 2 April Saddam's son Qusay Hussein declared that the American invasion from the south was a feint and ordered troops to be re-deployed from the Karbala front to the north of Baghdad. Lt . Gen. Raad al-Hamdani, commander of the Karbala region, protested this and argued that unless reinforcements were rushed to the Karbala gap immediately to prevent a breach, U.S. forces would reach Baghdad within 48 hours, but his suggestions fell on deaf ears. American troops rushed through the gap and reached the Euphrates River at the town of Musayyib. At Musayyib, U.S. troops crossed the Euphrates in boats and seized the vital al-Kaed bridge across the Euphrates after Iraqi demolitions teams had failed to destroy it in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0106-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Battle of Karbala\nThe 10th Armored Brigade from the Medina Division and the 22nd Armored Brigade from the Nebuchadnezzar Division, supported by artillery, launched night attacks against the U.S. bridgehead at Musayyib. The attack was repulsed using tank fire and massed artillery rockets, destroying or disabling every Iraqi tank in the assault. The next morning, Coalition aircraft and helicopters fired on the Republican Guard units, destroying many more vehicles as well as communications infrastructure. The Republican Guard units broke under the massive firepower and the U.S. forces poured through the gap and onward to Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0107-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Initial infiltration\nB Squadron, Delta Force (known as \"Wolverines\"), accompanied by several Air Force Special Tactics teams, a Delta intelligence and Target Acquisition, several military working dog teams and two Iraqi-American interpreters, was the first US SOF unit to enter western Iraq, crossing the border from Ar'ar in 15 customized Pinzgauer 6x6 Special Operations Vehicles and several armed Toyota Hilux pick up trucks. As part of Task Force 20, their formal role was to conduct selected high-priority SSE on suspected chemical weapon facilities before heading for the Haditha Dam complex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0107-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Initial infiltration\nAlong the way, Delta supported the seizure of H-3 Air Base and also conducted numerous deception operations to confuse the Iraqis as to the disposition of Coalition forces in the west. From the south, a week before the invasion began, two members of Special Boat Team 22's Delta Detachment and the Commanding Officer of the 539th Assualt Squadron Royal Marine Commandos, were infiltrated into southern Iraq by Kuwait intelligence operatives in order to gather critical intelligence for the upcoming assault on the port of Um Qasr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0108-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nOn 18 March 2003, B and D Squadrons of the British 22nd SAS Regiment had now infiltrated Iraq in full strength (D Squadron by air and B Squadron by ground) along with 1 Squadron Australian SASR and headed for H-2 and H-3 Air Base. They set up observation posts and called in airstrikes that defeated the Iraqi defenders. The combined British and Australian Squadrons took H-2 virtually unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0108-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nH-3 was secured on 25 March with the assistance of members of Delta Force and by Green Beret ODAs from Bravo company, 1st Battalion 5th SFG; a company of Rangers and Royal Marines from 45 Commando flew from Jordan to the bases and the base was handed over to them. The SAS teams moved to the next objective \u2013 the intersection of the two main highways linking Baghdad with Syria and Jordan, where both squadrons were involved in conducting interdictions of fleeing Iraqi leadership targets heading for Syria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0109-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nPreviously, 16 (Air) Troop of D squadron conducted mounted reconnaissance of an Iraqi army facility near the Syrian border, followed by a harassing attack on the site, two other troops had conducted mobile ambushes on Iraqi units in the area, although they themselves were being hunted by a large Fedayeen Saddam unit mounted in 'technicals.'", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0110-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nIn northern Iraq in early March, a small reconnaissance team from M Squadron of the British Special Boat Service mounted on Honda ATVs inserted into Iraq from Jordan. Its first mission was to conduct reconnaissance of an Iraqi air base at al-Sahara. The team was compromised by an anti-special forces Fedayeen unit and barely escaped thanks to a U.S. F-15E that flew air cover for the team and an RAF Chinook that extracted the team from out under the Fedayeen's 'noses'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0110-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nA second larger SBS operation was launched by M Squadron in full strength in a mix of land rovers and ATVs into northern Iraq from H-2 air base, the objective was to locate, make contact and take the surrender of the Iraqi 5th Army Corps somewhere past Tikrit and to survey and mark viable temporary landing zones for follow-on forces. However the Squadron was compromised by a goat herder; the SBS drove for several days whilst unknown to them anti-special forces Fedayeen units followed them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0110-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nAt an overnight position near Mosul, the Fedayeen ambushed the Squadron with DShK heavy machine guns and RPGs, the SBS returned fire and began taking fire from a T-72, the Squadron scattered and escaped the well-constructed trap. A number of Land Rovers became bogged down in a nearby wadi, so they mined the vehicles and abandoned them \u2013 though several did not detonate and were captured and exhibited on Iraqi television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0110-0003", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nThe SBS was now in three distinct groups: one with several operational Land Rovers was being pursued by the Iraqi hunter force, a second mainly equipped with ATVs was hunkered down and trying to arrange extraction, the third with just 2 operators on an ATV raced for the Syrian border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0110-0004", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Row and Falconer\nThe first group tried to call in coalition strike aircraft but the aircraft couldn't identify friendly forces because the SBS were not equipped with infra-red strobes \u2013 although their vehicles did have Blue Force Tracker units, they eventually made it to an emergency rendezvous point and were extracted by an RAF Chinook. The second group was also extracted by an RAF Chinook and the third group made it to Syria and was held there until their release was negotiated, there were no SBS casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 79], "content_span": [80, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0111-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nIn the early hours of 21 March 2003, as part of Operation Viking Hammer, 64 Tomahawk cruise missiles struck the Ansar al-Islam camp and the surrounding sites, the terrorist group \u2013 numbering around 700 \u2013 had inhabited a valley near Halabja Iraqi Kurdistan, along with a small Kurdish splinter faction; they had prepared a number of defensive positions including anti-aircraft machine guns and maintained a facility, that US intelligence suspected, at which chemical and biological agents may have been developed and stored for future terrorist attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0111-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nViking Hammer was set to begin on 21 March, however, the ground component of the operation was set back several days owing to the issues around infiltrating most of the 3rd Battalion 10th SFG into Iraq. The Islamic Group of Kurdistan surrendered after having suffered 100 men killed in the 21 March strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0112-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nOn 28 March 2003, the ground element of Operation Viking Hammer was finally launched with a six-pronged advance, each prong was composed of several ODAs from 3rd Battalion, 10th SFG and upwards of 1,000 Kurdish Peshmerga fighters. The main advance set off towards Sargat \u2013 the location of the suspected chemical and biological weapons site; the force was soon pinned down by DShK heavy machine-gun fire from the surrounding hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0112-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nA pair of US Navy F/A-18s responded to an urgent CAS request from the force and dropped two 500lb JDAMs on the Ansar al-Islam machine gun nests and strafed the positions with 20mm cannon before departing due to being low on fuel. The advance began again only to be halted once more by fire from prepared DShK and PKM machine gun nests, Green Berets from ODA 081 deployed a Mk 19 grenade launcher from the back of a Toyota Tacoma and suppressed the gun positions allowing the Peshmerga to assault and wipe out the terrorists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0112-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nAfter capturing the town of Gulp, the force continued onto the village of Sargat; the village was heavily defended by fortified fighting positions mounting DShKs and mortars along with several BM-21 Grad. Unable to call in airstrikes due to the close proximity of the Peshmerga, a Green Beret sergeant used a dismounted M2 HMG to suppress the entrenched terrorists, his actions allowed the Peshmerga to bring forward their own 82mm Mortars and Grads which forced the Ansar al-Islam fighters to retreat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0112-0003", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nTask Force Viking advanced to secure the Daramar Gorge \u2013 which was surrounded by caves in the rock walls \u2013 the Peshmerga were again engaged by small arms fire and RPGs which it and the ODAs returned fire with heavy weapons, however, it became obvious that they couldn't advance any further without air support. To dislodge the terrorists, the Combat Controllers attached to the ODAs vectored in US Navy F/A-18s which dropped six 500\u00a0lb JDAMs that shut down any further resistance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0112-0004", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nDuring the night, four AC-130 gunships maintained the pressure on the retreating Ansar al-Islam terrorists as they pulled back toward the Iranian border; the next day, Task Force Viking seized the high ground and pushed down through the valley \u2013 surrounding and killing small pockets of remnants from Ansar al-Islam. With their objectives completed, the 3rd Battalion and their Peshmerga returned to the green line to assist the push on Kirkuk and Mosul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0112-0005", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations, Operation Viking Hammer\nA specialist SSE team was brought in to document the find at Sargat, the team recovered traces of several chemicals including Ricin along with stocks of NBC protective suits, atropine injectors and Arabic manuals on chemical weapons and IED construction. Estimates of Ansar al-Islam dead number over 300, many of them foreign fighters, whilst only 22 Peshmerga fighters were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 76], "content_span": [77, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0113-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nAlso in the North, the 10th Special Forces Group (10th SFG) and CIA paramilitary officers from their Special Activities Division had the mission of aiding the Kurdish parties, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, de facto rulers of Iraqi Kurdistan since 1991, and employing them against the 13 Iraqi Divisions located near Kirkuk and Mosul. Turkey had officially prohibited any Coalition troops from using their bases or airspace, so lead elements of the 10th SFG had to make a detour infiltration; their flight was supposed to take four hours but instead took ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0113-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 22 March 2003, the majority of 2nd and 3rd Battalions 10th SFG, from Task Force Viking flew from their forward staging area in Constanta, Romania to a location near Irbil aboard six MC-130H Combat Talons, several were engaged by Iraqi air defences on the flight into northern Iraq (one was sufficiently damaged enough that it was forced to make an emergency landing at Incirlik Air Base). The initial lift had deployed 19 Green Beret ODAs and four ODBs into Northern Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0113-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nHours after the first of such flights, Turkey did allow the use of its air space and the rest of the 10th SFG infiltrated in. The preliminary mission was to destroy the base of the Kurdish terrorist group Ansar al-Islam, believed to be linked to al-Qaeda. Concurrent and follow-on missions involved attacking and fixing Iraqi forces in the north, thus preventing their deployment to the southern front and the main effort of the invasion. Eventually Task Force Viking would number 51 ODAs and ODBs alongside some 60,000 Kurdish Peshmerga militia of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0114-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 26 March 2003, the 173rd Airborne Brigade augmented the invasion's northern front by parachuting into northern Iraq onto Bashur Airfield, controlled at the time by elements of 10th SFG and Kurdish peshmerga. The fall of Kirkuk on 10 April 2003 to the 10th SFG, CIA Paramilitary Teams and Kurdish peshmerga precipitated the 173rd's planned assault, preventing the unit's involvement in combat against Iraqi forces during the invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0115-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nFollowing the Battle of Haditha Dam, Delta Force handed the dam over to the Rangers and headed north to conduct ambushes along the highway above Tikrit, tying up Iraqi forces in the region and attempting to capture fleeing high-value targets trying to escape to Syria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0116-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 2 April, Delta was engaged by half a dozen armed technicals from the same anti-special forces Fedayeen that had previously fought the SBS, two Delta operators were wounded (one serious), the squadron requested an urgent aeromedical evacuation and immediate close-air support as a company of truck-borne Iraqi reinforcements arrived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0116-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nTwo MH-60K Blackhawks carrying a para jumper medical team and two MH-60L DAPs of the 160th SOAR responded and engaged the Iraqis, which allowed the Delta operators to move their casualties to an emergency HLZ and they were medevaced to H-1 escorted by a pair of A-10As, however Master Sergeant George Fernandez died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0116-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nThe DAPs stayed on station and continued to engage the Iraqis, destroying a truck carrying a mortar and several infantry squads, whilst Delta snipers killed Iraqi infantryman firing on the DAPs, another pair of A-10As arrived and dropped airburst 500\u00a0lb bombs within 20m of Delta positions and killed a large number of Iraqi infantry gathering in a wadi. The DAPs spotted several Iraqi units and engaged them until they were dangerously low on fuel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0117-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nTask Force Viking launched an operation to seize the town of Ain Sifni, the town was strategically important because it straddles the main highway into Mosul, once the town fell, it would be clear for the coalition to advance on Mosul. ODAs from the 3rd and 10th SFG called in airstrikes on the Iraqi garrisons in and around the town, causing many of the Iraqi conscripts to flee, by 5 April 2003, there appeared to be only two Iraqi platoons left in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0117-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 6 April, ODAs 051, 055, and 056 assaulted the town \u2013 ODAs 055 and 056 provided fire support along with Peshmerga heavy weapons teams, whilst ODA 51 made the actual assault on the town. As ODA 51 cautiously advanced on the village, it came under intense fire \u2013 the two platoons of Iraqis turned out to be closer to battalion strength and equipped with heavy weapons like 82mm mortars, anti-aircraft guns, and an artillery piece. After 4 hours of F/A-18 airstrikes and constant heavy weapons fire from ODA 055 and 056, the assault force entered Ain Sifni; soon afterward, Iraqi infantry counterattacked, supported by several mortars, attempting to retake the town, but it was beaten back by ODA 51 and the Kurds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0118-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 6 April 2003, ODA 391 and ODA 392 from the 3rd SFG and ODA 044 from 10th SFG with about 150 Kurdish fighters were the main force involved in the Battle of Debecka Pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0119-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 9 April, nine ODAs from FOB 103 encircled Kirkuk after fierce fighting to capture the ridges overlooking the approaches to the city, the earlier capture of the nearby city of Tuz had largely broken the will of the Iraqi Army and only the Fedayeen remained in Kirkuk, the first ODA units entered the city the next day, a week later the 173rd Airborne took over responsibility for the city, after some minor skirmishes the Fedayeen fled. Staging out of MSS Grizzly, Delta mounted operations to interdict Ba'ath Party HVTs on Highway 1 (Highway 2 and 4 in western Iraq had been secured by British SAS and Australian SAS teams), on 9 April, the combined team seized an airfield near Tikrit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0120-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nThe successful occupation of Kirkuk came after approximately two weeks of fighting that included the Battle of the Green Line (the unofficial border of the Kurdish autonomous zone) and the subsequent Battle of Kani Domlan Ridge (the ridgeline running northwest to southeast of Kirkuk), the latter fought exclusively by 3rd Battalion, 10th SFG and Kurdish peshmerga against the Iraqi 1st Corps. The 173rd Brigade would eventually take responsibility for Kirkuk days later, becoming involved in the counterinsurgency fight and remain there until redeploying a year later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0121-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq\nOn 11 April an advanced element from FOB 102 numbering no more than 30 Green Berets advanced into Mosul, the advanced had followed several days of heavy airstrikes on three Iraqi divisions defending Mosul; on 13 April, 3rd Battalion 3rd SFG and a battalion from the 10th Mountain Division were ordered to Mosul to relieve the 10th SFG and their Peshmerga allies. Further reinforcing operations in Northern Iraq, the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (Special Operations Capable), serving as Landing Force Sixth Fleet, deployed in April to Erbil and subsequently Mosul via Marine KC-130 flights. The 26 MEU (SOC) maintained security of the Mosul airfield and surrounding area until relief by the 101st Airborne Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0122-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Special operations in southern Iraq\nOn 21 March, ODA 554 of Bravo Company, 2nd Battalion 5th SFG crossed the border with the United States Marines to support the seizure of the Rumaylah oil fields which was later secured by UK forces; half the team later drove to the outskirts of Basra and successfully picked up four Iraqi oil industry technicians who had been recruited by the CIA to assist in safeguarding the oil fields from destruction, they later rejoined the other half of the team and fought roving bands of Fedayeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 105], "content_span": [106, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0122-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Special operations in southern Iraq\nThe ODAs next mission was to work with a CIA-recruited Sheikh and assist British forces in identifying targets around Basra. The ODA soon established an informant network, they eventually assisted the British in rounding up some 170 Fedayeen in the city; they were eventually replaced by members of G Squadron 22nd SAS Regiment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 105], "content_span": [106, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0123-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Battle of Haditha Dam\nThe Battle of Haditha Dam occurred on 24 March 2003, Rangers from 3rd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, conducted a combat parachute drop onto H-1 Air Base, securing the site as a staging area for operations in the west. Delta Force recce operators drove through Iraqi lines around the Haditha Dam on customised ATVs, marking targets for Coalition airstrikes resulting in the eventual destruction of a large number of Iraqi armoured vehicles and anti aircraft systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 91], "content_span": [92, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0123-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Battle of Haditha Dam\nDelta's reconnaissance of the dam indicated that a larger force would be needed to seize it, so a request was made and approved for a second Delta squadron from Fort Bragg to be dispatched with a further Ranger battalion, along with M1A1 Abrams tanks from C Company, 2nd Battalion 70th Armor. C-17 flew the company from Tallil to H-1 and then to MSS (Mission Support Site) Grizzly \u2013 a desert strip established by Delta Force located between Haditha and Tikrit; C Squadron, Delta Force was flown directly to MSS Grizzly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 91], "content_span": [92, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0124-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Battle of Haditha Dam\nOn 1 April, C squadron, Delta Force and 3/75th Ranger Regiment conducted a night-time ground assault in their Pinzgauers and GMVs against the Haditha Dam complex. Three platoons of Rangers seized the dams' administrative buildings with little initial opposition, while a pair of AH-6M Six Guns orbited overhead, soon after daybreak, a Ranger sniper shot and killed 3 Iraqis carrying RPGs on the western side of the dam and Rangers on the eastern side engaged a truck carrying infantry, which led to an hour-long contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 91], "content_span": [92, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0124-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Battle of Haditha Dam\nSouth of the dam, another Ranger platoon was securing the dam's power station and electricity transformer against sabotage, another platoon was occupied establishing blocking positions on the main road into the dam complex. The blocking positions came under the sporadic mortar fire, resulting in the AH-6Ms flying multiple gun runs to silence the mortar positions, another mortar team, firing from a small island was engaged and silenced by a Ranger Javelin team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 91], "content_span": [92, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0124-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Battle of Haditha Dam\nFor five days, Iraqi forces continued to harass the Rangers at the dam, principally with episodic artillery and mortar fire along with several infantry counterattacks against the blocking positions; the HIMARS rocket system saw its first combat deployment at the dam \u2013 firing counter-battery missions, 3 Rangers were killed on 3 April by a VBIED at the blocking positions, the car was driven by a pregnant Iraqi woman acting distressed and asking for water. Rangers captured an Iraqi forward observer dressed as a civilian after sinking his kayak with .50cal fire, the observer had maps of the Rangers positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 91], "content_span": [92, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0125-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Objective Beaver\nIntelligence indicated that chemical and biological weapons stocks may have been located at a complex known as al Qadisiyah Research Centre along the shore of the al Qadisiyah reservoir among government and residential buildings, on the evening of 26 March, a DEVGRU assault element supported by B Company, 2nd Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment assaulted the complex (codenamed Objective Beaver).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0125-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Objective Beaver\nWhilst the first of four MH-60Ks inserted the Rangers into their blocking positions, it was engaged by small arms fire from a nearby building, an AH-6M spotted the muzzle flashes and fired a 2.75inch rocket into the location silencing the small arms fire, the second MH-60K was also struck by small arms fire but its door gunner suppressed it. A-10As engaged nearby electricity transformers successfully blacking out the area, but it resulted in a series of explosions and a resulting fire at the stations that dramatically lit the sky \u2013 pinpointing the orbiting helicopters for enemy gunmen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0125-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Objective Beaver\nSmall arms fire increased as the final two MH-60Ks inserted their blocking teams, one Ranger was wounded, the two pairs of AH-6Ms and MH-60L DAPs supporting the mission continued to suppress targets as the four MH-47Es carrying the DEVGRU main assault force inserted under heavy enemy small arms fire whilst DEVGRU sniper teams aboard a pair of MH-6Ms engaged numerous gunmen and vehicles, one Nightstalker crew was wounded as the MH-47Es lifted off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0125-0003", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Objective Beaver\nThe SEALs conducted a hasty SSE while the Ranger blocking positions received and returned fire, the AH-6Ms and the aerial snipers continued to engage enemy gunmen whilst the DAPs pushed further out to ensure no reinforcements approached \u2013 engaging and destroying numerous Fedayeen armed technicals. The SSE took longer than expected owing to the size and maze-like structure of the building, the mission completed after 45 minutes, later tests of the material recovered by DEVGRU showed no evidence of chemical or biological weapons at the Objective Beaver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0126-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nBravo and Charlie companies of 1st Battalion 5th SFG crossed the Kuwait border at H-Hour with ODA 531 using breaching demolition charges to clear a path through the sand berms. Charlie company's seven ODAs in 35 vehicles took the southeastern operation box of the western desert heading towards the towns of Nukyab, Habbariya and Mudyasis, ODA's 534 and 532 split off to head for the area surrounding Nukyab searching for mobile Scud-B TEL launch sites. ODA 532 also inserted a mobile weather station that provided planners with vital real time weather updates of the battle space.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0126-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nBravo company set out for the central town of Ar Rutba and H-3 Air Base with six ODAs and a support ODB (Operational Detachment Bravo). ODAs 523 and 524 searched a suspected Scud-B storage facility while ODAs 521 and 525 were tasked with clearing several abandoned airfields, with no sign of Scud launchers, ODA 525 deployed a Special Reconnaissance team to conduct pattern of life surveillance on the town of Ar Rutba. A two-man team called in a pair of nearby F-16C Fighting Falcons to destroy an Iraqi Army radio direction-finding facility they had identified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0126-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nA second reconnaissance team from ODA 525 deployed to cover the two highways leading to Ar Rutbah, however as the team was compromised by roving Bedouins who informed the Iraqi Army garrison at Ar Rutbah of the teams presence and location, armed Iraqi technicals crewed by the Fedayeen drove out to search for them, so the Green Berets mounted their GMVs, left their hide and found a position to ambush the Fedayeen, under the weight of fire the Fedayeen retreated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0126-0003", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nODA 525 attempted to link up with the two-man reconnaissance team and extract it to safety but large numbers of Iraqi vehicles began driving out of the town to them, the ODAs called in immediate air support. While waiting, the reconnaissance team and Target Acquisition Marines fired on the Fedayeen leaders with their suppressed MK12 sniper rifle and contacted ODA 521 (who were clearing suspects east of the town) and they reinforced ODA 525.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0126-0004", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nWithin minutes, F-16Cs arrived and engaged the Fedayeen vehicles, another Fedayeen convoy attempted to outflank ODA 525 but ran into the guns of ODA 524, after 4 hours of constant and punishing airstrikes on the encircling Fedayeen, eight GMVs of ODA 521 and 525 managed to extract the exposed reconnaissance team under the cover of a B-1B strategic bomber, the vehicles withdrew to ODB 520s staging area south of Ar Rutbah. Over 100 Fedayeen fighters were killed and four armed technicals were destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0126-0005", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nTo the west ODA 523 reinforced ODA 524, but ran into a pair of armed technicals on the highway, both were destroyed by the GMVs, the Green Berets ceased fire when a civilian station wagon full of Iraqi children drove into the middle of the firefight. ODA 522 also identified two Fedayeen armed technicals proceeding down the highway toward ODA 523, they set an ambush for them, destroying the vehicles and killing 15 Fedayeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0127-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nThe strategic intent of the US Army Special Forces ODAs had been to shut down the main supply routes and deny access around Ar Rutbah and the strategically important H-3 air base, which was defended by a battalion of Iraqi troops and significant numbers of mobile and static anti aircraft guns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0127-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nOn 24 March 2003, the surrounding ODAs supported by Task Force 7 (British Special Air Service) and Task Force 64 (Australian Special Air Service Regiment) called in constant 24 hours of precision airstrikes on H-3 using SOFLAM target designators, the aerial bombardment forced the Iraqi military vehicles to leave the base and headed towards Baghdad. ODA 521 over watching the highway they were travelling on ambushed the convoy destroying a truck mounted ZU-23, the convoy was thrown into disarray, a sandstorm prevented the ODA calling in airstrikes and the convoy scattered into the desert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0127-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nBravo company 5th SFG and the coalition SOF secured the airfield, finding a Roland surface-to-air missile system, around 80 assorted anti aircraft cannon guns including ZSU-23-4 Shilka, SA-7 grail handheld SAMs and an enormous amount of ammunition. H-3 was established as an Advanced Operating Base for Bravo company, with supplies delivered by C-130s and MH-47Es; ODA 581 vehicle checkpoint managed to capture the Iraqi general in command of H-3 as he was trying to escape in civilian attire, he was secured and flown by an unmarked CIA SAD Air Branch Little Bird on 28 March for further interrogation. Additionally, ODA 523 discovered what may have been chemical weapons samples in a laboratory on the grounds of H-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0128-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nBravo company turned its attention to Ar Rutbah, signals intercepts by SOT-A (Support Operations Team \u2013 Alpha) and an informer network among the Bedouins as well as inhabitants of the town indicated that around 800 Fedayeen remained in the town; Fedayeen patrols from the town were engaged by surrounding Green Berets and captured. ODAs guided precision airstrikes on Fedayeen anti aircraft guns on the outskirts of the town and on top of the airstrikes, they also struck large groups of Fedayeen militia with Javelin missiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0128-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nOn 9 April, nine ODAs secured the main roads into the town and commenced a day of near continuous final airstrikes from fix-wing aircraft and Apache helicopters. Civilians from the town approached the Green Berets asking them to stop the bombing, the Green Berets struck a deal with the civilians and they entered the town the next day. A B-52 and 2 F-16Cs flew show of force flights over the town as the Green Berets entered, the Fedayeen blended in with the population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0128-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Operations in western Iraq\nWithin days, the Green Berets helped the town to elect a mayor and set up markets, get sixty percent of the electricity grid working and repair water supplies. ODA 521 and 525 continued to operate in the region, stopping several trucks carrying foreign fighters, they disarmed them, took their details and warned them not to come back before sending them to Syria; in late May, the teams were replaced by the 3rd Armoured Cavalry Regiment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 96], "content_span": [97, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0129-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Other special operations\nThe 2nd Battalion of the U.S. 5th Special Forces Group, United States Army Special Forces (Green Berets) conducted reconnaissance in the cities of Basra, Karbala and various other locations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 94], "content_span": [95, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0130-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Other special operations\nAfter Sargat was taken, Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 10th SFG and CIA paramilitary officers along with their Kurdish allies pushed south towards Tikrit and the surrounding towns of Northern Iraq. Previously, during the Battle of the Green Line, Bravo Company, 3/10 with their Kurdish allies pushed back, destroyed, or routed the 13th Iraqi Infantry Division. The same company took Tikrit. Iraq was the largest deployment of the U.S. Special Forces since Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 94], "content_span": [95, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0131-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Other special operations\nODA 563 worked in support of the US Marines around Al Diwaniyah with local Sheikhs and their militias supported by AV-8Bs and F/A-18s; managing to capture the city of Qwam al Hamza. The following day ODA 563, their local Sheikh and his militia and a small Force Recon team captured the bridge leading to Diwaniyah and the militia attacked Iraqi positions over the bridge, forcing the Iraqi army and Fedayeen to flee toward Baghdad whilst being harassed by Marine Corps aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 94], "content_span": [95, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0132-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Jessica Lynch rescue\nPrivate First Class Jessica Lynch of the 507th Maintenance Company was seriously injured and captured after her convoy was ambushed by Iraqi forces during the Battle of Nasiriyah. Initial intelligence that led to her rescue was provided by an informant who approached ODA 553 when it was working in Nasiriyah, the intelligence was passed on and Task Force 20 planned a rescue mission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0132-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Jessica Lynch rescue\nLaunching from the recently captured airfield at Tallil, the rescue force consisted of 290 Rangers from 1st and 2nd battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment, around 60 SEALs from DEVGRU along with Pararescue Jumpers and Combat Controllers from the 24th Special Tactics Squadron conventional Marines from Task Force Tarawa then currently fighting through the city and aviators from the Army, Marines and Air Force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0132-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Jessica Lynch rescue\nThe plan called for Task Force Tarawa to conduct a deception mission by seizing the bridges across the Euphrates to draw attention away from the hospital Lynch was held at, an airstrike by US Marine AV-8 Harriers would be conducted against one of the bridges to confuse the opposition further and US Marine AH-1W Cobras were tasked to fly over the area to conceal the sound of incoming SOF helicopters. Air cover as provided by an AC-130 Spectre and a Marine EA-6 Prowler to jam any enemy SAM systems that might be present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0132-0003", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Jessica Lynch rescue\nWith the deception mission underway, the SEAL and select Ranger elements would be inserted by MH-60K Blackhawks and four MH-6 Little Birds, supported by four AH-6 attack helicopters and two MH-60L DAPs, the other Rangers would be flown in by Marine CH-46s and CH-53 transport helicopters to establish a cordon around the hospital grounds. The main assault force of SEALs would arrive by a ground convoy of AGMS Pandur forearmed vehicles and GMV trucks whilst the hostage rescue element landed directly on the objective in MH-6 Little Birds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0133-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Jessica Lynch rescue\nAt 0100 on 1 April 2003, the Marines commenced their deception mission, CIA elements cut the city's power as the helicopters approached their objective, the AH-6s led the way, behind them the MH-6s dropped off Task Force 20 sniper teams at strategic locations around and on the hospital. The DAPs and the AH-6s covered the MH-60Ks as they dropped off assault teams on the hospital roof and another by the front door, the ground assault convoy arrived and the assaulters raced inside and onto the second floor where Lynch was located.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0133-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Special operations in northern Iraq, Jessica Lynch rescue\n13 minutes later, a MH-60K touched down near the hospital entrance with a team of PJs and SOAR medics on board and transported Lynch to Tallil where it rendezvoused with a standby medical flight and then onto Kuwait and finally the United States. The hospital was devoid of any Fedayeen, although evidence suggested they were using it as a base; the Ranger blocking teams experienced some sporadic direct fire, the SEALs and the Rangers eventually recovered the remains of eight members of Lynch's unit that had been killed or died of their wounds. Task Force 20 carried out the first successful US POW rescue mission since World War II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0134-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nThree weeks into the invasion, the Army's 3rd Infantry Division, with the 1st Marine Division also present, moved into Baghdad. Units of the Iraqi Special Republican Guard led the defence of the city. The rest of the defenders were a mixture of Republican Guard units, regular army units, Fedayeen Saddam, and non-Iraqi Arab volunteers. Initial plans were for Coalition units to surround the city and gradually move in, forcing Iraqi armor and ground units to cluster into a central pocket in the city, and then attack with air and artillery forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0135-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nThis plan soon became unnecessary, as an initial engagement of armored units south of the city saw most of the Republican Guard's assets destroyed and routes in the southern outskirts of the city occupied. On 5 April, Task Force 1\u201364 Armor of the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division executed a raid, later called the \"Thunder Run\", to test remaining Iraqi defenses, with 29 tanks and 14 Bradley armored fighting vehicles advancing to the Baghdad airport. They met significant resistance, but were successful in reaching the airport, and eventually secured it after heavy fighting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0136-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nThe next day, another brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division attacked downtown Baghdad and occupied one of the palaces of Saddam Hussein in fierce fighting. U.S. Marines also faced heavy shelling from Iraqi artillery as they attempted to cross a river bridge, but the river crossing was successful. The Iraqis managed to inflict some casualties on the U.S. forces near the airport from defensive positions but suffered severe casualties from air bombardment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0136-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nWithin hours of the palace seizure and with television coverage of this spreading through Iraq, U.S. forces ordered Iraqi forces within Baghdad to surrender, or the city would face a full-scale assault. Iraqi government officials had either disappeared or had conceded defeat, and on 9 April 2003, Baghdad was formally occupied by Coalition forces. Much of Baghdad remained unsecured however, and fighting continued within the city and its outskirts well into the period of occupation. Saddam had vanished, and his whereabouts were unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0137-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nOn 10 April, a rumor emerged that Saddam Hussein and his top aides were in a mosque complex in the Al Az'Amiyah District of Baghdad. Three companies of Marines were sent to capture him and came under heavy fire from rocket-propelled grenades, mortars, and assault rifles. One Marine was killed and 20 were wounded, but neither Saddam or any of his top aides were found. U.S. forces supported by mortars, artillery, and aircraft continued to attack Iraqi forces still loyal to Saddam Hussein and non-Iraqi Arab volunteers. U.S. aircraft flying in support were met with Iraqi anti-aircraft fire. On 12 April, by late afternoon, all fighting had ceased. A total of 34 American soldiers and 2,320 Iraqi fighters were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0138-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nMany Iraqis celebrated the downfall of Saddam by vandalizing the many portraits and statues of him together with other pieces of his cult of personality. One widely publicized event was the dramatic toppling of a large statue of Saddam in Baghdad's Firdos Square. This attracted considerable media coverage at the time. As the British Daily Mirror reported,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0139-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nFor an oppressed people this final act in the fading daylight, the wrenching down of this ghastly symbol of the regime, is their Berlin Wall moment. Big Moustache has had his day.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0140-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nAs Staff Sergeant Brian Plesich reported in On Point: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0141-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nThe Marine Corps colonel in the area saw the Saddam statue as a target of opportunity and decided that the statue must come down. Since we were right there, we chimed in with some loudspeaker support to let the Iraqis know what it was we were attempting to do... Somehow along the way, somebody had gotten the idea to put a bunch of Iraqi kids onto the wrecker that was to pull the statue down. While the wrecker was pulling the statue down, there were Iraqi children crawling all over it. Finally they brought the statue down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0142-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nThe fall of Baghdad saw the outbreak of regional, sectarian violence throughout the country, as Iraqi tribes and cities began to fight each other over old grudges. The Iraqi cities of Al-Kut and Nasiriyah launched attacks on each other immediately following the fall of Baghdad to establish dominance in the new country, and the U.S.-led Coalition quickly found themselves embroiled in a potential civil war. U.S.-led Coalition forces ordered the cities to cease hostilities immediately, explaining that Baghdad would remain the capital of the new Iraqi government. Nasiriyah responded favorably and quickly backed down; however, Al-Kut placed snipers on the main roadways into town, with orders that invading forces were not to enter the city. After several minor skirmishes, the snipers were removed, but tensions and violence between regional, city, tribal, and familial groups continued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0143-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nU.S. General Tommy Franks assumed control of Iraq as the supreme commander of the coalition occupation forces. Shortly after the sudden collapse of the defense of Baghdad, rumors were circulating in Iraq and elsewhere that there had been a deal struck (a \"safqua\") wherein the U.S.-led Coalition had bribed key members of the Iraqi military elite and/or the Ba'ath party itself to stand down. In May 2003, General Franks retired, and confirmed in an interview with Defense Week that the U.S.-led Coalition had paid Iraqi military leaders to defect. The extent of the defections and their effect on the war are unclear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0144-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Fall of Baghdad (April 2003)\nU.S.-led Coalition troops promptly began searching for the key members of Saddam Hussein's government. These individuals were identified by a variety of means, most famously through sets of most-wanted Iraqi playing cards. Later during the military occupation period after the invasion, on 22 July 2003 during a raid by the U.S. 101st Airborne Division and men from Task Force 20, Saddam Hussein's sons Uday and Qusay, and one of his grandsons were killed in a massive fire-fight. Saddam Hussein himself was captured on 13 December 2003 by the U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division and members of Task Force 121 during Operation Red Dawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0145-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Other areas\nU.S. special forces had also been involved in the extreme south of Iraq, attempting to occupy key roads to Syria and air bases. In one case two armored platoons were used to convince Iraqi leadership that an entire armored battalion was entrenched in the west of Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0146-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Other areas\nOn 15 April, U.S. forces took control of Tikrit, the last major outpost in central Iraq, with an attack led by the Marines' Task Force Tripoli. About a week later the Marines were relieved in place by the Army's 4th Infantry Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0147-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Other areas\nCoalition aircraft flew over 41,000 sorties, of which over 9,000 were tanker sorties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0148-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Bush declares \"End of major combat operations\" (May 2003)\nOn 1 May 2003, Bush landed on the aircraft carrier USS\u00a0Abraham Lincoln, in a Lockheed S-3 Viking, where he gave a speech announcing the end of major combat operations in the Iraq war. Bush's landing was criticized by opponents as an unnecessarily theatrical and expensive stunt. Clearly visible in the background was a banner stating \"Mission Accomplished.\" The banner, made by White House staff and supplied by request of the United States Navy, was criticized as premature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0148-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Bush declares \"End of major combat operations\" (May 2003)\nThe White House subsequently released a statement that the sign and Bush's visit referred to the initial invasion of Iraq and disputing the charge of theatrics. The speech itself noted: \"We have difficult work to do in Iraq. We are bringing order to parts of that country that remain dangerous.\" Post-invasion Iraq was marked by a long and violent conflict between U.S.-led forces and Iraqi insurgents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 90], "content_span": [91, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0149-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Invasion, Aftermath of the invasion\nAfter the invasion, several factors contributed to the destabilization of Iraq. On 23 May, L. Paul Bremer issued Coalition Provisional Authority Order Number 2, dissolving the Iraqi Army and other entities of the former Ba'athist state. The new democratic system elected a majority of Shias, such as The Shia United Iraqi Alliance, who proceeded to ostracize Sunnis. Shia militia groups pushed Sunnis out of several areas, even emptying entire Sunni neighborhoods in Baghdad during the 2007 troop surge. The US military established prison camps where disgruntled Iraqis and former Ba'athists met, such as Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi at Camp Bucca. Excluding Ba'athists from the newly formed Iraqi government, disbanding the Iraqi Army, a new Shi'a majority in power oppressing Sunnis, and the American occupation's prison camps are notable factors that led to sectarian violence and the formation and spread of ISIS, al-Nusra Front, and other terrorist organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 1019]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0150-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Coalition and Allied contingent involvement\nMembers of the Coalition included Australia: 2,000 invasion, Poland: 200 invasion\u20142,500 peak, Spain: 1,300 invasion United Kingdom: 46,000 invasion, United States: 150,000 to 250,000 invasion. Other members of the coalition were Afghanistan, Albania, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Colombia, Costa Rica, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Georgia, Honduras, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Japan, Kuwait, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Mongolia, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Palau, Panama, the Philippines, Portugal, Romania, Rwanda, Singapore, Slovakia, Solomon Islands, South Korea, Tonga, Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. At least 15 other countries participated covertly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 66], "content_span": [67, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0151-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Coalition and Allied contingent involvement, Australia\nAustralia contributed approximately 2,000 Australian Defence Force personnel, including a special forces task group, three warships and 14 F/A-18 Hornet aircraft. On 16 April 2003, Australian special operations forces captured the undefended Al Asad air base west of Baghdad. The base would later become the second largest Coalition facility post-invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 77], "content_span": [78, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0152-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Coalition and Allied contingent involvement, Poland\nThe Battle of Umm Qasr was the first military confrontation in the Iraq War, with its objective the capture of the port. Polish GROM troops supported the amphibious assault on Umm Qasr with the British 3 Commando Brigade of the Royal Marines, and the US 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit. After the waterway was de-mined by a Detachment from HM-14 and Naval Special Clearance Team ONE of the U.S. Navy and reopened, Umm Qasr played an important role in the shipment of humanitarian supplies to Iraqi civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 74], "content_span": [75, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0153-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Coalition and Allied contingent involvement, United Kingdom\nBritish troops, in what was codenamed Operation (or Op) TELIC participated in the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. The 1st Armoured Division was deployed to the Persian Gulf and commanded British forces in the area, securing areas in southern Iraq, including the city of Basra during the invasion. A total of 46,000 troops of all the British services were committed to the operation at its start, including some 5,000 Royal Navy and Royal Fleet Auxiliary sailors and 4,000 Royal Marines, 26,000 British Army soldiers, and 8,100 Royal Air Force airmen. The British special forces deployment was codenamed Operation Row and were known as Task Force 7 under Combined Joint Special Operations Task Force-West (Task Force Dagger).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 82], "content_span": [83, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0154-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Summary of the invasion\nThe U.S.-led Coalition forces toppled the government and captured the key cities of a large nation in only 26 days. The invasion did require a large army build-up like the 1991 Gulf War, but many did not see combat and many were withdrawn after the invasion ended. This proved to be short-sighted, however, due to the requirement for a much larger force to combat the irregular Iraqi forces in the Iraqi insurgency. General Eric Shinseki, U.S. Army Chief of Staff, recommended \"several hundred thousand\" troops be used to maintain post-war order, but then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld\u2014and especially his deputy, civilian Paul Wolfowitz\u2014strongly disagreed. General Abizaid later said General Shinseki had been right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0155-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Summary of the invasion\nThe Iraqi army, armed mainly with older Soviet and Eastern European built equipment, was overall ill-equipped in comparison to the American and British forces. Attacks on U.S. supply routes by Fedayeen militiamen were repulsed. The Iraqis' artillery proved largely ineffective, and they were unable to mobilize their air force to attempt a defense. The Iraqi T-72 tanks, the most powerful armored vehicles in the Iraqi army, were both outdated and ill-maintained, and when they were mobilized they were rapidly destroyed, thanks in part to the Coalition air supremacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0155-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Summary of the invasion\nThe U.S. Air Force, Marine Corps and Naval Aviation, and British Royal Air Force operated with impunity throughout the country, pinpointing heavily defended resistance targets and destroying them before ground troops arrived. The main battle tanks of the U.S. and UK forces, the U.S. M1 Abrams and British Challenger 2, functioned well in the rapid advance across the country. Despite the many RPG attacks by irregular Iraqi forces, few U.S. and UK tanks were lost, and no tank crew-members were killed by hostile fire, although nearly 40 M1 Abrams were damaged in the attacks. The only tank loss sustained by the British Army was a Challenger 2 of the Queen's Royal Lancers that was hit by another Challenger 2, killing two crew members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0156-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Summary of the invasion\nThe Iraqi army suffered from poor morale, even amongst the elite Republican Guard. Entire units disbanded into the crowds upon the approach of invading troops, or actually sought out U.S. and UK forces to surrender to. Many Iraqi commanding officers were bribed by the CIA or coerced into surrendering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0156-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Summary of the invasion\nThe leadership of the Iraqi army was incompetent \u2013 reports state that Qusay Hussein, charged with the defense of Baghdad, dramatically shifted the positions of the two main divisions protecting Baghdad several times in the days before the arrival of U.S. forces, and as a result the units were confused, and further demoralized when U.S. forces attacked. The invasion force did not see the entire Iraqi military thrown against it; U.S. and UK units had orders to move to and seize objective target points rather than seek to engage Iraqi units. This resulted in most regular Iraqi military units emerging from the war without having been engaged, and fully intact, especially in southern Iraq. It is assumed that most units disintegrated to return to their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0157-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Summary of the invasion\nAccording to the declassified Pentagon report, \"The largest contributing factor to the complete defeat of Iraq's military forces was the continued interference by Saddam.\" The report, designed to help U.S. officials understand in hindsight how Saddam and his military commanders prepared for and fought the invasion, paints a picture of an Iraqi government blind to the threat it faced, hampered by Saddam's inept military leadership and deceived by its own propaganda and inability to believe an invasion was imminent without further Iraqi provocation. According to the BBC, the report portrays Saddam Hussein as \"chronically out of touch with reality\u00a0\u2013 preoccupied with the prevention of domestic unrest and with the threat posed by Iran.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0158-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, Death toll\nEstimates on the number of casualties during the invasion in Iraq vary widely. Estimates on civilian casualties are more variable than those for military personnel. According to Iraq Body Count, a group that relies on press reports, NGO-based reports and official figures to measure civilian casualties, approximately 7,500 civilians were killed during the invasion phase. The Project on Defense Alternatives study estimated that 3,200\u20134,300 civilians died during the invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0159-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nFedayeen Saddam militia, Republican Guard and Iraqi security forces were reported to have executed Iraqi soldiers who tried to surrender on multiple occasions, as well as threatening the families of those who refused to fight. One such incident was directly observed during the Battle of Debecka Pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0160-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nMany incidents of Fedayeen fighters using human shields were reported from various towns in Iraq. Iraqi Republican Guard units were also reported to be using human shields. Some reports indicate that the Fedayeen used ambulances to deliver messages and transport fighters into combat. On 31 March, Fedayeen in a Red Crescent-marked ambulance attacked American soldiers outside of Nasiriyah, wounding three. During the Battle of Basra, British forces of the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) reported that on 28 March, Fedayeen forces opened fire on thousands of civilian refugees fleeing the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0161-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nAfter the ambush of the 507th Maintenance Company during the Battle of Nasiriyah on 23 March, the bodies of several U.S. soldiers who had been killed in the ambush were shown on Iraqi television. Some of these soldiers had visible gunshot wounds to head, leading to speculation that they had been executed. Except for Sgt. Donald Walters, no evidence has since surfaced to support this scenario and it is generally accepted that the soldiers were killed in action. Five live prisoners of war were also interviewed on the air, a violation of the Third Geneva Convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0161-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nSergeant Walters was initially reported to have been killed in the ambush after killing several Fedayeen before running out of ammunition. However, an eyewitness later reported that he had seen Walters being guarded by several Fedayeen in front of a building. Forensics work later found Walters' blood in front of the building and blood spatter suggesting he died from two gunshot wounds to the back at close range. This led the Army to conclude that Walters had been executed after being captured, and he was posthumously awarded the Prisoner of War Medal in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0161-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nIt was alleged in the authorized biography of Pfc. Jessica Lynch that she was raped by her captors after her capture, based on medical reports and the pattern of her injuries, though this is not supported by Ms Lynch. Mohammed Odeh al-Rehaief, who later helped American forces rescue Lynch, stated that he saw an Iraqi Colonel slap Lynch while she was in her hospital bed. The staff at the hospital where Lynch was held later denied both stories, saying that Lynch was well cared for. While Lynch suffers from amnesia due to her injuries, Lynch herself has denied any mistreatment whilst in captivity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0162-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nAlso on 23 March, a British Army engineering unit made a wrong turn near the town of Az Zubayr, which was still held by Iraqi forces. The unit was ambushed and Sapper Luke Allsopp and Staff Sergeant Simon Cullingworth became separated from the rest. Both were captured and executed by Iraqi irregular forces. In 2006, a video of Allsopp lying on the ground surrounded by Iraqi irregular forces was discovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0163-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nDuring the Battle of Nasiriyah, Iraqi irregulars feigned surrender to approach an American unit securing a bridge. After getting close to the soldiers, the Iraqis suddenly opened fire, killing 10 soldiers and wounding 40. In response, American forces reinforced security procedures for dealing with prisoners of war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0164-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Casualties, War crimes and allegations\nMarine Sergeant Fernando Padilla-Ramirez was reported missing from his supply unit after an ambush north of Nasiriyah on 28 March. His body was later dragged through the streets of Ash-Shatrah and hung in the town square, and later taken down and buried by sympathetic locals. The corpse was discovered by U.S. forces on 10 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0165-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nMassive looting took place in the days following the 2003 invasion. According to U.S. officials, the \"reality of the situation on the ground\" was that hospitals, water plants, and ministries with vital intelligence needed security more than other sites. There were only enough U.S. troops on the ground to guard a certain number of the many sites that ideally needed protection, and so, apparently, some \"hard choices\" were made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0166-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nIt was reported that The Iraq Museum was among the looted sites. The FBI was soon called into Iraq to track down the stolen items. It was found that the initial allegations of looting of substantial portions of the collection were heavily exaggerated. Initial reports asserted a near-total looting of the museum, estimated at upwards of 170,000 inventory lots, or about 501,000 pieces. The more recent estimate places the number of stolen pieces at around 15,000, and about 10,000 of them probably were taken in an \"inside job\" before U.S. troops arrived, according to Bogdanos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0166-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nOver 5,000 looted items have since been recovered. An assertion that U.S. forces did not guard the museum because they were guarding the Ministry of Oil and Ministry of Interior is disputed by investigator Colonel Matthew Bogdanos in his 2005 book Thieves of Baghdad. Bogdanos notes that the Ministry of Oil building was bombed, but the museum complex, which took some fire, was not bombed. He also writes that Saddam Hussein's troops set up sniper's nests inside and on top of the museum, and nevertheless U.S. Marines and soldiers stayed close enough to prevent wholesale looting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0167-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\n\"Two great libraries, with priceless ancient collections\"\u2014the Awqaf Library (Library of the Ministry of Religious Endowments) and the National Library of Iraq and National Centre for Archives (the House of Wisdom)\u2014\"have been burned,\" The Boston Globe reported in 2003, adding that the libraries at the University of Mosul and University of Basra had been looted. Andr\u00e1s Riedlmayer, a specialist in Islamic architecture at Harvard University, said the U.S. State Department had asked him for advice before the invasion, and that \"everybody warned them that the greatest danger was not from Tomahawk missiles but from looting.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0167-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nNoting that Iraq had been unified only in 1922 and that relatively little attention had been paid to this local history, Keith D. Waterpaugh, a specialist in Ottoman history, said, \"Imagine if we could not go back and read The New York Times from 1922 on. If we are going to help the Iraqi people build a new nation, we don't do it by letting their past be destroyed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0168-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nMore serious for the post-war state of Iraq was the looting of cached weaponry and ordnance which fueled the subsequent insurgency. As many as 250,000\u00a0tons of explosives were unaccounted for by October 2004. Disputes within the US Defense Department led to delays in the post-invasion assessment and protection of Iraqi nuclear facilities. Tuwaitha, the Iraqi site most scrutinized by UN inspectors since 1991, was left unguarded and was looted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0169-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nZainab Bahrani, professor of Ancient Near Eastern Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University, reported that a helicopter landing pad was constructed in the heart of the ancient city of Babylon, and \"removed layers of archeological earth from the site. The daily flights of the helicopters rattle the ancient walls and the winds created by their rotors blast sand against the fragile bricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0169-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Security, looting and war damage\nWhen my colleague at the site, Maryam Moussa, and I asked military personnel in charge that the helipad be shut down, the response was that it had to remain open for security reasons, for the safety of the troops.\" Bahrani also reported that in the summer of 2004, \"the wall of the Temple of Nabu and the roof of the Temple of Ninmah, both sixth century BC, collapsed as a result of the movement of helicopters.\" Electrical power is scarce in post-war Iraq, Bahrani reported, and some fragile artifacts, including the Ottoman Archive, would not survive the loss of refrigeration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0170-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, U.S. media coverage\nThe U.S. invasion of Iraq was the most widely and closely reported war in military history. Television network coverage was largely pro-war and viewers were six times more likely to see a pro-war source as one who was anti-war. The New York Times ran a number of articles describing Saddam Hussein's attempts to build weapons of mass destruction. The 8 September 2002 article titled \"U.S. Says Hussein Intensifies Quest for A-Bomb Parts\" would be discredited, leading The New York Times to issue a public statement admitting it was not as rigorous as it should have been.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0171-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, U.S. media coverage\nAt the start of the war in March 2003, as many as 775 reporters and photographers were traveling as embedded journalists. These reporters signed contracts with the military that limited what they were allowed to report on. When asked why the military decided to embed journalists with the troops, Lt. Col. Rick Long of the U.S. Marine Corps replied, \"Frankly, our job is to win the war. Part of that is information warfare. So we are going to attempt to dominate the information environment.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0172-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, U.S. media coverage\nIn 2003, a study released by Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting stated the network news disproportionately focused on pro-war sources and left out many anti-war sources. According to the study, 64% of total sources supported the Iraq War while total anti-war sources made up 10% of the media (only 3% of US sources were anti-war). The study looked only at 6 American news networks after 20 March for three weeks. The study stated that \"viewers were more than six times as likely to see a pro-war source as one who was anti-war; with U.S. guests alone, the ratio increases to 25 to 1.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0173-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, U.S. media coverage\nA September 2003 poll revealed that seventy percent of Americans believed Saddam Hussein was involved in the attacks of 9/11. 80% of Fox News viewers were found to hold at least one such belief about the invasion, compared to 23% of PBS viewers. Ted Turner, founder of CNN, charged that Rupert Murdoch was using Fox News to advocate an invasion. Critics have argued that this statistic is indicative of misleading coverage by the U.S. media since viewers in other countries were less likely to have these beliefs. A post-2008 election poll by FactCheck.org found that 48% of Americans believe Saddam played a role in the 9/11 attacks, the group concluded that \"voters, once deceived, tend to stay that way despite all evidence.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0174-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, Independent media coverage\nIndependent media also played a prominent role in covering the invasion. The Indymedia network, among many other independent networks including many journalists from the invading countries, provided reports on the Iraq war. In the United States Democracy Now, hosted by Amy Goodman has been critical of the reasons for the 2003 invasion and the alleged crimes committed by the U.S. authorities in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0175-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, Independent media coverage\nThe Israeli Military Censor have released gag orders to Fresh and Rotter news platforms preventing them releasing any information about events and action related to the invasion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0176-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, Independent media coverage\nOn the other side, among media not opposing to the invasion, The Economist stated in an article on the matter that \"the normal diplomatic tools\u2014sanctions, persuasion, pressure, UN resolutions\u2014have all been tried, during 12 deadly but failed years\" then giving a mild conditional support to the war stating that \"if Mr Hussein refuses to disarm, it would be right to go to war\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0177-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, Independent media coverage\nAustralian war artist George Gittoes collected independent interviews with soldiers while producing his documentary Soundtrack To War. The war in Iraq provided the first time in history that military on the front lines were able to provide direct, uncensored reportage themselves, thanks to blogging software and the reach of the internet. Dozens of such reporting sites, known as soldier blogs or milblogs, were started during the war. These blogs were more often than not largely pro-war and stated various reasons why the soldiers and Marines felt they were doing the right thing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0178-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Media coverage, International media coverage\nInternational coverage of the war differed from coverage in the U.S. in a number of ways. The Arab-language news channel Al Jazeera and the German satellite channel Deutsche Welle featured almost twice as much information on the political background of the war. Al Jazeera also showed scenes of civilian casualties rarely seen in the U.S. media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 67], "content_span": [68, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0179-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism\nOpponents of the military intervention in Iraq have attacked the decision to invade Iraq along a number of lines, including the human cost of war, calling into question the evidence used to justify the war, arguing for continued diplomacy, challenging the war's legality, suggesting that the U.S. had other more pressing security priorities, (i.e., Afghanistan and North Korea) and predicting that the war would destabilize the Middle East region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0179-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism\nIn 2010, an independent commission of inquiry set up by the government of the Netherlands, maintained that UN resolution 1441 \"cannot reasonably be interpreted (as the Dutch government did) as authorising individual member states to use military force to compel Iraq to comply with the Security Council's resolutions.\" Accordingly, the Dutch commission concluded that the invasion violated international law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0180-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Rationale based on faulty evidence\nThe central U.S. justification for launching the war was that Saddam Hussein's alleged development of nuclear and biological weapons and purported ties to al-Qaeda made his regime a \"grave and growing\" threat to the United States and the world community. During the lead-up to the war and the aftermath of the invasion, critics cast doubt on the evidence supporting this rationale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0180-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Rationale based on faulty evidence\nConcerning Iraq's weapons programs, prominent critics included Scott Ritter, a former U.N. weapons inspector who argued in 2002 that inspections had eliminated the nuclear and chemical weapons programs, and that evidence of their reconstitution would \"have been eminently detectable by intelligence services ...\" Although it is popularly believed that Saddam Hussein had forced the IAEA weapons inspectors to leave Iraq, they were withdrawn at the request of the US before Operation Desert Fox, the 1998 American bombing campaign. After the build-up of U.S. troops in neighboring states, Saddam welcomed them back and promised complete cooperation with their demands. Experienced IAEA inspection teams were already back in Iraq and had made some interim reports on its search for various forms of WMD. American diplomat Joseph C. Wilson investigated the contention that Iraq had sought uranium for nuclear weapons in Niger and reported that the contention had no substance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 1042]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0181-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Rationale based on faulty evidence\nSimilarly, alleged links between Iraq and al-Qaeda were called into question during the lead-up to the war, and were discredited by a 21 October 2004 report from U.S. Senator Carl Levin, which was later corroborated by an April 2006 report from the Defense Department's inspector general. These reports further alleged that Bush Administration officials, particularly former undersecretary of defense Douglas J. Feith, manipulated evidence to support links between al-Qaeda and Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 68], "content_span": [69, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0182-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Lack of a U.N. mandate\nOne of the main questions in the lead-up to the war was whether the United Nations Security Council would authorize military intervention in Iraq. It became increasingly clear that U.N. authorization would require significant further weapons inspections. Many criticized their effort as unwise, immoral, and illegal. Robin Cook, then the leader of the United Kingdom House of Commons and a former foreign secretary, resigned from Tony Blair's cabinet in protest over the UK's decision to invade without the authorization of a U.N. resolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0182-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Lack of a U.N. mandate\nCook said at the time that: \"In principle I believe it is wrong to embark on military action without broad international support. In practice I believe it is against Britain's interests to create a precedent for unilateral military action.\" In addition, senior government legal advisor Elizabeth Wilmshurst resigned, stating her legal opinion that an invasion would be illegal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0183-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Lack of a U.N. mandate\nUnited Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan said in an interview with the BBC in September 2004, \"[F]rom our point of view and from the Charter point of view [the war] was illegal.\" This drew immediate criticism from the United States and was immediately played down. His annual report to the General Assembly for 2003 included no more than the statement: \"Following the end of major hostilities which resulted in the occupation of Iraq...\" A similar report from the Security Council was similarly terse in its reference to the event: \"Following the cessation of hostilities in Iraq in April 2003 ...\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0183-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Lack of a U.N. mandate\nThe United Nations Security Council has passed nearly 60 resolutions on Iraq and Kuwait since Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1990. The most relevant to this issue is Resolution 678, passed on 29 November 1990. It authorizes \"member states co-operating with the Government of Kuwait... to use all necessary means\" to (1) implement Security Council Resolution 660 and other resolutions calling for the end of Iraq's occupation of Kuwait and withdrawal of Iraqi forces from Kuwaiti territory and (2) \"restore international peace and security in the area.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0184-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Military intervention vs diplomatic solution\nCriticisms about the evidence used to justify the war notwithstanding, many opponents of military intervention objected, saying that a diplomatic solution would be preferable, and that war should be reserved as a truly last resort. This position was exemplified by French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin, who responded to U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell's 5 February 2003 presentation to the U.N Security Council by saying that: \"Given the choice between military intervention and an inspections regime that is inadequate because of a failure to cooperate on Iraq's part, we must choose the decisive reinforcement of the means of inspections.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 78], "content_span": [79, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0184-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Military intervention vs diplomatic solution\nIn response to Donald Rumsfeld's reference to European countries that did not support the invasion of Iraq as 'Old Europe', Dominique de Villepin ended his speech with words that would later come to embody the French-German political, economic, and military alliance throughout the beginning of the 21st Century: \"This message comes to you today from an old country, France, from a continent like mine, Europe, that has known wars, occupation and barbarity. (...) Faithful to its values, it wishes resolutely to act with all the members of the international community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 78], "content_span": [79, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0184-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Military intervention vs diplomatic solution\nIt believes in our ability to build together a better world.\" The direct opposition between diplomatic solution and military intervention involving France and the United States which was personified by Chirac versus Bush and later Powell versus de Villepin, became a milestone in the Franco-American relations. Anti - French propaganda exploiting the classic Francophobic clich\u00e9s immediately ensued in the United States and the United Kingdom. A call for a boycott on French wine was launched in the United States and the New York Post covered on the 1944 \"Sacrifice\" of the GIs that France had forgotten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 78], "content_span": [79, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0184-0003", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Military intervention vs diplomatic solution\nIt was followed a week later, on 20 February, by the British newspaper The Sun publishing a special issue entitled \"Chirac is a worm\" and including ad hominem attacks such as \"Jacques Chirac has become the shame of Europe\". Actually both newspapers expressed the opinion of their owner, U.S. billionaire Rupert Murdoch, a military intervention supporter and a George W. Bush partisan as argued by Roy Greenslade in The Guardian published on 17 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 78], "content_span": [79, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0185-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Distraction from the war on terrorism and other priorities\nBoth supporters and opponents of the Iraq War widely viewed it within the context of a post\u201311 September world, where the U.S. has sought to make terrorism the defining international security paradigm. Bush often described the Iraq War as a \"central front in the war on terror\". Some critics of the war, particularly within the U.S. military community, argued pointedly against the conflation of Iraq and the war on terror, and criticized Bush for losing focus on the more important objective of fighting al-Qaeda. As Marine Lieutenant General Greg Newbold, the Pentagon's former top operations officer, wrote in a 2006 Time article, \"I now regret that I did not more openly challenge those who were determined to invade a country whose actions were peripheral to the real threat\u2014al-Qaeda.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 92], "content_span": [93, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0186-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Distraction from the war on terrorism and other priorities\nCritics within this vein have further argued that containment would have been an effective strategy for the Saddam government, and that the top U.S. priorities in the Middle East should be encouraging a solution to the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict, working for the moderation of Iran, and solidifying gains made in Afghanistan and Central Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 92], "content_span": [93, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0186-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Distraction from the war on terrorism and other priorities\nIn an October 2002 speech, Retired Marine Gen. Anthony Zinni, former head of Central Command for U.S. forces in the Middle East and State Department's envoy to the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict, called Iraq \"maybe six or seven,\" in terms of U.S. Middle East priorities, adding that \"the affordability line may be drawn around five.\" However, while commander of CENTCOM, Zinni held a very different opinion concerning the threat posed by Iraq. In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee in February 2000, Zinni said: \"Iraq remains the most significant near-term threat to U.S. interests in the Persian Gulf region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 92], "content_span": [93, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0186-0002", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Distraction from the war on terrorism and other priorities\nThis is primarily due to its large conventional military force, pursuit of WMD, oppressive treatment of Iraqi citizens, refusal to comply with United Nations Security Council Resolutions (UNSCR), persistent threats to enforcement of the No Fly Zones (NFZ), and continued efforts to violate UN Security Council sanctions through oil smuggling.\" However, it is important to note that Zinni specifically referred to \"the Persian Gulf region\" in his Senate testimony, which is a significantly smaller region of the world than the \"Middle East\", which he referred to in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 92], "content_span": [93, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0187-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Potential to destabilize the region\nBesides arguing that Iraq was not the top strategic priority in the war on terrorism or in the Middle East, critics of the war also suggested that it could potentially destabilize the surrounding region. Prominent among such critics was Brent Scowcroft, who served as National Security Advisor to George H. W. Bush. In a 15 August 2002", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0187-0001", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Criticism, Potential to destabilize the region\nThe Wall Street Journal editorial entitled \"Don't attack Saddam\", Scowcroft wrote that, \"Possibly the most dire consequences would be the effect in the region ... there would be an explosion of outrage against us ... the results could well destabilize Arab regimes\", and, \"could even swell the ranks of the terrorists.\" In an October 2015 CNN interview with Fareed Zakaria, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair apologized for his 'mistakes' over Iraq War and admitted there were 'elements of truth' to the view that the invasion helped promote the rise of ISIS. In the opinon of Hayder al-Khoei, Iraq was already \"destined for chaos\" before 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 69], "content_span": [70, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0188-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Public opinion\nIn a March 2003 Gallup poll, the day after the invasion, 76% of Americans supported the military action against Iraq. In a March 2003 YouGov poll, 54% of Britons had approved of military action against Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0189-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Public opinion\nA decade later, in 2013, a Gallup poll found that 53% of Americans surveyed believed the Iraq War was a mistake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0190-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Related phrases\nThis campaign featured a variety of new terminology, much of it initially coined by the U.S. government or military. The military official name for the invasion was Operation Iraqi Freedom. Also notable was the usage \"death squads\" to refer to Fedayeen paramilitary forces. Members of the Saddam Hussein government were called by disparaging nicknames \u2013 e.g., \"Chemical Ali\" (Ali Hassan al-Majid), \"Baghdad Bob\" or \"Comical Ali\" (Muhammed Saeed al-Sahaf), and \"Mrs. Anthrax\" or \"Chemical Sally\" (Huda Salih Mahdi Ammash).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175625-0191-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq, Related phrases\nMany slogans and terms coined came to be used by Bush's political opponents, or those opposed to the war. For example, in April 2003 John Kerry, the Democratic candidate in the presidential election, said at a campaign rally: \"What we need now is not just a regime change in Saddam Hussein and Iraq, but we need a regime change in the United States.\" Other war critics use the name \"Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL)\" to subtly convey their belief with respect to the cause of the war, such as the song \"Operation Iraqi Liberation (OIL)\" by David Rovics, a popular folk protest singer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175626-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq order of battle\nThis is the order of battle for invasion of Iraq during the Iraq War between coalition forces and Iraqi regular forces supported by Fedayeen Saddam irregulars and others between March 19 and May 1, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175626-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 invasion of Iraq order of battle, Iraqi forces, Republican Guard\nUnder the supervision of Qusay Hussein, commanded by Staff General Sayf al-Din Taha al-Rawi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga\nA 502-delegate loya jirga convened in Kabul, Afghanistan, on December 14, 2003, to consider the proposed Afghan Constitution. Originally planned to last ten days, the assembly did not endorse the charter until January 4, 2004. As has been generally the case with these assemblies, the endorsement came by way of consensus rather than a vote. Afghanistan's last constitution was drafted for the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan in November 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Drafting the Constitution\nThe Bonn Agreement of December 2001 required Afghanistan to draft and adopt a new constitution within 2 years. In October 2002, Interim President Hamid Karzai appointed a nine-member Constitutional Drafting Commission, chaired by then Vice-President Nematullah Shahrani. Over the next six months, this body drafted a new constitution, based largely on the 1964 Afghan constitution. The initial draft, written primarily by Abdul Salam Azimi (who would become Chief Justice of Afghanistan's Supreme Court in 2006) was not the subject of in-depth political consultation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0001-0001", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Drafting the Constitution\nIn April 2003, Interim President Karzai passed a decree appointing a new 35-member Constitutional Commission and laying out a public consultation process. This commission travelled widely throughout the country and reworked the draft, which was not released to the public until November 2003, only weeks before the Constitutional Convention (Loya Jirga) was scheduled to begin. This process was supported by several international institutions that provided funding, mostly through the UN, and expertise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 42], "content_span": [43, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Selecting the Loya Jirga delegates\nIn July 2003, a Presidential Decree outlined the process for delegate selection for the Constitutional Loya Jirga (CLJ), stating that there would be 500 delegates, 344 elected by caucus at the district level, 64 women elected by caucus at the provincial level, 42 delegates from refugee, nomad, and minority communities, and 50 people (25 men, 25 women) appointed by President Karzai. The delegates included activists such as Shukria Barakzai, who campaigns for women's rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 51], "content_span": [52, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Issues addressed\nIssues involving substantial debate included whether Afghanistan should have a presidential or parliamentary system, whether Dari or Pashto should be the official language, and whether other local languages would be recognized, whether former king Mohammed Zahir Shah should maintain the title \"father of the nation,\" how to address women's rights, whether Afghanistan should be a free market economy, and whether higher education should be free.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Issues addressed\nThe heaviest debate surrounded the question of the presidential vs. parliamentary system. Interim President Hamid Karzai supported a draft constitution the created a presidential system, which would provide one nationally elected figure who could effectively direct the executive branch. Others argued that for an ethnically diverse country coming out of years of conflict - a power-sharing model with a strong President presented the best hope for national unity and reconciliation. At one point President Karzai threatened that he would not run for the office in 2004 if a parliamentary system or semi-presidential system was created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0004-0001", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Issues addressed\nMembers of the Tajik-dominated Northern Alliance accused Karzai of buying off opponents with promises of influential positions in a post-election government. On January 1, the loya jirga broke down when close to half of the assembly, consisting mostly of Uzbek, Tajik, Hazara and Turkmen minorities, boycotted the only ballot, forcing chairman Sibghatullah Mojaddedi to call for a 2-day adjourning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Issues addressed\nFollowing the highly restrictive regime of the Taliban, some rights including those related to entertainment were legalized again. However, liberals in the loya jirga were strongly challenged by conservatives, many of whom supported conservative policies such as the ban of music and dancing on public television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Election of chairman, committees\nThe Loya jirga was convened on 14 December, beneath a large tent at the newly refurbished technical university in Kabul. In the opening ceremonies, a dozen children in various traditional costumes waved Afghan flags and sang songs of peace, including \"We are doves, waiting for peace, we are tired of fighting.\" Former king Mohammad Zahir Shah addressed the assembly. Then Mojaddedi was elected chairman, winning 252 votes, over Abdul Hafiz Mansoor's 154. Deputies were elected, but excluded women. Many of the 114 female delegates protested at not being represented in the secretariat. To assuage their concerns, Mojaddedi appointed Safia Sediqi to the fourth deputy position and two other women as deputies' assistants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Election of chairman, committees\nMembers of constitutional commissions, supreme court and other government officials, and members of legal and human rights commissions were allowed to attend, but not vote. Provincial governors and top-ranking police, administration, and military officials were barred from the proceedings. Delegates were divided among ten committees to consider amendments to the draft constitution, which were submitted to a reconciliation council. Powerful militia leaders had been among the groups, often dominating the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Election of chairman, committees\nOn the third day, Malalai Joya , a female delegate from Farah Province, was temporarily evicted, having complained that the warlords would still be in charge of the new government. Her microphone was turned off when she suggested that some of the leaders should be tried in an international court. She remained under U.N. protection for several days because of death threats. Ms. Joya aroused controversy when she condemned the allocation of positions of influence at the council to certain faction leaders, including former president Burhanuddin Rabbani and Abdul Rasul Sayyaf, a deeply conservative Islamist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Malalai Joya's Historical Speech\nOn December 17, 2003, Malalai Joya, 25, from Farah Province delivered the following speech which received wide coverage in the media internationally:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Malalai Joya's Historical Speech\n\"My name is Malalai Joya from Farah Province. By the permission of the esteemed attendees, and by the name of God and the colored-shroud martyrs of the path of freedom, I would like to speak for couple of minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Malalai Joya's Historical Speech\nMy criticism on all my compatriots is that why are they allowing the legitimacy and legality of this Loya Jerga come under question with the presence of those felons who brought our country to this state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Malalai Joya's Historical Speech\nI feel pity and I feel very sorry that those who call Loya Jerga an infidel basis equivalent to blasphemy after coming here their words are accepted, or please see the committees and what people are whispering about. The chairman of every committee is already selected. Why do you not take all these criminals to one committee so that we see what they want for this nation. These were those who turned our country into the nucleus of national and international wars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0012-0001", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Malalai Joya's Historical Speech\nThey were the most anti-women people in the society who wanted to [makes pause] who brought our country to this state and they intend to do the same again. I believe that it is a mistake to test those already being tested. They should be taken to national and international court. If they are forgiven by our people, the bare- footed Afghan people, our history will never forgive them. They are all recorded in the history of our country.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Name controversy\nDelegates collected more than the necessary 151 signatures calling for the word \"Islamic\" to be removed from the draft constitution, suggesting \"Republic of Afghanistan\" instead. Despite enough signatures, the jirga's chairman Sibghatullah Mojaddedi refused to hold a vote and publicly called the delegates \"infidels\", causing concern on freedom of speech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Ratification\nAfter weeks of contentious debate, a walkout by the chair and hundreds of delegates, and dozens of amendments, the loya jirga ratified the constitution without taking a vote, but by consensus, on January 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0015-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Ratification\nMany delegates complained that the process had no specific criteria, that the rules of procedure were not followed, and that delegates were not properly prepared or educated about the issues. There were also complaints that many of the most important decisions were made by militia and party leaders, Karzai's favorites, and international representatives, such as US envoy Zalmay Khalilzad, behind the scenes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175627-0016-0000", "contents": "2003 loya jirga, Ratification\nA documentary film, \"Hell of a Nation\", produced and directed by Tamara Gould, Bonnie Cohen, and John Schenk, and aired on PBS's \"Wide Angle\" series covered the Afghan constitutional process in detail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal\nThe mutual fund scandal of 2003 was the result of the discovery of illegal late trading and market timing practices on the part of certain hedge fund and mutual fund companies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation\nOn September 3, 2003, New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer announced the issuance of a complaint against New Jersey hedge fund company Canary Capital Partners LLC, charging that they had engaged in \"late trading\" in collusion with Bank of America's Nations Funds. Bank of America is charged with permitting Canary to purchase mutual fund shares, after the markets had closed, at the closing price for that day. Spitzer's investigation was initiated after his office received a ten-minute June 2003 phone call from a Wall Street worker alerting them to an instance of the late trading problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nIn the United States, mutual fund prices are set once daily at 4:00\u00a0p.m. Eastern time. \"Late trading\" occurs when traders are allowed to purchase fund shares after 4:00\u00a0p.m. at that day's closing price. Under law, most mutual fund trades received after 4:00\u00a0p.m. must be executed at the following day's closing price, but because some orders placed before 4:00\u00a0p.m. cannot be executed until after 4:00\u00a0p.m., brokers can collude with investors and submit post-4:00\u00a0p.m. trades as if they had been placed before 4:00\u00a0p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0002-0001", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nIn 2003 several mutual fund companies and stock brokerage firms engaged in a trading practice which guaranteed profits for the stock brokerage firm\u2019s insider managers and preferred customers. To understand how this works, one needs to know how mutual funds shares are priced. Share values for mutual funds are not based upon bids from outside buyers. The price of a fund\u2019s price was set in the evening based upon the value of the securities that it owned at the end of trading day, 4:00 PM Eastern Time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0002-0002", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nThe law prohibited trading of mutual fund shares at any other price so the price set on Monday evening for a fund\u2019s shares was available to anybody all day long on Tuesday until the market closed at 4:00 PM Pension funds and hedge funds are faced with unpredictable big inflows of cash on any given day. Their job is to put those funds to work as soon as possible. Mutual funds were eager to take the money from these pension funds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0002-0003", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nThe mutual fund\u2019s fees management fees were based upon the amount of money (value of shares) held by the fund. More money held by the mutual fund meant more money at the end of the quarter for the fund\u2019s managers. Pension managers had a legitimate problem with knowing just how much money they had to invest on any given day. There are changes from day to day as beneficiaries took withdrawals or employers made deposits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0002-0004", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nAn ostensibly harmless practice developed where mutual funds let it be known that they could be flexible about taking purchases at that morning\u2019s price after the closing, even though that was prohibited by their rules. This was a matter of accommodating fund managers and encouraging them to trust that fund with their investment. People were beginning to realize unanticipated uses for computer technology, People realized there they could track what was happening to the value of any mutual fund\u2019s investments as quickly or even quicker than the mutual fund managers could using relatively simple spreadsheet programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0002-0005", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nThey realized that if permitted to buy after the close they could know what tomorrow\u2019s price would be and provided they sold the shares tomorrow morning that they bought that evening would be guaranteed a profit, a profit that ordinary customers that played by the rules could not get. The trades involved small variances in price but because the buyers were purchasing millions of dollars in mutual fund shares the guaranteed profits for these insiders was significant and", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nSuch trades can be made with information about after-hours market developments in other countries, for example. Traders would buy in at the previous day's close, and sell at the next day's close for a likely profit. This practice hurt long-term buy-and-hold investors in the mutual fund, who experienced a continued drain in the fund's net asset value.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nLate trading was not a new phenomenon. Prior to 1968, most mutual funds used \"backward pricing,\" in which the fund could be bought at the previous closing price. Thus, traders could purchase mutual funds on a day when the market was up, at the previous day's lower closing price, and then sell at the purchase date's closing price for a guaranteed profit. To prevent the exploitation of backward pricing, the SEC issued Rule 22c-1, requiring forward pricing of mutual fund transactions. This rule was enforced by randomly checking timestamps on orders, but intentional falsification of timestamps was difficult to catch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nIn addition, New York's Martin Act can be interpreted to prohibit late trading as well, due to the unfair advantage the late trader gains over other traders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Late trading\"\nCanary Capital settled the complaint for US$40 million, while neither admitting nor denying guilt in the matter. Bank of America stated that it would compensate its mutual fund shareholders for losses incurred by way of the illegal transactions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Market timing\"\nSpitzer and later the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) also charged that major mutual fund groups such as Janus, Bank One's One Group, and Strong Capital Management and others facilitated \"market timing\" trading for favored clients. Market timing is an investment strategy in which an investor tries to profit from short-term market cycles by trading into and out of market sectors as they heat up and cool off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0007-0001", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Market timing\"\nIn a novel interpretation of New York's Martin Act, Spitzer contended that fund firms committed fraud when they allowed some clients to trade more frequently than allowed in their fund documents and prospectus. In many cases, funds bar or limit frequent trading because the practice may increase the cost of administering a mutual fund borne by all shareholders in the fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0007-0002", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Spitzer investigation, \"Market timing\"\nMarket timers also can make managing the fund more difficult since the fund may need to keep extra cash to meet liquidity demands of selling timers, although if timers are trading opposite flows of other investors, they can moderate cash fluctuations. Those funds that did not limit frequent trading in their prospectus\u2014as well as a small number of funds that cater specifically to market timers\u2014were not charged. Spitzer contended that some advisors allowed market timers in order to increase their assets under management (fund advisors are paid based on the amount of assets in the fund).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, SEC investigation\nThe SEC is charged with the regulation of the mutual fund industry in the United States. Following the announcement of Spitzer's complaint, the SEC launched its own investigation of the matter which revealed the practice of \"front running\". The SEC claimed that certain mutual fund companies alerted favored customers or partners when one or more of a company's funds planned to buy or sell a large stock position. The partner was then in a position to trade shares of the stock in advance of the fund's trading. Since mutual funds tend to hold large positions in specific stocks, any large selling or buying by the fund often impacts the value of the stock, from which the partner could stand to benefit. According to the SEC, the practice of front-running may constitute insider trading.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, SEC investigation\nBy early November, investigations led to the resignation of the chairmen of Strong Mutual Funds and Putnam Investments, both major mutual fund companies. In the case of Strong, the chairman Richard Strong was charged with market-timing trading involving his own company's funds. In December, Invesco (market-timing) and Prudential Securities (widespread late trading) were added to the list of implicated fund companies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Settlements and trials\nNearly all of the fund firms charged by Spitzer with allowing market timing or late trading had settled with his office and the SEC between mid-2004 and mid-2005. One exception was J. W. Seligman, which chose in September 2005 to sue Spitzer in Federal court after their talks with Spitzer broke down. Seligman argued in its suit that Spitzer had overstepped his authority by attempting to oversee how Seligman's funds set their advisory fee and that the regulatory oversight of fees is left by Congress to the SEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0010-0001", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Settlements and trials\nSeparately, in August 2005 Spitzer lost the only trial arising from his investigations when a jury could not reach a verdict on all counts in a case brought against Theodore Sihpol, III, a broker with Bank of America who introduced Canary Capital to the bank. Though Spitzer threatened to retry Sihpol, he did not do so. In September 2005 Spitzer's office reached a plea bargain in a case brought against three executives charged with fraud for financing Canary and assisting its improper trading in mutual funds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175628-0010-0002", "contents": "2003 mutual fund scandal, Settlements and trials\nThat case against two Security Trust executives and one banker had appeared to be Spitzer's strongest, and the settlement seemed to reflect Spitzer's weakening hand in the wake of his defeat in the Sihpol case. The United States Second Circuit reversed the District Court In United States Security Commission v O`Malley on 19 May 2014 finding there was no consistent rule prohibiting Traders from engaging in market timing and therefore there was no requirement to disgorge profits made thereunder. This appeal related to a Rule 50 motion to dismiss on basis there was no credible evidence to leave to the jury as to breaching any duty of care and the Appeals Court Upheld same.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175629-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 protests in Dominican Republic\nThe 2003 protests in the Dominican Republic consisted of mass protests, rioting, labor unrest, strikes, demonstrations, rallies, marches, and a protest movement in Dominican Republic between July-November 2003, calling for economic reform despite the economic crisis and financial turmoil, one of the main causes of the political uprising. The movement and uprising were calling for the government of Hip\u00f3lito Mej\u00eda to resign amid popular pressure and anti-presidential opposition on the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175629-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 protests in Dominican Republic\nGunfire and shootings, clashes with armed groups, and associates with security forces left at least 5 dead in the first wave and 8 dead in the second wave of violent mass demonstrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175629-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 protests in Dominican Republic\nIn response to the growing street protests and rising civil disobedience, the government sent reinforcements and deployed troops to quell the mass protests. Protesters threw stones and hurled bricks at the forces, who responded with extreme force. The protesters marched almost daily in the first wave of protests in July-August when 3 were killed and their demands weren\u2019t met.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175629-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 protests in Dominican Republic\nThe second and deadlier wave of violent demonstrations and opposition-led street protests was in November when strikers were shot at by the security forces by Rubber bullets as anti-government rallies and violent marches calling for reforms and a solution to end the crisis. Protests turned into riots, calling for the resignation of the government. Thousands participated in the daily protests, leading to fatal clashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175630-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 reasons of the Supreme Court of Canada\nThe table below lists the reasons delivered from the bench by the Supreme Court of Canada during 2003. The table illustrates what reasons were filed by each justice in each case, and which justices joined each reason. This list, however, does not include decisions on motions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175630-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 reasons of the Supreme Court of Canada\nOf the 75 judgments released in 2003, 14 were oral judgments, 49 were unanimous, there was no pluralities, and no motions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters\nThe 2003 ricin letters were two ricin-laden letters found on two occasions between October and November 2003. One letter was mailed to the White House and intercepted at a processing facility; another was discovered with no address in South Carolina. A February 2004 ricin incident at the Dirksen Senate Office Building was initially connected to the 2003 letters as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters\nThe letters were sent by an individual who referred to themselves as \"Fallen Angel\". The sender, who claimed to own a trucking company, expressed anger over changes in federal trucking regulations. As of 2008, no connection between the Fallen Angel letters and the Dirksen building incident has been established. A $100,000 reward was offered in 2004 by the federal law enforcement agencies investigating the case, but to date the reward remains unclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Background, Ricin\nRicin is a white powder that can be produced as a liquid or a crystal. Ricin is an extremely toxic plant protein that can cause severe allergic reactions, and exposure to small quantities can be fatal. The toxin inhibits the formation of proteins within cells of exposed individuals. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) states that 500 micrograms is the minimum lethal dose of ricin in humans provided that exposure is from injection or inhalation. Ricin is easily purified from castor-oil manufacturing waste. It has been utilized by various states and organizations as a weapon, being most effective as an assassination weapon, notably in the case of the 1978 assassination of Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Background, Trucking regulations\nOn January 4, 2004 new federal transportation rules took effect which directly affected the over-the-road trucking industry in the United States. The rules took effect with a 60-day grace period and were aimed at reducing fatigue related accidents and fatalities. Called the most far-reaching rule changes in 65 years, the regulations reduced daily allowed driving time from 11 hours to 10. The most controversial measures involved the way that workdays were calculated. The calculations were not allowed to factor in such delays as food and fuel stops and other time spent waiting at, for instance, a factory for a load. The new provisions allowed drivers to stay on duty for only 14 hours, thus the time spent waiting could eat into the time a driver spent on duty. These rule changes were what the self-proclaimed \"Fallen Angel\" took aim at in the ricin-laden letters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 52], "content_span": [53, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, October 2003 letter\nOn October 15, 2003 a package was discovered at a mail-sorting center in Greenville, South Carolina, near the Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport. The package contained a letter and a small metal vial containing ricin powder. A label on the outside of the envelope containing the vial displayed the typed message: \"Caution ricin poison enclosed in sealed container. Do not open without proper protection\". The presence of ricin was confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on October 21. The letter inside the envelope was typewritten to the U.S. Department of Transportation, and stated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, October 2003 letter\nTo the department of transportation: I'm a fleet owner of a tanker company. I have easy access to castor pulp. If my demand is dismissed I'm capable of making Ricin. My demand is simple, January 4, 2004 starts the new hours of service for trucks which include a ridiculous ten hours in the sleeper berth. Keep at eight or I will start dumping. You have been warned this is the only letter that will be sent by me.Fallen Angel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, October 2003 letter\nDespite the potentially deadly nature of the poison, no one was exposed to, injured by, or killed by the ricin. The Greenville facility where the letter was found was also declared ricin-free in the ensuing weeks. In addition, the letter had no delivery address and no postmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, November 2003 letter\nOn November 6, 2003, another letter, described as \"nearly identical\" to the October letter, was discovered. This time, the letter was addressed to The White House and it was discovered at a White House mail-processing facility in Washington D.C. The letter contained a small vial of a white powdery substance that was initially tested negative for ricin. After subsequent testing at the mail facility resulted in positives for ricin contamination on mail equipment, the U.S. Secret Service ordered a retest that showed by November 10 the letter was \"probable for ricin\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, November 2003 letter\nThe letter was postmarked on October 17 in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Though addressed to the White House, the threatening language contained in the letter was again directed at the U.S. Department of Transportation and written by an individual calling him/herself \"Fallen Angel\", as with previous letter. The text of the letter stated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, November 2003 letter\nDepartment of transportationIf you change the hours of service onJanuary 4, 2004 I will turn D.C into a ghost townThe powder on the letter is RICINhave a nice dayFallen Angel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, November 2003 letter\nThe Secret Service did not alert the White House, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and other key agencies, including the CDC, of the discovery and positive tests until November 12. In the November 21, 2003 issue of Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report the CDC recommended that until Fallen Angel was captured, \"healthcare providers and public health officials must consider ricin to be a potential public health threat and be vigilant about recognizing illness consistent with ricin exposure\". The CDC's November warning mentioned only the first Fallen Angel letter. The discovery of the ricin letter at the White House facility was not disclosed to the public until early February 2004. The public disclosure of the second ricin letter from Fallen Angel coincided with the discovery of ricin in the mail room of a senate office building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Letters, February 2004 mail room contamination\nOn February 2, 2004 in a mail room serving Senator Bill Frist in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, a white powdery substance was found on a sorting machine. Tests on February 3 confirmed that the substance was ricin. The positive test results were indicated by six of eight preliminary tests on the substance. The discovery resulted in more than a dozen staffers undergoing decontamination as well as the closure of the Dirksen, Hart, and Russell Senate Office Buildings. The incident was treated as a criminal probe with investigators looking carefully for any connection between the ricin found at Dirksen and the \"Fallen Angel\" cases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Investigations, Fallen Angel\nThe focus of the probe by the FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) and the Department of Transportation's Office of Inspector General fell instantly upon the individual calling him/herself Fallen Angel in the two letters. The FBI was the lead agency in the Fallen Angel investigation. Agents questioned various individuals during their probe, such as one vocal former trucker in Florida. Federal officials, most notably at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), remarked that the letters did not have the hallmarks of international terrorism and were more likely produced by a homegrown criminal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Investigations, Fallen Angel\nOn January 4, 2004 the FBI, along with the USPIS and the DOT, offered a $100,000 reward in connection with the October 2003 case from Greenville, South Carolina. In late 2004 the amount of the reward was increased to $120,000. The criminal has not been captured to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Investigations, Dirksen Building contamination\nImmediately following the incident in Frist's office, both the FBI and the United States Capitol Police were tasked to the investigation; like in the Fallen Angel investigation, the FBI was the lead agency. Detectives and agents focused on the possibility that the individual responsible for the 2003 letters was also responsible for the contamination at the Dirksen building. Within two weeks of the incident, investigators were questioning the validity of the positive ricin tests at the Senate building. The results raised suspicion because no source (e.g. a letter) was ever found for the ricin. It was possible that the \"contamination\" was from paper by-products and not ricin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175631-0015-0000", "contents": "2003 ricin letters, Investigations, Dirksen Building contamination\nHowever, later tests confirmed that the initial tests did not indicate a false positive and the substance was indeed ricin. By the end of March 2005, there were no suspects and no confirmed source for the ricin found in Senator Frist's office. Investigators also found no connection to the Fallen Angel case as of the same date. Despite those developments, investigators were not yet ready to declare a dead end to the investigation. As of 2008, no direct connection has yet been found between the Frist case and the Fallen Angel case and no explanation found for the origin of the ricin in Frist's office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 66], "content_span": [67, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina\nCoordinates: The 2003 Abbeville right-of-way standoff was a 14-hour shootout that took place on December 8, 2003, in Abbeville, South Carolina, between alleged extremists and self-proclaimed \"sovereign citizens\" Arthur, wife Rita, and son Steven Bixby; and members of the Abbeville city police department, the Abbeville County sheriff's office, the South Carolina Highway Patrol, the South Carolina Department of Transportation , and the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Overview\nThe standoff, which resulted from a dispute between the Bixbys and the state of South Carolina over surveying during the planning of a highway widening project, resulted in the deaths of two lawmen, Abbeville County Deputy Sheriff Sgt. Daniel \"Danny Boy\" Wilson, 37, and State Constable Donald \"Donnie\" Ouzts, 61. All three Bixbys were taken into police custody after surrendering late in the evening of December 8. On February 19, 2007, a Chesterfield County jury found Steven Vernon Bixby (born August 17, 1967) guilty on 17 counts, including both murders as well as several lesser charges of kidnapping and conspiracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0001-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Overview\nOn February 21, 2007, this same jury recommended that Steven Bixby receive two death sentences for the murders and 125 years in prison for the lesser charges. Bixby was scheduled to be executed on April 22, 2007; however, the appeals process has not been exhausted. On August 16, 2010, the South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the conviction of Steven Bixby and the death sentence, and on April 25, 2011, the United States Supreme Court denied Bixby's petition for a writ of certiorari, effectively ending his appeals process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0001-0002", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Overview\nSteven Bixby is currently on South Carolina's death row at the Lieber Correctional Institution in Ridgeville. On October 26, 2007, an Abbeville County, South Carolina jury found Rita Leona Bixby (n\u00e9e Greenwood; August 4, 1932 \u2013 September 12, 2011) guilty of two counts of accessory before the fact of murder and one count of conspiracy. She was given two life sentences on the accessory charges, and five additional years for conspiracy, the maximum sentence for that crime. Arthur Walls Bixby (July 4, 1929 \u2013 September 5, 2011) was found mentally incompetent to stand trial, and subsequently committed to a mental facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nThe Bixby family lived in Warren, New Hampshire. There, Arthur Bixby was jailed for failure to pay $850, three years after a judgement in a lawsuit. The family's behavior prompted the judge in the case to arrange full-time security. Rita Bixby reportedly had a long history of filing seemingly frivolous lawsuits in New Hampshire courts; one such lawsuit attempted to gain title to land belonging to the Bixbys' neighbors. This suit was dismissed by the court, but an undeterred Rita Bixby attempted (unsuccessfully) to hold a sheriff's sale of the property in question. The Bixbys also frequently attempted to bypass traditional legal processes by filing claims and suits in unofficial \"common law courts\", claiming that they were \"sovereign citizens\" and hence had the right to pursue legal action in whatever manner they desired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nIn New Hampshire, Steven Bixby was convicted of driving while drunk and without a licence in 1992. In 1994, an arrest warrant was issued when he missed parole check-ins and had failed to pay the fines. He arrived in Abbeville in the 1990s and his parents arrived in 2000. They moved into a small home situated at 4 Union Church Road, near the junction of South Carolina Highway 72, Union Church Road, and Horton Drive, in West Abbeville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0003-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nThe parcel of land surrounding the Bixby residence was subject to a 1960 easement granted by a previous owner, Haskell Johnson, to the state of South Carolina, allowing for the South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT) to expand its right-of-way on the portion of the property adjoining Highway 72, should it desire to widen this highway in the future. It was debated, however, whether Johnson's granting this easement to the state was properly recorded by the Abbeville County register of deeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0003-0002", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nWhen the 1960 easement was granted, it was permissible under state law to record highway right of way instruments in the records vault at the SCDOT headquarters in Columbia. For many years now, the SCDOT has also recorded at local county courthouses. In this situation, the 1960 easement was apparently only on file in the SCDOT records vault, and not at the Abbeville County courthouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nIn the early 2000s, the state of South Carolina began widening Highway 72 from the Georgia state line to just east of Abbeville. Reportedly, the state determined in late 2003 that it would need to enter its easement on a strip of the Bixbys' land approximately ten feet in length to construct the project. Angered by what they claimed was an unconstitutional theft of their property by the SCDOT, the Bixbys sent numerous written appeals to various state officials, arguing that the easement in question had been obtained illegally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0004-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nSome of these appeals, laced with references to the New Hampshire state constitution, invocations of the New Hampshire state motto, and fierce statements underscoring the Bixbys' seeming willingness to die for their beliefs, did not arrive at state offices until after the standoff had concluded. On November 4, 2003, Rita wrote an email to family and friends which said that if anything was done on their property, there would be two shotguns that \"would not be just for show\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0004-0002", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nOn Thursday, December 4,2003, the SCDOT officials brought a copy of the easement to the Bixby home and informed the Bixbys that they would act on the easement and take 20 feet of land and that the Bixbys had the option to buy additional footage for the nominal consideration of $1. Rita and Arthur wrote a letter to numerous state officials which closed quoting Patrick Henry (\"Give me liberty, or give me death!\") and John Stark (\"Live free or die: Death is not the worst of evils.\") and ending with \"We, the undersigned, echo those sentiments.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nOn Friday, December 5, 2003, as officials with the SCDOT began staking out the portion of the Bixbys' land to be used for the construction of the highway project, the Bixbys posted signs on their property prohibiting trespassing by \"govermen [sic] agents and all others\". At the trial of Rita Bixby, the prosecution presented evidence that, on December 5, 2003, there was a meeting between Rita, Steven and Arthur Bixby and SCDOT officials Drew McCaffrey, Michael Hannah and Dale Williams to address the Bixbys' concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0005-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, Events leading to the standoff\nAt the trial of Rita Bixby, McCaffrey testified: \"I offered to show them the plans detailing who owned the right of way, but Rita Bixby said the plans were all lies.\" Arthur Bixby also attempted to sabotage survey work by removing stakes from the yard and throwing them into the middle of Highway 72. It may have been about this time that the Bixbys began heavily fortifying their home in preparation for a standoff with police or the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nEarly on December 8, 2003, a highway worker contacted police accusing Arthur and Steven Bixby of making threatening statements, and again disrupting the laying out of survey stakes along Highway 72. Abbeville County Sheriff's Deputy Sgt. Daniel \"Danny Boy\" Wilson responded to this complaint, arriving at the Bixbys' home around 9:15 AM, only to be shot by Steven Bixby at point-blank range with a 7mm Magnum rifle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0006-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nAt both Steven Bixby's trial and at Rita Bixby's trial, the prosecution presented evidence that Steven Bixby dragged Wilson into the house, used Wilson's handcuffs to cuff his hands behind his back, made a \"citizen\u2019s arrest\" of Wilson for trespassing and read him his Miranda rights. Wilson was then held hostage for the next fourteen hours, sometime during which he died from his wound. Wilson had been shot by a hunting rifle, which had been fired by Steven Bixby. The shot was fired by Steven Bixby from inside the Bixby home, through a window and struck Danny Wilson underneath his armpit. After making vain attempts to contact Wilson, authorities sent State Constable Donnie Ouzts to investigate. Within minutes, Ouzts was fatally shot as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nAt Steven Bixby's trial, testimony by forensic pathologist Dr. Brett Woodard, who performed the autopsies on the slain officers, gave the jury physical descriptions of the wounds sustained by Wilson and Ouzts. Jurors also viewed the dried, but still blood-stained shirts of the two officers, along with other of their personal effects they carried that day. Woodard described how the bullets entered each of the men, explained the damage they created while inside the body and determined each gunshot as the cause of death. Both men were killed by a \"rifle-type\" weapon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0007-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\n\"There was an entry wound in the (right) back and an exit wound in the front near a left shirt pocket,\" Woodard said of Ouzts\u2019 wound. \"There was also a reopened wound related to recent cardiac bypass surgery, marked by an incision. That incision gave way under the pressure of the bullet.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nThe bullet that struck Ouzts did so in the back near his spine and right shoulder blade, traveling across the body at an angle \u2014 from right to left \u2014 hitting his liver and passing through his heart. Death was nearly instantaneous. Wilson was hit just inside of his protective vest, on his left side near his left armpit and left pectoral muscle. \"It was a rather large, irregular wound,\" Woodard said. The bullet traveled through Wilson, striking his aorta artery and breaking his backbone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0008-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nAccording to testimony, following the gunshot, Wilson would immediately have lost all feeling below the wound and died shortly thereafter from trauma to the aorta and severe loss of blood. He would have lost consciousness almost immediately after the gunshot wound was inflicted. Woodard also testified that Wilson\u2019s left arm was raised when he was shot. This evidence suggested Wilson could have been knocking on the door when he was hit by the bullet\u00a0\u2014 among other possible scenarios that were offered later in cross-examination by the defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nAt this point, the South Carolina Department of Probation, Parole, and Pardon Service office in Abbeville County received a phone call indicating that an officer had been shot. All probation agents in the state of South Carolina are fully certified law enforcement officers, with the same training and arrest powers as all other certified law enforcement officers in the state. Probation Agent Phillip Sears and Agent-In-Charge Ed Strickland responded immediately to the scene, not knowing what had transpired on the property. As first responders to the Bixby home, Strickland and Sears canvassed the property, and quickly located the body of Constable Ouzts lying on the front lawn. The agents summoned reinforcements and began to establish a perimeter around the residence before other law enforcement officers arrived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nIn the meantime, Rita Bixby, from the Abbeville Arms apartment rented by Steven, phoned the South Carolina Attorney General's office, leaving the following message with a secretary: \"...this is Rita Bixby and I live at 4 Union Church Road...I've talked to you before, and they have; the state has decided they were going to come in and take our property. My husband and my son are there and there is a shootout going on because they're not going to take our land. No one has approached us and asked us if they could negotiate or anything.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0010-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nThey just simply came onto our land and started taking it and there is a shootout there.\" Rita then effectively took the entire apartment complex and its surroundings hostage, threatening to randomly shoot bystanders if either her husband or her son were harmed by the police. At the apartment, Rita had her son Dennis with her.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0011-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nThroughout the late morning and into the afternoon, members of various law enforcement agencies as well as Abbeville residents who had befriended the Bixbys attempted to negotiate with the family, to no avail. A SWAT unit came from Columbia by helicopter, followed by a South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) armored vehicle. At one point, nearly 200 law enforcement agents surrounded the Bixby residence. A constant barrage of gunfire, up to a thousand rounds of ammunition in five minutes, emanated from the small house, thwarting attempts by police to rescue Officer Wilson or capture the residence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0011-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nSo heavy was the gunfire, in fact, that the police had to be resupplied several times with ammunition. Media estimates have pegged the actual number of rounds fired in the tens of thousands. According to SLED Chief Robert Stewart, the level of gunfire from the Bixbys was worse than anything he had encountered in his 30-year career. Indeed, many Abbeville residents living over a mile from the site of the standoff reported hearing the continuous gunfire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0012-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nBy late afternoon, SWAT officers were able to negotiate Rita Bixby's surrender, though she refused to assist in negotiations with Arthur and Steven. Upon searching Steven's apartment and Rita's vehicle, authorities discovered numerous high-powered firearms, as well as a large quantity of what has been described as anti-government literature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0013-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nAround 7:15 PM, two hours after Rita's surrender, police breached the Bixbys' front door with a 10-foot steel battering ram attached to a vehicle, breaking a propane line and starting a fire, which several officers extinguished. A surveillance robot, armed with tear gas and 5X intensity pepper spray, was dispatched into the house, but was unable to enter due to the large quantity of debris blocking the front door. The robot was, however, able to return video of Danny Boy Wilson's handcuffed, lifeless body lying in a pool of blood. In an attempt to recover Wilson's body, a SWAT unit stormed the house; surprised by the earlier blaze, the Bixbys were caught off-guard for a moment, as they ceased firing long enough for the officers to drag the body from the house.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0014-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nBy 10:00 PM, after hours of constant firing from both sides and the release of over twenty canisters of tear gas and pepper spray into the nearly destroyed Bixby home, Steven Bixby surrendered to police. About an hour later, a critically wounded Arthur Bixby also surrendered and was flown to a Greenville, SC hospital, where he later recovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0015-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The standoff\nUpon entering the house for the first time, officers found a total of nine firearms, including Wilson's, as well as a large library of legal texts and articles related to militia uprisings. They also found several different wills made out by the Bixbys, and numerous suicide notes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0016-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nOn December 9, 2003, Steven and Rita Bixby were arraigned in Abbeville County on various charges related to the deaths of Wilson and Ouzts. Steven was charged with two counts of murder and one count of criminal conspiracy, while Rita was charged with accessory before the fact to murder, criminal conspiracy, and misprision of a felony. At arraignment, Steven said he was acting in self-defense and cited the New Hampshire motto, parts of the Constitution of New Hampshire, and some Federal law. There, he said, \"I love this country. I just can't stand the bastards in it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0016-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nArthur Bixby was later arraigned on charges similar to those against Steven. Prosecutors originally planned to seek the death penalty for all three Bixbys, but on August 23, 2006, Circuit Judge Alexander Macaulay ruled that the death penalty was not an option in Rita's case, a ruling that prosecutors appealed to have overturned by the South Carolina Supreme Court. In State v. Bixby, 373 S.C. 74, 644 S.E.2d 54 (2007), the South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's decision that Rita Bixby was ineligible for the death penalty under South Carolina law because she was merely charged with accessory before the fact of murder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0017-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nFollowing arraignment, Steven Bixby likened the standoff to the events at Waco and Ruby Ridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0018-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nAll three Bixbys were initially held in the Abbeville County jail, awaiting trial. For a brief period in 2005, Steven Bixby was moved to the Anderson County jail; in early 2006, he was moved again to the Lexington County jail, where he remained as of late August 2006, due to a breach of confidentiality regarding his meetings with expert witnesses in the case. Trial dates in the case were pushed back several times from their originally scheduled starts in mid-2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0018-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nOne reason for the delays was the sudden death of Circuit Judge Marc Westbrook in a September 2005 traffic accident; another reason was the contest between the defense and prosecution over both the venue of the trial and the county from which a jury pool would be selected. In early 2006, Macaulay agreed with Steven Bixby's defense that it would be nearly impossible to seat a truly impartial jury of Abbeville County citizens; in July 2006, Macaulay ruled that potential jurors would come from Chesterfield County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0019-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nOn February 19, 2007, a Chesterfield County jury found Steven Bixby guilty on 17 counts, including both murders as well as several lesser charges of kidnapping and conspiracy. On February 21, 2007, this same jury recommended that Steven Bixby receive two death sentences for the murders and 125 years in prison for the lesser charges. Bixby was scheduled to be executed on April 22, 2007; however, the appeals process has not been exhausted. On August 16, 2010, the South Carolina Supreme Court affirmed the conviction of Steven Bixby and the death sentence (State v. Bixby, Opinion No. 26871, August 16, 2010). Steven Bixby is currently on South Carolina's death row at the Lieber Correctional Institution in Ridgeville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0020-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nWhile in jail, Steven Bixby wrote over 1,500 pages of letters to his girlfriend. Some of the letters, signed \"chaotic patriot Steve\", were admitted during his trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0021-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nDespite initial concerns over security at the 100-year-old Abbeville County Courthouse, Eighth Circuit Judicial Solicitor Jerry Peace determined on August 29, 2006, that the trial would be held in Abbeville County. The trial began February 14, 2007 with a jury brought in from 160 miles away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0022-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nOn October 26, 2007, Rita Bixby was found guilty in Abbeville County Court of General Sessions. Judge Alexander Macauley presided over the week-long trial. Rita Bixby was found guilty by a jury of one count of conspiracy to commit murder, 1 count of accessory before the fact in the murder of Danny Wilson, and 1 count of accessory before the fact in the murder of Donnie Ouzts. The maximum penalty that could be imposed on the conspiracy count was 5 years. The accessory charge carried a mandatory minimum sentence of 30 years to life without parole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0022-0001", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nJudge Alexander Macauley sentenced Rita Bixby to 5 years in the custody of the Department of Corrections for the charge of conspiracy to commit murder. He sentenced her to life without parole on each accessory conviction. Rita Bixby made no statement to the court, only asking her attorney to advise Judge Macauley that she \"is not guilty of these charges\". Tearful family members of the deceased who were present for the trial embraced each other in relief at the ruling of Judge Macauley. Rita Bixby, on the date of her sentence, was 75 years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0023-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nBecause Arthur Bixby had developed dementia, he was not capable of standing trial. In July 2008, prosecutors dropped the murder charges and requested the probate court commit him indefinitely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0024-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nOn February 22, 2008, South Carolina state transportation officials agreed to name a stretch of state Highway 72 in Abbeville County for Abbeville County Deputy Sheriff Danny Wilson and Abbeville County Magistrate's Constable Donnie Ouzts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0025-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nOn August 17, 2010, the South Carolina Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for Steven Bixby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175632-0026-0000", "contents": "2003 standoff in Abbeville, South Carolina, The aftermath\nIn September 2011, the parents died of natural causes a week apart. On the 5th, Arthur died in at the age of 82. On the 12th, Rita died of cancer at the Graham Correctional Institution. She was 79. The house was demolished in 2018. As of 2021, Steven Bixby remained on death row because the drugs used for lethal injection were unavailable; however, it is expected with the planned signing of S.200, the state will resume executions with electrocution or firing squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175633-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nThe 2003 term of the Supreme Court of the United States began October 6, 2003, and concluded October 3, 2004. The table illustrates which opinion was filed by each justice in each case and which justices joined each opinion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175633-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, 2003 term membership and statistics\nThis was the eighteenth term of Chief Justice Rehnquist's tenure, and the tenth consecutive term in which the Court's membership had not changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 97], "content_span": [98, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nThe Supreme Court of the United States handed down seven per curiam opinions during its 2003 term, which began October 6, 2003 and concluded October 3, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nBecause per curiam decisions are issued from the Court as an institution, these opinions all lack the attribution of authorship or joining votes to specific justices. All justices on the Court at the time the decision was handed down are assumed to have participated and concurred unless otherwise noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0002-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Court membership\nAssociate Justices: John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 89], "content_span": [90, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0003-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Yarborough v. Gentry\n540 U.S. 1 Decided October 20, 2003. Ninth Circuit reversed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 93], "content_span": [94, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0004-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Mitchell v. Esparza\n540 U.S. 12 Decided November 3, 2003. Sixth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 92], "content_span": [93, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0005-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Illinois v. Fisher\n540 U.S. 544 Decided February 23, 2004. Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0006-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Muhammad v. Close\n540 U.S. 749 Argued December 1, 2003.Decided February 25, 2004. Sixth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 90], "content_span": [91, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0007-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Johnson v. California\n541 U.S. 428 Argued March 30, 2004.Decided May 3, 2004. The Court dismissed the case for want of jurisdiction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 94], "content_span": [95, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0008-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Middleton v. McNeil\n541 U.S. 433 Decided May 3, 2004. Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 92], "content_span": [93, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0009-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Holland v. Jackson\n542 U.S. 649 Decided June 28, 2004. Sixth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175634-0010-0000", "contents": "2003 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Holland v. Jackson\nStevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer noted without separate opinion that they would deny the petition for a writ of certiorari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175635-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 world oil market chronology, Sources\nOtherSources include: Associated Press (AP), Dow Jones (DJ), Japan Times, Los Angeles Times (LAT), New York Times (NYT), Oil Daily (OD), Reuters, USA Today (USAT), Wall Street Journal (WSJ), Washington Post (WP), World Markets Research Center (WMRC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175636-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 \u00c5landic legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in the \u00c5land Islands on 19 October 2003 to elect members of the Lagtinget. The 30 members were elected for a four-year term by proportional representation. Though the \u00c5land Centre recorded its worst results to date in the elections, it regained its status as the largest party on \u00c5land, beating out the Liberals for \u00c5land by a mere 10 votes. The \u00c5land Social Democrats had one of its best election results ever, doubling its representation in the Lagting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175636-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 \u00c5landic legislative election\nFollowing the elections, the previous government formed by \u00c5land Centre and the Liberals for \u00c5land, was replaced by one comprising the \u00c5land Centre, Liberals for \u00c5land, \u00c5land Social Democrats and Freeminded Co-operation parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175637-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 \u00darvalsdeild, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and KR won the championship. \u00der\u00f3ttur's Bj\u00f6rg\u00f3lfur Takefusa was the top scorer with 10 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175637-0001-0000", "contents": "2003 \u00darvalsdeild, Results\nEach team played every opponent once home and away for a total of 18 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175638-0000-0000", "contents": "2003 \u00ddokary Liga\nThe 2003 Turkmenistan Higher League (\u00ddokary Liga) season was the eleventh season of Turkmenistan's professional football league. Ten teams competed in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175639-0000-0000", "contents": "2003-03-29 George M. Holmes Convention Center, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC\n2003-03-29 George M. Holmes Convention Center, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC is a live album by Dave Matthews and Tim Reynolds, and is the ninth volume in the Dave Matthews Band's DMBlive series of download-only concert recordings which are not given unique album titles. The album was recorded at the George M. Holmes Convocation Center at Appalachian State University in Boone, North Carolina on March 29, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 86], "section_span": [86, 86], "content_span": [87, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175640-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season\nThe 2003\u201304 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season happened from 4 August 2003 to 23 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175640-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season, Season review\nThe 2003\u201304 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season started on 4 August 2003 against Karlsruher SC. N\u00fcrnberg won 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175641-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 2. Bundesliga\nThe 2003\u201304 2. Bundesliga was the 30th season of the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of the German football league system. 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg, Arminia Bielefeld and Mainz 05 were promoted to the Bundesliga while VfB L\u00fcbeck, Jahn Regensburg, Union Berlin and VfL Osnabr\u00fcck were relegated to the Regionalliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175641-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 2. Bundesliga, League table\nFor the 2003\u201304 season SSV Jahn Regensburg, SpVgg Unterhaching, Erzgebirge Aue and VfL Osnabr\u00fcck were newly promoted to the 2. Bundesliga from the Regionalliga while Arminia Bielefeld, 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg and FC Energie Cottbus had been relegated to the league from the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175642-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 2. Liga (Slovakia)\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the Slovak Second Football League (also known as 2. liga) was the eleventh season of the league since its establishment. It began on 19 July 2003 and ended on 5 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group\nThe 2003\u201304 A Group is the 56th season of the top Bulgarian national football league (commonly referred to as A Group) and the 80th edition of a Bulgarian national championship tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group\nThis is the first season since the revision of the league rules after an unsuccessful attempt for a creation of a so-called Premier Professional Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group, Overview\nIn the doorstep of the new millennium the Bulgarian Football Union decided to reform the football league system creating the Premier Professional Football League. The new top tier of Bulgarian football required all of its participants to be licensed as professional football clubs. The reforms also saw the number of teams reduced and introduced relegation play-offs during the years of its existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group, Overview\nThe Bulgarian Premier League, however, was unsuccessful so from season 2003\u201304 the top Bulgarian league was re-established as the Bulgarian A Professional Football Group, returning to the traditions of A Republican Football Group and increasing the number of teams participating back to 16. Still, A Group retained the requirement of a professional status of all participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group, Overview\nIn the 2003\u201304 season Lokomotiv Plovdiv became champions for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group, Teams\nA total of 16 clubs contested the league, including 12 from the previous season in the tier, and 4 promoted from the second flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group, Teams\nAs before the start of the season, the top flight of Bulgarian football was once again restructured and the number of participants in the league was increased back to the traditional 16 teams from 14 the previous season, there were no promotion play-offs for the right to participate in A Group that season. Instead after the end of season 2002\u201303 the last two teams in the top level \u2013 Dobrudzha Dobrich placed 13th, and Rilski Sportist Samokov placed 14th \u2013 were directly relegated to B Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175643-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A Group, Teams\nThe winners and the runners-up from the two divisions of B Group in season 2002\u201303 \u2013 Vidima-Rakovski and Rodopa Smolyan from the East division, and Belasitsa and Makedonska slava from the West division \u2013 were directly promoted to the top level of Bulgarian football. Vidima-Rakovski and Rodopa both made their debut in the top tier, while Belasitsa Petrich returned after a one-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175644-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. ChievoVerona season\nA.C. ChievoVerona played its third consecutive season in Serie A, and nearly equaled 7th place from the 2002-03 Serie A season. The club finished 9th in Serie A and was eliminated by Perugia in the round of 16 of Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175645-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Milan season\nIn 2003\u201304, Associazione Calcio Milan managed to claim their first Serie A title since 1998\u201399. Arguably, this was the pinnacle of Carlo Ancelotti's Milan side, as the players proved they had the ability to perform effectively for the whole season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175645-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Milan season\nRoma both scored more and conceded fewer goals than Milan, but the effectiveness the Milanese showed in tight matches ensured their winning margin was edged out to a stable 11 points. The title was sealed against Roma at home, with a goal by Andriy Shevchenko proving enough for a 1\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175645-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Milan season\nIn the Champions League, Milan failed to defend their European title, as they were knocked out in the quarter-finals, losing 4\u20130 to Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a in the second leg, after they had won 4\u20131 at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175645-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Milan season\nIndividually, the biggest surprise was how the Brazilian trequartista Kak\u00e1 seamlessly found his way into the Italian game, being a key player in Milan's success. The other two arrivals, Cafu and Giuseppe Pancaro, also integrated well with the team. Andriy Shevchenko was crowned as European Footballer of the Year on the back of his successful season. Tactically, Ancelotti used two different formations throughout the season; the 4\u20134\u20132 diamond (or 4\u20131\u20132\u20131\u20132) and the 4\u20133\u20132\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175645-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Milan season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175645-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Milan season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175646-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Perugia season\nA.C. Perugia were relegated from Serie A with a bang, following a chaotic season, in which president Luciano Gaucci managed to upset the Italian football society, by claiming that the referees' were deliberately trying to relegate Perugia to Serie B. Prior to the season, he performed a PR-stunt, when signing Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's son Al-Saadi Gaddafi He also continued trying to sign female players, trying to sign both Hanna Ljungberg and Victoria Svensson, according to Swedish daily Aftonbladet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175646-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Perugia season\nIn the same paper, Ancona goalkeeper Magnus Hedman accused his team mates for throwing away the final match of the season, in which Perugia won 1-0. That victory qualified Perugia for the relegation playoffs against Fiorentina, where Enrico Fantini scored in both matches for Fiorentina, ensuring Perugia was being relegated, only one year before the club folded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175646-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Perugia season\nThe list of players representing the club during the season included 35 players, which meant the team drastically changed from game to game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175646-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.C. Perugia season, Serie A, Relegation Playoffs\nFiorentina were promoted to 2004\u201305 Serie A; Perugia were relegated to 2004\u201305 Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175647-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Bari season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Italian football season, A.S. Bari competed in the Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175647-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Bari season, Season summary\nBari were expected to make a bid for an immediate return to the Serie A, but struggled all season. Manager Marco Tardelli was sacked and replaced by Giuseppe Pillon, who led the team to a secure but disappointing 21st place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175647-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Bari season, Kit\nA.S. Bari's kit was manufactured by Italian sports retailer Lotto and sponsored by Pasta Ambra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175647-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Bari season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175648-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Roma season\nAssociazione Sportiva Roma had a tremendous season in the league, scoring most goals and conceding the fewest goals of all teams, but despite this, A.C. Milan were able to run away with the title, due to a greater efficiency in winning their matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175648-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Roma season\nIn Fabio Capello's last season as Roma's coach, the squad did not manage to win any titles whatsoever, even though the results showed a resurgence from the anticlimactic 2002\u201303 season, in which Roma dipped to eighth in the league standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175648-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 A.S. Roma season\nFinancial worries forced the club to sell Emerson to Juventus and Walter Samuel to Real Madrid following the season's end. Capello controversially signed for Juventus as well, but key players such as Francesco Totti, Antonio Cassano and Cristian Chivu remained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175649-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ABA Goodyear League\nThe 2003\u201304 ABA Goodyear League was the third season of the Liga ABA. The league expanded this season: 14 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro, and Slovenia participated in Goodyear League in its third season: Union Olimpija, Krka, Pivovarna La\u0161ko, Geoplin Slovan, Cibona VIP, Zadar, Zagreb, Split Croatia Osiguranje, \u0160iroki Hercegtisak, Banjalu\u010dka pivara, Crvena zvezda, Reflex, Budu\u0107nost, Lov\u0107en CG komercijalna banka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175649-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ABA Goodyear League\nThere were 26 rounds played in the regular part of the season, best four teams qualified for the Final Four Tournament which was played in Zagreb from April 16 until April 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175649-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ABA Goodyear League, Regular season\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175649-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ABA Goodyear League, Final four, Incident\nOn Friday night, April 16 around 11pm following the semifinal games, an ethnically motivated incident occurred when Crvena zvezda's director Igor \u017de\u017eelj and B92 journalist Danijel Bukumirovi\u0107 got assaulted at the parking lot of Panorama Hotel by an organized group of fifteen Croatian hooligans with chains, rocks and metal poles. Bukumirovi\u0107 managed to escape into the car with only minor injuries while \u017de\u017eelj wasn't as lucky and ended up with a fractured rib and 6 stitches on his forehead. Croatian police reportedly arrested six individuals in connection with the attack that was carried out by a group that trolled around the Final Four venue Dra\u017een Petrovi\u0107 Basketball Hall, as well as hotels Sheraton and Panorama looking to beat up anyone from Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175650-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ABA season\nThe 2003\u201304 ABA season was the third season of the American Basketball Association, and the first season since the league took a year off in 2002 for reorganization. The regular season started in November 2003 and the year ended with the championship game in March 2004 featuring the Long Beach Jam and Kansas City Knights. Long Beach led by Dennis Rodman defeated Kansas City, 126\u2013123 in the championship game to win their first ABA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175651-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ACB season\nThe 2003\u201304 ACB season was the 21st season of the Liga ACB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175652-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AEK Athens F.C. season\nAEK Athens F.C. competed for the 45th consecutive season in the Greek top flight and 81st year in existence as a football club. They competed in the Alpha Ethniki, the Greek Cup and the UEFA Champions League. The season begun at 17 August 2003 and finished at 22 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175652-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AEK Athens F.C. season, Players, Squad statistics\nNOTE: The players are the ones that have been announced by the AEK Athens' press release. No edits should be made unless a player arrival or exit is announced. Updated 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175652-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AEK Athens F.C. season, Greek Cup, Second Round\nAEK Athens qualified to the Third Round without a match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175653-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AFC Ajax season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Dutch football season, AFC Ajax competed in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175653-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AFC Ajax season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175653-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AFC Ajax season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175653-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AFC Ajax season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175654-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 AHL season was the 68th season of the American Hockey League. The league introduces the Willie Marshall Award in honour the career points leader in the AHL, and awards it to the annual top goal scorer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175654-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AHL season\nThe AHL changes from a six division alignment to four divisions within two conferences. The Eastern conference consists of the Atlantic and East divisions, and the Western conference consists of the North and West divisions. Twenty-eight teams played 80 games each in the schedule. The Milwaukee Admirals finished first overall in the regular season, and won the Calder Cup, defeating the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175654-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175654-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AHL season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175654-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AHL season, All Star Classic\nThe 17th AHL All-Star Classic was played on February 9, 2004, at the Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Team Canada defeated team PlanetUSA 9-5. In the skills competition held the night before, team PlanetUSA defeated team Canada 18-9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175655-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AJ Auxerre season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 98th season in the existence of AJ Auxerre and the club's 23rd consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Auxerre participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue, and UEFA Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175656-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ARFU Asian Rugby Series\nThe 2003\u201304 ARFU Asian Rugby Series was the first edition of a tournament created by Asian Rugby Football Union for national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175656-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ARFU Asian Rugby Series\nThe formula was in two step. The 12 teams were divided in three pool of three, then, according to the results of the first round, in four pool in order to define the ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175656-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ARFU Asian Rugby Series, First round, Pool A\nRanking: 1. Japan 2. Hong Kong 3. Arabian Gulf 4. Sri Lanka", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175656-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ARFU Asian Rugby Series, First round, Pool B\nRanking: 1. Chinese Taipei 2. Singapore 3. Malaysia 4. India", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175656-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ARFU Asian Rugby Series, First round, Pool C\nRanking: 1. South Korea 2. China 3. Kazakhstan 4. Thailand", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was AS Monaco FC's 47th season in Ligue 1. They finished third in Ligue 1, were knocked out of the Coupe de la Ligue by Marseille at the Round of 32, knocked out of the Coupe de France by Ch\u00e2teauroux at the quarter-finals and reached the final of the UEFA Champions League where they were defeated by Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season, Season summary\nMonaco were clear outsiders to progress in the Champions League, but defeated tournament favourites like Real Madrid and Chelsea to face another unfancied side, Porto, in the final. Monaco were comprehensively beaten 3\u20130 by Jos\u00e9 Mourinho's side, but that did not dampen Monaco's achievement of having defied their underdog status to come within 90 minutes of club football's greatest prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season, Season summary\nSpanish striker Fernando Morientes (signed on loan from Real Madrid) was Monaco's top goalscorer with 22 goals in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season, Transfers\nIn:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175657-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Monaco FC season, Transfers\nOut:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175658-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Nancy Lorraine season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 37th season in the existence of AS Nancy Lorraine and the club's fourth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, AS Nancy Lorraine participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175659-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 AS Saint-\u00c9tienne season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 85th season in the existence of AS Saint-\u00c9tienne and the club's third consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, AS Saint-\u00c9tienne participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175660-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ASOA Valence season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 84th season in the existence of ASOA Valence and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, ASOA Valence participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175661-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aberdeen F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Aberdeen's 91st season in the top flight of Scottish football and their 93rd season overall. Aberdeen competed in the Scottish Premier League, Scottish League Cup, Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175661-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aberdeen F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175662-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Adelaide United FC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Adelaide United FC's inaugural season since its establishment in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175662-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Adelaide United FC season, Review\nDespite the rush to form the team, and starting five weeks into the season (the first four rounds of matches were squeezed in later in the season), the team lost just twice in its first 13 matches. Hectic catch up phases in November and December (7 matches in 31 days for 4 wins and 3 draws) and February (6 matches in 24 days for 4 wins and 2 losses) passed by with success. Aside from the debut win over Brisbane, regular season highlights included a 2\u20131 away win over Parramatta Power, a resounding 2\u20130 home victory against South Melbourne, and a 1\u20130 win over an in-form Marconi and the effective sealing of third spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175662-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Adelaide United FC season, Review\nDespite the high position, many people expected the wheels to fall off in the finals. But the finals phase served up two more fairytale results. Everything came together for the first leg of the Elimination Final, and the 3\u20130 win over the Brisbane Strikers was the team's first win by more than two goals. The roller coaster ride passed deep into a trough the following week in Brisbane with a 4\u20131 loss \u2013 but United won the Elimination Final over all due to the away goals rule, progressing to the Minor Semi-Final versus South Melbourne. This attracted the club's largest ever crowd, officially 16,558, in a tough win on penalties. The team was then outclassed by the eventual premiers, Perth Glory, 5\u20130 at Subiaco Oval in the Preliminary Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175662-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Adelaide United FC season, Review\nBuilt up from the core of Adelaide City's 2002\u201303 squad, the Adelaide United team forged ahead with a burgeoning team spirit that became their signature attribute. The previous season's Adelaide City players Mike Valkanis, Aaron Goulding, Kristian Rees and captain Aurelio Vidmar merged superbly with the return to Adelaide of Alagich (from Brisbane), Aloisi (Italy) and others to form an outfit which performed consistently all season. Coach John Kosmina, also returning after 25 years to his home city, is a clear favourite of the fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175662-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Adelaide United FC season, Review\nWith the winding-down of the NSL, the team has become a founding member of the A-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175662-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Adelaide United FC season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175663-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Airdrie United F.C. season\nSeason 2003\u201304 was Airdrie United's second competitive season. They competed in the Second Division, Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175663-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Airdrie United F.C. season, Summary\nAirdrie United finished first in the Second Division and were promoted to the First Division. They reached the third round of the Scottish Cup, the second round of the League Cup and reached the final of the Challenge Cup. Airdrie finished Runners-up, losing 2\u20130 to Inverness.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175664-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team (variously \"Alabama\", \"UA\", \"Bama\" or \"The Tide\") represented the University of Alabama in the 2003\u201304 college basketball season. The head coach was Mark Gottfried, who was in his sixth season at Alabama. The team played its home games at Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Alabama and was a member of the Southeastern Conference. This was the 92nd season of basketball in the school's history. The Crimson Tide finished the season 20\u201313, 8\u20138 in SEC play, lost in the second round of the 2004 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament. They were invited to the NCAA Tournament and advance to the elite eight before losing to the eventual national champs, UCONN. This is to date the furthest any Alabama team has advanced in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175665-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers men's ice hockey season\nThe 2003\u201304 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers ice hockey team represented the University of Alabama in Huntsville in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The Chargers were coached by Doug Ross who was in his twenty-second season as head coach. The Chargers played their home games in the Von Braun Center and were members of the College Hockey America conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175666-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 63rd season in Albacete Balompi\u00e9's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175666-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175666-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup\n2003\u201304 Albanian Cup (Albanian: Kupa e Shqip\u00ebris\u00eb) was the fifty-second season of Albania's annual cup competition. It began on 29 August 2003 with the First Round and ended on 19 May 2004 with the Final match. The winners of the competition qualified for the 2004\u201305 first qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League. Dinamo Tirana were the defending champions, having won their thirteenth Albanian Cup last season. The cup was won by Partizani Tirana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup\nThe rounds were played in a two-legged format similar to those of European competitions. If the aggregated score was tied after both games, the team with the higher number of away goals advanced. If the number of away goals was equal in both games, the match was decided by extra time and a penalty shootout, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup, First round\nGames were played on 29 August \u2013 4 September 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup, Second round\nGames were played on 17 September \u2013 1 October 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup, Third round\nAll fourteen teams of the 2002\u201303 Superliga and First Division entered in this round, along with Second Round winners. First legs were played on 12 November 2003 and the second legs were played on 26 November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup, Quarter finals\nIn this round entered the 8 winners from the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175667-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Albanian Cup, Semifinals\nIn this round entered the four winners from the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175668-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Algerian Championnat National\nThe 2003\u201304 Algerian Championnat National was the 42nd season of the Algerian Championnat National since its establishment in 1962. A total of 16 teams contested the league, with USM Alger as the defending champions, The Championnat started on August 14, 2003. and ended on May 24, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175669-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Algerian Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Algerian Cup was the 40th edition of the Algerian Cup. USM Alger won the Cup by defeating JS Kabylie 5-4 on penalties in the final after the game ended 0-0. It was USM Alger's seventh Algerian Cup in its history and second in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175670-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nThe 2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship was the 34th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1970-71. The championship began on 19 October 2003 and ended on 17 March 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175670-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nNemo Rangers were the defending champions, however, failed to qualify after being beaten by Na Piarsaigh in the third round of the 2003 Cork County Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175670-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nOn 17 March 2004, Caltra won the championship following a 0-13 to 0-12 defeat of An Ghaeltcaht in the All-Ireland final at Croke Park. It remains their only championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175670-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nCaltra's Michael Meehan was the championship's top scorer with 4-19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175670-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship, Team changes\nThe Waterford club champions did not contest the Munster Club Championship due to a delay in the completion of the Waterford County Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175671-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship was the 34th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament for senior clubs. The championship began on 18 October 2003 and ended on 17 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175671-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nBirr were the defending champions but were defeated by O'Loughlin Gaels in the Leinster final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175671-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nOn 17 March 2004, Newtownshandrum won the championship following a 0-17 to 1-6 defeat of Dunloy in the All-Ireland final. This was their first All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175671-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nNewtownshandrum's Ben O'Connor was the championship's top scorer with 0-47.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175671-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, Pre-championship\nThe build-up to the opening of the championship was dominated by Birr and the possibility that they would become the first club to win three All-Ireland titles in-a-row, and a record-breaking fifth championship title over all. Having secured their fifth successive county title, Birr were favourites to retain their provincial title for a third year-in-a-row. This would leave them only two wins away from hurling immortality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 70], "content_span": [71, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175672-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Allsvenskan (ice hockey) season\nThe 2003\u201304 Allsvenskan season was the fifth season of the Allsvenskan, the second level of ice hockey in Sweden. 24 teams participated in the league, and Mora IK, Hammarby IF, AIK, and Skellefte\u00e5 AIK qualified for the Kvalserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175672-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Allsvenskan (ice hockey) season, Relegation round, Northern Group\nVallentuna BK did not participate in the relegation round and were relegated to Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175673-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Alpha Ethniki\nThe 2003\u201304 Alpha Ethniki was the 68th season of the highest football league of Greece. The season began on 23 August 2003 and ended on 22 May 2004. Panathinaikos won their 19th Greek title and their first one in eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175673-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Alpha Ethniki, Promotion/Relegation Play-Off\nPlayed at a neutral venue (Makedonikos Stadium, Thessaloniki), between the 14th-place team in the Alpha Ethniki and the 3rd-place team in the Beta Ethniki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175674-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Amiens SC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 103rd season in the existence of Amiens SC and the club's third consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Amiens SC participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175675-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ancona Calcio season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Italian football season, Ancona Calcio competed in the Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175675-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ancona Calcio season, Season summary\nAncona never won a match between September and April, recording 21 losses and seven draws: losing with Sampdoria in early spring, the side collected the certain relegation. In the whole league, it obtained just 13 points finishing last in table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175675-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ancona Calcio season, Kit\nAncona's kit was manufactured by French sports retailer Le Coq Sportif and sponsored by Banca Marche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 33], "content_span": [34, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175675-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ancona Calcio season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Where a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175676-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Angers SCO season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 85th season in the existence of Angers SCO and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Angers SCO participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175677-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Angola Basketball Cup, 2004 Angola Men's Basketball Cup\nPetro Atl\u00e9tico won the trophy by beating Primeiro de Agosto 93-73 in the final played on May 23, 2004 at the Pavilh\u00e3o da Cidadela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175677-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Angola Basketball Cup, 2004 Angola Women's Basketball Cup\nThe 2004 Women's Basketball Cup was contested by five teams that played a preliminary round robin, the top two of which played the final at the best of three games Primeiro de Agosto A was the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175678-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Angola Basketball Super Cup\nThe 2004 Angola Men's Basketball Super Cup (11th edition) was contested by Primeiro de Agosto, as the 2003 league champion and Interclube, the 2003 cup runner-up. Primeiro de Agosto was the winner, making it is's 4th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175678-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Angola Basketball Super Cup\nThe 2004 Angola Women's Basketball Super Cup (9th edition) was contested by Primeiro de Agosto, as the 2003 league champion and Interclube, the 2003 cup runner-up. Primeiro de Agosto was the winner, making it is's 4th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175679-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arab Champions League\nThe 2003\u201304 Arab Champions League is the first edition of a new format called Arab Champions League replacing the former Arab Unified Club Championship. The teams represented Arab nations from Africa and Asia. CS Sfaxien of Tunisia won the final against El-Ismaily of Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175679-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arab Champions League, First round\nQatar and UA Emirates forfeited for undisclosed reasons. Dahak Club (Djibouti) were originally announced as participants but apparently not included in the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175679-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arab Champions League, Group stage, Group 2\nAl Ahly withdrew after the first match of the group against Al-Hilal, the result of this match was not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175680-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2003\u201304 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n was the 113th season of top-flight football in Argentina. The season ran from August 3, 2003 to June 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175680-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nBoca Juniors won the Apertura (league title n/a 26) and River Plate the Clausura (34th title) championships, while four teams were relegated, Chacarita Juniors, Nueva Chicago (the last two teams in average table), Atl\u00e9tico de Rafaela and Talleres (C) (lost promotion/relegation playoffs)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175681-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Arizona during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by Lute Olson in his 21st year as Arizona's head coach, the team played their home games at McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona as members of the Pacific-10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175681-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe team went 11\u20137 in regular-season conference play. They advanced to the semifinals of the 2004 Pac-10 Tournament before losing to Washington 90\u201385. Seeded ninth in the South Region of the 2004 NCAA Tournament, Arizona fell 80\u201376 to Seton Hall in the first round. The team went 20\u201310 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175681-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nAfter the season sophomore small forward Andre Iguodala entered the 2004 NBA draft in which he was selected ninth overall by the Philadelphia 76ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175682-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team represented the University of Arkansas in the 2003\u201304 college basketball season. The head coach was Stan Heath, serving for his second year. The team played its home games in Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175683-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Armenian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Armenian Hockey League season was the third season of the Armenian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Armenia. Four teams participated in the league, and Dinamo Yerevan won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 106th in the history of Arsenal Football Club. It began on 1 July 2003 and concluded on 30 June 2004, with competitive matches played between August and May. The club ended the Premier League campaign as champions without a single defeat \u2013 a record of 26 wins and 12 draws. Arsenal fared less well in the cups, eliminated in the FA Cup and League Cup semi-finals to Manchester United and Middlesbrough respectively, and at the quarter-final stage of the UEFA Champions League to Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season\nThe main addition to the first team was goalkeeper Jens Lehmann for \u00a31.5\u00a0million; striker Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes was later purchased in the winter transfer window. Arsenal retained their best players and successfully negotiated new contracts for captain Patrick Vieira and midfielder Robert Pires. The stability of the squad meant Arsenal were considered front-runners for the Premier League title, along with Manchester United, and Chelsea who were taken over by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season\nA strong start to the season saw Arsenal top the league table after four matches. The team's draw at Manchester United in September marked an unsavoury episode between both clubs: several Arsenal players were charged and fined accordingly by The Football Association for their part in a mass brawl that occurred after the match. In November, Arsenal beat Dynamo Kyiv by a single goal and more impressively scored five against Inter Milan at the San Siro \u2013 two results which kick-started their Champions League campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season\nAt the turn of the year, the team won nine league matches in a row to consolidate first position. In the first week of April, they were eliminated from the FA Cup and Champions League, but by the end of the month had secured their status as league champions, with a 2\u20132 draw against local rivals Tottenham Hotspur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season\n34 different players represented the club in five competitions and there were 15 different goalscorers. Arsenal's top goalscorer for the third year running was Thierry Henry, who scored 39 goals in 51 games. The Frenchman was given the accolade of PFA Players' Player of the Year by his fellow peers and the FWA Footballer of the Year by football writers. Although the Arsenal team were unsuccessful in cup competitions, their dominance in the league was regarded by many commentators as a standalone achievement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season\nThey acquired the nickname \"The Invincibles\", much like the Preston North End team that went unbeaten in the inaugural Football League season. The club was awarded a golden replica trophy by the Premier League once the season concluded and they remained unbeaten for 49 games, setting a new record. In 2012, the Arsenal team of 2003\u201304 won the \"Best Team\" category in the Premier League 20 Seasons Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nArsenal had finished the previous season as runners-up in the Premier League, overhauled by Manchester United in the final ten weeks of the season. The club did, however, retain the FA Cup, with a 1\u20130 win against Southampton. Such was Arsenal's effective start to the 2002\u201303 campaign, manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger suggested his team could remain the whole season undefeated in all competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nIt's not impossible as A.C. Milan once did it but I can't see why it's so shocking to say it. Do you think Manchester United, Liverpool or Chelsea don't dream that as well? They're exactly the same. They just don't say it because they're scared to look ridiculous, but nobody is ridiculous in this job as we know anything can happen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nThe team lost to Everton a month after Wenger's proclamation; teenager Wayne Rooney scored the match winner, which ended a run of 30 league games without defeat. By February 2003, Arsenal moved five points clear of Manchester United at the top of the league table, but injuries to key players, not least captain Patrick Vieira, had destabilised the team. Draws in April, coupled with a defeat to Leeds United at home, mathematically ended Arsenal's chances of retaining the title. Wenger refuted opinions from the media that their season was a failure and said:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nOf course we want to win the league, but I think the most difficult thing for the club is to be consistent and we have been remarkably consistent. We lose the league to a team [Manchester United] who spends 50% more money every year \u2013 last year they bought a player for \u00a330\u00a0million when they lost the championship. They will do the same next year and we [have] done miracles just to fight with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nIn the close season, Chelsea was sold to Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich for \u00a3140\u00a0million, the biggest takeover in British football history at the time. Arsenal vice-chairman David Dein however was displeased, and quipped that Abramovich had \"parked his Russian tanks on our lawn and is firing \u00a350 notes at us\", Abramovich was said to have placed a bid for Arsenal striker Thierry Henry, which was turned down at once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nArsenal's transfer activity in the summer was relatively quiet, given the financial constraints that came with the club's new stadium project. The club were able to keep the core of its team, successfully negotiating new contracts for Vieira and winger Robert Pires. German goalkeeper Jens Lehmann was the only major addition to the first team; he replaced David Seaman who joined Manchester City. Ukrainian defender Oleh Luzhny ended his four-year association with the club by joining Wolverhampton Wanderers on a free transfer, while striker Graham Barrett moved to Coventry City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0009-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nStriker Francis Jeffers, who found opportunities limited in the first team, joined his former club Everton on a season-long loan. Giovanni van Bronckhorst moved to Barcelona on a similar deal, with a view to a permanent transfer at the end of the season. Several young players were acquired from academies abroad, namely Ga\u00ebl Clichy from Cannes and Johan Djourou, formerly of \u00c9toile Carouge. In January 2004, Arsenal signed Spanish striker Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes from Sevilla and in April agreed a deal with Feyenoord for winger Robin van Persie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nWenger at the start of the season prioritised regaining the league title: \"I feel it is very important in our minds to do this and I know the hunger is strong to do it,\" and named Newcastle United and Liverpool, along with Manchester United and Chelsea, as Arsenal's main rivals for the Premier League. Former Arsenal midfielder Paul Merson asserted that his old club were favourites because they had the \"best players \u2026 If they all remain fit week-in week-out then they will not be beaten.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0010-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nGlenn Moore of The Independent wrote of Arsenal's chances: \"They will be thereabouts, but unless Wenger finally puts his faith in youth, and the likes of J\u00e9r\u00e9mie Aliadi\u00e8re, Jermaine Pennant and Phillipe Senderos repay him, they may lack the depth to sustain a title campaign.\" Defender Sol Campbell however believed the squad was \"strong enough for the league and FA Cup\", but doubted their chances of winning the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nThe club's home strip remained unchanged from the previous season; a red jersey with white sleeves, shorts and socks. The new away kit, a retro yellow jersey with a blue collar trim and shorts, was based on the Arsenal strip worn in the 1979 FA Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Pre-season\nTo prepare for the forthcoming season, Arsenal played a series of friendlies across Western Europe. Their first match ended in defeat against Peterborough United of the Second Division; goalkeeper Stuart Taylor was forced to come off the field after colliding with Peterborough substitute Lee Clarke in the second half. Arsenal then played out a draw against Barnet, where trialist Yaya Tour\u00e9 \u2013 the brother of Kolo, was included in the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0012-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Pre-season\nIn a 2011 interview, Wenger recalled Yaya's performance as being \"completely average on the day\" and noted his impatience stopped him from joining Arsenal; Tour\u00e9 went on to play for Barcelona before joining Manchester City in 2010. Arsenal undertook a tour in Austria, a year after crowd troubles forced their match in Eisenstadt to be abandoned. Wenger was absent with a stomach upset so assistant manager Pat Rice took charge of Arsenal against SC Ritzing on 22 July 2003; the team came from two goals down to draw their second consecutive friendly. Rice was pleased with Philippe Senderos' cameo in defence and said: \"Still some rough edges but he will only get better working with Martin Keown and Sol Campbell.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Pre-season\nArsenal recorded their first win of the pre-season against Austria Wien. Bergkamp capped off a \"superb individual display\" by scoring the first goal and setting up the second for Jeffers. The final match of the tour was against Be\u015fikta\u015f, which required tightened security given the history between English and Turkish football supporters. Bergkamp scored the only goal of the match in the second half. An Arsenal XI in England two days later faced St Albans City, where they won 3\u20131. The main squad then travelled to Scotland to play Celtic on 2 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0013-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Pre-season\nBoth goals in the one-all draw came in the second half; the match marked the return of Vieira after three months out with a knee problem. Wenger revealed afterwards that he intended to use the pre-season as an experiment for his defence. He partnered centre back Campbell with Tour\u00e9, who for much of last season played in midfield. Wenger was pleased with Tour\u00e9's performance against Celtic and said: \"He has quality. He was originally a central defender and, because we have kept a few clean sheets recently and he's played well, I thought we'd keep him there.\" An Arsenal XI travelled to Belgium for a game against Beveren and conceded two goals in the final five minutes to draw the match 2\u20132. Arsenal rounded off their pre-season preparations with a 3\u20130 win against Rangers on 5 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Pre-season\nColour key: Green = Arsenal win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Community Shield\nThe 2003 edition of the FA Community Shield, an annual English football match, was contested between Manchester United and Arsenal at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium on 10 August. Arsenal participated in the match as a result of their FA Cup win in 2002\u201303, while Manchester United were the league champions. Lehmann made his first competitive start for Arsenal and Tour\u00e9 continued to partner Campbell in central defence. United took a 15th-minute lead through Mika\u00ebl Silvestre, but Henry equalised for Arsenal soon after, from a free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0015-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Community Shield\nJeffers was sent off in the second half for kicking out at Phil Neville and no further goals scored meant the outcome of the match was decided by a penalty shoot-out. Goalkeeper Tim Howard saved Van Bronckhorst and Pires' spot kicks as United won the game 4\u20133 on penalties. Wenger made reference to Arsenal's low crowd turnout after the match and suggested it meant there was \"less and less appetite\" for the Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0015-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Community Shield\nHe was unhappy with the league season commencing on the following Saturday: \"I would have preferred to have had two more weeks, especially for the French players who were in the Confederations Cup. We certainly were not as fit as Manchester United and know many of our players were behind them fitness-wise.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the Premier League saw 20 teams play 38 matches; two against every other team, with one match at each club's stadium. Three points were awarded for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats. At the end of the season the top two teams qualified for the group stages of the UEFA Champions League; teams in third and fourth needed to play a qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nArsenal hosted Everton at Highbury on the opening weekend of the season. Campbell was sent off in the 25th minute, for a professional foul on Everton midfielder Thomas Gravesen. Arsenal, despite their man disadvantage, went two goals up after 58 minutes, before Tomasz Radzinski scored for the visitors late on. A trip to the Riverside Stadium to face Middlesbrough a week after ended in a 4\u20130 win; the first three goals, scored by Henry, Gilberto Silva and Sylvain Wiltord all came in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0017-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nThree days later, Campbell and Henry each scored as Aston Villa were beaten by two goals. Arsenal continued their perfect start to the season, with an away win against Manchester City on 31 August 2003. As Campbell was suspended, Martin Keown came into the first team to partner Tour\u00e9. Although Arsenal conceded first \u2013 a \"comical\" own goal by Lauren \u2013 and played \"the worst 45 minutes that any of their fans could remember\" according to journalist Matt Dickinson, Wiltord equalised in the second half, before Freddie Ljungberg had taken advantage of a Seaman error to score the winning goal. After four matches, Arsenal stood in first position, three points clear of Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nDue to international fixtures, Arsenal did not play another game for two weeks. On the resumption of club football, they faced newly promoted Portsmouth at home. Striker Teddy Sheringham gave the visitors a deserved lead, before Arsenal were awarded a penalty when Pires was adjudged to have been fouled in the penalty area by Dejan Stefanovi\u0107. Henry scored, and though their performance noticeably improved in the second half, the game ended in a draw. Portsmouth manager Harry Redknapp complained about the penalty decision post-match and felt Pires \"\u2026was going to get a yellow card [for diving].\" The player himself denied accusations that he deceived the referee: \"I did not dive and I am not a cheat. That is not the way I play.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nA week later, Arsenal travelled to face Manchester United at Old Trafford. Pires and Wiltord were dropped by Wenger in favour of Ray Parlour and Ljungberg; Campbell did not travel due to family bereavement. In the 80th minute, Vieira was sent off for a second bookable offence; he attempted to kick out at striker Ruud van Nistelrooy, which was seen by referee Steve Bennett. With the score 0\u20130, United were awarded a penalty in the 90th minute, but Van Nistelrooy's spot kick hit the bar and rebounded back into play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0019-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nAt the final whistle, Van Nistelrooy was immediately confronted by several Arsenal players, which escalated into an altercation between both teams. Six of Arsenal's players (Ashley Cole, Lauren, Keown, Parlour, Lehmann, Vieira) were later charged with improper conduct by The Football Association (FA), while the club were fined \u00a3175,000, the largest ever given to a club by the FA. Lauren received a four-game ban, whereas Vieira and Parlour were given one-match suspensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nIn their next match, Arsenal defeated Newcastle United by three goals to two; the winner was a penalty scored by Henry. Vieira suffered an injury during the game; this commenced a period of him being in and out of the side, for two months. Arsenal then faced Liverpool on the first weekend of October at Anfield. In the absence of Vieira, Parlour was on duty as captain, while Campbell replaced Keown in defence. Aliadi\u00e8re was paired alongside Henry in attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0020-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nArsenal went a goal down after 11 minutes, but equalised when Sami Hyypi\u00e4 unintentionally diverted Edu's header, from an Arsenal free-kick. Pires scored the winner in the second half, which maintained the team's lead at the top of the league table. The Times correspondent Oliver Kay described Arsenal's comeback as \"spirited\" and noted a difference with the team, in comparison to the previous season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\n\u2026recent events have taught them to place substance ahead of style. It may be less attractive to the purists, but there is no doubt that their new rugged approach has given them a more fearsome look. A year ago, they were producing football of a splendour rarely witnessed in this country or elsewhere. This season, with such fluency proving elusive, they have been grinding out results with an efficiency bordering on the Teutonic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nA tightly-fought match against Chelsea at home was settled by a second half error by goalkeeper Carlo Cudicini, which presented Henry with his seventh league goal in nine matches. Both teams up until that point were level on points at the top of the table and unbeaten. Wenger noted after the match that Chelsea's bigger squad would serve them well as the season progressed, but stressed his smaller squad had stability: \"We have been together for years and have the comfort of knowing we have won things before. When we are challenged, we become even more united.\" Arsenal ended October with a 1\u20131 draw against Charlton Athletic. After 10 games, Arsenal garnered 24 points. The point earnt at Charlton was enough for the team to move back into first position, which had been occupied by Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nArsenal began November with a trip to Elland Road to face Leeds United. There were no changes to the team from the Charlton game; for Leeds, Pennant started against his parent club after being granted permission by Wenger. Arsenal's victory by four goals to one was identical to the scoreline in the corresponding fixture of last season. In a match report for the News of the World, journalist Martin Samuel picked Henry as the man of the match and asserted Arsenal remained the team to beat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0023-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nAttention soon turned to the North London derby, where Arsenal played Tottenham Hotspur on 8 November 2003. Tottenham had not beaten their rivals since November 1999 and their last win at Highbury had come a decade previously. Kanu was brought into the starting line-up to partner Henry, as Wiltord was ruled out with a calf strain. Arsenal conceded an early goal after Darren Anderton capitalised on a defensive mix-up, but they scored two late goals in what was described as \"another stuttering\" performance in The Observer. The result put Arsenal four points clear in first, albeit temporarily as Chelsea's win at home to Newcastle United 24 hours later cut their gap to one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nArsenal did not play another game for a fortnight because of the international football break. On the resumption of club football, they played Birmingham City away from home. As suspensions came into action and there were injuries to first-team players, Wenger was forced to reshuffle his team. Clichy was handed his full debut and Pascal Cygan made his first start of the season, partnering Campbell. Ljungberg opened the scoring for Arsenal inside four minutes and further goals by Bergkamp and Pires ensured the team won their third straight match of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0024-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nBy extending their unbeaten run from the start of the season to 13 league matches, Arsenal set a new Premier League record. They were then held by Fulham to a goalless draw who became the first team to deny Arsenal from scoring in 46 league matches at Highbury. The Guardian correspondent David Lacey summarised Arsenal's football on the day as \"strong in the string section but short on percussion\" and noted they reverted to the pattern of scoring a perfect goal, instead of being efficient. Chelsea's 1\u20130 win over Manchester United meant Arsenal moved down to second place on the final day of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0025-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nTwo more points were dropped in Arsenal's next match, away to Leicester City on the first weekend of December. Henry was absent from the starting team as was captain Vieira. Arsenal had taken the lead at the hour mark through a Gilberto header, but conceded the equaliser in stoppage time. What made matters worse was the dismissal of Cole for a two-footed lunge on Ben Thatcher; he missed the team's next three fixtures as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0025-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nWenger said afterwards: \"It looked like Ashley wanted to get the ball but it was a two-footed tackle that was too high, it was a red card and we have to accept it.\" A goal from Bergkamp earned Arsenal a 1\u20130 win the following week, at home to Blackburn Rovers. Chelsea's defeat a day before meant the win for Arsenal was enough to take them back top, a point clear of Manchester United, who were now in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0026-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nArsenal then travelled to the Reebok Stadium to play Bolton on 20 December 2003, the setting where their title challenge faltered eight months ago. Although they again picked up just a point, Wenger believed it was a useful one: \"Provided Bolton keep playing like that, we will look back at this result and feel very happy. They are as good as a team as we have played.\" On Boxing Day, Henry scored twice for Arsenal in a 3\u20130 win against Wolverhampton Wanderers. Three days later, the team played Southampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0026-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nThe only goal of the match came in the first half: Henry's through pass found Pires \"who slid the ball beneath the exposed Antti Niemi\". The win meant Arsenal had gone half the season without losing and the team according to The Times had begun to \"establish an aura of invincibility\". Arsenal ended the calendar year in second place, with 45 points from 19 matches. They were one point behind leaders Manchester United and three ahead of Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0027-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nOn 7 January 2004, Arsenal played Everton at Goodison Park. Wenger made a host of changes: Cygan was recalled in central defence, which meant Tour\u00e9 was shifted onto the right and Lauren was dropped, while Parlour started in place of Gilberto in midfield. Kanu had given Arsenal the lead in the first half, only for Radzinski to score a \"richly deserved late equaliser\" for Everton with fifteen minutes remaining. Manchester United's victory at Bolton on the same night increased the champions' lead at the top to three points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0027-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nThree days after the Everton match, Arsenal hosted Middlesbrough and put on a display Wenger described as one of the season's best: \"We kept playing our natural game and could have scored more,\" he said. The 4\u20131 win meant Arsenal moved back top of the league, albeit alphabetically as their points, goal difference and goals scored were identical to that of Manchester United. A week later Arsenal beat Aston Villa by two goals to nil; both of the team's goals were scored by Henry. Controversy surrounded the Frenchman's first goal, a quickly taken free-kick which prompted confusion amongst Villa's players and brought about a reaction towards referee Mark Halsey, who signalled it was permissible. After 22 games played, Arsenal were in first place, two points clear of Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0028-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\n\"Some people refuse to appreciate new Arsenal. They still believe this is the side that Nick Hornby said stood for boring and lucky and dirty and petulant and rich and mean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0029-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nThe truth is it is a privilege to watch new Arsenal. They are Prozac for those used to the prosaic.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0030-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nRick Broadbent's account of Arsenal's win against Wolverhampton Wanderers in The Times, 9 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0031-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nArsenal remained unbeaten throughout February, winning all five matches. In a home match against Manchester City, Reyes made his first appearance for the club, coming on as a substitute in the second half. He had no part in the winning goal, a \"crunching, beautifully judged 25-yarder\" scored by Henry. Arsenal recorded an away win at Wolverhampton Wanderers on 7 February 2004, their 24th league match, which bettered a club record of games unbeaten from the start of the season (originally held by George Graham's team of 1990\u201391).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0031-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nWenger in his post-match press conference played down the record, and said of the unbeaten run: \"You need a little bit of luck and mental qualities.\" Henry reached a personal landmark against Southampton three days later, scoring his 100th and 101st Premier League goals. The victory moved Arsenal five points clear at the top, although they had played one more game than Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0032-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nA Saturday lunchtime kick-off against Chelsea saw the return of Henry; he was absent in Arsenal's FA Cup fifth round win against the same opposition. Arsenal found themselves a goal down after 27 seconds, but responded with an equaliser in the 15th minute \u2013 Bergkamp's \"delicately curving pass\" found Vieira on the left side to shoot the ball past goalkeeper Neil Sullivan. The winner came six minutes later: Sullivan misjudged a corner taken by Henry, which allowed Edu to shoot into an empty net. Arsenal's lead was now seven and it represented \"a stronger position than any they held last season\" according to Wenger. Tour\u00e9's transition into a defender was highlighted in The Times football supplement:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0033-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nCombined with Manchester United's loss of Rio Ferdinand, Kolo Tour\u00e9's emergence as a capable centre half has probably represented a ten-point swing in the Premiership. If Tour\u00e9 and Campbell stay fit, Arsenal should be more than capable of holding on to their seven-point advantage and in Ga\u00ebl Clichy, they have a promising replacement for Ashley Cole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0034-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nThe final match of the month was against Charlton at Highbury. Arsenal scored twice in the space of the opening four minutes, but by the end were \"clinging to their lead like nervous kittens\". After 27 games, the team stood in first position and had accumulated 67 points. They were nine points clear of both Chelsea and Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0035-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nArsenal carried their good form into March; Henry and Pires scored in the defeat of Blackburn Rovers. It was a laboured performance from the league leaders, one which served a \"\u2026reminder of the old maxim that championships are won by teams who can pick up points when they are not playing well.\" Arsenal then played Bolton Wanderers at home; Wenger made one change from the previous match \u2013 Bergkamp replaced Reyes upfront. The blustery conditions forced the game to be delayed by 15 minutes, approximately the same amount of time it took Pires to score Arsenal's opener.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0035-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nBy the 24th minute, it was 2\u20130: Henry's cross found Bergkamp who shot the ball past Jussi J\u00e4\u00e4skel\u00e4inen at the first attempt. Although Bolton's performance improved after scoring just before half time, the result was a ninth straight league win for Arsenal and kept them nine points clear at the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0036-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nThe visit of Manchester United on 28 March 2004 provided a stern test for Arsenal; it was both clubs' first meeting since the fiasco at Old Trafford. Cole, injured in the midweek Champions League game against Chelsea, was replaced by Clichy in the starting line-up, while Bergkamp was dropped for Reyes. Henry gave Arsenal the lead, with a long range shot that swerved past goalkeeper Roy Carroll. With five minutes of the game left, Louis Saha evaded the Arsenal defence and scored the equaliser for Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0036-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nArsenal came close to a winner in injury time, only for Lauren to have his shot saved. The draw was no good for Sir Alex Ferguson, the manager of Manchester United, who afterwards conceded his team's chances: \"They'll (Arsenal) go on to win the league now \u2013 I'm sure of that. They are playing with great determination \u2026 a very strong team, so should win the league really\". In avoiding defeat, Arsenal set a new all-time league record of 30 matches unbeaten from the start of the season, originally held by Leeds and Liverpool. They remained in first position at the end of March and were seven points in front of Chelsea, with eight matches remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0037-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nAfter two cup exits in the space of a week, Arsenal faced Liverpool on Good Friday at Highbury. Hyypi\u00e4 opened the scoring for the visitors after five minutes, and in spite of Henry's equaliser just after the half-hour mark, Liverpool led again before the interval. Arsenal responded by scoring twice in a minute; Henry's second goal saw the player hold off Dietmar Hamann in midfield, weave through defender Jamie Carragher and place the ball past Jerzy Dudek. The striker completed his hat-trick in the 78th minute, after good work by Bergkamp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0037-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nLiverpool manager G\u00e9rard Houllier likened Arsenal to a \"wounded animal\" after the match and believed Henry was \"the man who made the difference \u2026 he set the tempo\". Arsenal played out a goalless draw with Newcastle United on Bank Holiday Monday, and five days later faced Leeds United. On a night where Henry scored four goals and was described by his manager as \"the best striker in the world\", Arsenal moved to within two wins of regaining the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0038-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nWith Chelsea unable to garner maximum points in their next two matches, Arsenal knew before their game away at Tottenham that a draw would guarantee their status as champions. Cole returned for the derby, after sitting out the Leeds match with an ankle injury. Arsenal took an early lead when Vieira finished off a counter-attacking move. Incisive football brought about the second goal, ten minutes before the break. Bergkamp passed the ball to Vieira, who cut it back for Pires to sidefoot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0038-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nTottenham replied in the second half by scoring twice \u2013 the equaliser a penalty \u2013 but it did not stop the Arsenal players celebrating at the final whistle \"in front of their supporters' White Hart Lane enclave\". This marked the second time the club had been crowned league champions at their rivals' ground: the first time had been in 1971. Wenger praised his team for their success, telling the BBC: \"We've been remarkably consistent, haven't lost a game and we have played stylish football. We have entertained people who just love football.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0039-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nIn May, successive draws at home to Birmingham City and Portsmouth left Arsenal with 84 points from 36 games. Reyes scored the only goal of the match against Fulham; he profited from a mistake by goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar: \"The Dutchman tried to go past the Arsenal forward, but instead gifted possession and with it the easiest of open goals.\" Arsenal's final game of the league season was against Leicester City. They conceded the opening goal, but turned the match around in the second half through goals from Henry and Vieira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0039-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nWith 26 wins, 12 draws and no defeats, the team became the first since Preston North End in 1888\u201389 to go through a league season undefeated. Reviewing the match and overall season, Amy Lawrence of The Observer wrote: \"Arsenal's achievement may not make them 'great' in everyone's opinion \u2013 those who define greatness only by European Cups, back-to-back titles, and triple cartwheels on the way to every goal \u2013 but it is staggering in its own right.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0040-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe FA Cup is English football's primary cup competition. It was first held in 1871\u201372 with only 15 teams entering; the growth of the sport and changes to the competition's structure meant that by 2000, more than 600 teams took part. Clubs in the Premier League enter the FA Cup in the third round and are drawn randomly out of a hat with the remaining clubs. If a match is drawn it is replayed, ordinarily at the ground of the team who were away for the first game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0040-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nAs with league fixtures, FA Cup matches are subject to change in the event of games being selected for television coverage and this often can be influenced by clashes with other competitions. In the case of Arsenal, all but one of their ties (fourth round) was televised to the British audience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0041-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nArsenal entered the 2003\u201304 edition as holders of the cup. The team were undefeated in 14 cup ties since their 2\u20131 loss to Liverpool in the 2001 FA Cup Final, and aimed to win the competition for a third season in succession, something last achieved by Blackburn Rovers from 1884 to 1886. Henry believed Arsenal's good cup form showed they were \"interested\" in the competition and hoped their success would continue. The FA Cup was not high in Wenger's priority list \u2013 \"The [Premier League] and the Champions League are more important,\" but he clarified this never meant Arsenal intended to neglect the competition: \"You win what you can and go as far as you can.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0042-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nArsenal were drawn to face Leeds United away in the third round; the match was played on the first weekend of January. Wenger made six changes to the team which started at Southampton in the league, including Cole replacing Clichy at left-back after serving his three-match suspension. After eight minutes, Leeds went ahead when Lehmann's goal clearance hit striker Mark Viduka and rebounded into the net. Arsenal equalised through Henry, who converted Ljungberg's cross from the right on a volley. Additional goals from Edu, Pires and Tour\u00e9 inflicted a third consecutive 4\u20131 defeat for Leeds against Arsenal at Elland Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0042-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nAt home to Middlesbrough in the fourth round, Bergkamp opened the scoring for Arsenal, following good play from Parlour. Joseph-D\u00e9sir\u00e9 Job equalised for the away team four minutes after, but Ljungberg restored Arsenal's lead with a shot outside the penalty box and scored a second, direct from a corner. George Boateng was sent off for the visitors in the 86th minute for two bookable offences and substitute David Bentley added a fourth goal for Arsenal, chipping the ball over goalkeeper Schwarzer in the last minute of normal time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0043-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nIn the fifth round, Arsenal played Chelsea at Highbury. Five minutes before the end of the first half, striker Adrian Mutu gave Chelsea the lead, with a shot from 20 yards. Reyes, who replaced Henry in the starting eleven for the tie, levelled the scoreline with a long range effort. He beat goalkeeper Sullivan for pace to score his second, which later proved to be the winning goal of the match. The quarter-final pitted Arsenal against Portsmouth at Fratton Park on 6 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0043-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nHenry opened the scoring in the 25th minute and further goals from himself, Ljungberg and Tour\u00e9 secured the team's passage into the last four of the competition. Edu was singled out for praise by The Guardian correspondent Kevin McCarra, who enthused over the visitors' performance: \"Arsenal echoed the Ajax philosophy as players swapped position and kept changing the point of attack before the mesmerised eyes of the opposition.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0044-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nManchester United were Arsenal's opponents for the semi-final, staged at Villa Park on 3 April 2004. Both teams had settled for a draw in the league the previous Sunday, but given this was for a place in the final, the stakes were much higher. United defender Gary Neville described the game as his team's \"most important\" of the season after they were eliminated from the Champions League and he deemed them \"too far behind\" in the Premier League. Wenger rested Henry, mindful of the team's upcoming fixture congestion. Although Arsenal started the better of the two teams, it was United midfielder Paul Scholes who scored the only goal of the game which ensured their progress into the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0045-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nColour key: Green = Arsenal win; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0046-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nThe Football League Cup is a cup competition open to clubs in the Premier League and Football League. Like the FA Cup it is played on a knockout basis, with the exception of the semi-finals, which are contested over a two-legged tie. Wenger's tenure at Arsenal has seen him use the competition to field younger and lesser known players, something he and Ferguson were initially criticised for in 1997. While Ferguson felt it was an unwanted distraction at the time, Wenger said: \"If the competition wants to survive it must offer the incentive of a European place.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0046-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nThe winners of the League Cup in the 2003\u201304 season earnt entry into the UEFA Cup, unless they qualified for the UEFA Champions League through their league position. League Cup matches are subject to change in the event of games being selected for television coverage, inclement weather and potential competition clashes. All rounds up until the final are played in midweek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0047-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nArsenal entered the League Cup in the third round and were drawn at home to Rotherham United. Wenger handed midfielder Cesc F\u00e0bregas his debut at 16 years and 177 days; as of 2016 is still the youngest player to turn out for the club. Arsenal led from the 11th minute through an Aliadi\u00e8re goal, but conceded an equaliser late on which forced extra time. Rotherham goalkeeper Mike Pollitt was sent off for handling the ball outside his penalty area; his substitute Gary Montgomery denied Wiltord from scoring the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0047-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nAs there were no further goals, the match was decided on penalties which Arsenal won 9\u20138 in the shootout. Fellow divisional opponents Wolverhampton Wanderers were defeated 5\u20131 by Arsenal in the fourth round; Vieira, absent through injury in September and October, made his first team return and played the full match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0048-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nIn the fifth round, Arsenal travelled to The Hawthorns to play West Bromwich Albion. Wenger added experience to the side to complement youth, with Parlour, Edu, Kanu and Keown all featuring. Arsenal took the lead in the 25th minute through Kanu. Lauren's cross from the right-hand side deflected in the direction of the striker. His header was saved by goalkeeper Russell Hoult, who was unable to deny Kanu shooting the rebounded ball into the net. Aliadi\u00e8re scored Arsenal's second goal of the match following Hoult's poor clearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0049-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nArsenal exited the competition in the semi-finals against Middlesbrough. At Highbury, the setting for the first leg, Juninho scored the only goal of the tie. Arsenal's task of progressing was made more difficult after Keown was sent off in the second leg and Boudewijn Zenden doubled Middlesbrough's aggregate scoreline. Though Edu equalised for Arsenal on the night, Reyes' own goal earnt Middlesbrough the win. Wenger opined of the result: \"I don't think we deserved to lose; even when we were down to 10 men we were running the game.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0050-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nColour key: Green = Arsenal win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0051-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nThe UEFA Champions League is a continental club football competition organised by UEFA. Founded in the 1950s as the European Champion Clubs' Cup, the competition was open to champion clubs of each country and arranged as a straight knockout tournament. The growth of television rights saw the format rebranded in the 1990s to include a group stage and permit multiple entrants. Arsenal had qualified for every Champions League season since 1998\u201399, but the club never progressed further than the quarter-final stage. Ahead of the new campaign, Wenger assessed his team needed to perform in the home games, adding: \"We are mature enough now and we must add that little bit of sparkle to make the difference.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0052-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nArsenal were drawn in Group B, along with Italian club Inter Milan, Lokomotiv Moscow of Russia and Ukraine's Dynamo Kyiv. Wenger believed the trips to Eastern Europe threatened his team's chances of winning the Premier League: \"The other English teams have more comfortable groups than we do. It is tough to go to Russia \u2013 I always say that if you have to travel more than two hours it is difficult. Sometimes the players pay a high price in the games that follow the Champions League matches.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0053-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nArsenal opened their Champions League campaign with a 3\u20130 defeat against Inter Milan. Goals from Julio Ricardo Cruz, Andy van der Meyde and Obafemi Martins all in the first half extended Arsenal's run of six home games in the competition without a win. Wenger said afterwards: \"We can complain and cry the whole night but that will not change the result. The only thing we can do is to respond.\" The team, without Campbell and Vieira, earned a draw away to Lokomotiv Moscow, but remained bottom of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0053-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nArsenal lost to Dynamo Kyiv in late October; Wenger's decision to shift from his preferred 4\u20134\u20132 formation caused the team to play more narrow than usual. Cole scored the winning goal in the reverse fixture at Highbury. A cross by Wiltord was flicked on by Henry in the direction of an incoming Cole, who dived to head the ball past goalkeeper Oleksandr Shovkovskyi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0054-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe team scored four goals in the second half against Inter Milan and won 5\u20131. Wenger felt the result showed there was \"\u2026a special mental strength in the team\", while Cole compared it to England's victory against Germany in 2001 but added \"this was even better.\" Arsenal won 2\u20130 against Lokomotiv Moscow to top Group B. Jacob Lekgetho's dismissal in the eighth minute meant the visitors played the remainder of the match with ten men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0055-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nColour key: Green = Arsenal win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0056-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nArsenal were paired up against Celta Vigo in the last 16 stage and the first leg was held at the Bala\u00eddos. Although they conceded two goals from set pieces, Arsenal scored three times to win the game which put the team in a favourable position given the away goals rule. Their passage was secured with a 2\u20130 win on 10 March 2004; Henry scored both goals for the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0057-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nColour key: Green = Arsenal win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0058-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals, Arsenal met fellow English club Chelsea. The draw disappointed vice-chairman Dein: \"One of the joys of playing in Europe is playing teams from overseas \u2013 and having played Chelsea three times, it is a bit anti-climactic.\" The first leg, played at Stamford Bridge ended in a draw with Gu\u00f0johnsen and Pires scoring for their respective clubs. Arsenal were unable to take advantage of Marcel Desailly's dismissal in the second half, but Wenger felt his team were in a good position to progress: \"Our main aim will be to win the game at Highbury and we know we can do that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0059-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nHenry, rested for the FA Cup semi-final match, started alongside Reyes for the second leg. It was the latter forward who gave Arsenal the lead in injury time of the first half, but Frank Lampard equalised for Chelsea in the 51st minute. With three minutes remaining of the match, defender Wayne Bridge scored to eliminate Arsenal from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0060-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Quarter-finals\nColour key: Green = Arsenal win; Yellow = draw; Red = opponents win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 82], "content_span": [83, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0061-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Player statistics\nArsenal used a total of 34 players during the 2003\u201304 season and there were 15 different goalscorers. There were also three squad members who did not make a first-team appearance in the campaign. The team played in a 4\u20134\u20132 formation throughout the season, with two wide midfielders. Tour\u00e9 featured in 55 matches \u2013 the most of any Arsenal player in the campaign and Lehmann started in all 38 league matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0062-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Player statistics\nThe team scored a total of 114 goals in all competitions. The highest scorer was Henry, with 39 goals, followed by Pires who scored 19 goals. Three of Arsenal's goals in the 2003\u201304 season (Henry against Manchester City and Liverpool, Vieira against Tottenham Hotspur) were shortlisted for Goal of the Season by viewers of ITV's The Premiership. Five Arsenal players were sent off during the season: Jeffers, Vieira, Campbell, Cole and Keown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0063-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Player statistics\nNumbers in parentheses denote appearances as substitute. Players with name struck through and marked left the club during the playing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0064-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Awards\nIn recognition of the team's achievement, Wenger was awarded the Barclaycard Manager of the Year. A spokesperson of the awards panel said of the decision: \"Ars\u00e8ne Wenger is a very worthy recipient of this accolade and has sent his team into the history books. Arsenal have played exciting attacking football throughout the season and finishing it unbeaten is a feat that may not be repeated for another 100 years.\" Henry was given the accolade of PFA Players' Player of the Year by his fellow peers and the FWA Footballer of the Year by football writers for the second consecutive season. He came runner-up in both the 2003 FIFA World Player of the Year and the 2003 Ballon d'Or.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0065-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Awards\nThree Arsenal players received the Premier League Player of the Month award \u2013 Henry twice in January and April 2004, and Bergkamp and Edu shared the accolade in February 2004 after the judges \"felt it was appropriate that we make a joint award\". Wenger was the Premier League Manager of the Month in August 2003 and February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0066-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Aftermath and legacy\nA day after the Leicester City match, Arsenal paraded the Premier League trophy on an open-top bus, in front of more than 250,000 fans. The victory parade commenced at Highbury and ended at Islington Town Hall. At the town hall balcony, Vieira addressed the crowd: \"It has been a fantastic season. We achieved something unbelievable but we couldn't have done it without the fans.\" In an interview with the BBC, Dein added: \"We've seen history made and I'd be surprised if it happens again. It's just been a privilege to watch Arsenal this season.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0067-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Aftermath and legacy\nArsenal's achievement of going through the league season unbeaten received considerable praise from those involved in football. Derek Shaw, the chairman of Preston offered his congratulations as they equalled his club's record of completing a league season without defeat, set 115 years previously. Brazilian Roberto Carlos likened Arsenal's style of play to \"samba football\" while Michel Platini applauded the team's \"great flair and spirit\". Former Arsenal manager George Graham attributed the success to defensive improvements, since mistakes the previous season had proved costly and former striker Alan Smith felt the team were \"certainly the best Highbury's ever seen\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0068-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Aftermath and legacy\n\"Without a doubt going the whole season unbeaten is my greatest achievement. If you win the championship you feel someone else can come in and do better than you. It was always my dream to go the whole season unbeaten because there's not much more anyone can do to beat that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0069-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Aftermath and legacy\nThe British press unanimously praised Arsenal's feat once the season drew to a close; the News of the World branded the team as \"Immortals\", while The Sunday Times led with the headline \"Arsenal the New Invincibles\". In an otherwise positive reflection of Arsenal's season, Glenn Moore wrote for The Independent: \"There may thus have been some truth in Ars\u00e8ne Wenger's declaration that Arsenal's achievement was a greater triumph than winning the Champions' League. Arsenal's prolonged celebrations reflected the scale of this landmark and yet, when they reflect in the summer break, how many players will agree with Wenger? \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0070-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Aftermath and legacy\nA one-off golden replica trophy was commissioned by the Premier League thereafter; it was awarded to Arsenal before their first home game of the following season. The team eclipsed the league record of 42 matches without defeat (set by Nottingham Forest) against Blackburn Rovers and went seven more matches unbeaten until they lost \u2013 away to Manchester United in October 2004. Although Arsenal regained the FA Cup \u2013 on penalties against United \u2013 they finished second to Chelsea in the league. The move to the Emirates Stadium in 2006 coincided with a transitional phase for the club. Several experienced first teamers were displaced in favour of youth and the style of football shifted more towards ball retention. Arsenal have since failed to regain the league title; they nevertheless remained a fixture in the Champions League under Wenger's stewardship in the years after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175684-0071-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Arsenal F.C. season, Aftermath and legacy\nThe title win at White Hart Lane came third in a list of Arsenal's Greatest 50 Moments, and the performance at the San Siro was ranked tenth. In 2012, the Arsenal team of 2003\u201304 won the \"Best Team\" category in the Premier League 20 Seasons Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175685-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Asia League Ice Hockey season\nThe 2003\u201304 Asia League Ice Hockey season was the first season of Asia League Ice Hockey. Five teams participated in the league, and the Nippon Paper Cranes won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Aston Villa competed in the Premier League. Former Leeds United manager David O'Leary was appointed Villa manager in the summer of 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season\nUnder O'Leary, Villa made a very sluggish start to the campaign and found themselves in the relegation zone after winning just two of their first 13 league fixtures. They were still in the bottom three in mid-December before O'Leary galvanized them and they gradually climbed the table. Villa had a fantastic second half of the season and, with two matches remaining, had a chance of qualifying for the Champions League. After extending their unbeaten run to eight games by drawing at Southampton, defeat against Manchester United at Villa Park consigned them to sixth place. The Villains finished five points short of a Champions League place and were edged out of a UEFA Cup spot on goal difference by Newcastle United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season\nNevertheless, it was still a great achievement by O'Leary, who appeared to get the best out of the likes of Gareth Barry, Lee Hendrie, Jlloyd Samuel and 16-goal Juan Pablo \u00c1ngel. The Colombian was the club's leading scorer, while Darius Vassell bagged 9 goals to cement his place in England's Euro 2004 squad. Thomas S\u00f8rensen and Gavin McCann both had excellent seasons after moving from Sunderland, while Nolberto Solano quickly became a fans' favourite after his mid-season move from Newcastle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season\nAmong the men to represent Villa for the last time during 2003\u201304 was Dion Dublin, who netted 48 goals in 155 league games. O'Leary's side reached the last four of the Football League Cup by knocking out Wycombe Wanderers, Leicester City, Crystal Palace and Chelsea. The semi-final first leg, at Bolton, ended in a disappointing 5\u20132 defeat. Villa Park goals by Thomas Hitzlsperger and Samuel were not quite enough to prevent the Trotters from clinching a place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season\nManchester United came from behind to knock Villa out of the FA Cup in a third round tie at Villa Park. Despite narrowly missing out on qualifying for Europe, the mood around Villa Park was extremely positive in the summer of 2004. With the likes of Liam Ridgewell, Steven Davis, Peter Whittingham and the Moore brothers (Stefan and Luke) forcing open the first team door, David O'Leary had an abundance of young talent at his disposal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season, Youth squad, Under-19s\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season, Youth squad, Under-17s\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175686-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Aston Villa F.C. season, Other players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175687-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atalanta B.C. season\nAtalanta B.C. was promoted to Serie A, despite finishing only 5th in Serie B. The reason for the promotion was the expansion of the top domestic division from 18 to 20 teams. That offered a reprieve to an underperforming Atalanta side that failed to keep up with Palermo following Christmas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175688-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Athletic Bilbao season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 103rd season in Athletic Bilbao's history and their 73rd consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175688-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nAt the end of the previous season, head coach Jupp Heynckes left his position to return to his native Germany as manager of Schalke 04. B team coach Ernesto Valverde, who also represented Athletic during his playing career, was promoted in his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175688-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nValverde's first season in charge saw a successful La Liga campaign, as Bilbao finished in fifth place and qualified for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup. This constituted their best league placing and first European qualification for six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175688-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nAthletic were somewhat less successful in the Copa del Rey, suffering a humiliating defeat in their first match at the hands of Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B side Gimn\u00e1stica de Torrelavega. This marked their earliest exit from the cup since 1993\u201394.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175689-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Hawks season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Hawks' 55th season in the National Basketball Association, and 36th season in Atlanta. During the offseason, the Hawks signed free agent Stephen Jackson, while re-signing Jacque Vaughn after one season with the Orlando Magic. The Hawks continued to struggle losing eight of their first eleven games. At midseason, they traded Shareef Abdur-Rahim and Theo Ratliff to the Portland Trail Blazers for All-Star forward Rasheed Wallace. However, Wallace only played just one game for the Hawks before being traded to the Detroit Pistons for Bob Sura.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175689-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Hawks season\nWallace would win a championship with the Pistons as they defeated the Los Angeles Lakers in five games in the NBA Finals. The team also traded Nazr Mohammed to the New York Knicks, and acquired Joel Przybilla from the Milwaukee Bucks, while Dion Glover was released to free agency and signed with the Toronto Raptors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175689-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Hawks season\nWith the lack of big men on the team, and with Przybilla only playing just twelve games due to a knee injury, the Hawks signed free agent center Jason Collier in March. The team finished seventh in the Central Division with a 28\u201354 record. Jackson led the Hawks in scoring with 18.1 points per game, while Jason Terry averaged 16.8 points, 5.4 assists and 1.5 steals per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175689-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Hawks season\nFollowing the season, head coach Terry Stotts was fired, Jackson was traded to the Indiana Pacers, Terry and longtime Hawks forward Alan Henderson were both dealt to the Dallas Mavericks, Sura signed as a free agent with the Houston Rockets, Vaughn signed with the New Jersey Nets, and Przybilla signed with the Portland Trail Blazers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175690-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Thrashers season\nThe 2003\u201304 Atlanta Thrashers season was the Thrashers' fifth season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175690-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Thrashers season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175690-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Thrashers season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175690-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Thrashers season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175690-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atlanta Thrashers season, Draft picks\nAtlanta's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175691-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Atl\u00e9tico Madrid season\nAtl\u00e9tico de Madrid firmly re-established itself in La Liga, thanks to a seventh-place finish. The season saw Fernando Torres taking another step towards superstardom, scoring 19 goals in the season during which he turned 20 years, which led to a call-up to the Spain national team for UEFA Euro 2004. The finish was still not enough to satisfy the owner family Gil, resulting in coach Gregorio Manzano unexpectedly getting the sack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175692-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australia Tri-Series\nThe 2003\u201304 VB-Series was a cricket tri-series involving touring nations India and Zimbabwe and hosts Australia. Australia won the tournament, who lost one match in the group stage, by defeating India in the 2-match final. Adam Gilchrist was named Man of the Series for his 498 runs at an average of 62.25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175692-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australia Tri-Series, Group stage, Matches, Match 1: Australia v India\nAjit Agarkar recorded his first 5 wicket haul, and his best career ODI figures to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175692-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australia Tri-Series, Group stage, Matches, Match 2: Australia v Zimbabwe\nBrad Williams took his second 5 wicket haul, and recorded his best bowling figures with his 5/22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175692-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australia Tri-Series, Group stage, Matches, Match 4: Australia v Zimbabwe\nGilchrist's 172 is his personal highest score in both One Day Internationals and List A cricket. It was also the highest score by a wicket-keeper in ODI cricket until Mahendra Singh Dhoni's 183* in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175693-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian Athletics Championships\nThe 2003\u201304 Australian Athletics Championships was the 82nd edition of the national championship in outdoor track and field for Australia. It was held from 26\u201329 February 2004 at the Sydney Olympic Park Athletic Centre in Sydney. It served as a selection meeting for Australia at the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175694-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2003\u201304 Australian Figure Skating Championships was held in Boondall from 29 November through 6 December 2003. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing across many levels, including senior, junior, novice, adult, and the pre-novice disciplines of primary and intermediate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season\nThe 2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season was a slightly below average tropical cyclone season. It began on 1 November 2003 and ended on 30 April 2004. The regional tropical cyclone operational plan also defines a tropical cyclone year separately from a tropical cyclone season, which runs from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season\nTropical cyclones in this area are monitored by four Tropical Cyclone Warning Centres (TCWCs): the Australian Bureau of Meteorology in Perth, Darwin, and Brisbane; and TCWC Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Debbie\nFormed on 16 December and dissipated on 23 December. Crossed the Northern Territory coast as a Category\u00a03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Ken\nFormed on 1 January 2004 and dissipated on 6 January. Operationally monitored Ken to have reached tropical cyclone intensity for 24 hours, but post-analysis revealed that Ken never was a tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Monsoon Depression\nExisted between 10 and 17 January. Caused heavy rainfall across western Queensland and New South Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Fritz\nA tropical low developed on 10 February in the northern Coral Sea, within an active monsoon trough. The system developed rapidly and becoming Tropical Cyclone Fritz when it was northeast of Cooktown. Fritz moved rapidly to the west, and made landfall on the northern Queensland coast with winds of 75\u00a0km/h. The storm lost its tropical character as it crossed the Cape York Peninsula and entered the Gulf of Carpentaria on 11 February. The low reintensified over the favourable conditions in the Gulf, and reached its peak with 95\u00a0km/h winds near Mornington Island. Radar imagery showed evidence of an eye as the storm passed over the island on 12 February. It then crossed over the coast onto mainland Australian and degenerated overland. The remnant travelled over Northern Territory and Western Australia, before merging with a cold front to the south of Perth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 937]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Fritz\nCyclone Fritz brought up to 309\u00a0mm of rain to the Cairns area. This led to a number of landslides, one of which caused severe property damage in Yorkeys Knob. There was flash flooding near Innisfail when 74\u00a0mm of rain fell in one hour. Fritz uprooted a number of trees on Mornington Island, but there was no other damage there. There were no casualties from the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Monty\nCyclone Monty was a small cyclone that formed off the Kimberley coast around 27 February 2004. Monty then strengthened into a Category 4 cyclone as it moved parallel with the Pilbara coast. The cyclone made landfall near Mardie Station as a Category 3 cyclone on 1 March. Monty damaged several boats and caused isolated flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Evan\nFormed on 27 February and dissipated on 4 March. Crossed Groote Eylandt and the Northern Territory mainland, causing flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Subtropical Storm\nA subtropical cyclone formed on 2 March and crossed the coast in southeast Queensland on 5 March, bringing heavy rain and strong winds. A storm surge caused inundation along the coasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Nicky\u2013Helma\nFormed on 8 March, moved west of the region on 10 March, and was renamed Helma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Fay\nA low-pressure system formed in the Gulf of Carpentaria and moved westward into the Timor Sea; it was named Tropical Cyclone Fay on 16 March. Fay was 400\u00a0km north of Wyndham and 330\u00a0kilometres west northwest of Darwin. There were reports along the Kimberley Coast of gale-force winds. On 21 March, Cyclone Fay intensified even further as the storm approached Scott Reef where significant damage occurred. Looping back towards the Kimberley coast, Fay \u2013 now a Category\u00a03 system \u2013 approached to within 90\u00a0km of Broome on 25 March, before turning to the south-west. Broome experienced strong winds with gale-force gusts, some heavy rain and heavy seas but escaped serious damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Fay\nFay then headed further away from the coast on the 25th before resuming a general southerly track on the 26th. Fay crossed the Pilbara coast between the pastoral stations of Pardoo and Wallal between 8 am and 9 am WST on 27 March as a Category\u00a04 storm with estimated maximum wind gusts of around 235\u00a0km/h near the center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Fay\nThe cyclone weakened as it moved inland. Little wind damage was reported from the storm despite its intensity as it made landfall in a remote part of the WA coast and consequently only impacted sparsely populated pastoral and mining areas. As the system passed close to the Yarrie mine its translation speed reduced and some 200 workers were locked down for 8 hours in two squash courts as accommodation units were overturned, water tanks \"shredded\" and power lines cut. Fay appears to have weakened below cyclone strength on Sunday evening (28 March) between Nullagine and Telfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Fay\nCyclone Fay caused extensive flooding and considerable damage. Fortunately, there were no deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nGrace is mostly remembered for its effects prior to reaching cyclone status rather than during its life as an officially named tropical cyclone. A multi-centred tropical low formed adjacent to the north Queensland tropical coast near Cooktown as early as 20 March within a very active monsoon trough that stretched across the northern Coral Sea and Cape York Peninsula toward New Caledonia, and initially had a subtropical appearance. Over the ensuing days, the northernmost circulation became dominant and moved east to the southeast of the equatorward ridge. By 21/1820 UTC it became the second named tropical cyclone of Queensland's and was named Grace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nGrace moved toward the southeast at 15 to 20 knots (37\u00a0km/h). This general motion was to continue for the remainder of the cyclone's life. Grace peaked in intensity at 985 hPa with maximum sustained winds of 50 knots (93\u00a0km/h) near 20.3S/155.9E at 22/0000 UTC. This intensity was maintained for approximately 6 hours. Thereafter, Grace began to undergo extratropical transition with anincreasingly asymmetric wind field due to a squeeze with a surface ridge to the south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0016-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nGrace rapidly lost its entire upper-level structure and was downgraded at 23/1800 UTC from tropical cyclone status when located approximately 400 nautical miles (740\u00a0km) east-northeast of Sandy Cape (23.6S/162.3E). The remnant surface wind field of the system meandered to the east and then to the east-northeast over the following days, producing a very broad area of gales to its south through the Tasman Sea. The highest three-day rainfall amounts for Grace was 759\u00a0mm from Topaz, which received 372\u00a0mm in 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0016-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nThe strongest winds from the mainland were from Low Isle at 18/1311 UTC when gusts reached 50 knots (93\u00a0km/h). Cape Moreton at 21 March 2004 2230 UTC received gusts to 54 knots (100\u00a0km/h). Widespread flooding and damage to roads and property along the far north Queensland coast, mainly between Cooktown and Cairns. Winds and waves brought tide levels above the highest tides of the year and this was particularly evident at Cooktown. Floodwaters closed all major roads into Cairns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0016-0003", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nA large section of one lane of the Captain Cook Highway north of Cairns collapsed after a landslide consisting of nearly 20\u00a0metres of rock and boulders the size of cars destroyed the ocean-side road. The scenic coastal highway and link between Cairns and Port Douglas was closed for several days. Residents were evacuated from the Whitfield range area due to landslides. An estimated $20,000,000 (US) damage to the Cairns region is attributed to pre-cyclone Grace. There were no casualties associated with Tropical Cyclone Grace. In New Caledonia, further strong winds, heavy rains and flooding were experienced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0016-0004", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nA massive oil slick threatened a popular tourist beach in New Caledonia. Officials in the French Pacific territory put up barriers around the island of Amedee, which was threatened by a toxic oil slick, estimated to cover an area of 20 square kilometres. They said the oil had come from a boat wrecked several decades ago on a coral reef off South Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Oscar\u2013Itseng\nFormed on 21 March, moved out of the region on 27 March into South-West Indian Ocean region, renaming to Itseng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring 20 December, Tropical Disturbance 02F was last noted by the FMS, as it moved into the region from the South Pacific basin about 665\u00a0km (415\u00a0mi) to the northwest of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Tropical Disturbance 04F was first noted by the FMS within a broad area of low pressure during 29 December, while it was located on the border with the South Pacific basin, about 100\u00a0km (60\u00a0mi) to the south of Honiara in the Solomon Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0018-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nThe system was located in a moderate area of vertical windshear and was poorly organised with atmospheric convection confined to the system's eastern semicircle. The system subsequently moved south-eastwards and remained poorly organised, before it was last noted by the FMS later that day while it was located to the south of San Cristobal Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175695-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season, Season effects\nThis is a table of all of the storms that have formed in the 2003\u201304 Australian region cyclone season. It includes their duration, names, landfall(s)\u2013denoted by bold location names\u00a0\u2013 damages, and death totals. Damage and deaths include totals while the storm was extratropical, a wave, or a low, and all of the damage figures are in 2004\u00a0AUD and USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175696-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Austrian Cup\nThe 2003\u20132004 Austrian Cup (German: \u00d6FB-Cup) was the 70th season of Austria's nationwide football cup competition. It commenced with the matches of the First Round in August 2003 and concluded with the Final on 23 May 2004. The competition was won by Grazer AK after beating Austria Vienna 5\u20134 on penalties after the match finished 3\u20133 after extra time Due to Grazer AK qualifying for European competition through winning the Bundesliga, Austria Vienna qualified for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup as cup runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175697-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and Grazer AK won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175697-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Results\nTeams played each other four times in the league. In the first half of the season each team played every other team twice (home and away), and then did the same in the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175698-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Austrian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Austrian Hockey League season was the 74th season of the Austrian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Austria. Seven teams participated in the league, and EC KAC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175699-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ayr United F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season is the 94th season of competitive football by Ayr United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175700-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azadegan League\nThe final results of the 2003\u201304Azadegan League season were as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175701-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azerbaijan Cup\nThe Azerbaijan Cup 2003\u201304 was the 12th season of the annual cup competition in Azerbaijan with the final taking place on 9 May 2004. Twenty teams competed in this year's competition. Neftchi Baku were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175701-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azerbaijan Cup, First round\nThe first legs were played on September 20, 2003 and the second legs on October 5, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175701-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azerbaijan Cup, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on October 18 and 19, 2003 and the second legs on November 1 and 2, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175701-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azerbaijan Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on March 17, 2004 and the second legs on March 23, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175701-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azerbaijan Cup, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on April 14, 2004 and the second legs on April 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175702-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Azerbaijan Top League\nThe 2003-04 Azerbaijan Top League was contested by fourteen clubs. It started on 17 May 2003 and finished on 5 May 2004. The title was won by Neftchi Baku for the fourth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175703-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 B Group\nThe 2003\u201304 B Group was the 49th season of the Bulgarian B Football Group, the second tier of the Bulgarian football league system. A total of 16 teams contested the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175704-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bahraini Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Bahraini Premier League was contested by 10 teams, and Muharraq Club won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175705-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bangladeshi cricket season\nThe 2003\u201304 Bangladeshi cricket season featured the inaugural Test series in Bangladesh between Bangladesh and England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175705-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bangladeshi cricket season, International tours, English Cricket team in Bangladesh\nEngland played 2 Test matches and 3 one day internationals (ODI) against Bangladesh. England won both the Test matches and won all three ODIs by 7 wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 91], "content_span": [92, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175705-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bangladeshi cricket season, International tours, 2004 ICC Under-19 World Cup\nDuring February and March 2004 Bangladesh hosted the 2004 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup. This tournament featured a number of future international players for Bangladesh, including Enamul Haque Jr who ended the tournament as the highest wicket taker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 84], "content_span": [85, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175706-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Barnsley F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Barnsley compete in the Football League Second Division where they finished in 12th position with 62 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175707-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Barys Astana season\nThe 2003\u201304 Barys Astana season was the 5th season of the franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175708-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season\nBayer 04 Leverkusen bounced back from the nearly disastrous season it came from, finishing in the top three and qualifying for the UEFA Champions League in the process. The season marked the breakthrough for Bulgarian striker Dimitar Berbatov, who scored 16 goals, whereas Brazilian signing Fran\u00e7a contributed with 14 strikes. As it was, it was the attack that impressed the most, especially in the 6\u20132 crushing of champions Werder Bremen on the penultimate day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175708-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175708-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175709-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belarusian Cup\n2003\u201304 Belarusian Cup was the thirteenth season of the Belarusian annual football cup competition. Contrary to the league season, it is conducted in a fall-spring rhythm. The first games were played on 4 June 2003. Winners of the Cup qualified for the UEFA Cup first qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175709-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belarusian Cup, First round\nIn this round 8 clubs from Second League were drawn against 8 clubs from First League. Another four First League teams (Torpedo-Kadino Mogilev, Lokomotiv Vitebsk, Pinsk-900 and MTZ-RIPO Minsk) advanced to the next round by drawing of lots. The rest of First and Second League teams (four from each) chose not to participate in this edition of the Cup for financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175709-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belarusian Cup, Round of 32\n12 winners of previous round were joined by 16 clubs from Premier League. 4 of 16 Premier League clubs (Dnepr-Transmash Mogilev, Darida Minsk Raion, Lokomotiv Minsk, Gomel) advanced to the next round by drawing of lots. The games were played on 9 and 10 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175709-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belarusian Cup, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on 7 April 2004. The second legs were played on 11 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175710-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belarusian Extraliga season\nThe 2003\u201304 Belarusian Extraliga season was the 12th season of the Belarusian Extraliga, the top level of ice hockey in Belarus. Ten teams participated in the league, and HK Yunost Minsk won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175711-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian First Division\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the Belgian First Division was held between 8 August 2003 and 15 May 2004. Sporting Anderlecht became champions on 24 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175711-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian First Division, Promoted teams\nThese teams were promoted from the second division at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175711-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian First Division, Relegated teams\nThese teams were relegated to the second division at the end of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175711-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian First Division, Anderlecht's title success\nThe battle for the title was not great as Anderlecht had a big lead over their opponents (mainly Club Brugge). However, a bad finish from Anderlecht kept the suspense until the 31st matchday when Club Brugge drew with Mouscron while the team from Brussels also drew (1-1) at Herman Vanderpoortenstadion, the homeground of Lierse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175711-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian First Division, Battle for Europe\nThe next week, Club Brugge was sure to enter the UEFA Champions League Preliminary Round with a 1-0 win against Standard Li\u00e8ge, then lying third. In spite of this defeat, Standard managed to qualify for the UEFA Cup as they were 6 points ahead of Mouscron after the 32nd matchday. The suspense was killed after a 1-1 draw against Charleroi the next Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175711-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian First Division, The relegation dog fight\nThe end of the league was thus centered on the battle against relegation. Four teams were concerned\u00a0: R.A.E.C. Mons and Charleroi, which finally saved themselves, R. Antwerp F.C. and K. Beringen-Heusden-Zolder finishing respectively 6 and 5 points adrift.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175712-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Belgian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Belgian Hockey League season was the 84th season of the Belgian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Belgium. Four teams participated in the league, and Olympia Heist op den Berg won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175713-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Besan\u00e7on RC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 100th season in the existence of Besan\u00e7on RC and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Besan\u00e7on RC participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175715-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Be\u015fikta\u015f J.K. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the club's 46th season in the Turkish Super League and their 101st year in existence. Be\u015fikta\u015f finished the Super League 3rd, behind Fenerbah\u00e7e and Trabzonspor. By finishing 1st last year the club qualified for the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League. They, along with Galatasaray represented Turkey in the competition. They finished third, thereby proceeded the UEFA Cup where they lost in the Second Round to FC Valencia 5-2 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175716-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Biathlon World Cup\nThe 2003\u221204 Biathlon World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season of biathlon, organised by the International Biathlon Union. The Biathlon World Championships 2004 were part of the Biathlon World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175716-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Biathlon World Cup\nThe men's overall World Cup was won by Rapha\u00ebl Poir\u00e9e, while Liv Grete Skjelbreid Poir\u00e9e of Norway claimed the women's overall World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175716-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Biathlon World Cup, Calendar\nBelow is the World Cup calendar for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Birmingham City Football Club's 101st season in the English football league system, their second season in the Premier League, and their 52nd season in the top tier of English football. They finished 10th in the 20-team league, three places higher than the previous season. They entered the FA Cup at the third round stage and lost to Sunderland in the fifth after a replay, and lost their opening second-round League Cup-tie to Blackpool. Top scorer was loan signing Mikael Forssell with 19 goals, 17 of which were scored in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review\nHaving avoided relegation in their first season in the Premier League with seven wins from the last eleven games, Birmingham were expected to struggle. They were unbeaten in the league at the end of September, and went into November still in fourth place. During a poor spell in the middle of the season Steve Bruce's side fell as low as tenth, though they rallied again and stood one point off fourth place with eight matches to go. In contrast to the previous season, just one win from the last eleven games gave Birmingham a tenth-place finish, six points behind city rivals Aston Villa, who had been struggling against relegation at the turn of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, August\nIn Birmingham's first game of the season, they beat Tottenham Hotspur 1\u20130 at St Andrew's, courtesy of a debut goal by record signing David Dunn, who converted a penalty awarded for Anthony Gardner's foul on Robbie Savage. Tottenham's manager, Glenn Hoddle, said afterwards that Rob Styles should not have been appointed as referee because he had sent off Birmingham's Kenny Cunningham in pre-season and \"it's human nature to balance things up.\" Steve Bruce's side shared what PA Sport's reporter dubbed \"a thrilling 0-0\" at Southampton the following weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, August\nBoth sides had chances to win the match as James Beattie struck the post and Stern John saw a shot cleared off the line. Birmingham then overcame Newcastle United 1\u20130 at St James' Park: after Gary Speed brought down Damien Johnson in the penalty area, Dunn's penalty was saved, but he scored from the rebound to give Birmingham a second league win in three games. In the first minute of the match, referee Matt Messias accidentally struck Savage in the face as he signalled a free kick. Their second league win in three games saw Birmingham climb to sixth in the table as they entered September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, September\nBirmingham signed Finland international striker Mikael Forssell on a season-long loan from Chelsea before the transfer window shut. He scored twice on debut in a 2\u20132 draw with Fulham at St Andrew's, equalising just before half-time after Louis Saha gave the visitors an early lead and then again tying the scores after 82 minutes. Both sides finished with ten men: Sylvain Legwinski received a second yellow card for tripping Dunn and Darren Purse was sent off for \"aiming a punch at\" Luis Boa Morte after he scored Fulham's second goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, September\nAt Elland Road, Leeds United had the upper hand until Roque J\u00fanior fouled Forssell and was sent off. Paul Robinson saved Dunn's penalty but the assistant referee saw an infringement. Savage's retake was successful and Forssell made the score 2\u20130. A 2\u20130 win at home to Portsmouth on 27 September with goals from Stephen Clemence and Stan Lazaridis gave Birmingham their best ever start to a league season and moved them fourth in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, October\nManchester United inflicted Birmingham's first league defeat of the season, winning 3\u20130 at Old Trafford after goalkeeper Maik Taylor was sent off by Mike Dean for fouling Paul Scholes. A goalless draw was enough to take normally free-scoring Chelsea top of the league and Birmingham fourth. Having lost both Second City derbies in 2002\u201303, Aston Villa held out for a goalless draw at St Andrew's \"in a game high on energy but desperately low on quality\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, October\nA fine save by Taylor from Bolton Wanderers' Kevin Davies helped Birmingham keep another clean sheet and a well-worked goal by Forssell gave them a fifth win of the season. Faced with criticism of his team's style of play, Bruce was pragmatic: \"I wanted to assemble a team that was difficult to beat. If I'd gone down the other route and brought in six flair players we\u2019d have ended up bottom of the League.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, November\nHaving conceded only five league goals in the first three months of the season, Birmingham's defence was unusually fragile against Charlton Athletic. Matt Holland's two goals and Dean Kiely's multiple saves helped them become the first team for nine months to win at St Andrew's. Christophe Dugarry's powerfully headed goal was his first of the season and the last of his Birmingham career. Forssell scored just after half-time in a 1\u20131 draw at home to local rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers, before Birmingham lost 3\u20130 at home to Arsenal. They had the better of the first half against Liverpool at Anfield, but two spectacular second-half goals gave the hosts a 3\u20131 victory that left Birmingham in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nFour goals in the last half hour gave Blackburn Rovers an emphatic win at Birmingham. Dugarry, who had earlier missed from a yard out and whose foul in the build-up caused Forssell's goal to be disallowed, was sent off on 72 minutes after receiving two yellow cards. He was later charged with misconduct by the Football Association over an incident missed by the referee in which Craig Short's nose was broken, and banned for three matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nIn Dugarry's absence with a knee injury, Clinton Morrison made his first league start for eight months and scored the opening goal in a match in which two opponents were sent off: Leicester City's captain, Matt Elliott, for an arm in Dunn's face in the first half and their goalkeeper, Ian Walker, after an hour for handling the ball a long way outside his penalty area. Forssell's header completed a 2\u20130 win, and Maik Taylor ended the match with a black eye and three stitches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0006-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nManchester City took an early lead at St Andrew's on Boxing Day, and despite pressure from Birmingham it took two fortunate goals in the last ten minutes\u00a0\u2013 Jeff Kenna headed home the rebound after Savage's free kick struck the goalpost, and Richard Dunne's attempted clearance bounced in off Forssell\u00a0\u2013 to secure the three points. Against Everton at Goodison Park, when Taylor was \"jostled\" by both Duncan Ferguson and Alan Stubbs, no foul was given, and Wayne Rooney scored the only goal of the match; the defeat left Birmingham ninth in the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, January\nWith a defence disrupted by injury\u00a0\u2013 midfielder Darren Carter, making his first start of the season, was one of three players used at left back in the first 40 minutes\u00a0\u2013 Birmingham conceded three times to Tottenham Hotspur in the first half. Savage's penalty reduced the deficit, but Morrison missed a chance when through on goal, and the match ended 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0007-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, January\nA goal apiece after 16 minutes, Antti Niemi's goalkeeping kept Southampton in the game, but Kenna scored the winner after an exchange of passes with Morrison; it was his second goal in two weeks and third in 8+1\u20442\u00a0years. Moments later, Kenna was having his head stitched after a challenge for which David Prutton was sent off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0007-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, January\nAt Stamford Bridge, PA Sport's reporter highlighted Birmingham's incredible tenacity, Savage and Clemence \"excelling in central midfield as they outplayed, let alone outfought, their far more illustrious opponents\" to record another goalless draw with Chelsea, helped by Olivier Tebily's acrobatic clearance off the line after a rare error by Maik Taylor. After Newcastle United took a first-half lead at St Andrew's, Birmingham dominated without success. They were awarded a free kick in the second minute of stoppage time, which was moved forward 10 yards after a Newcastle player kicked the ball away. Cunningham took the free kick, and Stern John slid in to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nTaylor made several fine saves, includng a \"superlative double reflex save from first Macken and then Sibierski\", in a goalless draw with Manchester City at Eastlands. Johnson had and missed a late chance to win the match for Birmingham, which even Bruce thought would have been a injustice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0008-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nThree days later Birmingham comfortably beat Everton with goals by Johnson, Forssell and Stan Lazaridis: \"after collecting a pass from Savage in his own half, the Australian embarked on a speedy, purposeful and unchecked 40-yard (37\u00a0m) run before unleashing a fierce cross-shot into the roof of the net\" that earned him the club's Goal of the Season award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0008-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nBirmingham came back from 2\u20130 down at Villa Park to draw the Second City derby; the equaliser came in the fourth minute of stoppage time when Morrison's shot was parried and Stern John \"thrashed the loose ball into the roof of the net\". It was Christophe Dugarry's final appearance before his contract was cancelled by mutual consent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, March\nHome wins against Middlesbrough, League Cup winners just three days before, in which recent signing Martin Taylor scored his first goal when Forssell's shot struck his shoulder, and League Cup losers Bolton Wanderers, in which Bryan Hughes's first goal of the season and Forssell's fourth in four games took Birmingham fifth in the table. Leicester City prepared for their visit to Birmingham with a \"bonding\" break in Spain during which nine players were arrested, three of whom were jailed; thanks to Les Ferdinand's goal and their hosts' poor finishing, they put an end to Birmingham's eight-match unbeaten run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0009-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, March\nThe away match with Middlesbrough, played in a howling gale, was described by the Independent as \"an eight-goal thriller in which a keeper (Middlesbrough's Mark Schwarzer) was the star and managed to keep the scoring within reasonable bounds\" and by the Guardian as \"a snatch of comic relief, a red-face day out of the blue\"; Birmingham lost 5\u20133, and the last goal was scored by Szilard Nemeth after Matthew Upson tried to head the ball back to his goalkeeper but could not reach it until he was almost flat on the floor. Birmingham conceded early at home to Leeds United but had a 3\u20131 lead when a penalty was awarded. Although Forssell was the designated penalty-taker, Hughes had two goals already and wanted to complete his hat-trick; Bruce intervened in favour of Forssell, who duly scored his 18th goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nTwo weeks after Maik Taylor's loan from Fulham was made permanent, his goalkeeping was instrumental in Birmingham's goalless draw with his former club; the result left them in sixth place. Martin Grainger, who had replaced the injured Lazaridis after 14 minutes, opened the scoring against Manchester United after 39 with a free kick. He was himself substituted at half-time because of a patellar tendon torn before he took the free kick and never played again. Cristiano Ronaldo and Louis Saha gave United a 2\u20131 win. Just before half-time at Portsmouth, Yakubu Aiyegbeni gave the hosts the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0010-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nReferee Barry Knight disallowed the goal, sent off Maik Taylor for handling the ball outside his area, and awarded a free kick, from which Dejan Stefanovi\u0107 scored. Portsmouth doubled their lead, and then Stern John made the score 2\u20131. Knight then awarded a penalty, converted by Yakubu, and disallowed John's second for offside\u00a0\u2013 harshly, according to BBC Sport. Morrison gave Birmingham the lead at Charlton, who promptly equalised; Hughes miskicked in front of an open goal in stoppage time. Away to Wolverhampton Wanderers, Forssell scored his 19th and last goal of the season and played a through ball from which Morrison gave Birmingham a 2\u20131 lead, but Taylor parried the ball to Carl Cort's feet for the equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, May\nWithout Maik Taylor and Forssell, Birmingham secured a goalless draw away to a strong Arsenal side already confirmed as league champions. Had Morrison not failed to control Lazaridis' second-half cross, their unbeaten record might well have been broken. In their last home game of the season, Birmingham lost 3\u20130 to Liverpool; Emile Heskey, who made the assist for Michael Owen's goal and scored the second, signed for Birmingham ten days later. With Cunningham suspended, Savage captained the team for the visit to Blackburn Rovers; Stern John's late equaliser secured a 1\u20131 draw away and a tenth-place finish, six points short of European qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, FA Cup\nBirmingham reached the fifth round of the 2003\u201304 FA Cup before losing to Sunderland of Division One after a replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175717-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Birmingham City F.C. season, League Cup\nBirmingham entered the 2003\u201304 League Cup at the second round. They conceded after six minutes away to Blackpool of the Second Division, and when given a chance from the penalty spot, Clemence's kick cleared the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175718-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Blackburn Rovers competed in the FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclaycard Premiership for sponsorship reasons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175718-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Season summary\nFinishing sixth in the Premiership at the end of 2002\u201303 had booked Blackburn Rovers their second successive UEFA Cup campaign, but it was short-lived. A 5\u20131 opening-day victory against newly-promoted Wolverhampton Wanderers kickstarted their new season, however, their overall Premiership form was far too dismal to give the side any hope of a third successive European qualification. Indeed, much of the season was spent battling against relegation; a decent finish to the season saw relegation fears eradicated by the end of April. Rovers finished 15th in the final table, putting intense pressure on manager Graeme Souness to turn things around.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175718-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175718-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175718-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175719-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackpool F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Blackpool F.C. 's 96th season (93rd consecutive) in the Football League. It was also their third consecutive season in the third tier of English football. They finished in fourteenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175719-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackpool F.C. season\nScott Taylor was the club's top scorer, with 27 goals (sixteen in the league, six in the FA Cup, three in the League Cup and two in the League Trophy).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175719-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Blackpool F.C. season\nShortly after the season's conclusion, Steve McMahon resigned as the club's manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175720-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 126th season in Bolton Wanderers F.C. 's existence, and was their third consecutive year in the top-flight. This article covers the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175720-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175720-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175720-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175720-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Statistics, Appearances\nBolton used a total of 29 players during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175721-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bonaire League season\nThe 2003/04 season of the Bonearian football League played in Bonaire, Netherlands Antilles started on September 7, 2003 and the final was played on June 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175721-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bonaire League season\nThe championship was played over 3 phases. First phase with all 7 teams, followed by a play off with the top 4 teams and then a final with the 2 top teams. For the first times Real Rincon and Vespo were allowed to play each team once at home in the Antonio Trenidat Stadium. All remaining matches were played at Stadion Playa at Kralendijk. Defending champions Real Rincon successfully defended their titles by defeating SV Estrellas in the final 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175721-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bonaire League season, Regular season\nTeams face each other 2 times. Top four teams qualify for the semi final play offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175721-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bonaire League season, Play offs\nTeams face each other 2 times. Top two teams qualify for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175722-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Borussia Dortmund season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 German football season, Borussia Dortmund competed in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175722-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Borussia Dortmund season, Season summary\nDortmund failed to qualify for the Champions League group stage, and followed that up with a disappointing sixth-place finish in the Bundesliga. The club's poor form was mainly a result of playmaker Tom\u00e1\u0161 Rosick\u00fd's absence through virtually half of the season. The poor form led to the dismissal of coach Matthias Sammer, while the club's economy got ever more strained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175722-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Borussia Dortmund season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175722-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Borussia Dortmund season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175723-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup\n2003\u201304 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup was the tenth season of the Bosnia and Herzegovina's annual football cup, and a fourth season of the unified competition. The competition started on 17 September 2003 with the First Round and concluded on 26 May 2004 with the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175723-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, First round\nThirty-two teams entered in the First Round. The matches were played on 17 September 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175723-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Second round\nThe 16 winners from the prior round enter this round. The first legs were played on 22 and 29 October and the second legs were played on 5 November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175723-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe eight winners from the prior round enter this round. The first legs were played on 19 November and the second legs were played on 22 and 29 November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175723-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Semifinals\nThe four winners from the prior round enter this round. The first legs will be played on 17 March and the second legs were played on 17 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175724-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season\nThe 2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season was the team's 80th season of operation in the National Hockey League (NHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175724-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season, Regular season\nThe Bruins had the fewest power-play opportunities of any team in the League, with just 300.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175724-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175724-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175724-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175724-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Bruins season, Draft picks\nBoston's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175725-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Celtics season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 58th season for the Boston Celtics in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Celtics acquired Raef LaFrentz, a teammate of Paul Pierce from the University of Kansas, from the Dallas Mavericks. The Celtics roster move continued in December when Tony Battie and Eric Williams were both traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Ricky Davis. In February, Mike James was traded to the Detroit Pistons for Lindsey Hunter and Chucky Atkins in a three-team trade involving the Atlanta Hawks. However, Hunter was waived after the trade and later re-signed with the Pistons. The team also released Vin Baker, who signed as a free agent with the New York Knicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175725-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Celtics season\nCeltics head coach Jim O'Brien resigned after a 22\u201324 start to the season. He was replaced by John Carroll for the remainder of the season. However, the Celtics would lose 12 of their first 13 games under Carroll. When General Manager Danny Ainge stated that the Celtics would be better off missing the playoffs, the statement seemed to motivate the team as they posted a 9\u20135 record in March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175725-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Boston Celtics season\nThe Celtics, despite finishing fourth in the Atlantic Division with a low 36\u201346 record, qualified for the playoffs as the number 8 seed first NBA team to reach the playoffs with below .500 record since the 1996\u201397 Los Angeles Clippers which was also swept by the Utah Jazz that postseason. They were swept in four games by the Indiana Pacers in the opening round. Pierce was selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. Following the season, Carroll was fired as coach and replaced by Doc Rivers, who also fired by the Orlando Magic after 1\u201310 start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175726-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Botola\nThe 2003\u201304 Botola is the 48th season of the Moroccan Premier League. Raja Casablanca are the holders of the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175727-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bradford City A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Bradford City participated in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175727-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Season summary\nBradford City were relegated from the First Division after 3 seasons in the division. Manager Bryan Robson left at the end of the season, and was replaced by his assistant Colin Todd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175727-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Season summary\nDefender Paul Heckingbottom was the club's player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175727-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bradford City A.F.C. season, Kit\nBradford's kits were manufactured by Italian company Diadora and sponsored by Bradford-based car dealership JCT600.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 40], "content_span": [41, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175727-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bradford City A.F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175727-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bradford City A.F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175728-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brentford F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Brentford competed in Football League Second Division. After mid-season spell of one win in 18 matches and relegation looking definite, manager Wally Downes was sacked in mid-March 2004. Martin Allen took over and immediately turned things around, pulling off \"The Great Escape\" to secure safety on the final day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175728-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nCash-strapped Brentford began the 2003\u201304 season with a threadbare squad, depleted through injuries and propped up with youngsters, with manager Wally Downes admitting that the club's \"immediate goal is keeping ourselves afloat for a period that shows the bank we can manage ourselves\". Five defeats in the opening six games left the club second-from-bottom, before the integration of loanees Ben May, Tommy Wright and Joel Kitamirike yielded an improvement in form in September, going unbeaten and winning three of five matches. In October, amidst speculation that former Brentford manager Steve Perryman would return to the club as director of football, manager Wally Downes was assured that his role would not be affected. Perryman eventually turned the offer down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175728-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nDespite a morale-boosting 7\u20131 FA Cup first round victory over Gainsborough Trinity and four wins from six matches in October and November lifting the Bees to mid-table, the rot soon set in. After the goalkeeping position weakened by the \u00a3500,000 sale of Paul Smith in January 2004 and with just one win from 19 matches in all competitions, Wally Downes was sacked after a 2\u20130 home defeat to Stockport County on 13 March 2004, which was Brentford's fifth consecutive defeat. Caretaker manager Garry Thompson took charge for the away match versus Blackpool on 16 March, with a 1\u20131 draw securing the first point won for a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175728-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nFormer Barnet manager Martin Allen took over on 18 March 2004 and was tasked with retaining Brentford's Second Division status. Allen released a number of players, installed his own backroom team and immediately galvanised the squad, winning three and drawing three of his first six matches to lift the Bees above the relegation places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175728-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nA priceless point salvaged at already-relegated Wycombe Wanderers on 24 April kept the Bees above the relegation places, but a 1\u20130 defeat away to fellow strugglers Grimsby Town in the penultimate match of the season meant the club would need to secure safety on the final day with a victory over Bournemouth or favourable results elsewhere. The match versus Bournemouth at Griffin Park remained scoreless until seven minutes from time, when substitute Alex Rhodes \"coolly slotted\" past Cherries' goalkeeper Neil Moss for a 1\u20130 win that completed Brentford's escape from relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175729-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brescia Calcio season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Italian football season, Brescia Calcio competed in the Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175729-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brescia Calcio season, Kit\nBrescia's kit was manufactured by Italian sports retailer Kappa and sponsored by Banca Lombarda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 34], "content_span": [35, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175729-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brescia Calcio season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175730-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 British Basketball League season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 17th campaign in the history of the British Basketball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175730-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 British Basketball League season, Haribo Cup\nThis season saw the first edition of the newly created Haribo Cup. Following the BBL's decision to withdraw from the National Cup due to import player regulations, the League's newest competition saw all 10 teams competing in a knock-out style tournament culminating in the Grand Final at the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175730-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 British Basketball League season, BBL Trophy\nDue to the lack of teams competing in this season's Championship, the BBL Trophy featured all 10 BBL teams plus two invited teams from the English Basketball League (Plymouth Raiders and Teesside Mohawks). The First round saw all 12 teams divided into four regionalised groups with the top finishing team advancing to the Semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175731-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 British Collegiate American Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 BCAFL was the 19th full season of the British Collegiate American Football League, organised by the British Students American Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175731-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 British Collegiate American Football League, Changes from last season\nThis increased the number of teams in BCAFL to 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175732-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 British National League season\nThe 2003\u201304 British National League season was the eighth season of the British National League, the second level of ice hockey in Great Britain. Seven teams participated in the league, and the Guildford Flames won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175733-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Brown Bears women's ice hockey season\nThe 2003-04 Brown Bears women's ice hockey team represented Brown University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season\nThe 2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season was the 34th season of operation for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 22, 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season, Regular season\nOn March 17, 2004, Derek Roy scored just 15 seconds into the overtime period to give the Sabres a 4\u20133 road win over the Atlanta Thrashers. Roy tied the Blackhawks' Mark Bell, who had also scored 15 seconds into the overtime period in Chicago's 4\u20133 home win over the Detroit Red Wings on December 11, 2003. Both goals would end up being the fastest overtime goals scored during the 2003-04 NHL regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season, Playoffs\nThe Sabres failed to qualify for the playoffs for the third consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175734-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Buffalo Sabres season, Draft picks\nBuffalo's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175735-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bulgarian Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Bulgarian Cup was the 64th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Litex Lovech won the competition, beating CSKA Sofia 6\u20135 on penalties in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175735-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bulgarian Cup, First round\nIn this round entered winners from the preliminary rounds together with the teams of B Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175735-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bulgarian Cup, Second round\nThis round featured winners from the First Round and all teams of A Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175736-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bulgarian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Bulgarian Hockey League season was the 52nd season of the Bulgarian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Bulgaria. Four teams participated in the league, and HK Slavia Sofia won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175737-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bundesliga\nThe 2003\u201304 Bundesliga was the 41st season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 1 August 2003 and concluded on 22 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175737-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bundesliga, Champion squad\nGoalkeepers: Andreas Reinke (34); Pascal Borel (1). Defenders: Paul Stalteri (33 / 2); Val\u00e9rien Isma\u00ebl (32 / 4); Mladen Krstaji\u0107 (30 / 3); \u00dcmit Davala (22); Christian Schulz (17); Viktor Skrypnyk (6 / 1); Ludovic Magnin (4); Manuel Friedrich (1). Midfielders: Fabian Ernst (33 / 2); Johan Micoud (32 / 10); Frank Baumann (captain; 32 / 2); Kriszti\u00e1n Lisztes (30 / 3); Tim Borowski (25 / 1); Pekka Lagerblom (7); Holger Wehlage (4); Ivica Banovi\u0107 (3). Forwards: A\u00edlton (33 / 28); Ivan Klasni\u0107 (29 / 13); Angelos Charisteas (24 / 4); Nelson Valdez (21 / 5); Markus Daun (6); Marco Reich (2). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175737-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bundesliga, Champion squad\nOn the roster but have not played in a league game: Alexander Walke; Stefan Beckert; Christian Lenze; Simon Rolfes; Marco Stier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175737-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bundesliga, Champion squad\nTransferred out during the season: Manuel Friedrich (on loan to 1. FSV Mainz 05); Christian Lenze (to VfL Osnabr\u00fcck); Marco Reich (to Derby County F.C. ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175738-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Burnley F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Burnley's fourth season in the second tier of English football. They were managed by Stan Ternent in his sixth full season since he replaced Chris Waddle at the beginning 1998\u201399 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175738-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Burnley F.C. season, Season summary\nBurnley struggled all season, and finished the season in 19th, two points above the relegation zone. As with the previous season, Burnley's defense was their downfall - the team conceded 77 goals, bettered in the First Division only by bottom club Wimbledon and in the entire Football League by Second Division side Notts County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175739-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Bury F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Bury compete in the Football League Third Division where they finished in 12th position with 56 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175740-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Butler University in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Todd Lickliter, serving his 3rd year. The Bulldogs played their home games at Hinkle Fieldhouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175741-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CA Osasuna season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 83rd season in the existence of CA Osasuna and the club's fourth consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Osasuna participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175742-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CERH European League\nThe 2003\u201304 CERH European League was the 39th edition of the CERH European League organized by CERH. Its Final Four was held on 15 and 16 May 2004 at PalaBarsacchi, in Viareggio, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175742-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CERH European League, First round\nThe four eliminated teams with best ranking joined the CERS Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175742-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CERH European League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a home-and-away round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175742-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CERH European League, Group stage\nThe two first qualified teams advanced to the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175742-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CERH European League, Final four\nThe Final Four was played at PalaBarsacchi, in Viareggio, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175743-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CERS Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 CERS Cup was the 24th season of the CERS Cup, Europe's second club roller hockey competition organized by CERH. 19 teams from five national associations qualified for the competition as a result of their respective national league placing in the previous season. Following a preliminary phase and four knockout rounds, Reus Deportiu won its second consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175744-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 CHL season was the 12th season of the Central Hockey League (CHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175744-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CHL season, Regular season, Division standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SOL = Shootout loss; Pts = Points; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175744-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CHL season, Regular season, Division standings\ny - clinched league title; x - clinched playoff spot; e - eliminated from playoff contention", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175744-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CHL season, Records\nTulsa Oilers goaltender Rod Branch posted eight shutouts during the 2003\u201304 season, to affirm his position as the CHL's all-time career shut-out leader with 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175745-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 CS Sedan Ardennes season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 85th season in the existence of CS Sedan Ardennes and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, CS Sedan Ardennes participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season\nThe 2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season was the 24th National Hockey League season in Calgary, and the 32nd for the franchise in the NHL. The Flames ended a seven-year playoff drought, qualifying for the post-season for the first time since 1996. The Flames defeated three division winners en route to an appearance in the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals. The Flames were defeated in the finals by the Tampa Bay Lightning in seven games. The run to the finals captured the imagination of the city, while the Red Mile celebrations gained international attention for the \"Mardi Gras-like\" atmosphere as up to 80,000 people celebrated in the streets after each playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season\nHead coach Darryl Sutter succeeded Craig Button as the Flames' general manager. Sutter made numerous changes to the roster as he worked to remake the Flames into a fast, physical club. Chris Drury was dealt to Buffalo for Rhett Warrener and Steve Reinprecht before the season began. A knee injury to starting goaltender Roman Turek led Sutter to trade for Miikka Kiprusoff, a player he knew from his days with the San Jose Sharks. Kiprusoff responded to the deal by posting an NHL record low Goals Against Average of 1.69.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season\nThe Flames were led offensively by Jarome Iginla, who tied Ilya Kovalchuk and Rick Nash for the league lead with 41 goals as the trio shared the Rocket Richard Trophy. Iginla represented the Flames at the 54th National Hockey League All-Star Game in Minnesota, and was named a second team all-star for his performance during the season. Iginla's charity work and leadership both on and off the ice led to his also being awarded the King Clancy Memorial Trophy and NHL Foundation Player Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Regular season\nAfter struggling with an injury to starting goaltender Roman Turek in the first game of the season, an early November trade for San Jose Sharks third stringer Miikka Kiprusoff sparked the Flames, as Kiprusoff led Calgary into the playoffs for the first time in eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Regular season\nDefenceman Mike Commodore became a cult hero for his unruly red mop of hair during the playoffs, leading many fans to wear red afro wigs to playoff games. Craig Conroy brought a team building idea from his days with the St. Louis Blues, having the team award a green hard hat to the hardest working player each time the Flames won. As the exercise gained popularity, fans also began wearing green hard hats to the arena themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Regular season\nThe Flames allowed the fewest short-handed goals during the regular season, with just 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Regular season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Regular season, Season standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Regular season, Season standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Playoffs\nCalgary's defeat of the Vancouver Canucks in the first round was the first playoff series victory for the Flames since they won the Cup in 1989. Jarome Iginla scored two goals and assisted on Martin Gelinas' overtime winner in game seven, sending fans in Calgary into the streets to celebrate the victory. The Flames pulled off an even bigger upset in round two, knocking off the President's Trophy winning Red Wings in six, including back-to-back 1\u20130 shutouts in the final two games. Once again, Gelinas scored the overtime winner on a rebound on a play set up by Iginla. In doing so, Gelinas became the first player in NHL history to record three career OT winners to end a series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Playoffs\nThe third round series pitted the Flames against head coach Darryl Sutter and goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff's old team \u2013 the San Jose Sharks. After jumping out to a 2\u20130 series lead on the road, the Sharks returned the favour, defeating Calgary twice at home. After blanking the Sharks in San Jose in game five, the Flames returned home with a chance to go to the Stanley Cup Final. Led once again by Iginla and Gelinas, the Flames cruised to a 3\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0010-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Playoffs\nGelinas once again scored the series-clinching goal, this time in the second period, to return the Flames to the Stanley Cup Final for the first time since winning it in 1989; this was the first Finals appearance by a Canadian team since the 1994 Vancouver Canucks lost to the New York Rangers. In addition, the Flames became the first team to defeat the 1st, 2nd and 3rd seeded teams in their conference en route to the Stanley Cup Final (which was only repeated in 2012 by the Los Angeles Kings).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Playoffs\nThe Final versus Tampa Bay became known for controversy. First, referee Kerry Fraser was pulled from his game six assignment in Calgary after drawing the ire of Flames fans following several calls in game four that upset the local fans. Fraser would instead officiate game seven in Tampa. The officiating in game four prompted a rant by Sutter, in which he alleged that the NHL did not want Calgary to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Playoffs\nLate in game six, with the score tied, a shot that deflected off of Gelinas' skate was stopped by Tampa Bay goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin on the goal line. Later replays indicated that the puck may have crossed the line, however the play was not reviewed at the time, and the NHL would later rule the video was inconclusive, since the puck was in the air, not on the ice. Instead, the Lightning would win in double overtime, and go on to win game seven by a 2\u20131 score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Playoffs\nDespite the game seven loss, the playoff run lifted the city to a new high. Over 30,000 fans celebrated the Flames run at a rally at Olympic Plaza shortly after the Final had ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics\nJarome Iginla's 41 goals placed him in a tie for the league lead, earning him his second Rocket Richard Trophy. Iginla shared the award with Atlanta's Ilya Kovalchuk and Columbus' Rick Nash, both of whom also scored 41 goals. Iginla also led the league in playoff goals, as his total of 13 was one better than Tampa's Brad Richards and Ruslan Fedotenko. Iginla led the team in scoring for the fourth consecutive season,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics\nMiikka Kiprusoff, acquired from the San Jose Sharks early in the season, set a modern NHL record low Goals Against Average of 1.69 in 39 games played. He recorded five shutouts in the playoffs, a franchise record. Kiprusoff's performance with the Flames led to his being named the starting goaltender for team Finland at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, where he led the Finns to the championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics, Skaters\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics, Skaters\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Calgary. Stats reflect time with the Flames only. Bold denotes league leader", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Calgary. Stats reflect time with the Flames only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold text denotes league recordItalics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Transactions\nPrior to the season, the Flames sent restricted free agent Chris Drury to the Buffalo Sabres for defenceman Rhett Warrener and forward Steve Reinprecht, whom the Sabres had acquired from the Colorado Avalanche, then included in the Drury trade. Warrener especially was seen as being a key player for the Flames as they attempted to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Transactions\nThe acquisition of Miikka Kiprusoff proved to be a significant turning point for the Flames' season. Darryl Sutter dealt for Kiprusoff after starting goaltender Roman Turek suffered a knee injury that left him unable to play for several months. Kiprusoff stabilized the Flames' goaltending situation, producing a league record low goals against average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Draft picks\nThe 2003 NHL Entry Draft was held in Nashville, Tennessee on June 21\u201322, 2003. The Flames selected nine players in the draft. Calgary selected offensive minded defenceman Dion Phaneuf with their first pick, ninth overall. Phaneuf's coach with the Red Deer Rebels described him as being a physical player on draft day. \"This kid doesn't hit to hit. He hits to hurt. It's a mind-set that's rare in the game. At any level. You can't teach it, you can't fake it. You're either born with it, or you're not.\" Phaneuf quickly made an impact in the NHL, scoring 20 goals as a rookie in 2005\u201306, earning a nomination for the Calder Memorial Trophy as top rookie. Phaneuf was nominated for the Norris Trophy as top defenceman in 2007\u201308, just his third year in the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Farm teams, Lowell Lockmonsters\nAfter shutting down the Saint John Flames, the Flames entered into an agreement to share an affiliation with the Lowell Lockmonsters with the Carolina Hurricanes. The Lockmonsters posted a 32\u201336\u20136\u20136 record, out of the playoffs with a 6th-place finish in the Atlantic Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175746-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Calgary Flames season, Farm teams, Las Vegas Wranglers\nThe Las Vegas Wranglers entered the ECHL as an expansion team, immediately entering an affiliation agreement with the Flames. The team was immediately competitive, finishing second in the Pacific Division with a 43\u201322\u20137 record. This did not translate into the playoffs however, as the Wranglers lost in the divisional semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175747-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio\nThe 2003\u201304 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio season was the 19th season since its establishment. It was contested by 15 teams, and S.S. Pennarossa won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175747-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Regular season, Results\nAll teams play twice against the teams within their own group and once against the teams from the other group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175748-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Canadian network television schedule\nThe 2003\u201304 Canadian network television schedule indicates the fall prime time schedules for Canada's major English broadcast networks. For schedule changes after the fall launch, please consult each network's individual article.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175749-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cardiff City F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season Cardiff City played in Division One of the Football League. It was the team's first year in the Division One since being promoted from Division Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175750-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carlisle United F.C. season\nFor its 2003\u201304 season, Carlisle United F.C. competed in the English Football League Division Three. Carlisle United achieved a record of 12-9-15, the second-worst record in the third division. The club's 23rd place finish in the division led to them being relegated to the Football Conference National for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175750-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carlisle United F.C. season\nThe team was managed by player-manager Paul Simpson, in his first year with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season\nThe 2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season was the franchise's 25th season in the National Hockey League and seventh as the Hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Regular season\nThe Hurricanes finished 30th overall in the NHL in scoring for the second consecutive season, with just 172 goals for. They also struggled on the power-play, finishing 30th overall in power-play goals scored, with 41, and 30th overall in power-play percentage, at 10.68% (41 for 384).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Playoffs\nThe Hurricanes missed the playoffs for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Player statistics, Forwards\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Player statistics, Defensemen\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Player statistics, Goaltending\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Draft picks\nCarolina's picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft in Nashville, Tennessee. The Hurricanes have the 2nd overall pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175751-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Carolina Hurricanes season, Farm teams, American Hockey League\nThe Lowell Lock Monsters are the Hurricanes American Hockey League affiliate for the 2003\u201304 AHL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175752-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celta de Vigo season\nCelta de Vigo contested La Liga, Copa del Rey and UEFA Champions League in the 2003\u201304 season. The side reached the last 16 of the Champions League in their competition debut, going out to Arsenal, but at the same time the league form suffered and Celta dropped beneath the relegation zone, from which the team could not recover, and having finished in the top half of the standings for the better part of a decade, Celta found themselves in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, which rendered several key players leaving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175752-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celta de Vigo season\nThree Managers in Europe Four Years Since Atletico Madrid in 2000. was relegated", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175752-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celta de Vigo season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175752-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celta de Vigo season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175753-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic F.C. season\nIn season 2003\u201304 Celtic won a double of the Scottish Premier League championship and the Scottish Cup. They reached the quarter-finals of the Scottish League Cup, and the UEFA Cup after competing in the group stage of the Champions League. They set a new record for the most goals scored in a season \u2013 105 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175753-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175753-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175753-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic F.C. season, Player statistics, Appearances and goals\nList of squad players, including number of appearances by competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175754-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic League\nThe 2003\u201304 Celtic League was the third Celtic League season, and the first following the formation of the five regional rugby sides in Wales. The Celtic League, having previously been played as a pool stage followed by knockout rounds was restructured into a typical league system, based on home and away games only. The league was won by the Llanelli Scarlets, with all the other Welsh regions finishing in the top 6. Following this season, the Celtic Warriors were bought-out and disbanded by the Welsh Rugby Union, and in subsequent years, only four Welsh sides have competed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175754-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic League, Table\nUnder the standard bonus point system, points are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175754-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Celtic League, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under IRB eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not yet earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-IRB nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175755-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chamois Niortais F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 103rd season in the existence of Chamois Niortais F.C. and the club's 12th consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Chamois Niortais F.C. participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175756-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Charlton Athletic F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Charlton Athletic competed in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175756-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nFor the third season running, a late slump in form ended Charlton Athletic's hopes of European qualification. In 2001\u201302, they had finished 14th after failing to win any of their final 10 games. In 2002\u201303, they had finished 12th after a not-quite-so dramatic slump. 2003\u201304, however, did bring Charlton's best Premiership finish to date, as well as their highest league finish since the 1950s, as they came seventh. For much of the season, they had occupied the Champions League and UEFA Cup places, but the familiar end-of-season setback pushed them out of the European places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175756-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nAt the end of the season, goalkeeper Dean Kiely was named the club's Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175756-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175756-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175756-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175757-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chelsea F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Chelsea F.C. 's, 12th consecutive season in the Premier League and 98th year as a club. Manager Claudio Ranieri was sacked on 31 May 2004 and was replaced by Jos\u00e9 Mourinho. In July 2003, long-time chairman Ken Bates sold the club to Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175757-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chelsea F.C. season\nChelsea finished second to the unbeaten Arsenal in the Premier League. In the Champions League Chelsea reached the semi-finals against AS Monaco, but failed to reach the final, losing 5\u20133 on aggregate to the French side. They also exited the FA Cup in the fifth round to Arsenal and the Carling Cup in the quarter-finals to Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175757-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chelsea F.C. season, Team kit\nThe team kit was produced by Umbro. The shirt sponsor was Emirates Airline; the kit bore the \"Fly Emirates\" logo. Chelsea's home kit was all blue with a white collar. Their new away kit was all white with black and blue stripes down the center. Last season's away kit (all black with blue accents) was retained as the club's third kit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175757-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chelsea F.C. season, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175757-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chelsea F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175757-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chelsea F.C. season, Statistics\nStatistics taken from and . Squad details and shirt numbers from and .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175758-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season\nThe 2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season was the 78th season of operation of the Chicago Blackhawks in the National Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175758-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season, Regular season\nOn December 11, 2003, Mark Bell scored just 15 seconds into the overtime period to give the Blackhawks a 4\u20133 home win over the Detroit Red Wings. The Sabres' Derek Roy would match that mark in the overtime period on March 17, 2004, in a 4\u20133 Buffalo road win over the Atlanta Thrashers. Both goals would prove to be the fastest overtime goals scored during the 2003\u201304 NHL regular season. In February, Captain Alexei Zhamnov was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers. The team chooses not to name a replacement, for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175758-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175758-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175758-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175758-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Blackhawks season, Draft picks\nChicago's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Bulls' 38th season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Bulls re-signed free agent and former All-Star forward Scottie Pippen. However, they continued to struggle finishing last place in the Central Division with a 23\u201359 record, missing the playoffs for the sixth straight season. Following the season, Pippen retired and Jamal Crawford was traded to the New York Knicks. (See 2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season#Regular season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nHeading in to the season, Bulls fans were as optimistic as they had been in years. Before it was done, however, winds of change had blown through the Windy City leaving a roster and a coaching staff upside down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nAfter closing out the previous season with four solid wins in the final six games to reach the 30-victory plateau, the team was hopeful of reaching the playoffs for the first time since 1998 and new pieces were added to the team\u2019s puzzle for that to happen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nFirst, Kirk Hinrich was taken with the seventh overall pick in the 2003 NBA Draft to fill the void at the guard spot. This happened just days after the team learned it would be without services of Jay Williams, who was injured in a motorcycle accident in June and would miss this entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nLater in the summer, the Bulls brought back one of the sport\u2019s all-time legends when free agent Scottie Pippen\u2014a seven-time NBA All-Star, two-time Olympic gold medalist and one of the 50 greatest players in NBA history\u2014returned to Chicago on 07/20/03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\n\u201cI think I know how to win games in the NBA. It may sound simple, but both winning and losing can become a mindset, and I won\u2019t accept losing\u2014ever. Whether it\u2019s on the floor, in the huddle, at practice or just demonstrating a winning leadership, I plan on helping this team win,\u201d said Pippen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nJust one month into the season, however, it became clear that expectations were not being met and changes were necessary. With a 4-10 record, the team relieved Bill Cartwright of his head coaching duties (11/24/03). A few days later, Scott Skiles was named head coach (11/28/03) as he set out to instill a tough, defensive-minded, and high-effort mentality upon his new team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nThe Bulls makeover wasn\u2019t done yet. A blockbuster of a deal went down on 12/01/03, when Chicago traded Lonny Baxter, Donyell Marshall and Jalen Rose to Toronto for Antonio Davis, Chris Jefferies and Jerome Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\n\u201cThis trade helps us address a couple of different areas, areas that we needed to get stronger in. It not only provides us with size, but also with energy,\u201d said John Paxson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nWhile the Bulls continued to struggle, improvements in effort under Coach Skiles were evident, and the roster re-make had only begun. The team\u2019s 23-59 record qualified it for a sixth consecutive NBA Lottery appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nOther Notes: Hired Assistant Coaches Johnny Bach (07/15/03) and Ron Adams (07/16/03) \u2026 snapped a 26-game road losing streak versus Western Conference teams with a 95-79 win at Utah (02/04/04) \u2026 Hinrich dished out 506 assists and his average of 6.7 apg ranked tied for 7th in the NBA, despite the Bulls ranking last in the league in team field goal percentage (.414) \u2026 Hinrich was the only rookie in the NBA to tally a triple-double when he registered 11 points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists against the visiting Golden State Warriors (02/28/04) \u2026 Jamal Crawford went for a career-high 50 points (18-34 FG, 8-11 FT) at Toronto (04/11).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175759-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chicago Bulls season, Regular season\nHonors: Kirk Hinrich (freshman team) participated in the Schick Rookie Challenge at All-Star Weekend \u2026 Hinrich also was named to the got milk? NBA All-Rookie First Team \u2026 the Bulls drew an average of 19,736 fans through 41 home games (third in the NBA), including 11 sellouts \u2026 the Bulls also hosted the seven largest crowds in the NBA, including a season-high draw of 23,067 versus the L.A. Lakers at the United Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175760-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chinese Basketball Association season\nThe season ran from November 16, 2003 to March 3, 2004. No teams were promoted from the Second Division, while two teams were set to be relegated. However, relegations were abolished after all Relegation Round matches have been played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175760-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chinese Basketball Association season, Playoffs\nThe top 8 teams in the regular season advanced to the playoffs. The quarterfinals and semifinals once again used best-of-three series to determine the advancing team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175760-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chinese Basketball Association season, Playoffs\nIn the Final series, Guangdong Southern Tigers defeated Bayi Rockets (3-1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175760-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chinese Basketball Association season, Playoffs\nTeams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in regular season, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. Home court advantage belongs to the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175760-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chinese Basketball Association season, Relegations\nThe bottom 4 teams participated in the Relegation Round. Each team played 4 games against each of the other three teams, for a total of 12 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175760-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Chinese Basketball Association season, Relegations\n2 teams were set to be relegated. However, relegations were abolished after all Relegation Round matches have been played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175761-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Clermont Foot season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 94th season in the existence of Clermont Foot and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Clermont Foot participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175762-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 34th season of the National Basketball Association in Cleveland, Ohio. In the years following their 1998 first-round playoff loss to the Indiana Pacers, the Cavaliers dropped to the bottom of the league and became a perennial entrant in the annual NBA Draft Lottery. The franchise's freefall bottomed out during the 2002\u201303 season, as the Cavs fell to a 17\u201365 record, tied with the Denver Nuggets for the league's worst.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175762-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nHowever, the fortunes of the franchise shifted dramatically in May 2003, when the Cavs won the first overall pick in the draft lottery. The Cavaliers selected high school phenom LeBron James from St. Vincent-St. Mary High School in nearby Akron, providing the team with a centerpiece player around which to build.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175762-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe Cavs revised their look for the 2003\u201304 season, introducing a new logo and a variation on the wine and gold color scheme used by the club during the 1970s. Dark blue was also added as a trim color.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175762-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe team made major moves during the season, trading Ricky Davis, Chris Mihm, Michael Stewart and a second-round draft pick to the Boston Celtics in exchange for Eric Williams, Tony Battie, and Kedrick Brown. Later, Darius Miles was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers for Jeff McInnis and Ruben Boumtje Boumtje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175762-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe Cavaliers lost their first five games of the season, leading them to an awful 6\u201319 start. However, they played .500 basketball for the remainder of the season, finishing fifth in the Central Division with a 35\u201347 record. They fell just one game short of making the playoffs. James was named Rookie of the Year and selected to the All-Rookie First Team. Following the season, second-year forward Carlos Boozer signed as a free agent with the Utah Jazz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175762-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cleveland Cavaliers season, Offseason\nDespite James being with Cleveland for the first season, Cleveland still did not make the playoffs, still needing improvement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175763-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Club Brugge KV season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Belgian football season, Club Brugge competed in the Belgian First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175763-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Club Brugge KV season, Season summary\nClub Brugge failed to defend their title. Despite a famous win over reigning champions A.C. Milan, they also failed to progress from their Champions League group. A third-place finish in the group was enough for the club to continue their European campaign in the UEFA Cup, although they were soon knocked out in the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175763-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Club Brugge KV season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175763-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Club Brugge KV season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175763-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Club Brugge KV season, Results, Champions League, Third qualifying round\nBorussia Dortmund 3\u20133 Club Brugge on aggregate. Club Brugge won 4\u20132 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175764-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colchester United F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Colchester United's 62nd season in their history and their sixth successive season in the third tier of English football, the Second Division. Alongside competing in the Second Division, the club also participated in the FA Cup, the League Cup and the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175764-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colchester United F.C. season\nColchester embarked on cup runs in the FA Cup, reaching the fifth round where they were eliminated by Sheffield United, while they also were one fixture away from a trip to the Millennium Stadium in the Football League Trophy after falling to a 4\u20133 aggregate defeat to Southend United. The U's cup exploits eventually led to a late season drop in form, as they slipped from 5th position to 14th with fixture congestion. They recovered to finished 11th, nine points away from the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175764-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview\nPhil Parkinson embarked on his first full season in charge by applying what he had learnt from the final few months of the previous campaign, while gaining his UEFA A Licence and UEFA B Licence as well as a degree he studied for in his spare time. He introduced sports science to the club, revolutionising the way players trained, ate and rested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175764-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview\nThe U's participated in a record 15 cup ties during the season, making significant progress in the FA Cup and Football League Trophy. Helped by the astute signings of Wayne Andrews and Premier League youngsters Craig Fagan and Rowan Vine, Colchester reached the FA Cup fifth round, defeating Oxford United, Aldershot Town, Accrington Stanley, and Coventry City, courtesy of a Vine hat-trick, before succumbing to Sheffield United 1\u20130 at Bramall Lane. Two days after the FA Cup clash, the U's were faced with the task of overcoming a Football League Trophy southern section final first-leg 3\u20132 deficit against Southend United. The match ended 1\u20131, with former U's manager Steve Wignall's Southend progressing. Fixture congestion was a contributing factor in Colchester's slip down the table from 5th position to 14th, while losing Karl Duguid to a serious knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175764-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview\nAt the end of the season, Colchester completed the campaign in eleventh position, nine points adrift of the play-off places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175764-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colchester United F.C. season, Squad statistics, Player debuts\nPlayers making their first-team Colchester United debut in a fully competitive match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175765-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colorado Avalanche season\nThe 2003\u201304 Colorado Avalanche season was the Avalanche's ninth season. For the first time since moving to Colorado, the Avalanche did not win their division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175765-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colorado Avalanche season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175765-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colorado Avalanche season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175765-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colorado Avalanche season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175765-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Colorado Avalanche season, Draft picks\nColorado's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season\nThe 2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season was the Blue Jackets' fourth season in the NHL, as the team was coming off of a 29\u201342\u20138\u20133 record in the 2002\u201303 season, earning 69 points to finish in last place in the Western Conference for the second-straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Off-season\nColumbus would undergo some changes during the off-season, as leading scorer and team captain Ray Whitney would leave to sign with the Detroit Red Wings. The Blue Jackets would name veteran defenceman Luke Richardson the third captain in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season\nThe Blue Jackets would get off to a solid start in 2003\u201304, winning three of their first four games, though the club would eventually go on a seven-game losing streak to quickly fall out of playoff contention. Columbus would continue to struggle, and General Manager and Head Coach Doug MacLean announced on January 1, 2004, that he would step down from head coaching duties, naming Blue Jackets assistant coach and former NHL player Gerard Gallant as his replacement. Columbus posted a 9\u201321\u20134\u20133 record under MacLean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season\nWhile the Blue Jackets would play better hockey with Gallant behind the bench, the team would fail once again to earn a playoff spot, as they finished the season with a 25\u201345\u20138\u20134 record for 62 points\u2014seven fewer than the previous season\u2014and finish 29 points the Nashville Predators for the eighth and final playoff spot in the Western Conference. Columbus, however, climbed out of the basement in the Central Division for the first time in franchise history after finishing ahead of the Chicago Blackhawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season\nRick Nash had a memorable season, finishing in a three-way tie with Ilya Kovalchuk from the Atlanta Thrashers and Jarome Iginla from the Calgary Flames to win the Maurice \"Rocket\" Richard Trophy as the League's highest goal-scorer; he scored a club-record 41 goals and finished with a team-best 57 points. David Vyborny led the Blue Jackets with 31 assists and finished second to Nash with 53 points. Rookie Nikolai Zherdev also contributed a solid 34 points in 57 games. On defense, Anders Eriksson led the Jackets with 27 points, while Jaroslav Spacek contributed with 22 points in just 58 games. Jody Shelley provided the team toughness, earning a team-high 228 penalty minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season\nIn goal, Marc Denis was the team's number one, playing a team-high 66 games, winning 21 of them, posting a team best 2.56 goals against average (GAA) and earning five shutouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season\nThe Blue Jackets would finish the season having tied the Dallas Stars for most times shut-out, with 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season, Season standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175766-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Regular season, Season standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175767-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Combined Counties Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Combined Counties Football League season was the 26th in the history of the Combined Counties Football League, a football competition in England. This season saw the league were expanded up to two divisions after the Surrey County Senior League was adsorbed by the Combined Counties League and became new Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175767-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Combined Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 23 clubs from the previous season, along with one new club:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175767-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Combined Counties Football League, Division One\nThis season the league was expanded to two divisions after the Surrey County Senior League was absorbed by the Combined Counties League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175768-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u20132004 Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut in the 2003\u20132004 NCAA Division I basketball season. Coached by Jim Calhoun, the Huskies played their home games at the Hartford Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut, and on campus at the Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut, and were a member of the Big East Conference. They won their record-tying sixth Big East tournament. On April 6, 2004, they claimed their second national championship by defeating Georgia Tech, 82\u201373.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175769-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Connecticut Huskies women's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Connecticut Huskies women's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut in the 2003\u20132004 NCAA Division I basketball season. Coached by Geno Auriemma, the Huskies played their home games at the Hartford Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut, and on campus at the Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut, and are a member of the Big East Conference. The Huskies won their fifth NCAA championship, and third consecutive, by defeating the Tennessee Lady Vols, 70\u201361.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175769-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Connecticut Huskies women's basketball team, Huskies of Honor induction\nOn December 29, 2013, the University of Connecticut inducted two women's basketball team, the National Championship winning teams of 2002\u201303 and 2003\u201304 into the Huskies of Honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 79], "content_span": [80, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175770-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a 2003\u201304 was the 11th staging of the Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, a knockout competition for Spanish football clubs in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175770-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe competition began on August 2004 with the Regional stages and ended with the finals on 1 and 14 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175771-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Copa del Rey\nThe 2003\u201304 Copa del Rey was the 102nd staging of the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175771-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Copa del Rey\nThe competition began on 24 August 2003 and concluded on 17 March 2004 with the final, held at the Estadi Ol\u00edmpic Llu\u00eds Companys in Barcelona, in which Zaragoza lifted the trophy following a 3\u20132 victory over Real Madrid after extra time. The final match was played six days after the 2004 Madrid train bombings and three days after the 2004 Spanish general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175772-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coppa Italia\nThe 2003\u201304 Coppa Italia was the 57th edition of the tournament. Lazio won the tournament for the 4th time in club history, winning the two-legged final over Juventus on a 4\u20132 aggregate score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175772-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coppa Italia, Seedings and format\nIn the 2003\u201304 Coppa Italia there were a total of 48 teams competing: all 18 clubs from Serie A, 23 of the 24 clubs in Serie B, and 7 clubs from Serie C. The only Serie B club not to feature in the competition was ACF Fiorentina, as they had only later been reassigned to Serie B based on sporting merit following the disbarment of Cosenza. The clubs from Serie C included the 4 runners-up from the 2002-03 Serie C promotion playoffs along with the two finalists from the 2002-03 Serie C Coppa Italia competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175772-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coppa Italia, Group stage\nTo protest against the enlargement of Serie B to 24 teams, many clubs chose to forfeit games in the group phase of this year's competition and many games were not played. All forfeiting teams were given a 3-0 defeat and deducted 1 point in the table for each game not played. Forfeiting teams are indicated in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175773-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de France\nThe 2003\u201304 Coupe de France was the 87th edition of the annual French cup competition. It was won by Paris Saint-Germain. The cup finalist LB Ch\u00e2teauroux qualified for the UEFA Cup because PSG qualified to 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League through league table position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175773-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de France, Semi-finals\nJ\u00e9r\u00e9my Toulalan Marama Vahirua Mario Yepes Sylvain Armand Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Da Rocha Emerse Fa\u00e9 Mathieu Berson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175773-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de France, Semi-finals\nFr\u00e9d\u00e9ric D\u00e9hu Gabriel Heinze Hugo Leal Lorik Cana Juan Pablo Sor\u00edn Bernard Mendy Modeste M'bami", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175774-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue\nThe 2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue was the 10th edition of the French league cup competition. The competition was organized by the Ligue de Football Professionnel and was open to the 40 professional clubs in France that are managed by the organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175774-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue\nMonaco were the reigning champions, having defeated Sochaux 4\u20131 in the previous season's final. The previous season's finalists Sochaux returned to the final, defeating Nantes 5\u20134 on penalties to claim their first Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175774-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue, Round of 16\nThe matches were contested on 16 and 17 December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175774-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals were contested on 13 and 14 January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175774-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were contested on 3 and 4 February 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175774-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coupe de la Ligue, Final\nThe final was held on 17 April 2004 at the Stade de France, Saint-Denis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175775-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Coventry City F.C. season\nThis is Coventry City Football Club progress in the 2003\u201304 season. This season the Sky Blues will play in the First Division and will feature in the FA Cup and the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175776-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Crewe Alexandra participated in the Football League First Division, their 81st in the English Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175776-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Season summary\nCrewe finished in 18th place, a satisfactory position for a side returning to the First Division. Striker Dean Ashton scored 19 goals to make him the league's fourth-highest scorer, attracting attention from many larger clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175776-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Kit\nReebok remained Crewe's kit manufacturers, and introduced a new kit for the season. L. C. Charles continued as kit sponsors for the sixth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 40], "content_span": [41, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175776-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175776-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175777-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian First Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Croatian First Football League (officially known as the Prva HNL O\u017eujsko for sponsorship reasons) was the thirteenth season of the Croatian First Football League, the national championship for men's association football teams in Croatia, since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 24 July 2003 and ended on 15 May 2004. Dinamo Zagreb were the defending champions, having won their tenth championship title the previous season. Hajduk Split won the title, after a win against Varteks on 15 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175777-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian First Football League, Relegation group, Relegation play-off, Second leg\nMe\u0111imurje win 4\u20132 on aggregate and are promoted to 2004\u201305 Prva HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175778-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian First League\n2003-04 Croatian First League was the 13th season of the Croatian handball league since its independence and the third season of the First League format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175778-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian First League, League table, First phase\nIn the first part of the season, 16 teams played single-circuit league (15 matches). After 15 rounds the first six teams qualified for the Championship play-offs - playing for the Championship title and the remaining 10 in the Relegation play-offs - playing to stay in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175778-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian First League, League table, Championship play-offs\nIntermediate matches from the first part of the championship were transferred, and the clubs played three more times (15 matches).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175778-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian First League, League table, Relegation play-offs\nRelegation play-offs determined the placement of clubs that were between 7th and 16th place in the first phase of the championship. 18 matches were played (double league system).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175779-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian Football Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Croatian Football Cup was the 13th edition of Croatia's premier association football knockout competition. Hajduk Split were the defending champions, and the cup was eventually won by Dinamo Zagreb on away goals rule after the aggregate score in the final tie was 1\u20131 against Varteks. This was the 7th Croatian cup title for Dinamo and Varteks' fourth final without a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175780-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian Ice Hockey League season\nThe 2003-04 Croatian Ice Hockey League season was the 13th season of the Croatian Ice Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Croatia. Two teams, KHL Medve\u0161\u010dak Zagreb, and KHL Zagreb participated in the league, and KHL Medve\u0161\u010dak Zagreb won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175781-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian Second Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Druga HNL (also known as 2. HNL) season was the 13th season of Croatia's second level football since its establishment in 1992. The league was contested in two regional groups (North Division and South Division), with 12 clubs each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175781-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian Second Football League, Promotion play-off\nMe\u0111imurje and Pula 1856, winners of the North and South Division, qualified for a two-legged promotion play-off, which took place on 12 and 16 May 2004. The tie ended in a 2\u20132 aggregate score and Pula 1856 won it after the penalty shootout ended 5\u20134 in their favor, thereby earning promotion to the Prva HNL for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175781-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Croatian Second Football League, Promotion play-off\nHowever, Me\u0111imurje had another chance for promotion, as the losing team from the promotion play-off played another two-legged tie against the 11th placed team of Prva HNL, Cibalia. Me\u0111imurje won 4\u20132 on aggregate and was promoted to 2004\u201305 Prva HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Crystal Palace competed in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Season summary\nCrystal Palace started the season on the right foot, winning their first three games to top the table, but that was as good as it got under manager Steve Kember and, after a 5\u20130 defeat at newly promoted Wigan Athletic in November saw the club in 20th place, Kember was sacked (chairman Simon Jordan had previously declared that Kember would have a \"job for life\" at Palace). Kit Symons stepped up as caretaker until Northern Irishman and former Palace striker Iain Dowie was appointed. Under Dowie, Palace rocketed up the table to reach the play-offs. After beating Sunderland on penalties in the semi-final to reach the Millennium Stadium, they beat West Ham United to regain promotion to the Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Season summary\nCrucial to Palace's promotion was striker Andy Johnson, who scored 28 times in the league alone. He finished as the First Division's top scorer, and was voted as the club's Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Kit\nEnglish company Admiral Sportswear became Palace's kit manufacturers. The new home kit retained the navy shorts worn last season, albeit with a new blue and red striped design along the sides, and the navy socks, which now featured white trim. Palace's traditional blue and red striped shirts were modified with navy trim on the sleeves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 39], "content_span": [40, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Kit\nChurchill Insurance remained the kit sponsors for the fourth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 39], "content_span": [40, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175782-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175783-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cuban National Series\nThe 43rd Cuban National Series ended with Industriales winning their record 10th title, sweeping Villa Clara in the best of seven final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nThe 2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 66th edition of Romania's most prestigious football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nThe title was won by Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti against O\u021belul Gala\u021bi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Format\nFirst round proper matches are played on the ground of the lowest ranked team, then from the second round proper the matches are played on a neutral location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Format\nIf a match is drawn after 90 minutes, the game goes into extra time, where it works golden goal rule. If the match is still tied, the result is decided by penalty kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Format\nIn the quarter-finals and semi-finals, each tie is played as a two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Format\nFrom the first edition, the teams from Divizia A entered in competition in sixteen finals, rule which remained till today.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Quarter-finals\nThe matches were played on 3 December 2003 and 17 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175784-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Semi-finals\nThe matches were played on 7 April and 21 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175785-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cymru Alliance\nThe 2003\u201304 Cymru Alliance was the fourteenth season of the Cymru Alliance after its establishment in 1990. The league was won by Airbus UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup was the 62nd edition of the Cypriot Cup. A total of 54 clubs entered the competition. It began on 13 September 2003 with the first round and concluded on 23 May 2004 with the final which was held at GSP Stadium. AEK Larnaca won their 1st Cypriot Cup trophy after beating AEL Limassol 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nIn the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, participated all the teams of the Cypriot First Division, the Cypriot Second Division, the Cypriot Third Division and 12 of the 14 teams of the Cypriot Fourth Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe competition consisted of seven rounds. In the first and in the second round each tie was played as a single leg and was held at the home ground of the one of the two teams, according to the draw results. Each tie winner was qualifying to the next round. If a match was drawn, extra time was following. If extra time was drawn, there was a replay at the ground of the team who were away for the first game. If the rematch was also drawn, then extra time was following and if the match remained drawn after extra time the winner was decided by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe third round was played in a two-legged format, each team playing a home and an away match against their opponent. The team which scored more goals on aggregate, was qualifying to the next round. If the two teams scored the same number of goals on aggregate, then the team which scored more goals away from home was advancing to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nIf both teams had scored the same number of home and away goals, then extra time was following after the end of the second leg match. If during the extra thirty minutes both teams had managed to score, but they had scored the same number of goals, then the team who scored the away goals was advancing to the next round (i.e. the team which was playing away). If there weren't scored any goals during extra time, the qualifying team was determined by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nIn the next round, the teams were drawn into four groups of four. The teams of each group played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The group winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe quarter-finals and semi-finals were played over two legs and the same format as in the third round was applied. The final was a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe cup winner secured a place in the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, First round\nIn the first round participated all the teams of the Cypriot Second Division and the Cypriot Third Division and 12 of the 14 teams of the Cypriot Fourth Division. The two fourth division teams which were promoted from the 2003 STOK promotion play-offs to the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Fourth Division after finishing to the second and third place (Spartakos Kitiou and Th.O.I Filias) did not participate in the Cypriot Cup. ENAD Polis Chrysochous which finished first in the 2003 STOK promotion play-offs, participated in the Cypriot Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Second round\nIn the second round participated the winners of the first round ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Third round\nIn the third round participated the winners of the second round ties and six teams of the Cypriot First Division (the teams which finished 9th, 10th, 11th in the 2002\u201303 Cypriot First Division and the three teams which promoted from the 2002\u201303 Cypriot Second Division). The first eight teams of the 2002-03 Cypriot First Division did not participate in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Group stage\nIn the group stage participated the eight winners of the third round ties and the eight teams of the 2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division which did not participated in the third round, that were the teams which finished in the first eight places in the 2002\u201303 Cypriot First Division. The first four teams of the 2002\u201303 Cypriot First Division (Omonia, Anorthosis, APOEL, Olympiakos) were set heads of each group and the 5th\u20138th placed teams (AEL, Ethnikos Achna, AEP and AEK) were drawn one per group. The eight teams which advanced from the third round were drawn without limitations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Group stage\nThe teams of each group played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The group winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals participated all the teams which qualified from the group stage. The group winners were drawn against the runners-up, with the group winners hosting the second leg. Teams from the same group could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175786-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Cup, Semi-finals\n1The match APOEL-AEL abandoned at 1\u20130 in 83' after the referee was hit by an object that was thrown from the APOEL section of the crowd. It awarded 0\u20132 to AEL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division was the 65th season of the Cypriot top-level football league. APOEL won their 18th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The last three teams were relegated to the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division, Format\nThe champions ensured their participation in the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League and the runners-up in the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division, Format\nThe teams had to declare their interest to participate in the 2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup before the end of the championship. At the end of the championship, the higher placed team among the interested ones participated in the Intertoto Cup (if they had not secured their participation in any other UEFA competition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division, Changes from previous season\nNea Salamina, Aris Limassol and Alki Larnaca were relegated from previous season and played in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division. They were replaced by the first three teams of the 2002\u201303 Cypriot Second Division, Anagennisi Deryneia, Doxa Katokopias and Onisilos Sotira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175787-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division, Results\nThe score of the game Anagennisi-Onisilos was 2-2. Onisilos Sotiras won the appeal they filed in this game due to the irregular participation of a player of Anagennisi Derynia and the match was awarded with a score of 2-0 in their favour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175788-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Fourth Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Cypriot Fourth Division was the 19th season of the Cypriot fourth-level football league. Othellos Athienou won their 1st title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175788-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Fourth Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Fourth Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division and the last three teams were relegated to regional leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175788-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Fourth Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175789-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division was the 49th season of the Cypriot second-level football league. Nea Salamina won their 4th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175789-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to 2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division and the last three teams were relegated to the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175790-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Third Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Cypriot Third Division was the 33rd season of the Cypriot third-level football league. APOP Kinyras won their 1st title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175790-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Third Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Third Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division and the last three teams were relegated to the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175790-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Third Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175790-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Cypriot Third Division, Changes from previous season\nAlso, before the start of the season, Kinyras Empas and APOP Peyia were merged to form APOP Kinyras, which took the place of Kinyras Empas in the Cypriot Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175791-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Czech 1. Liga season\nThe 2003\u201304 Czech 1.liga season was the 11th season of the Czech 1.liga, the second level of ice hockey in the Czech Republic. 14 teams participated in the league, and HC Dukla Jihlava won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175792-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Czech 2. Liga\nThe 2003\u201304 Czech 2. Liga was the 11th season of the 2. \u010desk\u00e1 fotbalov\u00e1 liga, the second tier of the Czech football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175792-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Czech 2. Liga\nPromotion was secured by Drnovice after the 29th round of matches on 29 May 2004, after Mlad\u00e1 Boleslav had secured promotion in the previous round. Prachatice escaped relegation by winning on the last day of the season, defeating Kunovice 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175793-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Czech Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Czech Cup was the eleventh season of the annual football knock-out tournament of the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175794-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Czech Extraliga season\nThe 2003\u201304 Czech Extraliga season was the 11th season of the Czech Extraliga since its creation after the breakup of Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175795-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Czech First League\nThe 2003\u201304 Czech First League, known as the Gambrinus liga for sponsorship reasons, was the eleventh season of top-tier football in the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175796-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DEL season\nThe 2003\u201304 Deutsche Eishockey Liga season was the 10th season since the founding of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (English: German Ice Hockey League). The Frankfurt Lions became German Champions, and the W\u00f6lfe Freiburg (English: Freiburg Wolves) were relegated back to the 2. Bundesliga after a single season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175796-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DEL season\nA visible change for the fans was the league corporate sponsorship by the German Yellow Pages (German: Gelbe Seiten) who signed a 3-year agreement, later extended ending 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175796-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DEL season, Regular season\nThe regular season start was on September 4, 2003. The first 8 teams qualified for the playoffs, the last two are to go into playdowns, to determine which team will be relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175796-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DEL season, Playdowns\nThe two lowest placed teams Hannover Scorpions and W\u00f6lfe Freiburg played a Best-of-seven series play-down starting March 10, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175796-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DEL season, Playdowns\nThe W\u00f6lfe Freiburg had to leave the DEL after only one season, returning to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175797-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DFB-Pokal\nThe 2003\u201304 DFB-Pokal was the 61st season of the annual German football cup competition. 64 teams competed in the tournament of six rounds which began on 29 August 2003 and ended on 29 May 2004. In the final Werder Bremen defeated second-tier Alemannia Aachen, who knocked out defending champions Bayern Munich in the quarter-finals, 3\u20132, thereby becoming the fifth team in German football to win the double. It was Bremen's fifth win in the cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175797-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DFB-Pokal, Matches, First round\n* The match ended 1\u20132 (after extra time), but was awarded 2\u20130 to Sportfreunde Siegen due to LR Ahlen fielding four non-EU nationals, more than the maximum of three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175798-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DFB-Pokal Frauen\nThe Frauen DFB-Pokal 2003\u201304 was the 24th season of the cup competition, Germany's second-most important title in women's football. The first round of the competition was held on 6\u20137 September 2003. In the final which was held in Berlin on 29 May 2004 Turbine Potsdam defeated FFC Frankfurt 3\u20130, thus claiming their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175798-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 DFB-Pokal Frauen, 1st round\nHeike Rheine's 20\u20130 victory against FC Oberneuland was the most lopsided result in the Frauen DFB-Pokal ever, tied with an FFC Frankfurt victory from the 2001\u201302 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175799-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Mavericks season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Mavericks' 24th season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Mavericks acquired Antawn Jamison from the Golden State Warriors, and All-Star forward Antoine Walker from the Boston Celtics. Although the team struggled with chemistry with a 15\u201312 start, the Mavericks went on a nine-game winning streak in January, and won eight of their final ten games. They finished third in the Midwest Division with a 52\u201330 record. Dirk Nowitzki was the only member of the team to be selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175799-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Mavericks season\nWith the trio of Nowitzki, Michael Finley and Steve Nash along with NBA Sixth Man of the Year Jamison, the Mavericks continued their reputation as the best offensive team in the NBA. Notable were two rookies, Josh Howard and Marquis Daniels, who made an immediate impact, and were both selected to the All-Rookie Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175799-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Mavericks season\nHowever, the Mavericks were eliminated quickly four games to one in the playoffs, losing in the first round to their archrivals the Sacramento Kings. Following the season, Nash signed as a free agent with the Phoenix Suns, Walker was traded to the Atlanta Hawks and later returned to the Boston Celtics in midseason, and Jamison was dealt to the Washington Wizards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175799-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Mavericks season\nThe Mavericks sported gray alternate road uniforms for the season which only lasted one game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season\nThe 2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season was the Stars' 11th season, 37th overall of the franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season, Regular season\nOnly 369 total goals (194 for Dallas, 175 for their opponents) were scored in the Stars' regular-season games: the lowest total of all 30 NHL teams. Twenty-one games of their 82 regular-season games ended in a shutout. They also tied the Columbus Blue Jackets for most times shut out, with 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season, Playoffs, Round 1: (4) Colorado Avalanche vs. (5) Dallas Stars\nThe series began in Colorado. The Avalanche won the first two games; game 1 was by a score of 3-1 and game 2 was a 5-2 victory. Games 3 & 4 shifted to Dallas. Game 3 was won by Dallas 4-3 in overtime. However, in game 4, the Avalanche responded with a 3-2 double overtime win. Back in Denver for game 5, Colorado would go on to win 5-1 and clinch the series 4-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 91], "content_span": [92, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175800-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dallas Stars season, Draft picks\nDallas's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175801-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish 1st Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Danish 1st Division season was the 59th season of the Danish 1st Division league championship and the 18th consecutive as a second tier competition governed by the Danish Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175801-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish 1st Division\nThe division-champion and runner-up promoted to the 2004\u201305 Danish Superliga. The teams in the 14th, 15th and 16th relegated to the 2004\u201305 Danish 2nd Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Danish Cup was the 50th version of the Danish Cup. The final was played on May 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup\nFC K\u00f8benhavn ended as cup winner, but as they also won the Danish Superliga, the UEFA Cup-spot went to the cup runner-up Aalborg BK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results\nThe team listed to the left, is the home team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 74]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results, 1st round\nIn first round competed 48 teams from the \"series\" (Denmark's series and lower 2002) and 16 teams from Danish 2nd Division 2002-03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results, 2nd round\nIn second round competed 32 winning teams from 1st round and 8 teams from Danish 1st Division 2002-03 (no. 9 to 16).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results, 3rd round\nIn third round competed 20 winning teams from 2nd round, 6 teams from Danish 1st Division 2002-03 (no. 3 to 8) and 2 teams from Danish Superliga 2002-03 (no. 11 and 12).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results, 4th round\nIn fourth round competed 14 winning teams from 3rd round, 2 teams from Danish 1st Division 2002-03 (no. 1 and 2) and 4 teams from Danish Superliga 2002-03 (no. 7 to 10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results, 5th round\nIn fifth round competed 10 winning teams from 4th round and 6 teams from Danish Superliga 2002-03 (no. 1 to 6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175802-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Cup, Results, Semi finals\nThe semi finals are played on home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175803-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Superliga\nThe 2003\u201304 Danish Superliga season was the 14th season of the Danish Superliga league championship, governed by the Danish Football Association. It took place from the first match on July 26, 2003 to the final match on May 29, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175803-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Danish Superliga\nThe Danish champions qualified for UEFA Champions League 2004-05 qualification and the Royal League 2004-05. The runners-up qualified for UEFA Cup 2004-05 qualification and Royal League, while the 3rd and 4th placed teams qualified for UEFA Intertoto Cup 2004 and Royal League. The 11th and 12th placed teams were relegated to the 1st Division. The 1st Division champions and runners-up were promoted to the Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175804-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey season\nThis is a history of the 2003\u201304 season of the Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175804-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey season, Postseason\nIn the NCAA Frozen Four, the St. Lawrence Skating Saints beat Dartmouth, as the Big Green ranked fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175804-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey season, International\nTiffany Hagge played for the United States Under 22 team that competed in Lake Placid in 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 68], "content_span": [69, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175805-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team represented the University of Dayton during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Flyers, led by first year head coach Brian Gregory, played their home games at the University of Dayton Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 24\u20139, 12\u20134 in A-10 play, finishing first in the A-10's West division. Dayton opened the season winning the Maui Invitational. The Flyers advanced to the finals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament where they were defeated by rival Xavier. Dayton received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, the program's first consecutive NCAA appearances since the 1960s. The Flyers lost to DePaul in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175805-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2002-03 Dayton Flyers finished the season with an overall record of 24\u20136, with a record of 13\u20132 in the Atlantic 10 regular season. The Flyers defeated Temple to win the Atlantic 10 Tournament title. They received a bid to play in the NCAA Tournament where they fell to Tulsa in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175806-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Denver Nuggets season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 28th season for the Denver Nuggets in the National Basketball Association, and their 37th season as a franchise. The season saw the team draft future All-Star Carmelo Anthony with the third overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft. During the offseason, the team signed free agent Andre Miller, and re-signed former Nuggets guard Voshon Lenard. Coming off with the worst record of 17\u201365 the previous season, Anthony led the Nuggets to a fast start winning 13 of their first 19 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175806-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Denver Nuggets season\nHowever, the team struggled down the stretch posting losing records in February and March. The Nuggets finished sixth in the Midwest Division with a 43\u201339 record, and made the playoffs for the first time since 1995. Anthony had a stellar rookie season averaging 21.0 points per game, and being selected to the All-Rookie First Team. He also finished second behind LeBron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers in Rookie of The Year voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175806-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Denver Nuggets season\nHowever, in the first round of the playoffs, the Nuggets lost to the top-seeded Minnesota Timberwolves and league MVP Kevin Garnett in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175806-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Denver Nuggets season\nFor the season, the Nuggets changed their logo and uniforms, adding gold and light blue to their color scheme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175807-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Deportivo Alav\u00e9s season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 82nd season in the existence of Deportivo Alav\u00e9s and the club's first season back in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Alav\u00e9s participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175808-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Spanish football season, Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a competed in La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175808-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Season summary\nDeportivo reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League, being knocked out by eventual champions Porto 1\u20130 on aggregate, Porto's goal coming from a Derlei penalty in the second leg at Estadio Riazor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175808-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175808-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175809-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Derby County F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Derby County F.C. competed in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175809-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nGeorge Burley's first full season in charge brought little joy as Derby recorded a 20th-placed finish in the 2003\u201304 season, just 1 point clear of relegation with safety not confirmed until the penultimate game of the season with a 2\u20130 win over Millwall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175809-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nWith no money for players and the need to slash the club's wage bill, big names such as Fabrizio Ravanelli, Georgi Kinkladze and Craig Burley left the club with the gaps of their departure shored up by free signings; Candido Costa was taken on a season long loan whilst seven others \u2013 including Mathias Svensson and Leon Osman \u2013 were recruited on short term loans, as Derby used a club record 36 different players in the course of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175809-0001-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nThere was also the continued introduction of academy players to the side, with Tom Huddlestone and Marcus Tudgay making significant contributions alongside players such as Lee Grant and Lee Holmes. Burley achieved safety against a background of boardroom uncertainty \u2013 Chairman Lionel Pickering, after putting temporary faith in former Coventry City chairman Bryan Richardson and a notional \u00a330m bond, was removed from the chair after the club temporarily entered receivership by The Co-operative Bank, who instantly installed a new board composed of John Sleightholme, Jeremy Keith and Steve Harding, for the cost of \u00a31 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175809-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Derby County F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175809-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Derby County F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 63rd season for the Pistons, the 56th in the National Basketball Association, and the 47th in the Detroit area. Despite a solid year the previous season, the Pistons received the second overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft, which they obtained from the Memphis Grizzlies. They selected Darko Mili\u010di\u0107 as their top pick, but only used him as a reserve as he played limited minutes off the bench; he would later be regarded as one of the most infamous busts in the history of the NBA draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season\nAfter their first trip to the Conference Finals since 1991, the Pistons hired Larry Brown as head coach. Under Brown, the Pistons were once again a tough defensive team as they went on a 13-game winning streak between December and January. However, after a solid 33\u201316 start, they struggled in February losing six straight games. At midseason, the team acquired All-Star forward Rasheed Wallace from the Atlanta Hawks after playing just one game for them. With the addition of Wallace, the Pistons won 16 of their final 19 games finishing second in the Central Division with a 54\u201328 record. Ben Wallace was selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. The Pistons went on to win the NBA Championship for the third time in franchise history, with Mili\u010di\u0107 being the youngest player to win said championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Pistons defeated the Milwaukee Bucks in five games despite losing Game 2 at home. In the semifinals, they faced the New Jersey Nets who swept them in the Eastern Conference Finals in the previous year. The Pistons would win the first two games at home, but the Nets would put up a fight against the Pistons by winning 3 straight games to take a 3\u20132 series lead, which included a triple overtime win in Game 5 at The Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season\nHowever, with the Pistons facing elimination, the Pistons were digging an early hole in Game 6, but the Pistons were able to erase a 13\u20132 deficit and never trailed for the remainder of the game as they would refuse to relinquish the lead to the Nets and win Game 6 81\u201375.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0001-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season\nIn Game 7, the Pistons stingy defense held Jason Kidd to 0 points to blow out the Nets 90\u201369 to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals, where they defeated the top-seeded Indiana Pacers in a defensive six game series to earn their first appearance in the NBA Finals since 1990. In the Finals, the Pistons would pull off one of the greatest upsets in NBA history by defeating the heavily favored Los Angeles Lakers four games to one, winning their third overall championship and first since 1990. Chauncey Billups was named Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Series summary\nThe Finals were played using a 2-3-2 site format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with home court advantage. This was only used in the Finals, all other playoff series are held in a 2-2-1-1-1 format (the team with home court advantage starts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Aspects\nThe Lakers had a lineup of stars such as Karl Malone, Gary Payton, Derek Fisher, Kobe Bryant, and Shaquille O'Neal \u2013 their offensive capability was expected to overpower Detroit's defensive-based gameplan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Aspects\nPayton and Malone also added to the publicity of the Finals. Perennial All-Stars who had both previously reached the Finals, Payton had led the Seattle SuperSonics there in 1996, while Malone had led the Utah Jazz there in 1997 and 1998. However, Michael Jordan and the Bulls denied their championship rings a total of three times. By the time of Jordan's retirement in 2003, the two veterans were aged and failed to lead their teams deep into the playoffs. Thus, this Finals series was seen as the last chance for two of the greatest players in NBA history to finally become NBA champions (Later on, Malone retired while Payton became a champion as a key bench player for the Miami Heat).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game One\nConsidered to be a stunning upset by most of the NBA world, the Detroit Pistons managed to defeat the Lakers with imposing defense. Defensively clamping down on everyone but Bryant and O'Neal, the Pistons managed to hold everyone else to a total of 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game One\nThe Pistons trailed the Lakers 41\u201340 at halftime, but a 10\u20134 surge capped by Billups's 3-pointer gave the Pistons the lead. O'Neal's foul trouble furthered the scoring gap, with the Pistons leading by 13 points early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Two\nThe second game was close throughout the first half, but in the third quarter Detroit would score 30 points, cutting the deficit 68\u201366. However, at the end of the fourth quarter, Kobe Bryant's 3-point shot at 2.1 seconds to go would tie the game at 89\u201389. The Lakers and Pistons would then go to overtime, with the Lakers outscoring the Pistons 10\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nThursday, June 10, 2004, 14:31 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nThe Pistons beat Los Angeles by 20 in their first NBA Finals appearance together at The Palace of Auburn Hills since 1989 to take a 2\u20131 lead in the series. The 68 points scored by the Lakers set a (post-shot clock) franchise record for the fewest points scored in a Finals game. (Even Jay Leno was upset, saying in his Tonight Show monologue: \"68 points? 68 is a great score...if you're playing golf!\")", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nSunday, June 13, 2004, 14:49 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nAgain, the Pistons defeated the Lakers, although this time by eight, to take a 3\u20131 series advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nTuesday, June 15, 2004, 14:32 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nIn Game 5, the Pistons won their first championship since 1990, and Larry Brown finally won a title as an NBA head coach. The Pistons defense had overcome the high-scoring Laker offense, winning the game by 13, winning the series 4-1, and also ending a long Laker dynasty that lasted for many years. The game saw the end of Phil Jackson's first run as the coach (he returned for the 2005-06 season), and saw O'Neal, Payton, and Malone's last games in Laker uniforms (O'Neal and Payton were both acquired by the soon-to-be NBA Champions Miami Heat and Malone retired).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, Playoff Defensive Records\nAs a result of their incredible defensive dominance, the 2004 Pistons set a number of notable shot-clock era (1955\u2013Present) defensive Playoff records", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, Playoff Defensive Records\nLeast Points Per Game (PPG) allowed in a shot-clock era Playoff run of any length", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175810-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Pistons season, Playoff Defensive Records\nThe 2004 Pistons had a Defensive Rating of 92.0 in the Playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season\nThe 2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season was the 78th National Hockey League season in Detroit, Michigan. Despite multiple injuries to key players, the Wings found themselves once again winning the Presidents' Trophy for having the best regular season record in the NHL, scoring 109 points. In the post-season, they advanced to the Western Conference Semi-finals, where they were eliminated by the eventual Western Conference champion Calgary Flames in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season\nTwo Red Wings were named to the roster for the 2004 All-Star Game: defenseman Nicklas Lidstrom and center Pavel Datsyuk. Lidstrom was voted into his eighth appearance at the All-Star game by fans, and Datsyuk was selected to the roster for his first appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season\nThe Red Wings sold out all 41 home games in 2003\u201304 as 20,066 fans packed Joe Louis Arena for every regular season and playoff game played in Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nDetroit's early exit from the 2003 Stanley Cup playoffs left Curtis Joseph to be heavily scrutinized by the media as to whether or not he was up to task to start for Detroit. During the subsequent offseason, Dominik Hasek shocked the hockey world when he announced he was coming out of retirement and fulfilling his contractual obligation to the Red Wings. Given their previous success with Hasek, the Red Wings welcomed him back to the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nWith the Wings appearing to favor Hasek as their starting goaltender, Joseph opted to have surgery to repair his ankle prior to the start of the season, resulting with the Red Wings using Hasek and Manny Legace as their goaltending tandem. When Joseph returned from injury and subsequent conditioning assignment in the minors, anger quickly grew on and off the ice between Hasek and Joseph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nGeneral Manager Ken Holland attempted to move Joseph to alleviate the situation, but Holland was not able to find a trade partner nor give Joseph up via the waiver wire due to the hefty terms of his contract (the contract had two years remaining with an annual salary of US$8 million and a no-trade clause). Unable to continue holding three goaltenders on roster, Detroit elected to send Joseph to Detroit's minor league affiliate, the Grand Rapids Griffins, on a permanent basis following a poor performance against the Washington Capitals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nWhile Hasek assumed the starting role, he did not do so with ease. Hasek was not conditioned properly to handle the competition at the NHL level and was wrought with inconsistent play and injuries. By December 2003, both Hasek and Legace went down with injuries and Joseph was recalled from the minors, along with Joey MacDonald. While MacDonald was returned to the minors when Legace returned from injury, Joseph remained with the Red Wings as Hasek opted to remain on the injured reserve and did not return for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nJoseph and Legace would find themselves in a platoon situation until Joseph injured his ankle in a contest against the San Jose Sharks. The Red Wings recalled Marc Lamothe from the Griffins to support Legace. Lamothe would appear in two games during his time with Detroit, making him the fifth goaltender to dress for Detroit and the fourth to play for them that season (MacDonald did not play in any games while on roster). Lamothe was returned to the minors once Joseph returned from injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nDespite being viewed by many as Detroit's \"third\" goaltender, Manny Legace ended up the de facto starting goaltender for the season, leading the other goaltenders on the team in games played, wins and shutouts. (At the time, those were also career records for Legace.) Legace also had a better save percentage and goals against average (GAA) than either Hasek or Joseph. Based on his regular season play, Legace was named the starting goaltender going into the playoffs. During the opening round against the Nashville Predators, Legace won the first two games, but was pulled after the fourth game following consecutive three-goal losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nJoseph took over the starting duties and responded admirably, posting a .300 GAA, .977 save percentage and one shutout for the remainder of the series. While Joseph had a strong performance against Calgary (1.83 GAA and .928 SV%), Detroit suffered an offensive drought and, with the series tied at two games a piece, were shut-out the final two games of the series, eliminating Detroit from the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Goaltending controversy\nJoseph never appeared for the Red Wings again, as the last year of his contract was nullified by the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout. Instead, Joseph signed with the Phoenix Coyotes once the lockout was resolved. Legace went on to assume the starting role for Detroit, but was released after the season following another disappointing playoff exit. Hasek appeared with the Ottawa Senators during the 2005\u201306 season, but later returned to Detroit for what would be his last two seasons as an NHL goaltender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Regular season\nThe Red Wings tied the Tampa Bay Lightning for most short-handed goals scored in the NHL, with 15, and had the best penalty-kill percentage in the League (86.75%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Regular season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Regular season, Season standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Regular season, Season standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Playoffs\nThe Detroit Red Wings ended the 2003\u201304 regular season as the Western Conference's first seed and played Nashville in the first round. They defeated Nashville in six games and met Calgary in the second round. Calgary would go on to defeat Detroit and reach the Stanley Cup Finals, losing in Game 7 to the Tampa Bay Lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Player stats, Skaters\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Player stats, Goaltending\nNote: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Transactions\nThe Red Wings were involved in the following transactions during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Transactions, Draft picks\nDetroit's picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft in Nashville. The Red Wings were slated to pick 27th overall but traded their first pick to the Los Angeles Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Farm teams, Grand Rapids Griffins\nThe Griffins were Detroit's top affiliate in the American Hockey League in 2003\u201304.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175811-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Detroit Red Wings season, Farm teams, Toledo Storm\nThe Storm were the Red Wings' ECHL affiliate for the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175812-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 (Senegal)\nThe 2003-04 Division 1 season was the 39th of the competition of the first-tier football in Senegal. The tournament was organized by the Senegalese Football Federation. The season began on 13 December 2003 and finished on 9 October 2004. ASC Diaraf won the tenth title, the next club in Senegal to win the tenth title after ASC Jeanne d'Arc last season. The total number of national championship titles would remain tied with ten until Diaraf retook the totals as they won their eleventh and recent in the 2010 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175812-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 (Senegal)\nDiaraf along with AS Douanes would compete in the 2005 CAF Champions League the following season. ASEC Ndiambour participated in the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup, as AS Douanes also won the 2004 Senegalese Cup and were second place in the league, as Douanes qualified into the 2005 CAF Champions League, Dakar Universit\u00e9 Club, the fourth place club participated in the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175812-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 (Senegal)\nThe season would be a record-breaking season and the only season featuring twenty clubs. A record of 380 matches were played and 590 goals were scored more than double than last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175812-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 (Senegal)\nASC Jeanne d'Arc was the defending team of the title. Diaraf achieved a record 72 points, second Douanes with 69 points and 65 and third ASEC Ndiambour with 65 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175812-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 (Senegal)\nThe following season would feature eighteen clubs in which four clubs were relegated to Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175812-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 (Senegal), Overview\nThe league was contested by 20 teams with ASC Diaraf again winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175813-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey)\n2003\u201304 was the fifth season that Division 1 functioned as the third-level of ice hockey in Sweden, below the second-level Allsvenskan and the top-level Elitserien (now the SHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175813-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey), Format\nThe league was divided into four regional groups. In each region, the top teams qualified for the Kvalserien till Allsvenskan, for the opportunity to be promoted to the Allsvenskan. The bottom teams in each group were forced to play in a relegation round against the top teams from Division 2 in order to retain their spot in Division 1 for the following season. These were also conducted within each region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175814-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Futsal\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Futsal is the 15th season of top-tier futsal in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175815-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A\nThe 2003\u201304 Divizia A was the eighty-sixth season of Divizia A, the top-level football league of Romania. Season began in August 2003 and ended in June 2004. Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti became champions on 3 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175815-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A, Team changes, Relegated\nThe teams that were relegated to Divizia B at the end of the previous season (note that although O\u021belul Gala\u021bi lost the relegation play\u2013off, they remained in Divizia A, after they bought the first division place from the promoted team Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti, which merged with Astra Ploie\u0219ti):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175815-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A, Team changes, Promoted\nThe teams that were promoted from Divizia B at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175815-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 16 August 2019Source: Notes:1: Played last season in Divizia B.2: Rapid Bucure\u0219ti played 7 matches out of their stadium.3: Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti played 14 matches out of their stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175815-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A, Champion squad\nGoalkeepers: Gr\u00e9gory Delwarte (10 / 0); Uladzimir Hayew (2 / 0); Cristian Munteanu (9 / 0); \u0218tefan Preda (11 / 0). Defenders: Angelo Alistar (11 / 0); Cosmin B\u0103rc\u0103uan (27 / 4); Mugur Bolohan (1 / 0); Ovidiu Burc\u0103 (22 / 0); Adrian Iordache (25 / 2); Xavier M\u00e9ride (6 / 0); Samuel Okunowo (2 / 0); Szabolcs Perenyi (15 / 0); Flavius Stoican (8 / 1); Dorin Semeghin (28 / 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175815-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A, Champion squad\nMidfielders: Dan Alexa (23 / 1); Ionu\u021b Badea (16 / 0); Cristian Cigan (1 / 0); Cristian Ciubotariu (6 / 0); Alexandru Dragomir (1 / 0); \u0218tefan Grigorie (24 / 8); Sorin Iodi (1 / 0); Vlad Munteanu (18 / 2); Leonard Naidin (8 / 0); Florentin Petre (24 / 4); Iulian Tame\u0219 (26 / 1); Ianis Zicu (13 / 6). Forwards: Ionel D\u0103nciulescu (29 / 21); Claudiu Dr\u0103gan (8 / 0); Ciprian Marica (10 / 3); Claudiu Niculescu (28 / 16). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175816-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia A (women's football)\nThe 2003-04 season of the Divizia A Feminin was the 14th season of Romania's premier women's football league. CFF Clujana won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175817-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia B\nThe 2003\u201304 Divizia B was the 64th season of the second tier of the Romanian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175817-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia B\nThe format has been changed from two series of 16 teams to three series, each of them consisting of 16 teams. At the end of the season, the winners of the series promoted to Divizia A and the last three places from all the series relegated to Divizia C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175817-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia B, Team changes, Other\nDivizia A clubs and bitter rivals, Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti and Astra Ploie\u0219ti merged. Astra was absorbed by Petrolul and O\u021belul Gala\u021bi, which initially relegated after the promotion/ relegation play-off against FC Oradea, remained in the top-flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175817-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia B, Team changes, Other\nCallatis Mangalia was promoted from Divizia C as the best next runner-up, in order to occupy the vacant place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175817-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia B, Team changes, Renamed teams\nCS Certej merged with Mure\u0219ul Deva, was moved from Certeju de Sus to Deva and renamed as CS Deva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175818-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Divizia D Bihor\nThe 2003\u201304 Divizia D Bihor was the 36th season of the Liga IV Bihor, the fourth tier of the Romanian football league system. The season began on 16 August 2003 and was concluded on 5 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175819-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team represented Drexel University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dragons, led by 3rd year head coach Bruiser Flint, played their home games at the Daskalakis Athletic Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175820-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Duke University. The head coach was Mike Krzyzewski, who served for his 24th year at Duke. The team played its home games in Cameron Indoor Stadium in Durham, North Carolina, and was a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175821-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Duleep Trophy\nThe 2003\u201304 Duleep Trophy was the 43rd season of the Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament contested by five zonal teams of India: Central Zone, East Zone, North Zone, South Zone and West Zone. In addition to these five teams, a guest team (England A) also featured in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175821-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Duleep Trophy\nNorth Zone won the title, defeating East Zone in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175822-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dumbarton F.C. season\nSeason 2003\u201304 was the 120th football season in which Dumbarton competed at a Scottish national level, entering the Scottish Football League for the 98th time, the Scottish Cup for the 109th time, the Scottish League Cup for the 57th time and the Scottish Challenge Cup for the 13th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175822-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nNotwithstanding the improvement in performances towards the end of the previous season, manager David Winnie set about a considerable change in playing staff. Unfortunately, despite an initial burst, it would take longer than expected for the new players to settle in, and by the end of October, only one league win had been recorded. However, from then until the end of the season, the league campaign saw a vast improvement in results and in the end a 3rd-place finish was achieved - missing promotion by just 2 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175822-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nIn the Scottish Cup, it would be a first round exit for the third season in a row, with a heavy defeat to Gretna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175822-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nIn the League Cup, following a win over Ayr United in the first round, it would be Premier Division Aberdeen that would bring Dumbarton's interest in the competition to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175822-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nFinally, in the Scottish Challenge Cup, it was back to old habits, with Ross County handing out a first round thumping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175822-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nLocally, in the Stirlingshire Cup, Dumbarton lost both of their opening group ties - however each tie was lost on a penalty shoot out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175823-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Dundee compete in the Scottish Premier League where they finished in 7th position with 46 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 95th year of football played by Dundee United, and covers the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004. United finished the season in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season\nUnited were knocked out of the Tennent's Scottish Cup by Dunfermline in the third round and were beaten by Livingston in the CIS Insurance Cup third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nA host of new signings arrived at the club with Ian McCall securing deals from the lower divisions. Mark Kerr, Owen Coyle and Collin Samuel arrived from Falkirk, McCall's former club. Barry Robson also arrived from Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Scotland international Derek McInnes was purchased from recently relegated Premiership club West Brom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review, Early season\nUnited got off to a poor start in the league. The first match against Hibs at home ended in a disappointing defeat. The following week, United were thrashed 5\u20130 away against Celtic. The team didn't end up winning a game till mid-September when United defeated Partick Thistle 2\u20130 with Charlie Miller scoring a brace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review, Early season\nThe team began their Scottish League Cup campaign with a 3\u20131 home victory over Morton but yet the team's league form was patchy. The first Dundee derby of the season ended in a poor 1\u20131 draw and then United lost to eventual winners Livingston at the end of October to end the team's league cup campaign. By the end of November, United had picked up just 12 points and were already out of the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review, Winter/New Year\nDecember was a lot brighter for United with victories over Kilmarnock 2\u20130 away and a 2\u20130 home win over Livingston along with a bright performance away at Ibrox in an unlucky 2\u20131 defeat to Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review, Winter/New Year\nHowever, in the New Year, United crashed out of the Scottish Cup third round away to Dunfermline who would go on to be finalists that season. The team then enjoyed a 3\u20132 win over Aberdeen and this would start a memorable unbeaten home record that would stretch out until April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Match results\nDundee United played a total of 41 competitive matches during the 2003\u201304 season. The team finished fifth in the Scottish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Match results\nIn the cup competitions, United were knocked out of the Tennent's Scottish Cup in the third round for the second successive season, losing to Dunfermline. Livingston knocked United out of the CIS Cup in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Player details\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, United used 24 different players, with a further three players named as a substitute who did not make an appearance on the pitch. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Player details, Goalscorers\nThirteen players scored for the United first team with the team scoring 51 goals in total. Jim McIntyre was the top goalscorer with eleven goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Player details, Discipline\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, three United players were sent off, and 18 players received at least one yellow card. In total, the team received three dismissals and 69 cautions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Transfers, In\nSeven players were signed during the 2003\u201304 season, with a total (public) transfer cost of around \u00a3200,000. Another player was signed before the start of next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Transfers, In\nThe players that joined Dundee United during the 2003\u201304 season, along with their previous club, are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Transfers, Out\nFive players left the club during the season with no transfer involving a fee. Two players were loaned out during the season with three players also released before next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Transfers, Out\nListed below are the players that were released during the season, along with the club that they joined. Players did not necessarily join their next club immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175824-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dundee United F.C. season, Playing kit\nThe jerseys were sponsored by Morning, Noon and Night for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175825-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Dunfermline Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Dunfermline Athletic compete in the Scottish Premier League where they finished in 4th position with 53 points. They also reached the 2004 Scottish Cup Final where they lost 3\u20131 to Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 ECHL season was the 16th season of the ECHL. This was the first season that the league would be known as only the ECHL instead of East Coast Hockey League after the absorption of the former West Coast Hockey League teams. The Brabham Cup regular season champions were the San Diego Gulls and the Kelly Cup playoff champions were the Idaho Steelheads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, League changes\nThis season brought a major change in the ECHL as the Board of Governors approved membership applications from the Anchorage Aces, the Bakersfield Condors, the Fresno Falcons, the Idaho Steelheads, the Las Vegas Wranglers, the Long Beach Ice Dogs and the San Diego Gulls from the recently defunct West Coast Hockey League. In a change reflective of the nationwide presence, the East Coast Hockey League changed its name to simply ECHL on May 19, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, League changes\nDuring the 2003 off-season, the Richmond Renegades, Arkansas RiverBlades, Jackson Bandits, Baton Rouge Kingfish, and Lexington Men O' War all ceased operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, League changes\nIn addition to the former WCHL teams, the league also added two reactivated franchises in the Gwinnett Gladiators (formerly the Mobile Mysticks) and Texas Wildcatters (formerly the Huntington Blizzard).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, All-Star Game\nThe ECHL All-Star Game was held at Carver Arena in Peoria, Illinois, and was hosted by the Peoria Rivermen. The Eastern Conference All-Stars defeated the Western Conference All-Stars 7\u20136, with Peoria's Randy Rowe named Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L= Losses; OTL = Overtime or Shootout Losses; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = PointsGreen shade = Clinched playoff spot; Blue shade = Clinched division; (z) = Clinched home-ice advantage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175826-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ECHL season, Regular season, Leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games played; Mins = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals allowed; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175827-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EEHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 Eastern European Hockey League season, was the ninth and final season of the multi-national ice hockey league. Nine teams participated in Division A, Six teams participated in Division B, and seven teams participated in the EEHL Cup. HK Keramin Minsk won Division A, HK Vitebsk won Division B, and Titan Klin won the EEHL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175828-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EHF Champions League\nThe 2003\u201304 EHF Champions League was the 44th edition of Europe's premier club handball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175829-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup was the twenty-eighth edition of EHF's competition for women's handball national cup champions. It returned to an autumn to spring calendar three years later, running from October 10, 2003, to May 21, 2004. The format was also altered, breaking the Rounds of 32 and 16 into three preliminary rounds, with the four remaining teams playing against the third-placed teams in the Champions League's group stage in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175829-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup\nThe final confronted two teams coming from the Champions League, with 2002 EHF Cup champion Ikast Bording beating 8-times Champions League champion Hypo Nieder\u00f6sterreich, overcoming an away loss by a 9-goals margin, to become the first Danish team to win the Cup Winners' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 Elite Ice Hockey League season was the inaugural season of the Elite League. The season ran from September 12, 2003 until April 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season\nDuring the 2002\u201303 season, the financial collapse of the Manchester Storm and the Scottish Eagles, the resignation of the Bracknell Bees and the uncertainty surrounding the London Knights and their London Arena home left the Ice Hockey Superleague with little option but to fold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season\nThe three remaining Superleague clubs, the Belfast Giants, Nottingham Panthers and Sheffield Steelers were joined by three British National League clubs, the Basingstoke Bison, Cardiff Devils and Coventry Blaze and two new clubs, the London Racers and Manchester Phoenix in establishing the Elite Ice Hockey League. The clubs hoped to provide a more financially sustainable league than its predecessor with a greater number of British trained players taking part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season\nThe league was met with considerable opposition from the governing body, Ice Hockey UK who initially refused to affiliate itself with the new league, instead desiring that the remaining Superleague clubs integrate themselves into the British National League. This led to a bitter summer of uncertainty which only the intervention of the International Ice Hockey Federation ended. The IIHF ruled that the Elite League be granted a single season's affiliation with IHUK while discussions between IHUK, the EIHL and the BNL took place on the future of the sport in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season\nThe season began on September 12, 2003 with a game between the newly formed London Racers and the previous season's league champions, Sheffield Steelers. London began the season at Alexandra Palace but within a few weeks had relocated to the Lee Valley Ice Centre. The Racers went much of the season without winning, before finally claiming a 3\u20130 victory over Cardiff as the season drew to its close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Challenge Cup\nDuring the early part of the season, the results from league games also counted towards a separate Challenge Cup table. After each team had played each other once at home and once away, the top four teams in the table qualified for the semi finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Challenge Cup, Final\nThe final brought Nottingham and Sheffield head-to-head in a major final for the seventh time. The Steelers had won each of the last six finals in a run stretching back to 1995 and were clear favourites to win a seventh straight final against their bitter rivals after convincingly winning the Elite League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Challenge Cup, Final\nAfter a tight 1\u20131 draw at the National Ice Centre, the two clubs met in the second leg at Sheffield Arena on March 17. The Panthers stormed into an early 2\u20130 lead before the Steelers fought back to tie the game at 2\u20132. Regulation time ended level and so the game went into overtime. After 53 seconds, Kim Ahlroos won the game for Nottingham, ending an eight-year wait for the club to defeat their rivals in a showpiece event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 41], "content_span": [42, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Elite League Table\nEach team played four home games and four away games against each of their opponents. Sheffield and Nottingham fought it out for the inaugural Elite League title before the Steelers pulled away to become comfortable champions, thanks to twenty consecutive wins, including 7\u20133, 5\u20130, 3\u20130 and 7\u20134 victories over the Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Elite League Table\nNottingham finished runner-up while Coventry were the most successful former BNL side, finishing third. Belfast began the season strongly before a poor run of results in the second half of the season saw them slip to fourth place. Struggling London were always destined to finish last, doing so by thirty-eight points, while Basingstoke also missed out on a place in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Elite League Play Offs\nThe top six teams qualified for the playoffs. Group A consisted of Sheffield, Belfast and Manchester while Group B consisted of Nottingham, Coventry and Cardiff. The Phoenix chose to stage one of its home games, against the Steelers at the 1,500 capacity IceSheffield rather than play the substantial costs involved in hiring the MEN Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Elite League Play Offs, Semi Finals\nThe finals weekend took place over the weekend of 3 April-4 April at the National Ice Centre in Nottingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175830-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EIHL season, Elite League Play Offs, Final\nThe final saw the two main protagonists of the season come head-to-head in a repeat of the title race and Challenge Cup final. The Steelers avenged their overtime loss in the Cup a few weeks earlier by beating the Panthers 2\u20131 before a capacity crowd at the NIC. Sheffield marched into a 2\u20130 lead before Nottingham pulled a goal back on a 5 on 3 powerplay. The Panthers never seriously threatened Sheffield's goal and in the end the Steelers were comfortable winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175831-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ES Troyes AC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 18th season in the existence of ES Troyes AC and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, ES Troyes AC participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175832-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EWWL Trocal league\nEWWL Trocal League for the season 2003\u201304 was the third season of the EWWL Trocal league. Attended by eleven teams from five countries, a champion for the first time in history, became the team Gospi\u0107 Industrogradnja. In this season, clubs from Serbia and Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia and Austria took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175832-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EWWL Trocal league\nEWWL Trocal League for the season 2003\u201304 has begun to play 4 October 2003 and ended on 22 February 2004, when he it was completed a Regular season. Final Four to be played from 12\u201313 March 2004. in Gospi\u0107 in Croatia. Winner Final Four this season for the team Gospi\u0107 Croatia Osiguranje from Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175832-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EWWL Trocal league, Regular season\nThe League of the season was played with 11 teams and play a dual circuit system, each with each one game at home and away. The four best teams at the end of the regular season were placed in the Final Four. The regular season began on 4 October 2003 and it will end on 22 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175832-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EWWL Trocal league, Final four\nFinal Four to be played from 12\u201313 March 2004. in the Gradska \u0160kolska Sportska Dvorana in Gospi\u0107, Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was East Bengal Football Club's 8th season in the National Football League, and also marked the club's 84th season. East Bengal successfully defended their league title from the previous season, competing in the 2003-04 NFL. They have also won the 2003 Calcutta Football League and the 2003 ASEAN Club Championship. They became runners-up in the 2003 Super Cup, 2003 Durand Cup and 2003 IFA Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, First-team squad\nEast Bengal FC squad for the 2003\u201304 season. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Stadiums\nKingfisher East Bengal F.C. have been using both the Salt Lake Stadium and the East Bengal Ground sense Salt Lake Stadium opened in 1984. As of today the Salt Lake Stadium is used for East Bengal's I-League, AFC Cup, and Federation Cup games. The East Bengal Ground is used for the Calcutta Football League matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship\nAfter winning the 2002-03 National Football League, East Bengal FC were invited to the 2003 ASEAN Club Championship held at Jakarta, Indonesia. Top clubs from South-East Asia participated in the tournament which included the favourites BEC Tero Sasana from Thailand who already reached the 2002\u201303 AFC Champions League Finals. The star-studded team consisted of Golden Ball winner of 2002\u201303 AFC Champions League - Therdsak Chaiman. Other top teams like 2002 Malaysia Super League Champions Perak FC and Liga Indonesia 2002 Champions Petrokimia Putra participated in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship\nEast Bengal FC lost the first match against the favourites BEC Tero Sasana 1\u20130, courtesy of a solo goal from star man Therdsak Chaiman. The Red and Gold brigade bounced back in style as they defeated Philippine Army F.C. 6\u20130, with Bhaichung Bhutia scoring all 6 goals, becoming the only Indian player to score a double hattrick in an International game till date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship\nIn the Quarter Finals, East Bengal FC faced Persita Tangerang of Indonesia. Goals from Bhaichung Bhutia and Bijen Singh ensured a 2\u20131 win for the Kolkata side. Bhaichung was again on the scoresheet when East Bengal FC faced Petrokimia Putra in the Semi-Final. The score was 1\u20131 after 120 minutes and the Red and Golds won 7\u20136 in the shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship\nOn 26 July 2003, East Bengal FC made history as they defeated the favourites BEC Tero Sasana 3\u20131 with goals from Mike Okoro, Bhaichung Bhutia and Alvito D'Cunha, hence becoming the first Indian club to win a top-level officially recognised tournament from Foreign Soil. Bhaichung Bhutia became the Top Scorer of the tournament with 9 goals. Sandip Nandy was adjudged as the Best Goalkeeper of the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship, Quarter final\nEast Bengal faced Persita Tangerang of Indonesia in the Quarter Finals of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 78], "content_span": [79, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship, Semi final\nEast Bengal faced Petrokimia Putra, who were the reigning champions of Indonesia in the Semi Finals. East Bengal won 7-6 on penalties after the game ended 1-1 after Extra Time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175833-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 East Bengal FC season, Matches, ASEAN Club Championship, Final\nEast Bengal faced the 2002-03 AFC Champions League finalist BEC Tero Sasana in the Final of the 2003 ASEAN Club Championship. BEC Tero Sasana defeated East Bengal 1-0 in the group stages. East Bengal shocked everyone to win the match 3-1 and create history as they became the first team from India to win any major tournament on the continental stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175834-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eastern Counties Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Eastern Counties Football League season was the 62nd in the history of Eastern Counties Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175834-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eastern Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 20 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175834-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eastern Counties Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 17 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175835-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fourth year head coach Jim Boone. The Eagles played their home games at the Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center and were members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 13\u201315, 7\u201311 in MAC play. They finished fifth in the MAC West. They were knocked out in the first round of the MAC Tournament by Marshall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season\nThe 2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season was the Oilers' 25th season in the NHL, and they were coming off a 36\u201326\u201311\u20139 record in 2002\u201303, earning 92 points, and returned to the playoffs after a one-year absence. The Oilers were then defeated by the Dallas Stars in six games in the opening round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season\nDuring the off-season, the Oilers and Mike Comrie could not come to a contract agreement, and Comrie would not start the season with the team. Comrie would eventually be traded to the Philadelphia Flyers in December for Jeff Woywitka and the Flyers' first-round draft pick in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season\nThe club would start off the season on the right foot, having a record of 10\u20137\u20132\u20130 in the first 19 games. However, Edmonton would go into a slump and have a 10\u201317\u20136\u20131 in their next 34 games, falling to 12th place in the Western Conference. The Oilers would later emerge from the slump and finish the season with a 16\u20135\u20134\u20134 in their remaining 29 games. Despite the season turnaround, the Oilers would finish in ninth in the West, two points behind the eighth-placed Nashville Predators for the final playoff spot, thereby failing to qualify for the post-season for the second time in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season\nOffensively, Ryan Smyth would lead the club with 23 goals, 36 assists and 59 points. Radek Dvorak would finish just behind Smyth with 50 points, while Ethan Moreau and Raffi Torres would each score 20 goals. Marc-Andre Bergeron would lead the defense with 9 goals and 26 points, while Eric Brewer would finish just behind him with seven goals and 25 points. Georges Laraque would lead the club in penalty minutes, with 99.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season\nIn goal, Tommy Salo would begin the season as the starter. However, he would lose his job and eventually be traded to the Colorado Avalanche before the season was over. He won 17 games and had a 2.58 goals against average (GAA), along with three shutouts, with Edmonton. Ty Conklin took over the starting duties, where he would win 17 games, attain a 2.42 GAA and earn a shutout along the way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season, Heritage Classic\nThe Heritage Classic was an outdoor ice hockey game played on November 22, 2003, in Edmonton between the Edmonton Oilers and the Montreal Canadiens. It was the second NHL outdoor game and the first regular season outdoor game in the history of the NHL, and was modeled after the success of the \"cold war\" game between the University of Michigan and Michigan State University in 2001. The first NHL game to be played outdoors was in 1991 when the Los Angeles Kings played the New York Rangers in an exhibition game outside Caesars Palace in Las Vegas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0005-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season, Heritage Classic\nThe event took place in Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium in front of a crowd of 57,167, the largest number of people to ever watch a live NHL game, despite temperatures of close to -18\u00a0\u00b0C, -30\u00a0\u00b0C (-22\u00a0\u00b0F) with wind chill. It was held to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Edmonton Oilers joining the NHL in 1979. The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation television broadcast also set the record for most viewers of a single NHL game with 2.747\u00a0million nationwide. This was the first NHL game broadcast in HDTV on CBC. Montreal won the game 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season, Season standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season, Season standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175836-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Edmonton Oilers season, Schedule and results\nLegend: \u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Tie (1 point)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime Loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175837-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eerste Divisie\nThe Dutch Eerste Divisie in the 2003\u201304 season was contested by 19 teams, one more than in the previous season. This was due to AGOVV Apeldoorn entering from the amateurs. FC Den Bosch won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175838-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eerste Klasse\n2003\u201304 Eerste Klasse was a Dutch association football season of the Eerste Klasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175839-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Egyptian Premier League\nIn the Egyptian League 2003/2004, fourteen teams has participated. The first placed team in the league is the league's champion and qualifies, along with the second placed, team to CAF Champions League 2005. The third placed team qualifies to CAF Champions League 2005. The teams with the last three places in the league will be relegated to the Egyptian Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175839-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Egyptian Premier League\nEach team plays 26 matches from August 2003 to July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175840-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Egyptian Super Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Egyptian Super Cup was the 3rd Egyptian Super Cup, an annual football match played between the winners of the previous season's Egyptian Premier League and Egypt Cup. It was played at Cairo Military Academy Stadium in Cairo, Egypt, on 28 August 2003, contested by Al Ahly and Zamalek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175840-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Egyptian Super Cup\nAl Ahly defeated Zamalek and won the match 3\u20131 on penalties after being tied 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175841-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season\nThe 2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season was the 104th season in the club's football history. In 2003\u201304 the club played in the Bundesliga, the first tier of German football. It was the club's 100th season in the first tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175841-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175841-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175841-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, Eintracht Frankfurt II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175841-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, Under-19s\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175841-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, Under-17s\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175842-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ekstraklasa\nThe 2003\u201304 Ekstraklasa is the 78th season of the Polish Football Championship and the 70th season of the Ekstraklasa, the top Polish professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1927.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175842-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ekstraklasa, Overview\n14 teams competed in the 2003-04 season. Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season\nThe 2003\u201304 Eliteserien season ended with Storhamar Dragons claiming their fifth Norwegian title after defeating V\u00e5lerenga in double overtime in game 7. Michael Smithurst scored the game winner nearly two minutes into the second extra period in front of 7,405 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Playoffs\nAfter the regular season, the new standard of eight teams qualified for the playoffs. In the first round, the two highest remaining seeds were drawn against the two lowest remaining seeds; in the second round, the highest remaining seed was drawn against one of the two lowest. In each round the higher-seeded team was awarded home ice advantage, giving them a possible maximum of three home games as opposed to the lower-seeded team's possible maximum of two. Each best-of-five series followed a 1\u20132\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team played at home for games 2 and 3 (plus 5 if necessary), and the lower-seeded team at home for games 1 and 4 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Playoffs\nThe final was contested between the Storhamar Dragons and V\u00e5lerenga for the second consecutive year. In 2003, the championship had been decided in four straight games when V\u00e5lerenga won 4\u20130 to claim their 22nd title and 18th \"double\". As in the previous season, the 2004 final was played as a best-of-seven series following a 1\u20131\u20131\u20132\u20131\u20131 format. Storhamar, as league champions, were seeded first and played at home for games 2, 4, 5 and 7. They took the lead after winning the first game 2\u20131 in overtime, but failed to capitalize, losing their first home game 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Playoffs\nThe third and fourth games were both won by the home side. Game 5 saw V\u00e5lerenga achieve an away win in overtime to lead the series 3\u20132, but Storhamar came back to claim another overtime victory in Oslo and force a seventh, championship deciding game at Hamar OL-Amfi. A record 7,405 spectators turned out for the first game 7 in the history of the Norwegian Championship, in which Storhamar's Michael Smithurst scored the winning goal after 21 minutes and 54 seconds of overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175843-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eliteserien season, Qualifying for UPC-ligaen 2004\u201305, Final standings\nGP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTW = Overtime Wins; OTL = Overtime Losses; SOW = Shootout Wins; SOL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; Pts = Points; Q = QualifiedSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 78], "content_span": [79, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175844-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Elitserien (men's handball)\nThe 2003\u201304 Elitserien was the 70th season of the top division of Swedish handball. 14 teams competed in the league. The eight highest placed teams qualified for the playoffs, whereas teams 11\u201312 had to play relegation playoffs against teams from the second division, and teams 13\u201314 were relegated automatically. IK S\u00e4vehof won the regular season and also won the playoffs to claim their first Swedish title. This season ended the dominance of Redbergslids IK and HK Drott; the two clubs won every title except one from 1983\u201384 to 2002\u201303, but have only won one title between them since.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175845-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Elitserien season\nThe 2003\u201304 Elitserien season was the 29th season of Elitserien. It started in September 2003, with the regular season ending February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175845-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Elitserien season, Playoffs\nAfter the regular season, the standard of 8 teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175845-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nIn the first round, the highest remaining seed chose which of the four lowest remaining seeds to be matched against. In each round the higher-seeded team was awarded home ice advantage. Each best-of-seven series followed a 1\u20131\u20131\u20132\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team played at home for games 2 and 4 (plus 5 and 7 if necessary), and the lower-seeded team was at home for game 1, 3 and 6 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175846-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 England Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 English Hockey League season took place from September 2003 until May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175846-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 England Hockey League season\nThe men's title was won by Cannock for the second consecutive year with the women's title going to Hightown. There were no play offs to determine champions or relegation after the regular season but there was a competition for the top six clubs called the Premiership tournament which culminated in a final held at Old Loughtonians Hockey Club on 9 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175846-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 England Hockey League season\nThe Men's Cup was won by Reading and the Women's Cup was won by Hightown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175847-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eredivisie\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the Dutch Eredivisie began in August 2003 and ended in May 2004. The title was won by Ajax.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175848-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eredivisie (basketball)\nThe 2003\u201304 Eredivisie season was the 44th season of the Eredivisie in basketball, the highest professional basketball league in the Netherlands. MPC Capitals won their second national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175848-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eredivisie (basketball), Teams\nNewly established club Fun4All Bergen op Zoom made its debut in the Eredivisie this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175849-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season\nThe 2003\u201304 Eredivisie season was the 44th season of the Eredivisie, the top level of ice hockey in the Netherlands. Four teams participated in the league, and the Amsterdam Bulldogs won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175850-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Essex Senior Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Essex Senior Football League season was the 33rd in the history of Essex Senior Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175850-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Essex Senior Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 15 clubs which competed in the league last season, along with one new club:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175851-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Esteghlal F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season are the Esteghlal Football Club's 3rd season in the Iran Pro League, and their 10th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They are also competing in the Hazfi Cup and 59th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175851-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Esteghlal F.C. season, Player\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175852-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euro Hockey Tour\nThe 2003-04 Euro Hockey Tour was the eighth season of the Euro Hockey Tour. The season consisted of four tournaments, the \u010cesk\u00e1 Poji\u0161\u0165ovna Cup, Karjala Tournament, Baltica Brewery Cup, and the Sweden Hockey Games. The top two teams met in the final, and the third and fourth place teams met for the third place game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175853-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EuroLeague Women\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 8th edition of Europe's premier basketball tournament for women - EuroLeague Women since it was rebranded to its current format", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175853-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EuroLeague Women, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals\nGame 1 was played 2 March 2004. Game 2 was played 5 March 2004. Game 3 was played 10 March 2004. The team that won two games first, advanced to the Final four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175853-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 EuroLeague Women, Final four\nThe venue was on 4\u20136 April 2004. P\u00e9cs hosted the event at the Lauber Dezs\u0151 Sportcsarnok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague\nThe 2003\u201304 Euroleague was the fourth season of the professional basketball competition for elite clubs throughout Europe, organised by Euroleague Basketball Company, and it was the 47th season of the premier competition for European men's clubs overall. The 2003\u201304 season featured 24 competing teams from 13 different countries. The final of the competition was held in Nokia Arena, Tel Aviv, Israel, with hosts Maccabi Elite, defeating Skipper Bologna, by a score of 118-74.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Regular season\nThe first phase was a regular season, in which the competing teams were drawn into three groups, each containing eight teams. Each team played every other team in its group at home and away, resulting in 14 games for each team in the first stage. The top 5 teams in each group and the best sixth-placed team advanced to the next round. The complete list of tiebreakers was provided in the lead-in to the Regular Season results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Regular season\nIf one or more clubs were level on won-lost record, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nThe surviving teams were divided into four groups of four teams each, and again a round robin system was adopted resulting in 6 games each, with the top team advancing to the Final Four. Tiebreakers were identical to those used in the Regular Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nThis was the last season in which teams advanced directly from the Top 16 to the Final Four. A quarterfinal round was introduced in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 1: The three group winners, plus the top-ranked second-place team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 2: The remaining second-place teams, plus the top two third-place teams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 3: The remaining third-place team, plus the three fourth-place teams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 4: The fifth-place teams, plus the top ranked sixth-place team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nEach Top 16 group included one team from each pool. The draw was conducted under the following restrictions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175854-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Euroleague, Top 16\nAnother draw was held to determine the order of fixtures. In the case of two teams from the same city in the Top 16 (Panathinaikos and Olympiacos, Efes Pilsen and \u00dclker) they were scheduled so that every week only one team would be at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175855-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup (known as the Parker Pen Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 8th season of the European Challenge Cup, Europe's second tier club rugby union competition below the Heineken Cup. A total of 28 teams participated, representing seven countries. This was the first year of the competition following the introduction of regional rugby union teams in Wales. With the reduction of Welsh teams from nine to five, and with all teams participating in the 2003-04 Heineken Cup, there were no Welsh teams in the 2003\u201304 Parker Pen Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175855-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup\nThe competition began when Rotherham hosted Narbonne and Leonessa hosted Montferrand on 5 December 2003 and culminated in the final at the Madejski Stadium in Reading on 22 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175855-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup\nAs in the previous season, the competition was organised in a knockout format. Teams played each other on a home and away basis, with the aggregate points winner proceeding to the next round. The final was a single leg. For the second time, a third tier tournament was held - the European Shield. This was contested between the first round losers from the European Challenge Cup. As there were only 28 teams involved, the 2 \"best\" 1st Round losers were reprieved and proceeded to the 2nd Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175855-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup\nThe defending champions, England's London Wasps, did not have a chance to defend their crown because they qualified to play in the Heineken Cup. NEC Harlequins claimed the narrowest of victories over Montferrand in the final and picked up their second piece of European Club silverware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175856-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe 2003\u201304 European Nations Cup was the fourth edition of the newly reformed European Championship for tier 2 and 3 rugby union nations. This was the second two-year cycled championship, the first to be planned from the start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175856-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe title was won by Portugal for the first time, with their Iberian neighbours Spain being relegated. Portugal won all their games, except to a loss abroad to Romania. The Championship saw another new face in the Czech Republic who replaced the relegated Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175857-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThe 2002\u20132004 European Nations Cup was the fourth edition of the newly reformed European Championship for tier 2 & 3 Rugby Union Nations. This was the second two-year cycled championship, the first to be planned from the start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175857-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThe Third division had a controversy development during the 2002\u201303 season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175857-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThe European federation decided to reset tournament and change from a \"two-years\" formula to a double \"two-years formula\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175857-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThere were no relegation, due the 2007 Rugby World Cup \u2013 Europe qualification", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175857-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup Third Division, Pool A\nThe highest level was the Pool \"A\", with five teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175857-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Nations Cup Third Division, Pool B\nThe middle level was the Pool \"B\", with five teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175858-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Shield\nThe 2003\u201304 European Shield (known as the Parker Pen Shield for sponsorship reasons) was the 2nd season of the European Shield, Europe's third-tier club rugby union competition below the Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup. A total of 16 teams participated, representing five different countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175858-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Shield\nThis competition was contested between 12 first round losers from the 2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup plus 4 other Clubs entering directly into the 1st Round. The structure of the competition was a purely knockout format; teams played each other on a home and away basis, with the aggregate points winner proceeding to the next round. The final was a single leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175858-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Shield\nThe competition began on 10 January 2004 and culminated in the final at the Stadio Luigi Zaffanella in Viadana on 21 May 2004. Montpellier secured a victory over Viadana in the final and picked up their first piece of European Club silverware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175858-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 European Shield, Teams\nThis competition was contested between 12 first round losers from the 2003\u201304 European Challenge Cup, plus 4 other Clubs that joined directly at the 1st Round of the Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175859-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Everton F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Everton competed in the Premier League (known as the Barclaycard Premiership for sponsorship reasons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175859-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Everton F.C. season, Season summary\nIn 2002\u201303, all the talk at Goodison Park was about how David Moyes was restoring some pride to the blue half of Merseyside thanks to a seventh-place finish. 2003\u201304, however, was quite a different story, as Everton struggled at the wrong end of the Premiership and finished the season one place above the drop zone with 39 points (a tally which in many seasons has seen teams relegated, even under the 38-game format), albeit the abysmal seasons suffered by all of the bottom three clubs meant that Everton rarely looked to be in any serious danger of relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175859-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Everton F.C. season, Season summary\n18-year-old striker Wayne Rooney was England's key player in their run to the quarter-finals of Euro 2004, but fast-growing rumours that he was about to be sold to Manchester United put Everton's top flight future under increasing doubt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175859-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Everton F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175859-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Everton F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175859-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Everton F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 FA Cup was the 123rd staging of England and the world's oldest football competition, the FA Cup. The competition began on 23 August 2003, with the lowest-ranked of the entrants competing in the Extra Preliminary round. In the Third Round, the clubs from the Premiership and Division One competed in the competition for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup\nThe semi-finals were staged at neutral venues and, like the final, would not be replayed in the event of a draw. The competition culminated with the cup final at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff for a fourth year in a row, since Wembley Stadium was still in the rebuilding process. The cup was won by Manchester United for a record 11th time, with a 3\u20130 victory over Millwall from Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup\nThe appearance in the Cup Final by Millwall, a Level 2 team, marked the first time in 12 years that a team outside Level 1 of the English football pyramid appeared in the final game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, First round proper\nThis round is the first in which Football League teams from League One and League Two compete with non-league teams. Luton's Adrian Forbes and Sheffield Wednesday's Adam Proudlock netted hat tricks. Shildon AFC, of the Arngrove Northern League (level 9 on the football league pyramid), were the lowest ranked team left in the competition in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Second round proper\nTies were played over the weekend of 6 December 2003. Mansfield's Liam Lawrence showed how interested Championship and premiership clubs were with him by netting a hat trick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Third round proper\nThis round marks the first time Championship and Premier League (top-flight) teams play. Matches were played on the weekend of Saturday, 3 January 2004, with replays on 13 January and 14 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Fourth round proper\nTies played during the weekend of 24 January 2004, with replays on 3 February and 4 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Fourth round proper\nThe match between Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester City was particularly notable. Tottenham led the match 3\u20130 at half-time but Manchester City turned the match around in the second half to win 4\u20133, with Jon Macken scoring the winning goal in the 90th minute. This was despite Manchester City having one less player on the pitch during the second half after Joey Barton was red carded during the half-time interval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Final\nManchester United won the game and lifted the trophy for the 11th time in their history (a competition record) with a 3\u20130 victory over a Millwall side who were the first team from outside the top flight to reach the FA Cup final in 12 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Media coverage\nIn the United Kingdom, the BBC were the free to air broadcasters for the third consecutive season while Sky Sports were the subscription broadcasters for the sixteenth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175860-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup, Media coverage\nThe matches shown live on the BBC were: Accrington Stanley 1\u20130 Huddersfield Town (R1); Burton Albion 0\u20131 Hartlepool United (R2); Southampton 0\u20133 Newcastle United and Yeovil Town 0\u20132 Liverpool (R3); Liverpool 2\u20131 Newcastle United and Manchester City 1\u20131 Tottenham Hotspur (R4); Sunderland 1\u20131 Birmingham City and Arsenal 2\u20131 Chelsea (R5); Portsmouth 1\u20135 Arsenal and Millwall 0\u20130 Tranmere Rovers (QF); Arsenal 0\u20131 Manchester United (SF); and Manchester United 3\u20130 Millwall (Final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175861-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe 2003\u201304 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 123rd season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 661 clubs were accepted for the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175861-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 10) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with six rounds of preliminary (2) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 32 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175861-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Cup qualifying rounds, 2003\u201304 FA Cup\nSee 2003-04 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclaycard Premiership for sponsorship reasons) was the 12th season of the Premier League. Arsenal were the champions and Chelsea, who had spent heavily throughout the season, were the runners up. Arsenal ended the season without a single defeat \u2013 the first team ever to do so in a 38-game league season and the second team overall (the first was Preston North End in 1889, 115 years earlier, during a 22-game league season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nHaving qualified for the Champions' League the previous season, Chelsea were bolstered by a \u00a3100\u00a0million outlay on world-class players, a spree funded by the extensive financial resources of their new owner Roman Abramovich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nManchester United's attack was as strong as ever thanks to free-scoring Ruud van Nistelrooy, but the midfield was weakened following the \u00a325\u00a0million pre-season sale of David Beckham to Real Madrid, and the centre of defence suffered a more severe setback after Rio Ferdinand was ruled out for the final four months of the season after being found guilty of the \"failure or refusal to take a drugs test\". The case of Rio Ferdinand started a debate about punishments relating to drug testing in football, with there being differing views on whether the punishment was too harsh or too lenient. Ferdinand's club sought to make direct comparisons with an earlier case of Manchester City reserve player who had in fact committed a lesser drug testing offence and as a result escaped with only a fine. City themselves had just moved from Maine Road to the City of Manchester Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nArsenal, meanwhile, had only signed German goalkeeper Jens Lehmann in the 2003 close season, but French striker Thierry Henry was instrumental in Arsenal's success. Away from the Premier League, Ars\u00e8ne Wenger's team suffered disappointment in the cup competitions. They were knocked-out by League Cup eventual winners Middlesbrough in the semi-finals. They lost their defence of the FA Cup (which they held for two seasons in a row) after losing to eventual winners Manchester United in the semi-final. Arsenal were knocked out of the Champions League quarter-finals by Chelsea (3\u20132 on aggregate).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nThese blows in the FA Cup and Champions League came within a few days of each other, and it was feared that Arsenal might squander their lead of the Premier League for the second successive season, but Arsenal thumped Liverpool only days later. Arsenal's Invincibles finished the season with 26 wins, 12 draws, 0 defeats and 90 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nThe three relegation spots were occupied by three teams bracketed together on 33 points. Wolves and Leicester City followed the trend of many other newly promoted Premier League clubs and were relegated just one season after reaching the top division. For Leicester City, they would not return to the top flight for another 10 years and became the league champions for the first time ever in their history just a season later, whilst Wolves had been promoted back to the top flight in 2009-10 Premier League and slipped down again 3 years later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nThe other relegation place went to Leeds United, whose playing fortunes had dipped in the past two seasons after David O'Leary was sacked as manager and club debts had risen so high that many star players had to be sold. As a result, Leeds were relegated from the Premier League after 14 years of top division football \u2013 just three seasons after they had reached the Champions League semifinals, and they would not return for another 16 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Season summary\nIn his third season as Middlesbrough manager, Steve McClaren had guided the Teessiders to their first ever major trophy \u2013 sealed with a 2\u20131 win over Bolton Wanderers in the League Cup final. McClaren was also the first English manager to win a major trophy since Brian Little guided Aston Villa to League Cup success in 1996. He was also the first manager to take Middlesbrough into European competition \u2013 they would be competing in the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Teams\nTwenty teams competed in the league\u00a0\u2013 the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the First Division. The promoted teams were Portsmouth, Leicester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers, returning to the top flight after an absence of fifteen, one and nineteen years respectively. This was also both Portsmouth and Wolverhampton Wanderers' first season in the Premier League. They replaced West Ham United, West Bromwich Albion and Sunderland after spending time in the top flight for ten, one and four years respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, LMA Manager of the Year\nThe LMA Manager of the Year award was won by Ars\u00e8ne Wenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Players' Player of the Year\nThe PFA Players' Player of the Year award for 2004 was won by Thierry Henry of Arsenal for the second successive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Players' Player of the Year\nThe shortlist for the PFA Players' Player of the Year award was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Young Player of the Year\nThe PFA Young Player of the Year award was won by Scott Parker of Chelsea F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Team of the Year\nGoalkeeper: Tim Howard (Manchester United)Defence: Lauren, Ashley Cole, Sol Campbell (all Arsenal), John Terry (Chelsea)Midfield: Steven Gerrard (Liverpool), Patrick Vieira, Robert Pires (both Arsenal), Frank Lampard (Chelsea)Attack: Thierry Henry (Arsenal), Ruud van Nistelrooy (Manchester United)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Fans' Player of the Year\nThierry Henry of Arsenal was named the PFA Fans' Player of the Year for the second consecutive year. Henry was the first player to win this award twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, FWA Footballer of the Year\nThe FWA Footballer of the Year award for 2004 was won by Thierry Henry. The Arsenal forward picked up a remarkable 87% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Fair Play Award\nThe Premier League Fair Play Award merit is given to the team who has been the most sporting and best behaved team. Champions Arsenal won this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Behaviour of the Public League\nGiven to the best-behaved fans, Arsenal won this, thus achieving a fair play double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175862-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Manager of the Year\nArs\u00e8ne Wenger won the Premier League Manager of the Year award. His team won 26 games, losing none and drawing 12 scoring 73 goals, conceding 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175863-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier Reserve League\nThe 2003-04 Premier Reserve League season was the fifth since its establishment and featured 14 teams in the Northern League - won by Aston Villa Reserves - and 15 teams in the Southern League - won by Charlton Athletic Reserves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175863-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Premier Reserve League, League table\nPld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175864-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Trophy\nThe 2003\u201304 FA Trophy was the thirty-second season of the FA Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175865-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FA Women's Premier League, Southern Division\n1 - Barnet 2 points deducted for using ineligible player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175866-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FAW Premier Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 FAW Premier Cup was the seventh season of the tournament since its founding in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175867-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Barcelona season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Spanish football season, Barcelona competed in La Liga, Copa del Rey and UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175867-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Barcelona season, Season summary\nAfter the disappointment of the Joan Gaspart era, the combination of a new young president Joan Laporta and a new manager, former Dutch and Milan star Frank Rijkaard, saw Barcelona bounce back. Guided by new management off the pitch and the likes of future FIFA World Player of the Year Ronaldinho on the pitch, Bar\u00e7a achieved second place behind Valencia in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175867-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Barcelona season, Season summary\nBarcelona competed in the UEFA Cup rather than the UEFA Champions League for the first time since the 1995\u201396 season, given their sixth-place finish in 2002\u201303.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175867-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Barcelona season, Season summary\nThe BBC made a documentary, titled FC Barcelona Confidential, based on the turn of events in the league after Joan Laporta's entry. With his arrival, the club experienced a new style of management that returned the club into a positive cycle, with an inherited massive financial debt crisis was resolved. The season saw Barcelona's spectacular return to form, finishing second after being at the bottom of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175867-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Barcelona season, Squad\nSourceNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Fussball Club Basel 1893's 111th in existence and the club's 10th consecutive season in the Nationalliga A, the top flight of Swiss football. Basel played their home games in the newly constructed St. Jakob-Park complex. Local businessman Werner Edelmann was the club's chairman for the second consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season\nThe Club's main aims for the 2003\u201304 season were to regain the league title and, as cup holders, to retain their cup title. The third aim was to remain in the UEFA Cup as long as possible. During pre-season Basel won the Uhrencup and the Alpen Cup. After being the surprise package in Europe in the 2002\u201303 season, Basel could not bring this form into the UEFA Cup in 2003\u201304 as they were eliminated by Newcastle United in the second round after defeating Malatyaspor in the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season\nThe Super League season started impeccably, Basel won the first thirteen matches straight off. They completed the first half of the season undefeated, with seventeen wins and one draw. Basel remained in top position right up until the end of the season, thus achieving their championship aim. In the club's history this was their tenth championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, Overview\nDespite the fact that Grasshopper Club Z\u00fcrich were the reigning Swiss champions, Basel were favourites to win the domestic championship title. As runners-up of the previous Nationalliga A season, Basel entered the UEFA Cup in first round. Basel's biggest signing in advance of the 2003\u201304 season was Mat\u00edas Emilio Delgado from Chacarita Juniors But in the other direction Hakan Yakin left the club and transferred to Paris Saint-Germain. Philippe Cravero moved on to Servette after five seasons with the club, in which he had played 185 games. Of these 108 were in the Nationalliga A, eight in the Swiss Cup, four in the UEFA Cup, 12 in the UI Cup and 53 were friendly games. Bernt Haas returned to West Bromwich Albion after the end of the loan period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, Overview\nFC Basel started the season of with various warm-up matches. These included teams from the Swiss lower league as well as teams from the German Bundesliga, the French Ligue 1 and the Romanian Liga I. The season began on 16 July 2003 with the home game against Z\u00fcrich and the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup began on 24 September 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, Overview\nBefore the winter break Hakan Yakin returned to the club from Paris Saint-Germain and during the winter break they signed Francisco Gabriel Guerrero on loan from FC Z\u00fcrich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nThe Swiss Football Association (ASF-SFV) had changed the format of the domestic league. Since the 1987\u201388 Nationalliga A season there were 24 teams in the Nationalliga, 12 in the Nationalliga A and 12 in the Nationalliga B. In the first stage there was a qualifying phase played as double round-robin. In the second phase the top eight clubs played a further double round-robin for the championship, the last eight teams played against relegation to the amateur league and the last four teams from the top level played a promotion/relegation round for the top tier in the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nLast season was last in that format. The new format was called Swiss Super League, or with the sponsor name Axpo Super League. As of this season, there were ten teams in the top tier and eighteen in the second tier. In the top tier, the teams played a double round-robin in the first half of the season and then another double round-robin in the second half. There were three points for a victory and one each for a draw. The champions and runners-up would enter the qualifying rounds of the [2004\u201305 Champions League, the third placed team would enter the UEFA Cup second qualifying round. The bottom placed team would be relegated the second last team would play a play-off against relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nBasel's priority aim for the season was to win the league championship. The season started impeccably, Basel won the first thirteen matches straight off and moved to the top of the league table from the first round. They completed the first half of the season undefeated, with seventeen wins and one draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nBasel completed the seasons eighteen home ties undefeated, winning fourteen and drawing four. Their biggest home wins were two 6-0 wins against Servette and Neuch\u00e2tel Xamax. Four home games were reported as sold out, the highest attendance being 30,800 spectators on 23 November 2003 in their highest scoring match of the season, a 5\u20132 win against Grasshopper. Basel remained in top position in the table until the end of the season, thus achieving their championship aim. This was the club's tenth championship title in the club's history. They won the championship with 26 victories and seven draws, the team had suffered just three away defeats, and obtained 85 points. This meant that they were 13 points ahead of second placed Young Boys. Wil were bottom-placed and relegated and Neuch\u00e2tel Xamax played the play-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nBasel scored 86 goals during their league season, conceding 32. Christian Gim\u00e9nez was the teams top league scorer with 16 goals, Marco Streller second best with 13 and both Benjamin Huggel and Julio Hern\u00e1n Rossi netted eight times. Scott Chipperfield, Herv\u00e9 Tum and Murat Yakin each scored seven times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic Cup\nAs cup holders, Basel's clear aim for the Swiss Cup was to retain the title. In the first two rounds of the 2003\u201304 Swiss Cup Basel were drawn away and won their games against lower league teams, FC Alle and Urania Gen\u00e8ve Sport as expected. In the third round they were drawn away in the Hardturm Stadion against Grasshopper Club Z\u00fcrich but lost 1-0. Thus Basel were eliminated and missed their domestic cup aim. Grasshoppers advanced as far as the final, but here they were surprisingly defeated by Wil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nAs runners-up in the Swiss championship the previous season and as Swiss Cup winners Basel were qualified for the UEFA Cup first round. The club's aim was remain in the UEFA Cup as long as possible. But after being the surprise package in Europe in the 2002\u201303 season, Basel could not bring this form into the UEFA Cup in 2003\u201304.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nIn the first round Basel were drawn against Malatyaspor and played the first leg away in the Malatya \u0130n\u00f6n\u00fc Stadium in Malatya in front of a sold out 10,000 capacity attendance. Basel had to play without their best scorer Christian Gim\u00e9nez, defender Timoth\u00e9e Atouba, and the midfield players Esposito and Ivan Ergic who were out injured. Basel started well into the game and their captain Murat Yakin put them a goal up after 15 minutes. The home team increased the pressure after the break and the visitors defence had to play at their best.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0012-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nDespite seeing the yellow card in the 51st minute, the visitors captain and centre back was the best Basel player on the day. Basel goalkeeper Pascal Zuberb\u00fchler also saw the yellow card in after 71 minutes for time-wasting, but he was able to keep a clean score sheet until the end of the game. The captains younger brother Hakan, who had been substituted in just seven minutes earlier, finished off Basel's good move in the 75th minute to give the visitors a two goal lead. And the 2\u20130 lead was held up until the end of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nBasel started very quickly into the second leg match held at St. Jakob-Park with two good early chances. Herv\u00e9 Tum's header after just 45 seconds was a little too wide and Timoth\u00e9e Atouba tried a long range shot only a minute later but this was somewhat too high. But then the home team then defended their aggregate lead by simply keeping their Turkish opponents at bay by giving them a lot of space in the midfield area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0013-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nBasel's goalkeeper Pascal Zuberb\u00fchler only had to get involved once during the first half, this after 35 minutes as Muhammet Akag\u00fcnd\u00fcz appeared threateningly before him, but Atouba got back quickly to clear the danger. After the break the game changed. The visitors pushed forward with more presure, Fazli Ulusoy had their first chance, but his shot hit the outside of the post. Then Celaleddin Ko\u00e7ak reacted quickest on a loose ball and to beat Zuberb\u00fchler after 64 minutes. Muhammet Akag\u00fcnd\u00fcz also saw his shot bounce back of the post after 71 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0013-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nMalatyaspor kept up their presure and six minutes from time, Kocak managed to net his second goal as he reacted quicker than the Basel defence to beat Zuberb\u00fchler with a well-placed header. The game ended with an aggregate 2\u20132 draw and thus went into over time. The momentum of the second half seemed to be with the visitors, however, Basel were able to regroup themselves and Marco Streller's silver goal saw them through to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nIn the second round Basel were drawn against Newcastle United. The first leg was held at St. Jakob-Park with a sell-out 30,000 capacity. Basel started quickly with much momentum at the beginning of the first half. They had already come close on a couple of occasions before Mario Cantaluppi slammed home a powerful drive from outside the penalty area in the 11th minute. The visitors reacted very quickly, Laurent Robert was sent clear of the defence two minutes later. The French winger finished with composure and he sent his low shot into the far corner of the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0014-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nAnother two minutes later Basel were awarded a corner kick. Defender Andy O'Brien headed the ball clear but the danger was not over. Scott Chipperfield was able to collect the free ball and his shot was slightly deflected as it beat Newcastle keeper Shay Given. Newcastle always seemed to be in danger as Basel pushed forward. Especially Christian Gim\u00e9nez was always dangerous and the tall Marco Streller was always a danger as high balls were sent into the centre. The English side deserve credit for standing out that spell without any further damage. Then the found their second equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0014-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nIn the 37th minute Gary Speed first tried to send his header home after a Laurent Robert corner, but the ball was blocked, Titus Bramble reacted quickly on the loose ball and forced it over the line. Before the break Christian Gim\u00e9nez headed the ball against a post and in the second-half, substitute Julio Hern\u00e1n Rossi forced Nolberto Solano to clear off the line when a corner came unexpectedly to him and diverted the ball with his face.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0014-0003", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nTowards the end of the match Newcastle were the more dominant side and it was a pass from Solano that set up the winning goal. Shola Ameobi skilfully shook off Marco Zwyssig before driving the ball between the legs of keeper Pascal Zuberb\u00fchler. Basel's head coach Christian Gross blamed defensive errors for the 2\u20133 home defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nThe second leg was played at St James' Park in front of 40,325 spectators and was arbitrated by Danish referee Knud Erik Fisker. He was the first-person taking action that evening by showing Newcastle\u2019s captain Alan Shearer a yellow card after just 15 seconds. In that action Basel defender Marco Zwyssig was injured and he left the game in the fourth minute, being substituted by Boris Smiljani\u0107. Smiljani\u0107 himself was involved in the next action. A Laurent Robert corner was completely misjudged by Basel goalkeeper Pascal Zuberb\u00fchler and the ball bounced off the unlucky substitute\u2019s shin. Chipperfield cleared the ball, but it had already crossed the line and referee Fisker signalled the goal without hesitation. The rest of the game remained unspectacular, Newcatle controlled the game, but Basel remained dangerous on the counter. However, no further goals followed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nBasel were eliminated by Newcastle United in the second round 2\u20134 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe\nThe club had hoped that they could have continued a round or perhaps two further, but despite being knocked out at this stage, they considered that that had achieved their European aim for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 45], "content_span": [46, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, Players, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, Friendlies, Uhrencup\nThe Uhrencup is a club football tournament, held annually in Grenchen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175868-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, 2003\u201304 Swiss Super League, First half of season\nThe Swiss Super League season was contested by ten teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 95], "content_span": [96, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175869-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bayern Munich season\nFC Bayern Munich did not win any trophies in the 2003\u201304 season, but nevertheless qualified for the next years' Champions League. The biggest disappointment was losing 3\u20131 at home to champions Werder Bremen at the end of the season, being three goals down after just 35 minutes. New signing Roy Makaay scored 23 league goals, adapting smoothly to Bundesliga, but the defensive performances were not good enough to overhaul Werder Bremen at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175869-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bayern Munich season, Results, Bundesliga, League results\nSource: 1Bayern Munich goals come first. Ground's country's flag and opponent's country's flag shown when from a different country of Bayern Munich. Pos . = Position in league, Pts. = Points, GD = Goal difference, Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175869-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bayern Munich season, Results, Champions League, Group stage results\nSource: 1Bayern Munich goals come first. Ground's country's flag and opponent's country's flag shown when from a different country of Bayern Munich. Pos . = Position in league, Pts. = Points, GD = Goal difference, Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175869-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bayern Munich season, Reserve team\nBayern's reserve team were coached by Hermann Gerland. They finished as champions of the Regionalliga S\u00fcd but were not promoted to the 2. Bundesliga as reserve teams are not allowed to play higher than the third tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175869-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bayern Munich season, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175870-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bihor Oradea season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Bihor Oradea's 45th season in the Romanian football league system, and their 18th season in the Divizia A. At the end of the season the team finished on 16th place and relegated back to Divizia B, after only one season in the top flight of the Romanian football. During this season the club was known as FC Oradea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175870-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Bihor Oradea season, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti's 55th season in Divizia A. After building up a team again in 2003\u201304, Dinamo eliminated Shakhtar Donetsk in the first round of the UEFA Cup 2003\u201304 season. They went on to lose to Spartak Moscow in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nIn the Romanian League, against all odds, Dinamo won everything: the championships, the Romanian Cup, and the top goalscorer (Ionel D\u0103nciulescu). Seen as the third favourite in the battle, after Rapid and Steaua, Dinamo had an excellent second part of the season, and two strikers, D\u0103nciulescu and Claudiu Niculescu that scored together 37 goals. Dinamo had 14 wins at home, out of 15 games, the only defeat in front of their own fans being registered at the beginning of the season, against Rapid. Dinamo won the title with a game in hand, beating in the 29th round Apulum Alba Iulia, at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nIn the Romanian Cup final, Dinamo defeated O\u0163elul Gala\u0163i at Cotroceni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Squad\nGoalkeepers: Gr\u00e9gory Delwarte (10 / 0); Uladzimir Hayew (2 / 0); Cristian Munteanu (9 / 0); \u0218tefan Preda (11 / 0). Defenders: Angelo Alistar (11 / 0); Cosmin B\u0103rc\u0103uan (27 / 4); Mugur Bolohan (1 / 0); Ovidiu Burc\u0103 (22 / 0); Adrian Iordache (25 / 2); Xavier M\u00e9ride (6 / 0); Samuel Okunowo (2 / 0); Szabolcs Perenyi (15 / 0); Flavius Stoican (8 / 1); Dorin Semeghin (28 / 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Squad\nMidfielders: Dan Alexa (23 / 1); Ionu\u021b Badea (16 / 0); Cristian Cigan (1 / 0); Cristian Ciubotariu (6 / 0); Alexandru Dragomir (1 / 0); \u0218tefan Grigorie (24 / 8); Sorin Iodi (1 / 0); Vlad Munteanu (18 / 2); Leonard Naidin (8 / 0); Florentin Petre (24 / 4); Iulian Tame\u0219 (26 / 1); Ianis Zicu (13 / 6). Forwards: Ionel D\u0103nciulescu (29 / 21); Claudiu Dr\u0103gan (8 / 0); Ciprian Marica (10 / 3); Claudiu Niculescu (28 / 16). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Transfers\nNew players: Gaev (FC Gomel), Alistar (Ceahl\u0103ul), Naidin (FC Oradea), Cigan (FC Oradea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175871-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Transfers\nLeft team: Cr.Munteanu (FC Na\u021bional), Okunowo and Meride (contracts cancelled), Gregory Delwarte (Belgium), Bolohan (Universitatea Craiova), Iodi (Gloria Bistri\u021ba), Zicu (AC Parma), Marica (Shakhtar Donetsk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175872-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 123rd season in the existence of FC Girondins de Bordeaux and the club's 13th consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Bordeaux participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue and the UEFA Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175872-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season, Season summary\nWithout the goals of Pauleta, Bordeaux had a poor season and slipped to 12th in the league. Manager \u00c9lie Baup was sacked in October and replaced by former midfielder Michel Pavon, but results failed to improve. However, they did make an impressive run to the UEFA Cup quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175872-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175872-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season, First team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175873-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Gueugnon season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 64th season in the existence of FC Gueugnon and the club's eighth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, FC Gueugnon participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175874-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Istres season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 85th season in the existence of FC Istres and the club's third consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, FC Istres participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175875-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Lorient season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 78th season in the existence of FC Lorient and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, FC Lorient participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175876-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season\nAlthough at the end of the previous season they relegated, O\u021belul managed to retain their spot in Divizia A after the merger of FC Astra Ploie\u015fti and newly promoted Petrolul Ploie\u015fti. After 15 rounds played in Divizia A, Costel Orac was fired in December and replaced with Sorin C\u00e2r\u0163u.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175876-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season, Transfers, Out\nEU = if holds or not a European Union passport; Country: when 2 flags, 1st flag = country that plays for internationally, 2nd flag = country of birth; N = number on jersey; P = Position (for position name, pause mouse pointer on abbreviation); Name = Name on jersey (for more extensive name, pause mouse pointer on name); Age = age on the day of the signing; Moving from = only indicate the club the player was playing before start playing for this club in this season, for the type of the moving see Status column; Moving to = only indicates the club the player is going to play next, for the type of the moving see Status column; Ends = when the player's current contract ends; n/a = Not applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175877-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Porto season\nFC Porto became the 12th club to win multiple European Cup/Champions League titles in a fairytale 2003\u201304 season. For the first time since 1995, a club outside the big four leagues won the trophy, and it was widely attributed to charismatic coach Jos\u00e9 Mourinho. The title was clinched in an emphatic 3\u20130 victory against Monaco in the final in Gelsenkirchen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175877-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Porto season\nFollowing the success, Mourinho departed the club for Chelsea, bringing key defenders Paulo Ferreira and Ricardo Carvalho with him. Playmaker Deco also departed, in his case for Barcelona. Elsewhere, it got to keep midfield duo Maniche and Costinha intact, and strikers Derlei and Benni McCarthy stayed at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175877-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Porto season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175877-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Porto season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175878-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Rouen season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 105th season in the existence of FC Rouen and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, FC Rouen participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175879-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Schalke 04 season\nFC Schalke 04 had another disappointing season, in spite of the success of new stadium and UEFA Champions League final host Arena AufSchalke. Within weeks in the autumn, Schalke's chances of winning a trophy was slashed, losing to Br\u00f8ndby in the UEFA Cup and a humiliating collapse to Freiburg in the extra time of the domestic cup, losing 7\u20133. The seventh position in the league also ensured Schalke had to go through the Intertoto Cup to reach European competitions, putting further pressure on coach Jupp Heynckes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175880-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 75th season in the existence of FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard and the club's third consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Sochaux participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue, and UEFA Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175880-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175881-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Vaslui season\nThe 2003\u201304 season is FC Vaslui's 2nd season of its existence, and its 1st in Divizia B. After Marius Stan, went to Poli Unirea Ia\u015fi, the new president was Teofil Iordachi, but he resigned only after one week. Soon after, Drago\u015f Iftime was named the new president. Even if Adrian Porumboiu announced that he retires from sponsoring FC Vaslui, he still was helping the team in the new season. The new manager was named Gigi Ion, and the objective was to avoid relegation. FC Vaslui started the season with a victory against the archrival, Poli Unirea Ia\u015fi 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175881-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Vaslui season\nThe team continued with some great performances, and so the objective, from avoiding relegation, changed to promote in Divizia A. In November, Gigi Ion had a conflict with the president, and after the 15th Matchday, he was dismissed, even the team finished 2nd. In the second part of the season, 3 managers trained the team, the last one Ioan Sdrobi\u015f, staying until the end of the season. Also, Sdrobi\u015f trained the team in the previous season, having some great performances. At the end of the season, FC Vaslui finished 2nd, with 12 points less than Poli Unirea Ia\u015fi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175881-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FC Vaslui season, Squad\nAs of 30 May 2004Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175882-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup was the second season of the FIBA Europe Cup, Europe's fourth level professional club basketball tournament. The season started on 5 November 2003, and ended on 28 March 2004. A total number of 41 teams participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175882-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup, Conference West, Qualifying round, Play-offs\nThe winner of the play-offs qualified for the FIBA EuroCup Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175882-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup, Conference East, Qualifying round, Play-offs\nThe winner of the play-offs qualified for the FIBA EuroCup Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175882-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup, Conference Central, Qualifying round, Play-offs\nThe winner of the play-offs qualified for the FIBA EuroCup Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175882-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup, Conference South, Play-offs\nThe winner of the play-offs qualified for the FIBA EuroCup Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175882-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe Cup, Final Four\nThe pan-European Final Four was held in the \u0130zmir Atat\u00fcrk Sports Hall in \u0130zmir. The semifinals were played on 27 March while the Final and third place game were played on 28 March 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175883-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe League\nThe 2003\u201304 FIBA Europe League was the first season of the FIBA Europe League, the newly established third tier in European basketball. A total number of 30 teams participated in the competition. UNICS took the title after winning the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175883-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIBA Europe League, Team allocation\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175884-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FINA Swimming World Cup\nThe 2003\u20132004 FINA Swimming World Cup was a series of eight, short course meets organized by FINA and held at eight different international locations. The meets were held from November 2003 through February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175884-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FINA Swimming World Cup\nEd Moses of the United States and Martina Moravcov\u00e1 of Slovakia were the overall male and female winners of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175884-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FINA Swimming World Cup, Event winners\nTimes listed at top of each table represent the series record (WC) as of the start of the 2003/2004 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThe 38th World Cup season began in October 2003 in S\u00f6lden, Austria, and concluded at the World Cup finals in Sestriere, Italy, in March 2004. Sestriere would host the alpine skiing events at the 2006 Winter Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nHermann Maier of Austria and Anja P\u00e4rson of Sweden won the overall titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Race results\nAt the World Cup finals in Sestriere only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Men's Downhill Results\nIn Men's Downhill World Cup 2003/04 all results count. Stephan Eberharter won his third Downhill World Cup in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Men's Super G Results\nIn Men's Super G World Cup 2003/04 all results count. Hermann Maier won his fifth Super G World Cup. This record is still unbeaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Men's Giant Slalom Results\nIn Men's Giant Slalom World Cup 2003/04 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Men's Slalom Results\nIn Men's Slalom World Cup 2003/04 the all results count. Rainer Sch\u00f6nfelder won the cup with only one win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women, Race results\nAt the World Cup finals in Sestriere only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women, Women's Downhill Results\nIn Women's Downhill World Cup 2003/04 all results count. Renate G\u00f6tschl won her third Downhill World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women, Women's Super G Results\nIn Women's Super G World Cup 2003/04 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175885-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Women, Women's Giant Slalom Results\nIn Women's Giant Slalom World Cup 2003/04 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175886-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Cross-Country World Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 FIS Cross-Country World Cup was the 23rd official World Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and ladies. The season began in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany on 25 October 2003 and finished in Pragelato, Italy on 14 March 2004. Rene Sommerfeldt of Germany won the overall men's cup, and Gabriella Paruzzi of Italy won the women's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175887-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup\nThe 2003/04 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup was the twenty fifth World Cup season in freestyle skiing organised by International Ski Federation. The season started on 6 September 2003 and ended on 13 March 2004. This season included four disciplines: aerials, moguls, ski cross and halfpipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175887-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup\nIn this season new discipline halfpipe was for the first time introduced in world cup. Dual moguls counted together with moguls rankings and awarded with small crystal globe joined with moguls. Both events in Inawashiro were moguls events although 15 Feb 2004 is wrongly labeled as dual moguls in official fis results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175888-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup\nThe 2003/04 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 21st World Cup season, organized by the International Ski Federation. It started on 29 November 2003 in Kuusamo, Finland and ended on 6 March 2004 in Lahti, Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175889-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nThe 2003/04 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 13th in a row (11th official) Continental Cup winter season and the 2nd summer season in ski jumping for men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175889-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup and Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175889-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup, Europa Cup vs. Continental Cup\nThis was originally last Europa Cup season and is also recognized as the first Continental Cup season by International Ski Federation although under this name began its first official season in 1993/94.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175890-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 25th World Cup season of ski jumping. It began on 28 November 2003 at Ruka in Kuusamo, Finland, and finished on 14 March 2004 at Holmenkollbakken in Oslo, Norway. The defending champion from the previous three seasons was Adam Ma\u0142ysz. The overall World Cup was won by Janne Ahonen, who gained his first title. Roar Lj\u00f8kels\u00f8y placed second, with Bj\u00f8rn Einar Rom\u00f8ren in third. The Nations Cup was won by Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175891-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FK Partizan season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 58th season in FK Partizan's existence. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club played during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175891-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 FK Partizan season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175892-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fencing World Cup\nThe 32nd FIE Fencing World Cup began on October 2002 and concluded on October 2003 at the 2003 World Fencing Championships in Havana, Cuba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175893-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Feyenoord season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Dutch football season, Feyenoord competed in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175893-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Feyenoord season, Season summary\nFeyenoord equaled last's seasons results and finished 3rd, with 12 points less than the previous year. The club made it to the quarter-finals in the domestic KNVB cup, losing to FC Twente. In the UEFA cup they made it to the 2nd round losing to the FK Teplice from Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175893-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Feyenoord season, Kits\nFeyenoord's kits were manufactured by Italian company Kappa and sponsored by insurance company Stad Rotterdam Verzekeringen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175893-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Feyenoord season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175893-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Feyenoord season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175893-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Feyenoord season, Squad, Left club at the end of previous season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175894-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Gambia)\nThe 2003-04 First Division season was the 36th of the amateur competition of the first-tier football in the Gambia. The tournament was organized by the Gambian Football Association (GFA) . The season began on 16 December 2003 and finished on 20 June 2004, this was their next in two years. Wallidan FC won the fourteenth title and finished with 38 points, Wallidan qualified and competed in the 2005 CAF Champions League the following season. As Wallidan won the 2004 Gambian Cup, second placed cup winner Armed Forces FC participated in the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup the following season..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175894-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Gambia)\nArmed Forces FC was the defending team of the title. Wallidan finished with 38 points. Hawks FC scored the most goals and numbered 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175894-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Gambia), Overview\nThe league was contested by 10 teams with Wallidan FC again winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175895-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nThe 2003-04 First Division season was the 26th of the amateur competition of the first-tier football in Guinea-Bissau. The tournament was organized by the Football Federation of Guinea-Bissau. The season began on 27 December 2003 and finished on 17 June 2004, this was their next in two years. SC Bissau won their eleventh title and finished with 39 points and to financial reasons did not qualified and competed in the 2005 CAF Champions League the following season. Mavegro won the 2004 Guinea-Bissau Cup and did not participate in the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup the following season also to financial concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175895-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nOriginally a 22 match season and would be 232 matches, instead as FC Bijagos and UDI Bissau withdrew and were excluded, an 18 match season took place and thus relegated to the second division in the following season. Flamengo Bissau was last place with 13 points and the only club who competed relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175895-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nUDI Bissau was the defending team of the title. SC Bissau finished with 39 points. Atl\u00e9tico Bissor\u00e3 scored the most goals numbering 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175895-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First Division (Guinea-Bissau), Overview\nThe league was contested by 10 teams with SC de Bissau winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175896-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First League of Serbia and Montenegro\nThe 2003\u201304 First League of Serbia and Montenegro was the second and first full season of the Serbia and Montenegro's top-level football league since its establishment. It was contested by 16 teams, and Red Star Belgrade won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175896-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Teams\nRad, \u010cukari\u010dki, Javor Ivanjica, Rudar, Mogren and Radni\u010dki Ni\u0161 were relegated to the 2003\u201304 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175896-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2002\u201303 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro east, west, south and north champions Budu\u0107nost Banatski Dvor, Napredak Kru\u0161evac, Kom and Borac \u010ca\u010dak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175897-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2003\u201304 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina season was the fourth since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175898-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 First League of the Republika Srpska\nThe First League of the Republika Srpska 2003-04 was the 9th since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175899-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Gators men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Florida Gators men's basketball team represented the University of Florida during the 2003\u201304 men's college basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175900-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season\nThe 2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season was their eleventh season in the National Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175900-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175900-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175900-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175900-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season, Playoffs\nThe Panthers failed to qualify for the playoffs for the fourth consecutive season. They last made the playoffs in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175900-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Florida Panthers season, Draft picks\nFlorida's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference\nSince its inception in 1979, The Football Conference has formed the fifth-highest level of the overall English Football League System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference\nThe 2003\u201304 Football Conference season was the 25th season of the Football Conference and the last consisting of a single division. The top team and the winner of the play-offs were promoted to Football League Two, while this season only one team was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference\nA total of 22 teams contest the division, including 17 sides from last season, two relegated from the Football League Two and winners of Northern Premier League, Southern Football League and Isthmian League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nAll teams participating were professional, except for Aldershot Town, who were part-timers. In fact, Aldershot's performance exceeded everyone's expectations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nChester City clinched the league title and won promotion to Football League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nShrewsbury Town also earned promotion to League Two following their 3\u20130 play-off win on penalties after a 1\u20131 draw with Aldershot Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nNo clubs were relegated on the basis of their performances, due to Margate being demoted, Telford folding and the winners and runners-up of the Unibond League not meeting the criteria for a place in the Football Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nShrewsbury Town had the highest attendance, 84,150 in all, with an average of 4,007. Margate and Leigh RMI had the least spectators with 11,905 and 11,881, respectively, with an average of 567 and 566, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nThe total number of attendance was 880,220, yielding an average of 1905 per game, which was the all-time record for the Football Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Overview\nThe regular season began on 9 August 2003, and ended on 24 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Final league table\nNote: Hednesford Town (Southern Football League Premier Division) were the FA Trophy winners", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175901-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football Conference, Play-offs\nThe Conference National play-offs determined the second team that would be promoted to Football League Two. The teams placed second through fifth qualified for the play-offs. The semi-finals were played in a two-leg, home and away format, while the final was played as one leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175902-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Football League (known as the Nationwide Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 105th completed season of The Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175902-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League\nThis was the last season of the Football League with the Nationwide Building Society as title sponsor, and the last in which the divisions were known as the First, Second and Third Divisions: from the following season they would be known as the Championship, League One and League Two respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175902-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League\nNorwich City won the First Division, thus returning to the Premier League for the first time since 1994\u201395. Also promoted to the top flight were West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace. Plymouth Argyle won the Second Division, while Doncaster Rovers won the Third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175902-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League, Final league tables and results\nThe tables below are reproduced here in the exact form that they can be found at website, with home and away statistics separated. Play-off results are from the same website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Football League Cup (known as the Carling Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 44th staging of the Football League Cup, a knockout competition for England's top 92 football clubs. The competition name reflects a sponsorship deal with lager brand Carling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup\nThe competition began in August 2003 and ended with the final on 29 February 2004. The Millennium Stadium in Cardiff hosted the final match, as it had done since 2001 as the reconstruction was still taking place on Wembley Stadium in London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup\nThe winners were Middlesbrough who beat Bolton Wanderers in the final 2-1 and collected their first major piece of silverware in their history and as a result of their victory qualified for European football for the first time. Joseph Desire-Job gave Middlesbrough the lead with just 2 minutes gone and a Bolo Zenden penalty five minutes later doubled their advantage. Kevin Davies pulled a goal back in the 21st minute but Middlesbrough held on. It was to be until 2008 when another English manager won a domestic tournament when Harry Redknapp (then at Portsmouth) lifted the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup, Second round\nThe 36 winners from the First Round joined 16 of the 20 Premier League clubs not participating in the UEFA Champions League in Round Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup, Third round\nManchester United, Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea and Newcastle United joined the 24 winners from the Second Round. Matches were played on the week commencing 27 October 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw for the quarter-finals was made on 6 December 2003. Matches were played in the week beginning 15 December 2003. The only team from outside the Premier League competing in this round was West Bromwich Albion, who lost 2\u20130 to Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup, Semi-finals\nThe semi-final draw was made on 20 December 2003 Unlike the other rounds, the semi-final ties were played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The ties were played in the weeks beginning 19 January and 26 January 2004, however the second leg of Middlesbrough v Arsenal was not played until 3 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175903-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Cup, Final\nThe 2004 Carling Cup Final was played on 24 February 2004 at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff. It was contested by Bolton Wanderers and Middlesbrough. Middlesbrough won the match 2-1 and in doing so collected their first major piece of silverware in their history and qualified for the European football in the UEFA Cup for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175904-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League First Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Football League First Division (referred to as the Nationwide First Division for sponsorship reasons) was the twelfth and final season of the league under the First Division name, and the twelfth season under its current league division format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175905-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Trophy\nThe 2003\u201304 Football League Trophy, known as the LDV Vans Trophy for sponsorship reasons, was the 21st season in the history of the competition. A straight knockout competition for English football clubs in the third and fourth tiers of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175905-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Trophy\nIn all, 60 clubs entered the competition, including twelve from the Conference National. It was split into two sections, Northern and Southern, with the winners of each section contesting the final at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff. The competition began on 13 October 2003 and concluded on 21 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175905-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Trophy\nThe winners were Blackpool, who defeated Southend United 2\u20130 to win the title for a second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175905-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Football League Trophy, First round\nFour clubs received a bye into the Second Round. Bury and Huddersfield Town in the Northern section, and Northampton Town and Swansea City in the Southern section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament\nThe 52nd edition of the annual Four Hills Tournament was held in the traditional venues: Oberstorf and Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Germany, and Innsbruck and Bischofshofen in Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Format\nAt each of the four events, a qualification round was held. The 50 best jumpers qualified for the competition. The fifteen athletes leading the World Cup at the time qualified automatically. In case of an omitted qualification or a result that would normally result in elimination, they would instead qualify as 50th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Format\nUnlike the procedure at normal World Cup events, the 50 qualified athletes were paired up for the first round of the final event, with the winner proceeding to the second round. The rounds start with the duel between #26 and #25 from the qualification round, followed by #27 vs #24, up to #50 vs #1. The five best duel losers, so-called 'Lucky Losers' also proceed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Format\nFor the tournament ranking, the total points earned from each jump are added together. The World Cup points collected during the four events are disregarded in this ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Pre-Tournament World Cup Standings\nAt the time of the tournament, eight out of twenty-eight events were supposed to be completed, but three were cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Participating nations and athletes\nThe number of jumpers a nation was allowed to nominate was dependent on previous results. In Innsbruck and Bischofshofen, the amount of Austrian athletes was doubled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Participating nations and athletes\nThe defending champion was Janne Ahonen. Six other competitors had also previously won the Four Hills tournament: Andreas Goldberger in 1992-93 and 1994-95, Primo\u017e Peterka in 1996-97, Kazuyoshi Funaki in 1997-98, Andreas Widh\u00f6lzl in 1999-00, Adam Ma\u0142ysz in 2000-01 and Sven Hannawald in 2001-02.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Results, Oberstorf\nJumping 133.0 meters, Sigurd Pettersen was already in the lead after the first round. During the rest of the tournament, only Martin H\u00f6llwarth equalled this distance. In the last jump, Pettersen then soared to 143.5 meters, setting a new hill record and securing his victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175906-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Four Hills Tournament, Results, Innsbruck\nAged 24, Slovenian jumper Peter \u017donta celebrated the first and only World Cup victory of his career in Innsbruck. Runners-up Lindstr\u00f6m, for whom two second places were career bests, was denied this honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175907-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe Frauen-Bundesliga 2003\u201304 was the 14th season of the Frauen-Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 17 August 2003 and ended on 13 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175907-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Frauen-Bundesliga\n1. FFC Turbine Potsdam won its first national championship. The deciding match for the season's title happened on the last match day, when leading Potsdam met Frankfurt, who stood unbeaten in place 2. Frankfurt needed a win to surpass Potsdam, but failed to do so, receiving their only defeat that season with a 2\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Fulham's third consecutive season in the top league of English football, the Barclaycard Premiership. The club was managed by former player Chris Coleman, who replaced Jean Tigana at the end of the 2002\u201303 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season\nFulham were near the top of the table after the first few months of the season after a great start to the campaign and consistently remained in the top half throughout the course of the season. They ended up finishing in ninth position, only four points behind fifth-placed Newcastle United. It was a great debut season for Chris Coleman as manager, particularly as the club had to cope for half of the season without top goalscorer, Louis Saha, who left for Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Kit and sponsorship\nFulham's last deal with kit supplier Adidas came to an end on 11 May 2003. It was announced on June that dabs.com would be the kits sponsor in a two-year agreement. On June it was announced the new kit would be produced by Puma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Transfers, Summer, In\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Transfers, Summer, Out\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Transfers, January, In\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175908-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Fulham F.C. season, Transfers, January, Out\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175909-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Galatasaray S.K. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Galatasaray's 100th in existence and the 46th consecutive season in the S\u00fcper Lig. This article shows statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club have played in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175910-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gamma Ethniki\nThe 2003\u201304 Gamma Ethniki was the 21st season since the official establishment of the third tier of Greek football in 1983. Kastoria was crowned champion, thus winning promotion to Beta Ethniki. Larissa also won promotion as a runner-up, and Ilisiakos was also promoted after defeating PAS Giannina 3-1 in a single play-off match at Pyrgos Stadium between the 14th placed team of Beta Ethniki and the 3rd placed team of Gamma Ethniki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175910-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gamma Ethniki\nChalkida, Leonidio, Pontiakos Nea Santa and Kilkisiakos were relegated to Delta Ethniki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175911-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team began their 38th season of collegiate play on November 21, 2003 versus Morehead State University at the Patriot Center in Fairfax, VA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175911-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team, Recruits\nThe following is a list of commitments George Mason has received for the 2004-2005 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I college basketball season. The Hoyas were coached by Craig Esherick and played their home games at the MCI Center in Washington, DC. The Hoyas were members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 13-15, 4-12 in Big East play. They lost to Boston College in the first round of the 2004 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament and had no further postseason play. It was the first time since the 1973-74 season that Georgetown did not receive an invitation to either the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament or the National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nSenior forward and team co-captain Gerald Riley started all 28 games, completing his string of starting all 125 games of his collegiate career. With power forward Mike Sweetney having left the team over the offseason, choosing to forgo his senior year to enter the National Basketball Association Draft, Riley became the team's offensive centerpiece, and he averaged 33 minutes a game for the year. He put in a strong performance early in the season as the team won its first ten games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nSophomore forward Brandon Bowman, meanwhile, also started all 28 games \u2013 as he would all 127 games of his collegiate career \u2013 and averaged 34 minutes per game. He scored in double figures 24 times and led the team in scoring 12 times. He also led the team in rebounding 20 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nSophomore guard Ashanti Cook became a starter this season, starting all 28 games, as he would every game for the rest of his collegiate career. He scored a season-high 18 points against Connecticut and his 106 assists for the year were twice as many as anyone else on the team. He shot 34.4 percent from the field and only 31.9 percent from three-point range, but averaged 9.2 points per game. Junior forward Darrel Owens started the season strong, averaging in double figures in early games and scoring 20 points against Boston College. He also had ten or more rebounds in two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe team opened the season 10-0, including a victory over Rutgers in the Big East opener, but it sorely missed the departed Sweetney and won only three more games as virtually the entire team slumped. Riley excelled in the two victories over Miami, scoring 35 points at Miami and then 37 points against the Hurricanes a week later at the MCI Center, the most points scored by a Georgetown forward in a single game since 1965. In the two Miami games combined, he shot 25-for-32 (78.1%) from the field and a perfect 16-for-16 from the free-throw line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nOtherwise, however, his numbers went into decline as the team's fortunes fell. Owens also saw his performance drop; during Georgetown's season-ending nine-game losing streak, he never scored in double figures and averaged only 4.5 points per game. Among Hoya players, only Bowman did not slump. He led the team in rebounds in 15 of the last 17 games of the year. Though he also struggled at the onset of the nine-game losing streak, he shot 46 percent from the field during the final four games of the season compared to 31 percent for the rest of the team. The team averaged 52 points a game during its last four games, and Bowman was responsible for a third of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nLosing 14 of the final 17 games of the regular season, the team finished the regular season at 13-14 overall and 4-12 in the Big East \u2013 the worst conference record it ever had in the 34-season history of the original Big East Conference \u2013 and tied for 12th place. It went into the 2004 Big East Tournament with an eight-game losing streak and lost in the first round to Boston College. The tournament loss extended the team's losing streak to nine games, tying the school record for the most games lost in a row set by the hapless 3-23 team of 1971-72.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe team's 13-15 final record was the first losing record for a Georgetown team since the 1998-99 team went 15-16 and only the second since the 1972-73 team posted a 12-14 record. With no postseason play, Georgetown missed the NCAA Tournament for the third year in a row and for the sixth time in seven years. Although the 2001-02 team had no postseason play after Esherick declined an invitation to the 2002 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), the 2003-04 team was the first Georgetown squad to receive no invitation to either the NCAA Tournament or the NIT since 1973-74.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Esherick fired\nCraig Esherick \u2013 a former Georgetown player who had served as a Hoyas assistant coach for 17\u00bd seasons before succeeding John Thompson, Jr., as head coach in January 1999 \u2013 had posted a 103-74 (.582) record during his 5\u00bd seasons as head coach. At the end of the 2002-2003 season, Georgetown had extended his contract through 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Esherick fired\nHe indicated to the press late in the 2003-2004 season that his position as head coach was secure, that he had a good recruiting class joining the team for the 2004-2005 season \u2013 it included future stars Jeff Green, Roy Hibbert, and Jonathan Wallace \u2013 and that they should \"stay tuned,\" and Georgetown president John DeGioia gave him a public show of support around the same time. On March 5, 2004, Esherick said, \"I ain't going anywhere \u2013 I may be here for another 30 years.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Esherick fired\nHowever, after only one NCAA Tournament appearance during Esherick\u2032s tenure, three consecutive seasons without an NCAA Tournament appearance, and a sub-.500 performance in 2003-04 that ended with the record-tying losing streak, DeGioia fired Esherick on March 16, 2004, just six days after the end of the season. Assistant coaches Mike Riley, Jaren Jackson, and Chuck Driesell also left the team at the end of the season, Riley after 22 seasons as an assistant coach at Georgetown and the other two after a single season of coaching the Hoyas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175912-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Rankings\nThe team was not ranked in the Top 25 in either the AP Poll or the Coaches' Poll at any time and was never among other teams receiving votes in either poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175913-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets men's basketball team represented Georgia Institute of Technology as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference during the 2003\u201304 season. Led by fourth year head coach Paul Hewitt, the Yellow Jackets made their best finish to date in the NCAA Tournament, battling all the way to the national championship game, where they eventually fell to UConn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175914-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgian Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Georgian Cup (also known as the David Kipiani Cup) was the sixtieth season overall and fourteenth since independence of the Georgian annual football tournament. The competition began on 27 February 2004 and ended with the Final held on 26 May 2004. The defending champions are Dinamo Tbilisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175914-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgian Cup, Round of 32\nThe first legs were played on 27 and 28 February and the second legs were played on 1 and 2 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175914-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgian Cup, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on 6, 7 and 10 March and the second legs were played on 12, 13 and 14 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175914-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgian Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe matches were played on 22 March (first legs) and 6 April 2004 (second legs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175914-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Georgian Cup, Semifinals\nThe matches were played on 20 April (first legs) and 5 May 2004 (second legs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175915-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Getafe CF season\nThe 2003\u201304 season is Getafe CF's 21st season in existence as a football club. In addition to the domestic league, the club also competed in the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175916-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gillingham F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Gillingham F.C. competed in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175916-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gillingham F.C. season, Season summary\nGillingham achieved First Division survival by the narrowest of margins - a goal difference one goal better than 22nd-placed Walsall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175916-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gillingham F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175916-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gillingham F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season\nThe 2003-04 season is the eighth in the history of the Glasgow Warriors as a professional side. During this season the young professional side competed as Glasgow Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season\nThe 2003-04 season saw Glasgow Rugby compete in the competitions: the Celtic League; the European Challenge Cup, the Parker Pen Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons; and the inaugural Celtic Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nChris Birchall Alan Brown Lee Harrison Andrew Kelly Euan Murray Matt Proudfoot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nPaul Dearlove Donnie Macfadyen Cameron Mather Rory McKay Jon Petrie Roland Reid Andrew Wilson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nGraeme Beveridge Richard McKnight Mark McMillan Sam Pinder Kenny Sinclair", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nRory Kerr Sean Lamont Gareth Maclure Glenn Metcalfe Dave Millard Stuart Moffat Jon Steel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad, Academy players\nGlasgow had a number of academy players this season. Each player was teamed with a mentor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad, Back up players\nGlasgow also had a roll of back-up players from various clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Player statistics\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Glasgow have used 36 different players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and points scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 1\nGlasgow:Alan Bulloch, Calvin Howarth, Sean Lamont, Gareth Maclure, Mark McMillan, David Millard, Stuart Moffat, Graeme Morrison, Joe Naufahu, Sam Pinder, Colin Shaw, Kenny Sinclair, Jon Steel, Joe Beardshaw, Alan Brown, Paul Dearlove, Simon Gunn, Andrew Hall, Andrew Kelly, Scott Lawson, Donnie Macfadyen, Cameron Mather, Rory McKay, Eric Milligan, Euan Murray, Matt Proudfoot, Roland Reid, Nathan Ross and Andrew Wilson. Gloucester Rugby:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 2\nGlasgow:Stuart Moffat; Gareth Maclure, Graeme Morrison, Alan Bulloch, Sean Lamont; Calvin Howarth, Sam Pinder; Euan Murray, Simon Gunn, Matt Proudfoot, Andrew Hall, Nathan Ross, Cameron Mather (captain), Donnie Macfadyen, Paul Dearlove. Replacements - Joe Beardshaw, Lee Harrison, Andrew Kelly, Scott Lawson, Rory McKay, David Millard, Roland Reid, Kenny Sinclair, Jon Steel, Andrew Wilson. Newcastle:J Shaw; A Cadwallader, M Shaw, M Mayerhofler, M Stephenson; B Gollings, H Charlton; M Ward, M Thompson, M Hurter, J Parling, C Hamilton, E Taione, W Britz, H Vyvyan. Replacements used: J Grindall, N Makin, T May, I Peel, O Phillips, S Richardson, M Wilkinson, D Wilson, B Woods", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 3\nScotland U21: Brian Archibald (Stirling County); Nick De Luca (Heriot's), Alan Nash (Watsonians), Iain Berthinussen (Gala), Colin Shaw (Glasgow Hawks); Andy McLean (Gala), Brendan McKerchar (Melrose) captain; Robert Blake (Birmingham University), Fergus Thomson (Glasgow Hawks and Scottish Institute of Sport), Willie Aitken (Peebles), Peter Wilmshurst-Smith (Gloucester), Colin White (Stirling County), Alasdair Strokosch (Boroughmuir and Scottish Institute of Sport), Grant Strang (Aberdeen GSFP), Mark Cairns (Loughborough University).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0011-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 3\nReplacements - Calum Brown (Boroughmuir), John Cox (Boroughmuir), Mark Hunter (Stirling County), Stuart Johnson (Melrose), Jonathan White (Heriot's and Scottish Institute of Sport), Neil Cochrane (Watsonians), Richard Snedden (Boroughmuir), Stephen Gordon (Glasgow Hawks and Scottish Institute of Sport), Stephen Jones (Newcastle Falcons)Glasgow: Glenn Metcalfe (captain); David Millard, David Arneil (Heriot's), Joe Naufahu, Rory Couper (Boroughmuir); Colin Gregor (Watsonians), Sam Pinder; Mark Thomson (Kirkcaldy), Simon Gunn, Matt Proudfoot, Fergus Pringle (Hawick), John Stewart (Stirling County), Andrew Wilson, Paul Dearlove, Olly Brown (Boroughmuir). Replacements - Graham Kiddie (Boroughmuir), Alan Bulloch, Kenny Sinclair, Jamie Syme (Heriot's), Roland Reid, Ian Dryburgh (Watsonians), Chris Sinclair (Heriot's), Danny Wright (Watsonians), Jamie Fowlie (Forrester).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 957]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, European Challenge Cup, Results\nGlasgow Warriors lost on aggregate and were knocked out of the Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Magners Celtic League, League Table\nUnder the standard bonus point system, points are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 82], "content_span": [83, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nA player's nationality shown is taken from the nationality at the highest honour for the national side obtained; or if never capped internationally their place of birth. Senior caps take precedence over junior caps or place of birth; junior caps take precedence over place of birth. A player's nationality at debut may be different from the nationality shown. Combination sides like the British and Irish Lions or Pacific Islanders are not national sides, or nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nPlayers in BOLD font have been capped by their senior international XV side as nationality shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nPlayers in Italic font have capped either by their international 7s side; or by the international XV 'A' side as nationality shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nPlayers in normal font have not been capped at senior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175917-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nA position in parentheses indicates that the player debuted as a substitute. A player may have made a prior debut for Glasgow Warriors in a non-competitive match, 'A' match or 7s match; these matches are not listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175918-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Golden State Warriors season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Warriors' 58th season in the National Basketball Association, and 42nd season in the San Francisco Bay Area. During the offseason, the Warriors acquired Nick Van Exel from the Dallas Mavericks, and Clifford Robinson from the Detroit Pistons while signing free agents Calbert Cheaney and Speedy Claxton. The Warriors began to show they were turning the corner as they got off to a 14\u201313 start. However, as the New Year began, they went on a 7-game losing streak. Despite a nine-game losing streak between February and March, the Warriors would then win seven straight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175918-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Golden State Warriors season\nHowever, they yet again missed the playoffs by finishing fifth in the Pacific Division with a 37\u201345 record. Despite their record, the Warriors were very successful at home posting a 27\u201314 record at The Arena in Oakland. Following the season, head coach Eric Musselman was fired, Van Exel was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers, and Erick Dampier was traded to the Dallas Mavericks as the Warriors were unable to re-sign him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175919-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Gonzaga University in the NCAA men's Division I competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175920-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe 2003\u201304 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final was an elite figure skating competition held at the World Arena in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States from December 11 to 14, 2003. Medals were awarded in men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175920-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe Grand Prix Final was the culminating event of the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating series, which consisted of Skate America, Skate Canada International, Cup of China, Troph\u00e9e \u00c9ric Bompard, Cup of Russia, and NHK Trophy competitions. The top six skaters from each discipline competed in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175921-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Greek Basket League\nThe 2003\u201304 Greek Basket League season was the 64th season of the Greek Basket League, the highest tier professional basketball league in Greece. It was also the 12th season of Greek Basket League championship that was regulated by HEBA (ESAKE). The winner of the league was Panathinaikos, which beat Maroussi in the league's playoff's finals series. The clubs Irakleio and Ilysiakos were relegated to the Greek A2 League, along with Peristeri, which was relegated because it faced financial problems. The top scorer of the league was Nestoras Kommatos, a player of Aris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175922-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Greek Football Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Greek Football Cup was the 62nd edition of the Greek Football Cup. That season's edition was entitled \"Vodafone Greek Cup\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175923-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Grenoble Foot 38 season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 112th season in the existence of Grenoble Foot 38 and the club's third consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Grenoble Foot 38 participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175924-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Squad overview\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season\nThe 2003\u201304 season, was the Guildford Flames' twelfth year of ice hockey. The Guildford Flames competed in the British National League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season\nCoach Stan Marple brought in six Slovaks who would help the Flames to their most successful British National League season for three years. Milos Melicherik, Rastislav Palov and Jozef Kohut were the forwards, with Marian Smerciak and Peter Michnac on defence. Completing the Slovak crew later on was Edinburgh Capitals' leading scorer, Peter Konder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season\nApart from Paul Dixon, Tony Redmond and Rick Plant, Marple made a clean sweep of his squad. In came Canadian forwards Ryan Vince from the ECHL's Dayton Bombers and Domenic Parlatore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season\nRounding out the club were three GB internationals: netminder Stevie Lyle, defenceman Neil Liddiard and forward Nick Cross from Basingstoke Bison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season, Schedule and results, British National League play-offs\nThe top six league clubs competed in the playoffs in a double round-robin tournament played over three weeks after the end of the regular league season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season, Schedule and results, British National League play-offs\nThe top four teams after the first round progressed into the semi-finals with the first-placed team playing the fourth and the second against the third, home and away, with the teams finishing first and second in the round-robin stage having a choice of the home date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season, Schedule and results, British National League play-offs\nThe final was also played over home and away legs, the team finishing highest in the league receiving the choice of the home date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season, Schedule and results, British National League play-offs\nThe playoff winner received the John Brady Bowl, named in memory of the former manager of Kirkcaldy ice rink who was influential in creating the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175925-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Guildford Flames season, Schedule and results, Findus Cup\nAll British National League teams were eligible to compete in the qualifying round of the competition. After each team played each other home and away, the top four teams were drawn into the semi-finals, which were played over two legs. The final and third place playoff were one-game contests played at the Newcastle Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175926-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 HNK Hajduk Split season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 93rd season in Hajduk Split\u2019s history and their 13th in the Prva HNL. Their second place finish in the 2002\u201303 season meant it was their 13th successive season playing in the Prva HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175926-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 HNK Hajduk Split season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175926-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 HNK Hajduk Split season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175927-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 HNK Rijeka season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 58th season in Rijeka's history. It was their 13th season in the Prva HNL and 30th successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175927-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 HNK Rijeka season, Matches, Squad statistics\nCompetitive matches only. Appearances in brackets indicate numbers of times the player came on as a substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175928-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hartlepool United F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season wass Hartlepool United's 95th year in existence and their first season in Football League Second Division since 1993\u201394. Along with competing in the Football League Second Division, the club also participated in the FA Cup, League Cup and League Trophy. The season covered the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175928-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hartlepool United F.C. season, Players, Current squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175929-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey season\nThe 2003-04 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey team played in the NCAA championship game. The Crimson had 30 wins, compared to 4 losses and 1 tie for its second straight 30-win season. Nicole Corriero tied former Crimson player Jennifer Botterill\u2019s record for most points in one NCAA game with ten. She accomplished the feat on November 7, 2003 versus the Union Dutchwomen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175929-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey season, Player stats\nNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; PTS = Points; GW = Game Winning Goals; PPL = Power Play Goals; SHG = Short Handed Goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175930-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hazfi Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Hazfi Cup was the 17th season of the Iranian football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175931-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 107th season of competitive football by Heart of Midlothian, and their 21st consecutive season in the top level of Scottish football, competing in the Scottish Premier League. Hearts also competed in the UEFA Cup, Scottish Cup, League Cup and the Festival Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175932-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Heineken Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Heineken Cup was the ninth season for which European teams competed for the Heineken Cup. Competing teams, from England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales, were divided into six pools of four, in which teams played home and away matches against each other. The winners of the pools, together with the two best runners-up, qualified for the knock-out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175932-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Heineken Cup\nThis was the first competition in the series to employ the bonus point system for classifying teams. In prior competitions, teams earned two points for a win and one for a draw. Starting with the 2003-04 competition, teams earned points in the pool matches under the following scenarios:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175934-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hellenic Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Hellenic Football League season was the 51st in the history of the Hellenic Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175934-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hellenic Football League, Premier Division\nPremier Division featured 19 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175934-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hellenic Football League, Division One East\nDivision One East featured 14 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175934-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hellenic Football League, Division One West\nDivision One West featured 17 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with one new club:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175935-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hertha BSC season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Hertha BSC competed in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175935-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hertha BSC season, Season summary\nAfter five seasons of finishing in the European places, Hertha slumped to 12th, seven points clear of relegation. Manager Huub Stevens had paid for the poor form with his job in December, and his replacement Hans Meyer failed to continue Hertha's streak of European qualification. Meyer left at the end of the season, with Falko G\u00f6tz - a former Hertha BSC II manager and Hertha caretaker manager - appointed as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175935-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hertha BSC season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175935-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hertha BSC season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175935-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hertha BSC season, Players, Hertha BSC II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175935-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hertha BSC season, Transfers, Out\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175936-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hibernian F.C. season\nSeason 2003\u201304 was a disappointment for Hibernian, as the team again finished in the bottom half of the Scottish Premier League, and was knocked out at the first stage of the Scottish Cup. The main highlight of the season was the run to the 2004 Scottish League Cup Final, which Hibs reached by defeating both halves of the Old Firm. This also ended in disappointment, however, as the Final was lost 2\u20130 to Livingston. A month after that defeat, manager Bobby Williamson was allowed to leave the club to manage Plymouth Argyle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175936-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hibernian F.C. season, League season\nWith the Hibs squad \"stretched to its limits\" by injuries to Ian Murray, Grant Brebner, Stephen Glass and Yannick Zambernardi, Hibs again struggled in the league. Financial problems meant that the club had sold or released many of its senior players during Bobby Williamson's time in charge, and even Williamson's own long term contract was renegotiated to a shorter term and lower salary. The Hibs board were also apparently willing to allow Plymouth Argyle to take Williamson when made an approach in April 2004. Williamson's assistants, Gerry McCabe and Jim Clark, took charge of the team for the remainder of the season, with Tony Mowbray appointed soon after its conclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175936-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish League Cup\nAs one of the SPL clubs who had not automatically qualified for European competition, Hibs entered at the last 32 stage (second round) of the competition, in which they defeated Montrose 9\u20130 at Easter Road. Hibs were then given another home draw in the last 16, against Queen of the South, which Hibs won 2\u20131. In the quarter-final, Hibs were again drawn to play at home, but this time had to face league leaders Celtic. Despite falling behind early in the second half, Hibs won 2\u20131 thanks to a late goal by Kevin Thomson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175936-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish League Cup\nHibs were then given another tough draw for the semi-final, playing the other half of the Old Firm, Rangers. Nonetheless, Hibs won the tie 4\u20133 on penalties, with Frank de Boer's miss sending Hibs through. These two upset victories sent Hibs to the Final, where they met Livingston. Hibs sold a remarkable 37,000 tickets for the game, suggesting that the club still had the drawing power to be a major force in Scottish football. The match ended in major disappointment, however, as Livingston won 2\u20130 to lift the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175936-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hibernian F.C. season, Player stats\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Hibs used 27 different players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player. Goalkeeper Daniel Andersson was the only player to appear in every match, playing in 38 SPL matches, five League Cup ties and the one Scottish Cup tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175937-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Highland Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Highland Football League was won by Clachnacuddin. Fort William finished bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175938-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional\nThe 2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional was the 36th edition of the Honduran Liga Nacional. The season was divided into two tournaments, Apertura and Clausura, being conquered by Real C.D. Espa\u00f1a and Club Deportivo Olimpia respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175938-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional, Apertura\nThe Apertura tournament was played from August to December 2003; Club Deportivo Olimpia and Real C.D. Espa\u00f1a qualified to the Final after they eliminated C.D. Marath\u00f3n and C.D.S. Vida in the semifinals; once there, Real Espa\u00f1a obtained its 8th title under the management of Juan de Dios Castillo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175938-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional, Clausura\nOn the Clausura tournament, C.D. Olimpia won its 17th domestic league by beating C.D. Marath\u00f3n in the finals; Real Patepluma withdrew before the start of the regular season and were mathematically relegated to the Liga de Ascenso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175938-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional, Relegation\nRelegation was determined by the aggregated table of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments, the teams with less points at the end would be relegated to the Liga de Ascenso; however, Real Patepluma withdrew from the Clausura tournament due to a financial crisis and were automatically relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175939-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso\nThe 2003\u201304 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso was the 37th season of the Second level in Honduran football and the second one under the name Liga Nacional de Ascenso. Under the management of Carlos Padilla, F.C. Municipal Valencia won the tournament after defeating Hispano in the final series and obtained promotion to the 2004\u201305 Honduran Liga Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175940-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hong Kong FA Cup\n2003\u201304 Hong Kong FA Cup was the 30th staging of the Hong Kong FA Cup. The cup was won by Happy Valley who won 3-1 against Kitchee in the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175940-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe competition started on 27 April 2004 with 10 Hong Kong First Division clubs. Four of them took part in the first round to determine which team advanced to the quarter finals. From quarter finals onward, the cup competition was a single-elimination tournament. Although all the matches before the final was held at the Mongkok Stadium, the final was staged at the Hong Kong Stadium on 9 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175940-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe competition was officially known as 2003/04 HKFA Dongguan Centurycity Real Estate FA Cup due to sponsorship from Dongguan Centurycity Real Estate Development Limited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175941-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hong Kong First Division League\nThe 2003\u201304 Hong Kong First Division League season was the 92nd since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175942-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hong Kong League Cup\nHong Kong League Cup 2003\u201304 is the 4th staging of the Hong Kong League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175942-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hong Kong League Cup\nThe 10 teams from Hong Kong First Division League were divided into 2 groups. The top 2 teams in the groups entered the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175943-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Houston Rockets season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Rockets' 37th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 33rd season in the city of Houston. The season saw the Rockets move their home games from Compaq Center to the new Toyota Center. During the offseason, the Rockets hired head coach Jeff Van Gundy, who is best known for his tenure with the New York Knicks, and signed free agent Jim Jackson. Midway through the season, they signed free agent point guard Mark Jackson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175943-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Houston Rockets season\nThe Rockets finished fifth in the Midwest Division with a 45\u201337 record, and qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 1999 as the number 7 seed in the Western Conference. Second-year star Yao Ming and Steve Francis were both selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. However, the Rockets were eliminated from the first round of the playoffs by the Los Angeles Lakers, who added Karl Malone and Gary Payton to join Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, in five games. This also marked Francis' only playoff appearance in his career. Following the season, he was traded along with Cuttino Mobley and Kelvin Cato to the Orlando Magic, and Mark Jackson retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175943-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Houston Rockets season\nFor the season, the team sported new uniforms and a new logo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nHuddersfield Town's 2003\u201304 campaign was their first competitive campaign in the bottom division since the 1979\u201380 season. Huddersfield secured a return to the third tier (to be then called Football League One), at the first attempt, by beating Mansfield Town, on penalties, in the Playoff Final on 31 May 2004 at the Millennium Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Squad at the start of the season\nThe squad at the start of the season was mainly depleted. When Peter Jackson took over in late June 2003, there were only 8 players on the official list of registered players, because of the mass clear-out caused by Town going into administration the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Squad at the start of the season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nPeter Jackson began his second spell as Huddersfield manager in the summer of 2003 as the Terriers came out of administration under the new ownership of Ken Davy. He again wasted no time in installing Yorath as his assistant. With only eight players turning up to his first training session, and star player Martin Smith defecting to Northampton Town, many supporters would have been happy to see the side consolidate and not slip any further down the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nBut some shrewd signings (including Rob Edwards, Tony Carss, Efe Sodje, Steve Yates and goalkeeper Ian Gray), the emergence of a talented group of youngsters, and the prolific form of the previously ineffective Jon Stead made Town among the early pace-setters for the Division. As winter approached, Jackson's young side became more inconsistent and seemed to be fading but a change of formation tightened up the defence. Goalkeeper Paul Rachubka was brought in as the side found a new resilience and the ability to grind out narrow victories. Stead's form saw an offer from Sunderland, that was rejected, but he was snapped up by Premiership Blackburn Rovers for around \u00a31.2\u00a0million in January and was replaced by Polish U21 striker Pawel Abbott who had been unable to establish himself at Preston North End.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nIt took Huddersfield until the end of August to register their first league win of the season in Division 3 (a 2\u20131 win against Bristol Rovers at the McAlpine Stadium), but they managed to knock out Division 1 side Derby County in the first round of the League Cup and then amazingly beat Sunderland 4\u20132 in the second round at the Stadium of Light.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nThey then went on a 4-game winning streak, before hitting a bad patch, when they won only one game in 7, including losing in all three cup competitions (1\u20130 to Reading in the League Cup, 2\u20130 to Carlisle United in the Football League Trophy & 1\u20130 to Accrington Stanley in the FA Cup live on BBC One). Then after beating leaders Hull City 3\u20131, they went on a good run which came to a dramatic halt when they lost 4\u20130 to Macclesfield Town at Moss Rose. They then went on another good run throughout January 2004, but then they lost their talisman Jon Stead, who was sold to Premier League side Blackburn Rovers for \u00a31.3\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nWith only Andy Booth as a proper striker, Town loaned Preston North End striker Pawel Abbott, who scored 4 goals in his 6 games, they then signed him on a permanent deal for \u00a3125,000 and Huddersfield continued their climb up the table and with only 2 games to go, Huddersfield only needed to win one of their last team games to virtually guarantee automatic promotion to Division 2. But on 1 May, they lost their final home game to Mansfield Town 3\u20131, meaning they had to beat Cheltenham Town at Whaddon Road to ensure automatic promotion ahead of Torquay United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0005-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nAt half-time, all was going well, Huddersfield were 1\u20130 up thanks to Andy Booth's 100th goal for the club. But then disaster struck when Abbott received the ball just inside his own half and, inexplicably, ran back towards Town's goal and horrendously under hit a backpass that allowed the Robins to equalise with just 15 minutes of the game left. This, together with Torquay's win at Southend United, condemned the Terriers to a Play-Off spot, by virtue of an inferior goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nThe Play-off semi-final saw Town escape two bruising encounters with Lincoln City with goals from Danny Schofield and Rob Edwards staving off a spirited Lincoln fightback in the second leg, so Town went through 4\u20133 on aggregate. In the final at the Cardiff's Millennium Stadium, Town rode their luck against a Mansfield Town side who had hit three in each league meeting of the sides. Just before the end of normal time the Stags netted but the linesman controversially ruled that the initiating cross had gone out over the by-line. A penalty shoot-out then followed, which Town won 4\u20131, saw Town home and out of Division Three at the first attempt, securing their place in the newly named Football League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175944-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Squad at the end of the season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175945-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hull City A.F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Hull City compete in the Football League Third Division where they finished in 2nd position with 88 points, gaining automatic promotion to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season is Hyderabad cricket team's 70th competitive season. The Hyderabad cricket team is senior men's domestic cricket team based in the city of Hyderabad, India, run by the Hyderabad Cricket Association. They represent the region of Telangana in the state of Andhra Pradesh in domestic competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nLaxman and Rayudu got picked to the India Seniors squad for the 2003-04 NKP Salve Challenger Trophy, a List-A cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nLaxman got selected to the Rest of India squad for the 2003 Irani Cup, a first-class cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nArjun, Vishnuvardhan and Khaleel got selected to the South Zone squad for the 2003-04 Deodhar Trophy, a List-A cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nKhaleel got selected to the South Zone squad for the 2003-04 Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji Trophy\nThe Hyderabad team, led by Venkatapathy Raju, began their campaign in the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India, with a win against the Gujarat at Ahmedabad on 7 November 2003. They finished inside top-2 in Group B of the Elite League to advance to the Elite semi-final with three wins, a loss and two draws. They were eliminated in the semi-final where the Mumbai defeated the Hyderabad by an innings and 152 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nThe Hyderabad team, led by Venkatapathy Raju, began their campaign in the Subbaiah Pillai Trophy as part of the South Zone Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy, a List-A cricket tournament in India, with a loss against the Karnataka at Chennai on 7 January 2004. The five-wickets shared between Dodda Ganesh and Sunil Joshi helped the Karnataka restrict the Hyderabad to 155 while the half-centuries from J. Arunkumar and Joshi completed the chase for the Karnataka with seven wickets to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nIn the second match, the half-centuries from Daniel Manohar and Anirudh Singh gave a strong start to the Hyderabad but the middle-order collapse by Renjith Kumar and the run-outs in the end restricted the Hyderabad total to 237 while the Kerala with the help of the half-centuries from Anish Antony and Hemanth Kumar completed the chase in the penultimate ball with three wickets to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0006-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nThe half-centuries from Devishetty Vinay Kumar and Sankinani Vishnuvardhan helped the Hyderabad post 268 while the three-wicket hauls from Inder Shekar Reddy and Tirumalasetti Suman helped them win against the Goa by 101 runs in their third match. In the fourth match, the half-century from Subramaniam Badrinath along with the support from Sadagoppan Ramesh and Jayaraman Madanagopal helped the Tamil Nadu post 249.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0006-0003", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nThe Hyderabad started the chase strongly with the half-centuries from Shashank Nag and Ibrahim Khaleel along with the support from Manohar but five run-outs at the end resulted in the Hyderabad fall short by 2 runs as they were bowled out for 247. In the final zonal match, the five-wicket haul from Mohammad Ghouse Baba helped the Hyderabad restrict the Andhra to 230 despite the century from Yalaka Venugopal Rao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175946-0006-0004", "contents": "2003\u201304 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nIn reply, the Hyderabad had a big opening partnership from Manohar and Suman but the middle order collapse and tight bowling by the Andhra left the Hyderabad fall short by 8 runs. This loss resulted the Hyderabad finish fourth in South Zone and fail to qualify for the Ranji ODI Championship with a win and four losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175947-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe Continental Cup 2003\u201304 was the seventh edition of the IIHF Continental Cup. The season started on September 26, 2003, and finished on January 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175947-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe tournament was won by HC Slovan Bratislava, who beat HK Gomel in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175947-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 IIHF Continental Cup, First Group Stage, Group I standings\nV\u00e5lerenga, Herning Blue Fox, Keramin Minsk, EHC Black Wings Linz : bye", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175947-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 IIHF Continental Cup, Second Group Stage, Group K standings\nHK Gomel, HC Lugano, HC Slovan Bratislava, Severstal Cherepovets : bye", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 67], "content_span": [68, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175948-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU Junior Grand Prix\nThe 2003\u201304 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the seventh season of the ISU Junior Grand Prix, a series of international junior level competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the Grand Prix of Figure Skating, which was for senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The top skaters from the series met at the Junior Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175948-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Competitions\nThe locations of the JGP events change yearly. In the 2003\u201304 season, the series was composed of the following events:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175948-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualifiers\nThe following skaters qualified for the 2003\u201304 Junior Grand Prix Final, in order of qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175948-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualifiers\nLina Johansson of Sweden was the second qualifier in the ladies' event, and so Sweden did not have a host wildcard entry to the Junior Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175949-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU World Standings\nThe 2003\u201304 ISU World Standings, are the World Standings published by the International Skating Union (ISU) during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175949-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU World Standings\nThe 2003\u201304 ISU World Standings for single & pair skating and ice dance, are taking into account results of the 2001\u201302, 2002\u201303 and 2003\u201304 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175949-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ISU World Standings, World Standings for single & pair skating and ice dance, Season-end standings\nThe remainder of this section is a list, by discipline, published by the ISU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 106], "content_span": [107, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175950-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Icelandic Hockey League season\nThe 2003-04 Icelandic Hockey League season was the 13th season of the Icelandic Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Iceland. Three teams participated in the league, and Skautafelag Akureyrar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175951-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team represented the University of Idaho during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Members of the Big West Conference, the Vandals were led by third-year head coach Leonard Perry and played their home games on campus at Cowan Spectrum in Moscow, Idaho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175951-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThe Vandals were 13\u201315 overall in the regular season and 9\u20139 in conference play, fourth in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175951-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nIdaho met fifth seed UC Riverside in the quarterfinal of the conference tournament in Anaheim and defeated the Highlanders for their first-ever victory in the Big West tourney. The following night in the semifinal, they lost to second-seed Pacific by six points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175952-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team represented University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the 2003-04 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Bruce Weber's first season at Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175952-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season\nBill Self left the Fighting Illini in March, 2003 to take over as coach at Kansas, paving the way for Bruce Weber to be named the 16th Illinois head coach on April 30, 2003. Weber arrived in Champaign after directing the Southern Illinois Salukis for five seasons. Weber\u2019s inaugural season directing the Orange and Blue was a success, as he became just the third coach in Big Ten history to win an outright conference championship in his first season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175952-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season\nThe Illini had to win its final 10 games of the regular season to clinch sole possession of the title, with six of those wins coming away from the Assembly Hall. Weber also guided Illinois to its first NCAA Tournament victory over a higher seeded team, when the No. 5 Illini defeated No. 4 Cincinnati in the second round of the tournament. The Illini finished the year with a record of 26-7 and advanced to the NCAA Sweet Sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175953-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team represented Illinois State University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redbirds, led by first year head coach Porter Moser, played their home games at Redbird Arena and competed as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175953-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team\nThey finished the season 10\u201319, 4\u201314 in conference play to finish in tenth place. They were the number ten seed for the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament. They were victorious over Bradley University in their opening round game but were defeated by the University of Northern Iowa in their quarterfinal game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175954-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team represented Indiana University in the 2003\u201304 college basketball season. Their head coach was Mike Davis, who was in his fourth season. The team played its home games at Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana, and was a member of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175954-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nIndiana finished the season with an overall record of 14\u201315 and a conference record of 7\u20139, finishing 8th place in the Big Ten Conference. Due to finishing under .500, the Hoosiers were not invited to play in any post-season tournament. This season marked the first time since 1970 Indiana would finish with a losing record and the first time since 1985 they failed to make the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175955-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Indiana Pacers season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Pacers' 28th season in the National Basketball Association, and 37th season as a franchise. During the offseason, former Pacers head coach Larry Bird was named President of Basketball Operations. One of Bird's first moves in his new position was to fire head coach Isiah Thomas, after Thomas had led the Pacers to first-round playoff exits for three consecutive years. The defensive-minded Rick Carlisle, former head coach of the Detroit Pistons, was announced as Thomas' replacement. Also during the offseason, the Pacers acquired Scot Pollard from the Sacramento Kings in a three-team trade and signed free agent Kenny Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175955-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Indiana Pacers season\nThe Pacers got off to a fast start winning 14 of their first 16 games, and finished the season with a record of 61\u201321, which was worthy of the Eastern Conference first seed in the playoffs, guaranteed home-court advantage throughout the playoffs for the first time since 2000, and a new all-time franchise-best win-loss record. Jermaine O'Neal was named to the All-NBA Second Team, the first Pacer ever to do so, and even finished third in the MVP voting, which was the highest in the voting any Pacers player had ever reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175955-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Indiana Pacers season\nRon Artest was named to the NBA All-Defensive First Team, and also was named Defensive Player of the Year, the first Pacer ever to receive this award. Both O'Neal and Artest were selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game, with Carlisle coaching the Eastern Conference. Second-year guard Fred Jones won the Slam Dunk Contest during the All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175955-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Indiana Pacers season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Pacers swept the 8th-seeded Boston Celtics 4\u20130. They proceeded to defeat the 4th-seeded Miami Heat 4\u20132 in the second round, earning the Pacers their sixth spot in the Eastern Conference Finals in 11 years. The Pacers fell 2\u20134 in the Eastern Conference Finals to the eventual NBA champions, the 3rd-seeded Detroit Pistons, who were coached by former Pacers coach Larry Brown. Following the season, Al Harrington was traded to the Atlanta Hawks, while Anderson went along with him signing as a free agent with the Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175956-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Inter Milan season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Football Club Internazionale Milano's 95th in existence and 88th consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175956-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nThe 2003\u201304 season started with a lot of issues: despite assembling an expensive squad, Inter got poor results in the domestic league (two wins, three draws and a loss in derby) and H\u00e9ctor C\u00faper was sacked. In order to replace him, Alberto Zaccheroni was appointed coach before eventually finishing fourth in the league. Inter's campaign in the Champions League, however, resulted in failure: they didn't manage to get past the group stage, despite a historical win over Arsenal (0-3 in Highbury).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175956-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nIn January 2004, Massimo Moratti decided to leave his position of chairman, to be replaced by former player Giacinto Facchetti, who remains as chairman until his death on 4 September 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175956-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Inter Milan season, Players, Squad information, From youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175957-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Interliga season\nThe 2003\u201304 Interliga season was the fifth season of the multi-national ice hockey league. Nine teams participated in the league, and Podhale Nowy Targ from Poland have won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175958-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season\nInverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. in their tenth season in the Scottish Football League competed in the Scottish First Division, Scottish League Cup, Scottish Challenge Cup and the Scottish Cup in season 2003\u201304. They won their first major trophy when they won the Challenge Cup beating Airdrie United in the final 2\u20130 with goals from Steve Hislop and David Bingham, and at the end of the season, they won the First Division Championship and securing promotion to the Scottish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175958-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season\nHowever, SPL rules at that time stated that all member clubs must have a stadium with a minimum capacity of 10,000 seats. Caledonian Stadium did not and this left the club's board with a dilemma: either to stay in the First Division like Falkirk the previous season or to groundshare with Aberdeen's Pittodrie Stadium, over 100 miles (160\u00a0km) away. After consulting with supporters, the board decided the sacrifice of one season in Aberdeen would be worthwhile for Premier League football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175959-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team represented the University of Iowa as members of the Big Ten Conference during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by fifth-year head coach Steve Alford and played their home games at Carver\u2013Hawkeye Arena. They finished the season 16\u201313 overall and 9\u20137 in Big Ten play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175960-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team represents Iowa State University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cyclones were coached by Wayne Morgan, who was in his 1st season. They played their home games at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa, and competed in the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175960-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cyclones finished 17\u201314, 5\u201311 in Big 12 play to finish 9th the regular season conference standings. They lost to Kansas in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NIT Tournament where they defeated Wichita State and lost to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175960-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 28, 2003, The Des Moines Register published pictures of head coach Larry Eustachy kissing several young women and holding a beer at a party near the University of Missouri's campus just hours after the Tigers defeated the Cyclones on January 22. The Register also reported that Eustachy had been seen at a fraternity party at Kansas State hours after his team lost to the Wildcats. During the scandal, the Register reported that Iowa State documents showed that the NCAA cited Eustachy for rules violations related to paying players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175960-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nOn April 30, 2003, athletic director Bruce Van De Velde suspended Eustachy with pay and recommended that he be fired for violating a morals clause in his contract. Eustachy held a press conference in which he apologized for his behavior and admitted he had recently begun rehab treatment for alcoholism. Eustachy initially indicated he would contest the suspension. Instead, on May 5, he announced his resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175960-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nIn the wake of the scandal assistant coach Wayne Morgan was promoted to replace Eustachy as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175961-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ipswich Town F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Ipswich Town competed in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175961-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Season summary\nIpswich Town, in their second consecutive season in English football's second tier, finished the campaign in fifth place. Having scored 84 goals, Town suffered from their poor defensive record: with 72 goals conceded, Town had the third worst defensive record in the whole division, and the worst of the top 18 teams. Town won the first leg of their play-off, against fourth-placed West Ham United, with a goal from teenage striker Darren Bent (who scored 15 goals in the league alone), but lost the second leg 2\u20130, condemning Town to another season in the new championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175961-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175961-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175961-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175961-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Pre-season\nIpswich's pre-season preparations for the 2003\u201304 season included a pre-season tour of Scandinavia in July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175962-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iran 2nd Division\nThe following is the standings of the Iran Football's 2nd Division 2003-04 football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175963-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iran Pro League\nThe following is the standings of the Persian Gulf Cup's 2003/04 football season. This season will be the 3rd season since the establishment of the Iran Pro League (Persian Gulf Cup). Pas Tehran F.C. were defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175964-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iranian Basketball Super League\nThe following is the final results of the Iran Super League 2003/04 basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175965-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iranian Futsal Super League\nThe 2003\u201304 Iranian Futsal Super League will be the first season of the Futsal Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175966-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iranian Volleyball Super League\nThe following is the final results of the Iranian Volleyball Super League (Velayat Cup) 2003/04 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175967-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iraqi Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Iraqi Premier League kicked off on January 8, 2004. The name of the league was changed from Iraqi First Division to Iraqi Premier League. Due to security issues and scheduling difficulties, the season was officially cancelled in June 2004 during the opening group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175967-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iraqi Premier League\nThe top four teams from each group were meant to advance to the elite stage, which would be followed by semi-finals, a third place match and a final, with the champions and runners-up qualifying for the 2005 AFC Champions League and the third and fourth-placed teams qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Arab Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175967-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iraqi Premier League\nAs this was not able to happen, the Iraq Football Association (IFA) decided that a play-off would be held between the top four teams from the Central Groups to decide which two sides would qualify for the AFC Champions League, on the assumption that the leaders of the North and South Groups at the time of cancellation (Erbil and Al-Najaf) would be able to take part in the Arab Champions League along with Al-Talaba, who were specially invited to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175967-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iraqi Premier League\nAl-Shorta and Al-Zawraa were the teams to qualify to the AFC Champions League, but no teams were admitted to the Arab Champions League after Iraq withdrew from the tournament following UAFA's decision to only let them have one participant in Al-Talaba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175967-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Iraqi Premier League, Continental play-off\nAl-Shorta won 4\u20133 on aggregate and qualified for the 2005 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175968-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Irish Cup was the 124th edition of Northern Ireland's premier football knock-out cup competition. It concluded on 1 May 2004 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175968-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish Cup\nColeraine were the defending champions, winning their 5th Irish Cup last season after a 1\u20130 win over Glentoran in the 2003 final. This season the same two clubs reached the final again. A 1\u20130 victory for Glentoran, who were appearing in the final for the sixth time in nine years was enough to seal their 20th Irish Cup win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175969-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish League Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Irish League Cup (known as the CIS Insurance Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 18th edition of Northern Ireland's secondary football knock-out cup competition. It concluded on 11 November 2003 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175969-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish League Cup\nGlentoran were the defending champions after their fourth League Cup win last season; a 2\u20130 victory over Linfield in the previous final. This season the Glens reached the semi-finals but were later disqualified from the competition for fielding an ineligible player in an earlier match. As a result, Larne were given a walkover into the final where they were defeated on penalties by Cliftonville, who won the Cup for the first time. This was Cliftonville's second appearance in the final, and first since the 1994\u201395 final. It was also the first final in eight years not to feature either Linfield or Glentoran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175969-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish League Cup\nAs a result of a restructuring of the league system, the number of clubs eligible to take part in the competition this season was reduced to 16. The 16 clubs taking part were divided into four groups of four clubs. The clubs in each group played each other at home and away. The top two clubs from each group then advanced to the quarter-finals where they played a single knock-out tie against another quarter-finalist. The semi-finals were played in the same format with the two winners of the ties advancing to the single match final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175969-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish League Cup, Semi-finals\n1 Glentoran were disqualified for fielding an ineligible player. Larne received a walkover into the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175970-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish Premier League\nThe Irish Premier League in season 2003\u201304 comprised 16 teams, and Linfield won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175970-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish Premier League, Results\nEach team played every other team twice (home and away) for a total of 30 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175970-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Irish Premier League, Promotion/relegation play-off\nCliftonville, the club that finished in the relegation play-off place, faced Armagh City, the runners-up of the 2003-04 Intermediate League First Division in a two-legged tie for a place in next season's Irish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175971-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israel State Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Israel State Cup (Hebrew: \u05d2\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d4\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4\u200e, Gvia HaMedina) was the 65th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the 50th after the Israeli Declaration of Independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175971-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israel State Cup\nThe competition was won by Bnei Sakhnin who had beaten Hapoel Haifa 4\u20131 in the final. This is the first time the cup was won by a club from an Israeli Arab town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175971-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israel State Cup\nBy winning, Bnei Sakhnin qualified to the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, entering in the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175972-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Israeli Hockey League season was the 13th season of Israel's hockey league. HC Maccabi Amos Lod won their third league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175973-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Noar Leumit League\nThe 2003\u201304 Israeli Noar Leumit League was the 10th season since its introduction in 1994 as the top-tier football in Israel for teenagers between the ages 18\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175973-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Noar Leumit League\nMaccabi Haifa won the title, whilst Hapoel Be'er Sheva and Gadna Yehuda were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175974-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League season was held between 13 September 2003 and 22 May 2004. For the first time, there were two Israeli Arab clubs in the top division; Maccabi Ahi Nazareth and Bnei Sakhnin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175974-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League\nMaccabi Haifa won the title, whilst Nazareth and Maccabi Netanya were relegated. Bnei Sakhnin (who qualified for Europe by winning the State Cup) became the first Arab club to spend more than a single season in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175974-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nTwelve teams took part in the 2003-04 Israeli Premier League season, including ten teams from the 2002-03 season, as well as two teams which were promoted from the 2002-03 Liga Leumit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175974-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nMaccabi Ahi Nazareth were promoted as champions of the 2002-03 Liga Leumit. Bnei Sakhnin were promoted as runners up. Both Maccabi Ahi Nazareth and Bnei Sakhnin made their debut in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175974-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nHapoel Kfar Saba and Ironi Rishon LeZion were relegated after finishing in the bottom two places in the 2002-03 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175974-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nThe club played their home games at a neutral venue because their own ground did not meet Premier League requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175975-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Israeli Women's Cup (Hebrew: \u05d2\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d4\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd\u200e, Gvia HaMedina Nashim) was the 6th season of Israel's women's nationwide football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175975-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe competition was won by Maccabi Holon who had beaten ASA Tel Aviv University 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175975-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Israeli Women's Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on 20 April 2004. Both matches were played in Ness Ziona Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 89th season of the Isthmian League, which is an English football competition featuring semi-professional and amateur clubs from London, East and South East England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League\nIt was the last season for the Isthmian League as a feeder for the Conference Premier. At the end of the season, the Premier Division was replaced as a level 6 league (along with the Northern Premier League Premier Division and Southern Football League Premier Division) by the newly formed Conference North and Conference South. The Premier Division lost more than half its clubs to newly formed divisions, and the two regional divisions had a number of their clubs promoted to the Premier Division to replace them. Thus, the Isthmian League divisions downgraded to 7-9 levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consisted of 24 clubs, including 19 clubs from the previous season and five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nCanvey Island won the division and were promoted to the Conference National. Clubs finished higher than 14th position were to transfer to the newly created Conference North and South divisions and clubs finished higher than 21st position plus winners of division One were to participate in the play-offs for a two final spots in Conference North/South. After play-offs was held Hendon decided not to take up their option to join the Conference, their place was taken by Basingstoke Town. At the end of the season Ford United were renamed Redbridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nThere were no relegation from the Premier Division this season, though, due to league reform, clubs remained in the division downgraded from sixth tier to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division One North\nDivision One North consisted of 24 clubs, including 18 clubs from the previous season, and six new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division One North\nBefore the start of the season Leyton Pennant was renamed Waltham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division One North\nYeading won the division, but lost in the play-offs for a place in the newly created Conference North and South and were placed in the Premier Division along with Leyton and Cheshunt. Chesham United, Dunstable Town and Hemel Hempstead Town were transferred to the Southern Football League Premier Division. They were followed by Wealdstone, who defeated Dulwich Hamlet from Division One South. Enfield finished bottom of the table and relegated to Division Two, going down from sixth to ninth tier in two years due to league system reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division One North\nAt the end of the season divisions One were merged, all the remaining Division One North clubs were transferred to the Southern Football League Division Ones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division One South\nDivision One South consisted of 24 clubs, including 21 clubs from the previous season, and three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division One South\nLewes won the division and subsequent play-offs and were promoted to the Conference South. Clubs finished second to sixth were transferred to the Premier Division. Epsom & Ewell finished bottom of the table and were relegated, remaining clubs were to start next season in the merged Isthmian League Division One, going down with it from seventh to ninth level due to creation of Conference North/South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division Two\nAfter Hungerford Town resigned from the league, Division Two consisted of 15 clubs, including 12 clubs from the previous season, and three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175976-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Isthmian League, Division Two\nLeighton Town won the division and were transferred to Southern Football League Division One, while runners-up Dorking were transferred to the merged Isthmian League Division One. At the end of the season Wokingham Town merged into Emmbrook Sports to create new club Wokingham & Emmbrook F.C., who joined Hellenic Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175977-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ivy League men's basketball season\nThe 2003\u201304 Ivy League men's basketball season was the Ivy League's 50th season of basketball. The team with the best record (Princeton Tigers) played in the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. Jason Forte, a junior point guard from the Brown Bears, was awarded the Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175978-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Japan Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2003\u201304 Japan Figure Skating Championships were the 72nd edition of the event. They were held between December 25 and 26, 2003 at the Big Hat arena in Nagano. Skaters competed on the senior level in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. No pairs competition was held due to a lack of entrants. The competition was used to decide Japan's entries to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 Four Continents Championships. The entries to the 2004 World Junior Championships were decided at the Japanese Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175978-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Japan Figure Skating Championships, Japan Junior Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2003\u201304 Japan Junior Figure Skating Championships were used to pick the Japanese team to the 2004 World Junior Championships. They took place between November 21 and 23, 2003 in Kyoto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175979-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Japan Ice Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Japan Ice Hockey League season was the 38th and final season of the Japan Ice Hockey League. Four teams participated in the league, and Kokudo Ice Hockey Club won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175980-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Jordan League\nThe 2003\u201304 Jordan League was the 52nd season of Jordan Premier League, the top-flight league for Jordanian association football clubs. The championship consisted of a preliminary round-robin where 10 teams participated. The top four ranking teams then took part in a championship playoff, which was won by Al-Faisaly. The bottom four teams took part in a relegation playoff, in which Al-Jazeera and Al-Yarmouk were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175981-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Juventus F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Juventus Football Club's 106th in existence and 102nd consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175981-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Juventus F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175982-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KBL season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Triple 8~enwiki (talk | contribs) at 01:47, 18 November 2019 (no reason to desambiguate \u2013 his son is still a college player with no pro experience). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175982-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KBL season\nThe 2003\u201304 Anycall Professional Basketball season was the eighth season of the Korean Basketball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Klubi i Futbollit Tirana's 65th competitive season, 65th consecutive season in the Kategoria Superiore and 83th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nTirana started its 65th competitive season in mid-July, where was going to face the Georgian side Dinamo Tbilisi for the first qualifying round of 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League. In the first leg on 16 July 2003, Tirana almost lose the hopes when was beaten 3\u20130 at Boris Paichadze Dinamo Arena. In the returning leg at Qemal Stafa Stadium nine days later, Tirana would perform one of the best come-backs in Champions League history by beating Dinamo Tbilisi 3\u20130 in the regular time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nExtra time ended in the same level, but Tirana managed to complete the come-back by eliminating them via penalty shootout. In the second qualifying round, Tirana was easily defeated by Austrian side GAK, who eliminated the capital side with the aggregate 7\u20132. Tirana lost the first match at home 1\u20135 and then the second at Sportzentrum Weinz\u00f6dl with the result 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nTirana won the first trophy of the season on 16 August where they beat the cross-town rivals Dinamo Tirana to grab their 4th Albanian Supercup title. Sina, Halili and Agolli sealed the victory with their goals. Tirana commenced their domestic campaign on 23 August with a 0\u20136 away win against Lushnja at neutral ground of Tomori Stadium, which was followed with a 0\u20133 away win against Flamurtari Vlor\u00eb. On 12 September, Tirana recorded its biggest win of the season by scoring 7\u20131 against Besa Kavaj\u00eb at the Selman St\u00ebrmasi Stadium. The goals were scored by seven different players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nIn the second round of 2003\u201304 Albanian Cup, Tirana easily managed to eliminate Turbina C\u00ebrrik with the aggregate 8\u20132. On 25 October, Sulejman Mema resigned as the coach of Tirana after ending the month with 2 loses and 2 draws, with Tirana falling down at 4th place. He was replaced by Mirel Josa, a former player who represented KF Tirana for ten years from 1980 to 1990. Josa started extremely well, collecting six consecutive win in the league during the second phrase, including a 1\u20130 win over the rivals Partizani Tirana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nAlso in November, Tirana beat Lushnja 3\u20130 on aggregate to go into the quarter-finals of Albanian Cup. On 20 December, Tirana defeated Dinamo 5\u20131 at home, a result which was followed by a 1\u20131 draw against Elbasani, with Tirana ending the first part of the season in the first place, with a considerable gap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nTirana started 2004 with a 1\u20131 draw against Lushnja on 24 January. Six days later, Tirana gained its first win of the new year, defeating Flamurtari 0\u20132 in Vlor\u00eb. During this year, Tirana recorded six consecutive wins from 30 January to 13 March. On 19 March, in the match against Dinamo Tirana, Tirana was defeated for the time in 2004 with the result 3\u20130. Also in March, Tirana progressed in semi-finals of the Albanian Cup by beating Besa Kavaj\u00eb in the quarter-final with the aggregate 5\u20132, winning both matches. In April, Tirana managed to win four out of four league matches, being closer to win the league title. Also during this month, Tirana was eliminated by Dinamo Tirana in semi-final of the cup, with Dinamo qualifying in the final with the aggregate 5\u20132, winning both matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Season overview\nIn the final match of the season, Tirana returned in winning ways after four consecutive league matches without a win by defeating Elbasani 2\u20135 at Ruzhdi Bizhuta Stadium. Tirana ended the season in the first place with 80 points from 36 matches, being crowned the Albanian champions for the 22nd time in history. By winning the league, Tirana also qualified for the next season's UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175983-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KF Tirana season, Squad, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup\nThe 86th edition of the KNVB Cup (at the time called Amstel Cup) started on 9 August 2003. The final was played on 23 May 2004, with FC Utrecht beating FC Twente 1\u20130, lifting the trophy for the third time. A total of 88 clubs participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup, First round\nThe matches of the first round were played on August 9, 12 and September 1, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup, Second round\nThe matches of the second round were played on September 23 and 25, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup, Third round\nThe matches of the third round were played on October 28 and 29, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup, Round of 16\nThe matches were played on December 16 and 17. Six Eredivisie clubs entered the tournament here, because they had been playing in the Champions League and the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe matches of the quarter finals were played on 3-4 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175984-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 KNVB Cup, Semi-finals\nThe matches of the semi-finals were played on March 16 and 17, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175985-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Kansas in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, which was the Jayhawks' 106th basketball season and first under head coach Bill Self who was hired after Roy Williams accepted the head coaching position at his alma mater North Carolina. The team played its home games in Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kansas. KU finished the season with a record of 24\u20139, 12\u20134 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for second place in conference. The Jayhawks lost to Texas in the Big 12 Tournament semifinals and received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 4 seed in the St. Louis Region. They advanced to the Elite Eight where they lost to Georgia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175986-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Karnataka State Film Awards\nThe 2003\u201304 Karnataka State Film Awards, presented by Government of Karnataka, to felicitate the best of Kannada Cinema released in the year 2003\u201304. The awards were announced on 2005 January 1 and presented on 2005 July 16 in Ambedkar Bhavan, Bangalore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175986-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Karnataka State Film Awards, Jury\nA nine-member committee headed by P. H. Vishwanath, a noted director, made the selections. Of the 26 categories listed, there were no entries for the children and sub-regional sections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175986-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Karnataka State Film Awards, Jury\nKarnataka government increases the prize money from the existing Rs.20000 to Rs.1 lakh and for the rest of the categories it has been hiked to Rs.50000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175987-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kategoria Superiore\nThe 2003\u201304 Kategoria Superiore was the 68th season of top-tier football in Albania and the sixth season under the name Kategoria Superiore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175987-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kategoria Superiore, Results\nEach team plays every opponent four times, twice at home and twice away, for a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175988-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kategoria e Par\u00eb\nThe 2003\u201304 Kategoria e Par\u00eb was the 57th season of a second-tier association football league in Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175989-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kazakhstan Hockey Championship\nThe 2003\u201304 Kazakhstan Hockey Championship was the 12th season of the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship, the top level of ice hockey in Kazakhstan. Seven teams participated in the league, and Kazzinc-Torpedo won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175990-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kent Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Kent Football League season was the 38th in the history of Kent Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175990-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kent Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 15 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175991-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Kentucky in the 2003\u201304 college basketball season led by head coach Tubby Smith. Although the team earned a #1 seed in the NCAA Tournament, they were upset by the University of Alabama at Birmingham in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175992-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kilmarnock F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Kilmarnock's fifth consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having competed in it since its inauguration in 1998\u201399. Kilmarnock also competed in the Scottish Cup and the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175992-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Summary, Season\nKilmarnock finished tenth in the Scottish Premier League with 42 points. They reached the second round of the League Cup, losing to Brechin City and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup, losing to Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175993-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Knoxville Ice Bears season\nThe 2003-04 Knoxville Ice Bears Season was the franchise's second year in existence and their first in the newly formed South East Hockey League. It was also the first season at head coach for Jim Bermingham, replacing Tony Martino who left to coach in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175993-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Knoxville Ice Bears season, Off-Season\nThe Ice Bears first off-season was an eventful one. First, the Atlantic Coast Hockey League folded, and the Ice Bears moved to the newly formed South East Hockey League. Then, head coach Tony Martino left to coach Italian team HC Varese. He was replaced by Jim Bermingham, a 10-year pro who played his final season in Knoxville during the Ice Bears inaugural campaign. General Manager Tommy Benizio was let go and replaced with assistant coach Preston Dixon, who also retained his coaching position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175993-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Knoxville Ice Bears season, Season\nThe Ice Bears struggled for most of the season, finishing below .500 at 26-30-0, but still managed to finish 2nd in the SEHL standings. This season still stands as the only year the Ice Bears finished below .500, with the team just completing its 13th season of competition in 2015. Second year Ice Bear K.J. Voorhees finished the season with 104 points, amassing 53 goals and 51 assists. Voorhees' 53 goals still stands as an Ice Bears record, with no other player getting within 10 of his incredible feat during the Ice Bears' 13-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175993-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Knoxville Ice Bears season, Season\nThe Ice Bears entered the SEHL Playoffs as the 2nd seed, and took on the Cape Fear Fire Antz in the first round, with the winner advancing to play the Huntsville Channel Cats in the Finals. The Ice Bears swept the FireAntz 2 games to 0, winning 6-4 and 4\u20133. The Ice Bears advanced to the Finals, but for the second straight year were swept, as the Channel Cats took the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175993-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Knoxville Ice Bears season, Season\nThe Ice Bears attendance plummeted during the season by 1,000 per game, almost forcing the team to fold. But local ownership stuck together and kept the team afloat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175994-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Kuwaiti Premier League, Overview\nIt was contested by 14 teams, and Al Qadisiya Kuwait won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175995-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LB Ch\u00e2teauroux season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 88th season in the existence of LB Ch\u00e2teauroux and the club's sixth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, LB Ch\u00e2teauroux participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175996-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEB 2 season\nThe 2003\u201304 LEB 2 season was the 4th season of the LEB Plata, second league of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto and third division in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175996-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEB 2 season, Competition format\n14 teams play the regular season. This is a round robin, where each team will play twice against every rival. After the regular season, the eight first qualified teams played a playoff, were the two finalists promoted to LEB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175996-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEB 2 season, Competition format\nThe loser of the relegation playoffs was relegated to Liga EBA, played by the two last qualified teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175996-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEB 2 season, Competition format\nIf two or more teams have got the same number of winning games, the criteria of tie-breaking are these:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175997-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEB season\nThe 2003\u20132004 LEB season was the 8th season of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto, second tier of the Spanish basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175997-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEB season, LEB Oro Playoffs\nThe two winners of the semifinals are promoted to Liga ACB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175998-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEN Euroleague\nThe 2003\u201304 LEN Euroleague was the 41st edition of LEN's premier competition for men's water polo clubs. It ran from 17 September 2003 to 29 May 2004, and it was contested by 38 teams. The Final Four (semifinals, final, and third place game) took place on May 28 and May 29 in Budapest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175998-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEN Euroleague, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 14 April, and the second legs were played on 28 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00175999-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 LEN Trophy\nThe 2003\u201304 LEN Trophy was the 12th edition of LEN's second-tier competition for men's water polo clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176000-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 La Liga\nThe 2003\u201304 La Liga season, the 73rd since its establishment, started on 30 August 2003 and finished on 23 May 2004. Valencia were crowned champions for the 6th time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176000-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 La Liga, Teams\nTwenty teams competed in the league\u00a0\u2013 the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. The promoted teams were Murcia, Zaragoza and Albacete, returning to the top flight after an absence of fourteen, one and seven years respectively. They replaced Recreativo, Alav\u00e9s and Rayo Vallecano after spending time in the top flight for one, five and four years respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176000-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 La Liga, Awards, Pichichi Trophy\nThe Pichichi Trophy is awarded to the player who scores the most goals in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176000-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 La Liga, Awards, Fair Play award\nValencia was the winner of the Fair-play award with 99 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176000-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 La Liga, Awards, Pedro Zaballa award\nJoan Laporta (Barcelona president) and Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Alan\u00eds (CD Siempre Alegres footballer)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176001-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Latvian Hockey League season\nThe 2003-04 Latvian Hockey League season was the 13th season of the Latvian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Latvia. Nine teams participated in the league, and HK Riga 2000 won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176002-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Le Havre AC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 132nd season in the existence of Le Havre AC and the club's first season back in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Le Havre AC participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Leeds United relegated from the Premier League (known as the Barclaycard Premiership for sponsorship reasons) after 14 consecutive seasons in the top flight, in the wake of the club's financial crisis. Founding members of the Premier League in 1992, relegation saw them consigned to the First Division for the first time since 1990, this coming just three years after the club had reached the Champions League semi-finals in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Season summary\nHaving narrowly avoided relegation the previous campaign, another season of struggle was on the cards, as the financial crisis at Elland Road saw Leeds United's debts reach the \u00a3100 million mark, and consequently the sale of key players continued. Manager Peter Reid was sacked on 10 November after Leeds collected 8 points from their first 12 games, and former player, coach and manager Eddie Gray was brought in on a temporary basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Season summary\nSome initially improved results saw Leeds climb out of the relegation zone by the end of 2003, but a dreadful run of seven straight defeats after the turn of the year saw them cast adrift at the bottom of the table, and from that point onwards the club had no real hope of surviving in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Season summary\nSome decent results late in the season saw them at least move off the bottom of the table, but a 4\u20131 defeat at Bolton on 2 May confirmed relegation, and Gray was soon on his way out of the club for good, to be replaced by Kevin Blackwell, who had been brought to the club a year earlier as Reid's assistant. Few observers gave Leeds much hope of an immediate promotion back to the Premiership, with Blackwell's ultimate task being seen as one of avoiding a second successive relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Kit\nLeeds United retained the previous season's home kit, manufactured by Nike, although the kit carried a new sponsor, Whyte and Mackay. This marked the end of their previous three-year deal with Strongbow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 39], "content_span": [40, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Players, Youth team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176004-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Players, Trialists\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A\nThe 2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons, was the 82nd season of the Lega Basket Serie A, the highest professional basketball league in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A\nThe regular season ran from October 4, 2003 to May 9, 2004, 18 teams played 34 games each. The top 8 teams made the play-offs whilst the two lowest ranked teams, Coop Nordest Trieste and Sicilia Messina, were relegated to the Legadue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A\nMontepaschi Siena won their first ever title by winning the playoff finals series against Skipper Bologna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Season narrative, Preseason\nThe league signed a three-year sponsorship contract with mobile phone company TIM in September 2003, award the naming rights for the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Season narrative, Preseason\nPrior to the start of play, in August 2003, Virtus Bologna were excluded from the league due to financial irregularities (namely unpaid wages), they were replaced by Sicilia Messina, the losing finalist of the preceding year's Legadue, a proposal to expand the league to 20 clubs and thus include both clubs was not approved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Season narrative, Preseason\nReigning champions Benetton Treviso were seen as the favourites to retain their title, teams Lottomatica Roma, Scavolini Pesaro, Montepaschi Siena and Skipper Bologna were seen as the main challengers, with Air Avellino, Coop Nordest Trieste, Mabo Livorno and above all Sicilia Messina seen as the clubs fighting to avoid relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Season narrative, Regular season\nMontepaschi Sienna finished first in the league for the first time of their history, Skipper Bologna and Benetton Treviso finished equal on points in second place but Skipper was 2-0 in their direct confrontations and hence superseded Treviso. The title was strongly expected to be disputed between these three teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Season narrative, Regular season\nAt the other end of the standings, late promotee Sicilia Messina predictably struggled on the court - a relegation confirmed in the penultimate round seen as an achievement - and off the court, with financial problems and a perceived disinterest by the public. The other relegated team Coop Nordest Trieste also struggled financially (along with some other Serie A teams), both would declare bankruptcy in the course of the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Season narrative, Playoffs\nAfter reaching the finals for a historic first time, Montepaschi Sienna won its first championship after winning all of its playoff games. Losing finalist Skipper Bologna's prior defeat of Benetton Treviso meant that Benetton, who had won the last two editions, did not compete in the final for only the second time in six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Supercup\nThe Italian Basketball Supercup opened the season on September 27, 2003 in the PalaVerde in Treviso, it pitted reigning champions and 2002-03 cup holders Benetton Treviso against Oregon Scientific Cant\u00f9, finalists in the previous year's cup. Cant\u00f9 upset Benetton 85-79 to win its first trophy in 12 years, with Nate Johnson named MVP for his first game in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, All Star Game\nThe All Star Game was played in Genoa on December 13, 2004 in the newly opened PalaFiumara. The foreign All Stars beat Italy, bronze medalists at EuroBasket 2003, 106-99 after coming back from behind 55-26 down to force an overtime. Maurice Evans was designated MVP whilst Michele Mian won the three point shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176005-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lega Basket Serie A, Cup\nThe Cup was contested between 25 February and 28 February in the PalaFiera(in Italian) in Forl\u00ec between the 8 best ranked teams of the first phase of the league. Benetton Treviso won the cup for the second successive season, beating Scavolini Pesaro 85-76, Jorge Garbajosa was named as the Final Eight MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 32], "content_span": [33, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Leicester City competed in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Season summary\nMicky Adams had guided Leicester back to the Premiership at the first attempt, despite the club spending part of their Division One campaign in receivership before a takeover safeguarded their future. But he was unable to keep them there, and their relegation was confirmed at the beginning of May. A 4\u20130 thumping of fellow relegation rivals Leeds United in September appeared to have set the tone for the rest of the season but it was soon followed by a setback of five straight defeats despite promising displays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Season summary\nA run of three wins in five games in November kept Leicester in close contention of survival, with the 2\u20130 victory at Portsmouth seeing them rise to as high as 12th; however, it all went wrong as, after a creditable 1\u20131 draw with eventual champions Arsenal, the team went into freefall and endured a dreadful run of only one win in 22 games (though most scorelines were reasonably close and they dropped too many points from 12 games they drew which they could have won).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0001-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Season summary\nUltimately, Leicester were relegated in a 2\u20132 draw at Charlton Athletic, which left them eight points adrift of Manchester City with two games remaining. It was a traumatic end to a season which had seen the club plagued with crises on and off the field, including the La Manga controversy when players Keith Gillespie, Frank Sinclair and Paul Dickov were accused of sexual assault following an alleged incident at a hotel in Spain (all charges were finally dropped).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Squad, Left club during the season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176006-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Leicester City F.C. season, Awards, Club awards\nAt the end of the season, Leicester's annual award ceremony, including categories voted for by the players and backroom staff, the supporters and the supporters club, saw the following players recognised for their achievements for the club throughout the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176007-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Libyan Premier League\nThe 2003-04 Libyan Premier League was the 36th edition of Libyan top-flight football, organised by the Libyan Football Federation. History was made this season, as Olomby of Zawiya, became the first side outside of the two biggest cities in the country (Tripoli and Benghazi) to win the premier division. Their feat is yet to be beaten. They also prevented Ittihad from winning a treble of Libyan Premier League titles. This was the first time since that the Big Two had not won the league, since Mahalla achieved this in the 1998\u201399 season. Olomby have failed to come close to winning the league since, their best finish being 3rd in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176007-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Libyan Premier League, Promotion/Relegation Playoff\nThis was played between the 3rd-placed side in the Libyan Second Division, Al Shat, and this season's 12th-placed side, Al Charara. The winner would compete in next season's Libyan Premier League, while the loser would compete in the 2004\u201305 Libyan Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176007-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Libyan Premier League, Promotion/Relegation Playoff\nAl Shat are therefore promoted to next season's Libyan Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176008-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liechtenstein Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Liechtenstein Cup was the fifty-ninth season of Liechtenstein's annual cup competition. Seven clubs competed with a total of sixteen teams for one spot in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Cup. Defending champions were FC Vaduz, who have won the cup continuously since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176009-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Alef\nThe 2003\u20132004 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Hadera (champions of the North Division) and Maccabi Be'er Sheva (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to 2004\u201305. However as Maccabi Hadera folded during the following summer, eventually second placed Maccabi Tirat HaCarmel was promoted instead. During the summer Maccabi Kiryat Gat was demoted to Liga Alef, and Maccabi HaShikma Ramat Hen was promoted to Liga Artzit as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176009-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Alef\nAt the bottom, following a series of reprieves, caused by Maccabi Hadera and Hapoel Bat Yam folding and Maccabi Kiryat Gat being demoted to Liga Alef, only one club, Hapoel Migdal HaEmek was automatically relegated to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176010-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Artzit\nThe 2003\u201304 Liga Artzit season saw Ironi Nir Ramat HaSharon win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit alongside runners-up Hapoel Acre. Hapoel Tira and Hapoel Beit She'an were relegated to Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176010-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Artzit\nBeitar Avraham Be'er Sheva who had been relegated from Liga Leumit the previous season and were due to play in Liga Artzit in 2003\u201304, folded in the summer of 2003. Their place was taken by Hapoel Marmorek, the best runners-up in Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176011-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Bet\nThe 2003\u201304 Liga Bet season saw Hapoel Bnei Jadeidi, Hapoel Afula, Hapoel Qalansawe and Hapoel Bnei Lod win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176011-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Bet\nAt the bottom, Maccabi Bir al-Maksur (from North A division), Hapoel Bnei Nazareth (from North B division), M.M. Giv'at Shmuel and Maccabi Montefiore (from South A division) were all relegated to Liga Gimel. However, Beitar Acre (from North A division), Maccabi Daliyat al-Karmel (from North B division), Maccabi Yehud (from South A division), Maccabi Kiryat Ekron and Hapoel Oranit (from South B division), which finished in the relegation zone, were all reprieved from relegation, after several vacancies were created in Liga Bet for the 2004\u201305 season, mostly due to withdrawals and mergers of clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176012-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Gimel\nThe 2003\u201304 Liga Gimel season saw 99 clubs competing in 8 regional divisions for promotion to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176013-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Leumit\nThe 2003\u201304 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Haifa win the title and promotion to the Premier League. Runners-up Hapoel Nazareth Illit were also promoted to the Premier League for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176013-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Leumit\nBottom-placed Hapoel Ramat Gan were relegated to Liga Artzit. Tzafririm Holon were also due to be relegated, but were reprieved after Maccabi Kiryat Gat were demoted to Liga Alef due to financial difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176014-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liga Nacional de Hockey Hielo season\nThe 2003\u201304 Superliga Espanola de Hockey Hielo season was the 30th season of the Superliga Espanola de Hockey Hielo, the top level of ice hockey in Spain. Six teams participated in the league, and CH Jaca won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176015-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ligat Nashim\nThe 2003\u201304 Ligat Nashim was to be the sixth season of women's league football under the Israeli Football Association. However, the league was interrupted after the clubs went on strike in protest over discrimination in budget allocation and financial difficulties. and although the league resumed after a month of strike, eventually the league was abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176015-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ligat Nashim\nThe season is also noticeable due to the inclusion of Ironi Ariel, who lost all of its matches without scoring a goal. The team worst defeat came of the hands of Maccabi Holon, 0\u201348 (initially given as a 0\u201350 loss), with striker Silvi Jan scoring 15 goals. The club also registered a 0\u201332 loss to ASA Tel Aviv University, with Meital Dayan scoring 17 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176015-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ligat Nashim, League table\nThe league was abandoned after playing the 11th round, which was due to be the last before the play-offs, involving the top 6 teams. At the time of abandonment, 6 regular season matches were still due to be completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176016-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ligue 1\nOlympique Lyonnais won Ligue 1 season 2003\u201304 of the French Association Football League with 79 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176017-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ligue 2\nThe Ligue 2 season 2003\u201304, organised by the LFP was won by AS Saint-\u00c9tienne and saw the promotions of AS Saint-\u00c9tienne, SM Caen and FC Istres, whereas ASOA Valence, Besan\u00e7on RC and FC Rouen were relegated to National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176018-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Lithuanian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Lithuanian Hockey League season was the 13th season of the Lithuanian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Lithuania. Six teams participated in the league, and SC Energija won the championship. SC Energija received a bye until the finals, as they played in the Latvian Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176019-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liverpool F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Liverpool's 112th season in existence and their 42nd consecutive year in the top-flight. This article covers the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 May 2004. Liverpool finished the FA Premier League season in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176019-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liverpool F.C. season, Season summary\nLiverpool finished the season in fourth position in the Premier League in what was to be G\u00e9rard Houllier's last in charge of Liverpool. He was replaced by Rafael Ben\u00edtez at the end of the season after six years in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176019-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liverpool F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176019-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liverpool F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176019-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Liverpool F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176020-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Livingston F.C. season\nSeason 2003-04 saw Livingston compete in the Scottish Premier League. They also reached the semi-finals of the Scottish Cup and won the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176020-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Livingston F.C. season, Summary\nLivingston finished 9th in the Scottish Premier League during Season 2003\u201304. They went on to win Co-operative Insurance Cup after defeating Hibernian in the final and reached the semi final of the Scottish Cup losing to Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176020-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Managers\nLivingston started the season under M\u00e1rcio M\u00e1ximo who had been appointed during the summer. On 14 October 2003 he resigned as manager and was replaced by David Hay who led the club to their Co-operative Insurance Cup win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176021-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Logan Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Logan Cup was a first-class cricket competition held in Zimbabwe from 12 September 2003 \u2013 12 April 2004. It was won by Mashonaland, who won three of their six matches to top the table with 78 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176022-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Clippers season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Clippers' 34th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 20th season in Los Angeles. During the offseason, the Clippers signed free agents Bobby Simmons and former All-Star forward Glen Rice. However, after 18 games, Rice was released. With the Clippers starting from scratch again as they celebrated their 20th season in L.A., they hired Mike Dunleavy, Sr. as their new head coach. Under Dunleavy, the Clippers played slightly around .500 with a 22\u201325 start as of February 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176022-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Clippers season\nHowever, after co-hosting the 2004 NBA All-Star Game at the Staples Center with the Lakers, the young Clippers struggled badly as they won just six games, and posted a 13-game losing streak near the end of the season. The Clippers would slowly sink down the standings, coming to rest once again at the bottom of the Pacific Division with a 28\u201354 record. Following the season, Quentin Richardson signed as a free agent with the Phoenix Suns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176022-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Clippers season, Transactions\nThe Clippers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2003-04 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176023-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season\nThe 2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season was their 37th National Hockey League season. The Kings placed third in their division, 11th overall in their conference, and failed to qualify for the playoffs due to a season-ending, 11-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176023-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176023-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176023-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176023-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season, Transactions\nThe Kings were involved in the following transactions during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176023-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Kings season, Draft picks\nLos Angeles' picks of the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee on June 21, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Lakers' 56th season in the National Basketball Association and 44th in the city of Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe Lakers entered the season following a disappointing second-round loss to the eventual champion San Antonio Spurs in the 2003 playoffs. During the offseason, the Lakers signed star free agents Karl Malone and Gary Payton and re-signed free agent power forward Horace Grant. Following these acquisitions, the Lakers became the instant favorites to win the NBA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season\nDespite major acquisitions, key moves, and becoming overnight title favorites, the Lakers would run into major setbacks to begin the season. During the 2003 off-season, superstar guard Kobe Bryant had been accused of sexual assault in Colorado. Media attention surrounding the case would prove to be an ongoing distraction for the team, and Bryant missed games during his trial. In addition, Bryant's feud with superstar center Shaquille O'Neal reached a peak during the season, as both players criticized each other in the media. Payton struggled with coach Phil Jackson's triangle offense, and Malone missed significant time due to injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season\nDespite the setbacks, the Lakers finished the season with a 56\u201326 overall record, good enough to clinch the second seed in the Western Conference en route to the playoffs. In the playoffs, they defeated the Houston Rockets, the defending champion San Antonio Spurs, and the Minnesota Timberwolves to earn the franchise its 28th appearance in the NBA Finals. The Lakers entered the Finals against the Detroit Pistons as favorites. This was the third meeting between the Lakers and the Pistons in the NBA Finals, after both franchises met in 1988 and 1989, with each winning in both years respectively. However, the underdog Pistons' strong defense and teamwork propelled them to their third championship in franchise history, and the star-studded Lakers would collapse in five games. After the season, Jackson was fired and O'Neal (who requested a trade) was dealt to the Miami Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Series Summary\nThe Finals were played using a 2-3-2 site format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with home court advantage. This is only used in the Finals, all other playoff games are held in a 2-2-1-1-1 format (the team with home court advantage starts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Background\nThe Lakers had a star-studded lineup that included offseason acquisitions Karl Malone and Gary Payton as well as mainstays Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal. Malone and Payton were perennial All-Stars; Payton had led the Seattle SuperSonics to the Finals in 1996, while Malone's Utah Jazz reached the Finals in 1997 and 1998. However, both had been defeated by Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls. By 2003, Malone and Payton were in the latter stages of their respective careers and were no longer playing on championship-contending teams. Both Malone and Payton took pay cuts to sign with the Lakers in an effort to win a championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game One\nConsidered to be a stunning upset by most of the NBA world, the Detroit Pistons managed to defeat the Lakers with imposing defense. Defensively clamping down on everyone but Bryant and O'Neal, the Pistons managed to hold everyone else to a total of 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game One\nThe Pistons trailed the Lakers 41\u201340 at halftime, but a 10\u20134 surge capped by Billups's 3-pointer gave the Pistons the lead. O'Neal's foul trouble furthered the scoring gap, with the Pistons leading by 13 points early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Two\nThe second game was close throughout the first half, but in the third quarter Detroit would score 30 points, cutting the deficit 68\u201366. However, at the end of the fourth quarter, Kobe Bryant's 3-point shot at 2.1 seconds to go would tie the game at 89\u201389. The Lakers and Pistons would then go to overtime, with the Lakers outscoring the Pistons 10\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nThursday, June 10, 2004, 14:31 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nThe Pistons beat Los Angeles by 20 in their first NBA Finals appearance together at The Palace of Auburn Hills since 1989 to take a 2\u20131 lead in the series. The 68 points scored by the Lakers set a franchise record for the fewest points scored in a playoff game. Previous night, a group of overzealous Pistons fans made it difficult for the Lakers to get their rest by harassing them until 4am at their hotel in nearby Birmingham. Fans were screaming outside the building until management at the hotel called the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nSunday, June 13, 2004, 14:49 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nAgain, the Pistons defeated the Lakers, although this time by eight, to take a 3\u20131 series advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nTuesday, June 15, 2004, 14:32 at The Palace of Auburn Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176024-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Los Angeles Lakers season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nIn Game 5, the Pistons won their first championship since 1990, and Larry Brown finally won his title. The Pistons defense had overcome the high-scoring Laker offense, winning the game by 13, winning the series 4-1, and also ending a long Laker dynasty that lasted for many years. The game saw the end of Phil Jackson's first run as the coach (he returned for the 2005-06 season), and saw O'Neal, Payton, and Malone's last games in Laker uniforms (O'Neal and Payton were both acquired by the soon-to-be NBA Champions Miami Heat and Malone retired).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176025-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team represented the University of Louisville in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Rick Pitino and the team finished the season with an overall record of 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 118th season in the history of Luton Town Football Club, and club's 83rd consecutive year in the Football League. Luton finished in tenth place, a surprising success considering the financial issues that afflicted the club. Despite being placed in administrative receivership for the majority of the season following a turbulent change of ownership and having a rigorous transfer embargo imposed as a result, signing players only with the Football League's special dispensation, the club accrued more points than in the previous campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe lack of spending power meant that numerous youth team players were promoted to the first-team squad, such as Kevin Foley, Curtis Davies, Keith Keane, and Leon Barnett; as well as players with no previous professional football experience, like Enoch Showunmi. These players would go on to form a crucial part of the Luton side in later years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season\nThis article covers the period from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nThe previous season had seen consolidation for Luton after their drop into the basement division of English league football in 2001, with the club finishing the 2002\u201303 season in ninth place. Stability did not last for long, however, as the end of the season saw controversy erupt after an unidentified consortium gained control of the club, later revealed to be headed by businessman John Gurney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nGurney's first act was the sacking of successful managerial duo Joe Kinnear and Mick Harford, subsequently followed by a phone-poll to determine the next manager. Former Luton player and Hartlepool United manager Mike Newell was announced as the winner on 23 June 2003, though it is widely believed that Kinnear accumulated the most votes, only to reject a return to the club as he refused to work with Gurney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nIn terms of playing staff, the end of the last season had seen six released; goalkeepers Carl Emberson and Mark Ovendale, defenders Duncan Jupp, Alan Kimble and Aaron Skelton, and striker Carl Griffiths. No replacements had been brought in, leaving Luton with a compact squad, albeit with a number of talented young players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nWith the fallout surrounding the takeover still occurring, including the fact that players and staff had not been paid for two months, managing director John Gurney was summoned by the Football League to explain the situation. Striker Tony Thorpe voiced his thoughts on the matter, stating that the supporters needed to get behind the players and turn out for the first game of the season, responding to the fact that thousands of fans were deliberately not buying season tickets in an attempt to force the new owners out of the club. Defender Chris Coyne expressed a different view, praising the supporters for standing up for themselves and the club even though it meant he was not being paid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nOn 11 July, the Football League met with Gurney and expressed \"grave concern that the new owners... have been unable to satisfy [The League] of the club's financial stability going forward.\" As a result, Luton were placed under a transfer embargo and all payments due to the club from the authorities, such as sponsorship money and television rights, were to be withheld. In the weeks before this, Luton's supporters' trust, Trust in Luton, had devised a strategy to acquire shares in the club's major creditor, Hatters Holdings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0007-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nHatters Holdings, now majority-owned by Trust in Luton, deliberately placed the club into administrative receivership on 14 July to successfully force out John Gurney after a turbulent 55 days in charge. As a result, supporters began buying tickets again and the club hastily arranged friendly matches against Fulham, Hitchin Town and an Arsenal XI before the season began on 9 August. Despite ridding the club of Gurney, the club remained financially insecure and still had a transfer embargo in place, meaning Luton could only sign players on free transfers or on loan and, even then, only with dispensation from the authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August and September\nAfter being sacked alongside Joe Kinnear eight weeks earlier, Mick Harford returned to Luton on 6 August as Director of Football. Harford and manager Mike Newell had previously played together at Luton in 1986 and 1987, during the club's most successful period in the top division of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August and September\nA day before the season began, Luton were granted special dispensation from the Football League to sign a goalkeeper and an outfield player on loan. While the club elected to use youth team goalkeepers Rob Beckwith and Dean Brill, they did sign Portsmouth winger Courtney Pitt on a one-month loan. Pitt played in the opening game against Rushden & Diamonds as Luton won 3\u20131, Tony Thorpe scoring twice. A 2\u20131 victory in the next league game over Stockport County left Luton as early leaders of the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August and September\nOn 22 August, Tony Thorpe joined Luton's rivals Queens Park Rangers for a \u00a350,000 fee. It proved to be a transfer that angered many Luton supporters due to a combination of Thorpe's comments earlier in the season urging fans to get behind the team, QPR's status as Luton's rivals, and the fact that the club received such a small fee for a player perceived to be worth much more. The same day, as a result of funds being freed up by Thorpe's move, Luton signed young Coventry City striker Gary McSheffrey on a one-month loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August and September\nThe next three games saw two losses and a win. On 6 September, the club signed 21-year-old striker Enoch Showunmi on non-contract terms following special dispensation to sign an outfield player after captain Kevin Nicholls was injured for three months. Showunmi, who had no professional football experience and had previously played only for eleventh-tier club Willesden Constantine, had been on trial with Luton since August. Only one further win followed in September, leaving the club in fourteenth place in the table. Both McSheffrey and Pitt signed one-month extensions to their loans in late September, and the club allowed striker Dean Crowe, who had been injured for much of the past year, to join Third Division club York City on loan for a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August and September\nLuton progressed to the second round of the League Cup, where they faced Premier League club Charlton Athletic. After a 4\u20134 draw at extra-time, earning praise from Charlton manager Alan Curbishley, Luton lost 8\u20137 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October and November\nGoalkeeper Rob Beckwith was suspended after being sent off in a 3\u20130 defeat to Oldham Athletic, meaning Luton had only one goalkeeper in the form of 18-year-old Dean Brill for an upcoming match with Wycombe Wanderers. They signed former player Nathan Abbey on non-contract terms on 10 October from Stevenage Borough to cover Brill's position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October and November\nThe club endured a mixed month in the league during October, recording two wins, two draws and two losses, including a 6\u20133 defeat to AFC Bournemouth, as well as progressing to the second round of the Football League Trophy. An injury to regular striker Steve Howard pushed Adrian Forbes into a first-team role, where he excelled with six goals in six games, winning the award for October's top scorer in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0014-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October and November\nIn terms of transfers, Luton extended Gary McSheffrey's loan for a further month after he had scored eight goals in thirteen games and Nathan Abbey left after two weeks, the club signing experienced goalkeeper Marlon Beresford from Bradford City as a replacement on a three-month contract. Beresford joining meant that a player had to leave to satisfy the transfer embargo, and Courtney Pitt subsequently returned to Portsmouth after two months on loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October and November\nNovember saw the team go unbeaten in the league, with wins also in the Football League Trophy and FA Cup. Adrian Forbes continued his goalscoring form, hitting four goals in six games as Luton moved to tenth in the table, one point from the play-off places. The successful run of form coincided with welcome news for the club off the pitch, with confirmation from the Companies Court on 21 November that the administrators now had the power to sell the club to an appropriate bidder, safeguarding the future of Luton Town. On 28 November, a bid from a company called Bill Tomlins Sport Management was received, with the administrators intending to meet with representatives in early December to progress the sale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December and January\nThe team's good form continued into December, with two wins, a draw and one loss in the league leaving them in seventh place. Southend United knocked the club out of the Football League Trophy early in the month, but Luton did progress to the third round of the FA Cup with a 2\u20130 win over Rochdale. Gary McSheffrey left the club on 3 December with Luton unable to extend his loan further than the 93-day maximum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December and January\nJanuary began with Luton beating Bradford City 2\u20131 in the FA Cup, ensuring the club reached the fourth round of the competition for the first time since the 1994\u201395 season. Two consecutive 2\u20132 draws left the club in ninth place in the league, but a 1\u20130 defeat to Tranmere Rovers in front of Kenilworth Road's biggest crowd of the season on 24 January knocked Luton out of the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December and January\nMarlon Beresford left Luton on 26 January at the expiration of his contract, signing for divisional rivals Barnsley. Three days later, Luton signed a replacement in the form of Danish goalkeeper Morten Hyldgaard on a free transfer from Scottish Premier League side Hibernian until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February, March and April\nLuton had a strong February in the league, picking up 13 out of a possible 18 points and moving into a play-off position. This set of results saw manager Mike Newell win the Manager of the Month award and striker Enoch Showunmi rewarded as Player of the Month. Earlier in the month, following a hat-trick in a 4\u20131 win over Brentford, Showunmi had signed a two-and-a-half-year professional contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February, March and April\nOn 13 February, preferred bidder Bill Tomlins stated that he hoped Luton would be out of administration within a week, assuming the handover of the club went smoothly. However, no news was heard for over a month, which only then confirmed that the transfer of ownership of the club was planned to take place on 31 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February, March and April\nOn the pitch, Luton started March in a similar fashion to February with a draw and a win to place themselves in sixth position, just inside the play-offs, with twelve games left to play. However, the club soon slipped down the league, with a loss and two draws pushing them into mid-table. Irish defender Kevin Foley, a regular in the Luton first-team despite officially being classed as a youth player, agreed a two-and-a-half-year professional contract on 10 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February, March and April\nThe end of the month also saw the closure of the transfer window, and the club released striker Dean Crowe, who had made only two starts all season. Crowe subsequently joined Oldham Athletic. With Crowe's wages freed up, Luton signed Rushden & Diamonds captain and left-back Paul Underwood on a free transfer following the League's approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February, March and April\nIn terms of financial issues, the planned date for transfer of ownership on 31 March passed without event, with the future of the club still in the balance. A series of statements throughout April informing that Luton Town would be out of administration \"soon\" also failed to yield any immediate positive outcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February, March and April\nA poor run of results saw Luton pick up only one win from seven games in April, with a 2\u20131 defeat to Wrexham on 24 April confirming that the play-offs were mathematically out of reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0025-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nA win and loss in the final two games in early May meant that Luton finished the season in tenth place, seven points away from a play-off place. Given the financial constraints placed on the team and chaotic conditions surrounding ownership, the season exceeded most supporter and pundit expectations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0026-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nOn 12 May Bill Tomlins, head of the consortium buying Luton Town, confirmed the Football League had formally approved the purchase of the club from administrative receivership. Tomlins committed himself to building a new stadium on land purchased by previous chairman Mike Watson-Challis, with plans to open it in 2006. He also praised Trust in Luton for saving the club in July 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0027-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nGoalkeeper Morten Hyldgaard left the club on 14 May at the expiration of his contract, as did youth players Matthew Judge and Parys Okai. On 21 May, Luton turned down a bid from Sheffield Wednesday for top scorer Steve Howard. Initially, the bid was reported as being accepted, but it later came to light that a forged fax had been sent to Sheffield Wednesday apparently accepting the offer, while the official response from Luton had been to reject it. A day later, defender Chris Coyne and midfielder Steve Robinson both signed two-year contract extensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176026-0027-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nOn 27 May, youth players Curtis Davies, Rob Beckwith and Stephen O'Leary signed two-year professional contracts, while Michael Leary extended his own professional contract by a further two years. Defender Russell Perrett, who had been injured for the majority of the season, signed a one-year contract extension on 7 June. Ten days later, forward Adrian Forbes left the club on a free transfer to join Swansea City. On 23 June, goalkeeper Marlon Beresford agreed to return to Luton on a free transfer, with the deal taking place on 1 July at the opening of the transfer and player registration window. Midfielder Paul Hughes agreed to a two-year contract extension on 26 June, as Mike Newell continued to commit players to Luton for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division was the 90th season of top level association football in Luxembourg. The competition ran from 9 August 2003 to 16 May 2004 with Jeunesse Esch winning the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, Teams\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw the National Division's roster of twelve clubs include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nThe twelve teams completed the round-robin by playing each other twice (once home and once away) by 4 April. Then, the league divided into three. The top four teams were separated from the rest and formed the 'Title group' . The bottom eight teams were then subdivided into two groups of four, titled 'Relegation group A' and 'Relegation group B' . In the event, the top four were Jeunesse Esch, F91 Dudelange, FC Etzella Ettelbruck, and CS Grevenmacher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nIn each of the three mini-leagues, each team played each of the three other teams in the mini-league twice (once home and once away). To these results were added the 22 results of the first stage. The overall points totals (and goal difference, etc.) were used to determine each club's position in its respective mini-league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nAfter calculating the final results after 28 games, Jeunesse Esch, the top team in the title group, was declared the league champion. The fourth-placed team in each of the relegation groups (FC Mondercange and US Rumelange in groups A and B respectively) was relegated to the Division of Honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nThis format is no longer used; the current season, 2006\u201307 uses a straightforward round-robin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, European qualification\nLuxembourg was assigned one spot in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, for the league champions; it was also assigned two spots in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Cup, for the runners-up and the winners of the Luxembourg Cup. As league champions, Jeunesse Esch qualified for the Champions League. F91 Dudelange qualified for the UEFA Cup as runners-up. In addition, as F91 Dudelange won the Luxembourg Cup and the other finalist (CS P\u00e9tange) was not a National Division team, the UEFA Cup spot assigned to the cup winners went to FC Etzella Ettelbruck, who finished third in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176027-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Luxembourg National Division, Team changes for 2004-05 season\nThe champions and runners-up of the Division of Honour, CS Alliance 01 and CS P\u00e9tange, were promoted automatically. FC Mondercange and US Rumelange were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176028-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian First Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Macedonian First League was the 12th season of the Macedonian First Football League, the highest football league of Macedonia. The first matches of the season were played on 8 August 2003 and the last on 30 May 2004. Vardar were the defending champions, having won their fifth title. The 2003-04 champions were Pobeda who had won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176028-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian First Football League, Results\nEvery team will play three times against each other team for a total of 33 matches. The first 22 matchdays will consist of a regular double round-robin schedule. The league standings at this point will then be used to determine the games for the last 11 matchdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176029-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian Football Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Macedonian Football Cup was the 12th season of Macedonia's football knockout competition. FK Cementarnica 55 were the defending champions, having won their first title. The 2003\u201304 champions were FK Sloga Jugomagnat who won their third title after appearing in their eighth Final in nine seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176029-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian Football Cup, Second round\nThe first legs were played on 1 October and second were played on 22 October 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176029-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 26 November and second were played on 3 December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176029-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 10 March and the second on 15 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176029-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian Football Cup, Semi-finals\n2\u20132 on aggregate. Sloga Jugomagnat won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176030-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Macedonian Second Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Macedonian Second Football League was the twelfth season since its establishment. It began on 9 August 2003 and ended on 2 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176031-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Magyar Kupa\nThe 2003\u201304 Magyar Kupa (English: Hungarian Cup) is the 64th season of Hungary's annual knock-out cup football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176032-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Major Indoor Soccer League season, League standings, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176033-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese First Division\nThe Maltese First Division 2003\u201304 (known as MIA First Division 2003\u201304 for sponsorship reasons) started on 13 September 2003 and finished on 9 May 2004. Marsa and Mosta were relegated from Maltese Premier League. Tarxien and San Gwann were promoted from Maltese Second Division with the latter (San Gwann) having won a promotion playoff against Vittoriosa. St.Patrick were the champions while Lija were runners-up. Both were promoted to Maltese Premier League. Tarxien and Rabat were relegated to Maltese Second Division with the former having just clinched promotion only to go straight down again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176033-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese First Division, Participating teams\nThe Maltese First Division 2003\u201304 was made up of these teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176034-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League (known as the MIA Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 24th season of the Maltese Premier League, and the 89th season of top-tier football in Malta. The league started on 22 August 2003 and finished on 9 May 2004. Sliema Wanderers successfully defended last season's league triumph, equalling Floriana's league title record of 25 championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176034-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nThe following teams were promoted from the First Division at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176034-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nFrom the previous Premier League season, the following teams were relegated to the First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176034-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League, Second round, Championship Pool\nThe teams placed in the first six positions in the league table qualified for the Championship Pool, and the points obtained during the first round were halved (and rounded up) before the start of second round. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the second round: Sliema Wanderers 21 points, Birkirkara 18, Hibernians 17, Marsaxlokk 16, Floriana and Piet\u00e0 Hotspurs 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176034-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League, Second round, Relegation Pool\nThe teams which finished in the last four league positions were placed in the Relegation Pool and at the end of the round the two lowest-placed teams were relegated to the First Division. The points obtained during the first round were halved (and rounded up) before the start of second round. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the second round: Valletta 12 points, Balzan Youths 9, Msida Saint-Joseph 5 and \u0126amrun Spartans 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176035-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maltese Second Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Maltese Second Division (also known as MIA Second Division 2003-04 due to sponsorship reasons) started on 27 September 2003 and ended on 3 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Manchester City Football Club's second consecutive season playing in the Premier League, the top division of English football, and its seventh season since the Premier League was first created with Manchester City as one of its original 22 founding member clubs. Overall, it was the team's 112th season playing in a division of English football, most of which have been spent in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Season review\nAfter finishing ninth during the club's final season at 80-year-old Maine Road, Manchester City's debut season at the City of Manchester Stadium was a major disappointment. A ninth-place finish had not been good enough to earn City an opportunity to play in the UEFA Cup but the team was rewarded with that opportunity anyway due to being awarded a \"Fair Play\" slot in the UEFA Cup competition this season. City reached the second round proper of the competition thanks to aggregate victories against The New Saints and Lokeren, but exited the competition on the away goals rule after two draws against Polish club Groclin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Season review\nHaving embarked on a new era for the club by signing a host of experienced players in the summer, such as Claudio Reyna and Steve McManaman, to combine with such burgeoning talents coming through from the MCFC youth academy as Stephen Ireland and Shaun Wright-Phillips, City started their season very brightly with three wins in five games, sending them near the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Season review\nThey were still in the top-half of the table after winning five, drawing three and losing three of their first 11 games, with three notably big wins: a 3\u20130 opening-game away win at Charlton Athletic, a 4\u20131 home victory over Aston Villa and a 6\u20132 thumping of Bolton Wanderers. However, a dreadful 3\u20130 home defeat against unlikely opponents Leicester City in November started a gradual downturn in form and City then ended up battling against relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0002-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Season review\nAt one point, City went on a run of winning only one game out of 18 league and cup matches played, sparking media rumours of unrest in the squad. Survival in the Premier League was not confirmed until City won their 36th game of the league season. That victory meant that City were six points ahead of the relegation places, but the club's survival was effectively confirmed due to it having a far superior goal difference to Leicester, Leeds and Wolves, who were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Season review\nPerhaps the most memorable game played by Manchester City during this season was the FA Cup fourth round replay fixture against Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane which featured what many people consider to be one of the most extraordinary comebacks in the history of the competition. City fell three goals behind during the first half, had Nicolas Anelka substituted due to injury and Joey Barton was sent off during half-time for verbally abusing the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Season review\nDespite having one man less than their opponents during the second half, City came all the way back to win 4\u20133 and reach the next round. Rookie Icelandic goalkeeper \u00c1rni Arason made a key double save and Jon Macken scored the winning goal. In the next round, a Manchester derby at Old Trafford, City lost 4\u20132 to exit the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Team kit\nThere was a change in the producer of the team kits for this season, with Reebok replacing the previous season's supplier, Le Coq Sportif. The shirt sponsorship was provided by the financial and legal services group First Advice who had also been the sponsors for the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Historical league performance\nPrior to this season, the history of Manchester City's performance in the English football league hierarchy since the creation of the Premier League in 1992 is summarised by the following timeline chart \u2013 which commences with the last season (1991\u201392) of the old Football League First Division (from which the Premier League was formed).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitive games, Premier League, Results summary\nLast updated: 15 May 2004 (end of season). Source: Premier League results 2003\u201304", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 87], "content_span": [88, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitive games, Premier League, Points breakdown\nPoints against \"Big Four\" teams: 4 Points against promoted teams: 3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 88], "content_span": [89, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitive games, Premier League, Biggest & smallest\nBiggest home wins: 6\u20132 vs. Bolton Wanderers, 18 October 2003 000000000000000005\u20131 vs. Everton, 15 May 2004 Biggest home defeat: 0\u20133 vs. Leicester City, 9 November 2003 Biggest away win: 0\u20133 vs. Charlton Athletic, 17 August 2003 Biggest away defeat: 3\u20130 vs. Newcastle United, 22 November 2003 Biggest home attendance: 47,304 vs. Chelsea, 28 February 2004 Smallest home attendance: 44,307 vs. Charlton Athletic, 7 January 2004 Biggest away attendance: 67,645 vs. Manchester United, 13 December 2003 Smallest away attendance: 16,124 vs. Fulham, 20 September 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 90], "content_span": [91, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Competitive games, UEFA Cup\nFinal aggregate score 1\u20131 with Groclin progressing on away goals rule", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176036-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester City F.C. season, Goal scorers, League Cup and FA Cup\nInformation current as of 15 May 2004 (end of season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Manchester United's 12th season in the Premier League, and their 29th consecutive season in the top division of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season\nUnited started the season by winning the 2003 FA Community Shield and then secured a record eleventh FA Cup with a 3\u20130 win over Millwall at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. However, the club surrendered the Premier League title to unbeaten champions Arsenal, with a second-half dip in league form coinciding with Rio Ferdinand starting an eight-month ban from football due to a missed drugs test and restricting United to a third-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season\nNew to the United side were Portuguese winger Cristiano Ronaldo, Brazilian 2002 FIFA World Cup-winning midfielder Kl\u00e9berson, American goalkeeper Tim Howard, Cameroonian midfielder Eric Djemba-Djemba and French striker David Bellion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season\nUnited's UEFA Champions League and League Cup dreams ended in the last 16, with the European exit being particularly painful as a last minute goal by eventual champions Porto put them out of the competition and denied them an eighth successive Champions League quarter-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season, Transfers\nUnited's first departure of the 2003\u201304 season was David Beckham, who left Old Trafford after ten years with the Red Devils. On 7 July, forward Danny Webber joined Watford. A month after Webber's departure, Argentinian midfielder, Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Ver\u00f3n joined United's rivals Chelsea. Two days later, English forward Jimmy Davis died in a car crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season, Transfers\nComing in during the summer transfer window were French forward David Bellion, Cameroonian midfielder Eric Djemba-Djemba, American goalkeeper Tim Howard, Brazilian midfielder Kl\u00e9berson, and Portuguese winger Cristiano Ronaldo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season, Transfers\nLeaving in the winter transfer window was Alan Tate, who joined Swansea City. First-choice goalkeeper Fabien Barthez rejoined Marseille in April, while Danny Pugh joined Leeds United in late May, in exchange for Alan Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176037-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Manchester United F.C. season, Transfers\nArriving in the winter transfer window was Louis Saha, who signed from Fulham on 23 January for a fee of \u00a312.82\u00a0million. Alan Smith joined United on 26 May from Leeds United in exchange for Danny Pugh (see above). Gabriel Heinze joined United on 11 June from Paris Saint-Germain for a fee of \u00a36.9\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176038-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mansfield Town F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Mansfield Town Football Club competed in the Football League Third Division where they finished in 5th position with 75 points, reaching the 2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final where they lost on penalties to Huddersfield Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176039-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Maryland Terrapins men's basketball team represented the University of Maryland in the 2003\u20132004 college basketball season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). The team was led by head coach Gary Williams and played their home games at the Comcast Center. They won the 2004 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\u2014the first Maryland team to do so since 1984\u2014and advanced to the round of 32 in the 2004 NCAA Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176040-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Meistriliiga (ice hockey) season\nThe 2003-04 Meistriliiga season was the 14th season of the Meistriliiga, the top level of ice hockey in Estonia. Five teams participated in the league, and HK Panter-Hansa Sport Tallinn won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176041-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Memphis Grizzlies season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Grizzlies' ninth season in the National Basketball Association, and their third season in Memphis. It was also the final season playing their home games at the Pyramid Arena. They moved into FedExForum the next season. During the offseason, the Grizzlies signed free agent James Posey. After two unsuccessful seasons ever since they moved to Memphis, the Grizzlies finally played around .500 holding a 9\u20138 record as they acquired Bonzi Wells from the Portland Trail Blazers in early December. However, the team struggled posting a 7-game losing streak at the end of the month. Despite this, the Grizzlies continued to played their best basketball posting an 8-game winning streak in January, and winning 13 of their 15 games in March, as they made the playoffs for the first time in their franchise history, finishing fourth in the Midwest Division with a 50\u201332 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 933]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176041-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Memphis Grizzlies season\nPau Gasol continued to lead the team in scoring, rebounds and blocks, and 70-year old head coach Hubie Brown was named Coach of The Year. However, the Grizzlies lost in the first round of the playoffs, losing four games straight to the defending champion San Antonio Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176042-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season\nThe 2003\u201304 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey team represented Mercyhurst College in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (also Mersin \u0130dman Yurdu, Mersin \u0130Y, or M\u0130Y) Sports Club; located in Mersin, east Mediterranean coast of Turkey in 2003\u201304. The team participated in Second League Category A for 2nd time in the league's 3rd season. Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu football team has finished 2003\u201304 season in 15th place in Second League Category A. Mersin idmanyurdu participated in 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup and eliminated at second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season\nMacit \u00d6zcan was club president. M\u0130Y started to season with Y\u00fccel \u0130ldiz as the head coach. After 4th round Mehmet \u015eahan became the head coach. In the mid-season Levent Eri\u015f took over the management of the team. Ufuk Talay was the most appeared player (33), while top goalscorer was Taner Demirba\u015f (15).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation\nIn 2003\u201304 season Mersin idmanyurdu has participated in Second League Category A (the league has been played under the name of \"Second League Category A\" between 2001\u201302 and 2005\u201306; \"TFF League A\" in 2006\u201307; and \"TFF First League\" since 2007\u201308. Also sponsor names have been included in various seasons.). 18 teams attended in the league. Winners, runners-up and play-off winners were directly promoted to 2004\u201305 S\u00fcper Lig. Bottom three teams were relegated to 2003\u201304 TFF Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, Results summary\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2003\u201304 Second League Category A season league summary:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, League table\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2003\u201304 Second League Category A season place in league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, League table\n(C): Champions; \u00a0 (P): Promoted to 2004\u201305 S\u00fcper Lig; \u00a0 (R): Relegated to 2004\u201305 TFF Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, Results by round\nResults of games M\u0130Y played in 2003\u201304 Second League Category A by rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, First half\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2003\u201304 Second League Category A season first half game reports is shown in the following table. Kick off times are in EET and EEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, Second half\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2003\u201304 Second League Category A season second half game reports is shown in the following table. Kick off times are in EET and EEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 TFF First League participation, Second half\nIn the half season, player Ahmet Arslaner (Elaz\u0131\u011fspor) left the team, Volkan \u00d6zt\u00fcrk (Adanaspor) was transferred in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup participation\n2003\u201304 Turkish Cup was played for 42nd time as Fortis T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131 for sponsorship purposes. This season Cup was played by 48 teams in one-leg elimination system in 3 elimination rounds prior to quarter-finals. Trabzonspor won the cup for the 7th time. Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu participated in the cup and eliminated at first elimination round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup participation, Cup track\nThe drawings and results Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) followed in 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup are shown in the following table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup participation, Game details\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup game reports is shown in the following table. Kick off times are in EET and EEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, Management, Club management\nMacit \u00d6zcan, then mayor of Mersin city was president of the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, Management, Coaching team\nY\u00fccel \u0130ldiz was head coach at the start of the season. He took over the team in the mid of previous season. But, after 4th round he was replaced with Mehmet \u015eahan. In the mid-season Levent Eri\u015f became the head coach. He coached the team until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176043-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2003\u201304 squad\nAppearances, goals and cards count for 2003\u201304 Second League Category A and 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup games. 18 players appeared in each game roster, three to be replaced. Only the players who appeared in game rosters were included and listed in order of appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176044-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mestis season\nThe 2003\u201304 Mestis season was the fourth season of the Mestis, the second level of ice hockey in Finland. 12 teams participated in the league, and KalPa won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176045-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Miami Heat season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 16th season for the Miami Heat in the National Basketball Association. This season saw the team draft future All-Star and 3-time NBA Champion Dwyane Wade with the fifth overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft, while acquiring forward Lamar Odom from the Los Angeles Clippers. Before the season began, head coach Pat Riley resigned, but he would later return midway in the 2005\u201306 season and help guide the Heat to their first ever NBA championship. Under new head coach Stan Van Gundy, the Heat stumbled out of the gate losing their first seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176045-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Miami Heat season\nHowever, the team would play .500 basketball for the remainder of the season winning 14 of their final 17 games. Despite posting a mediocre 42\u201340 record, the Heat entered the playoffs as the #4 seed in the Eastern Conference. Wade had a stellar rookie season averaging 16.2 points per game, and was selected to the All-Rookie First Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176045-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Miami Heat season\nThe first round series pitted the Heat against the New Orleans Hornets, then in its second season of existence. The Heat would go on to defeat New Orleans in seven games. They advanced to the Conference Semi-finals for the first time since 2000. However, they went no further as they fell to the top-seeded Indiana Pacers in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176045-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Miami Heat season\nFollowing the season, Odom, second-year forward Caron Butler, and Brian Grant were all traded to the Los Angeles Lakers for big man Shaquille O'Neal after being bad blood with Kobe Bryant after blaming him for losing in the finals to the underdog Detroit Pistons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176046-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team represented Michigan State University in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans played their home games at Breslin Center in East Lansing, Michigan. They were coached by Tom Izzo in his ninth year as head coach. MSU finished the season with a record of 18\u201312, 12\u20134 to finish in a tie for second place in Big Ten play. The Spartans received a bid to the NCAA Tournament for the seventh consecutive year where they lost in the First Round to Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176046-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2002\u201303 season with an overall record of 22\u201312, 10\u20136 to finish in fifth place in the Big Ten. Michigan State received a No. 7 seed in the NCAA Tournament, their sixth straight trip to the Tournament, and advanced to the Elite Eight, their fourth trip to the Elite Eight under Tom Izzo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176046-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Spartans were led by sophomore Paul Davis (15.9 PPG, 6.2 PRG, 2.0 APG) and juniors Chris Hill (13.8 PPG, 2.8 RPG, 3.9 APG) and Kelvin Tolbert (10.7 PPG, 3.6 RPG, 2.0 PAG). The Spartans began the season ranked No. 3 in the country and faced a difficult non-conference schedule. MSU fell on the road to No. 6 Kansas in the second game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176046-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nTwo wins followed the loss before a murderer's row of a schedule which included three straight losses to No. 6 Duke, in overtime to No. 14 Oklahoma at the Palace of Auburn Hills, and to No. 8 Kentucky at Ford Field in the Basketbowl. The Spartans followed this losing streak by losing two of their final four non-conference games including at No. 17 Syracuse and dropped out of the rankings. They finished the non-conference slate at 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176046-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nAfter a loss to open Big Ten play to No. 21 Wisconsin, the Spartans recovered to win seven of their next eight and six of their last seven Big Ten games. They finished in a tie for second place in the Big Ten at 12\u20134 and 17\u201310 overall. A win over Northwestern in the Big Ten Tournament quarterfinals was followed by a third loss of the season to No. 17 Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176046-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Spartans received a No. 7 seed in the NCAA Tournament, reaching the tournament for the seventh consecutive year. But, for the second time in three years, the Spartans were knocked out in the First Round, this time by Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176047-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team represented the University of Michigan in intercollegiate college basketball during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team played its home games in the Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and was a member of the Big Ten Conference. Under the direction of head coach Tommy Amaker, the team finished tied for fifth in the Big Ten Conference. The team earned a fifth place seed and advanced to the semifinals of the 2004 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament. The team won the 2004 National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176047-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe team was unranked for all eighteen weeks of Associated Press Top Twenty-Five Poll, and it also ended the season unranked in the final USA Today/CNN Poll. The team had a 1\u20132 record against ranked opponents, with the lone victory coming against #12 Wisconsin 71\u201359 on February 22 at Crisler Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176047-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nColin Dill and J. C. Mathis served as team co-captains, and Lester Abram and Bernard Robinson, Jr. shared team MVP honors. The team's leading scorers were Daniel Horton (415 points), Bernard Robinson, Jr. (411 points) and Lester Abram (405 points). The leading rebounders were Robinson (194), Courtney Sims (161) and Graham Brown (139).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176047-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nCourtney Sims won the Big Ten Conference statistical championship for blocked shots with a 2.00 average in all games. The team led the conference in rebounding margin with a 3.4 average margin in conference games as well as blocked shots with a 4.31 team average in conference games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176047-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nIn the 2004 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament at the Conseco Fieldhouse from March 11\u201314, Michigan was seeded fifth and earned a first round bye. Then, in the second round they defeated number 4 Iowa79\u201370 before being defeated by number 1 Illinois 74\u201360.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176047-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nOn March 16, 2004, Michigan defeated Missouri 65\u201364 at Crisler Arena in the first round of the 2004 National Invitation Tournament. Then, Michigan defeated Oklahoma 63\u201352 and Hawaii 88\u201373 on March 22 and March 24 at Crisler Arena, respectively. At the final four in New York City at Madison Square Garden, the team defeated Oregon 78\u201353 in the semifinals on March 30 and Rutgers 62\u201355 to win the championship on April 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Middlesbrough participated in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Team kit and sponsors\nMiddlesbrough were sponsored by Dial-a-Phone, the team's kit was produced by Errea. The home shirt consisted of a plain red shirt, red shorts and red socks with white trim. The away strip was mainly navy blue with maroon shoulders, navy shorts and navy socks, with maroon detailing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, League review\nMiddlesbrough had an appalling start to their season, losing four of their first five games (their worst start since the 1984\u201385 season) and taking only one point. This set the foundations for a very patchy season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, League review\nMiddlesbrough hovered around the relegation spots for the first third of the season. However, they eventually found some form through November and December and went unbeaten for eight games which took them away from the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, League review\nMiddlesbrough's form was again inconsistent after Christmas, but they managed to pick up enough points to finish in a respectable 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nThe league cup campaign was the highlight of the season for Middlesbrough. It was one that would bring them their first major trophy in their 128-year history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nIt started in late September with a home match against Brighton and Hove Albion and Boro low down in the league due to a terrible start. Middlesbrough made hard work of it against lower league opposition, but managed to scrape through with a 94th minute extra-time goal from Malcolm Christie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nThe next round saw Boro comfortably beat Wigan Athletic 2\u20131 away with goals from Maccarone and Mendieta to set up a fourth round home match against Everton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nThe match against Everton was a closely contested affair, which ended 0\u20130 after extra time - penalties were needed to decide the winner. Middlesbrough won the shoot-out 5\u20134, with Mark Schwarzer saving from Leon Osman and Mendieta converting the winning penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nThe quarter finals saw Middlesbrough face Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane. Spurs led most of the match through a first-minute Darren Anderton goal. It took an 86th-minute equaliser from Michael Ricketts to send the game into extra time. No goals were scored in extra time, meaning Boro had a penalty shoot out for the second successive round. The shoot out went into sudden death, but after Mauricio Taricco's penalty hit the post, Franck Queudrue converted his penalty to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nBoro's semi final was a two legged match against a youthful Arsenal team. The first leg went Middlesbrough's way with them taking a 1\u20130 lead thanks to a Juninho goal. Arsenal boss Ars\u00e8ne Wenger chose a few more experienced players for the vital second leg, but to no avail: Boro won 2\u20131 on the night for a 3\u20131 aggregate win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nThe final was on 29 February 2004 against Bolton Wanderers at the Millennium Stadium. The game started in the best way possible for Boro, with goals from Joseph Desire-Job and Bolo Zenden giving them an early 2\u20130 lead. A mistake from Mark Schwarzer let Kevin Davies get one back, and the score remained 2\u20131 at half time. Both teams had chances to score in the second half, but the score stayed the same, giving Boro their first ever major trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review, Domestic cup review\nThe FA Cup campaign wasn't as successful. After a comfortable 2\u20130 win at home to Notts County, Boro were drawn against Arsenal in the fourth round. They lost the match 4\u20131 sending them out of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Squad, Senior squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Squad, Senior squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Premier League results\nNote: Results are given with Middlesbrough score listed first. Man of the Match is according to .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176048-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Player statistics, Appearances / Discipline\nAppearance and disciplinary records for 2003-04 league and cup matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176049-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Midland Football Alliance\nThe 2003\u201304 Midland Football Alliance season was the tenth in the history of Midland Football Alliance, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176049-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Midland Football Alliance, Clubs\nThe league featured 19 clubs from the previous season, along with five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176050-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Midland Football Combination\nThe 2003\u201304 Midland Football Combination season was the 67th in the history of Midland Football Combination, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176050-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Midland Football Combination, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season\nThe 2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season was the team's 11th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). After making it to the 2003 Stanley Cup Final and losing in the seventh game, the team placed fourth in the Pacific Division and 12th in the Western Conference, thereby failing to qualify for the 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Offseason\nIn the 2003 NHL Entry Draft, the Ducks selected Ryan Getzlaf with their first first-round pick, 19th overall, and Corey Perry with their second first-round pick, 28th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Offseason\nForward Steve Rucchin was named team captain following Paul Kariya's departure to the Colorado Avalanche via free agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season\nThe departure of Franchise player Paul Kariya marked another new era which had many fans angered as well as worried about the teams near future repeating the on-ice success. Signing Sergei Fedorov and Vaclav Prospal in the summer relieved most of the fans' fear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season\nBoth players delivered as expected but scoring decreased for several reasons: Mike Leclerc played only 10 games, Rob Niedermayer played only 55 games, though enjoying a good season and Andy McDonald stayed healthy but had trouble repeating his performance after missing half of last season due to a concussion; Chistov suffered from \"sophomore jinx\" collecting only 2 goals and Jason Krog could not repeat another season like the one he had before. Rookie Joffrey Lupul had a wonderful rookie campaign with a bright future ahead. Overall, while the team had more potential scoring depth, several players fell short to enjoy and repeat the scoring touch they showed last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season\nThe Defense performed well enough but J.-S. Giguere failed at times to play the way he did the year before allowing soft goals. Later that season Back-up goalie Martin Gerber saw more ice time challenging Giguere for the number one spot and nearly outperforming him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season\nPlaying away from home did not do them well as the Mighty Ducks won 19 games at home but only 10 games on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Playoffs\nThe Ducks missed the playoffs, despite making it to the Stanley Cup Finals the previous year against the eventual champions, the New Jersey Devils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Transactions\nTraded Todd Reirden to the Phoenix Coyotes for future consideration on January 17, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Transactions\nAcquired Martin \u0160koula from the Avalanche for Kurt Sauer and a 4th round pick on February 21, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Transactions\nAcquired Petr Shastlivy from the Ottawa Senators in exchange for Todd Simpson on February 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176051-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Draft picks\nAnaheim's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Millwall competed in the Football League First Division, the second tier of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Season summary\nDespite having spent the previous seasons chasing promotion to the Premiership, Mark McGhee left Millwall by \"mutual consent\" in October with the club just six points behind league leaders Sheffield United with 14 games played. His replacement, player-manager Dennis Wise, led Millwall to a final 10th place, four points off the play-offs. The club enjoyed greater success in the FA Cup, reaching the final for the first time in their history, to face Manchester United. Millwall, who were missing 16 players through injury and suspension, were unable to create many opportunities and lost 3-0 to a United side which had finished third in the Premier League that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Season summary\nCurtis Weston, a boyhood United fan, became the youngest player to ever appear in an FA Cup final when he came on a substitute for Wise in the 89th minute. Weston, aged 17 years 119 days, beat the 125-year-old record previously held by James F. M. Prinsep, who appeared in the 1879 final for Clapham Rovers aged 17 years and 245 days; Weston defeated Prinsep's record by 126 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Season summary\nAs United had already qualified for the Champions League, Millwall gained European qualification for the first time in their history, entering the UEFA Cup in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Kit\nStrikeforce remained Millwall's kit sponsors. London-based stationery retailer Ryman became kit sponsors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 33], "content_span": [34, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176052-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Millwall F.C. season, Awards\nAt the end of the season, defender Darren Ward was named the club's player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176053-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Milwaukee Bucks season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Bucks' 36th season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Bucks acquired Joe Smith from the Minnesota Timberwolves. Under new head coach Terry Porter, the Bucks played around .500 for most of the first half of the season. At midseason, the team traded Tim Thomas to the New York Knicks for Keith Van Horn. The young Bucks managed to play well as Michael Redd, who continued to show improvement had a breakout season averaging 21.7 points per game, while being selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176053-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Milwaukee Bucks season\nHowever, after holding a 33\u201327 record as of March 3, the Bucks lost eight of their next nine games, but still managed to make the playoffs despite finishing fourth in the Central Division with a 41\u201341 record. Top draft pick T.J. Ford made the All-Second Rookie Team. However, the Bucks did not make it out of the first round once again, losing to the eventual champions, the Detroit Pistons, in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176054-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs women's ice hockey season, Player stats\nNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; PTS = Points; GW = Game Winning Goals; PPL = Power Play Goals; SHG = Short Handed Goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 73], "content_span": [74, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176055-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season\nThe Golden Gophers accumulated an overall record of 30\u20134\u20132, and a 19\u20133\u20132 WCHA record in the 2003\u201304 campaign. The Golden Gophers swept the WCHA honors, winning the regular season championship and the WCHA Final Five with a 4\u20132 win over state rivals Minnesota-Duluth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176055-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season, Regular season\nThe Gophers went undefeated in the first half of the season, posting a 13\u20130\u20131 record. The Golden Gophers were the top team in the country for 18 of the 23 weeks in both the U.S. College Hockey Online and USA Today polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 74], "content_span": [75, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176055-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season, Postseason\nOn March 28, 2004 Halldorson and the Golden Gophers defeated Harvard, 6\u20132, to win their first NCAA Championship and her third national championship in six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 70], "content_span": [71, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176056-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 15th season for the Minnesota Timberwolves in the National Basketball Association. The season is one of the most memorable in Timberwolves history. During the offseason, the Timberwolves signed free agents Michael Olowakandi and Trenton Hassell. With a Western Conference-best 58-24 finish, the Wolves set the franchise record for wins, and won its first and only division championship. Power forward Kevin Garnett averaged 24.2 points, a league-high 13.9 rebounds, 5.0 assists, 1.5 steals and 2.2 blocks per game, winning the regular season Most Valuable Player Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176056-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Timberwolves defeated the Denver Nuggets in five games, which was their first ever win in a playoff series. The Wolves were then pushed to the limit in the semifinals by the Sacramento Kings, who they narrowly defeated in a deciding seventh game. In the Western Conference Finals, they faced the Los Angeles Lakers, who had defeated them in last season's First Round in six games. The Lakers team, known for its all-star starting lineup of Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant, Gary Payton and Karl Malone, defeated the Wolves in six games, then would go on to lose in the NBA Finals to the Detroit Pistons in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176056-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nMinnesota also acquired 4-time All-Star Latrell Sprewell in the off-season. The arrival was seen as controversial as Sprewell was known for his choking incident with then-Warriors head coach P.J. Carlesimo, though also for helping the 8th-seeded New York Knicks to the NBA Finals in 1999. Sam Cassell, who was known for winning two championships with the Houston Rockets, and his tenure with the Milwaukee Bucks, where he helped guide the Bucks to the Eastern Conference Finals in 2001, also was acquired to join Garnett, forming a \"Big 3\". Garnett, Cassell, and coach Flip Saunders represented the Western Conference in the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. The 2004 All-Star game was Cassell's only All-Star appearance in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176056-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nAs of 2021, this remains the only season the Timberwolves have ever won a playoff series; Minnesota would not make the playoffs again until 2018, losing in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176056-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Timberwolves season, Player statistics, Regular season\n* \u2013 Stats with the Timberwolves. ^ \u2013 Minimum 125 free throws made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176056-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Timberwolves season, Player statistics, Playoffs\n\u2020 \u2013 Minimum 20 field goals made. ^ \u2013 Minimum 5 three-pointers made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season\nThe 2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season was the team's fourth season in the National Hockey League (NHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Off-season, NHL draft\nThe 2003 NHL Entry Draft was held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee. After finishing the 2002\u201303 season with a 42\u201329\u201310\u20131 record, the Wild were awarded the 20th pick in the draft. Despite figuring fourth in the NHL for the previous season with only 178 goals allowed, and scoring only 198 goals, general manager Doug Risebrough selected defenseman Brent Burns in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Regular season, All-Star Game\nThe 2004 NHL All-Star Game was held on February 8, 2004, at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, home the Wild. The Eastern Conference defeated the Western Conference 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Playoffs\nDespite an incredible playoff run the previous year in 2002\u201303, the Wild failed to qualify for the 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Player statistics, Forwards\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Player statistics, Defensemen\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176057-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Minnesota Wild season, Player statistics, Goaltending\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176058-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Moldovan \"A\" Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Moldovan \"A\" Division season is the 13th since its establishment. A total of 16 teams are contesting the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176059-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Moldovan \"B\" Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Moldovan \"B\" Division (Romanian: Divizia B) was the 13th season of Moldovan football's third-tier league. There are 27 teams in the competition, in two groups, 14 in the North and 13 in the South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176060-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Moldovan National Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Moldovan National Division (Romanian: Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103) was the 13th season of top-tier football in Moldova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176060-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Moldovan National Division, Overview\nIt was contested by 8 teams and Sheriff Tiraspol won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season\nThe 2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season was the team's 95th season of play, 87th in the National Hockey League. The Canadiens returned to the playoffs this season and made it to the Eastern Conference Semifinals after winning the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals against the Boston Bruins, 4\u20133, before being eliminated by the eventual Stanley Cup champions, the Tampa Bay Lightning, 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Heritage Classic\nThe Heritage Classic was an outdoor ice hockey game played on November 22, 2003, in Edmonton, Alberta, between the Edmonton Oilers and the Montreal Canadiens. It was the second NHL outdoor game and the first regular season outdoor game in the history of the NHL, and was modeled after the success of the \"cold war\" game between the University of Michigan and Michigan State University in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Heritage Classic\nThe first NHL game to be played outdoors was in 1991 when the Los Angeles Kings played the New York Rangers in an exhibition game outside Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. The event took place in Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium in front of a crowd of 57,167, the largest number of people to ever watch a live NHL game, despite temperatures of close to \u221218 \u00b0C, \u221230 \u00b0C (\u221222 \u00b0F) with wind chill. It was held to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the Edmonton Oilers joining the NHL in 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Heritage Classic\nThe Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) television broadcast also set the record for most viewers of a single NHL game with 2.747 million nationwide. This was the first NHL game broadcast in HDTV on CBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Heritage Classic\nThe Canadiens won the game by a score of 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Roster\nForwards:11 - Saku Koivu15 - Darren Langdon17 - Jason Ward20 - Richard Zednik22 - Steve Begin24 - Andreas Dackell25 - Chad Kilger26 - Pierre Dagenais27 -", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176061-0008-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Montreal Canadiens season, Roster\nAlexei Kovalev32 - Gordie Dwyer34 - Jim Dowd35 - Tomas Plekanec37 - Niklas Sundstrom38 - Jan Bulis46 - Benoit Gratton71 - Mike Ribeiro73 - Michael Ryder76 - Jozef Balej81 - Marcel Hossa82 - Donald Audette88 - Chris Higgins90 - Joe Juneau94 - Yanic PerreaultDefencemen:5 - Stephane Quintal8 - Mike Komisarek28 - Karl Dykhuis43 - Patrice Brisebois44 - Sheldon Souray51 - Francis Bouillon52 - Craig Rivet65 - Ron Hainsey79 - Andrei MarkovGoaltenders:30 - Mathieu Garon60 - Jose Theodore", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176062-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Moroccan Throne Cup\nThe Moroccan Throne Cup was won by FAR de Rabat, who beat Wydad AC in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176062-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Moroccan Throne Cup, Final\nThis article about sports in Morocco is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176063-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Motherwell F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Motherwell's 6th season in the Scottish Premier League, and their 19th consecutive season in the top division of Scottish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176063-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Motherwell F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176064-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Munster Rugby season\nThe 2003\u201304 Munster Rugby season was Munster's third season competing in the Celtic League, alongside which they also competed in the Heineken Cup. It was Alan Gaffney's first season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176064-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Munster Rugby season, 2003\u201304 squad\nNote: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176064-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Munster Rugby season, 2003\u201304 Celtic League\nUnder the standard bonus point system, points are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 58th season of the National Basketball Association. The season ended with the Detroit Pistons defeating the Los Angeles Lakers 4\u20131 in the 2004 NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nThis was the final season for the original two-division format in both the Eastern and Western Conferences, before each of the conferences added a third division the following season. As a result, this would also be the final season for the NBA Midwest Division, as the Minnesota Timberwolves were that division's last champion, the only division title the franchise has won in their twenty-nine seasons in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nThe All-Star Game was held at the Staples Center in Los Angeles. The West won 136-132; Lakers center Shaquille O'Neal was named Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nFor the first time in 21 years the Portland Trail Blazers did not make the playoffs, ending the second longest streak in NBA history. For the first time in 20 years the Utah Jazz did not make the playoffs, ending the third longest streak in NBA history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nThe Houston Rockets played their first game at the Toyota Center. They reached the playoffs for the first time since 1999 and lose to eventual Conference champions Lakers in five games marked the only playoff appearance of Steve Francis NBA career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nPrior to the start of the season, Karl Malone and Gary Payton took major paycuts to leave their teams and join Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal on the Lakers for a chance at a possible NBA title. However, that title chase came to an end in the NBA Finals, as the Detroit Pistons won 4-1. The Minnesota Timberwolves, behind their \"Big Three\" of Kevin Garnett, Latrell Sprewell, and Sam Cassell, amassed the best record in the Western Conference, and were expected to finally win a first round playoff series. They won two and advanced to the Western Conference Finals, which they lost to the Lakers. It would be their last playoff appearance until the 2017\u201318 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nLeBron James (1st overall to Cleveland), Carmelo Anthony (3rd overall to Denver), Chris Bosh (4th overall to Toronto), and Dwyane Wade (5th overall to Miami), among others, formed one of the strongest drafts in NBA history. Among the highly touted rookies, Anthony and Wade led their teams to the playoffs, and Wade's play pushed the Heat into the second round. James went on to win NBA Rookie of the Year. Anthony became the first NBA rookie to lead a playoff team in scoring since David Robinson of the San Antonio Spurs during the 1989\u201390 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nThe Memphis Grizzlies qualified for the postseason for the first time in the franchise's then 9 year history, dating back to their days in Vancouver. With a record of 50-32, it was also the first time they posted a winning season. It was also their final season played at Pyramid Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nTracy McGrady was the first scoring leader since Bernard King in 1984\u201385 whose team did not make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Events\nGeneral Motors ended its sponsorship deal with the NBA after this season (having rotated among all eight of its U.S. divisions, including Saturn and Hummer), after which Toyota would become the new official partner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Playoffs\nTeams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its conference, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. The division champions are marked by an asterisk. Home court advantage does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Awards, Players of the month\nThe following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Awards, Rookies of the month\nThe following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Rookies of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176065-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBA season, Awards, Coaches of the month\nThe following coaches were named the Eastern and Western Conference Coaches of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176066-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBL season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBL season was the 26th season of competition since its establishment in 1979. A total of 12 teams contested the league. This season marked the first NBL season that featured the New Zealand Breakers, the first New Zealand team in the Australian competition. Also, the Canberra Cannons were replaced by the Hunter Pirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176066-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBL season, Regular Season\nThe 2003\u201304 Regular Season took place over 22 Rounds between 1 October 2003 and 29 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176066-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NBL season, Ladder\nThe NBL tie-breaker system as outlined in the NBL Rules and Regulations states that in the case of an identical win-loss record, the results in games played between the teams will determine order of seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176067-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings\nThe 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings was made up of two human polls, the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various other preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176068-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season\nThe 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 10, 2003, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on April 5, 2004 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. The Connecticut Huskies won their second NCAA national championship with an 82\u201373 victory over the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176068-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Season outlook, Pre-season polls\nThe top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls November 13, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176068-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Coaching changes\nA number of teams changed coaches throughout the season and after the season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176069-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings\nTwo human polls made up the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings, the USCHO.com Division I Men's Poll and the USA TODAY/American Hockey Magazine Poll. As the 2003\u201304 season progressed, rankings were updated weekly. There were a total of 34 voters in the USA Today poll and 30 voters in the USCHO.com preseason poll with 40 voters in the rest of the polls. Each first place vote in either poll is worth 15 points in the rankings with every subsequent vote worth 1 fewer point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176070-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season\nThe 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season began on October 3, 2003 and concluded with the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament's championship game on April 10, 2004 at the Fleet Center in Boston, Massachusetts. This was the 57th season in which an NCAA ice hockey championship was held and is the 109th year overall where an NCAA school fielded a team. The 2003-04 season was the inaugural year for the Atlantic Hockey Association after the discontinuation of Division I ice hockey sponsorship by the MAAC at the conclusion of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176070-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Pre-season polls\nThe top 15 from USCHO.com/CBS College Sports and the top 15 from USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176070-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points at the conclusion of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176070-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176070-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average at the end of the regular season while playing at least 33% of their team's total minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176070-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176071-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings\nTwo human polls comprise the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings, the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the USA Today Coaches' Poll is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176072-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season\nThe 2003\u201304 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season began on October 18, 2003 and concluded on March 20 of the following year. This was the 31st season of Division III college ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176073-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA football bowl games\nThe 2003\u201304 NCAA football bowl games were a series of 28 post-season games (including the Bowl Championship Series) played in December 2003 and January 2004 for Division I-A football teams and their all-stars. The post-season began with the New Orleans Bowl on December 16, 2003, and concluded on January 31, 2004, with the season-ending Gridiron Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176073-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA football bowl games\nA total of 28 team-competitive games, and two all-star games, were played. To fill the 56 available bowl slots, four teams with non-winning seasons participated in bowl games\u2014all four had a .500 (6\u20136) season. While teams that did not have winning seasons were invited to bowl games, seven teams with winning records were left out: Northern Illinois (10\u20132); Connecticut (9-3); Marshall and Toledo (both 8\u20134); Air Force and Akron (both 7\u20135); and South Florida (7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176073-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NCAA football bowl games, Poll rankings\nThe below table lists top teams (per polls taken after the completion of the regular season and any conference championship games), their win-loss records (prior to bowl games), and the bowls they later played in. The AP column represents rankings per the AP Poll, while the BCS column represents the Bowl Championship Series rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs\nThe National Football League playoffs for the 2003 season began on January 3, 2004. The postseason tournament concluded with the New England Patriots defeating the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl XXXVIII, 32\u201329, on February 1, at Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs\nBeginning with the 2003\u201304 season, the NFL changed the selection procedures regarding officials for playoff games. The league suspended the prior practice of assembling \"all-star\" officiating crews of highly rated individual officials. Instead, the league began using the entire crews that were highest rated during the regular season, preserving familiarity and cohesiveness in the officiating. The \"all-star\" crews were later resumed, beginning with the 2005\u201306 Conference Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Participants\nWithin each conference, the four division winners and the two wild card teams (the top two non-division winners with the best overall regular season records) qualified for the playoffs. The four division winners are seeded 1 through 4 based on their overall won-lost-tied record, and the wild card teams are seeded 5 and 6. The NFL does not use a fixed bracket playoff system, and there are no restrictions regarding teams from the same division matching up in any round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Participants\nIn the first round, dubbed the wild-card playoffs or wild-card weekend, the third-seeded division winner hosts the sixth seed wild card, and the fourth seed hosts the fifth. The 1 and 2 seeds from each conference then receive a bye in the first round. In the second round, the divisional playoffs, the number 1 seed hosts the worst surviving seed from the first round (seed 4, 5, or 6), while the number 2 seed will play the other team (seed 3, 4, or 5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0002-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Participants\nThe two surviving teams from each conference's divisional playoff games then meet in the respective AFC and NFC Conference Championship games, hosted by the higher seed. Although the Super Bowl, the fourth and final round of the playoffs, is played at a neutral site, the designated home team is based on an annual rotation by conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Schedule\nIn the United States, ABC broadcast the first two Wild Card playoff games. Fox then televised the rest of the NFC games. CBS broadcast the rest of the AFC playoff games and Super Bowl XXXVIII.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, AFC: Tennessee Titans 20, Baltimore Ravens 17\nIn a defensive struggle, Gary Anderson kicked the winning 46-yard field goal for the Titans with 29 seconds left. The winning kick was set up after a 15-yard unnecessary roughness penalty on Ravens offensive lineman Orlando Brown Sr. forced Baltimore to punt and enabled Tennessee to start its final drive from its own 37-yard line. Titans quarterback Steve McNair threw three interceptions. Meanwhile, the Ravens running back Jamal Lewis, the league's regular season rushing leader, was limited to 35 yards on 14 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, AFC: Tennessee Titans 20, Baltimore Ravens 17\nOn the Titans opening drive of the game, McNair completed passes to Drew Bennett and Frank Wycheck for gains of 17 and 14 yards, while Eddie George rushed five times for 25 yards on a 10-play, 67-yard drive. Running back Chris Brown finished the drive with a 6-yard touchdown run to give Tennessee a 7\u20130 lead. The Ravens were forced to punt on their ensuing drive, but three plays later, safety Ed Reed tipped a pass from McNair into the arms of cornerback Will Demps, who returned it 56 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, AFC: Tennessee Titans 20, Baltimore Ravens 17\nEarly in the second quarter, a 15-yard punt return from Titans receiver Derrick Mason gave his team the ball at the Ravens 35-yard line. McNair then led them to the 17-yard line, but Reed intercepted a pass from him and returned it 23 yards to the 29. After an exchange of punts, Ravens quarterback Anthony Wright completed four passes for 56 yards and rushed for 11, setting up a 43-yard field goal by Matt Stover giving Baltimore a 10\u20137 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, AFC: Tennessee Titans 20, Baltimore Ravens 17\nMidway through the third quarter, McNair's 49-yard touchdown pass to Justin McCareins gave the Titans a 14\u201310 lead. Then in the fourth quarter, Tennessee defense back Samari Rolle intercepted a pass from Wright at the Ravens 30-yard line, setting up a 45-yard field goal from Anderson. But Wright led Baltimore back, completing five passes for 80 yards on their ensuing drive. Tight end Todd Heap caught three of Wright's passes for 55 yards, and finished the drive with a leaping 35-yard catch in the back of the end zone to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, AFC: Tennessee Titans 20, Baltimore Ravens 17\nAfter an exchange of punts, the Titans took the ball on their own 37-yard line and drove 35 yards to Ravens 28-yard line where Anderson's 46-yard field goal with 33 seconds left gave them the win. This would be the Titans last playoff win until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, AFC: Tennessee Titans 20, Baltimore Ravens 17\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Titans and Ravens. Baltimore won the only previous meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, Dallas Cowboys 10\nThe Cowboys' turnaround season under coach Bill Parcells came to a crashing halt. The Panthers outgained the Cowboys in total yards 380\u2013204 and held the ball for 34:23. Dallas quarterback Quincy Carter threw for only 154 yards and an interception, while being sacked three times. Meanwhile, Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme threw for 273 yards and a touchdown to Steve Smith, who had five receptions for 135 yards and added 22 return yards on special teams. Stephen Davis ran for 104 yards and another touchdown, while Muhsin Muhammad caught four passes for 103 yards. John Kasay kicked five field goals for Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, Dallas Cowboys 10\nOn the Panthers third play of the game, Delhomme completed a 70-yard pass to Smith on the Cowboys 1-yard line, setting up Kasay's first field goal. Later in the first quarter, Toby Gowin's 31-yard punt gave the Panthers the ball at the Cowboys 41-yard line, and they scored another field goal to take a 6\u20130 lead. On the Cowboys ensuing drive, Carter completed a 28-yard pass to Joey Galloway and Troy Hambrick ran for 16 yards, giving Dallas a first down at the Panthers 20-yard line. But two plays later, fullback Richie Anderson fumbled the ball and Carolina safety Mike Minter recovered it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, Dallas Cowboys 10\nLater in the second quarter, Gowin once again gave the Panthers great field position with a 17-yard punt to the Carolina 49-yard line, and this time they managed to get the ball into the end zone with a 23-yard touchdown run by Davis, giving them a 13\u20130 lead. Carter managed to respond on the Cowboys ensuing drive, completing an 18-yard pass to Galloway, a 21-yard pass to Terry Glenn, and a 12-yard pass to Anderson. Billy Cundiff finished the drive with a 37-yard field goal to cut the score to 13\u20133 with 1:03 left in the second quarter. But after the ensuing kickoff, Delhomme's 57-yard completion to Muhammad set up Kasay's third field goal on the last play of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, Dallas Cowboys 10\nThe Panthers continued to dominate the game in the second half. Smith returned a Gowin punt seven yards to the Panthers 37-yard line. Then after a 24-yard reception by Muhammad, he caught a 7-yard pass and capped the drive with a 32-yard touchdown catch. Later on, he returned a punt to his own 40-yard line, setting up a 38-yard drive that ended with Kasay's fourth field goal, increasing the Panthers lead to 26\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, Dallas Cowboys 10\nDallas receiver Michael Bates returned the ensuing kickoff 41 yards to the Panthers 47-yard line, sparking a desperate rally. Carter then completed six consecutive passes and finished the drive with a 9-yard touchdown run, cutting the score to 26\u201310. Dallas' defense managed to force a punt on Carolina's next drive, but two plays later, Panthers lineman Julius Peppers intercepted a screen pass from Carter and returned it 34 yards to the Cowboys 11-yard line. Four plays later, Kasay kicked his fifth field goal with 3:04 left in the game to close out the scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 3, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, Dallas Cowboys 10\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Cowboys and Panthers. Carolina won the only previous meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nPackers defensive back Al Harris returned an interception 52 yards for the game-winning touchdown 4:25 into overtime, making this the first playoff game ever to be won in overtime with a defensive touchdown. The game is memorable for Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck's ironic comment after winning the coin toss for the start of overtime, telling the microphoned referee, and thus the crowd at Lambeau Field and the national television audience, \"We want the ball, and we're going to score.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nAfter forcing a punt, the Seahawks scored on their opening drive, with Hasselbeck completing two passes to Koren Robinson for 25 yards and Shaun Alexander rushing for 22 on the way to a 30-yard field goal by Josh Brown. In the second quarter, Tom Rouen's 38-yard punt gave the Packers the ball at midfield. Green Bay quarterback Brett Favre then completed a 29-yard pass to fullback William Henderson to set up a 31-yard field goal from Ryan Longwell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0017-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nSeattle struck back with a 51-yard drive, featuring a 28-yard reception by Bobby Engram, and scored another Brown field goal to retake the lead. But on the first play of the Packers ensuing drive, Favre completed a 44-yard pass to Javon Walker. Then after a 13-yard run from Ahman Green, Favre threw a 23-yard touchdown pass to tight end Bubba Franks. Seattle was forced to punt from their own 7 on their next drive, and receiver Antonio Chatman returned the ball six yards to the Seahawks 39-yard line. Two plays later, Favre's 23-yard completion to Donald Driver set up Longwell's 27-yard field goal with 41 seconds left in the half, giving the Packers a 13\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nSeattle took the second half kickoff and stormed down the field, driving 74 yards in 10 plays. Hasselbeck started out the drive with a 25-yard pass to Darrell Jackson, followed it up with a 15-yard completion to Itula Mili, and later completed a 14-yard pass to Mili. Alexander finished the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run on fourth down to tie the game. Then after forcing a punt, Hasselbeck completed five of seven passes for 72 yards, including a 33-yard pass to Robinson, and Alexander scored with another 1-yard touchdown run to give his team a 20\u201313 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0018-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nGreen Bay fullback Nick Luchey returned the ensuing kickoff 12 yards to his own 40-yard line, and Favre subsequently led the Packers 60 yards in 11 plays, taking over seven minutes off the clock. At the end of the drive, Green's 1-yard touchdown run tied the game with 9:56 left in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nSeattle went three-and-out on their next drive, and Chatman returned Rouen's punt 21 yards to the Seahawks 49-yard line. Favre once again led the Packers on another long scoring drive, moving the ball 49 yards in 12 plays and consuming 6:51 off the clock. Green finished the drive with another 1-yard touchdown run, and Longwell's extra point gave the Packers a 27\u201320 lead with 2:39 left in regulation. But Hasslbeck responded by completing three of five passes for 59 yards, including a 34-yard pass to Engram, on the way to Alexander's third 1-yard touchdown run to tie the game. Favre's 27-yard completion to Walker on the Packers ensuing drive gave them a chance to win, but Longwell missed a 47-yard field goal attempt on the last play of regulation, and it went into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nAfter the Seahawks won the overtime coin flip, Hasselbeck inadvertently spoke into the referee's microphone, \"We want the ball and we're gonna score!\" After both teams went three-and-out on their first drives of the extra period, Seattle drove to their own 45-yard line before Harris intercepted Hasselbeck's pass and returned it 52 yards for the winning touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nFavre completed 26 of 38 passes for 319 yards (his second highest post season total) and a touchdown. This was his 14th consecutive postseason game with a touchdown pass, a postseason record. Walker caught five passes for 111 yards. This would be the final game for John Randle in his Hall of Fame career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, NFC: Green Bay Packers 33, Seattle Seahawks 27 (OT)\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Seahawks and Packers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nColts quarterback Peyton Manning earned his first playoff victory as he completed 22 of 26 passes for 377 yards and five touchdowns, giving him a perfect passer rating of 158.3 as the Colts crushed the Broncos, scoring on every possession until running back Edgerrin James lost a fumble with 14:14 left in the fourth quarter. Manning passed for four touchdowns in the first half alone, including one to Marvin Harrison where he got up and scored after falling down untouched. Both Harrison and Brandon Stokley scored two touchdowns for Indianapolis, with Reggie Wayne added the fifth. Meanwhile, the Colts defense picked off two passes from Broncos quarterback Jake Plummer and recovered a fumble. Harrison recorded a career postseason high seven receptions for 133 yards and two touchdowns, while Stokley caught four passes for 144 yards and two scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 967]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nThe Colts took the opening kickoff and stormed down the field. James gained 39 yards on the first five plays of the drive, and then Manning finished it with a 31-yard touchdown pass to Stokley. Denver responded on their ensuing drive, advancing the ball 49 yards in 12 plays and taking 8:13 off the clock. Jason Elam capped off the drive with a 49-yard field goal to cut their deficit to 7\u20133, but it was as close as Denver would ever get for the rest of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0024-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nAfter the kickoff, Harrison caught three passes for 70 yards, including a pass in which he made a diving catch around three Denver players. All of them thought Harrison was down by contact and started to leave the field, but no one had actually touched him, and Harrison got back up and ran 46 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0025-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nAfter forcing a punt, the Colts drove 80 yards in nine plays. James rushed for 17 yards on the drive, while Manning started it off with a 25-yard completion to tight end Marcus Pollard and finished it with a 23-yard touchdown pass to Harrison, giving the Colts a 21\u20133 lead with 11:07 left in the second quarter. Denver managed to move the ball to the Colts 36-yard line on their ensuing drive, but a 15-yard penalty on guard Dan Neil pushed them out of field goal range and forced them to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0025-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nMicah Knorr managed to pin Indianapolis back at their own 13-yard line with his punt, but on the first play after that, Manning threw an 87-yard touchdown pass to Stokley. Plummer's 18-yard completion to Rod Smith helped the Broncos advance to the Indianapolis 37-yard line on Denver's next possession, but then he threw an interception to defensive back David Macklin, who returned it 21 yards to the Colts 45-yard line. After the turnover, Manning completed four passes for 48 yards, moving the ball to the Broncos 10-yard line where Mike Vanderjagt made a 27-yard field goal on the last play of the half, giving the Colts a 31\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0026-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nThe Colts defense stepped up in the third quarter, forcing three turnovers. Denver took the second half kickoff and drove to the Colts 23-yard line, featuring a 34-yard reception by Smith. But then Plummer was sacked on third down and Elam's 46-yard field goal attempt was blocked. After the botched field goal, the Colts drove 64 yards and scored with Manning's fifth touchdown pass, a 7-yard toss to Wayne. Three plays after the ensuing kickoff, Colts linebacker Rob Morris recovered a fumble from Plummer on the Broncos 20-yard line, setting up a 20-yard field goal from Vanderjagt. Then four plays after the ensuing kickoff, Macklin recorded his second interception from Plummer and returned it 32 yards to the Broncos 49-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0027-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nThis time, the Colts were unable to get any points. Three plays after the interception, Broncos linebacker Reggie Hayward recovered a fumble from James on the Broncos 38-yard line. After that, the Broncos drove 62 yards in 12 plays and scored with Plummer's 7-yard touchdown pass to Smith, cutting their deficit to 41\u201310. But by then, there was only seven minutes left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0028-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 4, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 41, Denver Broncos 10\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Broncos and Colts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0029-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nThe Panthers stunned the favored Rams in double-overtime, the fifth longest game in NFL history, in a thrilling finish to a game that featured big swings in momentum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0030-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nSt. Louis scored on their first drive of the game, with Marc Bulger completing passes to Dane Looker and Isaac Bruce for gains of 24 and 17 yards on the way to a 20-yard Jeff Wilkins field goal. They went on to add another field goal on their first drive of the second quarter, set up by Tommy Polley's 37-yard interception return to the Panthers 22-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0030-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nOn the first play after the ensuing kickoff, Carolina managed to take the momentum with a 65-yard run by Stephen Davis, giving them a first down on the Rams 4. Eventually faced with third and goal from the 5, quarterback Jake Delhomme was tackled behind the line and fumbled the ball while attempting a shovel pass, but it rolled into the end zone where receiver Muhsin Muhammad recovered it for a touchdown that gave the Panthers a 7\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0030-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nThe Rams got the ball back on their own 46 due to a 15-yard face mask penalty by Mike Minter while tackling Arlen Harris at the end of a 30-yard return, and retook the lead with a third field goal from Wilkins. However, the Panthers also received good field position to start their next series, as Brad Hoover returned the next kickoff 19 yards to the Carolina 41. Delhomme then led the Panthers to the St. Louis 27 where John Kasay kicked a 45-yard field goal, giving the team a 10\u20139 lead at the end of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0031-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nFor the third time in three quarters, St. Louis scored a field goal on their first drive, this one a franchise playoff record 51-yard kick from Wilkins that was set up by Bruce's 24-yard reception. However, the Panthers stormed back with three unanswered scoring drives. Kasay soon responded with a franchise playoff record field goal of his own, this one from 52 yards, to retake the Panthers lead at 13\u201312. Following a Rams punt, Carolina drove 64 yards in 14 plays and scored again on Kasay's 34-yard kick. Then in the fourth quarter, Minter intercepted a pass from Bulger on the Panthers 27. Carolina subsequently drove 73 yards, including a 36-yard catch by Steve Smith, to score on Hoover's 7-yard touchdown run and increase their lead to 23\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0032-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nCarolina now seemed to be in control of the game, especially when Deon Grant intercepted Bulger's pass on the first play after the ensuing kickoff and returned it 16 yards to the Rams 28. But the Panthers went three and out, and on their third down play, defensive tackle Tyoka Jackson's 11-yard sack pushed them to the outer limits of field goal range, where Kasay missed a 53-yard kick attempt with 6:26 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0033-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nSt. Louis took the ball back and drove 57 yards in 15 plays, featuring a 22-yard reception by Marshall Faulk on fourth down and two, and scored with Faulk's 1-yard touchdown run. Bulger's subsequent 2-point conversion pass to Looker cut the score to 23\u201320 with 2:39 to go. Then Wilkins recovered his own onside kick, setting up a 43-yard drive that ended with his 33-yard field goal. The field goal would cause some controversy, as the Rams held the ball inside the Carolina 20-yard line with less than a minute remaining, and one timeout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0033-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nBut Rams coach Mike Martz elected to play for the tie, allowing the clock to run down and kick the tying field goal, rather than let his quick-scoring offense try for the winning touchdown. Wilkins sent the game into overtime when he booted his fifth field goal of the afternoon through the uprights to tie the score at 23 as time expired in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0034-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nBoth teams blew scoring chances in the first overtime period. The Panthers would march down to the Rams 22-yard line on their first drive in overtime, and Kasay made a 40-yard field goal that would have won the game. But the Panthers were flagged for delay of game, and Kasay's second attempt from 45 yards was wide right. On the Rams ensuing possession, Wilkins attempted a 53-yard field goal, but it fell short. On the first play after Wilkins' miss, Muhammad caught a 22-yard pass on the Rams 35. But two sacks and a false start penalty pushed the Panthers all the way back to their own side of the field and they ended up punting the ball away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0035-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nThe Rams took the ball back and drove into Carolina territory, however an errant Bulger pass was intercepted by Carolina cornerback Ricky Manning. On the first play of the second overtime period, Delhomme needed only ten seconds to throw a 69-yard touchdown pass to Smith to win the game. It marked the first double-overtime game and longest NFL game since the 1986 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0036-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nDelhomme completed 16 of 26 passes for 290 yards, a touchdown, and an interception. Smith caught six passes for 163 yards and a touchdown. Bulger threw for 332 yards, but was intercepted three times. Bruce caught seven passes for 116 yards. Panthers kick returner Rod Smart returned five kickoffs for 123 yards, while Harris returned five for 124. Rams defensive lineman Brian Young had two sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0037-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nThis turned out to be the last hurrah for The Greatest Show on Turf, as the Rams would head into a steady decline over the next several seasons. It was also the last playoff game for the Rams in St. Louis before returning to Los Angeles in 2016 and their last home playoff game overall until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0038-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 29, St. Louis Rams 23 (2OT)\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Panthers and Rams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0039-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nIn one of the coldest games in NFL history, with temperatures reaching 4\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221216\u00a0\u00b0C), the Patriots survived the cold and NFL co-MVP Steve McNair, relying on yet another game-winning field goal from kicker Adam Vinatieri late in the fourth quarter and a key defensive stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0040-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nTom Brady stormed out the gates with a 19-yard completion to Kevin Faulk with his first pass attempt. A few plays later, the Titans defensive scheme confused him and caused him to burn a timeout, but it was well spent. On the next play, he threw a 41-yard touchdown pass to Bethel Johnson. McNair struck back with a 15-yard completion to Derrick Mason and a 24-yard pass to running back Eddie George, moving the ball to the Patriots 22-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0040-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nRoman Phifer almost ended the drive by intercepting a pass from McNair, but lineman Richard Seymour was penalized for roughing the passer and the Titans got the ball back with a first down on the New England 9-yard line. Two plays later, Chris Brown scored a 5-yard touchdown run to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0041-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nAfter the ensuing kickoff, Brady completed a pass to Dedric Ward for 22 yards on a 38-yard drive to the Titans 26-yard line. The drive ended with no points when Vinatieri missed a 44-yard field goal attempt, but on the next play, safety Rodney Harrison intercepted a pass from McNair and returned it seven yards to the Patriots 43-yard line. Brady subsequently completed four of six passes for 49 yards and rushed for three on the way to a 1-yard touchdown run by Antowain Smith to retake the lead less than two minutes into the second quarter. Later in the quarter, the Titans drove 51 yards in nine plays to the Patriots 13-yard line, featuring a 29-yard completion from McNair to Mason. But New England's defense kept them out the end zone and blocked Gary Anderson's 31-yard field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0042-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nEarly in the third quarter, McNair led the Titans on a 70-yard scoring drive, completing five consecutive passes for 59 yards and capping it off with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Mason. The rest of the third quarter was scoreless, but midway through the fourth quarter, Troy Brown's 10-yard punt return gave the Patriots great field position at the Titans 40-yard line. The Patriots gained only 13 yards on their ensuing possession (including a critical 4-yard completion from Brady to Brown on fourth down and 3), but it was enough for Vinatieri to make a 46-yard field goal, giving New England a 17\u201314 lead with 4:02 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0043-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nThe Titans took the ensuing kickoff and drove to the Patriots 33-yard line. But two penalties, a 10-yard intentional grounding call and a holding penalty, pushed them back 20 yards. McNair threw an 11-yard completion on the next play, but after that, Drew Bennett had the ball knocked out of his hands on fourth down and 12, and the Titans turned the ball over on downs with 1:38 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0044-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 10, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 17, Tennessee Titans 14\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Titans and Patriots. The Titans won the only prior meeting as the Houston Oilers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 120], "content_span": [121, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0045-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nThis offensive shootout became the second puntless game in NFL playoff history. For the second game in a row, Colts punter Hunter Smith took the day off while quarterback Peyton Manning completed 22 of 30 passes for 304 yards and three touchdowns (to Reggie Wayne, Brandon Stokley and Tom Lopienski respectively), while Edgerrin James ran for a career postseason high 125 yards and two scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0045-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nOn the Kansas City side, Dante Hall caught a touchdown and returned seven kickoffs for 207 yards and another score, and Priest Holmes, who set the regular-season rushing touchdown record in 2003, rushed for 176 yards, caught five passes for 32 yards, and scored twice. Kansas City's 33-year-old quarterback Trent Green threw for 212 yards and a touchdown while also rushing for 18 yards in his first career postseason game. A touchdown pass called back by a penalty and Holmes' third-quarter fumble, which set up a Colts' field goal, turned out to be too much for the Chiefs to overcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0045-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nKansas City defensive coordinator Greg Robinson resigned the following week in disgrace. \"He is the master,\" defensive end Eric Hicks said of Manning. \"That was an amazing performance. I never would have thought a quarterback would play two games in a row like that. They took us behind the woodshed and just beat us. It was embarrassing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0046-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nManning started off the day leading the Colts 70 yards and finished the opening drive with a 29-yard touchdown pass to Stokley. Kansas City responded with a 73-yard drive, with Holmes gaining 44 yards on five carries before Morten Andersen kicked a 22-yard field goal to cut the score to 7\u20133. The Colts stormed right back, driving 76 yards in six plays. Manning completed a 38-yard pass to Marvin Harrison on the drive, and James finished it with an 11-yard touchdown run. But then Kansas City came back, driving 77 yards in 12 plays, converting three third downs, and finishing the drive with a 9-yard touchdown pass from Green to Hall in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0047-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nAfter that, Manning led the Colts 71 yards and scored with a 2-yard touchdown pass to Tom Lopienski, giving them a 21\u201310 lead. Once again, the Chiefs drove deep into Colts territory, but this time they failed to score. First, Tony Gonzalez's 27-yard touchdown catch was called back by a pass interference penalty, and then Andersen missed a 31-yard field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0048-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nThe end of the first half briefly interrupted the barrage of scoring, but it quickly resumed in the second. On the second play of the half, Holmes' 48-yard run moved the ball to the Colts 22-yard line. But on the next play, Indianapolis defensive back David Macklin stripped the ball from Holmes and recovered it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0048-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nAfter that, the Colts drove to the Chiefs 22-yard line before Kansas City's first key defensive play of the game, defensive tackle Shawn Barber tackling James for a 5-yard loss on third down, forced them to settle for a Mike Vanderjagt field goal, increasing their lead to 24\u201310. But the Chiefs were not about to go down. Hall returned the ensuing kickoff 26 yards to his own 44-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0048-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nThen Holmes made up for his earlier mistake by carrying the ball on six of the eight plays of Kansas City's possession, gaining 44 yards and finishing the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run. Not to be outdone, Manning responded with five consecutive completions for 57 yards, including a 19-yard touchdown pass to Wayne to put the Colts back up by 14 points. But this margin turned out to be short lived; Hall returned the ensuing kickoff 92 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0049-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nBut once again, the Chiefs defense had no ability to stop the Colts. Manning led them on a 10-play, 81-yard drive that ended with James' 1-yard touchdown run with 10:38 left in the game. The Chiefs responded with a touchdown of their own, but it took too long. By the time Holmes finished the 17-play, 76-yard drive with a 1-yard touchdown run, only 4:16 remained in the game. The Colts then put the game away by running the clock down to eight seconds on their ensuing drive. This game is known among Chiefs fans in the pantheon of great Chief playoff losses as \"The No Punt Game\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0050-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 38, Kansas City Chiefs 31\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Colts and Chiefs. Indianapolis won the only prior meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0051-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nAhman Green's franchise postseason record 156 rushing yards and an early 14\u20130 lead was not enough to lift the Packers to victory. Facing fourth down and 26 yards to go, with 1:12 left in the fourth quarter and the Packers leading 17\u201314, Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb completed a 28-yard pass to Freddie Mitchell on a famous play now known as \"4th and 26\". The play set up David Akers' 37-yard field goal to send the game into overtime. In the extra period, an interception by Brian Dawkins set up another Akers field goal to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0052-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nMidway through the first quarter, Packers lineman Nick Barnett recovered a fumble from McNabb on the Eagles 40-yard line, and Brett Favre threw a 40-yard touchdown pass to Robert Ferguson on the next play. James Thrash returned the ensuing kickoff 36 yards to the 44-yard line. Then McNabb made up for his mistake with a 41-yard run to the Packers 15. But the drive stalled at the 14-yard line and ended with no points when Akers missed a 31-yard field goal attempt. After the missed field goal, Green rushed three times for 31 yards before Favre threw his second touchdown pass to Ferguson, giving the Packers a 14\u20130 lead with 1:16 left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0053-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nIn the second quarter, McNabb led the Eagles on a scoring drive, completing five consecutive passes for 77 yards, including a 45-yard pass to Todd Pinkston. On the last play, his 7-yard touchdown pass to Duce Staley cut the deficit to 14\u20137. Green Bay took the kickoff and drove 67 yards to the Eagles 1-yard line, featuring a 33-yard run by Green, but on fourth down, Green was stuffed by linemen Jerome McDougle and Mark Simoneau for no gain and the Packers turned the ball over on downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0054-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nLate in the third quarter, the Eagles drove 88 yards in eight plays to tie the game, despite two 10-yard penalties against them on the drive. McNabb was responsible for all of the yards on the drive, rushing for 37 yards and completing four passes for 72, including a 12-yard touchdown pass to Pinkston that tied the game on the first play of the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0055-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nLater on, Antonio Chatman's 10-yard punt return gave the Packers great field position on their own 49-yard line. On the next play, Favre threw a 44-yard completion to Javon Walker. Philadelphia's defense kept Green Bay out of the end zone, but Ryan Longwell kicked a 21-yard field goal to give them a 17\u201314 lead. After an exchange of punts, the Eagles got the ball on their own 20-yard line with 2:22 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0056-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nStaley started out the drive with a 22-yard run. Over the next three plays, McNabb was sacked for a 16-yard loss and threw two incompletions, bringing up 4th and 26 to go with just 1:16 left in the game. But he managed to overcome the situation with a 28-yard completion to Mitchell to keep the drive alive. He then added a 3-yard run, a 9-yard pass to Mitchell, and a 10-yard completion to Pinkston to get his team into field goal range, where Akers' 37-yard field goal sent the game into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0057-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nPhiladelphia won the coin toss in overtime, but they were forced to punt after three plays and Chatman returned the ball 15 yards to the 42-yard line. However, Dawkins intercepted Favre's first pass of the ensuing drive and returned it 35 yards to the Packers 34-yard line. An 11-yard run by Staley and an 8-yard reception by Pinkston then set up a 31-yard field goal from Akers to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0058-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nAlthough he was sacked eight times and lost a fumble, McNabb had a solid performance in the game, completing 21 of 39 passes for 248 yards and two touchdowns, while also rushing for 107 yards on 11 carries. His 107 rushing yards were a postseason record for a quarterback. Pinkston caught seven passes for 95 yards and a touchdown, while Thrash returned five kickoffs for 125 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0059-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Packers and Eagles. Philadelphia won the only prior meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0060-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 11, 2004, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 20, Green Bay Packers 17 (OT)\n| bg = #fff| nflseason = 2010| awayteam = Green Bay Packers | score1=21| hometeam = Philadelphia Eagles | score2= 16| playoffround = Wild Card Playoffs}}|}", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 123], "content_span": [124, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0061-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nNew England's defense dominated the Colts, only allowing 14 points, intercepting four passes from Peyton Manning (3 of them by Ty Law), recording four sacks (three by Jarvis Green), and forcing a safety. Although New England's offense fared no better and only scored one touchdown, Vinatieri's five field goals made up for the difference as the Patriots won, 24\u201314, to advance to their second Super Bowl appearance in three seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0062-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nThe Patriots took the opening kickoff and scored on their first drive, advancing the ball 65 yards in 13 plays. Tom Brady completed four passes to receiver David Givens for 40 yards on the drive, including a 7-yard touchdown pass, and converted a fourth down on his own 44-yard line with a 2-yard run. Manning seemed ready to counter, driving the Colts 68 yards to the New England 5-yard line, but on third down and 3, his pass was intercepted by Rodney Harrison in the end zone. After the interception, the Patriots drove 67 yards to the Colts 13-yard line where Vinatieri's 31-yard field goal increased their lead to 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0063-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nThe Patriots defense continued to dominate the Colts in the second quarter. On the first play after the ensuing kickoff, Law intercepted a pass from Manning and returned it six yards to the 41-yard line. The Patriots then drove 52 yards and increased their lead to 13\u20130 with a second Vinatieri field goal. Brady completed three passes for 42 yards on the drive, including a 17-yarder to Givens and a 16-yard completion to Troy Brown on fourth down and 8. For the first time in the entire postseason, the Colts were forced to punt on their next drive. Apparently, they were very out of practice, because the snap from center Justin Snow sailed over the head of punter Hunter Smith. The ball went into the end zone, and Smith was forced to knock it out of bounds for a safety, making the score 15\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 923]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0064-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nThe Colts had a great opportunity to score when defensive back David Macklin recovered a fumble from receiver Bethel Johnson three plays after the free kick, giving Indianapolis a first down on the Patriots 41-yard line. But five plays later, Harrison forced a fumble while tackling Marvin Harrison, and cornerback Tyrone Poole recovered it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0065-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nTrailing 15\u20130 at halftime, the Colts finally managed to build some momentum in the third quarter. First, Dominic Rhodes gave them great field position by returning the second half kickoff 35 yards to the 49-yard line. Then running back Edgerrin James spearheaded a 52-yard scoring drive, carrying the ball on seven of 12 plays for 32 yards and capping it off with a 2-yard touchdown run to cut the score to 15\u20137. But the Patriots took over the rest of the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0065-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nAfter Patrick Pass returned the ensuing kickoff 21 yards to the 43-yard line, Brady completed passes to Larry Centers for 28 yards, Brown for 17, and Kevin Faulk for 8, setting up Vinatieri's third field goal to increase their lead to 18\u20137. Three plays after the ensuing kickoff, Indianapolis was forced to punt. Antowain Smith then rushed four times for 53 yards on New England's next possession, advancing the ball to the Colts 3-yard line where Vinatieri kicked his fourth field goal. Two plays after the ensuing kickoff, Law recorded his second interception from Manning on the Colts 31-yard line. But this time, the Patriots failed to score because defensive back Walt Harris picked off a pass from Brady in the end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0066-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nAfter the turnover, the Colts drove 57 yards to the New England 31-yard line. But then Manning threw his third interception to Law with 8:17 left in the fourth quarter. After forcing a punt, Manning led the Colts back, completing eight of nine passes for 64 yards and finishing the drive with a 7-yard touchdown pass to Marcus Pollard with 2:22 left in regulation. The Colts failed to recover their ensuing onside kick attempt, but forced a punt with 2:01 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0066-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nHowever, the Patriots defense limited Manning to four consecutive incompletions, causing the Colts to turn the ball over on downs. Then after making Indianapolis use up all of their timeouts, Vinatieri's fifth field goal increased the Patriots lead to 24\u201314. The Colts attempted one last desperation drive, but ended up turning the ball over on downs again with seven seconds left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0067-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nBrady completed 22 of 37 passes for 237 yards, a touchdown, and an interception. Smith rushed for 100 yards. Pollard caught six passes for 90 yards and a touchdown. Rhodes returned five kickoffs for 121 yards, rushed for 16 yards, and caught two passes for 17 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0068-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nColts players would later publicly complain that the game officials did not properly call illegal contact, pass interference, and defensive holding penalties on the Patriots' defensive backs. This, and similar complaints made by other NFL teams, would prompt the NFL during the 2004 offseason to instruct all of the league's officials to strictly enforce these types of fouls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0069-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, AFC: New England Patriots 24, Indianapolis Colts 14\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Colts and Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 125], "content_span": [126, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0070-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 14, Philadelphia Eagles 3\nCarolina's defense shut down the Eagles offense, only allowing a field goal and holding Donovan McNabb to just 10 of 22 completions for 100 yards. Rookie cornerback Ricky Manning intercepted McNabb three times, while the Panthers defense recorded a total of five sacks. McNabb also sustained a lower-rib injury early in the game but stayed in until the second half. Although Carolina's offense only scored 14 points, it was more than enough for the team to earn their first trip to the Super Bowl with a 14\u20133 win. For the Eagles, it was their third straight NFC Championship Game loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0071-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 14, Philadelphia Eagles 3\nAfter a scoreless first quarter, the Panthers mounted the only long scoring drive of the game, advancing the ball 79 yards and scoring with Jake Delhomme's 24-yard touchdown pass to Muhsin Muhammad. The Eagles responded by driving 44 yards and scoring with a 41-yard field goal from David Akers. Philadelphia then forced a punt and drove to their own 44-yard line, but McNabb was intercepted by Manning and the score remained 7\u20133 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0072-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 14, Philadelphia Eagles 3\nThe Eagles took the second half kickoff and drove to the Panthers 18-yard line before Manning ended the drive with his second interception. Then after a punt, Manning recorded his third interception and returned it 13 yards to the Eagles 37-yard line. Four plays later, DeShaun Foster's 1-yard touchdown run increased Carolina's lead to 14\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0073-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 14, Philadelphia Eagles 3\nIn the fourth quarter, the Eagles had one last chance to come back, driving 74 yards in 11 plays to the Panthers 11-yard line. But linebacker Dan Morgan picked off a pass from backup quarterback Koy Detmer in the end zone with 5:16 left. The next time Philadelphia got the ball back, they turned the ball over on downs and Carolina ran out the clock to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0074-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 18, 2004, NFC: Carolina Panthers 14, Philadelphia Eagles 3\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Panthers and Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 122], "content_span": [123, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176074-0075-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl XXXVIII: New England Patriots 32, Carolina Panthers 29\nThis was the first Super Bowl meeting between the Panthers and Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 87], "content_span": [88, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 NHL season was the 87th regular season of the National Hockey League. The Stanley Cup champions were the Tampa Bay Lightning, who won the best of seven series four games to three against the Calgary Flames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season\nFor the fourth time in eight years, the all-time record for total shutouts in a season was shattered, as 192 shutouts were recorded. The 2003\u201304 regular season was also the first one (excluding the lockout-shortened 1994\u201395 season) since 1967\u201368 in which there was neither a 50-goal scorer, nor a 100-point scorer. This was the final season that ABC and ESPN televised NHL games until 2021-22. It was also the final NHL season before the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout with games resuming in the fall of 2005 as part of the 2005\u201306 season, and the final season in which games could end in ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, League business\nThe schedule of 82 games was revamped. The 30 teams played 82 games in a revamped format that increased divisional games from five to six per team (24 total), conference games from three to four (40 total), and decreased inter-conference games to at least one per team, with three extra games (18 in total).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, League business\nThe alternating of jerseys was changed. For the first season since the 1969\u201370 season, teams would now wear their colored jerseys at home and white jerseys away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, League business\nThe Phoenix Coyotes moved to a new arena in Glendale, Arizona, after playing their first seven seasons at America West Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was one overhung by concern over the expiry of the NHL Collective Bargaining Agreement. It led to the cancellation of the League's games for the entirety of the next season. During the entire season, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman and NHL Players' Association (NHLPA) head Bob Goodenow waged a war of words with no agreement being signed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nOn September 26, just before the season was to begin, young Atlanta Thrashers star Dany Heatley crashed his Ferrari in suburban Atlanta. The passenger, Thrashers teammate Dan Snyder, was killed. Heatley himself was badly injured and eventually charged with vehicular homicide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nEntering the season, the two Stanley Cup favorites were the Ottawa Senators in the Eastern Conference, who had won the Presidents' Trophy and come within a win of the Stanley Cup Finals the year before, and the Colorado Avalanche in the Western Conference, who, despite losing legendary goaltender Patrick Roy to retirement, added both Teemu Selanne and Paul Kariya to an already star-studded lineup. Neither of these teams, however, were as successful as expected, with Ottawa finishing fifth in their conference and Colorado finishing fourth, losing the Northwest Division title for the first time in a decade when the franchise was still known as the Quebec Nordiques.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nThe greatest disappointments were the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, who, despite making it to Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals the year prior and adding both Sergei Fedorov and Vaclav Prospal, failed to make the playoffs. The Los Angeles Kings failed to make the playoffs in large part due to a season-ending 11-game losing streak. In the East, the star-studded New York Rangers again failed to make the playoffs. The Washington Capitals, who were regarded as a contender, also stumbled early in the season and never recovered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0008-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nThe end of the season saw two of the most extensive housecleanings in League history, as the Rangers and Capitals traded away many of their stars and entered \"rebuilding mode.\" The Capitals traded away Jaromir Jagr, Peter Bondra, Sergei Gonchar, Robert Lang and Anson Carter, while the Rangers moved Petr Nedved, Brian Leetch, Anson Carter and Alexei Kovalev to other NHL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nThe most surprising teams were the Tampa Bay Lightning in the East and the San Jose Sharks in the West. The Lightning, who had a remarkable season with only 20 man-games lost to injury, finished atop the Eastern Conference, while the Sharks, who were firmly in rebuilding mode after a disastrous 28\u201337\u20139\u20138 campaign the last season, came second in the West and won the Pacific Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nTwo other teams that did better than expected were carried by surprising young goaltenders. The Calgary Flames ended a seven-year playoff drought backed by the solid play of Miikka Kiprusoff, and the Boston Bruins won the Northeast Division by a whisker over the Toronto Maple Leafs with the help of eventual Calder Memorial Trophy-winning goaltender Andrew Raycroft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nGoaltending was also the story of the Presidents' Trophy-winning Detroit Red Wings as the return from retirement of legend Dominik Hasek bumped Curtis Joseph to the minor leagues. At the same time, long-time back up Manny Legace recorded better numbers than both veterans and won the starting job in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nOf note is the fact that the Nashville Predators made the playoffs for the first time in franchise history, though they were dispatched by a star-studded Detroit Red Wings team in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season ended controversially, when in March 2004, the Vancouver Canucks' Todd Bertuzzi infamously attacked and severely injured the Colorado Avalanche's Steve Moore, forcing the latter to eventually retire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nDetroit Red Wings won the Presidents' Trophy and home-ice advantage throughout the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nFor rankings in conference, division leaders are automatically ranked 1\u20133. These three, plus the next five teams in the conference standings, earn playoff berths at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Eastern Conference\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Eastern Conference\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Eastern Conference\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Eastern Conference\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Eastern Conference\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Western Conference\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Western Conference\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Western Conference\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Western Conference\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0025-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Regular season, Final standings, Western Conference\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 71], "content_span": [72, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0026-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs\nThe 2004 playoffs were considered to be wide open, with no clear favorite. All of the top teams had weaknesses. Tampa Bay and Boston were both young teams with no history of recent postseason success. Detroit, Ottawa, Colorado, and Philadelphia all had major questions in goal. New Jersey was marred by injuries to Scott Stevens and Brian Rafalski, while Vancouver was missing the suspended Todd Bertuzzi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0027-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs\nThe first-round Eastern Conference matchups featured a number of historic rivalries. The Ottawa Senators met the Toronto Maple Leafs for the fourth time in five years in the always passion-filled Battle of Ontario. The Boston Bruins and Montreal Canadiens met in a resumption of the most common of all NHL playoff series, and one which the Canadiens have thoroughly dominated, including an upset win two years prior. The Devils\u2013Flyers rivalry added another playoff chapter with their series. The only non-rivalry was the Tampa Bay-New York Islanders series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0028-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs\nThe West saw the resumption of the Vancouver-Calgary rivalry, which had been somewhat dormant as the Flames made the playoffs for the first time since 1996. Detroit played division rival Nashville (whom they had struggled against during the regular season) in Nashville's first ever franchise visit to the playoffs. San Jose met the St. Louis Blues, while the always difficult four-five matchup saw Colorado and Dallas meet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0029-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs\nThe Calgary Flames, a sixth seed, defeated the Canucks in seven, the Red Wings in six and the Sharks in six games to become the first Canadian team to reach the Stanley Cup Finals in ten years, since the Canucks lost to the Rangers in 1994. They faced the Tampa Bay Lightning, who defeated the Islanders in five, swept the Canadiens and defeated the Flyers in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0030-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs\nFor the first time since 1994, neither the Avalanche, Devils, Red Wings or Stars played in the Stanley Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0031-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs, Stanley Cup Finals\nThe Lightning beat the Flames in the Stanley Cup Finals, four games to three. With the Flames having a 3\u20132 series lead and the series going back to Calgary for Game 6, with the Stanley Cup in the building and with the game tied 2\u20132 in the third, Martin Gelinas of the Flames (who scored the series-winning goals in the Flames' three previous series) appeared to have scored the go-ahead goal. Gelinas redirected a pass towards the Tampa net using his skate that was kicked out by Lightning goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0031-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Playoffs, Stanley Cup Finals\nIt appeared that before Khabibulin kicked the puck out, it had already crossed the goal line. The play was not reviewed. To this day, many Flames fans argue that the puck was in. The game eventually went into double overtime, where Lightning winger and former Flame Martin St. Louis scored the overtime winner. The Lightning went on to win Game 7 by a score of 2\u20131 and captured their first championship in franchise history. Brad Richards, with 12 goals and 26 points in the playoffs, won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0032-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Player statistics, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0033-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Player statistics, Leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games played; Mins = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses: OT = Overtime losses; GA = Goals allowed; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0034-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Milestones, Debuts\nThe following is a list of players of note who played their first NHL game in 2003\u201304 (listed with their first team):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176075-0035-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL season, Milestones, Last games\nThe following is a list of players of note who played their last NHL game in 2003-04, listed with their team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176076-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NHL transactions\nThe following is a list of all team-to-team transactions that have occurred in the National Hockey League during the 2003\u201304 NHL season. It lists what team each player has been traded to, or claimed by, and for which players or draft picks, if applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176077-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NK Dinamo Zagreb season\nThis article shows statistics of individual players for the football club Dinamo Zagreb It also lists all matches that Dinamo Zagreb played in the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176077-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NK Dinamo Zagreb season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176078-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NOFV-Oberliga\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the NOFV-Oberliga was the tenth season of the league at tier four (IV) of the German football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176078-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NOFV-Oberliga\nThe NOFV-Oberliga was split into two divisions, NOFV-Oberliga Nord and NOFV-Oberliga S\u00fcd. The champions of each, Hertha BSC II and VFC Plauen, entered into a play-off against each other for the right to play in the 2004\u201305 Regionalliga Nord. Hertha BSC II won 6\u20135 over two legs and thus gained promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176079-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season\nThe 2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season was the fourth season of the revamped NSW Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176079-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season\nThe Belconnen Blue Devils took out the minor premiership on 47 competition points, after having a superior goal difference over second placed St George Saints. However, the Devils lost two of three games in the finals series, including the grand final 2\u20130 to Bankstown City Lions. Thus, the Lions were the premiers for the 2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176079-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season\nThroughout the season many Premier League, Super League, Division One and Division Two teams competed in a newly formed FA Cup-style knockout competition called the Continental Tyres Cup in which the Sydney Crescent Star were crowned champions after defeating Bonnyrigg White Eagles in a penalty shootout at Gabbie Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176079-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season, Clubs\nTeams promoted from Super League:(After the end of the 2003 season.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176079-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season, Clubs\nTeams relegated to Super League:(After the end of the 2002\u201303 season.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176079-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NSW Premier League season, Gold Medal Dinner\nAt the end of the season, Football NSW hosted the Gold Medal Dinner, where players, coaches and referees were awarded for their work throughout the Premier League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176080-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NTFL season\nThe 2003/04 NTFL season was the 83rd season of the Northern Territory Football League (NTFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176080-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NTFL season\nSt Marys have won there 24th premiership title while defeating the Nightcliff Tigers in the grand final by 19 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176081-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NWHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176081-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 NWHL season, Playoffs\nThe Calgary Oval X-treme won the Championship of the NWHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season\nThe 2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season was the Nashville Predators' sixth season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The team qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time in franchise history, losing to the Detroit Red Wings in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season, Regular season\nThe Predators had the most power-play opportunities of all 30 teams in the League, with 428.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season, Player stats, Playoffs\nNote: Pos = Position; GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0MIN = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T/OT = Ties/overtime losses; GA = Goals-against; GAA = Goals-against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176082-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nashville Predators season, Draft picks\nNashville's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One\nThe 2003\u201304 National Division One was the seventeenth full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Bristol Shoguns who had been relegated from the Zurich Premiership 2002-03 while Penzance & Newlyn and Henley Hawks were promoted from the 2002\u201303 National Division Two. In terms of ground changes Plymouth Albion had a new home - moving from Beacon Park to newly built Brickfields which at 6,500 had twice the capacity of the original ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One\nAfter three consecutive seasons finishing second, Worcester became champions and were promoted to the Zurich Premiership for season 2004\u201305. Orrell were runners\u2013up, and Wakefield and Manchester were relegated to the 2004\u201305 National Division Two. Wakefield's final match was on 26 April 2004 against Coventry, who won the match 15\u201311 and with that defeat, consigned Wakefield, after fourteen consecutive seasons in National Division One, to relegation; while Coventry finished above Wakefield only on points difference. Wakefield folded during the summer for financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Team\n85 - 6 Exeter Chiefs at home to Manchester on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Team\n54 - 0 Exeter Chiefs away to Wakefield on 13 March 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Team\n85 - 6 Exeter Chiefs at home to Manchester on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Team\nExeter Chiefs at home to Manchester on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Team\nExeter Chiefs at home to Manchester on 28 February 2004Orrell at home to Manchester on 10 April 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Player\nLeigh Hinton for Orrell at home to Bedford Blues on 6 December 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Player\nDan Ward-Smith for Plymouth Albion at home to Henley Hawks on 20 March 2004 Richard Welding for Orrell at home to Manchester on 10 April 2004 Lee Carruthers for Otley at home to Manchester 13 December 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Player\nTony Yapp for Exeter Chiefs at home to Manchester on 28 February 2004 Leigh Hinton for Orrell at home to Manchester on 10 April 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Player\nTony Yapp for Exeter Chiefs away to Otley on 20 September 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Attendances\nWorcester at home to Pertemps Bees on 24 April 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176083-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division One, Season records, Attendances\nManchester at home to Pertemps Bees on 3 April 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North\nThe 2003\u201304 National Division Three North was the fourth season (sixteenth overall) of the fourth division (north) of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Three North. New teams to the division included Fylde and Kendal who were relegated from the 2002\u201303 National Division Two while promoted teams included Longton who came up as champions of Midlands Division 1 while Darlington (champions) and Macclesfield (playoffs) came up from North Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North\nThe league system was 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw with the promotion system changing for this season with a playoff system being introduced. The champions of both National Division Three North and National Division Three South would automatically go up but the runners up of these two divisions would meet each other in a one off match (at the home ground of the side with the superior league record) to see who would claim the third and final promotion place to National Division Two for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North\nAfter two seasons spent in the division Waterloo would pip Halifax to the title by the narrowest of margins finishing dead level on points but going up to the 2004\u201305 National Division Two by virtue of a massively better for and against record. Halifax would suffer a double disappointment by missing out on their second stab at promotion as they lost narrowly at home to 2003\u201304 National Division Three South runners up Launceston in the promotion playoff. Relegated teams included newly promoted Longton (who gained only 4 points all season), Liverpool St Helens and Preston Grasshoppers. Longton would drop back down to Midlands Division 1 while Liverpool St Helens and Preston Grasshoppers would fall to North Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Results, Promotion play-off\nThe league runners up of National Division Three South and North would meet in a playoff game for promotion to National Division Two. Halifax were the northern divisions runners up and as they had a superior league record than southern runners-up, Launceston, they hosted the play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\n91 - 5 Waterloo at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\n53 - 3 Waterloo away to Fylde on 17 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\n91 - 5 Waterloo at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nWaterloo at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nWaterloo at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nNew Brighton at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 13 September 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nLongton at home to Fylde on 8 November 2003Fylde away to Halifax on 24 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nAlistair J Murray for Tynedale at home to Longton on 18 October 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nJamie Bloem for Halifax at home to Darlington on 13 December 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nJohn Broxson for Waterloo at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 28 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nAnthony Birley for New Brighton at home to Preston Grasshoppers on 13 September 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176084-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nMike Scott for Fylde away to Halifax on 24 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South\nThe 2003\u201304 National Division Three South was the fourth season (17th overall) of the fourth division (south) of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Three South. New teams to the division included Launceston who were relegated from the 2002\u201303 National Division Two while promoted clubs included Southend (champions) and Haywards Heath (playoffs) coming up from London Division 1 and Dings Crusaders as champions of South West Division 1. The league system was 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw with the league champions going straight up into National Division Two and the runners up playing a playoff against the runners up from National Division Three North for the final promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South\nThe season saw an incredibly tight title race between Blackheath and Launceston. Both sides would finish dead level on 44 points each but Blackheath finished as champions thanks to a better for and against record. Launceston would join the London side in the 2004\u201305 National Division Two, making an instant return by defeating 2003\u201304 National Division Three North runners up Halifax in their promotion playoff in what was a very tight game played at the Yorkshire-based club. At the other end of the table the relegation battle was much less close with Old Colfeians and Basingstoke being the two sides to be relegated. Both Old Colfeians and Basingstoke would be demoted to London Division 1 for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Results, Promotion play-off\nThe league runners up of National Division Three South and North would meet in a playoff game for promotion to National Division Two. Halifax were the northern divisions runners up and as they had a superior league record than southern runners-up, Launceston, they hosted the play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\n76 - 10 Westcombe Park at home to Dings Crusaders on 20 March 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\n60 - 6 Westcombe Park away to Basingstoke on 20 December 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\n80 - 25 Launceston at home to Old Colfeians on 7 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\nRosslyn Park at home to Basingstoke on 11 January 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\nLaunceston at home to Old Colfeians on 7 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\nBlackheath away to Launceston on 22 November 2003Blackheath away to Old Colfeians on 17 April 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nJames O'Brien for Old Patesians at home to Old Colfeians on 27 March 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nJames O'Brien for Old Patesians at home to Old Colfeians on 27 March 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nSimon Porter for Launceston at home to Old Colfeians on 7 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nDerek Coates for Blackheath away to Launceston on 22 November 2003 Derek Coates for Blackheath away to Old Colfeians on 17 April 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176085-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Three South, Season records, Attendances\nAs only two attendances were listed due to poor media and club tracking it is therefore impossible to give any insight into attendances for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two\nThe 2003\u201304 National Division Two was the fourth version (seventeenth overall) of the third division of the English rugby union league system using the name National Division Two. New teams to the division included Moseley and Rugby Lions who were relegated from the 2002\u201303 National Division One while promoted teams included Nuneation who came up as champions of the 2002\u201303 National Division Three North with Rosslyn Park (champions) and Lydney (playoffs) coming up from the 2002\u201303 National Division Three South. This season would be the last using the league points system of 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two\nIn what was a very tight title race, Sedgley Park Park pipped Nottingham to the league championship by just one point \u2013 with both sides winning promotion to the 2004\u201305 National Division One. It was quite a turn around in Nottingham's case as the club had gone from just escaping relegation the previous season to gaining promotion as the league's runner up. At the other end of the table, promoted Lydney finished bottom with easily the worst record of just two wins and a draw from their twenty-six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two\nJoining them in the second relegation spot were Rugby Lions who went down on the last day of the season by losing heavily to champions Sedgley Park whilst relegation rivals Rosslyn Park stayed up by virtue of their win against Newbury Blues. Lydney would go into the 2004\u201305 National Division Three South while Rugby Lions dropped to the 2004\u201305 National Division Three North in what would be the Lions second successive relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Team\n91 - 0 Nuneaton at home to Lydney on 24 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Team\n58 - 15 Nottingham away to Lydney on 20 December 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Team\n91 - 0 Nuneaton at home to Lydney on 24 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Team\nStourbridge at home to Rosslyn Park on 25 October 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nSam Howard for Rosslyn Park at home to Bracknell on 3 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nJohn Carter for Doncaster at home to Lydney on 7 February 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nPeter Glackin for Nuneaton at home to Lydney on 24 January 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nBen Harvey for Stourbridge at home to Rosslyn Park on 25 October 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nNeil Hallett for Bracknell away to Sedgley Park on 29 November 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176086-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Division Two, Season records, Attendances\nBracknell at home to Rugby Lions on 6 September 2003", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176087-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Football League (India)\nThe 2003\u201304 National Football League was the eighth season of National Football League, the top Indian league for association football clubs, since its inception in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176087-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Football League (India), Overview\nThe fixtures for the first phase of the season (till round 11) were announced on 20 November 2003. It was contested by 12 teams, and East Bengal won the championship, in the month of April under the coach Subhas Bhowmick. Dempo came second and Mahindra came third. Indian Bank and Mohammedan were relegated from the National Football League next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League\nThe 2003\u201304 National Soccer League season was the 28th and final season of the National Soccer League in Australia. Perth Glory were crowned both premiers and champions after winning both the league and grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nThe season was remembered as the end of an era for the national league, following the announcement in 2003 that the national competition would be wholly scrapped in response to the Crawford Report into soccer in Australia. The end of the NSL led to the formation of the A-League, a new national competition that began in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nThe season was played as a single league, home-and-away format with top six teams qualifying for a finals series. Adelaide City withdrew from the competition shortly before the start of the season, leading to the hasty formation of Adelaide United to take their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nAt the beginning of the season, it became obvious that the title would be fought between Perth Glory and Parramatta Power. The Champions Glory lost several of their title-winning squad, most notably their dominant midfield, most of whom to the Power. Parramatta, backed by the Leagues Club, bought big for the last year including notably Ante Milicic and Sasho Petrovski, looking to simply buy the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nThis tactic seemed to be working for a large part of the season, as Power held off major challengers Perth, including a memorable 6\u20130 hiding, Glory's worst-ever loss. However, a turning point came and Perth began to close the gap both in results and performance terms, and won the Premiership by 6 points in the end. Neither of these sides were ever really matched by other sides during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nPerhaps the surprise of the season was Adelaide United, who surprised all by making the finals and nearly breaking Perth's all-time average season record attendance in the process, with the biggest crowds of the season. This was most notable as the club was thrown together just a few weeks before the season to take the place of former heavyweight Adelaide City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nIn the finals series, notably Perth were comprehensively beaten in both legs of the major semi-final, while Adelaide progressed to the minor semi-final in their first ever season, only to be thrashed by Glory, just highlighting the gap between the top two sides and the rest of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176088-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 National Soccer League, Overview\nThe last ever NSL Grand Final was held at Parramatta Stadium, due to Power winning the major semi-final. The Final was attended by a very measly crowd of just over 9,000, and played in thick rain from kick-off. Power's slick passing game was somewhat hurt by the poor conditions, and the game turned into something of a scrap. No goals were scored in 90 minutes of football, so the game went to extra-time where young Glory striker Nik Mrdja slotted to give Glory their fifth National League title and second NSL Championship, while Power finished the season with nothing to show for their quality and dominance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176089-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nationalliga A season\nThe 2003\u201304 NLA season was the 66th regular season of the Nationalliga A, the main professional ice hockey league in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176089-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nationalliga A season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176089-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nationalliga A season, Playoffs, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176089-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nationalliga A season, Playout round\nTeams ranked from 9 - 13 after regular season, played 2 games against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176090-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nationalliga B season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Marauder09 (talk | contribs) at 05:06, 19 November 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176090-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nationalliga B season\nThe 2003-04 Nationalliga B season was the 57th season of the Nationalliga B, the second tier level of ice hockey in Switzerland. 10 teams participated in the league, and EHC Biel-Bienne won the championship. They were not promoted to Nationalliga A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176091-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I\nThe 2003\u201304 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, also known as NB I, was the 102nd season of top-tier football in Hungary. The league was officially named Arany \u00c1szok Liga for sponsoring reasons. The season started on 25 July 2003 and ended on 27 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176091-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, Overview\nIt was contested by 12 teams, and Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176092-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team represented the University of Nevada, Reno during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Wolf Pack, led by fifth-year head coach Trent Johnson, played their home games at the Lawlor Events Center on their campus in Reno, Nevada as members of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176092-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nevada Wolf Pack men's basketball team\nAfter finishing atop the conference regular season standings, Nevada won the WAC Tournament to receive an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 10 seed in the St. Louis Region. The Wolf Pack defeated Michigan State and No. 2 seed Gonzaga to reach the first Sweet Sixteen in program history. In the Regional semifinal, No. 3 seed and eventual national runner-up Georgia Tech ended Nevada's run, 72\u201367. The team finished with a record of 25\u20139 (13\u20135 WAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season\nThe 2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season was the team's 22nd season in the National Hockey League since the franchise relocated to New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season\nLike the 2001\u201302 NHL season, the Devils finished 6th in the Eastern Conference and were eliminated in the first round of the playoffs. The team started the season really impressive, winning 17 of their first 30 games. However, in the 2004 calendar year, they were 24\u201319\u20134\u20131, causing them to finish sixth in the conference, second in the division and lose to one of their division rivals, the Philadelphia Flyers in five games in the quarterfinals. They were also marred by injured defenseman Scott Stevens and Brian Rafalski which also caused them to be eliminated in the first round of the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Regular season\nThe defending Stanley Cup champions, the Devils only allowed 164 goals, the lowest total ever allowed by a team under the 82-game regular-season format. The Devils also shut out their opponents 14 times, a league-high. Furthermore, they were the most disciplined team in the League, finishing with the regular season with the fewest power-play opportunities against (266) and the fewest power-play goals allowed (39).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Playoffs, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (E6) New Jersey Devils vs. (E3) Philadelphia Flyers\nThe series opened at Wachovia Center in Philadelphia, and the Flyers won both games 1 and 2 3-2 over New Jersey. Games three and four were played at Continental Airlines Arena in New Jersey. The Devils won game three 4-2, but the Flyers were victorious in game four by a score of 3-0. Game five was played back in Philadelphia, and the Flyers won that game 3-1 and won the series 4 games to 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 129], "content_span": [130, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Media\nTelevision coverage was still on Fox Sports Net New York with commentators Mike Emrick and Chico Resch as usual with Matt Loughlin hosting in the studio. Radio coverage remained on WABC 770 with John Hennessy calling the play-by-play with Randy Velischek providing color commentary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Player statistics, Playoffs\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes; PPG = Power-play goals; SHG = Short-handed goals; GWG = Game-winning goals\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0MIN = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T/OT = Ties/overtime losses; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; SO = Shutouts; SA = Shots against; SV = Shots saved; SV% = Save percentage;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176093-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Devils season, Draft picks\nThe Devils' draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176094-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Nets season\nThe 2003\u201304 New Jersey Nets season was the Nets' 37th season in the National Basketball Association, and 28th season in East Rutherford, New Jersey. After speculating that he would sign with the defending champion San Antonio Spurs in the off-season, Jason Kidd signed a 6-year, $99\u00a0million deal to stay with the Nets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176094-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Nets season\nThe team acquired All-Star center and two-time Defensive Player of the Year Alonzo Mourning, who missed all of last season due to his worsening kidney condition. However, after just twelve games, Mourning retired on November 25, 2003, due to complications from his kidney disease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176094-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Nets season\nAfter a 22\u201320 start to the season, Byron Scott was fired as head coach and was replaced with Lawrence Frank, as the Nets went on a 14-game winning streak at midseason. With Frank as interim head coach, the Nets overcame adversity, ending the season with a 47\u201335 record. Despite this, the Nets still managed to repeat as Division Champions and earn the number 2 spot in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176094-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Nets season\nAfter sweeping the New York Knicks in the opening round of the playoffs, the second round pitted the Nets against the Detroit Pistons in last year's Conference championship rematch. However, Detroit would get revenge this time, and would eventually win the series in seven games, ending the 2003\u201304 season for the Nets. The Pistons would go on to defeat the Los Angeles Lakers in the 2004 NBA Finals to win their third NBA championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176094-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Jersey Nets season\nFollowing the season, Kenyon Martin was traded to the Denver Nuggets, Kerry Kittles was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers, and Rodney Rogers signed as a free agent with the New Orleans Hornets. Martin and Kidd both represented the Eastern Conference at the 2004 NBA All-Star Game, which was held in Los Angeles. This was Kenyon Martin's only All-Star game appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176095-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Orleans Hornets season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Hornets' second season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Hornets signed free agent Steve Smith. Despite losing Jamal Mashburn for the first 44 games due to a knee injury, the Hornets got off to a solid 17\u20137 start to the season under new head coach Tim Floyd. However, they would struggle posting a losing record in January, and only managed to play .500 ball in February. Mashburn would return to play just 19 games averaging 20.8 points per game, but then re-injured his knee sitting out the rest of the season. The Hornets struggled losing 11 of their 16 games in March, but would rebound in April winning 4 of 7 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176095-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Orleans Hornets season\nDespite posting an average record of 41\u201341, the Hornets finished fifth in the Eastern Conference, and qualified for their fifth straight playoff appearance. This was also the team's final season in the NBA's Eastern Conference. Baron Davis was again hampered by injuries and he played just 67 games. Despite another injury-plagued season, Davis and teammate Jamaal Magloire both represented the Eastern Conference at the 2004 NBA All-Star Game in Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176095-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Orleans Hornets season\nIn the playoffs, they faced the Miami Heat in the first round, but lost in seven games. Following the season, the Hornets moved to the new Southwest Division of the NBA's Western Conference. Also following the season, Floyd was fired as coach after just one season, Smith left in the 2004 NBA Expansion Draft, Stacey Augmon signed as a free agent with the Orlando Magic, and Robert Traylor re-signed with the Cleveland Cavaliers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176096-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Islanders season\nThe 2003\u201304 New York Islanders season was the 32nd season in the franchise's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176096-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Islanders season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176096-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Islanders season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176096-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Islanders season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176096-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Islanders season, Draft picks\nNew York Islanders' had 9 picks in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176097-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Knicks season\nThe 2003\u201304 New York Knicks season was the 58th season for the Knicks in the National Basketball Association (NBA). During the offseason, the Knicks signed All-Star center Dikembe Mutombo in free agency. The Knicks started the season by losing seven of their first nine games as fans at the Garden chanted \"Fire Layden\", in reference to general manager Scott Layden. Knicks fans would get their wish as Layden was fired and replaced by former Detroit Pistons star Isiah Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176097-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Knicks season\nIn January, the Knicks traded Antonio McDyess and Charlie Ward to the Phoenix Suns for All-Star guard Stephon Marbury and Anfernee Hardaway. Ward was released by the Suns, and later signed as a free agent with the San Antonio Spurs. At midseason, Thomas made more moves, trading Keith Van Horn to the Milwaukee Bucks for Tim Thomas. After a 15\u201324 start, the Knicks fired head coach Don Chaney, and played one game under assistant Herb Williams before signing Lenny Wilkens as their new coach. With a 39\u201343 record, which placed them third in the Atlantic Division, the Knicks qualified for the NBA playoffs as the seventh seed in the Eastern Conference. Allan Houston averaged 18.5 points per game, but played just 50 games due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176097-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Knicks season\nIn the Eastern Conference First Round of the playoffs, the Knicks were swept in four games by the New Jersey Nets. New York did not return to the playoffs until the 2010\u201311 season. Following the season, Mutombo was traded to the Chicago Bulls, who then dealt him to the Houston Rockets. Longtime Knicks play-by-play announcer Marv Albert was not retained by the MSG Network, having criticized poor play by the team on-air. He remained an NBA on TNT broadcaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season\nThe 2003\u201304 New York Rangers season was their 78th in the National Hockey League (NHL). The team finished with one of the worst records in the league despite bringing in future Hall of Famer Jaromir Jagr midway through the season. The team would eventually trade away most of its major acquisitions, including their long-time defensive stalwart Brian Leetch. This would prove to be the final season for team captain Mark Messier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season, Playoffs\nThe Rangers failed to qualify for the 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, missing the playoffs for the seventh consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Rangers. Stats reflect time with Rangers only. \u2021Traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with Rangers only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176098-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New York Rangers season, Draft picks\nNew York's picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft in Nashville, Tennessee, at the Gaylord Entertainment Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176099-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Zealand Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2003\u201304 New Zealand Figure Skating Championships was held at the Paradice in Botany Downs, Auckland from 6 through 9 October 2003. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles across many levels, including senior, junior, novice, adult, and the pre-novice disciplines of juvenile, pre-primary, primary, and intermediate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176100-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 New Zealand V8 season\nThe 2003\u201304 New Zealand V8 season (the leading motorsport category in New Zealand) consisted of seven rounds beginning on 7\u20139 November 2003 and ending 27\u201338 March 2004. The championship was won by Andy Booth, for the first time in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Newcastle United participated in the FA Premier League. This season saw the club reach the semi-finals of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season\nNewcastle finished 5th in the Premiership at the end of the season, which ensured qualification for the UEFA Cup once again for the 2004\u201305 season. Many fans were left disgruntled that United did not make it into the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nNewcastle had finished the 2002\u201303 season third in the Premier League, entering the qualification rounds for the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nHowever, Newcastle did not qualify for the Champions League. They beat Partizan Belgrade 1\u20130 away from home, but then lost 1\u20130 at St James' Park and were eliminated via the penalty shootout. This defeat dropped Newcastle into the first round of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nNewcastle reached the semi finals of the UEFA Cup, defeating Breda, Basel, V\u00e5lerenga, Mallorca and PSV in the competition. Newcastle were knocked out by Olympique Marseille in the semi-finals 2\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nIn the league, the team were unable to repeat the success of the previous two seasons as Liverpool pipped them to the fourth Champions League spot in the last week of the season. Newcastle were able to nip in ahead of Aston Villa and Charlton Athletic to take fifth place and qualify for the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nThe club could have finished higher if they hadn't started and ended the season with terrible runs. Newcastle failed to win until October in the league and ended the season by winning only one of their last seven league games. The club's away form was a major Achilles heel, with the club registering only 2 away wins (at Middlesbrough and Fulham in the space of 4 days) and a staggering 12 away draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, Team kit\nThe team kit for the 2003\u201304 season was produced by Adidas and the main shirt sponsor was Northern Rock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176101-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176102-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United Jets FC season\nThe 2003\u201304 Newcastle United season was the final season of the National Soccer League. Newcastle finished 11th on the table, failing to qualify for the NSL finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176102-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Newcastle United Jets FC season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Roy Williams. No team captains were selected for this season, the first, and so far, only time this has happened in program history. The team played its home games in the Dean Smith Center in Chapel Hill, North Carolina as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Roster\nWes Miller was not eligible to play this season because he transferred from James Madison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Roster\nAfter playing as a walk-on in the previous season, David Noel received a basketball scholarship to play beginning with this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 62], "content_span": [63, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nAfter Matt Doherty resigned from the men's basketball coaching position at the end of the previous season, Dean Smith once again persuaded Roy Williams to once again take the vacant position. This time Williams accepted, becoming the head coach of the Tar Heels on April 14, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nAfter the annual Blue-White Scrimmage and two exhibition games against North Carolina Central (then playing in NCAA Division II conference CIAA) and Team Nike, Williams' first game with the Tar Heels was against Old Dominion on November 22, 2003. Williams received a standing ovation as he stepped onto the court of the sold out Smith Center. With Smith and Bill Guthridge in attendance, the Tar Heels beat Old Dominion 90-64. The win was Williams' 419th career win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 115 points scored against George Mason were the most points Tar Heel team had scored against an opponent since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe triple-overtime loss to Wake Forest at home set several program records. The 114 points scored in this game are the most points scored in a Tar Heel loss. The Wake Forest loss was only the fifth time a game went into triple overtime in program history. The last time a game went into triple overtime prior to this season was in the 1982-83 season against Tulane (also the team, albeit in 1976, that the Tar Heels played against to set the program and ACC record of four overtimes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe 119 points that Wake Forest scored are the most points an opponent has scored over the Tar Heels, breaking the 112 points Maryland scored at Cole Field House in the previous season. Those points are also the most an opponent has scored against the Tar Heels in the Smith Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nBoth teams scored 16 points in the first overtime. The Tar Heels' 16 points are the Tar Heels' third most points in an overtime period, and Wake Forest's 16 points are the second most points a Tar Heel opponent has scored in halftime. In the second overtime, both teams only scored two points, respectfully the fewest points the Tar Heels and one of their opponents have scored in a halftime. The 13 points Wake Forest scored in the third overtime are the third most points a Tar Heel opponent has scored in an overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe win against Miami was the 200th win in the Smith Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Tar Heels beat Connecticut for the second consecutive year. The win was also the Tar Heels' tenth win over a number one ranked team (according to the AP Poll). At the time, the Tar Heels tied UCLA for most wins over a number one ranked team. (The Tar Heels now own this record outright, with 13 wins over number one ranked teams to UCLA's 12.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176103-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team, Schedule and results\nThe Tar Heels finished with their first winning record in two seasons, 17-10, but only finished fifth in ACC play with a conference record of 8-8. They were eliminated in the quarterfinals of the 2004 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament by Georgia Tech. However, their overall record by the time of their loss in the ACC Tournament allowed them to play in the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Tar Heels' NCAA tournament run ended with a defeat against Texas in the tournament's Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 76], "content_span": [77, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176104-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 North West Counties Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 North West Counties Football League season was the 22nd in the history of the North West Counties Football League, a football competition in England. Teams were divided into two divisions: Division One and Division Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176105-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Counties East Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Northern Counties East Football League season was the 22nd in the history of Northern Counties East Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176105-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Counties East Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 18 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176105-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Counties East Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 14 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176106-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Northern Football League season was the 106th in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176106-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division Two:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176106-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Northern Premier League season was the 36th in the history of the Northern Premier League, a football competition in England. Teams were divided into two divisions; the Premier and the First. This season was the last before the formation of the Conference North and the Conference South, so most of the Premier Division teams were promoted to the Conference North for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League\nSubsequently, the First Division had most of its teams promoted to the Premier Division, with new teams admitted from the leagues just below the Northern Premier in the English football league system, although the league reform meant that the \"promoted\" clubs remained in the same tier within the English football league system, and further meant that while there was no relegation within the NPL itself, those clubs that missed out on promotion nevertheless had their position within the league system downgraded by one tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League\nDuring this season, Radcliffe Borough's Jody Banim broke the English record for the most consecutive games where a player has scored at least one goal, which ran from 9 September to 4 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League, Premier Division, Play-offs\nEight teams competed for the final Conference North place; including Hyde United, champions of Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League, Promotion and relegation\nIn the thirty-sixth season of the Northern Premier League the top fourteen teams of the Premier Division plus Bradford Park Avenue were promoted to the newly formed Conference North. They were replaced by the top fourteen teams of the First Division, who in turn were replaced by the following fourteen teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League, Promotion and relegation\nWhile no teams were relegated this season, the league reform meant the teams that missed out on \"promotion\" remained in a league that had its position in the English football league system downgraded by one tier while the \"promoted\" teams actually remained on the same level of the league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League, Cup results\nPresident's Cup: 'Plate' competition for losing teams in the NPL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League, Cup results\nChairman's Cup: 'Plate' competition for losing teams in the NPL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176107-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Northern Premier League, Cup results\nPeter Swales Shield: Between Champions of NPL Premier Division and Winners of the NPL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176108-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Norwich City F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 102nd season in the history of Norwich City, and the club's ninth consecutive season competing in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176108-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Norwich City F.C. season\nNorwich gained promotion to the FA Premier League as league champions with 94 points, finishing eight points ahead of runners-up West Bromwich Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176108-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Norwich City F.C. season, Kit\nNorwich maintained their kit manufacturing deal with Xara, who produced a new kit for the next two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 37], "content_span": [38, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176108-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Norwich City F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176108-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Norwich City F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176109-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nottingham Forest F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Nottingham Forest competed in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176109-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Season summary\nThe 2003\u20132004 season saw Paul Hart suffer from a squad that was low in confidence and with no money. However, Forest started reasonably well, winning five of their first seven games and after 15 games, they won seven and lost five and were in the top half of the table. Unfortunately, when they went into the bottom three, after going 14 games without a win, the Forest chairman Nigel Doughty called time on Hart's reign as Forest manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176109-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Season summary\nJoe Kinnear was then brought in to replace Hart. The club's directors looked to have made a good decision when Kinnear revitalised Forest, bringing out the best in key players like Michael Dawson and Andy Reid, and they climbed up the table to secure a safe 14th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176109-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176109-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176110-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OB I bajnoksag season\nThe 2003\u201304 OB I bajnoks\u00e1g season was the 67th season of the OB I bajnoks\u00e1g, the top level of ice hockey in Hungary. Six teams participated in the league, and Alba Volan Szekesfehervar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176111-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OGC Nice season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 100th season in the existence of OGC Nice and the club's second consecutive season in the top-flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Nice participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 OHL season was the 24th season of the Ontario Hockey League. In November 2003, the OHL Board of Governors renamed the OHL Humanitarian of the Year Award to the Dan Snyder Memorial Trophy, in recognition of former Owen Sound Platers player, Dan Snyder, who died in a car accident in September 2003. Twenty teams each played 68 games. The J. Ross Robertson Cup was won by the Guelph Storm, who swept the Mississauga IceDogs in the league final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: DIV = Division; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched conference title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season, CHL Canada/Russia Series\nIn the RE/MAX Canada-Russia Challenge, the OHL All-stars defeated the Russian Selects 7\u20131 at London, Ontario, on November 17, and the OHL All-stars defeated the Russian Selects 4\u20130 at Sarnia, Ontario, on November 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season, 2004 OHL Priority Selection\nOn May 1, 2004, the OHL conducted the 2004 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection. The Belleville Bulls held the first overall pick in the draft, and selected John Hughes from the Whitby Wildcats. Hughes was awarded the Jack Ferguson Award, awarded to the top pick in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season, 2004 OHL Priority Selection\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round of the 2004 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season, 2004 CHL Import Draft\nOn June 30, 2004, the Canadian Hockey League conducted the 2004 CHL Import Draft, in which teams in all three CHL leagues participate in. The Owen Sound Attack held the first pick in the draft by a team in the OHL, and selected Andrej Sekera from the Slovakia with their selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176112-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OHL season, 2004 CHL Import Draft\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round by Ontario Hockey League teams in the 2004 CHL Import Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176113-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OK Liga\nThe 2003\u201304 OK Liga was the 35th season of the top-tier league of rink hockey in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176113-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OK Liga, Competition format\nThe eight first teams at the end of the regular season qualified for the playoffs while the three last teams were relegated to Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176113-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OK Liga, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played games 1, 2 and 5 of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176113-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OK Liga, Copa del Rey\nThe 2004 Copa del Rey was the 61st edition of the Spanish men's roller hockey cup. It was played in Reus between the eight first qualified teams after the first half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176113-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OK Liga, Copa del Rey\nLiceo Vodafone won its ninth title, the first one since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176114-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OPJHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 OPJHL season is the 11th season of the Ontario Provincial Junior A Hockey League (OPJHL). The thirty-five teams of the North, South, East, and West divisions competed in a 49-game schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176114-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OPJHL season\nCome February, the top eight teams of each division competed for the Frank L. Buckland Trophy, the OPJHL championship. The winner of the Buckland Cup, the Aurora Tigers, went on to win both the Dudley Hewitt Cup as Central Canadian Champions and the 2004 Royal Bank Cup as National Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176114-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OPJHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched conference title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176114-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OPJHL season, Dudley Hewitt Cup Championship\nHosted by North Bay Skyhawks in North Bay, Ontario. Aurora Tigers won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176114-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 OPJHL season, 2004 Royal Bank Cup Championship\nHosted by Grande Prairie Storm in Grande Prairie, Alberta. Aurora Tigers won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176115-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oberliga (ice hockey) season\nThe 2003\u201304 Oberliga season was the 45th season for the Oberliga, the then second-level ice hockey league in Germany. It was divided into two groups (South-West and North-East). REV Bremerhaven won the championship and were promoted. A total of 20 teams participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176116-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University in the college basketball season of 2003\u201304. The team was coached by Tim O'Shea and played their home games at the Convocation Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176117-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Oklahoma State Cowboys men's basketball team represents Oklahoma State University in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by 14th-year head coach Eddie Sutton. In 2002\u201303, the Cowboys finished 22\u201310 (10\u20136 in the Big 12 Conference).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176117-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team, Preseason\nFour transfers became eligible to play for the Cowboys this season. Joey and Stevie Graham transferred from the University of Central Florida, Daniel Bobik transferred from BYU, and John Lucas III transferred from Baylor University but did not have to sit out the required year after the Baylor University basketball scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 57], "content_span": [58, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176117-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team, Regular season\nThe Cowboys won their first four games before traveling to BYU and take on Daniel Bobik's former team and Rafael Ara\u00fajo, who gave the Cowboys their first setback of the year. After six more consecutive wins, OSU lost in a blowout in their first conference game against Bob Knight's Texas Tech Red Raiders in Lubbock. The Cowboys then won 11 straight conference games before falling in double overtime to the Missouri. Oklahoma State won the regular season conference championship, finishing with a record of 14-2. Until 2018-19, it was the last time a team other than the Kansas Jayhawks won the Big 12 regular-season championship outright. (Oklahoma State and Kansas shared the title in 2004-05.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176117-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team, Postseason\nOklahoma State followed up its regular season Big 12 Conference championship with the tournament championship. OSU received a #2 seed in the East Regional, where it defeated the #1 seed St. Joseph's University in the regional final with the game-winning shot coming from John Lucas III. At the Final Four, the Cowboys fell to Georgia Tech on a last-second shot by Will Bynum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176117-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team eligibility at FIBA sanctioned events. Players may hold other non-FIBA nationality not displayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176118-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Oldham Athletic A.F.C. competed in the Football League Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176118-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176118-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176119-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympiacos F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Olympiacos's 44th consecutive season in the Alpha Ethniki and their 8th consecutive season in the UEFA Champions League. In the beginning of the summertime Olympiacos named Greek Nikos Alefantos coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176119-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympiacos F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176120-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique Lyonnais season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 105th season in the existence of Olympique Lyonnais and the club's 15th consecutive season in the top flight of French football. They participated in the Ligue 1, the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue, the Troph\u00e9e des Champions and UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176120-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique Lyonnais season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176120-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique Lyonnais season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176121-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique de Marseille season\nOlympique de Marseille returned to the UEFA Champions League for the first time in four years, and in spite of going out in the group stage, the side made headlines in the UEFA Cup, knocking Liverpool, Internazionale and Newcastle United out on the way to the final, where the sending off of goalkeeper Fabien Barthez and the converted penalty kick from Valencia's Vicente saw Valencia eventually edge the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176121-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique de Marseille season\nIn the domestic campaign, Marseille endured a disappointing campaign, where manager Alain Perrin was replaced by Jos\u00e9 Anigo early on, following the inability to hang onto the top teams. The end result was seventh, missing out even on UEFA Cup qualification, in spite of having the French player of the season in Didier Drogba in the team. The Ivorian striker netted 19 league goals and was instrumental to OM's fortunes in Europe, and following the season he was sold to Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176121-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique de Marseille season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176121-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Olympique de Marseille season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176122-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Omani League\nThe 2003\u201304 Omani League was the 28th edition of the top football league in Oman. It began on 6 November 2003 and finished on 27 May 2004. Ruwi Club were the defending champions, having won the previous 2002\u201303 Omani League season. On Thursday, 27 May 2004, Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. won 2-1 at home in their final league match against Al-Oruba SC and emerged as the champions of the 2003\u201304 Omani League with a total of 46 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176122-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Omani League, Teams\nThis season the league had decreased from 14 to 12 teams. Nizwa Club, Sidab Club, Al-Salam SC and Al-Ahli Club were relegated to the Second Division League after finishing in the relegation zone in the 2002\u201303 season. The four relegated teams were replaced by Second Division League teams Al-Tali'aa SC and Al-Nahda Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176123-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Orlando Magic season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 15th season for the Orlando Magic in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Magic signed free agents Juwan Howard and Tyronn Lue. Injuries hamstrung the Magic from the start of the season as Grant Hill missed the entire season recovering from ankle surgery, while Pat Garrity was lost after just two games with a knee injury. The Magic started the season with an 85\u201383 win on the road against the New York Knicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176123-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Orlando Magic season\nHowever, their season would go straight down right after as they lost their next 19 games costing head coach Doc Rivers his job. With replacement Johnny Davis taking over, the Magic never recovered from their losing streak as they lost thirteen straight near the end of the season, finishing last place in the Atlantic Division with a league-worst 21\u201361 record, the franchise's worst record since 1991\u201392.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176123-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Orlando Magic season\nThe season is notable for Tracy McGrady leading the league in scoring for the second straight time, averaging 28.0 points per game while being selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. Following the season, McGrady was traded along with Howard, Lue and Reece Gaines to the Houston Rockets, and second-year forward Drew Gooden was dealt to the Cleveland Cavaliers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176124-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo)\n2003\u201304 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo) was the 98th water polo championship in Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176124-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), First stage\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176124-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), Sources\nThis article about a water polo competition in Hungary is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season\nThe 2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season was the 12th season of the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). This season would see the Senators again finish with over 100 points, finishing with 102, but this was good for only third in the tightly-contested division, as the Boston Bruins would have 104 and the Toronto Maple Leafs 103. Ottawa would meet Toronto in the first-round of the playoffs for the fourth time, where the Maple Leafs would win the series 4\u20133 to end the Senators' playoff hopes. Ottawa would fire Head Coach Jacques Martin after the playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Offseason\nIn the off-season, Eugene Melnyk would purchase the club to bring financial stability. Another change was in the general manager position. Marshall Johnston resigned and was replaced by John Muckler on June 3, 2003. Muckler had been a candidate for the positions of Ottawa head coach or GM back in 1992, but had chosen to sign on with the Buffalo Sabres instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Offseason\nOn June 21, 2003, Assistant Coach Roger Neilson died after four years of battling cancer. The Senators would wear a patch on their jerseys with an illustration of his signature and a necktie. Neilson would often wear distinctive neckties and the necktie became associated with him, and also became the symbol for \"Roger's House\", a residence for the use of families with a family member fighting cancer while in hospital, established by him and the Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season\nMarian Hossa lead the club in scoring with 82 points, good enough for sixth overall in the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season, Highlights\nOn February 5, 2004, the Senators were playing the Toronto Maple Leafs and were leading 4\u20130 in the second period. The flu started affecting players on the Senators leading the team to be down to only 15 skaters by the end of the game. The Maple Leafs took full advantage and won the game 5\u20134 in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season, Highlights\nOn March 5, 2004, in a game against the Philadelphia Flyers, a record was set for the most penalty minutes in a game by both teams, at 419 minutes. Five brawls broke out in the last two minutes of the game. It took the officials until 90 minutes after the game was over to sort out the penalties. By the end of the game, Philadelphia had 213 penalty minutes and seven men left on the bench, while Ottawa finished with 206 penalty minutes and six men left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season, Highlights\nThe Senators finished the regular season first overall in the NHL in scoring (262 goals for), power-play goals scored (80) and power-play percentage (21.62%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season, Division standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season, Division standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Regular season, Division standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs\nIn the first round of the 2004 playoffs, the Senators would lose again to the Maple Leafs for the fourth straight time. By now, Ottawa had developed a strong rivalry with their Ontario cousins and there was a great deal of pressure on the team to finally defeat the Leafs. Two days after the Senators' loss, Head Coach Jacques Martin was fired, and goaltender Patrick Lalime was later traded to the St. Louis Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs\nMartin had been coach of the Senators for eight-and-a-half years. He was well respected, earned a 341\u2013255\u201396 regular season record with the Senators, had led the team to eight consecutive playoff appearances and was widely credited with changing the team into an elite NHL franchise. He also won the Jack Adams Trophy as Coach of the Year in 1999. However, after losing eight of 12 playoff series, including all four series in five years against the rival Toronto Maple Leafs, Senators ownership felt that a new coach was required for playoff success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Playoffs\nOn June 8, 2004, Bryan Murray of nearby town Shawville, Quebec, became the team's fifth head coach, leaving the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim. where he had previously been general manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176125-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ottawa Senators season, Draft picks\nOttawa's draft picks from the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held on June 21 and June 22, 2003 at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176126-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PAOK FC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was PAOK Football Club\u2019s 78th in existence and the club\u2019s 45th consecutive season in the top flight of Greek football. The team will enter the Greek Football Cup in the First round and will also enter in UEFA Cup starting from the First round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176126-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PAOK FC season, Players, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176126-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nAppearances denote players in the starting lineup, with the numbers in parentheses denoting appearances as substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176127-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PFC Cherno More Varna season\nThis page covers all relevant details regarding PFC Cherno More Varna for all official competitions inside the 2003\u201304 season. These are A Group and Bulgarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176128-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PFC Levski Sofia season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Levski Sofia's 82nd season in the First League. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club will play during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176128-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PFC Levski Sofia season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176128-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PFC Levski Sofia season, Competitions, Bulgarian Cup\nLevski are eliminated from the competition with 4\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176129-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PSV Eindhoven season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Dutch football season, PSV Eindhoven competed in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176129-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PSV Eindhoven season, Season summary\nDespite the 31 goals of Mateja Ke\u017eman, PSV failed to retain their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176129-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 PSV Eindhoven season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176130-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Panathinaikos F.C. season\nIn the 2003\u201304 season Panathinaikos played for 48th consecutive time in Greece's top division, Alpha Ethniki. They also competed in UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup and Greek Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176130-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Panathinaikos F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176131-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Panonian League season\nThe 2003\u20132004 Panonian League Season was the second season of the multinational Panonian league. As in the previous season, teams from Hungary, Romania and Croatia participated. A newcomer, HK Vojvodina from Serbia (then Serbia and Montenegro) participated too. At the end of the season the playoffs were held. The top two teams in the regular season qualified for the playoffs. The season lasted from October 25, 2003 to February 10, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176131-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Panonian League season\nThe league was abandoned after the season, as the teams from Hungary and Romania went off to form their own new league, the MOL Liga. It would not be until 2007 that the league once again functioned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176131-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Panonian League season, Playoffs, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were held on February 7 & February 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176131-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Panonian League season, Playoffs, Finals\nThe finals were held on the 25th and 28 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176132-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Paris Saint-Germain's 34th season in existence. PSG played their home league games at the Parc des Princes in Paris, registering an average attendance of 38,810 spectators per match. The club was presided by Francis Graille and the team was coached by Vahid Halilhod\u017ei\u0107. Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric D\u00e9hu was the team captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176133-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Parma A.C. season\nParma Associazione Calcio endured a season of horror, in which the club formerly known as Parma A.C. went into bankruptcy in the middle of the season, seeing out the season in order to avoid the chaos it would cause to the league pyramid. The reason for the bankruptcy was the financial fraud of its owner Calisto Tanzi, who had embezzled money from his company Parmalat, which also went out of business. The club was reformed under its original name as Parma F.C., and finished fifth in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176133-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Parma A.C. season\nIts glory days were over, however, and the club was forced to sell several key players in the summer of 2004, among them Hidetoshi Nakata, Matteo Ferrari and Matteo Brighi. However, its two most noted players, goalkeeper S\u00e9bastien Frey and top scorer and youngster Alberto Gilardino remained with the club, since it did not receive good enough offers to part with the two players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176133-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Parma A.C. season\nThe season was also the last in which Parma wore its distinctive blue and yellow colours at home, those being associated with Parmalat's ownership. From the 2004\u201305 season onwards the club reverted to its original white shirt with a black cross design. Club legend Antonio Benarrivo finished his career following the season, being the last player from the 1999 UEFA Cup winning team to leave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176133-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Parma A.C. season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176133-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Parma A.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176134-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Partick Thistle F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Partick Thistle compete in the Scottish Premier League where they finished in 12th position with 26 points, suffering relegation to the Scottish First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176135-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Persepolis F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the Persepolis's 3rd season in the Pro League, and their 21st consecutive season in the top division of Iranian Football. They were also be competing in the Hazfi Cup. Persepolis was captained by Afshin Peyrovani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176135-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Persepolis F.C. season, Squad\nAs of October 2003. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176136-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Perth Glory SC season\nThe 2003\u201304 Perth Glory SC season was the club's eighth season since its establishment in 1996, and its final season in the National Soccer League (NSL). Perth Glory finished top of the league and were crowned champions after defeating Parramatta Power in the 2004 NSL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176137-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia 76ers season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 76ers' 65th season, and their 55th in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Sixers acquired All-Star forward Glenn Robinson from the Atlanta Hawks and rookie Kyle Korver, who was drafted by the New Jersey Nets in the 2003 NBA draft. After Larry Brown left to become head coach of the Detroit Pistons, the Sixers hired Randy Ayers as his replacement. However, at midseason, Ayers was fired after a 21\u201331 start, and interim head coach Chris Ford took over for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176137-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia 76ers season\nSuperstar guard Allen Iverson had a rough year in which he had clashed with coaches and skipped a number of practices. Despite Iverson playing only 48 games due to injuries, he still was voted to start in the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. Robinson finished second on the team in scoring averaging 16.6 points per game, but played just 42 games due to ankle and elbow injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176137-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia 76ers season\nThe Sixers lost 15 more games than the previous season, finishing fifth in the Atlantic Division with a 33\u201349 record and missing the playoffs for the first time since 1998. Following the season, Eric Snow was traded to the Cleveland Cavaliers, Derrick Coleman was traded to the Detroit Pistons, and Ford was fired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176137-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia 76ers season, Offseason, Draft picks, Draft day transactions\nThe 76ers selected French point guard Paccelis Morlende with the 50th overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft. On draft day, the Sixers purchased Kyle Korver from the New Jersey Nets. They also traded Morlende to the Seattle SuperSonics for Willie Green. Green would play with the Sixers for seven seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176137-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia 76ers season, Offseason, July\nOn July 16, the Sixers signed Amal McCaskill. McCaskill would play in more games with the Sixers than with all of his other previous NBA teams combined. One week later, the Sixers were involved in a four-team trade with the New York Knicks, the Atlanta Hawks, and the Minnesota Timberwolves. The Sixers traded Keith Van Horn to the Knicks, as well as Randy Holcomb and a 2007 first-round draft pick to the Hawks. The Hawks did not receive the draft pick because it was lottery protected, so they received cash instead. The Hawks traded Glenn Robinson and a 2006 second-round draft pick to the Sixers. The Timberwolves traded Marc Jackson to Philadelphia. Robinson would start all of the games he played in for Philadelphia. Jackson would only play in 22 games with the 76ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 826]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176137-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia 76ers season, Offseason, August\u2013October\nOn August 8, the Sixers waived Efthimios Rentzias. On October 11, the Sixers waived William Avery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season\nThe 2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season was the Flyers' 37th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The Flyers reached the Eastern Conference Finals but lost in seven games to the Tampa Bay Lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season\nFree-agent goaltender Jeff Hackett was signed from the Boston Bruins to replace Roman Cechmanek and challenge backup Robert Esche for the number one spot in 2003\u201304, but Hackett was forced to retire in February due to vertigo. During the course of the season, serious injuries suffered by both Jeremy Roenick (broken jaw) and Keith Primeau (concussion) in February forced the Flyers to trade for the Chicago Blackhawks' Alexei Zhamnov, who filled in well and kept the Flyers afloat. Esche entrenched himself as starter and remained in that position even after the Flyers re-acquired Sean Burke from the Phoenix Coyotes, as the Flyers clinched the Atlantic Division title over the New Jersey Devils on the last day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season, Season standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Regular season, Season standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Playoffs\nThough solid in net, Esche's performance was over-shadowed by the play of captain Keith Primeau in the playoffs. Primeau led the Flyers past the defending Stanley Cup champion Devils in five, and the Toronto Maple Leafs in six on their way to the Eastern Conference Finals and a match-up with the Tampa Bay Lightning. Despite winning Game 6 on the late-game heroics of Primeau and winger Simon Gagne, the Flyers would come up short once again losing Game 7 in Tampa, 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nWin (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Tie/overtime loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions\nThe Flyers were involved in the following transactions from June 10, 2003, the day after the deciding game of the 2003 Stanley Cup Finals, through June 7, 2004, the day of the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Signings, Free agency\nThe following players were signed by the Flyers via free agency. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Signings, Internal\nThe following players were either re-signed by the Flyers or, in the case of the team's selections in the NHL Entry Draft, signed to entry level contracts. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Waivers\nThe Flyers were involved in the following waivers transactions. They were involved in one selection during the 2003 NHL Waiver Draft, which was held on October 3, 2003. The Flyers protected the following players: goaltenders Robert Esche and Jeff Hackett; defensemen Eric Desjardins, Kim Johnsson, Marcus Ragnarsson, John Slaney and Eric Weinrich; and forwards Tony Amonte, Donald Brashear, Eric Chouinard, Todd Fedoruk, Simon Gagne, Michal Handzus, Sami Kapanen, Claude Lapointe, John LeClair, Keith Primeau, Mark Recchi, Jeremy Roenick and Justin Williams. The Flyers left the following players unprotected: goaltender Neil Little; defenseman Chris Therien; and forwards Boyd Kane, Kirby Law, Ian MacNeil, Mark Murphy, Mike Peluso, Andre Savage, Mike Siklenka, Pete Vandermeer and Peter White.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Departures\nThe following players left the team via free agency, release, or retirement. Players who were under contract and left the team during the season are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Draft picks\nPhiladelphia's picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 21\u201322, 2003. The Flyers traded their originally allotted second, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth, and ninth-round draft picks in five different trades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176138-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philadelphia Flyers season, Farm teams\nThe Flyers were affiliated with the Philadelphia Phantoms of the AHL and the Trenton Titans of the ECHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176139-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philippine Basketball League season, New theme\nThe Philippine Basketball League (PBL), in partnership with the giant network ABS-CBN through Studio 23 and ABS-CBN Sports presentation of the league, adopted a new slogan \"Ito ang tunay na ligang bayan\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176139-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philippine Basketball League season, 2003-04 Platinum Cup, Finals\nFash (formerly Hapee) leaned on a couple of three-pointers by Larry Fonacier in the last quarter of the deciding fifth game to down Welcoat Paints and clinch the championship. Fash coach Junel Baculi now match former Stag coach Alfrancis Chua as the winningest mentor in the PBL with seven titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176139-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philippine Basketball League season, 2004 Unity Cup, Finals\nViva Mineral Water-FEU wins their first championship since joining the league in this same conference last year, where they lost to Hapee after taking a 2-1 series lead in the finals. Welcoat threatened to extend the series by taking an eight-point lead, 43-35, midway in the third quarter, but the Water Force ended their scoring drought with eight unanswered points for a 43-all deadlock entering the final period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176139-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Philippine Basketball League season, Occurrences\nPBL Commissioner Chino Trinidad resign unexpectedly at halftime of Game three of Fash-Welcoat finals series, Trinidad admitted his frustration and displeasure on a display of defiance by Welcoat players following the choice of Fash' Peter June Simon as MVP over Welcoat' Jercules Tangkay. Deputy commissioner Tommy Ong was named interim chief of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season\nThe 2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season was their eighth season in the National Hockey League, the franchise's 25th season in the NHL and 32nd overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season, Regular season\nThough the Coyotes finished last in their division (13th in the Conference), for a remarkable span in late December and early January, the team attracted the attention of the sports world, as goaltender Brian Boucher set an NHL record for consecutive shutouts. From December 31 to January 9, Boucher and the Coyotes recorded five consecutive shut-out victories, outscoring their opponents 18\u20130 during the span. The streak was broken on January 11 in a game against the visiting Atlanta Thrashers, when Randy Robitaille scored on Boucher at 6:16 of the first period. Boucher's streak lasted 332:01, surpassing Montreal Canadiens goaltender Bill Durnan's 1949 record by over 20 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season, Playoffs\nFor the second year in a row, the Coyotes failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176140-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Coyotes season, Draft picks\nPhoenix's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176141-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Suns season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 36th for the Phoenix Suns in the National Basketball Association. After advancing to the playoffs the previous season, the Suns started off to a disappointing start under head coach Frank Johnson. With the team at 8\u201313, team management elected to turn to assistant coach Mike D'Antoni to take over for Johnson. Under D'Antoni, the Suns would lose 40 of their next 61 games and miss the playoffs, finishing sixth in the Pacific division with a 29\u201353 regular season record, the first time since the 1987\u201388 season the Suns recorded 50 losses or more. The Suns played their home games at America West Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176141-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Suns season\nBefore the halfway mark of the season, the Suns sent starting point guard Stephon Marbury along with Anfernee Hardaway to the New York Knicks for Antonio McDyess, and a lack of offense was felt the rest of the season. Marbury, a future All-Star, was replaced with rookie SG Leandro Barbosa, who only averaged eight points per game. The oft-injured Tom Gugliotta was released and signed as a free agent with the Utah Jazz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176141-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Suns season\nThe Suns found the injury bug, with reigning Rookie of the Year Amar'e Stoudemire missing nearly 30 games (and the Suns his 20 points and nine rebounds per game). Power forward Shawn Marion did not repeat as an All-Star, despite ending the season averaging 19 points and 9.3 rebounds per game and finishing second in the league in steals per game. Joe Johnson had a breakthrough year in his third season NBA season, leading the league in minutes played and providing the Suns nearly 17 points a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176141-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Suns season\nBy trading Marbury, the Suns were without a point guard to lead an improving young core of Stoudemire, Marion, Johnson and Barbosa, all 25 years of age or younger. By shedding the injury-riddled Hardaway and Gugliotta, as well as Marbury, the Suns ended the season with a need for a club leader and money at their disposal. Following the season, McDyess signed as a free agent with the Detroit Pistons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176141-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Phoenix Suns season, Player statistics, Season\n* - Stats with the Suns. + - Minimum 70 games played or 2000 minutes, 400 assists, 100 blocks, 1400 points. \u2020 - Minimum 300 field goals made. ^ - Minimum 55 three-pointers made. # - Minimum 125 free throws made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176142-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pirveli Liga\n2003\u201304 Pirveli Liga was the 15th season of the Georgian Pirveli Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176143-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by first year head coach Jamie Dixon, the Panthers finished with a record of 31\u20135 and made it to the second round of the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament where they lost to Oklahoma State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season\nThe 2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season was the team's 37th season of play. For the third season in a row, the club placed last in the Atlantic Division and did not qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs. In an 18-game losing streak, they went 0\u201317\u20131 (one overtime loss). In the first 62 games, they were 11\u201342\u20135\u20134 for 31 points. In their final 20 games, they were 12\u20135\u20133\u20130, ultimately finishing with a 23\u201347\u20138\u20134 record for a last place finish. Their record losing streak would not be matched until the 2020-21 season by the Buffalo Sabres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Offseason\nHead Coach Rick Kehoe resigned as coach during the off-season, where former team broadcaster Eddie Olczyk was hired as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season\nThe Penguins struggled defensively, finishing 30th overall in the NHL in goals allowed, with 303. They struggled in short-handed situations, allowing the most power-play goals in the League, with 84, and finishing 30th overall in penalty-kill percentage, at 77.24%. Furthermore, they allowed the most short-handed goals in the NHL, with 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Player statistics\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining the Penguins. Stats reflect time with the Penguins only. \u2021Denotes player was traded mid-season. Stats reflect time with the Penguins only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Awards and records\nThe team also set the NHL record for longest home losing streak, with 14 home losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Transactions\nThe Penguins were involved in the following transactions during the 2003\u201304 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Draft picks\nPittsburgh had 11 picks in the 2003 NHL Entry Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Farm teams\nThe AHL's Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins finished third in the East Division with a 34\u201328\u201310\u20138 record. They defeated the Bridgeport Sound Tigers, Philadelphia Phantoms and the Hartford Wolf Pack to win the Richard F. Canning Trophy as Eastern Conference Champions. They were swept by the Milwaukee Admirals in the Calder Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176144-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Farm teams\nThe ECHL's Wheeling Nailers won the Northern Division and the Eastern Conference with a record of 51\u201317\u20134. They lost to the Reading Royals in the first round of the playoffs. Pat Bingham won the John Brophy Award as the ECHL's coach of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176145-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season\nThe 2003/04 football season saw Plymouth Argyle regain a place in the second tier of English football for the first time in twelve seasons, Along the way to capturing the Division Two championship they accumulated 90 league points, 21 clean sheets and a club record of seven straight clean sheets whilst also losing arguably the most successful manager in recent history in Paul Sturrock to Southampton F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176145-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176145-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176146-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Polish Volleyball League\n2003\u201304 Polish Volleyball League was the 68th season of Polish Championship (4th season as professional league) organized by Professional Volleyball League SA (Polish: Profesjonalna Liga Pi\u0142ki Siatkowej S.A.) under the supervision of Polish Volleyball Federation (Polish: Polski Zwi\u0105zek Pi\u0142ki Siatkowej).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176146-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Polish Volleyball League\nAZS Politechnika Warszawska and BBTS Bielsko-Bia\u0142a were promoted to Polish Volleyball League in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176146-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Polish Volleyball League\nIn season 2003/2004 Mostostal-Azoty K\u0119dzierzyn-Ko\u017ale and Pamapol AZS Cz\u0119stochowa played in CEV Champions League, Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w and Jastrz\u0119bie Borynia played in CEV Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176147-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Polska Liga Hokejowa season\nThe 2003\u201304 Polska Liga Hokejowa season was the 69th season of the Polska Liga Hokejowa, the top level of ice hockey in Poland. Eight teams participated in the league, and Unia Oswiecim won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Port Vale's 92nd season of football in the English Football League, and fourth successive season (41st overall) in the Second Division. Brian Horton resigned in February, and was replaced by Martin Foyle. Vale fought for promotion, but finished outside the play-off zone on goal difference. In the FA Cup, Vale narrowly avoided humiliation by beating non-league Ford United after the replay went to extra-time. However Vale exited at the Second Round with defeat to Conference club Scarborough, who also knocked the Vale out of the League Trophy at the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season\nVale also left the League Cup at the First Round stage. Stephen McPhee was Player of the Year and top-scorer with 27 goals, but he left the club at the end of the season to play abroad. Financial problems still hounded the club, and Chairman Bill Bratt was desperate to attract investment from fans, though he was unwilling to allow one person to have more than 50% of the club's shares.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Second Division\nThe pre-season saw Brian Horton bring in three key players on free transfers: George Pilkington (Everton); Jonny Brain (Newcastle United); and Austrian Andreas Lipa (Skoda Xanthi). Meanwhile, promising keeper Mark Goodlad began a lengthy period of time on the sidelines with injuries. Optimism surrounded the club, after the rebuilding of the new squad appeared to had finished after the break-up of the club's previous team due to financial troubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Second Division\nThe season opened with seven wins in eleven games, earning Brian Horton the Manager of the Month award. Though this was followed by a sequence of five defeats in eight games as the goals dried up, this run included a 5\u20131 thumping at home to Plymouth Argyle. In November, back-up keeper Dean Delany joined Macclesfield Town on a two-month loan. Vale then were in patchy form until March, though the side managed to do the double over Sheffield Wednesday. Brian Horton resigned in February, with the club in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Second Division\nHis replacement was former Vale legend Martin Foyle, whose only previous experience was in the club's youth set-up. As his assistant he appointed former teammate, Dean Glover, another club legend. In March, Foyle made his first signing, bringing defender Craig James on loan from Sunderland, and after a few weeks he signed him permanently. Mark Boyd headed out of the club however, and was allowed to sign with Carlisle United. Vale lost just two of their final twelve games, and ran close to a play-off place, only losing out due to their inferior goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Second Division\nThey finished in seventh place with 73 points. They were level on points with Hartlepool United and Swindon Town, but finished outside of the play-off zone due to their inferior goal difference. Stephen McPhee scored 27 goals to become the club's top-scorer, the highest tally since Andy Jones hit 37 in 1986\u201387. Other major contributions came from Billy Paynter (14), Steve Brooker (8), Marc Bridge-Wilkinson (7) and Adrian Littlejohn (7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Second Division\nAt the end of the season several players left the club: Neil Brisco (Rochdale); Liam Burns (Bristol Rovers); Adrian Littlejohn (Lincoln City); and Dean Delany (Shelbourne). Stephen McPhee also decided to leave the club, and though Chairman Bill Bratt had rejected offers of \u00a3100,000 for the player, McPhee exploited a loophole in his contract to join Portuguese side Beira-Mar. Marc Bridge-Wilkinson also turned down a new lower-paying contract, and instead signed with Stockport County. Player-coach Ian Brightwell also left Vale Park, having lost his assistant manager role to Glover, and joined Horton at Macclesfield Town. One boost was that Billy Paynter and George Pilkington put pen to paper on new long-term deals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances\nPeter Walker was appointed as Chief Executive in August 2003, having volunteered to work for free for six months. One feature of the season proved to be the long-running courtroom battle between former chairman Bill Bell and owners Valiant2001 over unpaid rent on the club shop. The club's finances were still worrying for supporters, though the problem appeared to have eased by the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances\nIn December, a Peter Jackson led consortium put a \u00a3150,000 investment into the club, which Bratt said \"...ensures the future of the club is safe\". The club also rejected other investment proposals from confidential sources. Vice-chairman Charles Machin recommended the board sell the club to Italian businessman Gianni Paladini for \u00a3530,000, but the board disagreed. In March 2004, Machin and director Geoff Wakefield were voted off the board, as the 'Jackson Five' clique elected Peter Jackson and Stan Meigh in their place. Machin said that \"I will not go away. I will haunt the corridors of power like Marley's ghost\". However he was never elected back onto the board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the FA Cup, Vale risked humiliation in a 2\u20132 draw with non-league Ford United at Vale Park. In the replay, Vale had led 1\u20130 before a last minute equalizer took the game into extra time. Despite having substitute Ian Armstrong's sent off, the \"Valiants\" escaped the lottery of the penalty shoot-out when on 114 minutes Ford scored an own goal. However, in the Second Round they were still eliminated by a non-league club, when Scarborough's Ashley Sestanovich scored an 80th-minute winner at Vale Park. This meant Scarborough knocked Vale out of the second competition of the season despite playing two leagues below the Vale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the League Cup, Vale faced First Division Nottingham Forest. They held Forest to a goalless draw, but were eliminated 3\u20132 in the subsequent penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176148-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the League Trophy, Vale travelled to the McCain Stadium, where they were defeated 2\u20131 by Conference club Scarborough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176149-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portland Trail Blazers season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the 34th season for the Portland Trail Blazers in the National Basketball Association. After years of off the court troubles and playoff underachieving, the Blazers under new General Manager John Nash, decided to rebuild. Throughout the season, the Blazers dealt away talented but troubled stars like trading Bonzi Wells, after losing his co-captain title, to the Memphis Grizzlies in November, and trading Rasheed Wallace to the Atlanta Hawks for Shareef Abdur-Rahim and Theo Ratliff in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176149-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portland Trail Blazers season\nHowever, after appearing in only one game with the Hawks, Sheed was again traded to the Detroit Pistons for the rest of the season. The Pistons would eventually win the NBA Finals of that year, giving Wallace his first championship. The team also sent Jeff McInnis to the Cleveland Cavaliers for Darius Miles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176149-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portland Trail Blazers season\nTaking up the slack was Zach Randolph, who led the team in scoring and rebounding, and was named Most Improved Player of The Year. However, the Blazers finished third in the Pacific Division with a 41\u201341 record, missing the playoffs for the first time since the 1981\u201382 season, a 21-year streak that was second-longest in NBA history. Following the season, Dale Davis was traded to the Golden State Warriors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Portsmouth F.C. competed in the Premier League. It was their first ever season in the Premiership and the first in English football's top flight since the 1987\u201388 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season, Season summary\nPortsmouth's Premiership debut (and only their second top division campaign during the last 45 years) was a fine one, as they finished 13th and established Fratton Park as one of the hardest Premiership grounds to get a result at. Only their dismal away form (with only two away wins all season) prevented them from finishing even higher and challenging for a European place, but it was still a very good season for the only newly promoted side to preserve their Premiership status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter a good start to the season which saw Portsmouth top of the Premiership after three games, the team slumped into the relegation zone, but rallied and only lost one of their last ten matches to finish 13th - ahead of more established sides like Everton, Manchester City, Blackburn Rovers and Tottenham Hotspur. To their credit, they were one of the only two teams to remain unbeaten against Arsenal's \"Invincibles\" in the league during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season, Kit\nPortsmouth introduced a new kit for the season, still manufactured under the club's own brand, Pompey Sport. ty remained the kit sponsors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176150-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Portsmouth F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176151-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Powergen Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Powergen Cup was the 33rd edition of England's rugby union club competition. Newcastle Falcons won the competition defeating Sale Sharks in the final. The event was sponsored by Powergen and the final was held at Twickenham Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176152-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nStatistics of Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 2003\u20132004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176152-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Overview\nIt was contested by 16 teams, and NK \u0160iroki Brijeg won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176153-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premier Soccer League\nThe 2003\u201304 Premier Soccer League was won by Kaizer Chiefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176154-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premiership Rugby\nThe 2003-04 Zurich Premiership was the 17th season of the top flight of the English domestic rugby union competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176154-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premiership Rugby\nRotherham were relegated after failing to win a single match all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176154-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premiership Rugby, Play-offs\nAs for the 2002\u201303 season, the first placed team automatically qualified for the final where they played the winner of the second vs third place semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176154-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premiership Rugby, Zurich Wildcard\nThe Zurich Wildcard was contested by the teams placed fourth through seventh in the final table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176154-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premiership Rugby, Zurich Wildcard, Semi finals\nDespite winning this match, Gloucester forfeited their place in the final as English teams were awarded an additional Heineken Cup qualification place due to London Wasps winning the 2003\u201304 Heineken Cup. This additional place was awarded to Gloucester as the next highest placed team in the league not automatically qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 55], "content_span": [56, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176154-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Premiership Rugby, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under World Rugby eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-WR nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176155-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Preston North End F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw Preston North End compete in the Football League First Division where they finished in 15th position with 59 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176156-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primeira Liga\nThe 2003\u201304 Primeira Liga was the 70th edition of top flight of Portuguese football. It started 16 August 2003 with an opening game between Acad\u00e9mica de Coimbra and Sporting Clube de Portugal, and ended on 9 May 2004. It was contested by 18 teams. FC Porto were the defending champions and became champions again, winning the Portuguese title in two consecutive seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176156-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primeira Liga\nThe first goal of the season was scored by Acad\u00e9mica's Filipe Alvim in the opening game against Sporting CP. The first red card of the season was given to Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira's Portuguese midfielder Pedrinha in the 3rd game of the season against Nacional and the first yellow card was given to Sporting's Portuguese midfielder Cust\u00f3dio in the opening game of the season. Porto's Benni McCarthy was the top scorer of the season, scoring 20 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176156-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primeira Liga\nPorto qualified for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, along with Benfica, who qualified for the third round. Sporting, Nacional, Braga and Mar\u00edtimo qualified for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup; in opposite, Alverca, Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira and Estrela da Amadora were relegated to the Segunda Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176156-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primeira Liga, Promotion and relegation\nVarzim, Santa Clara, and Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal were consigned to the Liga de Honra following their final classification in 2002\u201303 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176156-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primeira Liga, Promotion and relegation\nThe other three teams were replaced by Rio Ave, Alverca, Estrela da Amadora from Segunda Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176156-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primeira Liga, Awards, Annual awards\nThe Portuguese Silver Boot award was won by the South African Benni McCarthy of Porto, by scoring 20 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176157-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera B Nacional\nThe 2003\u201304 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 18th season of second division professional football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176157-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera B Nacional, Promotion playoff\nThis leg was played between the Apertura Winner: Instituto, and the Clausura Winner: Almagro. The winning team was declared champion and was automatically promoted to 2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n and the losing team played the Second Promotion Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176157-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera B Nacional, Second Promotion Playoff\nThis leg was played by Almagro, the losing team of the Promotion Playoff, and Hurac\u00e1n (TA), who was the best team in the overall standings. The winning team was promoted to 2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n and the losing team played the Promotion Playoff Primera Divisi\u00f3n-Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176157-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera B Nacional, Torneo Reducido\nIt was played by the teams placed 3rd and 5th, in the Overall Standings: Argentinos Juniors (3rd) and Godoy Cruz (5th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera Divisi\u00f3n-Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176157-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera B Nacional, Promotion playoff Primera Divisi\u00f3n-Primera B Nacional\nThe Second Promotion playoff loser (Hurac\u00e1n (TA)) and the Torneo Reducido Winner (Argentinos Juniors) played against the 18th and the 17th placed of the Relegation Table of 2003\u201304 Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176157-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera B Nacional, Relegation\nNote: Clubs with indirect affiliation with AFA are relegated to the Torneo Argentino A, while clubs directly affiliated face relegation to Primera B Metropolitana. Clubs with direct affiliation are all from Greater Buenos Aires, with the exception of Newell's, Rosario Central, Central C\u00f3rdoba and Argentino de Rosario, all from Rosario, and Uni\u00f3n and Col\u00f3n from Santa Fe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176158-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Overview\nIt was contested by 8 teams, and FC Santa Coloma won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176159-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera Divisi\u00f3n A season\nPrimera Divisi\u00f3n A (M\u00e9xican First A Division) is a Mexican football tournament. This season was composed of Apertura 2003 and Clausura 2004. Dorados de Sinaloa was the winner of the promotion to First Division after winning Le\u00f3n in the promotion playoff. '", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176159-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Primera Divisi\u00f3n A season, Promotion final\nThe promotion final faced Dorados against Le\u00f3n to determine the winner of the First Division Promotion. Dorados was the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176160-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team represented Princeton University in intercollegiate college basketball during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was John Thompson III and the team captains were Ed Persia and Judson Wallace. The team played its home games in the Jadwin Gymnasium on the University campus in Princeton, New Jersey, and was the champion of the Ivy League, which earned them an invitation to the 65-team 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament where they were seeded fourteenth in the Atlanta Region. Following the season Thompson departed to coach Georgetown where his father John Thompson, Jr. had coached for decades. He was replaced by Joe Scott. Both Scott and the younger Thompson are former Princeton Tigers basketball captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176160-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team\nUsing the Princeton offense, the team posted a 20\u20138 overall record and a 13\u20131 conference record. Princeton clinched the Ivy League title on March 6, 2004 at Dartmouth, making the March 9 annual Ivy League season finale contest against Penn meaningless. Nonetheless, the Tigers defeated Penn 76\u201370 in overtime giving them a nine-game winning streak as they entered the NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament. In its March 18, 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Atlanta Regional first-round game against the Brandon Mouton-led Texas Longhorns at the Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado the team lost by a 66\u201349 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176160-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Princeton Tigers men's basketball team\nThe team was led by first team All-Ivy League selections Will Venable and Judson Wallace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176161-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Providence Friars men's basketball team represented Providence College in the Big East Conference. The team finished with an 11\u20135 conference record and a 20\u20139 record overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176161-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nComing off an 18\u201314 record and a second-round NIT loss in 2002\u201303, the team returned all five starters for coach Tim Welsh's sixth season with the Friars. However, forward Romuald Augustin transferred to Bryant College for his fifth year of eligibility, while walk-on guard Chris Burns also transferred to Bryant for his sophomore season. The team also lost two departing seniors, guard Kareem Hayletts and forward Stephen Traugott. On February 24, after playing in 12 games for the Friars, senior forward M\u0101ris \u013baksa left the team to play professional basketball in Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176161-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nThe Friars began the season receiving votes in both polls, but not ranked in either. Following an 8\u20131 start that included a win over #14 Illinois, the Friars earned a #25 ranking in the AP Poll in time for their January 5 matchup with #18 Texas. The Friars took the Longhorns to overtime, but as time expired in the overtime period, Texas forward P. J. Tucker released a layup to give the Longhorns a two-point win. The controversial shot was reviewed for more than five minutes by the officials, who determined that the clock read \"0.00\" but the red backboard light had not yet gone off when the ball was released, which at the time overruled the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176161-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nDespite the close loss, the Friars re-emerged in the top 25 three weeks later, following a road win over #4 Connecticut. A six-game winning streak that began with a win over #18 Syracuse propelled the Friars to a #12 ranking in the AP Poll on March 1. This was followed by two home losses to close out the regular season, and a #3 seed in the 2004 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament. Following a first-round bye, the Friars dropped a three-point game to Villanova in the quarterfinals, leading to a #5 seed in the NCAA Tournament. In the first round, the Friars were defeated 66\u201358 by the #12 seed, Pacific. The Friars ended the season with a #21 ranking in the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176161-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Providence Friars men's basketball team\nThe Friars were led in scoring (18.9 ppg) and rebounding (9.4 rpg) by junior forward Ryan Gomes. He became the fourth Friar to be named a First Team All-American by the Associated Press.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 QMJHL season was the 35th season in the history of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. The league continued to expand to new eastern markets, with teams relocating to Maine and Prince Edward Island. Conferences were abandoned and teams were divided into three divisions by geography. Sixteen teams played 70 games each in the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season\nThe Lewiston Maineiacs became the league's second American-based team in history after the Plattsburgh Pioneers, and first to survive a full season. The P.E.I. Rocket also became the first major junior hockey team based on Prince Edward Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season\nRookie Sidney Crosby led the league in scoring as a 16-year-old, and won the Michel Bri\u00e8re Memorial Trophy as the MVP of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season\nThe Gatineau Olympiques finished first overall in the regular season winning their fourth Jean Rougeau Trophy, and also won their sixth President's Cup, defeating the Moncton Wildcats in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OL = Overtime loss; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season, Canada-Russia Challenge\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the first time the Canada-Russia challenge was played. The event, then known as the RE/MAX Canada-Russia Challenge was hosted by the Halifax Mooseheads and the Rimouski Oc\u00e9anic. On November 20, 2003, the Russian Selects defeated the QMJHL All-stars 3\u20132 at the Halifax Metro Centre. On November 24, 2003, the QMJHL All-stars defeated the Russian Selects 6\u20132 at Colis\u00e9e de Rimouski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season, Playoffs\nEach regular season division winner received a first round bye, and ranked 1st, 2nd, and 3rd overall. Remaining teams were ranked 4th to 13th, regardless of division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176162-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QMJHL season, Playoffs\nMaxime Talbot was the leading scorer of the playoffs with 27 points (11 goals, 16 assists).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176163-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 QSPHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 QSPHL season was the eighth season of the Quebec Semi-Pro Hockey League, a minor professional league in the Canadian province of Quebec. 14 teams participated in the regular season, and the Dragons de Verdun won the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176164-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Qatar Stars League, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and Al-Sadd Sports Club won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176165-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Queens Park Rangers competed in the Football League Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176165-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter 3 seasons in English football's third tier, QPR secured a return to the second division with a second-placed finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176165-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176165-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176166-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 R.S.C. Anderlecht season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, R.S.C. Anderlecht participated in the Belgian First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176166-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, Season summary\nAnderlecht won the title for the first time in three seasons. They had held a big lead over their title rivals Club Brugge for some time, but a bad finish from Anderlecht kept the suspense until the 31st matchday, when Club Brugge drew with Mouscron while the team from Brussels also drew (1-1) at Lierse to confirm their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176166-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176166-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176167-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 RK Zamet season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 47th season in RK Zamet\u2019s history. It is their 3rd successive season in the 1.HRL, and 27th successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176168-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup\nThe 2004 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup was the second season of the Serbian-Montenegrin men's national basketball cup tournament. The \u017du\u0107ko's left trophy awarded to the winner Crvena zvezda from Belgrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176169-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rangers F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 124th season of competitive football by Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176169-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nRangers played a total of 52 competitive matches during the 2003\u201304 season. The season ended trophyless. Due to the club's financial situation they had to resort to selling many top players. These included Barry Ferguson, Lorenzo Amoruso and Neil McCann, they also released high earners Arthur Numan and Bert Konterman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176169-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nDespite starting the season well with seven consecutive wins and topping the table, a 1\u20130 loss at home to Celtic in October saw Rangers season unravel. Inconsistent form and three old firm derby defeats saw Rangers fall behind Celtic in the title race and ended up finishing 17 points off top spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176169-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nThe Scottish Cup campaign ended in the third round after a 1\u20130 defeat to Celtic. The League Cup campaign also ended in defeat at the semi-final stage to Hibernian at Hampden Park, 4\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176169-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nIn Europe Rangers managed to qualify for the group stages of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League with a win over F.C. Copenhagen in the third qualifying round. They were drawn in the group stages alongside English Champions Manchester United, Stuttgart and Panathinaikos. Despite earning 4 points from the first two matches Rangers were to finish bottom of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176169-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, League Cup\nLast updated: 8 December 2014Source:1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different from that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176170-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ranji Trophy\nThe 2003\u201304 Ranji Trophy was the 70th season of the Ranji Trophy. Mumbai defeated Tamil Nadu on first innings lead. Maharashtra won the Plate division title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176170-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ranji Trophy\nWasim Jaffer of Mumbai took 23 catches in nine matches which is the record for most catches in a season by a fielder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176171-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Reading F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Reading's second consecutive season in the First Division, after promotion from the Second Division in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176171-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Reading F.C. season, Squad, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176171-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Reading F.C. season, Squad, Reserve/Academy squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176171-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Reading F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176171-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Reading F.C. season, Team kit\nReading's kit for the 2003\u201304 was manufactured by Kit@, and the main sponsor was .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176172-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Betis season\nDuring the 2003\u201304, Betis finished ninth in the La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176172-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Betis season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176173-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Madrid CF season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Real Madrid C.F. 's 73rd season in La Liga. This article shows statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club played in the 2003\u201304 season. It was the last time that Real Madrid finished below second place until 2013\u201314 season. The club played the season wearing their classic white home and teal blue away kits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176173-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Madrid CF season, Season summary\nIn spite of the arduous pre-season, the team got off to a good start to the season. They won the Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a against Mallorca with a 3\u20130 victory on 27 August in the second leg. By the time half the season had passed, the team topped the league table and was still in contention for the Copa del Rey and UEFA Champions League trophies. However, the team was eliminated in the quarter-finals of the Champions League by Monaco, and finished as runners-up in the domestic cup. They also lost their final five La Liga matches and finished in fourth place, which gave Valencia the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176173-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Madrid CF season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176173-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Madrid CF season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176173-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Madrid CF season, Pre-season\nThe team embarked on a summer tour in Asia, for 18 days, to cash in on the worldwide appeal of their new signing, David Beckham. It included exhibition matches in Beijing, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Bangkok, which alone earned the club \u20ac10\u00a0million. This was compared by popular contrary with the tour with the first visit of The Beatles to the United States in 1964. Although lucrative and generating wide publicity, the preparation value of the Asia was questionable, considering that the long 2003\u201304 season which lay ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176173-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Real Madrid CF season, Pre-season\nIt was exhausting for the players, due to endless rounds of publicity engagements and restrictions on the players' freedom of movement (due to the team hotel being besieged by fans). Most players admitted that they would have preferred a low-profile training camp and/or to have been home in Spain for the pre-season, instead of playing meaningless show matches against low quality opponents. The Asia tour has been said to have catered more to the needs of the club's marketing than to its players' preparations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176174-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Red Star Belgrade season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Red Star Belgrade participated in the 2003\u201304 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, 2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup and 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176175-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Red Stripe Bowl\nThe 2003\u201304 Red Stripe Bowl was the 30th edition of what is now the Regional Super50, the domestic limited-overs cricket competition for the countries of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB). It ran from 1 to 19 October 2003, with matches played in Antigua and Barbuda and Jamaica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176175-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Red Stripe Bowl\nTen teams contested the competition, divided into two groups of five. For a third consecutive season, Antigua and Barbuda entered as a separate team, with the remaining Leeward Islands players competing for a \"Rest of Leeward Islands\" team. A University of the West Indies team entered for the second and final time, while the West Indies under-19s competed for the first time. Canada were invited as the sole international guest team. The semi-finals and final of the competition were all held in Discovery Bay, Jamaica, with Guyana eventually defeating Barbados in the final to win their eighth domestic one-day title. Guyanese batsman Ramnaresh Sarwan led the tournament in runs, while four bowlers (Dinanath Ramnarine, Pedro Collins, Ian Bradshaw, and Mahendra Nagamootoo) were the joint leading wicket-takers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176175-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Red Stripe Bowl, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176175-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Red Stripe Bowl, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe top five wicket takers are listed in this table, listed by wickets taken and then by bowling average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176176-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Reggina Calcio season\nReggina Calcio did renew its Serie A contract on the second consecutive occasion, ensuring the longest stay of the Calabrian club in the top division of Italian football. With returning coach Franco Colomba not being successful in his third stay at the club, Giancarlo Camolese guided the side to 13th place in the league. With only 29 goals scored, Reggina relied heavily on its defence for the survival, and Martin Jir\u00e1nek plus defensive midfielder Davide Baiocco strengthened their reputations. After the season, Baiocco returned to Juventus, who in turn loaned him out to Reggina's arch-rivals Messina, newcomers for the 2004\u201305 season, setting up the first Messina strait derby in the highest division ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176177-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Regionalliga\nThe 2003\u201304 Regionalliga season was the tenth season of the Regionalliga tier three of the German football league system. It was contested in two geographical divisions with eighteen teams each. The competition began on 1 August 2003 with the first matches of each division and ended on the 5 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176178-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rochdale A.F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 Rochdale A.F.C. season was the club's 83rd season in the Football League, and the 30th consecutive season in the fourth tier (League Division Three). Rochdale finished the season in 21st place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176179-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Romanian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Romanian Hockey League season was the 74th season of the Romanian Hockey League. Five teams participated in the league, and SC Miecurea Ciuc won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176180-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rotherham United F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Rotherham United participated in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176180-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season summary\nRotherham slumped somewhat following last season's comfortable midtable finish and ended the season in 17th, three points from the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176180-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rotherham United F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176180-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rotherham United F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176181-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rugby Pro D2 season\nThe 2003\u201304 Rugby Pro D2 season was the 2003\u201304 second division of French club rugby union. There is promotion and relegation in Pro Rugby D2, and after the 2003\u201304 season, Bayonne and FC Auch finished at the top of the table and were promoted to the top level, and Bordeaux-B\u00e8gles were relegated to third division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176182-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rugby Union County Championship\nThe 2003\u201304 Tetley's Bitter Rugby Union County Championship was the 104th edition of England's County Championship rugby union club competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176182-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Rugby Union County Championship\nDevon won their eighth title after defeating Gloucestershire in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176183-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Russian Superleague season\nThe 2003\u201304 Russian Superleague season was the eighth season of the Russian Superleague, the top level of ice hockey in Russia. 16 teams participated in the league, and HC Avangard Omsk won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Sport Lisboa e Benfica's 100th season in existence and the club's 70th consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football. It ran from 1 July 2003 to 30 June 2004. Benfica competed domestically in the Primeira Liga and the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal. The club also participated in the UEFA Champions League as a result of finishing second in the Primeira Liga in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season\nAfter Jos\u00e9 Antonio Camacho led Benfica to second place, the club offered him a new two-year contract as manager in June. As a condition to renewing the contract, Camacho requested that the club sign more established players, but budget restraints allowed for limited investment. After several unsuccessful player bids, Benfica added Luis\u00e3o to the squad and re-signed Geovanni in August. Because their second-place finish only granted a berth in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, Benfica had to play Lazio for a spot in the group stage. They lost both legs and were relegated to the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season\nDomestically, Benfica began the league campaign with five points in four games, losing ground in the league race. They improved in subsequent games, but dropped points two more times, including at the official opening of the new Est\u00e1dio da Luz. January was a difficult month for Benfica as they lost the Derby de Lisboa with Sporting, and on 25 January witnessed the death of club player\u2014Mikl\u00f3s Feh\u00e9r\u2014in the middle of a game. In February and March, the team fluctuated between winning and losing streaks, including knocking out Rosenborg and losing to Inter Milan in the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season\nIn the final two months, Benfica unexpectedly recovered six points against Sporting, overtaking them to finish second and qualify for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League. The club also reached the Portuguese Cup Final for the first time in eight years. Benfica beat Porto in extra-time to win their 24th Cup, which they dedicated to Feh\u00e9r.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nIn the aftermath of their best league finish since 1997\u201398, Benfica negotiated a one-year extension to Camacho's contract, which had been set to expire on 30 June. As a condition to agreeing to stay, he wanted several problems related to the technical staff, training fields and signings to be solved. On 23 June, Camacho agreed to remain as manager, with Pepe Carcel\u00e9n and \u00c1lvaro Magalh\u00e3es assisting him. In his presentation, he confessed that the club's limited finances would make it harder to sign players; he also said that Benfica would give their best but did not expect to dethrone Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nBenfica inquired after Helton, and Ricardo to compete with Jos\u00e9 Moreira for the goalkeeper position. Over the course of two weeks, the club negotiated unsuccessfully with the latter and ultimately chose to stay with Moreira. The club also looked into strengthen their options at centre and at left-back, negotiating unsuccessfully with \u00c2nderson Polga, Atouba and J\u00fanior. Despite these failed negotiations, Benfica added Luis\u00e3o, and re-signed Geovanni; both would be regular starters throughout the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nWith Portugal in seventh place in the UEFA coefficient and because only the first six had their league runner-up drawn directly into the group stage of the UEFA Champions League, Benfica had to go through a qualifying round, and were paired with Lazio on the draw of 26 July. The first match was scheduled for 13 August at Stadio Olimpico and the return leg, on the 26 August, at the Est\u00e1dio do Bessa, due to Est\u00e1dio Nacional's inability to receive European games. The team began their season preparations on 5 July, with two days reserved for medicals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0005-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nAfter a week and a half of training sessions on Jerez de la Frontera, they travelled to Nyon on 16 July, for a seven-day tour. In Switzerland, they played Panathinaikos and Sporting, with different results, a loss with the Greeks and a win with Sporting. Back in Portugal, Benfica competed in two tournaments, first at the Guadiana Trophy with Belenenses, and later at the Centenarian Trophy with Boavista and Leix\u00f5es. The team ended their pre-season with a match against Moreirense. Although Camacho initially doubted the team's chances in the title race, in August he said that the team \"was stronger than last year, due to the added time together\", and that they would fight for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nBenfica played their first competitive game of the season against Lazio in Rome and lost 3\u20131. This reduced their hopes of reaching the group stage of the Champions League, as Camacho said: \"Lazio were supposed to do more tonight to win this game. Benfica helped them by committing some mistakes, mainly due to our lack of experience. We have complicated our lives in view of the second-leg match.\". The third goal from Lazio, scored by Mihajlovi\u0107, came from a Roger's foul after touching the ball with his hands; Camacho openly criticized Roger for the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nOn the 17th, Benfica began their league campaign away to Boavista. Their last win there was on 30 March 1996, eight seasons ago. The game ended as a goalless draw, with Camacho criticizing the referee for the excessive number of interruptions. On the following Saturday, Benfica defeated Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es at home, in a 2\u20130 win, which Camacho admitted to be flattering in comparison with the team performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0006-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nTwo days later, the club announced they were postponing their third match day from 31 August to 29 October, because of Acad\u00e9mica's desire to play that game at the newly renovated Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra. On the 27th, Benfica lost one-nil to Lazio, and were knocked out of the Champions League. Because of the financial loss from the elimination, the club was unable to invest further in squad; the team closed the transfer window with only Alex and Luis\u00e3o as new signings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nBenfica's first match in September was on the 14th against Belenenses. Despite leading the game with 90 minutes played, Benfica allowed the visitors to score two goals in extra time to draw the match 3\u20133. Camacho took responsibility for the goals in extra-time, admitting the team needed to be smarter and waste time. The next match was the Cl\u00e1ssico away on the 21st; Porto had a five-point lead in the league table, although Benfica had played one less game. Porto won 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0007-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nCamacho complained of bad luck: \"What happened was that one team entered the game to dominate, achieved some control, but it was the other team who scored. What matters in football is goals, and Porto scored, while we did not.\" Three days later, Benfica started their UEFA Cup campaign against La Louvi\u00e8re, a Belgian team that Ant\u00f3nio Sim\u00f5es described as \"easy\". The game ended in a 1\u20131 draw, with Camacho dismissing the idea that it was a bad result, saying that an away draw in a European competition was still a satisfying outcome. On the 28th, Benfica closed the month with a home win against Nacional, with Tiago scoring the only goal. Despite the fans whistling the team, Camacho was pleased with the performance, noting the opportunities the team had to double the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nThe first match in October was on the 4th; it was an away match at Parque de Jogos, Moreirense's home ground. Benfica won 4\u20131, which was their largest win all season. Camacho attributed the team's success to an improvement in the conversion rate of the attacking line. After a break for international matches, Benfica returned with the second leg of the UEFA Cup on the 15th. They dominated the match, and only a strong performance from Silvio Proto allowed the Belgians to leave with only a goal conceded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0008-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nTwo days later, Benfica announced they were rescheduling the game against Mar\u00edtimo from 25 October to 12 November, due to the opening game of the new Est\u00e1dio da Luz on the same day. On 19 October, Benfica ended their six-month spell at Est\u00e1dio Nacional with a match against Gil Vicente. Benfica scored first but Gil Vicente equalized three minutes later, unsettling the home side. In the second half, Sim\u00e3o scored the winning goal for Benfica. Camacho acknowledged that Benfica struggled after conceding Gil Vicente's goal, adding that it was a normal behaviour in football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0008-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nOn the 25th, Benfica opened its brand new Est\u00e1dio da Luz, attracting a sell-out crowd against Nacional Montevideo. Benfica won 2\u20131, with Nuno Gomes scoring twice. On the following Wednesday, Benfica opened the redeveloped Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra, in a game transferred from August. Sim\u00e3o put on a man of the match performance, leading the team to a 3\u20131 win to Acad\u00e9mica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nBenfica started November by hosting Beira-Mar on the 2nd in the official opening of their new stadium. Beira-Mar won 2\u20131, inflicting Benfica's second league defeat, which opened an 11-point gap to Porto. Camacho blamed the defeat on the lack of goal opportunities. Four days later, Benfica received Molde for the UEFA Cup, beating them 3\u20131 and assuring a two-goal lead for the second leg. Camacho recognized the team was struggling to defend against corner-kicks, as both Beira-Mar and Molde had scored in corners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0009-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nOn 9 November, the team visited Alverca and won three-nil, with two goals from Tiago and one from Geovanni. Camacho was pleased with the performance, but said that Benfica should have scored more. On 12 November, Benfica played Mar\u00edtimo, in a fixture transferred from October. Weakened by injuries in some of the regular players, Benfica could not do better than a one-all draw. Camacho attributed the result to the excessive number of games in short amount of time, something most of the players were not accustomed to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0009-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nAfter a 10-day international break, Benfica opened the Portuguese Cup campaign against Estrela da Amadora on the 22nd. They won 3\u20131 with all of the goals arriving late in the game. Benfica closed the month with a 2\u20130 win to Molde, on the second leg of the UEFA Cup, with Tiago again scoring twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nOn 1 December, Benfica won its first league match in their new stadium, beating Rio Ave by 2\u20130. After the match, Camacho defended his team to the press by saying \"Eus\u00e9bio's team is gone.\" A week later, the team defeated Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira away, with Jo\u00e3o Pereira scoring two goals. Because Porto had lost points, Benfica were now only six points from the top of the league. On the 13th, Benfica won their fifth match in a row, beating Braga at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0010-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nAfter the game, Camacho angrily refuted any idea that Benfica did not play accordingly to expectations: \"A poor performance? That's not what I saw. In football there are two teams. Everyone knows that, against Benfica, all teams give their best, and we suffer that in the first half, because Braga played like every other team here. It is like the story of the bottle, for the optimist it is half full; for the pessimist, it is half empty.\" On the same day, they were drawn with Rosenborg in the upcoming round of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0010-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nThe following Wednesday, Benfica progressed through the fifth round of the Portuguese Cup, with Luis\u00e3o scoring a single goal in an away win against Acad\u00e9mica. The final game of the month came on the 21st, with a 3\u20130 win to Estrela da Amadora. Two goals within the first ten minutes allowed the team to comfortably manage the remaining time. Camacho later said that Benfica could have scored six or seven goals. This was the team's seventh win in a row, the longest streak of consecutive wins in Camacho's time at Benfica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\n2004 opened with a Derby de Lisboa against Sporting on 4 January. Benfica conceded an early goal, after Moreira fouled Silva inside the box. Sporting added a second before half-time and closed the match with another converted penalty; winning 3\u20131 and increasing their lead over Benfica to four points. On 11 January, Benfica visited Uni\u00e3o de Leiria at the newly developed Est\u00e1dio Dr. Magalh\u00e3es Pessoa. In a tightly contested match, Benfica fell behind twice and briefly led on the 80th minute. However, Leiria equalized within two minutes and the match ended in a 3\u20133 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0011-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nWith five points lost in two games, the distance to the top was again 11 points, with 6 to second place. The game also marked the debut of Fyssas, a 30-year-old left-back hired to compete with Cristiano. A week later, Benfica beat Boavista 3\u20132 with two goals from Sokota. At the press conference, Camacho criticized the media's behaviour after two weeks of intense pressure due to previous results. On 25 January, Benfica closed the month with an away game at Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es. They won the game with a late goal, but the match was more remembered for the collapse and later death of Mikl\u00f3s Feh\u00e9r, who suffered a cardiac arrhythmia brought on by hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The day after his death, Benfica announced they were permanently retiring his shirt number.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nIn the aftermath of Feh\u00e9r's death, Benfica played at home to Acad\u00e9mica on 3 February. Benfica scored first on the 27th minute with a goal from Zahovi\u010d, with Geovanni later making it 2\u20130. On the 8th, Benfica defeated Belenenses at Restelo, with two second half goals from Sokota and Jo\u00e3o Pereira. Camacho said the team had won the first of a cycle of three decisive matches. Three days later, Benfica played the quarter-finals of the Portuguese Cup against Nacional. After conceding on 22nd minute, the team spent over an hour trying to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0012-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nTiago then scored in the 85th minute, with Sokota scoring Benfica's second a minute later. This put the team into the semi-final. On 15 February, Benfica received Porto for the second Cl\u00e1ssico of the season. Porto scored first through Costinha, but Benfica levelled the match through Sim\u00e3o on the 50th minute, with the game ending in a 1\u20131 draw. Camacho expressed that the correct result should have been a win for Benfica, and that Porto had been lucky. A week later, Benfica met Nacional again, now on their home turf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0012-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nAfter conceding an early goal, Benfica fought back to a 2\u20131 lead; only to allow Nacional to score two goals within two minutes and win the game. Because two goals had come from corner-kicks, Camacho was questioned if the centre-backs were at fault; which he answered: \"We conceded three goals from set pieces, and that could not be the centre-backs' fault, because we defend them with 5 or 6 players \u2013 so they alone cannot be blamed.\" On the 26th, Benfica received Rosenborg in the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0012-0003", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nWhile both teams had opportunities to open the score sheet in the first half, the winning goal arrived on the 61st minute when Zahovic released a powerful shot. The final game of February was on the 29th, with Benfica hosting Moreirense at Da Luz. Benfica scored first by Fernando Aguiar, but could not retain their lead and conceded a late goal from Dem\u00e9trius. Although Sporting had a seven-point advantage, Camacho refused to admit defeat on the Champions League race, saying: \"We have not lost the fight yet. \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nBenfica played the second leg of the UEFA Cup third round on 3 March. At the Lerkendal Stadion, Rosenborg scored two goals inside the first 15 minutes, but Benfica regained their aggregate lead with a goal on the 19th minute. Despite playing with a man less in the second half, Moreira was not beaten again and Benfica went through to the next round on away goals. On the 7th, the team visited Gil Vicente's home stadium. Benfica scored first with Geovanni, but squandered two chances to make it 2\u20130. Instead Gil Vicente were able to equalize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0013-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nCamacho substituted in Manuel Fernandes and the 17-year-old scored the winning-goal for Benfica. Camacho praised the players for maintaining their commitment after an exhausting European game. On the following Thursday, Benfica hosted Inter Milan in the UEFA Cup. The team had multiple chances against Toldo but could not beat him, with the match ending 0\u20130. On 14 March, Benfica played host to Mar\u00edtimo, beating them 1\u20130 with a goal by Sim\u00e3o in the 81st minute. On the 17th, Benfica hosted Belenenses for the Portuguese Cup semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0013-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nWith three goals scored in the first 36 minutes, Benfica managed the lead until the end. They qualified for their first final since 1997. On 21 March, Benfica visited the new Municipal de Aveiro to face the local team, Beira-Mar. With the team resting players for the game with Inter, Camacho brought in Nuno Gomes and the striker scored the winning goal with 15 minutes left to play. The win reduced the gap to Sporting to just 4 points. Four days later, Benfica and Inter Milan had an entertaining seven-goal thriller in the second leg of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0013-0003", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nAt half-time, the teams were level, but in the 10 minutes between the 60th and 70th minute, Inter scored three to Benfica's one, opening a two-goal cushion. Benfica later reduced the lead to 4\u20133, but this was insufficient to prevent an elimination. Benfica closed March on the 28th. Two early goals allowed the team to cruise past Alverca, bringing their win tally to five wins in eight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nBenfica opened April in Vila do Conde with an away match against Rio Ave on Sunday 4 April. The home team opened the scoring in the second half and six minutes later Benfica equalized by Tiago. The game ended with a 1\u20131 draw, with Camacho admitting the team showed signs of fatigue. This draw also allowed Sporting to regain a six-point lead, with just five match-days to go. On 10 April, Benfica played Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira at home. Nuno Gomes and Geovanni both scored in the second half to give Benfica a 2\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0014-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nA week later Benfica won their second game in a row, 3\u20130 away at Braga. Miguel scored his first of the season while Sokota and Sim\u00e3o made it 3\u20130 by the half-hour point. The win, Benfica's largest there since 1989-90, helped them reduce the gap to second place to three points, because of Sporting's loss to Boavista. Camacho attributed the easy win to his team's motivation. Benfica ended April with a home game against Estrela da Amadora. They took an early lead through Nuno Gomes and Sokota scored the second later in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0014-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nDavide reduced the lead on the 86th minute, but an additional goal by Miguel led to a 3\u20131 win that put Benfica in second place in the league table, after catching up to Sporting. Camacho liked the win but not the performance, saying: \"We lacked sharpness and played on a slow pace.\" For the upcoming match with Sporting, Tiago commented that the Derby could go either way, but dismissed the idea that it was the most important game in the season for Benfica, saying: \"The Portuguese Cup final is our most important game.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nOn 2 May, Benfica visited the new Est\u00e1dio Jos\u00e9 Alvalade for a match that decided who would go to the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League. Sporting pressed hard from the start and dominated the first half, but Benfica managed to balance the game in the second, until they finally beat Sporting's defence with an 87th-minute goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0015-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nRui Dias described the goal for Record: \"It wasn't until the 87th minute that the game knew its man of the match: Geovanni; if the game was destined to be generic, the Brazilian added inspiration and scored a spectacular goal that decided the game and almost certainly sealed the unthinkable second place for Benfica \u2013 who could have thought of that only a month ago?.\" With the win, Benfica were only a point short of qualifying for the Champions League. Camacho praised the team, saying they had had a fantastic season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0015-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nA week later, Benfica secured the second place in the league and the associated place in the third qualifying round of the Champions League with a 0\u20130 home draw against Uni\u00e3o de Leiria. Camacho later said: \"We finished in second place, because we did not give up.\". Benfica's last game of the season was the 2004 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Final. In a highly competitive match, Porto took the lead through Derlei on the 45th minute, before Benfica equalized by Fyssas on the 58th minute. In extra-time, Sim\u00e3o scored the winner, sealing Benfica's 24th Portuguese Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0015-0003", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nIt was the first trophy for the team since 1996, ending the club longest drought. Camacho complimented his team and dedicated the win to Feh\u00e9r and Bruno Bai\u00e3o, the latter a youth team player who had died the day before, also from heart related complications. In the post-season, although Camacho said he was preparing for the following season, he chose to depart to Real Madrid on 24 May, as he signed a 2-year deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Player statistics\nThe squad for the season consisted of the players listed in the tables below, as well as staff member Camacho (manager), Pepe Carcelan (assistant manager) and Alvaro Magalh\u00e3es (assistant manager).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Player statistics\nNote 1: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176184-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.L. Benfica season, Player statistics\nNote 2: Players with squad numbers marked \u2021 joined the club during the 2003\u201304 season via transfer, with more details in the following section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176185-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.S. Lazio season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 104th season in Societ\u00e0 Sportiva Lazio's history and their 16th consecutive season in the top-flight of Italian football. Despite financial problems, Lazio attained a respectable 6th place in Serie A and won the Coppa Italia, defeating Juventus in the two-legged final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176186-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.S.C. Napoli season\nS.S.C. Napoli endured a horror season in 2003\u201304 Serie B, relegated to Serie C by the end of the season. The target prior to the season was promotion to Serie A, and several experienced players were brought in to achieve that goal, among them Massimo Carrera, Renato Olive, Rubens Pasino and Gianluca Savoldi. Especially the signing of Savoldi was significant, since he is the son of legendary Napoli striker Giuseppe Savoldi. The club also lost its captain Roberto Stellone to Reggina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176186-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.S.C. Napoli season\nSupporter Sergio Ercolano was killed when falling down from the stands at the derby with Avellino. That forced Napoli to play three home matches in front of an empty stadium. When coach Andrea Agostinelli was replaced by Luigi Simoni, Napoli at least salvaged a 13th place in the table, and looked set to stay in Serie B for 2004-05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176186-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S.S.C. Napoli season\nThat changed when it became apparent that president Salvatore Naldi could not fund the club any longer, which meant bankruptcy for the second time in the Neapolitan footballing history. By August 2004, Napoli was declared bankrupt. Film producer Aurelio De Laurentiis refounded Napoli under the name \"Napoli Soccer\", and were placed in the 2004\u201305 Serie C1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176187-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SC Bastia season\nFrench football club SC Bastia's 2003\u201304 season. Finished 17th place in league. Top scorer of the season, including 9 goals in 8 league matches have been Florian Maurice. Was eliminated to Coupe de France end of 64, the Coupe de la Ligue was able to be among the final 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176188-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SK Rapid Wien season\nThe 2003\u201304 SK Rapid Wien season is the 106th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176189-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SM-liiga season\nThe 2003-04 SM-liiga season was the 29th season of the SM-liiga, the top level of ice hockey in Finland. 13 teams participated in the league, and K\u00e4rp\u00e4t Oulu won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176190-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SV Werder Bremen season\nSV Werder Bremen won its first ever German double, clinching both Bundesliga and the DFB-Pokal. Following a club record-breaking league season, Werder won the title six points clear of Bayern Munich, with A\u00edlton hitting 28 goals, the most ever from a Werder Bremen player. The cup victory was clinched following a 3\u20132 win against Alemannia Aachen, with defensive midfielder Tim Borowski the unexpected hero, hitting Alemannia with a brace. The title successes were Thomas Schaaf's first in his managerial career. Werder, however, lost both A\u00edlton and defensive senior talisman Mladen Krstaji\u0107 to FC Schalke 04, since both refused to sign new contracts with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176190-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SV Werder Bremen season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176190-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SV Werder Bremen season, Players, Werder Bremen II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176190-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SV Werder Bremen season, Players, Youth team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176191-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sacramento Kings season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Kings' 55th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 19th season in Sacramento. The season was best remembered for the team making a move in the offseason, acquiring Brad Miller from the Indiana Pacers and signing free agent Anthony Peeler. Superstar forward Chris Webber, who spent most of the season recovering from microfracture knee surgery, then serving a suspension due to the Ed Martin scandal, returned for the final 23 games of the season in which they played mediocre basketball the rest of the way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176191-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sacramento Kings season\nStill, the Kings finished the season second in the Pacific Division with a 55\u201327 record. Miller and Peja Stojakovi\u0107 were both selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. In the first round of the playoffs, the Kings got the last laugh as they defeated their archrivals the Dallas Mavericks in five games, before falling to Kevin Garnett and the Minnesota Timberwolves in the second round as Webber missed a potential game-tying 3-pointer in Game 7. This ended the Kings' attempt at a championship as their core would be dismantled the following season, which included Vlade Divac re-signing as a free agent with the Los Angeles Lakers, Peeler signing with the Washington Wizards, and Gerald Wallace leaving in the 2004 NBA Expansion Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176191-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sacramento Kings season, Playoffs\nSacramento's win over Dallas is their most recent playoff series victory to date; in fact, the Kings haven't even qualified for the NBA playoffs at all since 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176192-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team represented Saint Joseph's University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The group is one of 25 teams to finish the regular season undefeated in men's division I basketball. They were the last to do so until Wichita State did it in 2014. Under 9th year head coach Phil Martelli, the Hawks held an overall record of 27\u20130 and a conference record of 16\u20130 in the regular season before losing to Xavier in the A-10 tournament and eventually Oklahoma State in the East Regional Final of the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176192-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team, Regular season\nThe Hawks dominated the regular season, going 27-0 for the season. In the Atlantic 10 Tournament, the Hawks received a #1 seed, which included a first-round bye. However, they lost badly to the Xavier Musketeers 87\u201367. Despite their early exit, the Hawks still received a #1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. The Hawks also won the Philadelphia Big 5, going 4\u20130 in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176192-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Saint Joseph's Hawks men's basketball team, NCAA tournament\nThe Hawks received a #1 seed, and defeated Liberty, Texas Tech, and Wake Forest in the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd rounds, respectively. In the Elite 8 match-up against Oklahoma State, the Hawks lost by 2 points. John Lucas III of Oklahoma State hit a go-ahead three with only a few seconds left. On the ensuing possession, Jameer Nelson attempted to tie the game, but his 15\u00a0ft. shot fell short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176193-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Antonio Spurs season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Spurs' 28th season in the National Basketball Association, the 31st in San Antonio, and 37th season as a franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176193-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Antonio Spurs season\nThe Spurs entered the season as defending NBA champions, having defeated the New Jersey Nets in the 2003 NBA Finals in six games to win their second NBA championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176193-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Antonio Spurs season\nDuring the offseason, David Robinson, Danny Ferry, and Steve Kerr retired, Speedy Claxton signed with the Golden State Warriors, Stephen Jackson signed with the Atlanta Hawks, and Steve Smith signed with the New Orleans Hornets; in addition, the Spurs acquired Hedo T\u00fcrko\u011flu and Ron Mercer in a three-team trade, signed free agent Robert Horry (who had won championships with the Houston Rockets and the Los Angeles Lakers) and signed other free agents such as center Radoslav Nesterovi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176193-0001-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Antonio Spurs season\nDespite the retirement of Robinson, and despite having a won-loss percentage of approximately .500 in November, the Spurs posted a 13-game winning streak in January and won their final eleven games of the season. The team finished second in the Midwest Division with a 57\u201325 record. Two-time MVP Tim Duncan was selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176193-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Antonio Spurs season\nThe Spurs defeated the Memphis Grizzlies in four straight games in the first round of the playoffs. Although the Spurs took the first two games in a second-round rematch against the Los Angeles Lakers (the team they had eliminated in the previous season's Western Conference Semifinals), the Lakers, led by their \"big four\" of Karl Malone, Shaquille O'Neal, Kobe Bryant, and Gary Payton, responded by taking the next four games to eliminate the defending champions. The Lakers went on to reach the NBA Finals, where they lost to the Detroit Pistons in five games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176193-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Antonio Spurs season\nFollowing the season, Turkoglu signed as a free agent with the Orlando Magic and Kevin Willis signed with the Atlanta Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176194-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season\nThe 2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season was the franchise's 13th in the NHL. The Sharks made it to the Western Conference Finals for the first time before losing to the Calgary Flames. It was the last season before the 2004\u201305 lockout, which cancelled the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176194-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season, Off-season\nOn May 13, 2003, the Sharks hired Doug Wilson (no relation to coach Ron Wilson) as general manager, replacing Dean Lombardi. At the Entry Draft in June, the Sharks chose Milan Michalek with their first-round pick, sixth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176194-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season\nThe Sharks rotated team captaincy for the first half of the season before permanently handing the role to forward Patrick Marleau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176194-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176194-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176194-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 San Jose Sharks season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176196-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish Challenge Cup was the 13th season of the competition, competed for by all 30 members of the Scottish Football League. The defending champions were Queen of the South, who defeated Brechin City 2\u20130 in the 2002 final. Queen of the South were eliminated in the first round after defeat against Stranraer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176196-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe final was played on 26 October 2003, between Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Airdrie United at McDiarmid Park, Perth. Inverness Caledonian Thistle won 2\u20130, to claim their first 'major' cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176196-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round\nBerwick Rangers and Dumbarton received random byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176197-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish Cup was the 119th staging of Scotland's most prestigious football knockout competition, also known for sponsorship reasons as the Tennent's Scottish Cup. The Cup was won by Celtic who defeated Dunfermline Athletic in the final. The final was Henrik Larsson's last competitive match for Celtic. The Final also proved to be Dunfermline manager Jimmy Calderwood's last match as manager of the Fife club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176198-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish First Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish Football League First Division was won by Inverness Caledonian Thistle who were promoted to the Scottish Premier League. Ayr United and Brechin City were relegated to the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176198-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish First Division, Attendances\nThe average attendances for Scottish First Division clubs for season 2003/04 are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176200-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish League Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish League Cup was the 58th staging of the Scotland's second most prestigious football knockout competition, also known for sponsorship reasons as the CIS Insurance Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176200-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish League Cup\nThe competition was won by Livingston, who defeated Hibernian 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176201-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Men's National League season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 35th campaign of the Scottish Men's National League, the national basketball league of Scotland. The season featured 10 teams; from the previous season, St Mirren Buddies joined the league and Arbroath Musketeers did not return. City of Edinburgh Kings won their second league title with an unbeaten season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176201-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Men's National League season, Teams\nThe line-up for the 2003-04 season featured the following teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League\nAs league champions, Celtic qualified for the UEFA Champions League, with runners-up Rangers also qualifying. Third-placed Hearts qualified for the UEFA Cup, as did Dunfermline Athletic, who took the Scottish Cup place despite losing the final to Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League\nDuring the season, Celtic set a Scottish record of 25 successive wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League\nPartick Thistle were relegated, and First Division winners Inverness Caledonian Thistle were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League\nCeltic's Henrik Larsson was the top scorer with 30 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League, Teams, Promotion and relegation from 2002\u201303\nMotherwell finished bottom of the 2002\u201303 Scottish Premier League but were spared relegation, as 2002\u201303 Scottish First Division champions Falkirk were denied promotion due to their lack of an appropriate stadium for the Scottish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nDuring matches 1\u201322 each team played every other team twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 23\u201333\nDuring matches 23\u201333 each team played every other team once (either at home or away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 34\u201338\nDuring matches 34\u201338 each team played every other team in their half of the table once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176202-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League, Attendances\nThe average attendances for SPL clubs during the 2003/04 season are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176203-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Second Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish Second Division was won by Airdrie United who, along with Hamilton Academical, were promoted to the First Division. East Fife and Stenhousemuir were relegated to the Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176203-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Second Division, Attendances\nThe average attendances for Scottish Second Division clubs for season 2003/04 are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176204-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Third Division\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish Third Division was won by Stranraer who, along with Stirling Albion, gained promotion to the Second Division. East Stirlingshire finished bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176204-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Scottish Third Division, Attendance\nThe average attendance for Scottish Third Division clubs for season 2003/04 are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176205-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Seattle SuperSonics season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the SuperSonics' 37th season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Sonics signed free agent Antonio Daniels. The Sonics started the season in Tokyo, Japan with a two game series against the Los Angeles Clippers. The Sonics got off to a 5\u20131 start, but played around .500 for the first half of the season. Ray Allen played his first full season as a member of the Sonics after being acquired from the Milwaukee Bucks in a trade last February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176205-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Seattle SuperSonics season\nDespite missing the first 25 games due to an ankle injury, he was voted to play in the 2004 NBA All-Star Game. This was Allen's fourth overall All-Star Game appearance and his first as a member of the Sonics. However, despite a 7-game winning streak in March, the Sonics lost seven of their final ten games ending the season fifth in the Pacific Division with a 37\u201345 record, missing the playoffs. Following the season, Brent Barry signed as a free agent with the San Antonio Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176205-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Seattle SuperSonics season\nThis was also the Sonics' final season playing in the Pacific Division, as they moved to the new Northwest Division of the Western Conference next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176206-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro\nSecond League of Serbia and Montenegro 2003\u201304 (Serbian: Druga savezna liga) consisted of four groups of 10 teams. The competition started on 17 August 2003 and the regular season ended on June 13, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176206-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro, Changes for next season\nThe next season, second level in Serbia and Montenegro football consisted of two groups. Therefore, as the end of season, Serbian groups (North, East & West) merged into Serbian Second League (Druga liga Srbija), and South group formed the Montenegrin Second League (Druga liga Crna Gora).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 71], "content_span": [72, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176206-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro, Montenegrin league playoff, Second leg\nMornar qualified to 2004\u201305 Montenegrin First League, while Lov\u0107en remained a member of Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176207-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n season saw 22 teams participate in the second flight Spanish league. The teams that were promoted to La Liga were Levante UD, Getafe CF and CD Numancia. The teams that were relegated to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B were CD Legan\u00e9s, UD Las Palmas, Rayo Vallecano and Algeciras CF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176208-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B\nThe season 2003-04 of Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B of Spanish football started August 2003 and ended May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176208-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Group I\nTeams from Asturias, Basque Country, Cantabria, Galicia, La Rioja and Navarre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176208-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Group II\nTeams from Aragon, Castilla\u2013La Mancha, Castile and Le\u00f3n, Community of Madrid and Galicia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176208-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B, Group III\nTeams from Balearic Islands, Catalonia, Region of Murcia and Valencian Community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176209-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divis\u00e3o B\nThe 2003\u201304 Segunda Divis\u00e3o season was the 70th season of the competition and the 54th season of recognised third-tier football in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176209-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Divis\u00e3o B, Overview\nThe league was contested by 59 teams in 3 divisions with SC Espinho, Gondomar SC and SC Olhanense winning the respective divisional competitions and gaining promotion to the Liga de Honra. The overall championship was won by SC Espinho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176210-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Liga\nThe 2003\u201304 Segunda Liga season was the 14th season of the competition and the 70th season of recognised second-tier football in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176210-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Segunda Liga, Overview\nThe league was contested by 18 teams with GD Estoril Praia winning the championship and gaining promotion to the Primeira Liga along with Vit\u00f3ria Set\u00fabal and FC Penafiel. At the other end of the table SC Covilh\u00e3 and Uni\u00e3o Funchal were relegated to the Segunda Divis\u00e3o along with SC Salgueiros who were relegated for financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup was the second and first full season of the Serbia and Montenegro's annual football cup. The cup defenders was FK Sartid, but was defeated by FK Obili\u0107 in the second round. Red Star Belgrade has the winner of the competition, after they defeated Budu\u0107nost Banatski Dvor. She later clinched the First League title to claim its 8th domestic double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, First round\nThirty-two teams entered in the First Round. The matches were played on 28, 29 October, 11 and 12 November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, First round\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Second round\nThe 16 winners from the prior round enter this round. The matches were played on 3 December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Second round\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe eight winners from the prior round enter this round. The matches were played on 3 and 24 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176211-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Quarter-finals\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176212-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serbian Hockey League season\nThe 2003-04 Serbian Hockey League season was the 13th season of the Serbian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Serbia. Five teams participated in the league, and HK Vojvodina Novi Sad won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A\nThe 2003\u201304 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 102nd season of top-tier Italian football, the 72nd in a round-robin tournament. It contained 18 teams for the 16th and last time from the 1988\u201389 season. With the bottom three being relegated, the 15th placed side would face the sixth-highest team from Serie B, with the winner playing in the Serie A in the subsequent 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A\nAs usual, the top two teams would progress directly to the UEFA Champions League group stage, while third and fourth place would have to begin in the third qualifying round. The UEFA Cup places would be awarded to fifth and sixth place, and the winners of the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A\nMilan won their 17th scudetto; Roma impressed and were pushing for the title until the last few weeks of the season; Internazionale only made it to the Champions League ahead of Parma and Lazio on the last day thanks to Adriano, who had been signed from Parma earlier in the season; Lazio won the Coppa Italia against Juventus, handing Udinese the UEFA Cup spot; Ancona were relegated with only two wins, the joint lowest tally ever (Brescia's 12 points in 1994\u201395 Serie A is still the lowest ever); Empoli and Modena were also relegated; Perugia lost their special play-off, imposed to expand the league, against Fiorentina, who returned to Serie A after a two-year absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A\nUkrainian forward Andriy Shevchenko of Milan was the top scorer, with 24 goals. The 2003\u201304 league was the last professional season in the career of former European Footballer of the Year and Italian international Roberto Baggio, who finished among the tournament's top ten scorers with 12 goals, and among the all-time top five scorers in Serie A, with 205 career goals. It was also the last Serie A season for Baggio's former teammate Giuseppe Signori, who then moved to the Superleague Greece. Signori ended his career in Italy as the seventh highest scorer ever in Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A, Teams\nEighteen teams competed in the league\u00a0\u2013 the top fourteen teams from the previous season and the four teams promoted from the Serie B. The promoted teams were Siena, Sampdoria, Lecce and Ancona. Sampdoria, Lecce and Ancona returned to the top flight after an absence of four, one and ten years respectively, while Siena played in the top flight for the first time in history. They replaced Atalanta (relegated after three seasons in the top flight), Piacenza, Torino (both teams relegated after a two-years presence) and Como (relegated after a season's presence).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A, Rule changes\nUnlike La Liga, which imposed a quota on the number of non-EU players on each club, Serie A clubs could sign as many non-EU players as available on domestic transfer. But for the 2003\u201304 season a quota was imposed on each of the clubs limiting the number of non-EU, non-EFTA and non-Swiss players who may be signed from abroad each season, following provisional measures introduced in the 2002\u201303 season, which allowed Serie A & B clubs to sign only one non-EU player in the 2002 summer transfer window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A, Qualification play-offs\nPerugia had to play a qualification match with 6th-placed team of Serie B, Fiorentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176213-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A, Qualification play-offs\nFiorentina won 2\u20131 on aggregate and were promoted to 2004\u201305 Serie A; Perugia were relegated to 2004\u201305 Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176214-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie A (ice hockey) season\nThe 2003\u201304 Serie A season was the 70th season of the Serie A, the top level of ice hockey in Italy. 15 teams participated in the league, and the HC Milano Vipers won the championship by defeating Asiago Hockey in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176215-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie B\nThe 2003\u201304 Serie B is the 72nd season since its establishment in 1929. It is the second highest football league in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176215-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie B, Teams\nTreviso, Avellino, AlbinoLeffe and Pescara had been promoted from Serie C, while Atalanta, Piacenza, Como, and Torino had been relegated from Serie A. Following the Caso Catania, Fiorentina was added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176215-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie B, Events\nFollowing the Caso Catania, the league had been expanded to 24 clubs, and six special promotions were decided to descend to 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176215-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie B, Promotion play-offs\nFiorentina had to play a qualification match with 15th-placed team of Serie A, Perugia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176215-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie B, Promotion play-offs\nA.C. Perugia relegated to Serie B, while ACF Fiorentina was promoted to Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176215-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie B, Relegation play-off\nA.S. Bari was relegated to Serie C1 2004-05 but was later readmitted to Serie B in place of S.S.C. Napoli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176216-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie C1\nThe 2003\u201304 Serie C1 was the twenty-sixth edition of Serie C1, the third highest league in the Italian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176216-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Serie C1, League standings, Serie C1/A, Final Verdict\nRepechage\u00a0: Pavia and Prato admitted at Serie C1 2004\u201305", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 61], "content_span": [62, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176217-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sevilla FC season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Sevilla FC's 114th season in existence and the club's third consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Sevilla participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176218-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield Shield season\nThe 2003\u201304 Sheffield Shield season known as the Pura Cup was the 102nd season of the Sheffield Shield, the domestic first-class cricket competition of Australia. Victoria won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176219-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield United F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Sheffield United competed in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176219-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season summary\nSheffield United were unable to repeat the previous season's heroics, finishing 8th in the First Division, a mere two points off the play-off places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176219-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield United F.C. season, Kit\nThe kit was manufactured by French company Le Coq Sportif and sponsored by Desun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176219-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield United F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176219-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield United F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176220-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Sheffield Wednesday competed in the Football League Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176220-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter relegation the previous season, Sheffield Wednesday competed in the third tier of English football for the first time in over 20 years. Wednesday made a positive start to the season and were 2nd in the league by mid-September. As results slipped through Autumn they slid down to mid table, although they remained around 6 points from the play off places going into the new year. An upturn in form never materialised and as the season wore on and promotion became less likely, results turned for the worse. Wednesday lost 9 of their last 13 league games finishing 16th, 20 points from a play off position and only avoiding relegation by 3 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176220-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176220-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 104th season of competitive association football and first season in the Football Conference played by Shrewsbury Town Football Club, a professional football club based in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. Their twenty-fourth-place finish in 2002\u201303 Football League Second Division meant they were relegated from The Football League \u2013 fifty-three years after they joined it \u2013 and were playing their first season in Football Conference. The season began on 1 July 2003 and concluded on 30 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nJimmy Quinn, who was starting his first full season as player-manager, signed eight players before the summer transfer window closed. Shrewsbury occupied a play-off position for most of the season, and finished the Football Conference season in third place, failing to reach the automatic promotion place but securing a berth in the play-offs. Shrewsbury beat Barnet 5\u20133 in a penalty shoot-out in the semi-final having drawn 2\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThey won the 2004 Football Conference play-off Final, which took place at the Britannia Stadium, by beating Aldershot Town 3\u20130 on penalties after the match ended in a 1\u20131 draw; which meant the club was promoted back into The Football League in the newly renamed Football League Two. They lost in their opening round matches in both the 2003\u201304 FA Cup and Football League Cup, and were eliminated in the quarter-finals of the FA Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThirty players made at least one appearance in nationally organised first-team competition, and there were fifteen different goalscorers. Goalkeeper Scott Howie and defenders David Ridler and Darren Tinson missed only five of the fifty-one competitive matches played over the season. Luke Rodgers finished as leading scorer with fifteen goals, of which thirteen came in league competition and two came in the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nIn April 2003 Kevin Ratcliffe resigned as manager of Shrewsbury Town, four years after taking the position, he took responsibility for the club's poor run of where only two league games were won after the turn of the year and their relegation from The Football League was confirmed. Player Mark Atkins was placed in charge for the final game of the season against his original club Scunthorpe United at home which ended in a 2\u20131 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nReleased following the end of the 2002\u201303 season were Nigel Jemson, Peter Wilding, Andy Thompson, Jason van Blerk, Scott Partridge, Nick Evans and Chris Courtney. Andy Tretton, Josh Walker, Greg Rioch, Steve Guinan and Chris Murphy also left the club after departing for Hereford United, Moor Green, Northwich Victoria, Hereford United and Telford United respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Background and pre-season\nJimmy Quinn was announced as Shrewsbury's manager before the start of the 2003\u201304 season. New signings ahead of the start of the season comprised five defenders and one of each of the other positions: goalkeeper Scott Howie from Bristol Rovers, midfielder Martin O'Connor from Walsall and forward Colin Cramb from Fortuna Sittard. The five defenders were Ian Fitzpatrick from Halifax Town, David Ridler from Scarborough, Darren Tinson from Macclesfield Town and both Jake Sedgemore and Greg Rioch from Northwich Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Summary and aftermath\nShrewsbury spent the whole of the season in the top half of the table, rising as high as second place in September 2003 while never dropping below sixth after the first round of fixtures. Shrewsbury's defensive record was the second best in the Football Conference with forty-two goals conceded, bettered only by the league winners, Chester City (thirty-four). Howler, Ridler and Tinson recorded the highest number of appearances during the season, each appearing in forty-six of Shrewsbury's fifty-one games. Rodgers was Shrewsbury's top scorer in the league and in all competitions, with thirteen league goals and fifteen in total. Three other players, Cramb, Darby and Lowe, reached double figures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Summary and aftermath\nPrior to the club's Football League return, Shrewsbury released Fitzpatrick, Packer, Parker and Thompson. Quinn was also released as a player but remained as the club's manager into the 2004\u201305 season. New players to join were defender Dave Walton from Derby County and forward John Grant from Telford United. Dunbavin transferred back to Northwich Victoria for free.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176221-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season, Match details\nLeague positions are sourced by Statto, attendance numbers are sourced to Soccerbase; while the remaining information is referenced individually. Shrewsbury's score is listed first in the score columns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176222-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak 1. Liga season\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovak 1.Liga season was the 11th season of the Slovak 1. Liga, the second level of ice hockey in Slovakia. 11 teams participated in the league, and HK Spartak Dubnica won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176223-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovak Cup was the 35th season of Slovakia's annual knock-out cup competition and the eleventh since the independence of Slovakia. It began on 26 August 2003 with Round 1 and ended on 8 May 2004 with the Final. The winners of the competition earned a place in the second qualifying round of the UEFA Cup. Matador P\u00fachov were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176223-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Cup, First round\nThe match Steel Trans Li\u010dartovce \u2013 MFK Ru\u017eomberok was played on 26 August 2003 and the thirteen games were played on 2 and 3 September 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176223-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Cup, Second round\nThe four games were played on 30 September 2003 and the four games were played on 1 October 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176223-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 21 and 22 November 2003. The second legs were played on 28 and 29 November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176223-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 7 April 2004. The second legs were played on 21 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176224-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Extraliga season\nThe Slovak Extraliga 2003\u201304 was the eleventh regular season of the Slovak Extraliga, the top level of professional ice hockey in Slovakia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176224-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Final standings\nKey - GP: Games played, W: Wins, OTW: Over time wins, T: Ties, OTL: Over time losses, L: Losses, GF: Goals for, GA: Goals against, PTS: Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176224-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Extraliga season, Scoring Leaders\nKey - GP: Games played, G: Goals, A: Assists, PTS: Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176225-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Superliga\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovak First Football League (known as the Slovak Corgo\u0148 Liga for sponsorship reasons) was the 11th season of first-tier football league in Slovakia, since its establishment in 1993. This season started on 19 July 2003 and ended on 8 June 2004. M\u0160K \u017dilina are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176225-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Superliga, Teams\nA total of 10 teams was contested in the league, including 9 sides from the 2002\u201303 season and one promoted from the 2. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176225-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovak Superliga, Teams\nRelegation for 1. FC Ko\u0161ice to the 2003\u201304 2. Liga was confirmed on 31 May 2003. The one relegated team were replaced by Dukla Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176226-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovenian Football Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovenian Football Cup was the 13th season of the Slovenian Football Cup, Slovenia's football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176227-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovenian Hockey League season\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovenian Ice Hockey League was the 13th season of the Slovenian Hockey League. Seven teams participated in the league, and Olimpija have won the league championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176228-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovenian PrvaLiga\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovenian PrvaLiga season started on 20 July 2003 and ended on 30 May 2004. Each team played a total of 32 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176229-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovenian Second League\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovenian Second League season started on 10 August 2003 and ended on 6 June 2004. Each team played a total of 32 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176229-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovenian Second League, League standing, Promotion play-offs\nBela Krajina lost on away goals rule but got promoted anyway because Rudar Velenje declined promotion. Additionally, Zagorje also got promoted because \u0160martno didn't get a licence and was thus relegated from the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176230-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Slovenian Third League\nThe 2003\u201304 Slovenian Third League was the 12th season of the Slovenian Third League, the third highest level in the Slovenian football system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe 2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season was a below-average season with only three tropical cyclones occurring within the South Pacific to the east of 160\u00b0E. The season officially ran from November 1, 2003 to April 30, 2004 with the first disturbance of the season forming on December 4 and the last disturbance dissipating on April 23. This is the period of the year when most tropical cyclones form within the South Pacific Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season\nDuring the season at least 16 people were killed from tropical disturbances whilst overall damage was estimated at $218\u00a0million (2004\u00a0USD; $299\u00a0million 2021\u00a0USD). The most damaging tropical disturbance was Cyclone Heta which caused at least $211\u00a0million (2004\u00a0USD; $289\u00a0million 2021\u00a0USD) in damage to six different countries and left three dead. The deadliest tropical disturbance of the season was Tropical Depression 10F, which was responsible for eleven deaths and caused $2.74\u00a0million (2004\u00a0USD) in damage. Cyclone Ivy also caused 2 deaths and caused $4.17\u00a0million (2004\u00a0USD; $5.72\u00a0million 2021\u00a0USD) worth of damage to Vanuatu. As a result of the impacts caused by Heta and Ivy, the names were retired from the tropical cyclone naming lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season\nWithin the South Pacific, tropical cyclones are monitored by the Regional Specialized Meteorological Center (RSMC) in Nadi, Fiji, and the Tropical Cyclone Warning Center (TCWC) in Wellington, New Zealand. RSMC Nadi attaches a number and an F suffix to tropical disturbances that form in or move into the South Pacific. The United States Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) issues unofficial warnings within the South Pacific, designating tropical cyclones with a number and a P suffix. RSMC Nadi and TCWC Wellington both use the Australian Tropical Cyclone Intensity Scale, and measure windspeeds over a period of ten minutes, while the JTWC measures sustained winds over a period of one minute and uses the Saffir\u2013Simpson Hurricane Scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Heta\nCyclone Heta developed in the South Pacific Ocean and reached cyclone-force winds on January 1, 2004. It struck the island of Niue with a much more direct blow on January 6. Heta's eyewall hit Niue almost exactly at the height of the storm's power. It caused extensive property damage throughout the island, and two people were killed. Efforts to rebuild from the storm in Niue lasted almost the entire year of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Heta\nHeta caused American Samoa to declare a state of emergency (officially a \"Declaration of Emergency\" in American Samoan law) on January 7, and even though officially the storm never made landfall there, it necessitated the emergency evacuation of 140 people and was responsible for property damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Heta\nThe nation of Tonga was also affected by Heta, as the winds swept away trees that were needed for the country's food supply. However, Tonga did not receive a direct hit or suffer such extensive loss as Niue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Ivy\nNumbered 05F. Existed between February 21 and February 28. Caused heavy damage in Vanuatu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Grace\nEntered the region from the west on March 23, became extratropical the next day. Designated as 07F by Nadi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 10F\nExisted between April 6 and April 9. The storm was given the number 22P by the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. It was responsible for causing severe flooding to Fiji and 11 deaths. Damage from the flooding was estimated at US$2.6\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 12F\nFormed on April 7, later caused severe flooding in Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 13F\nDuring April 11 a weak tropical low moved into the South Pacific basin from the Australian region, and was designated as Tropical Disturbance 13F by RSMC Nadi later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nThe first numbered tropical disturbance of the season developed within a large area of atmospheric convection on December 4, to the northwest of the Fijian dependency of Rotuma. During that day the depression slowly moved west, before it was classified as a weak tropical depression during the next day. The system subsequently weakened and lost its organisation because of moderate to strong vertical windshear and was last noted during December 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nTropical Disturbance 02F was first noted by the FMS during December 16, within an environment conducive for further development, about 340\u00a0km (210\u00a0mi) to the west of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Over the next few days, the system remained poorly organised and slow-moving within an area of moderate vertical windshear, before it was last noted by the FMS during December 20, as it entered the Australian region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0012-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nTropical Disturbance 04F was subsequently first noted within a broad area of low pressure by the FMS, while it was located on the border with the South Pacific basin, about 100\u00a0km (60\u00a0mi) to the south of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. The system was located in a moderate area of vertical windshear and was poorly organised with atmospheric convection confined to the system's eastern semicircle. The system subsequently moved south-eastwards and remained poorly organised, before it was last noted by the FMS later that day while it was located to the south of San Cristobal Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring April 6, the FMS reported that Tropical Depression 11F had developed within a monsoon trough, about 140\u00a0km (85\u00a0mi) to the north-east of Suva in Fiji. Over the next day, the system moved south-eastwards towards Tonga, before it was last noted by the FMS later that day, while it was located about 300\u00a0km (185\u00a0mi) to the southwest of Tongatapu in Tonga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOn April 18, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 15F had developed within the monsoon trough, about 515\u00a0km (320\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Nuku\u02bbalofa in Tonga. During that day, the disturbance moved through the Tongan archipelago, before it was last noted later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring April 22, the FMS reported that Tropical Disturbance 15F had developed around 500\u00a0km (310\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Honiara in the Solomon Islands. Over the next couple of days, the system remained poorly organised and near stationary to the northeast of the Solomon Islands, before it was last noted during April 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176231-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South Pacific cyclone season, Season effects\nThis table lists all the storms that developed in the South Pacific to the east of longitude 160\u00b0E during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe 2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season featured the most intense tropical cyclone in the South-West Indian Ocean, Cyclone Gafilo, as well as nine other named storms. Tropical activity began on September\u00a028 when Moderate Tropical Storm Abaimba formed at a low latitude. Activity continued until late May, following Severe Tropical Storm Juba, which marked the third year in a row that a storm formed in May. The final disturbance, one of sixteen, dissipated on May\u00a024. Activity was near average, and the season was one of the longest on record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe first intense tropical cyclone was Beni, which reached that intensity on November\u00a013, the third-earliest on record. In December, Tropical Cyclone Cela moved across Madagascar, and Severe Tropical Storm Darius dropped heavy rainfall in the Mascarene Islands. In January, Cyclone Elita crossed Madagascar three times, which caused widespread flooding and 33\u00a0deaths. Also in that month was Intense Tropical Cyclone Frank, which developed quickly but remained away from land. On March\u00a07, Cyclone Gafilo struck near Antalaha in northeast Madagascar and largely destroyed the town. Across the country, the storm destroyed over 20,000\u00a0homes, leaving 304,000\u00a0people homeless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nNationwide, the storm killed 363\u00a0people and left $250\u00a0million in damage (2004\u00a0USD). Later in March, two storms \u2013 Nicky and Oscar \u2013 crossed 90\u00b0 E from the Australian basin and were renamed Helma and Itseng, respectively. Tropical cyclones in this basin are monitored by the Regional Specialised Meteorological Centre in R\u00e9union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season summary\nM\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's meteorological office in R\u00e9union (MFR) is the official Regional Specialized Meteorological Center for the South-West Indian Ocean, tracking all tropical cyclones from the east coast of Africa to 90\u00b0 E. The agency tracked 16\u00a0tropical disturbances during the season, of which ten intensified into tropical storms and were named from a sequential list. This is near the long-term average of nine tropical storms. Five storms intensified to tropical cyclone status, with maximum sustained winds of at least 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph); this is also near the long-term average. There were 19\u00a0days \u2013 one less than average \u2013 in which a tropical cyclone was active. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC), which is a joint United States Navy\u00a0\u2013 United States Air Force task force\u2013 also issued advisories for storms in the basin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season summary\nSimilar to the preceding season, the 2003\u201304 season began in September and ended the following May, making it one of the lengthiest on record. Most storms originated near the Chagos Archipelago in the central Indian Ocean. Two storms \u2013 Helma and Itseng \u2013 crossed from the Australian basin and were tracked by the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM). Many of the storms had unusual trajectories, with sudden changes in direction. Cyclone Elita crossed the coastline of Madagascar three times, described by the MFR as an \"exotic\" track but akin to Cyclone Felicie in 1971. The final storm \u2013 Juba \u2013 was the third-latest named storm on record, after Ikonjo in May 1990 and Gritelle in June 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Abaimba\nOn September\u00a028, the first tropical disturbance of the season originated as a circulation within the near-equatorial trough, west of the Chagos Archipelago. Despite moderate wind shear and minimal convection at first, the system developed an organized area of thunderstorms over the center. The swirl was influenced by the trade winds, moving westward at first before turning to the east. The MFR upgraded the system to a tropical depression on September\u00a029, and on the same day, the JTWC initiated advisories on the storm as Tropical Cyclone 01S.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Abaimba\nThe circulation became exposed from the convection before developing another plume of thunderstorms on October\u00a01. That day, the MFR upgraded the depression to Moderate Tropical Storm Abaimba, estimating peak winds of 80\u00a0km/h (50\u00a0mph), similar to the JTWC estimate. At the low latitude of 4.4\u00ba\u00a0S, Abaimba became the first named storm in the basin north of 5\u00ba\u00a0S. Wind shear increased late on October\u00a01, leaving the center exposed again. On the next day, Abaimba weakened into a tropical depression. The trajectory shifted to the south and west as it moved in a broad loop, until stalling on October\u00a04. That day, it was no longer classifiable as a tropical disturbance, and the circulation dissipated on October\u00a06.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Beni\nThe same westerly wind burst that spawned a cyclonic storm in the Arabian Sea also produced Cyclone Beni. On November\u00a07, an area of sprawling convection developed northeast of Diego Garcia. This system consolidated and organized, aided by decreasing wind shear, warm waters, and good outflow. On November\u00a09, the MFR classified the system as a tropical disturbance, and the JTWC designated it as Tropical Cyclone 02S. Two days later, the MFR upgraded it to Moderate Tropical Storm Beni. Moving around a ridge, the storm trekked southwestward before turning to the southeast on November\u00a012, steered by an approaching trough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0005-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Beni\nThat day, Beni intensified into the first tropical cyclone of the year. Its outflow was enhanced by the trough, and a well-defined eye became established within the convection. On November\u00a013, the MFR upgraded Beni to an intense tropical cyclone, estimating peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 175\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph); at the time, it was the third earliest in the season that a storm reached that intensity. The JTWC estimated slightly higher 1\u00a0minute winds of 185\u00a0km/h (115\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Beni\nA small cyclone, Beni rapidly weakened due to increased wind shear. By November\u00a014 \u2013 a day after reaching peak intensity \u2013 the circulation of Beni became exposed as the winds decreased to tropical storm force. A day later, the storm weakened into a tropical disturbance and turned to a northwest drift, steered in the trade winds. Thunderstorms redeveloped as the shear diminished, and Beni re-intensified into a tropical storm on November\u00a018 while crossing over its earlier path.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0006-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Beni\nMoving westward, the storm redeveloped an eye and re-attained tropical cyclone status on November\u00a019, reaching a secondary peak intensity of 140\u00a0km/h (85\u00a0mph) about 500\u00a0km (300\u00a0mi)) south of Diego Garcia. Cooler waters weakened Beni a day later, and the storm fell to tropical disturbance status by November\u00a021. Thunderstorms reformed intermittently as the system turned to the southwest. The circulation dissipated on November\u00a025 to the southeast of Madagascar. Moisture from the storm brought heavy rainfall to the Mascarene Islands, with 100 to 150\u00a0mm (3.9 to 5.9\u00a0in) of precipitation recorded on the eastern side of R\u00e9union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 86], "content_span": [87, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Cela\nIn early December, the near-equatorial trough was active to the north of the Mascarene Islands, which spawned a circulation near Diego Garcia. This circulation became more defined moving southwestward, and was designated Tropical Disturbance 3 by the MFR on December\u00a04. A day later, the JTWC began issuing advisories as Tropical Cyclone 03S. Dry air hindered development at first, but was counteracted by decreasing wind shear. The weather system intensified into Moderate Tropical Storm Cela on December\u00a07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0007-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Cela\nFailing to organize much, the storm attained winds of 75\u00a0km/h (45\u00a0mph) and made landfall at that intensity near Vohemar in northern Madagascar. Wind gusts there reached 184\u00a0km/h (114\u00a0mph). The circulation became disrupted over the mountainous terrain of the island, and emerged into the Mozambique Channel on December\u00a010 as a weak tropical disturbance. Unable to observe a low-level circulation, the JTWC discontinued advisories that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Cela\nAbundant moisture fueled the convection in the Mozambique Channel, although Cela's proximity to land hindered redevelopment. On December\u00a014, the system moved far enough from Madagascar that it re-intensified into a moderate tropical storm near Juan de Nova Island; this island recorded wind gusts of 112\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph) and 289\u00a0mm (11.4\u00a0in) of rainfall during the passage. As Cela moved southward, its convective structure organized further, developing an eye in the center. On December\u00a016, the storm attained tropical cyclone status while stalling west of Madagascar, with maximum sustained winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0008-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Cela\nFor the next four days, Cela's intensity fluctuated between tropical cyclone intensity or just below, affected by upwelling and periodic increases in wind shear. After a southwestward trajectory for a day, Cela turned southeastward and later to the south. It passed near Europa Island, which recorded a peak gust of 152\u00a0km/h (94\u00a0mph). On December\u00a020, Cela transitioned into an extratropical cyclone, affected by cooler water temperatures and the higher wind shear. The storm accelerated southeastward and was last noted by the MFR on December\u00a022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Cela\nFor much of its duration, Cela was located near or over Madagascar, and most of the country received 75 to 150\u00a0mm (3.0 to 5.9\u00a0in) of rainfall. On the west coast, Morombe reported a 24-hour precipitation total of 317\u00a0mm (12.5\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Darius\nA broad area of convection associated with the near-equatorial trough persisted on December\u00a024, in tandem with a circulation southwest of Diego Garcia. For several days, the thunderstorms pulsated without much development. On December\u00a027, the MFR designated the system as Tropical Disturbance 4, and more earnest convective development ensued. Moving southwestward around a ridge to the southeast, the disturbance intensified into Moderate Tropical Storm Darius on December\u00a030. On the next day, an eye feature developed, indicative of a stronger storm. Both the MFR and the JTWC estimated peak winds of 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph) on December\u00a031.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0010-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Darius\nA trough to the west prevented further development and steered Darius more to the south, bringing it east of St. Brandon on January\u00a01. On the next day, the severe tropical storm passed just 15\u00a0km (9\u00a0mi) east of Mah\u00e9bourg, Mauritius. An approaching cold front accelerated Darius to the south and south-southeast toward an area of higher wind shear. On January\u00a04, the MFR declared the storm as extratropical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Darius\nOn the sparsely-populated St. Brandon archipelago, wind gusts reached 121\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph) during the storm. The large circulation of Darius brought heavy rainfall to the Mascarene Islands, which helped end a drought in Mauritius. Rains there peaked at 271\u00a0mm (10.7\u00a0in), and wind gusts on the island peaked at 112\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph), located in the weaker quadrant of the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Elita\nTropical Disturbance 06 developed in the Mozambique Channel on January\u00a024 off the west coast of Madagascar. Drifting southwestward at first, the system became more defined and shifted its trajectory to the north. The JTWC initiated advisories on January\u00a026 as Tropical Cyclone 09S, and on the same day, the MFR upgraded the system to Moderate Tropical Storm Elita. A ridge to the northeast turned the storm toward the southeast, and Elita made its first landfall on Madagascar on January\u00a028 near Mahajanga. The airport there recorded 10\u00a0minute sustained winds of 126\u00a0km/h (78\u00a0mph), warranting an upgrade to tropical cyclone status. Elita was the first storm of that intensity to strike western Madagascar since Cyclone Cynthia in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Elita\nOver land, the weakening system moved southeastward, emerging into the western Indian Ocean on January\u00a029. After weakening to tropical depression status, Elita re-intensified into a moderate tropical storm, turned westward, and made a second landfall near Mananjary on January\u00a030. The storm reemerged into the Mozambique Channel and stalled off western Madagascar before turning back to the southeast. On February\u00a02, the JTWC estimated peak winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph), but the MFR maintained Elita as a severe tropical storm due to lack of observations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0013-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Elita\nOn the same day, the storm made its third and final landfall near Morondava, crossing the country and emerging near Manakara. Elita lost its remaining convection and transitioned into a hybrid storm, before the MFR declared the storm as extratropical on February\u00a05. The remnants meandered for about a week, finally exiting the region on February\u00a013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Elita\nElita dropped heavy rainfall of over 200\u00a0mm (8\u00a0in, which damaged or destroyed thousands of houses in Madagascar. Over 55,000\u00a0people were left homeless, primarily in Mahajanga and Toliara provinces. Flooding from the storm damaged or destroyed more than 450\u00a0km2 (170 sq mi) of agricultural land. Across the island, the cyclone caused at least 33\u00a0deaths, and the impacts were compounded by Cyclone Gafilo's deadly passage about two months later. Elsewhere, the cyclone brought rainfall and damage to Mozambique and Malawi, while its outer circulation produced rough seas and strong winds in Seychelles, Mauritius, and R\u00e9union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Frank\nA strong pulse in the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation (MJO) produced a circulation in the Intertropical Convergence Zone to the north of Rodrigues on January\u00a026, which developed into a tropical disturbance that day. This was the same weather system that spawned Cyclone Elita near Madagascar and Tropical Cyclone Linda northwest of Australia. A day earlier, convection increased in the region, fueled by decreasing wind shear and an otherwise favorable environment. The disturbance quickly intensified in these conditions, and was upgraded to Moderate Tropical Storm Frank on January\u00a028. Soon after, a small eye developed within the convection. Frank attained tropical cyclone intensity on January\u00a029, a rate of development the MFR remarked as \"explosive.\" A passing trough enhanced the outflow of the small storm, but also weakened the eye and halted development due to wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 964]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Frank\nAfter a general path to the southwest, the storm turned to the west-northwest on January\u00a030 into an area of lighter wind shear. Attaining winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph), Frank redeveloped an eye and was upgraded to an intense tropical cyclone by the MFR. Steered by high-pressure areas in the vicinity, the cyclone turned back to the southeast. It weakened while crossing its former path, where water temperatures had dropped due to upwelling. After reaching warmer waters, Frank re-intensified and attained a peak intensity of 185\u00a0km/h (115\u00a0mph) on February\u00a02, according to the MFR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0016-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Frank\nThe JTWC estimated peak winds of 145\u00a0mph (235\u00a0km/h). The intensity fluctuated for two days, when a definitive weakening trend began. The cyclone turned to the southwest and encountered stronger wind shear. Frank resumed its southeast path on February\u00a05 as the center became dislocated from the convection. A day later, the MFR declared the storm as extratropical, and followed the residual low for three more days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Gafilo\nIn early March, an expansive area of convection persisted near the Chagos archipelago, related to the monsoon trough. The eastern half of the system would eventually become Severe Tropical Storm Nicky\u2013Helma. The western half organized into a tropical disturbance on March\u00a01. Steered by a ridge to the south, the system tracked generally westward, intensifying into Moderate Tropical Storm Gafilo on March\u00a03. By the next day, Gafilo intensified to tropical cyclone status, aided by decreasing wind shear and the warmest waters of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0017-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Gafilo\nThe storm had a large size, extending 1,700\u00a0km (1,050\u00a0mi) from the Mascarene Islands to the Seychelles, with a distinct eye in the center of the convection. The large wind field dropped heavy rainfall on R\u00e9union to the south of the storm, reaching 393\u00a0mm (15.5\u00a0in) in the island's volcanic peaks. High waves over 4\u00a0m (13\u00a0ft) in height affected the island for a few days, which flooded a road and a hotel. The wind field extended far north to the Seychelles, dropping 159\u00a0mm (6.3\u00a0in) on Mah\u00e9 island. On Tromelin Island, wind gusts reached 122\u00a0km/h (76\u00a0mph) while the storm passed nearby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Gafilo\nMoving west-southwestward toward northern Madagascar, Gafilo had outflow channels in three directions, an unusual but very favorable set of atmospheric conditions. The cyclone rapidly intensified beginning on March\u00a05. At 12:00\u00a0UTC on March\u00a06, the MFR estimated peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 230\u00a0km/h (145\u00a0mph), making Gafilo a very intense tropical cyclone. The agency also estimated a minimum pressure of 895\u00a0mbar (26.4\u00a0inHg), the lowest on record in the basin. Around the same time, the JTWC estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 260\u00a0km/h (160\u00a0mph), equivalent to a Category\u00a05 on the Saffir\u2013Simpson scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0018-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Gafilo\nGafilo weakened slightly due to an eyewall replacement cycle, but made landfall with much of its intensity just south of Antalaha in northeastern Madagascar around 00:00\u00a0UTC on March\u00a07. One of the strongest cyclones on record to strike Madagascar, Gafilo wrecked 85% of the structures in Antalaha. According to the International Disaster Database, Gafilo killed 363\u00a0people in the country and left $250\u00a0million in damage (2004\u00a0USD). The cyclone struck the country less than two months after Cyclone Elita, resulting in additional losses for farmers of cloves, vanilla, and ylang-ylang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0018-0002", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Gafilo\nNationwide, Gafilo destroyed over 20,000\u00a0homes, leaving 304,000\u00a0people homeless, more than half near Antalaha. The cyclone damaged or destroyed 3,400\u00a0schools and 413\u00a0public buildings. The large circulation produced hurricane-force winds along the west coast near Mahajanga, an unprecedented event for a storm striking the island's east coast. A boat capsized in Bombetoka Bay, killing at least seven people. The ferry Sansom, sailing from Comoros to Mahajanga with 120\u00a0people aboard, capsized amid high waves, with only three survivors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Gafilo\nThe cyclone moved southwestward through the country, disrupting the inner convective core. The large dropped over 275\u00a0mm (10.8\u00a0in) of rainfall and produced 107\u00a0km/h (66\u00a0mph) winds on Mayotte. On March\u00a08, Gafilo emerged into the Mozambique Channel, and soon after turned to the southeast, moving ashore southwestern Madagascar late on March\u00a09 as a severe tropical storm. The storm meandered over southern Madagascar for three days before emerging off the island's east coast on March\u00a013. Passing south of R\u00e9union, Gafilo transitioned into a subtropical storm on March\u00a014, before becoming an extratropical cyclone the next day. The storm turned back to the west, dissipating on March\u00a018 south of R\u00e9union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 93], "content_span": [94, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Nicky\u2013Helma\nA weak low-pressure area was evident within the monsoon trough on March\u00a02 in the eastern periphery of the basin. Thunderstorms fluctuated around a weak circulation, which crossed 90\u00b0\u00a0E into the Australian basin on March\u00a07. On the next day, the system became better organized, and the BoM designated it as a tropical low. Fueled by warm waters and moderate but decreasing wind shear, the low strengthened as it moved southwestward around a ridge. The BoM upgraded the low to Tropical Cyclone Nicky on March\u00a09, well to the west of the Cocos Islands. On the next day, the storm crossed 90\u00b0\u00a0E into the South-West Indian Ocean, whereupon it was renamed Helma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Nicky\u2013Helma\nA central dense overcast organized over Helma's center, briefly developing an eye feature on March\u00a011. That day, the MFR estimated peak winds of 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph), making Helma a severe tropical storm. The JTWC, which designated the system Tropical Cyclone 17S, upgraded Helma to the equivalent of a minimal hurricane with peak winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph). An approaching trough increased wind shear and caused the storm to weaken, leaving the center exposed by late on March\u00a012. After turning to the south, Helma turned back to the southwest as a weakened depression, later turning to the southeast ahead of a cold front. The circulation dissipated on March\u00a016 without affecting land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 90], "content_span": [91, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Oscar\u2013Itseng\nAn active pulse in the MJO and a Rossby wave spawned Cyclone Fay and what would become Cyclone Oscar\u2013Itseng in the Australian region. The origins of the latter storm were from a low-pressure area that developed southwest of Christmas Island on March\u00a020. The BoM classified it as a tropical low on the next day. The system moved southward at first before beginning a westward trajectory. On March\u00a023, the BoM upgraded the system to Tropical Cyclone Oscar south of the Cocos Islands, and the JTWC classified the storm as Tropical Cyclone 20S.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 91], "content_span": [92, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0022-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Oscar\u2013Itseng\nAn eye became established in the center of the convection, and the JTWC upgraded Oscar to the equivalent of hurricane status on March\u00a025. On the next day, the agency estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 215\u00a0km/h (135\u00a0mph), while the BoM estimated peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 91], "content_span": [92, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Oscar\u2013Itseng\nDry air and increased wind shear weakened the cyclone, leaving the circulation exposed from the convection. Late on March\u00a027, Oscar crossed 90\u00b0\u00a0E into the South-West Indian Ocean, whereupon it was renamed Itseng. Its peak intensity in the basin was 100\u00a0mph (160\u00a0km/h), according to the MFR. On March\u00a028, the storm weakened into a tropical depression, and the JTWC discontinued advisories. A day later, the circulation turned to the west-northwest, steered by the ridge to the south. Late on March\u00a029, Itseng dissipated without having affected land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 91], "content_span": [92, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Juba\nIn late April into early May, a westerly wind burst produced a large area of convection extending from southern India to the Chagos Archipelago. In the North Indian Ocean, the convection eventually organized into a tropical storm off the west coast of India. In the southern hemisphere, the convection was broad and had two weak circulations. One of the vortices dissipated on May\u00a05, leaving the other center as the dominant system. Despite northeasterly wind shear, convection increased around this center enough for the MFR to designate it a tropical disturbance on May\u00a05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 83], "content_span": [84, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0024-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Juba\nOn the same day, the JTWC designated the system as Tropical Cyclone 23S. For about a week, the disturbance meandered on a general westward trajectory without much development. During this time, the JTWC discontinued advisories after thunderstorms diminished. On May\u00a011, the wind shear dropped, allowing convection to reorganize over the center. The storm began a southwest trajectory, and intensified into Moderate Tropical Storm Juba on May\u00a012. Such storms in May are unusual, but Juba marked the third consecutive year that a May storm developed in the basin, after Manou in 2003 and Kesiny in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 83], "content_span": [84, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0025-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Juba\nMoving due southward on May\u00a013, Juba quickly intensified in an area of minimal wind shear and beneficial outflow. That day, the MFR upgraded Juba to a severe tropical storm, estimating peak 10\u00a0minute sustained winds of 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph). The JTWC estimated that the storm intensified to the equivalent of a minimal hurricane, with 1\u00a0minute winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph). The wind shear increased on May\u00a014, stripping the center of the deep convection. Later that day, the JTWC discontinued advisories. The MFR downgraded Juba to a tropical disturbance on May\u00a015. The weak circulation turned to the south, passing just west of Rodrigues Island on May\u00a016. There, the thunderstorms dropped 102\u00a0mm (4.0\u00a0in) of rainfall, which proved beneficial due to the island facing water shortages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 83], "content_span": [84, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0026-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nToward the end of January, an area of convection extended from the coast of Africa. On January\u00a022, the MFR designated the system as Zone of Disturbed Weather 05, after a circulation became present northeast of Madagascar. Unfavorable wind shear prevented development, and the MFR discontinued advisories on January\u00a024. The same MJO pulse that spawned cyclones Elita and Frank also produced an area of convection in the eastern portion of the basin on January\u00a027. A day later, the system organized enough for the MFR to designate it Tropical Disturbance 08. Soon after, the circulation moved southeastward, crossing 90\u00ba\u00a0E into the neighboring Australian basin. There, the BoM tracked the storm, upgrading it to Tropical Cyclone Linda on January\u00a030, and tracking it until February\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0027-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nA low pressure moved westward from the Australian basin on March\u00a015, potentially a continuation of Tropical Cyclone Evan which moved across Northern Australia in early March. The MFR designated the low as Tropical Disturbance 11, estimating peak winds of 45\u00a0km/h (30\u00a0mph). The agency discontinued advisories on March\u00a021 while the disturbance was near Agal\u00e9ga island. That day, convection increased over the circulation despite moderate wind shear. On March\u00a023, the JTWC classified the system as Tropical Cyclone 21S, but the agency discontinued advisories on the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0027-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nThe MFR reissued advisories on March\u00a025, following the weak system on a general westward trajectory until March\u00a028 to the northeast of Madagascar. On March\u00a031, the MFR briefly issued advisories on Tropical Disturbance 13 on a system east-southeast of Agal\u00e9ga. With only pulsing thunderstorms, the system quickly weakened, and the agency ceased issuing advisories. The MFR also issued advisories for Zone of Disturbed Weather 14 on April\u00a026 to the north-northeast of Mauritius, noting an area of thunderstorms and a poorly-defined circulation. The system failed to develop further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0028-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nThe final system of the year was Zone of Disturbed Weather 16, which originated east-northeast of Diego Garcia on May\u00a019. The weak system moved to the west-southwest, and the MFR issued their last advisory on May\u00a024.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 70], "content_span": [71, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0029-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nA tropical disturbance is named when it reaches moderate tropical storm strength. If a tropical disturbance reaches moderate tropical storm status west of 55\u00b0E, then the Sub-regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Centre in Madagascar assigns the appropriate name to the storm. If a tropical disturbance reaches moderate tropical storm status between 55\u00b0E and 90\u00b0E, then the Sub-regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Centre in Mauritius assigns the appropriate name to the storm. A new annual list is used every year so no names are retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176232-0030-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal effects\nThis table lists all of the tropical cyclones and subtropical cyclones that were monitored during the 2003\u20132004 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season. Information on their intensity, duration, name, areas affected, primarily comes from RSMC La R\u00e9union. Death and damage reports come from either press reports or the relevant national disaster management agency while the damage totals are given in 2003 or 2004\u00a0USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176233-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southampton F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Southampton Football Club competed in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176233-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southampton F.C. season, Season summary\nThe previous season's FA Cup runners-up failed to make an impact in any of the cup competitions, and their 12th-place finish was a something of a disappointment after the previous season, when Southampton were eighth in the league - their highest ever in the Premiership and their highest in the top flight since 1990. The club was thrown into further turmoil in March, when Gordon Strachan announced his resignation as manager. There was talk that Glenn Hoddle would be returning to the club for a second spell, but the job went to Plymouth Argyle's Paul Sturrock instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176233-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southampton F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176233-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southampton F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176233-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southampton F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176233-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southampton F.C. season, Youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176234-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southeastern Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2003\u201304 SEC women's basketball season began with practices in October 2003, followed by the start of the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in early January 2004 and concluded in March, followed by the 2004 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Southern Football League season was the 101st in the history of the league, an English football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League\nIt was the last season for the Southern Football League as a feeder for the Conference Premier. At the end of the season, the Premier Division was replaced as a level 6 league (along with the Northern Premier League Premier Division and Isthmian League Premier Division) by the newly formed Conference North and Conference South. The Premier Division lost more than half its clubs to newly formed divisions, and the two regional divisions had a number of their clubs promoted to the Premier Division to replace them. Thus, the Southern Football League divisions downgraded to 7-8 levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division consisted of 22 clubs, including 17 clubs from the previous season and five new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nCrawley Town won the division and were promoted to the Conference National. Clubs finished higher than 14th position were to transfer to the newly created Conference North and South divisions and clubs finished higher than 18th position plus winners of divisions One were to participate in the play-offs for a two final spots in Conference North/South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nThere were no relegation from the Premier Division this season, though, due to league reform, clubs remained in the division downgraded from sixth tier to seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League, Eastern Division\nThe Eastern Division consisted of 22 clubs, including 18 clubs from the previous season and four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176235-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Southern Football League, Western Division\nThe Western Division consisted of 22 clubs, including 18 clubs from the previous season and four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176236-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sparta Rotterdam season\nThe 2003\u20132004 Sparta Rotterdam season was the second football) year in which the in 1888 formed club from Rotterdam had to play in the Dutch Second League. In the 2001\u20132002 season the team relegated for the first time in history by ending up in 17th place in the Eredivisie, and fourth in the play-offs for promotion and relegation (\"nacompetitie\"). Former Sparta defender Mike Snoei was the successor of Chris Dekker as Sparta's manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176237-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Spartan South Midlands Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Spartan South Midlands Football League season is the 7th in the history of Spartan South Midlands Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176237-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 17 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176237-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176237-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 13 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176237-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nAlso, Padbury United changed name to Padbury B T F C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176238-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting CP season\nSporting Clube de Portugal had a disappointing season in the wake of the selling of starlet Cristiano Ronaldo to Manchester United. They finished one point behind arch rivals Benfica, who clinched the final spot for the Champions League thanks to a late goal by Geovanni in the penultimate round of the season in the Lisbon derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season\nThe 2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season was the sixth consecutive season of the club in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n after its last relegation from La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Overview\nIn July 2003, due to the financial difficulties, Real Sporting sold David Villa to Zaragoza by \u20ac2.5m", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Overview\nOn 15 February 2004, in the game at Algeciras, Roberto beat the record for the longest clean sheet in Real Sporting at 727 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Overview\nOn 23 May 2004, Real Sporting earned one point at SD Eibar in the additional time, in a game where the rojiblancos ended with eight players after the referee sent off Yago, Cristian D\u00edaz and David Bauz\u00e1 in ten minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Overview\nReal Sporting ended the season in the fifth position, finally failing to promote and with 13 red cards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176239-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Squad, From the youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176240-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sri Lankan cricket season\nThe 2003\u201304 Sri Lankan cricket season featured two Test series with Sri Lanka playing against England and Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176240-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sri Lankan cricket season, Test series\nSri Lanka won the 3 match Test series against England 1-0 and also 4 limited overs internationals, one of which was the Bungle in the jungle. Sri Lanka won the Test series by winning 1 of the 3 matches with 2 drawn:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176240-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sri Lankan cricket season, Test series\nAustralia won the Test series 3-0 after Sri Lankan led in the 1st innings of each match by substantial amounts:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176241-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team represented St. Francis College during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Ron Ganulin, who was in his thirteenth year at the helm of the St. Francis Terriers. The Terrier's home games were played at the Generoso Pope Athletic Complex. The team has been a member of the Northeast Conference since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176241-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team\nThe Terriers participated in their first NIT Season Tip-Off Tournament, losing in the first round to Massachusetts 58\u201380. The Terriers proceeded to finish the season at 15\u201313 overall and 12\u20136 in conference play, to tie for the Conference Regular Season Championship with Monmouth. This is the second Regular Season Championship for the Terriers, the last one coming in the 2000\u201301 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176242-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team represented St. John's University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Mike Jarvis in his sixth year at the school until he was replaced by interim coach Kevin Clark. St. John's home games are played at Carnesecca Arena, then called Alumni Hall, and Madison Square Garden and the team is a member of the Big East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176243-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season\nThe 2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season was the 37th for the franchise in St. Louis, Missouri. The Blues qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs for the 25th straight seasons, the team's final playoff appearance until 2009. After finishing the regular season with a record of 39 wins, 30 losses, 11 ties and two overtime losses, the Blues were eliminated in the Western Conference Quarterfinals in five games by the San Jose Sharks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176243-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season, Off-season\nChris Pronger resigned the team captaincy in favour of veteran defenceman Al MacInnis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176243-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176243-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176243-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season, Regular season, Final standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176243-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 St. Louis Blues season, Draft picks\nSt. Louis's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176244-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stade Lavallois season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 102nd season in the existence of Stade Lavallois and the club's 11th consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Stade Lavallois participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176245-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stade Malherbe Caen season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 91st season in the existence of Stade Malherbe Caen and the club's seventh consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Stade Malherbe Caen participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176246-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team represented Stanford University in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was Head Coach Mike Montgomery's eighteenth and final season with the Cardinal. The Cardinal were a member of the Pacific-10 Conference and were the Pac-10 regular season champions as well as the Pac-10 Tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176246-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team, Rankings\nStanford was ranked #17 in the preseason Coaches' Poll and #20 in the preseason AP Poll. After going undefeated after 14 games, the Cardinal climbed to #2 in both polls (behind only Duke) by the ninth week of the season, where they remained until the thirteenth week of the season when they reached #1 in both polls. The Cardinal remained there until dropping to #2 in the sixteenth week (behind undefeated St. Joseph's) after their undefeated streak of 26 games ended when they were upset by Washington. The Cardinal returned to the #1 ranking the following week (the final poll of the season) after St. Joseph's lost 87\u201367 to Xavier in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176247-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stockport County F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season is Stockport County's 122nd season in football. Stockport finished the league season in 19th, two places off the relegation zone. This season ran from 9 August 2003 to 8 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176247-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stockport County F.C. season, Background\nFollowing a poor start to the 2003\u20132004 season player-manager Carlton Palmer was sacked by the club in September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176247-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stockport County F.C. season, Background\nUpon completion of the Euro 2004 qualifying matches with Northern Ireland, Sammy McIlroy re-entered club management signing a three-year deal in October 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176247-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stockport County F.C. season, Team, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Stoke City's 97th season in the Football League and the 37th in the second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season\nWith Stoke being successful in avoiding relegation manager Tony Pulis could begin making alterations to his squad for the 2003\u201304 season. A number of ins and outs followed but after a good start Stoke won just five of their first 21 matches and it seemed that another fight against relegation would be required. But after a win against West Ham United in December Stoke went nine matches unbeaten and pulled themselves away from relegation trouble. Their good form continued until the end of the season with Stoke ending a promising season of consolidation in 11th position with 66 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nManager Tony Pulis made a number of alterations to his squad in the summer of 2003 as a number of players which helped Stoke gain promotion and subsequent survival left the club and in came several new players. These included experienced goalkeeper Ed de Goey, defenders Clint Hill and John Halls, midfielders John Eustace and Darel Russell and forwards Carl Asaba and Gifton Noel-Williams whilst the most notable departures was that of James O'Connor and fan favourite Sergei Shtanuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nStoke began the 2003\u201304 season well beating Derby County 3\u20130 on the opening match and then Wimbledon to see Stoke sitting top of the table after two matches. But Stoke's form soon fell away and despite the return of Ade Akinbiyi Stoke won just 5 of their first 21 fixtures which ended with a 3\u20132 defeat at home to Cardiff City with former fan favorite Peter Thorne scoring a hat trick but such as his popularity with the club he refused to celebrate and earned a standing ovation from the Stoke supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0003-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nWith Stoke looking likely to be involved in another scrap against relegation Pulis brought in experienced no nonsense defender Gerry Taggart and in his first match he helped Stoke claim an unlikely three points away at high-flying West Ham United. This prompted Stoke's revival and in the next match Stoke beat Reading 3\u20130 with a hat trick from Dutch winger Peter Hoekstra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nStoke remained unbeaten for six more matches until their run was halted by a heavy 6\u20133 defeat at Crystal Palace. Whilst there was some hope from the fans that Stoke could mount a late push for a play-off spot they failed to keep a consistent run of form going and ended the season in a mid-table position of 11th. It was a promising end to the season with Stoke beating all-ready promoted West Bromwich Albion 4\u20131 and the feeling around the club was that they could now begin to look for a promotion to the Premier League rather that worry about being relegated to the third tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, FA Cup\nStoke drew Wimbledon in the third round who had now moved to Milton Keynes and after a bad tempered 1\u20131 draw at the National Hockey Stadium a free kick from Adam Nowland settled the replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176248-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League Cup\nStoke had a poor League Cup campaign as they narrowly beat Rochdale and were then knocked out 2\u20130 by Gillingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176249-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunderland A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Sunderland A.F.C. competed in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176249-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Season Summary\nWhile the dismal ending to the previous season, combined with losses in their opening two matches lead to fears that Sunderland might spend the season battling a second successive relegation, a run of 7 wins from their next 10 matches quickly ended any such fears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176249-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Season Summary\nA couple of spells of indifferent form meant that the club didn't convincingly challenge for automatic promotion until the closing stages of the season, and then another poor run of form in the season's closing stages, including the loss of a six-pointer to fellow promotion hopefuls West Bromwich Albion, just as quickly ended any such hopes. Sunderland were still considered favourites going into the play-offs, but a loss on penalties to Crystal Palace, who had gate-crashed the play-offs on the final day of the season, meant a second season in Division One (or, as it would be re-branded the following season, the Championship).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176249-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176249-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176249-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Players, Reserves\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176250-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunshine Tour\nThe 2003\u201304 Sunshine Tour was the fourth season of professional golf tournaments since the southern Africa based Sunshine Tour was rebranded in 2000. The Sunshine Tour represents the highest level of competition for male professional golfers in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176250-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunshine Tour\nThere were 17 tournaments on the schedule. This was an increase of one from the previous year. There were three tournaments from the previous season that were eliminated: the Dimension Data Better-Ball tournament, the Vodacom Golf Classic, and the Vodacom Players Championship. Three new tournaments were added: the Canon Classic (played in 2003 only), the Devondale Championship (played in 2003 only), and the Parmalat Classic. The tour was based predominantly in South Africa, with 13 of the 17 tournaments being held in the country. Two events were held in Swaziland, and one event each was held in Botswana and Zambia. Two events, the Dunhill Championship and the South African Airways Open were co-sanctioned by the European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176250-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunshine Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows schedule of events for the 2003\u201304 Sunshine Tour. As usual, the tour consisted of two distinct parts, commonly referred to as the \"Summer Swing\" and \"Winter Swing\". Tournaments held during the Summer Swing generally had much higher prize funds, attracted stronger fields, and were the only tournaments on the tour to carry world ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176250-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sunshine Tour, Schedule\nPrize funds shown did not count directly towards the Order of Merit. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of official money Sunshine Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for Sunshine Tour members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176251-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Super 16 season\nThe 2003\u201304 Super 16 season was the 83rd season of the Super 16, the top level of ice hockey in France. 15 teams participated in the league, and Gothiques d'Amiens won their second league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176252-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 SuperBest Ligaen season\nThe 2003\u201304 SuperBest Ligaen season was the 47th season of ice hockey in Denmark. Nine teams participated in the league, and Esbjerg IK won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176253-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Superliga Femenina\nThe 2003\u201304 Superliga season was the 16th since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176254-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League season was the 79th in the history of Sussex County Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176254-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176254-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League, Division One\nSt Leonards resigned from the league January 2004 and their playing record of P21 W7 D4 L10 GF32 GA35 P25 was expunged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176254-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 12 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with six new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176254-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League, Division Three\nDivision Three featured 13 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with one new club:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176254-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Sussex County Football League, Division Three\nAlso, Ifield merged with Edwards Sports to form Ifield Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176255-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Swansea City A.F.C. competed in the Football League Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176255-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter narrowly avoiding relegation from the Football League on the final day of the previous season, Kenny Jackett's Swansea improved dramatically on last term's 21st-place finish with 10th place, although they were still 12 points adrift of 9th-placed Oxford United. Their cup form improved too, beating Premiership hopefuls Preston North End in the fourth round of the FA Cup before being knocked out by Tranmere Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176255-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Season summary\nStriker Lee Trundle, signed from Welsh rivals Wrexham, finished 7th highest scorer (joint with Lincoln City's Gary Fletcher) in the division with 17 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176255-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176255-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Squad\nWhile on loan from Manchester United, Alan Tate wore the number 27 jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176255-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swansea City A.F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176256-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swedish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2003\u201304 Swedish Figure Skating Championships were held in \u00d6rebro from December 5 through 7, 2003. Because they were held in December, they were officially designated by the Swedish federation as the 2003 Swedish Championships, but the champions are the 2004 Swedish Champions. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's and ladies' singles, with the results among the selection criteria for the 2004 World Championships, the 2004 European Championships, and the 2004 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176257-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swindon Town F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Swindon Town's fourth season in the Division Two since their relegation from the second tier of English football in 2000. Alongside the league campaign, Swindon Town also competed in the FA Cup, League Cup and the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176258-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swiss Challenge League\nThe 2003\u201304 Swiss Challenge League was the 1st season of the Swiss Challenge League, and the 72nd season of second-tier football in Switzerland. FC Schaffhausen won the league and gained promotion to the Swiss Super League for the following season. SR Del\u00e9mont finished last and were relegated to the Swiss 1. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176259-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swiss Super League\nThe 2003\u201304 Swiss Super League was the 107th season of top-division football in Switzerland. The competition is officially named AXPO Super League due to sponsoring purposes. It began on 16 July 2003 and has ended on 23 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176259-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swiss Super League, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and FC Basel won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176259-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Swiss Super League, Results\nTeams play each other four times in this league. In the first half of the season each team played every other team twice (home and away) and then do the same in the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176260-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Syracuse Orangemen basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Syracuse Orangemen men's basketball team represented Syracuse University in NCAA men's basketball competition in the 2003\u201304 Division I season. The head coach was Jim Boeheim, serving for his 28th year. The team played its home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York. The team finished with a 23\u20138 (11\u20135) record, while making it to the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA tournament. The team was led by junior Hakim Warrick and sophomore Gerry McNamara. Senior Jeremy McNeil, juniors Craig Forth and Josh Pace and sophomore Billy Edelin were also major contributors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176260-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Syracuse Orangemen basketball team\nThis was the last season for Syracuse men's basketball under the Orangemen nickname. (At that time, women's teams and athletes were known as \"Orangewomen\".) Effective with the 2004\u201305 academic year, the school nickname became \"Orange\" for both men and women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176261-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S\u00fcper Lig\nThe 2003\u201304 S\u00fcper Lig was the 46th league season, and the third season of S\u00fcper Lig. Fenerbah\u00e7e won their 15th title, being 4 points ahead Trabzonspor. Since Turkey dropped from eighth to tenth place in the UEFA association coefficient rankings at the end of the 2002\u201303 season, the league has lost two of its UEFA Cup berths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176261-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 S\u00fcper Lig\nAn extremely dramatic final fixture took place, because in the relegation places, there were four teams. Bursaspor, with 37 points, \u0130stanbulspor with 38, \u00c7aykur Rizespor and Ak\u00e7aabat Sebatspor with 39. \u0130stanbulspor, managed by Aykut Kocaman, won 2-0 away at Konya over Konyaspor, \u00c7aykur Rizespor defeated Be\u015fikta\u015f 1-0, and Ak\u00e7aabat Sebatspor beaten Ankarag\u00fcc\u00fc 3-2. Bursaspor, defeating 1-0 Samsunspor reached the 40 points, but they were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176262-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TBHSL season\nThe 2003\u201304 Turkish Ice Hockey Super League season was the 12th season of the Turkish Ice Hockey Super League, the top level of ice hockey in Turkey. Four teams participated in the league playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176263-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TSV 1860 Munich season, Season summary\nAfter several seasons in midtable, Die L\u00f6wen's 10-season stay in Germany's top flight ended with a 17th-place finish and relegation. Manager Falko G\u00f6tz had been sacked in April, with former 1860 player Gerald Vanenburg juggling his duties as manager of PSV's youth team to replace him, but he was unable to save the club from the drop. After relegation, Rudolf Bommer, who had led fellow Bavarian club SV Wacker Burghausen to promotion to the 2. Bundesliga and consecutive 10th-place finishes in that division, was tasked with obtaining promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176263-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TSV 1860 Munich season, Kit\nThe club's kits were manufactured by Nike and sponsored by German motor oil company Liqui Moly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176263-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TSV 1860 Munich season, Players, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176263-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TSV 1860 Munich season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176264-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TVS Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 TVS Cup was a One Day International cricket tournament held in India in October - November 2004. It was a tri-nation series between the Australia, India and New Zealand. Australia defeated India in the final to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176265-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TVS Cup Tri series\nThe 2003\u201304 TVS Cup was a triangular One Day International cricket tournament, played by India, New Zealand and Australia. The tournament was held in India from 23 October 2003 to 18 November 2003, and consisted of a round robin stage, in which each nation played each of the others three times. The top two teams at the end of the round robin stage then played the final match of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176265-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 TVS Cup Tri series, Group stage points table\nIn the event of teams finishing on equal points, the right to play in the final will be determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season\nThe 2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season was the 12th National Hockey League season in Tampa, Florida. The Lightning won their first Stanley Cup over the Calgary Flames this season, after the Flames were attempting to be the first Canadian team to win a Stanley Cup since the 1993 Montreal Canadiens. It was the team's first truly successful season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season\nThe Lightning's 1st Stanley Cup championship came just a year after their NFL (National Football League) counterparts, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, won Super Bowl XXXVII, also their 1st championship. This would happen again in 2021, but the other way around.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Offseason\nThe Lightning did not have a first-round pick. For their first pick, they chose Mike Egener in the second round, 35th over-all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season\nOn Saturday, December 27, 2003, the Lightning scored three short-handed goals in a 4\u20132 win over the Boston Bruins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season\nThe Lightning finished the regular season having tied the Detroit Red Wings for the most short-handed goals scored, with 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season, Season standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Regular season, Season standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nWin (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Tie (1 point)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 72], "content_span": [73, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Player stats, Forwards\nNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; PTS = Points; PIM = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Player stats, Defensemen\nNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; PTS = Points; PIM = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Player stats, Goaltending\nNote: GP= Games played; W= Wins; L= Losses; T = Ties; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176266-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tampa Bay Lightning season, 54th NHL All-Star Game\nTampa Bay Lightning NHL All-Star representatives at the 54th NHL All-Star Game in St. Paul, Minnesota at the Xcel Energy Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nThe 2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal was the 64th edition of the Portuguese football knockout tournament, organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). This edition of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal began on 7 September 2003, and concluded on 16 May 2004 with the final at the Est\u00e1dio Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nPorto were the previous holders, having defeated Uni\u00e3o de Leiria 1\u20130 in the previous season's final. Benfica defeated Porto, 2\u20131 in the final to win their twenty fourth Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, dedicated to Mikl\u00f3s Feh\u00e9r. Benfica's cup success would gain them qualification to the 2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, First round\nFor the first round draw, teams were drawn against each other in accordance to their geographical location. The draw was split up into four sections: teams from the north, the center, the south and the Azores region. All first round cup ties were played on the 7 September. Due to the odd number of teams at this stage of the competition, Rabo de Peixe progressed to the next round due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition. The first round of the cup saw teams from the Terceira Divis\u00e3o (IV) start the competition alongside some teams who registered to participate in the cup from the Portuguese District Leagues (V).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Second round\nFor the second round draw, teams were drawn against each other in accordance to their geographical location. The draw was split up into three sections: teams from the north, the center and the south. Ties were played on the 28 September. The second round saw teams from the Portuguese Second Division (III) enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Third round\nThe draw for the third round took place on the 2 October. Ties were played on the 11\u201312 October. The third round saw teams from the Liga de Honra (II) enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fourth round\nAll fourth round cup ties were played on the 22\u201323 November. The fourth round saw teams from the Primeira Liga (I) enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fifth round\nTies were played on the 17 December. Felgueiras won their fifth round cup tie against Vilafranquense, but their win was overturned and Vilafranquense progressed to the next round due to Felgueiras' coach appearing at the tie to manage his side when he was supposed to be suspended. Due to the odd number of teams involved at this stage of the competition, Braga qualified for the quarter-finals due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176267-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Sixth round\nTies were played on the 14\u201321 January. Due to the odd number of teams involved at this stage of the competition, Benfica qualified for the quarter-finals due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176268-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Temple Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Temple Owls men's basketball team represented Temple University in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach John Chaney and played their home games at the Liacouras Center. The Owls are members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 15\u201314, 9\u20137 in A-10 play, and reached the 2004 National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176269-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Terceira Divis\u00e3o\nThe 2003\u201304 Terceira Divis\u00e3o season was the 54th season of the competition and the 14th season of recognised fourth-tier football in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176269-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Overview\nThe league was contested by 118 teams in 7 divisions of 10 to 18 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176270-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe Spanish Tercera Divisi\u00f3n 2003\u201304 started on August 2003 and will end on June 2004 with the promotion play-off finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176271-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Texas Tech Red Raiders men's basketball team represented Texas Tech University in the Big 12 Conference during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Bob Knight, his 3rd year with the team. The Red Raiders played their home games in the United Spirit Arena in Lubbock, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176272-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Thai League\nThe 2003\u201304 Thai Premier League had 10 teams. Two clubs would be relegated and 2 teams promoted from Thailand Division 1 League. The team that finished in 8th position would play in a relegation play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176272-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Thai League, Queen's Cup\nOsotsapa FC again won the Queen's Cup. This was their third success in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176272-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Thai League, Champions\nThe league champion was Krung Thai Bank. It was the second time the team won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176273-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top 16 season\nThe 2003-04 Top 16 season was the top level of French club rugby in 2003-05. The competition was played by 16 teams. In the first stage, two pools of 8 played. The first 4 of each pool were admitted to the \"top 8\" to play for the title, the other 4 to a relegation tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176273-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top 16 season, First round\n(3 points for a win, 2 points for a draw, 1 point for a loss)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176273-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top 16 season, Relegation Pool\nThe teams total sum of the points obtained in the first round and the points obtained in the matches played with the 4 teams from the other group (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176273-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top 16 season, Top 8\nTwo Pool of 4 teams. The first two of each pool were qualified for semifinals. Them and the third also qualified for 2004\u201305 Heineken Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League\nThe 2003\u201304 Top League was the first season of Japan's domestic rugby union competition, the Top League. Toshiba Brave Lupus won the league by finishing on top of the round-robin competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League\nToshiba Brave Lupus lost the final of Microsoft Cup to NEC Green Rockets, but the cup was considered a separate competition to the Top League prior to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League, Top League season, Final standings\n\u2022 The top 8 teams qualified to the Microsoft Cup play-offs. \u2022 The top 4 teams also qualified to for entry into the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship. \u2022 Teams 9 and 10 went through to the promotion and relegation play-offs against regional challengers. \u2022 Teams 11 and 12 were automatically relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League, Top League season, Final standings\nFour points for a win, two for a draw, one bonus point for four tries or more (BP1) and one bonus point for losing by seven or less (BP2). If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:\u00a0\u2022 Difference between points for and against\u00a0\u2022 Total number of points for\u00a0\u2022 Number of matches won\u00a0\u2022 Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams\u00a0\u2022 Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League, Microsoft Cup play-offs\nThe top eight teams in the league played off for the Microsoft Cup (2004) knock out tournament, which was won by NEC Green Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League, Top League Challenge Series\nIBM Big Blue and Toyota Verblitz won promotion to the 2004\u201305 Top League via the 2004 Top League Challenge Series, while Kyuden Voltex and Toyota Industries Shuttles progressed to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League, Promotion and relegation play-offs\nTwo promotion/relegation matches (Irekaesen) were played with the winners qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Top League. The 10th-placed team from the Top League against the 3rd-placed team from Challenge 1. The 9th-placed team from the Top League against the 1st-placed team from Challenge 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176274-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Top League, Promotion and relegation play-offs\nSo Kinetsu and Ricoh stayed in the Top League for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176275-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Torneo Argentino A\nThe 2003\u201304 Argentine Torneo Argentino A was the ninth season of third division professional football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion was promoted to Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176275-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Torneo Argentino A, Apertura 2003, First Stage\nIn every round the bye team played against the bye team of the other zone: Team from Zone A vs Team from Zone B and Team from Zone C vs Team from Zone D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176275-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Torneo Argentino A, Clausura 2004, First Stage\nIn every round the bye team played against the bye team of the other zone: Team from Zone A vs Team from Zone B and Team from Zone C vs Team from Zone D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nThe 2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season, the club's 87th season of existence and 77th as the Maple Leafs, saw the team finish in second place in the Northeast Division with a record of 45 wins, 24 losses, 10 ties and three overtime losses for 103 points. It was the highest point total in franchise history, beating out the 100 points earned by the 1999\u20132000 team. The Leafs defeated their provincial rivals, the Ottawa Senators, in seven games in the Conference Quarter-finals before falling to the Philadelphia Flyers four games to two in the Conference Semi-finals. The Leafs did not qualify for the playoffs again until the 2012\u201313 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nAs of the 2020-21 Toronto Maple Leafs season, this was the last time the team won a playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Regular season, Season standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Regular season, Season standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Regular season, Season standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Transactions\nThe Maple Leafs have been involved in the following transactions during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176276-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Draft picks\nToronto's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176277-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Raptors season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Raptors' ninth season in the National Basketball Association. This season saw the team draft future All-Star forward Chris Bosh with the fourth overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft. With new head coach Kevin O'Neill, the Raptors started the season on a high note beating the 2-time Eastern Conference Champion New Jersey Nets 90\u201387. However, a few days later they would set an embarrassing post shot clock record by scoring just 56 points in a loss to the Minnesota Timberwolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176277-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Raptors season\nAfter the first month of the season, they traded Antonio Davis and Jerome Williams to the Chicago Bulls for Jalen Rose and Donyell Marshall. The Raptors posted a 25\u201325 record at the All-Star break, but because of injuries, they only won just eight for the rest of the season. The team also posted nine and seven-game losing streaks respectively, finishing sixth in the Central Division with a 33\u201349 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176277-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Raptors season\nFollowing the season, O'Neil and General Manager Glen Grunwald were fired by the Raptors. This was also Vince Carter's final full season in Toronto, as he would be traded to the New Jersey Nets midway through next season. He was also selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176277-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season, Highs\nAfter acquiring Jalen Rose in a mid-November deal, the Raptors went on to win five straight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176277-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season, Lows\nAfter the 50 game mark, the Raptors were 25-25 and in position for a playoff spot. Unfortunately, the team would struggle out towards the end, finishing 8-24 and missing the playoffs. Kevin O'Neill was fired after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176278-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toto Cup Al\nThe 2003\u201304 Toto Cup Al was the 20th season of the third most important football tournament in Israel since its introduction. This was the 5th and final edition to be played with clubs of both Israeli Permier League and Liga Leumit clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176278-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toto Cup Al\nThe competition began on 8 August 2003 and ended on 20 May 2003, with Maccabi Petah Tikva beating Maccabi Haifa 3\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176278-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toto Cup Al, Format change\nThe 24 Israeli Permier League and Liga Leumit clubs were divided into six groups, each with four clubs, with the six group winners, along with the two best runners-up, advancing to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176278-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toto Cup Al, Group stage\nThe matches were played from 8 August 2003 to 29 October 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176279-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toto Cup Artzit\nThe 2003\u201304 Toto Cup Artzit was the 5th time the cup was being contested as a competition for the third tier in the Israeli football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176279-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Toto Cup Artzit\nThe competition was won by Hapoel Ramat HaSharon, who had beaten Hapoel Acre 2\u20131 on penalties after 0\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176280-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Tottenham Hotspur's 12th season in the Premier League and 26th successive season in the top division of the English football league system", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176280-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Season summary\nA dismal start to the season cost Glenn Hoddle his job and he was sacked as manager on 21 September after two-and-a-half years at the helm. Director of Football David Pleat took over first team duties until the end of the season but was unable to inspire Tottenham to a challenge for European qualification, nor either of the cup competitions, and a 14th-place finish in the final table was Tottenham's lowest since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176280-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176280-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Statistics, Goal scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176281-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Trabzonspor season\nThis article shows statistics of the club's players in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176281-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Trabzonspor season\nIn the 2003-2004 season Trabzonspor arrived second in S\u00fcper Lig. The top goalscorer of the team was G\u00f6kdeniz Karadeniz who scored 14 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176282-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1\nThe 2003\u201304 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 season was the 78th season of top-tier football in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176283-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Turkish Basketball League\nThe 2003-04 Turkish Basketball League was the 38th season of the top-tier professional basketball league in Turkey. The season started on October 10, 2003. Efes Pilsen won their eleventh national championship this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176283-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Turkish Basketball League, Turkish Basketball League 2003-04 Play-offs\nThe 2004 Turkish Basketball League Play-offs is the final phase of the 2003-04 regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176283-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Turkish Basketball League, Turkish Basketball League 2003-04 Play-offs\nFirst round, Quarterfinal and Semifinal series are 5-match series. The teams reaches the first 3 wins is through to the next round. The team which has won both regular season match-ups starts with a 1-0 lead to the series. If teams split up the regular season meetings, series starts with a 1-1 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176283-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Turkish Basketball League, Turkish Basketball League 2003-04 Play-offs\nFinal series are 7-match series and the team reaches first 4 wins is the champion of the Turkish Basketball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176284-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Turkish Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 Turkish Cup was the 42nd edition of the annual tournament that determined the association football Super League (S\u00fcper Lig) Turkish Cup (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131) champion under the auspices of the Turkish Football Federation (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Futbol Federasyonu; TFF). Trabzonspor defended its 41st edition achievement in a rematch with Gen\u00e7lerbirli\u011fi 4\u20130. The results of the tournament also determined which clubs would be promoted or relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176285-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.C. Sampdoria season\nU.C. Sampdoria returned to Serie A after a four year-absence, and immediately re-established itself as a team on the top half of the domestic championship. Goalkeeper Francesco Antonioli offered crucial experience, but apart from him did the bulk of the squad play in the 2002-03 Serie B, with top goalscorers Fabio Bazzani and Francesco Flachi quickly adjusting themselves to the higher pace of Serie A. Midfielders Sergio Volpi and Angelo Palombo also stood out. Right back Aimo Diana even earned a call-up to the national team following his performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176286-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season\nU.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo played the season 2003-04 in the Serie B league and Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176286-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Summary\nAmbitious Palermo, for the first time since 1973, failed to gain promotion to Serie A in the previous season following a 3-0 away defeat in the final match against Lecce, which were promoted at Palermo's place. That dramatic defeat was also the last appearance in his playing career for team captain Antonino Asta, who seriously injured during the match and did not manage to recover; he was part of the first team squad in the season 2003-04, without however making a single appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176286-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Summary\nFollowing the events, Palermo made a number of prominent signings in the summer market, such as Eugenio Corini, Andrea Gasbarroni and Luca Toni; in addition, Palermo-born star Gaetano Vasari agreed to join the rosanero with a salary based on the number of appearances he would have made in the season. Silvio Baldini was appointed as new boss to replace Nedo Sonetti. Several football pundits suggested Palermo to be the real favourite team to win the Serie B league because of the quality of its roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176286-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Summary\nThe team made a very impressive start by defeating Gianfranco Zola's Cagliari Calcio, and managed to be always in the promotion spots. However, following a surprising 3-1 home defeat to Salernitana that brought Palermo down to third place, Baldini heavily criticized club chairman Maurizio Zamparini who consequently fired him and appointed Francesco Guidolin at his place. On the last day of the January transfer market, three new notable signings were made: Antonio Filippini, Emanuele Filippini and Fabio Grosso. Palermo later returned to top the table and eventually won the league, ending with the same points than Cagliari, but being crowned as Serie B champions due to head-to-head matches and promoted to Serie A after 31 years in the lower divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176286-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality. Where a player has not declared an international allegiance, nation is determined by place of birth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176287-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Lecce season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Italian football season, U.S. Lecce competed in the Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176287-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Lecce season, Season summary\nU.S. Lecce finished the season in 10th position in the Serie A table. In other competitions, Lecce reached the quarter finals of the Coppa Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176287-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 U.S. Lecce season, Season summary\nJavier Chevant\u00f3n was the top scorer for Lecce with 19 goals in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176288-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UAB Blazers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 UAB Blazers men's basketball team represented the University of Alabama at Birmingham as a member of the Conference USA during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Mike Anderson's second season at UAB, and the Blazers played their home games at Bartow Arena. They finished the season 22\u201310, 12\u20134 in C-USA play and lost in the semifinals of the C-USA Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 9 seed in the St. Louis region. The Blazers defeated Washington and No. 1 seed Kentucky to reach the Sweet Sixteen. In the Regional semifinal, UAB fell to Kansas, 100\u201374.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176289-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UAE Football League, Overview\nIt was contested by 12 teams, and Al Ain FC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176290-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team represented the University of California, Irvine during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Anteaters were led by 7th year head coach Pat Douglass and played at the Bren Events Center. They were members of the Big West Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176290-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2002\u201303 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team finished the season with a record of 20\u20139 and 13\u20135 in Big West play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176291-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team finished 8th in the conference and lost in the first round of the Pac-10 tournament to the Washington Huskies. The 8th-place finish was worst ever for UCLA since the conference expanded to 10 teams. The Bruins did not play in a post-season tournament. This was the first season for head coach Ben Howland following the departure of Steve Lavin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176292-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UE Lleida season\nThis is a complete list of appearances by members of the professional playing squad of UE Lleida during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League\nThe 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League was the 12th season of UEFA's premier European club football tournament, the UEFA Champions League, since its rebranding from the European Cup in 1992, and the 49th tournament overall. The competition was won by Portugal's Porto, who defeated Monaco of France 3\u20130 at the Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen, Germany for Portugal's first win since 1987. This was Porto's second European trophy in two years, following their UEFA Cup success from the previous season. This was the first UEFA Champions League competition to feature a 16-team knockout round instead of a second group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League\nAfter eliminating (in order) Manchester United, Lyon and Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a, Porto met AS Monaco in the final. Monaco had previously knocked out Lokomotiv Moscow, Real Madrid and Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League\nMilan were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Qualification\nA total of 72 teams from 48 UEFA member associations participated in the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League. Liechtenstein (who don't have their own domestic league) as well as Andorra and San Marino are not participating. Also not admitted was Azerbaijan, which was suspended by UEFA. Each association enters a certain number of clubs to the Champions League based on its league coefficient; associations with a higher league coefficients may enter more clubs than associations with a lower league coefficient, but no association may enter more than four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Qualification, Association ranking\nFor the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, the associations are allocated places according to their 2002 UEFA country coefficients, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 1997\u201398 to 2001\u201302.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Qualification, Distribution\nSince the title holders (Milan) also qualified for the Champions League Third qualifying round through their domestic league, one Third qualifying round spot was vacated. Due to this, as well as due to suspension of Azerbaijan, the following changes to the default access list are made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Qualification, Teams\nLeague positions of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Champions League title holders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nTitle holders, 16 winners from the third qualifying round, 9 champions from countries ranked 1\u201310, and six second-placed teams from countries ranked 1\u20136 were drawn into eight groups of four teams each. The top two teams in each group advanced to the Champions League play-offs, while the third-placed teams advanced to the Third Round of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nReal Sociedad, Celta Vigo, Stuttgart and Partizan made their debut appearance in the group stage. This season became the first in the history of the Champions League in which three Greek clubs will play in the group stage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176293-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, Knockout stage, Final\nAs winners of the competition, Porto went on to represent Europe at the 2004 Intercontinental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage\nThe 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage matches took take place between 16 September and 10 December 2003. The group stage featured teams qualified by their league positions and others who had come through qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nThe 32 teams were divided into four pots. Pot 1 comprised the previous year's title holders Milan and the top seven clubs in the team ranking. Pot 2 contained the following eight clubs in the rankings and likewise for Pots 3 and 4. Each group contained one team from each pot. A team's seeding was determined by the UEFA coefficients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage, Draw\nClubs from the same association were paired up to split the matchdays between Tuesday and Wednesday. Clubs with the same pairing letter would play on different days, ensuring that teams from the same city (e.g. Milan and Internazionale, who also share a stadium) did not play on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 47], "content_span": [48, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage, Format\nDuring the group stage, each team plays the other three teams in their group twice (home and away or at an alternative venue). The top two teams with the most points or who meet the tie-break criteria progress to the first knockout round. The third placed side entered the UEFA Cup in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage, Format, Tiebreakers\nBased on paragraph 4.05 in the UEFA regulations for the current season, if two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria are applied to determine the rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176294-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups, Group D\n(*) originally scheduled for 25 November, delayed for security reasons due to the Istanbul terrorist bombings of 15 and 20 November", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176295-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League ran from 24 February 2004 until the final at the Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen, Germany on 26 May 2004. The knockout stage involved the 16 teams that finished in the top two in each of their groups in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176295-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League knockout stage\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176295-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Format\nEach tie in the knockout stage, apart from the final, was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that had the higher aggregate score over the two legs progressed to the next round. In the event that aggregate scores finished level, the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs progressed. If away goals were also equal, 30 minutes of extra time were played. If there were goals scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team qualified by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, the tie was decided via a penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176295-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Format\nIn the draw for the round of 16, matches were played between the winner of one group and the runner-up of a different group, with matches not allowed between teams from the same country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176295-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Format\nIn the final, the tie was played over just one leg at a neutral venue. If scores were level at the end of normal time in the final, extra time was played, followed by penalties if the score remained tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176295-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Final\nAs winners of the competition, Porto went on to represent UEFA at the 2004 Intercontinental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds\nThe 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds decided 16 of the 32 teams which played in the group stage. All times are CEST (UTC+2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe draw for this round was performed on 20 June 2003 in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round, Seeding\nHJK Helsinki Skonto Omonia Bohemian Sheriff Tiraspol Dinamo Tbilisi Leotar FBK Kaunas KR Reykjav\u00edk Vardar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round, Seeding\nBATE Borisov Sliema Wanderers Pyunik Barry Town Tirana Flora Tallinn Glentoran Grevenmacher HB T\u00f3rshavn Irtysh Pavlodar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 16 July, and the second legs were played on 23 July 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round, Matches\n3\u20133 on aggregate. Sliema Wanderers won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe draw for this round was performed on 20 June 2003 in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 72], "content_span": [73, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nCeltic Anderlecht Slavia Prague Rosenborg Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w Dinamo Zagreb Grazer AK", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nShakhtar Donetsk Partizan Copenhagen Maccabi Tel Aviv CSKA Sofia MTK Hung\u00e1ria CSKA Moscow", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nDjurg\u00e5rden Rapid Bucure\u0219ti HJK Helsinki Maribor \u017dilina Sliema Wanderers Omonia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 30 July, and the second legs were played on 6 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for this round was performed on 25 July 2003 in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nLazio Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a Celta Vigo Galatasaray Borussia Dortmund Chelsea Celtic AEK Athens", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nDynamo Kyiv Ajax Newcastle United Rangers Sparta Prague Marseille Lokomotiv Moscow Anderlecht", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nSlavia Prague Club Brugge Rosenborg Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w Grasshopper Dinamo Zagreb Benfica Grazer AK", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nShakhtar Donetsk Partizan Copenhagen \u017dilina CSKA Sofia Austria Wien MTK Hung\u00e1ria Vardar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Summary\nThe first legs were played on 12 and 13 August, and the second legs were played on 26 and 27 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176296-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Matches\nAjax won 3\u20132 on aggregate. Ajax won on silver goal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176297-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup was won by Valencia in the final against Marseille. It wrapped up a league and UEFA Cup double for Valencia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176297-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, Association ranking\nFor the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, the associations were allocated places according to their 2002 UEFA country coefficients, which took into account their performance in European competitions from 1997\u201398 to 2001\u201302.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176297-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, Teams\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176297-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 8 April, and the second legs were played on 14 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176297-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 22 April, and the second legs were played on 6 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176298-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Futsal Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 UEFA Futsal Cup was the 18th edition of Europe's premier club futsal tournament and the 3rd edition under the current UEFA Futsal Cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176298-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Futsal Cup, Final\nThe 2004 UEFA Futsal Cup Final was played on 24 April 2004 at the Pabell\u00f3n Parque Corredor in Torrej\u00f3n de Ardoz, Spain, and on 1 May 2004 at the Pavilh\u00e3o da Luz N\u00ba 1 in Lisbon, Portugal. Intervi\u00fa won 7\u20135 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176299-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UEFA Women's Cup\nThe third UEFA Women's Cup took place during the 2003\u201304 season. It was convincingly won by reigning champions Ume\u00e5 IK of Sweden in a two-legged final against 1. FFC Frankfurt of Germany. Both sides were aiming for their second win in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176300-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 UHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 United Hockey League season was the 13th season of the United Hockey League (Colonial Hockey League before 1997), a North American minor professional league. 12 teams participated in the regular season and the Muskegon Fury won the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176301-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ULEB Cup\nThe 2003\u201304 ULEB Cup was the second season of the second-tier level European professional club basketball competition, EuroCup Basketball, organized by the Euroleague Basketball Company. The EuroCup is the European-wide league level that is one tier below the EuroLeague level. Thirty-six teams participated in the competition. The final was held on April 13, in Charleroi, Belgium, between Real Madrid and Hapoel Jerusalem, the latter winning it by a score of 82\u201373.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176301-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ULEB Cup, Format\nThe 2003\u201304 ULEB Cup featured a total of 36 teams, divided into six groups of six. The round-robin group stage was followed by knock-out stages. The regular season began in November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176301-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ULEB Cup, Format, Regular season\nAll 36 teams in 6 groups played a round-robin competition, home and away. Two teams from each group advanced to the knockout stage (eighth-finals). Four teams with best third place records in their respective groups also advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176301-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ULEB Cup, Format, Eighth-finals\nThe winners from the eighthfinals advanced to the quarterfinals. The matches were played as two games, home and away. The match winners were determined by point differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176301-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ULEB Cup, Format, Quarterfinals\nThe winners from the quarterfinals advanced to the semifinals. The matches were played as two games, home and away. The match winners were determined by point differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176301-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 ULEB Cup, Format, Semifinals\nThe winners from the semifinals advanced to the finals. The matches were played as two games, home and away. The match winners were determined by point differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176302-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 US Cr\u00e9teil-Lusitanos season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 68th season in the existence of US Cr\u00e9teil-Lusitanos and the club's fifth consecutive season in the second division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, US Cr\u00e9teil-Lusitanos participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176303-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 USHL season is the 25th season of the United States Hockey League as an all-junior league. The regular season began on September 26, 2003, and concluded on March 28, 2004, with the regular season champion winning the Anderson Cup. The 2003\u201304 season was the first for the Danville Wings after transferring from the North American Hockey League and the only season for the St. Louis Heartland Eagles after moving from Topeka, Kansas. At the conclusion of the season, St. Louis voluntarily suspended operations and officially folded a year later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176303-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USHL season\nThe Clark Cup playoffs features the top four teams from each division competing for the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176303-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USHL season, Regular season\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched league title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176304-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USM Alger season\nIn the 2003\u201304 season, USM Alger competed in the Ligue 1 for the 24th time, as well as the Algerian Cup. It was their 9th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football. They were competing in Ligue 1, the CAF Champions League and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176304-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USM Alger season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 1 September 2003.Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176304-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USM Alger season, Squad information, Playing statistics\nAppearances (Apps.) numbers are for appearances in competitive games only including sub appearancesRed card numbers denote: Numbers in parentheses represent red cards overturned for wrongful dismissal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176304-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USM Alger season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176305-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USM Blida season\nIn the 2003\u201304 season, USM Blida is competing in the National 1 for the 19th season, as well as the Algerian Cup. They will be competing in Ligue 1, and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176305-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 USM Blida season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176306-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Udinese Calcio season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Italian football season, Udinese Calcio competed in the Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176306-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Udinese Calcio season, Kit\nUdinese's kit was manufactured by French sports retailer Le Coq Sportif and sponsored by Bernardi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176307-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Cup\nThe Ukrainian Cup 2003\u201304 was the 13th annual edition of Ukraine's football knockout competition, known as the Ukrainian Cup. Shakhtar Donetsk won the title, defeating FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176307-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Cup, Round and draw dates\nAll draws held at FFU headquarters (Building of Football) in Kyiv unless stated otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176308-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian First League\nThe 2003\u201304 Ukrainian First League was the thirteenth season of the Ukrainian First League (football) which was won by Zakarpattia Uzhhorod. The season started on July 18, 2003, and finished on June 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176308-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian First League, Promotion and relegation, Relegated teams\nOne club was relegated from the 2002-03 Ukrainian Top League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176308-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian First League, Promotion and relegation, Teams\nIn 2003-04 season, the Ukrainian First League consists of the following teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176309-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Hockey Championship\nThe 2003\u201304 Ukrainian Hockey League season was the 11th season of the Ukrainian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Ukraine. Thirteen teams participated in the league, and HC Sokol Kyiv won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176310-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Second League\nThe 2003\u201304 Ukrainian Second League was the 13th season of 3rd level professional football in Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176310-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Second League\nThe competitions were divided into three groups according to geographical location in the country \u2013 A is western Ukraine, B is southern Ukraine and Crimea, and C is eastern Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176310-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Promoted\nThe following team was promoted from the 2003 Ukrainian Football Amateur League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176310-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Relegated\nOnly one team was relegated from the 2002\u201303 Ukrainian First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176311-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Umaglesi Liga\nThe 2003\u201304 Umaglesi Liga was the fifteenth season of top-tier football in Georgia. It began on 26 July 2003 and ended on 30 May 2004 with a championship playoff match. Dinamo Tbilisi were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176312-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United Counties League\nThe 2003\u201304 United Counties League season was the 97th in the history of the United Counties League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176312-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United Counties League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 20 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176312-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United Counties League, Division One\nDivision One featured 15 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule\nThe following is the 2003\u201304 network television schedule for the six major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States. The schedule covers primetime hours from September 2003 through August 2004. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the 2002\u201303 season. All times are Eastern and Pacific, with certain exceptions, such as Monday Night Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule\nEach of the 30 highest-rated shows is listed with its rank and rating as determined by Nielsen Media Research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule\nThe 2003\u20132004 season marked the final time that the major networks scheduled substantial original scripted drama series on Saturdays. After years of declining ratings on that particular evening, beginning with the 2004\u20132005 season the networks ceased scheduling original dramas on Saturdays, choosing instead to fill the schedule with non-fiction programming and reruns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule\nPBS is not included; member stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule\nFrom August 13 to 29, 2004, all of NBC's primetime programming was preempted in favor of coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule, Sunday\nNOTE: On Fox, The Ortegas was supposed to air at 8:30-9, but it was cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule, Tuesday\nNOTE: On The WB, Fearless was supposed to have started in the Fall at 9-10, but it was delayed to midseason, then it was cancelled both due to production difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule, Wednesday\nNOTE: On Fox, The Bernie Mac Show and Cedric the Entertainer Presents were both supposed to air at 9-10, but at the last minute placed The O.C. instead, and The Bernie Mac Show was placed on Sundays, and Cedric the Entertainer Presents were cancelled. On NBC, original episodes of The Apprentice were supposed to air at 8\u20139 in 2004, but at the last minute, repeats were at it instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule, Thursday\nNOTE: On Fox, The O.C. was supposed to air at 9-10 after Tru Calling, but at the last minute stick with repeats. On NBC, Good Morning, Miami was supposed to have moved to Thursdays 9:30-10 starting January 2004, but at the last minute pulled and replaced with original episodes of The Apprentice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule, Saturday\nUPN and The WB do not show any original programming on Saturday nights, other than movies and encore programming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176313-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule, By network, The WB\nNote: The * indicates that the program was introduced in midseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176314-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule (daytime)\nThe 2003\u201304 daytime network television schedule for the six major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States in operation during that television season covers the weekday daytime hours from September 2003 to August 2004. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2002\u201303 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176314-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule (daytime)\nAffiliates fill time periods not occupied by network programs with local or syndicated programming. PBS \u2013 which offers daytime programming through a children's program block, PBS Kids \u2013 is not included, as its member television stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary. Also not included are stations affiliated with PAX, as its schedule is composed mainly of syndicated reruns although it also carried some first-run programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176314-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule (daytime), Schedule, Monday-Friday\nCBS note: Beginning in March 2004, CBS offered its affiliates two feeds of Guiding Light: one airing at 10:00 am and one airing at 3:00 pm (both Eastern). Before that time, CBS affiliates that aired Guiding Light outside of the network's recommended 3:00 pm Eastern timeslot had to tape-delay the program to the following morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 84], "content_span": [85, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176315-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule (late night)\nThese are the late night schedules for the four United States broadcast networks that offer programming during this time period, from September 2003 to August 2004. All times are Eastern or Pacific. Affiliates will fill non-network schedule with local, syndicated, or paid programming. Affiliates also have the option to preempt or delay network programming at their discretion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176315-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 United States network television schedule (late night), Schedule\nNote: Craig Kilborn left The Late Late Show at the end of August 2004, with guest hosts taking his place until Craig Ferguson was selected as the permanent host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176316-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Utah Jazz season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Jazz's 30th in the National Basketball Association. Without their dynamic duo of John Stockton and Karl Malone, not much was expected out of the Jazz entering the season. However, with young stars like Andrei Kirilenko picking up the slack while being selected for the 2004 NBA All-Star Game, the Jazz were competitive all season. With the exception of a slump in January and February, the Jazz remained above .500 all season as they battled the Denver Nuggets for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176316-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Utah Jazz season\nThe Jazz finished last place in the Midwest Division with a 42\u201340 record, and failed to qualify for the playoffs for the first time in twenty-one seasons. Their 42\u201340 record was their nineteenth consecutive winning season, a record which stood until the San Antonio Spurs broke it with their 20th consecutive winning season in 2016-17. The Spurs would eventually stretch that mark to twenty-two consecutive seasons, as well as twenty-two consecutive playoff appearances, both of which are NBA records, before falling short in the coronavirus-abbreviated 2020 Orlando Bubble season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176316-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Utah Jazz season\nFollowing the season, Greg Ostertag signed as a free agent with the Sacramento Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176317-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Valencia CF season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 Spanish football season, Valencia CF won the double of La Liga and the UEFA Cup. At the end of the season, manager Rafael Ben\u00edtez left to manage English side Liverpool and was succeeded by former Chelsea, Fiorentina and Valencia manager Claudio Ranieri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176317-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Valencia CF season\nValencia CF enjoyed a marvellous season by winning the La Liga and UEFA Cup double. The key players of the squad were Mista, Vicente Rodr\u00edguez, Francisco Rufete, David Albelda, Roberto Ayala, F\u00e1bio Aur\u00e9lio, Amedeo Carboni and Mauricio Pellegrino. Valencia CF started the league well in the early season but slumped in the mid-season and later made a remarkable comeback (remontada) in April and May thanks to Real Madrid's several slips. Valencia CF were on course for their first-treble winning season, however, Valencia were eliminated by eventual Copa del Rey runners-up Real Madrid in the quarter-finals and thus denying them a season treble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176317-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Valencia CF season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176317-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Valencia CF season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season\nThe 2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season was the Canucks' 34th NHL season. It was the first time since the Northwest Division was created that a team other than the Colorado Avalanche won the division title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, Divisional standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, Divisional standings\nDivisions: CE \u2013 Central, PA \u2013 Pacific, NW \u2013 Northwest", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, Divisional standings\nP \u2013 Clinched Presidents Trophy; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Regular season, Conference standings\np- Presidents' Trophy winner, x- qualified for playoffs, e- did not qualify for playoffs, y- divisional winner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Playoffs, Western Conference Quarter-Finals vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nAfter splitting the first two games in Vancouver, Dan Cloutier was injured midway through Game 3 in Calgary. With backup Johan Hedberg playing in relief, Vancouver would also split Games 3 and 4 in Calgary. Alex Auld took over in goal starting in Game 5, which the Canucks lost 2-1. Facing elimination in Game 6, Brendan Morrison scored the winner in the third overtime period to force a Game 7 in Vancouver. In the series-deciding game, the Canucks found themselves down a goal and on the penalty kill in the last minute. With Auld on the bench for the extra attacker, winger Matt Cooke tied the game with 5.7 seconds left to force overtime. However, with Ed Jovanovski still in the penalty box, former Canuck Martin Gelinas eliminated the Canucks on the power play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 100], "content_span": [101, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Player statistics, Skaters\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Player statistics, Skaters\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Team. Stats reflect time with the Team only. \u2021Traded mid-seasonBold/italics denotes franchise record", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Player statistics, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/Shootout Losses; GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Transactions\nThe Canucks were involved in the following transactions during the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176318-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vancouver Canucks season, Draft picks\nVancouver's picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft, held in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176319-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball men's basketball team finished with a 23\u201310 record (SEC East: 8\u20138, 4th) and reached the Sweet 16 of the NCAA Tournament. The Commodores were ranked No. 25 in the final ESPN/USA Today (Coaches) poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176319-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball team\nThe team was led by head coach Kevin Stallings and played its home games at Memorial Gymnasium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176320-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2003\u201304 season of the Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n, the top category of Venezuelan football, was played by 10 teams. The national champions were Caracas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176321-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vermont Catamounts women's ice hockey season\nThe 2003-04 Vermont Catamounts season was their second season in the ECAC Division I. Led by head coach Dennis Miller, the Catamounts had 6 victories, compared to 25 defeats and 3 ties. Their conference record was 2 victories, 15 defeats and 1 tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176322-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfB Stuttgart season\nVfB Stuttgart debuted in the modern-era 32-team Champions League with a progression from the group stage and a somewhat surprising victory with 2\u20131 against English champions Manchester United. Ultimately, the tournament ended with a narrow defeat to Chelsea. Kevin Kur\u00e1nyi, Philipp Lahm and Alexander Hleb were key players in a side that only just failed to finish in the top three for the second season in succession. Following an initial eight clean sheets, the attack suffered from only Kur\u00e1nyi being able to score, despite goalkeeper Timo Hildebrand keeping 18 clean sheets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176322-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfB Stuttgart season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176322-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfB Stuttgart season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176322-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfB Stuttgart season, Reserve team\nVfB Stuttgart II were coached by Reinhold Fanz and finished 11th in the Regionalliga S\u00fcd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176322-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfB Stuttgart season, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176323-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfL Bochum season\nThe 2003\u201304 VfL Bochum season was the 66th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176324-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfL Wolfsburg season\nVfL Wolfsburg started the season in brilliant fashion, taking an early Bundesliga lead, before slipping back in a nightmare run, which saw the team finish in the midfield, with a lower points haul than the previous seasons. Wolfsburg also dropped a bombshell when they signed Argentine starlet Andr\u00e9s D'Alessandro of River Plate. D'Alessandro had been relatively disappointing season, but Fernando Baiano together with Diego Klimowicz made sure the attack functioned really well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176324-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfL Wolfsburg season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176324-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfL Wolfsburg season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176324-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 VfL Wolfsburg season, Players, VfL Wolfsburg II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176325-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Villarreal CF season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 81st season in the existence of Villarreal CF and the club's fourth consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Villarreal CF participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey and the UEFA Intertoto Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176326-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team represented the University of Virginia during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by sixth-year head coach Pete Gillen, and played their home games at University Hall in Charlottesville, Virginia as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176326-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team, Last season\nThe Cavaliers had a record of 16\u201316, with a conference record of 6\u201310. They appeared in the 2003 National Invitation Tournament, where they lost in the second round to eventual champion St. John's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176327-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vyshcha Liha\nThe 2003\u201304 Vyshcha Liha season was the 13th since its establishment. The season began on 12 July 2003 with seven games of the first season round. FC Dynamo Kyiv were the defending champions, having won their 11th league title in the 2002\u201303 season and they successfully defended their title by winning the championship in the last round of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176327-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vyshcha Liha\nA total of sixteen teams participated in the league, the best fourteen sides of the 2002\u201303 season and two promoted clubs from the 2002\u201303 Ukrainian First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176327-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vyshcha Liha\nThe competition had a winter break which began on 11 November 2003 and the season resumed on 14 March 2004. The season concluded on 19 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176328-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Vysshaya Liga season\nThe 2003\u201304 Vysshaya Liga season was the 12th season of the Vysshaya Liga, the second level of ice hockey in Russia. 30 teams participated in the league. Spartak Moscow and Molot-Prikamie Perm were promoted to the Russian Superleague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176329-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WHL season\nThe 2003\u201304 WHL season was the 38th season for the Western Hockey League. Twenty teams completed a 72-game season. The Medicine Hat Tigers won the President's Cup, while the host Kelowna Rockets won the Memorial Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176329-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WHL season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176329-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WHL season, Regular season, Goaltending leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties\u00a0; GA = Goals against; SO = Total shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176329-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WHL season, RE/Max Canada-Russia Challenge\nOn November 26, Team WHL defeated the Russian Selects 4\u20131 in Calgary, Alberta before a crowd of 7,844.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176329-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WHL season, RE/Max Canada-Russia Challenge\nOn November 27, Team WHL defeated the Russian Selects 7\u20131 in Brandon, Manitoba before a crowd of 4,908.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176329-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WHL season, 2004 Bantam Draft\nThe 2004 WHL Bantam Draft was held at the WHL's head office in Calgary on April 29, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176330-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WNBL season\nThe 2003\u201304 WNBL season was the 24th season of competition since its establishment in 1981. A total of 8 teams contested the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176330-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WNBL season\nBroadcast rights were held by free-to-air network ABC. ABC broadcast one game a week, at 1:00PM at every standard time in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176330-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 WNBL season\nMolten provided equipment including the official game ball, with Hoop2Hoop supplying team apparel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176331-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team represented Wake Forest University during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176332-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Walsall F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 season, Walsall participated in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176332-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Walsall F.C. season, Season summary\nWalsall started the season strongly with 4\u20131 wins over local rivals West Bromwich Albion and Nottingham Forest, and on Boxing Day were four points off the play-offs. However, the club's form slumped in 2004, with the club not picking up another league win until March. Manager Colin Lee was sacked on 16 April, though the official reason given was that Lee had contacted Plymouth Argyle regarding their managerial vacancy. Paul Merson was appointed temporary player-manager, assisted by fellow player Simon Osborn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176332-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Walsall F.C. season, Season summary\nUltimately, Walsall would be relegated on the last day of the season despite a 3\u20132 win over Rotherham United: an extra two goals scored during the campaign would have been enough for them to climb above Gillingham to safety. Despite the sorry end to the campaign, Paul Merson was handed a permanent contract as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176332-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Walsall F.C. season, Season summary\nDefender Paul Ritchie was named as the club's Player of the Season, but returned to Scotland to play for Dundee United at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176332-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Walsall F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176332-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Walsall F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season\nThe 2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season was the Capitals's 30th season of play. The team finished in fifth and last-place in the Southeast Division, and fourteenth overall in the Eastern Conference to miss the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Regular season\nThe Capitals were the most penalized team in the League, with 401 power-play opportunities against. They also scored the fewest short-handed goals in the League, with just 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: CR = Conference rank; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime loss; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Bolded teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Regular season, Final standings\nDivisions: AT \u2013 Atlantic, NE \u2013 Northeast, SE \u2013 Southeast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Regular season, Final standings\nZ \u2013 Clinched Conference; Y \u2013 Clinched Division; X \u2013 Clinched Playoff spot", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Playoffs\nThe Capitals did not qualify for the 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Draft picks\nWashington's draft picks at the 2003 NHL Entry Draft held at the Gaylord Entertainment Center in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176333-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Capitals season, Farm teams\nThe Capitals main American Hockey League affiliate was the Portland Pirates. Though they had no direct ECHL affiliate, players were sent from time to time between the Dayton Bombers and Reading Royals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176334-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Washington Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Washington for the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by second-year head coach Lorenzo Romar, the Huskies were members of the Pacific-10 Conference and played their home games on campus at Hec Edmundson Pavilion in Seattle, Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176334-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nThe Huskies were 17\u201310 overall in the regular season and 12\u20136 in conference play, second in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176334-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nWashington lost their first five Pac-10 games, then won twelve of thirteen to finish as runner-up. In the eight-team conference tournament, they defeated UCLA in the quarterfinal and Arizona in the semifinal, the first team in 65 years to defeat the Wildcats three times in one season. In the final, they met top seed Stanford; a week earlier, the undefeated Cardinal traveled to Seattle and lost by thirteen points. It was a different outcome in the tourney in Los Angeles as Stanford won by eleven points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176334-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nWashington returned to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in five years, and were seeded eighth in the St. Louis regional. In the first round at Columbus, Ohio, the Huskies scored a hundred points, but lost to ninth seed UAB by two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176335-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team represented Washington State University for the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by third-year head coach Dick Bennett, the Cougars were members of the Pacific-10 Conference and played their home games on campus at Beasley Coliseum in Pullman, Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176335-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe Cougars were 13\u201315 overall in the regular season and 7\u201311 in conference play, tied for seventh in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176335-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nSeeded eighth in the conference tournament, the Cougars met top seed and second-ranked Stanford in the quarterfinal round and lost by 21 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176335-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nBennett was hired in March 2003; he was formerly the head coach at Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176336-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Wizards season\nThe 2003\u201304 NBA season was the Wizards 43rd season in the National Basketball Association, and their 31st season in the city of Washington, D.C.. With All-Star guard Michael Jordan retired for good and Doug Collins fired as head coach, the Wizards hired Eddie Jordan, and signed free agent and last year's Most Improved Player Gilbert Arenas during the offseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176336-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 Washington Wizards season\nUnder Jordan, the Wizards showed signs early into the season as they won their first game against the Chicago Bulls 99\u201374, and held the Toronto Raptors to 60 points in a 26-point margin win, while winning three of their first five games. However, with team captain Jerry Stackhouse playing just 26 games due to knee injuries, the Wizards played mediocre basketball all season finishing sixth in the Atlantic Division with a disappointing 25\u201357 record, missing the playoffs for the seventh straight season. Following the season, Stackhouse was traded to the Dallas Mavericks, and Christian Laettner signed as a free agent with the Miami Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176337-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Watford F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Watford F.C. competed in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176337-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Watford F.C. season, Season summary\nThe ongoing financial difficulties saw a large number of players released that summer, including record signing Allan Nielsen and strikers Tommy Smith and Gifton Noel-Williams. To make matters worse, Manchester United loanee Jimmy Davis was killed in a car crash on the opening day of the new campaign. This had a huge effect on the team's form at the beginning of the season, and notably on his close friend Danny Webber. But a strong finish to the season saw the club finish in mid-table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176337-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Watford F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176337-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Watford F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176338-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Welsh Alliance League\nThe 2003\u201304 Welsh Alliance League is the 20th season of the Welsh Alliance League, which is in the third level of the Welsh football pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176338-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Welsh Alliance League\nThe league consists of sixteen teams and concluded with Rhyl Reserves as champions. Runners-up, Llandyrnog United were promoted to the Cymru Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176338-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Welsh Alliance League, Teams\nGlantraeth were champions in the previous season and were promoted to the Cymru Alliance. They were replaced by Gwynedd League champions Llanrug United and Clwyd League runners-up, Llandyrnog United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176339-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Welsh Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Welsh Premier League was the 12th season of the Welsh Premier League since its establishment as the League of Wales in 1992. It began on 15 August 2003 and ended on 1 May 2004. The league was won by Rhyl. Defending champions Barry Town F.C. were relegated after seven league championships and twelve seasons in the Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176340-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wessex Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 Wessex Football League was the 18th season of the Wessex Football League, and the last in which the league consisted of a single division. The league champions for the first time in their history were newcomers Winchester City. There was no promotion to the Southern League, but two clubs were relegated to a new Division Two for 2004\u201305, as the league was restructured and two new divisions were added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176340-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wessex Football League\nFor sponsorship reasons, the league was known as the Sydenhams Wessex League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176340-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wessex Football League, League table\nThe league consisted of one division of 22 clubs, the same as the previous season, after Eastleigh were promoted to the Southern League and one new club joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176341-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, West Bromwich Albion F.C. competed in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176341-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary\nIn the 2003\u201304 season, Albion had their best League Cup run for 22 years, beating Newcastle United and Manchester United before losing to Arsenal in the quarter-finals. The team also enjoyed good form in the league, remaining in the top two from mid-October until the end of the season, winning promotion back to the Premiership, again as runners-up, at the first attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176341-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary\nAlbion unveiled the Astle Gates outside their home ground, The Hawthorns, in July 2003. The gates are a tribute to the club's former striker, Jeff Astle, who died in January 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176341-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176341-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season saw West Ham United competing in the First Division for the first time since the 1992\u201393 season, having been relegated from the Premiership in 18th place the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nFollowing West Ham's relegation from the Premiership, several key players left the club that summer, including Les Ferdinand, Trevor Sinclair, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Kanout\u00e9, Joe Cole, Paolo Di Canio and Glen Johnson. Young striker Jermain Defoe had also submitted a transfer request just one day after their relegation, but this was rejected and he would remain with the club for the start of the new season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nManager Glenn Roeder, who had since recovered from the brain tumour that caused him to miss the end of the previous season, immediately set about rebuilding his squad, signing Kevin Horlock, Matthew Etherington, Rob Lee and David Connolly prior to the beginning of the campaign. After a win over Preston North End on the opening day, a draw and a loss would follow and Roeder was sacked three games into the season. Sir Trevor Brooking once again took over as caretaker manager, and form improved as they won their next four games. A permanent replacement was soon found for Roeder, when Alan Pardew was bought in from Reading as new manager in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nDespite continuing to be a prolific goalscorer for the club, disciplinary issues became a problem for striker Jermain Defoe, who was sent off three times and played just 22 out of a possible 34 games due to suspension in the first half of the season. This, combined with his repeated refusal to sign a new contract, meant West Ham allowed him to leave the club in January to sign with Tottenham Hotspur in a swap deal that saw West Ham take out of favour striker Bobby Zamora. Along with Defoe, goalkeeper David James and club mainstay Ian Pearce would also leave for Manchester City and Fulham F.C. respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nUnder the guidance of Pardew, West Ham performed well enough to finish fourth and earn themselves a playoff finish. They would lose 1\u20130 to 5th place Ipswich Town in the first leg of their playoff semi-final, but bounced back to win 2\u20130 in the second, advancing to the final where they would face Crystal Palace at the Millennium Stadium. A goal from Neil Shipperley after 61 minutes would be enough to give Palace the win, consigning the Hammers to another season in English football's second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176342-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Ham United F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176343-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Midlands (Regional) League\nThe 2003\u201304 West Midlands (Regional) League season was the 104th in the history of the West Midlands (Regional) League, an English association football competition for semi-professional and amateur teams based in the West Midlands county, Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and southern Staffordshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176343-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Midlands (Regional) League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 19 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176343-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 West Midlands (Regional) League, Premier Division\nAlso, Little Drayton Rangers changed name to Market Drayton Town and Sedgeley White Lions changed name to Coseley Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176344-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Western Football League\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 102nd in the history of the Western Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176344-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Western Football League\nThe league champions for the seventh time in their history were Bideford, but it was runners-up Paulton Rovers who took promotion to the Southern League. The champions of Division One were Hallen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176344-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Western Football League, Final tables, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division remained at 18 clubs after Team Bath were promoted to the Southern League, and Bath City Reserves left the league. Two clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176344-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Western Football League, Final tables, First Division\nThe First Division remained at 19 clubs after Exmouth Town and Torrington were promoted to the Premier Division and two clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176345-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wichita Thunder season\nThe 2003\u201304 Wichita Thunder season was the 12th season of the CHL franchise in Wichita, Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176346-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wigan Athletic F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Wigan Athletic competed in the Football League First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176346-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nWigan were playing in Division One for the first time in their history, and after losing their first game many tipped them for a swift departure, but Wigan confounded expectations to go unbeaten for the next 17 games and sat at the top the table by November. A weak finish saw Wigan win only three of their last 10 games to finish seventh in Division One \u2013 a last minute goal by West Ham's Brian Deane in the final game of the season saw the Latics drop out of the play-off places in favour of eventual play-off winners Crystal Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176346-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176346-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176346-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176347-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team represented The College of William & Mary during the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. This was head coach Tony Shaver's first season at William & Mary after previously coaching at Hampden Sydney College. The Tribe competed in the Colonial Athletic Association and played their home games at Kaplan Arena. They finished the season 7\u201321, 4\u201314 in CAA play and lost in the quarterfinals of the 2004 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament to Towson in the preliminary round. They did not participate in any post-season tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176348-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wimbledon F.C. season\nDuring the 2003\u201304 English football season, Wimbledon F.C. competed in the First Division. This was Wimbledon's last season before changing its club name to Milton Keynes Dons after being given permission by the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176348-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wimbledon F.C. season, Season summary\nWimbledon entered administration in June 2003, and played their first match at the National Hockey Stadium in Milton Keynes in September. Although crowds improved at the club's new base, the administrator sold any player who could command a transfer fee and Murdoch's team finished bottom. The club was brought out of administration at the end of the season, and subsequently rebranded as Milton Keynes Dons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176348-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wimbledon F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176348-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wimbledon F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176349-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team represented University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison. The head coach was Bo Ryan, coaching his third season with the Badgers. The team played its home games at the Kohl Center in Madison, Wisconsin and is a member of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176350-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey season\nThe 2003\u201304 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey team was the Badgers' 4th season. Head coach Mark Johnson was in his first season as Badgers head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176350-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey season, Regular season\nSenior Meghan Hunter finished her Badgers career as the all-time career goals scored leader (since broken) with 84 goals. She also finished as the Badgers all-time career leader in assists (since broken) with 93.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 105th full season of competitive league football in the history of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers. They played the season in the Premiership, the highest level of English football. This marked their first ever appearance in the modern Premier League, and their first season in the top flight since 1983\u201384. The club had been promoted after having won the play-off final at the end of the previous season to earn the final promotion spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nTheir return to the top level proved short-lived as the team struggled throughout the campaign and were eventually relegated in 20th place, finishing bottom of the division on goal difference, seven points short of safety. They were officially relegated after failing to win their penultimate game, although their vastly inferior goal difference meant that survival was effectively ruled out on 1 May 2004, despite victory, owing to relegation rivals Manchester City also winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nWolves became the third team in Premier League history to fail to win an away game during a season. Contributing to this outcome was a series of serious injuries to key players, with Matt Murray and Joleon Lescott missing almost the entire season and Mark Kennedy and Kenny Miller kept out for long periods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Pre season\nWolves split their squad into two groups, one led by manager Dave Jones, another by coach Terry Connor after assistant manager John Ward left the club. Preparations also included a week's warm weather training in Jerez, Spain. A planned friendly against Dutch side ADO Den Haag was cancelled on the day of the game after a water leak hit the venue, Telford United's Bucks Head stadium. Only the final friendly was held at Wolves' Molineux home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, FA Premiership\nA total of 20 teams competed in the FA Premiership in the 2003\u201304 season. Each team would play every other team twice, once at their stadium, and once at the opposition's. Three points were awarded to teams for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats. The provisional fixture list was released on 19 June 2003, but was subject to change in the event of matches being selected for television coverage or police concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nKey:\u00a0\u00a0\u2021 On loan from another club \u00a0\u00a0* First appearance(s) for the club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nCorrect as of end of season. Starting appearances are listed first, followed by substitute appearances in parentheses where applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176351-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Kit\nThe season saw a new away kit, manufactured by Admiral, that was all black with minor gold trimmings. The home kit was the same as the previous season. Doritos sponsored the club for a second and final season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 48], "content_span": [49, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176352-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Women's National Soccer League\nThe 2003 Women's National Soccer League, known as the Ansett Summer Series under a sponsorship arrangement with Ansett Australia, was the eighth season of the Women's National Soccer League, the Australian national women's soccer competition. The season was played over 10 rounds followed by a grand final match between the top two teams. Queensland Sting finished first in the league however second-placed NSW Sapphires were crowned champions after winning the grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176352-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Women's National Soccer League, Regular season, Home and away season\nThe 2003 WNSL season was played over 10 rounds, followed by a grand final between the top two teams in the league, starting in October and completing in December 2009. While all teams played each other twice, not all teams played each other home and away with several rounds hosted in a single location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176352-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Women's National Soccer League, Grand final\nQueensland Sting entered the grand final without losing a match in the league, only missing out on points in two draws against NSW Sapphires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176353-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 World Sevens Series\nThe 2003\u201304 IRB Sevens World Series was the fifth edition of the IRB Sevens World Series. The Series was held over eight tournaments, an increase over the previous year, as this was the first year that the USA Sevens was added to the World Series. New Zealand won its fifth consecutive series, narrowly defeating England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176353-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 World Sevens Series, Table\n*South Africa won the 2003 Dubai Sevens and lost in the Cup Semi-Finals at the 2003 South Africa Sevens but no points are indicated on the IRB Series Standings for 2003-04. South Africa were deducted their points for these rounds for fielding an ineligible player (Tonderai Chavhanga).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176354-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was Wycombe Wanderers's 116th season of competitive association football, and tenth consecutive season in the Football League Second Division. They finished 24th of 24 and were relegated to the newly formed Football League Two. They also competed in the FA Cup, Football League Cup and Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176354-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Wycombe Wanderers F.C. season, Season summary\nManager Lawrie Sanchez was sacked by the club on 30 September 2003, with Tony Adams appointed as his successor on 5 November 2003. They finished bottom on 37 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176355-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team\nThe 2003\u201304 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team represented Xavier University from Cincinnati, Ohio in the 2003\u201304 season. Led by head coach Thad Matta, the Musketeers finished 19\u201310 in the regular season, and won the Atlantic 10 tournament. In the NCAA tournament, the Musketeers put on an unexpected performance, battling all the way to the Elite Eight, eventually falling to Duke. Following the season, Matta would depart to become the head coach of Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176355-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team, Tournament results, Atlantic 10 Tournament\n3/10/04 @ University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, OH Vs. St. Bonaventure, W, 90\u2013643/11/04 @ University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, OH Vs. St. Joseph's, W, 87\u2013673/12/04 @ University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, OH Vs. George Washington, W, 70\u2013473/13/04 @ University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, OH Vs. Dayton, W, 58\u201349", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 91], "content_span": [92, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176355-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Xavier Musketeers men's basketball team, Tournament results, NCAA Tournament\n3/19/04 @ TD Waterhouse Centre, Orlando, FL Vs. (10) Louisville W, 80\u201370 (First Round)3/21/04 @ TD Waterhouse Centre, Orlando, FL Vs. (2) Mississippi State W, 89\u201374 (Second Round)3/26/04 @ Georgia Dome, Atlanta, GA Vs. (3) Texas W, 79\u201371 (Sweet Sixteen)3/28/04 @ Georgia Dome, Atlanta, GA Vs. (1) Duke L, 66\u201363 (Elite Eight)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 84], "content_span": [85, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176357-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 108th season in existence and their first season in the Football League played by Yeovil Town Football Club, an English football club based in Yeovil, Somerset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176357-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nThe team reached the third round of the FA Cup before losing 2\u20130 at home to Premier League side Liverpool. The team played their first ever Football League Cup campaign being knocked out in the first round losing 4\u20131 away at Luton Town, while in the Football League Trophy the club were knocked out on penalties by Colchester United in the second round. Welsh attacking midfielder Gavin Williams was the club's top goalscorer scoring 13 goals, with 9 in the league, three in the FA Cup and one in the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176357-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Match results\nLeague positions are sourced from Statto, while the remaining contents of each table are sourced from the references in the \"Ref\" column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176358-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ystalyfera RFC season\nThe most important event of the 2003/04 Ystalyfera RFC season was the creation of Regional Rugby in 2003, which resulted in a major restructuring of the National League. For Ystalyfera this meant re-classification into Division Three South West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176358-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ystalyfera RFC season\nAdding to the excitement was the first meeting in the league against near neighbours Ystradgynlais RFC since 1980-81 \u2013 they were in \u2018free-fall\u2019 from their glorious \u2018Professional\u2019 era when their only saviour would prove to be their youth squad structure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176358-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ystalyfera RFC season\nOpponents by design were now not too far away in comparison to previous years, Ystalyfera would campaign a relegation battle with Skewen, Seven Sisters, Ystradgynlais and Trebanos, the latter two losing out finishing below the \u2018Fera at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176358-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ystalyfera RFC season\nCup exits were again early except for the Welsh Cup. A 1st Round bye was followed by a 2nd Round victory over Taibach 30-19. The 3rd round was a big exit from the event 0-55 away at Bridgend Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176358-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ystalyfera RFC season\nAt the time of the first encounter with Ystrad\u2019 on 27 December, the league position was three wins and eight defeats. A 12-3 win with tries from Ashley Carter and Graham Jones, a conversion by Gareth James and sin bins for Neil Lynch and Arwel Williams, stood as the only victory until the next encounter between the sides, when \u2018Fera won on 6 March 2004 23-5 at Ynysydarren. Scorers in this second encounter were Ashley Carter one try, Dai Thomas a try, Damian James two conversions and three penalties. Now becoming a regular habit wins in the last two games ensured safety for another season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176358-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 Ystalyfera RFC season\nTop scorer was Damian James with a personal record of 220 points, he also scored 13 tries, one more than Ashley Carter. Captain this season was Martyn Stoneman. Players Player was Mark Rewston and Supporters Player hooker Tristian Davies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176359-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Argentine football\nThe 2003-04 Argentine First Division season saw Boca Juniors ecstatic after a title run that also included the Intercontinental Cup. River Plate stole the Clausura leaving hated rival Boca Juniors looking up from second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176359-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Argentine football\nFour teams were relegated, Chacarita, Nueva Chicago, Atl\u00e9tico de Rafaela and Talleres de C\u00f3rdoba. The first two lost a direct relegation, their places occupied by Club Almagro and Instituto de C\u00f3rdoba. The last two lost their \"promotion\" games against Hurac\u00e1n de Tres Arroyos and Argentinos Juniors, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176359-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Argentine football, Torneo Clausura (\"Closing\" Tournament), Relegation, \"Promoci\u00f3n\" Playoff\nHurac\u00e1n de Tres Arroyos wins 5-3 and is promoted to Argentine First Division. Atl\u00e9tico Rafaela is relegated to the Argentine Nacional B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 102], "content_span": [103, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176359-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Argentine football, Torneo Clausura (\"Closing\" Tournament), Relegation, \"Promoci\u00f3n\" Playoff\nArgentinos Juniors wins 4-2 and is promoted to Argentine First Division. Talleres de C\u00f3rdoba is relegated to the Argentine Nacional B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 102], "content_span": [103, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176359-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Argentine football, National team\nThis section covers Argentina's games from August 1, 2003 to July 31, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176360-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Australian soccer\nThe 2003\u201304 season is the 35th season of competitive association football in Australia. Association football in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176361-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Belgian football\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 101st competitive season in Belgian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176361-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Belgian football, National team\nBelgium ended their qualifying campaign for the 2004 UEFA European Championship at the third place in Group 8 and thus did not take part to the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176362-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Dutch football\nThe 2003\u201304 season in Dutch football saw Ajax regain their title in the Eredivisie. Zwolle were relegated to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 124th season of association football in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nArsenal completed the season without losing a league match, becoming champions of the Premiership in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nLeeds United avoided going into administration, but were unable to avoid relegation and lost their place in the Premiership - along with Leicester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nNorwich City won promotion to the Premiership as Champions after nine years in Division 1. They were joined by runners-up West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace, who beat West Ham United in the play-off final. Wimbledon completed their relocation to Milton Keynes and moved into the former England National Hockey Stadium, which would be used as a temporary home until a new stadium was built at Denbigh North. At the end of the season, following the Dons' relegation, club directors changed its name to Milton Keynes Dons. Bradford City and Walsall joined them in relegation to Football League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nPlymouth Argyle were Division Two champions and ensured that they would be playing in the second tier of English football for the first time in 11 years. Queens Park Rangers joined them together with Brighton who won the play-off. At the bottom, Rushden & Diamonds were relegated to Division Three along with Grimsby Town, who suffered a second consecutive relegation after losing the last game of the season. Notts County and Wycombe Wanderers were also relegated. In the same division, Oldham Athletic were in financial difficulties but they avoided going into administration after a takeover bid was confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nDoncaster Rovers became Division Three champions to earn their second successive promotion, having been Conference play-off winners the previous season. They had not played above the league's lowest tier for nearly 20 years; they were joined by Hull City, Torquay United and play-off winners Huddersfield Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nCarlisle United were relegated to the Conference from Division Three. They had spent all but two of the previous 17 seasons in the league's fourth tier. York City followed them out of the Football League after a poor second half of the season. Chester City and Shrewsbury Town were promoted to the Football League from the Football Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Overview\nTelford United, who had been members of the Conference for every season since its formation in 1979, went out of business at the end of a season in which they had reached the Fourth Round of the FA Cup. The club was quickly reformed as A.F.C. Telford United and joined the Northern Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, FA Premier League\nDespite the Premiership title picture being a three-horse race for much of the campaign, Arsenal remained unbeaten all season long and clinched the title with 90 points and an 11-point gap over runners-up Chelsea, who had been most people's favourites for the title after a \u00a3100\u00a0million summer spending spree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0008-0001", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, FA Premier League\nAfter losing defender Rio Ferdinand to an eight-month ban for missing a drugs test in September, defending champions Manchester United turned in some lacklustre performances during the second half of the season, which put paid to their hopes of retaining their crown and restricting them to a third-place finish, some 15 points behind Arsenal. Solace came in the form of a record 11th FA Cup triumph, defeating Millwall 3\u20130 in the final at the Millennium Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, FA Premier League\nLiverpool were the final team to qualify for the Champions League, finishing in fourth place, but leaving them 30 points behind Arsenal and slightly closer to the relegation zone than the title winners, and manager G\u00e9rard Houllier was sacked shortly after the season's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, FA Premier League\nLeague Cup winners Middlesbrough qualified for the UEFA Cup for the first time in their history, joined by fifth-placed Newcastle United, who edged out Aston Villa \u2013 who had recovered from as low as 18th place in November \u2013 on goal difference. Seventh-placed Charlton Athletic and eighth-placed Bolton Wanderers both achieved their highest league finishes since the 1950s, while ninth-placed Fulham (many people's pre-season relegation favourites) defied the odds under 33-year-old manager Chris Coleman and achieved the highest league finish of their history. Birmingham City, in their second season since promotion, also enjoyed a solid year, finishing tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, FA Premier League\nPortsmouth, also considered favourites for relegation pre-season, finished a respectable 13th in their first top-flight season for 16 years, despite finishing behind bitter rivals Southampton, who recovered from the sudden resignation of Gordon Strachan in March to finish 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0012-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, FA Premier League\nNewly promoted Leicester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers both went down after just one season (Wolves not gaining one away win all season), while Leeds United's Premiership status was crushed under a multi-million pound debt which had been mounting relentlessly for the best part of three years, as their relegation ultimately became a matter of when rather than if, ending their top-flight membership after 14 successive seasons among the elite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0013-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League First Division\nThe top three led the division for most of the season, but Sunderland could not shake off their poor start and lost out to Norwich, who returned to the Premiership after nearly a decade, and West Brom, who bounced back to the Premiership after relegation the previous season. Crystal Palace achieved one of the most unlikely promotions of recent times, spending the entire first half of the season in the relegation zone under manager Steve Kember before surging into the play-off places under new manager Iain Dowie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0014-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League First Division\nWest Ham continued to sell most of their top players following relegation the previous season, but overcame the sudden sacking of Glenn Roeder only three games into the season, with his replacement Alan Pardew guided them to 4th place, with the loss to Crystal Palace in the playoff final the only disappointment. Wigan's first season in the First Division saw them finish two points of the play-off places in seventh, failing to win any of their last 4 games, although they did finish above last season's losing playoff finalists Sheffield United on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0015-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League First Division\nWimbledon's move to Milton Keynes took its toll on the club, and they finished bottom of the table in an abysmal final season for the club before it was renamed as MK Dons. Bradford fared little better, despite the presence of former England captain Bryan Robson in the manager's chair. Walsall made a respectable start to the season before slumping somewhat later on, and finally crashing into the relegation zone; just a single point from any of their last three games would have ensured survival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0016-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League First Division\nMillwall qualified for the UEFA Cup for finishing as runners-up in the FA Cup, as winners Manchester United already qualified for the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0017-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League Second Division\nPlymouth Argyle finished top of the division, though they lost manager Paul Sturrock to Southampton. Queens Park Rangers grabbed the second spot from under the noses of Bristol City, who proceeded to lose the play-off final to Brighton & Hove Albion, another side who bounced back from relegation the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0018-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League Second Division\nTony Adams, previously suggested by many as a possible future manager of Arsenal and England, failed to keep Wycombe Wanderers up, ending their ten-year spell in the division. Notts County nearly went bankrupt during the course of the season and the effect on the club was evident, as they slipped into Division Three (or League Two, as it would be called the next season). Rushden & Diamonds' years of success came to a grinding halt as they suffered their first-ever relegation and crashed out of the division after being promoted the previous year. Grimsby Town filled the final relegation spot, resulting in their second consecutive relegation; they had looked safe in the final weeks, but ultimately went down after a poor sequence of results combined with revivals by Chesterfield and Stockport County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0019-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League Second Division\nLeading goalscorer: Leon Knight (Brighton & Hove Albion) and Stephen McPhee (Port Vale) \u2013 25", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0020-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League Third Division\nDoncaster Rovers earned a second successive promotion, showing that the club was firmly back on track after the years of struggle and scandal that the club had endured in the late 1990s. Hull City were another team who had suffered much strife in the previous decade, but this time their extensive investment in players finally paid off, and they were promoted as runners-up. Torquay United earned the third automatic promotion spot from Huddersfield on the last day of the season. Huddersfield Town would make up for this by beating Mansfield in the play-off final, earning an immediate return after the previous year's relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0021-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League Third Division\nDespite winning 4 out of their last 5 games, Yeovil missed out on the playoffs on goal difference in their first ever season in the Football League, while Swansea, nearly relegated the previous season, finished 10th, but were still closer to the drop zone than the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0022-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, League tables, Football League Third Division\nYork City were in play-off contention for a large part of the campaign, but a disastrous end to the season saw them lose 16 of their last 20 games, costing them their 80-year-old League status. Conversely, Carlisle United started the season horrendously, but a late run saw them finish 23rd. A few years ago this would have seen them complete an amazing escape from relegation, but with the introduction of two relegation places from the League it was no longer sufficient, and they dropped into the Conference, becoming the first former top-flight team to suffer this indignity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0023-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Transfer deals, Summer transfer window\nThe summer transfer window ran from the end of the previous season until 31 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176363-0024-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in English football, Transfer deals, January transfer window\nThe mid-season transfer window runs from 1 to 31 January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176364-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Hong Kong football\nThe 2003\u201304 season in Hong Kong football, starting July 2003 and ending June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176364-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Hong Kong football, Exhibition matches in Hong Kong, Real Madrid Asia Tour 2003\nAlthough the team of Hong Kong is officially named Hong Kong, it loaned 6 players from Dalian Shide, including Zhang Enhua, Hao Haidong, Li Ming, Wang Pang, An Qi and Li Yao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 90], "content_span": [91, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football\nThe 2003\u201304 football season in Portuguese football was dominated by FC Porto, which was later involved in the corruption scandal Apito Dourado in relation to this season. Although Porto failed to win the Portuguese Double because of Benfica in the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal final, the club won the UEFA Champions League, becoming the first Portuguese team to do so in the current form of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, Domestic competitions, SuperLiga\nThe 2003-2004 season was dominated by FC Porto. After winning the SuperLiga, the Cup of Portugal and the UEFA Cup in 2003, Jos\u00e9 Mourinho's side dominated the championship from start to finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, Domestic competitions, SuperLiga\nSporting Clube de Portugal had a disappointing season, finishing third. At the end of the season coach Fernando Santos resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, Domestic competitions, SuperLiga\nCD Nacional was the great surprise finishing fourth. Due to Porto's success in European competition the previous year, the third (Sporting Clube de Portugal), fourth (CD Nacional) and fifth placed (SC Braga) teams qualified for the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, Domestic competitions, Cup of Portugal\nThe 2003-2004 edition of the Cup of Portugal was won by Benfica that defeated FC Porto 2-1 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, Domestic competitions, Cup of Portugal\nBecause both teams in the final had already qualified for the UEFA Champions League, the UEFA Cup spot usually allocated to the winner of the Cup went to CS Mar\u00edtimo, who finished sixth in the SuperLiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, Domestic competitions, SuperCup C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira\nThe 2003-2004 SuperCup C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira was won by FC Porto who defeated UD Leiria in the Est\u00e1dio D. Afonso Henriques, Guimar\u00e3es, in August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, International competitions, UEFA Champions League\nTwo Portuguese teams participated in the 2003-2004 edition of UEFA Champions League: FC Porto and Benfica. FC Porto won their second European trophy in two years, beating Partizan Belgrade, Marseille, Manchester United, Lyon, Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a and AS Monaco on their way. The only team Porto faced and failed to beat was Real Madrid in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 81], "content_span": [82, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176365-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Portuguese football, International competitions, UEFA Cup\nThe Portuguese participants in this edition of the UEFA Cup were: Benfica, Sporting and Uni\u00e3o de Leiria. Benfica entered the first round of the UEFA Cup. They were the most successful Portuguese team in the competition, reaching the fourth round, where they lost to an Italian team, Inter Milan. Prior to this, they beat La Louvi\u00e8re, Molde and Rosenborg. Sporting beat Malm\u00f6 in the first round, but were surprised in the following round by Turkish team Gen\u00e7lerbirligi, who beat Sporting in their own stadium by 3-0. Uni\u00e3o de Leiria entered in the final preliminary round, where they beat Coleraine, but they were knocked out in the first round by Molde (who were subsequently beaten by Benfica in the following round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176366-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Scottish football\nThe 2003\u201304 season was the 107th season of competitive football in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176366-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Scottish football, League Competitions, Scottish Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Scottish Premier League season was won by Celtic with 98 points, 17 points ahead of closest challengers Rangers. Both Rangers and Celtic therefore gained the two UEFA Champions League places and Hearts got the UEFA Europa League place having finished third. Partick Thistle were relegated to the Scottish First Division, this however was decided by a tribunal as at the time Inverness's stadium did not meet the criteria for the SPL, as with Falkirk the previous season, however unlike Falkirk the SPL decided that Inverness were allowed to share a ground with Aberdeen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176367-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Venezuelan football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2003-2004 football season in Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176368-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Welsh football\nThis article lists major events during the 2003\u201304 season in Welsh football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176368-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Welsh football, National team\nWales almost qualified for Euro 2004 in Portugal. They finished 2nd in a group that contained Italy, Serbia-Montenegro and Finland and made the play-offs. The Euro 2004 Qualifying play-offs pitted Wales with Russia. A 0\u20130 draw in a cold November evening in Moscow was followed by a 1\u20130 defeat in Cardiff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176368-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Welsh football, Welsh Cup\nRhyl beat Total Network Solutions 1\u20130 after extra time in the final of the Welsh Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176368-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Welsh football, Welsh League Cup\nRhyl beat Carmarthen Town 4\u20130 in the final of the Welsh League cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176368-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Welsh football, Welsh Premier League\n2003\u201304 saw Rhyl win the Welsh Premier League. TNS were about to win but a last day slip saw Rhyl claim the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176368-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 in Welsh football, Welsh Premier League\nBarry Town entered administration in the summer of 2003 having attained just 3 wins during a disastrous season and were relegated to the Welsh Football League Division One. All of their best players from the 2002\u201303 title winning season left and the amateur players who replaced them finished bottom of the league. The biggest win of the season in Wales was Caernarfon's 8\u20130 defeat of Barry Town on 30 August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176369-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 snooker season\nThe 2003\u201304 snooker season was a series of snooker tournaments played between 13 September 2003 and 20 May 2004. The following table outlines the results for ranking events and the invitational events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176369-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 snooker season\nLG Corporation signed a sponsorship agreement with World Snooker, and the seven world ranking events before the World Championship were branded as the \"LG Electronics Tour\". These tournaments carried conventional ranking points but also had a separate points system, with a \u00a350,000 prize for the player who accumulated the most points during the LG Electronics Tour. Ronnie O'Sullivan was the eventual winner of the cash prize, but both the sponsorship and format would only last for one season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176369-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 snooker season, Official rankings\nThe top 16 of the world rankings, these players automatically played in the final rounds of the world ranking events and were invited for the Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176369-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u201304 snooker season, Points distribution\n2003/2004 Points distribution for world ranking events, all new players received double points:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176370-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Armenian protests\nA series of mass protests were held in Armenia following the 2003 presidential election, led by the former presidential candidate Stepan Demirchyan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176370-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Armenian protests, Protests, April 12, 2004\n2003 Armenian Presidential election opposition candidate Stepan Demirchyan, who was the official runner-up of that election, was defeated by Robert Kocharyan in the second round. Demirchya started a protest demanding authority retirement in the Freedom Square, he later started a rally to Presidential Palace, but police blocked the road from the front of National Assembly, after this protesters announced a sit-in, later police attacked protesters to disperse the sit-in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176371-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Baltimore mayoral election\nThe 2003\u20132004 Baltimore mayoral election saw the reelection of incumbent mayor Martin O'Malley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176371-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Baltimore mayoral election\nIn 1999, Baltimore citizens voted to move mayoral elections to take place in presidential election years, effective with the 2004 elections. However, primary dates in Maryland can only be set by the General Assembly, which refused to move the primary to 2004. As a result, while the primary took place on September 9, 2003; the general election took place 14 months later, on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Martin O'Malley was reelected, but only to a three-year term rather than the usual four-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176371-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Baltimore mayoral election\nIt would be 2012 before the General Assembly finally agreed to move municipal elections to coincide with presidential elections, effective in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176372-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2003\u20132004 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup series was a series of stages where events in men's and women's artistic gymnastics were contested. The series was a two-year long competition culminating at a final event, the World Cup Final in 2004. A number of qualifier stages were held. The top 3 gymnast in each apparatus at the qualifier events would receive medals and prize money. Gymnasts who finished in the top 8 would also receive points that would be added up to a ranking which would qualify individual gymnasts for the biennial World Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176373-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series\nThe 2003\u20132004 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup series was a series of stages where events in rhythmic gymnastics were contested. The series consisted of a two-year long competition, culminating at a final event \u2014 the World Cup Final in 2004. A number of qualifier stages were held. The top 3 gymnasts and groups in each apparatus at the qualifier events would receive medals and prize money. Gymnasts and groups that finished in the top 8 also received points which were added up to a ranking that qualified for the biennial World Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh\nThe 2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh against the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) separatists was launched on May 19, 2003, and lasted nearly one year. It followed a two-week ultimatum to GAM to accept special autonomy under Indonesian rule. It was one of the Indonesian military's largest campaigns since the 1975 invasion of East Timor. It severely disabled the rebel movement, and along with the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake brought the 30-year conflict in Aceh to an end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh, Background\nOn 28 April 2003, the Indonesian government issued an ultimatum to end the fighting and accept special autonomy for Aceh within two weeks. Free Aceh Movement (GAM) leaders based in Sweden refused the ultimatum, but the United States, Japan, and the European Union urged both sides to avoid armed conflict and resume peace talks in Tokyo. On May 16, 2003, the government stated that the offer of autonomy was the final concession it would make to GAM, and the rejection of the ultimatum would lead to military operations against the movement. GAM leaders and negotiators responded to this demand, and stated that its members in Aceh had been arrested while trying to leave for Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh, Military operations\nAfter midnight on May 18, 2003, President Megawati Sukarnoputri gave the 12th Indonesian Military Chief, General Endriartono Sutarto, permission to commence military operations against the separatists. General Sutarto also imposed martial law in Aceh for a period of six months and the Indonesian government subsequently deployed 1,500 soldiers and 12,000 police to the province. This included a parachute landing by 458 paratroopers near Aceh airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh, Military operations\nIn June 2003, the government announced their intention to print a new ID card to distinguish all the people in Aceh from the rebels. NGOs and aid agencies were ordered to stop operations and leave the area and the government decreed that all assistance had to be coordinated through the government in Jakarta and the Indonesian Red Cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh, Military operations\nIn May 2004, martial law in Aceh came to an end and the status of the conflict was downgraded to a civil emergency. Indonesian Coordinating Minister ad interim Hari Sabarno announced the change after a cabinet meeting on May 13, 2004. The government announced that they had made significant progress, and that during the operation thousands of GAM members had been killed, captured and surrendered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh, Military operations\nAlthough martial law had been suspended, the military operations being conducted by the military continued. An estimated 2,000 people were killed during the fighting. According to Indonesian military sources, the majority of victims were soldiers, but international human rights groups and locals, including the government's human rights commission, claim that most of the victims were civilians. Evidence suggests that the military often does not distinguish between combatants, and non-combatants. Investigations also found GAM were responsible for the atrocities that occurred in Aceh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176374-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Indonesian offensive in Aceh, Military operations\nAcehnese refugees in Malaysia have reported widespread abuses in Aceh, which was closed to observers during the military operation. The trial of members of the Indonesian military is considered difficult, and trials that have occurred have only involved low-ranking soldiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176375-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Massachusetts legislature\nThe 183rd Massachusetts General Court, consisting of the Massachusetts Senate and the Massachusetts House of Representatives, met in 2003 and 2004 during the governorship of Mitt Romney. Robert Travaglini served as president of the Senate. Thomas Finneran and then Salvatore DiMasi each served as speaker of the House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176375-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Massachusetts legislature\nNotable legislation included \"one of the toughest smoking bans in the US, covering workplaces, restaurants, and bars across the state (many of which were already smoke-free as a result of local legislation).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176375-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Massachusetts legislature, Images\nMap of the 40 districts of the Massachusetts state senate apportioned in 2001", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176375-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132004 Massachusetts legislature, Images\nMap of the 160 districts of the Massachusetts House of Representatives apportioned in 2001", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation\nIn 2004, West and North Africa experienced their largest infestation of desert locusts in more than 15 years. A number of countries in the fertile northern regions of Africa were affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation, Development\nThe increase in Desert Locust breeding activity was noted in the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Desert Locust Bulletins in the autumn of 2003 when four unrelated outbreaks occurred simultaneously in Mauritania, Mali, Niger and Sudan. Shortly thereafter, unusually heavy rain fell for two days over a large area that extended from Dakar, Senegal to the Atlas Mountains in Morocco. Some areas in Western Sahara received more than 100\u00a0mm of rain whereas they normally receive about 1\u00a0mm of rain in a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0001-0001", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation, Development\nConsequently, ecological conditions remained favourable for at least six months and allowed several successive generations of Desert Locust breeding. In such circumstances, locusts increased very rapidly. By early 2004, the threat materialized as swarms of locusts started to form and move north into important agricultural areas in Morocco and Algeria, inflicting damage to crops. The collective fear, expressed by the FAO and news organizations covering the situation, was the potential destruction of a sizable portion of Africa's food supply if control operations could not be mounted quickly and successfully.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation, Development\nDuring the summer of 2004, large numbers of swarms from Northwest Africa invaded the Sahel in West Africa and quickly moved into crops. By then, the threat of a locust plague emerged, creating one of the most dangerous locust situations since 1989. As the year progressed, the swarms migrated over the continent causing devastation, and in November 2004 appeared in northern Egypt, Jordan and Israel for the first time in 50 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0002-0001", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation, Development\nOne swarm in Morocco between Tarfaya and Tan-Tan was 230\u00a0km long, at least 150 m wide, and contained an estimated 69 billion locusts, which were being used as a food resource by 33 species of birds (Ullman 2006). Swarms also invaded Cape Verde, the Canary Islands, southern Portugal, and Crete. Lack of rain and cold temperatures in the winter breeding area of Northwest Africa slowed down the development of the locusts and allowed the locust control agencies to stop the cycle in early 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation, Development\nNational teams in some 20 countries treated nearly 130,000 square kilometres by air and ground. The costs of fighting this upsurge have been estimated by the FAO to have exceeded US$400 million and harvest losses were valued at up to US$2.5 billion which had disastrous effects on the food security situation in West Africa. However a combination of strict pest control measures and a good harvest allowed Africa to avoid a continent-wide food disaster. According to the FAO, while the overall food output for the affected Sahel region has declined, it is still within the range of five-year averages. Nevertheless, some countries lost significant portions of their crops to the locusts, particularly Mauritania, which lost as much as half of its harvest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176376-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132005 Africa locust infestation, Development\nThe outbreak inspired several works of literature. In March 2007, Andersen Press published Sophie and the Locust Curse, a novel by British children's author Stephen Davies about the devastating impact of the 2004 locust swarm on communities in the Sahel region of Burkina Faso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0000-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals\nThe 2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals were revealed by a large-scale 2009\u20132013 investigation of football betting, bribery and match-fixing (Chinese: \u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u575b\u53cd\u8d4c\u98ce\u66b4; lit. ' Chinese football anti-betting storm'). The scandals were first made public in October 2009. Instead of being led by General Administration of Sport of China or Chinese Football Association like previous investigations, this investigation was led by the Ministry of Public Security. Xie Yalong, Nan Yong and Yang Yimin, who are all former vice presidents of Chinese Football Association, along with Zhang Jianqiang and some other CFA officials were arrested and removed from their posts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0000-0001", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals\nShanghai Shenhua F.C. was stripped of their 2003 Chinese Jia-A League title. Lu Jun, the only Chinese referee in the history of FIFA World Cup, and China national football team players Shen Si, Jiang Jin, Qi Hong, Li Ming, were arrested and sentenced to 5.5 years or 6 years in jail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0001-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Background\nIn the aftermath of the 2001 Chinese football match-fixing scandal, referee Gong Jianping was jailed and died in the prison. Other team managers, referees and officials were not subject to any criminal prosecution. Shandong Luneng F.C., Shanghai Shenhua F.C. and Zhejiang Greentown F.C. were fined 800,000 RMB, Jiangsu Sainty F.C. and Dalian Shide F.C. were fined 500,000 RMB, Qingdao Etsong Hainiu was fined 300,000 RMB. Their club managers were \"seriously warned\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0002-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Background\nIn 2006, Liaoshen Evening News report match-fixing event to the Chinese Football Association. Xie Yalong, Nan Yong and Yang Yimin replied \"the CFA will carefully study the evidence and quickly request judicial intervention. Please report to us again next time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0003-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Shanghai Shenhua vs Shanghai International in 2003\nIt was revealed in 2011 that the referee Lu Jun and CFA official Zhang Jianqiang received bribes totaling 700,000 yuan from Shanghai Shenhua before this Shanghai derby match between the top two teams. In 2013, Shanghai Shenhua was stripped of its 2003 title. Lu Jun, once nicknamed \"Golden Whistle\" (\u91d1\u54e8), was sentenced to 5.5 years in prison for fixing the results of the Shanghai derby and six other league matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 126], "content_span": [127, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0004-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Shanghai International vs Tianjin TEDA in 2003\nThe CFA stipulated that the result of \"the 2002 Jia-A League rank * 0.5 + the 2003 Jia-A League rank\" will be used to determine the teams participating the newly created Chinese Super League in 2004. In the final round of the 2003 Jia-A League, Chongqing Lifan would have to lose to Qingdao Etsong Hainiu and hope Shanghai International, a title hopeful, could beat (or tie with) Tianjin TEDA. In the match, Chongqing's supporters cheered for the guest team, Qingdao, and Chongqing Lifan successfully lost to Qingdao Etsong Hainiu 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 122], "content_span": [123, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0004-0001", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Shanghai International vs Tianjin TEDA in 2003\nHowever, Shanghai International lost to Tianjin TEDA in a 1\u20132 blowout. Tianjin TEDA gained the last seat for the inaugural Chinese Super League and Chongqing Lifan was relegated (although Chongqing was eventually able to qualify for the 2004 CSL by merging with Yunnan Hongta). Shanghai International finished one point behind the champions Shanghai Shenhua (in 2013, Shenhua were stripped of the title for bribing Lu Jun in the 9 November derby match).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 122], "content_span": [123, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0005-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Shanghai International vs Tianjin TEDA in 2003\nIn 2012, it was found that in 2003, the then vice president of the Chinese Football Association, Nan Yong, did not want Chongqing Lifan to \"lose and qualify\" and make the CFA rules a laughing stock. With Nan Yong's help, Tianjin TEDA's club manager, Zhang Yifeng, was able to contact Shanghai International and Chinese national football team player Shen Si, who then contacted club and national teammates Jiang Jin, Qi Hong and Li Ming. After Shanghai International lost to Tianjin TEDA, the four players received 8 million yuan in total. Shen Si was sentenced to six years in prison, the other three were sentenced to five years and six months in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 122], "content_span": [123, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0006-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Guangzhou GPC vs Shanxi Luhu in 2006\nGuangzhou GPC's team leader Yang Xu bribed Wang Pu, the general manager of Shanxi Luhu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0007-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Guangzhou GPC vs Zhejiang Greentown in 2006\nWith the help of the former CFA League Department official Fan Guangming, and retired Shandong Luneng player Leng Bo and Xing Rui, Guangzhou GPC bribed the players of Zhejiang Greentown, Shen Liuxi and Hu Minghua, with a total amount of 1.5 million yuan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 119], "content_span": [120, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0008-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, Qingdao Hailifeng vs Chengdu Sheffield United in 2007\nChengdu Sheffield United general manager Xu Hongtao and deputy general manager You Ke offered Qingdao Hailifeng with 300,000 yuan and free winter training for a month at Chengdu's base, in exchange with Chengdu's victory of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 129], "content_span": [130, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0009-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Notable affected matches, \"Chip Shot Gate\" of Qingdao Hailifeng in 2009\nIn a 2009 match against the bottom-of-the-league Sichuan F.C., Qingdao Hailifeng were leading 3\u20130 with 20 minutes left. But having bet before the match that the total number of goals would be at least four, Qingdao Hailifeng's chairman, Du Yunqi, asked the team for another goal into either net. Due to Sichuan's defensive effort, Qingdao was unable to score another goal. In the last minutes, Qingdao players tried three chip shots into their own goal. However, due to the goalkeeper Mou Pengfei's two saves on his teammates' shots and with the third attempt going wide, the match ended 3\u20130. The match was known as \"Chip Shot Gate (\u540a\u5c04\u95e8)\" in China. In 2010, CFA revoked Qingdao Helifeng's league registration. In 2012, Du Yunqi was sentenced to seven years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 121], "content_span": [122, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0010-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Punishment, Clubs\nOn February 21, 2010, the CFA Disciplinary Committee made preliminary punishment decisions for clubs identified by the Ministry of Public Security Gambling Task Force as being involved in match-fixing cases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176377-0011-0000", "contents": "2003\u20132009 Chinese football match-fixing scandals, Punishment, Clubs\nOn February 18, 2013, the CFA Disciplinary Committee again announced its decision to punish the clubs involved in the match-fixing cases:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176378-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\n2004 (MMIV) was a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2004th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 4th year of the 3rd\u00a0millennium, the 4th year of the 21st\u00a0century, and the 5th year of the 2000s decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176378-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\n2004 was designated as an International Year of Rice (by the United Nations) and the International Year to Commemorate the Struggle Against Slavery and its Abolition (by UNESCO).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176379-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1. deild, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and Havnar B\u00f3ltfelag won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176379-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 1. deild, Results\nThe schedule consisted of a total of 18 games. Each team played two games against every opponent in no particular order. One of the games was at home and one was away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 22], "content_span": [23, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176380-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1. deild karla\nThe 2004 season of 1. deild karla was the 50th season of second-tier football in Iceland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176381-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 10,000 Lakes Festival\nThe 2004 10,000 Lakes Festival was held July 1 through July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176382-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 Guineas\nThe 2004 1000 Guineas Stakes was a horse race held at Newmarket Racecourse on Sunday 2 May 2004. It was the 191st running of the 1000 Guineas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176382-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 Guineas\nThe winner was Guy Innes-Ker, 10th Duke of Roxburghe's Attraction, a bay filly trained by Mark Johnston at Middleham, North Yorkshire and ridden by Kevin Darley. Attraction's victory was the first in the race for her owner, trainer and jockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176382-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 Guineas, The contenders\nThe race attracted a field of sixteen runners, fifteen trained in the United Kingdom and one in Ireland: there were no challengers from continental Europe. The favourite was the Cheveley Park Stud's Red Bloom, the winner of the Group One Fillies' Mile at Ascot. The second choice in the betting was Attraction, who had been named European Champion Two-year old Filly in 2003 when she had won the Queen Mary Stakes and the Cherry Hinton Stakes but who had been off the racecourse for almost ten months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176382-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 1000 Guineas, The contenders\nThe Irish challenger was the Aidan O'Brien-trained Necklace, the winner of the Moyglare Stud Stakes and the Debutante Stakes. The Godolphin Racing stable was represented by Carry On Katie, the winner of the Cheveley Park Stakes and the Lowther Stakes as well as the Rockfel Stakes winner Cairns and the Japanese-bred Sundrop. The other contenders included Hathrah (Masaka Stakes), Silca's Gift (Nell Gwyn Stakes) and Majestic Desert (Fred Darling Stakes). Red Bloom headed the betting at odds of 4/1 ahead of Attraction (11/2) and Hathrah (6/1) with Secret Charm and Carry On Katie on 7/1 and Necklace on 8/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176382-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 Guineas, The race\nShortly after the start, most of the fillies moved to the far side of the wide Newmarket straight (the right side of the course from the jockey's point of view), with only Sundrop and the 33/1 outsider Spotlight racing down the centre. Attraction took the lead on the far side and set the pace with Hathrah, Carry On Katie, Majestic Desert, Cairns and Necklace close behind. A furlong from the finish, Attraction began to come under pressure as Red Bloom moved forward and Secret Charm, who had struggled to obtained a clear run also began to make progress. Attraction stayed on \"gamely\" in the closing stages to win by half a length from Sundrop with Hathrah a further half a length away in third place. Red Bloom took third ahead of Secret Charm and Carry On Katie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176382-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 Guineas, The race\nAfter the race Attraction's trainer Mark Johnston said: \"She doesn't have the most perfect physical confirmation in the world, but believe me, there are a lot worse horses than her. She is a champion two-year-old, the best in Europe, and now she is a Classic winner. She didn't just win that, she galloped and stayed all the way to the line. I am thrilled to see it happen. Everybody put doubts in my mind about her stamina, but really I never doubted her\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176383-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Monza\nThe 2004 1000\u00a0km of Monza was the first round of the 2004 Le Mans Series season, held at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza, Italy. It was run on May 9, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176383-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Monza\nAlthough proceeded by the 2003 1000km of Le Mans exhibition event, the 1000\u00a0km of Monza was the first official race of the new Le Mans Endurance Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176383-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Monza, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176384-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of N\u00fcrburgring\nThe 2004 1000\u00a0km of N\u00fcrburgring was the second round of the 2004 Le Mans Series season, held at the N\u00fcrburgring, Germany. It was run on July 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176384-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of N\u00fcrburgring, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176384-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of N\u00fcrburgring, Official results\n\u2020\u00a0\u2013 #36 Gerard Welter was disqualified in post-race inspection for having an illegal airbox fitted to the car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176385-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Silverstone\nThe 2004 1000\u00a0km of Silverstone was the third round of the 2004 Le Mans Series season, held at the Silverstone Circuit, United Kingdom. It was run on August 13, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176385-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Silverstone, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176385-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Silverstone, Official results\n\u2020 - #74 RSR Racing was not allowed to qualify due to failing technical scrutineering.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176386-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Spa\nThe 2004 1000\u00a0km of Spa was the fourth and final round of the 2004 Le Mans Series season, held at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium. It was run on September 12, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176386-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 1000 km of Spa, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176387-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 12 Hours of Sebring\nThe 2004 Mobil 1 12 Hours of Sebring was the 52nd running of this auto racing event, and took place on March 20, 2004. This was also the opening race of the 2004 American Le Mans Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176387-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 12 Hours of Sebring, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176388-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 2. deild karla\nThe 2004 season of 2. deild karla was the 39th season of third-tier football in Iceland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176389-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 2. divisjon\nThe 2004 2. divisjon season was the third highest football (soccer) league for men in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176389-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 2. divisjon\n26 games were played in 4 groups, with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws. T\u00f8nsberg, Follo, L\u00f8v-Ham and Alta were promoted to the First Division. Number twelve, thirteen and fourteen were relegated to the 3. divisjon. The winning teams from each of the 24 groups in the 3. divisjon each faced a winning team from another group in a playoff match, resulting in 12 playoff winners which were promoted to the 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176390-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Daytona\nThe 2004 Rolex 24 at Daytona was a Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series 24-hour endurance sports car race held on January 31\u2013February 1, 2004 at the Daytona International Speedway road course. The race served as the first round of the 2004 Rolex Sports Car Series. The race was won by the No. 54 Doran JE4-Pontiac entered by Bell Motorsports and driven by Terry Borcheller, Forest Barber, Andy Pilgrim, and Christian Fittipaldi, marking the first time that the Daytona Prototype class won the race overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176390-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Daytona\nThe GT class was won by the No. 44 Porsche 996 GT3-RS entered by Orbit Racing and driven by Mike Fitzgerald, Robin Liddell, Johnny Mowlem, Joe Policastro, and Joe Policastro Jr. The SGS class was won by the No. 93 Porsche 996 GT3 Cup entered by Doncaster Racing and driven by Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Dumoulin, Marc Lieb, Robert Julien, and Greg Pootmans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe 72nd 24 Hours of Le Mans (French: 72e 24 Heures du Mans) was an 24 hour automobile endurance race for Le Mans Prototype and Grand Touring cars held from 12 to 13 June at the Circuit de la Sarthe close to Le Mans, France. It was the 72nd edition of the 24 Hour race, as organised by the automotive group, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) since 1923. Unlike other events, it was not a part of any endurance motor racing championship. A test day was held eight weeks prior to the race on 25 April. Approximately 200,000 people attended the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe Audi Sport UK Team Veloqx R8 of Jamie Davies, Johnny Herbert and Guy Smith started from pole position after Herbert set the overall fastest lap time in the fourth qualifying session. The car led for much of the first 18 hours until a rear suspension problem created handling difficulties and was corrected in the garage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans\nIt gave the lead to the Audi Sport Japan Team Goh car of Seiji Ara, Rinaldo Capello and Tom Kristensen and although it caught fire during a pit stop, Ara held off the faster Herbert for the remainder of the race to win by 41.354 seconds. It was Ara's first Le Mans win, Capello's second and Kristensen's sixth. Kristensen equalled Jacky Ickx's all-time record of six overall victories and was the first driver to win the 24-hour race five times in a row. This was the fourth overall victory for Audi since its first in the 2000 edition. The Audi Sport UK Team Veloqx car finished in second and the Champion Racing trio of JJ Lehto, Emanuele Pirro and Marco Werner recovered from a crash in the second hour to complete the overall podium finishers in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) category was won by the Intersport Racing Lola B2K/40 car of William Bennie, Clint Field and Rick Sutherland, eight laps ahead of the sole other finisher in the class, the Rachel Welter WR LM2001 vehicle of Yojiro Terada, Patrice Roussel and Olivier Porta. A Chevrolet Corvette C5-R driven by Olivier Beretta, Oliver Gavin and Jan Magnussen won the Le Mans Grand Touring Sport (LMGTS) class and the sister car of Ron Fellows, Max Papis and Johnny O'Connell was eleven laps behind in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans\nProdrive's Ferrari 550-GTS Maranello of Colin McRae, Rickard Rydell and Darren Turner completed the category podium in third position. Porsches took the first six places in the Le Mans Grand Touring (LMGT) category with the White Lighting Racing Porsche 911 GT3-RS of J\u00f6rg Bergmeister, Patrick Long and Sascha Maassen taking the class win for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background and regulation changes\nThe 2004 24 Hours of Le Mans was the 72nd edition of the race and took place on the 8.482\u00a0mi (13.650\u00a0km) Circuit de la Sarthe road racing track close to Le Mans, France from 12 to 13 June. The automotive journalist Charles Faroux proposed the race to Georges Durand, the president of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO), and the industrialist Emile Coquile to test vehicle reliability and fuel-efficiency, which was first held in 1923. It is considered one of the world's most prestigious motor races and is part of the Triple Crown of Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background and regulation changes\nIn March 2003, the ACO announced changes to the Le Mans Prototype (LMP) classes that first took effect from the 2004 race. The former Le Mans Grand Touring Prototype and Le Mans Prototype 900 (LMP900) categories were merged and renamed Le Mans Prototype 1 (LMP1) and was limited solely to manufacturers. Since the Le Mans Prototype 675 (LMP675) category had no car capable of challenging for the overall victory, the ACO designated it a lower class and renamed it Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background and regulation changes\nLMP900 and LMP675 cars built in compliance with the ACO technical regulations for the LMP and LMGTP categories could enter until 31 December 2005. Skid blocks were made 10\u00a0mm (0.39\u00a0in) thicker and the air restrictor size was reduced by five per cent. Teams in LMP1 and LMP2 could choose between an open or a closed cockpit. The maximum weight of LMP2 vehicles was established at 750\u00a0kg (1,650\u00a0lb) and 900\u00a0kg (2,000\u00a0lb) for LMP1 cars. Engine displacement for normally aspirated engines set at 3,400\u00a0cc (210\u00a0cu\u00a0in), turbocharged engines were limited to 2,000\u00a0cc (120\u00a0cu\u00a0in) and engine displacement for diesel power units was restricted to 5,500\u00a0cc (340\u00a0cu\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background and regulation changes\nAfter a series of airborne accidents in sports car racing, such as an accident involving a Porsche 911 GT1 at the 1998 Petit Le Mans and the Mercedes-Benz CLR at the 1999 Le Mans race, the ACO altered the bottom of the LMP1 and LMP2 cars to lower the amount of downforce produced outside of their wheelbase and a reduction in rear overhang coupled with an increase in front overhang for less pitch sensitivity to minimise the possibility of such a crash occurring. The rear wing was moved forward and shortened from 400\u00a0mm (40\u00a0cm) to 300\u00a0mm (30\u00a0cm). A 20\u00a0mm (2.0\u00a0cm) plank was added to the underside of all LMP cars to force an increase in ride height and reduce the effectiveness of underfloor aerodynamics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries\nThe ACO received 77 applications (40 for the LMP classes and 37 for the Grand Touring (GT) categories) by the deadline for entries on 11 February 2004. It granted 50 invitations to the 24 Hours of Le Mans and entries were divided between the LMP1, LMP2, Le Mans Grand Touring Sports (LMGTS) and Le Mans Grand Touring (LMGT) categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nAutomatic entries were earned by teams which won their class in the 2003 24 Hours of Le Mans. Teams which won Le Mans-based series and events such as the 2003 Petit Le Mans, the 2003 1000 km of Le Mans and the 2003 American Le Mans Series (ALMS) were also invited. Some second-place finishers were also granted automatic entries in certain series and races. Additionally, entries were also granted for the winners and runners-up in the GT and N-GT categories of the 2003 FIA GT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nHad the entry of the 2003 Petit Le Mans category winner been the same as the 2003 American Le Mans Series class champion, the second automatic entry would have been awarded to another team in that category under an agreement with the ACO and the ALMS. As entries were pre-selected to teams, teams were not allowed to change their cars from the previous year to the next. They were permitted to change category provided that they did not change the make of car and the ACO granted official permission for the switch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nOn 20 November 2003, the ACO published its initial list of automatic invitations. Team Bentley, Infineon Team Joest, Pescarolo Sport (after changing engine suppliers from Peugeot to Judd), RN Motorsport, Dyson Racing and Alex Job Racing did not accept their automatic entries; their places were taken by Champion Racing, Audi Sport Japan Team Goh and Lister Racing due to its performance in the GT category during the 2003 FIA GT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nThe seven-member selection committee of the ACO announced the full 50-car entry list for Le Mans, plus six reserves on 25 March 2004. Following the publication of entries, several teams withdrew their entries. Arena Motorsport withdrew its Dome S101 car, promoting the No. 4 Taurus Sports Racing Lola B2K/10-Judd vehicle. Thierry Perrier's Porsche 911 GT3-RS was allowed to race after one of pre-selected BMS Scuderia Italia Ferrari 550-GTS Maranello's was withdrawn, because the team did not have enough time to make the car compliant with ACO regulations and it wanted to focus on the 2004 FIA GT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nLater, a Ferrari 360 Modena GTC fielded by Risi Competizione was replaced by XL Racing's Ferrari in the list of entries. Konrad Motorsport and Welter Racing were subsequently granted the fourth and fifth reserve entries and XL Racing withdrew its Ferrari. A second Racing for Holland Dome car was promoted to give the team two LMP1 entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nOn 21 April, the Car Racing team confirmed that its No. 67 Ferrari 550 was withdrawn due to financial problems from a lack of sponsorship and its place in the LMGT category was taken by a second Chamberlain-Synergy Motorsport-entered TVR Tuscan 400R. Force One Racing pulled its Pagani Zonda from the entry list after a heavy crash at the ACI Vallelunga Circuit in Italy halted the car's development. This promoted Seikel Motorsport's No. 84 Porsche into the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nThe No. 36 Gerard Welter car replaced the Spinnaker Clan Des Team car when the latter team withdrew on 1 June due to a lack of preparation and testing. Courage Comp\u00e9tition and its satellite operation Epsilon Sport were required by officials to withdraw one C65 chassis per team because an engine supply agreement with Mecachrome was terminated and both outfits sourced replacement engines from JPX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nA mandatory pre-Le Mans test day split into two daytime sessions of four hours each was held at the circuit on 25 April, involving all 50 entries and two of the six reserve cars. Audi set the pace of the day with a 3 minutes, 32.613 seconds lap from Allan McNish's No. 8 Audi Sport UK Team Veloqx R8 with six minutes to go, followed by Johnny Herbert's No. 88 Audi in second. Champion Racing was third with a lap from Marco Werner and Tom Kristensen was fourth for Team Goh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nThe fastest two non-Audis were the fifth-placed David Brabham in the No. 22 Zytek 04S car and Hiroki Kato's No. 9 Kondo Racing Dome S101 vehicle in sixth position. Max Papis led the LMGTS class in the No. 63 Corvette Racing C5-R with a lap of 3 minutes, 49.982 seconds set in the final minutes of the second session ahead of the sister No. 63 Corvette of Oliver Gavin and the No. 69 Larbre Comp\u00e9tition Ferrari of Christophe Bouchut. Rounding out the top five in the category were the Prodrive Ferrari cars of Tom\u00e1\u0161 Enge and Rickard Rydell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0011-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nJ\u00f6rg Bergmeister's No. 90 White Lightning Porsche 911 GT3-RSR led LMGT with a 4 minutes, 5.975 seconds lap, followed by Marc Lieb's No. 87 Orbit Racing car, which was sidelined for 2+1\u20442 hours with a broken steering rack after a crash against a guardrail at Tertre Rouge corner. A seal failure that mixed oil and diesel in the Taurus Lola and leaked oil on the Mulsanne Straight and a crash for No\u00ebl del Bello Racing's entry at Mulsanne Corner led to further stoppages during testing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nEight hours of qualifying divided into four two-hour sessions were available to all the entrants on 9 and 10 June. During the sessions, all entrants were required to set a time within 110 per cent of the fastest lap established by the fastest vehicle in each of the four categories to qualify for the race. Audi led the time sheets early on and Herbert's No. 88 car recorded a fastest lap of 3 minutes, 34.907 seconds on the final lap of the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nKristensen's Team Goh Audi was more than two seconds slower in second and he was followed by McNish in the No. 8 car in third position. Jan Lammers' Racing for Holland Dome car was the fastest non-Audi in fourth place. The No. 2 Champion Audi of JJ Lehto took fifth, Soheil Ayari's No. 18 Pescarolo C60 car took sixth and Brabham put the No. 22 Zytek 04S vehicle in seventh. Pierre Kaffer damaged the No. 8 Audi Sport UK car after an error put him off the track at the first Mulsanne Chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nWith a lap of 3 minutes, 46.020 seconds, Jean-Marc Gounon's No. 31 Courage C65 vehicle led in LMP2, more than eleven seconds ahead of its sister No. 35 Epsilon Sport car and the No. 24 Rachel Welter WR LM2001 entry. The No. 64 Corvette C5-R of Olivier Beretta set the early pace in LMGTS and his co-driver Gavin bettered his effort to establish the class' best lap at 3 minutes, 54.359 seconds. Peter Kox for Prodrive was the fastest Ferrari in second and Ron Fellows' No. 63 Corvette followed in third place. The second Prodrive Ferrari was fourth courtesy of a lap from rally driver Colin McRae. In LMGT, Bergmeister's No. 90 White Lightning Porsche led the class with a lap of 4 minutes, 9.679 seconds, ahead of St\u00e9phane Daoudi in the No. 70 JMB Racing Ferrari 360 Modena GTC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nTeams used the opening minutes of the second qualifying session to fine tune their cars and record their fastest lap times in lower ambient and track temperatures. Herbert could not improve the No. 88 Audi Sport UK R8's best lap due to a minor gear selection fault and slower traffic. McNish's sister No. 8 car bettered it with a time of 3 minutes, 34.683 seconds. No other driver improved their times over the rest of the session, enabling the No. 8 Audi to take provisional pole position from the No. 88 vehicle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nKristensen's Team Goh car fell to third after damaging its front splitter in a collision with a Chevrolet Corvette C5-R at Arnage corner, as Werner moved Champion's entry to fourth and complete an Audi sweep of the first four positions. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais drove the No. 17 Pescarolo C60 car to fifth despite a fuel pressure problem and a minor crash by co-driver Nicolas Minassian. The No. 15 Racing for Holland Dome car improved to sixth and the No. 6 Rollcentre Racing Dallara SP1 vehicle took seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0013-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nCourage No. 31 C65's lap time in LMP2 moved the car to eleventh overall, ahead of the clutch-stricken No. 15 Racing for Holland car. It remained eleven seconds in front of the Epsilon Sport team. Corvette Racing continued to lead in LMGTS with Gavin's No. 64 C5-R improving its best lap to a 3 minutes, 52.158 seconds. He was more than two seconds quicker than Fellows' No. 63 entry and a further second faster than Enge's No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari, who collided with a barrier at Indianapolis corner. Bergmesiter improved the No. 90 White Lighting Porsche's best lap in LMGT to a 4 minutes, 9.679 seconds and went three seconds ahead of the JMB Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nRain showers on 10 June removed rubber laid on the track by cars and lap times in the third session were expect were expected to be slower than before. However, ambient and track temperatures increased, allowing drivers to better their laps from the previous day. McNish went fastest overall before his Audi Sport UK teammate Herbert recorded the fastest lap at 3 minutes, 33.024 seconds on a new gurney flap with five minutes to go. Brabham in the No. 22 Zytek 04S car moved from provisional seventh to third by getting his first clear lap of the weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nRinaldo Capello made a minor improvement to the Team Goh Audi's quickest lap though the team fell to fourth and the Champion car to fifth. Bourdais set a lap which kept the No. 17 Pescarolo C60 vehicle in sixth and Katoh was the fastest of the Dome S101 cars in seventh. LMP2 continued to be paced by Gounon's No. 31 Courage C65 car and the Paul Belmondo Racing team took second place in the category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nIn LMGTS, Rydell's No. 65 Prodrive Ferrari moved to the front of the category and he maintained it until Gavin's lap of 3 minutes, 49.750 in the No. 64 Corvette reset the class lap record ten minutes later. The second Corvette driven by Johnny O'Connell was third and the other Prodrive Ferrari of Kox dropped to fourth. The LMGT category saw Sascha Maassen's No. 90 White Lightning Porsche improve its lap to a 4 minutes, 7.394 seconds. Mike Rockenfeller's No. 87 Orbit car came within less than two seconds behind in second and St\u00e9phane Ortelli's No. 85 Freisinger Motorsport entry finished the session in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nIn the final qualifying session, Herbert in the No. 88 Audi set a new fastest time of 3 minutes, 32.838 seconds eight minutes in. He held the top of the time charts to take his first pole position at Le Mans and the fourth of his motor racing career. McNish improved the No. 8 Audi's time to join Herbert on the grid's front row after missing much of the session due to a lack of power caused by a failed fuel injector that necessitated an engine change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nBrabham could not improve on his lap from the third session and began from third. Kristensen bettered Team Goh Audi's best time but remained in fourth, as Bourdais took fifth in the No. 17 Pescarolo C60 car. Werner's Champion Audi went faster for sixth after a front shock absorber repair, and Katoh took seventh. Gounon earned the Courage team pole position in the LMP2 category by improving the No. 31 car's best lap to a 3 minutes, 41.126 seconds and going 12th-fastest overall. The Paul Belmondo Racing team was ten seconds slower for second in its class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0015-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nAfter the No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari was damaged in an accident in the Porsche Curves, Enge took the top spot from Gavin's No. 64 Corvette in LMGTS with a 3 minutes, 49.438 seconds lap with ten minutes to go in the session. An improvement by O'Connell's No. 63 Corvette qualified it in third. White Lighting's third session lap secured the team the LMGT category pole position, with Jaime Melo's JMB Ferrari and Rockenfeller's Orbit Porsche second and third in class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying, Qualifying results\nPole position winners in each class are indicated in bold. The fastest time set by each entry is denoted in gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nThe drivers took to the track at 09:00 Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00) for a 45-minute warm-up session in clear weather. Teams used the session as a final opportunity to check the setup and reliability of their cars. Lehto's No. 2 Champion Audi set the fastest time with a 3 minutes, 36.078 seconds. The two Audi Sport UK R8s were second and third with the No. 8 narrowly ahead of the No. 88. Bourdais's No. 17 Pescarolo C60 car was fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nThe Team Goh Audi placed fifth, Lammers' Racing for Holland Dome car and the No. 22 Zytek 04S vehicle were sixth and seventh. The fastest LMP2 lap was recorded by Intersport Racing's Lola car at 4 minutes, 5.032 seconds. The No. 63 Corvette was the quickest vehicle in the LMGTS category and JMB's No. 70 Ferrari led in LMGT. Although the session passed without a major incident, Bourdais' engine cover came off his Pescarolo C60 car, and several drivers ran into the gravel traps beside the track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nThe weather at the start was overcast with an air temperature of 25\u00a0\u00b0C (77\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 28\u00a0\u00b0C (82\u00a0\u00b0F). There were 200,000 people in attendance. The French tricolour was waved by Fran\u00e7ois Fillon, the Minister of National Education, Higher Education and Research, at 16:00 local time to start the race, led by the starting pole sitter Jamie Davies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nA total of 48 cars planned to start but the No. 10 Lola B2K/10 and the No. 61 Barron Connor Racing Ferrari 575-GTC began from the pit lane due to a change of clutch and engine, respectively. The No. 14 Team Nasamax DM139 was extricated from the track too late after a fuel consumption test but the car joined the grid. Davies held off a challenge from his teammate McNish into the Dunlop Curve to lead the opening laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0018-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nThe other two Audis of Lehto and Capello and Lammers' Racing for Holland Dome entry passed Andy Wallace's Zytek car to demote it from third to sixth. The top five cars in LMGTS were nose-to-tail with Kox leading and a throttle sensor problem for Lammers on the Mulsanne Straight on lap four dropped him to 24th. Capello spun into a gravel trap at the Dunlop Curves four laps later and he rejoined behind Lammers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0018-0003", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nBefore the first hour ended a change of electronic control unit for Capello's Team Goh Audi dropped him off the lead lap as Gavin's Corvette took the lead of LMGTS. His teammate Fellows crashed against a tyre barrier at Arnage corner and was forced to enter the pit lane. Repairs to the front of the No. 63 car lost it five laps and O'Connell relieved Fellows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nOn 1 hour and 52 minutes, McNish and Lehto's cars lost control when they drove onto a patch of oil laid on the track at the entrance to the Porsche Curves, spun across a gravel trap and crashed into a tyre barrier in unison, temporarily knocking McNish unconscious. Both cars sustained heavy damage and recovery from trackside equipment allowed McNish and Lehto to return to the garage for extensive repairs. Soon after vacating the No. 8 car in the garage McNish collapsed and two doctors examined him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nHe was taken to the circuit's medical centre suffering from a sore knee and concussion. Doctors ruled him unfit for the rest of the event. The safety cars were deployed to slow the race as marshals worked to clear debris from the track. As the safety cars were recalled Brabham's Zytek vehicle sustained bodywork damage from picking up a puncture and John Field crashed the No. 27 Intersport Lola car at the second Mulsanne Chicane. Later in the second hour, the Champion and Team Goh Audi entries returned to the track outside of the top 40 overall positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0019-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nRyo Michigami's No. 9 Kondo Dome vehicle had a transmission failure on the final third of the lap and he drove to the garage for repairs. He fell to fifth, behind the No. 18 Pescarolo C60 car of \u00c9rik Comas and Katsutomo Kaneishi's No. 15 Racing for Holland car. The attrition rate promoted Sam Hancock's No. 31 Courage C65 car to sixth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nAt the front of the field, Smith's No. 88 Audi R8 led the Team Goh entry of Seiji Ara by one lap. Enge set the fastest lap in LMGTS to a 3 minutes, 53.327 seconds to be 17 seconds behind the class-leading No. 64 Corvette of Jan Magnussen. Lammers' Racing for Holland Dome vehicle overtook Beno\u00eet Tr\u00e9luyer's No 17 Pescarolo C60 car for third overall until a fuel pump failed and needed replacing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nHancock's No. 31 Courage C65 car ceded the lead in LMP2 to the sister Epsilon Sport entry, after a faulty rear gearbox selection mechanism required attention from mechanics. Repairs took 20 minutes and dropped the car down the race order. Not long after Robert Hearn lost control of Freisinger's No. 86 Porsche, and damaged the rear of his car against the inside barrier at the exit to the Karting Esses. Hearn was unable to get the Porsche moving again and retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0020-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start\nAfter relieving Smith, Herbert responded to Ara's faster pace, stabilising the gap at the front of the field, which increased after Ara ran into a gravel trap on the Mulsanne Straight. McRae's No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari was second in LMGTS until he spun at a Mulsanne Chicane after moving onto a dirty section of track to allow a faster LMP car past. His clutch began to slip afterward and Prodrive changed the device; the resulting pit stop dropped McRae eight laps behind Gavin's LMGTS leading Corvette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAs night fell, the No. 17 Pescarolo C60 car was driven into the team's garage with a broken alternator belt. Repairs took 14 minutes and elevated the No. 22 Zytek car of Hayanari Shimoda back into the top ten. Fellows had a rear-left puncture on a crest on the Mulsanne Straight that threw the No. 63 Corvette into a barrier. The car sustained heavy damage to its rear and left-hand corner. Paul Belmondo crashed the No. 37 Courage C65 car when his vision became obscured by a thick dust cloud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe car sustained a puncture in its tub's front-right hand section and was retired in the garage. The accident led to a second brief safety car intervention. As the safety car period ended Darren Turner spun the No. 65 Prodrive Ferrari into a gravel trap at the Dunlop Chicane and Chris Dyson ran the No. 15 Racing for Holland Dome into a gravel trap, requiring him to make a pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0021-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAt midnight, the two lead Audi cars were separated by a lap and Lehto drew closer to the leader of the LMGTS class, the No. 64 Corvette in fifth overall. Maassen slid the No. 90 White Lightning Porsche on oil in the Porsche Curves; he still led in the LMGT category. Lehto overtook Beretta to be ahead of all the LMGTS entries and bring the number of Audis in the top five overall positions to three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAfter Davies' No. 88 Audi served a stop-and-go penalty for passing under yellow flag conditions, he and Magnussen collided with one another at the Ford Chicane and sending the No. 64 Corvette softly into a trackside tyre wall. Davies and Magnussen were able to get their cars back to the pit lane for repairs. The incident gave the No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari of Alain Menu the lead of LMGTS and the gap between Davies and Kristensen was reduced to less than one lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari was later forced to enter the pit lane with a suspected misfire though it was later discovered that a section of rubber was lodged inside an air restrictor. Menu's Ferrari spent seven minutes undergoing repairs; it rejoined the race with his lead in the LMGTS category over the No. 64 Corvette lowered from four to 2+1\u20442 laps and the Kondo Dome moved ahead of him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0022-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe No. 90 White Lightning Porsche continued to lead the LMGT class but in the eleventh hour, the car ceded the lead it had held for the majority of the race when Bergmeister drove into the pit lane to replace a broken shifter linkage cable on its sequential gearbox and underwent a change of brakes. Patrick Long relieved Bergmeister and returned to the track in second, three laps behind Ralf Kelleners' No. 85 Freisinger Porsche. The No. 32 Intersport Lola car of William Binnie was required to enter the pit lane with a broken right-rear halfshaft but the car rejoined the circuit more than half an hour later without losing the lead in LMP2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAs the race approached its halfway point, the No. 22 Zytek car began leaking oil across the circuit at the Porsche Curves due to a possible broken chunk of bodywork hitting an oil union as the engine compartment caught fire from a lack of oil pressure. Brabham drove the car into the pit lane with flames erupting from its compartment bay and it was retired as the safety cars were dispatched for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nDuring the safety car period, Kristensen brought the Team Goh Audi into the pit lane to rectify a misfire he had between the past two hours and the Barron Connor No. 61 Ferrari experienced a left-front brake disc fire that necessitated the car's retirement after mechanics were unable to extinguish the fire and a change of uprights on its suspension system failed to work. In the 12th hour, Gavin missed the braking point for the first Mulsanne Chicane and damaged the front of the No. 64 Corvette.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0023-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nA 15-minute pit stop dropped the Corvette six laps behind Kox's LMGTS-leading No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari and to 11th overall. Not long after, Turner's No. 65 Prodrive Ferrari was affected by gear selection problems and the car spent most of the past hour in the garage. The car fell to fifth in LMGTS. At the front of the field the safety cars separated the field with the race-leading Audi Sport UK R8 of Herbert one lap ahead of Ara's Team Goh R8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn the early morning, Pirro's Champion Audi was fifth but fell behind Martin Short's No. 6 Rollcentre Dallara SP1 car due to an eight-minute change of brake disc. The No. 17 Pescarolo vehicle passed Enge for eighth overall. Intersport had an anxious moment when Clint Field picked up a right-rear puncture that caused the No. 31 Lola to pirouette leaving the Ford Curves before the entry to the pit lane. He was able to return to the pit lane for a replacement wheel and the Lola retained the LMP2 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nBefore the conclusion of the 15th hour, Short's No. 6 Dallara was hit from behind by Bourdais' No. 17 Pescarolo entry while he was lapping the car after the Dunlop Curve and was beached in a gravel trap. Trackside equipment extricated Short from the gravel and he continued in fourth position. The No. 88 Audi Sport UK R8 of Davies returned to the garage to correct an handling imbalance caused by a seized rear suspension pushrod bearing that took seven minutes to rectify, and promoted the Team Goh car of Capello to the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0024-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nAfter ceding fourth to the Champion Audi, the No. 6 Dallara car driven by Short experienced a left-rear suspension failure in the Karting Esses. The car spun through 360 degrees and crashed heavily broadside into a tyre barrier at high speed. Short was unhurt though the damage to the car necessitated its retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nAt this point, Davies set the race's fastest lap at 3 minutes and 34.264 seconds to lower Capello's lead. Comas drove the No. 17 Pescarolo car into the pit lane for repairs to its engine and he remained in third position. Pirro in fourth ran straight at the Mulsanne Corner and beached the Champion Audi R8 in a gravel trap. He recovered with assistance from marshals and made a pit stop for new tyres and Lehto relieved him. Soon after, the race-leading Capello locked his tyres and ran across the second Mulsanne Chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nHe drove the Team Goh Audi into the pit lane because he was fearful of a heavily flat spotted tyre disintegrating and Kristensen took over the No. 5 car. The No. 17 Pescarolo 60 car now driven by Tr\u00e9luyer launched over a kerb at a Mulsanne Chicane and a subsequent crash into the barrier lost him third to Lehto's Champion Audi R8. Enge's No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari led by five laps in the LMGTS category when its front-left wheel bearing seized in the Dunlop Chicane and damaged the front splitter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0025-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nThe car returned to the garage, losing the class lead to Beretta's No. 64 Corvette. Davies spun the No. 88 Audi Sport UK R8 at the Dunlop Chicane; the error did not lose him a significant amount of time. Further down the order, the No. 85 Freisinger Porsche stopped with an oil feed problem and White Lighting took the lead of LMGT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nTeam Goh had an anxious moment when fuel was spilt on the rear of Capello's R8 and ignited. Capello exited the car quickly as flames spread to its right rear though marshals extinguished the fire. Mechanics checked the car for damage and Capello resumed half a minute later. The incident allowed Davies in the No. 88 Audi Sport UK R8 to close to within 90 seconds of the Team Goh Audi but slower traffic subsequently delayed him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nOver an hour after losing the LMGTS lead, Menu, driving the No. 66 Prodrive Ferrari, was forced to replace the front splitter on the car in an attempt to correct a handling problem. It did not, however, result in an improvement and Menu drove into the garage for further repairs to the car's undertray. Enge relieved Menu and damaged the front of the Ferrari in an impact against a wall at Indianapolis corner on his first lap out of the pit lane. It dropped him to fourth in class behind Papis' No. 63 Corvette and Rydell's No. 65 Prodrive Ferrari. ChoroQ Racing Team moved to second place in LMGT after Freisinger's Porsche of Ortelli developed a misfire and dropped to third position in class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nThe No. 5 Team Goh Audi of Ara withstood a challenge from Herbert's faster No. 88 Audi Sport UK car in the final two hours of the race to take Audi's fourth win in five years at Le Mans by 41.354 seconds, at a distance of 5,169.9\u00a0km (3,212.4\u00a0mi) and an average speed of 215.418\u00a0km/h (133.855\u00a0mph). It was Ara's first Le Mans win, Capello's second and Kristensen's sixth. Kristensen equalled Jacky Ickx's all-time record of six victories and was the first driver to win the 24-hour race five times in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nChampion Racing recovered from its crash in the second hour to finish third. The highest-placed non-Audi was the No. 18 Pescarolo C60 car of Ayari, Comas and Tr\u00e9luyer in fourth and the No. 8 Audi Sport UK R8 of Frank Biela and Kaffer finished fifth. Although Corvette Racing ran out of spare parts because of the incidents it was involved in, the No. 63 held an 11-lap lead over the No. 64 to finish sixth overall and win the category, earning the team their third class victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nProdrive completed the class podium with McRae, Rydell and Turner's No. 65 Ferrari in front of the No. 66 of Enge, Kox and Menu. Porsche took the first six positions in the LMGT class as the No. 90 White Lighting entry took its second consecutive category win following its 2003 victory in conjunction with Alex Job Racing and extended the Porsche 911-GT3 RS' number of Le Mans class victories to six since its d\u00e9but in the 1999 edition. By finishing 17th, Team Nasamax's bio-ethanol-powered DM138 became the first renewable-fuelled car in history to finish the Le Mans event. The crew of the No. 32 Intersport car were victorious in LMP2, placing 25th overall and eight laps ahead of the No. 24 Rachel Welter WR LM2001 vehicle, the only other vehicle to finish in the class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176391-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race classification\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (70 per cent of the overall winning car's race distance) was 265 laps. Class winners are denoted with bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176392-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 3. divisjon\nThe 2004 season of the 3. divisjon, the fourth highest association football league for men in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176392-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 3. divisjon\n22 games were played in 24 groups, with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws. Twelve teams were promoted to the 2. divisjon through playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176393-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 4 Nations Cup\nThe 2004 4 Nations Cup was the ninth playing of the annual women's ice hockey tournament. It was held in Lake Placid, New York and Burlington, Vermont, from November 10\u201314, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176394-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 A Lyga\nThe Lithuanian A Lyga 2004 was the 15th season of top-tier football in Lithuania. The season started on 18 April 2004 and ended on 7 November 2004. 8 teams participated with FBK Kaunas winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176395-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 A3 Champions Cup\nThe 2004 A3 Champions Cup was second edition of A3 Champions Cup. It was held from February 22 to 28, 2003 in Shanghai, China PR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176396-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AAA Championships\nThe 2004 AAA Championships was an outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA), held from 10\u201311 July at the Manchester Regional Arena in Manchester, England. It was considered the de facto national championships for the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176396-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AAA Championships\nThis edition of the AAA Championships was billed as a British Olympic trials event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176397-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AAPT Championships\nThe 2004 AAPT Championships was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Adelaide in Australia and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 5 through 11 January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176397-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AAPT Championships, Finals, Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Arnaud Cl\u00e9ment / Micha\u00ebl Llodra 7\u20135, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176398-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AAPT Championships \u2013 Doubles\nJeff Coetzee and Chris Haggard were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176398-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AAPT Championships \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20133 against Arnaud Cl\u00e9ment and Micha\u00ebl Llodra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176399-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AAPT Championships \u2013 Singles\nNikolay Davydenko was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176399-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AAPT Championships \u2013 Singles\nDominik Hrbat\u00fd won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20130 against Micha\u00ebl Llodra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176400-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament\nThe 2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at Rotterdam Ahoy in the Netherlands. It was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 16 February through 22 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176400-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament\nThe singles line up was led by new World No. 1, Tennis Masters Cup, Wimbledon and Australian Open winner Roger Federer, reigning French Open champion, US Open runner-up and Australian Open semifinalist Juan Carlos Ferrero and Tokyo and Lyon champion Rainer Sch\u00fcttler. Other contenders were Chennai runner-up Paradorn Srichaphan, Paris Masters winner Tim Henman, Lleyton Hewitt, Sjeng Schalken and Martin Verkerk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176400-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, Finals, Doubles\nPaul Hanley / Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek defeated Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176401-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nWayne Arthurs and Paul Hanley were the defending champions but only Hanley competed that year with Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176401-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nHanley and \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won in the final 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20135 against Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176401-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176402-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nMax Mirnyi was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to Juan Carlos Ferrero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176402-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nLleyton Hewitt won in the final 6\u20137(1\u20137), 7\u20135, 6\u20134 against Ferrero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176402-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176403-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 11\u201314 in Greensboro, North Carolina, at the Greensboro Coliseum. The Maryland Terrapins won the tournament as the #6 seed, upsetting #3 seed Wake Forest, #2 seed NC State, and top seed Duke in succession on their way to the championship. It was Maryland's third tournament title, and their first since 1984. Maryland's John Gilchrist won the Most Valuable Player award. Maryland's championship ended Duke's streak of five straight ACC championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176403-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 ACC Tournament was the final event with nine participating teams. Virginia Tech and University of Miami from the Big East Conference joined the ACC for the 2004\u20132005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176404-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ACC Trophy\nThe 2004 ACC Trophy was a cricket tournament in Malaysia, taking place between 12 and 24 June 2004. It gave Associate and Affiliate members of the Asian Cricket Council experience of international one-day cricket and also helps forms an essential part of regional rankings. The tournament was won by the UAE who defeated Oman in the final by 94 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176404-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ACC Trophy, Teams\nThe teams were separated into four groups: three groups of four teams and one group of three teams. The following teams took part in the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176404-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ACC Trophy, Group stages\nThe top two from each group qualified for the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176405-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AF2 season\nThe 2004 AF2 season was the fifth season of the AF2. It was preceded by 2003 and succeeded by 2005. The league champions were the Florida Firecats, who defeated the Peoria Pirates in ArenaCup V.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176405-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AF2 season, ArenaCup V\nArenaCup V was the 2004 edition of the AF2's championship game, in which the National Conference Champions Florida Firecats defeated the American Conference Champions Peoria Pirates in Estero, Florida by a score of 39 to 26 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup\nThe 2004 AFC Asian Cup was the 13th edition of the men's AFC Asian Cup, a quadrennial international football tournament organised by the Asian Football Confederation (AFC). It was held from 17 July to 7 August 2004 in China. The defending champions Japan defeated China in the final in Beijing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup\nThe tournament was marked by Saudi Arabia's unexpected failure to even make it out of the first round; a surprisingly good performance by Bahrain, which finished in fourth place; Jordan, which reached the quarterfinals in its first appearance and Indonesia, which gained their historical first Asian Cup win against Qatar. The final match between China and Japan was marked by post-match rioting by Chinese fans near the north gate of Beijing Workers' Stadium, in part due to controversial officiating and anti-Japanese sentiment resulting from historical tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Qualification\nThe lowest-ranked 20 teams were placed in 6 preliminary qualifying groups of 3 and one group of 2, with the group winners joining the remaining 21 teams in 7 groups of 4. The top two of each of these groups qualified for the finals in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Squads\nFor a list of all squads that played in the final tournament, see 2004 AFC Asian Cup squads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Tournament summary\nThis competition saw a huge number of surprises. The first surprise named Bahrain was in group A, which, despite being just its second tournament, held on China and fellow neighbor Qatar before beating Indonesia 3\u20131, with the Hubail's brothers Mohamed and Ala'a instrumental in bringing Bahrain to the quarter-finals. Host China, after a shock draw to Bahrain, easily progressed to the next round after thrashing Indonesia 5\u20130 before Xu Yunlong scored the decisive goal in China's hard fought win over Qatar to process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Tournament summary\nIn group B, Jordan emerged as a second surprise, as the country just made its debut in the competition. Jordan surprised the whole tournament by two draws to the United Arab Emirates and, especially, a successful goalless draw to South Korea which had already finished in fourth place at the 2002 FIFA World Cup earlier, between that, Jordan shocked Kuwait with two late goals to seal a 2\u20130 victory, thus finishing second and progressed to the next round alongside South Korea, which, after being held by Jordan, decisively beat Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates to progress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Tournament summary\nThe two other debutants were Turkmenistan and Oman in group C and D surprised by not finishing bottom in their group, though they failed to progress. Instead, it was the two experienced Saudi Arabia and Thailand which disappointed most of fans, finishing bottom after disastrous performances. In group C, Uzbekistan also surprised by topping the group with three straight 1\u20130 win while Japan and Iran were able to progress in group D after a final goalless draw and better result than Oman. Iraq was the other qualifier in group C, after beating both Turkmenistan and Saudi Arabia only by one goal margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Tournament summary\nThe quarter-finals saw Jordan caused significant problem for Japan, and Jordan was thought to have almost qualified for the semi-finals in the penalty shootout. However, four straight misses later cost Jordan's semi-final dream to end. Uzbekistan and Bahrain held on in a 2\u20132 draw and Bahrain prevailed after penalty shootout. Host China easily crushed Iraq 3\u20130, with Zheng Zhi scored two penalties to take Iraq home, while South Korea and Iran created the most phenomenon match in the tournament, an insane thriller where Iran prevailed 4\u20133 in what would be perceived as the greatest Asian Cup match in the history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Tournament summary\nThe first semi-final saw Iran and host China battling for the final, with both being held 1\u20131, despite Iran was down to ten men. China eventually won in penalty shootout. The other semi-final was another insane thriller between Bahrain and Japan, with the Japanese won after extra times thanked for a goal by Keiji Tamada in early minutes of the first half of extra times, thus sent Japan to the final against host China. Iran overcame Bahrain in a consolidating third place encounter, 4\u20132, to acquire bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Tournament summary\nThe final in Beijing saw China lost to Japan, with a controversial handball goal by Koji Nakata that sealed the game. The win meant Japan had successfully defended their title they achieved four years ago. The outcome frustrated many Chinese supporters, who ended up rioting outside Workers' Stadium over referee's controversial decision allowing the handball goal of Koji Nakata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nWith five goals, A'ala Hubail and Ali Karimi are the top scorers in the tournament. In total, 96 goals were scored by 58 different players, with two of them credited as own goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Views\nLike other sports events, the Asian Cup 2004 was publicised as evidence of China's economic and athletic progress, being referred to by some as a prelude to the 2008 Summer Olympics. Many Chinese see the tournament as a success and take great pride in having showcased such an important sporting event in advance of the Olympic Games. However, the Japanese media and many other international observers have pointed out bad manners on the part of Chinese fans, and sparse attendance at the tournament, raising questions on China's ability to hold such sporting events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Views\nThroughout the tournament, most Chinese fans in the stadia expressed anti-Japanese sentiments by drowning out the Japanese national anthem, displaying political banners and booing whenever Japan got the ball, regardless of the score or opponent. This was reported by the international media, and was aggravated when Koji Nakata apparently knocked in the ball with his right hand in the final against China. The PRC government responded by calling for restraint and increasing police numbers to maintain order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176406-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup, Views\nThe Japanese government also called on the PRC to ensure the safety of Japanese fans, while specifically asking Japanese nationals or people of Japanese origin to not display any form of excessive pride, especially wearing Japan national football team uniforms. Despite the Chinese government's campaign, a riot started by Chinese fans broke out near the north gate of the Workers' Stadium, though reports differ as to the extent of the riot. As a result, some media groups have said that displays of \"excessive Chinese nationalism during the Beijing 2008 Summer Olympics have become a cause for concern for Chinese officials\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176407-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup Final\nThe 2004 AFC Asian Cup Final was an association football match that took place on 7 August 2004 at the Workers' Stadium in Beijing, People's Republic of China, to determine the winner of the 2004 AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176407-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup Final, Overview\nJapan defeated China 3\u20131. This was the third time that Japan won the AFC Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176407-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup Final, Overview\nThe tournament's closing ceremony was held immediately prior to kickoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176407-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup Final, Overview\nJapanese player Koji Nakata's handball goal in the 68th minute was controversially allowed by the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176407-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees: Saad Al Fadhli (Kuwait) Ali Al Khalifi (Qatar) Fourth official: Fathi Arabati (Jordan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176408-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification\nThe qualification process for the 2004 AFC Asian Cup football competition began on March 2003. Out of the 45 AFC members only Cambodia and the Philippines failed to enter for the tournament. Both China, the hosts and Japan, the reigning champions automatically qualified for the finals. The lowest ranked 20 teams were placed in 6 preliminary qualifying groups of 3 and one group of 2, with the group winners joining the remaining 21 teams in 7 groups of 4. The top two of each of these groups qualified for the finals in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176408-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Qualifying round, Group D\n1 The match was originally scheduled to be held on September 27, 2003, but was postponed to the following week as the North Korean team failed to arrive in Lebanon due to a traffic accident in Pyongyang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176408-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Qualifying round, Group D\n2 The match was abandoned in the 60th minute with Iran leading 1-0 after North Korea walked off when Iranian fans threw firecrackers on the pitch and refused to continue. The match was awarded 3\u20130 to Iran, but Iran were also ordered to play their next home match in an official AFC or FIFA competition behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176408-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Qualifying round, Group D\n3 The match was not played as North Korean immigration officials did not issue the Jordanian team visas, meaning they were refused entry into the country. The match was awarded 3\u20130 to Jordan, while North Korea were banned from AFC competitions for a year and from qualifying for the 2007 Asian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176408-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Qualifying round, Group G\nNB: All of Sri Lanka's home matches were played away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176408-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup qualification, Qualifying round, Group G\n1 Syria failed to show up for the match. The match was awarded 3\u20130 to Turkmenistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176409-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Asian Cup squads\nSquads for the 2004 AFC Asian Cup played in China from 17 July to 7 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League\nThe 2004 AFC Champions League was the 23rd edition of the top-level Asian club football tournament and the 2nd edition under the current AFC Champions League title. The title was won by Al-Ittihad over Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League, Format\nA total of 28 clubs were divided into 7 groups of four, based on region i.e. East Asian and Southeast Asian clubs were drawn in groups E to G, while the rest were grouped in groups A to D. Each club played double round-robin (home and away) against fellow three group members, a total of 6 matches each. Clubs received 3pts for a win, 1pt for a tie, 0pts for a loss. The clubs were ranked according to points and tie breakers were in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League, Format\nThe seven group winners along with the defending champion advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League, Format\nAll 8 clubs were randomly matched; however, the only restriction was that the clubs from the same country could not face each other in the quarter-finals. The games were conducted in 2 legs, home and away, and the aggregate score decided the match winner. If the aggregate score couldn't produce a winner, \"away goals rule\" was used. If still tied, clubs played extra time, where \"away goals rule\" still applied. If still tied, the game went to penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League, Knock-out stage, Quarter-finals\nFirst-leg home team shown first. First-leg home team score shown first for both legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League, Knock-out stage, Semifinals\nFirst-leg home team shown first. First-leg home team score shown first for both legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176410-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Champions League, Knock-out stage, Final\nFirst-leg home team shown first. First-leg home team score shown first for both legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176411-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Cup\nThe 2004 AFC Cup was the first edition of the AFC Cup, playing between clubs from nations who are members of the Asian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176411-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Cup, Qualification\nThe 'developing' 14 nations in the Asian Football Confederation were invited to nominate one or two clubs to participate in the 2004 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176411-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Cup, Group stage, Group A\n1Al Sha'ab Ibb were awarded a 3\u20130 win as Muktijoddha Sangsad KS did not show up for the match. 2The match was cancelled after a general strike in Yemen left Al Sha'ab Ibb unable to show up for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 34], "content_span": [35, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176411-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Cup, Group stage, Best runners-up\nThree best runners-up, one from groups A, B and C and two from groups D and E, qualify for the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 42], "content_span": [43, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176412-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Futsal Championship\nThe 2004 AFC Futsal Championship was held in Macau, China from 16 April to 25 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176413-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC U-17 Championship\nThe 2004 AFC U-17 Championship was the 11th AFC U-17 Championship, which was held between 4 and 18 September 2004 in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176413-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC U-17 Championship\nChina won their second title after beating Korea DPR 1-0 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176413-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC U-17 Championship, Venues\nThe matches were played in the following five venues. Three venues in the Shizuoka Prefecture and two in the Fukushima Prefecture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176414-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC U-17 Championship qualification\nThe AFC U-17 Championship 2004 Qualification was held from October 11th through the 15th in 2003. The drawing for its matchups was conducted on July 18th, 2003 at the AFC office in Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176415-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC U-19 Women's Championship\nThe 2004 AFC U-19 Women's Championship was the second instance of the AFC U-19 Women's Championship. It was held from May 25 to June 6, 2004 in Suzhou, China PR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176416-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Youth Championship\nThe Asian Football Confederations AFC Youth Championship 2004 was the 33rd instance of the AFC Youth Championship. It was held from 25 September to 9 October 2004 in Malaysia. The tournament was won by for the eleventh time by South Korea in the final against China PR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176417-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFC Youth Championship qualification\nThe AFC Youth Championship 2004 qualification was held in 15 places in 2003, Malaysia with 15 qualified teams advanced to the final phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176418-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship\nThe 2004 AFF Championship, officially known as the 2004 Tiger Cup, was the 5th edition of the AFF Championship, was jointly hosted by Vietnam and Malaysia from 7 December to 16 January 2005 and participated by the national football teams of Southeast Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176418-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship\nThe championship started off with group matches, where the top two teams from each group advanced to the semi-finals and the final, which was played in a home and away format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176418-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship, Summary\nIn the group matches, Indonesia, coached by former Thailand coach Peter Withe, emerged as the Group A winners with ten points, 17 goals scored and none conceded. They were the hot favourites to win the 2004 AFF Championship after bundling out the hosts Vietnam with an unexpected 3\u20130 victory. Less than a day after the match had ended, the Vietnam Football Federation requested the resignation from its national coach Edson Tavares, despite his requests to stay on until the last match. Singapore, led by Radojko Avramovi\u0107 pipped out the hosts by just a single point and remained to be the only team in the championship to not lose a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176418-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship, Summary\nFollowing the tournament motto \"Anything can happen\", Myanmar, under coach Ivan Kolev emerged as the surprise, holding defending champions Thailand to a draw and beating Malaysia on their own turf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176418-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship, Teams\nAll teams from member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation (AFF) participated with the exception of Brunei. However, they would be replaced by the world's newest country when sponsors Tiger Beer stated in May 2004 that East Timor would be joining the competition. This kept the tournament at 10 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176418-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship, Team statistics\nThis table will show the ranking of teams throughout the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176419-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Championship squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2004 AFF Championship, co-hosted by Vietnam and Malaysia, which took place between 7 December 2004 and 16 January 2005. The players' listed age is their age on the tournament's opening day (7 December 2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176420-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFF Women's Championship\nThe 2004 AFF Women's Championship was hosted by Vietnam. The inaugural tournament was held from 30 September to 9 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final\nThe 2004 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Port Adelaide Football Club and the Brisbane Lions, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 25 September 2004. It was the 108th annual grand final of the Australian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League), staged to determine the premiers for 2004 AFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final\nThe match was won by Port Adelaide, marking that club's first AFL premiership victory. It was a closely fought match until midway through the third quarter, when Port Adelaide broke away and went on to win by 40 points. It was attended by 77,671 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Background\nAt the conclusion of the home and away season, Port Adelaide had finished first on the AFL ladder with 17 wins and 5 losses, winning the McClelland Trophy for the third successive year. At the start of the year, Port Adelaide's captain was ruckman Matthew Primus, however he was injured in Round 3 and missed the rest of the season, which meant that forward Warren Tredrea acted as captain. Port Adelaide beat Geelong by 55 points in the qualifying final at AAMI Stadium, which gave them a week off and a place in the preliminary final; Port Adelaide then defeated St Kilda by 6 points in a tight preliminary final to advance to the grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Background\nBrisbane finished second on the ladder with a record of 16 wins and 6 losses. Brisbane thrashed St Kilda by 80 points in the qualifying final at the Gabba, and then defeated Geelong by 9 points in the preliminary final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground \u2013 although Brisbane had earned a home preliminary final under the finals system in place, grounds contracts with the Melbourne Cricket Ground required one preliminary final to be staged at the ground, and as the lower-ranked team, Brisbane's was chosen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Background\nIt was Brisbane's fourth consecutive Grand Final; and, having won the previous three, was attempting to become the first club to win four consecutive premierships since Collingwood in 1927\u201330. Port Adelaide was appearing in its first ever AFL Grand Final, having gained a reputation as finals chokers for its previous three seasons \u2013 when two minor premierships and a third place home and away finish both ended in lower positions after finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Background\nThe match was played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, the capacity of which was reduced owing to construction work on the new northern grandstand ahead of the 2006 Commonwealth Games. The attendance was reduced due to construction works on one of the grandstands resulting in the attendance being 77,671, the lowest at a grand final attendance since 1991, when it was held at Waverley Park, and the lowest at the MCG since the 1948 Grand Final Replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Background\nFor the first time in VFL/AFL history, both competing grand finalists were clubs based outside the state of Victoria; and, as of 2021, it remains the only grand final featuring two expansion teams who joined the league after 1986 as part of national expansion. In an article for the Herald Sun titled \"Our misery is interstate joy \u2013 Invaders on the M.C.G.\u201d, Kevin Healey stated that \u201cVictorian footy fans\u2019 worst nightmare finally came true last night \u2013 two interstate teams will contest the A.F.L. Grand Final.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nJonathan Brown did not train with the Brisbane Lions players in their warm up but he did take to the field at the start of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, First quarter\nLeading up to the opening bounce and for large portions of the first quarter there were scuffles between players. After Brisbane missed a couple of early shots at goal, Port Adelaide controlled the majority of the quarter, and Josh Carr kicked the first goal on the run after winning a contest at half forward in the 8th minute. Two more goals soon followed, to Brendon Lade in the 12th minute and Warren Tredrea in the 16th minute to open a 19 point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, First quarter\nBrisbane fought back through Jason Akermanis, who kicked goals in the 20th and 23rd minutes from long set shots to narrow the margin back to 8. At this point, a vicious brawl broke out between Brisbane full forward Alistair Lynch and Port Adelaide defender Darryl Wakelin; immediately after, Lynch limped off the ground under the blood rule, but also having torn his quadriceps earlier in the quarter, and he played very little part in the rest of the game. Port Adelaide continued to dominate general play throughout the quarter, and with a late goal from a boundary throw-in to Byron Pickett in the 28th minute, Port Adelaide extended its quarter time advantage to a well-deserved 15 points, Port Adelaide 4.5 (29) lead Brisbane 2.2 (14).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Second quarter\nThe second quarter continued to be rugged and absorbing. General play started to favour the Lions, but the Lions fell down in the forward line, kicking 0.4 (4) from several chances in the first ten minutes of the quarter; while Port Adelaide capitalised on a reversed free kick against Jason Akermanis in Brisbane's forward line to rebound the length of the ground, finishing with a goal against the run of play to Pickett, extending the Port Adelaide advantage to 18 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Second quarter\nBrisbane then enjoyed a brief purple patch, kicking four goals in seven minutes to take the lead. The first, to Clark Keating in the 16th minute, came from a solid contested mark in the forward pocket; to Daniel Bradshaw in the 19th minute from a 40m set shot; to Akermanis in the 21st minute, with a snap shot from the boundary line after a boundary throw-in; and finally to Tim Notting in the 22nd minute after he roved a goal square marking contest. Toby Thurstans (Port Adelaide) kicked a steadying goal from a coast-to-coast play in the 26th minute, and Brisbane led the game by one point at half time, Brisbane 6.7 (43) led Port Adelaide 6.6 (42).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Third quarter\nIn an even start to the third quarter, Thurstans kicked his second goal in the 2nd minute of the third quarter to regain the lead for Port Adelaide, before Notting kicked two goals on the run in two minutes to regain a six point lead for Brisbane. Pickett kicked his third goal in the 8th minute after winning a high tackle free kick at centre half-forward; and Daniel Bradshaw kicked another for Brisbane in the 10th minute from a 45m set shot to restore Brisbane's six point lead. The two teams then settled into a tight arm wrestle, each kicking one behind over the following ten minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Third quarter\nThen, Port Adelaide enjoyed a strong end to the quarter, kicking four goals in the final ten minutes of the quarter to open up a three goal lead. Josh Mahoney kicked the first in the 22nd minute after marking 30m from goal; Gavin Wanganeen kicked the second in the 25th minute with a mark from the same position; Shaun Burgoyne kicked the third in the 28th minute after roving a ruck contest in the forward pocket; and Wanganeen kicked the fourth in the 30th minute on the run after marking in the forward pocket. Brisbane had one chance in the final minute, Akermanis missing a snap shot from the pocket, and Port Adelaide led by 17 points at three-quarter time, Port Adelaide 12.8 (80) led Brisbane 9.9 (63).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nMahoney having a very good quarter. Will it carry over the top \u2013 For Wanganeen! To put them three goals in front!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nThey are the winningest team in Australia. The old Port Adelaide have won 36 [SANFL] premierships. Today at the MCG may just be their finest hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nTim Lane calling the last goal of the third quarter on Network Ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nIn the critical opening of the final quarter, Port Adelaide struck quickly, Gavin Wanganeen roving at full forward after Shaun Burgoyne created a turnover to kick his third goal in the second minute; and then Wanganeen again in the sixth minute to kick his fourth goal from 45m in general play. At this stage, Port Adelaide led by 29 points, having kicked six goals \u2013 four by Wanganeen \u2013 inside fifteen minutes either side of three quarter time. It was a premiership-winning burst against which Brisbane could not recover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Fourth quarter\nBradshaw kicked a goal in the 9th minute from a turnover to bring the margin back to 22 points, but after Thurstans kicked his third goal in the 13th minute, any Brisbane resistance ended. Port Adelaide kicked two more goals \u2013 to Stuart Dew in the 23rd minute and Adam Kingsley in the 25th minute \u2013 eventually winning by a comfortable 40 points, Port Adelaide 17.11 (113) d. Brisbane 10.13 (73).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 51], "content_span": [52, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Post match\nFollowing the match, Port Adelaide coach Mark Williams was quite animated, his celebrations including a speech on the dais in which he uttered the now-famous words \"Allan Scott \u2013 you were wrong! \", in reference to a comment made by Scott (a sponsor of the Port Adelaide Football Club), earlier in the 2004 season, that the club could not win a premiership under the coaching of Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Post match\nWilliams also made a mock choking gesture by holding his tie above his head like a noose as he stepped onto the arena, a reference to the breaking of Port Adelaide's reputation as \"chokers\" \u2013 which had been acquired after having losing in the previous two finals series, despite dominating the home and away seasons in those years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Norm Smith Medal\nByron Pickett, a premiership winning defender with North Melbourne in 1999, turned into a match-winning on-baller for the Power, and capped his day with being awarded the Norm Smith Medal for being judged the best player afield. His match statistics were: 19 kicks, 1 handball, 8 marks, 2 tackles, 3 goals and 2 behinds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Tribunal\nAlistair Lynch was reported several times for his fight with Darryl Wakelin, and was ultimately suspended for 10 weeks and fined $15,000 \u2013 although, as he retired after the game, he did not end up serving the suspension. Lynch later noted that he mentally snapped after having injured his quad early in the game triggered, and that his poor spectacle remains one of his greatest career regrets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Tribunal\nAdditionally, Jonathan Brown was suspended for five matches and fined $3000 for striking and wrestling with Josh Carr, Simon Black was suspended for a total of three matches on two separate striking charges, Darryl Wakelin was fined $5000 for wrestling with Lynch, and Josh Carr was fined $2400 for wrestling Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176421-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Grand Final, Match summary, Tribunal\nFollowing this game, the AFL introduced doubled tribunal penalties for indiscretions in the grand final, in an attempt to protect the spectacle of the grand final to its global audience. As of 2020, the 2004 incidents remain the last major grand final brawls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176422-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Rising Star\nThe National AFL Rising Star award is given annually to a stand out young player in the Australian Football League. The 2004 medal was won by Melbourne player Jared Rivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176422-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Rising Star, Eligibility\nEvery round, an Australian Football League rising star nomination is given to a stand out young player. To be eligible for the award, a player must be under 21 on 1 January of that year, have played 10 or fewer senior games and not been suspended during the season. At the end of the year, one of the 22 nominees is the winner of award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176423-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Under 18 Championships\nThe 2004 National AFL Under 18 Championships was the ninth edition of the AFL Under 18 Championships. Eight teams competed in the championships: Vic Metro, Vic Country, South Australia and Western Australia in Division 1, and New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory (NSW/ACT), Northern Territory, Queensland and Tasmania in Division 2. The competition was played over three rounds across two divisions. Vic Metro and the Northern Territory were the Division 1 and Division 2 champions, respectively. The Michael Larke Medal (for the best player in Division 1) was awarded to Victoria Metro's Jesse W. Smith, and the Hunter Harrison Medal (for the best player in Division 2) was won by the Northern Territory's Richard Tambling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176423-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Under 18 Championships, Results, Division 2\nNSW/ACT defeated Queensland by 4 points while NT beat Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176423-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Under 18 Championships, Results, Division 2\nNT defeated Queensland by 3 goals while Tasmania defeated NSW/ACT by 11 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176423-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Under 18 Championships, Under 18 All-Australian team\nThe 2004 Under 18 All-Australian team was named on 11 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176423-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Under 18 Championships, Under 18 All-Australian team\nNew South Wales/Australian Capital Territory: Edward ClarkeNorthern Territory: Richard TamblingQueensland: Will HamillSouth Australia: Ben Eckermann, Ryan Griffen, Heath Grundy, Scott McMahon, Angus Monfries, Cameron WoodTasmania: Justin ShermanVictoria Country: Brett Deledio, Marcus Drum, Ruory Kirkby, Jordan Lewis, Dean PoloVictoria Metropolitan: Jayden Attard, Jarred Moore, Ben Sharp, Jesse W. SmithWestern Australia: Mark Le Cras, Mitchell Morton, Alan Toovey", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176424-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL Women's National Championships\nThe 2004 AFL Women's National Championships took place in Adelaide, South Australia, Australia. The tournament began on 19 June and ended on 24 June 2004. The 2004 tournament was the 13th Championship. The Senior-vics of Victoria won the 2004 Championship, defeating the U19-vics of Victoria in the final. It was Victoria's 13th consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176425-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL draft\nThe 2004 AFL draft, concerning player acquisitions in the 2004/05 Australian Football League off-season, consisted of a trade period, a national draft, a pre-season draft, and the elevation of rookies. The AFL draft is the annual draft of talented players by Australian rules football teams that participate in the main competition of that sport, the Australian Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176425-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL draft\nIn 2004 there were 78 picks to be drafted between 16 teams in the national draft. Richmond received the first pick in the national draft after finishing on the bottom of the ladder during the 2004 AFL season. Three teams were allocated priority draft picks for winning 5 or less games in the previous season, Richmond, Hawthorn and Western Bulldogs. Carlton's two-year ban from the first and second rounds of the AFL draft expired in 2004 and they returned to the early part of the draft, with selections 9 and 25. As it had traded away its first and second round draft picks in 2001, effectively the Blues' first and second round draft picks were its first since 2000. They finished the 2004 season 11th with 10 wins and 12 losses, too high to be eligible for a priority draft pick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176425-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL draft, Rookie elevation\nIn alphabetical order of professional clubs. This list contains 2004-listed rookies who were elevated in the off-season; it does not detail the rookie draft which took place in the 2004/05 off-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 32], "content_span": [33, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176426-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL season\nThe 2004 Australian Football League season was the 108th season of the elite Australian rules football competition and the 15th under the name 'Australian Football League', having switched from 'Victorian Football League' after 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176426-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL season\nSee List of Australian Football League premiers for a complete list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176426-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL season, Wizard Home Loans Cup\nThe Wizard Home Loans Cup Final saw St Kilda defeat Geelong 1.14.5 (98) to 1.10.7 (76) in front of a crowd of 50,533.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176426-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL season, Match attendance\nTotal match attendance for all games was 5,915,407. Attendance at the grand final was 77,671. The largest non-finals attendance was 60,898 people for the Collingwood v Carlton game in round 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176426-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AFL season, Match attendance\nAttendances during the season were affected by the ongoing reconstruction of the Ponsford, Olympic and Melbourne Cricket Club stands at the MCG to be ready for the 2006 Commonwealth Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176427-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships was a combined men's and women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the Ariake Coliseum in Tokyo in Japan. The men's tournament was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour and the women's tournament was part of the Tier III category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 31st edition of the event and was held from 4 October through 10 October 2004. Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k and Maria Sharapova won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176427-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships, Finals, Men's Doubles\nJared Palmer / Pavel V\u00edzner defeated Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k / Petr P\u00e1la 5\u20131 ret.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176427-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships, Finals, Women's Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe / Katarina Srebotnik defeated Jennifer Hopkins / Mashona Washington 6\u20131, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176428-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob and Nicolas Kiefer were the defending champions, but Kiefer did not compete this year. Gimelstob teamed up with Ashley Fisher and lost in quarterfinals to Yves Allegro and Michael Kohlmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176428-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJared Palmer and Pavel V\u00edzner won the title by defeating Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k and Petr P\u00e1la. Palmer and V\u00edzner were leading 5\u20131 in the first set until Nov\u00e1k was forced to retire due to a rib injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176429-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nRainer Sch\u00fcttler was the defending champion, but did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176430-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nMaria Sharapova and Tamarine Tanasugarn were the defending champions, but decided to focus on the singles tournament only. Sharapova would eventually win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176430-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe and Katarina Srebotnik won the title by defeating Jennifer Hopkins and Mashona Washington 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176431-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Sharapova was the defending champion and successfully defender her title, by defeating Mashona Washington 6\u20130, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176431-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176432-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AIHL season\nThe 2004 AIHL season was the fifth season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). It ran from 1 May 2004 until 29 August 2004, with the Goodall Cup finals following on 4 and 5 September 2004. The Newcastle North Stars won the V.I.P. Cup after finishing the regular season first in the league standings. The Western Sydney Ice Dogs won the Goodall Cup for the first time by defeating the Newcastle North Stars in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176432-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AIHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on 1 May 2004 and ran through to 29 August 2004 before the top four teams advanced to compete in the Goodall Cup playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176432-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 AIHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the ten top skaters sorted by points, then goals. Current as of 5 September 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176432-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 AIHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage with a minimum 40% of the team's ice time. Current as of 5 September 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176432-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 AIHL season, Goodall Cup playoffs\nThe 2004 playoffs was scheduled for 4 September with the Goodall Cup final held on 5 September 2004. Following the end of the regular season the top four teams advanced to the playoff series which was held at the Erina Ice Arena in the Central Coast, New South Wales region. The series was a single game elimination with the two winning semi-finalists advancing to the Goodall Cup final. The Goodall Cup was won by Western Sydney Ice Dogs (1st title) who defeated the Newcastle North Stars 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176433-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AMA National Speedway Championship\nThe 2004 AMA National Speedway Championship Series was staged over three rounds, which were held at Auburn (August 6), Victorville (August 7) and Auburn (September 24). Greg Hancock won the title for a fifth time, and for the second time in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176433-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AMA National Speedway Championship, Event format\nOver the course of 20 heats, each rider raced against every other rider once. The field was then split into sections of four riders, with the top four entering the 'A' Final. Points were then awarded depending on where a rider finished in each final. The points in the 'A' Final were awarded thus, 20, 18, 16 and 14. Bonus points for were also awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176434-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AMA Superbike Championship\nThe 2004 AMA Superbike Championship is the 29th season of the AMA Superbike Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176435-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ANAPROF\nANAPROF 2004 is the 2004 season of the Panamanian football league, ANAPROF. The season started on February 13, 2004, with the Torneo Apertura Bellsouth 2004 and finalized on November 7, 2004, with the Torneo Clausura Bellsouth 2004. Both the Apertura and Clausura champion was Arabe Unido, therefore, for the third time in ANAPROF history, Arabe Unido were crowned ANAPROF 2004 champions without the need to play a grand final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176436-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ANZ Women's Hockey Challenge\nThe 2004 Women's ANZ Hockey Challenge was a women's field hockey event, comprising two four\u2013nations tournaments. It was held in Darwin and Townsville, from 16 to 27 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176436-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ANZ Women's Hockey Challenge\nAustralia won both tournaments, defeating New Zealand and Japan in the respective finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176436-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ANZ Women's Hockey Challenge, Competition format\nThe tournament featured the national teams of Australia, Japan and New Zealand, as well as a team from the Australian Institute of Sport. The teams competed in a double round-robin format, with each team playing each other twice. Three points were awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176436-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ANZ Women's Hockey Challenge, Statistics, Final standings\nAs per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176436-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 ANZ Women's Hockey Challenge, Statistics, Goalscorers\n* Note: the following goalscorers list comprises players from both tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176436-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 ANZ Women's Hockey Challenge, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 67 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 4.19 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176437-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open\nThe 2004 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open was a Tier 4 women's professional tennis tournament on the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the second edition of the tournament and was held from 16 through 21 February 2004. Nicole Pratt won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176438-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Doubles\nElena Likhovtseva and Iroda Tulyaganova were the defending champions, but chose not to participate that year. In the final, wildcards Liezel Huber and Sania Mirza defeated 3rd seeds Li Ting and Sun Tiantian 7\u20136(7\u20131), 6\u20134 to win their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176439-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Singles\nTamarine Tanasugarn was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Maria Kirilenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176439-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Singles\nIn the final, Nicole Pratt defeated Kirilenko 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20131 to win her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176440-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ARFU Asian Rugby Championship\nThe 2004 ARFU Asian Rugby Championship was the 19th edition of the tournament, de facto the last complete edition, due to the problems of the 20th edition, scheduled for 2006, but completed only in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176440-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ARFU Asian Rugby Championship\nThe tournament was played at Hong Kong, and won by Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176440-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ARFU Asian Rugby Championship\nThe team were divided in three divisions, according to the results of 2003-2004 ARFU Asian Rugby Series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176441-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ASB Classic\nThe 2004 ASB Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland, New Zealand that was part of Tier IV of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 19th edition of the tournament and took place from 5 January until 10 January 2004. Third-seeded Eleni Daniilidou won her second consecutive singles title at the event and earned $22,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176442-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ASB Classic \u2013 Doubles\nTeryn Ashley and Abigail Spears were the defending champions, but Spears decided to compete in Gold Coast at the same week. Ashley teamed up with Shenay Perry and lost in first round to Iveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 and Renata Vor\u00e1\u010dov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176442-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ASB Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMervana Jugi\u0107-Salki\u0107 and Jelena Kostani\u0107 won the title by defeating Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez 7\u20136(8\u20136), 3\u20136, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176443-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ASB Classic \u2013 Singles\nEleni Daniilidou was the defending champion and successfully defended her title, by defeating Ashley Harkleroad 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176444-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ASP World Tour\nThe ASP World Tour is a professional competitive surfing league. It is run by the Association of Surfing Professionals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176445-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Buenos Aires\nThe 2004 ATP Buenos Aires was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club in Buenos Aires, Argentina and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 32nd edition of the tournament and was held from 16 February through 22 February 2004. First-seeded Guillermo Coria won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176445-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Buenos Aires, Finals, Doubles\nLucas Arnold / Mariano Hood defeated Federico Browne / Diego Veronelli 7\u20135, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176446-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nMariano Hood and Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto were the defending champions but they competed with different partners that year, Hood with Lucas Arnold and Prieto with Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176446-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nGarc\u00eda and Prieto lost in the first round to Juan Ignacio Chela and Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176446-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nArnold and Hood won in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20134 against Federico Browne and Diego Veronelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176447-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Singles\nCarlos Moy\u00e1 was the defending champion but lost in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20131 against Guillermo Coria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176448-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Challenger Series\nThe ATP Challenger Series is the second tier tour for professional tennis organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). The 2004 ATP Challenger Series calendar comprised 146 tournaments, with prize money ranging from $25,000 up to $150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176449-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Masters Series\nThe table below shows the 2004 ATP Masters Series schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176449-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Masters Series\nThe ATP Masters Series are part of the elite tour for professional men's tennis organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176450-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Tour\nThe 2004 ATP Tour was the global elite men's professional tennis circuit organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) for the 2004 tennis season. The ATP Tour is the elite tour for professional tennis organised by the ATP. The ATP Tour includes the four Grand Slam tournaments, the Tennis Masters Cup, the ATP Masters Series, the International Series Gold and the International Series tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176450-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Tour, Statistical information\nPlayers and titles won (Grand Slam, Masters Cup, and Olympic titles in bold), listed in order of number of titles:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176450-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Tour, Entry rankings, Singles\nRoger Federer was the ATP Race Champion, finishing the 2004 season as the world number 1 with 6,335 total points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176450-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ATP Tour, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the ATP Rankings top 100 (singles) or top 50 (doubles) for at least one week) who announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive (after not playing for more than 52 weeks), or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2004 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176451-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176451-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20133 against Juan Ignacio Chela and Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176452-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Men's Singles\nAgust\u00edn Calleri was the defending champion but lost in the first round to Luis Horna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176452-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Men's Singles\nCarlos Moy\u00e1 won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20130 against Fernando Verdasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176452-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176453-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar\nThe 2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 11th edition of the men's tournament (4th for the women) of the event known that year as the Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar, and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour, and of the Tier III Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Fairmont Acapulco Princess in Acapulco, Mexico, from March 1 through March 7, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176453-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar, Finals, Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Juan Ignacio Chela / Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176453-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar, Finals, Women's Doubles\nLisa McShea / Milagros Sequera defeated Olga Blahotov\u00e1 / Gabriela Navr\u00e1tilov\u00e1 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176454-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Women's Doubles\n\u00c9milie Loit and \u00c5sa Svensson were the defending champions, but had different outcomes. While Svensson did not compete this year, Loit teamed up with Marion Bartoli and reached the semifinals before losing to Olga Blahotov\u00e1 and Gabriela Navr\u00e1tilov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176454-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLisa McShea and Milagros Sequera won the title, by defeating Blahotov\u00e1 and Navr\u00e1tilov\u00e1 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134 in the final. It was the 2nd title for McShea and the 1st title for Sequera in their respective doubles careers. It was also the 1st title for the pair during this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176455-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Women's Singles\nAmanda Coetzer was the defending champion, but lost in second round to Marta Marrero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176455-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Women's Singles\nQualifier Iveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 won the title by defeating Flavia Pennetta 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20134 in the final. It was her first singles title of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176455-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Telefonica Movistar \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 75], "content_span": [76, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176456-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian local elections\nOn 13 March 2004, Abkhazia held local elections for the 3rd convocations of its local assemblies, coinciding with early voting for the Russian presidential election of the following day. On 18 February, the People's Assembly rejected a proposal by President Vladislav Ardzinba to postpone the elections to coincide with the October 2004 presidential election, because all the necessary preparations had already been made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176456-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian local elections\nIn total, 243 candidates competed for 173 seats. In Sukhumi, 40 candidates competed for sixteen seats, most of whom were under thirty years old. In the Gagra district, 42 candidates were nominated, of whom 32 were registered, including six women, contesting 25 seats. In the Ochamchira District, 38 candidates were registered, including five women and sixteen incumbents. In the Gudauta District, 40 candidates were registered, including four women, contesting 29 seats. In the Gali District, 41 candidates were nominated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176456-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian local elections\n158 out of 173 elections were decided in the first round. In Sukhumi, only six out of sixteen candidates were elected in the first round. Five elections required a second round while four elections had to be repeated. In Gudauta District, all but one of the 29 elections were decided in the first round. In Sukhumi District, all thirteen elections were decided in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Abkhazia on 3 October 2004, the first that were competitive. Election law prohibited incumbent President Vladislav Ardzinba from running for a third term and he instead backed Prime Minister Raul Khadjimba, who also enjoyed support from the Russian authorities. Khadjimba's main opponent was Sergei Bagapsh, who was supported by the two major opposition parties, United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara, and later also by Aitaira when their candidate Alexander Ankvab was barred from running in a controversial decision by the Central Election Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election\nBagapsh won in the first round with just over 50% of the vote. However, the results of the elections were heavily contested, with Khadjimba claiming that he had received the most votes and that a run-off was necessary. The Central Election Commission issued several conflicting rulings and the stand-off lasted for two months until on 5 December, Bagapsh and Khadjimba agreed to share power as President and Vice President respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Background\nOn 14 July, during a session to which also Vice President Valery Arshba, Prime Minister Raul Khajimba, the cabinet and the general public were invited, the Parliament set the date for the elections to be 3 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Background\nAt the time of the elections, the Republican Party \"Apsny\" was the main pro-governmental party, and there were four active opposition movements, Aitaira, United Abkhazia, Amtsakhara and the People's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates\nProspective candidates had to be nominated by an interest group, a socio-political group or a political party between 4 and 23 August 2004. The nominees then had time until 18:00 local time on 23 August to register their candidacy with the Central Election Commission by submitting the required papers, and at least 2000 (but not more than 2500) signatures supporting their candidacy. In order for their candidacy to be accepted, nominees had to pass an Abkhaz language test, and to satisfy a residency requirement \u2013 they had to have lived in Abkhazia for the last 5 years before the election date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates\nA total of nine people were nominated, of which seven registered their candidacy. On 2 September the Central Election Commission announced that the registration of six candidates had been approved., but 3 September one candidate withdrew. The five candidates that participated in the elections are, in order of nomination:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates\nThere was one candidate whose registration was accepted but who decided not to run anyway:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates\nThere were two nominees who did not register their candidacy:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Raul Khajimba, government candidate\nOutgoing president Vladislav Ardzinba was by law prohibited from running for a third term, and his health would not have allowed him to either. Instead, the government's candidate for the presidential election was outgoing Prime Minister Khajimba. On 18 August, Ardzinba said in an interview with Respublika Abkhazia that Khajimba was the person most qualified to succeed him, and he appealed to all voters to vote for him. Khajimba also received the support of the Russian authorities. Russian President Vladimir Putin had worked for the KGB like Khajimba, and posters of the two together were hanging everywhere in Sukhumi. Deputies of Russia's parliament and Russian singers, led by Joseph Kobzon, both a deputy and a popular songster, came to Abkhazia campaigning for Khajimba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Raul Khajimba, government candidate\nOn 11 August, the Republican Party \"Apsny\", which supported Khadjimba's nomination, issued a statement in which it warned that Georgia might try to influence the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara unite to nominate Sergei Bagapsh\nUnited Abkhazia planned to present former Prime Minister Sergei Bagapsh and former Minister for Foreign Affairs Sergei Shamba as presidential and vice presidential candidates, with the order still to be determined, and former mayor of Sukhumi Nodar Khashba was to become prime minister. At the same time, there were some in Amtsakhara who wanted to field former Prime Minister Anri Jergenia as presidential candidate. However, United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara then decided to enter into a political alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 113], "content_span": [114, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara unite to nominate Sergei Bagapsh\nIn an interview with the newspaper Amtsakhara in July, Sergei Bagapsh said that the murder of Garri Aiba had been one of the factors that brought them together. On 20 June, United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara announced that Sergei Bagapsh would be their presidential candidate, and Stanislav Lakoba their vice presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 113], "content_span": [114, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, United Abkhazia and Amtsakhara unite to nominate Sergei Bagapsh\nShamba and Jergenia, who had thus lost out, both decided to run for President independently. Nodar Khashba was also nominated by an initiative group, but he did not register his candidacy, stating that he had been nominated without being consulted and that his registration would not stand a chance as he failed the five-year residency requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 113], "content_span": [114, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nThe presidential candidate for Aitaira was former Minister for Internal Affairs Alexander Ankvab. Ankvab refused to undergo the written Abkhaz language test mandated by law, on the grounds that the constitution did not provide for this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nOn 28 August, head of State Security Service Mikhail Tarba said that Aitaira chairman Leonid Lakerbaia had breached the law by calling for an overthrow of power if necessary. In turn, Lakerbaia denied having made the statement and declared that he would initiate a defamation action against Tarba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nOn 2 September, the central election commission announced that it rejected the registration of Aitaira's candidate Alexander Ankvab on the grounds that he had not lived the whole past five years in Abkhazia and that his proficiency in the Abkhaz language could not be established completely. On 3 September Aitaira petitioned the Central Election Commission to reverse this decision, and it appealed the Supreme Court to overrule the Central Election Commission. It contested that Ankvab was perfectly fluent in Abkhaz, but that the written language test contravened the constitution. Furthermore, Aitaira put forward that Ankvab had indeed resided in Abkhazia during the last five years, as demonstrated by Abkhazian documents and witnesses, but that the CEC had ignored these basing its decision solely on Russian documents showing that Ankvab also paid taxes there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 948]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nOn 9 September, Aitaira convened an extraordinary congress to discuss the matter, where it was suggested the party might support Sergei Bagapsh should the Supreme Court not rule in its favour. Among the guests who addressed the congress were Sergei Bagapsh, acting Prime Minister Astamur Tarba, chairman of the Central Election Commission Sergei Smyr and Chairman of the Language Commission Aleksei Kaslandzia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nOn 10 September The Supreme Court upheld the Central Election Commission's decision to bar Alexander Ankvab from the presidential elections. The court agreed with Ankvab and Aitaira that the CEC had failed to demonstrate that Ankvab had failed the residence requirements, but it also ruled that the CEC had been right to exclude Ankvab on the grounds that he had not taken the written language test. Even if this test went against the constitution, the law being the law Ankvab should have complied with it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nDuring the proceedings, Chairman of the Language Commission Aleksei Kaslandzia testified that Ankvab did in fact have an excellent command of Abkhaz. He had spoken with the Commission's members in Abkhaz for 2 hours and 5 minutes, where just over half an hour is normal. He had not read the provided reading material, but had at one point started to read from and discuss the newspaper Respublika Abkhazia, which Kaslandzia judged to be of a far higher difficulty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nIn fact, the initial protocol prepared by the Language Commission had stated that Ankvab's command of the Abkhaz language was excellent, but this protocol had mysteriously disappeared. Chairman of the CEC Sergei Smyr had then insisted that the second draft of the protocol should state that Ankvab's proficiency could not be established, because he had not been fully tested. Language Commission chairman Aleksei Kaslandzia testified that Smyr had gone so far as to threaten him with litigation should he not comply.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Exclusion of Alexander Ankvab\nAfter the ruling by the Supreme Court, Aitaira entered into an election alliance with United Abkhazia, Amtsakhara and the Federation of Independent Trade Unions, supporting Sergei Bagapsh and Stanislav Lakoba, with the agreement that Alexander Ankvab would become Prime Minister should the bid be successful, the position originally projected for Nodar Khashba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Other candidates\nThe People's Party of Abkhazia put forward Iakub Lakoba as their presidential candidate. The decision during the Party's sixth extraordinary congress on 18 August to officially nominate Lakoba was not unanimous: the Gagra and Gudauta branches thought it wiser to support Alexander Ankvab's nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Candidates, Other candidates\nVice President Valery Arshba ran independently for president, with Vice Speaker of Parliament Alexander Stranichkin as running mate. On 31 August, in his capacity of vice president, Arshba called on local authorities to uphold election law and enable fair elections. Arshba's registration was accepted, but a day later, on 3 December he announced that he withdrew from the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nCandidates could officially begin their election campaign after their registration had been accepted on 2 September. 18 August, a round table conference organised by Apsnypress and the Sukhum Media Club had adopted a set of ethical principals by journalists during the elections. On 31 August, as demanded by the Abkhazian constitution since Khajimba was participating in the elections, his premiership was temporarily suspended by President Ardzinba, his duties to be performed by first Deputy Prime Minister Astamur Tarba .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nCorresponding to election law, each candidate received five bits of free air time on national television, of which four live and one prerecorded. The broadcasting slots of these items was determined by lot by the Central Election Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 17 September, the People's Assembly invited the Russian Club for Promoting Political Participation of Voters to observe the upcoming elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 23 September, the Union of Volunteers from Kabardino-Balkaria expressed its support for Khajimba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 1 October, the five presidential candidates debated live on national television, and they agreed not to campaign the following day, the day before the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Conduct\nElection law forbade candidates to campaign on 3 October, the day of the presidential elections. The 190 polling stations opened 8:00 local time. In the afternoon Chief of the Central Election Commission Sergei Smyr announced that more than 120,000 voters had been registered and that by 13:00, more than 40% had voted. Head of the Gali district administration Yuri Kvekveskiri announced that there were no more than 15,000 voters in the Gali district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Conduct\nHead of the Club for Promoting Political Participation of Voters Nikolai Timakov declared in a press conference that elections had in general been organised well, and that the minor violations witnessed would not affect the outcome of the elections. Timakov reported that in the polling stations inspected by the club, members of the law enforcement agencies ensured the safety of voters and that voter lists as well as excerpts from the election law and posters of all the candidates had been attached to the walls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Results\nAccording to the official results, Bagapsh received 50.08% of all votes cast (including invalid votes), narrowly crossing the 50% threshold required to avoid a second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath\nOn 12 October Abkhazia's Supreme Court, after a series of contradictory decisions by the Electoral Committee, recognized that the new president would be businessman Sergei Bagapsh, accused by his rival's supporters of being pro-Georgian. (Georgia doesn't recognize any separatist candidates or even the elections). Abkhazia's outgoing President Ardzinba claimed the decision was illegal and made under pressure from supporters of Bagapsh. The decision was cancelled by the Supreme Court the night of the same day. When supporters of Raul Khadjimba seized the building of the Supreme Court and destroyed the protocols from local electoral constituencies new elections were prescribed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath\nSoon the Supreme Court cancelled the later decision, and again named Bagapsh the new president. His supporters captured a local TV station, while Raul Khadjimba's supporters took control over the parliament's building. Outgoing president Ardzinba replaced Raul Khadjimba as a prime-minister with Nodar Khashba, who, before this appointment served in the Ministry of Extraordinary Situations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nOn 11 November, both Bagapsh and Khajimba met for around three hours with Ardzinba. According to Daur Tarba, member of Bagapsh's election team, Ardzinba initially agreed with Khajimba that the elections should be held again, but changed his mind when Bagapsh offered Khajimba \"a very high post\" in his future government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nOn Friday 12 November, around 10,000 supporters of Sergei Bagapsh gathered on Freedom Square, and around 500 supporters of Raul Khajimba gathered next to the Presidential building. During the day, Bagapsh and Khajimba met twice, first in the Galereya caf\u00e9 and at 3pm again for about ten minutes. After the second meeting, Bagapsh told his supporters that no compromise had been reached but that dialogue would continue. Following this, his supporters expressed their dissatisfaction about the lack of progress, the crowd broke up into two parts that then moved towards the Presidential building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nThe supporters of Khajimba present at the site, moved back and some brawls broke out. In the meantime, Khajimba and Prime Minister Khashba left the building through the back door. As Bagapsh's supporters moved into the building, they encountered guards who fired warning shots into the air. The ricochets injured two of Bagapsh's supporters and mortally wounded the 78 years old Tamara Shakryl, an academic and human rights campaigner who supported Khajimba. She died in hospital 3 hours later, her relatives blamed Prime Minister Khashba for her death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0033-0002", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nFirst Deputy Prime Minister Astamur Tarba then ordered the guards and special forces nearby to stand down, which left the Presidential building under control of Bagapsh's supporters. After a short celebration with liquor found inside the building, most of them left again, leaving just guards at the offices. At 5pm, Bagapsh arrived in the palace accompanied by Khajimba, and the two held a half-hour meeting in the Prime Minister's office. After the meeting, Khajimba left and Bagapsh addressed his supporters, stating:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\n\"We are one people and we will make a common front against all our enemies. We are not planning to pursue anyone. Enough shake-ups. Raul Khajimba is my younger friend, he is my younger brother, and we will work together.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nAfterwards, control over the Presidential building was handed over to the police, as Bagapsh's supporters retreated to the surrounding area which they continued to guard with a few dozen people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nThe taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters split government's opinions. President Ardzinba and Prime Minister Khashba condemned it as \"an armed coup\", and Khashba refused to enter the building on Monday 15 November in protest of the continued presence of armed supporters of Bagapsh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0036-0001", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nThe actions were also condemned by Alexander Yakovenko, spokesman for the Russian Ministry for Foreign Affairs, who described them as \"an attempt at forcefully seizing power by the supporters of one presidential candidate\", denouncing it as \"illegal, forceful actions\" and warning that it threatened the stability in Abkhazia and across the region as a whole. In contrast, more than half of government staff did show up for work 15 November, among whom Vice President Valery Arshba. Leader of Aitaira Leonid Lakerbaia denied that a coup had taken place \u2013 no one had seized power, since Bagapsh had been elected President, confirmed by both the Electoral Commission and the Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nOn 5 December the presidential candidates Sergei Bagapsh and Raul Khadjimba agreed to hold new elections. In these elections they would run on a joint ticket, with Khadjimba as vice presidential candidate. The new elections were won by Bagapsh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Taking of the Presidential building by Bagapsh's supporters\nThese elections were not recognized by any State and International Organizations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 108], "content_span": [109, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176457-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath, Long-term consequences\nOn 2 June 2005, United Abkhazia held its third party conference. The socio-political movement decided to revoke the memberships of Minister for Foreign Affairs Sergei Shamba, who had founded and become head of the Social-Democratic Party of Abkhazia, of former Prime Minister Nodar Khashba, of former Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Khilchevsky and of member of Parliament Albert Kapikian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176459-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Acropolis Rally\nThe 2004 Acropolis Rally (formally the 51st Acropolis Rally of Greece) was the sixth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over four days between 3 and 6 June 2004, and was won by Subaru's Petter Solberg, his 7th win in the win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176460-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic\nThe 2004 Acura Classic was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in San Diego, California, in the United States. It was part of Tier I of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 26th edition of the tournament was held from July 25 through August 1, 2004. Fourth-seeded Lindsay Davenport won the singles title and earned $189,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176460-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Virginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176461-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic \u2013 Doubles\nKim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, but Clijsters chose not to participate, and only Sugiyama competed that year. Sugiyama partnered with Shinobu Asagoe, but lost in the first round to Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo and Mary Pierce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176461-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Rennae Stubbs won in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20134, against Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176461-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nAll eight seeded pairs received a bye to the second round. Text in italics indicates the round those seeds were eliminated, while champion seeds are indicated in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176462-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic \u2013 Singles\nJustine Henin was the defending champion, but withdrew due to a virus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176462-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport won the title, defeating Anastasia Myskina 6\u20131, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176462-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Acura Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176463-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ac\u0131badem bombing\nOn 20 May 2004, a car bomb detonated in Ac\u0131badem, Turkey, in the car park of a McDonald's restaurant. No casualties were reported and numerous parked cars were seriously damaged by the explosion. The police, who was informed about a bomb 15 minutes before the attack, evacuated the restaurant and took intense security measures, preventing the loss of life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176463-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ac\u0131badem bombing\n8 people with connections to the attack were arrested in the week after the attack. After judicial process, it was revealed that they were T\u0130KKO members. It was determined that the individuals were involved in the bombing, as well as an incident that resulted in the killing of 2 soldiers in Tokat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176464-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International\nThe 2004 Adidas International was a combine men's and women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the NSW Tennis Centre in Sydney in Australia that was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. The tournament ran from 11 through 18 January 2004. Lleyton Hewitt and Justine Henin-Hardenne won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176464-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International, Finals, Men's Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Todd Woodbridge defeated Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 7\u20136(7\u20133), 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176464-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International, Finals, Women's Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Dinara Safina / Meghann Shaughnessy 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176465-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nPaul Hanley and Nathan Healey were the defending champions but they competed with different partners that year, Hanley with Wayne Arthurs and Healey with Jordan Kerr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176465-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nHealey and Kerr lost in the first round to Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176465-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nArthurs and Hanley lost in the quarterfinals to Yves Allegro and Rainer Sch\u00fcttler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176465-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge won in the final 7\u20136 (7\u20133), 7\u20135 against the Bryans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176465-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176466-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Singles\nHyung-Taik Lee was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176466-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Singles\nLleyton Hewitt won the final 4\u20133 after Carlos Moy\u00e1 was forced to retire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176466-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176467-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, but Clijsters withdrew from the tournament due to a left ankle injury. Sugiyama teamed up with Liezel Huber and lost in the quarterfinals to Dinara Safina and Meghann Shaughnessy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176467-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Women's Doubles\nCara Black and Rennae Stubbs won the title by defeating Dinara Safina and Meghann Shaughnessy 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176468-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Women's Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but was forced to withdraw due to a left ankle injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176468-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne won the title by defeating Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176468-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Adidas International \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis\nThe Adjara crisis was a political crisis in Georgia's Adjaran Autonomous Republic, then led by Aslan Abashidze, who refused to obey the central authorities after President Eduard Shevardnadze's ousting during the Rose Revolution of November 2003. The crisis threatened to develop into military confrontation as both sides mobilized their forces at the internal border. However, Georgia's post-revolutionary government of President Mikheil Saakashvili managed to avoid bloodshed and with the help of Adjaran opposition reasserted its supremacy. Abashidze left the region in exile in May 2004 and was succeeded by Levan Varshalomidze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Tensions\nAdjaran leader Aslan Abashidze, being in strong opposition to the Rose Revolution, declared a state of emergency immediately after Eduard Shevardnadze's ousting on November 23, 2003. Following negotiations with central authorities, the state of emergency was temporarily canceled on January 3, 2004, just one day before the presidential election. The state of emergency was renewed on January 7 and was followed by the crackdown of an oppositional demonstration. On January 19, dozens were injured as a result of clashes between protesters and police in the southern Adjaran village of Gonio. The protesters demanded the resignation of Aslan Abashidze. In the wake of Abashidze's visit to Moscow, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a statement on January 20 backing Abashidze's policy and condemning his opposition as \"extremist forces.\" In late January, Georgian officials, including Acting President Nino Burjanadze and President-elect Mikheil Saakashvili, met with Abashidze in Batumi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 1018]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Tensions\nOn February 20, the opposition movement's offices were again raided after the opposition had staged a protest rally in Batumi. Clashes between supporters of and opposition to Abashidze also took place in Kobuleti. Disorders coincided with the visit of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe (CoE) Walter Schwimmer in Batumi, who held talks with Aslan Abashidze. President Saakashvili demanded from Adjaran leadership to abolish the Autonomous Republic's Security Ministry, which was Abashidze's main weapon of repression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, At the Choloki Bridge\nThe situation escalated on March 14, when the central Georgian officials took advantage of Abashidze's being in Moscow and headed to Adjara to campaign for the parliamentary elections scheduled for March 28. However, pro-Abashidze armed groups blocked the administrative border of Adjara at the Choloki River and prevented President Mikheil Saakashvili and other members of the government to travel to the Autonomous Republic. The Adjaran authorities claimed Saakashvili was going to take control over the region by force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, At the Choloki Bridge\nIn retaliation, Georgia's central authorities imposed partial economic sanctions against its defiant region in a bid \"to exhaust Adjaran regime's resources\". Tensions defused between Tbilisi and Batumi on March 16 after President Saakashvili and Aslan Abashidze met and struck a deal that allowed for economic sanctions on Adjara to be lifted. An agreement was reached over disarmament of paramilitary forces in Adjara, release of political prisoners, joint control of the customs and port of Batumi, and providing conditions for free election campaigning in Adjara. However, Abashidze refused to disarm his paramilitary forces in April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, At the Choloki Bridge\nOn April 19-April 21, Batumi-based military commanders Major General Roman Dumbadze and Murad Tsintsadze officially announced their insubordination to central authorities' orders. On April 24, the Adjaran Senate approved Aslan Abashidze's proposal to impose a curfew in the region. However, dozens of soldiers of Adjaran leader Aslan Abashidze's elite special purpose unit began to leave the region and pledged loyalty to the country's central authorities. Several Adjaran officials also did so. Local opposition resumed the series of protests in Batumi, being broken up severely on April 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, At the Choloki Bridge\nAt the end of April, Georgia launched its largest ever military exercises at the Kulevi training ground, near the Black Sea town of Poti. The Large-scale war games, some 30\u00a0km away from Adjara's administrative border, was a show of strength, amid the confrontation between the central authorities and the Adjaran leader. In retaliation, the two key bridges connecting Adjara with the rest of Georgia over the Choloki River were blown up by Abashidze's forces to prevent an incursion into Adjara allegedly planned by the country's central authorities. On May 3, the U.S. Department of State condemned Abashidze's activities and accused him of \"trying to provoke a military crisis\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\nOn May 4, a large opposition protest rally was attacked by the local security forces in Batumi. Dozens of protesters were reportedly injured. However, the violent break up of peaceful demonstration proved a catalyst for even larger protests later on the same day. Tens of thousands from all Adjara headed to Batumi demanding Abashidze's resignation. Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania and Interior Minister Giorgi Baramidze crossed the Choloki River on May 5 and held talks with Adjaran Interior Minister Jemal Gogitidze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\nThe latter agreed to withdraw his forces and paramilitary groups from the administrative border provided he would be guaranteed with security. Abashidze's position became untenable when local protesters took control of the central part of the city of Batumi and Georgian special forces entered the region and started to disarm pro-Abashizde militants. Later on the same day, Secretary of the Russian Security Council Igor Ivanov arrived in Batumi. Abashidze stepped down after overnight talks with Ivanov and left for Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\n\"Aslan has fled, Adjara is free,\" President Saakashvili announced at the dawn of St George's Day on May 6 and congratulated Georgians with what he described as \"a second bloodless revolution\" in Georgia. President Saakashvili also said that Abashidze's resignation \"will pave the way for Georgia's prosperity.\" \"It will be the beginning of Georgia's territorial integrity,\" he added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\nSaakashvili left for Adjara shortly after Aslan Abashidze's departure and met celebrating Adjarans in Batumi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\nOn May 7, direct presidential rule was imposed in Adjara and a 20-member Interim Council was set up to run the Autonomous Republic before fresh local elections could be held in the region. Levan Varshalomidze was appointed as the Chairman of the Government of the Autonomous Republic of Adjara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\nRegional parliamentary elections were held on June 20. Victorious Adjara, a party backed by President Saakashvili won 28 seats out of 30 in the local legislative body. The remaining two seats were occupied by Saakashvili's former allies, members of the Republican Party. There were allegations of vote-rigging from the Republicans, after they won less than 15 percent of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176469-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Adjara crisis, Adjara's Revolution\nOn July 20, the Adjaran Supreme Council approved Levan Varshalomidze as the Chairman of the Autonomous Republic's Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176470-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Adur District Council election\nElections to Adur District Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by 10. The Conservative Party held overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 38.0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500\nThe 2004 Advance Auto Parts 500 was the eighth stock car race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. It was held on April 18, 2004, at Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Virginia before a crowd of 91,000. The 500-lap race was won by Rusty Wallace of the Penske-Jasper Racing team after he started from a seventeenth position; It was Wallace's fifty-fifth and final victory of his career. Bobby Labonte finished second and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. came in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500, Report, Background\nMartinsville Speedway is one of five short tracks to hold NASCAR races; the others are Richmond International Raceway, Dover International Speedway, Bristol Motor Speedway, and Phoenix International Raceway. The standard track at Martinsville Speedway is a four-turn, 0.526-mile (0.847\u00a0km) oval. Its turns are banked at eleven degrees, and neither the front stretch (the location of the finish line) nor the backstretch is banked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500, Report, Background\nBefore the race Kurt Busch led the Drivers' Championship with 1,032 points, nineteen ahead of Matt Kenseth in second, and a further sixteen in front of Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in third. Tony Stewart was fourth on 946 points, and Elliott Sadler was a further four points behind in fifth. Ford was leading the Manufacturers' Championship with 48 points; Chevrolet was second with 43 points, and Dodge was a close third on 42. Jeff Gordon was the race's defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThree practice sessions were held before the Sunday race: one on Friday and two on Saturday. The first session lasted 90 minutes, and the second and final sessions lasted 45 minutes. Jeff Gordon was fastest in the first practice session with a lap of 20.325 seconds; Ryan Newman was second and Jimmie Johnson third. Kasey Kahne took the fourth position with a time of 20.371, and Busch placed fifth. Robby Gordon, Earnhardt, Jamie McMurray, Ricky Rudd, and Sadler rounded out the session's top-ten drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nAlthough forty-four drivers were entered in the qualifier; according to NASCAR's qualifying procedure, only forty-three could race. Jeff Gordon clinched his third consecutive pole position at Martinsville Speedway with a time of 20.252 seconds. He was joined on the front row of the grid by McMurray. Newman qualified third, Earnhardt fourth, and Kevin Harvick fifth. Ward Burton, Busch, Johnson. Sadler and Jeremy Mayfield rounded out the top ten qualifiers. The driver that failed to qualify was Todd Bodine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nAfter the qualifier, Gordon said, \"We came with the basic setup that we sat on the pole here the last time with and we had to make some adjustments. We tweaked it and at the end of practice, I felt like we hit on some things. I took off and the car did everything I really wanted it to do. I couldn't ask for much more than I got out of the car.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176471-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Advance Auto Parts 500, Report, Practice and qualifying\nOn Saturday morning, Mark Martin set the fastest time in the second practice session with a lap of 20.561 seconds, ahead of Harvick and Terry Labonte. Ricky Craven (with a time of 20.599) was fourth-fastest; Mayfield was fifth and McMurray sixth. Jeff Gordon, Scott Riggs, Johnson, and Robby Gordon followed in the top ten. Later that day, Earnhardt paced the final practice session with a time of 20.580; Johnson was second and Busch third. Jeff Gordon was fourth-fastest, ahead of Newman and Harvick. Terry Labonte was seventh-fastest, Robby Gordon eighth, Jeff Green ninth, and Craven tenth. Jeff Burton was afflicted with a problem with his brakes in the closing stages of the session; he spun back into the wall and heavily damaged his car's left side. Burton switched to a back-up car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176472-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Advanta Championships\nThe 2004 Advanta Championships was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at The Pavilion in Villanova, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States that was part of Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 20th edition of the tournament and was held from November 1 through November 7, 2004. First-seeded Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo won her second consecutive singles title and earned $93,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176472-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Advanta Championships, Finals, Doubles\nAlicia Molik / Lisa Raymond defeated Liezel Huber / Corina Morariu 7\u20135, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176473-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Advanta Championships \u2013 Doubles\nMartina Navratilova and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions from 2003, but Navratilova chose not to participate. Raymond successfully defended her title, playing alongside Alicia Molik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176473-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Advanta Championships \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176474-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Advanta Championships \u2013 Singles\nAm\u00e9lie Mauresmo was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176474-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Advanta Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176475-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships\nThe 8th Aerobic Gymnastics World Championships were held in Sofia, Bulgaria from June 3 to June 5, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Afghanistan on October 9, 2004. Hamid Karzai won the elections with 55.4% of the vote and three times more votes than any other candidate. Twelve candidates received less than 1% of the vote. It is estimated that more than three-quarters of Afghanistan's nearly 12 million registered voters cast ballots. The elections were overseen by the Joint Electoral Management Body, chaired by Zakim Shah and vice-chaired by Ray Kennedy, an American working for the United Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election\nAfter some accusations of fraud circulated on the day of the election, at least fifteen candidates declared that they were boycotting the ballot, but the boycott dissolved when the United Nations announced it would set up a three-person independent panel to investigate the charges of irregularities. The panel included a former Canadian diplomat, a Swedish electoral expert, and the third member was later named by the European Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election\nThe date was originally set for July 5, 2004. The elections were twice postponed, first until September, and then until October. Candidates for president also nominated two vice-presidential candidates. Some candidates used this to balance their ticket with regard to Afghanistan's three main ethnic communities. If no candidate had secured 50% of the votes, a run-off election would have been held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nTwenty-three candidates put their name forward for presidency, but five of them dropped out of the running by the time campaigning began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nThe favourite throughout was interim president Hamid Karzai. Karzai ran as an independent, though he had the backing of several political parties, including Afghan Mellat, a social democratic party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nInitially, General Abdul Rashid Dostum, a warlord that led the National Islamic Movement of Afghanistan and then became a member of the Afghan National Army in Karzai's first interim government, was expected to be Karzai's main challenger, but it soon became clear that his popularity was limited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nYunus Qanuni, who served in several prominent positions in the interim government, instead emerged as the focus of opposition to Karzai. Qanuni, a leading member of the Northern Alliance, had the support of Mohammed Fahim, an interim vice-president who was dropped from the Karzai ticket during the campaign. Qanuni claimed to represent the legacy of Ahmad Shah Massoud, as did several other candidates (including Massoud's brother, one of Karzai's vice-presidential candidates).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nAlso running was Mohammed Mohaqiq. He was a leader of the Islamic Unity Party of Afghanistan, a minister under Burhanuddin Rabbani and Karzai, and had been a strong ally of Dostum. Mohaqiq criticised Karzai as a weak leader and pledged to unite conflicting factions and end the drugs trade. He faced widespread accusations that he committed war crimes during the fight against the Soviet occupation, subsequent internecine conflict within the Mujahedin, and later, against the Taliban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nThe youngest candidate was 41-year-old Abdul Hafiz Mansoor. He was a member of the Northern Alliance and claimant to the legacy of Massoud. A journalist and former Minister for Information and Culture, Mansoor accused Karzai of trying to form an elected dictatorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nThe main candidate of the religious right was Ahmad Shah Ahmadzai, leader of the exiled government in Pakistan during the Soviet occupation. Ahmadzai formerly led a radical Islamist group which was active in the Mujahedin, and later in both the Taleban and Al-Qaida, but has since disavowed any links with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nHamyon Shah Aasifi represented monarchist groups, although the former King, Mohammed Zahir Shah, has renounced his claims to be head of state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nAbdul Satar Sirat held several ministerial positions in the early 1970s. Sirat later served as envoy for the exiled King and was initially voted leader of the interim government but stepped aside in favour Karzai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nMassouda Jalal, a medical doctor, was the only female candidate, although two women were nominated for vice-president (Nelab Mobarez running with Aasifi and Shafiqa Habibi running with Dostum).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nSeveral candidates publicly supported women's rights, including Karzai, Wakil Mangal and, most prominently, the former police colonel Abdul Hasib Aarian. 72-year-old Abdul Hadi Khalilzai, the oldest candidate and a former teacher and religious lawyer, claimed to support women's rights \"according to the Constitution, accepted Afghan tradition and the holy religion of Islam\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nLatif Pedram, a journalist and poet, and Mohammed Ibrahim Rashid were strong advocates for the rights of Afghan refugees. Sayed Ishaq Gailani, a Muslim intellectual who fought against the Soviet occupation, stood to represent the Sufi Muslim minority. All candidates claimed to be able to build bridges between Afghanistan's various communities and factions. Ghulam Farooq Nejrabi, a paediatric physician and medical lecturer who called for an end to religious, ethnic and sexual discrimination, even claimed he could build bridges with the Taleban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Candidates and issues\nMahfuz Nedahi, who had served as Minister of Mines and Industry in the interim government, accused the other candidates of running on tribal or party lines and failing to offer a true programme of national unity, while Sayed Abdul Hadi Dabir, an amateur boxer and former fighter in the Mujahedin, criticised tribal nepotism in government appointments and called for a national Ulema to be formed as part of the elected parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Campaigning and voting\nBallots contained the names of candidates, accompanied by their photo and an icon of their choice. Where appropriate, the icon was the symbol of their political party. However, most candidates ran as independents regardless of their party affiliation, and selected generic icons to distinguish their candidacy. In order to avoid voting fraud, voters dipped their thumb in ink after they had cast their ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Campaigning and voting\nIn Afghanistan, polling centres opened at 6\u00a0am or 7\u00a0am in different areas, and were set to close at 4\u00a0pm. However, on election day, voting time was officially extended by two hours, but several polling centres closed on time before news of this announcement reached them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Campaigning and voting\nVery significantly, over two million people voted among refugee communities in Iran and Pakistan, thanks to an operation conducted by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) through a remarkable logistic effort. In Peshawar, Pakistan, under the leadership of Stuart Poucher, a small team from IOM managed in less than two months to hire over 400 electoral officers, and over 6,000 polling officials, to conduct voter education for over 800,000 refugees, over half of whom voted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies\nDuring the campaign there were some rumours that the election would be decided by negotiation, as candidates bargained for promises of political position under Karzai or another candidate in return for dropping out of the race. There were rumours in September that Sirat and Mohaqiq had formed a pact with Qanuni, whilst Gailani and Aarian declared their support for Karzai on the last day of campaigning, October 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies\nAll the candidates except Karzai, Gailani and Aarian, publicly declared that they were boycotting the ballot and would ignore the results\u2014 effectively uniting Karzai's disparate opponents. Two major opposition candidates, the Hazara leader Mohammed Mohaqeq and the Uzbek strongman General Abdul Rashid Dostum, soon declared they had not joined the boycott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies, Election fraud\nSignificant fraud occurred in the 2004 presidential election, even though it did not attract the level of international attention as the fraud in the 2009 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies, Election fraud\nOn election day there were several claims that the ink used to mark voters could be easily removed and that multiple voting had resulted, as well as isolated reports of intimidation and campaigning at the polling centres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies, Election fraud\nJournalist Christian Parenti claimed that many people in Afghanistan were in possession of three or four photographic ID cards. He himself, not an Afghan citizen, could have easily voted. \"One of the parties gave me two valid voting cards,\" he said \"that I could add my photograph to and I could have voted if I wanted to.\" Other problems reported by Parenti included lack of pens in polling places, not having enough ballots, and differences in closing times of voting stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies, Election fraud\nThe documentary film \"God's Open Hand\" by Ghost Studios exposes voter fraud. However, the film mainly focuses on the hopes and dreams of the Afghan people on their first ever Presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies, Election fraud\nIn September 2009, Hamid Karzai, downplaying the significance of the fraud in the 2009 presidential election, said \"there was fraud in 2004\" as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Controversies, Election fraud\nOn September 3, 2009, when envoys from the United States, Britain, France, Germany, and other Western nations met in Paris to discuss the recent 2009 Afghan election, UN Special Representative in Afghanistan Kai Eide said that the 2009 Afghan presidential election, widely characterized by rampant fraud and intimidation, \"was a better election than five years ago.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176476-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Afghan presidential election, Violence\nRebels loyal to the former Taliban leadership had vowed to disrupt the election, accusing the United States moving to dominate the region. During the election process, five Afghan National Army soldiers died in skirmishes and due to landmines. 15 staff of the Joint Electoral Management Body were killed and a further 46 injured in various attacks. 2 International sub-contractors working in Nuristan in support of the electoral process were also killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176477-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Africa Cup\nThe 2004 Africa Cup (officially called \"Africa Top ten\" at the time) was the fifth edition of top level rugby union tournament in Africa. Ten teams were admitted, but Tunisia withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176477-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Africa Cup\nThe final was played in 2004, due to the participation of Namibia to the 2003 Rugby World Cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176477-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Africa Cup\nThe teams were divided into two zones, North and South. The North Zone contained four teams in a round robin pool. In South Zone, the six teams were divided in two pools, with a \"Zone final\" between the winner of each pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176477-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Africa Cup\nAt the end a second division was also played as \"CAR Development\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176478-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics\nThe 14th African Championships in Athletics were held in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo in July, 2004. Since African Championships is a biennial event, this edition was contested only a month before 2004 Summer Olympics. Thus some top athletes shunned the event. On the other hand, many athletes use the competition to prepare for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176479-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176480-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176480-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +2.6\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +1.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +1.7\u00a0m/s, Heat 5: +1.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 6: +0.6\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 74], "content_span": [75, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176481-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176482-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176483-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk\nThe men's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176484-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176484-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -2.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +0.9\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: -1.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: -2.7\u00a0m/s, Heat 5: -2.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 6: -1.8\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 74], "content_span": [75, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176485-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176486-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176487-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176488-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176489-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 17\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176490-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176491-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176492-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176493-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176494-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176495-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176496-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176497-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176498-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176499-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176500-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176501-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe women's 10,000 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176502-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176502-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: +1.3\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +1.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +1.9\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +1.1\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176503-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176504-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176505-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk\nThe women's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176506-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176506-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind:Heat 1: -0.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.3\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +0.2\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +0.9\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176507-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe women's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16. This marked the first time that this event was held for women at the African Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176508-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176509-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176510-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176511-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176512-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176513-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176514-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176515-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176516-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176517-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176518-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176519-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176520-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176521-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176522-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump event at the 2004 African Championships in Athletics was held in Brazzaville, Republic of the Congo on July 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations\nThe 2004 African Cup of Nations, known as the NOKIA African Cup of Nations, Tunisia 2004 for sponsorship reasons (also referred to as AFCON 2004 or CAN 2004), was the 24th edition of the Africa Cup of Nations, the biennial international men's football championship of Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations\nThe tournament was instead hosted by Tunisia. Tunisia won their first title after defeating one-time champions Morocco 2\u20131 in the final. Nigeria finished third after beating Mali 2\u20131 in the third place play-off. As champions, Tunisia qualified for the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup in Germany. Tournament defending champions Cameroon eliminated in the quarter-finals after failing to win their match against Nigeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThe organization of the 2004 Africa Cup of Nations was awarded to Tunisia on 4 September 2000 by the CAF Executive Committee meeting in Cairo, Egypt. Voters had a choice between four countries\u00a0: Malawi and Zambia (joint bid), Tunisia and Zimbabwe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Host selection\nBenin and Togo were both also candidates at the start (joint bid) but withdrew on 4 September 2000 before the meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThis edition was awarded to Tunisia which represented Africa in the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France by taking the majority of the votes of the CAF Executive Committee members which are 13 after its impressive success in the 1994 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Host selection\nThis is the third time that Tunisia has hosted the African Cup after 1965 and 1994 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Sponsorship\nOn September 20, 2003 in Tunis, Nokia acquired from CAF the right to be the \u201ctitle sponsor\u201d of the 24th edition, which is therefore officially called NOKIA Africa Cup of Nations, Tunisia 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Mascot\nTo choose the tournament mascot, the organizing committee is launching a competition open to the entire Tunisian population. The only rules imposed, this mascot must be an eagle and must represent football, Africa and Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Mascot\nOf the fifty or so proposals submitted to the committee, it is the work of Malek Khalfallah that is retained. It is an eagle, which the author baptized N\u00e7ayir. The colors of its equipment, red and white, refer to the colors of the Tunisian flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Mascot\nI sent my proposal by post without even giving my phone number. I just wanted to participate. And one day someone knocks on the door telling me that I must urgently call a number. To my surprise I learned that it was my first mascot proposal that won the competition! I then had to modify some details requested by the organizing committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Match ball\nThe official ball for the 2004 African Cup of Nations is the Adidas Fevernova. Designed two years earlier by Adidas for the 2002 FIFA World Cup, the ball was reused during 2004 African Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Qualification\nThe 49 nations registered for the competition are divided into thirteen groups: ten groups of four teams and three groups of three teams. The selections of Guinea-Bissau, Sao Tome and Principe and Djibouti forfeit before the start of qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Qualification\nThe first of each group qualify for the final tournament in Tunisia, as well as the best of the second. Cameroon, as defending champion, and Tunisia, as host country, are automatically qualified for the final phase of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Qualification, First participation\nBenin and Rwanda manage to qualify for the AFCON for the first final phase of their history, after finishing at the top of their group in the qualifiers in front of two former African champions, Sudan and Ghana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Qualification, First participation\nZimbabwe do the same after finishing first in the finalists in all qualifying groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Venues\nThe six cities selected to host the event are coastal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Match officials\nThe following referees were chosen for the 2004 Africa Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Squads\nAs is the case in all versions of the African Cup of Nations, each team participating in the tournament must consist of 23 players (including three goalkeepers). Participating national teams must confirm the final list of 23 players no later than ten days before the start of the tournament. In the event that a player suffers an injury which prevents him from participating in the tournament, his team has the right to replace him with another player at any time up to 24 hours before the team's first game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Format\nOnly the hosts received an automatic qualification spot; the other 15 teams qualified through a qualification tournament. At the finals, the 16 teams were drawn into four groups of four teams each. The teams in each group played a single round robin. After the group stage, the top two teams from each group advanced to the quarter-finals. The quarter-final winners advanced to the semi-finals. The semi-final losers played in a third place match, while the semi-final winners played in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Draw\nThe draw took place on 20 september 2003 in Tunis. In parentheses, the FIFA World Rankings as of January 14, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Draw\nTunisia (45) (hosts)\u00a0Cameroon (14) (title holders)\u00a0Nigeria (35)\u00a0Senegal (33)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Draw\nAlgeria (63)\u00a0South Africa (36)\u00a0Egypt (32)\u00a0DR Congo (54)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Match summary\nThe 16 national teams participating in the tournament together played a total of 32 matches ranging from group stage and progression matches to knockout matches, with teams eliminated through the various progressive stages. Rest days are set aside during the different stages to allow players to recover during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nTeams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss), and if tied on points, the following tiebreaking criteria were applied, in the order given, to determine the rankings (Regulations Article 74):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 88 goals scored in 32 matches, for an average of 2.75 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Statistics, Tournament team rankings\nAs per statistical convention in football, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176523-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176524-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations Final\nThe 2004 African Cup of Nations Final was a football match that took place on 14 February 2004 at the Stade 7 November in Rad\u00e8s, Tunisia, to determine the winner of the 2004 African Cup of Nations, the football championship of Africa organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176524-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations Final\nTunisia won the title for the first time by beating Morocco 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176524-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations Final, Match details, Summary\nIn the final at the Stade 7 November in Rad\u00e8s, Tunisia got off to a good start with a lead 1-0 after four minutes with Mehdi Nafti centered on Francileudo Santos, who scored his fourth goal of the tournament. At the end of the first half, Morocco returned to the score with a goal from Youssouf Hadji on a lift from Youssef Mokhtari. Seven minutes passed in the second half before another Tunisian striker, Ziad Jaziri gave his country the lead. The match ultimately ended 2-1, giving Tunisia its first African Cup of Nations title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176524-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations Final, Match details, Summary\nRoger Lemerre also becomes the first coach to win two different continental tournaments. The national team also wins the African National Team of the Year award from the Confederation of African Football. The victory gives rise to the team's nickname, the \"Eagles of Carthage\" and, as a result, the team badge is changed to incorporate an eagle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 57], "content_span": [58, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176525-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations qualification, Qualifying round\nThe 52 nations were divided into 10 groups of four teams and 3 groups of 3 teams, with the 13 group winners and the best runner-up from the groups containing 4 sides qualifying for the finals. Qualifying took place between 6 September 2002 and 6 July 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176525-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations qualification, Qualifying round, Group 3\nTanzania pulled out for financial reasons and the game was awarded to Sudan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176525-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations qualification, Qualifying round, Group 5\nThe match was abandoned at 3-0 in 85' when Mauritania were reduced to six players following 5 red cards. The result stood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176525-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations qualification, Best runner-up\nThe best runner-up from groups with four teams would qualify for the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176526-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations squads\nBelow is a list of squads used in the 2004 African Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176526-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Cup of Nations squads, Group B, Kenya\nSince participation in CAN 2004, the Kenyan goalkeepers received traditional numbers 1, 13 and 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176527-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Futsal Championship\nThe 2004 African Futsal Championship took place between 9 July \u2013 3 September 2004. The tournament was won by Egypt who qualified for the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship in Chinese Taipei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176528-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Judo Championships\nThe 2004 African Judo Championships were the 25th edition of the African Judo Championships, and were held in Tunis, Tunisia from 7 May to 8 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176529-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Men's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 African Men's Handball Championship was the 16th edition of the African Men's Handball Championship, held in Cairo, Egypt, from 8 to 18 April 2004. It acted as the African qualifying tournament for the 2005 World Championship in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176529-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Men's Handball Championship\nEgypt win their fourth title beating Tunisia in the final game 31\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176530-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African U-19 Women's Championship\nThe 2004 African U-19 Women's Championship was the second edition of the African under-19 women's football championship. The winners of the tournament Nigeria have qualified to the 2004 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship\nThe 2004 African Women's Championship was the sixth edition of the African Women's Championship (now known as the Africa Women Cup of Nations), the biennial international football championship organised by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) for the women's national teams of Africa. It was held in South Africa between 18 September and 3 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship\nNigeria won its sixth title, after defeating Cameroon 5\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship\nSouth Africa were elected as hosts on 12 December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Qualification\nSouth Africa qualified automatically as hosts, while the remaining seven spots were determined by the qualifying rounds, which took place from May to July 2004. From this tournament onwards, the defending champions does not receive automatic qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Qualification, Format\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still level, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (no extra time would be played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Qualification, Format\nThe seven winners of the final round qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Format\nThe eight teams were divided into two groups of four teams each. The top two teams in the groups advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Format\nThe teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Results, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, if a match is level at the end of normal playing time, extra time is played (two periods of 15 minutes each) and followed, if necessary, by kicks from the penalty mark to determine the winner, except for the third place match where no extra time is played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176531-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship, Statistics, Goalscorers\nPerpetua Nkwocha was the top scorer of the event with nine goals. In total, 48 goals were scored by 27 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification\nThe 2004 African Women's Championship qualification process was organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) to decide the participating teams of the 2004 African Women's Championship. South Africa qualified automatically as hosts, while the remaining seven spots were determined by the qualifying rounds, which took place from May to July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification\nFrom this tournament onwards, the defending champions does not receive automatic qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Teams\nA total of 17 national teams participated in the qualifying process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Format\nQualification ties were played on a home-and-away two-legged basis. If the aggregate score was tied after the second leg, the away goals rule would be applied, and if still level, the penalty shoot-out would be used to determine the winner (no extra time would be played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Format\nThe seven winners of the final round qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Preliminary round\nCongo won 4\u20132 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Preliminary round\nMalawi won by default and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Preliminary round\nTanzania won 5\u20131 on aggregate and advanced to the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nCameroon won 2\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nEthiopia won 9\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nZimbabwe won 7\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nAlgeria won 3\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nGhana won 22\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\n1 The match was abandoned at the 76th minute after an officer from the riot police 'mistakenly' fired tear gas which dispersed fans rushing to find an open space.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nNigeria won 12\u20133 on aggregate and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nDR Congo won by default after Gabon withdrew and qualified for the final tournament. The former also withdrew later, forcing the CAF to elect a lucky loser, to select the best of the eliminated teams to qualify for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, First round\nMali won as lucky loser and qualified for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176532-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Championship qualification, Goalscorers\nAkua Anokyewaa and Adjoa Bayor, both from Ghana, were the top scorers of the qualifying process with 6 goals each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176533-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 African Women's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 African Women's Handball Championship was the 16th edition of the African Women's Handball Championship, held in Egypt from 9 to 18 April 2004. It acted as the African qualifying tournament for the 2005 World Women's Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai\n2004 Ai (stylized as 2004 A.I.) is the third studio album by Japanese-American singer-songwriter Ai, released on June 16, 2004. 2004 Ai was her first top 10 album, as well as her first album to be certified by the RIAJ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Background\nThe album was her second to be released under Universal Music Japan. While she was initially signed to the DefJam Japan sub-label for Original Ai, this album was her first to be released after her switch to the Universal Sigma sub-label. Original Ai was a commercial success compared to her debut under BMG Japan, My Name Is Ai, selling 20 times her debut album's amount and peaking at number 15 on Oricon's albums chart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 19], "content_span": [20, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Background\nTwo singles were released prior to the album, \"After the Rain\" and \"EO,\" both of which were top 30 hits. \"EO\" was her highest charting single to date, reaching number 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 19], "content_span": [20, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Writing and production\nThe majority of the album was produced by R&B producers 813 (DJ Yutaka and Shingo. S), 2Soul, Daisuke Imai, T. Kura and Michico. Ai had worked with 813 and Michico on Original Ai, on the songs \"Summer Time\" and \"Girls' Talk\" respectively. \"Dreaming of You\" was a collaboration with Danish music production duo , i.e. Carsten Lindberg and Joachim Svare, with new Japanese lyrics written by Ai. Ai had previously worked with the pair on her single \"Thank U.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 31], "content_span": [32, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Writing and production\nAi collaborated with several musicians on the album, most notably beat-boxer Afra and rapper Tucker on the single \"Watch Out!\" She also collaborated with 1970s guitarist Char, who arranged the song \"Breathe.\" The collaboration occurred because Ai happened to be childhood friends with Char's son, vocalist Jesse from the rock band Rize. The pair later collaborated vocally on Char's DVD single \"No Generation Gap\" (2004), which was featured on Ai's album Feat. Ai. Ai also collaborated with reggae artist Boy-Ken on \"Angel.\" Boy-Ken released an alternative version of \"Angel\" on his album Everythin' Is Everythin' (2004). The interlude \"L'Haleine des Cordes\" is a classical piece arranged by game music composer Shir\u014d Sagisu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 31], "content_span": [32, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Promotion and concerts\nThe album received several minor commercial tie-ups. \"After the Rain\" was used as the Fuji TV music show Hey! Hey! Hey! Music Champ's January to April 2004 ending theme song. \"EO\" was use as the TV Tokyo music show Japan Countdown's May 2004 ending theme song. \"Watch Out!\" was used in TV commercials for the PlayStation game True Crime: Streets of LA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 31], "content_span": [32, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Promotion and concerts\nAn English version of the song \"Alive\" was used as an insert song for the South Korean drama Delightful Girl Choon-Hyang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 31], "content_span": [32, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Promotion and concerts\nAi supported the album with two tours, the 15 date 2004 Ai Club Tour between May and August 2004, and the 10 date 2004 Ai Japan Tour in September and October 2004. Ai also performed at the 2004 MTV Buzz Asia Concert in Seoul, South Korea, as well as the Taipei Music Festival to promote the album. Footage from the Taiwan concert, the club tour and the concert tour were compiled to create Ai's first live DVD, Machigainai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 31], "content_span": [32, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Critical reception\nThe reviewers at CDJournal felt the album had a lot more personality than Original Ai. (2003) They felt the album's sound did not show the \"frailty\" of other popular R&B acts, and noted the album's \"strong beats\" and the lyrics from a female viewpoint. \"After the Rain\" was called \"bewitching,\" and that the song's \"sticky with emotion melody wraps the song in a mellow atmosphere.\" The reviewers felt that Ai's \"pressingly questioning\" rap in \"Watch Out!\" showed a high level of technique.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 27], "content_span": [28, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Critical reception\nThe music videos were well received at music awards shows. At the 2004 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, \"After the Rain\" was nominated for the Best Buzz Asia - Japan award. Ai also received two nominations at the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, best R&B video for \"EO,\" and best collaboration for \"Watch Out.\" In 2005 at the Space Shower Music Video Awards, she won the best female video award for \"Watch Out.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 27], "content_span": [28, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Chart performance\nThe album debuted at number three in Japan, selling 36,000 copies. It became a long charting album, selling three times its first week total (113,000) over 17 weeks. At the time, this was Ai's most successful release, and it became her first release to receive a certification by the RIAJ (gold). As of 2012, it remains her fourth most commercially successful album in Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 26], "content_span": [27, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176534-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Ai, Personnel\nPersonnel details were sourced from 2004 Ai's liner notes booklet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 18], "content_span": [19, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176535-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Air Canada Cup (women's tournament)\nThe 2004 Air Canada Cup was the second edition of the women's ice hockey tournament. It was held from February 5-7, 2004 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen and Bad T\u00f6lz, Germany. The Canadian U22 national team won the tournament, going undefeated over three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176536-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Air Force Falcons football team\nThe 2004 Air Force Falcons football team represented the United States Air Force Academy in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were a member of the Mountain West Conference. The Falcons were coached by Fisher DeBerry and played their 2004 season home games at Falcon Stadium. They finished the season 5\u20136, 3\u20134 in Mountain West play to finish in a three-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176537-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Akron Zips football team\nThe 2004 Akron Zips football team represented the University of Akron in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Akron competed as a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). The Zips were led by J. D. Brookhart in his first year as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176538-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Al Hoceima earthquake\nThe 2004 Al Hoceima earthquake occurred on 24 February at 02:27:47 local time near the coast of northern Morocco. The strike-slip earthquake measured 6.3 on the moment magnitude scale and had a maximum perceived intensity of IX (Violent) on the Mercalli intensity scale. Between 628 and 631 people were killed, 926 were injured, and up to 15,000 people were made homeless in the Al Hoceima-Imzourene-Beni Abdallah area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176538-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Al Hoceima earthquake, Earthquake\nThe moment tensor and pattern of surface cracks indicate left-lateral strike-slip faulting on a buried NE-SW trending fault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176538-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Al Hoceima earthquake, Earthquake\nThis earthquake occurred near the epicenter of the magnitude 6.0 Al Hoceima earthquake of May 26, 1994, that injured one person and caused significant damage to adobe buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176538-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Al Hoceima earthquake, Earthquake, Damage\nGround cracks and landslides were observed between Ajdir and Beni Abdallah and maximum peak ground acceleration of 0.24g was recorded near Imzourene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176538-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Al Hoceima earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nSeveral aftershocks killed at least three people and destroyed previously weakened buildings. This earthquake occurred near the eastern end of the Rif mountain belt, which is part of the diffuse boundary between the African and Eurasian plates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe 2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team represented the University of Alabama during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. This was the team's 72nd season in the SEC. The Crimson Tide were led by head coach Mike Shula who was entering his second season as head coach. They began their season with trying to improve from a 4\u20139 (2\u20136) record from the 2003 season. The 2004 squad finished the season with a record of 6\u20136 following a loss to Minnesota in the Music City Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe team began the 2004 season at 3\u20130 with blowout victories over Utah State, Mississippi, and Western Carolina. The Tide's starting quarterback Brodie Croyle was injured during the Western Carolina game and lost for the season. Without him, the team struggled to find consistent offense against SEC opponents Arkansas and South Carolina. The team rebounded to have multiple blowouts victories in three of the next four games, only losing to rival Tennessee. The season ended on a three-game slide, losing to rivals LSU and Auburn, also losing in the Music City Bowl to Minnesota. This season also marks the first time since 1958 in which Alabama was absent from the AP poll top 25 every week of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nAlabama opened the 2004 season by defeating the Utah State Aggies 48\u201317. Brian Bostick scored the first Alabama points of the game with his 28-yard field goal. On the ensuing Aggies possession, Roman Harper intercepted a Travis Cox and returned it to the Utah State 21-yard line. Two plays later, Brodie Croyle threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Clint Johnston to give the Crimson Tide a 10\u20130 lead. The Aggies responded later in the first with a 35-yard Cox touchdown pass to Kevin Robinson to cut the score to 10\u20137. In the second quarter, Kenneth Darby scored for Alabama on a 29-yard run and Ben Chaet connected on a 44-yard field goal for Utah State to make the halftime score 17\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nOn the third play of the second half, Simeon Castille intercepted a Cox pass and returned it 31-yards for his first career touchdown. After the Alabama defense forced a punt on the ensuing Aggies drive, Croyle threw a 57-yard touchdown strike to Keith Brown on the Crimson Tide's first offensive play of the second half to give them a 31\u201310 lead. After a 32-yard Bostick field goal extended the Alabama lead to 34\u201310, the Aggies responded with their final points of the game on a 21-yard Cox touchdown pass to Chris Forbes. The Crimson Tide then closed the game with a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns. The first came on a one-yard Tim Castille run and the second on a seven-yard Ray Hudson run in the 48\u201317 Alabama victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nAlabama opened conference play by defeating their long-time rival, the Ole Miss Rebels 28\u20137. After a scoreless first, the Crimson Tide took a 14\u20130 halftime lead after scoring a pair of second-quarter touchdowns. Tim Castille scored first on a one-yard run and Tyrone Prothro scored second on a 15-yard Brodie Croyle touchdown pass. Alabama extended their lead to 21\u20130 in the third quarter when Ray Hudson scored his first of two touchdowns on a 13-yard Croyle pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nAfter the Rebels scored their only points of the game on a six-yard Eric Rice touchdown reception from Ethan Flatt, Alabama responded on the following drive with a 46-yard Hudson touchdown run to make the final score 28\u20137. In the game, Hudson ran for 116 yards, and D. J. Hall and Keith Brown became the first freshman receivers to start for Alabama since Ozzie Newsome in 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Western Carolina\nAlabama won their third straight game to open the season against the Division I-AA Western Carolina Catamounts 52\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nIn the 2004 edition of the Iron Bowl, the Crimson Tide took a 6\u20130 lead at halftime over favored Auburn, but ultimately fell 21\u201313 to the Tigers. Alabama took a 6\u20130 halftime lead on field goals of 42 and 22-yard by Brian Bostick. Auburn responded in the second half with 21 consecutive points to take a 21\u20136 lead. Touchdowns were scored by Cadillac Williams on a five-yard run, on a 32-yard Jason Campbell pass to Courtney Taylor and on a two-yard Ronnie Brown run. Alabama scored their only touchdown late in the fourth on an 18-yard Spencer Pennington touchdown pass to D. J. Hall to make the final score 21\u201313 after a failed onside kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nAfter finishing the regular season with an overall record of 6\u20135, the Crimson Tide accepted an invitation to play in the Music City Bowl on December 4. Their appearance was the second for Alabama in the game, marked the first all-time meeting against the Minnesota Golden Gophers on the gridiron and a return to postseason play for the Crimson Tide following a two-year bowl ban imposed by the NCAA. Led by running backs Marion Barber III and Laurence Maroney who each rushed for over 100 yards, Minnesota defeated Alabama 20\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176539-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nThe Crimson Tide scored first when Spencer Pennington threw a two-yard touchdown pass to Le'Ron McClain for a 7\u20130 Alabama lead. Minnesota tied the game later in the first on a defensive touchdown. The score happened after Anthony Montgomery forced a Pennington fumble that was recovered in the endzone by Keith Lipka. The Gophers took a 17\u20137 lead in the second quarter after a five-yard Barber touchdown run and a 27-yard Rhys Lloyd field goal. The Crimson Tide responded with a one-yard McClain touchdown run to cut the Minnesota lead to 17\u201314 at halftime. The second half was dominated by both defenses with Minnesota only managing to score on a 24-yard Lloyd field goal in the third and Alabama only scoring on a safety in the fourth to make the final score 20\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176540-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Democratic presidential primary\nIn the United States, the 2004 Alabama Democratic presidential primary (held June 1) was one of the last remaining tests of some of the leading contenders for the Democratic Party's nomination as its candidate for the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176540-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama Democratic presidential primary, Analysis\nBy this primary, John Kerry already secured the nomination. He easily won with 75% of the vote, including every county and congressional district. The largest turnout by far came from Jefferson County, Alabama, where Kerry won with almost 92%. Also at roll call at the convention, Carol Moseley-Braun received 7 delegate votes despite not being on the ballot in the Alabama state primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176541-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alabama elections\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Alabama took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives, various state and local elections, and the presidential election of that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176542-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alamo Bowl\nThe 2004 Alamo Bowl featured the Ohio State Buckeyes, and the Oklahoma State Cowboys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176542-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alamo Bowl\nOhio State got on the board first, when quarterback Justin Zwick connected with wide receiver Anthony Gonzalez for a 23-yard touchdown pass, and a 7\u20130 lead. Mike Nugent connected on field goals of 37 and 35 yards in the first quarter as well, as Ohio State built a 13\u20130 lead over Oklahoma State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176542-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Alamo Bowl\nIn the second quarter, running back Lydell Ross rushed for a 1-yard touchdown and a 20\u20130 lead. He finished the game with 12 carries for 99 yards. Nugent connected on his third field goal of the game, this one from 41 yards out, as Ohio State increased its lead to 23\u20130, before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176542-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Alamo Bowl\nIn the third quarter, Ted Ginn Jr. rushed five yards for a touchdown, increasing Ohio State's lead to 30\u20130. Nugent kicked his final field goal in the fourth quarter, a 37 yarder to give Ohio State a 33\u20130 lead. Shaun Willis rushed for a 4-yard touchdown at the end of the game, to make the final score 33\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176542-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Alamo Bowl\nFive days after the game, Oklahoma State coach Les Miles left the Cowboys to become the coach of the LSU Tigers, succeeding Nick Saban. Offensive coordinator Mike Gundy was promoted to succeed Miles. Gundy continues to hold the position through 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176543-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alaska wildfires\nThe 2004 Alaska fire season was the worst on record in terms of area burned by wildfires in the U.S. state of Alaska. Though the 1989 fire season recorded more fires, nearly 1,000, the 2004 season burned more than 6,600,000 acres (10,300 sq mi; 27,000 km2) in just 701 fires. The largest of these fires was the Taylor Complex Fire. This fire consumed over 1,700,000 acres (2,700\u00a0sq\u00a0mi; 6,900\u00a0km2) and was the deemed to be the largest fire in the United States from at least 1997 to 2019. Out of all 701 fires, 426 fires were started by humans and 215 by lightning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176543-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alaska wildfires, Causes of the Fires\nBeginning in May 2004, the summer was extremely warm and wet in comparison to typical Interior Alaska summer climate. Much of the rain over the summer of 2004 came during thunderstorms, which resulted in record amounts of lightning triggering many of the original fires near Fairbanks, Alaska. Wildfires are prone to develop in areas with frequent lightning strikes. After months of lightning and increased temperatures, an uncharacteristically dry August resulted in fires continuing through September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176543-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Alaska wildfires, Impacts on Climate Change & Landscape\nAlaska has a climate that of the boreal zone, more commonly known as the Taiga. The boreal zone, across the globe, makes up more than 25% of global forests, and when wildfires occur it is a top leader in carbon emissions. Approximately 12% of the world's carbon is stored in top layer soil and this part is the first to burn in any wildfire. These emissions have some of the greatest impacts on natural carbon balance, and Alaska gives its fair contribution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176543-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Alaska wildfires, Impacts on Climate Change & Landscape\nTypically Alaskan forest fires make up 41% of the United States' carbon emissions from wildland fires, but more recently with warming conditions and more wildfire occurrences these figures have gone all the way to 89%. Landscape is also changing with regards to wildfires as less canopy is provided after an occurrence, hence soil temperatures may rise and be inhabitable by certain species. When soil temperatures rise permafrost is revealed and begins to melt away. This then leads to Landslides and Erosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 60], "content_span": [61, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176543-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Alaska wildfires, Impacts on Air Quality\nThe 2004 fire season of Alaska had large impacts on the air quality and safety of citizens. These impacts were relevant to those specifically living in Fairbanks, Alaska. Deemed by the EPA as a hazardous and unhealthy zone for over 15 days, the city of Fairbanks had about 1,000 micrograms per cubic meter of smoke particulate. To put it into perspective, an area deemed to be unhealthy typically has 65 micrograms of smoke particulate per cubic meter, while an area deemed to be hazardous has anymore than 250 micrograms per cubic meter. Normal levels in Fairbanks, Alaska were around 10 micrograms per cubic meter. The main issue with smoke particulate is not the smoke itself but the matter that is mixed in. Wildfire smoke is usually made up of acids, chemicals, metals, soil/dust, and pollen/mold spores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176544-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Albanian Supercup\nAlbanian Supercup 2004 is the 11th edition of the Albanian Supercup since its establishment in 1989. The match was contested between the Albanian Cup 2004 winners KF Partizani and the 2003\u201304 Albanian Superliga champions KF Tirana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election\nThe 2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, formally the 3rd Alberta Senate nominee election of Alberta was held on November 22, 2004 to nominate appointments to the Senate of Canada. The Senate nominee election was held in conjunction with the 2004 Alberta general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election\nThe 3rd Senate nominee election took place six years following the 2nd Senate nominee election held in 1998, and 15 years after the first Senate nominee election held in 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election\nThe election came five months following the 2004 Canadian federal election which saw the Liberal government secure a minority under new Prime Minister Paul Martin. Previous Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chr\u00e9tien refused to appoint Senators elected in Alberta in 1998. Previous Senate nominees from 1998 Bert Brown and Ted Morton, both of the Reform Party failed to be nominated before their five year term expired. Brown, one of the four nominated Senators was subsequently appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Stephen Harper on July 10, 2007, and Betty Unger was appointed to the Senate on January 6, 2012, becoming the second and third elected Senators in the upper chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background\nIn the late-1980s, the Government of Alberta under Premier Don Getty had made vailed statements about holding a province-wide election to select nominees for the Senate with the expectation that Meech Lake Accord would be ratified and the Prime Minister would make appointments to the Senate on the basis of names submitted by each province's premier. The Senate nominee election was featured in the Speech from the Throne in February 1989 for the fourth session of the 21st Alberta Legislature, but died on the order paper when the Legislature was dissolved to hold an early provincial election. The bill was reintroduced in the summer of 1989 during the 22nd Alberta Legislature, which permitted the vote to take place during the October 1989 Alberta municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background\nStan Waters, nominated by the Reform Party, won the 1989 Senate nominee election, with 41.7 per cent of the popular vote. On October 17, 1989, one day after the Senate nominee election, Mulroney stated he was not bound to appoint a Senator by the results of the election, and instead intended to follow the process in the Meech Lake Accord. Getty responded to the comments by Mulroney by stating he would provide a list to the Prime Minister with a single name, Waters. Prime Minister Brian Mulroney had criticized the electoral process, although he nonetheless made a public announcement agreeing to advise Governor General Ray Hnatyshyn to appoint Waters to the Canadian Senate on June 11, 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background\nWaters time in the Senate was cut short when he was diagnosed with brain Cancer in the Summer of 1991, and died months later in Calgary on September 25, 1991 at the age of 71, four years before the mandatory retirement age for Canadian Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background\nPrime Minister Jean Chr\u00e9tien appointed four Senators from Alberta prior to the 1998 Alberta Senate nominee election, including Nicholas Taylor on March 7, 1996, Jean Forest on May 17, 1996, Thelma Chalifoux on November 26, 1997, and Douglas Roche. Roche, a former Member of Parliament for the Progressive Conservative Party was appointed to the Senate on September 17, 1998, one month before the 1998 Alberta Senate nominee election was held. Former Prime Minister Joe Clark criticized the appointment as a \"cynical, provocative and wrong\". Alberta Premier Ralph Klein penned an open letter to Chr\u00e9tien criticizing the appointment and calling for Senate reform. Klein went on to criticize Chr\u00e9tien stating \"the prime minister of this country is saying that democracy is a joke\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background, Candidates\nBoth of Alberta's opposition parties, the Liberal Party and the New Democratic Party (NDP), boycotted the election in demonstration of their opposition to the process. As a result, the only candidates to contest the election were representatives of the right-of-centre Alberta Progressive Conservatives, Alberta Alliance Party and Social Credit parties, and a number of independents. After pressure from the Liberal and NDP camps (who did not want their supporters to feel compelled to vote for a right-of-centre candidate), polling officers were instructed to advise voters on election day that they did not have to vote in the Senate election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background, Candidates\nIn early October, Progressive Conservative Premier Ralph Klein promised that the Progressive Conservative Party would not run a candidate in the Senate nominee election, which he reversed after pressure from caucus. Klein's rationale for the boycott was that the Senate was a \"federal thing\". Five candidates were nominated from the Progressive Conservative Party, including the 1998 Senate election winner Bert Brown. The second nominee from the 1998 election, Ted Morton declined to run, and instead contested a seat in the Legislative Assembly as a Progressive Conservative. The other Progressive Conservative candidates were Betty Unger, a home-care nurse and conservative party supporter; Cliff Breitkreuz, a farmer and former Reform and Alliance Member of Parliament for Yellowhead; Jim Silye, President of an oil exploration company and former Calgary Stampeders player; and David Usherwood, a farmer and financial advisor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 991]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background, Candidates\nThree candidates were nominated under the Alberta Alliance Party, including Michael Roth, a small business owner from Lacombe; Vance Gough a Calgary entrepreneur and business instructor at Mount Royal University who previously finished fourth of four candidates in 1998; and Gary Horan, a small business owner from Edmonton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background, Candidates\nTwo independent candidates contested the election, Link Byfield, the former publisher of Alberta Report and western rights advocate; and Tom Sindlinger, an economist and former Member of the Legislative Assembly for Calgary-Buffalo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background, Candidates\nThe Social Credit party attempted to nominate Gerry Pyne of Calgary, but were unable to obtain the 1,500 signatures required to get on the ballot, and the party therefore was not represented in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Background, Candidates\nAs of the date of the election, there were three vacant Alberta seats in the Senate of Canada, with another set to become vacant within six years. Voters could vote for up to four candidates, though many candidates encouraged their supporters to vote for only one, a legal option, to prevent the vote totals of their competitors from rising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Aftermath\nOverall, Albertans were seen as disinterested in the Provincial election and Senate nominee election. Elections Alberta stated the provincial election turnout was 44.7 per cent of eligible voters, while the Senate nominee election saw a turnout of 44.2 per cent (885,289 ballots). Although total turnout included 85,937 (9.7 per cent) voters decline ballots, and 84,643 (9.6 per cent) voters rejecting their ballot. Commentators such as the Edmonton Journal editorial board called the large number of declined and rejected ballots a grim picture for Alberta's Senator-in-waiting strategy for reform. Many Liberal and NDP supporters were observed discarding their Senate nominee ballots, while the proportion of spoiled ballots was higher in ridings and polls where the Liberals and NDP did well in the concurrent Legislature election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Aftermath\nThe Klein government sent the four Senators-in-waiting on a cross-country trip following the election in Spring 2005 to promote Senate reform. Although Klein refused to give the group of nominees the opportunity to speak at the August 2005 Council of the Federation meeting in Banff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Aftermath\nPrime Minister Paul Martin refused to advise Governor General Adrienne Clarkson to appoint the elected Senate nominees to the Upper Chamber, instead putting forward three appointees of his choosing: Grant Mitchell, Elaine McCoy and Claudette Tardif on March 24, 2005. After the announcement, Breitkreuz publicly admonished Klein for his perceived failure to advocate for Alberta's Senators-in-waiting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Aftermath\nOn April 19, 2007, on the advice of newly elected Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper, Governor General Mich\u00e4elle Jean appointed Bert Brown to the Senate to fill the vacancy left by Daniel Hays' early retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176545-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta Senate nominee election, Aftermath\nAlberta Premier Ed Stelmach decided to defer new Senate elections set to take place when the terms of senators-in-waiting ended, which was controversial. Senator-in-waiting Link Byfield decided to resign as he felt he lacked a mandate. Remaining candidates Breitkreuz and Unger both accepted the term extension. Unger was appointed to the Senate on January 6, 2012, after the mandatory retirement of Tommy Banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176546-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta electoral redistribution\nFrom 2004\u20132012, electoral laws in Alberta, Canada fixed the number of legislature seats at 83. Prior to the 26th general election, the Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission was given the task of re-distributing the province's electoral divisions. In February 2003, the Commission recommended 83 divisions as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176546-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta electoral redistribution\nAs a result of the re-distribution, Calgary gained two seats. Edmonton lost one seat, and one special consideration division was eliminated. Dunvegan is the sole remaining \"special\" division - due to its isolation it is allowed to have a population below 75% of the provincial average. Lesser Slave Lake is now considered to be a standard rural division as its boundaries were re-drawn so that its population is slightly above 75% of the provincial average. One urbanized division outside Calgary and Edmonton was added, and two rural seats were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election\nThe 2004 Alberta general election was held on November 22, 2004 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election\nThe election was called on October 25, 2004. Premier Ralph Klein decided to go to the polls earlier than the legislated deadline of March 2006. This election was held in conjunction with the 2004 Alberta Senate nominee election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election\nWhen the election was called, it was expected to be anticlimactic, with Klein cruising to his fourth straight majority, the tenth for his Progressive Conservative Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election\nShortly after the drop of the writs, Klein's mother died and all parties suspended their campaigns for several days. After the campaign resumed, Klein avoided making any policy announcements and attended few events. One commentator called it \"Kleinfeld: the campaign about nothing\" (a reference to the television sitcom Seinfeld). The Liberal Party, which had hoped to hold on to the five seats it had and regain the two seats that it had lost to resignations, began to pick up momentum and became far more optimistic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election\nIn the end, the Conservatives were re-elected, despite losing 11 seats and 15% of the popular vote. The Liberals more than doubled their seats by electing 17 MLAs on election night while dominating Edmonton, and making strong inroads in Calgary. The Alberta New Democrats (NDP) held on to their two seats and gained two more, all in Edmonton. The Conservatives swept rural Alberta except for one seat that went to the Alberta Alliance, which placed second in a number of rural ridings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election\nThe Alberta Greens gained in the popular vote, jumping from 0.3% in the 2001 election to 2.8%, and placed third in some places. Although placing second in the riding of Drayton Valley-Calmar ahead of the Liberals, it was unable to win any seats, however. Social Credit placed third in a number of ridings, and its leader tied for second in Rocky Mountain House. The Conservative, Liberal and NDP leaders all easily held onto their own seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Results by region\n1 \"Edmonton\" corresponds to only the city of Edmonton. (Only the ridings whose names begin with \"Edmonton\".) The four suburban ridings around the city as listed below are grouped with Central Alberta in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Electoral re-distribution\nAlberta's electoral laws fix the number of legislature seats at 83. As a result of the Alberta Electoral Boundary Re-distribution, 2004, Calgary gained two seats. Edmonton lost one seat, and one \"special consideration\" division was eliminated. Dunvegan-Central Peace is the sole remaining \"special\" division - due to its isolation, it is allowed to have a population below 75% of the provincial average. Lesser Slave Lake is now considered to be a standard rural division as its boundaries were re-drawn so that its population is slightly above 75% of the provincial average. One urbanized division outside Calgary and Edmonton was added, and two rural seats were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties\nFor this election, there were 11 political parties registered with Elections Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Parties that elected MLAs in the previous election\nThe parties are listed in descending order of number of MLAs elected in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 100], "content_span": [101, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Parties that elected MLAs in the previous election, Progressive Conservative Party\nIn the 2001 election, the Progressive Conservatives recorded a result that was comparable to those achieved in their years of dominance under Peter Lougheed. The Tories received 627,252 out of 1,013,152 votes cast and won 74 seats, gaining 11 seats over and above their 1997 result at the expense of the Liberals. This result was achieved due to a resurgence of the party in Edmonton, where the Tories won a majority of seats for the first time since 1982. Premier Ralph Klein easily retained his Calgary-Elbow seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 132], "content_span": [133, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Parties that elected MLAs in the previous election, Progressive Conservative Party\nOn April 8, 2002, Doug Griffiths retained the Tories' seat in Wainwright in the only by-election held since the 2001 election, albeit with a substantially reduced plurality. The Tories lost only one seat since the 2001 election, after Edmonton-Norwood MLA Gary Masyk crossed the floor to join the Alberta Alliance. As expected, the Tories nominated a full slate of candidates for the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 132], "content_span": [133, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Parties that elected MLAs in the previous election, Liberal Party\nThe 2001 election was generally regarded to be as a disaster for the Liberals. Although the Liberals retained Official Opposition status and received 276,854 votes, the party lost 11 seats to the Tories and won only seven seats, six of them in Edmonton. Leader Nancy Macbeth even lost her own seat in Edmonton-McClung - she resigned days after the election and was replaced by Ken Nicol, the Opposition's sole representative outside the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 115], "content_span": [116, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Parties that elected MLAs in the previous election, Liberal Party\nNicol eventually resigned as MLA for Lethbridge East and as Leader of the Opposition to run (unsuccessfully) for the Liberals in the federal election, as did Edmonton-Ellerslie MLA Debby Carlson. These seats remained vacant through dissolution. The Liberals were led in the 2004 election by Edmonton-Riverview MLA Kevin Taft, who was elected to the position in March 2004. The Liberals had 82 candidates in the 2004 election - they were absent from the ballot in Drumheller-Stettler after failing to file papers for their expected candidate, Don McMann before the deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 115], "content_span": [116, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Parties that elected MLAs in the previous election, New Democratic Party\nIn 2001, the New Democrats were unable to claim Official Opposition status from the floundering Liberals, but Leader Raj Pannu managed to hold the party's two existing seats\u2014Pannu's own in Edmonton\u2014Strathcona and Brian Mason's seat in Edmonton Highlands (later merged into Edmonton Highlands-Norwood). The \"NDs\", as they were then known, received 81,339 votes. Pannu resigned the leadership in July 2004, with Mason filling the role of interim leader before being elected to that position in September 2004. The party has also ceased abbreviating its name as \"ND in favour of the more traditional \"NDP\" abbreviation. The NDP nominated a full slate of candidates for the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 122], "content_span": [123, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties\nThe parties are listed in descending order of number of candidates nominated in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Alberta Alliance\nThe Alberta Alliance was registered in October 2002 and held its founding convention in February 2003. Its leader, Randy Thorsteinson had led Social Credit through a modest rebirth before quitting that party in April 1999. The party's sole MLA, Gary Masyk (Edmonton-Norwood) crossed the floor from the governing Progressive Conservatives on June 29, 2004. The Alliance nominated a full slate of candidates for the 2004 election, the only other party besides the Tories and the NDP to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Greens\nAlso known as the \"Green Party of Alberta\", the Alberta Greens ran 10 candidates in the 2001 election, who combined for 2,850 votes. In the 2004 election, the Greens nominated 49 candidates - more than 4 times the highest number of candidates they had previously run in an election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Social Credit Party\nPrior to the 2001 election, the Social Credit Party was in turmoil following the departure of party leader Randy Thorsteinson. Under Lavern Ahlstrom, the party nominated 12 candidates in the 2001 election (down from 70 in 1997), and received 5,361 votes (down from 64,667). The party had 42 candidates for the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Separation Party\nThe Separation Party of Alberta was founded in June 2004 taking over the rights of the Alberta First Party. Bruce Hutton became interim leader. As a separatist party, it is the separatist successor to the Alberta Independence Party, which ran some independent candidates in the 2001 election, but never achieved official party status. The separatist cause was first taken up by the Western Canada Concept in the early 1980s when Gordon Kesler won a by-election. The Separation Party had 12 candidates in the 2004 election. See Alberta separatism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Alberta Party\nThe Alberta Party did not nominate any candidates in 2001, but nominated four candidates for the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Communist Party\nThe Communist Party nominated two candidates in the 2001 election, who combined for 117 votes. They ran two candidates in the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, The Equity Party\nThe Equity Party ran no candidates in this election, The party was de-registered after the Alberta government amended the Elections Act to force a party to run at least one candidate, the party failed to field a candidate and was de-registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Other registered parties, Reform Party\nThe Alberta Party, Equity Party and the Reform Party did not run any candidates in the 2001 election. The Equity Party and Reform Party were also absent from the ballot in 2004. The party was de-registered after the Alberta government amended the Elections Act to force a party to run at least one candidate, the party failed to field a candidate and was de-registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, De-registered parties\nThe Natural Law Party of Alberta was de-registered by Elections Alberta in 2001, after they stopped filing financial statements. In 2001 The Natural Law Party did not nominate any candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Political parties, Independent candidates\n29 independent candidates ran in the 2001 election. These candidates won a total of 10,528 votes. 10 independents ran in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nMarch 27, 2004 - Kevin Taft becomes leader of the Alberta Liberals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nJune 29, 2004 - Gary Masyk crosses the floor from the Progressive Conservatives to the Alberta Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nJuly 13, 2004 - Raj Pannu resigns as leader of the Alberta New Democrats. Brian Mason is appointed interim leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nSeptember 9, 2004 - Alberta Alliance kicked off five-city \"I Blame Ralph\" tour in Edmonton. Ralph Klein announces Senate Election", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nSeptember 18, 2004 - Brian Mason formally becomes leader of the Alberta New Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nOctober 25, 2004 - At the request of Premier Ralph Klein, Lieutenant-Governor Lois Hole dissolves the legislature and sets the election day for November 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nOctober 28, 2004 - Premier Klein is harshly criticized by opposition parties and activist groups after he claims that protestors on Alberta's Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped (AISH) who had heckled him did not look severely disabled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nOctober 31, 2004 - Premier Klein's mother, Florence Gray dies at the age of 80 following a year-long illness. All major parties announce they will suspend their provincial campaigns while the premier mourns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nNovember 4, 2004 - Global Television Network re-iterates that they will not invite Alberta Alliance leader Randy Thorsteinson to their leaders debate, because his party did not elect any members in the previous election and their sole MLA crossed the floor. The decision sparks anger amongst Alliance members and even disappoints the other three leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nNovember 8, 2004 - Close of nomination's and the Global television leaders debate involving Klein, Taft and Mason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nNovember 13, 2004 - NDP leader Mason releases a brochure entitled Health Care for Dummies in an effort to mock the premier's reluctance to discuss health care in detail during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nNovember 19, 2004, - Advance polling stations open, and Students across the province vote in Alberta Student Vote, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nNovember 22, 2004 - Voting day for the 26th Alberta general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nDecember 9, 2004 - The Court of Queen's Bench rules that Chris Kibermanis (Lib.) won the election in Edmonton Castle Downs by three votes, upholding the result of the initial, election-night result. The PC candidate, Thomas Lukaszuk, appealed to the Court of Appeal of Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176547-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Alberta general election, Timeline\nJanuary 24, 2005 - The Alberta Court of Appeal rules that Lukaszuk won the election in Edmonton Castle Downs by three votes, overturning the result of the first vote-count, which had given the seat to Kibermanis of the Liberals. Kibermanis accepted defeat and did not appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176548-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Algarve Cup\nThe 2004 Algarve Cup was the 11th edition of the Algarve Cup, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Portugal. It took place 14\u201320 March 2004. The USA won the tournament defeating Norway, 4-1, in the final game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176548-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe twelve invited teams are split into three groups that played a round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176548-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Algarve Cup, Format\nSince the expansion to 12 teams in 2002, the Algarve Cup format has been as follows: Groups A and B, containing the strongest ranked teams, are the only ones in contention to win the title. The group A and B winners contest the final \u2013 to win the Algarve Cup. The runners-up play for third place, and those that finish third in the groups play for fifth place. The teams in Group C played for places 7\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176548-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe winner of Group C played the team that finished fourth in Group A or B (whichever has the better record) for seventh place. The Group C runner-up played the team who finishes last in Group A or B (with the worse record) for ninth place. The third and fourth-placed teams in Group C played for the eleventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176548-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Algarve Cup, Format\nPoints awarded in the group stage followed the standard formula of three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss. In the case of two teams being tied on the same number of points in a group, their head-to-head result determined the higher place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176549-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian Cup Final\nThe 2004 Algerian Cup Final was the 40th final of the Algerian Cup. The final took place on June 25, 2004, at Stade 5 Juillet 1962 in Algiers with kick-off at 17:00. USM Alger beat JS Kabylie 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176549-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian Cup Final\nAlgerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 clubs JS Kabylie and USM Alger will contest the final, in what will be the 42nd edition of the Kabylo-Algiers Derby. The competition winners are awarded a berth in the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176550-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian presidential election\nMember State of the African Union Member State of the Arab League", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176550-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Algeria on 8 April 2004. Incumbent President Abdelaziz Bouteflika was re-elected with 85% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176550-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian presidential election, Conduct\nThere were about 130 official foreign observers in Algeria for these elections, which followed more than a decade of civil conflict. Delegations of observers came from the Arab League, the African Union, the United Nations, the European Parliament and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176550-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian presidential election, Conduct\nAn OSCE spokesman said its small election monitoring team observed no obvious electoral fraud, and that the election, while not perfect, was excellent by regional standards and that it is \"pretty clear\" the results reflected the views of the Algerian people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176550-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Algerian presidential election, Conduct\nHowever, the Kabyle population boycotted the elections following the Arouch directives, only 10% (officially) of them went to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176551-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All England Open Badminton Championships\nThe 2004 Yonex All England Open was the 94th edition of the All England Open Badminton Championships. It was held in Birmingham, England, from 9 to 14 March 2004, and the prize money was US$125,000 or \u00a369,471.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176552-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 2001:8003:f42f:7c00:1d7f:9f01:d036:1bf8 (talk) at 15:19, 2 February 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176552-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship\nThe 2004 All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship was the twelfth season of Japan Automobile Federation GT premiere racing and the final season under the name All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship as for 2005 the series was renamed to Super GT. It was marked as well as the twenty-second season of a JAF-sanctioned sports car racing championship dating back to the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship. The GT500 class champions of 2004 were the #1 Xanavi NISMO Nissan Fairlady Z team driven by Satoshi Motoyama and Richard Lyons and the GT300 class champions were the #16 M-TEC Honda NSX driven by Tetsuya Yamano and Hiroyuki Yagi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176553-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All Thailand Golf Tour\nThe 2004 All Thailand Golf Tour is the sixth season of the All Thailand Golf Tour, the main professional golf tour in Thailand since it was established in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176554-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Big 12 Conference football team\nThe 2004 All-Big 12 Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big 12 Conference players for the 2004 Big 12 Conference football season. The conference recognizes two official All-Big 12 selectors: (1) the Big 12 conference coaches selected separate offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Coaches\" team); and (2) a panel of sports writers and broadcasters covering the Big 12 also selected offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Media\" team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176554-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Big 12 Conference football team, Key\nBold = selected as a first-team player by both the coaches and media panel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176555-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Big Ten Conference football team\nThe 2004 All-Big Ten Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big Ten Conference players for the 2004 Big Ten Conference football season. The conference recognizes two official All-Big Ten selectors: (1) the Big Ten conference coaches selected separate offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Coaches\" team); and (2) a panel of sports writers and broadcasters covering the Big Ten also selected offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Media\" team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176555-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Big Ten Conference football team, Key\nBold = selected as a first-team player by both the coaches and media panel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176556-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 21st staging of the All-Ireland hurling championship. The championship began on 16 May 2004 and ended on 4 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176556-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship\nCork were the defending champions and successfully retained the title after defeating Kilkenny by 1\u201316 to 1\u201310 in a replay of the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176557-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship was the 73rd staging of the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county Gaelic football tournament for boys under the age of 18. Laois entered the championship as defending champions, however, they were defeated by Kerry in the All-Ireland semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176557-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nOn 26 September 2004, Tyrone won the championship following a 0-12 to 0-10 defeat of Kerry in the All-Ireland final. This was their sixth All-Ireland title overall and their first title in three championship seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176558-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship was the 74th staging of the All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1928. The championship began on 27 March 2004 and ended on 19 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176558-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nOn 19 September 2004, Galway won the championship following a 0-16 to 1-12 defeat of Kilkenny in the All-Ireland final replay at O'Connor Park. This was their sixth All-Ireland title overall and their first title since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176558-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nTipperary's Darragh Hickey was the championship's top scorer with 4-29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176559-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior B Hurling Championship\nThe All-Ireland Senior B Hurling Championship 2004 was the 26th staging of the All-Ireland Senior B Hurling Championship, Ireland's secondary hurling knock-out competition. Kildare won the championship, beating Mayo 3-14 to 3-7 in the final at Croke Park, Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176560-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\u2014known as the Foras na Gaeilge All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship for sponsorship reasons\u2014was the high point of the 2004 season, the centenary year for the sport of camogie. The championship was won by Tipperary who defeated Cork by an eight-point margin in the final. The attendance was a then record of 24,567.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176560-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Group stages\nAntrim staged their match with Kilkenny in Cushendall as part of the Glens Feis who were also celebrating their centenary in 2004. Cork had beaten Tipperary by 3-7 to 1-6 in the group stages of the National Camogie League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176560-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Semi-finals\nAs part of the centenary celebrations the two semi-finals were televised live by RT\u00c9 for the first time. Cork beating Galway by 3-9 to 1-4 and Tipperary overcoming a strong Wexford challenge with a two-point win thanks to a goal from Deirdre Hughes. Because of illness team captain Joanne Ryan was not named in the starting line-up for the semi-final clash with Wexford but came off the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176560-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Final\nA goal from Deirdre Hughes in the 19th minute, when she availed of a mix-up in the Cork defence to score into an empty net kept Tipperary on course for a fifth title in six years as Una O'Dwyer maintained her absolute control at the heart of their defence. Tipperary were denied a goal when Eimear McDonnell\u2019s ninth minute penalty was stopped by Cork \u2019keeper Aoife Murray. Hughes\u2019s goal was quickly followed by two pointed frees from Grogan, and gave Tipp an important psychological boost and a half time lead of 1-6 to 0-4 and when Joanne Ryan\u2019s persistent efforts were rewarded with a goal in the 43rd minute, Tipperary gained even more in confidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176560-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Aftermath\nRaymie Ryan retired as Tipperary manager the following November having guided the Tipperary team to two successive All-Ireland victories, two Munster championship titles, and their first National League title since 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 55], "content_span": [56, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176561-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final was the 73rd All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, an inter-county camogie tournament for the top teams in Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176561-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nThis final marked the centenary of the first camogie match, played in 1904. Tipperary won easily, Claire Grogan scoring nine points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship final was a hurling match played at Croke Park on 17 March 2004 to determine the winners of the 2003\u201304 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the 34th season of the All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champion clubs of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by Dunloy of Antrim and Newtownshandrum of Cork, with Newtownshandrum winning by 0-17 to 1-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nDunloy started quickly and opened the scoring through Colin McGuickian, however, that was the only time they were to lead during the match. Ben O'Connor levelled the scores from a free before Alan T. O'Brien completed a fine solo run by landing a point. Dunloy hit three wides, while at the other end Ben O'Connor tapped over another free to increase his side's lead. O'Connor put on a show of deadly accuracy from placed balls throughout the half. He put over three frees \u2013 the last of which could have so easily been a goal as he blasted it in low forcing goalkeeper Gareth McGee to deflect it over for a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nDunloy started the second half under pressure. When Martin Curry was fouled in the area for a penalty, goalkeeper McGee stepped up to blast the sliotar into the back of the net and give his side a boost. The Antrim side then closed the gap between the two sides even further after Ben O'Connor missed a straightforward free while at the other end Paddy Richmond slotted over another point for the Northerners to reduce the deficit to two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe match was as close as Dunloy were to come as Ben O'Connor, Andy O'Brien and James Bowles all found their range to put Newtown six points ahead before Jerry O'Connor claimed the score of the afternoon as he burst through on a fine solo run. Ben O'Connor increased his personal tally to ten points, while Alan T. O'Brien put the icing on the cake, and his third of the game was to be the final point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nNewtownshandrum's victory secured their first and only All-Ireland title. They become the 21st club to win the All-Ireland title, while they are the fifth Cork representatives to claim the ultimate prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nDunloy's All-Ireland defeat was their second in succession and their fourth over all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176562-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nDue to the similarity of the colour of their jerseys a change was necessary. Each team donned a version of their county jersey, with Newtownshandrum wearing a red and white strip and Dunloy wearing a saffron and white strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the 2004 Bank of Ireland All-Ireland Senior Football Championship was the premier Gaelic football competition in 2005. It consisted of 33 teams and began on Sunday 2 May 2004. The championship concluded on Sunday 26 September 2004, when Mayo were defeated by Kerry by 1\u201320 to 2\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Format\nSince the introduction of the so-called \"back-door\" system, a number of changes have taken place in the championship format. In 2004 the following system was used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe provincial championships in Munster, Leinster, Ulster and Connacht ran as usual on a \"knock-out\" basis. These provincial games were then followed by the \"Qualifier\" system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe All-Ireland Quarter-Finals: Each of the four Provincial Champions played one of the four winners from Round 4. The All-Ireland Semi-Finals were on a Provincial rota basis, initially determined by the Central Council. If a Provincial Championship winning was defeated in its Quarter-Final, the team that defeated it would take its place in the Semi-Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Qualifiers, Round 1\nThe losers of the Preliminary round matches and quarter final matches of each provincial championship started the qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Qualifiers, Round 1\nTipperary withdrew from the competition following the resignation of their manager, Andy Shorthall, giving Fermanagh a walkover into Round 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Qualifiers, Round 2\nThe winners of round 1 were joined by the semi final losers of each provincial championship. The matches would be between a round 2 winner and a provincial championship semi final loser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Qualifiers, Round 3\nThe winners of round 2 contest as the matches from here were lowered to four. Matches were open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Qualifiers, Round 4\nThe winners of round 3 were joined by the losers of each provincial championship final. The matches would be between a round 3 winner and the loser of a provincial championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176563-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe provincial champions and the winners of round 4 contested the quarter finals. The quarter final matches would be between a provincial champion and a round 4 winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176564-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 117th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176564-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nMayo were hoping to bridge a gap that stretched all the way back to their All-Ireland football title winning team of 1951. They failed, though less miserably than in 2006. Mayo lost their fourth final in a row; in the end Kerry only won by eight points. Dara \u00d3 Cinn\u00e9ide was the winning captain, while manager Jack O'Connor won the title in his first season in charge. The match was shown live in Ireland on RT\u00c9 Two as part of the Sunday Game live with match commentary from Ger Canning and Martin Carney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176564-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nLargely regarded as one of the most disappointing All-Ireland football finals for many years, Mayo's capitulation drove spectators from the stadium in their thousands with Kerry leading by 1-12 to 1-4 at half time. Kerry racked up a total of 1-20, the highest team score in an All-Ireland football final since the time of 'Bomber' Liston and the 5-11 that decimated Dublin in 1978. Mayo returned to the final two years later, to be torn apart by Kerry all over again in a final when Kerry surpassed the score they achieved in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176565-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 118th staging of Ireland's premier hurling knock-out competition. Cork won the championship, beating Kilkenny 0\u201317 to 0\u20139 in the final at Croke Park, Dublin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final was a hurling match played at Croke Park on 12 September 2004 to determine the winners of the 2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the 118th season of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champions of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by Kilkenny of Leinster and Cork of Munster, with Cork winning by 0\u201317 to 0\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, The game\nThe game got off to a flying start as Kilkenny missed three early opportunities, including Eddie Brennan putting a great goal chance wide within seconds of the throw in. Cork went ahead through a Joe Deane free from 20 metres. Cork had a couple of refereeing decisions in their favour to go with that and give them the slight advantage through the first ten minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, The game\nHenry Shefflin got Kilkenny back on track with a point from out on the left and Cha Fitzpatrick followed up soon after with another well taken score as Cork's short puck out strategy misfired. Joe Deane was again reliable from the placed ball at short range, pointing after a James Ryall foul. Deane was also dangerous in open play with the crossbar denying him a goal, while Ben O'Connor's smashed the follow up into the side netting. Kilkenny got the next score with Martin Comerford putting Kilkenny back into the lead and went further ahead after Shefflin pointed a free.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, The game\nCork's Brian Murphy received attention with double vision brought on by migraine, which forced him out of the game. Kilkenny got back on top after that stoppage with a Martin Comerford point. Another Deane free ended a nine-minute scoreless sequence for Cork. An exchange of wides followed as Kilkenny continued to foul at around fifty metres from their goal. Ben O'Connor got his first point as a result of one foul. Brian Corcoran got Cork's first score from play to put them within a point. Shefflin pointed the next long free for Kilkenny, replacing D. J. Carey who had been wayward. Jerry O'Connor replied for Cork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, The game\nCork had a great start after the interval and Niall McCarthy refused what looked a good goal chance within seconds of the restart, taking a simple point instead. An exchange of points followed. Niall McCarthy's purple patch continued as he scored the point of the game from a puck out, fielding well before turning, running and striking to score. Kieran Murphy made up for a missed Ben O'Connor free by pointing a simple chance. Niall McCarthy put Cork two in front before Kieran Murphy won another free 45 metres out with Ben O'Connor taking the chance this time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, The game\nKilkenny's response was immediate. Shefflin showed terrific skill to get a shot on target on the volley from Carey's hand pass but his effort was saved by Donal \u00d3g Cusack in the Cork goal and from his clearance James Ryall fouled Deane on the forty, yielding another free chance. Deane pointed the free to put Cork in a commanding position. Subsequent frees from Ben O'Connor and Deane as well as a Tom Kenny point put Cork well clear. Cork conceded a '65 to Kilkenny which they defended successfully before Brian Corcoran putt the final nail in Kilkenny's coffin, grabbing a fine point from a tight angle just before the final whistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176566-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, The game\nCork's All-Ireland victory was their first since 1999. The win gave them their 29th All-Ireland title over all and put them as outright leaders on the all-time roll of honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176567-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final\nThe 2004 TG4 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final featured Galway and Dublin. Dublin started the stronger and led by six points after twenty five minutes thanks mainly to points from Angie McNally and Mary Nevin. However a Niamh Duggan goal and a point from Annette Clarke kept Galway in touch. At half-time Dublin led with the score at 0\u20137 to 1\u20132. In the second half, Galway took charge after Clarke scored their second goal with an assist from Gillian Joyce. Nevin and McNally replied with further points for Dublin while Lisa Cohill and Gillian Joyce kept Galway ahead. Edel Concannon's goal eight minutes from time proved to be the decisive score that won the title for Galway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176567-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nTeam: 1 Una Carroll2 Marie O'Connell3 Ruth Stephens 4 Ann-Marie McDonagh5 Aoibheann Daly6 \u00c1ine Gilmore7 Emer Flaherty8 Annette Clarke (c)9 Patricia Gleeson10 Lisa Cohill 11 Niamh Fahey12 Niamh Duggan13 Geraldine Conneally14 Lorna Joyce15 M. Delaney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176567-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:Edel Concannon for Gilmore (23)Gillian Joyce for Delaney (HT)M.Burke for O'Connell (53)F. Wynne for Conneally (58)E. O'Malley for Gleeson (60)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176567-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nTeam: 1 Cl\u00edodhna O'Connor2 Sorcha Farrelly3 Noelle Comyn4 Maria Kavanagh5 Niamh McEvoy6 Louise Keegan 7 Gemma Fay8 Martina Farrell9 Fiona Corcoran 10 Elaine Kelly11 Bernie Finlay 12 Lyndsey Davey13 Ashling McCormack 14 Angie McNally15 Mary Nevin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176567-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:Louise Kelly for Kavanagh (43)Sin\u00e9ad Aherne for Kelly (47)S. McGrath for Farrelly (49)K. Hopkins for Davey (54)Orla Colreavy for Farrell (58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176568-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship was the 41st staging of the All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176568-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship\nDublin entered the championship as defending champions, however, they were defeated by Kildare in the Leinster final replay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176568-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Football Championship\nOn 2 October 2004, Armagh won the championship following a 2-8 to 1-9 defeat of Mayo in the All-Ireland final. This was their first All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176569-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship was the 41st staging of the All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament for players under the age of twenty-one. The championship began on 2 June 2004 and ended on 18 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176569-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship\nOn 18 September 2004, Kilkenny won the championship following a 3-21 to 1-6 defeat of Tipperary in the All-Ireland final. This was their second All-Ireland title in succession and their 9th title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176570-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship final was a hurling match that was played at Nowlan Park, Kilkenny on 18 September 2004 to determine the winners of the 2004 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, the 41st season of the All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champion teams of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by Kilkenny of Leinster and Tipperary of Munster, with Kilkenny winning by 3\u201321 to 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176571-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-Pro Team\nThe 2004 All-Pro Team was composed of the National Football League players that were named to the Associated Press, Pro Football Writers Association, and The Sporting News All-Pro Teams in 2004. Both first and second teams are listed for the AP team. These are the three teams that are included in Total Football II: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League. In 2004, the Pro Football Writers Association and Pro Football Weekly combined their All-Pro teams, a practice with continues through 2008. In 2004, the AP reinstated the \u201cFullback\u201d position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176572-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 All-SEC football team\nThe 2004 All-SEC football team consists of American football players selected to the All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) chosen by the Associated Press (AP) and the conference coaches for the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176572-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 All-SEC football team\nThe Auburn Tigers won the conference, beating the Tennessee Volunteers 38 to 28 in the SEC Championship Game. Despite finishing the season undefeated, the Tigers were not invited to the National Championship Game, and won the Sugar Bowl over the Virginia Tech Hokies 16 to 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176572-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 All-SEC football team\nAuburn quarterback Jason Campbell was voted AP SEC Offensive Player of the Year. Georgia defensive end David Pollack, a unanimous AP selection, was voted AP SEC Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176572-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 All-SEC football team, Key\nBold = Consensus first-team selection by both the coaches and AP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 31], "content_span": [32, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176573-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Allan Cup\nThe 2004 Allan Cup was the Canadian national senior ice hockey championship for the 2003\u201304 Senior \"AAA\" season. The event was hosted by the St-Georges Garaga in Saint-Georges, Quebec. The 2004 tournament marked the 96th year that the Allan Cup has been awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176574-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad\nThe 2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Roy Emerson Arena in Gstaad in Switzerland and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from July 5 through July 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176574-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad, Finals, Doubles\nLeander Paes / David Rikl defeated Marc Rosset / Stanislas Wawrinka 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176575-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and David Rikl were defending champions. Rikl was also the two-time defending champion, having won the title with Joshua Eagle in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176575-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Doubles\nPaes and Rikl defended their title, defeating wildcard entry Marc Rosset and Stan Wawrinka in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176575-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176576-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Potito Starace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176576-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20133, 5\u20137, 6\u20133 against Igor Andreev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176576-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176577-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Allsvenskan\nAllsvenskan 2004, part of the 2004 Swedish football season, was the 80th Allsvenskan season played. The first match was played 3 April 2004 and the last match was played 30 October 2004. Malm\u00f6 FF won the league ahead of runners-up Halmstads BK, while AIK and Trelleborgs FF were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake\nThe 2004 Alor earthquake occurred on the island of Alor 21:26:41 UTC 11 November 2004. Alor is an island located in Indonesia, the largest island of the Alor Archipelago with almost 16,800 residents. The earthquake had a magnitude of 7.5, on the moment magnitude scale, with an epicenter on Alor at a depth of about 10\u00a0km (6.2\u00a0mi). It was recorded on 301 stations. The epicenter of the earthquake was located 1,600\u00a0km (990\u00a0mi) east of the capital of Jakarta. Hundreds of homes and much infrastructure was damaged with 23 deaths and thousands of casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tectonic setting\nAlor island is of volcanic origin, forming part of the Banda Arc, which was formed by the subduction of the Australian Plate beneath the Eurasian Plate. Currently the Banda Arc is involved in the early stages of an Arc-Continent collision, as continental crust of the Australian Plate becomes involved in this boundary. Several microplates have been formed, including the Banda Sea Plate and the Timor Plate. The boundary between these two microplates is a north-dipping subduction zone, movement on which has caused large earthquakes in the past, including the 1991 Kalabahi earthquakes that resulted in 23 fatalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Aftershocks\nThere were over 30 noticeable aftershocks between 11 May to 13 May, in the range from Mw\u202f 4.1 to 5.4. The aftershocks occurred almost hourly immediately after the mainshock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tsunami\nFrom the official website of the United States National Tsunami Warning Center, NOAA/NWS, according to the research of the Indonesian Meteorological and Geophysical Agency (BMG), there's a tsunami followed by the Alor earthquake Nov 2004 closing to Alor island. And the flooding of the coastline is about 50 meters away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tsunami\nThere were a series of subsequent effect on the local area:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tsunami\nKalabahi city was severely damaged by the tsunami as well as from the continuous aftershocks of the earthquake. Located in the valley between hills, Bukapiting village, was completely destroyed. A landslide also caused by the earthquake destroyed the road that connects Kalabahi and Maritaing villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tsunami\nMaritaing beach, found 98\u00a0km (61\u00a0mi) north of Kalabahi village, was also hit by the tsunami. In Dali, a floating hotel in the natural harbor was pushed to the shore after the earthquake caused water to recede.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tsunami\nSome 649 houses were damaged and 205 of them were severely damaged or destroyed. There was large scale destruction of government infrastructure. Three schools and eight places of worship collapsed. The electricity grid of Alor island was shut down temporarily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Tsunami\nMoreover, airplanes were not able to land, because of the destruction of the local airport in Kalabahi city. Many cracks appeared in the runways, shutting down air services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Historical Earthquakes in nearby regions since 2000\nOn May 4, 2000, an earthquake measured at of 7.5 on the Richter scale, 7.5 Mwc, shook the Sulawesi Province, resulting in 35 deaths. Later the same year on June 4, a 7.9 Mwc earthquake, with an epicentre in Bengkulu Province, caused over 117 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 96], "content_span": [97, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Historical Earthquakes in nearby regions since 2000\nIn 2004, on February 6, a 6.9 Mwc earthquake, occurred at Papua. The aftershocks caused over 34 deaths. Another, on November 26, 6.4 Mwc earthquake, centred near West Papua, caused over 30 deaths. At the end of the year, on boxing day, an earthquake and tsunami occurred in the sea bed off Sumatra island, which affected over 20 nearby countries and took over 220,000 lives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 96], "content_span": [97, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Historical Earthquakes in nearby regions since 2000\nIn 2005, on March 28, an 8.7 Mwc earthquake, centred near Nias and Simeulue islands away from the Sumatra west shore, which caused over 900 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 96], "content_span": [97, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Geological background, Historical Earthquakes in nearby regions since 2000\nAnother earthquake on May 27, 2006, measuring 6.4 Mwc, with an epicentre near the central city of Yogyakarta, caused over 5,000 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 96], "content_span": [97, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Damage and casualties\nAccording to ABC News Online 14 November 2004Many roads on Alor island have been badly damaged", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Damage and casualties\nAftershocks from the earthquake continued for over half of a month, with large and widespread destruction of infrastructure including thousands of houses, schools, offices and places of worship although local hospitals mostly remained undamaged, the hospitals were unable to cope with large numbers of casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Social reactions\nAt the first phase of Alor earthquake November 2004, 4,500 affected households received emergency shelter and non-perishable material; after, the same number of households are assigned with the essential building material and basic tools", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Social reactions\nAccording to the red cross document, the residual balance of CHF 420,054 (66% of the total emergency appeal income), was assigned to the Tsunami Emergency and Recovery Program 2005 - 2010 for Indonesia. The detailed composition of the funds' balance is in the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Social reactions\nAnd according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Social reactions\n\u201ccash assistance allocated by the central government has rounded about USD 172,000.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Reconstruction of the earthquake\nInfrastructure is now being reinforced by anti-seismic design with the shock-resistant technology; mostly in houses and the schools. They are mostly able to resist earthquakes measuring to 8 on the Richter scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Reconstruction of the earthquake, Memorial\nThe disaster is commemorated on 10 December of every year with most of the local schools gather and singing songs to the national flag. The local government and media will also memorize that earthquake on TV channels and official websites by documentary films and videos. The total amount of help donated to victims is US$ 420,054.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 64], "content_span": [65, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176578-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Alor earthquake, Influence of Earthquake to local economy\nAll industries were affected in the short and long term. The residents in Alor island still practice subsistence agriculture with poorly developed infrastructure which is prone to frequent natural disasters. Another main industry on the island is the fishing industry and the mining industry with natural gas, ipsum, kaolin, petroleum, tin, gold and various diamond mines on the island. The island is a recognised diving destination, making local tourism one of the major income source of Alor inhabitants, with mainly diving and snorkeling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176579-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Downhill\nThe 2004 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Downhill season involved 12 events at sites in North America and Europe between November 2003 and March 2004. Austria's Stephan Eberharter won the individual title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176579-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Downhill, Final point standings\nOverall | Downhill | Super G | Giant Slalom | Slalom | Combined", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176580-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Alsace regional election\nA regional election took place in Alsace on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Adrien Zeller (UMP) was re-elected President, defeating Jacques Bigot (PS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176580-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Alsace regional election\nThis French elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176581-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Altazor Awards\nThe fifth annual Altazor Awards took place on April 5, 2004, at the Centro Cultural Matucana 100. The nominees were announced on January 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176582-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Amber Valley Borough Council election\nElections to Amber Valley Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party held overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 44%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176583-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 America East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 America East Conference Baseball Tournament took place from May 27-29 at Mahaney Diamond in Orono, Maine. The top four regular season finishers of the league's eight teams qualified for the double-elimination tournament. In the championship game, fourth-seeded Stony Brook defeated second-seeded Maine, 3-1, to win its first tournament championship. As a result, Stony Brook received the America East's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament, the program's first in Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176583-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 America East Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe top four finishers from the regular season were seeded one through four based on conference winning percentage only. They then played in a double-elimination format. In the first round, the one and four seeds were matched up in one game, while the two and three seeds were matched up in the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176583-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 America East Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Outstanding Player\nStony Brook outfielder Isidro Fortuna was named Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 94], "content_span": [95, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176584-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 America East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 America East Men's Basketball Tournament was hosted by the Boston University Terriers at Walter Brown Arena . The final was held at Patrick Gym on the campus of the University of Vermont. Vermont gained its second consecutive berth to the NCAA Tournament with its win over Maine. Vermont was given the 15th seed in the West Regional of the NCAA Tournament and lost in the first round to Connecticut 70\u201353. Boston University gained a bid to the NIT and lost in the opening round to Rhode Island 80\u201352.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176585-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans Series\nThe 2004 American Le Mans Series season was the 34th season for the IMSA GT Championship, and the sixth under the American Le Mans Series banner. It was a series for Le Mans Prototypes (LMP) and Grand Touring (GT) race cars divided into 4 classes: LMP1, LMP2, GTS, and GT. It began March 20, 2004 and ended October 16, 2004 after 9 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176585-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans Series, Schedule\nThree circuits were added to the 2004 schedule, replacing three events which did not return from 2003. The sprint event at Road Atlanta along with Circuit Trois-Rivi\u00e8res and the Miami, Florida street circuit were removed, while Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course and Portland International Raceway both returned once again. These were joined by the addition of Lime Rock Park. The removal of Trois-Rivi\u00e8res rendered Mosport as the only race outside the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176585-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 finishers in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176585-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nExceptions were for the 4 Hour Monterey Sports Car Championships was scored in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176585-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nAnd for the 12 Hours of Sebring and Petit Le Mans which award the top 10 finishers in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176585-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nCars failing to complete 70% of the winner's distance are not awarded points. Teams only score the points of their highest finishing entry in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176586-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio\nThe 2004 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio was the second race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season held at Mid-Ohio sports car course. It took place on June 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176586-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series\nThe 2004 American League Championship Series was the Major League Baseball playoff series to decide the American League champion for the 2004 season, and the right to play in the 2004 World Series. A rematch of the 2003 American League Championship Series, it was played between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees, at Fenway Park and the original Yankee Stadium, from October 12 to 20, 2004. The Red Sox became the first (and to date only) team in MLB history to come back from a 0\u20133 series deficit to win a seven-game series. The Red Sox, who had won the AL wild card, defeated the Anaheim Angels in the American League Division Series to reach the ALCS, while the Yankees, who had won the AL East with the best record in the AL, defeated the Minnesota Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series\nIn Game 1, Yankees pitcher Mike Mussina pitched a perfect game through six innings, while the Red Sox recovered from an eight-run deficit to close within one run before the Yankees eventually won. A home run by John Olerud helped the Yankees win Game 2. The Yankees gathered 22 hits in Game 3 on their way to an easy win. The Yankees led Game 4 by one run in the ninth inning, but a steal of second base by Red Sox base runner Dave Roberts and a single by Bill Mueller off Yankees closer Mariano Rivera tied the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series\nA home run by David Ortiz then won it for the Red Sox in extra innings. Ortiz also won Game 5 with a single in the 14th inning. Curt Schilling pitched seven innings in Game 6 for the Red Sox, during which time his sock became soaked in blood due to an injury in his ankle. Game 7 featured the Red Sox paying back New York for their Game 3 blowout with a dominating performance on the road, anchored by Derek Lowe and bolstered by two Johnny Damon home runs, one a grand slam. David Ortiz was named the Most Valuable Player of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series\nThe Red Sox remain the only team in MLB history to win a series after being down 3-0. Prior to the 2004 ALCS, no team in MLB had so much as forced a Game 7 under those circumstances - the only team to even do that since 2004 is the Houston Astros who after being down 3-0 went on to lose the 2020 ALCS in seven games to the Tampa Bay Rays. The Red Sox went on to sweep the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series, winning their first World Series championship in 86 years and ending the Curse of the Bambino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nThe Red Sox ended their 2003 season in the previous American League Championship Series with a game seven loss to the Yankees, on a walk-off home run by Yankees third baseman Aaron Boone in the bottom of the 11th inning. During the offseason, they traded Casey Fossum, Brandon Lyon, Jorge de la Rosa, and a minor leaguer to the Arizona Diamondbacks for ace starting pitcher Curt Schilling. Manager Grady Little was also fired and replaced with Terry Francona due to poor decisions that Little made during the previous season's playoffs. The Red Sox also signed a closing pitcher, Keith Foulke, to a three-year contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nGoing into the all-star break, the Red Sox were seven games behind the Yankees for the division lead with a record of 48\u201338, but led the wild card. In an attempt to improve the team and solidify a playoff decision and in anticipation for a showdown against the New York Yankees, general manager Theo Epstein traded well-liked shortstop Nomar Garciaparra to the Chicago Cubs in exchange for first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz and shortstop Orlando Cabrera in a four-team deal on the trading deadline (July 31).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nThe team fell behind up to 10+1\u20442 games in the division during the month of August, but managed to come back in September to within two games. However, the Yankees held strong and won the division, finishing three games ahead of the Red Sox. The Red Sox won the AL Wild Card (the best record among three second-place teams) to obtain a spot in the playoffs. Entering the postseason, first baseman Kevin Millar was asked to compare the team with the previous season's team, to which he responded, \"I'm pretty sure we're five outs better than last year.\" It was a reference to the 2003 American League Championship Series, in which the Red Sox held a 5\u20132 lead over the Yankees with one out in the eighth inning of Game 7, only to blow the lead and lose the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nThe Red Sox would sweep the Anaheim Angels in three games, but at a cost. In the first game of the series, Schilling would be hurt by a line drive hit off his foot, leaving the rest of his postseason play in doubt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Route to the series, New York Yankees\nThe 2004 Yankees began the season in Tokyo with a split against the Rays. Playing a much-anticipated game against the Red Sox, the team lost the game 6\u20132 and 6 out of the first 7 games to their rivals. After falling as many as 4+1\u20442 games behind the Red Sox on April 25, the team would make up the deficit in less than 2 weeks, including an 8-game win streak. By the end of June, they had a commanding 8+1\u20442 game lead in the AL East over the Sox after sweeping them with a dramatic 5\u20134 walk-off 13-inning victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Route to the series, New York Yankees\nAfter the All-Star break, the Yankees traded Jos\u00e9 Contreras to the White Sox for Esteban Loaiza. Contreras was signed away from the Red Sox before the 2003 season, but he failed to live up to expectations. With a 10+1\u20442 game lead in the second week of August, the team struggled and watched their lead dwindle to only 2+1\u20442 games on September 3. The team held off the Red Sox to claim the division and set up a playoff rematch with the Twins. The results were pretty much the same, as the Yankees took the Division Series in 4 games, setting up the rematch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Series build-up\nThe Red Sox and Yankees had met 45 times in the previous two years, with Boston holding a 23\u201322 lead. The Red Sox held an 11\u20138 advantage over New York in 2004, but eight of the games were decided in one of the teams' final at-bats. Boston outscored New York, 106\u2013105. and this was the fifth time that the two teams were on the doorstep of a World Series, with the Yankees winning the previous four, in 1949, 1978, 1999, and 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Series build-up\nThe Series was widely anticipated, especially given the outcome of the previous October, when the Yankees beat the Red Sox in seven games when Aaron Boone hit the home run off of Tim Wakefield in the bottom of the 11th inning to send the Yankees to the World Series. Yankees General Manager Brian Cashman said that \"the two teams in the American League facing each other in this series are the two best teams, period.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Series build-up\nFox commentator Joe Buck said as the series began: \"What's hard to believe, it was almost exactly one year ago tonight that Aaron Boone hit that 11th inning home run to beat the Red Sox, yet for some reason it seemed predetermined that we would be right back here a year later for a rematch of sort.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Series build-up\nDan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe wrote that \"one year after they (Yankees) jousted to the (Sox's) finish in the Bronx last October in an epic seventh game that appeared to take the clash to its zenith they go at it again...\" In this series, Alex Rodriguez seemed to answer the Sox' acquisition of Curt Schilling, as the two veteran stars faced each other, \"wearing the uniforms of the ancient rivals in an October game...\" Yankees pitcher Mike Mussina summed up the build-up: \"This is what everyone was hoping for... It's a rematch of last year, with the best two teams in the American League.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Series build-up\nThe New York Times said that this was the showdown the Yankees anticipated the entire season, while the Red Sox craved it an entire year. This was the reason why the Red Sox fired Grady Little, traded Nomar Garciaparra, and added Curt Schilling. Outfielder Johnny Damon said of Boone's home run: \"If we do advance to the World Series and win, it's a better story that we went through New York. We needed to get back here. This is where a lot of hearts were broken, and we're in a perfect seat to stop the hurting.\" The Red Sox' Theo Epstein agreed, saying \"Now that it's here, we can admit that if we're able to win a World Series and go through New York along the way, it will mean that much more.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Series build-up\nInitially, Game 4 was scheduled for the afternoon. However, MLB Commissioner Bud Selig had moved the starting time of Game 4 to primetime, due to the rematch, and Fox had a triple-header, first the Seattle Seahawks\u2013New England Patriots game at Gillette Stadium at 1:00\u00a0pm ET, then Game 4 of the NLCS between the St. Louis Cardinals and Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park at 4:30\u00a0pm ET.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nTuesday, October 12, 2004 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nGame 1 pitted the Red Sox's star pitcher Curt Schilling against Yankees ace Mike Mussina. Schilling entered the game with a 6\u20131 postseason career record, but the expected pitchers' duel quickly became a one-sided exhibition. Schilling had sustained a torn tendon sheath in his right ankle during Game 1 of the American League Division Series against the Angels, and proved to be ineffective. In the first, Gary Sheffield doubled with two outs before Hideki Matsui drove him in with a double, then Matsui scored on Bernie Williams's single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nIn the third, the Yankees loaded the bases with no outs on two singles and a walk before Matsui cleared them with a double. After moving to third on a groundout, Matsui scored on Jorge Posada's sacrifice fly. In the sixth, Kenny Lofton hit a leadoff home run off of knuckleballer Tim Wakefield. Sheffield doubled with two outs before scoring on a single by Matsui, giving him an ALCS record-tying five RBIs in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nMussina, meanwhile, retired the game's first 19 Red Sox batters. Mark Bellhorn ended Mussina's bid for a perfect game with a one-out double in the seventh. After David Ortiz singled with two outs, Kevin Millar's double to left scored two runs. Millar moved to third on a passed ball before scoring on Trot Nixon's single. Tanyon Sturtze relieved Mussina and allowed a home run to Jason Varitek that made it 8\u20135 Yankees. Next inning, Tom Gordon allowed singles to Bill Mueller and Manny Ramirez before Ortiz's two-out triple cut the Yankees lead to 8\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nThe Yankees called upon closer Mariano Rivera, who induced a pop out by Kevin Millar to end the inning. In the bottom half, Alex Rodriguez and Sheffield singled off of Mike Timlin before Williams' two-run double made it 10\u20137 Yankees. The Sox hit two singles in the top of the ninth inning off of Rivera, but the game ended when Bill Mueller grounded into a double play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nWednesday, October 13, 2004 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nGame 2 featured Pedro Mart\u00ednez of the Red Sox facing Yankees pitcher Jon Lieber. Again, the Yankees struck first, as Gary Sheffield drove in Derek Jeter, who walked, in the first inning. The 1\u20130 score held up for several innings, as Lieber and Martinez put together a classic pitchers' duel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nMartinez got himself in and out of trouble through several innings, but, shortly after making his 100th pitch of the night, walked Jorge Posada and allowed a John Olerud home run, giving New York a 3\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nAgain, the Red Sox rallied. Trot Nixon singled to lead off the eighth off of Lieber, who was replaced by Tom Gordon. A double by Jason Varitek moved Nixon to third before Orlando Cabrera's RBI groundout closed the gap, 3\u20131. With two outs and a runner on third, however, the Yankees again turned to Rivera, who struck out Johnny Damon to end the inning. Rivera shut down the Red Sox in the ninth by inducing a groundout by Mark Bellhorn, and, after giving up a double to Manny Ram\u00edrez, striking out David Ortiz and Millar, ending the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nSaturday, October 16, 2004 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nWith the series moving to Fenway Park, Game 3 was originally scheduled for October 15, but was postponed a day due to rain. The starting pitchers were Kevin Brown for the Yankees and Bronson Arroyo for the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nAs in the first two games, the Yankees began by scoring in the first. Derek Jeter walked and scored from first on a double by Alex Rodr\u00edguez. Two batters later, Hideki Matsui hit a home run to right field, giving the Yankees a 3\u20130 lead. The Red Sox answered in the second inning with a leadoff walk by Jason Varitek and a Trot Nixon home run to right field. A double by Bill Mueller, an infield RBI hit by Johnny Damon (his first hit of the series), and a Derek Jeter error led to two more runs. The Red Sox led for the first time in the series, 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nThis lead was short-lived, as Alex Rodr\u00edguez led off the third inning with a home run over the Green Monster. Gary Sheffield then walked and Hideki Matsui doubled, prompting Bronson Arroyo to be replaced on the mound by Ramiro Mendoza, who immediately allowed a Bernie Williams RBI single and then balked, allowing Matsui to score from third, which gave the Yankees a 6\u20134 lead. The Red Sox, however, responded by tying the game in the bottom of the inning, scoring two runs on an Orlando Cabrera bases-loaded double off Yankees reliever Javier V\u00e1zquez to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nIn the fourth inning, the Yankees took the lead on a three-run home run to left by Gary Sheffield after a walk and hit-by-pitch. After another double by Hideki Matsui, the Red Sox put in pitcher Tim Wakefield, who volunteered to forgo his scheduled Game 4 start in order to preserve Boston's battered bullpen. Wakefield got Bernie Williams to pop out and then intentionally walked Jorge Posada. Rub\u00e9n Sierra then tripled to score Matsui and Posada, giving the Yankees an 11\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nFrom that point on the Yankees were in total control, with the New York offense continuing to hit and score runs long into the night. In the fifth, Jeter walked with one-out before back-to-back RBI doubles by Rodriguez and Sheffield made it 13\u20136 Yankees. In the seventh, Miguel Cairo and Sheffield singled off of Wakefield, who was relieved by Alan Embree. Matsui's single scored a run, Williams's double scored two, and Jorge Posada's double scored another. The Red Sox scored their last runs of the game in the bottom of the inning off of Vazquez on Jason Varitek's two-run home run after a leadoff single. Matsui also hit a two-run home run in the ninth off of Mike Myers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nWhen the game was over, the Yankees had set a team record for postseason runs scored. Rodr\u00edguez, Sheffield, and Matsui had prolific hitting nights. Matsui had five hits and five RBIs, tying LCS records. He and Rodr\u00edguez both tied the postseason record for runs scored with five. The two teams combined for 37 hits and 20 extra-base hits, both postseason records. At four hours and 20 minutes, the game was the longest nine-inning postseason game ever played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nAlthough the final score was 19\u20138, Dan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe said \"nineteen to eight. Why not '19\u201318'?\" He was referring to the Red Sox not having won a World Series since 1918, and demeaning chants of that year echoed at Yankee Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nBob Ryan wrote about the Red Sox in The Boston Globe: \"They are down, 3\u20130, after last night's 19\u20138 rout, and, in this sport, that is an official death sentence. Soon it will be over, and we will spend another dreary winter lamenting this and lamenting that.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nSunday, October 17, 2004 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nGame 4 featured Yankees pitcher Orlando Hern\u00e1ndez, the 1999 ALCS MVP against Boston's Derek Lowe. For the first time in the series, the Yankees did not score in the first inning. However, they eventually did score first. With two outs and nobody on in the third inning, Derek Jeter singled. Alex Rodr\u00edguez then hit a two-run home run over the Green Monster. This hit resembled a home run he hit in Game 3, as it also came in the third inning and went out of the park onto Lansdowne Street. This would be followed by the ball being thrown back into the outfield by fans on the Street, Johnny Damon tossing the ball back over the fence, and the ball once again being tossed back before being pocketed by Umpire Joe West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nHern\u00e1ndez, who had not pitched in two weeks, cruised through the first four innings giving up just one hit and two walks. In the fifth inning, he pitched himself into a jam, walking two of the first three batters. With two men on and two out, Orlando Cabrera singled to right field, scoring Bill Mueller. Manny Ram\u00edrez walked to load the bases, and then David Ortiz hit a single to center field, scoring Cabrera and Johnny Damon and giving the Red Sox a 3\u20132 lead, only their second lead in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe lead lasted less than an inning. Hideki Matsui hit a triple with one out in the sixth, after which Mike Timlin relieved Lowe. Bernie Williams hit an infield single to score Matsui and tie the game 3-3. After Jorge Posada walked, Williams attempted to advance to third on a passed ball but was thrown out by Jason Varitek. However, Rub\u00e9n Sierra hit another infield single, moving Posada to third. Tony Clark then hit a third infield single to score Posada and give the Yankees a 4\u20133 lead. Miguel Cairo then walked to load the bases for Jeter, but Timlin induced a groundout to escape the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nMassachusetts native Tanyon Sturtze pitched two scoreless innings in relief of Hern\u00e1ndez. Mariano Rivera, the Yankees star closer, entered the game in the eighth for a two-inning save attempt. In the ninth inning, Rivera allowed a lead-off walk to Kevin Millar, which ultimately turned out to be the turning point of the series. Dave Roberts was then chosen to pinch-run for Millar. With the Red Sox down to their final three outs, Rivera checked Roberts at first base several times before throwing a pitch to Bill Mueller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nOn Rivera's first pitch to Mueller, the speedy Roberts stole second, putting himself in scoring position. Mueller's single allowed Roberts to score, resulting in Rivera blowing the save and the game going into extra innings, tied at four runs apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nBoth teams threatened for more runs in the 11th inning, but the game remained tied until the bottom of the 12th. Ram\u00edrez led off with a single against new pitcher Paul Quantrill, who had relieved Tom Gordon, and Ortiz hit a two-run walk-off home run to right field. Ortiz became the first player with two walk-off homers in the same postseason; his first capped a Red Sox sweep of the Anaheim Angels in the American League Division Series. Red Sox pitcher Curtis Leskanic got the win in relief after being called on to stop the Yankees' 11th inning threat and had pitched the 12th and allowed no runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nMonday, October 18, 2004 at Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nGame 5 began at 5:11\u00a0pm EDT on Monday, October 18, just 16 hours after Game 4 had ended the previous night. Mike Mussina led the Yankees against Boston's Pedro Mart\u00ednez. The Red Sox drew first blood this time, as David Ortiz drove in a run with an RBI single after two one-out singles and Jason Varitek walked with the bases loaded in the first inning to give Boston a 2\u20130 lead. Bernie Williams homered in the second inning to close the gap to 2\u20131, a score which would hold up for several innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nDespite seven strikeouts by Mart\u00ednez, in the top of the sixth inning, Jorge Posada and Rub\u00e9n Sierra singled with one out. After Miguel Cairo was hit by a pitch to load the bases, Derek Jeter cleared the bases with a double, giving the Yankees a 4\u20132 lead. The Red Sox threatened again in the seventh inning but came up empty. For the second straight night, however, the Yankee bullpen couldn't keep the lead. Ortiz led off the eighth inning with a home run off former Red Sox reliever Tom Gordon, making it a one-run game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nKevin Millar followed with a walk and was again replaced by pinch runner Dave Roberts, who went to third on Trot Nixon's single. Gordon was replaced by Mariano Rivera with the lead still intact, but Jason Varitek's sacrifice fly tied the game. The Yankees threatened in the top of the ninth when former Red Sox player Tony Clark hit a ball to deep right with two outs, but the ball took a hop over the short right-field wall for a ground-rule double, forcing Rub\u00e9n Sierra to stop at third base, where he was stranded to set up another extra-inning marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nEach team got its share of base runners in extra innings. Boston's Doug Mientkiewicz doubled in the tenth and moved to third, but did not score. Two Red Sox led off the 11th with singles, but Esteban Loaiza, who had struggled since being acquired by the Yankees mid-season, came in to pitch with one out and got Orlando Cabrera to ground into a double play. Knuckleballer Tim Wakefield came on in relief once again for the Red Sox in the 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0038-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nHe allowed a single to Miguel Cairo, who went to second on a Manny Ram\u00edrez error, but Cairo was eventually stranded. In the top of the 13th, Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek, who didn't normally catch for Wakefield (backup catcher Doug Mirabelli usually did) and who admitted to being poor at catching knuckleballs, allowed three passed balls, but the Yankees stranded runners on second and third when Sierra struck out. Loaiza pitched well over his first two innings, but, in the bottom of the 14th, Damon and Ram\u00edrez walked, bringing up Ortiz with two outs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0038-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThe previous night's hero did his job again, singling to center on the 10th pitch of the at-bat to bring home Damon and setting off another celebration at Fenway. Ortiz's heroics prompted Fox TV announcer Tim McCarver to gush shortly afterwards, saying, \"He didn't do it again, did he? Yes he did.\" The late inning heroics of Ortiz also gave the Red Sox fans a chance to create their own chant, \"Who's your Papi?\" (Ortiz being known affectionately as \"Big Papi\"), in rebuttal to the \"Who's your daddy?\" chant used by Yankees fans in reference to a quote by Pedro Mart\u00ednez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThe game set the record for longest duration of a postseason game at 5 hours, 49 minutes, a record which was broken the next year by Game 4 of the 2005 National League Division Series between the Houston Astros and Atlanta Braves, which was only one minute longer even though it was 18 innings instead of 14. Both games were eventually passed by Game 2 of the 2014 National League Division Series between the Washington Nationals and the San Francisco Giants which was also 18 innings but significantly longer time-wise, lasting six hours and 23 minutes. This in turn was broken by Game 3 of the 2018 World Series between the Red Sox and the Los Angeles Dodgers, which was also 18 innings but lasted seven hours and 20 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nGame 5 of the National League Championship Series began at 8:54\u00a0pm EST on the same night and was intended to be the second part of FOX's two-game telecast. However, that game proceeded quickly and, despite starting 3 hours and 43 minutes after ALCS Game 5, ended only 24 minutes after the final pitch of this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThis victory by the Red Sox forced a Game 6. Before this, the 1998 Atlanta Braves and 1999 New York Mets were the only baseball teams ever to be down 0\u20133 in a seven-game series and force a Game 6, but neither of those teams won that game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\n\"The Bloody Sock Game\"Tuesday, October 19, 2004 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nGame 6 was held on Tuesday, October 19 at Yankee Stadium. The starting pitchers were Curt Schilling of the Red Sox and Jon Lieber of the Yankees. Schilling pitched with a torn tendon sheath in his right ankle, which was sutured in place in an unprecedented procedure by Red Sox team doctors. The teams played the first few innings scoreless as cold, windy conditions, combined with a light drizzle, kept many hard hit balls in the field of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0043-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nLieber, who had been brilliant in Game 2, was the first of the starters to falter, to the surprise of many given Lieber's Game 2 outing and Schilling's injured state. Lieber surrendered a two-out single to Jason Varitek, driving in Kevin Millar. Then Orlando Cabrera singled to left field and Mark Bellhorn, who had struggled the entire series, drove a line drive into the left field stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0043-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nThe ball struck a fan in the hands in an attempted catch and dropped back onto the field, after which left field umpire Jim Joyce signaled the ball to be still in play, prompting Boston manager Terry Francona to run onto the field and argue the ruling. The officiating crew huddled and ultimately overruled the call. Bellhorn had a three-run home run, and the Red Sox had a 4\u20130 lead. Schilling, still injured from the ALDS and Game 1, pitched seven strong innings, allowing only one run on a Bernie Williams home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0043-0003", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nTo help stabilize the tendon in his ankle, Red Sox doctors had placed three sutures connecting the skin with ligament and deep connective tissue next to the bone, effectively creating a wall of tissue to keep the peroneal tendon from disrupting Schilling's pitching mechanics. Schilling was only forced to field his position once and visibly limped to first base to field the toss from Millar. Nonetheless, the Yankees did not bunt for the duration of Schilling's outing, something Joe Torre later explained as not playing out of the normal character of his team. Torre also admitted that had he known beforehand how bad the injury really was, it might have changed his mind. By the end of his performance, Schilling's white sanitary sock was partially soaked in blood, and he stated later that he was completely exhausted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nBronson Arroyo took the mound for Boston in the eighth and, with one out, allowed a Miguel Cairo double. Derek Jeter singled him in to close the gap to 4\u20132, leading up to the series' most controversial play. Alex Rodriguez grounded a ball to Arroyo, who picked up the ball and ran to the baseline to tag Rodriguez out, but Rodriguez slapped Arroyo's arm, knocking the ball loose. While the ball rolled down the baseline, Rodr\u00edguez went to second and Jeter scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0044-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nAfter another long conversation among the umpires, Rodr\u00edguez was called out for interference and Jeter was ordered back to first, thus wiping out the score. The call further incensed the Yankee fans, already irate over the home run call in the fourth. As Torre and Rodr\u00edguez continued to frenetically argue with the umpires, many fans began to throw balls and other debris onto the field. Boston manager Terry Francona pulled his players from the field to protect them. After a delay, order was restored, and Arroyo got out of the inning unscathed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0044-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nIn the top of the ninth, after a leadoff single by Jason Varitek, his third hit of the night, off Paul Quantrill (the game 4 loser), the Yankees attempted to turn a double play. However, on a very close play, Orlando Cabrera was called safe at first base. This was the third time in the game that the frustrated New York fan base had a close call go against their team, and they again showered the field with debris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0044-0003", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nAs the Yankees made a pitching change to insert Tanyon Sturtze into the game to relieve Quantrill, home plate umpire Joe West conversed with New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg, MLB security director Kevin Hallinan, and various NYPD officials. Shortly after this, Sturtze was told to stop his warmup, and NYPD officers began streaming out of the dugouts, and took the field in full riot gear. The police remained on the field, near the first and third base walls, for the remainder of the top of the ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0044-0004", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nWhen the game resumed, Sturtze did get out of the inning, stranding Cabrera. The police vacated the field during the break between innings. Red Sox closer Keith Foulke came in for the bottom of the ninth and allowed Matsui and Sierra to walk, bringing Tony Clark to the plate as the potential pennant-winning run, but Clark struck out swinging on a full count to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nFive previous teams had managed to win one game after going down 3\u20130 in a post-season series. Of these five, two made it to a Game 6. But now the Red Sox, the 26th team in Major League Baseball playoff history to face a 3\u20130 series deficit, became the first to force a Game Seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nAfter the game, Schilling proudly wore his shirt with the Red Sox's motto, \"Why Not Us?\" in the locker room and during the press conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nWednesday, October 20, 2004 at Yankee Stadium (I) in Bronx, New York", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nFor inspiration for their ALCS comeback, the Red Sox gathered in Yankee Stadium's visitors' clubhouse prior to Game 7 to watch Miracle, the movie chronicling the 1980 U.S. men's gold-medal hockey team. The Yankees meanwhile, had Bucky Dent, the hero of the Yankees' one-game playoff against Boston in 1978, throw out the ceremonial first pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nGame 7 began at 8:30\u00a0p.m. The starting pitchers were Derek Lowe for the Red Sox and Kevin Brown for the Yankees. Johnny Damon led off the game with a single to left and stolen base, but was thrown out at home trying to score on a Manny Ramirez base hit. The very next pitch, however, was lined into the right-field bleachers by David Ortiz to give Boston a 2\u20130 advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0049-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nAfter the Yankees went down in order in the first inning, Brown retired Trot Nixon on a groundout to begin the top of the second, but Kevin Millar singled to center field before Brown walked Bill Mueller and Orlando Cabrera to load the bases. Torre then replaced Brown with Javier V\u00e1zquez to face Johnny Damon, who hammered his first pitch into the right-field seats for a grand slam to make the score 6\u20130 Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0049-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nLowe, meanwhile, on two days rest, pitched six innings, allowing only one run on one hit when Miguel Cairo was hit by a pitch in the third, stole second, and scored on Derek Jeter's single. Vazquez walked Cabrera to lead off the fourth before Damon again homered on his first pitch to make it 8\u20131 Boston and give him three hits and six RBIs in this game. After walking two batters, Vazquez was relieved by Esteban Loaiza, who allowed a single to Jason Varitek to load the bases before retiring Trot Nixon and Kevin Millar to end the inning. Loaiza then threw three shutout innings, allowing three hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nPedro Mart\u00ednez relieved Lowe in the seventh inning, receiving loud chants of \"Who's Your Daddy?,\" which intensified as he gave up a leadoff double to Hideki Matsui, who scored on Bernie Williams's double. After Jorge Posada grounded out, Williams scored on Kenny Lofton's single, but John Olerud struck out and Cairo flew out to end the inning. In the eighth, Mark Bellhorn homered for the second night in a row off of Tom Gordon to make it 9\u20133 Boston. Next inning, Nixon hit a leadoff single, advanced to second on a Doug Mientkiewicz single, then went to third on a Mueller sacrifice fly before scoring on a sacrifice fly by Cabrera. Mariano Rivera relieved Gordon and retired Damon to end the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nMike Timlin pitched a scoreless eighth and started the 9th for the Red Sox, but allowed a leadoff single to Matsui and walked Lofton with two outs. Alan Embree was brought in to finish the game for Boston. At 12:01\u00a0am, on October 21, Rub\u00e9n Sierra hit a groundball to second baseman Pokey Reese, who threw to first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz to finish the unprecedented comeback. It was their first pennant since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0051-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nThe Red Sox won 10\u20133 and became the third team in sports history and the first since the 1975 NHL's New York Islanders to win a seven-game series after losing the first three games. For the Yankees, this was their first time losing an ALCS in eight appearances (their last ALCS elimination was in 1980). David Ortiz was named the series MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nA riot broke out near Fenway Park in Boston following the series win, in which Victoria Snelgrove, an Emerson College journalism student, was accidentally shot and killed by police with an FN 303 pepper spray crowd-controlling projectile round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Composite box\n2004 ALCS (4\u20133): Boston Red Sox over New York Yankees", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nAfter dominating much of baseball since 1996 this would be the closest that the Joe Torre-led Yankees would get to going back to the World Series. They would not get back until 2009 when they beat defending Champion Philadelphia Phillies in six games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nThis series is often seen as a turning point of the Red Sox-Yankees rivalry, which up until this point, was often dominated by the Yankees. Since the Red Sox\u2019s owner Harry Frazee traded Babe Ruth to the Yankees for cash on January 5, 1920, the Yankees became the premier team in baseball, winning a record 26 World Series and 39 pennants from 1920-2003. Meanwhile, the Red Sox, who were baseball\u2019s most successful franchise until 1920, only won a handful of pennants after trading Ruth, losing every World Series they played in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0055-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nHowever, since 2004, the Red Sox have won four World Series compared to just one Yankees World Series. The 2010s was the first ever decade the Yankees franchise did not play in the World Series since the 1910s, and the first in which they did not win a World Series since the 1980s. In the same decade, the Red Sox won a World Series in 2013 and 2018. On their way to a championship in 2018, the Red Sox defeated the Yankees in four games in the American League Division Series, which was the first postseason match-up between the two rivals since the 2004 AL Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nIn 2020, the Houston Astros nearly came back from a 3-0 series deficit, but lost in Game 7 of the AL Championship Series to the Tampa Bay Rays. It was the closest a team in Major League Baseball has come to pulling off this feat since the 2004 Red Sox. In the National Hockey League, the 2010 Philadelphia Flyers became the first NHL team to comeback from a 3-0 deficit since the New York Islanders did it 1975 (they coincidentally beat a team from Boston, the Bruins, in the 2010 Eastern Conference Semifinals to accomplish the feat). Four years later in 2014, the Los Angeles Kings came back from 3-0 in a series with the San Jose Sharks in the First Round of the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176587-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nIn 2021, the Red Sox and Yankees would once again face off in the postseason, with the Red Sox winning the American League Wild Card Game by a score of 6-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series\nThe 2004 American League Division Series (ALDS), the opening round of the 2004 American League playoffs, began on Tuesday, October 5, and ended on Saturday, October 9, with the champions of the three AL divisions\u2014along with a \"wild card\" team\u2014participating in two best-of-five series. They were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series\nThe New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox went on to meet in the AL Championship Series (ALCS). The Red Sox became the American League champion, and defeated the National League champion St. Louis Cardinals in the 2004 World Series for their first World Championship since 1918.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 1\nPitching dominated in Game 1 as Mike Mussina faced Johan Santana. The Twins got on the board first when Shannon Stewart singled home Michael Cuddyer, who singled to leadoff and moved to second on a sacrifice bunt. Then in the sixth, Jacque Jones hit a solo home run to make it 2\u20130. The Yankees got nine hits and numerous walks, but never capitalized on Santana, Juan Rinc\u00f3n, or closer Joe Nathan, hitting into five double plays (including a strikeout-caught stealing play in the second and fly ball-out at home play in the third). As of 2021, this is the last postseason game won by the Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 2\nBrad Radke of the Twins faced Jon Lieber of the Yankees in Game 2. In the top of the first, Justin Morneau doubled in Torii Hunter to give the Twins a 1\u20130 lead. In the bottom of the first, Derek Jeter's leadoff home run tied the score. A single by Michael Cuddyer with two on and sacrifice fly by Henry Blanco made it 3\u20131 Twins, but Gary Sheffield tied the game with a two-run homer in the bottom of the third. Alex Rodriguez gave the Yankees the lead in the bottom of the fifth with a solo home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 2\nHe added in another run in the seventh by singling home Miguel Cairo, who drew a leadoff walk and moved to second on a sacrifice bunt, to make it 5\u20133 Yankees. Jacque Jones reached first on a strike three wild pitch from Tom Gordon, then Torii Hunter singled to put runners on first and second in the eighth. Mariano Rivera came in but, a single by Morneau and a ground-rule double by Corey Koskie scored a run each, tying the game, but with the go-ahead run at third, Rivera retired Jason Kubel and Cristian Guzm\u00e1n to end the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0003-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 2\nThe game went into extra innings and in the top of the 12th, Torii Hunter hit the go-ahead solo home run off of Tanyon Sturtze. The Twins were on the verge of putting the Yankees down two games to none, heading home, but Twins manager Ron Gardenhire left closer Joe Nathan in for a third inning of work. Nathan got the first out, but then walked Cairo and Jeter on four pitches each, after which Gardenhire still chose to leave Nathan in despite his clearly having nothing left and Alex Rodriguez coming up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0003-0003", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 2\nRodriguez promptly hit a ground-rule double that tied the game. Then, after Sheffield was intentionally walked, Hideki Matsui hit the game-winning sacrifice fly that scored Jeter off of J.C. Romero. Paul Quantrill earned a win by retiring the last hitter of the top of the 11th as the Yankees tied the series heading to Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 3\nYankees starter Kevin Brown faced Twins hurler Carlos Silva in the crucial Game 3. The Twins grabbed the lead in the bottom of the first when Jacque Jones hit his second home run of the series, but with two outs in the second, five straight singles gave the Yankees a 3\u20131 lead. Then, as the night wore on, the Yanks blew the game open in the sixth. Bernie Williams hit a two-run homer after Matsui singled to lead off the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 3\nAfter a single, walk, sacrifice bunt and strikeout from J.C. Romero, Derek Jeter added a two-run single off of Jesse Crain to make it 7\u20131 Yankees. Brown hurled six innings, while Hideki Matsui's home run in the seventh inning to make it 8\u20131 Yankees. The Twins, however, did not go quietly. Two consecutive hit-by-pitches to lead off the bottom of the ninth inning by F\u00e9lix Heredia was followed by two singles off of Tanyon Sturtze, the second of which by Michael Cuddyer scored a run. Mariano Rivera relieved Sturtze and allowed a groundout by Jose Offerman and sacrifice fly by Shannon Stewart before Jones grounded out to end the game as the Yankees' 8\u20134 win gave them a 2\u20131 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 4\nJavier V\u00e1zquez of the Yankees went against Johan Santana of the Twins, who were on the board first with a sacrifice fly by Torii Hunter in the first after back-to-back singles. But the Yankees tied it in the third when Derek Jeter hit a leadoff single, moved to second on a groundout, and scored on an RBI single by Hideki Matsui. A walk and double in the fourth was followed by Corey Koskie's sacrifice fly that put the Twins back in front 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 4\nHenry Blanco led the bottom of the fifth off with a home run to make it 3\u20131 Twins. Two two-out singles and a hit-by-pitch loaded the bases before a two-run double by Lew Ford extended the Twins' lead to 5\u20131. However, the Twins squandered the lead in the top of the eighth with Juan Rinc\u00f3n pitching in relief. Bernie Williams would single home Gary Sheffield after a single and wild pitch. With Matsui and Williams on base and one out, Rub\u00e9n Sierra hit the game-tying three-run home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, New York vs. Minnesota, Game 4\nJoe Nathan would come on in relief and get the next two outs. The game went into extra innings and Alex Rodriguez doubled, stole third, and scored on Kyle Lohse's wild pitch in the top of the 11th to put the Yankees up 6\u20135. Mariano Rivera got the win with two shutout innings as he retired the Twins 1\u20132\u20133 to end the series in the bottom of the 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 1\nGame 1 pitched Curt Schilling against Jarrod Washburn. The Red Sox struck first when David Ortiz singled home Manny Ram\u00edrez, who doubled with two outs. In the fourth, the Red Sox blew the game open. After Ortiz walked to open the inning, Kevin Millar homered to make it 3\u20130. Then the Red Sox loaded the bases with one out. Johnny Damon would reach on an error by Chone Figgins that scored two unearned runs to make it 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 1\nScot Shields relieved Washburn and after Mark Bellhorn struck out, Manny Ram\u00edrez hit a three-run home run to make it 8\u20130 Red Sox. Troy Glaus's home run in the bottom of the inning put the Angels on the board. In the seventh, Darin Erstad homered off of Schilling with one out. Garret Anderson reached on Schilling's throwing error before scoring on Glaus's double, but Alan Embree and Mike Timlin held them scoreless for the rest of the game while the Red Sox added run in the eighth on Doug Mientkiewicz's RBI single with two on off of Ramon Ortiz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 2\nPedro Mart\u00ednez of the Red Sox faced Bartolo Col\u00f3n of the Angels. A bases-loaded walk to Manny Ramirez for the Red Sox in the second put them ahead 1\u20130. However, the Angels would tie it in the bottom half with an RBI single by Dallas McPherson after a leadoff walk and single. The Angels would take their only lead in the series when Vladimir Guerrero, the eventual MVP, singled home Jose Molina and David Eckstein with the bases loaded. The Red Sox immediately responded when Jason Varitek hit a two-out, two-run homer to tie the game in the sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 2\nThe Sox would take the lead on a sacrifice fly by Manny Ram\u00edrez in the seventh off of Francisco Rodriguez, then padded their lead in the ninth off of Brendan Donnelly. Ramirez doubled with one out and after an intentional walk, scored on Trot Nixon's single. After a two-out intentional walk loaded the bases, Orlando Cabrera cleared them with a double. Keith Foulke retired the Angels in order in the bottom of the inning as the Red Sox's 8\u20133 win gave them a 2\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 3\nKelvim Escobar of the Angels and Bronson Arroyo of the Red Sox faced off in the clincher. The Red Sox once again struck first with runners on second and third when Trot Nixon's single and Kevin Millar's groundout made it 2\u20130 in the third. The Angels cut the lead in half when Troy Glaus hit a home run in the fourth. In the bottom of the inning, a single, error and walk loaded the bases before Manny Ramirez's sacrifice fly made it 3\u20131 Red Sox. Scot Shields relieved Escobar and allowed an RBI double to David Ortiz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 3\nAfter an intentional walk loaded the bases, another Angel error allowed Mark Bellhorn to score to make it 5\u20131 Red Sox. Ramirez's RBI single with two on next inning increased the lead to 6\u20131. It appeared as if the Angels were down and out, but they loaded the bases in the top of the seventh thanks to two walks and a single. After Chone Figgins struck out, Darin Erstad walked to force in a run that made it 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176588-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 American League Division Series, Anaheim vs. Boston, Game 3\nMike Timlin then threw to Vladimir Guerrero, who hit a grand slam to right that evened the score at 6\u20136 and stunned the Fenway crowd. The game went to extra innings and, in the bottom of the tenth, Johnny Damon led off with a single. After Pokey Reese forced him and Ramirez struck out, Jarrod Washburn relieved Francisco Rodr\u00edguez and David Ortiz hit the series-winning two-run home run over the Green Monster to send the Red Sox to the ALCS for the second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176589-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 American Samoan general election\nGeneral elections were held in American Samoa on 2 November 2004. A second round of the election for Governor was held on 16 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176590-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nThe 19th American Society of Cinematographers Awards were held on February 13, 2005, honoring the best cinematographers of film and television in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176591-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Americas Olympic Baseball Qualifying Tournament\nTwo spots in the Baseball at the 2004 Summer Olympics were available to baseball teams of the Pan American Baseball Confederation. To decide which teams would qualify, a tournament was held in 2003 in Panama, from October 30 to November 10. The tournament was won by Cuba, with Canada also qualifying for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176591-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Americas Olympic Baseball Qualifying Tournament\nNotably, the United States team did not qualify, after losing to Mexico in quarterfinals. This elicited shock in the American media as the USA was the previous gold medal winner, and was the first country to play baseball and is the country where baseball has the largest following.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176591-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Americas Olympic Baseball Qualifying Tournament, Withdrawals\nAlthough the tournament was originally scheduled to include 13 teams, four withdrew before their first game: Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, Aruba and the Bahamas. As the Bahamas were a last-minute withdrawal, the tournament structure was left unbalanced, with one pool larger than the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 65], "content_span": [66, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176591-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Americas Olympic Baseball Qualifying Tournament, Pool Play, Pool B\nThe game between the \u00a0United States and \u00a0Brazil was delayed due to weather. Before it could be played it became irrelevant to the standings, and was therefore cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176592-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Amstel Gold Race\nThe Amstel Gold Race 2004 was the 39th edition of the annual road bicycle race \"Amstel Gold Race\", held on Sunday April 18, 2004 in the Limburg province, The Netherlands. The race stretched 251.1 kilometres, with the start in Maastricht and the finish in Valkenburg. There were a total of 191 competitors, with 101 riders completing the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176593-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Amsterdam Admirals season\nThe 2004 Amsterdam Admirals season was the tenth season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Bart Andrus in his fourth year, and played its home games at Amsterdam ArenA in Amsterdam, Netherlands. They finished the regular season in third place with a record of five wins and five losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176594-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Amsterdam Tournament\nThe Amsterdam Tournament is a pre-season football tournament held for club teams from around the world, hosted at the Amsterdam ArenA. The 2004 tournament was contested by Ajax, Arsenal, Panathinaikos and River Plate on 30 July and 1 August 2004. Ajax won the tournament for the fourth year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176594-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Amsterdam Tournament, Table\nNB: An extra point is awarded for each goal scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176595-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Anaheim Angels season\nThe Anaheim Angels' 2004 season was the franchise's 44th since its inception. The regular season ended with a record of 92\u201370, resulting in the Angels winning their fourth American League West division title, their first since 1986. Their playoff run was short, as they were quickly swept by the Boston Red Sox in the American League Division Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176595-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Anaheim Angels season\nThe season was notable for being the last season the Angels played under the \"Anaheim Angels\" moniker; owner Arte Moreno changed the team name to the controversial \"Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim\" moniker the following season. It was also notable as the season in which newly signed outfielder Vladimir Guerrero won the AL Most Valuable Player award, the first time an Angels player had been so honored since Don Baylor in 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176595-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Anaheim Angels season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In; SB = Stolen Bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176595-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Anaheim Angels season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176595-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Anaheim Angels season, Player stats, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games; IP = Innings Pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176595-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Anaheim Angels season, Player stats, Starting pitchers, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games; W = Wins; L = Losses: SV = Saves; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election\nThe 2004 Andalusian regional election was held on Sunday, 14 March 2004, to elect the 7th Parliament of the autonomous community of Andalusia. All 109 seats in the Parliament were up for election. The election was held simultaneously with the 2004 Spanish general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election\nAs happened with the concurrent nationwide election, results in Andalusia were heavily influenced by political controversy derived from the 11 March train bombings in Madrid. The ruling Spanish Socialist Workers' Party of Andalusia (PSOE\u2013A) exceeded all opinion poll expectations by securing a comfortable majority. Incumbent Manuel Chaves was thus able to be re-elected for a fifth consecutive term as President of the Regional Government of Andalusia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Parliament of Andalusia was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of Andalusia, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution of 1978 and the regional Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a regional president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Parliament was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in Andalusia and in full enjoyment of their political rights. The 109 members of the Parliament of Andalusia were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nSeats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of Almer\u00eda, C\u00e1diz, C\u00f3rdoba, Granada, Huelva, Ja\u00e9n, M\u00e1laga and Seville, with each being allocated an initial minimum of eight seats and the remaining 45 being distributed in proportion to their populations (provided that the number of seats in each province did not exceed two times that of any other).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Parliament of Andalusia expired four years after the date of its previous election, unless it was dissolved earlier. Election day was to take place between the thirtieth and the sixtieth day from the date of expiry of parliament barring any date within from 1 July to 31 August. The previous election was held on 12 March 2000, which meant that the legislature's term would have expired on 12 March 2004. The election was required to take place no later than the sixtieth day from the date of expiry of parliament on the condition that it was not held between 1 July and 31 August, setting the latest possible election date for the Parliament on Tuesday, 11 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe president had the prerogative to dissolve the Parliament of Andalusia and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a regional president within a two-month period from the first ballot, the candidate from the party with the highest number of seats was to be deemed automatically elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176596-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Andalusian regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 55 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Parliament of Andalusia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176597-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nIn the 2004 Andhra Pradesh Assembly election, the Congress had swept the state, winning 185 of the 294 seats in the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176597-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nThe Congress' pre-poll alliance partners Left Front and TRS also did well winning 15 and 26 seats respectively, taking the UPA tally to 226. As the leader of the Congress Legislature Party, Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy was invited to form the Government by Governor S.S. Barnala. Expectedly, the Government lasted the full term of 5 years and the tenure of the Legislative Assembly was due to expire on 30 May 2009. The Election Commission of India (ECI) decided to hold the Assembly elections along with the general election. The election in each Assembly constituency (AC) was held in the same phase as the election to the corresponding Parliamentary constituency that the AC falls under.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176598-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Angola Cup\nThe 2004 Ta\u00e7a de Angola was the 23rd edition of the Ta\u00e7a de Angola, the second most important and the top knock-out football club competition following the Girabola. Sonangol do Namibe beat Primeiro de Agosto 2-0 in the final to secure its second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176598-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Angola Cup, Championship bracket\nThe knockout rounds were played according to the following schedule:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176598-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Angola Cup, Final\nSquad: Bebeto, Bota, Capick, Capoco, Costa, Dady, Diangani, Dod\u00f3, Dombaxi, Fan\u00e7oni, Guilherme, Hugo, Kalusha, Luengo, Minhas, Nanana, Nuno, Silo, Tino, Tot\u00f3, Zola Head Coach: Romeu Filem\u00f3n", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176599-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Antenna Awards\nThe 2004 Antenna Awards ceremony honoured the best in Australian community television in 2003, and took place on February 28, 2004, at Storey Hall, RMIT City Campus, Melbourne, beginning at 7:00\u00a0p.m. AEST. The ceremony, the first of its kind in Australia, was announced on December 29, 2003. Produced by Kristy Fuller and directed by Craig Young, the ceremony was hosted by Esther Makris and Gary Mitchell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176599-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Antenna Awards\nAntennas were presented in 31 categories. Radio Karate won four awards, including Best Comedy Program and Best Editing, the most for the evening. Other winners include Dawn's Creek and Pluck with two awards, including Program of the Year for Pluck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176599-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Antenna Awards\nThe ceremony was televised live by Channel 31 Melbourne, Channel 31 Sydney, Briz 31 Brisbane, C31 Adelaide, and LINC TV Lismore, and on a one-week delay to Access 31 Perth. On 19 March 2015, the ceremony was made available to stream on YouTube.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176600-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Antiguan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Antigua and Barbuda on 23 March 2004. The result was a victory for the opposition United Progressive Party (UPP), which defeated the incumbent Antigua Labour Party. Baldwin Spencer, leader of the UPP, replaced Lester Bird as Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda, with Bird being one of eight Labour MPs to lose his seat. Spencer became only the second Prime Minister from outside the Bird family or the Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176600-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Antiguan general election\nBird had been Prime Minister since 1994, when he succeeded his father, Vere Bird, who had been Prime Minister from independence in 1981, having previously served as Chief Minister or Premier of Antigua since 1960 with the exception of the 1971\u20131976 period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176600-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Antiguan general election, Campaign\nThe Bird family was widely accused of corruption and nepotism. The Jamaica Observer noted that \"Bird's government had been badly damaged by scandals that in recent years have centred on allegations of bribery, misuse of funds in the national health insurance plan, and a 13-year-old girl's charges that he and his brother used her for sex and to procure cocaine. Bird, 72, denied the last charges and organised an inquiry that found no evidence.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176600-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Antiguan general election, Campaign\nBird's brother, Vere Bird, Jr., was accused of involvement with the Medellin drug cartel in 1989. He lost his Cabinet post, but was not prosecuted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176600-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Antiguan general election, Conduct\nAn observer team from the Caribbean Community praised the peaceful vote and said the results \"clearly reflect the will of the people\". Among recommendations, it urged the Electoral Commission to strengthen its independence. Previous elections in Antigua and Barbuda had been followed by allegations of electoral irregularities favouring the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176600-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Antiguan general election, Results\nThe vote in the seat of Barbuda ended in a draw between the Barbuda People's Movement, an ally of the UPP, and the Barbuda People's Movement for Change, an ally of the ALP, with each candidate receiving 400 votes. A by-election was held on 20 April, which saw Trevor Walker of the BPM elected, with 408 votes against 394 for the BPMC candidate, Arthur Nibbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176601-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Anzac Test\nThe 2004 ANZAC test was a rugby league test match played between Australia and New Zealand at the EnergyAustralia Stadium in Newcastle on 23 April 2004. It was the 5th Anzac test played between the two nations since the first was played under the Super League banner in 1997 and the first to be played in Newcastle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176602-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team\nThe 2004 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team represented Appalachian State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Mountaineers competed in NCAA Division I-AA as a member of the Southern Conference. The team celebrated its 75th season of play and were led by Jerry Moore in his 16th season as head coach. Home games were played at Kidd Brewer Stadium in Boone, North Carolina. The 2004 season was a disappointing one for the Mountaineers. The team finished third in the Southern Conference at 4\u20133 and slumped to an overall 6\u20135 record. The low point of the season was a 30\u201327 loss to archrival Western Carolina in the Battle for the Old Mountain Jug.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176603-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Aquitaine regional election\nA regional election took place in Aquitaine on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Alain Rousset (PS) was re-elected President of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176604-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Junior Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 Arab Junior Athletics Championships was the eleventh edition of the international athletics competition for under-20 athletes from Arab countries. It took place in Damascus, Syria \u2013 the fourth time that the city hosted the tournament. A total of 43 athletics events were contested, 22 for men and 21 for women. The 2002 medal table leader, Morocco, was absent from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176604-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Junior Athletics Championships\nSudan topped the table for the first time with eight gold medals. Egypt was a close second with seven titles. Qatar were third with six gold medals, all in the men's side. A minority of track finals had times recorded only to a tenth of a second due to technical restrictions. Junior implements were used in the men's throwing events for a second edition running, setting the standard for future events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176604-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Junior Athletics Championships\nOn the men's side Antar Zerguela\u00efne won a middle-distance double, Nagmeldin Ali Abubakr was a double sprint medallist and Aymen Ben Ahmed took the hurdles gold medal. All three went on to win senior medals at African level. Long jumper Saleh Al-Haddad was a clear winner and took multiple Asian medals as a senior. Gretta Taslakian emerged on the women's side, breaking new ground for Lebanon by winning a sprint double \u2013 also her country's first individual gold medals at the competition. Sudanese trio Muna Jabir Adam, Hind Roko Musa and Nawal El Jack won eight individual medals between them in the track events \u2013 all would make an impact as seniors at the Pan Arab Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176605-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 Arab Youth Athletics Championships was the inaugural edition of the international athletics competition for under-18 athletes from Arab countries. Organised by the Arab Athletic Federation, it took place in Rabat, Morocco from 31 July to 2 August. A total of thirty-nine events were contested, of which 20 by male and 19 by female athletes, identically matching the programme of the 2003 World Youth Championships in Athletics. The girls' programme did not have a steeplechase event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176605-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nFive athletes completed individual doubles at the tournament. On the boys' side, Omani Abdullah Al-Sooli won a 100 metres/200 metres short sprint double and Abdalaati Iguider of Morocco took both middle-distance titles. On the girls' side, Nawal El Jack of Sudan won both the 400 metres flat and 400 metres hurdles, Jordan's Rima Taha won both horizontal jumps, and Egypt's Sara Es Sayed Hassib Dardiri won the shot put and discus throw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176605-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nThe host nation Morocco easily topped the table with a total of fourteen golds among its 42 medals. The Next most successful nations were Egypt, with six gold medals, and Sudan, with five gold medals from its haul of 17. Saudi Arabia and Algeria were the other stand-out nations, having each won thirteen medals. A total of twelve nations reached the medal table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176605-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nThe competition was held in the same year as the 2004 Arab Junior Athletics Championships. The youth event subsequently became a biennial event held in odd-numbered years, in order to avoid the schedule clash. Three champions from the youth championships also won an Arab junior title that year, all from the throw events: Mostafa Abdul El-Moaty won the shot put titles, Yasser Mohamed Ali Hassan had a javelin throw double, and Iman Mohamed El Ashri was twice hammer throw winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176605-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Arab Youth Athletics Championships\nFour of the medallists here went on to win individual medals at the 2005 World Youth Championships in Athletics: Adam El-Nour turned his Arab youth 400\u00a0m to a world gold, Nawal El Jack won the girls' 400\u00a0m world title, while Arab boy's 400\u00a0m hurdles medallists Abdulagadir Idriss and Mohammed Daak were first and second at the global event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!\n2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!! is the fourth video album by Japanese boy band Arashi. It was released by J Storm on January 1, 2005 and contains concert footage from their Iza, Now Tour, filmed at Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan on August 3, 2004. The video album peaked at number three on the Oricon DVD chart. It was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of Japan (RIAJ) in June 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Background and release\nArashi's fourth summer concert tour, the Iza, Now Tour, promoted their fourth studio album, Iza, Now!. From late-July to late-August, the band played in front of 300,000 people throughout Japan. The concert was recorded on August 3, 2004 at Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, watched by a crowd of 17,000. Five months later, the video was released in Japan by J Storm. Backstage footage of the band arriving and departing from each venue, and the MC, a short customary talk during the intermission, was included as a bonus feature on the second disc. It was released in Taiwan on August 14, 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Commercial performance\n2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!! debuted at number three on the Oricon DVD chart, with 67,000 copies sold in its first week. In June 2006, it was certified Gold by the RIAJ for shipments of 100,000 units. In 2010, it reached number 49 on the Oricon year-end Music DVD chart. The release charted for 326 weeks and went on to sell over 211,000 copies. In 2019, after Arashi announced a halt in activities, the video re-entered the Oricon DVD chart, peaking at number 48 on the date ending February 11, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Tour, Concert synopsis\nTypical of any Johnny's concerts, Iza Now Tour included extravagant sets and stage design. The main stage consist of a large half globe structure that opens up for Arashi's entrance to new songs or different sets while huge LED screens displayed close-ups of the performances or graphics as added effect. The small adjoining walkway were constructed of inflatable material that made them bounce while walking on it. There was also a concave walkway that was at eye level with a part of the arena area audience. Raising platforms and cranes were also used so that the Arashi members will be able to get closer to the audience on the second floor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Tour, Concert synopsis\nVariety of themes can be observed for different parts of the set list. The first set of performance (Overture, Jam, Gori Muchuu, Pikanchi and Pikanchi Double) were presented in futuristic themed wardrobes in addition with use of pyrotechnics and lights. The setting changed dramatically to an African safari like set for Horizon, accompanied by an army of camouflaged Johnny's Junior (back up dancers). The songs for this set (Horizon, Dangan-Liner and Nemuranai Karada) were remixed in accordance with the African theme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Tour, Concert synopsis\nPerformance of Lucky Man right to Eyes With Delight was done in a laid back manner. Eyes With Delight was recorded in multiple angles focusing on each member plus one edited shots of all of them together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Tour, Concert synopsis\nStrumming of a Spanish guitar commenced the beginning of a new rendition of Tomadoi Nagara in a slower beat and acoustic Spanish influenced sound. The beautiful ballad was performed with images of Spain reflected on the screen in the background. Kimi Wa Sukoshimo Warukunai which was a pure pop song was upgraded with flamenco beat resulting to a fresh new arrangement. Arashi who were dressed in dark magenta suits with lace finishing, danced the flamenco while the fangirls screamed in approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176606-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Arashi! Iza, Now Tour!!, Tour, Concert synopsis\nAfter the solos by Ninomiya and Matsujun, Arashi performed a rock remixed version of their hit song \"A Day in Our Life\". An energetic dance performance of \"RIGHT BACK TO YOU\" follows. The dance was performed on an elevated stage. The set of songs after that consist of happy songs setting the mood before they bid their farewells.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176607-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arena Football League season\nThe 2004 Arena Football League season was the 18th season of the Arena Football League. It was succeeded by 2005. The league champions were the San Jose SaberCats, who defeated the Arizona Rattlers in ArenaBowl XVIII. The AFL reduced its playoff teams from the top 12 teams in the league making the playoffs to the top eight teams in the league making the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176607-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arena Football League season, Standings\n* New York Dragons won the Eastern Division, but did not make the playoffs as only the top 8 teams qualified. The AFL reverted to the old rule in the following season in that Division Champions get an automatic bid to the playoffs for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176608-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentina rugby union tour\nThe 2004 Argentina rugby union tour was a series of matches played in June 2004 in New Zealand, and in November 2004 in France and Ireland by Argentina national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176608-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentina rugby union tour, In New Zealand\nNew Zealand: 15.Nick Evans, 14.Mils Muliaina, 13.Tana Umaga (capt. ), 12.Sam Tuitupou, 11.Joe Rokocoko, 10.Andrew Mehrtens, 9.Byron Kelleher, 8.Mose Tuiali'i, 7.Richie McCaw, 6.Jerry Collins, 5.Simon Maling, 4.Chris Jack, 3.Greg Somerville, 2.Andrew Hore, 1.Tony Woodcock, \u2013 replacements: 18.Jono Gibbes, 19.Marty Holah \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Keven Mealamu, 17.Kees Meeuws, 20.Justin Marshall, 21.Carlos Spencer, 22.Dan CarterArgentina: 15.Hernan Senillosa, 14.Lucas Borges, 13.Federico Aramburu, 12.Manuel Contepomi, 11.Pablo Gomez Cora, 10.Juan Fernandez Miranda, 9.Nicolas Fernandez Miranda, 8.Gonzalo Longo (capt), 7.Lucas Ostiglia, 6.Martin Durand, 5.Patricio Albacete, 4.Ignacio Fernadez Lobbe, 3.Omar Hasan Jalil, 2.Mario Ledesma, 1.Rodrigo Roncero, \u2013 replacements: 16.Federico Mendez Azpillaga, 18.Pablo Bouza, 19.Martin Schusterman \u2013 No entry: 17.Eusebio Guinazu, 20.Matias Albina, 21.German Bustos, 22.Francisco Bosch", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 975]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176608-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentina rugby union tour, In France and Ireland\nFrance: 15.Nicolas Brusque, 14.Aurelien Rougerie, 13.Tony Marsh, 12.Yannick Jauzion, 11.Cedric Heymans, 10.Frederic Michalak, 9.Jean-Baptiste Elissalde, 8.Imanol Harinordoquy, 7.Olivier Magne, 6.Serge Betsen, 5.Jerome Thion, 4.Fabien Pelous (capt. ), 3.Sylvain Marconnet, 2.William Servat, 1.Olivier Milloud, \u2013 replacements: 20.Julien Peyrelongue, 21.Cl\u00e9ment Poitrenaud \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Sebastien Bruno, 17.Nicolas Mas, 18.Pascal Pape, 19.Julien Bonnaire, 22.Jimmy MarluArgentina: 15.Juan Martin Hernandez, 14.Lucas Borges, 13.Federico Aramburu, 12.Manuel Contepomi, 11.Hernan Senillosa, 10.Felipe Contepomi, 9.Agustin Pichot (capt. ), 8.Gonzalo Longo, 7.Lucas Ostiglia, 6.Martin Durand, 5.Rimas Alvarez Kairelis, 4.Patricio Albacete, 3.Omar Hasan Jalil, 2.Mario Ledesma, 1.Rodrigo Roncero, \u2013 replacements: 19.Martin Schusterman \u2013 No entry: 16.Federico Mendez Azpillaga, 17.Eusebio Guinazu, 18.Pablo Bouza, 20.Nicolas Fernandez Miranda", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 1008]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176608-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentina rugby union tour, In France and Ireland\nIreland: 15.Girvan Dempsey, 14.Geordan Murphy, 13.Brian O'Driscoll (capt. ), 12.Shane Horgan, 11.Denis Hickie, 10.Ronan O'Gara, 9.Peter Stringer, 8.Anthony Foley, 7.Johnny O'Connor, 6.Simon Easterby, 5.Paul O'Connell, 4.Malcolm O'Kelly, 3.John Hayes, 2.Shane Byrne, 1.Reggie Corrigan, \u2013 replacements: 19.Eric Miller \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Frankie Sheahan, 17.Marcus Horan, 18.Donncha O'Callaghan, 20.Guy Easterby, 21.David Humphreys, 22.Kevin MaggsArgentina: 15.Juan Martin Hernandez, 14.Hernan Senillosa, 13.Federico Aramburu, 12.Manuel Contepomi, 11.Lucas Borges, 10.Felipe Contepomi, 9.Agustin Pichot (capt. ), 8.Gonzalo Longo, 7.Lucas Ostiglia, 6.Martin Durand, 5.Rimas Alvarez Kairelis, 4.Patricio Albacete, 3.Omar Hasan Jalil, 2.Mario Ledesma, 1.Rodrigo Roncero, \u2013 replacements: No entry: 16.Federico Mendez Azpillaga, 17.Eusebio Guinazu, 18.Pablo Bouza, 19.Augusto Petrilli", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176609-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine Professional Golf Tour\nThe 2004 Argentine Professional Golf Tour was a season of golf tournaments on the Argentine Professional Golf Tour (TAPG), the then official professional golf tour of Argentina. The season ran from the end of January to the beginning of December, and consisted of 13 tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176609-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine Professional Golf Tour\nThe Order of Merit was won by Jos\u00e9 C\u00f3ceres, ahead of \u00c1ngel Cabrera in second, and Rafael Echenique in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176609-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine Professional Golf Tour\nOne event, the South Open, was co-sanctioned by the Tour de las Americas, the highest level tour in Latin America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis\nThe Argentine energy crisis was a natural gas supply shortage experienced by Argentina in 2004. After the recession triggered by the economic crisis and ending in 2002, Argentina's energy demands grew quickly as industry recovered, but extraction and transportation of natural gas, a cheap and relatively abundant fossil fuel, did not match the surge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis\nAccording to estimates, 50% of the electricity generated in Argentina depends on gas-powered plants. The national energy matrix has no emergency reserves and by 2004 it was functioning at the top of its capacity. At this point, barely emerging from the seasonal low demand caused by summer, many industrial facilities and power plants started suffering intermittent cuts in their supply of natural gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis\nBetween February and May the cuts amounted to an average of 9.5 million m\u00b3 a day, about 13% of industrial demand, and by the end of May they grew to a maximum of 22 million m\u00b3. The most seriously affected regions were the capital, certain regions of the province of Buenos Aires, and the province of La Pampa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis\nAs winter approached, the Argentine government announced that it would restrict natural gas exports in order to preserve the supply for internal consumption, both domestic and industrial, in compliance with the Hydrocarbons Law. These export cuts would seriously harm Chile and affect Uruguay and Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis\nThe Chilean Minister of Economy and Energy, Jorge Rodr\u00edguez, warned Argentina that supply contracts with Chilean companies must be fulfilled. This caused a mild diplomatic crisis. Chile imports more than 90% of its natural gas from Argentina and depends heavily on it to generate electricity; it has shifted the focus from coal and oil towards gas, and had five gas pipelines built for the specific purpose of getting gas from Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Causes\nThe energy crisis was blamed on a number of factors. Former Argentine President N\u00e9stor Kirchner attributed it on lack of investment on the part of the private companies that extract the resource (such as Repsol YPF), and the concomitant lack of pressure from past governments on those companies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Causes\nThe private corporations contended that their profits after the collapse of the Argentine economy were severely hurt by the freezing of domestic and industrial fees since 2002. Natural gas remained at the same price during the inflationary process caused by the devaluation of the Argentine peso, while the prices of gasoline and diesel were adjusted upwards, which increased the demand for gas as a cheap alternative fuel and at the same time discouraged its production. In addition to this, a larger part of the supply of natural gas was required to compensate for a smaller yield of hydroelectricity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Causes\nThe exporters complained that heavy export tariffs compounded with the price freezing and prevented them from investing on more surveyance and further exploitation, thus leaving them unable to keep up with demand. However, the government and critics of the neoliberal model of the Menem administration point out that the privatized companies obtained huge profits during the 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Remedies\nIn order to diminish the impact of the crisis, three measures were suggested: buying natural gas from Bolivia, which has abundant reserves of it; directly buying electricity from Brazil, which generates a large part of it using hydroelectric power plants; and importing oil from Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Remedies\nFor historical reasons, Bolivia would not sell natural gas to Chile. Moreover, it lacks the infrastructure to convey it. A projected gas pipeline that would transport massive amounts of gas to Argentina was delayed by the critical political situation in Bolivia during 2003. Moreover, some people and organizations in Bolivia have expressed strong disagreement about the idea of exporting gas, calling the energy crisis \"a fiction\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Remedies\nThe Venezuelan Ch\u00e1vez administration, which at the time was politically close to the Argentine government, signed energy accords that including sending fuel oil tankers to Argentina at reduced costs, through PDVSA (the Venezuelan state oil company). Fuel oil (imported or otherwise) is, in any case, considerably more expensive than natural gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Remedies\nIn addition to industrial supply, Argentina employs Compressed Natural Gas for stoves, ovens, etc., and as fuel for over 1.4 million natural gas vehicles. While the possibility of restricting domestic usage was considered, it was deemed unnecessary and disruptive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Remedies\nAs a response to the 2001 economic crisis, electricity tariffs were converted to the Argentine peso and frozen in January 2002 through the Public Emergency and Exchange Regime Law. Together with high inflation (see Economy of Argentina) and the devaluation of the peso, many companies in the sector had to deal with high levels of debt in foreign currency under a scenario in which their revenues remained stable while their costs increased. This situation has led to severe underinvestment and unavailability to keep up with an increasing demand, factors that contributed to the 2003-2004 energy crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Remedies\nSince 2003, the government has been in the process of introducing modifications that allow for tariff increases. Industrial and commercial consumers' tariffs have already been raised (near 100% in nominal terms and 50% in real terms), but residential tariffs still remain the same. Nevertheless, the national government even tried to profit from the crisis by creating a new oil company, Enarsa, with 53% of state control and full exploitation rights over offshore areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Winter 2005\nAs 2004 passed with no major disruptions, some people claimed that the so-called \"energy crisis\" had in fact turned out a minor complication, inflated by the government and the media. In a broader context, though, it is still true that investments on exploitation of energy resources, as well as energy production and distribution, are insufficient. In March 2005, President Kirchner admitted that \"for a long time the possibility will remain that we must move on the brink [of a crisis]\". However, the government also pointed out that remedies are on the works, and that Argentina is better prepared than in 2004 to face problems with energy generation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Winter 2005\nIn the meantime, fuel oil supply from Venezuela has continued, amounting to 50 million tonnes sent in two ships (in April and May) by PDVSA, in a coordinated effort with the Brazilian oil company Petrobras and the Electrical Market Management Company of Argentina (Cammesa).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176610-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Argentine energy crisis, Winter 2005\nAnalysts and officials, such as former President of Uruguay Jorge Batlle, have remarked that a full-fledged protocol for energetic integration of Mercosur should be outlined and brought into action as soon as possible to coordinate energy production and distribution in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176611-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe 2004 Arizona Cardinals season was the franchise's 106th season, 85th season in the National Football League and the 17th in Arizona. The team managed to improve upon their previous output of 4\u201312. However, the team failed to make the playoffs for the sixth straight season. Season lows for the Cardinals included losing two games to the San Francisco 49ers, the only two games the 49ers won in 2004. The Cardinals, during Week 9, also defeated the Miami Dolphins for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176611-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe season was notable for drafting wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald with the 3rd pick in the first round of the 2004 NFL Draft. Following the season, Emmitt Smith retired after 15 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176611-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Cardinals season, Offseason, Pat Tillman\nOn April 22, 2004, former Cardinals safety Pat Tillman was killed in a friendly fire incident while on patrol. Tillman was the first professional football player to be killed in combat since the death of Bob Kalsu of the Buffalo Bills, who died in the Vietnam War in 1970. Tillman was posthumously laterally promoted from Specialist to Corporal. He also received posthumous Silver Star and Purple Heart medals. On Sunday, September 19, 2004, all teams of the NFL wore a memorial decal on their helmets in Tillman's honor. The Cardinals continued to wear this decal throughout the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176611-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Cardinals season, Regular season, Schedule\nIn the 2004 regular season, the Cardinals' non-divisional, conference opponents were primarily from the NFC South, although they also played the New York Giants from the NFC East, and the Detroit Lions from the NFC North. Their non-conference opponents were from the AFC East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary took place on February 3, 2004, as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional. the candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received and is open to registered Democrats only. A total of 55 (of 64) delegates are awarded proportionally. A 15 percent threshold is required to receive delegates. Frontrunner John Kerry won the primary with former general Wesley Clark coming second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary\nIn 2003 the Arizona primary had been moved up from February 24 to February 3 by Democratic Governor Janet Napolitano in order to give the state more influence in the nomination contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary, Campaign\nThe candidates began campaigning in Arizona in September 2003 and by the time of the primary had spent 2.5 million dollars on television adverts in the state. Arizona was the first primary in the Western United States and as such was regarded as the first chance to see how the candidates appealed among Hispanic voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary, Campaign\nHoward Dean was the early favourite for the primary but by the time of the primary he had lost ground to both Wesley Clark and John Kerry. Kerry surged strongly in the polls after he had established himself as the strong frontrunner for the nomination in Iowa and New Hampshire. Exit polls showed Kerry did well among the half of voters who made up their minds in the last week before the primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary, Endorsements\nWesley Clark got the endorsement of former Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona Paul Johnson while Kerry got the endorsements of several state officials. Howard Dean received the endorsement of former Governor Bruce Babbitt. However Governor Janet Napolitano avoided endorsing any of the candidates and only endorsed John Kerry after the primary was finished on March 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary, Endorsements\nJoe Lieberman made the most visits of any of the candidates to Arizona and this helped him to get the endorsement of Phoenix newspaper, The Arizona Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary, Reaction\n\"I am stunned by the results and truly honored and humbled by the confidence that so many voters in Arizona have shown me today\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176612-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Democratic presidential primary, Analysis\nOn Mini Tuesday, John F. Kerry won the Arizona Primary election with about 43% of the vote. He also won every congressional district and county, except Greenlee County which voted for Clark. The largest turnouts in the state came from Maricopa County and Pima County. Exit polls showed he did well among older voters, Hispanics and veterans. He defeated his rivals among liberals, moderates and conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176613-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe 2004 Arizona Diamondbacks looked to improve on their 84\u201378 record from 2003. The D-backs hoped to contend for a postseason berth in what was a weaker National League West Division than in years past. However, just three years removed from winning a World Series title, the Diamondbacks instead finished the season with a record of 51\u2013111, the worst record by any National League team since the 1965 Mets won one fewer game. The one highlight of a disastrous season was when Randy Johnson pitched a perfect game on May 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176613-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Diamondbacks season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176613-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Diamondbacks season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200\nProposition 200, the \"Arizona Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act\", was an Arizona state initiative passed in 2004 that basically requires: (a) persons to provide proof of citizenship to register to vote; (b) voters to present a photo identification before receiving a ballot at the polling place; and (c) state and local agencies to verify the identity and eligibility, based on immigration status, of applicants for non-federally mandated public benefits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200\nThe proposition also makes it a misdemeanor for public officials to fail to report violations of U.S. immigration law by applicants for those public benefits and permits private lawsuits by any resident to enforce its provisions related to public benefits. The requirement to provide proof of citizenship to register to vote was later ruled invalid in federal court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200\nAuthors of the ballot measure, the \"Protect Arizona Now\" committee, claimed that the provision of state identification and public benefits to individuals without adequately verifying their immigration status gave rise to opportunities for voter fraud and imposed economic hardship on the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200\nOpponents of the ballot measure asserted that it was anti-immigrant and reminiscent of California's 1994 Proposition 187, as well as disputed the existence of voter fraud and argued that immigrants were important contributors to the state's economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Proponents\nTwo separate, rival groups supported Proposition 200. The first group was the proposition's sponsor, the Protect Arizona Now (PAN) committee, led by Kathy McKee and supported at the national level by the Carrying Capacity Network (CCN) and Population-Environment Balance (PEB). The second group was the Yes on 200 committee, led by Rusty Childress, a Phoenix-area car dealer, and supported at the national level by the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Proponents\nThere was a split within PAN, which McKee described as an \"attempted hijacking of a local effort by greedy, out-of-state interests\"; this split highlighted an ongoing feud within the immigration reduction movement between FAIR and the other two groups dating back to at least 2003, with CCN and PEB issuing frequent statements accusing FAIR (as well as NumbersUSA) of being \"reform lite\" and \"undermining real immigration reform.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Proponents\nPAN was formed by McKee and Childress, who became its chair and treasurer, respectively. The PAN National Advisory Board was chaired by Dr. Virginia Abernethy, and included Dr. David Pimentel and Marvin Gregory. Childress later joined a separate effort, Yes On 200, organized by FAIR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Proponents\nDuring the signature gathering campaign, McKee accused Childress of withholding funds and petitions from PAN and fired him. Childress sued McKee over custody of PAN's signatures and funds, but the court ruled in favor of McKee. Childress and the two most prominent supporters of the initiative within the Arizona state legislature, Russell Pearce and Randy Graf, then formed a separate organization, Yes On 200, which was funded almost entirely by out-of-state interests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Proponents\nWhen FAIR began an independent signature gathering campaign to collect the remaining signatures needed to put the initiative on the ballot, McKee accused FAIR of attempting a hostile takeover of PAN. When McKee named Abernethy, an avowed \"ethnic separatist,\" as the chair of PAN's national advisory board, FAIR responded by issuing a press release calling for both McKee and Abernethy to resign from PAN and saying that Abernethy's views were \"repugnant, divisive and do not represent the views of the vast majority of Arizonans who support Proposition 200.\" Abernethy's appointment drew harsh criticism from an anti-bigotry group based in Chicago, which noted her \"leadership roles in other extremist organizations,\" such as The Occidental Quarterly and the Council of Conservative Citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Campaign\nOn July 5, 2004, Protect Arizona NOW's Chairman, Kathy McKee, pursuant to Arizona law, submitted 190,887 signatures to the Arizona Secretary of State's office, surprising critics, who had believed organizers would not be able to garner enough signatures before the deadline. A counter-organization, the Statue of Liberty Coalition, was formed to block Proposition 200, claiming the initiative was racist and would violate Latino civil rights. Opposition to Proposition 200 was bipartisan, including Senator John McCain (R), Senator Jon Kyl (R), Governor Janet Napolitano (D), the Arizona Republican Party, the Green Party, the Libertarian Party, and the AFL-CIO. Tamar Jacoby, a writer on immigration-related issues in articles for The Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Campaign\nSupporters partly relied for justification on a 2004 FAIR study that estimated that Arizona taxpayers were annually paying $1 billion to cover the education, uncompensated health care, and incarceration costs of illegal immigration, net of the taxes paid by the illegal immigrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Campaign\nThis study appeared to contradict a 2003 study performed by a team at the Thunderbird School of Global Management and sponsored by Wells Fargo and the Consul General of Mexico in Phoenix, which estimated that immigrants were annually contributing $318 million more in income and sales taxes than they were costing the state in services and uncompensated health care. However, it was not clear whether that estimate was based on all immigrants or only illegal immigrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Campaign\nIn November 2004, the electorate passed Proposition 200, with 56% of voters voting in the affirmative. Exit polls found that 47% of Latino voters voted in favor of the initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Implementation\nA substantial legal battle erupted over the precise definition of \"public benefits.\" Arizona's Attorney General ruled that the law pertains to only discretionary state programs. Federally funded entitlements like food stamps and subsidized school lunches are examples of public benefits to which, given the Attorney General's finding, the new law would not apply. PAN interpreted the proposition to apply the welfare portion of the initiative to the nearly 60 programs contained in Arizona Revised Statutes Title 46, \"Welfare.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Implementation\nDespite withstanding three pre-election and two post-election lawsuits, at least one lawsuit related to Proposition 200 is still pending. \"Yes on 200\" filed a post-election lawsuit, initially dismissed in the lower court but currently on appeal, saying that the Attorney General overstepped his bounds when he narrowed the definition of \"public benefits.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Implementation\nOn December 23, 2004, the federal appeals court in Tucson removed an earlier restraining order that had kept the state from implementing the law. The entire law, with one exception, is in effect, using the definition of \"public benefits\" promulgated by the Governor and Attorney General. State, county, and city workers may be fined up to $700 for each instance in which they provide such benefits to persons who cannot produce evidence of citizenship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Implementation\nKathy McKee has since started a new group, Protect America NOW, to support similar initiatives in other states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Voter registration and identification at the polls\nProposition 200 required, among other things, proof of citizenship to register to vote and voter identification at the polling place. No major elections took place after its adoption before November 7, 2006, and the actual implementation of these two provisions of the proposition remained unclear. Opponents challenged the constitutionality of these requirements upon voters, arguing that such a law could be used to discriminate against ethnic groups, thus violating the Fourteenth Amendment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Voter registration and identification at the polls\nOn October 5, 2006, the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit temporarily suspended these requirements, a little over a month before the election. However, the ruling was stayed fifteen days later by the U.S. Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Voter registration and identification at the polls\nIn October 2010, the Ninth Circuit held that the requirement to provide proof of citizenship to register to vote is invalid as preempted by the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA) and that the requirement to provide voter identification at the polling place is valid. However, in April 2011, the court granted Arizona's petition for en banc review of this ruling, and it heard oral arguments on June 21, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Voter registration and identification at the polls\nIn April 2012, the en banc court also held that the requirement to provide proof of citizenship to register to vote is invalid as preempted by the NVRA and that the requirement to provide voter identification at the polling place is valid. The Supreme Court of the United States declined to stay the ruling on June 28, 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176614-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Proposition 200, Voter registration and identification at the polls\nIn July 2012, Arizona submitted to the Supreme Court a petition for writ of certiorari to review the Ninth Circuit's ruling that the state's proof of citizenship requirement is preempted by the NVRA. The Court granted the petition in October 2012, and it heard oral arguments on March 18, 2013. On June 17, 2013, the Supreme Court affirmed, in a 7\u20132 vote with Justice Antonin Scalia delivering the Court's opinion, the Ninth Circuit's ruling that Arizona's proof of citizenship requirement is preempted by the NVRA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176615-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona State Sun Devils football team\nThe Arizona State Sun Devils football team represented Arizona State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. It played its home games at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176616-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Wildcats baseball team\nThe 2004 Arizona Wildcats baseball team represented the University of Arizona in the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Wildcats played their home games at Jerry Kindall Field at Frank Sancet Stadium. The team was coached by Andy Lopez in his 3rd year at Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176616-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Wildcats baseball team\nThe Wildcats won the South Bend Regional and then Long Beach Super Regional to advanced to the College World Series, where they were defeated by the Georgia Bulldogs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176617-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arizona Wildcats football team\nThe 2004 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were coached by Mike Stoops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176618-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Amendment 3\nConstitutional Amendment 3 of 2004, is an amendment to the Arkansas Constitution that makes it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil unions. The referendum was approved by 75% of the voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176618-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Amendment 3, Contents\nMarriage. Marriage consists only of the union of one man and one woman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176618-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Amendment 3, May 2014 Court Ruling on Amendment 3 and Arkansas Statutes\nOn May 9, 2014, Sixth Judicial Circuit Judge Chris Piazza ruled the ban on same-sex marriage in the state of Arkansas was unconstitutional, which legalized same-sex marriage in the state. Previously same-sex marriage was banned by both state statute and the state constitution in Arkansas. Subject to court stays and appeals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176619-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Arkansas Democratic presidential primary was held on May 18 in the U.S. state of Arkansas as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176620-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season\nThe 2004 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season was the 7th season of the highest classification of high school boys soccer in Arkansas since being sanctioned by the Arkansas Activities Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176620-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season, Conference Alignment\nThe 2004 season was the last under the 2002-2004 classification cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176620-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season, State Playoffs\nThe top four teams from each conference qualified to state. The first three rounds were hosted by Fayetteville. The championship match was played at Ladyback Field in Fayetteville, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176620-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season, All State\nA total of 44 players were selected to the All State team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176621-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team\nThe 2004 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team represented the University of Arkansas in the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Razorbacks were coached by Dave Van Horn, in his 2nd season with the Razorbacks, and played their home games at Baum Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176621-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Schedule and results\n*Denotes non\u2013conference game \u2022 Schedule source \u2022 Rankings based on the teams' current ranking in the USA Today/ESPN Coaches' Poll", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176621-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team, Razorbacks in the 2004 MLB Draft\nThe following members of the Arkansas Razorbacks baseball program were drafted in the 2004 Major League Baseball Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176622-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nThe 2004 Arkansas Razorbacks football team represented the University of Arkansas during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Razorbacks played five home games at Donald W. Reynolds Razorback Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas and two home games at War Memorial Stadium in Little Rock, Arkansas. The Razorbacks were coached by head coach Houston Nutt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176623-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkansas State Indians football team\nThe 2004 Arkansas State Indians football team (now called the Arkansas State Red Wolves) represented Arkansas State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I FBS college football season as members of the Sun Belt Conference. Under head coach Steve Roberts, the team compiled a record of 3 wins and 8 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176624-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkhangelsk explosion\nOn March 16, 2004, an explosion destroyed a corner section of a nine-story Soviet-era apartment building in Arkhangelsk, Russia. It happened at 3:03\u00a0a.m. local time (UTC +3). The explosion occurred in 120 Avenue of the Soviet Cosmonauts in the October district (Oktyabrskiy rayon) of Arkhangelsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176624-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkhangelsk explosion\nThe death toll from the explosion was 58 (33 women, 16 men and 9 children). Two of the dead succumbed to their wounds in a hospital after being rescued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176624-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkhangelsk explosion\nThe explosion came two days after Vladimir Putin won reelection and several weeks after a suicide bombing killed 41 Moscow Metro passengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176624-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Arkhangelsk explosion\nIn April 2004, authorities arrested and charged 26-year-old former employee of city gas services Sergey Alekseychik. On December 16, 2005 he was sentenced to 25 years in prison. According to the official version, Alekseychik was fired from his natural gas technician job several days prior to the explosion, and to get even with his former employers and the city, he sabotaged the gas system thus causing the tragedy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176625-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Armenian Cup\nThe 2004 Armenian Cup was the 13th edition of the Armenian Cup, a football competition. In 2004, the tournament had 18 participants, out of which 3 were reserve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176625-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Armenian Cup, Results, First round\nThe first legs were played on 14 and 15 March 2004. The second legs were played on 18 and 19 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176625-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Armenian Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 22 March 2004. The second legs were played on 26 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176625-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Armenian Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 3 April 2005. The second legs were played on 21 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176626-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Armenian First League\nThe 2004 Armenian First League season started on 1 May 2004. The last matches were played on 15 November 2004. Pyunik-2 became the league champions, but because they are a reserve team they were unable to promote to the Armenian Premier League. As a result, the second placed team Lernayin Artsakh FC was given promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176627-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Armenian Premier League\nThe 2004 Armenian Premier League season was the thirteenth since its establishment. It was contested by 8 teams, and Pyunik FC won the championship. No team was relegated this season, because the Football Federation of Armenia decided to increase the number of teams in the premier league from 8 to 9 for the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176628-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Army Black Knights football team\nThe 2004 Army Black Knights football team represented the United States Military Academy as a member of Conference USA (C-USA) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176629-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly election\nThe Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly election, 2004 took place in 2004 to elect 60 seats in the Arunachal Pradesh Legislative Assembly. The results were declared on 10 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176630-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashdod Port bombings\nThe 2004 Ashdod Port bombings were two suicide bombings carried out nearly simultaneously on March 14, 2004 at the Port of Ashdod in Ashdod, Israel. 10 people were killed in the attack, and 16 were injured. Hamas and Fatah claimed joint responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176630-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashdod Port bombings, The attack\nOn Sunday, March 14, 2004, two Palestinian suicide bombers who wore explosive belts hidden underneath their clothes approached the Port of Ashdod. Despite the vast security arrangements at the compound, the two suicide bombers managed to infiltrate into the compound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176630-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashdod Port bombings, The attack\nAt 16:20 pm the suicide bombers detonated their explosive devices - one exploded himself in an office building inside the compound, and the other exploded after a few moments at the entrance to the compound. The force of the blast killed ten civilians, most of them were port workers, and injured 16 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176630-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashdod Port bombings, The perpetrators and Israeli response\nHamas and Fatah claimed joint responsibility for the attack and stated that the attack was carried out by two 18-year-olds from the Jabalya refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. The two assailants managed to infiltrate Israel from Gaza by hiding in a container that went through the Karni Crossing. A Hamas leader in Gaza stated that the original plan was that the suicide bombers would blow up fuel tanks at the port; Israel said the bombers intended to carry out a \"mega attack\" with hundreds of casualties, but instead blew themselves up hundreds of meters from the tanks. Later on it was revealed that the attack was financed and directed by Nizar Rayan. In response, Hamas founder Ahmed Yassin was killed along with his bodyguards in a strike by Israeli helicopters in Gaza City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176631-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashura bombings in Iraq\nThe Ashura massacre of March 2, 2004 in Iraq was a series of planned terrorist explosions that killed at least 80-100 and injured at least 200 Iraqi Shi'a Muslims commemorating the Day of Ashura. The bombings brought one of the deadliest days in the Iraq occupation after the Iraq War to topple Saddam Hussein.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176631-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashura bombings in Iraq, The attacks\nNine explosions were detonated in Karbala, accompanied by mortar, grenade, and rocket fire, killing over 100 people, while three explosions near the Kadhimiya Shrine in Baghdad killed 58 more. Though the attack involved armed squads, car bombs, and up to a dozen suicide bombers, there was also an explosive-laden vehicle which was intercepted while trying to enter Basra, as were two suicide bombers in Karbala and others in Baghdad who had entered via Syria. The squads armed with rockets and small arms were meant to kill those wounded by the blasts as well as to trap those trying to flee the carnage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176631-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashura bombings in Iraq, The attacks\nAl-Qaeda, which considers Shia Islam to be heretical, was immediately held responsible for the attack, and it was believed their intent was to cause much more destruction than actually occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176631-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ashura bombings in Iraq, The attacks\nBrigadier General Mark Kimmitt, the American commander in Baghdad, initially blamed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi for the attacks, but it was subsequently revealed that Zarqawi's field commander in Iraq, Abu Abdallah al Hassan Ben Mahmoud, directed the attacks. Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, a highly influential Shiite in Iraq, blamed the U.S. for allowing the attacks to occur, but Kimmitt had agreed with Shiite leaders to vacate the shrines out of respect for cultural differences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176632-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asia Cup\nThe eighth edition of cricket's Asia Cup (also called Indian Oil Asia Cup) was held in Sri Lanka after a gap of 4 years. Sri Lanka beat India in the final to win the cup. The 4 test playing Asian nations participated in the tournament along with, for the first time, leading Asian associate nations, the UAE and Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176633-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nThe 2004 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship season (APRC) was an international rally championship organized by the FIA. The champion was Malaysian driver Karamjit Singh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176634-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 22nd edition of the Men's Asian Amateur Boxing Championships were held from January 11 to January 18, 2004 in Puerto Princesa Coliseum, Puerto Princesa, Philippines. The tournament served as a qualification event for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176634-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Amateur Boxing Championships\nIn the light flyweight, flyweight, bantamweight and featherweight divisions, the top three performers gained Olympic qualification. From lightweight to light-heavy weight, the top two boxers qualified while only the winners of the heavyweight and super heavyweight divisions progressed to the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176635-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Badminton Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Badminton Championships was the 24th edition of the Asian Badminton Championships. It was held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia from April 20 to April 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176636-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Cross Country Championships\nThe 7th Asian Cross Country Championships took place 2004 in Pune, India. Team rankings were decided by a combination of each nation's top three athletes finishing positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176637-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Cycling Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Cycling Championships took place at the Yokkaichi Keirin Velodrome, Yokkaichi, Japan from 9 to 16 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176638-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Fencing Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Fencing Championships were held in Manila, Philippines from 21 April to 26 April, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176639-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships was an international indoor athletics event took place in Tehran, Iran, between 6 and 8 February. The female events were held separately from the men's events, taking place during the morning sessions. Due to the Islamic country's customs, men were forbidden from watching the female events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176639-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships\nA total of 23 nations sent athletes to compete at the championships, which featured 30 track and field events. China topped the medal table with 11 golds. Iran was second with six golds while Kazakhstan finished third with four golds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176639-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships, Participating nations\nA total of 23 nations were represented by athletes competing at the 2004 championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176640-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships \u2013 Results\nThese are the results of the 2004 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships which took place on 6\u20138 February 2008 in Tehran, Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176641-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Judo Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Judo Championships were held at the Baluan Sholak Palace of Culture and Sports in Almaty, Kazakhstan from 15 May to 16 May 2004. A total of 194 judokas participated, 113 men and 81 women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176642-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Junior Athletics Championships was the eleventh edition of the international athletics competition for Asian under-20 athletes, organised by the Asian Athletics Association. It took place from 12\u201315 June at the Perak Stadium in Ipoh, Malaysia. A total of 43 events were contested, which were divided equally between male and female athletes aside from the men's 3000 metres steeplechase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176643-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Badminton Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Junior Badminton Championships is an Asia continental junior championships to crown the best U-19 badminton players across Asia. This tournament were held in Hwacheon Indoor Stadium, Hwacheon, South Korea from 12\u201318 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176644-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Men's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Junior Men's Volleyball Championship was held in Doha, Qatar from 3 September to 10 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176644-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Men's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2002 Asian Junior Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176644-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Men's Volleyball Championship, Final standing\nTeam RosterLee Jong-hwa, Chun Chang-hee, Park Chul-woo, Lim Si-hyoung, You Kwang-woo, Moon Sung-min, Hwang Dong-il, Kang Young-jun, Shin Yung-suk, Park Sung-ryul, Hong Jung-pyo, Kim Dong-kunHead Coach: Lee Kyung-suk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 63], "content_span": [64, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176645-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Women's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Junior Women's Volleyball Championship was held in Sugathadasa Indoor Stadium, Colombo, Sri Lanka from 19 September to 26 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176645-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2002 Asian Junior Women's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176645-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nSri Lanka (Host)\u00a0Chinese Taipei (3rd)\u00a0Maldives\u00a0South Korea\u00a0Australia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176646-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships\nThe 10th Asian Junior Table Tennis Championships 2004 were held in New Delhi, India, from 19 \u2010 24 July 2004. It was organised by the Table Tennis Federation of India under the authority of the Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU) and International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176647-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Karate Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Karate Championships are the 6th edition of the Asian Karate Championships, and were held in Taoyuan, Taiwan from 6 to 8 February, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176648-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Men\u2019s Club Volleyball Championship was the 5th staging of the AVC Club Championships. The tournament was held in Azadi Volleyball Hall, Tehran, Iran. Sanam of Iran won the tournament after beating Paykan of Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176649-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Men's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Men's Handball Championship was the eleventh Asian Championship and was held in Doha, Qatar from 12 to 21 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176650-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Men's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Men's Junior Handball Championship (9th tournament) took place in Hyderabad from 8 September\u201317 September. It acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2005 Men's Junior World Handball Championship in Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176650-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Men's Junior Handball Championship, Draw\nQatar\u00a0South Korea\u00a0United Arab Emirates\u00a0China\u00a0Iran\u00a0Uzbekistan *", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176651-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships was held in Yangzhou, China, June 10\u201313, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176652-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Taekwondo Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Taekwondo Championships are the 16th edition of the Asian Taekwondo Championships, and were held in Seongnam, South Korea from May 20 to May 23, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176653-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Tour\nThe 2004 Asian Tour was the inaugural season of the modern Asian Tour, the main men's professional golf tour in Asia excluding Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176653-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Tour, Tournament schedule\nThe table below shows the 2004 Asian Tour schedule. The season began in December 2003 with the Okinawa Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176653-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Tour, Order of Merit\nThere is a complete list on the official site .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176654-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2004 Asian Weightlifting Championships were held in Almaty in Kazakhstan between April 7 and April 12, 2004. It was the 36th men's and 17th women's championship. The event was organised by the Asian Weightlifting Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176654-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176655-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Women\u2019s Club Volleyball Championship was the 5th staging of the AVC Club Championships. The tournament was held in Almaty, Kazakhstan. The local club Rahat Almaty won the championship after finishing tied with 4-1 with the Chinese silver medalists Bayi Yiyang High-Tech District and bronze winners Chung Shan from Chinese Taipei. The result was resolved by the set ratio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176656-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Women's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Women's Handball Championship, the tenth Asian Championship, which was taking place from 23 to 25 July 2004 in Hiroshima, Japan. It acted as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2005 World Women's Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176657-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Women's Junior Handball Championship (8th tournament) took place in Bangkok from 1 July\u20138 July. It acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2005 Women's Junior World Handball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176658-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Women's Softball Championship\nThe 2004 Asian Women's Softball Championship was an international softball tournament which featured twelve nations which was held from 12\u201318 December 2004 at the Rizal Memorial Baseball Stadium in Manila, Philippines. The top three finishing teams qualified for the 2006 Women's Softball World Championship which was held in Beijing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176659-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Asian Wrestling Championships\nThe following is the final results of the 2004 Asian Wrestling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176660-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards\nThe 2004 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards (simplified Chinese: Astro\u534e\u4e3d\u53f0\u7535\u89c6\u5267\u5927\u59562004; traditional Chinese: Astro\u83ef\u9e97\u81fa\u96fb\u8996\u5287\u5927\u734e2004), presented by Astro in Malaysia, was an awards ceremony that recognises the best Hong Kong television programmes that had aired on Malaysia's Astro Wah Lai Toi in 2004. The ceremony took place on 8 January 2005 at the Wisma MCA in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was televised live on Astro's Cantonese channel, Astro Wah Lai Toi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176660-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards\nSquare Pegs was the night's biggest winner, earning a total of four awards including My Favourite Drama and My Favourite Actor (Roger Kwok).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season\nThe 2004 Atlanta Braves season marked the franchise's 39th season in Atlanta and 134th overall. The Braves won their 10th consecutive division title, finishing 10 games ahead of the second-place Philadelphia Phillies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season\nOn September 29, 2004, Bobby Cox won his 2,000th game as a manager. He became the ninth manager to achieve the feat, doing so with a 6-3 win over the New York Mets at Turner Field in the final home game of the year He was named Manager of the Year after the season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season\nJ. D. Drew replaced Gary Sheffield (lost to the Yankees in free agency) in the outfield, free agent John Thomson joined the rotation, and rookies Adam LaRoche and Charles Thomas saw significant playing time on a younger 2004 Braves team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season\nThe Braves would face the Houston Astros in the Division Series (the fourth time that these two teams met in seven years, all of which were won by Atlanta), but the Braves lost three games to two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, 2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta Braves vs. Houston Astros\nHouston wins series, 3-2. Atlanta suffered a 1st round elimination for the third consecutive postseason and fourth time out of the last five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 99], "content_span": [100, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176661-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Braves season, Award winners\n2004 Major League Baseball All-Star GameJohnny Estrada represented the Atlanta Braves as a catcher for the National League All-Star team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season\nThe 2004 Atlanta Falcons season was the franchise's 39th in the National Football League (NFL). It was the first year under head coach Jim Mora. Under Mora, the team went 11\u20135, advancing to the playoffs. After easily handling the 8\u20138 St. Louis Rams in the Divisional round, the Falcons advanced to the NFC Championship game for the first time since 1998, but lost to the Philadelphia Eagles. The Falcons did not make the postseason again until 2008 and would not appear in the NFC Championship again until 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season\nThe team led the NFL in rushing in 2004, with 2,672 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Offseason\nThe Falcons signed former Oakland Raiders defensive tackle Rod Coleman and former San Francisco 49ers cornerback Jason Webster in free agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season, Schedule\nIn the 2004 regular season, the Falcons\u2019 non-divisional, conference opponents were primarily from the NFC West, although they also played the Detroit Lions from the NFC North, and the New York Giants from the NFC East. Their non-conference opponents were from the AFC West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 1\nThe Falcons began their season by traveling to San Francisco, where Falcons head coach Jim L. Mora had coached the last five years as the 49ers defensive coordinator, to play the San Francisco 49ers. The Falcons scored first with a 15-yard touchdown pass from Michael Vick to Alge Crumpler. In the second quarter the Falcons scored again with a two-yard touchdown run by Warrick Dunn. Dunn ran for a second rushing touchdown in the fourth quarter this one from nine yards out. The 49ers did battle back with two touchdown passes from Tim Rattay late in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 1\nAt the end of the game the 49ers could have tied the game at 21points with a two-point conversion. Their attempt at a two-point conversion failed as Tim Rattay\u2019s pass to Brandon Lloyd was defended by Rod Coleman. Tight end Alge Crumpler finished the game with 6 receptions for 82 yards and a touchdown; at that time it was Crumpler's second best game of his career", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 2\nFor the Falcons home opener the 1\u20130 St. Louis Rams came to the Georgia Dome to take on the 1\u20130 Falcons. The Falcons started their second drive of the game from their own 18-yard line when Michael Vick dumped a pass off to his full back Justin Griffith. Griffith took the ball all the way to the St. Louis 20 for a 62-yard gain. 4 plays later Vick found Griffith again this time for a 3-yard touchdown pass to give the Falcons the lead 7 to 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 2\nIn the second quarter Vick set up the Falcons second score of the game, with a 14-yard run to the St. Louis 2-yard line. Vick's run was followed by Warrick Dunn scoring the Falcons second touchdown of the game. After Jay Feely\u2019s extra point the Falcons had the lead 14 to 0. On the following drive the Rams\u2019 offence moved the ball 82 yards to the Falcon's 1-yard line where Marshall Faulk capped of the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run. Vick and the Falcons got the ball back with 1:06 left before half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 2\nVick's 3 rushes on the drive for 20, 14, and 18 yards put Falcons kicker Jay Feely in range for a 35-yard field goal with 6 seconds left in the half. The Falcon's went into half time with a 10-point lead. In the third quarter Ram's QB Marc Bulger completed 4 of 5 passes as he moved the ball down the field on an 80-yard touchdown drive. The drive was capped off with a 33-yard touchdown pass to Torry Holt, which cut the Falcons lead 3 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0005-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 2\nLater in the third quarter the rams tied when Jeff Wilkins hit a 46-yard field goal to make the score 17 to 17. On the next drive Vick completed 3 of his 4 pass attempts for 48 yards. He then set up another Warrick Dunn 2-yard touchdown run with a 7-yard rush from the St. Louis 9-yard line. Because of a taunting penalty on the kick off the rams started their ensuing drive on their own 10-yard line. On first down Patrick Kerney sacked Ram's QB Marc Bulger at the St. Louis 1-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0005-0004", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 2\nBacked up at their own 1-yard line Bulger and the Rams wanted to try to make a big play (after the game Bulger said \"I was going for a home run,\"). When Bulger dropped back to pass in his own end zone Falcon's defensive end Brady Smith got into the back field, and took the ball right from Bulger's hand for a touchdown. Bulger almost got the pass off for what could have been a 99-yard touchdown for the Rams. \"I was a half-second away from letting the ball go. ... It could have been a touchdown the other way.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0005-0005", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 2\nSaid Bulger after the game. The Falcons kicked one more field goal before the game ended to make the final score Falcons 34, Rams 17. . For the third time in his career Vick ran for more than 100 yards in a game; he finished the game with 109. For the second week in a row Warrick Dunn ran for 2 touchdowns .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 3\nIn week 3 the winless Arizona Cardinals came to the Georgia Dome to play the unbeaten Falcons. On the Falcons first drive, running back Warrick Dunn ran for a 60-yard gain that put the Falcons at the Arizona 8-yard line. 4 plays after the long Warrick Dunn run the Falcons took the lead (3 to 0) with a 25-yard Jay Feely field goal. Early in the second quarter Arizona punter Scott Player punted the ball to Falcons\u2019 punt and kick returner Allen Rossum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 3\nRossum returned the punt 30 yards to give the Falcons great field position at the Arizona 39-yard line. The Falcons were unable to score a touchdown on the drive, but Feely did kick a 23-yard field goal to make the score 6 to 0. Late in the second quarter Falcons\u2019 defensive tackle Rod Coleman sacked and forced a fumble by Cardinals\u2019 quarterback Josh McCown. Cloeman also recovered the fumble to give the Falcons the ball at the Arizona 13-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 3\nThe Falcons were unable to capitalize on the turnover, and Michael Vick fumbled at the Arizona 8-yard line, which gave the Cardinals the ball back with 27 seconds left in the first half. After the Falcons punted on their first possession to start the second half 4 consecutive drives ended in turnovers:\u2022 Coleman recorded his second forced fumble of the game\u2022 On the ensuing Falcons drive Vick fumbled for the second time\u2022 Falcons\u2019 defensive end Brady Smith forced a third McCown fumble\u2022 2 plays later Vick was intercepted by Cardinals\u2019 safety Adrian WilsonWilson's interception gave the Cardinals\u2019 great field possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0006-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 3\nThe Cardinals were only able to gain 6 yards on the drive, but Neil Rackers 30-yard field goal shrunk the Falcons\u2019 lead to 3 points. Later in the fourth quarter both teams fumbled again. Dunn fumbled at his own 21-yard line which put Arizona in range to kick a game-tying field goal, but 2 plays later Arizona wide receiver Karl Williams fumbled, which gave the ball to Atlanta. On the Falcons final drive, Vick sealed the victory with a 58-yard run. The rush was the longest of Vick's career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0006-0004", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 3\nAfter the game Vick admitted he was thinking about more than winning the game during his 58-yard run. \"I was thinking about getting the first down and getting out of bounds\u2026 but then I was thinking about the type of game I was having and decided I can make something happen. I wanted to score,\" said Vick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 4\nIn week 4 the still unbeaten Falcons traveled to Carolina to play the 1 and 1 Carolina Panthers. In the Falcons\u2019 first drive of the game Michael Vick completed his first pass to wide receiver Dez White for 19 yards, and his second to Justin Griffith for 18. Vick's passes were followed by a 38-yard touchdown run by Warrick Dunn which gave the Falcons\u2019 an early lead (7 to 0). On the next drive Carolina wide receiver Muhsin Muhammad had two big receptions for 34 and 23-yard gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 4\nFollowing Muhammad's 23-yard catch, running back DeShaun Foster scored on a 1-yard touchdown run. Foster's run tied the game at 7 points. The first quarter action continued Atlanta tight end Alge Crumpler caught 3 passes from Vick, for 17, 5, and, 24-yard gains, that put the Falcons in range for Jay Feely to kick a 47-yard field goal, which put the Falcons back on top 10 to 7. Early in the second quarter the Falcons put together another good drive which resulted in a successful Feely Field goal attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 4\nFeely's 2nd field goal extended the Falcons\u2019 lead to 6 points, and capped off the Falcons third consecutive scouring drive. Late in the first half Carolina quarterback Jake Delhomme completed 8 of 9 passes to put Carolina kicker John Kasay in range to hit a 26-yard field goal with 46 seconds left in the half. Kasay's kick brought the score to 13 to 10 going into half time. Neither team scored again until early in the fourth quarter when Falcon defensive back Kevin Mathis intercepted a Delhomme pass, and returned it 35 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0007-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 4\nLater in the fourth quarter Carolina punter Todd Sauerbrun punted the ball to Atlanta return man Allen Rossum who returned the punt 25 yards to the Carolina 40-yard line. Following the return by Rossum, Atlanta turned to running back T. J. Duckett. Duckett carried the ball 5 times for 36 yards, the last of which was a 4-yard touchdown. Duckett's touchdown gave the Falcons a 17-point lead with only 4:16 left in the ball game. The panthers were unable to score in the last 4 minutes, and the Falcons won 27 to 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0007-0004", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 4\nAfter the game Carolina defensive end Julius Peppers spoke about how they might have paid too much attention to Vick. \"We get sidetracked as a team, as a defensive unit, in thinking we've got to stop one person. There's 10 other people out there ... if you focus on just one, someone else will kill you,\" said Peppers after the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 5\nIn week 5, the Falcons played the Detroit Lions at the Georgia Dome. The Lions came into the game with 2 wins and 1 loss, and the Falcons were at a perfect 4 wins and 0 losses. Neither team scored until the Falcons\u2019 first drive of the second quarter. On fourth and 6, at their own 36-yard line, the Falcons faked a punt, and punter Chris Mohr completed a 26-yard pass to wide receiver Brian Finneran. 4 plays later the Falcons faced another fourth down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 5\nWith 5 yards to go for the first down, Michael Vick completed a 10-yard pass to Finneran for the first down. With the help of some fourth down conversions and Detroit penalties the Falcons managed to find the end zone when Warrick Dunn scored on a 2-yard touchdown run. Detroit followed with a scouring drive of their own when Lions\u2019 quarterback Joey Harrington completed a 39-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Az-Zahir Hakim. The Hakim touchdown evened the score at 7. The Falcons got the ball back with 3:20 left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 5\nThe first play of the Falcons\u2019 drive was also their last. Vick threw an interception to Lions\u2019 linebacker Alex Lewis who returned the ball to the Atlanta 2-yard line. 3 plays after the interception Detroit running back Artose Pinner ran in for a 1-yard touchdown that gave the Lions a 7-point advantage. The Falcons got the ball back with less than 2 minutes left in the half. Vick completed a 49-yard pass to wide receiver Peerless Price, but 4 plays later the Falcons turned the ball over after an unsuccessful fourth down conversion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0008-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 5\nThe teams went into half time with the Lions winning 14 to 7. The only scoring in the third quarter was a 23-yard field goal by Jason Hanson. The field goal was set up by Atlanta return man Allen Rossum who muffed a punt to give the Lions the ball at Atlanta's 16-yard line. Atlanta kicked another field goal before the game ended. The Falcons lost 10 to 17. It was the Falcons\u2019 first loss of the 2004 season. Vick fumbled 3 times in the loss and had this to say about it after the game:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 5\nI was caught up looking for receivers and got careless with the ball. The bottom line is I should have had the ball tucked away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 6\nThe Falcons came into week 6 trying to avoid back to back losses. Their opponent in week 6 was the San Diego Chargers who stood 3\u20132. The Falcons scored first when Michael Vick completed a 19-yard touchdown pass to Alge Crumpler in the second quarter. The touchdown gave the Falcons the lead 7 to 0. On the next drive San Diego quarterback Drew Brees completed 2 passes to wide receiver Eric Parker for 15 and 14 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 6\nParker's receptions helped move the Chargers to the 1-yard line where running back LaDainian Tomlinson scored, on a 1-yard touchdown rush, to tie the game at 7 points. The Falcons got the ball back with 1:13 left before half time, but their drive was ended when Vick threw an interception to Chargers corner back Drayton Florence. The interception gave the Chargers the ball at Atlanta's 39-yard line, and it only took Brees 3 plays find Parker for a 17-yard touchdown pass. At half time the Chargers were winning 14 to 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 6\nThe Chargers extended their lead in the third quarter when kicker Nate Kaeding hit a 53-yard field goal to make the score 17 to 7. Early in the fourth quarter Vick completed a 50-yard pass to wide receiver Peerless Price. 3 plays later Vick ran for a 14-yard touchdown, which made the score 17 to 14. The Falcons defense then forced the Chargers to punt the ball back to the Falcons. Atlanta got the ball back at the Chargers\u2019 47-yard line. 3 plays after the punt, Vick threw a 32-yard touchdown to wide receiver Dez White.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0010-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 6\nVick's second touchdown pass of the game gave the Falcons a 4-point lead. The Chargers kicked a field goal on their next possession which brought them within one point of the Falcons. The Falcons got the ball back with 5:55 left in the game. They held on to the ball for the rest of the game, and they won 21 to 20. The Falcons sixth game was their fifth win of the year. In 2003 the Falcons did not get 5 wins until their 17th game. \"Michael Vick did what Michael Vick can do, and that's run all over the place with the ball and create first downs,\" San Diego head coach Marty Schottenheimer commented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nIn week 7, the 5\u20131 Falcons traveled to Kansas City to play the 1\u20134 Kansas City Chiefs. On the Falcons first drive Michael Vick's 32-yard run got the Falcons into field goal Range, and 3 plays later the Falcons scored when kicker Jay Feely hit a 19-yard field goal to give the Falcons the lead 3 to 0. On the Chiefs first offensive play from scrimmage Falcons defensive tackle Ed Jasper forced and recovered a fumble by Chiefs running back Priest Holmes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nThe Falcons were unable to capitalize on the turnover, and turned the ball over on downs 4 plays later. The Chiefs were able to get points from the Falcons\u2019 turn over. On the Chiefs drive following the turnover, Holmes ran for 38 yards on 4 rushes including a 15-yard touchdown run which gave the Chiefs the lead 7 to 3. Later in the first quarter Michael Vick was intercepted by Chiefs defensive back Greg Wesley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0011-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nWhen the Chiefs got the ball back, after the interception, Holmes quickly got his team into the red zone when he took a pass from quarterback Trent Green 33 yards to the Atlanta 7-yard line. One play after Holmes\u2019 reception Chiefs running back Derrick Blaylock scored on a 7-yard touchdown run. The Falcons fell behind 14 to 3. Holmes scored on the Chiefs next 2 possessions which extended the Chiefs\u2019 lead to a huge 25-point margin (28 to 3). Before the half was over Holmes scored again giving the Chiefs a 35 to 3 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0011-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nThe Chiefs got the ball back after half time, but were forced to punt. They punted the ball away to Allen Rossum who returned it 75 yards for a touchdown. Rossum's return was the only touchdown the Falcons scored the entire game. The Chiefs followed Rossum's return with an 80-yard scoring drive which was capped off by Blaylock's second touchdown of the game. The Falcons could not answer back. On their next drive the Falcons turned the ball over on downs again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0011-0004", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nFollowing the Atlanta turnover the Chiefs again drove the ball down the field, and Blaylock scored his 3rd touchdown. The Falcons\u2019 next 2 drives ended in failed fourth down conversions. The Chiefs\u2019 final drive of the game ended with Blaylock's 4th rushing touchdown of the game. The final score was 56 to 10. Both Holmes and Blaylock scored 4 rushing touchdowns in the game. The Falcons only gained 222 total yards which was their worst total in the 2004 season. The Falcons also gave up 271 rushing yards which was also their worst total for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0011-0005", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nThe Chiefs 8 rushing touch downs set a new NFL record. Blaylock commented on the record setting day after the game, \"They had, like, the No. 1 rushing defense, but once we started moving the ball on them we just kept moving the ball. We got in a rhythm. And eight touchdowns later, we've got the record.\" Falcons coach Jim Mora could only joke about the circumstance:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 7\nI am honored to be a part of history. We have done a tremendous job of stopping the run. So it just emphasized how well they played. Their O-line was doing such an excellent, tremendous job, it might not have mattered who was in there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 8\nIn week 8 the 5\u20132 Falcons went to Denver did some rippers, to play the 5\u20132 Denver Broncos. The Broncos began the game with a 69-yard scoring drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown pass from Jake Plummer to tight end Patrick Hape. On the Falcons first drive, Michael Vick broke away for a 44-yard run which got the Falcons to the Denver 23-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 8\nThe Falcons were forced to settle for a field goal which made the score 7 to 3. Denver got the ball back and it only took one play for Plummer to find wide receiver Rod Smith for an 80-yard touchdown pass. Smith's reception made the score 14 to 3. Early in the second quarter the Falcons got their first touchdown of the game when T. J. Duckett scored on a 21-yard touchdown run. The Broncos next drive ended in a turnover. Falcons\u2019 defensive end Patrick Kerney intercepted Plummer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0013-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 8\nFollowing Kerney's Interception Atlanta scored again when Vick threw a 34-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Peerless Price. Price's touchdown gave Atlanta the lead and made the score 17 to 14. Later in the second quarter Atlanta line backer Keith Brooking intercepted Plummer and gave Atlanta the ball in Denver territory with just over a minute left in the first half. Atlanta was able to get a field goal before half time. On Atlanta's first drive of the second half, tight end Alge Crumpler caught passes for 12 and 18 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0013-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 8\nVick then ran for a 15-yard gain and moved the ball to the Denver 5-yard line. On the next play, Warrick Dunn scored with a 5 touchdown run. Late in the 3rd quarter, Atlanta's rookie wide receiver Michael Jenkins made his first reception in the NFL. Jenkins\u2019 first reception was a 46-yard gain to the Denver 36-yard line. 2 plays later Vick threw his second touchdown pass of the game to Price. The 25-yard touchdown made the score 34 to 14. On the ensuing drive, Plummer threw for his 3rd touchdown of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0013-0004", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 8\nHis 3rd touchdown was a 7-yard pass to Darius Watts. Later in the 4th quarter, Falcons corner back Kevin Mathis intercepted a pass from Plummer and returned it 66 yards for a touchdown. It was Plummer 3rd pick of the game. Before the game ended Plummer threw his 4th touchdown of the game. His final touchdown of the game was a 35-yard pass to wide receiver Ashley Lelie. The Falcons won their 6th game of the year with a final score of 41 to 28. Crumpler finished the game with 7 receptions for 86 yards. Plummer threw for 499 yards in his loss to the Falcons and had this to say about it:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 8\nIf I had thrown for 2 yards and we\u2019d won, I\u2019d be the happiest guy in here right now.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 10\nIn week 10, the Falcons played the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at the Georgia Dome. Michael Vick\u2019s 45-yard pass to Alge Crumpler helped put the Falcons in field goal range on their first drive. 4 plays after Vick's long completion, Jay Feely hit a 33-yard field goal to give Atlanta an early 3-point lead. On the Falcons second drive Vick helped set up a second touchdown when he broke away for a 41-yard run. 2 plays later running back T. J. Duckett scored on a 2-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 10\nEarly in the second quarter, Duckett ran for his second touchdown of the game. Duckett's second touchdown was from 1 yard out and gave the Falcons a 17-point lead. The Buccaneers scored their first points of the game with 5:48 left in the 2nd quarter. Tampa Bay quarterback Brian Griese hit wide receiver Michael Clayton for a 25yard touchdown pass, and made the score 17 to 3. In the 3rd quarter Ronde Barber intercepted a pass from Vick and gave Tampa Bay the ball in Atlanta territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0015-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 10\n4 plays after the turnover Griese threw a 22-yard touchdown to tight end Ken Dilger. Griese's second touchdown cut the Falcons lead to 3 points. The Falcons brought their lead back to 10 points in the 4th quarter when Vick threw a 49-yard touchdown to Crumpler. The Falcons defense had 7 sacks in the game. Crumpler had 118 yards in the game which was a career-high. Falcons defensive tackle Rod Coleman had this to say about Atlanta's 7 sack performance:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 10\nSometimes, they had three guys on me. I was just laughing. They were wasting three guys on me, but their quarterback was on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 11\nIn week 11 the Falcons went to New York to play the New York Giants. Giants\u2019 quarterback Eli Manning made his first NFL start in the game. On the Falcons opening drive, Michael Vick ran for gains of 7, 20, and 24 yards and finished the drive with a 6-yard touchdown pass to Alge Crumpler. Early in the 2nd quarter, Vicks threw another touchdown pass to Crumpler to make the score 14 to 0. Late in the 2nd quarter, Manning threw his first interception of his career. Manning's pass was picked off by Atlanta corner Jason Webster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 11\nAtlanta tried to kick a 46-yard field goal before the half expired, but Jay Feely\u2019s attempt was no good. In the 3rd quarter Manning moved the Giant's offense down the field and finished it with his first touchdown of his NFL career. Mannings first touchdown was a 6-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jeremy Shockey. Later in the 3rd quarter Manning threw another interception. Manning's second interception was made by Atlanta defensive end Brady Smith. In the 4th quarter Giants kicker Steve Christie hit a 24-yard field goal to make the score 14 to 10. The win brought the Falcons to 8\u20132. Falcons coach Jim Mora had this to say about Vick after the game:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 11\nMike wins. You look at his record, it's not always pretty in terms of statistics and quarterback rating. You might need to throw those things out when you talk about Mike Vick. He just wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 12\nIn week 12, the Falcons played the New Orleans Saints at the Georgia Dome. In the 1st quarter Michael Vick threw a 24-yard pass to Alge Crumpler which put the ball at the New Orleans 16-yard line. Vick ran for a 16-yard touchdown one play after his completion to Crumpler. In the 2nd quarter Vick threw a 25-yard pass to receiver Peerless Price. Price's reception moved the ball to the Saint's 1-yard line and set up Vick's 1-yard touchdown pass to fullback Stanley Pritchett on the next play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 12\nSaints\u2019 kicker John Carney made 2 field goals in the second quarter to make the score 14 to 6. With 38 seconds left in the 1st half Michael Vicks's second cousin Aaron Brooks threw an interception to Falcons cornerback Allen Rossum. Rossum returned the pick 14 yards to the Saint's 26-yard line and the Falcons were able to kick a field goal before halftime. The Saints got the ball to start the 3rd quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0019-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 12\nOn their first drive the Saints offense moved the ball to the Atlanta 19-yard line but their field goal attempt was blocked by Falcons defensive tackle Ed Jasper. Later in the 3rd quarter, Brooks scored on a 1-yard touchdown run. The Saints scored on a 2-point conversion. The 2-point conversion was caught by New Orleans receiver Joe Horn. In the 4th quarter Brooks threw a 7-yard touchdown to Horn and gave New Orleans the lead 21 to 17. With 1:56 left in the game Atlanta was down by 4 points and had the ball at the New Orleans 47-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0019-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 12\nOn their first play of the drive Vick completed a 27-yard pass to Crumpler and on their second play Vick threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Crumpler. On the Saints final drive, Brooks threw an interception to Atlanta cornerback DeAngelo Hall. Crumpler had this to say about his game-winning touchdown grab:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 12\nMe and Mike have a great connection. We work on that all week in practice \u2013 the scramble drill. Mike put the ball in a great spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 13\nIn week 13, the Falcons played the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at Raymond James Stadium. Tampa Bay running back Michael Pittman finished the Bucs first drive of the game with a 4-yard rushing touchdown. Early in the second quarter, Michael Vick threw an interception to Tampa Bay line backer Derrick Brooks. Brooks intercepted the ball in his own end zone for a touchback. Tampa Bay's drive following the interception ended with a 50-yard Jay Taylor field goal. The Falcons\u2019 next drive was ended when Brooks forced Vick to fumble. Tampa Bay recovered Vick's fumble at their own 47-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 13\nTaylor capitalized on Vick's second fumble with a 30-yard field goal and extended the Bucks lead to 13 to 0. In the 3rd quarter, Vick fumbled again when he was sacked by Tampa Bay defensive end Simeon Rice. Just one play after Vick's fumble, Tampa Bay quarterback Brian Griese connected with wide receiver Joey Galloway for a 36-yard touchdown. In the 4th quarter Tampa Bay fullback Mike Alstott scored on a 1-yard touchdown run. The Buccaneers won 27 to 0. The Falcons turned the ball over 5 times in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 14\nIn week 14, the Falcons played the Oakland Raiders at the Georgia Dome. The Raiders scored on their second drive with a 52-yard field goal by kicker Sebastian Janikowski. Atlanta scored their first points of the game in the second quarter. T. J. Duckett ran for a 28 ran touchdown and gave Atlanta the lead 7 to 3. On the ensuing drive Falcon's safety Aaron Beasley forced a fumble from Oakland running back J.R. Redmond. The Falcons turned Redmond's turnover into points when Duckett finished another drive with a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 14\nAtlanta scored again in the 2nd quarter when Falcons\u2019 defensive tackle Rod Coleman intercepted a pass from Kerry Collins and returned it 39 yards for a touchdown. Coleman played for the Raiders for 5 years before becoming a Falcon. The Falcons went into half time winning 21 to 3. On the opening drive of the 2nd half, Duckett scored his 3rd rushing touchdown of the game. Duckett's 3rd touchdown was from 4 yards out and gave extended Atlanta's lead to 28 to 3. Duckett also scored a 1-yard touchdown to cap off the Falcons first drive of the fourth quarter. The Raiders also scored a touchdown in the 4th quarter when running back Zack Crockett scored a 1-yard touchdown. With the win Atlanta clinched the NFC South division championship. Duckett scored a career-high 4 touchdown in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 15\nIn week 15, the Falcons played the Carolina Panthers in the Georgia Dome. Early in the 1st quarter Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme was sacked by Falcons linebacker Keith Brooking. Delhomme then fumbled and the ball was recovered by Atlanta defensive tackle Chad Lavalais at the Carolina 40-yard line. The Falcons scored after the turnover when Michael Vick threw a 3-yard pass to Falcon's wide receiver Brian Finneran for a touchdown. The Falcons kicked a field goal early in the second quarter to make the score 10 to 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 15\nFollowing the Falcon's field goal, the Panthers drove down the field goal and scored when Delhomme threw a 6-yard touchdown to Muhsin Muhammad. The Panthers kicked a field goal before half time to make the score 10 to 10 at halftime. Running back Warrick Dunn carried the ball 9 times for 45 yards including a 6-yard touchdown run on the opening drive of the 2nd half. The Falcons scored again in the 3rd quarter when Vick threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Dez White.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0023-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 15\nLate in the 3rd quarter Vick was intercepted for the second time of the game by Panthers cornerback Chris Gamble. The Panthers turned Vicks second interception into points when Delhomme threw an 11-yard touchdown to tight end Kris Mangum. 2 minutes later in the 4th quarter, Panthers defensive end Julius Peppers recovered a fumble by Vick and returned it 60 yards for a touchdown. Peppers touchdown tied the game at 24 to 24. The next time the Panthers offence got the ball Delhomme threw a 43-yard pass to wide receiver Keary Colbert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0023-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 15\n4 plays later Panther's running back Nick Goings scored on a 5-yard touchdown run. Goings\u2019 touchdown gave the Panthers their first lead of the game with only 3:41 left in the game. With 1:44 left in the game the Falcons offense faced a 4th and goal at the Panther's 12-yard line. The Falcons were down by 7, and if they didn't score on that 4th down, the Panthers would have retained possession and been able to run out the clock. Vick ran up the middle for the 12-yard touchdown which tied the game at 31 to 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0023-0004", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 15\nThe Panthers were unable to score on the final drive of the 4th quarter so the game went into overtime. The Panthers got the ball first to start sudden death overtime but on 3rd and 9 Delhomme was intercepted by Falcons\u2019 safety Aaron Beasley. 3 plays later the Falcons kicked a field goal and won 34 to 31. There were 4 touchdowns scored in the 4th quarter. Vick commented on his spectacular game-tying touchdown run after the game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 15\nEveryone else had their backs turned to me, so that is why I was able to make it to the end zone. I was lucky to get in there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 16\nIn week 16, the Falcons played the New Orleans Saints in the Louisiana Super Dome. With a record of 11\u20133, the Falcons were set to be the second seed in the 2004 NFC Playoffs. Quarterback Matt Schaub started in place of Michael Vick. In the 1st quarter Schaub was sacked in the end zone by Saint's defensive tackle Tony Bryant for a safety. The Saints also kicked a field goal in the 1st quarter to give them a 5 to 0 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 16\nOn the first play of the 2nd quarter Schaub threw a short pass to Warrick Dunn, who ran 59 yards to the New Orleans-yard line. 4 plays later Jay Feely kicked a 25-yard field goal. On the Saint's next drive Aaron Brooks threw an interception to Keith Brooking who returned the pick 27 yards to the New Orleans's 11-yard line. Feely kicked a 20-yard field goal to give the Falcons the lead 6 to 5. Brooks\u2019 18-yard pass to Joe Horn helped the Saint's move the ball down the field for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0025-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 16\nThe drive ended when Brooks\u2019 scored on a 1-yard touchdown run which put the Saints back up 12 to 6. In the 3rd quarter Dont\u00e9 Stallworth scored on a 39-yard pass from Brooks. Dunn scored on a 16-yard touchdown run, but on the following kickoff Saint's return man Michael Lewis returned the kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown. Neither team scored in the 4th quarter, and the Saints won 26 to 13. The Falcons\u2019 playoff status was unaffected by the loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 17\nIn week 17 the Falcons played the Seattle Seahawks at Quest Field. The Seahawks were forced to punt on their first drive and Falcons\u2019 linebacker Demorrio Williams blocked Ken Walter\u2019s punt. The Falcons scored on their next drive when Vick threw a 2-yard touchdown to Peerless Price. Later in the first quarter Seahawks\u2019 running back Shaun Alexander scored a 1-yard touchdown. In the second quarter Jay Feely kicked a 33-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 17\nOn the fourth play of the Seahawks\u2019 next drive, cornerback DeAngelo Hall intercepted a pall from Seahawks\u2019 quarterback Matt Hasselbeck, and returned the pick 48 yards for a touchdown. Hasselbeck's pass was intended for the NFL's all-time leading receiver, Jerry Rice. Hasselbeck on the next drive threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Darrell Jackson. In the third quarter Matt Schaub was intercepted by Seattle cornerback Marcus Trufant. Hasselbeck finished the next drive with another 3-yard touchdown pass. Hasselbeck's second touchdown was to tight end Jerramy Stevens. Early in the fourth quarter Feely kicked a 40-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0026-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Regular season results, Week 17\nThe Seahawks followed Feely's field goal with another touchdown drive. Seattle's scouring drive was capped off by a 1-yard touchdown run by Hasselbeck. On the final timed play from scrimmage, Schaub threw a 3-yard touchdown to wide receiver Brian Finneran. Atlanta's final touchdown made the score 26 to 28 with Seattle still leading. The Falcons attempted a two-point conversion, but Warrick Dunn failed to cross the goal line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Postseason, Divisional Playoffs\nIn the Divisional round of the playoffs the Falcons played the St. Louis Rams at the Georgia Dome. On the Falcons first drive Michael Vick ran for a 47-yard gain to the St. Louis 21-yard line. 2 plays later Vick threw an 18-yard touchdown to Alge Crumpler. The Rams also scored on their first drive when quarterback Marc Bulger threw a 57-yard touchdown to wide receiver Kevin Curtis. On the Falcons next drive Warrick Dunn ran for a 62-yard touchdown. On the Falcon's 3rd possession Dunn scored again. Dunn's 2nd rushing touchdown was from 19 yards out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Postseason, Divisional Playoffs\nThe Ram's offence scored again on their next possession. Bulger's 2nd touchdown was a 2-yard pass to wide receiver Torry Holt. Running back T. J. Duckett ran 3 times for 29 yards on the Falcon's next drive, but the drive ended when a fumble by Vick was recovered by Rams linebacker Tommy Polley. The Rams then went 3 and out, and were forced to punt. Kevin Stemke\u2019s punt was returned 68 for a touchdown by Allen Rossum. Ram's kicker Jeff Wilkins made a 55-yard field goal at the end of the 1st half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Postseason, Divisional Playoffs\nThe Falcon's had the lead at half time 28 to 17. Early in the 2nd quarter Rossum returned a punt 39 yards to the St. Louis 32-yard line. Vick threw a 6-yard touchdown to wide receiver Peerless Price on the Falcons next drive. The Rams were forced to punt to Rossum again and he returned it 45 yards to the St. Louis 13-yard line. Jay Feely then kicked a 38-yard field goal which made the score 38 to 17 going into the 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0027-0003", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Postseason, Divisional Playoffs\nIn the 4th quarter Falcon's defensive end Brady Smith sacked Bulger in the Ram's end zone for a safety. Duckett scored a 4-yard touchdown late in the 4th quarter. The Falcons won 47 to 17. The Falcon's ran for 327 yards which was a new franchise records. Rossum's 152 return yards set a new NFL postseason record. Vick ran for 119 yards in the game which was also a new NFL postseason record. Dunn ran for 142 yards which was the most in Falcons postseason history. Rams safety Antuan Edwards had this to say about the loss: \"Every person in this locker room is a little stunned. In all phases of the game, we got whipped.\" The win was Atlanta's final postseason win until the 2012 divisional playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Postseason, NFC Championship\nIn the NFC Championship the Falcons played the Philadelphia Eagles at Lincoln Financial Field. In the first quarter on the Eagles first scouring, the Eagles\u2019 running back Brian Westbrook broke a 36-yard run to the Atlanta 25-yard line. On the next play Eagles\u2019 Donovan McNabb completed a 21-yard pass to tight end L.J. Smith. Dorsey Levens scored from 4 yards out on the next play. The Falcons scored their first points on their first drive of the 2nd quarter. Jay Feely\u2019s 23-yard field goal shrunk the Eagles\u2019 lead to 4 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176662-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlanta Falcons season, Postseason, NFC Championship\nOn the Eagles\u2019 next drive McNabb completed a 45-yard pass to wide receiver Greg Lewis and 2 plays later he threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to tight end Chad Lewis. The Falcons countered on their next drive when Warrick Dunn ran for a 10-yard touchdown. On the first drive of the 2nd half Westbrook ran the ball 4 times for 34 yards which helped put the Eagles in field goal range. The drive was capped off by a 31-yard David Akers field goal. Akers also kicked a 34-yard field goal later in the 3rd quarter. McNabb sealed the game in the 4th quarter when he threw another touchdown pass to Chad Lewis. The Eagles won 27 to 10 and advanced to the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176663-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held from May 26\u201330 at Dodd Stadium in Norwich, CT. It featured the top two regular-season finishers of each six-team division, plus the next two best finishers. Fourth-seeded St. Bonaventure defeated Rhode Island in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the Atlantic 10's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176663-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe league's top six teams, based on winning percentage in the 24-game regular season schedule, qualified for the field. The top two teams in each division qualified for the tournament automatically; the two division winners, Rhode Island in the East and George Washington in the West, received the top two seeds and byes through to the second round of the double elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176663-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team\nThe following players were named to the All-Tournament Team. St. Bonaventure's Brian Pellegrini, one of three Bonnies selected, was named Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176663-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team\nRichmond's Thomas Martin (2002) and Bobby LeNoir (2003) were second-time selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176664-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament was played from March 10 to March 13, 2004, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio. The winner was named champion of the Atlantic 10 Conference and received an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. Xavier University won the tournament. The top two teams in each division received first-round byes. Saint Joseph's University entered the tournament undefeated, but lost to Xavier in the quarterfinals. Dayton, Richmond, Saint Joseph's, and Xavier all received bids to the NCAA tournament, with the latter two teams losing in the regional finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176664-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nAll games played at University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio* - Overtime", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship\nThe 2004 Toyota Atlantic Championship season was contested over 12 rounds. 11 different teams and 24 different drivers competed. In this one-make formula all drivers had to utilize Swift chassis and Toyota engines. This season also saw a C2-class running older Swift chassis and Toyota engines. In C2-class five different drivers competed, but none of them for the whole season. The Toyota Atlantic Championship Presented by Yokohama Drivers' Champion was Jon Fogarty driving for Pacific Coast Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nFor every race the points were awarded: 31 points to the winner, 27 for runner-up, 25 for third place, 23 for fourth place, 21 for fifth place, 19 for sixth place, 17 for seventh place, 15 for eighth place, 13 for ninth place, 11 for tenth place, winding down to 1 point for 20th place. Lower placed drivers did not award points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nAdditional points were awarded to the fastest qualifier on Friday (1 point), the fastest qualifier on Saturday (1 point), any driver leading at least one lap in the race (1 point), the most improved driver from start to finish (1 point) and the driver setting the fastest lap (1 point). So the maximum for one driver in one race is to earn 35 points. Oval races only saw one qualifying. C2-class drivers were not able to score points in the main class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nRace 1 Alfred Unser and David Sterckx only awarded with half points, because they ran non-parity engines. Alfred Unser 3/2=1.5 rounded up 2 points. David Sterckx 11+1=12/2=6 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nRace 3 only one additional point for the qualifying - oval race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nRace 4 and 5 only one additional point awarded to the fastest qualifier, because only one session was held for each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nRace 11 no additional point awarded to the most improved driver, because the most improved driver was C2-class driver Cam Binder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, Main championship\nIn all races not all points were awarded (not enough competitors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, C2-Class championship\nPoints system see above. But additional points only awarded for the fastest qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Final points standings, Driver, C2-Class championship\nNo more competitors in C2-class. Four races without a single entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176665-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Championship, Complete Overview\nR19=retired, but classified NS=did not start (8)=place after practice, but grid position not held free", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176666-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Salem Memorial Baseball Stadium in Salem, VA from May 25 through May 30. Florida State won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176666-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament, Tournament, Play-In Game\nThe two teams with the worst records in regular season conference play faced each other in a single elimination situation to earn the 8th spot in the conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176667-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the inaugural Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament. It was played between March 12 and March 20, 2004. All games were played at the Tate Rink in West Point, New York, the home venue of the Army Black Knights. By winning the tournament, Holy Cross received the Atlantic Hockey Association's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, the first appearance in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176667-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured three rounds of play and a play-in game. All games in the tournament are single-elimination. The play-in game consists of the eighth and ninth seeds competing to decide the final qualifier. In the quarterfinals, the first seed plays the winner of the play-in game while the second and seventh seeds, the third and sixth seeds and the fourth and fifth seeds play to determine who advances to the semifinals. of the four remaining teams, the highest and lowest remaining ranked teams play each other with the other two teams facing one another to determine the championship participants. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176667-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176668-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Melching Field at Conrad Park on the campus of Stetson University in DeLand, Florida from May 26 through 29. Florida Atlantic won its first and only tournament championship to earn the Atlantic Sun Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176668-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe top six teams (based on conference results) from the conference earn invites to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176668-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Tournament Most Valuable Player\nRusty Brown was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Brown was an infielder for Florida Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176669-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 4\u20136 at the Curb Event Center at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176669-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nCentral Florida defeated top-seeded, reigning champions Troy State in the championship game, 60\u201355, to win their third Atlantic Sun/TAAC men's basketball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176669-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Golden Knights, therefore, received the Atlantic Sun's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176669-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nEven though the Atlantic Sun's membership decreased from twelve to eleven (Jacksonville State departed for the Ohio Valley) no changes to the format were made. As such, only the top eight teams from the conference tournament were eligible for the tournament. These eight teams were seeded based on regular season conference records and were all entered into the quarterfinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe 2004 Atlantic hurricane season was a very deadly, destructive, and extremely active Atlantic hurricane season, with over 3,200\u00a0deaths and more than $61\u00a0billion (2004 USD) in damage. More than half of the 16\u00a0tropical cyclones brushed or struck the United States. Due to the development of a Modoki El Ni\u00f1o \u2013 a rare type of El Ni\u00f1o in which unfavorable conditions are produced over the eastern Pacific instead of the Atlantic basin due to warmer sea surface temperatures farther west along the equatorial Pacific \u2013 activity was above average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe season officially began on June\u00a01 and ended on November\u00a030, though the season's last storm, Otto, dissipated on December\u00a03, extending the season beyond its traditional boundaries. The first storm, Alex, developed offshore of the Southeastern United States on July\u00a031, one of the latest dates on record to see the formation of the first system in an Atlantic hurricane season. It brushed the Carolinas and the Mid-Atlantic, causing one death and $7.5\u00a0million (2004\u00a0USD) in damage. Several storms caused only minor damage, including tropical storms Bonnie, Earl, Hermine, and Matthew. In addition, hurricanes Danielle, Karl, and Lisa, Tropical Depression Ten, Subtropical Storm Nicole and Tropical Storm Otto had no effect on land while tropical cyclones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season\nThere are four notable storms: Hurricane Charley, that made landfall in Florida as a Category\u00a04 hurricane on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS), causing $16\u00a0billion in damage in the United States alone. Later in August, Hurricane Frances struck the Bahamas and Florida, causing at least 49\u00a0deaths and $10.1\u00a0billion in damage. The costliest and most intense storm was Hurricane Ivan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season\nIt was a Category 5 hurricane that devastated multiple countries adjacent to the Caribbean, before entering the Gulf of Mexico and causing catastrophic damage on the Gulf Coast of the United States, especially in the states of Alabama and Florida. Throughout the countries it passed through, Ivan caused 129\u00a0fatalities and over $26.1\u00a0billion in damage. The deadliest storm was Hurricane Jeanne. In Haiti, torrential rainfall in the mountainous areas resulted in mudslides and severe flooding, causing at least 3,006\u00a0fatalities. Jeanne also struck Florida, inflicting extensive destruction. Overall, the storm caused at least $7.94\u00a0billion in damage and 3,042\u00a0deaths, ranking it as one of the deadliest Atlantic hurricanes in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season\nCollectively, the storms of this season caused at least 3,261\u00a0deaths and about $61.15\u00a0billion in damage, making it the costliest Atlantic hurricane season at the time, until surpassed by the following year. As of 2021 it ranks as fifth costliest. With six hurricanes reaching at least Category\u00a03 intensity, 2004 also had the most major hurricanes since 1996. However, that record would also be surpassed by 2005 and 2020, with seven major hurricanes in those years. In the spring of 2005, four names were retired: Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne. This tied the then-record most names retired with 1955 and 1995, a mark also surpassed in 2005, when five were retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nSince 1984, forecasts of hurricane activity have been issued before each hurricane season by noted hurricane expert Dr. William M. Gray and his associates at Colorado State University (CSU), and separately by forecasters with the U.S. Government's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). According to CSU, the average season between 1950 and 2000 had 9.6\u00a0tropical storms, 5.9\u00a0hurricanes, and 2.3\u00a0major hurricanes, which are Category\u00a03 or higher on the Saffir-Simpson hurricane wind scale. A normal season, as defined by NOAA, has 12.1\u00a0named storms, of which 6.4\u00a0reach hurricane strength and 2.7\u00a0become major hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nCSU released its first prediction on December\u00a05, 2003, which projected an above average season, with 13\u00a0named storms, seven hurricanes, and three major hurricanes. This forecast was adjusted upward slightly on April\u00a02. On May\u00a017, prior to the start of the season, NOAA forecasters predicted a 50% probability of activity above the normal range, with twelve to fifteen tropical storms, six to eight of those becoming hurricanes, and two to four those hurricanes reaching major intensity. Dr. Gray released a prediction on May\u00a028 that was similar, with 14 named storms, eight reaching hurricane strength, and three becoming major hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nAfter the season began, Dr. Gray announced he had revised his predictions slightly downwards on August\u00a06, citing mild El Ni\u00f1o conditions. His new forecast was thirteen named storms, seven hurricanes, and three reaching major hurricane intensity. On August\u00a010, NOAA released an updated prediction as well, with a 90% probability of above-to-near normal activity, but the same number of storms forecast. CSU issued another forecast on September\u00a03, indicating sixteen tropical storms, eight hurricanes, and five major hurricanes. The season ended up with sixteen tropical depressions, fifteen named storms, nine hurricanes, and six major hurricanes, which matched CSU's final prediction on October\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe Atlantic hurricane season officially began on June\u00a01, 2004. However, the first system, Hurricane Alex, did not develop until July\u00a031. It was an above average season in which 16\u00a0tropical cyclones formed. All but one tropical depression attained tropical storm status, and nine of these became hurricanes. Six hurricanes further intensified into major hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nDue to a Modoki El Ni\u00f1o \u2013 a rare type of El Ni\u00f1o in which unfavorable conditions are produced over the eastern Pacific instead of the Atlantic basin due to warmer sea surface temperatures farther west along the equatorial Pacific \u2013 activity was above average. Five hurricanes and three tropical storms made landfall during the season and caused 3,270\u00a0deaths and about $60.9\u00a0billion in damage. Additionally, Hurricane Alex and Tropical Storm Earl also caused losses and fatalities, though neither made landfall. The season officially ended on November\u00a030, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nTropical cyclogenesis began at the end of July, with the development of Hurricane Alex on July\u00a031. However, it did not become a named storm until the following day, which was the fifth-latest start since the 1952 season. August was an unusually active month, with eight named storms, including Alex, Bonnie, Charley, Danielle, Earl, Frances, Gaston, and Hermine. This broke the record for the most named storms in the month of August set in 1933 and 1995. This new record was tied in 2012. On average, there are only three tropical storms and one to two hurricanes in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nOf the eight systems that month, five became hurricanes and three strengthened further into major hurricanes. A total of five tropical cyclones developed in September, including the most intense system of the season, Hurricane Ivan. Activity decreased further in October, with the formation of only two systems, Tropical Storm Matthew and Subtropical Storm Nicole. The season then went dormant for over a month and a half, until Tropical Storm Otto developed on November\u00a029. Otto was the final tropical cyclone of the season and degenerated into a remnant low pressure on December\u00a03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe season's activity was reflected with an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) rating of 227, one of the highest values on record in the Atlantic basin. ACE is, broadly speaking, a measure of the power of the hurricane multiplied by the length of time it existed, so storms that last a long time, as well as particularly strong hurricanes, have high ACEs. Calculations are provided at Talk:2004 Atlantic hurricane season/ACE calcs. It is only calculated for full advisories on tropical systems at or exceeding 39\u00a0mph (63\u00a0km/h), which is tropical storm strength.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe 2004\u00a0season was very deadly, with about 3,270\u00a0fatalities overall. Nearly all of the deaths were reported in Haiti following the floods and mudslides caused by Tropical Storm Jeanne. The other tropical cyclones that caused fatalities include Hurricane Alex, Charley, Frances, Gaston, and Ivan, and Tropical Storms Bonnie and Earl. Because four out of the six major hurricanes made several landfalls, the season was also extremely damaging, with losses estimated at about $60.9\u00a0billion, over half of which was caused by Hurricanes Charley and Ivan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nA few other tropical cyclones caused light to moderate damage, including Hurricanes Alex and Gaston and Tropical Storms Bonnie and Matthew. In addition to the 16\u00a0tropical cyclones of the season, a tropical low in May brought torrential flooding to Haiti and the Dominican Republic, killing 2,000\u00a0people and causing extensive damage. Although the system was not officially classified as a tropical storm, it did have a circulation with loosely organized convection, resembling a subtropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Records\nThe 2004\u00a0season had numerous unusual occurrences and set many records. However, most of them were surpassed by the following year. With six hurricanes reaching at least Category 3 intensity, 2004 also had the most major hurricanes since 1996, a record which would be surpassed in 2005. Florida was directly impacted by four major hurricanes during the season \u2013 Hurricane Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne. This was the first time four tropical cyclones produced hurricane-force winds in one state during a single season since four hurricanes made landfall in Texas in 1886.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Records\nThere were many other hurricanes in the season that were individually unusual. Hurricane Alex was the strongest hurricane on record to intensify north of 38\u00b0N latitude. Hurricane Ivan was the most unusual storm of the season. Ivan became the southernmost Category 4 hurricane on record in the Atlantic basin, as well as the first major hurricane in the Atlantic on record to form as low as 10\u00b0N latitude. A 91\u00a0ft (28\u00a0m) wave, possibly the largest ever recorded, was attributed to Ivan; this wave may have been as high as 131\u00a0ft (40\u00a0m). Additionally, hurricanes Charley and Ivan ranked as the third and second costliest hurricanes in the United States at the time, respectively, behind only Hurricane Andrew. With $60.9\u00a0billion in damage, this was the costliest season at the time, until the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Alex\nThe interaction between a trough and tropical wave resulted in the development of a tropical depression on July\u00a031, while centered about 200\u00a0mi (320\u00a0km) east of Jacksonville, Florida. After initially being poorly organized, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Alex late on August\u00a01. The storm tracked northeastward and became a hurricane on August\u00a03. As Alex moved out to sea, it intensified into a Category\u00a03 hurricane and peaked with winds of 120\u00a0mph (195\u00a0km/h). Alex reached major hurricane status second farthest north in the Atlantic, after Hurricane Ellen in 1973. Eventually, Alex weakened due to cooler sea surface temperatures. The hurricane fell to tropical storm intensity around 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a06. Six hours later, it became extratropical while located about 955\u00a0mi (1,540\u00a0km) east of Cape Race, Newfoundland, and was soon absorbed by a large extratropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 949]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Alex\nRough seas and a storm surge up to 6\u00a0ft (1.8\u00a0m) on the Outer Banks of North Carolina caused minor beach erosion and washed out portions of a highway in Cape Fear. A man drowned near Nags Head due to these conditions. Strong winds also pelted the area, with sustained winds reaching 77\u00a0mph (124\u00a0km/h) and gusts up to 105\u00a0mph (169\u00a0km/h) in Hatteras. As a result, 10,000\u00a0buildings and houses were left without electricity. The combination of strong winds and the storm surge damaged more than 100 buildings and houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Alex\nAt Ocracoke, coastal flooding was considered the worst since Hurricane Gloria in 1985. Additionally, rainfall up to 7.55\u00a0in (192\u00a0mm) on the Outer Banks flooded nearly 500\u00a0cars. Damage in North Carolina reached about $7.5\u00a0million. In Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, three people were injured by rip currents, while five others were hospitalized in New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bonnie\nA tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Two on August\u00a03, while located about 315\u00a0mi (505\u00a0km) east of Barbados. The depression crossed the Lesser Antilles on August\u00a04, before degenerating back into a tropical wave. The remnants traversed the Caribbean Sea, and re-developed into Tropical Depression Two on August\u00a08. The depression strengthened further upon reaching the Gulf of Mexico and was upgraded to Tropical Storm Bonnie on August\u00a09. A break in a mid-level ridge re-curved Bonnie northward on August\u00a010 and then northeastward on August\u00a011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bonnie\nLater that day, the storm peaked with winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h), before wind shear began weakening it. At 14:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a012, Bonnie made landfall near Apalachicola, Florida with winds of 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h). The storm rapidly weakened inland and degenerated as a remnant low offshore of New Jersey on August\u00a014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bonnie\nIn the Lesser Antilles, the storm brought light winds and mostly localized flooding to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. The regenerated system brought light rainfall to the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula. In North Florida, scattered power outages were reported, and rainfall and storm surge flooded roads, especially in Taylor County. A tornado in Jacksonville damaged several businesses and homes. Tornadoes were also reported in The Carolinas, and Virginia, with one in North Carolina destroying 17\u00a0homes and impacting 59\u00a0others. It also caused three deaths and $1.27\u00a0million in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bonnie\nIn Greenville County, South Carolina, a few roads were washed out, while portions of U.S. Route 501 were inundated with 1\u00a0ft (0.30\u00a0m) of water. Minor flooding also occurred in Mid-Atlantic and New England. In Atlantic Canada, basement and road flooding was reported, especially in Edmundston, New Brunswick. Slick roads caused one death in that area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Charley\nA tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Three on August\u00a09 to the south-southeast of Barbados. Early on August\u00a010, it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Charley, before reaching hurricane intensity south of Jamaica on August\u00a011. Charley continued to strengthen after curving northwestward and was a 120\u00a0mph (195\u00a0km/h) Category\u00a03 hurricane when it made landfall near Alqu\u00edzar, Cuba on August\u00a013. After emerging into the Straits of Florida, Charley weakened to a Category\u00a02 hurricane. However, the storm abruptly strengthened into a Category\u00a04 hurricane later on August\u00a013, with winds peaking at 150\u00a0mph (240\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Charley\nAt 19:45\u00a0UTC on August\u00a013, Charley made landfall at Cayo Costa, Florida, followed by another landfall in Punta Gorda about an hour later. Charley rapidly weakened over Florida, falling to Category\u00a01 by early on August\u00a014. Later that day, the storm emerged into the Atlantic, before making two more landfalls in Cape Romain and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina as a minimal hurricane. Late on August\u00a014, Charley weakened to a tropical storm over southeastern North Carolina, shortly before becoming extratropical near Virginia Beach, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Charley\nThe storm brought rainfall and strong winds to the island of Jamaica. In Westmoreland Parish, flooding inundated several homes and damaged roadways. Winds in the parish caused a large tree to fall on a house, resulting in significant damage to the home. In Kingston, high winds damaged power lines and homes. Widespread power outages occurred due to numerous downed trees and power lines. The storm left $4.1\u00a0million in damage and one fatality in Jamaica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Charley\nWinds up to 118\u00a0mph (190\u00a0km/h) in Cuba left all of Pinar del R\u00edo Province and more than 50% of La Habana Province without electricity for several days. At least 70,290\u00a0homes and about 3,000\u00a0agricultural buildings were either damaged or destroyed. Roughly 95% of sugar cane, bean, and banana crops were ruined. There were four deaths and $923\u00a0million in damage. Impact in Florida was extreme: strong winds caused 2\u00a0million power outages and destroyed more than 2,439\u00a0structures and impacted over 26,749\u00a0others. Charley caused 24\u00a0deaths and 792\u00a0injuries. Agricultural losses were heavy, especially to oranges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0016-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Charley\nDamage to agriculture totaled about $2.2\u00a0billion. In South Carolina, 2,231\u00a0houses were damaged, with 2,317\u00a0of those severely damaged and 40\u00a0were destroyed. Approximately 141,000\u00a0people were left without electricity. Port Charlotte was left without electricity for 13 days. Winds up to 85\u00a0mph (137\u00a0km/h) in North Carolina downed trees and power lines, and left 65,000\u00a0homes without power. Charley destroyed 40\u00a0houses and damaged 2,231\u00a0other homes in the state. Throughout the United States, the storm caused $16\u00a0billion in damage, with nearly of all of it in Florida. The remnants of Charley produced light rainfall in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Danielle\nA tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Four while south-southeast of Cape Verde on August\u00a013. Although sea surface temperatures were only marginally warm, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Danielle early on August\u00a014. Further intensification occurred and by early on August\u00a015, Danielle reached hurricane status. The storm deepened significantly over the next 24\u00a0hours and became a Category\u00a02 hurricane. Later on August\u00a016, Danielle peaked as strong Category\u00a02 hurricane with winds of 110\u00a0mph (175\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 964\u00a0mbar (28.5\u00a0inHg).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Danielle\nAt the time of peak intensity on August\u00a016, Danielle was heading northward to north-northwestward because of a subtropical ridge. Shortly thereafter, southwesterly vertical shear began increasing, causing the hurricane to weaken. Mid -level flow associated with a diffluent trough caused Danielle to move northeastward on August\u00a018. Later that day Danielle deteriorated to a Category\u00a01 hurricane, hours before being downgraded to a tropical storm. On August\u00a019, Danielle became nearly stationary and moved erratically while southwest of the Azores. Eventually, the storm curved west-southwestward and weakened to a tropical depression on August\u00a020. About 24\u00a0hours later, Danielle degenerated into a remnant low-pressure area. The remnant low moved westward and then to the north-northwest, before dissipating about 795\u00a0mi (1,280\u00a0km) west-southwest of the westernmost islands of the Azores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 949]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Earl\nBy August\u00a013, a tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Five while located about 1,150\u00a0mi (1,850\u00a0km) east of the Lesser Antilles. The depression headed westward between 21 and 29\u00a0mph (34 and 47\u00a0km/h) due to a strong subtropical ridge located to its north. After developing banding features and an increase in Dvorak intensity estimates, the depression was upgraded to Tropical Storm Earl at 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a014. The storm strengthened slightly further and on the following day, it reached maximum sustained winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h). Later on August\u00a015, Earl crossed the Windward Islands and passed just south of Grenada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Earl\nAlthough Earl appeared well-organized, it unexpectedly degenerated into a tropical wave on August\u00a016, after a reconnaissance aircraft reported no closed circulation. The remnants eventually reached the Pacific Ocean and developed into Hurricane Frank on August\u00a023. Tropical storm force winds and heavy rainfall in Grenada damaged at least 34\u00a0homes and a nursing home and toppled several trees and electrical poles. Damage on other islands was confined to a few impacted homes, moderate crop losses, and widespread power outages, especially in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Tobago. One fatality occurred and 19\u00a0people were listed as missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frances\nAround 00:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a024, a tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Six, while located about 755\u00a0mi (1,215\u00a0km) west-southwest of the southernmost islands of Cape Verde. Moving west-northwestward, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Frances later that day. Frances reached hurricane status late on August\u00a025 while curving northwestward. By August\u00a028, the storm reached an initial peak intensity as a Category\u00a04 hurricane with winds of 130\u00a0mph (215\u00a0km/h). Late the following day, Frances weakened to a Category\u00a03 hurricane during an eyewall replacement cycle. However, by August\u00a031, the storm re-intensified into a Category\u00a04 hurricane and attained its maximum sustained wind speed of 145\u00a0mph (230\u00a0km/h). Although approaching the Bahamas, wind shear and increasing westerly winds aloft caused Frances to weaken to a Category\u00a03 hurricane late on September\u00a02.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frances\nAt 19:30\u00a0UTC on September\u00a02, the system made landfall on San Salvador Island with winds of 125\u00a0mph (205\u00a0km/h). Early the next day, Frances struck Cat Island while somewhat weaker. The system decelerated and weakened slightly to a Category\u00a02 hurricane before landfall in Eleuthera hours later. By September\u00a04, Frances made another landfall on Grand Bahama with winds of 105\u00a0mph (165\u00a0km/h). Moving slowly west-northwestward, the hurricane made landfall in Hutchinson Island, Florida at the same intensity, early on September\u00a05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frances\nRapidly weakening, Frances fell to Category\u00a01 intensity around midday and deteriorated to a tropical storm about six hours later. On September\u00a06, the storm emerged into the Gulf of Mexico near New Port Richey, before another landfall at the mouth of the Aucilla River with winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h). Early on September\u00a07, Frances weakened to a tropical depression over Georgia. By late the next day, the system became extratropical, though the remnants persisted until dissipation over the Gulf of Saint Lawrence on September\u00a011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frances\nIn the Bahamas, about 75% of residents lost electricity. Between 13 and 17\u00a0percent of the non-native Australian pine on San Salvador Island experienced damage, primarily from snapping, though some browning from salt spray was noted. Several feet of water flooded the international airport at Freeport. Insured losses reached about $300\u00a0million. Severe damage was also dealt to banana, corn, and pineapple crops. About 4,160\u00a0homes received minor damage, while 2,522\u00a0houses were rendered uninhabitable or destroyed. About 700\u00a0people were left homeless. Additionally, sea walls, schools, bridges, roads, and docks suffered damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frances\nStrong winds brought severe damage to Florida, especially counties along the east coast. Hundreds of homes, mobile homes, and businesses were destroyed in Indian River, Martin, and St. Lucie counties, and damage was inflicted on thousands of other structures there. In the tri-county area alone, damage totaled approximately $4.5\u00a0billion. Palm Beach County also suffered particularly severely, with 15,000\u00a0houses and 2,400\u00a0businesses damaged there. About 4.27\u00a0million customers were left without electricity in Florida. Frances and its remnants brought extensive flooding to other states, especially in Georgia, North Carolina, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0023-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frances\nThe storm spawned 101\u00a0tornadoes in the United States, with 45\u00a0in South Carolina alone. Damage in the United States totaled approximately $9.8\u00a0billion, placing Frances among the costliest hurricanes in the country. Overall, the storm caused 49\u00a0deaths, two each in the Bahamas and Ohio, eight in Georgia, and thirty-seven in Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gaston\nA frontal low-pressure area developed into Tropical Depression Seven at 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a027, while located about 130\u00a0mi (210\u00a0km) east-southeast of Charleston, South Carolina. The depression gradually strengthened and was upgraded to Tropical Storm Gaston early on August\u00a028. Initially, Gaston tracked slowly, moving southeastward and then westward, before a developing mid- to upper-level ridge re-curved the storm northwestward. Gaston strengthened and briefly became a hurricane at 120:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a029, although operationally it was thought to have peaked as a strong tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gaston\nTwo hours later, the storm made landfall near Awendaw, South Carolina with winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h). Gaston weakened rapidly inland and was only a tropical depression by early on August\u00a030. Gaston re-strengthened into a tropical storm while located over eastern Virginia on August\u00a031, just hours before emerging into the Atlantic. Gaston re-intensified slightly further, but became extratropical near Sable Island on September\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gaston\nIn South Carolina, an unofficial measurement indicated wind gusts up to 82\u00a0mph (132\u00a0km/h) in South Capers Island, which is near Parris Island. Strong winds destroyed eight homes, damaged more than 3,000\u00a0buildings, and left more than 150,000\u00a0people without power. Additionally, flash flooding further inland severely damaged or destroyed at least 20\u00a0homes in Berkeley County. In North Carolina, widespread street flooding occurred, including inundation of portions of Interstates 40 and 95. Several trees were downed by strong winds, especially in Chatham and Johnston counties. A tornado in Hoke County damaged several homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Gaston\nSevere flooding occurred in east-central Virginia due to rainfall amounts up to 12.6\u00a0in (320\u00a0mm). In Chesterfield, Dinwiddie, Hanover, Henrico, and Prince George counties, 350\u00a0homes and 230\u00a0businesses were damaged or destroyed, and many roads were closed due to high water. In Richmond, more than 120\u00a0roads were closed, including a portion of Interstate 95. There were nine fatalities. Throughout the United States, Gaston caused about $130\u00a0million in damage. The remnants produced light rainfall in Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and Sable Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Hermine\nThe frontal zone that spawned Hurricane Gaston developed an area of convection south of Bermuda on August\u00a025. After detaching from the front and developing a circulation, the system became a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a027. It initially remained weak while the convection fluctuated, until intensifying into Tropical Storm Hermine at 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a029. Later that day, wind shear exposed the circulation to the north of the convection, though the storm was able to a peak as a 60\u00a0mph (95\u00a0km/h) tropical storm on August\u00a030. The storm turned northward under the steering currents of a subtropical ridge. Increased wind shear from Gaston weakened Hermine. By late on August\u00a030, the circulation was entirely exposed from the convection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Hermine\nEarly on August\u00a031, Hermine made landfall near New Bedford, Massachusetts as a minimal tropical storm. It rapidly weakened while moving northward, and after becoming extratropical, Hermine was absorbed by a frontal zone later that day. The storm brought tropical storm force winds and light rainfall to eastern Massachusetts, reaching about 0.5\u00a0in (13\u00a0mm) on Cape Cod. The remnants of Hermine tracked across New Brunswick and produced locally heavy rainfall, peaking at about 2.36\u00a0in (60\u00a0mm). In Moncton, minor basement flooding and street closures were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ivan\nA westward-moving tropical wave developed into a tropical depression on September\u00a02, before becoming Tropical Storm Ivan on the following day. Tracking westward, Ivan gradually strengthened, reaching hurricane intensity on September\u00a05. On September\u00a06, the storm strengthened significantly, becoming a Category\u00a04 hurricane, despite being located at an unusually low latitude. It subsequently weakened, though it reached major hurricane status again the next day. Late on September\u00a07, Ivan passed close to Grenada while heading west-northwestward. Although located near the Netherlands Antilles on September\u00a09, Ivan briefly became a Category\u00a05 hurricane. During the next five days, Ivan fluctuated between a Category\u00a04 and 5\u00a0hurricane. The storm passed south of Jamaica on September\u00a011 and then the Cayman Islands on the next day. Although curving northwestward, Ivan brushed western Cuba as a Category\u00a05 hurricane on September\u00a014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 985]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ivan\nShortly after moving to the west of Cuba on September\u00a014, Ivan entered the Gulf of Mexico. Over the next two days, the storm gradually weakened while tracking north-northwestward and northward. At 06:50\u00a0UTC on September\u00a016, Ivan made landfall near Gulf Shores, Alabama with winds of 120\u00a0mph (195\u00a0km/h). It quickly weakened inland, falling to tropical storm status later that day and tropical depression strength by early on September\u00a017. The storm curved northeastward and eventually reached the Delmarva Peninsula, where it became extratropical on September\u00a018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ivan\nThe remnants of Ivan moved southward and then southwestward, crossing Florida on September\u00a021 and re-entering the Gulf of Mexico later that day. Late on September\u00a022, the remnants regenerated into Ivan in the central Gulf of Mexico as a tropical depression, shortly before re-strengthening into a tropical storm. After reaching winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h), wind shear weakened Ivan back to a tropical depression on September\u00a024. Shortly thereafter, Ivan made a final landfall near Holly Beach, Louisiana with winds of 35\u00a0mph (55\u00a0km/h) and subsequently dissipated hours later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ivan\nThroughout the Lesser Antilles and in Venezuela, Ivan caused 44\u00a0deaths and slightly more than $1.15\u00a0billion in losses, with nearly all of the damage and fatalities in Grenada. Although Ivan was passing south of Hispaniola, the outer bands of the storm caused four deaths in the Dominican Republic. In Jamaica, high winds and heavy rainfall left $360\u00a0million in damage and killed 17\u00a0people. The storm brought strong winds to the Cayman Islands, resulting in two deaths and $3.5\u00a0billion in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0030-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ivan\nIn Cuba, a combination of rainfall, storm surge, and winds resulted in $1.2\u00a0billion in damage, but no fatalities. Heavy damage was reported along the Gulf Coast of the United States. Along the waterfront of Escambia and Santa Rosa counties in Florida, nearly every structure was impacted. In the former, 10,000\u00a0roofs were damaged or destroyed. About 4,600\u00a0homes were demolished in the county. Similar impact occurred in Alabama. Property damage was major along Perdido Bay, Big Lagoon, Bayou Grande, Pensacola Bay and Escambia Bay. A number of homes were completely washed away by the high surge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0030-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ivan\nFurther inland, thousands of other houses were damaged or destroyed in many counties. Ivan produced a record tornado outbreak, with at least 119\u00a0twisters spawned collectively in nine states. Throughout the United States, the hurricane left 54\u00a0fatalities and $20.5\u00a0billion in damage. Six deaths were also reported in Atlantic Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Ten\nA tropical wave accompanied with a well-organized area of convection emerged off the western coast of Africa on August\u00a029. Performing a slow curve over the eastern Atlantic, the wave became increasingly less-defined over subsequent days as a result of strong southwesterly wind shear. Following the development of shower and thunderstorm activity near the center, the system acquired enough organization to be deemed a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a07, while positioned about 725\u00a0mi (1,165\u00a0km) southwest of the southernmost Azores. Hostile environmental conditions caused the depression to remain below tropical storm intensity and subsequently degenerate into a remnant low by 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a09 after the center decoupled from the remainder of the convective activity. The low-level circulation persisted near the Azores until dissipating the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 945]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nTropical Depression Eleven developed from a tropical wave at 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a013, while located about 70\u00a0mi (110\u00a0km) east-southeast of Guadeloupe. After crossing the island while moving west-northwestward, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Jeanne around midday on September\u00a014. It strengthened further in the Caribbean Sea, before making landfall near Guayama, Puerto Rico with winds of 70\u00a0mph (110\u00a0km/h) at 16:00\u00a0UTC the following day. Hours later, Jeanne emerged into the Mona Passage and resumed deepening, becoming at Category\u00a01 hurricane at midday on September\u00a016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0032-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nAround the time, the hurricane made another landfall at the eastern tip of Dominican Republic with winds of 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h). By early on September\u00a017, Jeanne weakened to a tropical storm due to its slow movement over the rough terrain of Hispaniola, and briefly fell to tropical depression intensity at 18:00\u00a0UTC. After re-emerging into the Atlantic, the storm then moved generally northward. After the system passed between the eastern Bahamas and Turks and Caicos Islands on September\u00a018, slow re-intensification occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nLate on September\u00a020, Jeanne again became a Category\u00a01 hurricane; around that time, it began to execute an anti-cyclonic loop. The storm moved eastward, before a trough of low pressure caused Jeanne to curve southeastward. Early on September\u00a022, the system strengthened into a Category\u00a02 hurricane. A deep-layer ridge slowly curved Jeanne to the west by the following day, around the time it weakened to a Category\u00a01 hurricane due to upwelled waters. However, the storm began re-intensifying on September\u00a024, becoming a Category\u00a02 hurricane again that day and a Category\u00a03 by September\u00a025.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nAt 14:00\u00a0UTC on the latter, Jeanne struck the Abaco Islands in the Bahamas with winds of 115\u00a0mph (185\u00a0km/h). The hurricane strengthened slightly further, peaking with maximum sustained winds of 120\u00a0mph (195\u00a0km/h). Jeanne made its final landfall on Hutchinson Island, Florida at the same time around 04:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a026. It quickly weakened after moving inland and fell to tropical storm intensity only 14\u00a0hours later. Curving northward, Jeanne decayed to a tropical depression over Georgia late on September\u00a027. Jeanne turned northeastward and became extratropical over Virginia after about 24\u00a0hours. The remnants briefly re-strengthened after moving offshore the Delmarva Peninsula, but dissipated late on September\u00a029.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nIn Guadeloupe, rainfall amounts up to 11.81\u00a0in (300\u00a0mm) caused flooding and mudslides throughout the island. Many roads and bridges were inundated or washed out. About 470\u00a0homes were damaged or destroyed. Similar impact was reported in Puerto Rico, with heavy precipitation causing flooding and mudslides. There was also heavy damage to crops, schools, houses, and businesses. Strong wind gusts left 70% of the island without power. Jeanne resulted in $169.9\u00a0million in damage and eight deaths. In Dominican Republic, major flooding was reported, with rivers overflowing, bridges collapsing, roads cut off, damage to agriculture, and mudslides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0034-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nStrong winds disrupted telephone services and caused power outages. Overall, hundreds of people became homeless and there was 23\u00a0deaths and $270\u00a0million in damage. Up to 13\u00a0in (330\u00a0mm) of rain fell on the mountainous region of Haiti, causing extreme flooding and mudslides, especially in the Gona\u00efves area. Over 200,000\u00a0people were left homeless and an estimated 3,006\u00a0fatalities occurred. In the Bahamas, communications were disrupted and some homes were inundated by storm surge in the Abaco Islands. Similar impact was reported on Grand Bahama, with several houses and the airport being flooded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0034-0002", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Jeanne\nFurther, winds tore-off and damaged a number of roofs. Throughout the state of Florida, strong winds were observed, leaving approximately 3.44\u00a0million people without electricity. Additionally, more than 101,611\u00a0homes were impacted by the storm, almost 14,000 of which severely or beyond repairs. Several other states experienced severe flooding. Overall, there were five deaths and about $7.5\u00a0billion in damage in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Karl\nA tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Twelve early on September\u00a016, while located 390\u00a0mi (630\u00a0km) southwest of Cape Verde. The depression moved westward under a subtropical ridge and became Tropical Storm Karl later that day. On September\u00a017, the storm curved northwestward and continued strengthening, reaching hurricane status early on September\u00a018. Karl intensified significantly while moving west to west-northwestward and became a major hurricane by early the next day. The storm briefly deepened to a Category\u00a04 hurricane on September\u00a020, before weakening slightly and subsequently re-strengthening to that intensity. With a steadily increasing wind field, Karl peaked with maximum sustained winds of 145\u00a0mph (230\u00a0km/h) early on September\u00a021 while resuming a northwestward motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Karl\nAfter peak intensity on September\u00a021, Karl weakened due to increasing wind shear, while moving northeastward in response to a baroclinic trough. After wind shear lessened, the storm briefly became a major hurricane again on September\u00a023. However, wind shear returned later that day and ocean temperatures began cooling. Another trough re-curved Karl northward on September\u00a024 as the storm was gradually weakening. Early on September\u00a025, Karl became extratropical while located about 585\u00a0mi (940\u00a0km) east of Cape Race, Newfoundland. The remnants of Karl accelerated northeastward and then east-northeastward. Sustained winds up to 89\u00a0mph (143\u00a0km/h) and gusts reaching 112\u00a0mph (180\u00a0km/h) were observed on Mykines in the Faroe Islands. The extratropical remnants of Karl dissipated over Norway on September\u00a028.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lisa\nAt 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a019, a tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Thirteen, which was centered located about 520\u00a0mi (840\u00a0km) west-southwest of Cape Verde. Despite unfavorable conditions due to outflow from nearby Hurricane Karl, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Lisa on September\u00a020. After nearly reaching hurricane status, Lisa began executing a small cyclonic loop due to a Fujiwhara interaction with a tropical wave. Additionally, the interaction caused Lisa to weaken to a tropical depression on September\u00a023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lisa\nAs Lisa merged with the tropical wave, convection became difficult to distinguish between the two systems, although Lisa maintained a distinct low-level circulation throughout the merger. During the next several days, the storm fluctuated in intensity, from a tropical depression to a strong tropical storm. A deep mid- to upper-level trough caused Lisa to turn northward on September\u00a025.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Lisa\nBy October\u00a01, a short-wave trough re-curved and accelerated Lisa toward the northeast. The storm strengthened and was finally upgraded to a hurricane at 06:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a02. At that time, Lisa attained its peak intensity with winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 987\u00a0mbar (29.1\u00a0inHg). After sea surface temperatures dropped to around 73.4\u00a0\u00b0F (23.0\u00a0\u00b0C), Lisa weakened and was downgraded to a tropical storm later on October\u00a02. The storm lost tropical characteristics and transitioned into an extratropical cyclone at 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a03. Shortly thereafter, the remnants of Lisa were absorbed by a frontal zone while located about 1,150\u00a0mi (1,850\u00a0km) of Cape Race, Newfoundland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Matthew\nA tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Fourteen on October\u00a08, while located about 205\u00a0mi (330\u00a0km) southeast of Brownsville, Texas. The depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Matthew about six hours later. The storm moved generally northeastward or northward throughout its duration. After briefly weakening, Matthew attained its peak intensity late on October\u00a09, with maximum sustained winds of 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h) and a minimum barometric pressure of 997\u00a0mbar (29.4\u00a0inHg). At 11:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a010, Matthew made landfall near Cocodrie, Louisiana with winds of 40\u00a0mph (65\u00a0km/h). Only an hour later, Matthew weakened to a tropical depression and became extratropical early on October\u00a011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Matthew\nThe storm dropped heavy rainfall in southeastern Louisiana, with a peak total of 18\u00a0in (460\u00a0mm) near Haynesville. Along the coast, storm surge up to 5.85\u00a0ft (1.78\u00a0m) was observed at Frenier. A combination of storm surge and heavy rainfall inundated numerous roads in Lafourche, Orleans, St. Bernard, St. John the Baptist, St. Tammany, and Terrebonne parishes. About 20\u00a0homes in Terrebonne Parish were damaged, while several others were flooded in Lafourche Parish. A tornado also damaged the roof of a trailer in Golden Meadow. Winds resulted in electrical outages for approximately 2,500\u00a0customers. The storm cracked water lines in LaPlace, leaving nearly 30,000\u00a0residents without tap water. Overall, losses in Louisiana reached $255,000. In Mississippi, storm surge caused coastal flooding in Hancock County. Damage in the state totaled only $50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Nicole\nThe interaction between an upper-level trough and a decaying cold front led to the development of a low-pressure area on October\u00a08 to the southwest of Bermuda. Although it lacked a well-defined center of circulation, the system was already producing gale-force winds. Early on October 10, the low developed a curved band of convection northwest of the center, and it organized into Subtropical Storm Nicole by 06:00\u00a0UTC. An approaching mid-level trough turned the system northeastward. Early on October 11, Nicole passed about 60\u00a0mi (95\u00a0km) northwest of Bermuda. On the island, Nicole and its precursor dropped 5.86\u00a0in (148\u00a0mm) of rainfall and produced wind gusts reaching 60\u00a0mph (97\u00a0km/h). The winds left 1,800\u00a0homes and businesses without power, while the unsettled conditions caused delays at the L.F. Wade International Airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 898]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Storm Nicole\nAfter passing Bermuda, Nicole developed an area of convection near the center, suggesting the beginning of a transition to a tropical cyclone. However, strong wind shear caused weakening after the storm reached peak winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h), preventing Nicole's transition to a fully tropical cyclone. A larger extratropical storm absorbed Nicole on October\u00a011, while the storm was located south of Nova Scotia. In Maine, gusty winds from the remnants of Nicole downed trees and electrical lines, resulting some power outages, especially along or near the coast. Similarly, 11,300\u00a0people were left without electricity in Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick alone after winds uprooted trees and toppled power lines. Significant rainfall was also produced in the region, peaking at about 5\u00a0in (130\u00a0mm) in northeastern Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 898]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Otto\nA cold front and a strong upper-level trough interacted, resulting in the development of an extratropical low-pressure area on November\u00a026. After losing frontal characteristics, the system transitioned into Subtropical Storm Otto at 12:00\u00a0UTC on November\u00a029, while located about 1,150\u00a0mi (1,850\u00a0km) east-southeast of Bermuda. Initially, the storm moved northwestward due to a weakness in a subtropical ridge. Late on November\u00a029, Otto attained its maximum sustained wind speed of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h). Deep convection formed near the center and the storm began transitioning to a warm core system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Otto\nThe system was re-classified as Tropical Storm Otto at 12:00\u00a0UTC on November\u00a030, although it is possible that Otto transitioned to a fully tropical cyclone one day earlier, on November\u00a029. Although sea temperatures were relatively cold, Otto did not quickly weaken, because of low wind shear. On December\u00a01, the storm curved southeastward and completed a cyclonic loop later that day. After wind shear began increasing, Otto started weakening and was downgraded to a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on December\u00a02. At that, Otto reached its minimum barometric pressure of 995\u00a0mbar (29.4\u00a0inHg). Early on December\u00a03, the storm degenerated into a remnant low while located about 920\u00a0mi (1,480\u00a0km) southeast of Bermuda. Otto was the first tropical cyclone to form in the month of November since Olga of 2001", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Season effects\nThe following table lists all of the storms that have formed in the 2004 Atlantic hurricane season. It includes their duration, names, landfall(s) (in parentheses), damages, and death totals. Deaths in parentheses are additional and indirect (an example of an indirect death would be a traffic accident), but were still related to that storm. Damage and deaths include totals while the storm was extratropical, a wave, or a low, and all of the damage figures are in 2004 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names\nThe following names were used for named storms that formed in the North Atlantic in 2004. This is the same list used for the 1998 season except for Gaston and Matthew, which replaced Georges and Mitch. The names not retired from this list were used again in 2010. Storms were named Gaston, Matthew, and Otto for the first time in 2004. Names that were not assigned are marked in gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176670-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nOn April 5, 2005, The World Meteorological Organization retired four names \u2013 Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne due to extreme damages and death toll and will not be used again for an Atlantic hurricane. They were replaced in the 2010 season by Colin, Fiona, Igor, and Julia. The 2004 season is tied with the 1955, 1995, and 2017 seasons for the second-highest number of names retired after a single season in the Atlantic basin, surpassed only by the 2005 season, which had five names retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176671-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe 2004 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Auburn compiled a record of 13\u20130, winning the Southeastern Conference championship and finishing the season ranked #2 in both the AP Poll and the Coaches' Poll. Beginning the season ranked #17 in the AP poll and #18 in the Coaches' Poll, the Tigers were denied a berth in the BCS National Championship Game because they finished the regular season ranked #3 in the BCS rankings. Head coach Tommy Tuberville, who was nearly fired after the 2003 season, was named national Coach of the Year by the Associated Press. This was Auburn's third undefeated season in which they played over ten games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176671-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe team defeated LSU, Georgia, and Tennessee (twice, facing them a second time in the SEC Championship game), all of whom were ranked opponents. They were left out of the BCS National Championship Game, and instead went to the 2005 Sugar Bowl, beating #9 Virginia Tech, 16\u201313, to finish 13\u20130. USC and Oklahoma played for the national title in the Orange Bowl. USC's national title was later vacated by the NCAA. Both Darryl W. Perry and GBE College Football Ratings awarded their national titles to Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176671-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe team's roster featured four first-round NFL draft picks in running back Carnell Williams, running back Ronnie Brown, defensive back Carlos Rogers, and quarterback Jason Campbell, as well as five future Pro Bowl participants in offensive linemen Marcus McNeill and Ben Grubbs, running back Ronnie Brown, Carlos Rogers, and defensive tackle Jay Ratliff. Permanent team captains were Campbell, Williams, Brown, Rogers, and Bret Eddins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176672-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Auckland City mayoral election\nThe 2004 Auckland City mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections held that same year. In 2004, elections were held for the Mayor of Auckland plus other local government positions including nineteen city councillors. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176672-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Auckland City mayoral election, Ward results\nCandidates were also elected from wards to the Auckland City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176673-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours 2004 are appointments to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by Australian citizens. The list was announced on 26 January 2004 by the Governor General of Australia, Michael Jeffrey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176673-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours are the first of the two major annual honours lists, the first announced to coincide with Australia Day (26 January), with the other being the Queen's Birthday Honours, which are announced on the second Monday in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176674-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia national soccer team season\nThis page summarises the Australia national soccer team fixtures and results in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176674-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\n2004 commenced with a trip to Venezuela for a first ever meeting with the Venezuela national football team in a friendly which finished 1\u20131 after an injury time equaliser to the hosts. This was followed by a 1\u20130 friendly win in London over South Africa. Following this Australia hosted Turkey in a two-match friendly series. The Turks were ranked 7th in the world at the time and won both fixtures, 3\u20131 in Sydney and then 1\u20130 in Melbourne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176674-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nIn late May and early June Australia hosted the final tournament of the 2004 OFC Nations Cup in Adelaide. The tournament doubled as qualification for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. Australia largely cruised through their matches although a surprise 2\u20132 draw with Solomon Islands in the last game meant the two nations would meet again in a two-legged playoff to determine the OFC Nations champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176674-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nThese fixtures took place in October. Australia comfortably won both legs. A 5\u20131 win in Honiara was followed with a 6\u20130 win in Sydney to be crowned OFC Nations champions and qualify for the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176674-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nThe year ended with a 2\u20132 friendly draw in London to Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176675-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia rugby union tour of Europe\nThe 2004 Wallabies Spring Tour was a series of five matches played by the Australia national rugby union team in November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176675-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches\nScotland: 15.Stuart Moffat, 14.Sean Lamont, 13.Graeme Morrison, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Chris Paterson, 10.Dan Parks, 9.Chris Cusiter, 8.Ally Hogg, 7.Donnie Macfadyen, 6.Scott Gray, 5.Scott Macleod, 4.Nathan Hines, 3.Bruce Douglas, 2.Gordon Bulloch (capt. ), 1.Allan Jacobsen, \u2013 replacements: 16.Ross Ford, 17.Craig Smith, 18.Alastair Kellock, 19.Jon Petrie, 20.Mike Blair, 21.Andy Craig, 22.Hugo Southwell Australia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Clyde Rathbone, 13.Stirling Mortlock, 12.Matt Giteau, 11.Lote Tuqiri, 10.Stephen Larkham, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.John Roe, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.George Smith, 5.Dan Vickerman, 4.Justin Harrison, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Jeremy Paul, 1.Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 16.Brendan Cannon, 17.Matt Dunning, 18.Mark Chisholm, 19.David Lyons, 20.Elton Flatley, 21.Wendell Sailor, 22.Mat Rogers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176675-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches\nFrance: 15.Nicolas Brusque, 14.Aurelien Rougerie, 13.Tony Marsh, 12.Yannick Jauzion, 11.Cedric Heymans, 10.Frederic Michalak, 9.Jean-Baptiste Elissalde, 8.Imanol Harinordoquy, 7.Olivier Magne, 6.Serge Betsen, 5.Jerome Thion, 4.Fabien Pelous (capt. ), 3.Sylvain Marconnet, 2.William Servat, 1.Olivier Milloud, \u2013 replacements: 16.Sebastien Bruno, 19.Julien Bonnaire, 20.Julien Peyrelongue, 22.Christophe Dominici \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 17.Nicolas Mas, 18.Pascal Pape, 21.Cl\u00e9ment PoitrenaudAustralia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Clyde Rathbone, 13.Stirling Mortlock, 12.Matt Giteau, 11.Lote Tuqiri, 10.Stephen Larkham, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.John Roe, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.George Smith, 5.Dan Vickerman, 4.Justin Harrison, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Jeremy Paul, 1.Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 17.Matt Dunning, 19.David Lyons, 20.Elton Flatley, 21.Wendell Sailor, 22.Mat Rogers \u2013 No entry: 16.Brendan Cannon, 18.Mark Chisholm", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 957]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176675-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches\nScotland: 15.Hugo Southwell, 14.Chris Paterson, 13.Ben Hinshelwood, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Sean Lamont, 10.Dan Parks, 9.Chris Cusiter, 8.Jon Petrie, 7.Donnie Macfadyen, 6.Ally Hogg, 5.Nathan Hines, 4.Stuart Grimes, 3.Gavin Kerr, 2.Gordon Bulloch (capt. ), 1.Allan Jacobsen, \u2013 replacements: 16.Robbie Russell, 17.Bruce Douglas, 18.Scott Macleod, 19.Jason White, 20.Mike Blair, 22.Graeme Morrison \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 21.Gordon RossAustralia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Clyde Rathbone, 13.Stirling Mortlock, 12.Matt Giteau, 11.Lote Tuqiri, 10.Stephen Larkham, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.David Lyons, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.George Smith, 5.Dan Vickerman, 4.Justin Harrison, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Jeremy Paul, 1.Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 16.Brendan Cannon, 17.Matt Dunning, 18.Radike Samo, 19.Stephen Hoiles, 20.Elton Flatley, 21.Wendell Sailor, 22.Mat Rogers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176675-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches\nEngland: 15.Jason Robinson (capt. ), 14.Mark Cueto, 13.Henry Paul, 12.Mike Tindall, 11.Josh Lewsey, 10.Charlie Hodgson, 9.Andy Gomarsall, 8.Martin Corry, 7.Lewis Moody, 6.Joe Worsley, 5.Steve Borthwick, 4.Danny Grewcock, 3.Julian White, 2.Steve Thompson, 1.Graham Rowntree, \u2013 replacements: 20.Harry Ellis, 21.Will Greenwood, 22.Ben Cohen \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Andy Titterrell, 17.Andrew Sheridan, 18.Ben Kay, 19.Andy HazellAustralia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Wendell Sailor, 13.Morgan Turinui, 12.Matt Giteau, 11.Lote Tuqiri, 10.Elton Flatley, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.David Lyons, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.George Smith, 5.Dan Vickerman, 4.Justin Harrison, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Jeremy Paul, 1.Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 17.Matt Dunning, 19.Stephen Hoiles, 22.Mat Rogers \u2013 No entry: 16.Brendan Cannon, 18.Radike Samo, 20.Matt Henjak, 21.Drew Mitchell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election\nElections to the Australian Capital Territory Legislative Assembly were held on Saturday, 16 October 2004. The incumbent Labor Party, led by Jon Stanhope, was challenged by the Liberal Party, led by Brendan Smyth. Candidates were elected to fill three multi-member electorates using a single transferable vote method, known as the Hare-Clark system. The result was a clear majority of nine seats in the 17-member unicameral Assembly for Labor. It marked the first and so far only time in the history of ACT self-government that one party was able to win a majority in its own right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election\nStanhope was elected Chief Minister at the first sitting of the sixth Assembly on 4 November 2004. The election was conducted by the ACT Electoral Commission and was the second time in Australia's history that an electronic voting and counting system was used for some, but not all, polling places, expanding on the initial trial of the system at the 2001 ACT election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Overview\nThe incumbent centre-left Labor Party, led by Chief Minister Jon Stanhope, attempted to win re-election for a second term after coming to power in 2001. Labor was challenged by the opposition centre-right Liberal Party, led by Brendan Smyth, who assumed the Liberal leadership in November 2002. A third party, the ACT Greens, held one seat in the Assembly through retiring member, Kerrie Tucker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Overview\nThe election saw all 17 members of the Assembly face re-election, with members being elected by the Hare-Clark system of proportional representation. The Assembly is divided into three electorates: five-member Brindabella (including Tuggeranong and parts of the Woden Valley) and Ginninderra (including Belconnen and suburbs) and seven-member Molonglo (including North Canberra, South Canberra, Gungahlin, Weston Creek, and the remainder of the Woden Valley). Election dates are set in statute to occur once every four years; the government has no ability to set the election date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Overview\nFollowing the 2001 election outcome, Labor held eight seats; the opposition Liberal Party held seven seats; with the Greens holding a further one seat; and the Democrats also holding one seat. In September 2002, Helen Cross resigned from the Liberal Party, and remained in the Assembly, sitting as an independent. Gary Humphries, the former Liberal leader, resigned from the Assembly on 25 November 2002 to fill a casual vacancy in the Australian Senate following the resignation of Margaret Reid. Humphries was replaced in the Assembly by Jacqui Burke who was sworn in on 18 February 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates\nSitting members at the time of the election are in bold. Tickets that elected at least one MLA are highlighted in the relevant colour. Successful candidates are indicated by an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Brindabella\nFive seats were up for election. The Labor Party was defending three seats. The Liberal Party was defending two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Brindabella\nMick Gentleman* John Hargreaves* Paschal Leahy Rebecca Logue Karin MacDonald*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Brindabella\nSteve Doszpot Steve Pratt* Megan Purcell Karen Schilling Brendan Smyth*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Ginninderra\nFive seats were up for election. The Labor Party was defending two seats. The Liberal Party was defending two seats. The Australian Democrats were defending one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Ginninderra\nWayne Berry* Ross Maxwell Susan McCarthy Mary Porter* Jon Stanhope*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Ginninderra\nBriant Clark Vicki Dunne* Ilona Fraser Bob Sobey Bill Stefaniak*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Molonglo\nSeven seats were up for election. The Labor Party was defending three seats. The Liberal Party had won three seats in 2001 but after Helen Cross's departure from the party in 2002 was defending two seats. The Greens were defending one seat. Helen Cross was also defending her seat with an independent list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Molonglo\nAndrew Barr Adina Cirson Simon Corbell* Katy Gallagher* Mike Hettinger Ted Quinlan* Kim Sattler", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Candidates, Molonglo\nLucille Bailie Jacqui Burke* Ron Forrester David Kibbey Richard Mulcahy* Gordon Scott Zed Seselja*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results\nAustralian Capital Territory general election, 16 October 2004Legislative Assembly << 2001\u20132008 >>", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results\nOn election night 16 October 2004, four hours after the close of polling, with 78 per cent of the vote counted, Liberal leader, Brendan Smyth, conceded defeat to Labor. Smyth conceded that the incumbent Labor Government had been returned for a second term and appeared set to win the Territory's first ever majority mandate. Labor had obtained 47 per cent of the vote across the ACT, with the Liberals at 34.8 per cent and the Greens at 9.2 per cent. Swings were recorded towards Labor (+5.3 per cent), Liberal (+3.2 per cent) and the ACT Greens (+0.1 per cent).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results\nSupport for the Democrats collapsed and they lost their one and only seat. Counting continued up until 27 October 2004, when all preferences were distributed, resulting in Labor winning nine seats, the Liberals winning seven seats, while the Greens won one seat. The ACT Electoral Commission determined and announced the election's final results on 29 October 2004. The result marked the first time in the history of ACT self-government that one party was able to win a majority in its own right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results\nIn Brindabella, Labor retained its three seats and the Liberals retained its two seats. Government minister John Hargreaves and backbencher Karin MacDonald were re-elected; with Mick Gentleman replacing the retired former Government minister Bill Wood. For the Liberal Party, leader Brendan Smyth and shadow minister Steve Pratt were both re-elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results\nLabor gained a seat in Ginninderra, where Democrats sitting member Roslyn Dundas unsuccessfully sought re-election. The Liberals retained their two seats. Chief Minister Jon Stanhope and Labor Speaker Wayne Berry were both re-elected, with Mary Porter winning the additional seat for Labor. Both Bill Stefaniak and Vicki Dunne retained their seats for the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results\nIn seven-member Molonglo, there was no change to representation from the 2001 ACT election with both Labor and the Liberals retaining three seats, and the Greens retaining one seat. Labor Deputy Chief Minister Ted Quinlan, and ministers Katy Gallagher and Simon Corbell all won re-election. The Liberal benches saw the re-election of one member, Jacqui Burke and two new members, Zed Seselja and Richard Mulcahy; following the retirement of long-serving member and former Speaker, Greg Cornwell. Helen Cross, elected as a Liberal member at the 2001 ACT election, resigned from the Liberal Party in September 2002 to become an independent. Cross failed to get re-elected at the 2004 ACT election. The Greens sitting member, Kerrie Tucker, resigned from the Assembly less than one month before the election. The Greens endorsed Deb Foskey, who was elected as the sole Green in the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 948]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results, Electronic voting and counting system, Overview\nThe ACT's electronic voting system was first used at the 2001 election and was again used at the 2004 election. The system used standard personal computers as voting terminals, with voters using a barcode to authenticate their votes. Voting terminals were linked to a server in each polling location using a secure local area network. No votes were taken or transmitted over a public network like the Internet. The electronic voting system was used in the pre-poll voting centres, which were open for three weeks before polling day, and which opened on election day as ordinary polling places. In polling places that did not have electronic voting, voters used traditional paper ballots. In electronic polling places, voters were given a choice of voting electronically or on paper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 108], "content_span": [109, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results, Electronic voting and counting system, Overview\nElectronic counting, which combines the counting of electronic votes and paper ballots, was first used in the ACT at the 2001 election and was again used in the 2004 election. In 2001 and 2004, preferences shown on paper ballots were data-entered by two independent operators, electronically checked for errors, and manually corrected if required. This data was then combined with the results of the electronic voting, and the computer program distributed preferences under the ACT's Hare-Clark electoral system. The software for the electronic voting and counting system was built using Linux open source software, which was chosen specifically for the electoral system to ensure that election software is open and transparent and could be made available to scrutineers, candidates and other participants in the electoral process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 108], "content_span": [109, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results, Electronic voting and counting system, 2004 statistics\nIn 2004, a total of 28,169 electronic votes were recorded at four pre-poll voting centres and at eight polling places on polling day. This number of electronic votes represented a 70 per cent increase on the 16,559 electronic votes cast at the 2001 election. The proportion of electronic votes in relation to all votes counted increased from 8.3 per cent in 2001 to 13.4 per cent in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 115], "content_span": [116, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results, Electronic voting and counting system, 2004 statistics\nAt each electronic polling place the number of voting machines was increased from ten in 2001 to at least fifteen in 2004 to ensure that those that wished to use computers to vote could do so with minimal queues. The ACT Electoral Commission claims that interim results for 20,722 votes using the electronic voting system were available through the Commission's website by ten minutes after the close of polls on polling night. Later in the night, a further 7,447 electronic votes cast were made available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 115], "content_span": [116, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176676-0021-0002", "contents": "2004 Australian Capital Territory general election, Results, Electronic voting and counting system, 2004 statistics\nBefore 10:00pm, interim preference results from all formal electronic votes cast were available, representing 13.6 per cent of all formal votes. Based on these, and other results, the Commission claims that commentators were able to accurately predict the election outcome. Of the seventeen candidates indicated as elected on election night using the 27,849 formal electronic votes, sixteen were ultimately elected. Only one candidate indicated as elected on election night was not ultimately successful \u2013 Labor candidate Andrew Barr was the last candidate indicated as elected in Molonglo on election night. After the full distribution of all preferences, the last position in Molonglo was taken by Liberal candidate Zed Seselja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 115], "content_span": [116, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176677-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Carrera Cup Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Carrera Cup Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing competition open to Porsche 911 GT3 Cup cars. The championship, which was the second Australian Carrera Cup Championship, was contested over a nine round series and was administered by CupCar Australia Pty Ltd. Alex Davison won the title from Jim Richards and Fabian Coulthard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176677-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Calendar\nThe championship was contested over a nine round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176677-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Results\nRace 2 of Round 5 at Queensland Raceway was cancelled following a crash on the first lap of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176678-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Drivers' Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Drivers' Championship was an Australian motor racing competition open to Formula 4000 cars. It was the 48th Australian Drivers' Championship and the sixteen and last to be contested by Formula Holden / Formula Brabham / Formula 4000 cars. The championship winner was awarded the 2004 CAMS Gold Star and the Silver Star Trophy was awarded to the winner of the \"Silver Star\" class which was restricted to approved competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176678-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Drivers' Championship\nThe championship, which was promoted as the 2004 Holden Australian Drivers' Championship, was dominated by reigning Australian Formula Ford Champion Neil McFadyen. McFadyn won six of the eight races and took second place at each of the two Winton Motor Raceway races behind International Formula 3000 returnee Rob Nguyen. With only one race finish off the podium, but no wins, Ty Hanger was the runner up ahead of Nguyen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176678-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Drivers' Championship, Calendar\nThe championship was contested over a four-round series with two races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176678-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Drivers' Championship, Calendar\nThe winner of each round (for presentation purposes only) was determined by the aggregation of Championship points awarded in that round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176678-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Drivers' Championship, Points system\nGold Start points were awarded on a 20\u201315\u201312\u201310\u20138\u20136\u20134\u20133\u20132\u20131 basis to the first ten outright finishers in each race. Silver Star points were awarded on a 20\u201315\u201312\u201310\u20138\u20136\u20134\u20133\u20132\u20131 basis to the first ten Silver Star class finishers in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176679-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula 3 Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Formula 3 Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing championship open to Australian Formula 3 cars. The championship, which was the fourth Australian Formula 3 Championship, was organised and administered by Formula 3 Australia Inc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176679-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula 3 Championship\nWestern Australian racer Karl Reindler took a narrow three point championship victory driving a Dallara F301 for South Australian based motor racing team, Team BRM. Reindler took the win over Queensland driver Chris Gilmour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176679-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula 3 Championship, Points system\nChampionship class points were awarded on a 20-15-12-10-8-6-4-3-2-1 basis to top ten placed Championship class drivers in each race. One additional point was awarded to the driver gaining pole position for the Championship class at each race and one additional point was awarded to the driver setting the fastest Championship class race lap in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176679-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula 3 Championship, Points system\nTrophy class points were awarded on a 20-15-12-10-8-6-4-3-2-1 basis to top ten placed Trophy class drivers in each race. One additional point was awarded to the driver gaining pole position for the Trophy class at each race and one additional point was awarded to the driver setting the fastest race Trophy class race lap in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176679-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula 3 Championship, Points system\nManufacturers Championship points were awarded on a 20-15-12-10-8-6-4-3-2-1 basis to the recognized engine manufacturers of cars classified as finishers in each race, irrespective of class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176680-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula Ford Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Formula Ford Championship was an Australian motor racing competition open to Formula Ford racing cars. The championship was managed by the Formula Ford Association Inc. and was promoted as the 2004 Ford Racing Australian Formula Ford Championship. It is recognised by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport (CAMS) as the 12th Australian Formula Ford Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176680-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula Ford Championship\nThe championship was won by David Reynolds driving a Van Diemen RF04.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176680-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Calendar\nThe championship was contested over an eight round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176680-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded on a 20-16-14-12-10-8-6-4-2-1 basis to the top ten finishers at each race. An additional point was awarded to the driver achieving pole position for the first race at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176680-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Standings\nAll competing cars were required to comply with Formula Ford regulations as defined by CAMS. These regulations specified the mandatory use of a Ford 1600cc crossflow engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 52], "content_span": [53, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176681-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian GT Performance Car Championship\nThe 2004 Australian GT Performance Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned Australian motor racing title, organised by Procar Australia as part of the PROCAR Championship Series and open to high performance coupes and sedans, racing with minimal modifications. It was the second running of the Australian GT Performance Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176681-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian GT Performance Car Championship\nDuring the running of the championship, PROCAR relinquished its Category Management rights back to the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176681-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian GT Performance Car Championship\nJustin Hemmes won the championship driving a Subaru Impreza WRX, defeating semi-factory Volkswagen Golf R32 driver Paul Stokell by 90 points. Mitsubishi Lancer driver Garry Holt was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176681-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian GT Performance Car Championship, Points system\nPoints were awarded on a 30-24-20-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis to the top 21 classified finishers in each race except for the two rounds run over two races, where the second race was worth double points. An additional 3 points were awarded to the driver setting the fastest qualifying time at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Australian Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Foster's Australian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 7 March 2004 at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit. It was Race 1 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. Michael Schumacher won the race for Ferrari from pole position in very dominant fashion, with his teammate Rubens Barrichello finishing behind him in second. This one-two finish gave Ferrari a strong 9-point lead in the constructors' standings after just one race. Williams and Renault each had both cars finish in the points while McLaren, a team that had enjoyed success in years preceding this, only managed one point, with David Coulthard finishing a lapped 8th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix\nThis race also marked the first time since the 2001 San Marino Grand Prix that cars competed without using fully-automatic gearboxes and launch control, which were both banned by the FIA after the 2003 season. The use of traction control, however, was still permitted by the FIA, and would continue to be used over the next three seasons, until being banned for the 2008 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nLeinders was entered as Third Driver but was refused a superlicence until he completed the required mileage in an F1 car. He satisfied this requirement before the next race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nQualifying resulted in a Ferrari one-two, with Juan Pablo Montoya third on the grid for Williams. Gianmaria Bruni, Christian Klien and Olivier Panis all failed to set a qualifying time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAt the start, Alonso was up and away and ahead of Button and looking for a way to deal with Montoya while Jarno Trulli went from ninth on the grid to be fifth out of the first corner. He was aided in his task by Montoya, who went howling down to Turn 1, braked just a hint too late and Montoya was jumped by the Renault of Fernando Alonso as he tried to stay ahead of the surging Alonso. He went off and Alonso had to put some wheels on the grass to avoid a disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMontoya went back to seventh. That condemned the Colombian to an afternoon stuck in traffic and put paid to any challenge there might have been for Alonso. Behind all this there were a few wheels off the grass as others sorted themselves out (notably both Saubers) while Takuma Sato bumped the rear end of Trulli's Renault, slightly (but significantly) damaging both cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe Ferraris were gone already and as the afternoon developed all that Fernando Alonso could do was to watch the rears of the two red cars as they disappeared from his view. It did not take long. By the fourth lap they were two seconds ahead. By the eighth lap they were five seconds clear and after that Alonso had nothing to do. No one else could keep up with him. Sauber's Giancarlo Fisichella had a long battle for position in the midfield with Jordan's Nick Heidfeld.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFisichella passed Heidfeld, who later dropped out of the race with a transmission failure. Montoya attempted to regain the place by going around the outside of the Spaniard into the first turn, but outbraked himself and ran wide. This dropped him behind his teammate Ralf Schumacher, who'd qualified 8th. Despite repassing Ralf Schumacher on-track, the Colombian ended up behind him again by the race's end in fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race proved that Ferrari once again had a dominant car, with Michael Schumacher winning from teammate Rubens Barrichello in Ferrari's first one-two since Japan 2002, while the rest of the field was over 20 seconds behind. Schumacher led every one of the 58 race laps. At the start, Montoya was jumped by the Renault of Fernando Alonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176682-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFernando Alonso gave Renault a podium with third place, while Jenson Button got BAR off the mark with sixth. Jarno Trulli finished 7th in the Renault and was the first lapped runner. McLaren seemed to be less competitive than in recent years, with Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen becoming the first retirement of the year, dropping out with an engine problem, and with David Coulthard picking up just 1 point in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176683-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Lacrosse League season\nResults and statistics for the Australian Lacrosse League season of 2004, the inaugural season for the ALL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship was an Australian motor racing competition for modified production-based coupes complying with \"Nations Cup\" regulations. Contested as part of the 2004 Procar Championship Series, it was sanctioned by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport as a National Championship with PROCAR Australia Pty Ltd appointed as the Category Manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship\nThe championship, which was the fifth Australian Nations Cup Championship, was won by defending champion Paul Stokell driving a Lamborghini Diablo GTR. Finishing second was Nathan Pretty driving a Holden Monaro 427C with David Stevens third in his turbocharged Porsche 911 GT2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship\nThe 2004 championship was eagerly awaited by fans of the category. Although it had lost John Bowe and his Ferrari 360 N-GT, popular young Danish driver Allan Simonsen would drive an ex-ALMS Ferrari 550 GT2 in selected rounds (as well as racing a Ferrari 360 Challenge in the Trophy Class) for Mark Coffey Racing while David Stevens introduced the 911 GT2. 59 year old Australian racing legend Peter Brock, after racing a Monaro for Garry Rogers Motorsport in 2003, left to form his own team (with Monaro's supplied by GRM) with himself and oldest son James Brock doing the driving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship\nGRM themselves would continue with Pretty driving the #427 Monaro as well as servicing the Team Brock cars between rounds. Ian Palmer, the brother of series founder Ross Palmer, raced a Honda NSX Brabham and also Peter Brock's Monaro for a number of races. Team Lamborghini Australia returned to defend their crown with Stokell driving the V12 Lamborghini Diablo and he was joined by Formula 3 driver Peter Hackett in a second Diablo GTR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship\nFollowing the 2004 championship, PROCAR shut down the Nations Cup championship citing financial difficulties (this also saw the cancellation of the 2004 Bathurst 24 Hour). From 2005 CAMS would revive the Australian GT Championship with the Nations Cup cars (with the exception of the Monaros) eligible to race in that series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship, Schedule\nThe championship was contested over a seven round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship, Classes\nCars competing in two classes, GT Class and Trophy Class, classified according to potential vehicle performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded in each class on a 30-24-20-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis to the top twenty one class placegetters in each race. 3 bonus points were awarded to the driver achieving pole position in each class during qualifying at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176684-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Nations Cup Championship, Points system\nCars from a separate series, the Porsche Drivers Challenge, were invited to compete with the Nations Cup cars at selected rounds however the drivers were not eligible for championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open\nThe 2004 Australian Open was a Grand Slam tennis tournament held in Melbourne, Australia from 19 January to 1 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open\nAndre Agassi was unsuccessful in defending his 2003 title, being defeated in the semi-finals by Marat Safin. This ended a 26-match winning streak for Agassi at the Australian Open, having previously won in 2000, 2001 and 2003, missing 2002 through injury. Roger Federer won his first Australian Open title, defeating Safin in the final. Serena Williams was unable to defend her 2003 title after withdrawing from the tournament due to a left knee injury. Justine Henin-Hardenne defeated compatriot and rival Kim Clijsters in the final to win her only Australian Open title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Seniors, Men's Doubles\nMicha\u00ebl Llodra / Fabrice Santoro defeated Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Seniors, Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Seniors, Mixed Doubles\nElena Bovina / Nenad Zimonji\u0107 defeated Martina Navratilova / Leander Paes, 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Juniors, Boys' Doubles\nScott Oudsema / Brendan Evans defeated David Gali\u0107 / David Jeflea, 6\u20131, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Juniors, Girls' Doubles\nChan Yung-jan / Sun Shengnan defeated Veronika Chvojkov\u00e1 / Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1, 7\u20135, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Wheelchair, Men's Doubles\nRobin Ammerlaan / Martin Legner defeated Tadeusz Kruszelnicki / Satoshi Saida, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176685-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open, Wheelchair, Women's Doubles\nMaaike Smit / Esther Vergeer defeated Sonja Peters / Sharon Walraven, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176686-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nScott Oudsema and Phillip Simmonds were the defending champions, but only Scott Oudsema competed that year with Brendan Evans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176686-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nBrendan Evans and Scott Oudsema won in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20131 against David Gali\u0107 and David Jeflea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176687-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nMarcos Baghdatis was the defending champion, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176687-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nGa\u00ebl Monfils defeated Josselin Ouanna (6\u20130, 6\u20133) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176688-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nCasey Dellacqua and Adriana Szili were the defending champions, but did not compete in the Juniors that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176688-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nChan Yung-jan and Sun Shengnan won the title, defeating Veronika Chvojkov\u00e1 and Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176689-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nBarbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176689-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nShahar Pe'er defeated Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 (6\u20131, 6\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176690-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMicha\u00ebl Llodra and Fabrice Santoro were the defending champions, and won the final 7\u20136(4), 6\u20133 against Bob and Mike Bryan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176691-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer defeated Marat Safin, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2004 Australian Open. It was his first Australian Open title and second Major title overall. The victory granted Federer the world No. 1 ranking the following week for the first time in his career, and he would hold the top ranking for a record 237 consecutive weeks, until 17 August 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176691-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndre Agassi was the defending champion, but was defeated in the semifinals by Safin. This ended his streak of 26 match wins at the Australian Open (extending back to 2000 as he did not play in 2002).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176691-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nSafin also defeated No. 1 seed Andy Roddick in the quarterfinals. This was the only time in Roddick's career where he was seeded No. 1 at a Major tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176691-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nA total of 13 seeded players lost in the first round, the most seeds to do so at a Major since the 32-seed draw was adopted at the 2001 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176692-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for men's singles at the 2004 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176693-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nElena Bovina and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 won the title at the 2004 Australian Open, defeating the defending champions Martina Navratilova and Leander Paes in the final 6\u20131, 7\u20136(7\u20133).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176694-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSerena Williams and Venus Williams were the defending champions, but Serena withdrew from the tournament (due to an injury) and Venus didn't want to participate with another player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176694-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez reached the final of the Australian Open for the second time (in 2003 they lost to Williams sisters). This time they won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20133, against Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176695-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne defeated compatriot and rival Kim Clijsters in the final, 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20133 to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2004 Australian Open. It was Henin-Hardenne's third Grand Slam title, and her third win against Clijsters in a Grand Slam tournament final, after her victory at the 2003 French Open and the 2003 US Open. Clijsters would go on to win the title seven years later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176695-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams was the defending champion, but did not participate this year due to injury affecting her left knee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176695-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis Grand Slam would be the last time the top two seeded players would meet in a final until the 2013 French Open, a span of 36 majors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176696-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Women's singles at the 2004 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176697-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Production Car Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Production Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing title open to Group 3E Series Production Cars. The championship, which was the 11th Australian Production Car Championship, was managed by Procar Australia as part of the 2004 PROCAR Championship Series. The championship was won by Chris Alajajian driving a Subaru Liberty GT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176697-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Production Car Championship, Race calendar\nThe championship was contested over a seven-round series with two races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176697-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Production Car Championship, Classes\nCar competed in four classes based on the performance potential of each car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176697-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Production Car Championship, Points system\nOutright championship points were awarded on a 30\u201324\u201320\u201318\u201317\u201316\u201315\u201314\u201313\u201312\u201311\u201310\u20139\u20138\u20137\u20136\u20135\u20134\u20133\u20132\u20131 basis to the first 21 finishers in each class in each race. In addition, 3 outright championship points were awarded to the driver setting the fastest qualifying time in each class for race 1 at each round. Class championship points were awarded on the same basis as outright championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176697-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Production Car Championship, Results\nNote: The Toyota Corolla Sportiva was classified as a Class B car for Round 1 and as a Class C car from Round 2 onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176698-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Under-21 Individual Speedway Championship\nThe 2004 Australian Under-21 Individual Speedway Championship was the 18th running of the Australian Under-21 Individual Speedway Championship organised by Motorcycling Australia. The final took place on 31 January 2004 at the Undera Park Speedway in Undera, Victoria. The championship was won by defending champion, Adelaide's Rory Schlein. Robert Ksiezak from Adelaide was second with another South Australian, Matt Wethers, in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176698-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Under-21 Individual Speedway Championship, 2004 Australian Under-21 Solo Championship, Final\n1 Rory Schlein ()2 Robert Ksiezak ()3 Matt Wethers ()4 Trevor Harding ()", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 108], "content_span": [109, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176698-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian Under-21 Individual Speedway Championship, 2004 Australian Under-21 Solo Championship, Heat By Heat\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fell \u2022 ns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 115], "content_span": [116, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election\nThe 2004 Australian federal election was held in Australia on 9 October 2004. All 150 seats in the House of Representatives and 40 seats in the 76-member Senate were up for election. The incumbent Liberal Party of Australia led by Prime Minister of Australia John Howard and coalition partner the National Party of Australia led by John Anderson defeated the opposition Australian Labor Party led by Mark Latham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election\nAs of 2021, this is the most recent federal election in which the leader of the winning party would complete a full term of Parliament as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Results, Seats changing hands\nIn the House of Representatives, the Coalition won eight seats from Labor: Bass (Tas), Bonner (Qld), Braddon (Tas), Greenway (NSW), Hasluck (WA), Kingston (SA), Stirling (WA) and Wakefield (SA). Labor won four seats from the Coalition: Adelaide (SA), Hindmarsh (SA), Parramatta (NSW) and Richmond (NSW). The Coalition thus had a net gain of four seats. The redistribution had also delivered them McMillan (Vic), formerly held by Christian Zahra of Labor and won by Liberal Russell Broadbent; and Bowman (Qld), formerly held by Labor's Con Sciacca and won by Liberal Andrew Laming. Labor, meanwhile, received the new seat of Bonner (Qld) and the redistributed Wakefield (SA), both of which were lost to the Liberal Party. The Labor Party regained the seat of Cunningham, which had been lost to the Greens in a by-election in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nThe Coalition parties won 46.7% of the primary vote, a gain of 3.7% over the 2001 election. The opposition Australian Labor Party polled 37.6%, a loss of 0.2 percentage points. The Australian Greens emerged as the most prominent minor party, polling 7.2%, a gain of 2.2 points. Both the Australian Democrats and One Nation had their vote greatly reduced. After a notional distribution of preferences, the Australian Electoral Commission estimated that the Coalition had polled 52.74% of the two-party-preferred vote, a gain of 1.7 points from 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nThe Liberal Party won 74 seats, the National Party 12 seats and the Country Liberal Party (the Northern Territory branch of the Liberal Party) one seat, against the Labor opposition's 60 seats. Three independent members were re-elected. The Coalition also won 39 seats in the 76-member Senate, making the Howard Government the first government to have a majority in the Senate since 1981. The size of the government's win was unexpected: few commentators had predicted that the coalition would actually increase its majority in the House of Representatives, and almost none had foreseen its gaining a majority in the Senate. Even Howard had described that feat as \"a big ask\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nThe election result was a triumph for Howard, who in December 2004 became Australia's second-longest serving Prime Minister, and who saw the election result as a vindication of his policies, particularly his decision to join in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The results were a setback for the Labor leader, Mark Latham, and contributed to his resignation in January 2005 after assuming the leadership from Simon Crean in 2003. The defeat made Labor's task more difficult: a provisional pendulum for the House of Representatives, showed that Labor would need to win 16 seats to win the following election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nHowever, Kim Beazley said that the accession of Latham to the ALP leadership, in December 2003, had rescued the party from a much heavier defeat. Beazley stated that polling a year before the election indicated that the ALP would lose \"25\u201330 seats\" in the House of Representatives. Instead the party lost a net four seats in the House, a swing of 0.21 percentage points. There was also a 1.1-point swing to the ALP in the Senate. The Coalition gaining control of the Senate was enabled by a collapse in first preferences for the Australian Democrats and One Nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nMembers and Senators defeated in the election include Larry Anthony, the National Party Minister for Children and Youth Affairs, defeated in Richmond, New South Wales; former Labor minister Con Sciacca, defeated in Bonner, Queensland; Liberal Parliamentary Secretaries Trish Worth (Adelaide, South Australia) and Ross Cameron (Parramatta, New South Wales); and Democrat Senators Aden Ridgeway (the only indigenous member of the outgoing Parliament), Brian Greig and John Cherry. Liberal Senator John Tierney (New South Wales), who was dropped to number four on the Coalition Senate ticket, was also defeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nCelebrity candidates Peter Garrett (Labor, Kingsford Smith, New South Wales) and Malcolm Turnbull (Liberal, Wentworth, New South Wales) easily won their contests. Prominent clergyman Fred Nile failed to win a Senate seat in New South Wales. The first Muslim candidate to be endorsed by a major party in Australia, Ed Husic, failed to win the seat of Greenway, New South Wales, for Labor. The former One Nation leader, Pauline Hanson, failed in her bid to win a Senate seat in Queensland as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nMinor parties had mixed results. The Australian Democrats polled their lowest vote since their creation in 1977, and did not retain any of the three Senate seats they were defending. The Australian Greens won their first Senate seat in Western Australia and retained the Seat they were defending in Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nThey did not achieve a widely expected Senate Seat in Victoria, due to fellow progressive parties, the Australian Labor Party and The Australian Democrats, as well as some micro parties, joining with the conservative parties in a preference deal with far-right evangelist Christian party Family First, which despite a popular vote of just 1.7% received so many preferences from the unsuccessful Candidates of other parties that it eventually overtook the Greens David Risstrom's 7.4% vote and claimed that Senate Seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nAs predicted, the Greens did not gain a Senate Seats in Queensland or South Australia, partly because of similar preference deals by fellow progressive parties, but also because of a traditionally lower vote in these States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0008-0003", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nPredictably, the Greens lost their first and (at the time) only Lower House seat of Cunningham, which they had gained by way of an electoral anomaly at the 2002 by-election in that Seat, which when The Liberal Party did not provide a Candidate, caused atypical voting patterns, overwhelmingly amongst voters who would normally have voted for The Liberals and did not want to vote for their traditional nemeses, The Labor Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Overall result\nThe Australian Progressive Alliance leader, Senator Meg Lees, and the One Nation parliamentary leader, Senator Len Harris, lost their seats. One Nation's vote in the House of Representatives collapsed. The Christian Democratic Party, the Citizens Electoral Council, the Democratic Labor Party, the Progressive Labour Party and the Socialist Alliance all failed to make any impact. The Family First Party polled 2% of the vote nationally, and their candidate Steve Fielding won a Senate seat in Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Result\nThe Liberal and National parties run joint tickets in some states. The figures under \"Seats\" show the number of Senate seats won at this election. These have been added to the number of seats won in 2001 to give the total number of seats in Senate which each party will hold after 1 July 2005, when the new Senators take their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Result\nThe National and Liberal Parties won the fifth and sixth Senate seats in Queensland, thus giving the Coalition 39 seats and outright control of the Senate. Labor won the final Senate seats in New South Wales and South Australia, giving it 28 seats. The Greens won the final Senate seats in Western Australia and Tasmania, increasing their Senate seats from 2 to 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Pre-election issues\nIn the wake of the 2002 Bali Bombings and the 2001 World Trade Center attacks, the Howard government along with the Blair and Bush governments, initiated combat operations in Afghanistan and an alliance for invading Iraq, these issues divided Labor voters who were disproportionately anti-war, flipping those votes from Labor and to the Greens. The second issue was the ongoing and continued worsening of the Millennium Drought continued to bolster support for the Nationals water management policies of the Murray-Darling river system, diverting focus away from rural and inner-city community water supplies and focusing on Regional and Farmland water supplies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign\nThe Prime Minister, John Howard, announced the election at a press conference in Canberra on 29 August, after meeting the Governor-General, Major General Michael Jeffery, at Government House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Opening shots: \"who do you trust?\"\nJohn Howard told the press conference that the election would be about trust. \"Who do you trust to keep the economy strong and protect family living standards?\" he asked \"Who do you trust to keep interest rates low? Who do you trust to lead the fight on Australia's behalf against international terrorism?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Opening shots: \"who do you trust?\"\nHoward, who turned 64 in July, declined to answer questions about whether he would serve a full three-year term if his government was re-elected. \"I will serve as long as my party wants me to,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Opening shots: \"who do you trust?\"\nAt a press conference in Sydney half an hour after Howard's announcement, Opposition Leader Mark Latham welcomed the election, saying the Howard Government had been in power too long. He said the main issue would be truth in government. \"We've had too much dishonesty from the Howard Government\", he said. \"The election is about trust. The Government has been dishonest for too long.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 82], "content_span": [83, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Labor starts ahead in national opinion polls\nThe campaign began with Labor leading in all published national opinion polls. On 31 August, Newspoll published in The Australian newspaper gave Labor a lead of 52% to 48% nationwide, which would translate into a comfortable win for Labor in terms of seats. Most commentators, however, expected the election to be very close, pointing out that Labor was also ahead in the polls at the comparable point of the 1998 election, which Howard won. Howard had also consistently out-polled Latham as preferred Prime Minister by an average of 11.7 percentage points in polls taken this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 92], "content_span": [93, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, After the first week, the Coalition draws ahead\nAfter the first week of campaigning, a Newspoll conducted for News Corporation newspapers indicated that the Coalition held a lead on a two-party-preferred basis of 52% to 48% in the government's 12 most marginal held seats. To secure government in its own right, Labor needed to win twelve more seats than in the 2001 election. In the same poll, John Howard increased his lead over Mark Latham as preferred Prime Minister by four points. The Taverner poll conducted for The Sun-Herald newspaper revealed that younger voters were more likely to support Labor, with 41% of those aged 18 to 24 supporting Labor, compared with 36% who support the Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, A terrorist attack on the Australian embassy in Jakarta marks the second week\nOn 9 September, during the second week of campaigning the election was rocked by a terrorist attack on the Australian embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia. John Howard expressed his \"utter dismay at this event\" and dispatched Foreign Minister Alexander Downer to Jakarta to assist in the investigation. Mark Latham committed the Labor party's \"full support to all efforts by the Australian and Indonesian governments to ensure that happens\". The parties reached an agreement that campaigning would cease for 10 September out of respect for the victims of this attack and that this would be in addition to the cessation of campaigning already agreed upon for 11 September in remembrance of the terrorist attacks in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 125], "content_span": [126, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, The leaders debate and the worm turns in Latham's favour\nA debate between John Howard and Mark Latham was televised commercial-free on the Nine Network at 7:30pm on Sunday 12 September. In a change from previous election debates, which involved a single moderator, the leaders were questioned by a five-member panel representing each of the major media groups in Australia. There was a representative from commercial television (Laurie Oakes), the ABC (Jim Middleton), News Limited (Malcolm Farr), John Fairfax Holdings (Michelle Grattan) and radio (Neil Mitchell). After an opening address, Howard and Latham responded to questions posed by the panel and had the opportunity to make a closing statement. The Nine Network permitted other television organisations to transmit the feed, but only the ABC chose to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 104], "content_span": [105, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, The leaders debate and the worm turns in Latham's favour\nThe debate was followed (only on the Nine Network) by an analysis of the leaders' performance by the \"worm\". The worm works by analysing the approval or disapproval of a select group of undecided voters to each statement that a leader makes. Throughout the debate, according to the worm, Latham performed strongly and Howard performed poorly. A final poll of the focus group found that 67% of the focus group believed that Latham won the debate and that 33% of the focus group believed that Howard won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 104], "content_span": [105, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, The leaders debate and the worm turns in Latham's favour\nMajor media outlets generally agreed that Latham had won the debate, although they pointed out that with no further debates scheduled and nearly four weeks of the campaign remaining, Latham's gain in the momentum from the debate was unlikely to be decisive. Political commentators noted that the 2001 election debate, between Howard and then opposition leader Kim Beazley, gave the same worm results yet Labor still lost that election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 104], "content_span": [105, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, At the midpoint, it is too close to call\nBy the midpoint of the campaign, after Labor had released its policies on taxation and education, polls showed that the election was still too close to call. The Newspoll in The Australian, showed (21 September) Labor leading with 52.5% of the two-party-preferred vote. The ACNielsen poll published in The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age showed the Coalition ahead on 52%. The Morgan poll, which has a poor recent record of predicting federal elections, showed Labor ahead with 53% on the weekend of 18\u201319 September. A Galaxy Poll in the Melbourne Herald Sun showed the Coalition ahead with 51%, but showed Labor gaining ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, At the midpoint, it is too close to call\nDespite Latham's strong performance in the debate, most political commentators argued that he had not gained a clear advantage over Howard. They pointed to anomalies in Labor's tax policy and the controversy surrounding Labor's policy of reducing government funding to some non-government schools as issues which Howard was successfully exploiting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, At the midpoint, it is too close to call\nJohn Howard and John Anderson launched the Coalition election campaign at a joint function in Brisbane on 26 September. Howard's policy speech can be read at the Liberal Party website. Anderson's policy speech can be read at the National Party website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, At the midpoint, it is too close to call\nMark Latham's policy speech was delivered, also in Brisbane, on 29 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 88], "content_span": [89, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Contradictory polls in the fourth week\nDuring the fourth week of the campaign contradictory polls continued to appear. The ACNielsen poll published in The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age on 25 September showed the Coalition ahead with 54%, which would translate into a large majority for the government. The Newspoll in The Australian on 28 September showed Labor ahead with 52%, which would give Labor a comfortable majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Tasmanian forests erupt as the main issue during the last week\nIn the last days of the campaign the environment policies regarding the logging of Tasmania's old-growth forests were released by both major parties, but too late for the Greens to adjust their preference flows on how-to-vote cards in most electorates as the majority were already printed. In the game of \"cat and mouse\" on Tasmanian forest policy between Mark Latham and John Howard, Latham eventually lost out when Dick Adams (Labor member for the Tasmanian seat of Lyons), Tasmanian Labor Premier Paul Lennon and CFMEU's Tasmanian secretary Scott McLean all attacked Latham's forest policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Tasmanian forests erupt as the main issue during the last week\nAt a timber workers' rally on the day Labor's forestry policy was announced, Scott McLean asked those gathered to pass a resolution of no confidence in Mr Latham's ability to lead the country. Michael O'Connor, assistant national secretary of the CFMEU said the Coalition's forest policy represented a much better deal for his members than Labor's policy. Australian Labor Party national president Carmen Lawrence later said that \"Labor has only itself to blame for the backlash over its forestry policy\" and that it was a strategic mistake to release the policy so late in the election campaign. She stated that she was disappointed in criticism from within the ALP and union movement, and that the party did not leave itself enough time to sell the package.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Tasmanian forests erupt as the main issue during the last week\nTreasury and the Department of Finance reported on the validity of Labor's costings of their promises. They claimed to identify a different flaw to that identified by Liberal Treasurer Costello, but overall Labor was satisfied with the report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, The Handshake\nOn the morning of 8 October, the day before the election, a television crew filmed Latham and Howard shaking hands as they crossed paths outside an Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio studio in Sydney. The footage showed Latham appearing to draw Howard towards him and tower over his shorter opponent. The incident received wide media coverage and, while Latham claimed to have been attempting to get revenge for Howard squeezing his wife's hand too hard at a press function, it was variously reported as being \"aggressive\", \"bullying\" and \"intimidating\" on the part of Latham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, The Handshake\nThe Liberal Party campaign director, Brian Loughnane, later said this incident generated more feedback to Liberal headquarters than anything else during the six-week campaign, and that it \"brought together all the doubts and hesitations that people had about Mark Latham\". Latham disputes the impact of this incident, however, having described it as a \"Tory gee-up: we got close to each other, sure, but otherwise it was a regulation man's handshake. It's silly to say it cost us votes \u2013 my numbers spiked in the last night of our polling.\" (Latham Diaries, p.\u00a0369) According to Latham's account of events, Latham came in close to Howard for the handshake to prevent Howard shaking with his arm rather than his wrist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, The campaign, Final opinion polls are not conclusive\nThe final opinion polls continued to be somewhat contradictory, with Newspoll showing a 50\u201350 tie and the Fairfax papers reporting 54\u201346 to the Coalition. Most Australian major daily newspaper editorials backed a return of the Howard government, with the notable exceptions of The Sydney Morning Herald, which backed neither party, and The Canberra Times, which backed Labor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals\nAs in all Australian elections, the flow of preferences from minor parties can be crucial in determining the final outcome. The close of nominations was followed by a period of bargaining among the parties. Howard made a pitch for the preferences of the Australian Greens by appearing to offer concessions on the issue of logging in old-growth forests in Tasmania, and the Coalition directed its preferences to the Greens ahead of Labor in the Senate, but the Greens nevertheless decided to allocate preferences to Labor in most electorates. In exchange, Labor agreed to direct its preferences in the Senate to the Greens ahead of the Democrats (but critically, not ahead of other minor parties), increasing the chances that the Greens would displace Australian Democrats Senators in New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals\nThe Democrats in turn did a preference deal with the Family First Party, which angered some Democrats supporters who viewed Family First's policies as incompatible with the Democrats'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn Victoria, Family First, the Christian Democrats and the DLP allocated their senate preferences to Labor, to help ensure the re-election of the number three Labor Senate candidate, Jacinta Collins, a Catholic who has conservative views on some social issues such as abortion. In exchange, Labor gave its Senate preferences in Victoria to Family First ahead of the Greens, expecting Family First to be eliminated before these preferences were distributed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn the event, however, Labor and Democrat preferences helped Family First's Steve Fielding beat the Green's David Risstrom to win the last Victorian Senate seat and become Family First's first Federal parliamentarian. This outcome generated some controversy and highlighted a lack of transparency in preference deals. Family First were elected in Victoria after receiving 1.88% of the vote, even though the Greens had the largest minor party share of the vote with 8.8%. In Australia, 95% of voters vote \"above the line\" in the Senate. Many \"above the line\" voters do not access preference allocation listings, although they are available in polling booths and on the AEC website, so they are therefore unaware of where their vote may go. The end result was one Family First, three Liberal and two Labor Senators elected in Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 935]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn Tasmania, Family First and the Democrats also directed their Senate preferences to Labor, apparently to preclude the possibility of the Liberals winning a majority in the Senate and thus reducing the influence of the minor parties. The Australian Greens' Christine Milne appeared at risk of losing her Senate seat to a Family First candidate shortly after election night, despite nearly obtaining the full required quota of primary votes. However, strong performance on postal and prepoll votes improved Milne's position. It was only the high incidence of \"below the line\" voting in Tasmania that negated the effect of the preference swap deal between Labor and Family First. The end result was one Green, three Liberal and two Labor Senators elected in Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn New South Wales, Democrat preferences flowing to Labor rather than the Greens were instrumental in Labor's winning of the last Senate seat. Had Democrat preferences flown to the Greens rather than Liberals for Forests and the Christian Democrats, then the final vacancy would have been won by the Greens' John Kaye. The scale of Glenn Druery's (of the Liberals for Forests party) preference deals was revealed by the large number of ticket votes distributed when he was eliminated from the count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nHe gained preferences from a wide range of minor parties such as the Ex-Service Service and Veterans Party, the Outdoor Recreation Party, and the Non-Custodial Parents Party. Liberals for Forests also gained the preferences of two leftish parties \u2013 the Progressive Labour Party and the HEMP Party. When Druery was eventually excluded, these preferences flowed to the Greens, but the Greens would rather have received the preferences earlier in the count. In the end, three Liberal/National Senators and three Labor Senators were elected in New South Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn Western Australia, the Greens' Rachel Siewert was elected to the final vacancy after the final Labor candidate was excluded. This was a gain for the Greens at the expense of the Democrats Brian Greig. While the Democrats had done a preference swap with Family First, the deal in Western Australia did not include the Christian Democrats. As a result, when the Australian Democrats were excluded from the count, their preferences flowed to the Greens, putting them on track for the final vacancy. The end result was one Green, three Liberal and two Labor Senators elected in Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn South Australia, the Australian Democrats negotiated a crucial preference swap with Family First that prevented the Greens winning the final vacancy. If the Democrats had polled better, they would have collected Family First and Liberal preferences and won the final vacancy. Former Democrat Leader Meg Lees also contested the Senate in South Australia, but was eliminated late in the count. However, Lees did have some impact on the outcome, as there were large numbers of below the line preferences for both the Progressive Alliance (as well as One Nation) which were widely spread rather than flowing to the Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nWhen the Democrats were excluded, preferences flowed to Family First which prevented the Greens' Brian Noone passing the third Labor candidate. This resulted in a seat that could otherwise have been won by the Greens instead being won by Labor on Green preferences. The flow of One Nation preferences to Labor made it impossible for either Family First or the Liberal Party to win the final vacancy. Labor's Dana Wortley was elected to the final vacancy. The end result in South Australia was split 3 Liberal, 3 Labor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nIn Queensland, Pauline Hanson attracted 38,000 below the line votes and pulled away from One Nation. Preferences from the Fishing Party kept the National Party's Barnaby Joyce ahead of Family First and Pauline Hanson. Joyce then unexpectedly won the fifth vacancy ahead of the Liberal Party. The sixth and last vacancy was then won by Liberal Russell Trood. The final outcome was 1 National, 3 Liberals and 2 Labor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on Senate outcomes\nThe election of both Barnaby Joyce and Russell Trood to the Senate in Queensland resulted in the Coalition gaining control of the Senate and was confirmed by the National Party's Senate Leader Ron Boswell's in a televised telephone call to Prime Minister John Howard. This result was not widely predicted prior to the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 101], "content_span": [102, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on House of Representatives and national outcomes\nDespite constant media attention on preference deals, and a widely held belief that the two party preferred result for the election would be close, the Newspoll figures during the three months prior to the election showed little alteration in the first preference margin between the parties, nor was there any evidence of any voter volatility. The figures suggested, then, that as the Coalition's first preference vote was healthy, the most likely result was a Government victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 132], "content_span": [133, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0040-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on House of Representatives and national outcomes\nThis was born out in the election results when the Liberal first preference vote of 40.5 per cent was 3.4 percentage points higher than in 2001, while Labor's first-preference vote of 37.6 per cent was its lowest since the elections of 1931 and 1934. Preference flows from minor parties are much more likely to affect an election outcome when the two major parties are close. The collapse of Labor's primary vote therefore negated this effect, even though 61 out of 150 House of Representatives seats were decided on preferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 132], "content_span": [133, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Preference deals, The effect of preference deals on House of Representatives and national outcomes\nThe national outcome of minor party preference distributions (in order of number primary votes received) is summarised in the following table:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 132], "content_span": [133, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176699-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian federal election, Disclosure\nDates for financial disclosure for the 2004 Federal election were specified by the Australian Electoral Commission. Broadcasters and publishers had to lodge their returns by 6 December, while candidates and Senate groups needed to lodge by 24 January 2005. This information was made available for public scrutiny on 28 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix was the penultimate round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 15\u201317 October 2004 at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThis race was most notable for the last-lap battle between Sete Gibernau and Valentino Rossi for victory, as well as Rossi's subsequent crowning as world champion - clinching his sixth overall world title, fourth premier-class title and third back-to-back MotoGP title as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAfter fourteen rounds, Valentino Rossi is narrowly leading the hunt with 254 points. Close second is Sete Gibernau with 224 points and further behind is Max Biaggi in third with 188 points. Rossi has the first opportunity to win the 2004 MotoGP world championship if he finishes second or higher to secure the title, regardless of Gibernau's finish. Gibernau in turn need to score six points more than Rossi to keep his title fight alive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nFor 2004 the MotoGP Safety Commission advised to make some changes to improve the safety on the circuit. As such, the Government of Victoria and the Australian logistics and supply chain business Linfox, who purchased the circuit in the same year, invested a two million Australian dollars to execute these changes in two months. The changes involved the extension of the pit lane entry and exit, as well as enlarging existing gravel traps so no changes were made to the fast, flowing lay-out of the circuit itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nBefore the start of the race, the now annual Barry Sheene Tribute Ride took place to commemorate the British rider, who had passed away due to cancer last year. Several hundred motorcyclists and some local press were present, as well as Sheene's former teammate Steve Parrish and his then fifteen-year-old son Freddie Sheene as civilian passenger. It was also revealed that Colin Edwards would move from the Telef\u00f3nica Movistar Honda to the Gauloises Yamaha Team to partner Valentino Rossi for the 2005 season. He will be replacing Carlos Checa who will be going to the Ducati Marlboro Team for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nIt is Sete Gibernau who fired the first shot on Saturday, taking pole position with a time of 1:30.122. +0.100 seconds behind is Valentino Rossi, who will be starting just behind the Spaniard and in third is Loris Capirossi who is +0.491 seconds behind. The second row of the grid consists out of Colin Edwards in fourth, Makoto Tamada in fifth and Alex Barros in sixth place. Suzuki test rider Gregorio Lavilla replaces the injured Kenny Roberts Jr. who is still recovering from his elbow injuries he sustained after a first-lap collision on the opening lap of the Japanese round. Garry McCoy also replaces Shane Byrne who is still recovering from wrist damage he sustained during a practice highside at the Czech round where he suffered ligament and tendon damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAll riders take off and do their usual warm-up lap before lining up in their respective grid slots. As the lights go out, Capirossi gets a great start and immediately slingshots past to take the lead going into Doohan Corner (Turn 1). Rossi manages to remain in second whilst Troy Bayliss has a really good start and manages to get up into fourth spot, almost overtaking Gibernau in the process. Gibernau initially gets off the line relatively well but loses out on the front two, opening up a small gap to Rossi and almost losing the position to Bayliss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nBarros makes up one position as he gets away, fighting with sixth place Max Biaggi who managed to briefly overtake teammate Tamada before getting swallowed up again in the pack as Tamada exiting the turn on the opening lap. At the entrance of the Southern Loop, Gibernau has practically nullified the gap and even manages to pass Rossi on the outside exiting the turn, snatching second from him. Further back, Colin Edwards is slowly clawing back his way up the field after losing out to both Camel Honda riders initially, going up Tamada's inside and taking sixth position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nEntering Stoner Corner (Turn 3), Gibernau has a look up the inside of Capirossi but stays behind for now. As Rossi is blocked by Capirossi, Bayliss then manages to sneak past around the outside and take third. At the Honda Corner (Turn 4), Gibernau makes a lunge up the inside of Capirossi and takes the lead as Rossi tries to go around the outside of Bayliss but gets blocked off and has to stay behind. Further back, Biaggi - who had overtaken Tamada before - also makes a move down Edward's inside to take sixth position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0006-0003", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nExiting the hairpin, Gibernau immediately starts to open up a gap to Capirossi as Rossi hounds Bayliss through Siberia (Turn 6) but almost loses fourth himself to Barros behind him at the entry of the fast unnamed Turn 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0006-0004", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAt the exit of that turn, Rossi then tries to line up a pass going into Hayshed (Turn 8) but goes too wide and runs off-track, not crashing out by miracle and even manages to get a great run on Bayliss at Lukey Heights (Turn 9) to make a lunge pass at MG (Turn 10) on the home hero as well as Capirossi for third position. Exiting the hairpin, Bayliss looks to be making a move around the outside of teammate Capirossi at the unnamed Turn 11 but thinks better of it and stays behind for now. Gibernau is still way ahead in front as Rossi is also starting to open up a small gap to the fighting pair of the Marlboro Ducati's. Exiting Turn 12, Barros is close behind Bayliss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap two, Barros almost goes side by side with Bayliss at the Gardner Straight but his superior power preventing him from fully doing that, instead the Repsol Honda rider lines himself up on the outside of Bayliss at Doohan Corner to then try and get the inside line at the Southern Loop but gets blocked and has to stay behind. Biaggi meanwhile is now coming under pressure from Edwards at both Doohan Corner and the Southern Loop, the American trying to pass him around the outside. Rossi meanwhile is still opening up his advantage to the Ducati duo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nGibernau's gap back to Rossi was +1.195 seconds in sector one but has increased to +1.222 seconds in sector two. Barros is close at Lukey Heights, then dives down the inside of Bayliss at MG, moving him up to fourth place. Gibernau's gap back to Rossi has decreased slightly to +1.107 in sector three. Also at MG, Marco Melandri tries to take seventh position from Edwards around the outside but fails and has to stay behind at the exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap three and Rossi sets the fastest lap of the race. At Doohan Corner, Biaggi manages to pass Bayliss for fifth place. At Honda Corner, Melandri goes up the inside of Edwards and takes seventh place, with Nicky Hayden behind him trying a move around the outside but going wide upon entry, losing ninth to Tamada in turn. At Turn 8, Edwards manages to retake seventh position. In sector two, Gibernau's gap back to Rossi was +1.062 seconds. In sector three, this gap has decreased slightly to +0.901 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap four, Rossi sets the fastest lap, only for Barros to snatch it away. Fourth place Barros is still right behind Capirossi at the Gardner Straight but is unable to make a move entering Doohan Corner. Rossi is slowly closing the gap and Barros tries to go down the inside of Capirossi at MG but is once again unable to get past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap five and Barros is right behind Capirossi at the Gardner Straight but cannot get by Capirossi due to the Ducati's superior top speed. Barros sets the fastest lap as well. Gibernau's gap back to Rossi was +0.703 seconds at the start/finish straight but that has already been reduced to +0.487 seconds in sector one. Barros has now also broken the circuit record with a time of 1:31.309, beating Rossi's 2003 record of 1:31.421 with +0.112 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap six, the top six is as follows: Gibernau, Rossi, Capirossi, Barros, Biaggi and Bayliss. Exiting Stoner Corner, sparks can be seen at the bottom of Rossi's bike as he pushes at the max to close the gap to Gibernau. Barros is once again very close coming into Honda Corner but still cannot get past Capirossi. Replacement rider Garry McCoy has come into the pits to retire with technical issues. At MG, Barros is still right behind but cannot get side by side with the Italian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap seven and Capirossi sets the fastest lap of the race. Rossi has almost caught up to Gibernau with Capirossi closing the gap to him also. Barros tries to pass Capirossi around the outside but gets blocked and has to stay behind still.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eight, Rossi has fully caught Gibernau by now. Barros is still right behind Capirossi but caouldn't get past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap nine and Bayliss manages to get side by side with Biaggi on the Gardner Straight, going past entering Doohan Corner for fifth spot. Biaggi tries to hang on and retake the position at the Southern Loop but isn't quite able to. James Ellison is entering the pits", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap ten, Gibernau has a slight moment exiting the Southern Loop but doesn't lose any time or position from it. At Stoner Corner, Barros is very close and at Honda Corner, Barros finally manages to get by Capirossi thanks to a late lunge on his inside, outbraking him and taking third as a result. He then starts to open a small gap in pursuit of the top two riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap eleven and Rossi makes a lunge entering Doohan Corner to close up to Gibernau in front of him. Gibernau's gap back to Rossi is only +0.232 seconds. Rossi's gap to Barros was +0.952 seconds in sector two, increasing to +1.001 seconds in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twelve, Edwards goes up the inside of Biaggi at the entrance of Doohan Corner, taking fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap thirteen and Rossi attempts a move on Gibernau's inside at the entry of the Southern Loop but is too far and thus has to stay behind. No overtakes happened at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap fourteen - the halfway point of the race -, Biaggi has managed to take back sixth position from Edwards entering Doohan Corner. At the entrance of the Southern Loop, Biaggi then attempts a move on the inside of Bayliss for fifth but thinks better of it. At MG, Biaggi then lunges up his inside, promoting him up to fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap fifteen and Edwards has also managed to get ahead of a now struggling Bayliss, taking sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap sixteen, the top six is as follows: Gibernau, Rossi, Barros, Capirossi, Biaggi and Edwards. Exiting Stoner Corner, sparks fly off of Rossi's Yamaha YZR-M1 again. Rossi's gap back to Barros is +2.190 seconds. At MG, Tamada goes up in seventh after diving down the inside of Bayliss at MG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap seventeen and Rossi is still right behind Gibernau, harassing him all throughout the lap. Before MG, Hayden managed to pass Bayliss for eighth position. Melandri has retired from the race, the Italian sitting in pit box disappointed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eighteen, Gibernau is still in the lead with Rossi right behind him. No overtakes happened at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap nineteen and Rossi makes his move, going side by side with Gibernau at the Gardner Straight and taking over the lead for the first time in the race. Rossi's gap to Gibernau was -0.060 seconds at the start/finish straight and is now +0.144 seconds in sector one. In sector two, that gap increases to +0.231 seconds and in sector three, the gap increases again to +0.307 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty, Hayden goes up the inside of Tamada at the inside of the Southern Loop to take seventh spot. Just ahead, Edwards is also tries a move around the outside at the same corner but gets blocked by Biaggi and has to settle for sixth for now.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-one and Rossi is still ahead, Gibernau in second and Barros back in third. At the Honda Corner, Rossi has a slight moment and goes a tad wide, allowing Gibernau to almost go up the inside of Rossi and snatch the lead back. However, Rossi blocks him off and retains the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty-two, Edwards has passed Biaggi entering Doohan Corner for fifth place, with Hayden trying a move as well. He tries to go side by side with the Italian at the entry of the Southern Loop but Biaggi blocks his path and forces him to stay behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-three and Gibernau overtakes Rossi by going side by side with him at the Gardner Straight, taking first position entering Doohan Corner. Hayden almost manages to get up the inside of Biaggi for fifth at MG but has to stay behind for now.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty-four, Capirossi has managed to close the gap to a now struggling Barros. At the end of the Gardner Straight, Capirossi manages to pass Barros and get back into fourth position. The pair comes up to a backmarker - James Haydon - which goes out of the way at MG without causing any troubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-five and Rossi has closed up at the Honda Corner but is not able to overtake Gibernau. He has another look at the exit of Lukey Heights but Gibernau blocks him off before he can make a lunge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty-six, the penultimate lap of the race, Gibernau still leads but Rossi is all over the back of him. At Lukey Heights the duo encounters another backmarker, this time being Nobuatsu Aoki. He gets out of the way at Lukey Heights, causing no troubles for the frontrunners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nGibernau crosses the line to start the last lap - lap thirty - and Rossi goes up the inside of Gibernau at the Southern Loop to take the lead. At Honda Corner however, Rossi runs wide and gifts the position back to Gibernau, trying to fight back upon exit but not being able to take the place. At Lukey Heights, Rossi tries a move on his inside but isn't quite able to get by.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0032-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nHowever, Gibernau runs a bit wide at the exit of the uphill corner and Rossi takes the place anyway as he takes a tight line through the corner. He blocks the possibility for overtaking at MG for Gibernau, staying in front going up to Turn 11. Gibernau tries to get him on speed but comes short, allowing Rossi to cross the line and win the race - his eighth of the season - with Gibernau a close second. Capirossi comes home in third place as Barros gets pipped to the line by Edwards who takes fourth, the Brazilian having to settle for fifth. Hayden comes home in sixth position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn the parade lap back to parc-ferm\u00e9, Rossi puts his arms on his head, barely believing the feat he had just accomplished, shaking his head also. He then kisses his bike and gives it some pats as well as a brushing with the hand as a symbolic gesture to the Yamaha he just won the title with. He puts his arm up in the air as a sign of total victory, with backmarker Nobuatsu Aoki riding next to him to congratulate him on his victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nHe then puts his arms on his head again before they both go up in the air while both Capirossi and Taamada ride next to him to congratulate him as well. As Checa stops next to Rossi to congratulate him also, 'The Doctor' gets swarmed by fans who invaded the track as well as photographers who circle around him. One of his crewmembers also arrives to hug and celebrate with him. Rossi steps off his bike to continue his celebrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0033-0002", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAs he steps on his bike again and gets going, the fans and photographers continue to run with and after him, revealing they had dressed him up in a shirt that reads \"Che spettacolo\" meaning \"What a spectacle\" in Italian. They also put this on his helmet. He puts his arms up at the fans one more time as he rides into the pits now to get to parc-ferm\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nGibernau is the first to actually arrive back to parc-ferm\u00e9, stepping off his bike and looking at his rear tyre to see how badly it had grained. He takes off his gloves, as well as his helmet, to reveal an angry Gibernau walking towards his Telef\u00f3nica Movistar Honda crew. Capirossi has also arrived at parc-ferm\u00e9, stepping off his bike and happily walking over to celebrate with his crew. After lengthy celebrations, Rossi then arrives, gets off the bike and goes to his crew to celebrate with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0034-0001", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOne of the Ducati crewmembers shakes Rossi's hands and Capirossi hugs Rossi as well. Gibernau looks at him as he gets interviewed by the media, Rossi then taking off his helmet to show his locks to everyone. As Rossi takes off various other things and puts on his cap, he puts his helmet in the air with his arm as Gibernau looks on, still being interviewed. The Italian now goes to one of the reporters and also gets interviewed by the media. After the interviews, Rossi and Gibernau give each other a cold handshake, the Spaniard doing likewise to some of the Yamaha crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAll riders make their way to the podium, the fans start to sing \"Vale! Vale!\" in droves. First one to appear is Capirossi, followed by Gibernau and then Rossi, who kisses his helmet as he arrives. The fans cheer for him as he steps onto the podium. All the riders receive their trophies, Rossi kissing his and holding it next to it before holding it above his head in glee. The champagne then gets handed out by the podium girls, Rossi cheekily spraying one of the girls as well as Capirossi. Gibernau immediately sprays it into the crowd as Capirossi also sprays Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nRossi's win, Gibernau's second and Biaggi's seventh position gives Rossi an unassailable lead with one round remaining. As such, he is crowned 2004 MotoGP World Champion with 279 points. Second is Gibernau with 244 and third is Biaggi with 197 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176700-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round fifteen has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176701-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Austrian Figure Skating Championships (German: \u00d6sterreichischen Staatsmeisterschaften im Eiskunstlauf 2004) took place in Vienna. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. The results were used to choose the Austrian teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Austria on 25 April 2004. While the post of President of Austria is a largely ceremonial one, presidential elections are conducted on a party basis and are seen as a test of the relative standing of the major parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election\nThe victorious candidate was Heinz Fischer of the opposition Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6). He defeated Benita Ferrero-Waldner, foreign minister in the ruling conservative coalition led by the Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Campaign\nThe campaign started in January 2004 with the announcements of Ferrero-Waldner and Fischer that they would run. Several other candidates also announced their intention to run, but they were not supported by a major party, their campaigns went virtually unnoticed by the media, and they failed to get the required 6,000 signatures supporting their candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Campaign\nA notable exception was Franz Fiedler, head of the National Audit Office. In late February he announced that he was considering a candidacy, and that he had the support of important but unnamed politicians. Conventional wisdom held that he had no chance of getting a majority, but that his candidacy would force a run-off between Ferrero-Waldner and Fischer. But since his financial supporters were unwilling to reveal their names, he decided not to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Campaign\nIn advance of the campaign the \u00d6VP and the SP\u00d6 agreed on a \"Fairness Pact,\" with compliance to be supervised by a panel of three people, headed by Ludwig Adamovich, former head of the Constitutional Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Campaign\nThe first complaint before the panel was brought by the SP\u00d6, who claimed that the \u00d6VP had stolen one of their slogans. The panel decided that this was not fair according to community standards, but not specifically forbidden by the Fairness Pact. Both parties hailed this decision as a victory for their own side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Campaign\nLater, both sides complained that the other side had given out presents of tangible value (mainly chocolates) at rallies; the panel refused to consider these claims. Other complaints (commercials during the agreed-upon Easter break, tearing down and defacing posters) were withdrawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Platforms\nFischer's campaign praised their candidate's experience as President of the Parliament, his expertise in constitutional law, and his proven ability to negotiate compromises. Ferrero's campaign suggested that as a dedicated socialist Fischer might not always show the neutrality required from a Federal President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Platforms\nFerrero's campaign pointed to her international connections, her language abilities (English, French, Italian, Spanish), and her performance as foreign minister during the period of the European Union sanctions against Austria. Fischer's campaign claimed that she had made many mistakes as a foreign minister, and expressed the fear that a conservative president would not be an appropriate counterweight to a conservative government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Platforms\nIn the beginning of the campaign, polls suggested a 15% lead for Fischer: during the campaign Ferrero narrowed the margin, but polls never showed a decisive lead for her.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176702-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Austrian presidential election, Results\nIn the 2002 parliamentary elections the conservative parties (the \u00d6VP and the Freedom Party of Austria, FP\u00d6) received 52 percent of the votes, compared to 46 percent for the SP\u00d6 and the Greens. In this election, however, many conservative voters stayed at home, and this (together with Fischer's high personal popularity) was the reason for the lower number of votes for Ferrero. The turnout of slightly above 70% of registered voters was considered low by Austrian standards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176703-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Auto Club 500\nThe 2004 Auto Club 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on May 2, 2004 at California Speedway in Fontana, California. Contested over 250 laps on the 2-mile (3.23\u00a0km) asphalt D-shaped oval, it was the tenth race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Rookie Kasey Kahne of Evernham Motorsports won the pole, and Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176703-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Auto Club 500, Background\nThe track, California Speedway, is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked from fourteen degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at eleven degrees. Unlike the front stretch, the backstraightaway is banked at three degrees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176704-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Auvergne regional election\nA regional election took place in Auvergne on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Pierre-Jo\u00ebl Bont\u00e9 (PS) was elected President, defeating incumbent Val\u00e9ry Giscard d'Estaing, a former President of France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election\nThe Azores Regional Election, 2004 (Portuguese: Elei\u00e7\u00f5es Regionais dos A\u00e7ores, 2004) was an election held on 17 October 2004 for the legislative assembly and government of the Portuguese autonomous region of the Azores, in which the Socialist Party, under the leadership of Carlos C\u00e9sar won 57% of the votes, and got an absolute majority, for the 2nd consecutive turn. The Social Democratic Party ran in a coalition with the People's Party, called Azores Coalition, but was massively defeated gathering just 37% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election\nVoter turnout increased, for the first time since the 1992 election, with 55.2% of the electorate casting their ballot on election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election, Background\nIn the Azores, there were 52 seats in the Regional Parliament in dispute, the same of the previous election, in 2000. The seats were distributed by the 9 islands of the archipelago proportionally to the population of each island; however, each island is entitled to at least two members of parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election, Political parties\nA total of 7 parties and/or coalitions ran in these elections. The parties/coalitions listed on the voting ballots were the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election, Results\nFor a third consecutive term, the Socialist Party won the regional election in Azores, increasing its share of the vote from 49% to 57%, and re-electing Carlos C\u00e9sar to the presidency of the Regional Government. C\u00e9sar and his party obtained an absolute majority with 31 of the assembly's 52 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election, Results\nThe Social Democrats and the People's Party contested these elections in a joint coalition called \"Azores Coalition\". The coalition achieved a very disappointing result, polling 20% below the Socialists. The PSD/CDS-PP coalition only won 37% of the votes, but was able to increase the number of parliament members to 21, against the combined total of 20 both parties had since 2000. In fact, the bad result from this PSD/CDS-PP coalition was one of the reasons PSD and CDS didn't contest, in a coalition, the 2005 general elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election, Results\nDue to the strong bipolarization of the race, both PS and PSD/CDS-PP gathered a total of almost 94% of the votes, and due to the application of the Hondt election model in the nine islands, the smaller parties were severely punished. The Unitarian Democratic Coalition (CDU), led by the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP), saw their share of vote reduced by almost half and they lost all representation in the regional parliament. The Left Bloc also suffered a setback by polling below 1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176705-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Azorean regional election, Results\nThe People's Monarchist Party, the Earth Party and the Democratic Party of the Atlantic also failed to make any inroads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176706-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy\nThe 2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 30th edition of the event known that year as the BA-CA-TennisTrophy, and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria, from 11 October through 17 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176706-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy, Finals, Singles\nFeliciano L\u00f3pez defeated Guillermo Ca\u00f1as 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176706-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy, Finals, Doubles\nMartin Damm / Cyril Suk defeated Gast\u00f3n Etlis / Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176707-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Doubles\nYves Allegro and Roger Federer were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176707-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Doubles\nMartin Damm and Cyril Suk won the title, defeating Gast\u00f3n Etlis and Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176708-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176708-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Singles\nFeliciano L\u00f3pez won the title, defeating Guillermo Ca\u00f1as 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season\nThe 2004 BC Lions finished in first place in the West Division with a 13\u20135 record. They won the West Final and appeared in the 92nd Grey Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Grey Cup\nToronto Argonauts (27) \u2013 TDs, Damon Allen (2), Robert Baker; FGs Noel Prefontaine (2); cons., Prefontaine (3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Grey Cup\nBC Lions (19) \u2013 TDs, Jason Clermont, Dave Dickenson; FGs Duncan O'Mahony (2); cons. O'Mahony (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Grey Cup\nFirst Quarter BC\u2014TD Clermont 12-yard pass from Dickenson (O'Mahony convert) 4:07", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Grey Cup\nSecond Quarter TOR\u2014FG Prefontaine 27-yard field goal 7:40 TOR\u2014TD Allen 1-yard run (Prefontaine convert) 12:22 BC\u2014FG O'Mahony 42-yard field goal 13:13 TOR\u2014TD Baker 23-yard pass from Allen (Prefontaine convert) 14:37", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Grey Cup\nThird Quarter TOR\u2014TD Allen 1-yard run (Prefontaine convert) 4:45 BC\u2014FG O'Mahony 36-yard field goal 9:16", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176709-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Grey Cup\nFourth Quarter BC\u2014TD Dickenson 7-yard run (convert failed) 6:06 TOR\u2014FG Prefontaine 16-yard field goal 12:19", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176710-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BCR Open Romania\nThe 2004 BCR Open Romania was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 12th edition of the event known that year as the BCR Open Romania, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Arenele BNR in Bucharest, Romania, from September 13 through September 19, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176710-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BCR Open Romania, Finals, Doubles\nLucas Arnold Ker / Mariano Hood defeated Jos\u00e9 Acasuso / Oscar Hernandez 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176711-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BDO World Darts Championship\nThe 2004 Lakeside World Darts Championship was the first World Darts Championship held after Imperial Tobacco were forced to withdraw their sponsorship. UK government legislation had banned tobacco companies from attaching their brands to sporting events from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176711-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BDO World Darts Championship\nThe tournament had been previously known as the Embassy World Championship for 26 years since its inception in 1978. Bob Potter, owner of the Lakeside Country Club which hosts the event, stepped in to become the new title sponsor of the event. The prize fund for 2004 matched the previous year, with the exception of the non-qualifiers payments which were removed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176711-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BDO World Darts Championship\nThe championship was staged between 3\u201311 January. Andy Fordham became a new name on the trophy after defeating defending champion, Raymond van Barneveld in the semi-final and Mervyn King in the final. Fordham hit the highest 3-dart average in the final (97.18) since the PDC/BDO split in 1993 - although Phil Taylor and Eric Bristow had each surpassed that figure twice in their previous BDO title wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176711-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 BDO World Darts Championship, Prize money\nThe prize money was \u00a3199,000 for the men's event and \u00a310,000 for the women's event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176711-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 BDO World Darts Championship, Prize money\nThere was also a shared 9 Dart Checkout prize of \u00a351,000, along with a High Checkout prize of \u00a32,000 per event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176712-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BFL season\nThe 2004 season of the Belgian Football League (BFL) is the regular season played in the Belgium. The Antwerp Diamonds won Belgian Bowl XVII against the Leuven Lions by a score of 12-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176712-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BFL season, Regular season, Regular season standings\nW = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT = Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against The top four teams of the regular season are seeded into playoffs for the Belgian Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176713-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BMW Open\nThe 2004 BMW Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Munich, Germany and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 26 April until 2 May 2004. Unseeded Nikolay Davydenko won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176713-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BMW Open, Finals, Doubles\nJames Blake / Mark Merklein defeated Julian Knowle / Nenad Zimonji\u0107 6\u20132, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176714-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nWayne Black and Kevin Ullyett were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176714-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nJames Blake and Mark Merklein won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20134 against Julian Knowle and Nenad Zimonji\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176715-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176715-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nNikolay Davydenko won in the final 6\u20134, 7\u20135 against Martin Verkerk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176716-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters\nThe 2004 Paris Masters (also known as the BNP Paribas Masters for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament held at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France and played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 32nd edition of the Paris Masters, and was part of the 2004 ATP Masters Series. The tournament was held from 1 November to 8 November 2004. Russia's Marat Safin defeated Czech Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in the final to win the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176716-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters, Finals, Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Todd Woodbridge defeated Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176717-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Doubles\nWayne Arthurs and Paul Hanley were the defending champions, but lost in the first round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176717-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134, against Wayne Black and Kevin Ullyett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176718-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles\nMarat Safin defeating Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20133, to win the title at the 2004 Paris Masters. It was his then-record third title at the Paris Masters, and he became the first man to win the two final Masters events of the season back-to-back, having won the Madrid Masters the week before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176718-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles\nTim Henman was the defending champion but he lost in the third round to Mikhail Youzhny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176718-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. All sixteen seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176719-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BX159\n2004 BX159, is an asteroid from the central region of the asteroid belt, approximately 1.2 kilometers in diameter. It was first observed at Paranal Observatory in the Atacama desert of Chile on 20 January 2004. 2004 BX159 missed the virtual impactor date of 29 August 2009. The asteroid was removed from the Sentry Risk Table in April 2014 as a result of precovery images establishing it is a harmless main belt asteroid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176719-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BX159, Description\n2004 BX159 orbits the Sun in the central main-belt at a distance of 2.2\u20132.9\u00a0AU once every 4.03 years (1,471 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.15 and an inclination of 4\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176719-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BX159, Description\nAfter discovery, it was thought to be a Mars-crossing asteroid because of its poorly known orbit, and was listed on the Sentry Risk Table as a possible impactor. With an observation arc of 3 days and only 8 observations, perihelion was determined to be 1.5\u00b13 astronomical units (AU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176719-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 BX159, Description\nPrecovery observations in archival data of the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on Mauna Kea were identified in early 2014, resulting in a dramatic improvement of the orbital accuracy, sufficient to recognize the object as a regular main belt asteroid, not posing any danger to Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176719-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 BX159, Description\nThe body was subsequently linked by the Minor Planet Center with additional observations reported since 1997. It has now a well-established orbit, observed over decades, with the lowest possible uncertainty of 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176719-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 BX159, Description\nIt is even known that 2004 BX159 passed 0.0036\u00a0AU (540,000\u00a0km; 330,000\u00a0mi) from asteroid 3 Juno on 18 September 1961.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176720-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BYU Cougars football team\nThe 2004 BYU Cougars football team represented Brigham Young University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176720-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BYU Cougars football team, Schedule\n\u2022SportsWest Productions (SWP) games were shown locally on KSL 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176720-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BYU Cougars football team, BYU Cougars Radio Network\nThe BYU Cougars radio network carried every game on radio using the broadcast trio of Greg Wrubell (pxp), Marc Lyons (analyst), and Bill Riley or Andy Boyce (sidelines). KSL 1160 AM served as the flagship station for BYU Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election\nThe Ba'kelalan by-election was a by-election for the seat of Ba'kelalan state constituency in the Sarawak State Legislative Assembly. The seat fell vacant after the death if its incumbent member, Dr Judson Sakai Tagal in a helicopter crash at Mount Murud. The seat was defended for Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition government by Nelson Balang Rining of the Sarawak Progressive Democratic Party (SPDP), while an independent politician Baru Bian contested against BN in a straight one-to-one fight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election\nAt the time of the election, there were 7,976 voters, a majority of whom were the Lun Bawang and Kelabit people. Since the creation of the constituency in 1995, the incumbent Dr Judson Sakai Tagal won the seat for two consecutive terms uncontested. This is the first time that the Ba'kelalan residents are able to exercise their rights to vote since the creation of the constituency. The seat has been won continuously by BN since the constituency creation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election\nIn this by-election, Nelson Balang Rining successfully defended the seat at a 1,452 majority. Baru Bian, who only decided to contest within 24 hours of the nomination day was able to garner 1,391 votes although he was widely believed to have lost deposit (garner less than 1/8 of the total votes cast) before the polling day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Background and history\nThe Ba'kelalan state constituency has various ethnic groups which can be grouped under Orang Ulu people (\"upriver people\"). The Lun Bawang and the Kelabit people forms the majority of the ethnic groups here. The Ba'kelalan state constituency was formally part of the Lawas state constituency. In 1995, Ba'kelalan state constituency was separated from Lawas during a delineation exercise. At the time of the by-election, there were a total of 7,976 eligible voters with 70% of them were Kelabits or Lun Bawang, 1.2% Chinese, 0.8 percent Bidayuh, 0.9% Malay/Melanau, and 0.1% other ethnic groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Background and history\nSince the creation of the constituency in 1995, the Ba'kelalan residents never voted before because the incumbent Dr Judson Sakai Tagal, won uncontested for two consecutive terms in 1996 and 2001 state elections. Therefore, this by-election was the first time that residents was able to exercise their voting rights since the creation of the constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Background and history\nBa'kelalan is situated deep in the interior of Sarawak bordering Indonesian Kalimantan. Therefore, the only convenient mode of access is by air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Nomination of candidates\nNomination of candidates have become an issue in this election. Firstly, the Sarawak BN coalition has nominated several names, followed by another few names by the Sarawak Progressive Democratic Party (SPDP) leaders, and several names from the grassroots (people of Ba'kelalan). Meanwhile, other Sarawak BN component parties such as Parti Pesaka Bumiputera Bersatu (PBB) and Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS) decided to rally behind any BN candidate being nominated. The state BN chairman, Abdul Taib Mahmud, preferred Nelson Balang, Judson Sakai's political secretary and SPDP youth chief, because he is familiar with the area and its people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Nomination of candidates\nOn the other hand, SPDP president William Mawam Ikom, has his own list of candidates. The list did not include Nelsong Balang but choose Bob Baru, a Miri based dentist because has high education background and well-liked by the Ba'kelalan community. Besides, SPDP also suggested another candidate, Roland Mattu as a possible candidate. However, BN top leadership did not favour Bob Baru because he has a strong Christian background which could be affecting the state political scene dominated by muslim Melanau. Finally, SPDP succumb to the choice of the top leadership in Sarawak BN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Nomination of candidates\nWith rumours spreading that BN would win the by-election on the nomination day, a Lun Bawang lawyer based in Kuching named Baru Bian unexpectedly offered himself as an independent candidate to campaign against BN on the day before the nomination day. Baru was a Parti Bansa Dayak Sarawak (PBDS) supreme council member. He resigned from PBDS and made a press statement that he would contest as an independent because PBDS, as a member of the BN coalition, cannot contest against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Nomination of candidates\nUnlike BN, Baru Bian relied on his previous record on defending Native Customary Rights (NCR) cases against property developers in court. He is well-known in the Lun Bawang community because of his strong principles and exceptional faith. Baru Bian decided to contest in the last minute because of requests by certain Ba'kelalan residents to represent them. He also noted that a considerable number of the Ba'kelalan residents did not favour Nelson Balang. Baru previously contested against PBB's Awang Tengah Ali Hassan at Lawas constituency under PBDS ticket but lost. Baru Bian is the cousin of Nelson Balang. Baru was also a senior pastor of Borneo Evangelical Mission (BEM) church.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Nomination of candidates\nAnother independent candidate named Wilson Lio Apoi also expressed interests in contesting in this election. He claimed that he obtained support from Bario and Lawas. However, his nominating paper was rejected by returning officer. Other candidates such as Frank Samuel Agong, and Mohamed Brahim also had their nomination papers rejected due to technical errors. Sarawak National Party (SNAP) was an opposition party. It declined to reveal its own list of possible candidates. The party then decided to withdraw from contesting in this by-election a few days before the nomination day. Meanwhile, Sarawak Democratic Action Party (DAP) refused to involve in this by-election. Sarawak DAP chairman Wong Ho Leng opined that a different kind of voice is needed to break the BN dominance in Sarawak politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Election campaign issues, Barisan Nasional\nSarawak BN has always been campaigning on the platform of developing Ba'kelalan and improve the region's socioeconomic status. The BN candidate Nelson Balang stated that he will continue to bring development to Ba'kelalan. These includes better electricity, water supply, and roads to the constituents. Alfred Jabu Numpang, the Sarawak deputy chief minister told the Ba'kelalan voters that only BN can bring to development to them. Meanwhile, a senior minister in the Sarawak cabinet Awang Tengah Ali Hassan stated that an independent candidate will not be able to bring any changes to Ba'kelalan. Under previous state assemblyman Judson Sakai, Ba'kelalan had slightly better road access and electricity supply although the some road sare still inaccesible by small vehicles. BN also hired four-wheel drives to bring voters to polling stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Election campaign issues, Barisan Nasional\nBN also announced that they Ba'kelalan would be developed as a tourism destination. Meanwhile, Awang Tengah announced that a RM 76 million water supply project would be implemented soon in this region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Election campaign issues, Baru Bian\nOn the other hand, Baru Bian viewed development in terms of both mental and spiritual developments. He clarify that he was not totally against BN in this election as he was providing alternative voice for the people. This was because Nelson Belong was not well accepted by the Ba'kelalan constituents. He also stressed that land rights and land acquisitions are both important in the development of Ba'kelalan. As a devout Christian, Baru also had a chance to influence those who are sympathetic to his religious outlook. Baru said that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Election campaign issues, Baru Bian\nWe stand to defend our right to decide who we want, for all the good that God had taught us, for honesty and intergrity. This is more important in our teaching that material wealth and possession. Our faith had taught us man shall not live by bread alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Results\nThere were 56% of the voters participated in this election. As expected, Nelson Balang won the election with a majority of 1,452 votes. In terms of percentage, Nelson obtained 67% of the votes while Baru Bian obtained 36%. Older voters tend to vote for BN for more developments in Ba'kelalan while younger voters opted for Baru Bian because of his academic qualifications and championing of native customary rights. The Kelabit people voted for Nelson Balang while Lun Bawang people voted for Baru Bian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Results\nAreas such as Limbang, Bario, and Medamit are known to vote for Nelson Balang while the people from the interior of Ba'kelalan such as Long Tuma, Long Tuping, and Long Sebangang voted for Baru Bian. Baru Bian won in 32 polling stations in the lowland regions of the constituency while Nelson Balang won in the highland villages of Ba'kelalan and Bario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Aftermath\nAfter the by-election, Nelson Balang vowed to continue Dr Judson Sakai's legacy in developing Ba'kelalan. Meanwhile, Baru Bian accepted his defeat. He said he will continue to defend native land rights. Baru was also willing to contest the seat again in the coming 2006 state election. Baru also reminded BN on finding the cause on why there is considerable number of voters not supporting BN. He also hoped that BN will help to alleviate the socio-economic and infrastructure problems in Ba'kelalan. Baru also congratulated his cousin after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176721-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Ba'kelalan by-election, Aftermath\nPrime minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi thanked the voters and congratulated Sarawak chief minister Abdul Taib Mahmud for winning the by-election. Malaysian deputy prime minister Najib Razak said that Barisan win was expected because the people already expressed their wish for more development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176722-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baghdad refusal of orders\nOn October 13, 2004, American Army reservists participating in the Iraq War refused an order to drive a convoy of fuel tankers lacking armour plates through Baghdad, leading to claims of \"mutiny\" amongst the soldiers who claimed to be balking at a \"suicide mission\" that would have seen them enter hostile territory without a combat escort, in damaged trucks without armor plating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176722-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Baghdad refusal of orders\nThe 343rd Quartermaster Company, based in Rock Hill, South Carolina had earlier been forced to turn back from an abortive 3.5 day journey to another army base which had refused their load of contaminated fuel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176722-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Baghdad refusal of orders\nReturning to Tallil Air Base, the same company was ordered to take their cargo to Taji, north of Baghdad. The journey would be through dangerous terrain known for ambushes by Iraqi insurgents and would be made without the usual infantry and helicopter escort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176722-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Baghdad refusal of orders, Fallout\nWhile 19 soldiers refused the order, only 18 were placed under investigation. In the end, the army decided not to pursue a court-martial against the soldiers, but rather to seek non-judicial punishments against five of them. Five soldiers were reassigned to different units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176722-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Baghdad refusal of orders, Fallout\nThe Army ordered the 120-troop company put on stand down, and taken off active duty while their vehicles were repaired and upgraded with steel armor plates. They returned to active status on November 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176722-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Baghdad refusal of orders, Fallout\nOn October 21, the Army announced that they had replaced the commander of the unit at her own request. The first sergeant was also replaced as a result of the action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176723-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bahrain Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Bahrain Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 4 April 2004 at the Bahrain International Circuit. It was Race 3 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. It was the first Formula One race to be held in the Kingdom of Bahrain and the Middle East. The 57-lap race was the third round of the 2004 Formula One season. The race was won by Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher. His teammate Rubens Barrichello completed a 1-2 for the team, whilst Jenson Button completed the podium for the BAR team by finishing in third position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176723-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bahrain Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176724-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bahrain Superprix\nThe 2004 Bahrain Super Prix was the inaugural and only Bahrain Super Prix race held at the Bahrain International Circuit on December 10, 2004. It was won by Briton Lewis Hamilton for Manor Motorsport, who finished ahead of Nico Rosberg and Jamie Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176724-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bahrain Superprix, Classification, Qualifying\nQualifying is split into two sessions, both of which being 45 minutes, both of which were held on December 9, with the best times of each driver counting towards the grid for the qualifying race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176725-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bahraini Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2004 Bahraini Crown Prince Cup was the 4th edition of the cup tournament in men's football (soccer). This edition featured the top four sides from the Bahraini Premier League 2003-04 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176726-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bakersfield, California mayoral election\nThe 2004 Bakersfield, California mayoral election was held on March 2, 2004 to elect the mayor of Bakersfield, California. It saw the reelection of incumbent mayor Harvey Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176726-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bakersfield, California mayoral election\nThe election coincided with the California presidential primaries. Since Hall obtained a majority in the initial round of voting, no runoff was necessitated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176727-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baladeh earthquake\nThe 2004 Baladeh earthquake occurred on May 28 in northern Iran. This dip-slip earthquake had a moment magnitude of 6.3 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). Total deaths for the event amounted to 35, with 278\u2013400 injured, and $15.4 million in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176728-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ball State Cardinals football team\nThe 2004 Ball State Cardinals football team represented Ball State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Cardinals were led by second-year head coach Brady Hoke and played their home games at Ball State Stadium as members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). They finished the season 2\u20139, 2\u20136 in MAC play to finish in fifth place in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176729-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ballon d'Or\nThe 2004 Ballon d'Or, given to the best football player in Europe as judged by a panel of sports journalists from UEFA member countries, was delivered to the Ukrainian striker Andriy Shevchenko on 13 December 2004. On 9 November 2004, was announced the shortlist of 50 male players compiled by a group of experts from France Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176729-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Ballon d'Or\nThere were 52 voters, from Albania, Andorra, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, England, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, Moldova, Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Ireland, Romania, Russia, San Marino, Scotland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, Wales and Yugoslavia. Each picked a first (5pts), second (4pts), third (3pts), fourth (2pts) and fifth choice (1pt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176729-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ballon d'Or\nAndriy Shevchenko was the third Ukrainian to win the award after Oleh Blokhin (1975) and Igor Belanov (1986). He finished top goalscorer in the 2003\u201304 Serie A, scoring 24 goals in 32 matches, as his team won the league title. The best ranked goalkeeper on the list was Gianluigi Buffon (Italy) with a 17th place (jointly with Traianos Dellas, Fernando Morientes, Frank Lampard and Didier Drogba). Ricardo Carvalho (Portugal) was the top ranked defender in the list, at ninth, while Deco (Portugal) was the top ranked midfielder at second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176729-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ballon d'Or, Rankings, Non-voted players\nThe following 21 men were originally in contention for the 2004 Ballon d\u2019Or, but did not receive any votes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176730-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Orioles season\nThe 2004 Baltimore Orioles season involved the Orioles finishing 3rd in the American League East with a record of 78 wins and 84 losses. The team led Major League Baseball in at bats (5,736) and hits (1,614).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176730-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Orioles season, Regular season, Notable transactions\nJuly 6, 2004: Ken Huckaby was selected off waivers by the Baltimore Orioles from the Texas Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176730-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Orioles season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176731-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe 2004 Baltimore Ravens season was the team's ninth season in the NFL. They were unable to improve upon their previous output of 10\u20136 and a playoff appearance, instead going 9\u20137 and missing the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176731-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe 2004 season was the subject of the John Feinstein non-fiction book Next Man Up; the result of Feinstein spending the season behind the scenes with the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176731-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Ravens season\nIt was also the highlight of then 37-year-old Deion Sanders making a comeback after three years out of football. Meanwhile, Jamal Lewis, who was coming off a historic 2003 season, was arrested for drug charges and earned a two-game suspension by the NFL. He would finish the season with just 1,006 yards rushing as the Ravens were one of the worst offenses in the NFL in 2004. Ed Reed, who had 9 interceptions for the season, was named Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176731-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Ravens season\nFor the season, the Ravens introduced black alternate uniforms for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176731-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Baltimore Ravens season, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Pittsburgh Steelers\nSteelers starting quarterback Tommy Maddox would suffer an injury during this game, sending 2004 first-round pick Ben Roethlisberger out on the field. After the game, Roethlisberger would lead the Steelers to fourteen straight victories to end the season. Thus, this marked the only loss the Steelers suffered during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176732-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bandy World Championship\nThe 2004 Bandy World Championship was a competition between bandy playing nations. The men's tournament was played in Sweden on 1\u20138 February 2004 for Group A and Group B was played at the City Park Ice Rink in Hungary on 25\u201328 February 2004. Finland won the championship for the 1st time. There were 11 bandy playing countries participating in the 2004 championships: Finland, Kazakhstan, Norway, Russia, Sweden (group A) and Belarus, Canada, Estonia, Hungary, Netherlands and United States (group B).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176732-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bandy World Championship, Results\nFinland became champion. For the first time ever the championship went to a team other than Soviet Union/Russia or Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176733-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bangkok International Film Festival\nThe 2004 Bangkok International Film Festival started on January 22 and ran until February 2. The Golden Kinnaree Awards were announced on January 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176734-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bangkok gubernatorial election\nGubernatorial elections were held on August 29, 2004, to determine the governor of Bangkok. The Democrat Party's candidate, Apirak Kosayodhin, won the election with 911,441 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176735-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic\nThe 2004 Bank of the West Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts that was part of the Tier II Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 33rd edition of the tournament and took place at the Taube Tennis Center in Stanford, California, United States, from July 12 through July 18, 2004. Second-seeded Lindsay Davenport won the singles title, her third at the event after 1998 and 1999, and earned $ 93,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176735-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic, Finals, Doubles\nEleni Daniilidou / Nicole Pratt defeated Iveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 / Claudine Schaul, 6\u20132, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176736-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176736-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Doubles\nEleni Daniilidou and Nicole Pratt won the title, defeating Iveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 and Claudine Schaul 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176737-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but did not compete this year due to a recovery from a surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176737-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport won the title, defeating Venus Williams 7\u20136(7\u20134), 5\u20137, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176737-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400\nThe 2004 Banquet 400 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race that took place on October 10, 2004, at Kansas Speedway in Kansas City, Kansas. The race was won from the pole by Joe Nemechek, his final trip to victory lane in NASCAR. Ricky Rudd finished second and Greg Biffle came in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400, Race report\nJoe Nemechek would defeat Ricky Rudd by just one car length (.081 of a second) in front of 90,000 fans. Nemechek won the pole position for the race at just over 180 miles per hour (290\u00a0km/h) during Friday's qualifying session. The race took three hours to complete and nine caution periods slowed the race for 39 laps. The race began at approximately 2:00 PM EDT and concluded at approximately 5:07 PM EDT. At an interview done in 2012, Nemechek praised NASCAR's then-lenient rules on \"vehicle innovation\" that allowed him to acquire his fourth (and final) NASCAR Cup Series victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400, Race report\nSterling Marlin had problems in the pits and came out with a terrible 34th-place finish due to a crash. Kirk Shelmerdine received the last-place finish on the third lap of this 267-lap race due to a problem with his clutch. Shane Hmiel would make the best finish in his NASCAR career to date with a respectable 24th-place finish. Veteran driver Larry Gunselman would make his final Nextel Cup Series start. He would attempt the next two Daytona 500 races and make several starts in the Busch and Craftsman Truck Series before becoming the owner of Max Q Motorsports; a NASCAR Sprint Cup Series team that is currently inactive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400, Race report\nKyle Busch crashed out for the second time in his fourth career start in 2004. Oddly enough, neither of his first two crashouts directly resulted in cautions coming out for his wrecks. At Las Vegas, he smacked the outside wall twice very early on. The hits weren't hard enough to spray debris but they were sufficient enough to force the crew to park the car after Kyle limped it back to the pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400, Race report\nHere at Kansas, Kyle hit the outside wall in the trioval and knocked a brake rotor out of his car, which was promptly run over by a trailing Mark Martin. Kyle slowed on the track without any visibly significant cosmetic damage while Mark had to pit after one more lap with two flat tires, finally prompting a caution for the debris. Mark was almost instantly bailed out thanks to a caution just after the ensuing restart, earning him the lucky dog, but Kyle had to drive his car straight to the back of the hauler due to the terminal brake system damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400, Race report\nThis was the fifth and final NASCAR Cup Series race for owner Dave Watson, the owner of W.W. Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176738-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Banquet 400, Race report\nPurse monies for each driver ranged from $279,725 ($383,266.62 when adjusted for inflation) to $63,212 ($86,610.24 when adjusted for inflation). Kansas Speedway awarded a grand total of $3,553,992 to all the drivers who qualified for this event ($4,869,520.05 when adjusted for inflation).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176739-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baqubah bombing\nThe 2004 Baqubah bombing occurred next to a local market and a police station on 28 July 2004, in Baquba, Diyala Governor, targeting civilians that were lined up waiting to sign up as police volunteers. According to witnesses, a suicide car bomber rammed his vehicle into the queue outside the building and detonated the explosive charges. The force of the blast was huge and destroyed a minivan that was parked nearby, killing all 21 people inside. A total of 68 Iraqis perished in the attack and scores more were wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176739-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Baqubah bombing\nThe city of Baqubah went on to become an important center for the Iraqi insurgency and was declared to be the center of operations for the Al-Qaeda in Iraq in late 2003 - early 2006, then it became a major location for Islamic State of Iraq , before US troops moved in and forced the group to relocate. It was the site of almost daily incidents, including major attacks in 2004\u20132005, 2008 and 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176740-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Barbarians end of season tour\nThe 2004 Barbarians end of season tour was a series of matches played in May\u2013June 2004 in Scotland, Wales, England and Portugal by Barbarian F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176740-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Barbarians end of season tour\nFor the first time, the \"Baa-baas\", played against Portugal, the Winner of 2004 Six Nations \"B\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176741-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council in South Yorkshire, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by 3. The Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176742-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council election\nElections to Barrow-in-Furness Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour party kept overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nElections to the Baseball Hall of Fame for 2004 proceeded in keeping with rules enacted in 2001. The Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) held an election to select from recent players; Dennis Eckersley and Paul Molitor gained induction to the Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nThe Veterans Committee did not hold an election; the 2001 rules changes provided that elections for players retired over 20 years would be held every other year, with elections of non-players (managers, umpires and executives) held every fourth year. The Committee held elections in 2003 in both categories, including players who were active no later than 1981. The next election for players was in 2005; elections in both categories would again be held in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nThe induction ceremonies were held on July 25 in Cooperstown, with Commissioner Bud Selig presiding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, The BBWAA election\nThe BBWAA was again authorized to elect players active in 1984 or later, but not after 1998; the ballot included candidates from the 2003 ballot who received at least 5% of the vote but were not elected, along with selected players, chosen by a screening committee, whose last appearance was in 1998. All 10-year members of the BBWAA were eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, The BBWAA election\nVoters were instructed to cast votes for up to 10 candidates; any candidate receiving votes on at least 75% of the ballots would be honored with induction to the Hall. Results of the 2004 election by the BBWAA were announced on January 6. The ballot consisted of 32 players; 506 ballots were cast, with 380 votes required for election. A total of 3314 individual votes were cast, an average of 6.55 per ballot. Those candidates receiving less than 5% of the vote (25 votes) will not appear on future BBWAA ballots, but may eventually be considered by the Veterans Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, The BBWAA election\nCandidates who were eligible for the first time are indicated here with a dagger (\u2020). The two candidates who received at least 75% of the vote and were elected are indicated in bold italics; candidates who have since been selected in subsequent elections are indicated in italics. The candidates who received less than 5% of the vote, thus becoming ineligible for future BBWAA consideration, are indicated with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, The BBWAA election\nThe newly eligible candidates included 17 All-Stars, five of whom were not on the ballot, who were selected a total of 52 times. While no player was selected more than ten times, Paul Molitor (seven times), Dave Stieb (seven), Dennis Eckersley (six) and Joe Carter (five) were selected five times or more. The field included two Cy Young Award winners (Eckersley and Doug Drabek), three MVPs (Eckersley, Terry Pendleton and Kevin Mitchell) and one Rookie of the Year (Jerome Walton).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, The BBWAA election\nPlayers eligible for the first time who were not included on the ballot were: Rafael Belliard, Greg Cadaret, Tony Castillo, Dave Clark, Joey Cora, Mike Devereaux, Erik Hanson, Xavier Hernandez, Chris Hoiles, Rex Hudler, Pete Incaviglia, Mark Lemke, Nelson Liriano, John Marzano, Tom Pagnozzi, Donn Pall, Mark Parent, Bob Patterson, Billy Ripken, Luis Rivera, Bip Roberts, Craig Shipley, Pete Smith, Bill Swift, Jerome Walton, David West, and Eddie Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, The BBWAA election\nNone of the newly-eligible candidates would appear on any future ballots. As expected, Eckersley and Molitor were elected on their first appearance; no other first-timer received the 5% of votes required to remain on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nMurray Chass received the J. G. Taylor Spink Award honoring a baseball writer. (The award was voted at the December 2003 meeting of the BBWAA, dated 2003, and conferred in the summer 2004 ceremonies.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThe Spink Award has been presented by the BBWAA at the annual summer induction ceremonies since 1962. It recognizes a sportswriter \"for meritorious contributions to baseball writing\". The recipients are not members of the Hall of the Fame, merely featured in a permanent exhibit at the National Baseball Museum, but writers and broadcasters commonly call them \"Hall of Fame writers\" or words to that effect. Living recipients were members of the Veterans Committee for elections in odd years 2003 to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThree final candidates, selected by a BBWAA committee, were named on July 15, 2003 in Chicago in conjunction with All-Star Game activities; the finalists were: Murray Chass, who covered the New York Yankees for The New York Times; Joe Goddard, who has long covered the Chicago Cubs and White Sox for the Chicago Sun-Times; and Bob Burnes, who covered the St. Louis Browns for the St. Louis Globe Democrat. All 10-year members of the BBWAA were eligible to cast ballots in voting conducted by mail in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nOn December 17, Murray Chass was announced as the recipient, having received 280 votes out of the 438 ballots cast, with Goddard receiving 98 votes and Burnes receiving 60 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nLon Simmons received the Ford C. Frick Award honoring a baseball broadcaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nThe Frick Award has been presented at the annual summer induction ceremonies since 1978. It recognizes a broadcaster for \"major contributions to baseball\". The recipients are not members of the Hall of the Fame, merely featured in a permanent exhibit at the National Baseball Museum, but writers and broadcasters commonly call them \"Hall of Fame broadcaster\" or words to that effect. Living honorees were members of the Veterans Committee for elections in odd years 2003 to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nTo be eligible, an active or retired broadcaster must have a minimum of 10 years of continuous major league broadcast service with a ball club, a network, or a combination of the two; more than 160 candidates were eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nOn December 11, 2003, 10 finalists were announced. In accordance with guidelines established in 2003, seven were chosen by a research committee at the museum: Ken Coleman, Jack Graney, Graham McNamee, Hal Totten, Gene Elston, France Laux and Ty Tyson. Three additional candidates \u2013 Joe Nuxhall, Dave Niehaus and Lon Simmons \u2013 were selected in voting by over 105,000 fans prior to November 2003 at the Hall's official website .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176743-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nOn February 26, Lon Simmons was announced as the 2004 recipient ; an original voice of the San Francisco Giants, as well as an announcer for the Oakland Athletics. He called games for 41 years before retiring following the 2002 season. He was selected in a January vote by a 20-member committee composed of the 14 living recipients, along with six additional broadcasting historians or columnists: Bob Costas (NBC), Barry Horn (The Dallas Morning News), Stan Isaacs (formerly of New York Newsday), Ted Patterson (historian), Curt Smith (historian) and Larry Stewart (Los Angeles Times). Committee members are asked to base the selection on the following criteria: longevity; continuity with a club; honors, including national assignments such as the World Series and All-Star Games; and popularity with fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176744-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Basildon District Council election\nThe 2004 Basildon District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Basildon District Council in Essex, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176744-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Basildon District Council election, Election result\nAll comparisons in vote share are to the corresponding 2000 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176745-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Basingstoke and Deane Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176745-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives gain 2 seats to hold 28 seats, level with the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties combined and leaving 4 Independents holding the balance on the council. The Conservatives increased their share of the vote and picked up Burghclere from a former Conservative turned independent, and Winklebury from Labour. Labour lost votes with the Labour leader of the council Rob Donnelly losing his seat in Popley East and the Liberal Democrats taking a seat from Labour in Brighton Hill South. Overall turnout in the election was 38.24%, in increase from the 31.33% in 2003, and put down to the European elections being held at the same time as the council election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176745-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Liberal Democrat and Labour alliance continued to run the council, after winning a 1-vote majority over the Conservatives at the annual council meeting. Independent Martin Biermann became chairman of the environment committee and a further 2 Independents became vice-chairmen of committees, leading to accusations by the Conservatives that a deal had been done with the Independents, but this was denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500\nThe 2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on October 31, 2004 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton, Georgia. Contested over 325 laps, the race was the 33rd of the 36-race 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Ryan Newman of Penske-Jasper Racing won the pole, while Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race. Roush Racing teammates Mark Martin and Carl Edwards finished second and third, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Background\nAtlanta Motor Speedway was formerly a 1.522 miles (2.449\u00a0km) oval until 1997, when two doglegs were added and the track became 1.54 miles long and a quad-oval. As of the 2014 season, the track is considered one of 16 intermediate tracks on the Cup schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Background\nOne week after the plane crash prior to the Subway 500 that killed ten people, six of whom affiliated with Hendrick Motorsports, the four teams replaced their standard hood designs with a decal of the ten people killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Qualifying\n59 cars were initially entered for the race, the most since the 1999 Daytona 500. After the preliminary list was released, J. J. Yeley, Greg Sacks, Larry Hollenback, and Andy Belmont entered the race, while Carl Long and Derrike Cope withdrew. Afterwards, Randy LaJoie replaced Larry Gunselman, and two days later, Cope replaced Stanton Barrett, and Mike Wallace replaced Jimmy Spencer. Brendan Gaughan went out for qualifying first, and Larry Foyt was the last driver to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Qualifying\nRyan Newman won the pole with a lap time of 28.939 seconds and speed of 191.575 miles per hour (308.310\u00a0km/h), his 26th career pole and second straight. Joe Nemechek started second, followed by Elliott Sadler, Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Mark Martin, Jimmie Johnson, Kevin Harvick, and Jeff Gordon. Scott Riggs, Scott Wimmer, Kerry Earnhardt, Johnny Sauter, Hermie Sadler, Wallace, Cope, LaJoie, Sacks, Foyt, Kirk Shelmerdine, Morgan Shepherd, Belmont, Hollenback, and Kenny Wallace failed to qualify; Wallace never made an attempt due to a battery failure. Due in most part of Riggs and Wimmer\u2014who made every race to that point\u2014failing to qualify, it led to the creation of the \"Top 35 Rule\" in 2005 to ensure NASCAR's top-tier teams make the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Race\nPrior to the race, a moment of silence was held for the ten killed in the Hendrick plane crash. Rock band Third Day performed the national anthem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Race\nJoe Nemechek took the lead on lap one, though Ryan Newman led for the next 48 laps. Carl Edwards led for four laps before losing the lead to Newman during a caution period for oil on the track; Bobby Labonte was the beneficiary, allowing him to gain back a lap. From laps 54 to 74, Newman and Edwards led 10 and 11 laps, respectively, before Mark Martin led for 41 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Race\nJimmie Johnson led briefly for four laps from 116 to 119, before Martin reclaimed the lead on lap 120; 18 laps later, Bobby Labonte spun in turn 2, bringing out the second caution, and allowing Casey Mears to regain a lap. Martin would lead until lap 178, when another oil caution was called, Greg Biffle the beneficiary, with Michael Waltrip leading lap 179, before Martin reclaimed the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Race\nJohnson and Nemechek led laps 237 and 238-239, respectively, until Martin led for another 70 laps; during Martin's lead, another oil caution was waved on lap 287 with Jeff Burton getting a lap back, and on lap 301, Kevin Harvick stalled on pit road; Biffle was once again the beneficiary. Johnson led for two laps until lap 312, when Dale Earnhardt Jr. crashed on the backstretch after Edwards made contact with him, allowing Kasey Kahne to lead for four laps. Brian Vickers was the beneficiary of the caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0006-0003", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Race\nOn the final restart, Johnson took the lead, and led for the remainder of the race, beating Martin by 0.293 seconds. The win was Johnson's 13th career Cup win, seventh of 2004, first at Atlanta, and third consecutive, making him the first driver to win three straight races since Hendrick teammate Jeff Gordon in 1998\u20131999, and the first to do so in a season since Gordon during the 1998 season. Martin finished second, and the top five consisted of Edwards, Nemechek, and Kahne; Burton, Vickers, Jamie McMurray, Tony Stewart, and Biffle rounded out the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Post-race\n\"The No. 6 car was coming, but I had 10 angels riding along.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Post-race\nOver the radio, Johnson stated, \"in loving memory, all the way,\" and celebrated his win by driving to the flagstand to receive the checkered flag, then performing a Polish victory lap; Johnson later stated he had felt guilty for destroying one of Hendrick Director of Engine Operations Randy Dorton's (who was among those killed on the flight) engines while celebrating his first career win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Post-race\nIn victory lane, Hendrick competition director Ken Howes gave Johnson a cell phone with Rick Hendrick on the line. The three other Hendrick drivers (Gordon, Labonte, Vickers) joined Johnson in victory lane, and the team wore their caps backwards in honor of Hendrick's son Ricky Hendrick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Post-race\nAfter the race, Martin, who led a race-high 227 laps, defended crew chief Pat Tryson for their late pit stop strategy, stating, \"We were a sitting duck. If we pitted, they stay out and win. If we stay out, they pit. So it was nobody's fault but those caution flags.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176746-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500, Post-race\nSeven of the Chase for the Nextel Cup drivers suffered problems during the race: points leader Kurt Busch suffered an engine failure on lap 52, and finished 42nd; defending Cup champion Matt Kenseth also blew an engine, finishing 41st; Elliott Sadler crashed in pit road, damaging his steering, and finished 36th; Gordon finished 34th after being forced to go into the garage for a poor-handling car; Jeremy Mayfield's tire was cut, forcing him into the wall, and finished 26th; Ryan Newman suffered from pit stop errors, and finished 17th and two laps down; finally, Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s crash on the backstretch relegated him to 33rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176747-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bassetlaw District Council election\nThe 2004 Bassetlaw District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Bassetlaw District Council in Nottinghamshire, England as part of the 2004 United Kingdom local elections. One third of the council was up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176748-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baton Rouge mayoral election\nThe 2004 Baton Rouge mayoral election was held on September 18 and November 2, 2004 to elect the mayor-president of Baton Rouge, Louisiana. It saw Democrat Kip Holden unseat incumbent Republican Bobby Ray Simpson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176749-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships\nThe 2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Racquet Park at the Amelia Island Plantation in Amelia Island, Florida, United States. It was classified as a Tier II event on the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 25th edition of the event and took place from April 5 to 11, 2004. Lindsay Davenport won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176749-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships, Finals, Doubles\nNadia Petrova / Meghann Shaughnessy defeated Myriam Casanova / Alicia Molik, 3\u20136, 6\u20132, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176750-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Doubles\nLindsay Davenport and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions, but Raymond did not compete this year. Davenport teamed up with Corina Morariu and were eliminated in first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176750-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy won the title by defeating Myriam Casanova and Alicia Molik 3\u20136, 6\u20132, 7\u20135 in the final. It was the 6th title for both players in their respective doubles careers. It was also the 2nd title for the pair during the season, after their win in Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176751-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Singles\nElena Dementieva was the defending champion, but lost in second round to Jelena Kostani\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176751-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport won the title by defeating Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final. It was the 2nd title in the year for Davenport and the 40th title of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176751-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176752-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bavarian Cup\nThe 2004 Bavarian Cup was the seventh edition of this competition which was started in 1998. It ended with the Jahn Regensburg II winning the competition. Together with the finalist, TSV Aindling, both clubs were qualified for the DFB Cup 2004-05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176752-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bavarian Cup\nThe competition is open to all senior men's football teams playing within the Bavarian football league system and the Bavarian clubs in the Regionalliga S\u00fcd (III).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176752-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bavarian Cup, Rules & History\nThe seven Bezirke in Bavaria each play their own cup competition which in turn used to function as a qualifying to the German Cup (DFB-Pokal). Since 1998 these seven cup-winners plus the losing finalist of the region that won the previous event advance to the newly introduced Bavarian Cup, the Toto-Pokal. The two finalists of this competition advance to the German Cup. Bavarian clubs which play in the first or second Bundesliga are not permitted to take part in the event, their reserve teams however can. The seven regional cup winners plus the finalist from last season's winners region are qualified for the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176752-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bavarian Cup, Participating clubs\nThe following eight clubs qualified for the 2004 Bavarian Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176752-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Bavarian Cup, DFB Cup 2004-05\nThe two clubs, TSV Aindling and Jahn Regensburg II, who qualified through the Bavarian Cup for the DFB Cup 2004-05 both were knocked out in the first round of the national cup competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176753-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt\nThe 2004 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt was the 25th edition of the Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt cycle race and was held on 19 May to 23 May 2004. The race started in Selb and finished in Burghausen. The race was won by Jens Voigt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176754-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Baylor Bears football team\nThe 2004 Baylor Bears football team (variously \"Baylor\", \"BU\", or the \"Bears\") represented Baylor University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were represented in the Big 12 Conference in the South Division. They played their home games at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. They were coached by head coach Guy Morriss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176755-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Handball World Championships\nThe 2004 Beach Handball World Championships are a nine-team tournament in both men's and women's beach handball, held at El Gouna in Egypt in 2004. This were the first ever beach handball world championships held in history of the sport. Matches are played in sets, the team that wins two sets is the winner of a match. When teams are equal in points the head-to-head result is decisive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships\nThe 2004 Beach Soccer World Championships was the tenth and final edition of the Beach Soccer World Championships, the most prestigious competition in international beach soccer contested by men's national teams; the following year, the competition was replaced by the second iteration of a world cup in beach soccer, the better known FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. It was organized by Brazilian sports agency Koch Tavares in cooperation with and under the supervision of Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW), the sports governing body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships\nThe tournament took place at Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, specifically at the purpose built Copacabana Arena which had a capacity of 10,000. The main sponsor was McDonald's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships\nBrazil successfully defended their title by again beating Spain, in consecutive finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships, Organisation\nThe format was changed back to how the tournament was played between 1999 and 2001. This meant increasing the number of participants back up to twelve teams and splitting them up into four groups of three nations contested in a round robin format. The top two teams from each group progressed into the quarter finals from which point on the championship proceeded as a knock-out tournament until the winner was crowned, with an additional third place deciding match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships, Teams, Qualification\nEuropean teams gained qualification by finishing in the top four spots of the 2003 Euro Beach Soccer League. South American teams were hand-picked based on recent performances. The other entries received wild-card invites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships, Draw\nThe teams were split into three pots in reflection of their similar circumstances. The draw to assign one nation from each pot into the four groups took place on January 29 in Sao Paulo and was conducted by BSWW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 43], "content_span": [44, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176756-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Beach Soccer World Championships, Group stage\nMatches are listed as local time in Rio de Janeiro, (UTC-3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176757-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Beijing Guoan F.C. season\nThe 2004 Beijing Guoan F.C. season was their 1st season in the Chinese Super League and 14th consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. They competed in the Chinese Super League, FA Cup and Super League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176757-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Beijing Guoan F.C. season, First team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176758-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian First League\n2004 Belarusian First League was the fourteenth season of 2nd level football championship in Belarus. It started in April and ended in November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176758-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2003 season\nTwo top teams of last season (Lokomotiv Vitebsk and MTZ-RIPO Minsk) were promoted to Belarusian Premier League. They were replaced by two teams that finished at the bottom of 2003 Belarusian Premier League table (Lokomotiv Minsk and Molodechno-2000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176758-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2003 season\nTwo teams that finished at the bottom of 2003 season table (Neman Mosty and Pinsk-900) relegated to the Second League. They were replaced by two best teams of 2003 Second League (Baranovichi and Veras Nesvizh).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176759-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian Premier League\nThe 2004 Belarusian Premier League was the 14th season of top-tier football in Belarus. It started on April 15 and ended on November 11, 2004. Gomel were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176759-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian Premier League, Team changes from 2003 season\nTwo lowest placed teams in 2003 (Lokomotiv Minsk and Molodechno-2000) relegated and were replaced by two best teams from 2003 First League: newcomers MTZ-RIPO Minsk and Lokomotiv Vitebsk, who previously competed in Premiere League as KIM, Dvina and Lokomotiv-96 and is a different team from Lokomotiv Vitebsk, who relegated to First League in 1995 and after a few seasons in First and Second Leagues was disbanded in late 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176759-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian Premier League, Overview\nDinamo Minsk won their 7th champions title and qualified for the next season's Champions League. The championship runners-up BATE Borisov and 2004\u201305 Cup winners MTZ-RIPO Minsk qualified for UEFA Cup. 2001 champions Belshina Bobruisk finished on last place and directly relegated to the First League. Lokomotiv Vitebsk and MTZ-RIPO Minsk shared 14th and 15th places with equal number of points and had to play one-legged play-off on a neutral ground to determine who will relegate and who will stay. Lokomotiv Vitebsk lost the game and relegated to the First League. Torpedo-SKA Minsk, who finished 6th, lost financial support from their sponsor in early 2005 and, after losing almost all their main squad and not having funds to pay entrance fee for next season's Premiere League, had to relegate to Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176760-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Belarus on 17 October 2004, with a second round of voting in two constituencies on 27 October, and a third round in one on 20 March 2005. The vast majority of successful candidates, 97 of 109, were independents. Voter turnout was reported to be 91.04% in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176760-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian parliamentary election\nA total of 359 candidates contested the election, with oppositing parties claiming that around 40% of their candidates were not registered. The OCSE delegation noted that although all candidates were given a set amount of free television and radio airtime and a free statement in the national press, over 80% of television news time was dedicated to President Alexander Lukashenko in the five weeks before the election. They also noted concerns about the independence of the Electoral Commission and a lack of transparency during the voting and counting process. The government also closed down nine independent newspapers in the lead-up to the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176761-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian referendum\nA referendum on allowing President Lukashenko to stand in further elections was held in Belarus on 17 October 2004, alongside parliamentary elections. Lukashenko was nearing the end of his constitutionally-limited two terms, and the change would allow him to run for a third term. The result was 88.9% in favour, with a turnout of 90.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176761-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian referendum, Results\nDo you permit the first President of the Republic of Belarus Lukashenko A.G. to participate as a candidate for Presidency of the Republic of Belarus during the President elections and do you adopt the Part I of Article 81 of the Constitution of the Republic of Belarus in the following wording:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176761-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belarusian referendum, Controversy\nParagraph 112 of Belarusian Electoral Code lists \"questions connected with election and dismissal of the President of the Republic of Belarus\" among questions prohibited from being brought out to the Republican referendum. There were several arrests of protesters against the result and reports of oppositional leaders being beaten by police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176762-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Cup Final\nThe 2004 Belgian Cup Final, took place on 17 May 2004 between Beveren and Club Brugge. It was the 49th Belgian Cup final and was won by Club Brugge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176763-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Belgian Figure Skating Championships (Dutch: Belgisch Kampioenschap 2004; French: Championnat de Belgique 2004) took place between 28 and 29 November 2003 in Deurne. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Belgian Grand Prix (formally the Formula 1 Belgian Grand Prix 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 29 August 2004, at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, near the town of Spa, Belgium. It was Race 14 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. The race was contested over 44 laps and was won by Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, taking his and McLaren's only race win of the season from tenth place on the grid. Second place for Michael Schumacher won his seventh world championship, after beating third-placed Rubens Barrichello.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix\nJarno Trulli started from pole position alongside Schumacher. The race saw many changes of the lead, but following several fortuitous safety cars, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was leading the race for the final few laps. Mark Webber triggered a pile-up at the start, eliminating four cars and damaging several others, although he did admit to his mistake later. The race saw Christian Klien score his first championship points, and Olivier Panis and the Jaguar team their last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nFerrari had sealed the Constructors' Championship at the previous race, but the battle for second in the Championship, between Renault and BAR, was still fierce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nHeading into the 14th race of the season, Michael Schumacher, driving for the Ferrari team, was leading the Drivers' Championship by 38 points from teammate Rubens Barrichello. Jenson Button, driving for BAR, was in third place, but only Schumacher and Barrichello could mathematically win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nHowever, the biggest story was the controversy surrounding Button's drive for 2005. Ten days before the Hungarian Grand Prix, Button chose to leave BAR and signed a two-year contract to return to Williams. This was surprising, as Button was enjoying his best season to date, while Williams had been struggling. BAR, however, insisted they had the right to exercise their option to keep Button. Button's management argued that the BAR option was not valid because it contained a clause allowing him to leave if BAR risked losing their Honda engines. They felt the new contract signed in the summer for Honda to supply engines to BAR was not definitive, and thus Button was free to move.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nWith regard to the Spa circuit itself, the race did not take place in 2003 so that modifications to the Bus Stop chicane could be completed. Pundits were very critical of the changes to the chicane: namely, a sweeping right-hand bend has been introduced just before it. This left a huge piece of green-coloured tarmac, causing Martin Brundle to be very scathing of it during qualifying, stating \"you could hold an entire kart meeting in there, including transporters and trucks!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nFour practice sessions were held before qualifying \u2013 two 60-minute sessions on Friday, 27 August, and two 45-minute sessions on Saturday, 28 August. All teams, with the exception of Ferrari, Williams, McLaren, and Renault, were permitted to run three drivers on Friday. Anthony Davidson, the third driver for BAR, set the quickest time in the first practice session, 1:45.104. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen set the fastest time in practice two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nSaturday practice one was cancelled due to fog, and Barrichello set the quickest time in Saturday practice two, shortened from 45 to 30 minutes as a result of the fog that had cancelled practice one. Saturday's second practice session saw two major excursions from Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia and Gianmaria Bruni, the latter causing the session to be red-flagged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nQualifying was split into two sections. In the first season, dubbed \"pre-qualifying\", each driver took turns to record one lap at a time. The order the cars ran in was the reverse order to the classified results at the 2004 Hungarian Grand Prix. For example, Michael Schumacher won the race, so would be the last car to run in pre-qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe second qualifying session (dubbed \"qualifying\") repeated this process (with the drivers running in reverse order to the pre-qualifying results), but with the caveat that the drivers would not be allowed to alter their fuel loads between then and the race. The fastest time in the second session would take pole. As in 2003, setups and fuel loads could not be altered between the end of the second qualifying session and the race. In pre-qualifying, Ricardo Zonta, driving for Toyota, spun off at Pouhon corner, leading him to collide with the tyre wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe second part of qualifying started as being very wet but quickly dried out, enabling Jarno Trulli to switch to intermediate tyres, enabling him to set the fastest lap time. Schumacher qualified second. The conditions did not suit Jenson Button, who had run on wet tyres when the track was ready for intermediates, and Juan Pablo Montoya, who did his qualifying lap on intermediates as it began to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nTrulli's Renault had a good start from pole position, but second-placed Schumacher's Ferrari did not, and he lost positions to Fernando Alonso's Renault and David Coulthard's McLaren. At La Source, Mark Webber's Jaguar collided with Barrichello's Ferrari, causing Webber to lose his front wing and Barrichello to suffer rear wing damage. In a separate incident, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's McLaren made contact with Felipe Massa's Sauber, which caused Massa to lose his front wing. In a third incident, Nick Heidfeld's Jordan and Olivier Panis's Toyota made contact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nGoing into Eau Rouge, Webber was side-by-side with Takuma Sato's BAR, and they collided in the middle of the corner whilst they were overtaken by Montoya's Williams. The contact broke Sato's left rear suspension and Webber's front right suspension. Sato consequently spun in the middle of the track. The rest of the field attempted to avoid the spinning BAR, but in doing so, Zsolt Baumgartner and Gianmaria Bruni, both driving for Minardi, made contact, putting Bruni out of the race and getting him hit by Giorgio Pantano's Jordan. Sato, Webber, Bruni, and Pantano were out of the race. A small fire on Bruni's car, caused by the contact with Pantano, forced the safety car to come out. During this time, Button, Massa, Barrichello, Heidfeld, Baumgartner, and Olivier Panis stopped for repairs caused by debris. Massa and Barrichello stopped twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe safety car came in at the end of lap four and Trulli led Alonso and Coulthard. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen overtook Schumacher for fifth position and Button overtook Ricardo Zonta's Toyota. Schumacher continued to be slow, losing 1.1 seconds to R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in the middle sector on lap five, enabling Montoya to overtake him around the outside of the Bus Stop chicane on lap five. On lap six, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen overtook his teammate, Coulthard, for third, going up the inside at the Les Combes chicane. On lap eight, Barrichello overtook Baumgartner and Heidfeld, putting him into 14th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nChristian Klien, in the sole remaining Jaguar, was the first driver to make a scheduled pit stop, on lap nine, and race leader Trulli made a pit stop on lap 10, rejoining in ninth place. Alonso now led the race, but on lap 12 he had an oil leak and spun twice at Les Combes, losing the lead to R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. He managed to rejoin, but he then had a further spin at Rivage for the same reason and could not rejoin. On the same lap Coulthard had a rear tyre de-lamination, but he made it back to pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen stopped at the end of lap 13. Montoya now led the race from Schumacher, until Montoya pitted on lap 15. Montoya left the pit lane behind Massa, losing time while overtaking him. Schumacher pitted one lap later and leapfrogged Montoya. New leader Pizzonia came into the pits on lap 17. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen now led from Button in second, Trulli in third, and Schumacher in fourth, but Schumacher was able to overcome Trulli on lap 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nGiancarlo Fisichella's Sauber ran wide on lap 20 and lost parts of his front wing. On the same lap, Montoya attempted to repeat his earlier overtake on Trulli, but the pair collided, putting Trulli into a spin. Trulli lost several places, and Montoya lost fourth place to his teammate, Pizzonia. Button pitted on lap 21, rejoining in seventh, behind the battling Fischella and Barrichello. Barrichello then took fifth place on lap 22, as Trulli made a second pit stop, having been passed by Panis. Button was also able to pass Fisichella for sixth position on lap 23, as Barrichello pitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen pitted on lap 29, rejoining in second position, while Schumacher still had to stop. Montoya pitted on the same lap as R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. On lap 31, Button suffered a right rear tyre de-lamination similar to Coulthard's, at approximately 205\u00a0mph (330\u00a0km/h), pitching him into a spin. As a result, he crashed into the Minardi of Baumgartner, who was being lapped, putting both drivers out of the race and bringing out a safety car. Schumacher, Pizzonia, and Heidfeld took the opportunity to pit behind the safety car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nStill behind the safety car, on lap 32, Pizzonia retired due to a gearbox problem. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen led the race from Schumacher, Montoya, Barrichello, and Zonta, who started last. At the restart on lap 34, Klien overtook Panis for eighth place and one point, as Coulthard overtook Trulli for tenth place. One lap later, Coulthard overtook Panis for ninth. On lap 36, Montoya's rear right tyre de-laminated, forcing him to retire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 38, Coulthard attempted to overtake Klien for seventh place, but contact between the two drivers meant Coulthard needed a new front wing after it broke loose and became stuck over his own rear wing. The resulting debris caused the safety car to come out again. The safety car came in at the end of lap 41, but just four corners later, fourth-placed Zonta's engine blew up spectacularly, putting him out of the race. On the penultimate lap, Coulthard overtook Panis for seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen won the race, his first and only victory of 2004. Schumacher finished second, with teammate Barrichello third. The result gave Schumacher his seventh World Drivers' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176764-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Post-race\nAt the 2005 British Grand Prix, Daily Express editor Bob McKenzie honoured a pledge that he would run naked around Silverstone if McLaren won a race in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176765-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Super Cup\nThe 2004 Belgian Supercup was a football match between the winners of the previous season's Belgian First Division and Belgian Cup competitions. The match was contested by Cup winners Club Brugge, and 2004\u201305 Belgian First Division champions, Anderlecht on 22 December 2004 at the ground of the league champions as usual, in this case the Constant Vanden Stock Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176765-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Super Cup\nClub Brugge won its twelfth supercup in total, as it beat Anderlecht 2-0 through goals by Sebastian Hermans and Rune Lange.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176765-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian Super Cup\nFollowing 2004 no cup winner has won the supercup and as such Club Brugge is the last team to have accomplished this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176766-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian regional elections\nOn 13 June 2004, regional elections were held in Belgium, to choose representatives in the regional councils of the Flemish Parliament, the Walloon Parliament, the Brussels Parliament and the German-speaking Community of Belgium. The elections were held on the same day as the European elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176766-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\nIn the Flemish Parliament election, the liberal-socialist government was put to the test. The far right Vlaams Blok became the second largest party in Flanders just after the alliance of conservatives Christian Democratic and Flemish-New Flemish Alliance (CD&V - N-VA). The green party Groen! managed to be elected and keeps half of their seats in the parliament. In contrast with the previous election, the People's Union (VU-ID) has split and the new parties, N-VA and Spirit, allied with CD&V and Different Socialist Party (SP.A) respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176766-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\nBecause of the cordon sanitaire of all the other parties against Vlaams Blok, a coalition of at least three parties needed to be formed in order to have a majority in the Flemish Parliament. Groen! confirmed that it did not want to take part in the new coalition, so the only coalition left was a conservative-socialist-liberal tripartite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176766-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian regional elections, Flemish Parliament\nIn the aftermath of the elections, Yves Leterme (CD&V) was selected to form a Flemish regional government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176766-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian regional elections, Walloon Regional Parliament\nIn the aftermath of the elections, Elio Di Rupo (PS) was selected to form a Walloon regional government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176766-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Belgian regional elections, Brussels Regional Parliament\nIn the aftermath of the elections, Charles Picqu\u00e9 (PS) was selected to form a Brussels regional government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176767-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open\nThe 2004 BellSouth Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Vi\u00f1a del Mar, Chile and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the eleventh edition of the tournament and ran from February 9 through February 15, 2004. Fifth-seeded Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176767-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open, Finals, Doubles\nJuan Ignacio Chela / Gast\u00f3n Gaudio defeated Nicol\u00e1s Lapentti / Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez 7\u20136(7\u20132), 7\u20136(7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176768-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open \u2013 Doubles\nAgust\u00edn Calleri and Mariano Hood were the defending champions but only Hood competed that year with Lucas Arnold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176768-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open \u2013 Doubles\nArnold and Hood lost in the quarterfinals to Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176768-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open \u2013 Doubles\nJuan Ignacio Chela and Gast\u00f3n Gaudio won in the final 7\u20136(7\u20132), 7\u20136(7\u20133) against Nicol\u00e1s Lapentti and Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176769-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open \u2013 Singles\nDavid S\u00e1nchez was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to Gustavo Kuerten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176769-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 BellSouth Open \u2013 Singles\nFernando Gonz\u00e1lez won in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20134 against Kuerten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes\nThe 2004 Belmont Stakes was the 136th running of the Belmont Stakes. The 1+1\u20442-mile (2,400\u00a0m) race, known as the \"test of the champion\" and sometimes called the \"final jewel\" in thoroughbred horse racing's Triple Crown series, was held on June 5, 2004, three weeks after the Preakness Stakes and five weeks after the Kentucky Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes\nFor the third year in a row, a horse won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, only to lose the Belmont Stakes, lengthening the Triple Crown drought to 26 years. In 2004 before a record crowd, Smarty Jones was thought to have an excellent chance of completing the series as he was unbeaten and dominant in his earlier races. However, he failed to relax during the early part of the race when pressured by horses who eventually finished well back. Smarty Jones hit the lead with over half a mile to go but did not have enough energy left to withstand a late charge by Birdstone, who won at odds of 36-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nUndefeated in the lead-up to the Triple Crown series, Smarty Jones won the Kentucky Derby by 2+3\u20444 lengths, and then won the Preakness Stakes by 11+1\u20442 lengths. As a result, he became the heaviest favorite for the Belmont Stakes since Spectacular Bid and Secretariat in the 1970s. When he returned to his home base at Philadelphia Park after winning the Preakness, some 10,000 fans turned out just to see him gallop in the morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nWhen he traveled to Belmont Park a week before the race, he was accompanied through Pennsylvania by two motorcycle police officers, while other police cars blocked key intersections and three helicopters circled overhead. The cavalcade drove past a billboard on the Pennsylvania turnpike that read, \"Look out New York, Smarty's Coming!\" His owners received thousands of letters of encouragement and Smarty Jones merchandise was in high demand. \"Smarty Fever\" led to the largest attendance at Belmont Park in its history: 120,139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nThere were concerns though. Smarty Jones was sired by a sprinter and his broodmare sire was also a sprinter, making his stamina a question mark. He had faced a grueling prep season without any time off since his first race in November 2003. His dominant performance in the Preakness may have taken too much out of him. His trainer, John Servis, tried to keep the horse fresh by giving the colt only one slow workout in the 5 weeks between the Derby and Belmont, while trying to keep the edge off by giving him just enough slower exercise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nAnother concern was the constant attention from press and other visitors, which disrupted the stable routine. Barclay Tagg, who had been through a similar experience with Funny Cide, later recalled visiting Smarty Jones's barn one night at around midnight. \"There were six guards in front of his stall, cutting up and drinking beer, and the light was on in his stall\", he said. \"It's very hard to keep the commotion down.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nRock Hard Ten was the second favorite for the Belmont after finishing second in both the Derby and Preakness. His owners had been disappointed in his Preakness performance though, feeling the horse would have done better if he had been closer to the pace. His jockey at the time, Hall of Famer Gary Stevens, disagreed and declined to ride the horse in the Belmont. \"I wasn't about to... ride him in the Belmont if it meant following orders I couldn't live with\", he said. Alex Solis picked up the mount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nPurge was the third choice in the field after winning the Peter Pan Stakes, while Eddington was the next choice after finishing third in the Preakness. The remaining horses were given little chance, including two entries by trainer Nick Zito. In particular, Birdstone was the \"most maligned colt on the Derby trail\" because of his small size and slight frame \u2013 he weighed only about 900 pounds at the time of the Belmont. Despite Birdstone's excellent breeding and respectable eighth-place finish in the Derby, he was a 36-1 long-shot for the Belmont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nSmarty Jones got a good start and settled into third place behind Purge and Rock Hard Ten while running four-wide. The opening quarter-mile was a reasonable 24.33 seconds and the first half-mile went in 48.65 seconds. The pace then started to pick up significantly. Purge dropped back and Eddington moved forward to challenge for the lead while racing five wide. \"I knew there was trouble on the backstretch. [ Smarty Jones] wasn't settled\", said Servis. \"That was my concern the whole three weeks, trying to take the edge off. I wasn't able to do it. That's horse racing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nPressured by Rock Hard Ten to the inside and Eddington to the outside, Smarty Jones ran the third quarter-mile in 23 seconds while the fourth quarter went in :233\u20445. Rounding the final turn, the challengers started to drop back as Smarty Jones completed the first 1+1\u20444 miles in a rapid 2:00.52 \u2013 a time fast enough to have won all but four Kentucky Derbies. His lead was opening and the crowd was in a frenzy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nIn the final furlong though, Smarty Jones's stride started to falter. Track announcer Tom Durkin realized the pace might catch up with the horse and warned the crowd:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\n\u201cThe whip is out on Smarty Jones... It\u2019s been 26 years... Just one furlong away... They\u2019re coming down to the finish... Can Smarty Jones hold on? ... Here comes Birdstone... Birdstone surges past... Birdstone wins the Belmont Stakes... Smarty Jones was valiant, but vanquished.\" \u2013 Tom Durkin", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nThe crowd was stunned. \"We came to see a coronation and instead we got a sporting event. Sometimes that happens\", said John Hendrickson, the husband of Birdstone's owner, Marylou Whitney. \"I\u2019ve never been in a crowd of 120,000 people where it went from roaring to dead silence.\" In the winner's circle, Whitney apologized. \"I\u2019m sorry, I\u2019m sorry, I\u2019m sorry that Smarty Jones couldn\u2019t win today,\" she said. \"We would have been happy to run second.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nThe result remains controversial due to the tactics used with Rock Hard Ten and Eddington. Many felt that Jerry Bailey in particular on Eddington did not ride to win, as the early move while racing wide sacrificed his horse's chances. \"I never saw two riders ride so hard to lose a race in my life\", said Roy Chapman, the owner of Smarty Jones, a week after the race. \"They just were out for one thing: making sure Smarty didn\u2019t win.\" Some also criticized Smarty Jones's jockey, Stewart Elliott, for letting the horse move too early. Servis was more philosophical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Race description\n\"When he was dragging Stewie out of the saddle on the backside, I had a bad feeling,\" he said. \"You can't do that and win going a mile and a half. That was one of the things that helped us in the Derby and the Preakness; he relaxed so well. He just didn't relax today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176770-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Belmont Stakes, Chart\nSource: EquibaseTimes: 1\u20444 \u2014 0:24.33; 1\u20442 \u2014 0:48.65; 3\u20444 \u2014 1:11.76; mile \u2014 1:35.44; 1+1\u20444 \u2014 2:00.52; final \u2014 2:27.50. Fractional Splits: (:24.33) (:24.32) (:23.11) (:23.68) (:25.08) (:26.98)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack\nThe 2004 Beni attack was one of the biggest attacks by the People's Liberation Army (PLA) of Communist Party of Nepal, Maoist, during the Nepalese Civil War (1996\u20132006). Almost the entire Western Division of the PLA, numbering around 3,500, attacked government positions in Beni, the district headquarters of Myagdi district in western Nepal, on 20 March 2004 at around 10 pm. Hundreds of civilians were used for logistics. Around 90 soldiers of the PLA and dozens of police and military personnel as well as civilians died. Multiple government buildings were destroyed and dozens of members of the civil service and government forces were kidnapped by the PLA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Background\nBy 2003, the Maoist guerilla fighters were organised into a centralised military force, the People's Liberation Army, with battalion-level formations. It was divided into the Eastern Division and the Western Division, led by Nanda Kishor Pun (Pasang) and Barshaman Pun (Ananta) respectively. The rebels believed that they had reached a \"strategic balance\" with the state, having defeated Nepal Police and fought with the army in equal terms, and were expecting to progress to the much awaited \"strategic offensive\" where they would push the army to the defensive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Background\nThey believed they had mastered guerilla warfare and mobile warfare, the first two steps, according to Mao, of a protracted people's war, and were seeking to incorporate elements of the final step, the positional warfare, into their battle strategy. After the failure of the 2003 peace talks, the Maoists decided to start carrying out centralised attacks on government positions. Their first such attack, on positions in Dang and Banke, in October 2003, failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Background\nBy early 2004, the leadership started getting worried that the PLA cadre may get demoralised and frustrated, as the Nepalese Army (then Royal Nepalese Army (RNA)) claimed it had destroyed almost all of the PLA, while the PLA had not carried out successful large-scale attacks to disprove RNAs propaganda, in more than a year. The Maoists launched the Special People's Military Campaign in February 2004 to \"militarize the entire population and create a mentality of resistance\". But the Maoists had never had much success recruiting fighters without resorting to violence, coercion and kidnapping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0001-0003", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Background\nFrom the Maoists' point of view, the \"vacillating middle-class\" needed to be shown that theirs was going to be the winning side in the conflict, in order to persuade it to finally take a side. The much smaller Eastern Division carried out its attack on Bhojpur on 2 February 2004, resulting in 20 police and 12 military deaths. Around the same time, almost the whole of the Western Division began amassing in the Lukum village of Rukum District in preparation of a much larger attack on Beni, the Myagdi district headquarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nAround 3,500 PLA fighters contributed by the Mangalsen First Brigade (1,200), Satbariya Second Brigade (1,000), Lisne-Gam Third Brigade (1,070) and Basu-Smriti Fourth Brigade (300) marched to Lukum village of Rukum District in early March. The soldiers spent a week in Lukum, preparing for battle. Division commander Pasang used sand models and videos to brief the brigade commanders on the layout of the town, the route and the plan of attack, and the soldiers practised their battle strategy in the playground of a local school. Meanwhile, the non-combatant activists of the entire West-Central Command were deployed for logistics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nIn the weeks leading up to the attack, people from the surrounding villages of Baglung and Myagdi districts were warned not to venture into Beni, and check-posts were established to monitor and control the movement of people. Around 1,700 people, including villagers abducted or coerced into volunteering, were charged with transporting weapons, medical supplies, food and clothing. Rest stops were set up along the route of the march to Beni. Thousands of cattle had been caravanned from all over western Nepal to feed the troops, while large quantities of medical supplies were smuggled from across the Indian border. The non-combatant volunteers would participate in the attack, carrying arms and medical supplies, providing first-aid and carrying the wounded out of the fighting area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nThe Maoists left Lukum on 13 March, after a ceremony which included song and dance and speeches from the commanders. A letter from the then supreme commander of PLA and General Secretary of the Maoist Party, Pushpa Kamal Dahal (Prachanda), was read. The caravan of PLA fighters, Maoist activists and civilian \"volunteers\" marched through days and nights, across the forests, fields and snowy mountains of Dhawalagiri region, stopping for short times only at the designated rest-stops where local villagers had been \"volunteered\" to cook for them and provide shelter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nThey reached the village of Takam in Myagdi District on 17 March. The local villagers agreed to provide whatever help they needed during their stay, but unanimously rejected the demand for \"volunteers\" to go to Beni, to which the Maoists agreed. On the night of 18 March, the Maoists received reports that their plan to attack Beni on 22 March might have leaked. They immediately advanced the date of attack to 20 March. They left Takam the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nA battalion each was sent to engage and delay possible reinforcements arriving from Kushma of Parbat and Baglung of Baglung. Another battalion of 300 fighters was sent to stop possible reinforcements from Ghumaunetal camp, a few kilometres north of Beni. A platoon of 60\u201370 fighters were sent to engage any patrols that may have already left the camp. The fighters from the Fourth Brigade (a battalion of 300 fighters) were sent to Pari Beni, the Beni settlements that were separated from the town by the Kali Gandaki river. They were to attack the district jail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nThe remaining fighters would constitute the main attack force that would go to Beni via the Darwang-Vaviyachaur-Singa-Arthunge route. As they passed Darwang, they ordered the locals to prepare meals in the early morning of 21 March to feed the fighters returning back from Beni. Some fighters separated from the main attack force in Vaviyachaur to take the main road along the Myagdi River and attack the military barracks from the Mangalghat bazaar side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Preparation and march to Beni\nThe witnesses of the march to Beni reported seeing soldiers as numerous as \"hairs\". They appeared as though they had not taken a bath for a long time; some of them were hunting fleas on their body, some were old and walking with sticks, and around one-fifths were women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Attack\nThe main attack force descended from the Arthunge hills that surround the Beni Valley from the north-western side at around 9 pm on 20 March. Pasang coordinated the attack from the hills. By 10:30 pm, the forces had infiltrated the city and taken positions. Maoist fighters had broken into homes, shops and offices in the town and taken positions on the windows and the roofs. They had pulled furniture and sacks of grain from the shops and formed barricades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Attack\nThe group that had separated to arrive in the town through the main road along the Myagdi River reached Mangalghat bazaar to the west of the barracks around 10:45 pm. They encountered a small patrol on their way to the barracks; four patrolmen and two Maoist fighters were killed in the engagement. At 11 pm, the maoists started firing 81-mm and 2-inch mortars at the military barracks of the Shri Kali Prasad Battalion (E) in western Beni from at least three positions surrounding it. The army realised the town was under attack only after the mortars began firing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Attack\nThe eastern hills caught fire from the army's counterattack. After an hour of bombing, Pasang ordered the mortars to cease fire and the main attack force in the town to begin the assault. The 300 fighters who were sent to attack the district jail on the other side of the river met no resistance, as the 19 police officers on duty that night had already fled. They freed the prisoners, burned the building down, and destroyed a temple in the premises. According to a Maoist account, they had found only one hawaldar with a rifle whom they let go with the prisoners. They then went to join the main attack force across the river.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Attack\nThe Maoists broke into homes, shops and offices throughout the town, and set up treatment centres. Those near the frontlines were used for first-aid, and those farther from the fighting were used for surgeries, mainly extracting bullets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Attack\nAccording to Maoist accounts, they had taken all the posts surrounding the officers' residences located on the west side of the barracks by 2:00 am. They had captured a soldier and some weapons. Around 5:00 am, a military helicopter arrived in Beni and dropped some bombs but left after the Maoists fired at it. By 7:30 am, the Maoists had control of the city except for the barracks, with all security forces and government officers having surrendered. The Maoists burned down the DDC and DAO offices around 3:30 am. The Maoists used child soldiers during the night, per eye witness accounts, but they were replaced with adult fighters in the morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Retreat\nA military helicopter arrived at 9:30 am and dropped ammunition for the security forces. When it came back again at 10:30 am, the Maoists decided to withdraw. They retreated in an orderly fashion, walking in a long line carrying the wounded on stretchers and dokos. They had about 40 hostages: the CDO, a DSP, two RNA soldiers and around 35 police officers. A military helicopter pursued them and dropped bombs. A police officer and half a dozen Maoist fighters died on the first day from the aerial attacks. Two more officers who were wounded were allowed to go back to Beni. Witness reports indicate that the Maoists continued their orderly retreat despite attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Retreat\nThe next morning, an army contingent sent after the retreating Maoists ambushed them in a village near Darwang, killing seven fighters. At least one more clash occurred with the pursuing RNA soldiers. The Maoists could not stop for meals and rest as planned until they reached deep within their stronghold; some fighters were seen eating uncooked rice as they walked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Casualties\nThe total number of deaths was 140: 14 RNA soldiers, 17 police officers, 90 Maoists fighters and 19 civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Casualties\nAccording to official figures, 33 security personnel died in the attack while three were missing. Maoists claimed to have killed as many as 151 members of the security forces but the claim was found to be baseless. The army claimed that 500 Maoists had died, while the commander of the Shri Kali Prasad Battalion claimed the military had found 202 Maoist dead bodies. The Beni Red Cross which collected and buried the bodies said they counted 67.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Casualties\nMaoists gave a precise figure of 78 deaths on their side, including two vice-commanders of Brigades, one battalion commander, one battalion vice-commander and 6 \"volunteers\". Identity cards recovered from dead bodies in Beni confirmed that some platoon commanders were among the dead. Some of the Maoist deaths were from friendly fire. According to official figures, 19 civilians died, including three boys between the ages of six and twelve who were killed in a nearby village by grenades left behind by the Maoists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Aftermath\nThe Maoists released a statement one day after the attack demanding that the government release Matrika Yadav, Suresh Ale Magar and Kiran Sharma in exchange for the hostages they had taken from Beni. The hostages were taken to Thawang; they arrived there on 5 April after a fifteen-day walk. On 6 April, they were released to the custody of International Red Cross amid a ceremony; its representatives had flown to Thawang on invitation from the Maoists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176771-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Beni attack, Legacy\nThe Maoists demonstrated that district centres were vulnerable. Their ability to coordinate a massive operation lasting months in complete secrecy showed their strength in rural western Nepal, and how poor RNA intelligence was. They also disproved suggestions that the Maoists military might had been destroyed or severely weakened by the RNA. However, their inability to breach a barracks after more than 12 hours of attack with thousands of fighters against a few hundred military personnel showed that they were far from achieving an upper hand over the RNA. The security of district headquarters were bolstered throughout the country, and the Maoists went back to ambushing security conveys along the highways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176772-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Berlin Marathon\nThe 2004 Berlin Marathon was the 31st running of the annual marathon race held in Berlin, Germany, held on 26 September 2004. Felix Limo won the men's race in 2:06:44\u00a0hours, while the women's race was won by Japan's Yoko Shibui in 2:19:41.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176773-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Berlin Thunder season\nThe 2004 Berlin Thunder season was the sixth season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Rick Lantz in his first year, and played its home games at Olympic Stadium in Berlin, Germany. They finished the regular season in first place with a record of nine wins and one loss. In World Bowl XII, Berlin defeated the Frankfurt Galaxy 30\u201324. The victory marked the franchise's third World Bowl championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176774-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Betta Electrical Sandown 500\nThe 2004 Betta Electrical Sandown 500 the ninth round of the Australian 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series. It was held on the weekend of 10\u201312 September 2004 at Sandown International Raceway in Melbourne, Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176774-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Betta Electrical Sandown 500\nIt was the 37th \"Sandown 500\" endurance race to be held at the Victorian circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176774-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Betta Electrical Sandown 500, Top 10 Shootout\nThe ten fastest cars from Qualifying contested a Top 10 Shootout on the Saturday to determine the starting positions on the first five rows of the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176774-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Betta Electrical Sandown 500, Official results\n- Neil McFadyen practiced the #23 WPS Falcon, but was withdrawn due to a stomach virus, he was replaced by Charlie O'Brien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176775-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bhutan A-Division\nThe 2004 season of the Bhutanese A-Division was the tenth recorded season of top-flight football in Bhutan. The league was won by Transport United, their first title. Transport United were Bhutan's representatives in the 2005 AFC President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176776-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Championship Game\nThe 2004 Dr Pepper Big 12 Football Championship Game was played on December 4, 2004 in Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. The game determined the 2004 football champions of the Big 12 Conference. The #2 Oklahoma Sooners defeated the Colorado Buffaloes 42-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176776-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Championship Game, The teams\nThe Oklahoma Sooners came into the game with a perfect 11\u20130 record and #2 in the nation. They started the season with four home games, defeating Bowling Green, Houston, Oregon, and Texas Tech. The Sooners then traveled to Dallas for the Red River Shootout against #5 Texas, which they won 12-0. Oklahoma then beat Kansas State on the road; then returned home for their homecoming game against Kansas. Their next two games were both road games against ranked conference opponents; they beat #20 Oklahoma State and #22 Texas A&M. They finished the season with wins at home against Nebraska and at Baylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176776-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Championship Game, The teams\nThe Colorado Buffaloes came into the game with a 7\u20134 record; they were co-champions of the North Division (with Iowa State) and got into the championship game via head-to-head result. The Buffaloes started the season with three wins: Colorado State (in the Rocky Mountain Showdown), at Washington State and back home against North Texas. They lost the next two games against Missouri and #21 Oklahoma State. They beat Iowa State by 5, which would ultimately be their ticket into the Big 12 Championship Game. They dropped their next two matchups, losing to #17 Texas A&M and #8 Texas. They finished the regular season with three wins, however: at Kansas, at home against Kansas State, and at Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176776-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary\nOklahoma's success was fueled by quarterback Jason White, who exceeded 250 yards passing. The Sooners' offense ran over Colorado's defense, finishing the game with 498 total yards (to Colorado's 46) and 26 first downs (to Colorado's 3). They controlled the ball for just over 24 minutes, as opposed to the Buffaloes' 12 minutes of possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176776-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Championship Game, Game summary\nThe Sooners' defense showed up as well; Colorado finished the game 0-12 on third down conversions and 0-1 on fourth down conversions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176777-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Ameriquest Field in Arlington in Arlington, TX from May 26 through May 30. The Cowboys of Oklahoma State University won their first tournament and earned the Big 12 Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament mirrored the format of the College World Series, with two 4-team double-elimination brackets and a final championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176778-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Conference Softball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big 12 Conference Softball tournament was held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, OK from May 12 through May 15, 2004. Nebraska won their third conference tournament and earned the Big 12 Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176778-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Conference Softball Tournament\nNebraska, Texas A&M, Missouri, Baylor and Oklahoma received bids to the NCAA tournament. Oklahoma would go on to play in the 2004 Women's College World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176779-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big 12 Women's Basketball Championship, known for sponsorship reasons as the 2004 Phillips 66 Big 12 Women's Basketball Championship, was the 2004 edition of the Big 12 Conference's championship tournament. The tournament was held at the Reunion Arena in Dallas from 9 March until 13 March 2004. The Quarterfinals, Semifinals, and Finals were televised on the ESPN family of networks. The championship game, held on March 12, 2004, featured the number 1 seeded Texas Longhorns, and the sixth seeded Oklahoma Sooners. Oklahoma won the tournament by posting a 66-47 victory over the Longhorns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176780-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2004 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big 12 Conference held from November 3 to 7, 2004. The 7-match tournament was held at the Blossom Athletic Center in San Antonio, TX with a combined attendance of 7,606. The 8-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Texas A&M Aggies defeated the Texas Longhorns in the championship match to win their 3rd conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176781-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big 12 Conference. It was played from March 11 to 14 in Dallas, Texas at the American Airlines Center. Oklahoma State won the tournament for the 1st time and received the conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176781-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeding\nThe Tournament consisted of a 12 team single-elimination tournament with the top 4 seeds receiving a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176781-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeding\nBaylor removed itself from postseason play, including the conference tournament, before the 2003\u201304 season due to the Baylor University basketball scandal. Because of this, Texas Tech got a bye in the first round of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176782-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Commerce Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater, NJ. This was the twentieth annual Big East Conference Baseball Tournament. The Notre Dame Fighting Irish won their third tournament championship in a row and claimed the Big East Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. Notre Dame would go on to win five championships in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176782-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe Big East baseball tournament was a 4 team double elimination tournament in 2004. The top four regular season finishers were seeded one through four based on conference winning percentage only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176782-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Jack Kaiser Award\nMatt Macri was the winner of the 2004 Jack Kaiser Award. Macri was a junior third baseman for Notre Dame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176783-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, a part of the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, took place from March 10\u201313, 2004 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. It was a single-elimination tournament with four rounds and the four highest seeds (two from each Big East division) received byes in the first round. The twelve Big East teams with the best conference records were invited to participate. Its winner, Connecticut, received the Big East Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament, the sixth for the Huskies, tying Georgetown for the most Big East Tournament championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176783-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nNote: By finishing below twelfth place during the regular season, Miami and St. John's did not qualify for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176784-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big League World Series\nThe 2004 Big League World Series took place from July 30-August 7 in Easley, South Carolina, United States. Easley, South Carolina defeated Williamsport, Pennsylvania in the championship game. It was South Carolina's second straight championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176785-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 6\u201310 at Reese Court at the University of Eastern Washington in Cheney, Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176785-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nTop-seeded Eastern Washington defeated Northern Arizona in the championship game, 71\u201359, to win their first Big Sky men's basketball tournament title. EWU had the lost the three previous conference championship games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176785-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Eagles, in turn, received an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament, their first appearance in the Division I tournament. No other Big Sky members were invited this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176785-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nNo new teams were added to the Big Sky prior to the 2003\u201304 season, leaving total membership at eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176785-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nNo changes were made to the existing tournament format. Only the top six teams from the regular season conference standings were invited to the tournament. The two top teams were given byes into the semifinals while the third- through sixth-seeded teams were placed and paired into the preliminary quarterfinal round. Following the quarterfinals, the two victorious teams were re-seeded in the semifinal round, with the lowest-seeded remaining team paired with the tournament's highest seed and vis-versa for the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 59], "content_span": [60, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176786-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament was the postseason baseball tournament for the Big South Conference, held from May 26\u201329, 2004 at Winthrop Ballpark, home field of Winthrop in Rock Hill, South Carolina. The top six finishers participated in the double-elimination tournament. The champion, Coastal Carolina, won the title for the seventh time, and fourth in a row, and earned an invitation to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176786-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, Format\nThe top six finishers from the regular season qualified for the tournament. The teams were seeded one through six based on conference winning percentage and played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176786-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nSteven Carter was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Carter was a pitcher for Coastal Carolina, and won the award for the second of two consecutive years. Through 2020, Carter is the only player to earn the award twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176787-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 2\u20136, 2004 at campus sites. The tournament was won by the Liberty Flames, their second tournament win in school history. Liberty defeated High Point in the title game 89\u201344, although Danny Gathings of High Point won the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176787-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nEight of the conference's nine teams participated for the tournament, with Birmingham\u2013Southern being ineligible. Teams were seeded by conference winning percentage. All games were hosted at campus sites, with home-field advantage going to the higher seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176788-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big South Conference football season\nThe 2004 Big South Conference football season was the third football season for the Big South Conference. The season began on Saturday, September 4, 2004 and concluded on November 20. The Coastal Carolina Chanticleers won the conference's regular season championship, their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176789-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big Ten Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Siebert Field on the campus of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minnesota from May 15 through 19. The top six teams from the regular season participated in the double-elimination tournament, the twenty third annual tournament sponsored by the Big Ten Conference to determine the league champion. Minnesota won their eighth tournament championship and earned the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176789-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2004 tournament was a 6-team double-elimination tournament, with seeds determined by conference regular season winning percentage only. Michigan claimed the third seed over Michigan State by tiebreaker. As in the previous two years, the top two seeds received a single bye, with the four lower seeds playing opening round games. The top seed played the lowest seeded winner from the opening round, with the second seed playing the higher seed. Teams that lost in the opening round played an elimination game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176789-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Outstanding Player\nGlen Perkins was named Most Outstanding Player. Perkins was a pitcher for Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176790-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Conference football season\nThe 2004 Big Ten Conference football season was the 109th season for the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176791-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was played between March 11 and March 14, 2004 at Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. The championship was won by Wisconsin who defeated Illinois in the championship game. As a result, Wisconsin received the Big Ten's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The win marked Wisconsin's first win in their first appearance in the championship game. It also marked the first time in tournament history that the top two seeds appeared in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176791-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll Big Ten schools played in the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records. Seeding for the tournament was determined at the close of the regular conference season. The top five teams received a first round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176792-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Softball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big Ten Softball tournament was held at Alumni Field on the campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan from May 13 through May 15, 2004. As the tournament winner, Michigan State earned the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament. As the eighth-seed, Michigan State became the lowest-seeded team to win the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176792-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big Ten Softball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2004 tournament was an eight team single-elimination tournament. The top eight teams based on conference regular season winning percentage earned invites to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176793-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 10\u201313 at Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176793-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nPacific defeated Cal State Northridge in the championship game, 75\u201373, to obtain the third Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament championship in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176793-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Tigers earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament as the #12 seed in the St. Louis region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176793-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nEight of the ten teams in the conference participated, with UC Irvine and Long Beach State not qualifying. Teams were seeded based on regular season conference records. The top four seeds received byes, with the top two seeds receiving a second bye into the semifinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176794-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bihar flood\nThis article about a flood is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176794-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bihar flood\nThe 2004 Bihar flood was one of the worst floods in Bihar, India in a decade. 885 people and 3272 animals had lost their lives and nearly 21.299 million human were affected. 20 districts of Bihar were affected. An alarming rise in water level due to heavy rains inundated fresh areas in Bhagalpur district, Begusarai district, Katihar district, Darbhanga district, Samastipur district and Khagaria district. According to the Central Water Commission Bagmati, Budhi Gandak, Kamla Balan, Adhwara, Kosi and Mahananda rivers were flowing above the red mark at various places, while the Ganges crossed the danger mark for the first time at Farakka Barrage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176795-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Billboard Music Awards\nThe 2004 Billboard Music Awards were held December 8, 2004 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The awards recognized the most popular artists and albums from 2006. Usher is the biggest winner of the night with thirteen awards and then Alicia Keys with seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176796-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election\nA by-election was held for the United Kingdom Parliament seat of Birmingham Hodge Hill, on 15 July, the same day as the Leicester South by-election. The by-election was called following the resignation of the sitting MP, Terry Davis, on 22 June 2004. Davis had been appointed as Secretary General of the Council of Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176796-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election\nThe area has had a Labour MP since the 1950 general election, the only break being a Conservative Party victory at a 1977 by-election for the Birmingham Stechford constituency. Stechford returned to Labour at the 1979 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176796-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election\nAt the by-election, the seat was retained by the Labour Party, and Liam Byrne became the MP, but with a vastly reduced majority with the seat becoming a marginal. The Liberal Democrat candidate Nicola Davies increased her party's share of the vote by over 26% and was only 460 votes behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176796-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election\nThe by-election was heavily contested by Labour and the Liberal Democrats, with both parties alleging \"dirty tricks\" by the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176797-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Birthday Honours\nThe Birthday Honours 2004 for the Commonwealth realms were announced on 11 June 2004 for the United Kingdom, New Zealand, the Cook Islands and elsewhere to celebrate the Queen's Birthday of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176797-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Birthday Honours\nThe recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour, and arranged firstly by the country whose ministers advised the Queen on the appointments, then by honour, with classes (Knight, Knight Grand Cross, etc.) and then divisions (Military, Civil, etc.) as appropriate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176798-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)\nThe 2004 Queen's Birthday Honours in New Zealand, celebrating the official birthday of Queen Elizabeth II, were appointments made by the Queen in her right as Queen of New Zealand, on the advice of the New Zealand government, to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders. They were announced on 7 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176798-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)\nThe recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176799-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council election\nElections to Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council in June 2004 heralded a shock result as Labour council leader Sir Bill Taylor lost his seat to Liberal Democrat Zamir Khan. \"This morning as I was shaving I thought I could get beat and that is what happened\", commented Taylor after the result. \"I canvassed more for this election than for any other. I spoke to more than a thousand people on their doorsteps and was not given any suggestion there were any difficulties.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176799-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council election\nLiberal Democrat leader Paul Browne blamed the defeat on dissatisfaction with British foreign policy, particularly in areas with high numbers of Muslim voters: \"Sir Bill has gone because of what has happened in Iraq. Simple.\" Only 63 of the 64 seats on the council were filled as the Earcroft ward by-election took place a month after due to the death of Mayor Mike Barratt. Yusuf Sidat was elected as an independent in Queen's Park Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176800-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000\nThe 2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000 was a motor race for V8 Supercars, staged on 10 October 2004 at the Mount Panorama Circuit just outside Bathurst in New South Wales, Australia. It was Round 10 of the 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176800-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000\nThe event was the eighth Australia 1000, first held after the organisational split over the Bathurst 1000 that occurred in 1997. The race was staged four days after the 41st anniversary of the first Bathurst 500/1000 touring car endurance race which was held at the Mount Panorama Circuit in 1963. The 2004 event was the 48th race with a lineage back to the 1960 Armstrong 500 held at Phillip Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176800-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000\nThe race was won by 2003 winners Greg Murphy and Rick Kelly driving a Kmart Racing Team entered Holden Commodore (VY). It was the sixth consecutive Bathurst 1000 victory for Holden, a new record. The 2004 event was the 32nd and last Bathurst 500/1000 for nine time race winner Peter Brock. He did not get to drive in the actual race however as Jason Plato, his British co-driver in the #05 Holden Racing Team Holden Commodore (VY), crashed heavily on lap 31, putting the car out of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176800-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000, Entry List\n35 cars were entered in the race \u2013 16 Ford Falcons and 19 Holden Commodores. Three cars were of the pre-2003 Group 3A regulation set. Amongst the debutants were former Formula One driver Alex Yoong, future championship race winners Fabian Coulthard and Lee Holdsworth and future New Zealand Touring Cars champion John McIntyre. 1988 race winner Tomas Mezera made his final start in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176800-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000, Qualifying, Starting grid\nThe following table represents the final starting grid for the race on Sunday:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176801-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bofrost Cup on Ice\nThe 2004 Bofrost Cup on Ice was held in Gelsenkirchen from November 26 and 28. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. It was part of the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating series from its inception until 2003, when it was replaced by Cup of China. Instead of a short program, singles and pairs perform a jumping and required elements contest, followed then by the free skating. Ice dancers perform their original and free dances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176802-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Boise State Broncos football team\nThe 2004 Boise State Broncos football team represented Boise State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Boise State competed as a member of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), and played their home games at Bronco Stadium in Boise, Idaho. The Broncos were led by fourth-year head coach Dan Hawkins. The Broncos finished the season 11\u20131 and 8\u20130 in conference (went undefeated 11\u20130 in the regular season) to win their third straight WAC title and played in the Liberty Bowl, where they lost to Louisville, 44\u201340.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum\nA referendum on natural gas reserves was held in Bolivia on 18 July 2004. Voters were asked five questions on the government's policy on natural gas, with all five approved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Background\nHolding a referendum on the use of the country's gas reserves was one of the first promises made by President Carlos Mesa upon assuming the presidency in the aftermath of the Bolivian Gas War of October 2003 that saw his predecessor, Gonzalo S\u00e1nchez de Lozada, forced to resign and to flee the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Background\nThe referendum was largely intended to quell the political unrest seen during the Gas War. Fears of an uprising led the Bolivian government to take measures essentially forcing the population to vote (announcing fines and other penalties for those who refused or boycotted) and warned that protesters against the referendum would be imprisoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Results\nDo you agree that the Hydrocarbons Law (No. 1689), enacted by Gonzalo S\u00e1nchez de Lozada, should be repealed?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Results\nDo you agree that the Bolivian State should recover ownership over all hydrocarbons at the wellhead?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Results\nDo you agree that Yacimientos Petrol\u00edferos Fiscales Bolivianos should be re-established, reclaiming state ownership of the Bolivian people's stakes in the part-privatized oil companies, so that it can take part in all stages of the hydrocarbon production chain?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Results\nDo you agree with President Carlos Mesa's policy of using gas as a strategic recourse to achieve a sovereign and viable route of access to the Pacific Ocean?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176803-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolivian gas referendum, Results\nDo you or do you not agree that Bolivia should export gas as part of a national policy framework that ensures the gas needs of Bolivians; encourages the industrialization of gas in the nation's territory; levies taxes and/or royalties of up to 50% of the production value of oil and gas on oil companies, for the nation's benefit; and earmarks revenues from the export and industrialization of gas mainly for education, health, roads, and jobs?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176804-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The council stayed under no overall control, with the Liberal Democrats overtaking the Labour Party, by 1 seat, as the largest party and assuming control of the council from Labour. Overall turnout was 43.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176804-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council election, Council Composition\nPrior to the election the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 70], "content_span": [71, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176805-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bonaire status referendum\nA status referendum was held on the island of Bonaire on 10 September 2004. A majority voted for integration into the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176805-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bonaire status referendum, Background\nAfter the 1994 referendum came out in favour of maintaining and restructuring the Netherlands Antilles, the government of the Netherlands Antilles tried to restructure the Netherlands Antilles and attempted to forge closer ties between the islands, as is exemplified by the adoption of an anthem of the Netherlands Antilles in 2000. A new referendum on Sint Maarten, which was in favour of a separate status for Sint Maarten as a country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, sparked a new series of referendums across the Netherlands Antilles, however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176806-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bonnaroo Music Festival\nThe festival ran June 11, 2004 \u2013 June 13, 2004, and more than 90,000 people attended. It was marked by torrential rains, creating an incredibly large amount of mud. Many vehicles had to be towed out of the parking area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176806-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bonnaroo Music Festival, Notes\nWillie Nelson was originally scheduled to perform but, shortly before the festival, had to cancel his summer 2004 tour due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Steve Winwood was asked to fill in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176806-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bonnaroo Music Festival, Notes\nMaroon 5 was also on the bill, but did not appear at their performance time, citing a sore throat by lead vocalist Adam Levine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176806-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bonnaroo Music Festival, Superjam\nGeorge Porter (bass), Stanton Moore (drums), and Eric Krasno and Neil Evans of Soulive (guitar and keyboard).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood\nThe 2004 Boscastle flood (Cornish: An Lanwes Kastel Boterel 2004) occurred on Monday, 16 August 2004 in the two villages of Boscastle and Crackington Haven in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The villages suffered extensive damage after flash floods caused by an exceptional amount of rain that fell over eight hours that afternoon. The flood in Boscastle was filmed and extensively reported but the floods in Crackington Haven and Rocky Valley were not mentioned beyond the local news. The floods were the worst in local memory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood\nA study commissioned by the Environment Agency from hydraulics consulting firm HR Wallingford concluded that it was among the most extreme ever experienced in Britain. The peak flow was about 140 m3/s, between 5:00\u00a0pm and 6:00\u00a0pm BST. The annual chance of this (or a greater) flood in any one year is about 1 in 400. The probability each year of the heaviest three-hour rainfall is about 1 in 1300 (although rainfall probability is not the same as flood probability). At midday on 16 August 2004, heavy thundery showers had developed across the South West due to a weak disturbance to the northeast of the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood\nThe last time Boscastle had suffered notable flooding was in 1996 as a result of Hurricane Lili, but floods are recorded in 1847, 1957, on 3 June 1958 (one man drowned) and on 6 February during the Winter of 1962\u201363 in the United Kingdom. On 16 August 1952 the small town of Lynmouth, 50 miles (80\u00a0km) north-east along the north coast in Devon near Exmoor, suffered extensive damage in a catastrophic flood, in which 34 people lost their lives. Coincidentally, this was 52 years to the day before Boscastle's 2004 flood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Causes of the flood\nOn the 16th, warm air picking up moisture \u2013 due to residual heat from the Atlantic Ocean \u2013 travelled towards the South West Cornish coast as prevailing winds. Upon contact with the topographically vertical coast, these winds experienced a strong up-drafting force thus causing internal moisture to reach the atmosphere, and consequently cool as a string of storm clouds. With convergence and coalescence, enhanced moisture levels resulted in heavy rainfall on the afternoon of 16 August 2004. 185\u00a0mm (7\u00a0inches) of rain fell over the high ground just inland of Boscastle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Causes of the flood\nAt the peak of the downpour, at about 15:40 GMT, 24.1mm of rain (almost one inch) was recorded as falling in just 15 minutes at Lesnewth, 2.5 miles (4\u00a0km) up the valley from Boscastle. In Boscastle, 89 millimetres (3.5\u00a0in) of rain was recorded in 60 minutes. The rain was very localised: Otterham and Lesnewth, both a few miles inland from Boscastle, recorded 24 hour totals of 200\u00a0mm and 185\u00a0mm respectively on the day, whereas four of the nearest 10 rain gauges showed less than 3\u00a0mm of rain in the same period. The cause of the very heavy localised rain is thought to be an extreme example of what has become known as the Brown Willy effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Causes of the flood\nThe torrential rain led to a 2\u00a0m (7\u00a0ft) rise in river levels in one hour. A 3\u00a0m (10\u00a0ft) wave, believed to have been triggered by water pooling behind debris caught under a bridge and then being suddenly released as the bridge collapsed, surged down the main road. Water speed was over 4\u00a0m/s (10\u00a0mph), more than enough to cause structural damage. It is estimated that 20,000,000 cubic metres (5.3\u00d7109\u00a0US\u00a0gal) of water flowed through Boscastle that day alone. The steep valley sides, and the saturated surface ensured a high amount of surface run-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Causes of the flood\nChanges in farming practice in the area also possibly contributed, sewage could have been a cause as well, with a reduction of trees and hedges higher up the valley causing water to flow through more quickly than would have been the case in the past. No one died in the flood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Impact of the flood\n75 cars, 5 caravans, 6 buildings and several boats were washed into the sea; approximately 100 homes and businesses were destroyed, and some had to be demolished; trees were uprooted and debris were scattered over a large area. In an operation lasting from mid-afternoon until 2:30\u00a0am, a fleet of 7 Westland Sea King helicopters rescued about 150 people clinging to trees and the roofs of buildings and cars. No major injuries or loss of life were reported. The estimated cost of damage was \u00a315 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Work since the flood\nMost work took place in the winter season (October\u2013May), during the off-season. The carpark was reduced to half capacity (120 spaces) in winter, for works to take place, and then back to 240 spaces in summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, The lower bridge\nThe main structure of the former lower bridge survived the flood, however the stone walls did not, and were washed away. On 1 May 2005, the official reopening of the village, wooden fences were used on the bridge to temporarily replace the stone walls. The bridge used to have a concrete plaque on it saying \"This bridge is the private property of the lord of the manor, August 1887\". This was lost during the flood, but then recovered from the harbour in good condition. This bridge has now been replaced with a new one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, The lower bridge\nDuring the flood of 2004, 14 cars became lodged beneath it, this had caused a huge backlog of flood water and debris, adding to the damage caused in the surrounding area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, The lower bridge\nThe original proposal was for a stone bridge, this was rejected. The second proposal is for a modern concrete bridge, with steel railings. Public consultations were held and villagers were asked to select their preference from four designs; most did not choose the one which has been proposed. This plan was rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, The lower bridge\nThe new bridge is a few metres further down the river than the old bridge. The bridge was installed on 18 December 2007, and was made by Cornish Concrete, a company based near Truro. The main arch is made from reinforced concrete, with metal railings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, The lower bridge\nThe old stone bridge, which was over 100 years old, was demolished in early April 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Mini flood \u2013 21 June 2007\nBoscastle flooded again, although not nearly as badly as the 2004 floods. After an afternoon of intense localised rainfall, and a week of steady rain everyday, a small flood happened on 21 June 2007. 30\u00a0mm fell on the area in one hour. Roads had become flooded in the area and in the village, most water came from the saturated fields around the village. Many drains had become blocked. Roads around the Tintagel, Camelford and Davidstow area were closed off to stop people visiting the village. River levels were alarmingly high, but the banks contained the water. However the many culverts of the River Jordan had overflowed onto the villages roads, adding to the amount of water on the roads. The new storm culvert joining the River Jordan to the River Valency was at full capacity, but did not flood. Services and organisations called in included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176807-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Boscastle flood, Mini flood \u2013 21 June 2007\nThe Environment Agency's flood defences installed after the 2004 flood worked and kept the water in the river channel. A few properties in the village were flooded by 3\u00a0ft (1\u00a0m) from water flowing down the streets, rather than from the river flooding, although the damage was not nearly as bad as the 2004 flood. The two main roads (B3266, B3263) were blocked with flood waste and debris, although this was cleared and the roads reopened the following morning. The Environment Agency looked at the culverts around the village and will change them all to modern drainage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176808-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bosnian municipal elections\nBosnia and Herzegovina municipal elections were held on 2 October 2004 to elect municipal mayors and assemblies. The mayoral results are as follow:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176809-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston College Eagles football team\nThe 2004 Boston College Eagles football team represented Boston College during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Boston College was a member of the Big East Conference. The Eagles played their home games in 2004 at Alumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, which has been their home stadium since 1957.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176810-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Marathon\nThe 2004 Boston Marathon was the 108th running of the annual marathon race in Boston, United States and was held on April 19. The elite men's race was won by Kenya's Timothy Cherigat in a time of 2:11:45 hours and the women's race was won in 2:24:27 by Catherine Ndereba, also of Kenya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season\nThe 2004 Boston Red Sox season was the 104th season in the franchise's Major League Baseball history. Managed by Terry Francona, the Red Sox finished with a 98\u201364 record, three games behind the New York Yankees in the American League East. The Red Sox qualified for the postseason as the AL wild card, swept the Anaheim Angels in the ALDS, and faced the Yankees in the ALCS for the second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season\nAfter losing the first three games to the Yankees and trailing in the ninth inning of the fourth game, the Red Sox became the first team in major league history to come back from a three-game postseason deficit, defeating the Yankees in seven games. The Red Sox then swept the St. Louis Cardinals in the World Series, capturing their first championship since 1918.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Offseason, Pre-season events\nDuring the 2003\u201304 off season, the Red Sox acquired a starting ace pitcher; Curt Schilling, as well as a closer, Keith Foulke. Many visitors at their spring training at Fort Myers, Florida, were very enthusiastic about the 2004 Red Sox team. Expectations once again ran high that 2004 would finally be the year that the Red Sox ended their championship drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, Road to a Championship\nThe regular season started well in April, but through midseason the team struggled due to injuries, inconsistency and defensive woes, and fell more than eight games behind New York. A bright point came on July 24, when the Red Sox overcame a five-run deficit as Bill Mueller hit a game-winning home run to right-center off Yankees closer Mariano Rivera. The game also featured a now infamous brawl between Yankee superstar Alex Rodriguez and Red Sox catcher and captain Jason Varitek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, Road to a Championship\nRed Sox General Manager Theo Epstein shook up the team at the MLB trading deadline July 31, trading the team's wildly popular yet often hurt and disgruntled shortstop, Nomar Garciaparra, to the Chicago Cubs, receiving Orlando Cabrera from the Montreal Expos and Doug Mientkiewicz from the Minnesota Twins in return. In a separate transaction, the Red Sox also traded AAA outfielder Henri Stanley to the Los Angeles Dodgers for center fielder Dave Roberts. With valuable players like Cabrera, Mientkiewicz, and Roberts in the lineup, the club turned things around, winning twenty-two out of twenty-five games and going on to finish within three games of the Yankees in the AL East and qualifying for the playoffs as the AL Wild Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Regular season, Road to a Championship\nThe team played its home games at Fenway Park, before a regular season total attendance of 2,837,294 fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games played; IP = Innings Pitched; W = Win; L = Loss; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strikeout", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, Division Series\nBoston began the playoffs by sweeping the AL West champion Anaheim Angels. The Red Sox blew out the Angels 9\u20133 in Game 1, scoring 7 of those runs in the fourth inning. However, the Sox' 2003 off season prize pickup Curt Schilling suffered a torn tendon when he was hit by a line drive. The injury was exacerbated when Schilling fielded a ball rolling down the first base line. The second game, pitched by Pedro Mart\u00ednez, stayed close until Boston scored four in the ninth to win 8\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, Division Series\nIn game three, what looked to be a blowout turned out to be a nail-biter, as Vladimir Guerrero hit a grand slam off Mike Timlin in the top of the seventh inning to tie it at six. However, David Ortiz, who was noted for his clutch hitting, delivered in the 10th inning with a game winning two-run homer, off Jarrod Washburn, sailing over the Green Monster. The Red Sox advanced to a rematch in the 2004 American League Championship Series against their bitter rivals, the New York Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nDespite high hopes that the Red Sox would finally vanquish their nemesis from the Bronx, the series started disastrously for them. Curt Schilling pitched with the torn tendon sheath in his right ankle he had suffered in Game 1 of the Division Series against Anaheim, and was routed for six runs in three innings. Yankee starter Mike Mussina had six perfect innings, and held an 8\u20130 lead. Despite the Sox' best effort to come back (they scored seven runs to make it 8\u20137), they ended up losing 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nIn Game 2, already with his Yankees leading 1\u20130 for most of the game, John Olerud hit a two-run home run to put the New York team up for good. The Sox were soon down three games to none after a 19\u20138 loss in Game 3 at home. In that game, the two clubs set the record for most runs scored in a League Championship Series game. At that point in the history of baseball, no team had come back to win from a 3\u20130 series deficit (only the 1998 Atlanta Braves and 1999 New York Mets had ever gotten as far as a Game 6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nIn Game 4, the Red Sox found themselves facing elimination, trailing 4\u20133 in the ninth with Yankees closer Mariano Rivera on the mound. After Rivera issued a walk to Kevin Millar, Dave Roberts came on to pinch run and promptly stole second base, this being what many consider the turning point in the series. He then scored on an RBI single by Bill Mueller which sent the game to extra innings. The Red Sox went on to win the game on a two-run home run by David Ortiz in the 12th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nIn Game 5, the Red Sox were again down late, this time by the score of 4\u20132, as a result of Derek Jeter's bases-clearing triple. But the Sox struck back in the eighth, as Ortiz hit a homer over the Green Monster to bring the Sox within a run. Then Jason Varitek hit a sacrifice fly to bring home Dave Roberts, scoring the tying run. The game would go for 14 innings, capped off by many squandered Yankee opportunities (they were 1 for 13 with runners in scoring position).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0009-0002", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nIn the top of the 12th inning, the knuckleballing Tim Wakefield came in from the bullpen, without his customary \"personal catcher\", Doug Mirabelli. Varitek, the starting catcher, had trouble with Wakefield's tricky knuckleballs in the 13th: he allowed three passed balls in the top of the 13th. The third and last of those gave the Yankees runners on second and third with two out. The Red Sox were spared, however, as Rub\u00e9n Sierra struck out to end the inning. In the bottom of the 14th, Ortiz would again seal the win with a game-winning RBI single that brought home Damon. The game set the record for longest postseason game in terms of time (5 hours and 49 minutes) and for the longest American League Championship Series game (14 innings), though the former has since been broken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nWith the series returning to Yankee Stadium for Game 6, the improbable comeback continued, with Curt Schilling pitching on an ankle that had three sutures wrapped in a bloody white sock (red with a blood stain). Schilling struck out four, walked none, and only allowed one run over seven innings to lead the team to victory. Mark Bellhorn also helped in the effort as he hit a three-run home run in the fourth inning. Originally called a double, the umpires conferred and agreed that the ball had actually gone into the stands before falling back into the field of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nA key play came in the bottom of the eighth inning with Derek Jeter on first and Alex Rodr\u00edguez facing Bronson Arroyo. Rodr\u00edguez hit a ground ball down the first base line. Arroyo fielded it and reached out to tag him as he raced down the line. Rodr\u00edguez slapped at the ball and it came loose, rolling down the line. Jeter scored and Rodr\u00edguez ended up on second. After conferring, however, the umpires called Rodr\u00edguez out on interference and returned Jeter to first base, the second time in the game they reversed a call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nYankees fans, upset with the calls, littered the field with debris. The umpires called police clad in riot gear to line the field in the top of the 9th inning. In the bottom of the ninth, the Yankees staged a rally and brought former Red Sox player Tony Clark, who had played well against the Red Sox since leaving the team, to the plate as the potential winning run. Closer Keith Foulke however, struck out Clark to end the game and force a Game 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0010-0003", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nIn this game, the Red Sox completed their historic comeback on the strength of Derek Lowe's one-hit, one-run pitching and Johnny Damon's two home runs, including a grand slam in the second inning off the first pitch of reliever Javier V\u00e1zquez, and defeated the New York Yankees, 10\u20133. Ortiz, who had the game-winning RBIs in Games 4 and 5, was named ALCS Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nMajor League Baseball, the National Basketball Association, and the National Hockey League are three professional sports that feature best-of-seven games series in their playoffs. Coming back to win a seven-game series when down by three games has only been accomplished by four National Hockey League teams and only one Major League Baseball team in the history of the MLB, NBA, and NHL. The 1942 Toronto Maple Leafs (NHL) came back from being down by three games to the Detroit Red Wings to win the 1942 Stanley Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nThe 1975 New York Islanders (NHL) did the same when they came back to beat the Pittsburgh Penguins in the 1975 Stanley Cup Quarterfinals. The Philadelphia Flyers (NHL), during their Cinderella run to the 2010 Stanley Cup Finals, came back from three games down to defeat the Boston Bruins to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals. The Los Angeles Kings,in the 2013\u201314 NHL Playoffs defeated the San Jose Sharks in the first round, on their way to winning the 2014 Stanley Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Postseason, League Championship Series\nThe Boston Red Sox are currently the only team in Major League Baseball history to overcome a three game deficit in either a league or a World Series championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 80], "content_span": [81, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nThe Red Sox faced the St. Louis Cardinals in the 2004 World Series. The Cardinals had posted the best record in the major leagues that season, and had previously defeated the Red Sox in the 1946 and 1967 Series, with both series going seven games. The third time would be the charm, however, as the momentum and confidence Boston had built up in the ALCS would overwhelm St. Louis. The Red Sox began the Series with an 11\u20139 win, marked by Mark Bellhorn's game-winning home run off Pesky's Pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nHe later on said that he \"just did what he needed to do.\" It was the highest scoring World Series opening game ever (breaking the previous record set in 1932). The Red Sox would go on to win Game 2 in Boston (thanks to another sensational performance by the bloody-socked Schilling). The Red Sox won both these games despite making 4 errors in each game. In Game 3, Pedro Mart\u00ednez shut out the Cardinals for seven innings. The Cardinals only made one real threat \u2014 in the third inning when they put runners on second and third with no outs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0013-0002", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nHowever, the Cardinals' rally was killed by pitcher Jeff Suppan's baserunning gaffe. With no outs, Suppan should have scored easily from third on a Larry Walker ground ball to second baseman Bellhorn, who was playing back, conceding the run. But as Bellhorn threw out Walker at first base, Suppan inexplicably froze after taking several steps toward home and was thrown out by Sox first baseman David Ortiz as he scrambled back to third. The double play was devastating for St. Louis. The Red Sox needed one more game to win their first championship since the 1918 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0013-0003", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nIn Game Four the Red Sox did not allow a run, and the game ended as \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda (who would become the 2005 Red Sox starting SS) hit the ball back to Keith Foulke. (This was the second time that Renter\u00eda had ended a Series, as he had won it for the Marlins seven years prior in the 1997 World Series.) After Foulke lobbed the ball to Doug Mientkiewicz, the Sox had won their first World Championship in 86 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0013-0004", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nThe Sox held the Cardinals' offense (the best in the NL in 2004) to only three runs in the last three games, never trailing in the Series. Manny Ram\u00edrez was named World Series MVP. The Red Sox won Game Four of the series on October 27, eighteen years to the day from when they lost to the New York Mets in the 1986 World Series. In fact, it came 18 years to the day they lost their last World Series game, as they would sweep the 2004 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nThe Red Sox performed well in the 2004 postseason. From the eighth inning of Game 5 of the American League Championship Series against the Yankees (a tie) until the end of the World Series, the Sox played 60 innings, and never trailed at any point. This was only the fourth World Series ever played in which the losing team had never held a lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nTo add a final, surreal touch to the Red Sox championship title, on the night the Red Sox won, a total lunar eclipse colored the moon over Busch Stadium to a deep red hue. The Red Sox won the title about eleven minutes before totality ended. Many Red Sox fans who were turned away due to no tickets for the game were allowed to watch the final inning from the confines of Busch Stadium after being let in free of charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nFox commentator Joe Buck famously called the final out, saying:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nBack to Foulke. Red Sox fans have longed to hear it: the Boston Red Sox are World Champions!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nThe Red Sox held a parade (or as Boston mayor Thomas Menino put it, a \"rolling rally\") on Saturday, October 30, 2004. A crowd of more than three million people filled the streets of Boston to cheer as the team rode on the city's famous Duck Boats. The parade followed the same route the New England Patriots took following their victories in Super Bowls Super Bowl XXXVI in 2002 and Super Bowl XXXVIII in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nFollowing their 2004 World Series win, the Red Sox replaced the dirt from the field as a \"fresh start\". They earned many accolades from sports media and throughout the nation for their incredible season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nPitcher Derek Lowe said that with the win, the chants of \"1918!\" would no longer echo at Yankee Stadium again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nThe Patriots win in the Super Bowl meant the Red Sox World Series win made Boston the first city to have Super Bowl and World Series champions in the same year in 25 years, when the Pittsburgh Steelers won Super Bowl XIII, followed by the Pirates winning the 1979 World Series. The Patriots winning Super Bowl XXXIX in the ensuing offseason made Boston the first city to have two Super Bowls and one World Series championship over a span of 12 months since Pittsburgh in 1979\u20131980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176811-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, 2004 World Series\nAfter the Bruins won the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals, which made Boston the first city to win championships in all four sports leagues in the new millennium, Dan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe ranked all seven championships by the Boston teams (the Patriots in the Super Bowls played in 2002, 2004 and 2005, the Red Sox in 2004 and 2007, the Celtics in 2008, and the Bruins in 2011) and picked the Red Sox win in 2004 as the greatest Boston sports championship during the ten-year span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176812-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana general election\nGeneral elections were held in Botswana on 30 October 2004, alongside local elections. The result was a ninth consecutive victory for the ruling Botswana Democratic Party (BDP), which won 44 of the 57 seats in the National Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176812-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana general election, Background\nThe Independent Electoral Commission had a campaign to encourage voter registration, with a target of registering at 500,000 voters. Although it achieved its target, registering around 61% of the estimated 900,000 voting-age population, the opposition Botswana National Front (BNF) accused it of making errors in the registration process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176812-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana general election, Campaign\nFor the first time, the election campaign involved parties using billboards. However, the opposition claimed that their media access was restricted, and a study by the Media Institute of Southern Africa showed that the BDP had received over 50% of the election coverage. The BDP campaigned on promises to improve training, expand electricity and water supplies and amend laws that discriminated against women. The campaign of the opposition parties focused on unemployment and poverty. However, although the BNF, Botswana Alliance Movement (BAM) and Botswana People's Party (BPP), entered into an electoral pact agreement in 2003, their campaigns were marked by open personal attacks between them and their leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176812-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana general election, Campaign\nFifty-six of the 57 constituencies were contested, with Vice President Ian Khama unopposed in the Serowe North constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176812-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana general election, Conduct\nFor the first time, international monitors were able to observe the elections, with delegations from the Southern African Development Community, the African Union, the Commonwealth and the United Nations in attendance. There were 11,000 personnel from the Independent Electoral Commission involved in running the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176813-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana local elections\nLocal elections in Botswana were held on 30 October 2004 for the district councils of the Districts of Botswana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176813-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana local elections, Results By District, Central District\nThe election in one ward was postponed due to the death of a candidate. The Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) won the seat in a by-election held on 4 December 2004, bringing their total to 128 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176813-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana local elections, Results By District, Francistown City\nElections in one ward were postponed because the party symbol for one of the contestants was erroneously omitted. The Botswana People's Party (BPP) won the seat in a by-election held on 4 December 2004, giving it one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176813-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Botswana local elections, Results By District, Southern District\nThere was a tie in one constituency and a by-election was held on 8 January 2005. The Botswana National Front (BNF) candidate won, bringing their total to 24 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176814-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bowling Green Falcons football team\nThe 2004 Bowling Green Falcons football team represented Bowling Green State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Gregg Brandon and played their home games in Doyt Perry Stadium in Bowling Green, Ohio. It was the 86th season of play for the Falcons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176815-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brabantse Pijl\nThe 2004 Brabantse Pijl was the 44th edition of the Brabantse Pijl cycle race and was held on 28 March 2004. The race started in Zaventem and finished in Alsemberg. The race was won by Luca Paolini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season\nThis article details the Bradford Bulls rugby league football club's 2004 season, the ninth season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford started the 2004 season off by beating Penrith Panthers 22\u20134 in the World Club Challenge to become World Champions for the second time. The Bulls start to the regular season rounds could not have been better as Lesley Vainikolo set a Super League record with the most tries in a match scoring five in Bradford's 34\u20136 win against Wigan Warriors. The Bulls could not retain their Challenge Cup title as they were knocked out in Round 4 as St Helens R.F.C. beat them 30\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford continued their run of form with a comprehensive 40\u20136 win against Wakefield Trinity Wildcats. The Bulls kept their league winning streak going with a hard fought 20\u20136 win against Yorkshire rivals Huddersfield Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls started April by grinding out a 25\u201318 win against Salford City Reds. Bradford's first league loss of the season came in Round 5 against arch rivals Leeds Rhinos who came out 26\u201318 winners. The Bulls picked themselves up after this defeat and hammered St Helens R.F.C. 54\u20138 with Shontayne Hape scoring a hat-trick. Bradford lost for the second time this season as Hull F.C. beat them 26\u201318 with Shaun Briscoe scoring four tries for the Hull side. The Bulls finished the month with a 22\u201322 draw at Warrington Wolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford started May with a much needed 24\u201312 win against London Broncos. The Bulls then beat Castleford Tigers 44\u201318 with Stuart Reardon scoring four tries. Bradford kept their winning run on track with a 30\u201320 win against Widnes Vikings. The month finished badly for the Bulls as their winning streak was broken in a 35\u201330 loss to St Helens R.F.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe start of June was a poor one for Bradford as they lost 26\u201312 to arch-rivals Leeds Rhinos. Bradford soon got back on track as they beat Salford City Reds 35\u201328 in a hard fought match. The Bulls also posted an impressive 40\u201312 win against Huddersfield Giants with Paul Deacon kicking them to victory with 10 goals. Bradford finished the month with a 38\u201330 win against Widnes Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls started July well as they smashed Castleford Tigers 60\u201312 with Lesley Vainikolo stealing the spotlight with four tries, he then scored another two the following week in a 36\u201326 win against the Wakefield Trinity Wildcats. The good start to the month came to an end as the Bulls lost 32\u201316 to Wigan Warriors. Bradford recovered from this defeat and beat London Broncos 44\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford's month got off to a bad start as they lost 25\u201314 to Hull F.C. keeping the Bulls fifth in the table. The Bulls got their season back on track with a hard fought 36\u201322 win against Warrington Wolves thanks to a Lesley Vainikolo hat-trick. Bradford backed this win up with an outstanding 38\u201312 win against Wigan Warriors with Iestyn Harris leading the way with two tries and a goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls were brought crashing back to earth as league leaders and arch-rivals Leeds Rhinos beat them 40\u201312, the Bulls were down to 12 men for at least 20 minutes of the match as Leon Pryce received two sin-bins. Bradford finished the month strong as they beat Hull F.C. 26\u201312, Lesley Vainikolo scored his fourth hat-trick of the year to help the Bulls get the much needed win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls continued their charge to second in the league as they beat woeful London Broncos 60\u201318, Shontayne Hape scored a hat-trick, Logan Swann and Rob Parker also scored two tries each to help the Bulls get the win. Bradford continued their winning end to the season with a nail biting 28\u201327 win against Warrington Wolves where Paul Deacon's two late drop-goals secured the points for the Yorkshire side. The Bulls finished the regular season by thumping St Helens R.F.C. 64\u201324, both Stuart Reardon and Lesley Vainikolo grabbed hat-tricks whilst Hape scored two tries to help the Bradford team finish the 2004 season second in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford qualified for the 2004 Grand Final by defeating arch rivals Leeds Rhinos in the Qualifying Semi-final. The Bulls came out as 26\u201312 winner thanks to tries from Robbie Paul, Lee Radford, Lesley Vainikolo and a double from Shontayne Hape. However Leeds soon got revenge as they defeated the Bulls 16\u20138 in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176816-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Bradford Bulls season, Table\nSource: . Classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176817-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brandenburg state election\nThe 2004 Brandenburg state election was held on 19 September 2004 to elect the members of the 4th Landtag of Brandenburg. The incumbent government of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and Christian Democratic Union (CDU) led by Minister-President Matthias Platzeck was returned with a significantly reduced majority. The Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) moved into second place, although polls prior to the election suggested it would become the largest party. The CDU fell to third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176817-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brandenburg state election, Background\nThe SPD had suffered losses in several state elections before Brandenburg. This was thought to be a consequence of the Agenda 2010 policy, a series of economic liberal economic reforms adopted by the federal SPD government led by Chancellor Gerhard Schr\u00f6der. Many voters in eastern Germany turned to the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), while many in the west later turned to Labour and Social Justice, an SPD splinter party. In state elections, the SPD's growing unpopularity had chiefly benefited the CDU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176817-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brandenburg state election, Background\nIn Brandenburg, both Minister-President Matthias Platzeck (SPD) and his partner J\u00f6rg Sch\u00f6nbohm (CDU) supported Schr\u00f6der's reforms. Both PDS and the German People's Union (DVU), which had entered the Landtag in 1999, campaigned in opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176817-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Brandenburg state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 3rd Landtag of Brandenburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176818-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open\nThe 2004 Brasil Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Costa do Sauipe resort, Mata de S\u00e3o Jo\u00e3o, in Brazil and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and ran from February 23 through February 29, 2004. Gustavo Kuerten won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176818-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open, Winners, Men's Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg / Marcin Matkowski defeated Tomas Behrend / Leo\u0161 Friedl 6\u20132, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176819-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nTodd Perry and Thomas Shimada were the defending champions but only Perry competed that year with Jordan Kerr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176819-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nKerr and Perry lost in the quarterfinals to Andr\u00e9 S\u00e1 and Fl\u00e1vio Saretta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176819-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20132 against Tomas Behrend and Leo\u0161 Friedl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176820-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nSjeng Schalken was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176820-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nGustavo Kuerten won in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20133 against Agust\u00edn Calleri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176821-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Brazilian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Grande Pr\u00eamio do Brasil 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 24 October 2004 at the Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace. It was Race 18 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. It marked the first time that a GP in Brazil was held at the end of the F1 season , and local fans were delighted when Brazil's Rubens Barrichello took pole for his home race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176821-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Brazilian Grand Prix\nIt would be Barrichello's first non-retirement at Interlagos in ten years, his previous finish at the circuit being at the season opener in 1994. The early laps were held in changeable conditions, and the race ended up as a duel between Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Juan Pablo Montoya, who were to be McLaren teammates for 2005. The Colombian took victory in his final race for Williams, which was also the last win for the Williams team until the 2012 Spanish Grand Prix. Montoya's move to take the lead was brave even by his standards. Elsewhere, Jaguar's final race was a failure of epic proportions, with their two drivers colliding, with Webber trying an optimistic-looking move on Klien whilst expecting his teammate to move over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176821-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brazilian Grand Prix\nRicardo Zonta returned to his home race for the Toyota team, replacing Olivier Panis, who had retired from the sport after the previous race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176821-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brazilian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176822-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brentwood Borough Council election\nElections to Brentwood Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election, all seats last being elected in 2002 following boundary changes. The Conservative Party took control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176822-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brentwood Borough Council election, Election result\nThe swing was 4.9% from the Liberal Democrats to the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176823-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brickyard 400\nThe 2004 Brickyard 400, the 11th running of the event, was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on August 8, 2004 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. Contested at 161 laps \u2013 extended from 160 laps due to a green\u2013white\u2013checker finish \u2013 on the 2.5 mile (4.023 km) speedway, it was the twenty-first race of the 2004 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series season. Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176823-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brickyard 400, Background\nThe Indianapolis Motor Speedway, located in Speedway, Indiana, (an enclave suburb of Indianapolis) in the United States, is the home of the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400. It is located on the corner of 16th Street and Georgetown Road, approximately six miles (10\u00a0km) west of Downtown Indianapolis. It is a four-turn rectangular-oval track that is 2.5 miles (4.023\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 9 degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, has no banking. The back stretch, opposite of the front, also has a zero degree banking. The racetrack has seats for more than 250,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176823-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brickyard 400, Summary\nFor the first time in Nextel Cup Series history, the Green-white-checker finish rule caused a race to be extended, in this case for one additional lap. On the extra lap, Casey Mears blew a tire, Ricky Rudd hit the wall, then Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. suffered tire failures. Jeff Gordon retained the lead to become the first four-time winner of the Brickyard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176823-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Brickyard 400, Summary\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#51), Hermie Sadler (#02), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Greg Sacks (#13), Andy Hillenburg (#37), Geoffrey Bodine (#34), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176824-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election was held on Thursday 10 June 2004 to Bridgend County Borough Council, Wales. It took place on the same day as other council elections in Wales and England. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176824-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election\nThe election resulted in the Labour Party losing control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176824-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election, Overview\n54 council seats were up for election, across 39 electoral wards, a similar number to the previous election in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176824-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election, Overview\nLabour had a strong majority on the council prior to the election, though council leader Jeff Jones had recently stood down from his position. Labour lost 18 seats at the election, though remained the largest party. The following week, Liberal Democrat Cheryl Green announced she would lead a coalition Lib Dems, Conservatives and Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176824-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election, Ward Results\nContests took place in 37 of the 39 wards, with councillors in two of the wards being elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176824-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgend County Borough Council election, Ward Results, Sarn (one seat)\nThe vote was postponed in this ward until 22 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176825-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgestone 400\nThe 2004 Bridgestone 400 was the twelfth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on September 25, 2004 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, Nevada. Patrick Carpentier won the pole, the fifth and final pole of his Champ Car career. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176825-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgestone 400, Race\n* Alex Tagliani was dropped from 14th to 16th in the final standings and lost his bonus point for leading a lap as a penalty for ignoring a black flag during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 26], "content_span": [27, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176826-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bridgestone Grand Prix of Monterey\nThe 2004 Bridgestone Grand Prix of Monterey was the eleventh round of the 2004 Champ Car season, held on September 12, 2004 at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in Monterey, California. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais took the pole while Patrick Carpentier won the race, the fifth and final win of his Champ Car career. It was also the 22nd and final Champ Car event to take place at the Laguna Seca racetrack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176827-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane Broncos season\nThe 2004 Brisbane Broncos season was the seventeenth in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2004 Telstra Premiership, making it to the finals again, but were knocked out of contention by the North Queensland Cowboys, their first ever loss to the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176827-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nThe 2004 NRL season was Darren Lockyer's first in the position of five-eighth and Gorden Tallis' last as captain. The Broncos started the season by defeating the New Zealand Warriors 28-20 in Round 1, only to lose their next match against the Parramatta Eels by 26-18. The Broncos then won their next five matches, including a controversial match against the Tigers, during which the Broncos appeared to field 14 men at one stage of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176827-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nIn the 60th minute, Brisbane's Shane Webcke was taken off the ground after being knocked out by Bryce Gibbs; while he was assisted off the field, Corey Parker was brought on, and immediately scored off a Darren Lockyer pass to start a Broncos revival (they trailed 24-8 at halftime) which saw them claim a 32-24 victory. An ensuing investigation saw the Broncos stripped of two competition points, but, following a successful appeal, they were reinstated weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176827-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nIn round 10, the Broncos and the Newcastle Knights made history by contesting the first ever golden point match on free-to-air television. The Broncos lost the match 16-17 after Newcastle's Kurt Gidley booted a field goal three minutes and 26 seconds into extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176827-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nThe Broncos eventually qualified for the finals for the thirteenth consecutive season after finishing the minor rounds in third place on the ladder (only behind eventual Grand Finalists the Sydney Roosters and the Bulldogs), but would bow out in straight sets, first losing to the Melbourne Storm at home by 31-14 before losing to the North Queensland Cowboys in Townsville, in what was captain Gorden Tallis' final game for the club. It also marked the first time the Broncos had lost to the Cowboys, and the first time the Broncos had been held scoreless anywhere in Queensland. With Tallis' retirement at the end of the season, the Broncos' captaincy was passed onto Darren Lockyer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176828-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane City Council election\nElections of the Brisbane City Council in Queensland, Australia, were held on Saturday, 27 March 2004 to elect a councillor to each of the local government area's 26 wards and the direct election of the Lord Mayor of Brisbane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176828-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane City Council election\nThe election resulted in the election of Campbell Newman of the Liberal Party as Lord Mayor, defeating the Labor Party incumbent, Tim Quinn, by 2.5% of the mayoral two-party-preferred vote. The Liberals won 9 wards to Labor's 17. Newman became the first Liberal Lord Mayor since Sallyanne Atkinson narrow defeat in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176829-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brisbane Lions season\nThe Brisbane Lions' 2004 season was its eighth season in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176830-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brit Awards\nThe 2004 Brit Awards were the 24th edition of the biggest annual pop music awards in the United Kingdom. They are run by the British Phonographic Industry and took place on 17 February 2004 at Earls Court in London. The awards were marked by a set of victories by the rock band The Darkness. They won the first British Rock Act award ever presented at the BRIT Awards. last present year in British Dance Act. The show, when broadcast, attracted 6.18 million viewers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176831-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Academy Television Awards\nThe 2004 British Academy Television Awards were held on Sunday 18 April at the Grosvenor House Hotel in Park Lane, London. The ceremony was hosted by Davina McCall and broadcast on ITV the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176832-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Academy Television Craft Awards\nThe British Academy Television Craft Awards of 2004 are presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and were held on 16 May 2004 at The Dorchester, Mayfair, the ceremony was hosted by Alistair McGowan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176833-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Columbia Scott Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2004 British Columbia Scott Tournament of Hearts, British Columbia's women's provincial curling championship, was held January 20-24 2004 at the Golden Ears Winter Club in Maple Ridge, British Columbia. The winning team of Georgina Wheatcroft represented British Columbia at the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts in Red Deer, Alberta, finishing with a record of 4-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176834-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Formula 3 International Series\nThe 2004 Formula 3 International Series was the 54th British Formula 3 International Series season. It commenced on 3 April, and ended on 1 October after twenty-four races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176834-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 British Formula 3 International Series, Drivers and teams\nThe following teams and drivers were competitors in the 2004 British Formula 3 International Series. The Scholarship class is for older Formula Three cars. Teams in the Invitation class are not series regulars, and do not compete for championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176835-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Formula Ford Championship\nThe 2004 British Formula Ford Championship is the 29th edition of the British Formula Ford Championship. The first race started on 4 April at Donington Park and the last race on 3 October at Brands Hatch after 10 rounds and 20 races. The series switched from supporting the British Touring Car Championship to supporting the British GT and British Formula Three Championship. After 2004 the series continued to support the two series until the end of 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176836-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British GT Championship\nThe 2004 British GT season consisted of an eight-round series of sports car racing in the British GT Championship, with each round consisting of two races. The series was open to N-GT and GT Cup class cars. Jonathan Cocker won the N-GT Class Driver's Championship, whilst Adam Wilcox and Ni Amorim shared the GT Cup Driver's Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176836-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 British GT Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' Championships, N-GT\nPoints were awarded as follows: 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 from first to eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 82], "content_span": [83, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176836-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 British GT Championship, Championship standings, Drivers' Championships, GT Cup\nPoints were awarded as follows: 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1 from first to eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176837-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Grand Prix\nThe 2004 British Grand Prix (formally the 2004 Formula 1 Foster's British Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Silverstone Circuit on 11 July 2004. It was Race 11 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176837-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe race was preceded by a demonstration of contemporary Formula One cars on Regent Street in London, including former British Formula One World Champion Nigel Mansell driving the Jordan EJ14. The event attracted an estimated 500,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176837-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 British Grand Prix, Background\nThe event was also notable for the death of Minardi Sporting Director John Walton, who died of a heart attack following the street demonstration, causing the Minardi team to withdraw its cars from Saturday's early practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176837-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 British Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176838-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British National Track Championships\nThe 2004 British National Track Championships were a series of track cycling competitions held from 7\u201310 October 2004 at the Manchester Velodrome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open\nThe 2004 British Open was the 2004 edition of the British Open snooker tournament, held from 8 to 14 November 2004 at Brighton Centre, Brighton, England. John Higgins won the tournament, defeating Stephen Maguire nine frames to six in the all-Scottish final to lift his first ranking-event title since the 2001 edition of this event. In the semi-finals, Higgins defeated Shaun Murphy 6\u20130 and Maguire defeated Ronnie O'Sullivan 6\u20131. The defending champion Stephen Hendry lost in the quarter-finals. Higgins made the highest tournament break with his two breaks of 144. The tournament was the second of eight WPBSA ranking events in the 2004/2005 snooker season, following the Grand Prix in October, which was won by O'Sullivan. It preceded the third ranking event of the season, the UK Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary\nThe 2004 British Open was the second ranking event of the 2004/2005 snooker season, after the Grand Prix in October, which was won by world number one Ronnie O'Sullivan\u2014the 2004 and two-time world champion\u2014who defeated Ian McCulloch 9\u20135 in the final. It preceded the UK Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary\nThe defending champion was seven-time world champion Stephen Hendry who defeated O'Sullivan 9\u20136 in last year's final. Hendry was still angry at his loss at the Grand Prix to McCulloch, explaining, \"The way I felt at the Grand Prix was down to the fact that I know what I'm still capable of\". The total prize fund was \u00a3200,000 and the host broadcaster was Eurosport. O'Sullivan was considered the favourite, with his mentor Ray Reardon saying \"Ronnie is in the form of his life and looks very close to being unstoppable at the moment\". Although few top players reached the final eight in the Grand Prix, O'Sullivan said he would not be surprised if they performed well in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Qualifying\nThe qualifying rounds were played between players ranked lower than 32 for one of 16 places in the final stage, at Pontin's Snooker Centre, Prestatyn, Wales. The matches were best-of-9 frames until the semi-finals. Highly regarded 17-year-old Chinese player Ding Junhui, in his professional first season, won his sixth consecutive match when he beat Robin Hull 5\u20132. The other successful qualifiers included the likes of Shaun Murphy, Mark Selby, Neil Robertson, and Ryan Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 49], "content_span": [50, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 1\nThe 16 first-round matches were between players ranked 17\u201332 and those who had made it through the qualifying stage. In this round, Ding took 63 minutes to whitewash 5\u20130 Malta's Tony Drago\u2014who turned professional before Ding was born\u2014outscoring Drago 463\u201373, for his first appearance in the last 32 of a ranking tournament. European Open winner Stephen Maguire defeated Australian Robertson 5\u20133, while world number 48 Murphy beat McCulloch 5\u20132. Michael Holt, in his first season in the top 32, beat Dave Harold 5\u20132, and Mark King defeated Selby by the same scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 1\nAli Carter whitewashed Belgian's number one Bjorn Haneveer 5\u20130 in 76 minutes, while Barry Hawkins prevailed 5\u20134 over Joe Perry, despite the latter making the highest break so far with a 133. John Parrott made a century break in his 5\u20133 victory over Jamie Burnett, while Joe Jogia won four consecutive frames to overcome Joe Swail 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 2\nThe winners of round 1 went through to face members of the top 16. Ding continued his run, defeating Jimmy White 5\u20131 to make the last 16 of a ranking event for the first time. Ding called the win his most satisfying to date and White commended his opponent's performance, saying, \"He's dangerous and he's improved a hell of a lot this year\". Elsewhere, Maguire whitewashed UK champion Matthew Stevens 5\u20130, outscoring him 427\u201368.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 2\nO'Sullivan extended his unbeaten run to 12 matches when he defeated Parrott 5\u20132, in a match that lasted two hours and 28 minutes and which featured a lot of tactical, disjointed exchanges. He was not satisfied with his performance, however: \"I was awful\u2014if I keep playing like that they'll have to call the nuthouse to come and collect me\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 2\n1997 world champion Ken Doherty, who was ranked seventh but had slipped to fifteenth in the provisional rankings, defeated Quinten Hann 5\u20131, after Hann had smashed the red balls from his break-off shot at 0\u20134 down, from which he fluked a red and made an 89 break. John Higgins, a three-time champion who first won in 1995, beat Drew Henry 5\u20131, and said he would withdraw from the tournament if his pregnant wife went into labour. Hendry beat Robert Milkins 5\u20131, and dismissed suggestions that the loss at the Grand Prix had inspired him to play better at this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0005-0003", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 2\nMurphy defeated world number four Paul Hunter 5\u20133 for his second last-16 appearance in a ranking event, and attributed the win to his happiness off the table; Murphy\u2014a Christian since the age of 17\u2014said, \"My girlfriend Claire is a wonderful woman. We've become engaged and we're involved with a tremendous church in Rotherham\". Two-time world champion and world number two Mark Williams\u2014who became a father in May and had slipped to eighth in the provisional rankings\u2014claimed a 5\u20131 victory over Jogia in 89 minutes. In a hard-fought contest, Stephen Lee defeated King 5\u20134. The other winners were Carter, Andy Hicks, Anthony Hamilton, Hawkins, Barry Pinches, Holt, and Stuart Bingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 3\nIn the last 16, O'Sullivan compiled two century breaks to whitewash Lee 5\u20130 for his 13th consecutive win and his 9th consecutive quarter-final. Regarding comments he made about his retirement after his previous match, O'Sullivan said, \"There's no point quoting me because what I say from one day to the next will be different\". Maguire made a total clearance of 140 in his 5\u20132 win over Ding, while Hamilton defeated Williams 5\u20133 for his fourth consecutive win over the world number two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Round 3\nHendry, whose last tournament victory was this event last year, made four breaks over 60 in his 5\u20132 win over Carter to set up a match with Higgins, who made the highest break so far with a 141 in his 5\u20133 win over Pinches. Doherty became the fifth member of the top eight to lose when he was defeated 4\u20135 by Hicks, while Hawkins defeated Bingham 5\u20134 and Murphy beat Holt 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals, O'Sullivan defeated Hicks 5\u20131 in a match in which Hicks made a few errors. After the match, O'Sullivan attributed his success to his mentor Reardon. Maguire made three consecutive century breaks from 2\u20130 up to whitewash Hamilton 5\u20130, setting up a semi-final clash with O'Sullivan. Maguire won the first two frames on the black, the second after trailing 0\u201374 and requiring two snookers. Maguire said that he played brilliant, like in practice, and Hamilton said his opponent was a \"proper talent\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nHiggins defeated Hendry 5\u20132 in a low-quality match in which Higgins won the first three frames with a high break of 30. Hendry won the next two with breaks of 66 and 58, but Higgins closed the match with breaks of 85 and 79. Higgins said he was willing to risk a possible fine by attending to his wife if she gave birth. Murphy beat fellow qualifier Hawkins 5\u20133 to reach his first ranking semi-final, with Higgins as the opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-finals, now best-of-11, Higgins took 73 minutes to whitewash Murphy 6\u20130, scoring breaks of 58, 114, 57, 89, and completing the victory with a total clearance of 144, the highest break so far. The time of 73 minutes was only two minutes slower than the quickest best-of-11 match\u2014the semi-finals of the 1993 International Open between Hendry and Dave Harold\u2014and Higgins outscored Murphy 566\u201372. In the first three frames, Murphy managed to score a total of 10 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 50], "content_span": [51, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nIn the fourth, Murphy broke down on a break of 50 before Higgins fluked a yellow, enabling him to make a 57 break. He then fortuitously snooked Murphy on the pink, which Higgins potted to make it 4\u20130. An 89 break extended Higgins' lead, before he finished the match with a 144 break. Higgins attributed his performance to a shortening of his cue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 50], "content_span": [51, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nIn the other semi-final, Maguire ended O'Sullivan's 14-match unbeaten run with a 6\u20131 victory to earn a place in the final against Higgins. Maguire made century breaks in the first two frames, becoming the first player to make five consecutive century breaks (including the three made in his previous match). Maguire won the third on the pink after O'Sullivan missed the yellow. O'Sullivan won the next with a break of 51, before Maguire made a break of 71 in each of the final two frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 50], "content_span": [51, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nAfter the match, O'Sullivan\u2014who had won all three previous encounters against Maguire\u2014said, \"I've never seen anything like that on a snooker table before\u00a0... He's a great player, probably the best in the world at the moment\", and even before the match, O'Sullivan had described Maguire as \"of the young ones, definitely the best\". The defeat meant that Reardon lost the \u00a3100 bet he placed at 150\u20131 that O'Sullivan would win all eight of the season's ranking events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 50], "content_span": [51, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Final\nIn the all-Scottish best-of-17 final, Higgins defeated Maguire 9\u20136 for a record-equalling fourth title. Of the victory, Higgins said it was the most important of his career. He had not won a ranking title since his 2001 victory at this event and had lost his previous six finals. It was his 25th major title and his 16th ranking title, and it earned him \u00a330,000 in prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 44], "content_span": [45, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Final\nIn the afternoon session, Maguire took the first frame, but Higgins won the next three, compiling a 100 break in the third. Breaks of 72, 55, and 76 allowed Maguire to regain the lead, before Higgins took the eighth after Maguire missed a straightforward red to leave it 4\u20134 at the end of the first session. In the evening session, Higgins took the ninth, before Maguire made two breaks over 50 in the 10th. Higgins then made two consecutive century breaks, including a 144 in the 11th, which equalled his own highest break. He continued his run with a break of 68 in the 13th, before Maguire pulled one back in the next. A 97 break gave Higgins the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 44], "content_span": [45, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Tournament summary, Final\nAll tournament, Higgins had been anticipating the birth of his child and on 24 November, Higgins became a father for the second time when his wife gave birth to a son, Oliver, shortly after his loss at the UK Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 44], "content_span": [45, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Main draw\nNumbers to the left of the players are the tournament seedings. Players in bold are the match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Final\nThe bold text denotes winning frame scores and the winning finalist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Qualifying\nQualifying for the tournament took place between 2 and 4 November 2004 at Pontins in Prestatyn, Wales. Players in bold indicate match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Century breaks, Qualifying stage centuries\nA total of 13 players compiled a total of 14 century breaks during the qualifying stages of the 2004 British Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176839-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 British Open, Century breaks, Televised stage centuries\nThere were 33 century breaks compiled by 17 different players during the course of the main rounds of the 2004 British Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 60], "content_span": [61, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176840-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Rally Championship\nThe 2004 British Rally Championship season was the 46th season of the British Rally Championship. The season consisted of eight rounds and began on 23 April, with the Pirelli International Rally in the north east of England. The season ended on 6 November, at the Tempest South of England Rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176841-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Rowing Championships\nThe 2004 British Rowing Championships known as the National Championships at the time, were the 33rd edition of the National Championships, held from 16\u201318 July 2004 at the National Water Sports Centre in Holme Pierrepont, Nottingham. They were organised and sanctioned by British Rowing, and are open to British rowers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176842-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Speedway Championship\nThe 2004 British Speedway Championship was the 44th edition of the British Speedway Championship. The Final took place on 7 July at Oxford Stadium in Oxford, England. The Championship was won by Joe Screen, who beat David Norris, Mark Loram and Scott Nicholls in the final heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176843-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Superbike Championship\nThe 2004 British Superbike season is the 17th British Superbike Championship season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship\nThe 2004 Green Flag MSA British Touring Car Championship season was the 47th British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nWith the admittance of Super 2000-spec cars into the championship, the BTCC welcomed with it a new manufacturer, with SEAT Sport's UK division entering a pair of Toledos identical to those used in the European Touring Car Championship, run by RML. At the wheel were Jason Plato, returning to the championship for the first time since his title victory in 2001, and youngster Rob Huff, who earned his drive through winning the inaugural SEAT Cupra UK Championship, for which Plato had acted as a driver coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nThey were joined by reigning champions of the last three seasons Vauxhall, with Triple 8 Engineering again running a trio of Astra Coupes. 2003 champion Yvan Muller remained along with runner-up and 2002 title winner James Thompson, with Luke Hines replacing Paul O'Neill in the third car on the back of claiming the Production class title in his debut season the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nHonda cut its Arena Motorsport-run Civic Type-R campaign down to a single car for the returning Tom Chilton, but the Civic challenge was augmented by a pair of cars entered by Team Dynamics for Matt Neal, returning to his family team from the works Honda set-up, and Dan Eaves, who brought with him Halfords sponsorship after the withdrawal of Vic Lee Racing. Proton completed the line-up of works teams, its two Impians now driven by two newcomers to British motorsport; the experienced South African Shaun Watson-Smith and the young Malaysian Farique Hairuman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nFinancial trouble forced MG Rover to pull its works backing from West Surrey Racing's MG ZS assault, but the team cut down from three to two cars and returned as an independent with young gun Colin Turkington and veteran Anthony Reid staying on board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nEx-works Vauxhall Astra Coupes were a popular choice amongst the other independents, with Michael Bentwood stepping up from the Production ranks in a 'VXR Junior' team prepared by Tech-Speed Motorsport and 2003 Independents champion Rob Collard continuing to campaign an Astra for his self-run team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nGA Motorsport (now under the 'Team Sureterm' banner) continued to run a pair of Astra Coupes for the returning Paul Wallace and Renault Clio Cup graduate Charlie Butler-Henderson, while a Super 2000-spec Alfa Romeo 156 was also entered for Carl Breeze. Wallace was soon replaced by experienced former Ford and Volvo factory driver Kelvin Burt, then later Irishman Gavin Smith and Stefan Hodgetts (son of ex-BTCC champion Chris), the latter then stepping in to replace Butler-Henderson when his funds ran out. Hodgetts then swapped cars with Breeze, who himself was replaced by Gavin Pyper for the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nSynchro Motorsport again returned with an ex-works Honda Civic Type R for former works driver James Kaye. Jason Hughes stepped up from the Production class, racing an ex-WSR MG ZS for his Kartworld Racing team, and John Batchelor's 'Team Varta' also switched classes, running Richard Marsh from the second round onwards in first a Super 2000 Civic Type-R, then later an ex-Vic Lee Racing Peugeot 307. Marsh was replaced by Jay Wheals for the final round, for which the team returned to the Civic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2004, Teams and drivers\nMardi Gras Motorsport had an abortive campaign, entering a Super 2000 Civic and later an ex-works Peugeot 406 Coupe, both LPG-powered, for businessman John George, and Edenbridge Racing briefly entered a Super 2000 BMW 320i for Justin Keen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176844-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 British Touring Car Championship, Season Calendar\nAll races were held in the United Kingdom (excepting Mondello Park round that held in Ireland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176845-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 British motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 British motorcycle Grand Prix was the ninth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 23\u201325 July 2004 at the Donington Park circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176845-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 British motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round nine has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176846-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brittany regional election\nA regional election took place in Brittany on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Jean-Yves Le Drian (PS) was elected President, defeating incumbent Josselin de Rohan (UMP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176846-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brittany regional election\nThis Brittany-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176846-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brittany regional election\nThis French elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176847-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brown Bears football team\nThe 2004 Brown Bears football team was an American football team that represented Brown University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Brown tied for fourth in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176847-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brown Bears football team\nIn their seventh season under head coach Phil Estes, the Bears compiled a 6\u20134 record and outscored opponents 222 to 194. Will Burroughs, Anjel Gutierrez and L. Rubida were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176847-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brown Bears football team\nThe Bears' 3\u20134 conference record placed them in a three-way tie for fourth place in the Ivy League standings. Brown was outscored 154 to 145 by Ivy opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176847-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Brown Bears football team\nBrown played its home games at Brown Stadium in Providence, Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176848-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brownlow Medal\nThe 2004 Brownlow Medal was the 77th year the award was presented to the player adjudged the fairest and best player during the Australian Football League (AFL) home-and-away season. Chris Judd of the West Coast Eagles won the medal by polling thirty votes during the 2004 AFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176848-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brownlow Medal, Voting procedure\nThe three field umpires (those umpires who control the flow of the game, as opposed to goal or boundary umpires) confer after each match and award three votes, two votes, and one vote to the players they regard as the best, second-best and third-best in the match, respectively. The votes are kept secret until the awards night, and they are read and tallied on the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176848-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Brownlow Medal, Voting procedure\nAs the medal is awarded to the fairest and best player in the league, those who have been suspended during the season by the AFL Tribunal (or, who avoided suspension only because of a discount for a good record or an early guilty plea) are ineligible to win the award; however, they may still continue to poll votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176849-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Broxbourne Borough Council election\nThe Broxbourne Council election, 2004 was held to elect council members of the Broxbourne Borough Council, the local government authority of the borough of Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176849-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Broxbourne Borough Council election, Results summary\nAn election was held in 12 out of the 13 wards on 10 June 2004. (No election in Rosedale Ward)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176849-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Broxbourne Borough Council election, Results summary\nThe new political balance of the council following this election was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176850-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Brunei Premier League\nStatistics of the Brunei Premier League for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176850-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Brunei Premier League, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and DPMM FC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176851-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bucknell Bison football team\nThe 2004 Bucknell Bison football team was an American football team that represented Bucknell University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Bucknell tied for third in the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176851-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bucknell Bison football team\nIn their second season under head coach Tim Landis, the Bison compiled a 7\u20134 record. Kevin Ransome and Daris Wilson were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176851-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Bucknell Bison football team\nThe Bison outscored opponents 296 to 221. Their 4\u20132 conference record tied for third place in the seven-team Patriot League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176851-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Bucknell Bison football team\nBucknell played its home games at Christy Mathewson\u2013Memorial Stadium on the university campus in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176852-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Buenos Aires 200km\nThe 2004 200\u00a0km of Buenos Aires is the first edition of this race on the TC2000 season. The race was held in the Aut\u00f3dromo Juan y \u00d3scar G\u00e1lvez in Buenos Aires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season\nThe 2004 Buffalo Bills season was their 45th in the National Football League. The team improved upon their previous season's output of 6\u201310, finishing 9\u20137. However, this was the fifth straight season in which the team missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season\nBuffalo needed a win in the final game of the season against the Pittsburgh Steelers to qualify for the playoffs. However, despite the Steelers playing their third-stringers (which, notably, included Willie Parker, who would have his breakout performance in the game), Buffalo lost and subsequently missed the playoffs. It was the only winning season that Buffalo had in the 2000s (2000\u20132009) and would be the Bills' last winning season until 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season\nAccording to Football Outsiders, who has tracked every play in the NFL since the early 1990s, the 2004 Bills are statistically the best NFL team (in their record-keeping history) to have failed to qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season\nThe Bills set an NFL record by returning six kickoffs for touchdowns in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season\nTheir match with the Miami Dolphins in Week 6 is the only time in the NFL since 1968 that the last two winless teams have met each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season, Offseason, Free Agency\nThe Bills failed to re-sign guard Ruben Brown and cornerback Antoine Winfield Sr.. Both would end up signing with NFC North teams, with Brown signing with the Chicago Bears and Winfield signing with the Minnesota Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season, Offseason, Free Agency\nTo replace the departed players, the Bills signed former Chicago Bears guard Chris Villarrial and former Philadelphia Eagles cornerback Troy Vincent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176853-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bills season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nThe Bills drafted future starters Lee Evans from Wisconsin and J. P. Losman from Tulane in the first round of the 2004 Draft. Buffalo also signed undrafted tight end Jason Peters from Arkansas and converted him into a Pro Bowl offensive tackle. Buffalo traded their 2004 second round pick and 2005 first round pick to move into position to draft Losman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176854-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Buffalo Bulls football team\nThe 2004 Buffalo Bulls football team represented the University at Buffalo in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Bulls offense scored 197 points while the defense allowed 351 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176855-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bulgarian Cup Final\nThe 2004 Bulgarian Cup Final was played at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia on May 12, 2004 and was contested between the sides of Litex Lovech and CSKA Sofia. The match was won by Litex Lovech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176856-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bulgarian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Bulgarian Figure Skating Championships National Championships of the 2003\u201304 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176856-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Bulgarian Figure Skating Championships\nThe results were used to choose the teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176857-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bulgarian Supercup\nThe 2004 Bulgarian Supercup was the second Bulgarian Supercup match, a football match which was contested between the 2003\u201304 A Group champion, Lokomotiv Plovdiv, and the winner of the 2004 Bulgarian Cup Final, Litex Lovech. The match was held on 31 July 2004 at the Lazur Stadium in Burgas, Bulgaria. Lokomotiv beat Litex 1\u20130 to win their first Bulgarian Supercup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176858-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bulldogs RLFC season\nThe 2004 Bulldogs RLFC season was the 70th season in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2004 Telstra Premiership, finishing the regular season 2nd (out of 15). The Bulldogs went on to claim their 8th Premiership with a 16\u201313 win over the Sydney Roosters in the 2004 NRL Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176859-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Burgundy regional election\nA regional election took place in Burgundy on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Fran\u00e7ois Patriat (PS) was re-elected President of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176860-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Burnley Borough Council election\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Trappedinburnley (talk | contribs) at 16:29, 11 January 2020 (main article). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176860-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Burnley Borough Council election\nElections to Burnley Borough Council in Lancashire, England were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour party lost overall control of the council to no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176861-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Bury Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Bury Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The number of councillors increased from 48 to 51, with the addition on North Manor Ward, as well as other boundary changes, therefore it is not possible to show seats gained and lost. The top 3 candidates in each ward were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176862-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament was held from March 5\u20138, 2004 at the Richmond Coliseum in Richmond, Virginia. The winner of the tournament was VCU, who received an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176863-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League\nThe 2004 CAF Champions League was the 40th edition of the CAF Champions League, the Africa's premier club football tournament prize organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). Enyimba of Nigeria defeated \u00c9toile du Sahel of Tunisia in the final to win their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176863-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n1 US Stade Tamponnaise refused to participate; they were banned from CAF competitions for two years and fined $3000. 2 AS Temp\u00eate Mocaf and Ulinzi Stars withdrew before 1st leg. 3 ASC Nasr de Sebkha withdrew before the 2nd leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176863-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League, Best Scorers\nThe top scorers from the 2004 CAF Champions League are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final\nThe 2004 CAF Champions League Final was the final of the 2004 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final\nIt was a football tie held over two legs in December 2004 between \u00c9toile du Sahel of Tunisia, and Enyimba of Nigeria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Qualified teams\nIn the following table, finals until 1996 were in the African Cup of Champions Club era, since 1997 were in the CAF Champions League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Stade Olympique de Sousse\nStade olympique de Sousse is a multi-purpose stadium in Sousse, Tunisia. It is used by the football team \u00c9toile du Sahel, and was used for the 2004 African Cup of Nations. The stadium holds 28,000 people. It hosts within it the meetings played by the football team of the city: \u00c9toile sportive du Sahel (ESS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Stade Olympique de Sousse\nFor many decades, Sousse footballers knew only the clay surfaces and knew the turf surfaces only when the stadium was inaugurated with an initial capacity of 10,000 places. It passes over the years to 15,000 seats and is then expanded again on the occasion of the 1994 African Cup of Nations with 6,000 additional seats to reach a capacity of 21,000 seats; A luminous panel is installed at the same time. The last expansion was carried out in 1999 to bring the capacity of the stadium to 28,000 seats for the 2001 Mediterranean Games, a reorganization of the gallery of honor was carried out, from a capacity of 70 to 217 places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Stade Olympique de Sousse\nIt hosted 1977 FIFA World Youth Championship, 1994 African Cup of Nations, 2001 Mediterranean Games and 2004 African Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Abuja National Stadium\nAbuja National Stadium, Abuja is a multipurpose national sports stadium located in Abuja, in the Federal Capital Territory of Nigeria. The stadium serves as a home to the Nigerian national football team, as well as a center for various social, cultural, and religious events. The Federal Government of Nigeria approved the contract for the construction of the National Stadium complex and Games Village on 18 July 2000. The stadium was constructed to host the 8th All Africa Games which took place in October 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Abuja National Stadium\nIn fact, CAF refused to hold the match in the city of Aba, the stronghold of Enyimba, because it did not comply with the CAF standards adopted for the stadiums. Enyimba announced that the African Champions League final will be played in the National Stadium of Lagos, but the Confederation of African Football has announced the transfer of the match from Lagos to the Nigerian capital Abuja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Format\nThe final was decided over two legs, with aggregate goals used to determine the winner. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule would have been applied, and if still level, the tie would have proceeded directly to a penalty shootout (no extra time is played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176864-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League Final, Matches, First leg\nAssistant referees:Olivier Safari Kabene (DR Congo)Waleed Ahmed Ali (Sudan)Fourth official:Sidi Alioum (Cameroon)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176865-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League group stage\nThe group stage of the 2004 CAF Champions League was played from 10 July to 17 October 2004. A total of eight teams competed in the group stage, the group winners and runners-up advance to the Knockout stage playing semifinal rounds before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176865-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Champions League group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and the runners-up of each group advanced to the Knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176866-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Confederation Cup\nThe 2004 CAF Confederation Cup was the first edition of the newly created CAF Confederation Cup. Hearts of Oak of Ghana beat fellow Ghanaians Asante Kotoko 8-7 on penalties in the final after the two legs ended 2-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176866-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nIn this round, the 8 winners of the round of 16 play the losers of the round of 16 of the Champions League for 8 places in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176866-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Confederation Cup, Top goalscorers\nThe top scorers from the 2004 CAF Confederation Cup are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176867-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Confederation Cup group stage\nThe group stage of the 2004 CAF Confederation Cup was played from 7 August to 14 November 2004. A total of eight teams competed in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176867-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners of each group advanced directly to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176868-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Super Cup\nThe 2004 CAF Super Cup was the 12th CAF Super Cup, an annual football match organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), between the winners of the previous season's CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup competitions. The match was contested by 2003 CAF Champions League winners, Enyimba, and 2003 African Cup Winners' Cup winners, ES Sahel, at the Aba Stadium in Aba, Nigeria, on 22 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176868-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CAF Super Cup\nThe game finished 1\u20130 to Enyimba, securing their first Super Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176869-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CAR Development Trophy\nThe 2004 CAR Development Trophy was the third edition of lower level rugby union tournament in Africa. After a preliminary, the teams were divided in three pools, with a final between the winner of each of them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games\nThe 33rd CARIFTA Games was held in the National Stadium in Hamilton, Bermuda, on April 9\u201311, 2004. An appraisal of the results has been given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Participation (unofficial)\nDetailed result lists can be found on the CACAC, the CFPI, the Grenadasports, and the \"World Junior Athletics History\"website. An unofficial count yields the number of about 313athletes (158 junior (under-20) and 155 youth (under-17)) from about 23countries: Anguilla (4), Antigua and Barbuda (6), Aruba (2), Bahamas (61),Barbados (28), Bermuda (22), British Virgin Islands (2), Cayman Islands (10),Dominica (5), Grenada (15), Guadeloupe (18), Guyana (2), Jamaica (67),Martinique (12), Montserrat (1), Netherlands Antilles (2), Saint Kitts andNevis (3), Saint Lucia (3), Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (3), Suriname(2), Trinidad and Tobago (34), Turks and Caicos Islands (5), US Virgin Islands(6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Records\nOnly 2 games records were set. The most prominent result of the games was thenew World Junior 200m record set by Usain Bolt of Jamaica to 19.93 seconds! Of course also a new games record was set, and for the first time, the 20seconds barrier was broken by a junior athlete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Records\nThe other games record was set by Jamaican Kimberly Williams in the girls' youth (U-17) triple jump competition achieving 12.53m (-0.6\u00a0m/s).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Records\nMoreover, a total of seven national records were set by the junior athletes. In the men's category, Ronald Forbes set the 400 metres hurdlesrecord for the Cayman Islands to 53.63 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Records\nIn the women's category, Zindzi Swan set two new records in high jump (1.79 m) and long jump (6.05 m (wind: 1.4\u00a0m/s)) for Bermuda, Sabina Christmas in javelin throw (43.42 m) for Dominica, Natalia Vincent also in javelin throw (45.56 m) for Grenada, Tressa-Ann Charles in shot put (14.06 m) for Saint Lucia, and Kineke Alexander in 400 metres dash for Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Austin Sealy Award\nThe Austin Sealy Trophy for themost outstanding athlete of the games was awarded for then second time in therole to Usain Bolt ofJamaica. He set the new world junior 200m record, and won 2 further gold medals leadingthe Jamaican relay teams (4 \u00d7 100 m relay, and 4 \u00d7 400 m relay) in the junior (U-20) category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Medal summary\nMedal winners are published by category: Boys under 20 (Junior), Girls under 20 (Junior), Boys under 17 (Youth), and Girls under 17 (Youth). Complete results can be found on the CACAC, the CFPI, the Grenadasports, and the \"World Junior Athletics History\"website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176870-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 CARIFTA Games, Medal table (unofficial)\nThe medal count has been published. There is a mismatch between the unofficial medal count and thepublished medal count for Jamaica and the Bahamas. This can be explained bythe fact that there were only two competitors in the events boys U20 polevault, girls U20 400m hurdles, girls U20 4 \u00d7 400 m relay, boys U17 400m hurdles,therefore not having been considered in the published medal count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176871-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 33rd CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament in conference history. It was played between March 12 and March 20, 2004. First round games were played at campus sites, while all 'super six' games were played at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan. By winning the tournament, Ohio State won the Mason Cup and received the Central Collegiate Hockey Association's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176871-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured four rounds of play. In the First Round, the first and twelfth seeds, the second and eleventh seeds, the third and tenth seeds, the fourth and ninth seeds, the fifth and eighth seeds and the sixth and seventh seeds played a best-of-three series. All six victors in the first round advance as the newly minted 'Super Six' and play only single-elimination for the duration of the tournament. The top two ranked winners receive byes into the semifinals while the four other teams play in the quarterfinals to determine the other qualifiers. In the semifinals, the remaining highest and lowest seeds and second highest and second lowest seeds play a single-game, with the winners advancing to the finals. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176871-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176872-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CD Universidad San Mart\u00edn season\nThe 2005 season was the 1st season of competitive football by Universidad San Mart\u00edn de Porres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176873-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CECAFA Cup\nThe 2004 CECAFA Cup, officially called Amoudi Senior Challenge Cup due to sponsorship reasons, was the 28th edition of the tournament. It was held in Ethiopia, and was won by Ethiopia. The matches were played between December 11\u201425. All matches were played in the National Stadium in Addis Ababa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176874-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL Draft\nThe 2004 CFL Draft took place on Wednesday, April 28, 2004. 53 players were chosen from among eligible players from Canadian Universities across the country, as well as Canadian players playing in the NCAA. Of the 53 draft selections, 35 players were drafted from Canadian Interuniversity Sport institutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season\nThe 2004 Canadian Football League season is considered to be the 51st season in modern-day Canadian football, although it is officially the 47th Canadian Football League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nNeil Payne retired from his position as Director of Officiating in February and was replaced by George Black. Former Eskimos Head Coach, Tom Higgins was named as the 2003 Coach of the Year. CFL Commissioner Tom E. Wright, announced that Vancouver would host the 93rd Grey Cup for 2005. Furthermore, CFL Commissioner Tom E. Wright also announced in late October, that Winnipeg would be the host of the 94th Grey Cup for 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nWayne Smith of Appalachian State University was drafted first overall in the 2004 CFL Draft by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Former player, broadcaster and football administrator, Mike Wadsworth died in April. In September, the Canadian Football Hall of Fame inducted Larry Highbaugh, Cal Murphy, Lui Passaglia, Dan Yochum and Ben Zambiasi during the Induction Weekend ceremonies in Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nCFL partner, Sun Microsystems added and launched real-time, in-game statistics entry with live play-by-play and scoring on cfl.ca. On June 2, the CFL announced a partnership with FSN and launched a player-based and team-based game for the 2004 season. In addition, the CFL also launched its first ever online kids section called\u00a0\u2014 the Dare CFL KidsZone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nThe CFL started a new international broadcasting agreement with Trajectory Sports & Media Group, to deliver Canadian Football to more than 50 million households in 176 countries for the 2004 season. U.S. television coverage of the 92nd Grey Cup resulted in the largest international broadcast distribution of a Grey Cup game\u00a0\u2014 when it was made available to more than 55 million television households. In addition, Rogers Sportsnet announced the start of \"CFL Crunch\", which is a 30-minute news segment concerning the league on June 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nOn October 18, the Toronto Argonauts announced their agreement with York University, to construct a new 25,000-seat stadium on the university's Keele campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nLeague attendance increased by 8% over the 2003 season, when more than 2.2 million fans were coming into CFL stadiums. The B.C. Lions home attendance figures increased by 13% over the 2003 season, by averaging about 26,697 fans per game at BC Place Stadium. The Montreal Alouettes continued their strong attendance figures by recording its fifth straight year of having sell out crowds at both, Percival Molson Memorial Stadium and Olympic Stadium. The CFL set a new playoff attendance record with a total of 181,717 postseason crowds attending playoff games in Toronto, Edmonton, Montreal, Vancouver and Ottawa. The Grey Cup game in Ottawa had a sell-out crowd of 51,242 at Frank Clair Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nThe attendance increases were likely caused at least in part by the lack of NHL hockey in the wake of the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nRecords: Before he retired, Edmonton running back, Mike Pringle, established two new records in 2004. The first record was accomplished on July 12, when Pringle established a new CFL career record for yards from scrimmage with 20,254 yards in the Eskimos 25\u20139 win over the B.C. Lions. The second record was accomplished on September 19 against the same B.C. Lions, when Pringle became the all-time leading rusher in CFL history with 16,425 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nIn addition, three CFL quarterbacks established new records as well. Edmonton's Jason Maas, entered the CFL record books by setting a new mark for most consecutive pass completions in a regular season game with 22 on July 30. On August 13, B.C. 's Casey Printers, sets a new CFL record for the highest pass completion percentage in a regular season game by completing 90.9% of his passes. Furthermore, Hamilton's Danny McManus, joined the company of Damon Allen and Ron Lancaster by surpassing the milestone of passing for 50,000 or more career yards on October 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nThe Montreal Alouettes became the first team in CFL history to have four receivers on one team reach the 1000-yard receiving mark in one season: Ben Cahoon (1183 yards), Jeremaine Copeland (1154 yards), Thyron Anderson (1147 yards), and Kwame Cavil (1090 yards)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, CFL News in 2004\nThe Toronto Argonauts won their 15th Grey Cup by defeating the B.C. Lions 27\u201319 on November 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, Regular season standings, Final regular season standings\nNote: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 73], "content_span": [74, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176875-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 CFL season, Grey Cup playoffs\nThe Toronto Argonauts are the 2004 Grey Cup Champions, defeating the BC Lions 27\u201319, at Ottawa's Frank Clair Stadium. It was the first Grey Cup for Toronto since the 85th Grey Cup in 1997. The Argonauts' Damon Allen (QB) was named the Grey Cup's Most Valuable Player and the Lions' Jason Clermont (SB) was the Grey Cup's Most Valuable Canadian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176876-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CFU Club Championship\nThe 2004 Caribbean Football Union Club Championship was an international club football competition held in the Caribbean to determine the region's qualifier to the CONCACAF Champions' Cup. The 2004 edition included eight teams from six football associations, contested on a two-legged basis. Even though two teams from Trinidad and Tobago contested the 2003 final, only one team was entered in the 2004 tournament, as compared to two from Jamaica. The inclusion of teams from Saint Martin and Montserrat and not from other Caribbean countries was never explained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176876-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CFU Club Championship\nThe first round included one of the great mismatches in international club history, as Harbour View FC of Jamaica slammed Ideal of Montserrat, 30\u20131 on aggregate. In an all-Jamaican final, Jomo Gordon scored in stoppage time of the second leg to give Harbour View FC a 3\u20132 aggregate win over Tivoli Gardens FC, thereby advancing to the 2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176876-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CFU Club Championship, Final\nHarbour View FC 2004 CFU champions, advance to 2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176877-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 12 and March 14, 2004 at Tri-City Arena in Kearney, Nebraska. By winning the tournament, Niagara received College Hockey America's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176877-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured six teams. The top two teams from the regular season received byes to the semifinals where they played the winners from the quarterfinal games. The two semifinal winners met in the championship game on March 14, 2004, with the winner receiving an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176877-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176878-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CIS football season\nThe 2004 CIS football season began on September 2, 2004, and concluded with the 40th Vanier Cup national championship on November 27 at Ivor Wynne Stadium in Hamilton, Ontario, with the Laval Rouge et Or winning their third championship and second consecutive. Twenty-seven universities across Canada competed in CIS football this season, the highest level of amateur play in Canadian football, under the auspices of Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176878-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CIS football season, Results, Regular season standings\nNote: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, OTL = Overtime Losses, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176878-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CIS football season, Results, Championships\nThe Vanier Cup is played between the champions of the Mitchell Bowl and the Uteck Bowl, the national semi-final games. In 2005, according to the rotating schedule, the winners of the Canada West conference Hardy Trophy met the winners of the Atlantic conference Loney Bowl championship for the Mitchell Bowl. The Ontario conference's Yates Cup championship team travelled to the Dunsmore Cup Quebec champion for the Uteck Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176879-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Champions' Cup\nThe 2004 CONCACAF Champions' Cup was the 39th edition of the annual international club football competition held in the CONCACAF region (North America, Central America and the Caribbean), the CONCACAF Champions' Cup. It was won by Alajuelense after a 5\u20131 aggregate win over Deportivo Saprissa in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176880-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Futsal Championship\nThe 2004 CONCACAF Futsal Championship was the 3rd edition of the CONCACAF Futsal Championship, the quadrennial international futsal championship organised by CONCACAF for the men's national teams of the North, Central American and Caribbean region. The tournament was held in Heredia, Costa Rica between 23 July\u20131 August 2004. A total of eight teams played in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176880-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Futsal Championship\nSame as previous editions, the tournament acted as the CONCACAF qualifiers for the FIFA Futsal World Cup. The top two teams of the tournament qualified for the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship in Chinese Taipei as the CONCACAF representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176880-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Futsal Championship, Venues\nThe matches were played at the Palacio de los Deportes in Heredia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176880-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Futsal Championship, Group stage\nThe top two teams of each group advanced to the semi-finals. The semi-final winners qualified for the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship. The teams were ranked according to points (3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, 0 points for a loss). If tied on points, tiebreakers would be applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176880-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Futsal Championship, Knockout stage\nIn the knockout stage, extra time and penalty shoot-out would be used to decide the winner if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176881-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament\nThe 2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament was the eleventh edition of the CONCACAF Pre-Olympic Tournament, the quadrennial, international, age-restricted football tournament organised by CONCACAF to determine which men's under-23 national teams from the North, Central America and Caribbean region qualify for the Olympic football tournament. It was held in Mexico, from 2 and 12 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176881-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament\nHost nation, Mexico, won the title after a 1\u20130 win over Costa Rica in the final. As the top two teams, Mexico and Costa Rica both qualified for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Greece as the CONCACAF representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176881-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Knockout stage\nAll match times listed are CDT (UTC\u22125), as listed by CONCACAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176881-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Statistics, Awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176881-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Statistics, Awards\nBobby Convey Jose L\u00f3pez L\u00f3pez Diego Mart\u00ednez Luis Ernesto P\u00e9rez", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176881-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Qualified teams for Summer Olympics\nThe following two teams from CONCACAF qualified for the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176882-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification\nThe qualifying competition for the 2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament determined the remaining seven teams for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176883-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament squads\nThe 2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament was an international football tournament that was held in Mexico from 2 to 10 February 2004. The eight national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of twenty players, three of whom had to be goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176883-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament squads\nThe final lists were published by CONCACAF on 1 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176883-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament squads\nThe age listed for each player is on 2 February 2004, the first day of the tournament. A flag is included for coaches who are of a different nationality than their own national team. Players marked in bold have been capped at full international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament\nThe 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament was the first edition of the CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, the quadrennial international football tournament organised by CONCACAF to determine which women's national teams from the North, Central American and Caribbean region qualify for the Olympic football tournament. The tournament was held in Costa Rica from 25 February to 5 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament\nThe tournament was originally scheduled to be held in Mexico from 2 to 12 February 2004, but was later moved to Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament\nThe top two teams qualified for the 2004 Summer Olympics women's football tournament in Greece as the CONCACAF representatives. The United States won the final 3\u20132 against Mexico, with both teams qualifying for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Qualification\nCanada, Costa Rica and the United States automatically qualified for the final tournament. The remaining five berths were allocated to the five group winners of the qualification tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Qualification, Qualified teams\nThe following eight teams qualified for the final tournament. Mexico, the original hosts of the tournament, originally qualified automatically. However, after the tournament venue was changed, new hosts Costa Rica instead qualified automatically, while Mexico took Costa Rica's place in the qualifying competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Venues\nThe matches were held at the Estadio Nacional, San Jos\u00e9 and the Estadio Eladio Rosabal Cordero, Heredia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Group stage\nThe top two teams from each group advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Group stage, Tiebreakers\nThe ranking of teams in the group stage was determined as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Goalscorers\nThere were 81 goals scored in 16 matches, for an average of 5.06 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Best XI\nThe following players were included in CONCACAF's \"Best XI\" of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176884-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament, Qualified teams for Summer Olympics\nThe following two teams from CONCACAF qualified for the 2004 Summer Olympic women's football tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification\nThe 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification determined the five teams that joined Canada, Costa Rica and the United States at the 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament in Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Teams\nOriginally, 17 teams entered the competition. Canada and the United States automatically qualified for the final tournament, along with hosts Costa Rica. Dominica later withdrew, and were replaced by Suriname. Following the qualifying draw, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands also withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Caribbean Zone, Series A\nBoth matches were played in Paramaribo, Suriname. The Dominican Republic were originally drawn into the group, but were later moved to Group 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Caribbean Zone, Series A\nTrinidad and Tobago won 6\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Caribbean Zone, Series B\nBoth matches were played in George Town, Cayman Islands. The U.S. Virgin Islands were originally drawn into the group, but later withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Caribbean Zone, Series B\nJamaica won 4\u20130 on aggregate and qualified for the 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Caribbean Zone, Series C\nBoth matches were played in San Crist\u00f3bal, Dominican Republic. Puerto Rico were originally drawn into the group, but later withdrew and were replaced by the Dominican Republic (who were moved from Group 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Caribbean Zone, Series C\nHaiti won 10\u20132 on aggregate and qualified for the 2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 84], "content_span": [85, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, North/Central American Zone, Series D\nAll matches were played in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. Costa Rica were originally drawn into the group and selected to host the matches, but later were removed after replacing Mexico as the final tournament host. Mexico subsequently replaced Costa Rica in the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 97], "content_span": [98, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176885-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 CONCACAF Women's Pre-Olympic Tournament qualification, Goalscorers\nThere were 76 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 6.33 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 71], "content_span": [72, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176886-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament\nThe 2004 CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament began on 7 January 2004, and is the 12th CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament. This was the 4th tournament is open to players under the age of 23 without any other restriction. There is no qualification stage and all 10 member of CONMEBOL automatic qualified. The winner and the runner-up qualified for 2004 Summer Olympics. Players born on or after 1 January 1981 were eligible to play in this competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176887-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CONMEBOL Pre-Olympic Tournament squads\nBelow are the rosters for the 2004 CONMEBOL Men Pre-Olympic Tournament held in Chile. The ten national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 20 players; only players in these squads are eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176888-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 COSAFA Cup, Quarter-Finals\nThe four quarter-finalists of the 2003 edition Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia and Swaziland received byes into quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176888-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 COSAFA Cup, Quarter-Finals\nNote: \u2020 The match between Swaziland and Zimbabwe was abandoned at 0\u20135 in 83' following crowd trouble; the result stood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176888-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 COSAFA Cup, Final\nThe final was originally planned for two legs but was reduced to one match for unknown reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176889-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThe 2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n was the 2004 edition of the Spanish official show jumping horse show, at Las Mestas Sports Complex in Gij\u00f3n. It was held as CSIO 5*.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176889-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThis edition of the CSIO Gij\u00f3n was held between 27 August to 4 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176889-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nThe competition was a show jumping competition with two rounds. The height of the fences were up to 1.60 meters. The best six teams of the eleven which participated were allowed to start in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176889-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nGrey penalties points do not count for the team result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176889-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix\nThe Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix, the Show jumping Grand Prix of the 2004 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, was the major show jumping competition at this event. It was held on 2 August 2004. The competition was a show jumping competition over one round with tie-break for the riders that made 0 points in the main round, the height of the fences were up to 1.60 meters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176890-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nThe 2004 Cal Poly Mustangs football team represented California Polytechnic State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176890-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nCal Poly competed as a charter member of the new Great West Football Conference (GWFC). They had previously been a Division I-AA Independent. The Mustangs were led by fourth-year head coach Rich Ellerson and played home games at Mustang Stadium in San Luis Obispo, California. The team finished the season as champion of the GWFC, with a record of nine wins and two losses (9\u20132, 4\u20131 GWFC). Overall, the team outscored its opponents 336\u2013183 for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176890-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cal Poly Mustangs football team, Team players in the NFL\nThe following Cal Poly Mustang players were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176891-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team\nThe 2004 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team represented California State University, Fullerton in the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Titans played their home games at Goodwin Field. The team was coached by George Horton in his 8th season at Cal State Fullerton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176891-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team\nThe Titans won the College World Series, defeating the Texas Longhorns and former Titans head coach Augie Garrido in the championship series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176891-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball team, Titans in the 2004 MLB Draft\nThe following members of the Cal State Fullerton Titans baseball program were drafted in the 2004 Major League Baseball Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176892-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Calder Cup playoffs\nThe 2004 Calder Cup playoffs of the American Hockey League began on April 14, 2004. Twenty teams, the top five from each division, qualified for the playoffs. The fourth- and fifth-placed teams in each division played best-of-3 series in the qualifying round. The four winners, in addition to the other twelve teams that qualified, played best-of-7 series for division semifinals, finals and conference finals. The conference champions played a best-of-7 series for the Calder Cup. The Calder Cup Final ended on June 6, 2004 with the Milwaukee Admirals defeating the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins four games to none to win the first Calder Cup in team history. Milwaukee's Wade Flaherty won the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as AHL playoff MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176892-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Calder Cup playoffs, Records\nSeveral league records were set during the 2004 Calder Cup Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176892-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the 2003\u201304 AHL regular season, 20 teams qualified for the playoffs. The top five teams from each division qualified for the playoffs. The Milwaukee Admirals were the Western Conference regular season champions as well as the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy winners with the best overall regular season record. The Hartford Wolf Pack were the Eastern Conference regular season champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176892-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Calder Cup playoffs, Bracket\nIn the qualification round all games are played at the arena of the fourth seed. In each round after the Qualification Round, the higher seed receives home ice advantage, meaning they can play a maximum of four home games if the series reaches seven games. There is no set series format for each series after the Qualification Round due to arena scheduling conflicts and travel considerations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176892-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Calder Cup playoffs, Conference finals, Western Conference, (W1) Milwaukee Admirals vs. (N3) Rochester Americans\n1 \u2013 Game played at HSBC Arena \u2013 Buffalo, NY2 \u2013 Game played at Blue Cross Arena at the War Memorial \u2013 Rochester, New York", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 117], "content_span": [118, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176893-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The council stayed under no overall control with a minority Conservative administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176894-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary Stampeders season\nThe 2004 Calgary Stampeders season was the 47th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 66th overall. The Stampeders finished in 5th place in the West Division with a 4\u201314 record and failed to make the playoffs. As of the 2019 season, this is the last time the Stampeders did not make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election\nThe 2004 Calgary municipal election was held on October 18, 2004 to elect a Mayor and fourteen Aldermen to Calgary City Council. Only 19.81% of the population voted, making the turnout one of the lowest in Western Canadian history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election\nThe election was highly controversial after allegations of electoral fraud by incumbent Ward 10 Alderman Margot Aftergood who subsequently resigned after the election in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Ward 10 Controversy\nThe 2004 Calgary municipal election was the first election Calgary would allow the use of mail-in ballots. From September 29 to October 3, 2004, the City would receive 1,080 online applications for special mail-in ballots for Ward 10. Of the 1,080 requests, 1,074 originated from two computers, requesting the ballots be mailed to the same postal box \"Suite 307\" in a North-East Calgary strip mall. Ultimately 1,266 Special Ballot packages would be mailed to Suite 307, of which 851 were eventually submitted to the Returning Office. Of those 694 were rejected due to improper completion of the certificate envelope, and 157 which were properly completed were marked \"rejected\" by the Returning Officer. The final result of the Ward 10 election saw Aftergood defeat her next closest opponent Diane Danielson by 138 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Ward 10 Controversy\nOn October 14, the Calgary Police Service Commercial Crime and Arson unit was notified of the irregularity and began investigating. On November 11 Calgary Police would execute a search warrant on Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta Hung Pham's home for electronic equipment after the online applications had been traced to an account at his home. Hung Pham identified the traced account holder as his sister-in-law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Ward 10 Controversy\nOn November 29, 2004 the City of Calgary and Margot Aftergood reached an agreement where she would resign her office as Alderman for Ward 10 in exchange for the City paying 60% of her legal costs. The City provided Diane Danielson the same offer, which she rejected. Calgary City Council would pass a resolution on December 6, 2004 requesting the Government of Alberta convene an inquiry \"into and concerning the Calgary October 2004 municipal election in Ward 10 including, but not limited to, the conduct of all Ward 10 candidates, their campaign teams and the City of Calgary elections office\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Ward 10 Controversy\nOn December 29, 2004, the Minister of Municipal Affairs Rob Renner ordered an investigation into the election under Section 571 of the Municipal Government Act, which was completed by Robert C. Clark on June 22, 2005. The report concluded a significant irregularity occurred during the election involving the application for and return of Special Ballots using the names of persons who did not know that this was taking place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Ward 10 Controversy\nEventually, Margot Aftergood acknowledged the postal box in question was rented by her husband David Aftergood, but asserted she or her husband did nothing wrong. In 2007 David Aftergood was found guilty of violating the Elections Act and was sentenced to 14 days in jail and a $2,000 fine. However, David Aftergood was granted a new trial on appeal and in January 2010, the Crown stayed charges against him. Ron Aftergood, Margot's brother and campaign volunteer Son Nguyen pleaded guilty to violating the Local Authorities Election Act and were fined $4,000 and $1,500 respectively. Charges against other accused individuals were dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Ward 10 Controversy\nAndre Chabot would be elected Alderman in the 2005 by-election for Ward 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176895-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Calgary municipal election, Further reading\nThis elections in Canada-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 California Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2, 2004, the same day as the Republican primary. Senator John Kerry overwhelmingly won the primary over rivals Senator John Edwards, Congressman Dennis Kucinich, and Reverend Al Sharpton. The primary was open to both registered Democrats and unaffiliated voters. 440 delegates were at stake, with 370 tied to the March primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign\nWith the Wisconsin primary results, which pitted John Kerry and John Edwards in a close fight, and Dean's withdrawal from the race, the campaign moved to Super Tuesday contests. California shared its primary with 9 other states, including New York and Ohio who also placed their primaries on March 2, 2004, or Super Tuesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign\nFor months Governor Dean had been leading in California, but since he's fall and Kerry's rise, polls in California were mixed. However, when Dean exited the race polls showed Kerry with over 2:1 leads over contender John Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign, John Kerry campaign\nFollowing victories in Idaho, Utah and Hawaii, Kerry moved into the Super Tuesday contests swiftly and with major momentum. With polls showing him ahead in big Super Tuesday states such as California, New York, and Ohio, Kerry was positive on big wins in all three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign, John Kerry campaign\nHowever, Kerry campaigned hard in the Golden State to and didn't take competition from Edwards and Kucinich lightly. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that Senator had spent 5 additional days in the state than any other candidate competing in the state as well as the fact that Kerry has increased State Staffers by 25 and increased Volunteer Numbers by hundreds in mid-February to ensure a sweep through the California Primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign, John Edwards campaign\nJohn Edwards, having come out with a strong second place showing in Wisconsin (losing to Kerry 40%\u201334%), claimed significant momentum heading into California and other Super Tuesday nominating contests on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign, John Edwards campaign\nEdwards, not having as much popularity out west as in the Rust Belt, South, and Mid-West, did not focus on California until his unexpected final surge in Wisconsin, beating one-time California and national front-runner Howard Dean. Edwards sent Elizabeth Edwards out west to help campaign as well as opened Campaign offices across the state in a last-ditch effort for a final surge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Campaign, John Edwards campaign\nWhen the Democrats debated on February 26, 2004, in Los Angeles, Edwards hoped to score points by attacking John Kerry like in the New York debate. However, by the time of the debate, Kerry was already ahead of Edwards by 40 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176896-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 California Democratic presidential primary, Analysis\nOn Super Tuesday, Kerry swept all the primaries and eventually won the nomination the next day. He won California by a landslide. He won with nearly 65% of the vote, including every county in the state and every congressional district with over 60% except California's 2nd congressional district. Kerry's only legit opponent left, John Edwards, received under 20% of the vote, insuring his major defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176897-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Golden Bears football team\nThe 2004 California Golden Bears football team was an American football team that represented the University of California, Berkeley in the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their third year under head coach Jeff Tedford, the Golden Bears compiled a 10\u20132 record (7\u20131 against Pac-10 opponents), finished in second place in the Pac-10, and outscored their opponents by a combined score of 441 to 192.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176897-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Golden Bears football team\nThe Golden Bears were ranked No. 4 at the end of the regular season, its only loss having been No. 1 USC by a 23\u201317 score. In that game, quarterback Aaron Rodgers set a school record for consecutive completed passes with 26 and tied an NCAA record with 23 consecutive passes completed in one game. He set a Cal single-game record for passing completion percentage of 85.3. Rodgers' performance set up the Golden Bears at first and goal with 1:47 remaining and a chance for the game-winning touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176897-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 California Golden Bears football team\nOn the first play of USC's goal-line stand, Rodgers threw an incomplete pass. This was followed by a second-down sack by Manuel Wright. After a timeout and Rodgers' incomplete pass on third down, USC stopped Cal's run play to win the game. Rodgers commented that it was \"frustrating that we couldn't get the job done.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176897-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Golden Bears football team\nAfter Texas was picked over Cal for a Rose Bowl berth, the fourth-ranked Bears were awarded a spot in the Holiday Bowl, which they lost to Texas Tech, 45\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176897-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Golden Bears football team\nThe team's statistical leaders included Aaron Rodgers with 2,566 passing yards, J. J. Arrington with 2,018 rushing yards, and Geoff McArthur with 862 receiving yards. Three California players received first-team honors on the 2004 College Football All-America Team: running back J. J. Arrington (AP, FWAA, TSN, SI, ESPN, CBS); offensive lineman Marvin Phillip (SI); and defensive lineman Ryan Riddle (TSN, SI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176897-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Golden Bears football team\nAfter the season, Rodgers decided to forgo his senior season to enter the 2005 NFL Draft. He was drafted in the first round by the Green Bay Packers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176898-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 1A\nProposition 1A was a California ballot proposition on the November 2, 2004 ballot. The proposition passed with 9,411,198 (83.7%) votes in favor and 1,840,002 (16.3%) against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176898-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 1A\nThe proposition is intended to protect revenues collected by local governments (cities, counties, and special districts) from being transferred to the California state government for statewide use. The provisions may be suspended if the governor declares a fiscal necessity and two-thirds of the California State Legislature approve the suspension. It did not take effect until 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176898-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 1A\nProposition 1A was added to the ballot by the California Legislature as a state-sponsored compromise to take the place of the initiative-drawn Proposition 65 on the same ballot. It was passed by the California Assembly by a vote of 64-13. It was approved by the California State Senate by a vote of 34-5. Proponents of Prop 65 negotiated with state officials to draw up the provisions of Proposition 1A. The former proponents then dropped their support for 65 in favor of 1A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176898-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 1A, Impact\nThe passing of California Proposition 1A resulted in significant changes to state authority over local finances:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176899-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 55\nProposition 55 was a California ballot proposition on the March 2, 2004 ballot. It passed with 3,239,706 (50.9%) votes in favor and 3,130,921 (49.1%) against. The official title was Kindergarten-University Public Education Facilities Bond Act of 2004. Its main provisions authorized the sale of $12.3 billion in bonds intended to relieve overcrowding and to repair public education facilities from public elementary schools through public universities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176899-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 55, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176900-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 56\nProposition 56 was a California ballot proposition on the March 2, 2004 ballot. It failed to pass with 2,185,868 (34.3%) votes in favor and 4,183,188 (65.7%) against. It was intended to penalize the state's elected officials for every day that the state budget is overdue. The proposition would also have lowered the threshold required pass a budget and enact new budget-related taxes to 55% from the two-thirds supermajority vote currently required. (The two-thirds requirement was implemented with the passage of California Proposition 13 in 1978). Prop 56 was officially known as the Budget Accountability Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176900-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 56, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176901-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 57\nProposition 57 (officially, the Economic Recovery Bond Act) was a California ballot proposition on the March 2, 2004 primary election ballot. It was passed with 4,056,313 (63.4%) votes in favor and 2,348,910 (36.6%) against. The proposition authorized the state to sell $15 billion in long-term bonds to pay off accumulated deficits. Proposition 57 went into effect only because Proposition 58 (the California Balanced Budget Act) also passed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176901-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 57\nPropositions 57 and 58 were the centerpiece of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's plan to resolve California's budget problems. Schwarzenegger campaigned heavily for the passage of Propositions 57 and 58. California State Senator Tom McClintock, Schwarzenegger's fellow Republican and rival in the 2003 gubernatorial recall, was one of the chief opponents of Proposition 57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176901-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 57\nThe last payment of these deficit bonds was made Wednesday, August 5, 2015. Included in the payments made over the life of the bonds were payments into a state escrow account, where interest payments totaling $4.1 billion were put aside to be paid out through July 1, 2019. When the bonds were paid off, Schwarzenegger said, \"I\u2019m glad this chapter of California\u2019s fiscal history is finally closed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176901-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 57, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176902-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 58\nProposition 58 was a California ballot proposition on the March 2, 2004 ballot. It passed with 4,535,084 (71.2%) votes in favor and 1,841,138 (28.8%) against. It was officially called the California Balanced Budget Act. It requires the state legislature to pass a balanced budget every year, which means that budgeted recurrent expenditure, including repayment of past debt, does not exceed estimated revenue. The act does not require that capital works programs be funded out of current revenues. The California Constitution has always allowed bond issues (state debt) for specified capital works, above a certain value. Bond measures must be approved by a statewide ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176902-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 58\nThe Act created a reserve fund called the Budget Stabilization Account in case of future financial trouble. It also prevented the creation of any future bonds to pay off deficits like that in Proposition 57 (the California Economic Recovery Bond Act). Proposition 58 took effect only because Proposition 57 also passed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176902-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 58\nPropositions 57 and 58 were the centerpiece of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's plan to resolve California's budget problems. Schwarzenegger campaigned heavily for both propositions' passage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176902-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 58\nWhile Prop 58 was to provide balanced California budgets, the deficits continued in subsequent years, growing larger over time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176902-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 58, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59\nProposition 59 (or Senate Constitutional Amendment 1) was an amendment of the Constitution of California that introduced freedom of information or \"sunshine\" provisions. It was proposed by the California Legislature and overwhelmingly approved by the voters in an initiative held as part of the November 2004 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Approval by the people\nProposition 59 was approved by the State Legislature as Senate Constitutional Amendment 1 of the 2003\u20132004 Regular Session (Resolution Chapter 1, Statutes of 2004). It was adopted by the California State Senate by a vote of 34-0 and the State Assembly by 78-0. It was then put to voters as a ballot proposition on 2 November 2004. It passed with 9,334,852 (83.4%) votes in favor and 1,870,146 (16.6%) against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\nThe amendment adds to the state constitution Article I, Section 3 (b). Section 3 (a) is the provision of the Declaration of Rights that guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the right to petition the government and the right to instruct one's elected representatives. The amendment added to these rights the following provisions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\n(1) The people have the right of access to information concerning the conduct of the people\u2019s business, and, therefore, the meetings of public bodies and the writings of public officials and agencies shall be open to public scrutiny.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\n(2) A statute, court rule, or other authority, including those in effect on the effective date of this subdivision, shall be broadly construed if it furthers the people\u2019s right of access, and narrowly construed if it limits the right of access. A statute, court rule, or other authority adopted after the effective date of this subdivision that limits the right of access shall be adopted with findings demonstrating the interest protected by the limitation and the need for protecting that interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\n(3) Nothing in this subdivision supersedes or modifies the right of privacy guaranteed by Section 1 or affects the construction of any statute, court rule, or other authority to the extent that it protects that right to privacy, including any statutory procedures governing discovery or disclosure of information concerning the official performance or professional qualifications of a peace officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\n(4) Nothing in this subdivision supersedes or modifies any provision of this Constitution, including the guarantees that a person may not be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or denied equal protection of the laws, as provided in Section 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\n(5) This subdivision does not repeal or nullify, expressly or by implication, any constitutional or statutory exception to the right of access to public records or meetings of public bodies that is in effect on the effective date of this subdivision, including, but not limited to, any statute protecting the confidentiality of law enforcement and prosecution records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Text\n(6) Nothing in this subdivision repeals, nullifies, supersedes, or modifies protections for the confidentiality of proceedings and records of the Legislature, the Members of the Legislature, and its employees, committees, and caucuses provided by Section 7 of Article IV, state law, or legislative rules adopted in furtherance of those provisions; nor does it affect the scope of permitted discovery in judicial or administrative proceedings regarding deliberations of the Legislature, the Members of the Legislature, and its employees, committees, and caucuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 36], "content_span": [37, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Official summary\nThe official summary of Proposition 59 states that the purpose of the amendment is to", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Official summary\nProvide right of public access to meetings of government bodies and writings of government officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Official summary\nProvide that statutes and rules furthering public access shall be broadly construed, or narrowly construed if limiting access.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Official summary\nRequire future statutes and rules limiting access to contain findings justifying necessity of those limitations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Official summary\nPreserve constitutional rights including rights of privacy, due process, equal protection; expressly preserves existing constitutional and statutory limitations restricting access to certain meetings and records of government bodies and officials, including law enforcement and prosecution records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Official summary\nThe Legislative Analyst's Estimate predicted only \"potential minor annual state and local government costs to make additional information available to the public\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176903-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 59, Explanation of provisions\nAccording to The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press the effects of the amendment may be summarized roughly as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60\nProposition 60 was an amendment of the Constitution of California, enacted in 2004, guaranteeing the right of a party participating in a primary election to also participate in the general election that follows. It was proposed by the California Legislature and approved by the voters in referendum held as part of the November 2004 election, by a majority of 67%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Provisions\nProposition 60 related to partisan primary elections for statewide offices, as well as races for the state legislature, and the State Board of Equalization. It added to the state constitution Article II, Section 5 (b), stating that", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Provisions\nA political party that participated in a primary election for a partisan office has the right to participate in the general election for that office and shall not be denied the ability to place on the general election ballot the candidate who received, at the primary election, the highest vote among that party\u2019s candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Provisions\nProvides the right for political party participating in a primary election for partisan office to also participate in the general election for that office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Provisions\nCandidate receiving most votes from among that party's candidates in primary election for state partisan office cannot be denied placement on general election ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Provisions\nIt was declared by the Legislative Analyst to have \"no fiscal effect\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Process of enactment\nIn 2004 the state legislature proposed a constitutional amendment called Senate Constitutional Amendment 18. This contained provisions relating to both primary elections and funds from the sale of government property. This was to be put to voters as a single measure called Proposition 60. However Californians for an Open Primary challenged the measure as a violation of the rule that ballot propositions must deal with only a single subject. The group wished to have Proposition 60 removed from the ballot. Instead, in Californians for an Open Primary v. Shelley, the Third District Court of Appeals ordered that the proposition be split, so that the provisions relating to government property would become a separate measure, called Proposition 60A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176904-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60, Process of enactment\nProposition 60 (including the provisions later excised) was approved by the California State Senate by a vote of 28-3 and by the State Assembly by a by 55\u201321. On November 2, 2004 it was approved by voters by a majority of 5,806,708 (67.3%) \"Yes\" votes, to 2,829,284 (32.7%) \"No\" votes. Proposition 60A was also approved by voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A\nProposition 60A was an amendment of the Constitution of California, enacted in 2004, relating to funds from the sale of government property. It was proposed by the California Legislature and approved by the voters in a referendum held as part of the November 2004 election, by a majority of 73%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Provisions\nThe law directed funds collected from the sale of surplus government property toward repaying the $15 billion in bonds authorized by the passage of Proposition 57 in March 2004. The official summary of the proposition reads:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Provisions\nDedicates proceeds from sale of surplus state property purchased with General Fund monies to payment of principal, interest on Economic Recovery Bonds approved in March 2004. When those bonds are repaid, surplus property sales proceeds directed to Special Fund For Economic Uncertainties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Provisions\nTo do this the amendment added to the state constitution Article III, Section 9, stating that", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Provisions\nThe proceeds from the sale of surplus state property occurring on or after the effective date of this section, and any proceeds from the previous sale of surplus state property that have not been expended or encumbered as of that date, shall be used to pay the principal and interest on bonds issued pursuant to the Economic Recovery Bond Act authorized at the March 2, 2004, statewide primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Provisions\nOnce the principal and interest on those bonds are fully paid, the proceeds from the sale of surplus state property shall be deposited into the Special Fund for Economic Uncertainties, or any successor fund. For purposes of this section, surplus state property does not include property purchased with revenues described in Article XIX or any other special fund moneys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Provisions\nThe Summary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact predicted \"Net savings over the longer term-potentially low. Tens of millions of dollars-from accelerated repayment of existing bonds\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Process of enactment\nIn 2004 the state legislature proposed a constitutional amendment called Senate Constitutional Amendment 18. This contained provisions relating to both primary elections and funds from the sale of government property. This was to be put to voters as a single measure called Proposition 60. However Californians for an Open Primary challenged the measure as a violation of the rule that ballot propositions must deal with only a single subject. The group wished to have Proposition 60 removed from the ballot. Instead, in Californians for an Open Primary v. Shelley, the Third District Court of Appeals ordered that the proposition be split, so that the provisions relating to government property would become a separate measure, called Proposition 60A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176905-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 60A, Process of enactment\nSenate Constitutional Amendment 18 (which included the provisions that would become Proposition 60A) was approved by the California Assembly by a vote of 55-21 and by the State Senate by a vote of 28\u20133. On November 2, 2004 it was approved by the electorate with 7,776,374 (73.3%) votes in favor and 2,843,435 (26.7%) against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176906-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 61\nProposition 61 was a California ballot proposition on the November 2, 2004 ballot. It passed with 6,629,095 (58.3%) votes in favor and 4,750,309 (41.7%) against. The proposition was the result of an initiative and authorized the sale of $750 million in bonds to provide funding for children's hospitals. It was officially known as the Children's Hospital Bond Act of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176906-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 61, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176907-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 62\nProposition 62 was a California ballot proposition on the November 2, 2004 ballot. It failed to pass with 5,119,155 (46.1%) votes in favor and 5,968,770 (53.9%) against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176907-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 62\nOfficially known as the Voter Choice Open Primary Act, the proposition was an initiative constitutional amendment and statute that provided for a modified blanket primary (two-round) election system like that used in the state of Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176907-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 62\nUnder the provisions of the proposition, instead of traditional partisan primary elections for statewide offices (in which voters have to be registered with a political party to choose the nominee of that party in the primary), all candidates for election would appear on the primary election ballot (first round ballot), and all voters could vote for any candidate regardless of the party affiliation of the voter or candidates. The two candidates with the most votes (regardless of party or lack thereof) would later appear on the general election (second round) ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176907-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 62\nProp 62 would have affected elections to all statewide elected officers (Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Attorney General, Insurance Commissioner, Controller, Secretary of State, and Treasurer), for the California State Legislature, and for federal congressional elections (to both the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate. The proposition did exempt presidential primary elections and elections of party central committees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176907-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 62\nThe provisions of Proposition 62 conflicted with those of Proposition 60, which the California State Legislature referred on the ballot. That proposition essentially re-affirmed the existing partisan primary system. The California Constitution provides that if the provisions of two approved propositions are in conflict, only the provisions of the measure with the higher number of \"yes\" votes at the statewide election take effect. Since Prop 60 passed and Prop 62 did not, the issue was moot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176907-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 62, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176908-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 64\nProposition 64 was a California ballot proposition on the November 2, 2004 ballot. It passed with 6,571,694 (59.0%) votes in favor and 4,578,725 (41.0%) against. It was an initiative statute that limited the California law on unfair competition, restricting private lawsuits against a company only to those where an individual is injured by and suffers a financial loss due to an unfair, unlawful, or fraudulent business practice and providing that otherwise only public prosecutors may file lawsuits charging unfair business practices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176908-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 64\nProponents argued that the measure would limit \"frivolous lawsuits\" against companies, which they claimed result mainly in a windfall for lawyers rather than consumers. Proponents also argued that businesses ultimately must pass along their costs in the form of higher prices to consumers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176908-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 64\nOpponents charged that the proposition was heavily funded by businesses who wanted to weaken consumer rights by limiting Californians' ability to enforce environmental, public health, and consumer protection laws such as 1986's Proposition 65.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176908-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 64, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176909-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 65\nProposition 65 was a California ballot proposition on the November 2, 2004 ballot. It failed to pass with 3,901,748 (37.6%) votes in favor and 6,471,506 (62.4%) against. It was a state constitutional amendment that would have required voter approval for any state legislation reducing certain local government revenues from January 2003 levels. It was officially known as the Local Taxpayers and Public Safety Protection Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176909-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 65\nLocal governments (cities and counties) in California primarily receive their revenue from three sources: property taxes, local sales taxes, and the vehicle license fees. Proposition 65 was born out of frustration from local governments as the California state government increasingly used local revenues to pay for state government programs, especially during tough financial times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176909-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 65\nProponents of the proposition ultimately used it as a bargaining tool to negotiate an agreement with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and the California State Legislature on protecting local government revenues. The result was the compromise Proposition 1A on the same ballot, which provided more flexible terms and deferred its restrictions until 2006. As a result, previous proponents of Proposition 65 dropped their support in favor of Proposition 1A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176909-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 65\nThis proposition conflicted with the provisions of Proposition 1A on the same ballot. The California Constitution provides that if the provisions of two approved propositions are in conflict, only the provisions of the measure with the higher number of \"yes\" votes at the statewide election take effect. (Since Prop 65 did not pass, the issue was moot.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176909-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 65, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's Estimate of Net State and Local Government Fiscal Impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176910-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 66\nProposition 66 was a California ballot proposition on the November 2, 2004 ballot. It was a proposed amendment to the California three-strikes law (implemented in 1994 with Proposition 184). Prop 66 would have required the third felony charge against a suspect to be especially violent and/or serious crimes to mandate a 25-years-to-life sentence. It also would have changed the definition of some felonies. It was rejected by voters, with 52.7% voting against the proposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176910-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 66\nThough polls indicated that the measure would be overwhelmingly approved by California voters, public opinion shifted dramatically in the last days of the campaign. Opponents argued that its wording was so ambiguous that it threatened to shorten sentences for far more convicts than proponents estimated, and that it would have categorized some serious felonies\u2014assault with intent to rape an elderly or disabled person, for example\u2014as nonviolent crimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176910-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 66\nDays away from the election, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger was joined by Henry Nicholas, co-founder and former co-chairman, president and chief executive officer of Broadcom Corporation and a victims\u2019 rights advocate whose sister was murdered in 1983, as well as former Governors Jerry Brown, Pete Wilson, Gray Davis and George Deukmejian in launching an intensive radio and television advertising campaign against the ballot initiative. The ads warned that Prop. 66, if passed, \u201cwould release 26,000 dangerous criminals and rapists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176910-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 66\nNicholas contributed $3 million to the campaign and flew former Gov. Brown to Long Beach from Oakland to record radio ads with him in the home recording studio belonging to Ryan Shuck of the rock group Orgy. Joining them was Dave Silvera, of the band Korn. Over the next several days, an ad blitz including spots from Shuck and Silvera blanketed radio stations across the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176910-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 66\nAt one point ahead in the polls by more than a 3-to-1 margin [6], Prop 66 failed to pass, with 5,604,060 voters (47.3 percent) voting for, 6,238,060 (52.7 percent) voting no, and 747,563 (5.9 percent) casting no vote. Mark DiCamillo, director of the Field Poll, called the come-from-behind campaign to defeat Prop 66 \u201cunprecedented\u201d in California electoral politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176911-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 69\nCalifornia Proposition 69, the DNA Initiative, was a successful 2004 California ballot proposition that allows for the collection of DNA samples from all felons and from people who have been arrested for certain crimes. As of 2009, all adults arrested for or charged with any felony in California must provide a sample for inclusion in the database.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176911-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 69\nCalifornia currently maintains the third largest DNA database in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71\nProposition 71 of 2004 (or the California Stem Cell Research and Cures Act) is a law enacted by California voters to support stem cell research in the state. It was proposed by means of the initiative process and approved in the 2004 state elections on November 2. The Act amended both the Constitution of California and the Health and Safety Code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71\nThe Act makes conducting stem cell research a state constitutional right. It authorizes the sale of general obligation bonds to allocate three billion dollars over a period of ten years to stem cell research and research facilities. Although the funds could be used to finance all kinds of stem cell research, it gives priority to human embryonic stem cell research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71\nProposition 71 created the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), which is in charge of making \"grants and loans for stem cell research, for research facilities, and for other vital research opportunities to realize therapies\" as well as establishing \"the appropriate regulatory standards of oversight bodies for research and facilities development\". The Act also establishes a governing body called the Independent Citizen\u2019s Oversight Committee (ICOC) to oversee CIRM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71\nProposition 71 is unique in at least three ways. Firstly, it uses general obligation bonds, which are usually used to finance brick-and-mortar projects such as bridges or hospitals, to fund scientific research. Secondly, by funding scientific research on such a large scale, California is taking on a role that is typically fulfilled by the U.S. federal government. Thirdly, Proposition 71 establishes the state constitutional right to conduct stem cell research. The initiative also represents a unique instance where the public directly decided to fund scientific research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71\nBy 2020, the funding from proposition 71 was mostly used, and so the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine expected to shut down if it did not receive additional funding. For that reason, another ballot initiative has been initiated as part of the 2020 California elections. This initiative, known as Proposition 14, will authorize $5.5 billion in state general authorization bonds to fund the stem cell research at the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. The initiative passed with 51% of the vote, so the stem cell research will continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Provisions\nProposition 71 states that \"This measure shall be known as the California Stem Cell Researchand Cures Act\u201d. That is therefore the official citation. However the measure is also headed as the California Stem Cell Research and Cures Initiative. The Act is long and complex. It amends the state constitution by adding \"Article 35 \u2013 Medical Research\". This article establishes the CIRM and guarantees a right to conduct stem cell research. Proposition 71 also amends the Health and Safety Code, by introducing a provision in Part 5 of Division 106 called \"Chapter 3 \u2013 California Stem Cell Research and Cures Bond Act\". This chapter, among other provisions, establishes the ICOC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, The new institute, CIRM membership\nCIRM may have up to 50 employees, who are exempt from civil service. CIRM is divided in three working groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Background\nHuman embryonic stem cell research became a public issue in 1998 when two teams of scientists developed \"methods for culturing cell lines derived, respectively, from: (1) cells taken from the inner cell mass of early embryos, and (2) the gonadal ridges of aborted fetuses\". Since then, this type of research has sparked intense controversy in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Background\nEver since 1996, Congress has attached to the Health and Human Services appropriations bill (which regulates the funding for the National Institutes of Health) a provision known as the \"Dickey\u2013Wicker Amendment\". This amendment, named after the former representative Jay Dickey, Republican from Arkansas, prohibits the use of federal monies to fund \"research that destroys or seriously endangers human embryos, or creates them for research purposes\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Background\nIn 1999, however, the General Counsel of the Department of Health and Human Services issued a legal opinion arguing, \"that the wording of the law might permit an interpretation under which human embryonic stem cell research could be funded\". This interpretation stipulated that the government could fund this research so long as the embryos used had been destroyed by researchers privately paid. Although the Clinton administration adopted this interpretation and wrote the corresponding guidelines, it did not have the time to enforce them. The issue would pass on to the next administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Background\nOn August 9, 2001, President George W. Bush announced his administration's policy regarding human embryonic stem cell research. The President opted to fund only research on the existing 60 cell lines. The small number of cell lines quoted by the President surprised many scientists. Furthermore, they were concerned about the availability and quality of these lines. Scientists also worried about the impact the president\u2019s policy could have on the American research community. The United States, they argued, lags behind other countries where governments support stem cell research. This, in turn, could cause American scientists to move to these countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Background\nProposition 71 represents a response to the federal policy. The idea for this proposition came about after the California legislature blocked a billion-dollar measure to fund stem cell research. Robert N. Klein II, a real-estate developer from Palo Alto, whose son suffers from diabetes and whose mother has Alzheimer's, became the leader of the campaign effort to pass Proposition 71, and spent three million dollars of his own money in the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Proponents\nThe Coalition for Stem Cell Research and Cures comprised a broad group of people and organizations that included: 22 Nobel laureates; celebrities such as Christopher Reeve, Sharyn Rossi, Monica Siegenthaler, Brad Pitt, Saba Motakef, and Michael J. Fox; a number of elected officials such as State Treasurer Phil Angelides, and State Controller Steve Westly, and State Senator Deborah Ortiz; more than fifty patient and disease advocacy groups (e.g., Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, Alzheimer's Association California Council, Sickle Cell Disease Foundation of California), medical groups and hospitals (e.g., California Medical Association, Children's Hospital-Los Angeles), groups representing Latinos and African Americans (e.g. National Coalition of Hispanic Organization, California NAACP), women's advocacy groups (e.g., Planned Parenthood, California NOW) and faith-based organizations (e.g. Catholics for a Free Choice).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 987]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Proponents\nThe Republican Party opposed this initiative, but two key Republican figures endorsed it. They were George P. Shultz, the U.S. Secretary of State in the Reagan Administration and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. Although Schwarzenegger did not endorse it until October 18, 2004, his support may have helped to solidify the proposition's lead in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Proponents\nThis campaign raised approximately $25 million. The contributors included such prominent figures as Bill Gates, who donated $400,000; Pierre M. and Pamela Omidyar, the founders of eBay who together gave $1 million; Gordon Gund, the owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers basketball team, who contributed $1 million; Herbert M. Sandler, chairman of the board of World Savings Bank, who gave $500,000; John Doerr, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, who donated $2 million; and William Bowes Jr., a founder of Amgen (a biotech company), who gave $600,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Opposition\nThose who opposed Proposition 71 included the Roman Catholic Church, Orange County Republicans, and the California Pro-Life Council, an affiliate of the National Right to Life Committee. Among the politicians in this group were State Senator Tom McClintock (R-Thousand Oaks) and Orange County Treasurer-Tax Collector John Moorlach. The Hollywood actor Mel Gibson also joined the efforts to defeat this initiative. Conservative groups, however, were not the only ones opposing Prop. 71; organizations such as the California Nurses Association (CNA), the Green Party, the Center for Genetics and Society, Our Bodies Ourselves, among others, were also against the initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Opposition\nTwo prominent groups campaigning to defeat the initiative were the Pro-Choice Alliance Against Proposition 71 and Doctors, Patients, and Taxpayers for Fiscal Responsibility. These two groups lacked the wide range of endorsements that the proponents had (however, the Pro-Choice Alliance Against Proposition 71 was endorsed by seven organizations and a number of university professors). On the Doctors, Patients, and Taxpayers for Fiscal Responsibility website (which no longer exists) there were only fourteen members listed. Among these members were Dr. Vincent Fortanasce, a physician; Diane Beeson, a medical sociologists; Carol Hogan, a spokesperson for the California Catholic Bishops; and Dr. H Rex Greene, an oncologist and hospital administrator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Opposition\nThe four organizations campaigning against the initiative raised almost $400,000. The main contributors were the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, which donated $50,000 and Howard Ahmanson Jr., founder and president of Fieldstead & Company, who gave $95,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Analysis\nInitial analysis and discussion of need for analysis was done in 2007", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176912-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 California Proposition 71, Campaign, Analysis\nSociologist Ruha Benjamin offers the first in-depth analysis of Proposition 71 in (Stanford University Press 2013). Too frequently the debate over stem cell research devolves in to simple judgments\u2014good or bad, life-saving medicine or bioethical nightmare, symbol of human ingenuity or our fall from grace\u2014ignoring the people affected. Benjamin moves the terms of debate to focus on the shifting relationship between science and society, on the people who benefit\u2014or don't\u2014from Proposition 71 and what this says about democratic commitments to an equitable society. Benjamin discusses issues of race, disability, gender, and socio-economic class that serve to define certain groups as more or less deserving in their political aims and biomedical hopes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176913-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California Republican presidential primary\nThe 2004 California Republican presidential primary was held on March 2, 2004, the same day as the Democratic primary. As expected, incumbent President George W. Bush won near-unanimously over the disbanded opposition. Bush later won the general election over Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176914-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California State Assembly election\nThe 2004 California State Assembly elections were held on November 2, 2004. California's State Assembly in its entirety comes up for election in even numbered years. Each seat has a two-year term and members are limited to three 2-year terms (six years). All 80 biennially elected seats in the Assembly were up for election this year. It was expected that the Democrats would retain control of the Assembly, which they did. While some seats were close races, no opposing party challenges to incumbents were successful on either side and thus, there were no changes to the party balance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176915-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California State Senate election\nThe 2004 California State Senate elections were held on November 2, 2004. Senate seats of odd-numbered districts were up for election. Senate terms are staggered so that half the membership is elected every two years. Senators serve four-year terms and are limited to two terms. As was expected, the Democratic Party held on to the majority of the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections\nCalifornia's state elections were held November 2, 2004. Necessary primary elections were held on March 2. Up for election were all the seats of the State Assembly, 20 seats of the State Senate, and sixteen ballot measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, California State Legislature elections, State Senate\nThere are 40 seats in the State Senate. For this election, candidates running in odd-numbered districts ran for four-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, California State Legislature elections, State Assembly\nAll 80 biennially elected seats of the State Assembly were up for election this year. Each seat has a two-year term. The Democrats retained control of the State Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions\nSixteen ballot propositions qualified to be listed on the general election ballot in California. Nine of these measures were passed, whilst seven failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 1A\nProposition 1A would protect local funding and tax revenues for locally delivered services and prohibit the State from reducing local governments' property tax proceeds. Proposition 1A passed with 83.6% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 59\nProposition 59 would amend the Constitution to provide the public the right to access meetings of government bodies and writings of government officials. Proposition 59 passed with 83.3% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 60\nProposition 60 would provide the right for political parties participating in a primary election for partisan office to also participate in the general election for that office. Proposition 60 passed with 67.5% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 60A\nProposition 60A would reserve proceeds from sale of surplus state property purchased with General Fund monies to payment of principal, interest on Economic Recovery Bonds approved in March 2004. Proposition 60A passed with 73.2% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 61\nProposition 61 authorizes $750 million in bonds for grants for construction, expansion, remodeling, renovation, furnishing and equipping children's hospitals. Proposition 61 passed with 58.3% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 62\nProposition 62 would allow voters to vote for any state or federal candidate, except for president, regardless of party registration of voter or candidate. Proposition 62 failed with 46.2% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 63\nProposition 63 would establish a 1% tax on taxable personal income above $1 million to fund expanded health services for the mentally ill. Proposition 63 passed with 53.7% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 64\nProposition 64 limits the ability for lawsuits to be filed, only allowing them if there was actual loss. Proposition 64 passed with 58.9% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 65\nProposition 65 would amend the constitution to allow for voter approval of reductions of local fee or tax revenues. Proposition 65 failed with 37.6% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 66\nProposition 66 would limit the three strikes law to violent and serious felonies, allow limited re-sentencing under new definitions, and increase punishment for child sex offenders. Proposition 66 failed with 47.3% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 67\nProposition 67 would amend the constitution to increase the telephone surcharge be increased and to allocate funds for emergency services. Proposition 67 failed with 28.4% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 68\nProposition 68 would amend the constitution to allow tribal compact amendments, allowing casino gaming for sixteen non-tribal establishments unless tribes accept. Proposition 68 failed with 16.2% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 69\nProposition 69 would require and provide funding for the collection of DNA samples from all felons with submission to the state DNA database. Proposition 69 passed with 62.0% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 70\nProposition 70 would require the Governor to execute a 99-year gaming compact upon tribe's request, and the tribe would contribute a percentage of its net gaming income to state funds in exchange for expanded, exclusive gaming. Proposition 70 failed with 23.7% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 71\nProposition 71 would establish the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine to regulate and fund stem-cell research, would establish a constitutional right to conduct stem-cell research, and would create a stem-cell research oversight committee. Proposition 71 passed with 59.1% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176916-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 California elections, Statewide ballot propositions, Proposition 72\nProposition 72 would require health care coverage for employees working for large and medium employers. Proposition 72 failed with 49.1% approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176917-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 California wildfires\nThe 2004 California wildfires were a series of wildfires that were active in the state of California during the year 2004. In total, there were 7,898 fires that burned 311,024 acres (1,258.67\u00a0km2) of land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176917-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 California wildfires, Fires\nBelow is a list of all fires that exceeded 1,000 acres (4.0\u00a0km2) during the 2004 fire season. The list is taken from CAL FIRE's list of large fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176918-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cambridge City Council election\nThe 2004 Cambridge City Council election to the Cambridge City Council took place in 2004. Due to ward boundary changes, the whole council was up for election rather than the normal one-third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176919-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian Premier League\nThe 2004 Cameroonian Premier League season in Cameroon was contested by 18 teams. This association football competition was won by Cotonsport Garoua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Cameroon on 11 October 2004. Incumbent President Paul Biya was easily re-elected in an election which the opposition claimed had seen widespread electoral fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Background\nBiya came to power in 1982 and by 2004 had ruled Cameroon for 22 years. Multi-party democracy was introduced for the 1992 election but Biya was accused of rigging the election to ensure victory. The last presidential election in 1997 saw Biya re-elected with 93% of the vote after opposition parties boycotted the election. The expectation before the 2004 election was that Biya would be re-elected to another term of office, with no chance that anyone else would be able or allowed to defeat him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Candidates\nAfter announcing that the presidential election would be held on 11 October, Biya confirmed on 16 September that he would stand for re-election. Before his announcement there had been calls from groups such as university lecturers and over 100 former footballers for him to stand again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Candidates\nBiya was opposed by 15 other candidates after the opposition failed to agree on a single candidate. A 10-party coalition nominated Adamou Ndam Njoya for the election, but his candidacy was rejected by the veteran opposition politician John Fru Ndi who decided to stand as well. Fru Nidi said that he should have been selected instead of Njoya as Fru Nidi's Social Democratic Front had more elected members. Fru Ndi was an anglophone from western Cameroon who had stood in the 1992 election, while Adamou Ndam Njoya was a Muslim francophone from northern Cameroon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Candidates\nThere were also reports that Biya backed some of the candidates so they could act as spoilers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Campaign\nBiya initially did not campaign in the election and only made his first campaign stop within the last week before polling day. Biya described his opponents as inexperienced and said that he was only person who could prevent anarchy in Cameroon. He also pledged to improve education, health and women's rights, as well as decentralising and developing industry and tourism. One of Biya's campaign slogans was \"Free mosquito nets for pregnant mothers\" but there was significant scepticism over the pledges made by Biya after the failure to achieve ones made in previous elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Campaign\nThe opposition candidates said that the government had mismanaged the economy and failed to address widespread poverty. John Fru Ndi attracted the most supporters to his rallies of any of the opposition candidates, with up to 30,000 attending his rally in Douala. He pledged to restore previous wage scales for workers, to reduce corruption and poverty, scrap fees at university and remove taxation from small businesses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Conduct\nOpposition candidates criticised the election as having seen significant amounts of multiple voting and that security forces had harassed opposition agents at polling stations. They described the election as having been rigged and appealed to the Supreme Court to annul the results. However most international observers said that despite some shortcomings the election was mainly satisfactory. These included a group of former United States congressmen who called the election \"fair and transparent\"; however, the International Federation of Human Rights Leagues dissented and said that the election had seen many irregularities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176920-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Cameroonian presidential election, Results\nOn 25 October 2004 the Supreme Court confirmed the results and rejected the complaints from the opposition. The final results saw Biya secure 70.9% of the vote against 17.4% for his nearest rival John Fru Ndi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176921-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby\nThe Campeonato Argentino de Rugby 2004 was won for the first time by the selection of Cuyo, (Mondoza).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176921-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby, Campeonato\nNo relegation, the next year the tournament returned to an eight-team formula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176921-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby, Ascenso\nDue to the new format for year 2005 (eight teams in \"Campeonato\" instead of six, and merging of \"Ascenso\" ed \"Estimulo\", there were two promotions and no relations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176921-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby, Estimulo\nDue to the reorder for next season, all the teams were promoted to \"Ascenso\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176922-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nThe 2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A was the 48th edition of the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A. The competition was won by Santos, coached by Vanderlei Luxemburgo. Runners-up were Atl\u00e9tico Paranaense, which led the competition for 11 weeks and lost the title in the penultimate round. The other teams qualified for the Copa Libertadores were from the state of S\u00e3o Paulo, S\u00e3o Paulo and Palmeiras. The highest goal scorer was Washington (Atl\u00e9tico Paranaense), who scored 34 goals and broke the tournament's record. Beginning two seasons were four teams would be relegated and only two promoted so the tournament would have 20 teams by 2006, the four teams relegated to the second division were Crici\u00fama, Guarani, Vit\u00f3ria and Gr\u00eamio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176922-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format\nFor the second consecutive season, the tournament will be played in a double round-robin system. The team with most points at the end of the season will be declared champion. The bottom four teams will be relegated and will play in the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B in the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176922-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Format, International qualification\nThe S\u00e9rie A will serve as a qualifier to CONMEBOL's 2005 Copa Libertadores. The top-three teams in the standings will qualify to the Second Stage of the competition, while the fourth place in the standings will qualify to the First Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176923-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe football (soccer) Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B 2004, the second level of Brazilian National League, was played from April 23 to December 11, 2004. The competition had 24 clubs and two of them were promoted to S\u00e9rie A and six were relegated to S\u00e9rie C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176923-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nIn the first round, each team played against each other, much like what happens in S\u00e9rie A. However, in contrast to S\u00e9rie A, each team played against the other only once. Therefore, each team played 23 games, 12 home and 11 away (or the opposite). The eight best ranked teams advanced to the second round, where they were divided in two groups of four. Teams in each group played against each other home and away. The two best ranked teams in each group advanced to the final round. Those four teams were put in a single group, and played against each other home and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176923-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nBrasiliense finished the final phase group with most points and was declared 2004 Brazilian S\u00e9rie B champions, claiming the promotion to the 2005 S\u00e9rie A along with Fortaleza, the runners-up. The six worst ranked teams in the first round (Am\u00e9rica-RN, Remo, Am\u00e9rica Mineiro, Joinville, Mogi Mirim and Londrina) were relegated to play S\u00e9rie C in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176924-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nThe football (soccer) Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C 2004, the third level of Brazilian National League, was played from August 1 to November 28, 2004. The competition had 64 clubs and two of them were promoted to S\u00e9rie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176924-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nUni\u00e3o Barbarense finished the final phase group with most points and was declared 2004 Brazilian S\u00e9rie C champions, claiming the promotion to the 2005 S\u00e9rie B along with Gama, the runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176925-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Carioca\nThe 2004 edition of the Campeonato Carioca kicked off on January 24 and ended on April 18, 2004. It is the official tournament organized by FFERJ (Federa\u00e7\u00e3o de Futebol do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, or Rio de Janeiro State Football Federation. Only clubs based in the Rio de Janeiro State are allowed to play. Twelve teams contested this edition. Flamengo won the title for the 28th time. Bangu was relegated, ending a string of 90 consecutive participations in the Carioca championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176926-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A\nThe 2004 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol de la Serie A (known as the 2004 Copa P\u00edlsener Serie A for sponsorship reasons) was the 47th season of the Serie A, the top level of professional football in Ecuador. Deportivo Cuenca won their first national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176926-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Format\nThe format for 2004 remained the same for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176926-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Format\nThe First Stage and Second Stage are identical. The ten teams competed in a double round-robin tournament, one game at home and one away. The top three teams in each stage qualified to the Liguilla Final with bonus points (2, 1, and .5 points, respectively). The First Stage winner and runner-up qualified to the 2004 Copa Sudamericana. At the end of the Second Stage, the two teams with the fewest points were relegated to the Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176926-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Format\nThe Liguilla Final was a double round-robin tournament between the six qualified teams of the First and Second Stage. The winner of the Liguilla Final was crowned the Serie A champion. The champion and runner-up also qualified to the 2005 Copa Libertadores into the Second Stage, while the third-place finisher qualified to the First Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176927-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Ga\u00facho\nThe 84th season of the Campeonato Ga\u00facho kicked off on February 1, 2004 and ended on June 6, 2004. Eighteen teams participated. Holders Internacional beat Ulbra in the finals, winning their 36th title. Santo \u00c2ngelo and Pelotas were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176928-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Mineiro\nThe 2004 Campeonato Mineiro de Futebol do M\u00f3dulo I was the 90th season of Minas Gerais's top-flight professional football league. The season began on January 21 and ended on April 18. Cruzeiro won the title for the 33rd time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176929-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato Paulista\nThe 2004 Campeonato Paulista de Futebol Profissional da Primeira Divis\u00e3o - S\u00e9rie A1 was the 103rd season of S\u00e3o Paulo's top professional football league. The competition began on 18 January and ended on 21 April. S\u00e3o Caetano were the champions, winning for the first time in their history. V\u00e1gner Love was the top scorer with 12 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176930-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campeonato da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o do Futebol\nStatistics of Campeonato da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o do Futebol in the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176931-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones\nThe 2004 Campeon de Campeones was the 40th edition of this Mexican Super Cup football two leg match played by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176932-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia\nThe 2004 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia was a men's tennis tournaments played on outdoor clay courts in Palermo, Italy that was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 26th edition of the tournament and was held from 27 September until 3 October 2004. Eighth-seeded Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176932-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia, Finals, Doubles\nLucas Arnold Ker / Mariano Hood defeated Gast\u00f3n Etlis / Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez 7\u20135, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176933-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia \u2013 Doubles\nLucas Arnold Ker and Mariano Hood successfully defended their title by defeating Gast\u00f3n Etlis and Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in the final. Arnold Ker won the tournament for the third year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176934-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia \u2013 Singles\nNicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Filippo Volandri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176934-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia \u2013 Singles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych won the title by defeating Volandri 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176935-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Cup of Curling\nThe 2004 Strauss Canada Cup of Curling was held January 6\u201311, 2004, at Sport Mart Place in Kamloops, British Columbia. The winning teams received berths into the 2005 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials, the 2004 Continental Cup of Curling and the 2005 Canada Cup of Curling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176935-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Cup of Curling\n2001 World Champion Colleen Jones and her rink from Halifax won the women's event, defeating Saskatchewan's Sherry Anderson in the final. As Jones had already qualified for the 2005 Olympic Trials, Anderson earned a berth for her team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176935-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Cup of Curling\nTwo-time World Champion Randy Ferbey and his rink from Edmonton won the men's event, defeating Calgary's John Morris in the final. As Ferbey had also already qualified for the Olympic Trials, Morris' team qualified as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176935-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Cup of Curling\nThe total purse for the event was $180,000, with both the men's and women's champions winning $33,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176936-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters and the Rogers AT&T Cup\nThe 2004 Canada Masters and the Rogers AT&T Cup were tennis tournaments played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 115th edition of the Canada Masters, and was part of the ATP Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour, and of the Tier I Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. The men's event took place at the Rexall Centre in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, from July 26 through August 1, 2004, and the women's event at the Uniprix Stadium in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, from August 2 through August 8, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176936-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters and the Rogers AT&T Cup\nThe men's draw was headlined by World No. 1, Australian Open and Wimbledon champion Roger Federer, Wimbledon finalist and recent Indianapolis titlist Andy Roddick, and French Open runner-up and Monte Carlo winner Guillermo Coria. Other top seeds were 2004 Rome Masters champion Carlos Moy\u00e1, Indian Wells runner-up Tim Henman, David Nalbandian, Juan Carlos Ferrero and Rainer Sch\u00fcttler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176936-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters and the Rogers AT&T Cup\nThe women's field was led by WTA No. 2, Rome and Berlin winner Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo, Roland-Garros champion Anastasia Myskina, and French Open runner-up Elena Dementieva. Among other top players present were former World No. 1 Jennifer Capriati, seventeen-year-old Wimbledon champion Maria Sharapova, Ai Sugiyama, Nadia Petrova and Paola Su\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176936-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters and the Rogers AT&T Cup, Finals, Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi / Leander Paes defeated Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Max Mirnyi, 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176936-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters and the Rogers AT&T Cup, Finals, Women's Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe / Ai Sugiyama defeated Liezel Huber / Tamarine Tanasugarn, 6\u20130, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176937-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters \u2013 Doubles\nThe 2004 Canada Masters \u2013 Doubles was the men's singles event of the one hundred and fifteenth edition of the Canada Masters; a WTA Tier I tournament and the most prestigious men's tennis tournament held in Canada. Mahesh Bhupathi and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions. They were both present but did not compete together. Mirnyi partnered with Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman, but Bhupathi and partner Leander Paes defeated them 6\u20134, 6\u20132, in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176938-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada Masters \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer defeated the defending champion Andy Roddick in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2004 Canadian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176939-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada rugby union tour of Europe\nThe 2004 Canada rugby union tour of Europe was a short series of two matches played in November 2004 in Italy and England by Canada national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176939-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nItaly: 15.Kaine Robertson, 14.Ludovico Nitoglia, 13.Gonzalo Canale, 12.Andrea Masi, 11.Denis Dallan, 10.Rima Wakarua, 9.Paul Griffen, 8.David dal Maso, 7.Mauro Bergamasco, 6.Aaron Persico, 5.Marco Bortolami (capt. ), 4.Santiago Dellape, 3.Salvatore Perugini, 2.Fabio Ongaro, 1.Andrea Lo Cicero, \u2013 replacements: 16.Giorgio Intoppa, 17.Salvatore Costanzo, 18.Enrico Pavanello, 19.Silvio Orlando, 20.Pietro Travagli, 21.Luciano Orquera, 22.Walter Pozzebon Canada: 15.Quentin Fyffe, 14.Mike Pyke, 13.John Cannon, 12.Marco di Girolamo, 11.Stirling Richmond, 10.Jared Barker, 9.Ed Fairhurst, 8.Stan McKeen, 7.Mike Webb, 6.Jamie Cudmore , 5.Colin Yukes, 4.Mike Burak, 3.Garth Cooke, 2.Mark Lawson, 1.Kevin Tkachuk, \u2013 replacements: 16.Aaron Abrams, 17.Forrest Gainer, 18.Dan Pletch, 19.Josh Jackson, 20.Pat Fleck, 21.Ryan Smith, 22.Derek Daypuck", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176939-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canada rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nEngland: 15.Jason Robinson (capt. ), 14.Mark Cueto, 13.Henry Paul, 12.Mike Tindall, 11.Josh Lewsey, 10.Charlie Hodgson, 9.Andy Gomarsall, 8.Martin Corry, 7.Andy Hazell, 6.Lewis Moody, 5.Steve Borthwick, 4.Danny Grewcock, 3.Julian White, 2.Steve Thompson, 1.Graham Rowntree, \u2013 replacements: 16.Andy Titterrell, 17.Andrew Sheridan, 18.Ben Kay, 19.Hugh Vyvyan, 20.Hall Charlton, 21.Will Greenwood, 22.Ben Cohen Canada: 15.Derek Daypuck, 14.David Moonlight, 13.Ryan Smith, 12.Marco di Girolamo, 11.Stirling Richmond, 10.Ed Fairhurst, 9.Pat Fleck, 8.Colin Yukes, 7.Stan McKeen, 6.Jamie Cudmore, 5.Mike Burak, 4.Josh Jackson, 3.Forrest Gainer, 2.Aaron Abrams, 1.Kevin Tkachuk (capt. ), \u2013 replacements: 16.Mark Lawson, 17.Garth Cooke, 18.Dan Pletch, 19.Christoph Strubin, 20.Dave Spicer, 21.John Cannon, 22.Sean O'Leary", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176940-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Canadian Figure Skating Championships were held on January 5\u201311, 2004 in Edmonton, Alberta. It is a figure skating national championship held annually to determine the national champions of Canada and is organized by Skate Canada, the nation's figure skating governing body. Skaters competed at the senior and junior levels in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Due to the large number of competitors, the senior men's and senior ladies' qualifying was split into two groups. The results of this competition were used to pick the Canadian teams to the 2004 World Championships, the 2004 Four Continents Championships, and the 2004 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Canadian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Grand Prix du Canada 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 13 June 2004 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. It was Race 8 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix\nIt was won by Michael Schumacher, with teammate Rubens Barrichello second, making for a 1-2 finish for Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro as part of a season where Ferrari took the most wins of the season and the driver's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix\nIn the post race inspections, Williams and Toyota were excluded from the race due to illegal brake ducts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix\nThis would be the last time that Scuderia Ferrari won in Canada until the 2018 Canadian Grand Prix, at the same circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nThe 2004 Canadian Grand Prix nearly did not happen, originally being dropped from the calendar in 2003 but later reinstated. The issue was to do with tobacco sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nIt was the eighth race of the 2004 Formula One season, and was the first of two North American consecutive rounds. The Canadian Grand Prix 2004 was one of drama, but at the finish line Michael Schumacher took his 77th career victory, his 7th win of the 2004 season, and his 7th win in Canada. Timo Glock made his debut replacing Giorgio Pantano who did not compete due to personal circumstances. The Renaults were fast off the line as was expected, but a suspension failure put Jarno Trulli out of the race before he'd reached the second corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nTakuma Sato starting from the pit lane had a close shave with the two Jaguars and David Coulthard. Christian Klien's Jaguar was hit from behind, propelling him into the McLaren of Coulthard, which also resulted in a collision with Mark Webber who was forced to pit with a punctured tyre, but later retired with suspension failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nAfter the start, Fernando Alonso was up to third behind pole sitter Ralf Schumacher and Jenson Button. Jordan debutante Timo Glock took advantage of the second corner tangle and managed to find himself in 10th. As the race progressed, Rubens Barrichello moved ahead of Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen into 6th position, as Glock was forced back by faster cars. Sauber's Felipe Massa battled with the ailing Takuma Sato for 14th, as Coulthard moved up to 12th, with the Toyotas in a strong 8th and 9th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nThe McLaren's were first to pit as part of their three stop strategy, followed shortly by Button and Montoya. Ralf Schumacher was 5 seconds ahead of Alonso until he pitted and rejoined in fourth, whilst Alonso's podium hopes were later dashed by a problem with the fuel hose which forced the Renault pit crew to resort to the spare hose, costing Alonso an additional 16 seconds. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's afternoon couldn't get much worse, as he served a drive through penalty for crossing the white line on his exit from the pit lane. Barrichello later rejoined after his first pit stop behind Montoya, to make the running order Ralf Schumacher, Jenson Button, Michael Schumacher, Juan Pablo Montoya, Rubens Barrichello and Fernando Alonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nNick Heidfeld was involved in an incident in the pit lane where the lollipop man lifted whilst the fuel hose was still attached, and the fuel man was dragged along as the Jordan pulled away. The Saubers were on a long first stint and Giancarlo Fisichella did not pit until lap 25, surprisingly rejoining in the points. Meanwhile, Button was closing the gap to Ralf Schumacher, as Montoya did likewise to Ralf's older brother Michael.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nMinardi's Gianmaria Bruni was hauled in for a drive through penalty for speeding in the pit lane, but retired with gearbox failure shortly after. Ralf pitted again on lap 33, and rejoined in 3rd whilst Coulthard narrowly missed another collision with a fiery Christian Klien. In the second stint, Barrichello was seemingly much faster than his teammate Michael Schumacher, but could not find a way past the reigning champion. Alonso began to fly in fourth, as the adventurous Klien took an airborne trip over the grass. Alonso's charge was short-lived though, as his Renault pulled slowly to the side of the circuit with a driveshaft failure. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Barrichello and Michael Schumacher took their second pit stops without much hassle, although Schumacher had a leary moment when he almost hit the pit wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nRalf Schumacher then took his third and final stop, and so too did Montoya and Button. Takuma Sato's disappointing afternoon ended with the Honda engine exploding. As the final stages of the race approached, Michael Schumacher led brother Ralf, with Barrichello, Button, and Montoya following, and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in sixth. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen then had to make yet another pit stop to change his steering wheel, dropping the Finn down to 7th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nWith a few laps left to go, Felipe Massa suffered a rear suspension failure at the hairpin, a wheel flying beyond the retaining fence (nobody was injured) as his Sauber flew into the tyre barrier. The Brazilian was taken to hospital for precautionary tests, but was basically unharmed. Christian Klien continued an entertaining afternoon by spinning 360 degrees, narrowly avoiding a surprised Timo Glock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nThe front runners remained the same until the chequered flag, Michael Schumacher and Scuderia Ferrari coming away with a 7th victory of the season. Younger brother Ralf, and Barrichello completed the podium portrait. Jenson Button ended the race in 4th, and Montoya finished in 5th. Giancarlo Fisichella's quiet race ended with an impressive 6th, with R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen taking two points for seventh and Toyota's Cristiano da Matta taking the final point for 8th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176941-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Grand Prix, Report\nAfter the race, however, both Toyota's and Williams's cars were disqualified with brake irregularities, brake ducts seemingly not conforming to regulations. After the disqualification, Jenson Button claimed 3rd, with Giancarlo Fisichella taking 4th, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Coulthard taking 5th and 6th, and Glock and Nick Heidfeld in 7th and 8th respectively, giving Jordan points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176942-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Junior Curling Championships\nThe 2004 K\u00e4rcher Canadian Junior Curling Championships were held February 7\u201315 at the Juan de Fuca Recreation Centre in Victoria, British Columbia. The winning teams represented Canada at the 2004 World Junior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176942-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nThe Teranet Ontario Junior Curling Championships were held January 7\u201311 at the Oakville Curling Club in Oakville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176942-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nKelly Cochrane defeated Lee Merklinger from the Granite Curling Club of West Ottawa in the women's final. Merklinger had beaten the Julie Reddick rink from Oakville 3-1 in the semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176942-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nIn the men's final, John Epping of Peterborough defeated Mark Bice of Sarnia 8-5. Epping had beaten the Ottawa Curling Club's Mike McLean rink 7-5 in the semifinal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176943-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2004 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship was held January 10-18, 2004 at the McIntyre Curling Club in Timmins, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176943-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2004 Mixed was the last Canadian Mixed Championship to be held in the same calendar year as it was billed as. The 2005 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship would be held in November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176943-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nShannon Kleibrink, skip of the Alberta team became the first (and to date only) woman to skip a team to national mixed title, when her foursome defeated Ontario's Heath McCormick in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176944-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian National Challenge Cup\nThe 2004 Canadian National Challenge Cup took place in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island from the sixth to the eleventh of October. The seedings were based on the last years performance by province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176944-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian National Challenge Cup, Rosters, Surrey Pegasus FC\nSurrey (Squad): Rob Iorio, Trevor Short, Randy Celebrini, Gavin Frey, Eddie Cannon, Paul Dailly, DarinBurr, Adam Costley, Ryan Powell, Nico Berg, Mike Dodd, Ryan Green, Robin Regnier, Frank Lore, JamieFiddler, Stedman Espinoza, Laurent Scalignine, Rob Reed, Steve London, Shawn Perry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176944-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian National Challenge Cup, Rosters, Ottawa Royals\nOttawa (Squad): Erik Lefebre - Andriy Sowarek, Simon Bonk, Declen Bonper, Dan Cheney, Sylvain Cloutier,Drew Dailey, Dan Degenutti, Alec Edgar, Dave Foley, Kweis Loney, Dylan Loy, Ewan Lyttle, GordMacDonald, James MacMillan, Victor Mendes, Sanjeev Permar, Marcelo Plada, Dom Rochon, Roland Tinmuh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176945-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Professional Soccer League season\nThe 2004 Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the seventh season for the Canadian Professional Soccer League. The season began on May 24, 2004 and concluded on October 11, 2004 with Toronto Croatia defeating Vaughan Shooters 4\u20130 to capture their second CPSL Championship (known as the Rogers CPSL Cup for sponsorship reasons). The championship was hosted for the first time at Victoria Park Stadium in Brampton, Ontario, which granted the Brampton Hitmen a wildcard berth. In the regular season the Toronto Supra clinched their first Eastern Conference title, while Hamilton Thunder secured their second Western Conference title. Though the league decreased in membership they managed to expand to the Windsor - Detroit territory with the addition of the Windsor Border Stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176945-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Changes from 2003 season\nThe 2004 season saw the league decrease from 13 to 11 teams. The Ottawa Wizards, and the Durham Flames had their franchises revoked. The Laval Dynamites went on hiatus as they awaited the completion of their home venue the Centre Sportif Bois-de-Boulogne. Though the CPSL lost 3 franchises they managed to expand to the Essex County with the addition of the Windsor Border Stars. Founding member the Mississauga Olympians were sold to John O'Neill and replaced the Durham Flames under the name Durham Storm. Vaughan Sun Devils changed their name to the Vaughan Shooters, while the North York Astros joined them in their move to the Ontario Soccer Centre. Director of Officials Tony Camacho resigned and was replaced by former Director at Large Walter Kirchner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 73], "content_span": [74, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176945-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, All-Star game\nIn the 2004 All-Star game Boavista F.C. of the Primeira Liga conducted a North American tour where one of their opponents were a CPSL Select team assembled by Harry Gauss, and Steve Nijjar. The match was played at Cove Road Stadium in London, Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176945-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Individual awards\nThe annual CPSL awards ceremony was held on October 9, 2004 at the La Contessa Banquet Hall in North York, Toronto. London City and Windsor Border Stars were both tied with the most wins with 2 awards. London City's Paul Munster had a tremendous season where he captured both the Golden Boot and Rookie of the Year, which later spring boarded his career back to Europe to sign with Slavia Prague in the Czech First League. After leading expansion franchise Windsor Border Stars to an Open Canada Cup, former English football player Pat Hilton was given the Coach of the Year. While Windsor's Justin Marshall was voted the Defender of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176945-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Individual awards\nThe league chose Danny Amaral as its MVP after making his return to Canadian soccer with Toronto Supra after several seasons in Portugal. George Azcurra of Toronto Croatia won his fourth Goalkeeper of the Year. The Referee of the Year went to Amato De Luca, which marked his second CPSL accolade. The most disciplined team throughout the season were Durham Storm. The league also introduced the President of the Year award in order to recognize the top executive or organizer, and the inaugural recipient was North York Astros Bruno Ierullo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 66], "content_span": [67, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176946-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian Senior Curling Championships\nThe 2004 AMJ Campbell Canadian Senior Curling Championships were held in Vernon, British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176947-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal budget\nThe Canadian federal budget of 2004 was a budget for the Government of Canada. It was read in the House of Commons of Canada on March 23, 2004 by Finance Minister Ralph Goodale of the governing Liberal Party. It was prepared by Goodale with significant input from Prime Minister Paul Martin, who had previously served as Minister of Finance in the government of Jean Chr\u00e9tien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176947-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal budget, Details of the budget\nThe budget contained few surprises: most major initiatives had been announced long beforehand. These included $2 billion for health care, money for municipalities, and $1 billion to help livestock farmers harmed by the Mad Cow crisis. Government spending was set to increase at the same rate as Gross domestic product (GDP) over the next few years with any surplus going to pay down the national debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176947-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Opposition parties\nThe budget was criticized by the Conservative Party for its lack of tax cuts and its increases in spending. The New Democratic Party criticized the policy of debt reduction, arguing that social spending, especially on health care, would be more beneficial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176947-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal budget, Legislative process\nBefore the budget could be passed, parliament was dissolved for the 2004 election. The budget legislation was appended to the 2005 budget that was passed the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election\nThe 2004 Canadian federal election (formally the 38th Canadian general election) was held on June 28, 2004, to elect members to the House of Commons of Canada of the 38th Parliament of Canada. The Liberal government of Prime Minister Paul Martin lost its majority, but was able to form a minority government after the elections. The main opposition party, the newly amalgamated Conservative Party of Canada, improved its position but with a showing below its expectations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election\nOn May 23, 2004, Governor General Adrienne Clarkson, on the advice of Martin, ordered the dissolution of the House of Commons. Following a 36-day campaign, voters elected 308 Members of the House of Commons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election\nAll three major national parties had changed their leaders since the 2000 election. Earlier the election was widely expected to be a relatively easy romp for Martin to a fourth consecutive Liberal majority government, but early in 2004 Liberal popularity fell sharply due to the sponsorship scandal. Polls started to indicate the possibility of a minority government for the Liberals, or even a minority Conservative government, fuelling speculation of coalitions with the other parties. In the end, the Liberals fared better than the final opinion polls had led them to fear, but well short of a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election\nOn election day, polling times were arranged to allow results from most provinces to be announced more or less simultaneously, with the exception of Atlantic Canada, whose results were known before the close of polling in other provinces due to the British Columbia Supreme Court's decision in R v Bryan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, National results\nIn 2004, a federal party required 155 of the 308 seats to hold a majority in Canada. The Liberals came short of this number, winning 135. Until extremely close ridings were decided on the west coast, it appeared as though the Liberals' seat total, if combined with that of the left-wing New Democratic Party (NDP), would be sufficient to hold a majority in the House of Commons. In the end, the Conservatives won Vancouver Island North, West Vancouver-Sunshine Coast, and New Westminster-Coquitlam, after trailing in all three ridings, as sub-totals were announced through the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, National results\nAs a result, the combined seat count of the Liberals and the NDP was 154, while the other 154 seats belonged to the Conservatives, Bloquistes, and one independent Chuck Cadman (previously a Conservative). Rather than forming a coalition with the NDP, the Liberal party led a minority government, obtaining majorities for its legislation on an ad hoc basis. Nevertheless, as the showdown on Bill C-48, a matter of confidence, loomed in the spring of 2005, the Liberals and NDP, who wanted to continue the Parliament, found themselves matched against the Conservatives and the Bloc, who were registering no confidence. The bill passed with the Speaker casting the decisive tie-breaking vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, National results\nVoter turnout nationwide was 60.9%, the lowest in Canadian history at that time, with 13,683,570 out of 22,466,621 registered voters casting their ballots. The voter turnout fell by more than 3pp from the 2000 federal election which had 64.1% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, National results\n* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election. In the case of the CHP, which did have 46 candidates in the previous election, the party did not have official status and is not officially compared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, National results\n1 Conservative Party results are compared to the combined totals of the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party in the 2000 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Liberal Party of Canada\nUntil the sponsorship scandal, most pundits were predicting that new Prime Minister Paul Martin would lead the Liberal Party of Canada to a fourth majority government, possibly setting a record for number of seats won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 80], "content_span": [81, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Liberal Party of Canada\nHowever, polls released immediately after the scandal broke showed Liberal support down as much as 10% nationwide, with greater declines in its heartland of Quebec and Ontario. Although there was some recovery in Ontario and Atlantic Canada, Liberal hopes of making unprecedented gains in the west faded. The unpopularity of some provincial Liberal parties may also have had an effect on federal Liberal fortunes. In Ontario, for instance, the provincial Liberal government introduced an unpopular budget the week of the expected election call, and their federal counterparts then fell into a statistical dead heat with the Conservatives in polls there. The Liberals were also harmed by high-profile party infighting that had been plaguing the party since Martin's earlier ejection from Cabinet by now-former Prime Minister Jean Chr\u00e9tien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 80], "content_span": [81, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Liberal Party of Canada\nThe campaign was criticized openly by Liberal candidates, one incumbent Liberal comparing it to the Keystone Kops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nIn the final months of 2003, the Progressive Conservatives and the Canadian Alliance were running a distant third and fourth, respectively, in public opinion polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nMany pundits predicted that the combination of the popular and fiscally conservative Martin, along with continued vote-splitting on the right, could have led to the almost total annihilation of the Progressive Conservatives and Canadian Alliance. This fear prompted those two parties to form a united Conservative Party of Canada, which was approved by the members of the Canadian Alliance on December 5, 2003, and controversially by the delegates of the Progressive Conservatives on December 6, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nThe new Conservative Party pulled well ahead of the NDP in the polls just before the election, although its support remained below the combined support that the Progressive Conservatives and the Alliance had as separate parties. On March 20, the Conservatives elected Stephen Harper as their new leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nThe Conservatives gained more ground in polls after Harper became leader, and the poll results in the weeks before the election had them within one to two points of the Liberals, sometimes ahead, sometimes behind them. Party supporters hoped that the voters would react negatively to the Liberal attacks on what they called Harper's \"hidden agenda\", and that anger over the sponsorship scandal and other Liberal failures would translate to success at the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nLate in the campaign, the Conservatives began to lose some momentum, in part due to remarks made by MPs and candidates regarding homosexuality, official bilingualism and abortion. Additionally, the Liberal Party began airing controversial TV ads. Harper was also criticized for his position supporting the American-led 2003 invasion of Iraq. The term \"hidden agenda\", used commonly in the 2000 election to refer to Stockwell Day, began surfacing with increasing regularity with regard to Harper's history of supporting privatized health care. Further damaging the Conservative campaign was a press release from Conservative headquarters that suggested that Paul Martin supported child pornography. The momentum began to swing against his party, although some polls suggested it was neck and neck right up until election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nAlthough on the eve of the election the party was polling slightly ahead of the Liberals everywhere west of Quebec, it had dropped in support, polling behind or on par with Liberals everywhere except the West (Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba), where it held onto its traditional support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Conservative Party of Canada\nAll together the new Conservatives fell from the combined Canadian Alliance-Progressive Conservative vote in 2000 of 37%, to only 29% of the vote, yet still gained 21 extra seats, finishing in second-place with 99 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, New Democratic Party\nBefore the announcement of the union of the right-of-centre parties, some were predicting that the New Democratic Party (Canada) would form the official opposition because the NDP was polling ahead of both right-of-centre parties. A new leader (Jack Layton) and clear social democratic policies helped revitalize the NDP. Polls suggested that the NDP had returned to the 18% to 20% level of support it enjoyed in the 1984 election and 1988 election. Layton suggested that the NDP would break their previous record of 43 seats won under former leader Ed Broadbent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, New Democratic Party\nThe NDP focused the campaign on winning ridings in Canada's urban centres, hoping especially to win seats in central Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa and Winnipeg. The party's platform was built to cater to these regions and much of Layton's time was spent in these areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, New Democratic Party\nThe campaign stumbled early when Layton blamed the deaths of homeless people on Paul Martin, prompting the Liberals to accuse the NDP of negative campaigning. The NDP benefited from the decline in Liberal support, but not to the same extent as the Conservatives. There was an increasing prospect that NDP voters would switch to the Liberals to block a Conservative government. This concern did not manifest itself in the polls, however, and the NDP remained at somewhat below 20 percent mark in the polls for most of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, New Democratic Party\nThe NDP achieved 15% of the popular vote, its highest in 16 years. However, it only won 19 seats in the House of Commons, two less than the 21 won in 1997, and far short of the 40 predicted. There was criticism that Layton's focus on urban issues and gay rights marginalized the party's traditional emphasis on the poor, the working class, and rural Canadians. Long-time MP Lorne Nystrom and several other incumbents from the Prairie provinces were defeated, with the NDP being shut out of Saskatchewan for the first time since 1965. Layton won his own seat in a tight race, while Broadbent was returned to Parliament after many years of absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nThe Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois (BQ) had managed their best showing back in 1993, but they lost seats to the Liberals in 1997 and 2000, prompting pundits to suggest a decline in support for Quebec sovereignty. The Bloc continued to slide in the polls in most of 2003 after the election of the federalist Quebec Liberal Party at the National Assembly of Quebec under Jean Charest, and during the long run-up to Paul Martin becoming leader of the federal Liberals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nHowever, things progressively changed during 2003, partly because of the decline in popularity of the Liberal Party of Quebec government of Jean Charest, and partly because support for independence in Quebec rose again (49% in March). The tide took its sharp turn when, in February 2004, the sponsorship scandal (uncovered in considerable part by the Bloc) hit the Liberal federal government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nThese events led to a resurgence of the BQ, putting it ahead of the pack once again: according to an Ipsos-Reid poll carried out for The Globe and Mail and CTV between the June 4 and 8, 50% of Quebecers intended to vote for the BQ against 24% for the Liberals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois\nSpeculation was ongoing about the possibility of the Bloc forming alliances with other opposition parties or with an eventual minority government to promote its goals of social democracy and respect of the autonomy of provinces. Leader Gilles Duceppe stated that the Bloc, as before, would co-operate with other opposition parties or with the government when interests were found to be in common, but that the Bloc would not participate in a coalition government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 71], "content_span": [72, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Major political parties, Green Party of Canada\nThe Greens ran candidates in all 308 ridings for the first time in its history. The party won twice as many votes in this election than it had over the previous 21 years of its history combined, although it failed to win a seat. It also spent more money than in the previous 21 years, and although much of this money was borrowed, the Greens' share of the popular vote enabled them to receive federal funding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 78], "content_span": [79, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Campaign slogans\nThese are the official slogans for the 2004 campaigns. The optional parts of the mottos (sometimes not used for efficiency) are put in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176948-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Canadian federal election, Accusations of Stephen Harper trying to form a coalition government\nOn March 26, 2011, Gilles Duceppe stated that Harper had tried to form a coalition government with the Bloc and NDP two months after this election in 2004. He was responding to Harper's warnings in 2011 that the Liberals might form a coalition with the Bloc and the NDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 99], "content_span": [100, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176949-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canberra Women's Classic\nThe 2004 Canberra Women's Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the National Sports Club in Canberra, Australia and was part of the Tier V category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and was held from 11 through 17 January 2004. Second-seeded Paola Su\u00e1rez won the singles title, after surviving five matchpoints in the final, and earned $16,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176949-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canberra Women's Classic, Finals, Doubles\nJelena Kostani\u0107 / Claudine Schaul defeated Caroline Dhenin / Lisa McShea 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176950-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canberra Women's Classic \u2013 Doubles\nTathiana Garbin and \u00c9milie Loit were the defending champions, but Garbin opted to compete in Hobart that same week. Loit teamed up with St\u00e9phanie Cohen-Aloro and withdrew the tournament in semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176950-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canberra Women's Classic \u2013 Doubles\nJelena Kostani\u0107 and Claudine Schaul won the title by defeating Caroline Dhenin and Lisa McShea 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20133) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176951-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canberra Women's Classic \u2013 Singles\nMeghann Shaughnessy was the defending champion, but decided to compete in Sydney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176951-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canberra Women's Classic \u2013 Singles\nPaola Su\u00e1rez won the title by defeating Silvia Farina Elia 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival\nThe 57th Cannes Film Festival started on 12 and ran until 23 May 2004. The Palme d'Or went to the American film Fahrenheit 9/11 by Michael Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival\nThe festival opened with La mala educaci\u00f3n, directed by Pedro Almod\u00f3var and closed with De-Lovely, directed by Irwin Winkler. Laura Morante was mistress of the ceremonies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Main competition\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury for the feature films of the 2004 Official Selection:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Un Certain Regard\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury of the 2004 Un Certain Regard:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Cin\u00e9fondation and short films\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury of the Cin\u00e9fondation and short films competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Camera d'Or\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury of the 2004 Camera d'Or:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Un Certain Regard\nThe following films were selected for the competition of Un Certain Regard:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Films out of competition\nThe following films were selected to be screened out of competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cin\u00e9fondation\nThe following short films were selected for the competition of Cin\u00e9fondation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Short film competition\nThe following short films competed for the Short Film Palme d'Or:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cannes Classics\nFor the third year, the Cannes Festival selected \"some of world cinema's masterpieces and rarities\" for the audience. The following films were projected in the \"Salle Bu\u00f1uel\" during the festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, International Critics' Week\nThe following films were screened for the 43rd International Critics' Week (43e Semaine de la Critique):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, Directors' Fortnight\nThe following films were screened for the 2004 Directors' Fortnight (Quinzaine des R\u00e9alizateurs):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176952-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Cannes Film Festival, Awards, Official awards\nThe following films and people received the 2004 Official selection awards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup\nThe 2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of six races in 4 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 17th edition. The series consisted of 5 regular world cup races and the world cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Final standings\nThe winner of each world cup race was awarded 30 points. Semifinalists were guaranteed at least 5 points and paddlers eliminated in heats received 2 points each. The world cup final points scale was multiplied by a factor of 1.5. That meant the winner of the world cup final earned 45 points, semifinalists got at least 7.5 points and paddlers eliminated in heats received 3 points apiece. Only the best five results of each athlete counted for the final world cup standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 1\nThe first race of the season was held at the newly built Hellinikon Olympic Canoe/Kayak Slalom Centre in Athens, Greece from 22 to 25 April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 2\nThe second race of the season was held at the Segre Olympic Park in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain from 22 to 23 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 3\nThe third race of the season was held in Merano, Italy from 29 to 30 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 4\nThe fourth race of the season was held at the Prague-Troja Canoeing Centre, Czech Republic from 10 to 11 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 5\nThe fifth race of the season was held at the Augsburg Eiskanal, Germany from 16 to 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176953-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Final\nThe final race of the season was held in Bourg-Saint-Maurice, France from 23 to 25 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176954-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup Race 1 \u2013 Men's K-1\nThe 2004 Canoe Slalom World Cup Race 1 - Men's K-1 was a Canoe Slalom race in Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176955-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Canoe Sprint European Championships\nThe 2004 Canoe Sprint European Championships were held in Pozna\u0144, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176956-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cape Verdean Football Championships\nThe 2004 Cape Verdean Football Championship season was the 25th of the competition of the first-tier football in Cape Verde. Its started on 8 May and finished on 10 July, earlier than the last season. The tournament was organized by the Cape Verdean Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176956-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nAcad\u00e9mico do Aeroporto was the defending team of the title. A total of 11 clubs participated in the competition, one from each island league. No club participated from the Santo Ant\u00e3o Island League (South) due to the regional championship was not held, again in several seasons, also the champion of a previous season competed at the nationals, Acad\u00e9mico do Aeroporto from the island of Sal participated. As that club were also regional winners, again a runner-up of the regionals qualified and was Santa Maria from the south of the island. A total of 93 goals were scored, Ravs scored the most numbering 11 (more than 10% of the total).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176956-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nThere were no competition in the first week of July due to the municipal elections that were taking place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176956-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nThe league was contested with 12 clubs, Sal-Rei FC would win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176956-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Results\nThe league's highest scoring game would be Acad\u00e9mico Aeroporto defeating Paulense 6-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176957-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cape Verdean local elections\nLocal elections were held in Cape Verde on 21 March 2004. The Movement for Democracy (MpD) won in the municipalities of Boa Vista, Paul, Porto Novo, S\u00e3o Domingos and Tarrafal, the MpD-affiliated Ribeira Grande Democratic Group (GDRG) won in Ribeira Grande, while the African Party for the Independence of Cape Verde (PAICV) won in the municipalities of Mosteiros, Praia the capital, Santa Catarina do Fogo and S\u00e3o Filipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176958-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Capital One Bowl\nThe 2004 Capital One Bowl was a post-season college football bowl game between the Georgia Bulldogs and the Purdue Boilermakers on January 1, 2004, at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida. Purdue entered as the Big Ten runner-up, while Georgia entered the game after a disappointing loss in the SEC Championship Game. 64,565 people came out to watch a rematch of the 2000 Outback Bowl, a game Georgia won in Overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176958-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Capital One Bowl\nGeorgia started quickly, scoring 24 unanswered points to begin the game. Purdue scored 10 quick points before halftime to make it 24\u201310. After a scoreless third quarter, the stage was set for a very exciting ending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176958-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Capital One Bowl\nAfter Purdue opened the quarter with a touchdown to make it 24\u201317, Georgia added a field goal with 7 minutes remaining to make it 27\u201317. Purdue would manage a touchdown drive, scoring with 1:34 left, but when the Boilermakers couldn't recover the ensuing onside kick it appeared the game was over. Purdue was out of timeouts when Mark Richt called a run on second down instead of ordering quarterback David Greene to take a knee. The coach was trying to avoid a punt with a few seconds left, but he quickly regretted his decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176958-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Capital One Bowl\nRunning back Kregg Lumpkin got hemmed up deep in the backfield and tried to run the other way, but Shaun Phillips stripped the ball. After a wild scramble, Niko Koutouvides recovered for Purdue at the Georgia 34. Purdue's Ben Jones then kicked a 44-yard field goal with 49 seconds remaining to keep the game going, tied at 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176958-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Capital One Bowl\nTaking the ball first, the Bulldogs got to the 3 with the help of a pass interference penalty on Bobby Iwuchukwu, then went for it on fourth down from inside the 1. Lumpkin managed to slide through a crease for the touchdown. Purdue then received the ball with a chance to keep the game going. Georgia appeared to get the clinching stop when Kyle Orton threw an incomplete pass on fourth-and-goal from the 8, but the Bulldogs were offsides. Orton's final pass was intercepted by Taylor in the end zone, setting off a wild celebration by the Georgia players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176959-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cardiff Council election\nThe 2004 Cardiff Council election was the third election to the post-1996 Cardiff Council following the re-organization of local government in Wales. It was held on 10 June 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 elections. On the same day, elections were held for the European Parliament as well as to the other 21 local authorities and to community councils in Wales as part of the 2004 Welsh local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176959-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cardiff Council election, Overview\nCouncil elections in Wales were originally scheduled for May 2003, but were delayed to avoid a conflict with the 2003 Wales Assembly elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176959-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cardiff Council election, Overview\nAll 75 council seats were up for election. Labour lost its majority at this election. The Labour group leader also resigned after it became clear he would be defeated in an election for the post by Llandaff councillor Greg Owens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176959-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cardiff Council election, Overview\nIndependent Butetown councillor, Betty Campbell, narrowly lost her seat to Labour amid claims of 'dirty tricks' during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176959-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cardiff Council election, Ward Results, Gabalfa (2 seats)\nThe Liberal Democrats had won a seat in this ward at a by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176959-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Cardiff Council election, Ward Results, Pentwyn (4 seats)\nCubitt previously represented Pontprennau. Woodman had previously held the seat for the Liberal Democrats at a by-election on 11 September 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176960-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Caribbean Series\nThe forty-sixth edition of the Caribbean Series (Serie del Caribe) was held from February 1 through February 6 of 2004 with the champion baseball teams of the Dominican Republic, Tigres del Licey; Mexico, Tomateros de Culiac\u00e1n; Puerto Rico, Leones de Ponce, and Venezuela, Tigres de Aragua. The format consisted of 12 games, each team facing the other teams twice, and the games were played at Estadio Quisqueya in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election\nThe 2004 Carinthian state election was held on 7 March 2004 to elect the members of the Landtag of Carinthia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election\nThe election was a victory for the first-term Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) government under J\u00f6rg Haider, which repeated its strong performance from the previous election. This came despite difficulties on the federal level and recent defeats in other state elections, as well as a strong challenge from the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6). The Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) lost almost half its voteshare, while The Greens won seats for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election, Background\nPrior to amendments made in 2017, the Carinthian constitution mandated that cabinet positions in the state government (state councillors, German: Landesr\u00e4ten) be allocated between parties proportionally in accordance with the share of votes won by each; this is known as Proporz. As such, the government was a perpetual coalition of all parties that qualified for at least one state councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election, Background\nIn the 1999 state election, the FP\u00d6 became the largest party in a state legislature for the first time in history, winning 42% of votes cast. FP\u00d6 leader J\u00f6rg Haider became Governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election, Electoral system\nThe 36 seats of the Landtag of Carinthia are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between four multi-member constituencies. For parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 5 percent state-wide electoral threshold. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Hare quota, with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176961-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Carinthian state election, Contesting parties\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, three parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176962-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carlisle City Council election\nThe 2004 Carlisle City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Carlisle District Council in Cumbria, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176962-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Carlisle City Council election, Election result\nLabour became the largest party on the council with 24 councillors, but without a majority, after gaining 3 seats from the Conservatives in Belle Vue, St Aidans and Yewdale. However Labour did lose one seat to the Liberal Democrats in Castle, with the Liberal Democrats also gaining a seat from the Conservatives in Dalston by 1 vote. This meant the Conservatives dropped to 20 seats, while the Liberal Democrats went up to 7 and there remained 1 independent. Overall turnout at the election was 42.6%, up from 31.4% in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176962-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Carlisle City Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Liberal Democrats continued to back the Conservatives to run the council, with Mike Mitchelson remaining as leader of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176962-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Carlisle City Council election, By-elections between 2004 and 2006\nA by-election was held on 24 November 2005 in Castle ward after the death of the Liberal Democrat group leader John Guest. Olwyn Luckley held the seat for the Liberal Democrats, who continued to hold the balance of power on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176963-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carlow County Council election\nAn election to Carlow County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 21 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election\nThe third election to the Carmarthenshire County Council were held in May 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election. As in previous elections, the Independent councillors had the largest number of seats. They resulted in a coalition between Independent and Labour Councillors for the next four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Cenarth (one seat)\nThe sitting Plaid Cymru councillor, John Crossley, chose to contest Llangeler and the party did not field a candidate, leading to the loss of the seat to the Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Dafen (one seat)\nTegwen Devichand was elected at a by-election following the death of the previous councillor, Vernon Warlow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Hendy (one seat)\nWilliam James crossed the floor from Independents in the previous term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Kidwelly (one seat)\nAlthough the sitting councillor, a former Labour member of Llanelli Borough Council, was elected as an Independent Labour candidate in 1995, he subsequently joined the Independent group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Llanddarog (one seat)\nThe elected candidate, who had sat as a Ratepayer for Gorslas since 1995, and on Dyfed County Council since 1977, had now joined the Independent group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Llandybie (two seats)\nAnthony Wyn Jones was elected at a by-election following the death of the previous Independent councillor, Gerald Earl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Llangeler (one seat)\nThe elected candidate was the sitting councillor for Cenarth since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 75], "content_span": [76, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Llansteffan (one seat)\nOsi Rhys Osmond had been elected at a by-election following the death of the previous Independent councillor, Arthur Harries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Llwynhendy (two seats)\nDillwyn Bowen was the Labour councillor for Bynea from 1995 until de-selected by the Labour Party prior to the 2004 election. He then chose to contest Llwynhendy alongside sitting Independent councillor Don Davies, who had himself been de-selected by Labour prior to the 1999 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176964-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Carmarthenshire County Council election, Results, Pontyberem (one seat)\nJoy Williams captured the seat for Plaid Cymru at a by-election following the death of the previous Independent Labour councillor, Ieuan Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176965-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Challenge Cup\nThe 2004 Carolina Challenge Cup was the first staging of the Carolina Challenge Cup, a preseason soccer tournament co-hosted by USL A-League side, Charleston Battery and USL Pro Soccer League club Wilmington Hammerheads. Held from March 20\u2013March 28, the Cup featured two Major League Soccer clubs, one USL Pro Soccer League club, and one USL A-League club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176965-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Challenge Cup\nColumbus Crew of MLS won the inaugural tournament on goal differential over D.C. United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176966-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400\nThe 2004 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 was the 5th stock car race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season and the 49th iteration of the event. The race was held before a crowd of 56,000 on March 21, 2004 at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports would win the race, leading 69 laps. Bobby Labonte of Joe Gibbs Racing and Ryan Newman of Penske-Jasper Racing would take 2nd and 3rd, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176966-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400\nThe race would be the last spring Darlington race until 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic forced NASCAR to race at Darlington in the spring, as the Ferko lawsuit would move the second race that Darlington originally had, the Southern 500, to Texas Motor Speedway for a promised second date to Texas. The Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 would therefore move to the fall and be lengthened to 500 miles, making the race the new Southern 500. In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic would make NASCAR race once again at Darlington in the spring, and in 2021 after rekindled fan interest, would announce that Darlington would once again get its spring 400-mile race, this time called the Goodyear 400.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176966-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400, Qualifying\nQualifying took place on March 19, 2004. Kasey Kahne would win the pole with a 28.638 second lap, with an average speed of 171.716 miles per hour (276.350\u00a0km/h). Meanwhile, Michael Waltrip, driver of the #15 Dale Earnhardt, Inc. Chevrolet would not set a time, due to Waltrip scrubbing the wall in Turn 2. Instead of completing a lap, Waltrip would take a provisional and qualify 39th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176966-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400, Qualifying\nStanton Barrett of W. W. Motorsports would be the only driver not to qualify due to the provisional system set in place by NASCAR at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176966-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Dodge Dealers 400, Race, Pre-race ceremonies\nPre -race ceremonies would start with Darlington Raceway chaplain Harold King giving out the invocation. The contemporary Christian music group NewSong would sing the national anthem, with the 108th Squadron of the United States Navy Strike Force from Virginia Beach, Virginia performing the flyover. Five members of the Carolina Dodge Dealers Association would give the starting command.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176967-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Carolina Panthers season\nThe 2004 Carolina Panthers season was the franchise's 10th season in the National Football League and the 3rd under head coach John Fox. It was also the team's 8th season at Bank of America Stadium. They failed to improve upon their record in 2003, a year when they finished the regular season 11\u20135 and ultimately fell 29\u201332 in Super Bowl XXXVIII to the New England Patriots and they finished 7\u20139. Their collapse to a 1\u20137 record start was because of key injuries to their starters including wide receiver Steve Smith Sr., through the first eight games. Despite their late-season rally, they failed to make the playoffs since 2002. They would suffer another collapse in 2016 to a 6\u201310 record that year after appearing in Super Bowl 50 the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176968-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Castle Point Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Castle Point Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Castle Point Borough Council in Essex, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176968-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Castle Point Borough Council election, Background\nBefore the election the Conservatives controlled the council with 39 councillors, while both Labour and the Canvey Island Independent Party had 1 seat. The Canvey Island Independent Party had been formed by ex-Labour councillor Dave Blackwell after he quit Labour in January 2004. The party wanted Canvey Island to have its own council and police division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176968-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Castle Point Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives remained in control of the council, but lost 4 seats to the Canvey Island Independent Party. This reduced the Conservatives to 35 councillors, while the Canvey Island Independent Party became the only opposition on the council with 6 seats. The Canvey Island Independent Party won all 5 seats they had contested including defeating the only Labour councillor Terry Blackwell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176969-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 11\u201313 June 2004 at the Circuit de Catalunya located in Montmel\u00f3, Catalonia, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176969-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix\nThis race saw the last non-factory rider to lead the championship before Cal Crutchlow in the 2018 Argentine Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176969-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round five has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season\nThe 2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season is the 57th season of Colombia's top-flight football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Apertura\nThe Campeonato Apertura (officially the 2004 Copa Mustang I for sponsorship reasons) was the first tournament of the season. It began on February 1 and ended on May 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Apertura, First stage, Standings\nPts=Puntos; GP=Games Played; W=Wins; D=Draw; L=Lost; GF=Goals Favored; GA=Goals Allowed; DIF=Difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Apertura, Semifinals\nThe second phase of the 2005-I tournament consisted of two groups of 4 teams semifinals. This was disputed by the best eight teams from the first phase of the tournament. the winners of each group will face on the finals to define a champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Finalizaci\u00f3n\nThe Campeonato Finalizaci\u00f3n (officially the 2004 Copa Mustang II for sponsorship reasons) was the second tournament of the season. It began on August 1 and ended on December 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Finalizaci\u00f3n, First phase, Standings\nPts=Puntos; GP=Games Played; W=Wins; D=Draw; L=Lost; GF=Goals Favored; GA=Goals Allowed; DIF=Difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176970-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Finalizaci\u00f3n, Semifinals\nThe second phase of the 2005-I tournament consisted of two groups of 4 teams semifinals. This was disputed by the best eight teams from the first phase of the tournament. the winners of each group will face on the finals to define a champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176971-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cavan County Council election\nAn election to Cavan County Council took place on 5 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 25 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176972-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cebu City local elections\nLocal elections were held in Cebu City on May 10, 2004 within the Philippine general election. Registered voters of the city elected candidates for the following elective local posts: mayor, vice mayor, district representative, and eight councilors at-large for each district. There are two legislative districts in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176973-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Doubles\nAkiko Morigami and Saori Obata were the defending champions, but Obata decided to compete in Hyderabad that week. Morigami teamed up with Alina Jidkova and lost in the first round to Gisela Dulko and Patricia Tarabini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176973-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Doubles\n\u00c5sa Svensson and Meilen Tu won the title by defeating Maria Sharapova and Vera Zvonareva 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20130) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176974-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Singles\nLisa Raymond was the defending champion, but lost in the final to Vera Zvonareva. The score was 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176974-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176975-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Central African constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in the Central African Republic on 5 December 2004. The new constitution would change the system of government from presidential to semi-presidential, as well as putting a limit of two terms on the President. It was approved by 91.37% of voters with a 77.1% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176976-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Championships in Athletics\nThe 16th Central American Championships in Athletics were held at the Estadio de Atletismo del Instituto Nicarag\u00fcense de Deportes in Managua, Nicaragua, between September 25\u201326, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176976-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Championships in Athletics\nA total of 42 events were contested, 22 by men and 20 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176976-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Championships in Athletics, Participation\nA total of 183 athletes from 7 countries were reported to participate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176976-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Championships in Athletics, Medal table (unofficial), Note\n\u2020: There is a slight difference in silver medals between a published medal table and the unofficial medal count above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 80], "content_span": [81, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176977-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics\nThe 2004 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics were held at the Estadio Nacional in San Jos\u00e9, Costa Rica, between June 11\u201312, 2004. Organized by the Central American Isthmus Athletic Confederation (CADICA), it was the 17th edition of the Junior (U-20) and the 12th edition of the Youth (U-18) competition. A total of 84 events were contested, 43 by boys and 41 by girls. Overall winner on points was \u00a0Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176977-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nComplete results can be found on the CADICA, the CACAC, and on the AthletismoCR.com webpages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176977-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Team trophies\nThe placing table for team trophy awarded to the 1st place overall team (boys and girls categories) was published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176977-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Participation\nA total number of 279 athletes and officials were reported to participate in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics\nThe 16th Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships were held in the Estadio Rafael Hern\u00e1ndez Ochoa in Coatzacoalcos, Veracruz, Mexico, between 25\u201327 June 2004. The games were originally planned to be held in San Salvador, El Salvador. However, they were relocated to the state of Veracruz in Mexico in early 2004. Both cities of Xalapa and Coatzacoalcos were applicants. A discussion of the results is given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Records\n1): A new (junior implement) hammer of 6\u00a0kg was used for the first time at the championships. Therefore, the mark of 59.03m is naturally a new championship record. However, Yosmel Montes from Cuba threw the hammer 65.88m using the (senior implement) 7.257\u00a0kg hammer during the 1996 championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Records\n2): The result of 14.91s in 110m hurdles was reported as wind-assisted (2.7\u00a0m/s).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Records\nMoreover, there were a couple of further results marked as championship records. However, they might be disputable as discussed below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Records\n3): Citlalli Huerta from Mexico jumped 3.70m during the 2002 championships (marked as \"Exhibition\").", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Records\n4): Violeta Guzm\u00e1n of Mexico threw the hammer (4\u00a0kg as in this competition) 51.46m during the 1996 championships. The event was not held during the last championships in 2002, which might explain the mismatch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Records\n5): Erik Corral of Mexico jumped 4.20m during the 1998 championships. Again, the event was not held during the last championships in 2002, which might explain the mismatch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 78], "content_span": [79, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Placing table\nThe placing table for team trophydistributed to the 1st place overall team (men and womencategories) was published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 84], "content_span": [85, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176978-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Central American and Caribbean Junior Championships in Athletics, Participation (unofficial)\nDetailed result lists can be found on the World Junior Athletics History website. An unofficial count yields a number of about 411 athletes (223 junior (under-20) and 188 youth (under-17)) from about 21 countries:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [71, 97], "content_span": [98, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176979-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Central Michigan Chippewas football team\nThe 2004 Central Michigan Chippewas football team represented Central Michigan University in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their first season under head coach Brian Kelly, the Chippewas compiled a 4\u20137 record (3\u20135 against MAC opponents), finished in fifth place in the MAC's West Division, and were outscored by their opponents, 378 to 260. The team played its home games in Kelly/Shorts Stadium in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, with attendance of 75,216 in five home games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176979-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Central Michigan Chippewas football team\nThe team's statistical leaders included Kent Smith with 2,284 passing yards, Jerry Seymour with 1,284 rushing yards, and Damien Linson with 574 receiving yards. Tailback Jerry Seymour was selected at the end of the 2004 season as the team's most valuable player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176979-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Central Michigan Chippewas football team\nBrian Kelly was introduced as Central Michigan's head football coach on January 2, 2004. He had served as the head football coach at Grand Valley State University for 13 years, compiling a 118-35-2 record and leading his Lakers football teams to NCAA Division II national championships in both 2002 and 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176980-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Centre regional election\nA regional election took place in the former region of Centre (now Centre-Val de Loire) on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Michel Sapin (PS) was re-elected President of the Council (from 1998 to 2000 and from 2004 to 2007).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176981-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Centrix Financial Grand Prix of Denver\nThe 2004 Centrix Financial Grand Prix of Denver was the ninth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on August 15, 2004 on the streets of Denver, Colorado near the Pepsi Center. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais swept the pole and the race win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176982-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Centrobasket\nThis page shows the results of the 2004 Men's Central American and Caribbean Basketball Championship, also known as the 2004 Centrobasket, which was held in the city of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic from July 7 to July 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176982-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Centrobasket, Final ranking\n1. Dominican Republic2. Puerto Rico3. Panama4. Mexico5. Cuba6. Barbados7. Antigua and Barbuda8. Guatemala", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176983-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Centrobasket Women\nThis page shows the results of the 2004 Centrobasket Championship for Women, which was held in the city of Guatemala City, Guatemala from July 27 to July 31, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176984-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ceredigion County Council election\nAn election to Ceredigion County Council was held on 10 June 2004 on the same day of the European Elections. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176984-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ceredigion County Council election\nThe whole council was up for election and following boundary changes the number of seats was reduced to 42. The council remained in a situation of No Overall Control following Plaid Cymru gains at the expense of the Independents. The Independents formed a coalition administration following the previous county council election in May 1999, being largest group on the council along with the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176984-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ceredigion County Council election, Election results: overview\nSixteen members of the original Council elected in 1995 were again returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176984-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ceredigion County Council election, Election results: overview\nThree of the elected Independent councilors, namely Gethin James (Aberporth), Ray Quant (Borth) and Haydn Lewis (Penparc) were non-party Independents, in that they did not sit as members of the Independent group of councilors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176984-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ceredigion County Council election, Election results: overview\n1Cymraeg/Welsh was the label used by independent councillor John Ivor Williams. In 1999, and again in 2008, he ran with the label Independent. 2Llais Aberaeron UDP Reject was the label used by Mary Elizabeth Davies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176984-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ceredigion County Council election, Ward Results, Llanfarian (one seat)\nAlun Lloyd Jones had left the Plaid Cymru group and joined the Independents after the 1999 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176985-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nThe 2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt was an attempted coup d'\u00e9tat against the Chadian President Idriss D\u00e9by that was foiled on the night of May 16, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176985-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Plot\nThe coup attempt was at first presented by the government as a fairly contained military mutiny over pay and conditions of service, with the Information Minister Moktar Wawadajab assuring the BBC that the mutiny had ended without a shot being fired, and that no-one was killed or injured. While the rebellion was rapidly quelled by loyalist forces after a brief exchange of fire, and the about 80 rebels and their ringleader, the army Colonel Bechir Haggar, were arrested, the President later admitted the seriousness of what had happened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176985-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Plot\nIn a televised address to the nation on May 18 D\u00e9by confirmed that elements of the GNNT and of the Presidential Guard had made an attempt on his life: \"A group of fanatic and manipulated officers tried to disrupt the functioning of republican institutions on the night of May 16 \u2026 Their hidden agenda was the assassination of the President.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 38], "content_span": [39, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176985-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Motivations\nThe possible reasons behind the failed coup are judged to be mainly two by observers. The first of these, and the most evident, is linked to the decision by D\u00e9by to search a third presidential mandate, modifying the Constitution with the help of the solid majority he could count on in the National Assembly; precisely in the day of the coup the necessary constitutional amendments were being rushed through the Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176985-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Motivations\nThis generated strong tensions in the inner circles of power, especially among the Zaghawa, D\u00e9by's ethnic group; and the coup saw the participation of senior Zaghawa officers, and important political allies of D\u00e9by were thought to have been involved, like Daoussa D\u00e9by, half-brother of the President, and the Erdimi twins, Tom and Timam, nephews of D\u00e9by. The suspicions regarding Daoussa D\u00e9by were to prove groundless, while on December 12, 2005 the Erdimi brothers were accused by the government of being the true masterminds behind the failed coup. The two were also to be the key architects in yet another coup d'\u00e9tat attempt that took place in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176985-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chadian coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Motivations\nAnother possible reason may be linked to D\u00e9by's foreign policy decisions regarding the Darfur conflict; in the conflict involving the Darfur rebels and the Sudan-supported Janjaweed, at the time D\u00e9by was attempting to maintain good relations with Sudan, a choice that made many Senior Chadian officers unhappy, many of whom were reportedly supporting the insurgents logistically, politically and financially. Relations with Sudan were to worsen dramatically the following year, leading to the Chadian-Sudanese conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176986-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Bell\nThe 2004 Challenge Bell was a tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the Club Avantage Multi-Sports in Quebec City in Canada that was part of Tier III of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 12th edition of the Challenge Bell, and was held from November 1 through November 7, 2004. Martina Such\u00e1 won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176986-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Bell, Champions, Doubles\nCarly Gullickson / Mar\u00eda Emilia Salerni def. Els Callens / Samantha Stosur, 7\u20135, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176987-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Bell \u2013 Doubles\nLi Ting and Sun Tiantian were the defending champions, but decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176987-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Bell \u2013 Doubles\nCarly Gullickson and Mar\u00eda Emilia Salerni won the title, defeating Els Callens and Samantha Stosur 7\u20135, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176988-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Bell \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sharapova was the defending champion, but decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176988-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Bell \u2013 Singles\nMartina Such\u00e1 won the title, defeating Abigail Spears 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176989-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Cup\nThe 2004 Challenge Cup, known as the Powergen Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 103rd staging of the Challenge Cup, a European rugby league cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176989-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Cup\nThe competition began in November 2003, and ended with the final in May 2004, which was played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff due to ongoing reconstruction work at Wembley Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176989-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Cup\nThe tournament was won by St. Helens, who beat Wigan Warriors 32\u201316 in the final. The Lance Todd Trophy was won by Sean Long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176989-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Cup, Final\nSt Helens: Paul Wellens, Ade Gardner, Martin Gleeson, Willie Talau, Darren Albert; Jason Hooper, Sean Long, Nick Fozzard, Keiron Cunningham, Keith Mason, Chris Joynt, Lee Gilmour, Paul Sculthorpe (c)Subs: Dominic Fe'aunati, Jon Wilkin, Ricky Bibey, Mark Edmondson Coach: Ian Millward", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176989-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Cup, Final\nWigan: Kris Radlinski, David Hodgson, Sean O'Loughlin, Kevin Brown, Brett Dallas, Danny Orr, Adrian Lam, Quentin Pongia, Terry Newton, Craig Smith, Danny Tickle, Gareth Hock, Andy Farrell (c)Subs: Stephen Wild, Mick Cassidy, Danny Sculthorpe, Terry O'Connor Coach: Mike Gregory", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176990-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Tour\nThe 2004 Challenge Tour was a series of golf tournaments known as the Challenge Tour, the official development tour run by the PGA European Tour. The tour was started as the Satellite Tour in 1986 and was renamed the Challenge Tour ready for the start of the 1990 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176990-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Tour\nThe Challenge Tour Rankings was won by England's Lee Slattery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176990-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Challenge Tour, Rankings\nThe top 15 on the Challenge Tour Rankings gained membership of the European Tour for the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176991-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car Grand Prix of Portland\nThe 2004 Champ Car Grand Prix of Portland was the fourth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on June 20, 2004 at Portland International Raceway in Portland, Oregon. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais took the pole and race win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season\nThe 2004 Champ Car World Series season was the 26th overall season in the CART/Champ Car genealogy, and the first under the ownership of Open-Wheel Racing Series (OWRS) as the Champ Car World Series. It began on April 18, 2004, and ended on November 7 after 14 races. For sponsorship purposes, it was branded as Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford. The Drivers' Champion was S\u00e9bastien Bourdais. The Rookie of the Year was A. J. Allmendinger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season\nThe open-wheel racing organization Championship Auto Racing Teams, Inc. had operated until 2003. After that year's season, CART declared bankruptcy and was liquidated in an Indianapolis courtroom in January 2004. Three team owners who had participated in the CART series, Gerald Forsythe, Kevin Kalkhoven, and Paul Gentilozzi, purchased CART's liquidated assets and resurrected it as Open-Wheel Racing Series for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season\nChamp Car races were broadcast on Spike TV. Also, high-definition live broadcasts were on HDNet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams\nThe Ford-Cosworth XFE, a 2.65 liter turbo V8 engine remained the exclusive power plant for the reorganized Champ Car series. Bridgestone remained the exclusive tire supplier as well. They also continued the marketing agreement that branded the series Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford. The following teams and drivers competed in the 2004 Champ Car season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams, From CART to Champ Car\nThe assets of the bankrupt Championship Auto Racing Teams, Inc. (CART) organization were awarded to Open-Wheel Racing Series, LLC in the Indianapolis courtroom of Judge Frank Otte on January 28, 2004. A bid from Indy Racing League owner Tony George was rejected because the former venders of CART would not have been paid, thus ensuring the split in American open-wheel racing would continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams, From CART to Champ Car\nDespite this victory, the OWRS partners, CART team owners Kevin Kalkhoven, Gerald Forsythe, and Paul Gentilozzi, would still have to work hard to get the 18 racecars they promised would be on track for the scheduled Grand Prix of Long Beach on April 18. Two CART teams founded in 2003, American Spirit Team Johansson and Fittipaldi-Dingman Racing, would not race in 2004, while U. E. \"Pat\" Patrick, one of the original founders of CART, sold off his CART team assets before starting a short-lived IRL effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 64], "content_span": [65, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams, Long Beach Season Premiere and its aftermath\nOn March 9 a \"Season Premiere\" promotional event was held in Long Beach, California, announcing 12 confirmed drivers and a 16 race schedule. However, just two days later on March 11, Adri\u00e1n Fern\u00e1ndez threw the plans for the season into serious doubt by announcing the one car team he had presented at Long Beach would not compete in the Champ Car series. He instead expanded his Indy Racing League team to two cars (even though the IRL season had already seen its first race). Another blow came a week later on March 18 when Bobby Rahal, onetime CEO of CART and 3 time series champion and who also presented a one car team in Long Beach, announced he would not compete in CART and would also run a two car IRL team like Fern\u00e1ndez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 86], "content_span": [87, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams, Champ Car makes it to Long Beach\nMomentum for Champ Car began to turn in the aftermath of Rahal's exit when his driver, Michel Jourdain Jr., announced that he and his sponsor, the Mexican supermarket Gigante would not follow Rahal to the IRL. Jourdain ended up driving for the new RuSPORT team, partnering with rookie A. J. Allmendinger. On March 20, Herdez Competition announced that Ryan Hunter-Reay would race a 2nd car for them. On March 24 Gerald Forsythe expanded his team from two cars to three, providing a seat for Patrick Carpentier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 74], "content_span": [75, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams, Champ Car makes it to Long Beach\nConquest Racing announced a two car team featuring ex-Formula One driver Justin Wilson on March 25, with Alex Sperafico filling the second seat two days later. Walker Racing's one car team announced on April 8 proved to be the final piece of the puzzle to get to the 18 car field promised by the Champ Car partners in January. Although his participation with two cars was already known, Dale Coyne waited until just before practice began for the Grand Prix of Long Beach to announce that his drivers would be Champ Car veterans Oriol Servi\u00e0 and Tarso Marques.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 74], "content_span": [75, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Season summary, Schedule\nO\u00a0 Oval/Speedway\u00a0R\u00a0 Dedicated road course\u00a0S\u00a0 Temporary street circuit", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Season summary, Schedule\nThe initial schedule announced by Champ Car at the Long Beach Season Premiere event included 16 races. One event that didn't make the final schedule was a race on a street circuit in Seoul, South Korea on October 17, a week before the Surfers Paradise race, but the race was cancelled on September 24 because of \"environmental issues\", two months after reports that government approval for a race near Seoul World Cup Stadium could not be arranged in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176992-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Champ Car season, Season summary, Schedule\nThe second was a \"TBA\" event that was scheduled to take place somewhere in the United States after the Gran Premio Telmex/Tecate in Mexico City and never materialized. A second TBA event on the initial schedule became the Bridgestone 400 on September 25 at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, which was announced on July 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176993-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Champagne-Ardenne regional election\nA regional election took place in Champagne-Ardenne on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Jean-Paul Bachy (PS) was elected President, defeating incumbent Jean-Claude Etienne (UMP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176994-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Champion Hurdle\nThe 2004 Champion Hurdle was a horse race held at Cheltenham Racecourse on Tuesday 16 March 2004. It was the 74th running of the Champion Hurdle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176994-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Champion Hurdle\nThe race was won by Laurence Byrne's Hardy Eustace, a seven-year-old gelding trained in Ireland by Dessie Hughes and ridden by Conor O'Dwyer. His victory was the first in the race for his owner, trainer and jockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176994-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Champion Hurdle\nHardy Eustace started a 33/1 outsider and led throughout to win by five lengths from Rooster Booster who had won the race in the previous year, with Intersky Falcon in third. Thirteen of the fourteen runners completed the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176995-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Champions Tour\nThe 2004 Champions Tour was the 25th season for the golf tour now known as PGA Tour Champions since it officially began in 1980 as the Senior PGA Tour. The season consisted of 30 official money events with purses totalling $53,932,400, including five majors. Craig Stadler won the most tournaments, five. The tournament results, leaders, and award winners are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176995-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Champions Tour, Tournament results\nThe following table shows all the official money events for the 2004 season. \"Date\" is the ending date of the tournament. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names are the number of wins they had on the tour up to and including that event. Senior majors are shown in bold. Golfers winning on their Champions Tour debut are shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176996-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Champs Sports Bowl\nThe 2004 Champs Sports Bowl was the 15th edition of the college football bowl game and was played on December 21, 2004, featuring the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, and the Syracuse Orange. This was the first version of the bowl played under the Champs Sports moniker and 15th overall. Syracuse of the Big East was chosen because the Big 12 did not have enough bowl eligible teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176996-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Champs Sports Bowl, Game summary\nGeorgia Tech started the scoring with a 22-yard interception return for a touchdown, on the second play of scrimmage, giving Georgia Tech the early 7\u20130 lead. Syracuse quarterback Perry Patterson scored on a 21-yard touchdown run cutting the lead to 7\u20136. Tech answered with a 10-yard touchdown pass from Reggie Ball to wide receiver Calvin Johnson, increasing Tech's lead to 14\u20136. Still in the first quarter, Reggie Ball threw an 80-yard touchdown pass to Nate Curry increasing the lead to 21\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176996-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Champs Sports Bowl, Game summary\nIn the second quarter PJ Daniels scored on a 5-yard touchdown run, increasing the lead to 28\u20136. Later in the quarter, Calvin Johnson scored on a 5 yard wide receiver reverse, increasing the lead to 35\u20136. That was the half-time score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176996-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Champs Sports Bowl, Game summary\nIn the third quarter, Reggie Ball rushed for an 11-yard touchdown to increase the lead to 42\u20136. PJ Daniels 1-yard touchdown run increased the lead to 49\u20136. Perry Patterson found Steve Gregory for a 25-yard touchdown pass. The 2-point conversion was successful making the score 49\u201314. A Georgia Tech safety made the final margin 51\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176996-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Champs Sports Bowl, Aftermath\nSyracuse did not reach another bowl game again until 2010. Georgia Tech reached five more in that time span, though they lost all of them. They did not win a bowl game again until 2012. Syracuse announced in 2011 that they would join Georgia Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference, no earlier than 2014. They joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176997-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Charlotte Sting season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the eighth season for the Charlotte Sting. The team fell short for the WNBA Playoffs for the first time in four years, falling a game short to the Washington Mystics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176997-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Charlotte Sting season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Sting's 2003 record, they would pick 9th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Sting picked Mery Andrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176998-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chase for the Nextel Cup\nThe 2004 Chase for the Nextel Cup served as the premiere ten-race playoff series among the top ten drivers in the NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. After the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 on September 11, 2004, the ten drivers atop the standings were locked into the playoff. Kurt Busch won the driver's championship for the first time in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176998-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Notes\n1\u00a0\u2013 Jeff Gordon is the official owner of the No. 48, though his work in signing Johnson to Hendrick Motorsports, licensing of merchandising through Hendrick Gordon Licensing LLC, and holds minority interest in the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176998-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Notes\n2\u00a0\u2013 Mark Martin is the official owner of the No. 17 because of his work in signing Kenseth, and holds minority interest in that team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176998-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Notes\n3\u00a0\u2013 Georgetta Roush is Jack's mother, and the official owner of the No. 97.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176999-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chatham Cup\nThe 2004 Chatham Cup was the 77th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176999-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chatham Cup\nUp 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. In all, 133 teams took part in the competition. Different publications give different numbers for the rounds in the competition, with some showing two preliminary rounds followed by four rounds proper prior to quarter-finals, semi-finals and a final, and others showing one preliminary round followed by five rounds proper. The latter designations are used for the results below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176999-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chatham Cup\nExtra time played during the 2004 Chatham Cup used the golden goal rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176999-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chatham Cup\nOne surprise of the 2004 competition was the performance of Sunday league social team Internationale, who reached the last 32 of the competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176999-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Chatham Cup, The 2004 final\nThe final was the only Chatham Cup final to be decided by golden goal, with a Michele Zannoto goal in the 16th minute of extra time breaking the deadlock in favour of Miramar Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00176999-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Chatham Cup, The 2004 final\nThe Jack Batty Memorial Cup is awarded to the player adjudged to have made to most positive impact in the Chatham Cup final. The winner of the 2004 Jack Batty Memorial Cup was Tim Butterfield of Miramar Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177000-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chattanooga Mocs football team\nThe 2004 Chattanooga Mocs football team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Mocs were led by second-year head coach Rodney Allison and played their home games at Finley Stadium. They finished the season 2\u20139 overall and 2\u20135 in SoCon play to tied for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177001-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy\nThe 2004 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy was an English county cricket tournament, held between 28 August 2003 and 28 August 2004. The competition was won by Gloucestershire Gladiators who beat the Worcestershire Royals by 8 wickets at Lord's. This was the final year where only red balls and white clothing was used in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177001-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Format\nThe eighteen first-class counties, joined by 20 Minor Counties: Bedfordshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire, Cheshire, Cornwall, Cumberland, Devon, Dorset, Herefordshire, Hertfordshire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Northumberland, Oxfordshire, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Suffolk, Wales Minor Counties and Wiltshire. They were also joined the national teams of Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands and Scotland. Teams who won in the first round progressed to the second round. The 18 first class counties plus Berkshire, Cambridgeshire, Staffordshire and Wiltshire joined in the second round. The winners in the second round then progressed third round. The winners in the third round progressed to the quarter-final stage. Winners from the quarter-finals then progressed to the semi-finals from which the winners then went on to the final at Lord's which was held on 28 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 930]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177002-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cheltenham Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Cheltenham Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Cheltenham Borough Council in Gloucestershire, England. Half of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrats lost overall control of the council to no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177003-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nThe 2004 Cheltenham Gold Cup was a horse race which took place at Cheltenham on Thursday, 18 March 2004. It was the 76th running of the Cheltenham Gold Cup, and it was won by the pre-race favourite Best Mate. The winner was ridden by Jim Culloty and trained by Henrietta Knight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177003-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nWith his third successive Gold Cup victory Best Mate became the fourth horse to win the race three times or more, and he was the first triple-winner since Arkle in the mid-1960s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177003-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cheltenham Gold Cup, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter. PU = pulled-up.\u2020 Trainers are based in Great Britain unless indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177004-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chennai Open\nThe 2004 Chennai Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the SDAT Tennis Stadium in Chennai in India and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 5 January through 11 January 2004. Carlos Moy\u00e1 won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177004-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chennai Open, Finals, Doubles\nRafael Nadal / Tommy Robredo defeated Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram 7\u20136(7\u20133), 4\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177005-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chennai Open \u2013 Doubles\nJulian Knowle and Michael Kohlmann were the defending champions but lost in the quarterfinals to Mariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177005-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chennai Open \u2013 Doubles\nRafael Nadal and Tommy Robredo won in the final 7\u20136(7\u20133), 4\u20136, 6\u20133 against Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177006-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chennai Open \u2013 Singles\nParadorn Srichaphan was the defending champion but lost in the final 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20135) against Carlos Moy\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177007-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cherwell District Council election\nThe 2004 Cherwell District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Cherwell District Council in Oxfordshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season\nThe 2004 season was the Chicago Bears's 85th season in the National Football League. The team failed to improve on their 7\u20139 record as they fell to a 5\u201311 record, under first-year head coach Lovie Smith. The team was once again in a quarterbacking carousel after the injury of starter Rex Grossman early on in the season. This was the team's eighth losing season in the past nine seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season\nAccording to statistics site Football Outsiders, the 2004 Bears had the third-worst offense, play-for-play, in their ranking history. Chicago's 231 points and 3,816 offensive yards were dead-last in the league in 2004. Their team quarterback passer rating was 61.7 for the year, also last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season\nThe Bears started four different quarterbacks in 2004 \u2013 Chad Hutchinson, Craig Krenzel, Jonathan Quinn, and Rex Grossman. Grossman (the only Bears quarterback who would average more than 200 yards passing per game in 2004) would eventually establish himself as the starter, and two seasons later, would lead the Bears to their second NFC Championship and an appearance in the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Preseason\nNOTE: The first and last pre-season games were broadcast on WMAQ-TV channel 5, but due to NBC's coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics, The second and third games were broadcast on WCIU-TV as WMAQ broadcast the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:38 \u2013 Thomas Jones 2 yd TD run (Paul Edinger kick) (CHI 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ2 \u2013 DET \u2013 0:16 \u2013 Jason Hanson 27 yd FG (CHI 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ3 \u2013 DET \u2013 12:17 \u2013 Bracy Walker 92 yd blocked FG return TD (Hanson kick) (DET 10\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ3 \u2013 DET \u2013 7:37 \u2013 Jason Hanson 21 yd FG (DET 13\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 12:40 \u2013 Thomas Jones 2 yd TD run (Edinger kick) (CHI 14\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ4 \u2013 DET \u2013 9:54 \u2013 4 yd TD pass from Joey Harrington to Az-Zahir Hakim (Hanson kick) (DET 20\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 1: vs Detroit Lions, Scoring Summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 1:53 \u2013 Safety, Nick Harris ran out of bounds in own end zone (DET 20\u201316)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 8:08 \u2013 Paul Edinger 34 yd FG (CHI 3\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:41 \u2013 Paul Edinger 23 yd FG (CHI 6\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 MIN \u2013 8:57 \u2013 3 yd TD pass from Daunte Culpepper to Randy Moss (Morten Andersen kick) (MIN 7\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 MIN \u2013 5:09 \u2013 Morten Andersen 42 yd FG (MIN 10\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 MIN \u2013 10:58 \u2013 Daunte Culpepper 1 yd TD run (Andersen kick) (MIN 17\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 14:46 \u2013 Paul Edinger 32 yd FG (MIN 17\u20139)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 MIN \u2013 11:20 \u2013 Morten Andersen 24 yd FG (MIN 20\u20139)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 6:20 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1 yd TD run (2 pt conversion failed) (MIN 20\u201315)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 MIN \u2013 5:39 \u2013 2 yd TD pass from Daunte Culpepper to Randy Moss (Andersen kick) (MIN 27\u201315)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 3: at Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 2:00 \u2013 Rex Grossman 6 yd TD run (Edinger kick) (MIN 27\u201322)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 PHI \u2013 5:00 \u2013 David Akers 51 yd FG (PHI 3\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 PHI \u2013 10:59 \u2013 David Akers 42 yd FG (PHI 6\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 PHI \u2013 6:03 \u2013 11 yd TD pass from Donovan McNabb to Terrell Owens (Akers kick) (PHI 13\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 PHI \u2013 1:57 \u2013 David Akers 42 yd FG (PHI 16\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:06 \u2013 Paul Edinger 25 yd FG (PHI 16\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 PHI \u2013 4:41 \u2013 David Akers 40 yd FG (PHI 19\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 4: vs Philadelphia Eagles, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:57 \u2013 2 yd TD pass from Jonathan Quinn to Bryan Johnson (2 pt conversion failed) (PHI 19\u20139)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 6: vs Washington Redskins, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 WAS \u2013 5:41 \u2013 Ola Kimrin 41 yd FG (WAS 3\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 6: vs Washington Redskins, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 WAS \u2013 14:53 \u2013 18 yd TD pass from Mark Brunell to Rod Gardner (Kimrin kick) (WAS 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 6: vs Washington Redskins, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:36 \u2013 Jerry Azumah 70 yd interception return TD (Paul Edinger kick) (WAS 10\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 6: vs Washington Redskins, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 WAS \u2013 11:13 \u2013 Ola Kimrin 26 yd FG (WAS 13\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 6: vs Washington Redskins, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:10 \u2013 Paul Edinger 46 yd FG (WAS 13\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 7: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 TB \u2013 13:25 \u2013 Mart\u00edn Gram\u00e1tica 22 yd FG (TB 3\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 7: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 TB \u2013 0:48 \u2013 6 yd TD pass from Brian Griese to Michael Clayton (Gram\u00e1tica kick) (TB 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 7: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 TB \u2013 12:23 \u2013 Mart\u00edn Gram\u00e1tica 22 yd FG (TB 13\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 7: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:45 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1 yd TD run (Paul Edinger kick) (TB 13\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 7: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 TB \u2013 8:52 \u2013 Michael Pittman 3 yd TD run (2 pt conversion failed) (TB 19\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:01 \u2013 49 yd TD pass from Craig Krenzel to Bernard Berrian (Paul Edinger kick) (CHI 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 SF \u2013 5:26 \u2013 Dwaine Carpenter 80 yd fumble return TD (Todd Peterson kick) (7\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 SF \u2013 0:40 \u2013 Todd Peterson 48 yd FG (SF 10\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:27 \u2013 Paul Edinger 52 yd FG (10\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 SF \u2013 6:20 \u2013 Todd Peterson 51 yd FG (SF 13\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 4:35 \u2013 Paul Edinger 45 yd FG (13\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:59 \u2013 Paul Edinger 27 yd FG (CHI 16\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 8: vs San Francisco 49ers, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:52 \u2013 Nathan Vasher 71 yd interception return TD (Edinger kick) (CHI 23\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 NYG \u2013 8:03 \u2013 Tiki Barber 3 yd TD run (Steve Christie kick) (NYG 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 NYG \u2013 3:54 \u2013 Tiki Barber 1 yd TD run (Christie kick) (NYG 14\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:13 \u2013 35 yd TD pass from Craig Krenzel to Bernard Berrian (Paul Edinger kick) (NYG 14\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 2:35 \u2013 Anthony Thomas 4 yd TD run (Edinger kick) (14\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 1:09 \u2013 Paul Edinger 22 yd FG (CHI 17\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:00 \u2013 Paul Edinger 21 yd FG (CHI 20\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:44 \u2013 Anthony Thomas 41 yd TD run (Craig Krenzel run for 2 pt conversion) (CHI 28\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 9: at New York Giants, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 NYG \u2013 1:56 \u2013 1 yd TD pass from Kurt Warner to Jeremy Shockey (Christie kick) (CHI 28\u201321)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 TEN \u2013 2:17 \u2013 29 yd TD pass from Billy Volek to Derrick Mason (Gary Anderson kick) (TEN 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:18 \u2013 Michael Haynes 45 yd interception return TD (Paul Edinger kick) (7\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 11:04 \u2013 R. W. McQuarters 75 yd punt return TD (Edinger kick) (CHI 14\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 TEN \u2013 12:55 \u2013 Gary Anderson 33 yd FG (CHI 14\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 TEN \u2013 6:00 \u2013 47 yd TD pass from Billy Volek to Drew Bennett (Anderson kick) (TEN 17\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:52 \u2013 Paul Edinger 29 yd FG (17\u201317)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 10: at Tennessee Titans, Scoring summary\nOT \u2013 CHI \u2013 11:43 \u2013 Safety, Fred Miller tackled in own end zone by Adewale Ogunleye (CHI 19\u201317)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 IND \u2013 9:05 \u2013 14 yd TD pass from Peyton Manning to Marcus Pollard (Mike Vanderjagt kick) (IND 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 2:12 \u2013 Paul Edinger 51 yd FG (IND 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 IND \u2013 14:04 \u2013 35 yd TD pass from Peyton Manning to Reggie Wayne (Vanderjagt kick) (IND 14\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 IND \u2013 10:56 \u2013 Mike Vanderjagt 34 yd FG (IND 17\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 IND \u2013 5:41 \u2013 10 yd TD pass from Peyton Manning to Marvin Harrison (Vanderjagt kick) (IND 24\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 IND \u2013 0:59 \u2013 Mike Vanderjagt 20 yd FG (IND 27\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 IND \u2013 8:26 \u2013 27 yd TD pass from Peyton Manning to Reggie Wayne (Vanderjagt kick) (IND 34\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 IND \u2013 0:42 \u2013 Edgerrin James 11 yd TD run (Vanderjagt kick) (IND 41\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 11: vs Indianapolis Colts, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 1:37 \u2013 2 yd TD pass from Craig Krenzel to Dustin Lyman (Edinger kick) (IND 41\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 90], "content_span": [91, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 DAL \u2013 10:43 \u2013 Julius Jones 33 yd TD run (Billy Cundiff kick) (DAL 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:57 \u2013 R. W. McQuarters 45 yd interception return TD (Paul Edinger kick) (7\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 DAL \u2013 11:07 \u2013 5 yd TD pass from Vinny Testaverde to Darian Barnes (Cundiff kick) (DAL 14\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 12: at Dallas Cowboys, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 DAL \u2013 7:00 \u2013 Julius Jones 4 yd TD run (Cundiff kick) (DAL 21\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 13: vs Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 4:47 \u2013 6 yd TD pass from Chad Hutchinson to Desmond Clark (Paul Edinger kick) (CHI 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 13: vs Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 MIN \u2013 1:19 \u2013 4 yd TD pass from Daunte Culpepper to Nate Burleson (Morten Andersen kick) (7\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 13: vs Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 11:22 \u2013 Paul Edinger 53 yd FG (CHI 10\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 13: vs Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 MIN \u2013 2:23 \u2013 40 yd TD pass from Daunte Culpepper to Marcus Robinson (Andersen kick) (MIN 14\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 13: vs Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:22 \u2013 15 yd TD pass from Chad Hutchinson to David Terrell (Edinger kick) (CHI 17\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 13: vs Minnesota Vikings, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 10:23 \u2013 5 yd TD pass from Chad Hutchinson to Jason McKie (Edinger kick) (CHI 24\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 JAX \u2013 3:18 \u2013 6 yd TD pass from Byron Leftwich to Reggie Williams (Josh Scobee kick) (JAX 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 1:44 \u2013 Paul Edinger 42 yd FG (JAX 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 JAX \u2013 0:31 \u2013 Josh Scobee 30 yd FG (JAX 10\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 JAX \u2013 5:36 \u2013 Josh Scobee 25 yd FG (JAX 13\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 JAX \u2013 13:48 \u2013 Safety, Chad Hutchinson sacked in own end zone by Daryl Smith (JAX 15\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 14: at Jacksonville Jaguars, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 JAX \u2013 9:26 \u2013 31 yd TD pass from Byron Leftwich to Jimmy Smith (Scobee kick) (JAX 22\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 92], "content_span": [93, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 15: vs Houston Texans, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 HOU \u2013 0:27 \u2013 37 yd TD pass from David Carr to Corey Bradford (Kris Brown kick) (HOU 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 15: vs Houston Texans, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 4:06 \u2013 Safety, intentional grounding by David Carr in own end zone (HOU 7\u20132)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 15: vs Houston Texans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 14:09 \u2013 Paul Edinger 43 yd FG (HOU 7\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0089-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 15: vs Houston Texans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 HOU \u2013 11:37 \u2013 Kris Brown 20 yd FG (HOU 10\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0090-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 15: vs Houston Texans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 HOU \u2013 4:23 \u2013 Domanick Davis 11 yd TD run (Brown kick) (HOU 17\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0091-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 15: vs Houston Texans, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 HOU \u2013 2:37 \u2013 Charlie Anderson 60 yd fumble return TD (Brown kick) (HOU 24\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0092-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 DET \u2013 3:06 \u2013 Jason Hanson 31 yd FG (DET 3\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0093-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 DET \u2013 11:30 \u2013 Kevin Jones 1 yd TD run (Hanson kick) (DET 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0094-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 DET \u2013 5:50 \u2013 Jason Hanson 39 yd FG (DET 13\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0095-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 DET \u2013 0:00 \u2013 Jason Hanson 34 yd FG (DET 16\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0096-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:40 \u2013 Lance Briggs 38 yd interception return TD (2 pt conversion failed) (DET 16\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0097-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 DET \u2013 11:29 \u2013 Jason Hanson 40 yd FG (DET 19\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0098-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 16: at Detroit Lions, Scoring summary\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:04 \u2013 15 yd TD pass from Chad Hutchinson to Jason McKie (Paul Edinger kick) (DET 19\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0099-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 12:54 \u2013 Thomas Jones 2 yd TD run (Paul Edinger kick) (CHI 7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0100-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ1 \u2013 GB \u2013 3:22 \u2013 17 yd TD pass from Brett Favre to Bubba Franks (Ryan Longwell kick) (7\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0101-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 GB \u2013 13:16 \u2013 38 yd TD pass from Brett Favre to William Henderson (Longwell kick) (GB 14\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0102-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 GB \u2013 11:52 \u2013 Darren Sharper 43 yd interception return TD (Longwell kick) (GB 21\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0103-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ2 \u2013 GB \u2013 6:14 \u2013 25 yd TD pass from Craig Nall to Javon Walker (Longwell kick) (GB 28\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0104-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:48 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1 yd TD run (Edinger kick) (GB 28\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177008-0105-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Bears season, Regular season, Week 17: vs Green Bay Packers, Scoring summary\nQ3 \u2013 GB \u2013 0:41 \u2013 Ryan Longwell 20 yd FG (GB 31\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season\nThe 2004 Chicago Cubs season was the 133rd season of the Chicago Cubs franchise, the 129th in the National League and the 89th at Wrigley Field. The Cubs finished 89-73, good for 3rd in the NL Central. Despite the strong record, the Cubs faltered down the stretch and did not make the playoffs. The season is largely viewed as a disappointment as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Regular season\nIn 2004, despite the return of Greg Maddux and a midseason deal for Nomar Garciaparra, misfortune struck the Cubs again. They led the Wild Card by 1.5 games over San Francisco and Houston on September 25, and both of those teams lost that day, giving the Northsiders a chance at increasing the lead to a commanding 2.5 games with only eight games remaining in the season, but reliever LaTroy Hawkins blew a save to the Mets, allowing a three-run game-tying home run with two outs in the ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Regular season\nThe Cubs lost the game in extra innings, a defeat that seemingly deflated the team, as they proceeded to drop 6 of their last 8 games, including back-to-back 12 inning games to the lowly Cincinnati Reds at home, as the Astros won the Wild Card. Despite the fact that the Cubs had won 89 games, this fallout was decidedly unlovable, as the Cubs traded superstar Sammy Sosa after he had left the season's final game early.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177009-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177010-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago Marathon\nThe 2004 Chicago Marathon was the 27th running of the annual marathon race in Chicago, United States and was held on October 10. The elite men's race was won by Kenya's Evans Rutto in a time of 2:06:44 hours and the women's race was won by Romania's Constantina Di\u021b\u0103 in 2:23:44.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177011-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago White Sox season\nThe 2004 Chicago White Sox season was the White Sox's 105th season, and their 104th season in Major League Baseball. They finished with a record 83-79, good enough for 2nd place in the American League Central, 9 games behind the champion Minnesota Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177011-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago White Sox season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Base on balls; SO = Strikeouts; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177011-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chicago White Sox season, Player stats, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177012-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chihuahua state election\nThe Mexican state of Chihuahua held an election on Sunday, 4 July 2004. At stake was the office of the Chihuahua State Governor, all 33 members of the unicameral Chihuahua State Congress, and 67 mayors and municipal councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177012-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chihuahua state election\nTurnout was around 46% of the 2,254,234 chihuahuenses eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177012-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chihuahua state election, Governor\nAt the time of the election, the sitting governor was Patricio Mart\u00ednez Garc\u00eda of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177012-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chihuahua state election, Governor\nAt the close of voting, exit polls were indicating a victory for Jos\u00e9 Reyes Baeza of a PRI-led alliance with a lead of ten percentage points. As the count progressed, Javier Corral Jurado of the PAN \u2013 representing an unusual alliance of his party and the left-leaning PRD \u2013 conceded the election at around 23h00 local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177012-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Chihuahua state election, Municipalities\nPreliminary results indicated the state's 67 municipalities would be divided as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177012-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Chihuahua state election, Municipalities\nThe PAN/PRD alliance won a closely fought mayoral race in state capital Chihuahua, previously governed by the PRI. In a give-and-take action between the state's two largest cities, borderland industrial and commercial powerhouse Ciudad Ju\u00e1rez fell to the PRI after 12 years of PAN rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177013-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chilean telethon\nThe 2004 Chilean telethon was the 19th Telet\u00f3n solidarity campaign held in Chile, on 3\u20134 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177013-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chilean telethon, News, A strong group\nOne of the many successes of the telethon was the large participation of a group of 15 well-known figures in Chile (led by former captain of the Chile national football team Iv\u00e1n Zamorano), who spent most of a day receiving donation phone calls from branches of Banco de Chile and from around the world, and during that period were very lively, singing, jumping, and encouraging all Chileans to join in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177014-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open (tennis)\nThe 2004 China Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It is the 6th edition of the China Open, and is part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour, and of the Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events are held at the Beijing Tennis Center in Beijing, People's Republic of China. The men's event took place from 13 to 19 September 2004, while the women's took place the following week from 20 to 26 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177014-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open (tennis)\nAdditionally, a mixed doubles tournament was held from 22 to 25 September 2004, although it counted only as an exhibition tournament and, therefore, no points were given for the ATP and WTA rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177014-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open (tennis), Finals, Men's Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob / Graydon Oliver defeated Alex Bogomolov, Jr. / Taylor Dent, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(8\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177014-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open (tennis), Finals, Women's Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi / Dinara Safina defeated Gisela Dulko / Mar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi, 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177014-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open (tennis), Finals, Mixed Doubles\nTripp Phillips / Emmanuelle Gagliardi defeated Justin Gimelstob / Jill Craybas, 6\u20131, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177015-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nThe event was being held for the first time since 1997. Mahesh Bhupathi and Leander Paes were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177015-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob and Graydon Oliver won the title, defeating Alex Bogomolov, Jr. and Taylor Dent 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(8\u20136) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177016-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe event was being held for the first time since 1997. Jim Courier was the last champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177016-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nMarat Safin won the title, beating Mikhail Youzhny 7\u20136(7\u20134), 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177017-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nIn order to commemorate the first joint edition since 1996, a mixed doubles tournament was held by combining female players of the WTA China Open and the male players of the ATP Beijing Challenger. The tournament had a prize money of USD $6,000, but as this was an exhibition tournament, no points were given for the ATP and WTA rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177017-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nMatches were played at best of three sets with a Match tie-break replacing the final set, in which a pair must win a 10-point tiebreaker (or by a two-point margin) to win the match. Match tie-breaks were not fully implemented until the 2006 season in official tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177017-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nTripp Phillips and Emmanuelle Gagliardi won the title by defeating Justin Gimelstob and Jill Craybas 6\u20131, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177018-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nThe tournament was moved from Shanghai to Beijing in 2004. Last champions in Shanghai were \u00c9milie Loit and Nicole Pratt. Pratt teamed up with Tamarine Tanasugarn but they were eliminated in semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177018-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi and Dinara Safina won the title by defeating Gisela Dulko and Mar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177019-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nElena Dementieva was the defending champion, but didn't participate in this competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177019-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams won in the final 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20134, against Svetlana Kuznetsova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177019-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177020-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese FA Cup\nThe Pabst Blue Ribbon 2004 Chinese FA Cup (Chinese: 2004\u84dd\u5e26\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u676f) was the 10th edition of Chinese FA Cup. The matches of first round were kicked off on 10 April 2004, and the final took place at Helong Stadium on 18 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177021-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Chinese Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Formula 1 Sinopec Chinese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 26 September 2004 at the Shanghai International Circuit. It was Race 16 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship and was the inaugural Chinese Grand Prix. The 56-lap race was won by Rubens Barrichello for the Ferrari team, from a pole position start. Jenson Button finished second for the BAR team, with Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen third in a McLaren. This was the first race back for Ralf Schumacher after injuries in the 2004 United States Grand Prix three months prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177021-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Grand Prix\nFollowing a clean start, Rubens Barrichello won the race with Jenson Button in second and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in third place. Michael Schumacher finished in 12th place after a race with several incidents, including a collision, a spin and a puncture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177021-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Grand Prix\nJarno Trulli missed this inaugural Grand Prix after he left the Renault team after the 2004 Italian Grand Prix due to his strained relationship with team boss, Flavio Briatore. This was the only Grand Prix race in 2004 that he missed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177021-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League\nThe 2004 Chinese Super League is the debut season of the establishment of the Chinese Football Association Super League (\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u8d85\u7ea7\u8054\u8d5b or \u4e2d\u8d85), also known as the Chinese Super League. Sponsored by Siemens Mobile it is the eleventh season of professional association football league and the 43rd top-tier league season in China. The premier football league in China under the auspices of the Chinese Football Association the season started on May 15 and ended December 4 where it was planned that no teams would be relegated at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League, Overview\nThe first Chinese Super League (CSL) season was greeted with great enthusiasm by the media and the FA, with the decision to create a new top tier league in China made in order to freshen up Chinese football. The previous ten seasons of the old Chinese first division had been successful and had improved the quality of play in China, however, the Chinese Football Association felt that a change was needed to give Chinese Football a further boost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League, Overview\nThe decision to create the Chinese Super League was made before the 2003 Chinese season and of the 15 First Division teams competing in the 2003 season, it was decided that 3 would be relegated with no promotion at all from the second tier league. The remaining 12 teams would compete in the inaugural Super League season, which saw Chongqing Lifan remain within the league despite being relegated after they merged with seventh place team Yunnan Hongta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League, Overview\nIt was planned that one team would be relegated with two teams to be promoted into the CSL at the end of the season but the relegation was cancelled halfway through and so for the second season the Super League had 14 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League, Controversy\nThere were many controversial events during the season including the discovery that some players were betting against their own teams and losing games deliberately. Some referees were also suspected of fixing matches by awarding dubious penalty kicks and handing out cards freely. The most notorious incidents happened during two matches, one game involving Beijing Hyundai and the other Dalian Shide. In their respective matches, the players were unhappy about the referee's decisions and they protested by abandoning the match halfway. The CFA took both incidents seriously and handed out punishments by docking points off the two guilty teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League, Upsets\nThe season produced one of the biggest upset in Chinese football history. Shenzhen Jianlibao, coached by Zhu Guanghu, was facing financial problems and owed its players several months of salary. However, motivated by their coach, they still managed to finish Champions and even more remarkably, their defence only conceded 13 goals in 22 matches, the least in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177022-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League, Upsets\nAnother team causing an upset at the wrong end of the table was Shanghai Shenhua who had been Champions in the previous season and during the 2004 season had played in the prestigious AFC Champions League. However, they played poorly in the 2004 season and finished 3rd from bottom, only 1 point above bottom placed team, Chongqing Lifan. If there had been relegation in the season, Shanghai would have found themselves battling against the drop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177023-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Super League Cup\nThe 2004 Chinese Super League Cup (Chinese: 2004\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u8d85\u7ea7\u8054\u8d5b\u676f) was the first edition of Chinese Super League Cup. Shandong Luneng Taishan won the title after beating Shenzhen Jianlibao 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177024-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese Taipei National Football League\nStatistics of Chinese Taipei National Football League in the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177025-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese lottery scandal\nIn 2004, a scandal occurred when one of four lottery tickets didn't go to a prearranged winner, resulting in the arrest of five people and several government officials being removed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177025-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Chinese lottery scandal\nThe Shaanxi Provincial Sports Lottery Centre refused to give the unexpected winner, Liu Liang, the prize of a new BMW, claiming that he held a fake lottery ticket. The court found that Yang Yongming, a contractor to the lottery company, had cheated on the four top prizes. The lottery center authorities declared that Liu's ticket was valid and apologized. The car was sold for 300,000 yuan, and Liu Liang retreated to a remote village on Qinling Mountain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177026-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chorley Borough Council election\nElections to Chorley Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177027-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Christchurch mayoral election\nThe 2004 Christchurch mayoral election was part of the 2004 New Zealand local elections. On 9 October of that year, elections were held for the Mayor of Christchurch plus other local government roles. Incumbent Garry Moore successfully contested a third term in office with a decisive majority. The second-placed candidate, Aaron Keown, received almost 50,000 fewer votes than Moore. Keown ran as an Independent, but contested the 2008 general election for ACT New Zealand, standing in the Waimakariri electorate. The third-placed candidate, Jamie Gough, was only 18 years old at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177027-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Christchurch mayoral election\nBoth Keown and Gough were elected Christchurch City Councillors at the 2010 local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177027-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Christchurch mayoral election, Voting statistics\nParticipation in local elections has been falling for years. In the 2004 local election, only 38.6% of registered voters cast their vote. The following table shows the voting statistics since the 1989 local elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177027-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Christchurch mayoral election, Voting statistics\nTable notes:1 Note that the number of voters reported in the summary report differs by 75 compared to the declaration of results of election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm\nThe 2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm was a rare weather event that took place in Louisiana and Texas in the United States on December 24, 2004, before the storm moved northeast to affect the coastal sections of the Mid-Atlantic states and New England in the succeeding few days. This was a different storm from the historic event that struck the Midwest and southern Canada around December 23 from another cyclone which preceded this storm. The event involved a thin band of snowfall with unusually cold temperatures for the middle Texas coast, and caused dozens of varied weather records to be shattered. It was the most significant snow for the Texas Gulf Coast, and deep South Texas, since February 1895.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Anticipation of the event\nThere had been indications for up to a week before the event that a frontal wave in the Gulf of Mexico was expected to track far enough to the south (along roughly the 26th parallel) to lead to snow along the Gulf of Mexico coastline of the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Synoptic history\nA surface cyclone formed in the western Gulf of Mexico on December 24 and December 28 due to a shortwave aloft, and moved eastward through the western Gulf of Mexico, bringing banded snowfall to the middle Texas coast. The extratropical cyclone moved east, then northeast, tracking across the northern peninsula of Florida early on December 26 before moving about 100\u00a0miles\u00a0(200\u00a0km) offshore the Southeast, paralleling the coast. Continuing to deepen, the developing storm moved about 200\u00a0miles\u00a0(300\u00a0km)\u00a0offshore the Mid-Atlantic states, New England, and Atlantic Canada on December 27 before moving out to sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Texas and Louisiana\nThe most noticeable, and unusual, event associated with the storm was the snowfall it produced. Much of the snow fell in southern Texas, along the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, but some snow, albeit less deep, fell across southwestern and southeastern Louisiana. Any snowfall in these areas is extremely unusual, perhaps occurring once every twenty years, and these events are usually airborne flurries which melt on contact with the ground. In many places the snow stuck to the ground and accumulated to an appreciable depth. In Brownsville, Texas, snow fell to a depth of 1.5 inches (3.8\u00a0cm), the first measurable snowfall at the city in years, since the Great Blizzard of 1899.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Texas and Louisiana\nThe fact that the snow accumulated overnight on Christmas Eve led to a White Christmas the next morning, something completely foreign to the region. Across all of southern Texas and in southwestern Louisiana, snow fell in places where it had not for anywhere from 15 to 120 years. Near the coast, in Corpus Christi, Texas, 5.2 inches (13\u00a0cm) of snow fell, more snow than in all previous recorded years combined. This was also the case in Victoria, Texas, where a significant 13.0 inches (33\u00a0cm) fell. New Orleans, Louisiana had its first white Christmas in 50 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Texas and Louisiana\nIn addition to the unusual occurrence of snow inland, moderate to heavy snow was also reported over the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico. This is the first significant snow fall in Houston since February 12, 1960, when a snowstorm hit central and south Texas with eight to 10\u00a0inches of snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Georgia and South Carolina\nAs the cyclone tracked through Florida offshore the Southeast, up to an inch of freezing rain and sleet fell at Augusta and Aiken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 82], "content_span": [83, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, North Carolina\nSeveral inches of snow fell across portions of the state, with the highest amount noted of 9.5 inches (24\u00a0cm) at Ahoskie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Virginia\nSeveral locations across the Tidewater reported over a foot of snow, with the highest amount of 14 inches (36\u00a0cm) reported at Quinby and Tabb. Frontogenesis (strengthening temperature gradient) within the comma head of the extratropical cyclone between the 500\u00a0hPa and 700\u00a0hPa layers (or 10-20\u00a0kft) contributed to the banded snow seen across this region. It led to the snowiest December across the Norfolk area since 1958.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Maryland\nLight to moderate snow fell on the Eastern Shore, with the highest amount of 4.5 inches (11\u00a0cm) measured at Shelltown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, New Jersey\nOn December 25, 2004, there was light to moderate snows fall across portions of the state, with the highest amount of 2 inches (5.1\u00a0cm) falling at Mount Holly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, New York\nSoutheastern sections of the state saw the snowfall. The highest amount reported was 8.7 inches (22\u00a0cm) at East Hampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Connecticut\nModerate to heavy snow fell across much of the state. The highest total reported was 7 inches (18\u00a0cm) at East Killingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Rhode Island\nHeavy snow fell statewide. The highest total was 8.2 inches (21\u00a0cm) at Tiverton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Massachusetts\nThe heaviest snowfall from the storm fell across Massachusetts. Brewster measured 18 inches (46\u00a0cm) during the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, New Hampshire\nCentral and southern sections of the state saw moderate to heavy snow. The highest amount was 9 inches (23\u00a0cm) at Salem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Vermont\nSnow fell across portions of the state during this storm, with 6 inches (15\u00a0cm) falling at a dairy farm in Franklin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177028-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Christmas Eve United States winter storm, Effects, Maine\nHeavy snow fell across portions of Maine. The highest amount reported was from Whiting where 13 inches (33\u00a0cm) was measured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177029-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Chrono des Herbiers\nThe 2004 Chrono des Herbiers was the 23rd edition of the Chrono des Nations cycle race and was held on 17 October 2004. The race started and finished in Les Herbiers. The race was won by Bert Roesems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177030-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Churchill Cup\nThe 2004 Churchill Cup was held between 14 June and 21 June 2004 in Calgary and Edmonton, Canada. It was the second edition of the Churchill Cup competition. The three original rugby union teams taking part in the men's competition: Canada, England A and the USA, were joined by the New Zealand Maori.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177030-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Churchill Cup\nA women's competition, involving the same teams, took place alongside the men's event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177030-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Churchill Cup, Format\nThe competition took on a straight 'knock-out' format. Four teams played in two semi-final matches, with the North American sides kept apart. The winners of each semi final competed in the final match, while the losers took part in a 3rd/4th place playoff. Four matches were played over a period of two weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake\nThe Ch\u016betsu earthquakes (\u4e2d\u8d8a\u5730\u9707, Ch\u016betsu jishin) occurred in Niigata Prefecture, Japan, at 17:56 local time (08:56 UTC) on Saturday, October 23, 2004. The Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) named it the \"Heisei 16 Niigata Prefecture Chuetsu Earthquake\" (\u5e73\u621016\u5e74\u65b0\u6f5f\u770c\u4e2d\u8d8a\u5730\u9707, Heisei ju-roku-nen Niigata-ken Chuetsu Jishin). Niigata Prefecture is located in the Hokuriku region of Honshu, the largest island of Japan. The initial earthquake had a magnitude of 6.6 and caused noticeable shaking across almost half of Honshu, including parts of the T\u014dhoku, Hokuriku, Ch\u016bbu, and Kant\u014d regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Details\nThe first quake struck the Chuetsu area of Niigata Prefecture, Japan with a reading of 7 on the Japanese shindo intensity scale at Kawaguchi, Niigata. The moment magnitude of the earthquake is estimated at 6.6. For comparison, the Great Hanshin earthquake, which devastated much of Kobe, measured 7 on the shindo scale, with a magnitude of 7.3. The earthquake occurred at a depth of 15.8\u00a0km. The JMA gave the coordinates of the earthquake as Coordinates: .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Details\nA second earthquake occurred at 18:11, 16 minutes after the first. This one, at a much shallower depth, had a shindo intensity of 6+ and a magnitude of 5.9. A third, at 6:34, had a shindo intensity of 6\u2212. At 19:45, another intensity 6\u2212 earthquake occurred. Intervening and subsequent earthquakes of lesser intensity also shook the region. During the first 116 hours, 15 earthquakes with intensities of shindo 5\u2212 or higher rocked the Chuetsu region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Details\nIn a press release, the Geographical Survey Institute (GSI) of the Government of Japan published preliminary estimates that a fault having a length of 22\u00a0km and a width of 17\u00a0km moved approximately 1.4\u00a0m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Details\nThis was the deadliest earthquake to strike Japan since the January 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Details\nThis was also first time a snake robot was used at a natural disaster site. A Souryu serpentine robot was used in a house in Nagaoka City that was damaged during this earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, List of major aftershocks\nThe following is a list of major earthquakes that have occurred in Niigata Prefecture since October 23, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nAs late as November 3, the 39th fatality attributable to the earthquakes occurred as perceptible aftershocks continued. 68 dead and 4,795 injuries were reported in Niigata Prefecture. Over one hundred thousand people fled their homes. The earthquakes caused houses to collapse in Ojiya and damaged thousands in the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nFor the first time in its 40-year history, a Shinkansen train derailed while in service, the train being too close to the epicentre to be halted by the automatic UrEDAS earthquake detection system. Eight out of ten cars of the Toki 325 service (a 200 Series Shinkansen train) derailed on the Joetsu Shinkansen line between Nagaoka Station in Nagaoka and Urasa Station in Yamato; no injuries were reported among the 155 passengers. The railbed, bridges and tunnels were all affected. East Japan Railway Company (JR East) stopped all trains in Niigata Prefecture, including the extensively damaged Joetsu Line, Shinetsu Main Line, Iiyama Line, Tadami Line and Echigo Line. Part of Nagaoka Station appeared ready to collapse as a result of an aftershock, but after a brief closure, the station reopened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 832]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nThe section of the Joetsu Shinkansen between Echigo-Yuzawa Station and Tsubame-Sanjo Station closed. Buses transferred passengers between the two operating sections of the line: Tokyo Station to Echigo-Yuzawa Station and Tsubame-Sanjo Station to Niigata Station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nOn December 27, 2004, service resumed on all remaining parts of the Joetsu and Iiyama Lines reopened. On December 28, 2004, the Joetsu Shinkansen also reopened, the last to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nJapan Highways closed all expressways in Niigata Prefecture. Closures affected the Kanetsu Expressway and the Hokuriku Expressway. As of November 4, the Kanetsu Expressway remained closed between Nagaoka Interchange and Koide Interchange. This segment reopened on November 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nLandslides and other problems forced closure of two national highways, National Route 8 and National Route 17, as well as several prefectural roads. This isolated several localities, including nearly the entire village of Yamakoshi, which was then a village in the district of Koshi but since merged with and became part of the city of Nagaoka. On July 22, 2005, the government lifted the nine-month-old evacuation order for 528 of the 690 affected households.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nThe earthquakes also caused a landslide that partially buried three vehicles. A young boy was rescued from one of these vehicles, but his mother and sister perished. (Recent typhoons had waterlogged the soil, making landslides more likely.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Damage\nThe quake broke water mains. Extensive electric power, telephone (including cellular telephone) and Internet outages were reported. The cellular telephone system suffered from direct damage to relay stations, as well as depletion of battery back-up power supplies in as little as a day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Aftermath\nOn April 1, 2007, the directive to evacuate five settlements in the former village of Yamakoshi (later part of the city of Nagaoka) was lifted. Residents were permitted to return to their homes after a span of nearly two and a half years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, Aftermath\nThe movie A Tale of Mari and Three Puppies was based on events that took place during this earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, History\nNiigata Prefecture has been hit by numerous earthquakes in recorded history. Notable recent ones include a large quake on June 16, 1964 that had a magnitude of 7.5, killing 28, where major liquefaction had occurred and tsunami destroyed the port of Niigata city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177031-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Ch\u016betsu earthquake, History\nThere was also the 2007 Ch\u016betsu offshore earthquake, both striking shortly after major typhoons passed by, causing complications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177032-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Bearcats football team\nThe 2004 Cincinnati Bearcats football team represented the University of Cincinnati in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team, coached by Mark Dantonio, played its home games in Nippert Stadium, as it has since 1924. This was the Bearcats last season in Conference USA as they became members of the Big East Conference after the academic year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177033-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Bengals season\nThe 2004 Cincinnati Bengals season was the team's 37th year in professional football and its 35th with the National Football League. The Bengals began to focus on the future, trading All-Pro running back Corey Dillon to the New England Patriots. That cleared the way for Rudi Johnson to start at running back. Carson Palmer was given the starting quarterback job. Palmer and the young Bengals would struggle early, losing five of their first seven games. As the season wore on, the Bengals began to hit their stride, as they climbed back to .500, at 6\u20136, before a sprained knee sent Palmer to the sidelines during a 35\u201328 road loss to the eventual Super Bowl Champion Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177033-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Bengals season\nWith wins in their final two games, the Bengals would finish 8\u20138 for the second year in a row. Rudi Johnson finished sixth in the NFL in rushing with 1,454 yards, giving Bengals fans hope for the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177033-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Bengals season\nThis season would see the Bengals make their first appearance on Monday Night Football since 1992, a win at home against the Denver Broncos on October 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177033-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season\nThe 2004 season constituted the first time since 1991 that the Bengals played the Washington Redskins, and the match produced their first ever away win over that franchise. The reason for this is that before the admission of the Texans in 2002, NFL scheduling formulas for games outside a team\u2019s division were much more influenced by table position during the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season\nThe Cincinnati Reds' 2004 season included the Reds' fourth-place in the National League Central division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season, Regular season, Season summary\nThe Reds finished with a final record of 76\u201386. That earned them fourth place in their division. They finished 29 games behind the division winner and eventual National League champion, the St. Louis Cardinals. The Reds also finished 16 games behind the second place team and National League wild card winner, the Houston Astros. The Reds finished 13 games behind the third place team, the Chicago Cubs. They finished 3\u00bd games ahead of the fifth place team, the Pittsburgh Pirates, and 8\u00bd games ahead of the sixth place team, the Milwaukee Brewers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177034-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election\nThe second election to the City and County of Swansea Council were held in May 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election, Overview\nAll council seats were up for election. These were the third elections held following local government reorganisation and the abolition of West Glamorgan County Council. The Labour Party lost their majority on the authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election, Candidates\nThe contests were fought by most of the main parties but Labour was the only one to contest the majority of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election, Results, Clydach (two seats)\nSylvia Lewis had been elected as an Independent in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election, Results, Fairwood (one seat)\nElected as an Independent in 1995, John Bushell successfully defended the seat as a Conservative in 1999 but now again stood, unsuccessfully, as an Independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election, Results, Llansamlet (four seats)\nElected as an Independent in 1999, June Evans subsequently joined the Independent group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177035-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 City and County of Swansea Council election, Results, Upper Loughor (two seats)\nPossible boundary change. the number of seats was reduced from two to one", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177036-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council election\nElections to City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election following boundary changes. The council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177036-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council election, Election result\nThis result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the council after the elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 77], "content_span": [78, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177037-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 City of Lincoln Council election\nElections to City of Lincoln Council in Lincolnshire, England, were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the Council was up for election and the Labour Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177037-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 City of Lincoln Council election, Election result\nAll comparisons in vote share are to the corresponding 2000 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177038-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Civic Democratic Party leadership election\nA leadership election was held in the Civic Democratic Party (ODS) in the Czech Republic on 4 December 2004. The incumbent leader Mirek Topol\u00e1nek ran unopposed and his victory was expected. Topol\u00e1nek received votes from 354 of the 391 party delegates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177039-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Clare County Council election\nAn election to Clare County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 32 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177041-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Clemson Tigers football team\nThe 2004 Clemson Tigers football team represented Clemson University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Clemson's 600th win came November 20 against South Carolina, a game notable for a brawl between the two teams. Due to the brawl, the Tigers declined a bowl bid in part because of the unsportsmanlike nature of the fight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177042-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Browns season\nThe 2004 Cleveland Browns season was the team's 56th season and 52nd with the National Football League. The Browns were looking to improve on their 5\u201311 record from 2003 and return to their 2002 playoff position; however, hindered by a tough schedule they regressed further and only won four games. On November 30, Butch Davis resigned as head coach and general manager of the team. He was succeeded by offensive coordinator Terry Robiskie. Robiskie promoted tight end coach Rob Chudzinski to offensive coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177042-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Browns season\nOn September 12, the Browns defeated the Baltimore Ravens, 20\u20133, marking the team's only Week 1 win since returning to the NFL in 1999. In the two decades since the Browns returned to the league, the Browns went 1\u201318\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177042-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Browns season, Schedule\nFootball statistics site Football Outsiders calculated that the 2004 Browns played the toughest schedule of any NFL team between 1989 and 2013, based on strength of opponent, although Pro Football Reference argues that their schedule was only the fifth-toughest in this span and twelfth-toughest non-strike since 1971. The Browns played just one game \u2013 their Week 16 contest against the Miami Dolphins \u2013 against a team with fewer than six wins, and played five against opponents with 12 or more wins, including a total of three against Steelers and Patriots who were a combined 28\u20132 against their remaining opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177042-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Browns season, Schedule\nApart from their AFC North division games, the Browns played against the AFC East and NFC East according to the conference rotation, and played the Chargers and Texans based on 2003 divisional positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177043-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Indians season\nThe 2004 Cleveland Indians season was the 104th season for the franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177043-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Indians season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177043-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cleveland Indians season, Player stats, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177044-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Clipsal 500\nThe 2004 Clipsal 500 was the sixth running of the Adelaide 500 race. Racing was held from Friday 18 March until Sunday 21 March 2004. The race was held for V8 Supercars and was the opening round of the 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177044-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Clipsal 500, Format\nThe format, unique to V8 Supercars and loosely similar to the Pukekohe 500 format, split the total distance of 500 kilometres into two separate 250 kilometre races each held on a different day. Points were assigned separately to the races, with more points allocated for Race 2 over Race 1, and they combined to award a round result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177045-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda\nThe 2004 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda was the 19th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda cycle race and was held on 29 February 2004. The race was won by J\u00e9r\u00f4me Pineau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177046-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n\nThe 2004 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n was the 24th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n cycle race and was held on 7 August 2004. The race started and finished in San Sebasti\u00e1n. The race was won by Miguel \u00c1ngel Mart\u00edn Perdiguero of the Saunier Duval team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177047-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cl\u00e1sico RCN\nThe 44th edition of the annual Cl\u00e1sico RCN was held from October 17 to October 24, 2004 in Colombia. The stage race started in Bucaramanga and finished with an individual time trial at the Alto del Escobero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177048-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team\nThe 2004 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team represented Coastal Carolina University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Chanticleers were led by second-year head coach David Bennett and played their home games at Brooks Stadium. Coastal Carolina competed as a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 10\u20131 with a 4\u20130 record in conference play, winning their first Big South championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177049-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Coca-Cola 600\nThe 2004 Coca-Cola 600, the 45th running of the race, was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on May 30, 2004 at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Charlotte, North Carolina. Contested at 400 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4 km) speedway, it was the twelfth race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race, his second win of the season and also at Charlotte. Michael Waltrip finished second and Matt Kenseth finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177049-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Coca-Cola 600\nFailed to qualify: Steve Park (No. 7), Todd Bodine (No. 37), Carl Long (No. 46), Stanton Barrett (No. 94), Geoffrey Bodine (No. 98), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89), Jeff Fultz (No. 78), Kirk Shelmerdine (No. 72), Andy Hillenburg (No. 80)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177049-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Coca-Cola 600, Background\nLowe's Motor Speedway is a motorsports complex located in Concord, North Carolina, United States 13 miles from Charlotte, North Carolina. The complex features a 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) quad oval track that hosts NASCAR racing including the prestigious Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day weekend and the Nextel All-Star Challenge, as well as the UAW-GM Quality 500. The speedway was built in 1959 by Bruton Smith and is considered the home track for NASCAR with many race teams located in the Charlotte area. The track is owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI) with Humpy Wheeler as track president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177050-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colchester Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Colchester Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Colchester Borough Council in Essex, England. This was the same day as the other 2004 United Kingdom local elections and as the 2004 European Parliament Elections. One third of the seats were up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177050-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Colchester Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives gained 4 seats to become the largest party on the council with 28 seats, 3 short of a majority. They overtook the Liberal Democrats who held 23 seats, Labour with 6 seats and 3 independents. Overall turnout at the election was 34.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177050-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Colchester Borough Council election, Election result\nAs a result, the Conservatives took all the seats on the council cabinet for the first time since that style of government was introduced in Colchester, with the Conservative group leader John Jowers becoming the new leader of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177050-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Colchester Borough Council election, By-elections between 2004 and 2006\nA by-election took place on 21 October 2004 in Berechurch after the resignation of Liberal Democrat councillor Susan Brooks. Labour's David Harris took the seat from the Liberal Democrats by a majority of 345.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177051-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe 2004 Colgate Raiders football team was an American football team that represented Colgate University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. A year after advancing to the national championship, Colgate tied for third in the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177051-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Colgate Raiders football team\nIn its ninth season under head coach Dick Biddle, the team compiled a 7\u20134 record. Chris Brown, Luke Graham and Antrell Tyson were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177051-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe Raiders outscored opponents 261 to 225. Their 4\u20132 conference record tied for third in the seven-team Patriot League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177051-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Colgate Raiders football team\nFollowing their deep playoff run in 2003, the Raiders were ranked No. 5 in the preseason national Division I-AA poll. Losses quickly dropped Colgate to the bottom half of the top 25, and a league loss to unranked Bucknell in the second-to-last weekend of the season booted the Raiders from the rankings altogether. Colgate finished the year unranked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177051-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe team played its home games at Andy Kerr Stadium in Hamilton, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177052-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 College Baseball All-America Team\nAn All-American team is an honorary sports team composed of the best amateur players of a specific season for each team position\u2014who in turn are given the honorific \"All-America\" and typically referred to as \"All-American athletes\", or simply \"All-Americans\". Although the honorees generally do not compete together as a unit, the term is used in U.S. team sports to refer to players who are selected by members of the national media. Walter Camp selected the first All-America team in the early days of American football in 1889.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177052-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 College Baseball All-America Team\nThe NCAA recognizes four different All-America selectors for the 2004 college baseball season: the American Baseball Coaches Association (since 1947), Baseball America (since 1981), Collegiate Baseball (since 1991), and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (since 2001).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177053-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 College Football All-America Team\nThe 2004 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following All-American Teams: Associated Press (AP), Football Writers Association of America (FWAA), American Football Coaches Association (AFCA), Walter Camp Football Foundation, The Sporting News, Sports Illustrated, Pro Football Weekly, ESPN, CBS Sports, College Football News, and Rivals.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177053-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 College Football All-America Team\nThe College Football All-America Team is an honor given annually to the best American college football players at their respective positions. The original usage of the term All-America seems to have been to such a list selected by football pioneer Walter Camp in the 1890s. The NCAA officially recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, SN, and the WCFF to determine Consensus All-Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177053-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 College Football All-America Team\nThirteen players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2004, 8 of them unanimously. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177054-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cologne Centurions season\nThe 2004 Cologne Centurions season was the inaugural season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Peter Vaas and played its home games at RheinEnergieStadion in Cologne, Germany. They finished the regular season in fourth place with a record of four wins and six losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177054-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cologne Centurions season\nThe Centurions replaced the Barcelona Dragons for this season, keeping only two members from Barcelona's 2003 roster: linebacker Cedric Cotar and receiver Marco Martos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177055-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cologne bombing\nOn 9 June 2004, a nail bomb detonated in Cologne, Germany, in a business area popular with immigrants from Turkey. Twenty-two people were wounded, with four sustaining serious injuries. A barber shop was completely destroyed; many shops and numerous parked cars were seriously damaged by the explosion and by the nails added to the bomb for extra damage. Authorities initially excluded the possibility of a terrorist attack. The bomb, which contained more than 800 nails, was hidden in a travel compartment on a bicycle left in front of the barber shop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177055-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cologne bombing\nIn November 2011, after having been accused by authorities of being responsible for a robbery in Eisenach, the neo-Nazi terrorist group National Socialist Underground (Nationalsozialistischer Untergrund) released a video claiming responsibility for the Cologne bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177055-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cologne bombing\nThe group\u2019s main members, Uwe B\u00f6hnhardt, Uwe Mundlos, and Beate Zsch\u00e4pe, were also indicted with the killing of nine businessmen of Turkish and Greek origin between 2000 and 2006 (the National Socialist Underground murders) and the murder of Mich\u00e8le Kiesewetter in 2007. B\u00f6hnhardt and Mundlos died in a murder-suicide, leaving only Zsch\u00e4pe to be charged (among other charges) for the attempted murder of 23 people in the Cologne bombing, in the NSU trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177055-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cologne bombing\nThe events of the 2017 film In the Fade, starring Diane Kruger as a German woman whose Kurdish husband and their child were killed in a nail bomb attack by Neo-Nazis, was inspired by the 2004 bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177056-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament was held at Brooks Field in Wilmington, North Carolina from May 26 through May 29. The event determined the champion of the Colonial Athletic Association for the 2004 season. Second-seeded UNC Wilmington won the tournament for the first time and earned the CAA's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177056-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nEntering the event, former member East Carolina had won the most championships, with seven. Among active members, Old Dominion led with three titles while George Mason and VCU had each won twice and William & Mary had won once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177056-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe top six teams from the CAA's round-robin regular season qualified for the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference winning percentage. They played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177056-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nMatt Poulk was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Poulk was a third baseman for UNC Wilmington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 97], "content_span": [98, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36\nIn the November 2004 United States election, one of the issues up for a vote in the state of Colorado was known as Amendment 36. It was a ballot initiative for an amendment to the state constitution. It would have changed the way in which the state apportioned its electoral votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36\nRather than assigning all 9 of the state's electors to the candidate with a plurality of popular votes, under the amendment, Colorado would have assigned presidential electors proportionally to the statewide vote count, which would be a unique system (Nebraska and Maine assign electoral votes based on vote totals within each congressional district). The amendment did not pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36, Result\nThe amendment ultimately failed, garnering only 34% of the vote:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36, Analysis\nThe amendment is deeply intertwined with the 2004 presidential election, in which Republican George W. Bush ran against Democrat John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36, Analysis\nAs Colorado was expected to lean towards Bush, the passage of this amendment (generally favored by Democrats and opposed by Republicans), could have taken some electoral votes from Bush and assigned them to Kerry. Had such an apportionment been in place in 2000, Al Gore would have won the electoral college vote and become president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36, Analysis\nHowever, as November 2004 neared, Colorado began to look increasingly like a swing state in which it was possible that Kerry would win. Many Democrats who had pushed for Amendment 36 therefore began to have second thoughts and withdrew their advocacy for and support of the amendment. This withdrawal of Democratic support has been blamed for the defeat of the ballot initiative on Election Day. In the end, Bush won the state, but this amendment would not have been sufficient for Kerry to win the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177057-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Amendment 36, Analysis\nThe applicability of this amendment to a presidential vote being conducted simultaneously was questioned and might have been the subject of a legal dispute had the amendment passed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177058-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Buffaloes football team\nThe 2004 Colorado Buffaloes football team represented the University of Colorado at Boulder in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team played their home games in Folsom Field in Boulder, Colorado. They participated in the Big 12 Conference in the North Division. They were coached by head coach Gary Barnett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season\nThe Colorado Rockies' 2004 season was the 12th for the Rockies. They tried to win the National League West. Clint Hurdle was the manager. They played home games at Coors Field. They finished with a record of 68-94, 4th in the NL West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Regular season, Summary\nHaving missed the first 68 games of the season due to a groin injury, right fielder Larry Walker's first three home runs of the season () came on June 25, 2004, versus the Cleveland Indians. The last was off Jos\u00e9 Jim\u00e9nez, which won the game for the Rockies in the 10th inning for a 10\u22128 margin. Walker totaled four hits and five runs batted in (RBI) on the day, and it was his third career three-home run game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Regular season, Summary\nWalker reached 2,000 career hits on June 30, 2004, becoming the 234th player in major league history to do so (). Having already achieved 400 doubles, 300 home runs, 1,000 runs scored, and 1,000 RBI, he became the 40th player to reach all five totals. The milestone hit was a double off Ben Sheets in the fourth inning versus the Milwaukee Brewers. Through that point, Walker was the Rockies' career leader in 12 categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177059-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177060-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Colorado State Rams football team\nThe 2004 Colorado State Rams football team represented Colorado State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Hughes Stadium in Fort Collins, CO and were led by head coach Sonny Lubick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177061-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Columbia Lions football team\nThe 2004 Columbia Lions football team was an American football team that represented Columbia University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Columbia tied for last in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177061-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Columbia Lions football team\nIn their second season under head coach Bob Shoop, the Lions compiled a 1\u20139 record and were outscored 265 to 140. Rashad Biggers, Chuck Britton, Jeff Otis and Michael Quarshie were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177061-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Columbia Lions football team\nThe Lions' 1\u20136 conference record tied for seventh place in the Ivy League standings. Columbia was outscored 171 to 99 by Ivy opponents. Columbia's only win was against fellow cellar-dweller Dartmouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177061-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Columbia Lions football team\nColumbia played its homes games at Lawrence A. Wien Stadium in Upper Manhattan, in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177062-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Commonwealth Bank International \u2013 Draw\nAndre Agassi was the defending champion, but David Nalbandian defeated him 6\u20132, 6\u20133, in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177063-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Commonwealth Youth Games\nThe 2004 Commonwealth Youth Games were held in Bendigo, Australia. They were the second Commonwealth Youth Games, which are held every four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177063-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Commonwealth Youth Games, Medal Count\nThis is the full table of the medal count of the Commonwealth Youth Games 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177064-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup\nThe 2004 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup was the twelfth edition of the competition between the champions of former republics of Soviet Union. It was won by Dinamo Tbilisi for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177065-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia leadership election\nThe Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KS\u010cM) held a leadership election on 15 May 2004. The incumbent leader Miroslav Greben\u00ed\u010dek narrowly defeated Vojt\u011bch Filip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177065-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia leadership election, Result\nGreben\u00ed\u010dek was considered front-runner of the election. His victory was considered certain due to good electoral performances of the party, but his victory in the first round was surprisingly narrow and it was speculated that he might lose in the second round, but won and remained the leader of KS\u010cM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 71], "content_span": [72, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177066-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Comorian legislative election\nParliamentary elections were held in the Comoros on 18 April 2004, with a second round on 25 April. The result was a victory for the Camp of the Autonomous Islands, which won 12 of the 18 elected seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177066-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Comorian legislative election, Background\nFollowing the previous elections in 1996, a political crisis had led to Anjouan and Moh\u00e9li seeking to secede from the Union. A 1999 coup led to Azali Assoumani taking power. A new constitution was introduced in 2001, decentralising power by granting autonomy to the three islands. Azali subsequently won presidential elections in 2002, which were boycotted by the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177066-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Comorian legislative election, Electoral system\nAt the time of the elections, only 18 of the 33 members of the Assembly of the Union were directly elected in single-member constituencies. The remaining 15 were chosen by the legislatures of the three islands, Anjouan, Moh\u00e9li and Grande Comore, with each island electing five members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177066-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Comorian legislative election, Electoral system\nThe direct elections were held in 18 single-member constituencies using the two-round system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177066-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Comorian legislative election, Campaign\nIn 2004 there was only one national political party, the Convention for the Renewal of the Comoros led by Assoumani, which favoured more centralised government. Prior to the elections a loose coalition, the Camp of the Autonomous Islands, was formed by opposition groups organised by the presidents of the three islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177066-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Comorian legislative election, Results\nAll fifteen of the indirectly-elected seats were won by the Camp of the Autonomous Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177067-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 2004 postseason college baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Cougar Field in Houston, Texas from May 26 through May 30, 2004. The TCU Horned Frogs won the tournament and received the conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament consisted of eight teams, with two double-elimination brackets, and a single-game final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177067-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Baseball Tournament, Finish order\n\u2020 - Winner of the tournament and received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. # - Received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177068-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 10\u201313 at the U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177068-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nHosts Cincinnati defeated top-seeded DePaul in the championship game, 55\u201350, to clinch their fourth Conference USA men's tournament championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177068-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Bearcats, in turn, received an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament. They were joined in the tournament by fellow C-USA members UAB, Charlotte, DePaul, and Memphis, all of whom earned at-large bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177068-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThere were no changes to the tournament format from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177068-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe top four teams were given byes into the quarterfinal round while the next eight teams were placed into the first round. The two teams with the worst conference records were not invited to the tournament. All remaining tournament seeds were determined by regular season conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177069-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2004 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament was the tenth edition of the Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Conference USA champion and guaranteed representative into the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The tournament was hosted by the University of Louisville and the games were played at Cardinal Park Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177070-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Connecticut Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2 in the U.S. state of Connecticut as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177071-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Huskies football team\nThe 2004 Connecticut Huskies football team represented the University of Connecticut in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season as a member of the Big East Conference. The team was led by sixth-year head coach Randy Edsall and played its home games at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177072-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Connecticut State Senate election\nThe 2004 Connecticut State Senate elections took place as part of the biennial 2004 United States Elections. All 36 seats of the Connecticut State Senate were up for re-election. Senators serve two-year terms and are up for re-election every election cycle. The August 10th primary elections decided candidates that appeared on the ballot for the General election. The General Election took place on November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177073-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Sun season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was their sixth season and their second in Connecticut. The Sun attempted to return to the postseason for the second consecutive season and were successful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177073-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Sun season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Sun's 2003 record, they would pick 8th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. However, the Sun traded the pick to the Houston Comets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177073-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Sun season, Schedule, Playoffs\nIn the first round of the Eastern Conference Playoffs, the Sun had to face the Washington Mystics. Since the Sun had the better record, the series would be played with game 1 at Washington, game 2 at Connecticut, and game 3 (if needed) at Connecticut. The Sun lost the first game, but won the next two to advance to the next round. In the second round of the Eastern Conference Playoffs, the Sun had to face the New York Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177073-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Sun season, Schedule, Playoffs\nThe Sun and the Liberty had identical records and each team had won two of the four meetings against each other in the regular season. The Sun attained home-court advantage however, because they beat the Liberty by more than the Liberty beat them. The series would be played with game 1 at New York and games 2 and 3 (if needed) at Connecticut. The Sun swept the Liberty and game 3 was not needed. The Sun advanced to the WNBA Finals. The team would be facing off against the Seattle Storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177073-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 Connecticut Sun season, Schedule, Playoffs\nThe Storm had the better record so the series would be played with game 1 at Connecticut, and games 2 and 3 (if needed) at Seattle. This was the last year the league played the finals in a best-of-three setup. The Storm beat the Sun 2 games to 1 to win the WNBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election\nThe 2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election took place on March 20, 2004, in Toronto, Ontario, and resulted in the election of Stephen Harper as the first leader of the new Conservative Party of Canada. The Conservative Party was formed by the merger of the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, in December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election\nStephen Harper, the former leader of the Canadian Alliance, was elected on the first (and only) ballot. Tony Clement, a former Ontario Progressive Conservative health minister, and Belinda Stronach, the former Chief Executive Officer of Magna International, were the other candidates on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election\nThe leader was selected by a system in which each of the party's riding associations was allocated 100 points, which were allocated among candidates in proportion to the votes that he or she received. This system was selected as a condition of the merger, to prevent the far larger Canadian Alliance membership base from overwhelming that of the Progressive Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election\nMembers voted using ranked ballots. If no candidate won a majority of votes in the first round, the ballots supporting the candidate with the smallest number of votes would be re-distributed according to the voters' second preferences. Subsequent rounds were not needed, however, because Stephen Harper won in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Tony Clement\n42, Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario Member of Provincial Parliament for Brampton South (1995-2003), provincial Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (2001-2003), provincial Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing (1999-2001), provincial Minister of the Environment (1999-2000), provincial Minister of Transportation (1997-1999), third place candidate in Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election (2002)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 79], "content_span": [80, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election, Candidates, Stephen Harper\n44, Reform Party of Canada MP for Calgary West (1993-1997), Canadian Alliance MP for Calgary Southwest (2002-), Leader of the Canadian Alliance (2002-2003), President of the National Citizens Coalition (1998-2002)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 81], "content_span": [82, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177074-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Conservative Party of Canada leadership election, Results\nEach of 308 ridings had 100 points which were distributed by proportional representation according to votes cast by party members in the riding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan\nThe 2004 Constitution of Afghanistan is the supreme law of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, which served as the legal framework between the Afghan government and the Afghan citizens. Although Afghanistan (Afghan Empire) was made a state in 1747 by Ahmad Shah Durrani, the earliest Afghan constitution was written during the reign of Emir Abdur Rahman Khan in the 1890s followed by the 1923 version. The 1964 Constitution of Afghanistan transformed Afghanistan into a modern democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan\nThe constitution was approved by the consensus in January 2004 after the 2003 loya jirga. The Constitution consists of 162 articles and was officially signed by Hamid Karzai on January 26, 2004. It evolved out of the Afghan Constitution Commission mandated by the Bonn Agreement. The constitution provides for an elected President and National Assembly. The transitional government of interim president Hamid Karzai was put in place after the June 2002 loya jirga. The first presidential elections after the new constitution was in effect, took place in October 2004, and Karzai was elected to a five-year term. The first elections for the National Assembly were delayed until September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Eligibility of President\nArticle 62 of the Constitution of Afghanistan of 2004 states that a candidate for the office of President:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Legislative branch\nThe National Assembly of Afghanistan consists of two houses: the Wolesi Jirga (House of the People) and the Meshrano Jirga (House of Elders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Legislative branch\nThe Wolesi Jirga, the more powerful house, consists of a maximum of 250 delegates directly elected through a system of single non transferable vote (SNTV). Members are elected on a provincial basis and serve for five years. At least 64 delegates must be women; and ten Kuchi nomads were also elected among their peers. The Wolesi Jirga has the primary responsibility for making and ratifying laws and approving the actions of the president and has considerable veto power over senior appointments and policies", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Legislative branch\nThe Meshrano Jirga will consist of an unspecified number of local dignitaries and experts appointed by provincial councils, district councils, and the president. The president also appoints two representatives of the physically disabled. The lower house passes laws, approve budgets and ratify treaties\u00a0\u2013 all of which will require subsequent approval by the Meshrano Jirga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Judicial branch and court system\nThe nation's top court is the Stera Mahkama (Supreme Court). Its members are appointed by the president for 10-year terms. There are also High Courts, Appeals Courts, and local and district courts. Eligible judges can have training in either Islamic jurisprudence or secular law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Judicial branch and court system\nCourts are allowed to use Hanafi jurisprudence in situations where the Constitution lacks provisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Cabinet\nThe current cabinet consists of the president, his two vice-presidents and 25 ministers. The ministers are appointed by the president but need approval from the Wolesi Jirga (lower house).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Provinces and Districts\nThe constitution divides Afghanistan into 34 provinces. Each province is governed by a provincial council with members elected for four-year terms. Provincial Governors are appointed by the president. Provinces are divided into districts, which contain villages and towns. Every village and town will also have councils, with members serving for three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Religion\nThe Constitution describes Islam as its sacred law and the most commonly practiced faith throughout Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Religion\nFollowers of other religions are \"free to exercise their faith and perform their religious rites\" within the limits of the law. There is no mention of freedom of thought, and apostasy from Islam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Civil and human rights\nCitizens are guaranteed the right to life and liberty, to privacy, of peaceful assembly, from torture and of expression and speech. If accused of a crime, citizens hold the right to be informed of the charges, to representation by an advocate, and to presumption of innocence. Article 34 states, \"Freedom of expression shall be inviolable. Every Afghan shall have the right to express thoughts through speech, writing, illustrations as well as other means in accordance with provisions of this constitution. Every Afghan shall have the right, according to provisions of law, to print and publish on subjects without prior submission to state authorities. Directives related to the press, radio and television as well as publications and other mass media shall be regulated by law.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Civil and human rights\nProvisions are made to ensure free education and healthcare for all citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Language\nArticle 16 of the constitution states that \"from amongst Pashto, Dari, Uzbek, Turkmen, Balochi, Pashai, Nuristani and other current languages in the country, Pashto and Dari shall be the official languages of the state.\" In addition, other languages are considered \"the third official language\" in areas where they are spoken by a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Language\nArticle 20 states that the Afghan National Anthem (Wolesi Tarana) \"shall be in Pashto with the mention of \"God is Great\" as well as the names of the tribes of Afghanistan.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Language\nThe constitution aims \"to foster and develop all languages of Afghanistan.\" (Article 16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177075-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Constitution of Afghanistan, Land ownership\nForeigners are not allowed to own land in Afghanistan. Foreign individuals shall not have the right to own immovable property in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177076-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Continental Cup of Curling\nThe 2004 Continental Cup of Curling was held in Medicine Hat, Alberta from November 25 to 28. North America won its second title, defeating Team Europe 228-172.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177076-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Continental Cup of Curling, Singles\n(Each game worth four points, eight bonus points awarded to top aggregate score)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177077-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Continental Tire Bowl\nThe 2004 Continental Tire Bowl featured the Boston College Eagles, and the North Carolina Tar Heels. The game was played on Thursday, December 30, 2004, at 1:00 PM EST. The game was the third edition to this bowl game, but the last one under the name Continental Tire Bowl. It would later be renamed the Meineke Car Care Bowl. This edition was particularly notable because Boston College would join the Atlantic Coast Conference, which North Carolina also plays in, the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177077-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Continental Tire Bowl\nL. V. Whitworth started the scoring with a 5-yard touchdown run to give Boston College an early 7\u20130 lead. North Carolina came right back, and quarterback Darian Durant threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to running back Ronnie McGill, to tie the game at 7. Boston College quarterback, Paul Peterson threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Grant Adams to give BC a 14\u20137 lead at the end of the 1st quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177077-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Continental Tire Bowl\nIn the second quarter, Darian Durant threw a 5-yard touchdown pass to Wallace Wright to tie the game at 14. He later threw a 51-yard bomb to Derrele Mitchell to give North Carolina a 21\u201314 lead. Before halftime, Paul Peterson hooked up with David Kashetta on a 1-yard touchdown pass to tie the game at 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177077-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Continental Tire Bowl\nWith four minutes left in the third quarter, North Carolina's Connor Barth hit a 27-yard field goal to give UNC a 24\u201321 lead. In the fourth quarter, Andre Callender ran 1-yard for a touchdown. The failed extra point gave Boston College a 27\u201324 lead. Later on, BC kicker Ryan Ohliger ran a fake field goal 21 yards for a touchdown to increase the lead to 34\u201324. An 18-yard field goal by Ohliger capped the scoring, and BC held on to win 37\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections\nThe Cook County, Illinois general election was held on November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections\nElections were held for Clerk of the Circuit Court, Recorder of Deeds, State's Attorney, Board of Review district 3, three seats on the Water Reclamation District Board, and judgeships on the Circuit Court of Cook County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Election information\n2004 was a presidential election year in the United States. The primaries and general elections for Cook County races coincided with those for federal races (President, House, and Senate) and those for state elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Election information, Voter turnout, Primary election\nVoter turnout in Cook County during the primaries was 35.02%. The city of Chicago saw 38.58% turnout and suburban Cook County saw 31.34% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Election information, Voter turnout, General election\nThe general election saw 74.75% turnout, with 2,088,727 ballots cast. Chicago saw 75.13% turnout and suburban Cook County saw 74.36% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Clerk of the Circuit Court\nIn the 2004 Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County election, incumbent first-term Clerk Dorothy A. Brown, a Democrat, was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Recorder of Deeds\nIn the 2004 Cook County Recorder of Deeds election, incumbent Recorder of Deeds Eugene Moore, a Democrat, was reelected. Moore had first been appointed in 1999 (after Jesse White resigned to become Illinois Secretary of State), and had been elected to a full-term in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Recorder of Deeds, General election\nRepublican nominee Cox had declared that his intent in seeking the office was to push for its elimination, as he argued that the office was an unnecessary duplication of services and had become a \"model of waste and corruption\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, State's Attorney\nIn the 2004 Cook County State's Attorney election, incumbent second-term State's Attorney Richard A. Devine, a Democrat, was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, State's Attorney, Primaries, Democratic\nIn the Democratic primary, incumbent Dick Devine defeated challenger Tommy H. Brewer (who had previously, in 1994, run unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination Cook County Sheriff).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Cook County Board of Review\nIn the 2004 Cook County Board of Review election, one seat, Democratic-held, was up for election. The incumbent won reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Cook County Board of Review\nThe Cook County Board of Review has its three seats rotate the length of terms. In a staggered fashion (in which no two seats have coinciding two-year terms), the seats rotate between two consecutive four-year terms and a two-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Cook County Board of Review, 3rd district\nIncumbent second-term member Robert Shaw, a Democrat last reelected in 2002, lost reelection, being unseated by in the Democratic primary by Larry R. Rogers, Jr., who went on to win the general election unopposed. Rogers' margin-of-victory over Shaw in the Democratic primary was narrow, at 1,087 votes (equal to 0.37 of votes cast). This election was to a four-year term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Cook County Board of Review, 3rd district, Primaries\nNo candidates, ballot-certified or formal write-in, ran in the Republican primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Water Reclamation District Board\nIn the 2004 Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago election, three of the nine seats on the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago board were up for election in an at-large election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Judicial elections\nPasrtisan elections were held for judgeships on the Circuit Court of Cook County due to vacancies. Retention elections were also held for the Circuit Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Judicial elections\nPartisan elections were also held for subcircuit courts judgeships due to vacancies. Retention elections were held for other judgeships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177078-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook County, Illinois elections, Other elections\nCoinciding with the primaries, elections were held to elect both the Democratic and Republican committeemen for the wards of Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177079-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook Islands Round Cup\nThe 2004 season of the Cook Islands Round Cup was the thirty first recorded season of top flight association football competition in the Cook Islands, with any results between 1951 and 1969 and also in 1986 and 1988\u20131990 currently unknown. Nikao Sokattack won the championship, their second recorded championship. Tupapa Maraerenga were runners-up, with Matavera finishing in third place following a seven match unbeaten run at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177079-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook Islands Round Cup, League table\nNikao Sokattack won the league, which was played on a round robin home and away basis, although only a partial table is available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177080-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook Islands general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Cook Islands on 7 September 2004. Initial results showed the Democratic Party winning by a wide margin, but close results led to 11 electoral petitions being filed, delaying the date Parliament could sit until mid-December. In the interim, Prime Minister Robert Woonton announced that he was forming a coalition government with the rival Cook Islands Party. This led to a split within the Democrats, with Woonton and four other MPs leaving to form the Demo Tumu Party. With 14 MPs, the coalition had a comfortable majority in Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177080-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook Islands general election\nThe results of the electoral petitions saw the seat of Titikaveka change hands while Woonton's seat was a dead tie. Woonton subsequently resigned in order to fight a by-election, causing his government to be dissolved. He was succeeded by his deputy, Jim Marurai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177081-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook Islands parliamentary term referendum\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 20:08, 5 January 2020 (\u2192\u200etop: Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (2\u00d7);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177081-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cook Islands parliamentary term referendum\nA referendum on reducing the term length of Parliament from five to four years was held in the Cook Islands on 7 September 2004. It followed a referendum on the same subject in 1999 that was approved by a majority of voters, but not the two-thirds required to be passed. The proposal would amend article 37 of the constitution, which at the time read \"The Queen's Representative shall dissolve Parliament at the expiration of 5 years from the date of the last preceding general election, if it has not sooner been dissolved.\" The change was approved by 82.27% of voters, passing the two-thirds threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177082-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Aerosur\nFollowing are the results of the 2004 Copa Aerosur, the Bolivian football tournament held in La Paz, Cochabamba and Santa Cruz, sponsored by AeroSur airline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177082-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Aerosur\nThe 2004 tournament started in January and ended in February. The 12 teams from the top division qualified for the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica\nThe 2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica was the 41st edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica, the South-American championship for international association football teams. The competition was organized by CONMEBOL, South America's football governing body, and was held in Peru, who hosted the tournament for the sixth time, from 6 to 25 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica\nThe tournament was won by Brazil in a shootout over Argentina. This made Brazil hold the World Cup and Copa Am\u00e9rica titles simultaneously for the second time in history, as happened after 1997 Copa Am\u00e9rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica\nThere is no qualifying tournament for the final tournament. CONMEBOL's 10 South American countries participated, along with two more invited countries, making a total of twelve teams competing in the tournament. The two invited countries for this edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica were Mexico and Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Squads\nEach association had to present a list of twenty-two players to compete in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Group stage\nThe teams were divided into three groups of four teams each. The formation of the groups was made by CONMEBOL in a public drawing of lots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Group stage\nEach team plays one match against each of the other teams within the same group. Three (3) points are awarded for a win, one (1) point for a draw and zero (0) points for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Group stage\nFirst and second placed teams, in each group, advance to the quarter-finals. The best third placed team and the second best third placed team, also advance to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Group stage, Ranking of third-placed teams\nAt the end of the first stage, a comparison was made between the third-placed teams of each group. The two best third-placed teams advanced to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 61], "content_span": [62, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177083-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica, Goal scorers\nWith seven goals, Adriano is the top scorer in the tournament. In total, 78 goals were scored by 55 different players, with none of them credited as own goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177084-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final\nThe 2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final was the final of the 41st Copa Am\u00e9rica. The match was played in Lima, for the first time. This was the fifth final for Brazil (winning two of the previous). Meanwhile, was the second for Argentina (winning once).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177084-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica Final\nCarlos Amarilla was the referee for the final match. He refereed two more matches in previous stages of the tournament, both involving Argentina: first against Ecuador in the first round and against Peru in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177085-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Ciclismo\nThe 4th edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica de Ciclismo was held on 2004-01-11 in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil. The Copa Am\u00e9rica opened the Brazilian season and took place on the Formula One-track in the city of S\u00e3o Paulo-Interlagos, a circuit of 4.3\u00a0km (2.7\u00a0mi).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177086-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica squads\nBelow are the squads of the teams that participated in the 2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177087-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar\nThe 2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Club Campestre El Rancho in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia that was part of Tier III of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the seventh edition of the tournament and ran from 23 February through 29 February 2004. First-seeded Fabiola Zuluaga won her third consecutive singles title, and fourth in total, at the event and earned $27,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177087-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar, Finals, Doubles\nBarbara Schwartz / Jasmin W\u00f6hr defeated Anabel Medina Garrigues / Arantxa Parra Santonja 6\u20131, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177088-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Doubles\nKatarina Srebotnik and \u00c5sa Svensson were the defending champions, but none competed this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177088-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Doubles\nBarbara Schwartz and Jasmin W\u00f6hr won the title by defeating Anabel Medina Garrigues and Arantxa Parra Santonja 6\u20131, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177089-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Singles\nFabiola Zuluaga was the defending champion and successfully defended her title, by defeating Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Lorenzo 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177089-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores\nThe 2004 Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica (officially the 2004 Copa Toyota Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica for sponsorship reasons) was the 45th edition of the Copa Libertadores, CONMEBOL's premier annual international club tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores\nThe tournament was won by Colombian club Once Caldas defeating defending champions Boca Juniors 2-0 on a penalty shoot-out. This was the second time, in the history of the tournament, that a team from Colombia won the Copa Libertadores. The first time was during Atl\u00e9tico Nacional's successful campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores\nThis was the last Copa Libertadores in which the away goals rule would not be used in every two-legged knockout round. However, starting in the 2008 Copa Libertadores, the away goals rule was removed from the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage, Round of 16\nFirst leg matches were played between May 4, 2004 and May 6, 2004. Second leg matches were played between May 11, 2004 and May 13, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage, Quarterfinals\nFirst leg matches were played on May 20, 2004 and May 21, 2004. Second leg matches were played between May 25, 2004 and May 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage, Semifinals\nFirst leg matches were played on June 9, 2004 and June 10, 2004. Second leg matches were played on June 16, 2004 and June 17, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177090-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores, Knockout stage, Finals\nFirst leg match was played on June 23, 2004. Second leg match was played on July 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177091-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores Finals\nThe 2004 Copa Libertadores Final was a two-legged football match-up to determine the 2004 Copa Libertadores champion. It was contested by Colombian club Once Caldas and Argentine club Boca Juniors. The first leg of the tie was played on 23 June at Boca Juniors' venue, La Bombonera, with the second leg played on 1 July at Estadio Palogrande in Manizales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177091-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Libertadores Finals\nAfter both matches ended tied, Once Caldas won the series by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2004 Copa Per\u00fa season (Spanish: Copa Per\u00fa 2004), the promotion tournament of Peruvian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe tournament has 5 stages. The first four stages are played as mini-league round-robin tournaments, except for third stage in region IV, which is played as a knockout stage. The final stage features two knockout rounds and a final four-team group stage to determine the two promoted teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2004 Peru Cup started with the District Stage (Spanish: Etapa Distrital) on February. The next stage was the Provincial Stage (Spanish: Etapa Provincial) which started, on June. The tournament continued with the Departamental Stage (Spanish: Etapa Departamental) on July. The Regional Staged followed. The National Stage (Spanish: Etapa Nacional) started on November. The winner of the National Stage will be promoted to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Departmental Stage\nThe following list shows the teams that qualified for the Regional Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage\nThe following list shows the teams that qualified for the Regional Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region I\nRegion I includes qualified teams from Amazonas, Lambayeque, Tumbes and Piura region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region II\nRegion II includes qualified teams from Ancash, Cajamarca, La Libertad and San Mart\u00edn region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region III\nRegion III includes qualified teams from Huanuco, Junin and Pasco region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region IV\nRegion IV includes qualified teams from Ayacucho, Huancavelica and Ica region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region V\nRegion V includes qualified teams from Callao, Lima, Loreto and Ucayali region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VII\nRegion VII includes qualified teams from Arequipa, Moquegua and Tacna region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VIII\nRegion VIII includes qualified teams from Apur\u00edmac, Cusco, Madre de Dios and Puno region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177092-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Per\u00fa, National Stage\nThe National Stage started in November. The winners of the National Stage will be promoted to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177093-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Petrobras Santiago\nThe 2004 Copa Petrobras Santiago was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor red clay courts. It was part of the 2004 ATP Challenger Series. It took place in Santiago de Chile, Chile between 1 and 7 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177093-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Petrobras Santiago, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177093-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Petrobras Santiago, Champions, Doubles\nEnzo Artoni / Ignacio Gonz\u00e1lez King def. Brian Dabul / Dami\u00e1n Patriarca, 6\u20133, 6\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177094-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Petrobras Santiago \u2013 Doubles\nEnzo Artoni and Ignacio Gonz\u00e1lez King defeated Brian Dabul and Dami\u00e1n Patriarca 6\u20133, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177095-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Petrobras Santiago \u2013 Singles\n\u00d3scar Hern\u00e1ndez defeated Nicol\u00e1s Lapentti 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177096-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Sudamericana\nThe 2004 Copa Nissan Sudamericana was the 3rd edition of CONMEBOL's secondary international football tournament. It was won by Argentine club Boca Juniors, who defeated Bol\u00edvar of Bolivia to win their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177097-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nThe 2004 Copa Sudamericana Finals was a two-legged football match-up to determine the 2004 Copa Sudamericana champion. It was contested by Bolivian club Bol\u00edvar and Argentinian club Boca Juniors. Both teams were playing in their first Copa Sudamericana finals. The first leg was played in Estadio Hernando Siles in La Paz on 8 December and the host team Bol\u00edvar won 1\u20130. The second leg was played in La Bombonera in Buenos Aires on 17 December and the host team Boca Juniors won 2\u20130, thus being crowned the champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177097-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nIt was also the first Copa Sudamericana trophy won by Boca Juniors, which as winners, earned the right to play in the 2005 Recopa Sudamericana against the winner of the 2004 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177098-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol\nThe 2004 Copa de S.M. La Reina de F\u00fatbol was the 22nd edition of Spain's women's football national cup. The competition was shortened from previous editions' eight teams to just four and held in Burgos as a Final Four from 4 to 6 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177098-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol\nLevante UD defeated CFF Puebla in a penalty shootout in semifinals and defending champion CE Sabadell in extra time in the final to win its fourth cup in five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177099-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa del Rey Final\nThe 2004 Copa del Rey Final was the 102nd final of the Spanish cup competition, the Copa del Rey. The final was played at Montju\u00efc in Barcelona, on 17 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177099-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa del Rey Final\nThe match was won by Zaragoza, who defeated Real Madrid 3\u20132 after extra time, winning the tournament for the sixth time in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177100-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa del Rey Juvenil\nThe 2004 Copa del Rey Juvenil was the 54th staging of the Copa del Rey Juvenil tournament. The competition began on May 16, 2004 and ended on June 26, 2004 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177101-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto\nThe Copa del Rey 2003-04 was the 68th edition of the Spanish basketball Cup. It was organized by the ACB and was disputed in Sevilla in the Palacio Municipal de Deportes San Pablo between 26 and 29 February 2004. The winning team was TAU Cer\u00e1mica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177102-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa do Brasil\nThe Copa do Brasil 2004 was the 16th staging of the Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177102-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa do Brasil\nThe competition started on February 4, 2004 and concluded on June 30, 2004 with the second leg of the final, held at the Est\u00e1dio do Maracan\u00e3 in Rio de Janeiro, in which Santo Andr\u00e9 lifted the trophy for the first time with a 2-0 victory over Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177102-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa do Brasil\nDauri, of 15 de Novembro, with 8 goals, was the competition's top goal scorer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177102-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa do Brasil, Format\nThe competition was played by 64 clubs in a knock-out format where all rounds were played over two legs and the away goals rule was used, but in the first two rounds if the away team won the first leg with an advantage of at least two goals, the second leg was not played and the club automatically qualified to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177103-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa do Brasil Finals\nThe 2004 Copa do Brasil Finals was a two-legged Brazilian football that determinate the 2004 Copa do Brasil champion. It was played on June 24 and 30. It was contested by Santo Andr\u00e9, the 2003 Copa Estado de S\u00e3o Paulo winners and 2003 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C runners-up, and Flamengo, whose last success had come in the 2001 Campeonato Carioca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177103-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Copa do Brasil Finals\nSanto Andr\u00e9 won the finals by a 4\u20132 aggregate scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177104-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Coppa Italia Final\nThe 2004 Coppa Italia Final was the final of the 2003\u201304 Coppa Italia, the 57th season of the top cup competition in Italian football. The match was played over two legs between Lazio and Juventus. This was the 13th Coppa Italia final appearance by Juventus and the 5th by Lazio. It was the first meeting of these two clubs in the finals. The first leg was played in Rome on 17 March 2004, in which Lazio won 2\u20130. The second leg was played on 12 May 2004 in Turin and the two clubs drew 2\u20132, giving Lazio their 4th title on an aggregate result of 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177105-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork City Council election\nAn election to Cork City Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 31 councillors were elected from three electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177106-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork County Council election\nAn election to Cork County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 48 councillors were elected from ten electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177107-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 95th staging of the Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1909. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 10 February 2004. The championship began on 30 April 2004 and ended on 24 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177107-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 24 October 2004, Watergrasshill won the championship after a 2-13 to 2\u201308 defeat of Dromina in the final at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Chaoimh. It remains their only championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177107-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nNemo Rangers' James Masters was the championship's top scorer with 4-34.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177107-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship, Format change\nIn 2003 the Cork County Board Executive established a Hurling Championship Review Committee in an effort to improve the competitiveness of the Cork Senior Championship. The committee also proposed the splitting of the existing Cork Intermediate Championship in two with the creation of a 16-team Premier Intermediate Championship and a 16-team Intermediate Hurling Championship. The 10 lowest-ranked teams from the 2003 Intermediate Championship were joined by the 2003 Junior Championship winners as well as the individual divisional winners - Argideen Rangers, Kanturk, Carrigaline, Blackrock and Watergrasshill. Grenagh, who won the Mid Cork Junior Championship division in the junior grade, declined the invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177108-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship was the 107th staging of the Cork Junior A Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1895. The championship began on 17 October 2004 on 14 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177108-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nOn 14 November 2004, Ballygarvan won the championship following a 3-7 to 1-12 defeat of Grenagh in the final. This was their first championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177108-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nBallygarvan's Liam Dillon was the championship's top scorer with 1-33.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177109-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship was the inaugural staging of the Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 10 February 2004. The championship began on 30 April 2004 and ended on 31 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177109-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 31 October 2004, St. Catherine's won the championship following a 1-11 to 1-8 defeat of Courcey Rovers in the final. This remains their only championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177109-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nMallow's Pa Dineen was the championship's top scorer with 3-25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177110-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Football Championship\nThe 2004 Cork Senior Football Championship was the 116th staging of the Cork Senior Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the opening fixtures took place on 14 December 2003. The championship began on 7 April 2004 and ended on 17 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177110-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Football Championship\nCastlehaven entered the championship as the defending champions, however, they were beaten by Mallow in round 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177110-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Football Championship\nOn 17 October 2004, Carbery won the championship following a 1-11 to 0-07 defeat of Bishopstown in the final. This was their fourth championship title overall and their first title since 1971.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177110-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Football Championship\nFion\u00e1n Murray from the St. Finbarr's club was the championship's top scorer with 1-30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177111-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Cork Senior Hurling Championship was the 116th staging of the Cork Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the 2004 fixtures took place on 14 December 2003. The championship began on 2 May 2004 and ended on 31 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177111-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nNewtownshandrum were the defending champions, however, they were defeated by Cloyne in the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177111-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 31 October 2004, Na Piarsaigh won the championship following a 0-17 to 0-10 defeat of Cloyne in the final. This was their third championship title overall and their first in nine championship seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177112-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cornell Big Red football team\nThe 2004 Cornell Big Red football team represented Cornell University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Ivy League. They were led by first-year head coach Jim Knowles and played their home games at Schoellkopf Field. Cornell finished the season 4\u20136 overall and 4\u20133 in Ivy League play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177113-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cotton Bowl Classic\nThe 2004 Cotton Bowl Classic was a post-season college football bowl game between the Oklahoma State Cowboys and the Ole Miss Rebels on January 2, 2004, at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas. It was the final game of the 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season for each team and resulted in a 31\u201328 Ole Miss victory. Ole Miss represented the Southeastern Conference (SEC) while Oklahoma State represented the Big 12 Conference. It was Ole Miss's first January bowl victory since the 1970 Sugar Bowl and first Cotton Bowl Classic appearance since 1962.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177113-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary\nOle Miss quarterback Eli Manning completed 21 of 33 pass attempts, threw for two touchdowns, and he ran for one additional touchdown to lead the Rebels to a Cotton Bowl Classic win in a game that was not decided until the final minutes as the Rebels built a 31\u201314 lead, then held on after the Cowboys made it 31\u201328 with 4:38 to go. Vernand Morency had two touchdowns for OSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177114-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Country Music Association Awards\nThe 2004 Country Music Association Awards, 38th Ceremony, on November 9, 2004, hosted by CMA Award Winning duo, Brooks & Dunn. This was the final ceremony to be held in the Grand Ole Opry House in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177114-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Country Music Association Awards\nAlan Jackson led with seven nominations, including Album of the Year, and Entertainer of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177115-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 County Championship\nThe 2004 County Championship season, known as the Frizzell County Championship for sponsorship reasons, was contested through two divisions: Division One and Division Two. Each team plays all the others in their division both home and away. The top three teams from Division Two were promoted to the first division for 2005, while the bottom three sides from Division 1 are relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177115-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 County Championship, Division One, Standings\nSource: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd matches won; 3rd fewest defeatsP = Position; Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; L = Matches lost; Tie = Matches tied; D = Matches drawn; Aban = Matches abandoned; Deduct = Points deducted; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177115-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 County Championship, Division Two, Standings\nSource: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd matches won; 3rd fewest defeatsP = Position; Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; L = Matches lost; Tie = Matches tied; D = Matches drawn; Aban = Matches abandoned; Deduct = Points deducted; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177116-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Coupe de France Final\nThe Coupe de France Final 2004 was a football match held at Stade de France, Saint-Denis on 29 May 2004, that saw Paris SG defeat LB Ch\u00e2teauroux 1-0 thanks to a goal by Pauleta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177117-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Coupe de la Ligue Final\nThe Coupe de la Ligue Final 2004 was a football match held at Stade de France, Saint-Denis on April 17, 2004, that saw Sochaux defeat Nantes in a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177118-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Coventry City Council election\nElections to Coventry City Council were held in June 2004. Due to boundary changes, the entire council was up for election. The council remained with no overall control, but the Conservatives became the largest party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177118-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Coventry City Council election, Ward results\nNote that seat gains and losses are compared with the previous seat of the same name. All eighteen seats had redrawn boundaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177119-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Craven District Council election\nThe 2004 Craven District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Craven District Council in North Yorkshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177119-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Craven District Council election\nAfter the election, the composition of the council was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177119-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Craven District Council election, Background\nAfter the last election in 2003, the Conservatives had 11 seats, compared to 10 for independents and 9 Liberal Democrats. However, in November 2003 an independent candidate gained a seat from the Liberal Democrats at a by-election in Bentham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177119-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Craven District Council election, Background\nAt the 2004 election two long serving councillors stood down, Beth Graham from Settle and Ribblesbanks ward, who had been a councillor since 1976, and Peter Walbank of Grassington ward. Candidates at the election included the first Labour party candidate for a few years, James Black in Skipton South, while the Green party also stood a candidate in Aire Valley with Lothersdale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177119-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Craven District Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives gained 2 seats at the election to have 13 councillors, compared to 11 independents and 6 Liberal Democrats. Overall turnout at the election reached 50% after being held with all postal voting, only 9% below the turnout nationally at the 2001 general election, with the high turnout leading to a delay in the counting of the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177120-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Crawley Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Crawley Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Crawley Borough Council in West Sussex, England. Boundary changes had taken place, so the entire council was up for election. The Labour Party stayed in overall control of the council, albeit with a majority of just one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177121-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 Lib\u00e9r\u00e9\nThe 2004 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 Lib\u00e9r\u00e9 was the 56th edition of the cycle race and was held from 6 June to 13 June 2004. The race started in Meg\u00e8ve and finished in Grenoble. The race was won by Iban Mayo of the Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177121-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 Lib\u00e9r\u00e9, Teams\nTwelve teams, containing a total of 95 riders, participated in the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177122-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Croatian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Croatian Figure Skating Championships (Croatian: Prvenstvo Hrvatske za 2004) were the National Championships of the 2003\u201304 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177122-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Croatian Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ladies\n* \u017deljka Krizmani\u0107 and Helena Pozojevic placed first and second respectively in the junior competition, and the ISU recognizes them as the senior silver and bronze medalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177123-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Croatian Football Super Cup\nThe 2004 Croatian Football Super Cup was the sixth edition of the Croatian Football Super Cup, a football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Croatian First League and Croatian Football Cup competitions. The match was played on 17 July 2004 at Stadion Poljud in Split between 2003\u201304 Croatian First League winners Hajduk Split and 2003\u201304 Croatian Football Cup winners Dinamo Zagreb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177124-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season\nThe 2004 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season was the 38th in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2004 Telstra Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177124-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nIn the off-season the Sharks signed Stuart Raper as their head coach following the previous season's dismissal of Chris Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177124-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nCronulla did not begin the 2004 season well, losing four or five matches on the trot to be sitting last on the ladder after round five. One early season lowlight was the on-field dismissal of Greg Bird for kneeing Souths' winger Shane Marteene and his subsequent 10-week ban. However, there were some on-field highlights none more so than their round 22 upset of the high-flying Sydney Roosters who were sitting on top of the ladder at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177124-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nThey also defeated the likes of the Parramatta Eels at Parramatta Stadium where on their last visit the Sharks were thrashed 74-4 (in fact, Cronulla have not lost at the venue ever since), the Melbourne Storm in Melbourne, the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles at Brookvale Oval where the Sharks historically have a poor record and the Brisbane Broncos in Brisbane. Otherwise, the season was overall a disappointment; the Sharks missing the finals for the second year in succession however they did improve on their disastrous 12th finish in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177125-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cup of China\nThe 2004 Cup of China was the fourth event of six in the 2004\u201305 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Capital Gymnasium in Beijing on November 11\u201314. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Golden Waltz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177126-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cup of Russia\nThe 2004 Cup of Russia was the sixth event of six in the 2004\u201305 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Luzhniki Palace of Sports in Moscow on November 25\u201328. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Midnight Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177127-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei (women's football)\nThe 2004 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 1st annual Romanian women's football knockout tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177128-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nThe 2004 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final was the 66th final of Romania's most prestigious cup competition. The final was played at the Stadionul Cotroceni in Bucharest on 6 June 2004 and was contested between Divizia A sides Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti and O\u0163elul Gala\u0163i. The cup was won by Dinamo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division\nThe 2004 Absa Currie Cup First Division season was the second tier competition in the 66th Currie Cup season since it started in 1889. It was won by the Boland Cavaliers, who defeated the Border Bulldogs 23\u201322 in the final at the Boland Stadium, Wellington on 22 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division, Competition\nThere were six participating teams in the 2004 Currie Cup First Division. These teams played each other twice over the course of the season, once at home and once away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division, Competition\nTeams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that scored 4 or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by seven points or less. Teams were ranked by log points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division, Competition\nThe top four teams qualified for the title play-offs. In the semi-finals, the team that finished first had home advantage against the team that finished fourth, while the team that finished second had home advantage against the team that finished third. The winners of these semi-finals played each other in the final, at the home venue of the higher-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division, Points scorers\nThe following table contain points which have been scored in competitive games in the 2004 Currie Cup First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division, Cards\nThe following table contains all the cards handed out during the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177129-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup First Division, Squad Lists\nThe following players have been named in the squads for the 2004 Currie Cup First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division\nThe 2004 Absa Currie Cup Premier Division season was the 66th season in the competition since it started in 1889. It was won by the Blue Bulls, who defeated the Free State Cheetahs 42-33 in the final at Loftus Versfeld on 23 October 2004. It was the first of three consecutive finals contested between the Blue Bulls and Free State Cheetahs. Andr\u00e9 Watson became the first-ever official to referee seven Currie Cup finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition\nThere were 8 participating teams in the 2004 Currie Cup Premier Division. These teams played each other twice over the course of the season, once at home and once away", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition\nTeams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that score 4 or more tries in a game, as well as to teams losing a match by 7 points or less. Teams were ranked by log points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division, Competition\nThe top 4 teams qualified for the title play-offs. In the semi-finals, the team that finished first had home advantage against the team that finished fourth, while the team that finished second had home advantage against the team that finished third. The winners of these semi-finals played each other in the final, at the home venue of the higher-placed team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division, Points scorers\nThe following table contain only points which have been scored in competitive games in the 2004 Currie Cup Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division, Cards\nThe following table contains all the cards handed out during the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177130-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Currie Cup Premier Division, Squad Lists\nThe following players have been named in the squads for the 2004 Currie Cup Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177131-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Curtis Cup\nThe 33rd Curtis Cup Match was played on 12 and 13 June 2004 at Formby Golf Club in Formby, Merseyside, England. The United States won 10 to 8. Great Britain and Ireland won 5 of the 6 foursomes but American dominated in the singles, winning 9 of the 12 matches. Michelle Wie became the youngest ever Curtis Cup player, at the age of 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177131-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Curtis Cup, Format\nThe contest was a two-day competition, with three foursomes and six singles matches on each day, a total of 18 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177131-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Curtis Cup, Format\nEach of the 18 matches was worth one point in the larger team competition. If a match was all square after the 18th hole extra holes were not played. Rather, each side earned 1\u20442 a point toward their team total. The team that accumulated at least 91\u20442 points won the competition. In the event of a tie, the current holder retained the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177131-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Curtis Cup, Teams\nEight players for Great Britain & Ireland and USA participated in the event plus one non-playing captain for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums\nA referendum on the Annan Plan was held in the Republic of Cyprus and the non recognized Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus on 24 April 2004. The two communities were asked whether they approved of the fifth revision of the United Nations proposal for reuniting the island, which had been divided since 1974. While it was approved by 65% of Turkish Cypriots, it was rejected by 76% of Greek Cypriots. Turnout for the referendum was high at 89% among Greek Cypriots and 87% among Turkish Cypriots, which was taken as indicative of great interest in the issue on the part of the electorates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Background\nThe referendum had originally been planned for 21 April, until the UN planners realised it was the anniversary of the coup in Athens in 1967, which set off the chain of events that led to the Turkish invasion of the island in 1974.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Campaign, Republic of Cyprus\nPolitical leaders in the Republic of Cyprus strongly opposed the plan. Tassos Papadopoulos, president of the Republic of Cyprus, spoke out against the plan in a speech broadcast live on television. Two days before the referendums, Cyprus's biggest party, Progressive Party of Working People, decided to reject the Annan Plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Campaign, Republic of Cyprus\nGreek Prime Minister Kostas Karamanlis decided to maintain a \"neutral\" position over the plan, but opposition leader George Papandreou of PASOK urged Cypriots to vote in favour, also because the plan had been promoted by his political party while it was still in power and Papandreou had been the Foreign Minister at the time, and had claimed both communities were ready for \"a final common agreement\". Nevertheless, opinion polls conducted in the Republic of Cyprus over the entire period of the negotiations from start to finish had always shown around 80% opposition to the proposals. Greek Cypriots have not voted uniformly on the Annan Plan. Their voting behaviour was strongly depended on their partisanship and their location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Campaign, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus\nAmong Turkish Cypriots the plan was argued to be excessively pro-Greek, but most said they were willing to accept it as a means of ending their prolonged international isolation and exclusion from the wider European economy. However, it was opposed by their leadership, with the Turkish Cypriot President Rauf Denkta\u015f actively advocating a no vote. However, his Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Talat favoured the plan's acceptance, while Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan also supported it. Turkey saw a resolution of the Cyprus issue as being an essential first step to eventual Turkish membership of the EU as well as a way of defusing tensions with Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Campaign, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus\nThe Grey Wolves (a Turkish right-wing nationalist group belonging to the MHP nationalist party) actively advocated a \"no\" vote. There were some limited riots caused by the Grey Wolves party activists against pro-ratification supporters during the pre-vote period. At least 50 such activists had arrived in Northern Cyprus during the pre-voting period. However, the referendum itself passed off peacefully and was deemed free and fair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Referendum question\nThe question put to the electorate of the two communities was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Referendum question\nDo you approve the Foundation Agreement with all its Annexes, as well as the constitution of the Greek Cypriot/Turkish Cypriot State and the provisions as to the laws to be in force, to bring into being a new state of affairs in which Cyprus joins the European Union united?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath\nSince the Greek Cypriot Community did not approve the Plan, and implementation of the Plan was dependent on its approval by both communities, the Annan Plan, according to its own terms, became null and void.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath\nShould the Foundation Agreement not be approved at the separate simultaneous referenda, or any guarantor fail to sign the Treaty on matters related to the new state of affairs in Cyprus by 29 April 2004, it shall be null and void, and have no legal effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Participation issues\nGreek Cypriots disputed the right of Turkish Cypriots who had immigrated from Turkey since the 1974 breakaway. Following the referendum, Greek Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos wrote to Kofi Annan, complaining that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Participation issues\nHowever, under the final Plan not only the entirety of settlers were to remain in Cyprus and the possibility for a permanent flow of settlers from Turkey was left open, but all of them were allowed to vote during the referendum. This was so, despite established international law and UN practice, and persistent repeated calls of our side to the contrary, which were utterly disregarded. The end result, is that once more the settlers have participated in formulating the will of Turkish Cypriots during the referendum of April 24, and this against every norm of international law and practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Participation issues\nThe British Foreign Affairs Select Committee noted that while the settler population did not \"swing\" the vote, \"as illegal immigrants they should not have been allowed to vote at all\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, Greek Cypriots\nThe Republic of Cyprus' president, Tassos Papadopoulos, emphasised that his people had rejected just the Annan plan and not all solutions to the Cyprus problem. \"They are not turning their backs on their Turkish Cypriot compatriots,\" he said soon after the results were declared. \"They have simply rejected this particular solution on offer.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, Turkish Cypriots\nTurkish Cypriot President Rauf Denkta\u015f responded to the referendum outcome by declaring that, with the Annan Plan rejected, his \"no\" campaign had reached its objective. He rejected calls for his immediate resignation, but announced the following month that he would not be standing for a fifth presidential term in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, Greece, Turkey and the United Kingdom\nThere was varied reaction from Cyprus' Guarantor Powers, Greece, Turkey and the United Kingdom. Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdo\u011fan said that he believed the result spelled an end for Turkish Cypriot isolation, and that by rejecting the Annan Plan, \"southern Cyprus (was) the loser\". A spokesman for the Greek government stressed that efforts to reunite Cyprus should not be halted, pointing out that in the EU framework it is \"in the interest of everyone to continue efforts to reconcile Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, Greece, Turkey and the United Kingdom\nThe British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said, \"We will respect the choice which Greek Cypriots have expressed today. But I hope that they will continue to reflect on whether this choice is the right one for them.\" The general international reaction to the result was similar to that of Britain: one of deep disappointment, particularly among those bodies that had worked on the Annan Plan and on EU accession arrangements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 95], "content_span": [96, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, European Union\nThe European Union had been counting on approval of the Annan Plan so that Cyprus would join it as a united island, and expressed disappointment at the Greek Cypriot rejection of the Plan. It had already agreed that the Republic of Cyprus would become a member regardless of the result of the referendum, and so on May 1, 2004, Cyprus joined the European Union together with nine other countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, European Union\nWith regard to the Turkish Cypriots the European Union stated the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, European Union\nThe whole of the island is in the EU. However, in the northern part of the island, in the areas in which the Government of Cyprus does not exercise effective control, EU legislation is suspended in line with Protocol 10 of the Accession Treaty 2003. The situation will change once a Cyprus settlement enters into force and it will then be possible for EU rules to apply over the whole of the island. However, the suspension does not affect the personal rights of Turkish Cypriots as EU citizens. They are citizens of a Member State, the Republic of Cyprus, even though they may live in the northern part of Cyprus, the areas not under government control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Aftermath, Reaction, European Union\nHad the plan been ratified by both sides, Cyprus would have entered the EU as the United Cyprus Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 72], "content_span": [73, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177132-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Cypriot Annan Plan referendums, Causes of the outcome, Reasons for rejection by the Greek Cypriots\nAs summarised by \"The Case Against the Annan Plan\", Coufoudakis and Kyriakides and the Letter by the President of the Republic, Mr Tassos Papadopoulos, to the U.N. Secretary-General, Mr Kofi Annan dated 7 June 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 103], "content_span": [104, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177133-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Cyprus Rally\nThe 2004 Cyprus Rally (formally the 32nd Cyprus Rally) was the fifth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over three days between 14 May and 16 May 2004, and was based in Limassol, Cyprus. Citro\u00ebn's S\u00e9bastien Loeb won the race, his 7th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177134-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Czech Figure Skating Championships were held in Hradec Kr\u00e1lov\u00e9 between January 8 and 11, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177135-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Lion Awards\n2006 Czech Lion Awards ceremony was held on 5 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177136-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix was the tenth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 20\u201322 August 2004 at the Masaryk Circuit located in Brno, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177136-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round ten has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 89], "content_span": [90, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177137-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Senate by-elections\nBy-elections for Prague 4 and Znojmo District Senate seats were held in the Czech Republic in October 2004. Elections were held after incumbent senators became members of European parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177137-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Senate by-elections, Prague 4\nElection in Prague 4 was won by Franti\u0161ek P\u0159\u00edhoda who defeated Erazim Koh\u00e1k by landslide. P\u0159\u00edhoda's victory was generally expected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177137-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Senate by-elections, Znojmo\nZnojmo election was unexpectedly won by Milan \u0160pa\u010dek. He faced Jaroslav Pa\u0159\u00edk who was considered front-runner due to his results in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177138-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech Senate election\nSenate elections were held in the Czech Republic on 5 and 6 November 2004, with a second round on 12 and 13 November. The result was a victory for the Civic Democratic Party, which won 37 of the 81 seats. Voter turnout was 28.6% in the first round and just 18.4% in the second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177139-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Czech regional elections\nRegional elections were held in the Czech Republic to elect the Regional Councils of 13 regions (all except Prague) on 5\u20136 November 2004. They were won by Civic Democratic Party (ODS), whilst the ruling Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD) was heavily defeated, finishing third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season\nThe 2004 D.C. United season was the eighth season of the club's existence. It was highlighted by winning their first MLS Cup championship since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season\nThe season was hallmarked by United winning their fourth Major League Soccer championship, winning MLS Cup 2004 3\u20132 over Kansas City Wizards. To date, this was the last time in franchise history that the team has won an MLS Cup title. Additionally, by winning the championship, some cite that it marked a \"second golden age\" in United. Following the 2004 title, United would go on to win two MLS Supporters' Shields, to claim the most in the league, as well as their second U.S. Open Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season\nIn terms of player and manager transactions, the offseason saw English head coach Ray Hudson end his two-season stint with the club, as United management fired him out of dissatisfaction with his results as a manager. United signed retired MLS star Piotr Nowak to the role of head coaching duties. Hitherto, no other head coach had been a former MLS player. The signing of Nowak marked a new trend of first-generation MLS players assuming coaching duties for second generation MLS players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season\nIn 2003, United made national and international headlines by drafting 14-year-old prospect Freddy Adu as the first pick of the MLS SuperDraft. MLS orchestrated a series of negotiations between United and Dallas Burn, who had the first overall selection. A series of agreements between the two sides gave Dallas additional allocation from United so that Adu could play for his local club, as he grew up near Potomac, Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season, Club, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season, Club, Statistics\nList of squad players, including number of appearances by competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177140-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 D.C. United season, Transfers, Out\nSourced list of players sold or loaned out during the season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177141-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 D1 Grand Prix series, 2004 Schedules, 2004 D1 Grand Prix Point Series\nRound 1 - February 27/28 - Irwindale Speedway, Irwindale, California, United States - Yasuyuki Kazama (S15)Round 2 - May 4/5 - Sports Land SUGO (Go-Kart circuit), Miyagi Prefecture, Japan - Yasuyuki Kazama (S15)Round 3 - July 24/25 - Ebisu South Course, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan - Ken Nomura (ER34)Round 4 - August 21/22 - Autopolis, \u014cita Prefecture, Japan - Nobuteru Taniguchi (S15)Round 5 - September 18 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Ryuji Miki (S15)Round 6 - October 23/24 - Ebisu South Course, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan - Youichi Imamura (FD3S)Round 7 - November 25 - Tsukuba Circuit, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan - Youichi Imamura (FD3S)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177141-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 D1 Grand Prix series, 2004 Schedules, 2004 D1 Grand Prix Exhibition Matches\nD1 Pre-Season Match - January 17 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Kuniaki Takahashi (JZX100)D1 Exhibition - Apr. 17 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Ken Nomura (ER34)D1 Odaiba Allstar Match - Apr. 18 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Yasuyuki Kazama (S15)D1 Odaiba Allstar Match - Sep. 19 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Youichi Imamura (FD3S)D1 USA vs Japan Allstar - December 17 - California Speedway, Fontana, California, United States - Nobushige Kumakubo (S15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177142-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Ligapokal\nThe 2004 DFB-Ligapokal was the eighth edition of the DFB-Ligapokal. Bayern Munich won their fifth title, beating Werder Bremen 3\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177142-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Ligapokal, Participating clubs\nA total of six teams qualified for the competition. The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177143-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Ligapokal Final\nThe 2004 DFB-Ligapokal Final decided the winner of the 2004 DFB-Ligapokal, the 8th edition of the reiterated DFB-Ligapokal, a knockout football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177143-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Ligapokal Final\nThe match was played on 2 August 2004 at the Bruchwegstadion in Mainz. Bayern Munich won the match 3\u20132 against Werder Bremen for their 5th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177143-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Ligapokal Final, Route to the final\nThe DFB-Ligapokal is a six team single-elimination knockout cup competition. There are a total of two rounds leading up to the final. Four teams enter the preliminary round, with the two winners advancing to the semi-finals, where they will be joined by two additional clubs who were given a bye. For all matches, the winner after 90 minutes advances. If still tied, extra time, and if necessary penalties are used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177144-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Pokal Final\nThe 2004 DFB-Pokal Final decided the winner of the 2003\u201304 DFB-Pokal, the 61st season of Germany's premier knockout football cup competition. It was played on 29 May 2004 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin. Werder Bremen won the match 3\u20132 against second-division Alemannia Aachen, giving them their 5th cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177144-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Pokal Final, Route to the final\nThe DFB-Pokal began with 64 teams in a single-elimination knockout cup competition. There were a total of five rounds leading up to the final. Teams were drawn against each other, and the winner after 90 minutes would advance. If still tied, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177144-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 DFB-Pokal Final, Route to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177145-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic\nThe 2004 DFS Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on grass courts at the Edgbaston Priory Club in Birmingham in the United Kingdom that was part of Tier III of the 2004 WTA Tour. The tournament was held from 7 June until 13 June 2004. Third-seeded Maria Sharapova won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177145-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic, Finals, Doubles\nMaria Kirilenko / Maria Sharapova defeated Lisa McShea / Milagros Sequera 6\u20132, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177146-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic \u2013 Doubles\nEls Callens and Meilen Tu were the defending champions but they competed with different partners that year. Callens partnered with Shinobu Asagoe, and lost in the first round to Eleni Daniilidou and Katarina Srebotnik. Tu partnered with Tina Kri\u017ean, and lost in the quarterfinals to Maria Kirilenko and Maria Sharapova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177146-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic \u2013 Doubles\nKirilenko and Sharapova won the title, defeating Lisa McShea and Milagros Sequera in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20131. Despite playing on the WTA tour for a further 16 years, this was Sharapova's last WTA final, and title, in doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177146-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177147-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic \u2013 Singles\nMagdalena Maleeva was the defending champion, but lost in the third round to Tamarine Tanasugarn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177147-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sharapova won the title, defeating Tatiana Golovin in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177147-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 DFS Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe champion seed is indicated in bold text. Text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. The top eight seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177148-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 DPR Korea Football League\nStatistics of DPR Korea Football League in the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season\nThe 2004 season was Daegu F.C. 's second season in the South Korean K-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nThe club's foundation captain, Kim Hak-Cheol, had left Daegu to join the newly formed Incheon United, which was making its K-League debut. Hong Soon-Hak, a midfielder who had played a number of games the previous season, was designated captain. While all of the imports from the previous season bar Indio were released following the conclusion of the club's first season, Nonato and Jefferson, both Brazilian strikers, transferred in. Another Brazilian, Santiago, a central defender, would arrive mid-season. Daegu improved in 2004 to 10th place in the league, which due to Incheon United's entry, now boasted 13 clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nThe K-League revised its playing structure following the prolonged 2003 season, and now required each club to play home and away matches in two stages (each club playing 12 matches in each stage) against the other participating clubs; the winners of each stage qualifying for a playoff phase along with the top two teams from the overall table. This meant that only 24 regular season games were played. In contrast to the previous season, Daegu had a reasonable offensive record, scoring 30 goals during the season, second only to eventual champion Suwon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nDaegu's Brazilian import, Nonato, finished the season as the club's leading scorer (and the K-league's overall runner-up), with 13 goals from 23 appearances. However, the club's defensive record was the worst in the league. Furthermore, in the FA Cup, Daegu were knocked out in the round of 32 by National League side Hallelujah FC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nIn the Samsung Hauzen Cup, a new cup competition run as a league competition specifically for K-League clubs (thus excluding National League and lower tier clubs) during the K-League's mid-season break, Daegu finished 8th out of 13 teams. Nonato again featured prominently on the scorekeeper's chart, being runner-up in goals scored. Nonato would subsequently be loaned to FC Seoul for the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Player In/Out, In\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177149-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Daegu FC season, Player In/Out, Out\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177150-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dakar Rally\n2004 Dakar Rally also known as the 2004 Paris-Dakar Rally was the 26th running of the Dakar Rally event. The rally started in the Auvergne region of France, passing through Morocco, Mauritania and Mali, and finishing Dakar in Senegal. This was the last time the rally ever visited France. The rally was won by the French team of St\u00e9phane Peterhansel and Jean-Paul Cottret in a Mitsubishi; while the motorcycle class was won by Nani Roma of Spain on a KTM and the trucks class was won by Russians Vladimir Chagin, Semen Yakubov and Sergey Savostin in a Kamaz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177150-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dakar Rally, Summary\nThe competitors included former world rally champion Colin McRae. Stephane Peterhansel took an early lead after the third stage. Four times winner of the rally, Ari Vatanen, won the fourth stage, which was his 50th individual stage win at the Dakar Rally. Peterhansel received a five minutes penalty after his team-mate pushed his car when it encountered gearbox trouble 300m from the finishing line of the fifth stage but retained his overall lead. McRae moved up to third place after the sixth stage but lost time on the seventh stage after getting stuck in a sand dune.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177150-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Dakar Rally, Summary\nPeterhansel retook the lead from overnight leader Hiroshi Masuoka after the eighth stage, and retained it after stage nine. Stages 10 and 11 were cancelled owing to concerns over the security situation in Mali. The rally resumed with stage 12 between Bobo-Dioulasso in Burkina Faso and Bamako in Mali; Peterhansel retained the lead at the end of the stage. McRae won the 13th stage between Bamako and Ayoun el Atrous in Mauritania, the first Briton to win a stage of the Dakar rally since Andrew Cowan in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177150-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 Dakar Rally, Summary\nThe 14th, 15th and 16th stages were won by Luc Alphand, Hiroshi Masuoka and Jutta Kleinschmidt. McRae won the final stage but the overall winner was Stephane Peterhansel, who became only the second man to have won both the car and motorcycle categories of the Dakar Rally. The motorcycle category was won by Spaniard Nani Roma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177151-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Burn season\nThe 2004 Dallas Burn season was the eighth season of the Major League Soccer team. The season saw the team fail to make the playoffs for the second consecutive year. The season was also the first full season under head coach Colin Clarke. The team moved from Dragon Stadium back to the Cotton Bowl. It would be the last full season for the team in the Cotton Bowl, as they would move to their current stadium in Frisco in 2005. It was also the team's final season as the Burn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177151-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Dallas Burn season\nWith the move to their own stadium the next year, the team would be rebranded as FC Dallas in 2005. Burn forward Eddie Johnson shared the Golden Boot Award with Brian Ching, tying him for the most goals in the MLS with 12. Johnson was the second Burn player to win the award, with Jason Kreis previously winning it in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season\nThe 2004 season was the Dallas Cowboys' 45th in the National Football League (NFL), their 16th under the ownership of Jerry Jones, their 33rd playing their home games at Texas Stadium, and their second season under head coach Bill Parcells. The team failed to improve on their 5-11 record in 2003 and finished at 6\u201310, failing to make the postseason for the first time since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Offseason\nBefore the season began, the Cowboys faced were forced to adjust. Coming off their first winning season for the first time in five years, the team, under Bill Parcells' direction, continued to bring in veteran talent and draft promising prospects. In the offseason, the Cowboys signed quarterback Vinny Testaverde and traded for wide receiver Keyshawn Johnson. Both Testaverde and Johnson had played for Parcells when he had coached the New York Jets. In return for Johnson, the Buccaneers received Joey Galloway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Offseason\nThe draft saw the arrival of running back Julius Jones, cornerbacks Jacques Reeves and Nate Jones, and college quarterback turned wide receiver Patrick Crayton. In owner Jerry Jones's continuing quest to acquire quarterback talent, the Cowboys traded for the rights to Drew Henson, another baseball player attempting to return to football. Henson starred at Michigan, keeping future NFL quarterback Tom Brady from claiming the starting job outright. His struggles in the New York Yankees farm system led him to reconsider his career and opt for a return to football, similar to Chad Hutchinson, whom the team had acquired two years prior. Hutchinson was later released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Quarterback controversy\nWith the opening of training camp, the team seemed poised to take the next step; however, this soon changed. Within the first week of camp, the Cowboys released starting quarterback Quincy Carter. The move came with no warning; reporters at training camp became aware something had occurred when Carter did not suit up for practice and was later seen being escorted from the Cowboys facility. Though never verified by Carter or the team, it has been speculated by the Cowboys, that his release was prompted by a failed drug test administered by the Cowboys, an action prohibited by NFL rules. Rumors began that Carter had already entered the second phase of the NFL's substance abuse program, meaning he had twice failed NFL-mandated random drug screenings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Quarterback controversy\nTest results are not made public but notices are sent to team officials. A third violation of the substance abuse program results in a mandatory suspension, and the Cowboys, unwilling to risk losing a starting quarterback during the season, began to monitor Carter with its own drug tests. Carter's formal protest of his release through the NFLPA as well as his subsequent troubles with drug addiction appear to lend credence to this scenario, According to the NFLPA. This move had a long-term effect on the team: Had Carter remained, second-year QB Tony Romo would have been fourth on the depth chart and likely cut from the team. When Carter left, Romo moved up to number 3, and was later a Pro Bowl starting quarterback for the Cowboys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season\nVinny Testaverde would be the opening day starter for the Cowboys. His extensive experience and veteran presence was an asset to the team, especially to young undrafted practice squad addition Tony Romo, but failed to produce many points behind an inconsistent offensive line. Dallas' defense would also regress from the previous season, especially the secondary which lost starting cornerback Mario Edwards in free agency and longtime mainstay and team leader safety Darren Woodson due to injury. Following a loss to the Baltimore Ravens, Drew Henson would start the annual Thanksgiving Day game against the Chicago Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season\nThe game still provided excitement for Cowboys fans as a rookie running back Julius Jones, who had been injured early in the season and had just returned in the previous game, put on a masterful performance rushing for 150 yards and two touchdowns in leading the team to victory. Jones' momentum would carry over to the next game where he would rush for 198 yards and three scores in a dramatic win over the Seattle Seahawks. In only 7 starts (8 games overall) Jones would rush for over 800 yards and seven touchdowns, though not justifying Parcells' decision to pass on running backs Steven Jackson and Kevin Jones in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177152-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season\nBill Parcells would continue to mold the team steadily implementing his preferred 3-4 defense and allowing his assistant coaches on offense, particularly Maurice Carthon and Sean Payton, to take more control. Other notable additions to the team this year include linebackers Ryan Fowler and Scott Shanle as well as former Heisman Trophy winner Eddie George in his final NFL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177153-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dally M Awards\nThe 2004 Dally M Awards were presented on Tuesday 7 September 2004 at the Sydney Town Hall in Sydney and broadcast on Fox Sports. Warren Smith presided as Master of Ceremonies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177153-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dally M Awards, Dally M Awards\nThe Dally M Awards were, as usual, conducted at the close of the regular season and hence do not take games played in the finals series into account. The Dally M Medal is for the official player of the year while the Provan-Summons Medal is for the fans' of \"people's choice\" player of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177154-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Danish Cup Final\nThe 2004 Danish Cup Final was the final and deciding match of the Danish Cup 2003-04. It took place on Thursday 20 May 2004 at Parken Stadium in Copenhagen and saw the Superliga leaders F.C. Copenhagen beat no. 5 in the league Aalborg Boldspilklub (AaB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177154-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Danish Cup Final\nF.C. Copenhagen have won the Cup on two previous occasions (1995 and 1997). AaB have won the Cup in 1966 and 1970.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177155-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Danish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Danish Figure Skating Championships (Danish: Danmarks Mesterskaberne 2004) was held at the Herlev Sk\u00f8jtehal in Herlev from December 12 to 14, 2003. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles. Not all disciplines were held on all levels due to a lack of participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177156-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Danmark Rundt\nThe 2004 Danmark Rundt was held from 4\u20138 August 2004. It was the 14th edition of the men's stage race, which was established in 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177156-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Danmark Rundt, Final classifications, Overall classement (yellow jersey)\nKurt Asle Arvesen's average speed for the race was 40.621\u00a0km/h.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 77], "content_span": [78, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177156-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Danmark Rundt, Final classifications, Fighter classement\nThe order was decided by the same jury that gives the points throughout the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177157-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Darfur Humanitarian Ceasefire Agreement\nFollowing the escalation of the Darfur conflict in the Sudan, Chad brokered negotiations in N'Djamena led to the Humanitarian Ceasefire Agreement between the Sudanese government and the two rebel groups, the Sudanese Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) and the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLM/A) on 8 April 2004, other signatories were Chad and the African Union. The ceasefire came into effect on 11 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177157-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Darfur Humanitarian Ceasefire Agreement\nThe National Movement for Reform and Development \u2014 a group which splintered from the JEM in April did not participate in the cease-fire talks or the agreement. Janjaweed and rebel attacks have continued since the ceasefire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177157-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Darfur Humanitarian Ceasefire Agreement\nThe African Union formed a Ceasefire Commission (CFC) to monitor observance of the ceasefire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177158-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe 2004 Dartmouth Big Green football team was an American football team that represented Dartmouth College during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Big Green tied for last in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177158-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nIn its 13th and final season under head coach John Lyons, the team compiled a 1\u20139 record and was outscored 205 to 108. Ryan Conger, Chris Dodds, Chris Little and Clayton Smith were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177158-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe Big Green's 1\u20136 conference record tied for sixth in the Ivy League standings. Dartmouth was outscored 200 to 151 by Ivy opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177158-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nDartmouth played its home games at Memorial Field on the college campus in Hanover, New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177159-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Daventry District Council election\nElections to Daventry District Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177160-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors\nThe 2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 35th edition of the event known that year as the Davidoff Swiss Indoors, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the St. Jakobshalle in Basel, Switzerland, from 24 October through 30 October 2004. Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177160-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors, Finals, Singles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k defeated David Nalbandian, 5\u20137, 6\u20133, 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177160-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors, Finals, Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Lucas Arnold Ker / Mariano Hood, 7\u20136(11\u20139), 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177161-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177161-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 7\u20136(11\u20139), 6\u20132, against Lucas Arnold and Mariano Hood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177162-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Coria was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177162-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Singles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k won the tournament, beating David Nalbandian in the final, 5\u20137, 6\u20133, 6\u20134, 1\u20136, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177163-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup\nThe 2004 Davis Cup was the 93rd edition of the tournament between nations in men's tennis. A total of 130 nations participated in the tournament. In the final, Spain defeated the United States at the Estadio de La Cartuja in Seville, Spain, on 3\u20135 December, giving Spain their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177163-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup, World Group, Draw\nFirst round losers compete in Play-off ties with Zonal Group I Qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177164-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone\nThe Americas Zone was one of three Zones of Davis Cup competition in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177165-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III\nThe Group III tournament was held in the Week commencing February 4, in Tegucigalpa, Honduras, on outdoor hard courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177165-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Format\nThe eight teams were split into two groups and played in a round-robin format. The top two teams of each group advanced to the promotion pool, from which the two top teams were promoted to the Americas Zone Group II in 2005. The last two placed teams of each group from the preliminary round were relegated into the relegation pool, from which the two bottom teams were relegated to the Americas Zone Group IV in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177165-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Pool A, Promotion pool\nThe top two teams from each of Pools A and B advanced to the Promotion pool. Results and points from games against the opponent from the preliminary round were carried forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177165-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Pool A, Promotion pool, Results of Individual Ties\nColombia and Netherlands Antilles promoted to Group II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177165-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Pool A, Relegation pool\nThe bottom two teams from Pools A and B were placed in the relegation group. Results and points from games against the opponent from the preliminary round were carried forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177165-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group III, Pool A, Relegation pool, Results of Individual Ties\nTrinidad & Tobago, US Virgin Islands demoted to Group IV for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 91], "content_span": [92, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177166-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Americas Zone Group IV\nThe Group IV tournament was held in the Week commencing April 7, in Escaz\u00fa, Costa Rica, on outdoor hard courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177167-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2004 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177167-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group III\nVenue: Phu Tho Tennis Centre, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (hard)Date: 5\u201311 April", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177167-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group IV\nVenue: Al Hussein Sport City, Amman, Jordan (hard)Date: 5\u201311 April", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177168-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone\nThe Europe/Africa Zone was one of three groups of Davis Cup competition in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177168-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group III, Venue 1\nVenue: Orange Tennis Centre, Kaunas, Lithuania (indoor carpet)Date: 2\u20138 February", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177168-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group IV, Venue 1\nVenue: Olympique Club de Dakar, Dakar, Senegal (hard)Date: 2\u20138 February", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177169-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nThe European and African Zone was one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177169-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nIn the European and African Zone there were four different groups in which teams competed against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177170-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup World Group\nThe World Group was the highest level of Davis Cup competition in 2004. The first-round losers went into the Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, and the winners progress to the quarterfinals. The quarterfinalists were guaranteed a World Group spot for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177171-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs\nThe World Group Play-offs were the main play-offs of 2004 Davis Cup. Winners advanced to the World Group, and loser were relegated in the Zonal Regions I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177171-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, Teams\nBold indicates team has qualified for the 2005 Davis Cup World Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177172-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Days of Thunder season\nThe 2004 Days of Thunder season was the 4th season of United Kingdom-based NASCAR style stock car racing, originally known as ASCAR. For this season the Days of Thunder brand was adopted entirely in place of the ASCAR name having been introduced as a promotional brand the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177172-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Days of Thunder season, Race calendar\nAll races were held at the Rockingham Motor Speedway in Corby, Northamptonshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177172-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Days of Thunder season, Race calendar\nThe season consisted of six meetings of two races taking place on the first Sunday of each month from May to October. The grid for the opening race of each meeting was set by a qualifying session with the second race grid being set by the finishing order of the first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500\nThe 2004 Daytona 500, the 46th running of the event was the first race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup season. It was a race held on February 15, 2004, at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. The race was televised by NBC, with Allen Bestwick, 1975 race winner Benny Parsons, and Wally Dallenbach, Jr. calling the action for the second time after the 2002 race. It was the first NASCAR Nextel Cup race to air in high definition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500\nDale Earnhardt, Jr. won the race, making this his first Daytona 500 victory exactly six years to the day after his father Dale Earnhardt, Sr. won his first and only Daytona 500 in the 1998 race. Tony Stewart finished second and rookie Scott Wimmer finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Qualifying and Gatorade 125's\nGreg Biffle won his first career Cup Series pole, but an engine change during Speedweeks forced him to go the rear of the field. The inside column of cars all moved up one row, promoting Dale Earnhardt, Jr., who had won the first Gatorade 125, to the number one starting spot. Elliott Sadler won the second of the Gatorade 125s, after holding off two-time 500 winner Sterling Marlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Qualifying and Gatorade 125's\nOf the 45 cars entered, the two who failed to qualify were Kirk Shelmerdine, driving his own #72 Ford Taurus, and ARCA veteran Andy Hillenburg in the #90 Ford Taurus, one of Junie Donlavey's final attempts at entering a Cup car. Andy Belmont was going to enter in the #95 for the Sadler Brothers but withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nBefore the start of the race, several cars had to move to the rear of the field: engine changes for polesitter Greg Biffle, Ryan Newman, Ricky Craven, and 1990 race winner Derrike Cope. Rookie and Sprint Cup debutant Scott Riggs started from the rear in a backup car. This meant that Gatorade Duel #1 winner Dale Earnhardt, Jr. took over the first starting spot and led the opening laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nMark Martin, coming off a disappointing season last year, exited the race with a blown engine on lap 8, which brought out the first caution. On lap 26, his Roush Racing teammate Jeff Burton joined him in the garage, likewise with an engine failure. Kevin Harvick made the first lead change on lap 30. Four laps later, Cope spun in turn 4, collecting Scott Riggs; this would bring out the second caution. After the first round of green-flag pit stops, Tony Stewart took the lead. He and Jimmie Johnson swapped it a few times while navigating lapped cars (most of them were at the \"tail-end\" of the lead lap, given that the lap 34 crash occurred during pit stops) before Earnhardt, Jr. reclaimed the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nOn lap 60, the third caution was flown when Rusty Wallace, Ken Schrader, and Jeff Green crashed on the backstretch. After the restart, Stewart and Earnhardt, Jr. both battled for the lead until a huge crash occurred in the back straightaway on lap 71. This started when rookies Brian Vickers and Johnny Sauter made contact, collecting Marlin, Newman, defending 500 winner Michael Waltrip, John Andretti, Kevin Lepage, Terry Labonte; Johnny Benson, Jr.; Scott Riggs, Robby Gordon, and Jamie McMurray. Waltrip got the worst of it, as his car went into the infield grass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe friction, combined with the fact that the rains that had washed out the Busch race the day before, caused the tire rim to dig into the infield grass. The car flipped over three times, kicked up a lot of dirt, and came to a stop on its roof. A temporary delay under a long caution (although the race was not red-flagged) ensued as emergency crews debated whether or not too upright Waltrip's car before extricating him. The situation was exacerbated due to Waltrip's size.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nJeff Gordon led the field at the lap 81 restart. From laps, 81 to 200 were run caution-free. The main competitors during the second half of the race still were Stewart and Earnhardt, Jr., who combined led 101 of the final 120 laps. They were the two strongest cars of the day, as they led for more than 156 laps (98 by Stewart and 56 by Earnhardt, Jr.).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nWhen the leaders pitted at lap 137, Sauter (who was five laps down after damage to his car from the lap 71 crash) tried to pit with them but had evident braking issues. He had to swerve to miss Kurt Busch (who was one lap down after contact with Earnhardt, Jr. earlier in the race punctured a tire) and flew through the pitlane at over 100\u00a0mph. Wisely, he did not attempt to stop in his pit box and came around the track to try again. His speeding penalty dropped him further back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nDuring the final round of green-flag pit stops with approximately 30 laps to go, Biffle tried to gain ground on the leaders at the pit entry but was quite evidently faster than the pack of cars running at pit lane speed. He dropped behind them prior to pitting, but his speeding penalty dropped him out of the Top 10 and from contention for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nWhen the final green-flag pit stops were over, rookie Scott Wimmer of Bill Davis Racing was out in front. The crew had only changed right-side tires, elevating him from a likely seventh or eighth-place finish to a chance to win. Unfortunately, he had no drafting partner and was caught up by the faster Stewart and Earnhardt, Jr. with 25 laps to go. Earnhardt, Jr. passed Stewart on lap 181 and held him off in the remaining laps to win his first Daytona 500. Earnhardt, Jr. won the race exactly three years after his father's fatal crash on the final lap of the 2001 race, where Waltrip had won his first race which itself came three years after Earnhardt's win in the 1998 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177173-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThis pattern of a driver with some connection to Earnhardt, Jr. winning the Daytona 500 every three years (since Earnhardt, Sr.'s win in 1998) has continued. Kevin Harvick, who replaced Earnhardt after his death, won the 2007 race just barely beating Mark Martin. Jamie McMurray, driving for Earnhardt Ganassi, won the 2010 race. Hendrick Motorsports (team Earnhardt, Jr. was in at that time) driver Jimmie Johnson won the 2013 race, though Earnhardt Jr. was 2nd in that race and won the 2014 race, just ten years later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177174-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delaware Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Delaware Democratic presidential primary was held on February 3, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. Frontrunner John Kerry easily won the primary while Senator Joe Lieberman came second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177174-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Delaware Democratic presidential primary\nAs the primary approached Joe Lieberman said that victory in the Delaware primary was required in order for his campaign to continue. He had visited the state four times and got the endorsement of Democratic senator Thomas R. Carper. After his defeat in the primary Lieberman withdrew from the race for the nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177174-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Delaware Democratic presidential primary\nExit polls showed that over half of voters who took part in the primary said they were 'angry' with the administration of George W. Bush and over 80% said they opposed the decision to go to war with Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177175-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team\nThe 2004 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team represented the University of Delaware in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They were led by K. C. Keeler, who was in his third season as head coach of the Fightin' Blue Hens. The team played its home games at Delaware Stadium in Newark, Delaware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177176-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delaware gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Delaware gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2004, coinciding with the U.S. presidential election. Incumbent Governor Ruth Ann Minner faced a serious challenge from retired Superior Court Judge Bill Lee, but managed a five-point victory on election day. As of 2021, this is the last time Kent County voted for the Republican candidate in a gubernatorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177177-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delaware lieutenant gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Delaware lieutenant gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2004, coinciding with the Delaware gubernatorial election. Democratic nominee and incumbent Lieutenant Governor of Delaware John Carney was reelected lieutenant governor over Republican nominee James P. Ursomarso in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177178-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships was an ATP tournament held in Delray Beach, Florida, United States that was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 12th editions of the tournament and was held from September 13 to September 20. Unseeded Ricardo Mello won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177178-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships, Finals, Doubles\nLeander Paes / Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek defeated Gast\u00f3n Etlis / Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez 6\u20130, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177179-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 were the defending champions, but Zimonji\u0107 did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177179-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nPaes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won in the final 6\u20130, 6\u20133, against Gast\u00f3n Etlis and Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177180-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nRicardo Mello defeated Vincent Spadea 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20133 to win the 2004 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships singles event. Jan-Michael Gambill was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention convened from July 26 to 29, 2004 at the FleetCenter (now the TD Garden) in Boston, Massachusetts, and nominated Senator John Kerry from Massachusetts for president and Senator John Edwards from North Carolina for vice president, respectively, in the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention was famous because it included the keynote speech of Barack Obama, who would go on to be elected President four years later. New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson served as chairman of the convention, while former presidential advisor to Bill Clinton, Lottie Shackelford, served as vice chairwoman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention marked the formal end of the active primary election season, although all meaningful primary elections had finished months earlier. After the convention, John Kerry and John Edwards were defeated by the incumbent George W. Bush and Dick Cheney in the general election. As of 2020, this was the most recent time that the Democratic Party nominated a ticket of two white men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Convention themes\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention featured a theme for each day of the convention. The first night of the meeting focused on the theme \"Plan for America's Future\" with speeches devoted to building optimism for John Kerry's candidacy. The second night of the meeting focused on the theme \"A Lifetime of Strength and Service\" devoted to John Kerry's biography and his path to his nomination. The third night of the meeting focused on the theme \"A Stronger More Secure America\" devoted to issues of homeland security and the global war on terror.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Convention themes\nThe last night of the meeting focused on the theme \"Stronger at Home, Respected in the World\" devoted to the overall agenda of the party to secure the borders, improving domestic welfare while at the same time promoting international cooperation in world affairs. The phrase \"Help is on the Way\" was often repeated by speakers such as John Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Party platform\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention successfully passed an official party platform. A forty-three page document, the party platform was entitled \"Strong at Home, Respected in the World\" \u2013 also the name of the theme conveyed on the last night of the convention. The first part of the platform was called \"A Strong, Respected America\". The section defined specific goals and actions to defeat terrorism, to keep weapons of mass destruction from the hands of terrorists, to promote world peace and security, to strengthen the military, to achieve energy independence and to strengthen homeland security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Party platform\nThe second part of the platform was called, \"A Strong, Growing Economy\". The section defined specific goals and actions to create what the party called \"good jobs\" and \"standing up for the great American middle class.\" The third part of the platform was called, \"Strong, Healthy Families.\" The section defined specific goals and actions to reform the healthcare system in the United States, to improve education and to protect the environment. The final part of the platform was called, \"A Strong American Community.\" It stressed the diversity of the nation and the importance of upholding civil rights as a major tenet of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Boston venue\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention was the first held in Boston, one of the few held in the home state of the presidential nominee, and also the first since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. During the convention, there was a memorial service to honor the victims of the attacks. Haleema Salie, who lost her daughter, son-in-law, and unborn grandchild on American Flight 11, spoke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Boston venue, Site selection\nAfter an initial notice to 34 cities, 10 cities requested the RFP to host the convention: Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Miami, New York City and Pittsburgh. Of those, five cities (Baltimore, Boston, Detroit, Miami and New York) submitted bids, and four cities (not including Baltimore) were visited by the DNC during the site selection process. Boston was announced as the host of the convention on November 13, 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Boston venue, Site selection\nAs a result of the selection of Boston, organizers of the Reebok Pro Summer League had to fold the league into the upstart Las Vegas Summer League due to a lack of lodging in the Boston area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Boston venue, Security\nDuring the convention, U.S. Capitol Police, the U.S. Coast Guard, and other governmental organizations took many security measures to protect the participants of the Democratic National Convention. Security measures included bomb-sniffing dogs, 7-feet high metal barricades, a ban on corporate and private flights at Logan airport, along with the shutting down of Interstate 93.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Boston venue, Police union\nOther Bostonians took advantage of the meeting as a national stage for specific agendas. The police union, for example, gained attention with threats of picketing of delegates from entering and exiting functions \u2013 a dilemma for Democrats as the party has traditionally been an ally of organized labor. Having worked without a contract for two years, the Boston Police Patrolmen's Association struck a deal with Boston mayor Thomas Menino for a new contract, avoiding a major embarrassment for the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama's keynote address\nState Senator Barack Obama, the Illinois Democratic candidate for United States Senate, delivered the convention's keynote address on Tuesday, July 27, 2004. His unexpected landslide victory in the March 2004 Illinois U.S. Senate Democratic primary had made him overnight a rising star within the national Democratic Party, started speculation about a presidential future, and led to the reissue of his memoir, Dreams from My Father. His keynote address, although not carried by the commercial broadcast television networks, was well received, which further elevated his status within the Democratic Party and led to his reissued memoir becoming a bestseller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama's keynote address\nAs the keynote speaker, Obama set the tone for the party platform. His speech, proclaiming the unnecessary and artificial divides in American culture and politics, was reminiscent of John Edwards's \"Two Americas\" stump speech: \"There's not a liberal America and a conservative America\u2014there's the United States of America.\" Obama emphasized the importance of unity, and made veiled jabs at the Bush administration and the news media's perceived oversimplification and diversionary use of wedge issues: \"We worship an awesome God in the blue states, and we don't like federal agents poking around in our libraries in the red states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama's keynote address\nWe coach Little League in the blue states, and yes, we've got some gay friends in the red states. There are patriots who opposed the war in Iraq, and there are patriots who supported the war in Iraq. We are one people, all of us pledging allegiance to the Stars and Stripes, all of us defending the United States of America.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama's keynote address\nObama noted his interracial and international heritage: he was born in Honolulu, Hawaii to a Kenyan immigrant father and a white mother from Kansas. He emphasized the power of education, recounting the privilege of attending the exclusive Punahou School and Harvard Law School despite his family's poverty, and criticized the perception that poor black youths who read books are \"acting white.\" He went on to describe his successful career in law and politics while raising a family in Chicago. \"In no other country on Earth is my story even possible\", Obama proclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Barack Obama's keynote address\nTowards the end of his speech, he emphasized the importance of hope in the American saga, and he illustrated how that hope manifested itself in the lives of John Kerry, John Edwards, and even his own personal life, as \"a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him too.\" According to Obama, the \"audacity of hope\" is \"God's greatest gift\" to Americans, allowing him to feel optimistic that the lives of average Americans can be improved with the right governmental policies. Following the speech political commentator Chris Matthews rightly predicted \"I just saw the first black president\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Edwards' address\nNot yet formally nominated for the Vice Presidency, John Edwards took the stage at the Convention to give the first major national speech of his political career. Delegates raised red-and-white vertical \"Edwards\" banners and chanted his name. The theme of Edwards's address was the divide between the \"two Americas\", his populist message throughout the primary campaign and now one embraced by Kerry. He tied the division to his own roots in North Carolina, and introduced his family to the audience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Edwards' address\nEdwards addressed his parents from the podium: \"You taught me the values that I carry in my heart: faith, family, responsibility, opportunity for everyone. You taught me that there's dignity and honor in a hard day's work. You taught me to always look out for our neighbors, to never look down on anybody, and treat everybody with respect.\" Edwards went on to define the two Americas he claimed to exist, one for the rich and one for the poor, and repeated several times that \"It doesn't have to be that way.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Edwards' address\nHe called for one health care system, equal in quality to the coverage received by Senators and other elected officials, and promised to establish a Patients' Bill of Rights. Edwards proposed one public school system for all, arguing that \"None of us believe that the quality of a child's education should be controlled by where they live or the affluence of their community.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0012-0003", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Edwards' address\nHe appealed for the end of the two economies, \"one for people who are set for life, they know their kids and grandkids are going to be just fine, and then one for most Americans, people who live paycheck to paycheck.\" Edwards also stated how the Democrats expected to pay for their agenda: \"We're going to roll back \u2013 we're going to roll back the tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans. And we're going to close corporate loopholes. We're going to cut government contractors and wasteful spending. We can move this country forward without passing the burden to our children and our grandchildren.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Edwards' address\nMany pundits noted that while Edwards's charismatic style was in evidence, he had rushed through the speech, ending several minutes earlier than planned. The delegates in the FleetCenter, however, were enraptured, and Edwards led them several times in a statement-response chant: \"Hope is on the way.\" This, and the general upbeat tone of the address, was a response to attacks by the Bush campaign claiming that Kerry and Edwards were pessimistic and cynical; it was altered and echoed the next day in the more detailed speech of John Kerry: \"Help is on the way.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Results of delegate voting\nIn the days before the convention started, the other candidates withdrew, freed their delegates and officially endorsed Kerry. All the delegates voted to ratify this decision and vote for Kerry, except those of Kucinich, who attempted to vote for Kucinich anyway. Many states refused to let them do so, and only permitted them to register abstentions. The final tally went thus:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Kerry's address\nPrior to his speech, John Kerry's daughter spoke about her father. After this, a video played, showing highlights from Kerry's life, including his birth in Colorado, his childhood in New England, the travels with his diplomat father to post-World War II Germany, and his service in Vietnam's Mekong Delta, interspersed with clips of Kerry speaking and narrated voice overs. After the video's conclusion, former U.S. Senator Max Cleland delivered a speech proclaiming that the global conflict and active wars in Afghanistan and Iraq required a decorated military hero such as Kerry in the White House. This concluded with Kerry's entrance, where he made a military salute and announced, \"I'm John Kerry, and I'm reporting for duty!\" Kerry then accepted the nomination for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Kerry's address\nDemocrats reacted positively to John Kerry's acceptance speech. With Democrats strongly opposed to the Bush administration, John Kerry spent most of his speech appealing to independent voters and to swing voters. He promised to train 40,000 new active duty troops, to implement all the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission, to cut the national deficit in half within four years, to cut middle class taxes while repealing the Bush administration's tax cuts for those making more than US$200,000 per year, to stop privatization of Social Security, and to expand stem cell research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Kerry's address\nOn the day after Kerry's speech, George W. Bush's reelection campaign launched a counterattack on the claims and promises made by Kerry and others at the convention. At a campaign stop in Springfield, Missouri, Bush told a crowd: \"My opponent has good intentions, but intentions do not always translate to results\", attacking Senator Kerry's record in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Other speakers\nIn addition to the Obama, Edwards, and Kerry addresses, there were also speeches from former presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, former vice-president and 2000 presidential nominee Al Gore, New York Senator and former First Lady Hillary Clinton, Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy, former candidate Al Sharpton, and presidential advisory counsel on HIV/AIDS Denise Stokes. Ron Reagan, son of Republican president Ronald Reagan, also spoke at the Convention, blaming Bush's hijacking of his father's legacy for his switch in support to the Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Lack of convention 'bounce'\nPolls conducted after Kerry's speech showed no significant increase of support (or \"convention bounce\") for the Democratic nominee's bid to unseat President Bush. Democrats ascribed the disappointing numbers to an unusually polarized electorate that year with few undecided voters, though Bush did get a small bounce out of his convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Demonstrations and protests\nThere were a number of demonstrations during the 2004 Democratic National Convention. Protesters included members of the Bl(A)ck Tea Society, a group of self-described anarchists, who opposed the war in Iraq. Approximately 400 members of the Bl(A)ck Tea Society marched through Boston's financial district and headed toward the fleet center, where they set fire to an effigy that showed George Bush on one side and John Kerry on the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Demonstrations and protests\nThat evening a group of peace activists held a peaceful rally a few hundred feet from the FleetCenter. Local Boston politicians were joined by presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich and long-time activist and California state senator Tom Hayden in a call to end the occupation of and to remove U.S. troops from Iraq and to bring in an international peacekeeping force. Also, Hayden and Kucinich called on anti-war Democrats to support John Kerry against George Bush in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177181-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention, Demonstrations and protests\nThe largest protest was held on the Sunday evening before the convention was set to start. An estimated 2,000 anti-war members marched at the same time as approximately 1,000 anti-abortion activists, and the two groups crossed paths en route to the convention center. The following day, this anti-abortion group had its permit revoked to protest outside of the Kerry family home. They challenged the decision, but it was upheld by a federal judge, who sided with the Secret Service in determining that the protest would be too close to Kerry's home, potentially endangering the presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address\nThe keynote address at the 2004 Democratic National Convention (DNC) was given by then Illinois State Senator, United States senatorial candidate, and future President Barack Obama on the night of Tuesday, July 27, 2004, in Boston, Massachusetts. His unexpected landslide victory in the March 2004 Illinois U.S. Senate Democratic primary made him a rising star within the national Democratic Party overnight, and led to the reissue of his memoir, Dreams from My Father. His keynote address was well received, which further elevated his status within the Democratic Party and led to his reissued memoir becoming a bestseller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address\nObama first met Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry in the spring of 2004, and was one of several names considered for the role of keynote speaker at the party's convention that summer. Obama was told in early July 2004 that he was chosen to deliver the address, and he largely wrote the speech himself, with later edits from the Kerry presidential campaign. Delivered on the second night of the DNC in just under 20\u00a0minutes, the address included both a biographical sketch of Obama, his own vision of America, and the reasons for his support of Kerry for the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address\nUnlike almost all prior and all subsequent convention keynote addresses, it was not televised by the commercial broadcast networks, and was only seen by a combined PBS, cable news and C-SPAN television audience of about nine million. Since its delivery, several academics have studied the speech, both for the various narratives it describes as well as its implications for racial reconciliation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Background\nIn 1996, Obama was first elected to the Illinois Senate by that state's 13th District, and he would go on to hold that seat for eight years. While still a sitting state senator he entered the 2004 Illinois Senate race, which would end on the same day as the 2004 presidential election. The Democratic presidential primary in Illinois was held that March 16, and later that spring Obama had his first opportunity to meet the soon to be nominated Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry, doing two joint Chicago campaign stops that left Kerry impressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Background\nThat April, Kerry campaign manager Mary Beth Cahill began listing possible candidates to be the 2004 Democratic National Convention's keynote speaker\u2014including Jennifer Granholm, Janet Napolitano, Tom Vilsack, Mark Warner, and Bill Richardson\u2014searching for speakers who would generate a significant buzz in the media. Others involved in the process included convention manager Jack Corrigan and Kerry media advisor Robert Shrum. Corrigan's friend, Lisa Hay, knew Obama from their time together working on the Harvard Law Review and strongly recommended him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Background\nCahill had previously seen Obama in a photo in TIME and began asking for opinions from people who knew and had worked with him. Although there were some internal worries about his style of speaking, lack of experience with a teleprompter, opposition to the Iraq War that Kerry initially supported, and the fact that he was only a state senator, they eventually chose Obama over the other finalist, Jennifer Granholm, in part because polls showed Kerry with less support among African-Americans than Democrats normally enjoyed and because he was running for an important Senate seat. During the process, the Obama senate campaign provided the Kerry camp with an eight-minute audition video, and several Obama advisors lobbied on his behalf with members of the Kerry staff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Background\nAccording to Obama, he was told just several weeks after his campaigning with Kerry that he would be given some kind of speaking role at that summer's convention; he was later called by Cahill, reportedly sometime right before the Independence Day holiday, who told him that he was chosen to be the convention's keynote speaker. Kerry first publicly hinted that Obama would deliver the convention's keynote address on June 29, though it was not until July 14 when the official announcement was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Writing\nObama began drafting his speech while staying in a hotel in Springfield, Illinois, several days after learning he would deliver the address. According to his account of that day in The Audacity of Hope, Obama states that he began by considering his own campaign themes and those specific issues he wished to address, and while pondering the various people he had met and stories he had heard during his campaign, was reminded of the phrase \"The audacity of hope\", which was previously used in a sermon by his pastor Jeremiah Wright. The title of Wright's sermon was \"The Audacity to Hope\" but Obama recalled it as \"The Audacity of Hope\", which became the title for his conference address, and later the title of his second book. This seemingly minor change turned Wright's verb into Obama's noun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Writing\nWright had attended a lecture by Dr Frederick G. Sampson in Richmond, Virginia, in the late 1980s, on the George Frederic Watts painting Hope, which inspired him to give a sermon in 1990 based on the subject of the painting - \"with her clothes in rags, her body scarred and bruised and bleeding, her harp all but destroyed and with only one string left, she had the audacity to make music and praise God ... To take the one string you have left and to have the audacity to hope ... that's the real word God will have us hear from this passage and from Watt's painting.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Writing\nThe first draft was written longhand, and Obama reportedly labored over it for some two weeks, often beyond midnight. Described by his campaign political director as \"a greatest hits collection of rhetoric drawn from his stump speeches\", Obama also watched and read previous keynote addresses during the process. Originally given 8\u00a0minutes to speak, Obama's completed address ran 25\u00a0minutes, leading to two more weeks of edits with advisors that brought it down to 17\u00a0minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Writing\nThe final draft was sent to a Democratic speechwriting team at the FleetCenter on roughly July 20, at which time some biographical material was removed so as to include more on the presidential ticket; one report indicated that roughly three quarters was reported to have been left intact after the Kerry campaign's edits, while another indicated that very little had been changed. After delivering it, Obama acknowledged that his and Kerry's staffs had reviewed the speech for length, noting, however, that he was proud to have written it himself along with most of his other speeches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention (DNC), held at the FleetCenter (now the TD Garden) in Boston, Massachusetts, began on July 26, with Obama scheduled to address the delegates the following evening. The Obama campaign was unhappy with the time slot and hoped to change it, as that night would not be covered by the major networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nObama arrived in Boston at 1:30\u00a0am EDT Sunday the 25th on a chartered Hawker jet, delayed in Illinois because of a hold up on the state budget. The aircraft was provided for him because that same morning Obama made his first appearance on Meet the Press, hosted by Tim Russert. During the interview, Obama touched upon what he hoped to achieve in the speech:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nWhat I'd like to do is talk about the vision the Democratic Party has for this country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nYou know, I think that there's enormous strength in the country, enormous resilience in the country, but people are struggling, and as I've been traveling throughout Illinois over the last 18 months, what I've been seeing are people who are concerned about their economic security, concerned about their ability to pay for their health care, their kids, sending them to college, and if we can project an optimistic vision that says we can be stronger at home, more respected abroad, and that John Kerry has the message and the strength to lead us in that fashion, then I think we'll be successful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nThis was followed by appearances on Face the Nation and Late Edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nObama appeared on Good Morning America the day of the speech, and when asked how he would deal with the fact that he was against the invasion of Iraq while Kerry and Edwards supported the resolution approving the use of military force, responded that they were focused on the future instead of looking back at the past, and that now everyone was interested in seeing a successful policy on the war. Obama also stated the advice his wife Michelle had given him for the night's address: \"Don't screw it up.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nDuring another interview that morning with NPR, Obama said, \"I'm sure I'm going to be excited, although I was here last night and something that really takes the pressure off, you realize that nobody's listening... So, you know, who knows what lines I could slip in there... No one would notice. So as long as I'm smiling and waving, I think I'll be OK.\" He referred to talk about his presidential prospects as silly, and also addressed the risk of being typecast, as another young African-American politician, Harold Ford, had given the keynote address in 2000. That afternoon he was at Boston Harbor where he gave a speech on environmental policy to a small crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Convention\nAccording to Martin Nesbitt, a close friend of Obama, the two were walking together the afternoon before the speech, and when Nesbitt likened him to a rock star because of the crowd growing behind them, Obama replied: \"Yeah, if you think it\u2019s bad today, wait until tomorrow... My speech is pretty good.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Preparation\nObama was scheduled to give his keynote address on the night of Tuesday, July 27. Some Obama advisors were concerned prior to his delivery, because it amounted to the first time he used a teleprompter. He would have three one-hour practice sessions in what were normally the FleetCenter locker rooms of the Boston Bruins and the Boston Celtics, reportedly having difficulty with the teleprompter while also learning various techniques in speaking to a live and TV audience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Preparation\nOnce while Obama was backstage rehearsing his speech, he met Kerry staffer and speechwriter Jon Favreau (later to become Obama's speechwriter), who instructed him that to avoid overlap with Kerry, a sentence had to be changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0015-0002", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Preparation\nThe sentence involved, later recalled as \"We're not red states and blue states; we're all Americans, standing up together for the red, white, and blue\" was to conclude his paragraph on red states and blue states, but was instead used by Kerry as \"Maybe some just see us divided into those red states and blue states, but I see us as one America: red, white, and blue\"; it is unclear whether or not this already existed in Kerry's speech, but regardless, its removal left Obama incensed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 72], "content_span": [73, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nStepping on stage shortly before 9:45\u00a0pm EDT to the 1964 song \"Keep On Pushing\" by The Impressions, Obama would go on to speak for 17\u00a0minutes, interrupted 33 times by the audience's applause. The final speech would amount to 2,297 words.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nAfter thanking Illinois Senator Dick Durbin for the introduction and acknowledging the privilege of speaking there, Obama immediately launched into a brief auto-biographical sketch, from his Kenyan grandfather's work as a domestic servant for the British, to his own father who obtained a scholarship to come to the United States. He then spoke of his mother's family, describing his grandfather fighting under Patton in World War II while his grandmother worked on a bomber assembly line and raised his mother. Obama explained that the African name given to him by his parents, Barack, meant \"blessed\", concluding that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nI stand here today, grateful for the diversity of my heritage, aware that my parents\u2019 dreams live on in my two precious daughters. I stand here knowing that my story is part of the larger American story, that I owe a debt to all of those who came before me, and that in no other country on Earth is my story even possible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nObama then alluded to the basic freedoms enunciated in the Declaration of Independence, and stated that the 2004 election was a time to reaffirm these values and realize that \"We have more work to do.\" He went on to mention several Americans he had met who were struggling with jobs, healthcare, and education, stating that \"they don't expect government to solve all their problems... But they sense, deep in their bones, that with just a slight change in priorities, we can make sure that every child in America has a decent shot at life, and that the doors of opportunity remain open to all.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nIn the next segment of his address, Obama mentioned John Kerry for the first time, enumerating his major values and beliefs on a host of issues, interrupted by a story of a young Marine he had met and the affirmation that when military action is undertaken, the families and soldiers involved must be cared for and that there is an obligation to \"never ever go to war without enough troops to win the war, secure the peace, and earn the respect of the world.\" Obama subsequently returned to Kerry and affirmed his commitment to keep America secure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nObama then addressed the ideas of community and unity in America, that a person struggling somewhere affects us even if we are not directly involved. Referring to the \"spin masters\" and \"negative ad peddlers\" who he claimed were ready to divide the country, Obama declared:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nWell, I say to them tonight, there is not a liberal America and a conservative America \u2014 there is the United States of America. There is not a black America and a white America and Latino America and Asian America \u2014 there's the United States of America. The pundits like to slice-and-dice our country into Red States and Blue States; Red States for Republicans, Blue States for Democrats. But I've got news for them, too: We worship an awesome God in the Blue States, and we don't like federal agents poking around in our libraries in the Red States. We coach Little League in the Blue States, and, yes, we've got some gay friends in the Red States. There are patriots who opposed the war in Iraq and there are patriots who supported the war in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nAsking whether the country wished to engage in a politics of cynicism or hope, he stated that Kerry and Edwards called on the American people to hope, which he assured was not simply \"blind optimism\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nIt's the hope of slaves sitting around a fire singing freedom songs. The hope of immigrants setting out for distant shores. The hope of a young naval lieutenant bravely patrolling the Mekong Delta. The hope of a mill worker's son who dares to defy the odds. The hope of a skinny kid with a funny name who believes that America has a place for him too. Hope! Hope in the face of difficulty! Hope in the face of uncertainty! The audacity of hope! In the end, that is God's greatest gift to us, the bedrock of this nation. A belief in things not seen. A belief that there are better days ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Speech, Delivery\nStating his own beliefs on what could be done, Obama said that he believed \"we have a righteous wind at our backs\" and expressed confidence in the country's ability to meet the current challenges. He concluded by expressing his belief that in November Kerry and Edwards would be elected, and with their inauguration, \"this country will reclaim its promise, and out of this long political darkness, a brighter day will come.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Family\nAfter the speech Obama and his wife were interviewed by Brian Williams, and when asked about what she thought, Michelle replied, \"And all I have to say is, honey, you didn't screw it up, so good job.\" Obama said that he hoped his two daughters had watched the whole event, as their baby-sitter was permitted to let them stay up only if they watched the convention. Obama's grandmother, Madelyn Dunham, called Obama after the speech and told him, \"You did well...I just kind of worry about you. I hope you keep your head on straight.\" She was later quoted by a journalist: \"I was a little amazed. It was really quite an exceptional speech, or I'm being prejudiced, I don't know. But, to me, it was really quite exceptional.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, News media and pundits\nImmediately after the speech MSNBC host Chris Matthews admitted, \"I have to tell you, a little chill in my legs right now. That is an amazing moment in history right there. It is surely an amazing moment. A keynoter like I have never heard.\" He added later in the night, \"...I have seen the first black president there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, News media and pundits\nAnd the reason I say that is because I think the immigrant experience combined with the African background, combined with the incredible education, combined with his beautiful speech, not every politician gets help with the speech, but that speech was a piece of work.\" Commenting the next day, Pat Buchanan, while complimentary towards Obama, was more critical of what he called a centrist speech: \"He is hiding what he truly believes. What does Obama believe about this war?\" On PBS, columnist David Brooks responded positively, \"This is why you go to conventions, to watch a speech like this,\" while Mark Shields said, \"A star is born.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, News media and pundits\nFormer Jimmy Carter speechwriter Hendrik Hertzberg considered it slightly better than Mario Cuomo's 1984 keynote address, stating, \"If he wrote that speech, then he should be president, because it's such a great speech. If he didn't, he should be president because he found such a great speechwriter.\" Martin Medhurst, a professor of rhetoric and communications at Baylor University, disagreed about it being better than Cuomo's, even if it was an exceptional performance. Stressing that it was too early to make any predictions, he noted that new political stars were not normally created because of keynote addresses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, News media and pundits\nTom Brokaw asked rhetorically whether Obama or Kerry would be the man more remembered from the convention, while CNN's Jeff Greenfield called it \"one of the really great keynote speeches of the last quarter-century.\" Howard Fineman noted that Obama's emphasis on parents, not government in teaching children was the same kind of language that could have been heard amongst Republicans. Rice University historian Douglas Brinkley stated, \"Obama trumped Bill Clinton. Clinton gave a good speech yesterday. Obama was better. That's hard to do in American politics.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, News media and pundits, Newspapers\nThe day after the speech, a Chicago Tribune editorial declared Obama \"The Phenom\". The Washington Times acknowledged that it would likely disagree with Obama's policies, but compared with John Edwards' speech, \"his sentiments had a freshness and a realness that Mr. Edwards' lacked.\" A reporter for Britain's The Independent declared that the mantle of who was most likely to be the first black president had passed from Colin Powell to Obama, though another was left unimpressed, finding the speech \"disappointingly free of original thought\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 98], "content_span": [99, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0030-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, News media and pundits, Newspapers\nKenya's The Nation also covered the speech, and noted his use of biography, particularly his Kenyan heritage. A columnist for The Christian Science Monitor acknowledged that many aspects of his speech were typical of political speeches, but that Obama had managed to make it appear as though they were something new and exciting. Speaking of the broadcast networks that had not covered the address, the column said, \"They missed the national debut of what could be one of the most exciting and important voices in American politics in the next half century.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 98], "content_span": [99, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Politicians\nObama's fellow Illinois Democrats praised him after the speech. Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan reacted by saying, \"He is a star... For Barack, the sky's the limit,\" while Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley said, \"He hit a grand slam home run.\" Senate President Emil Jones responded, \"It was such a moving speech that I had tears in my eyes... It was electrifying. When I looked around the room, all across the people were so emotional, tears in their eyes. They're crying. A great individual, a great Illinoisan.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Politicians\nGovernor Rod Blagojevich stated, \"After the speech last night, I would think that even if he had an opponent, he might get 100 percent of the vote.\" Former Illinois Senator Carol Moseley Braun said, \"Obama represents the best of what we brought from our generation...he represents a kind of division within the Democratic Party. It's not the old left.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Politicians\nNew York Senator Hillary Clinton, who would later run against Obama for the Democratic nomination in 2008 and go on to serve as his Secretary of State during his first term as U.S. President, was quoted saying, \"I thought that was one of the most electrifying moments that I can remember at any convention.\" Alabama Representative Artur Davis pushed the idea of Obama running for president, stating, \"If anyone can do it, Obama can...Obama may help break down the stereotypes that an African-American politician is someone only for other blacks... When Obama runs for the White House, he will run not as a candidate for blacks. He has the capacity to run as a candidate for everyone.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 75], "content_span": [76, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Academics\nIn an article entitled \"An Immigrant's Dream and the Audacity of Hope\" in the American Behavioral Scientist, Babak Elahi and Grant Cos compare Obama's speech to the one given by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger at the 2004 Republican National Convention, both utilizing an \"immigrant dream narrative\". They observe that in Obama's rhetorical shift away from his own biography and back toward that of John Kerry, he was able to make a convincing argument that Senator Kerry, through his own service to the country, was an \"honorary immigrant\", and thus that Kerry too had chosen to be an American citizen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Academics\nIn \"Recasting the American Dream and American Politics\", Robert C. Rowland and John M. Jones, two professors of communications, argue that the disconnect between what policies the majority of the American public reported supporting (more liberal) and the political label the plurality used to describe themselves as (conservative) had to do with the fact that America's romantic narrative, the search for the American Dream, had become closely associated with Ronald Reagan and conservatives, and that in a keynote address unremarkable in its basic themes, Obama sought to recast the narrative as one associated with liberals. Whereas Reagan's narrative focused heavily on individualism, Obama used the metaphor of hope to call for a balance between those individual values and community values, the latter also being necessary for the achievement of the American Dream.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 944]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Reception, Academics\nDavid A. Frank at the University of Oregon compares Obama's speech with the one given by Al Sharpton at the same convention, stating that while Sharpton did not stray beyond familiar themes of African American trauma, Obama broadened his scope to include all races and classes in a narrative that \"harkened back to the Roosevelt-Johnson legacy of shared purpose and coalition...\" In an alternative reading, Mark Lawrence McPhail criticizes Obama, stating that his \"reduction of black trauma to 'slaves sitting around a fire singing freedom songs'\" romanticizes the historical realities of black suffering and borders on the stereotypical image of the \"'happy darkie' of traditional racism\", and that his speech did not contribute to an open conversation about racism that is ultimately necessary for racial reconciliation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 73], "content_span": [74, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Audience\nRoughly 9.1 million people were reported to have watched the Democratic convention on the night of the speech, ratings which were described as \"tepid\" by Variety, as it only amounted to \"about half the audience tuning into regularly scheduled summer programming the week before\", and was less than the 10.3 million people who tuned into the second night of the 2000 DNC. However, neither ABC, CBS, nor NBC provided any coverage of the convention that night (some Chicago affiliates did broadcast Obama's speech), leading to criticism from some columnists. But with major networks not covering the evening's events, other stations received greater viewership, including 3 million viewers for PBS, followed by CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Aftermath\nThat night Fox News reported that people had been taking the Obama signs from the convention floor as keepsakes, whereas many signs for Teresa Heinz-Kerry were still on the floor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Aftermath\nIn an interview with JET, Obama acknowledged that the speech had exceeded peoples' expectations and that he felt encouraged by the fact that many people appeared to respond to the themes of common values and working together. When asked about all the presidential speculation, Obama responded, \"I just need to win the Senate right now.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Aftermath\nAfter easily defeating Alan Keyes to win his Senate seat and being sworn into office on January 4, 2005, Obama wrote The Audacity of Hope, which was released in October 2006. Despite initially saying that he had no immediate plans to run for president and would serve out his full Senate term, Obama would go on to run for and be elected the 44th President of the United States on November 4, 2008, becoming the first African American to be elected to the nation's highest office. On November 6, 2012, Obama was reelected to a second term as President of the United States, defeating former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Aftermath\nObama nominated John Kerry to serve as his Secretary of State during the former's second term, as Hillary Clinton declined to stay on; Kerry was subsequently confirmed and served as Secretary of State until the conclusion of Obama's presidency in January 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177182-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention keynote address, Aftermath\nTen years after the speech, The Washington Post noted its historic nature and everything that followed from it: \"Then the next ten years happened.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177183-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic National Convention speakers\nThe 2004 Democratic National Convention featured a variety of speakers, ranging from former presidents to rising newcomers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177184-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party (HK) leadership election\nThe Democratic Party leadership election was held on 12 December 2004 for the 30-member of the 6th Central Committee of the Democratic Party in Hong Kong, including chairman and two vice-chairman posts. It was the first contested chairmanship election in the party's history. Legislative Council member and party's Vice-Chairman Lee Wing-tat defeated the Chan King-ming, succeeding Yeung Sum as the chairman of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177184-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party (HK) leadership election, Eligibility\nThe Central Committee was elected by the party congress. All public office holders, including the members of the Legislative Council and District Councils, are eligible to vote in the party congress. Every 30 members can also elect a delegate who holds one vote in the congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177184-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party (HK) leadership election, Overview\nChairman Yeung Sum announced he would not seek for re-election after the party performed badly in the 2004 Hong Kong Legislative Council election in September. However, Albert Ho Chun-yan said he was not keen to run for the chairmanship because he was busy working for other organisations, such as the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, where he was the secretary. Chan King-ming, who was seen as a Reformist said a genuine contest for the leadership was necessary for the party's future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177184-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party (HK) leadership election, Results\nIn the election on 12 December, Lee Wing-tat, the major figure in the mainstreamer faction defeated Chan King-ming from the Young Turks faction with 189 to 113 votes. Chan who was also a vice-chairman candidate and Albert Ho both got elected with 205 votes, higher than the third candidate Zachary Wong Wai-yin who only got 96 votes, being elected as the new two vice-chairmen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177184-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party (HK) leadership election, Results\nThe elected members of the 6th Central Committee are listed as following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums\nDebates and forums took place between candidates in the campaign for the Democratic Party's nomination for the president of the United States in the 2004 presidential election. The Democratic National Committee sanctioned 6 debates out of 16 total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debate table\nKey: \u00a0P\u00a0 denotes candidate participated in debate; \u00a0N\u00a0 denotes candidate was not invited; \u00a0A\u00a0 denotes candidate absent but was invited; \u00a0O\u00a0 denotes candidate was out of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, May 3, 2003 \u2013 Columbia, South Carolina\nThe first debate was held at Drayton Hall Theatre at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, South Carolina on May 3, 2003 at 9 p.m. EDT. It was sponsored by ABC News and the South Carolina Democratic Party and moderated by George Stephanopoulos of ABC News. It was the earliest formal debate in presidential campaign history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 102], "content_span": [103, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, September 4, 2003 \u2013 Albuquerque, New Mexico\nThe second debate overall, and the first sanctioned by the DNC, was held at Popejoy Hall at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico on September 4, 2003 at 6 p.m. MDT. It was sponsored by PBS, Univision and moderated by Mar\u00eda Elena Salinas of Univision and Ray Suarez of PBS and hosted by Governor Bill Richardson and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. This was the first ever primary debate simulcast in both English and Spanish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 107], "content_span": [108, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, September 9, 2003 \u2013 Baltimore, Maryland\nThe third debate was held at Gilliam Concert Hall, Murphy Fine Arts Center at Morgan State University in Baltimore, Maryland on September 9, 2003. Sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus Institute and Fox News, it was moderated by Brit Hume, joined by Farai Chideya, Ed Gordon and Juan Williams, with an introduction by Congressman Elijah Cummings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 103], "content_span": [104, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, September 25, 2003 \u2013 New York, New York\nThe fourth debate overall, and the second sanctioned by the DNC, was held at Pace University in New York, New York on September 25, 2003 at 4 p.m. EDT. Sponsored by CNBC and The Wall Street Journal, it was moderated by Brian Williams of NBC, joined by Gerald Seib of The Wall Street Journal, Ron Insana of CNBC and Gloria Borger of CNBC. This was the only debate to feature all 10 candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 103], "content_span": [104, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, October 9, 2003 \u2013 Phoenix, Arizona\nThe fifth debate overall, and the third sanctioned by the DNC, was held at the Orpheum Theatre in Phoenix, Arizona on October 9, 2003 at 5 p.m. MST. Sponsored by CNN and the Arizona Democratic Party, it was moderated by Judy Woodruff, joined by Jeff Greenfield and Candy Crowley, with an introduction by Governor Janet Napolitano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 98], "content_span": [99, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, October 26, 2003 \u2013 Detroit, Michigan\nThe sixth debate overall, and the fourth sanctioned by the DNC, was held at Fox Theatre in Detroit, Michigan on October 26, 2003. Sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus Institute and Fox News, it was moderated by Gwen Ifill of PBS, joined by Carl Cameron of Fox News and Huel Perkins of WJBK, with an introduction by Congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, November 24, 2003 \u2013 Des Moines, Iowa\nThe seventh debate overall, and the fifth sanctioned by the DNC, was held at the Polk County Convention Center in Des Moines, Iowa on November 24, 2003. Sponsored by MSNBC, it was moderated by Tom Brokaw of NBC. Senators John Kerry and John Edwards appeared by satellite from studios in Washington, D.C. due to debate on final passage of the Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act. Senator Joe Lieberman initially declined to attend because he was not competing in the Iowa Caucuses, then asked to participate by satellite as well, but was not allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, December 9, 2003 \u2013 Durham, New Hampshire\nThe eighth debate overall, and the sixth and final debate sanctioned by the DNC, was held at Johnson Theatre at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, New Hampshire on December 9, 2003 at 7:00 p.m. EST. Sponsored by WMUR-TV and ABC News, it was moderated by Ted Koppel, joined by Scott Spradling of WMUR-TV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, January 4, 2004 \u2013 Johnston, Iowa\nThe ninth debate was held at the Maytag Auditorium at Iowa Public Television in Johnston, Iowa on January 4, 2004 at 2 p.m. CST. Sponsored by The Des Moines Register and PBS, it was moderated by Paul Anger of The Des Moines Register, joined by David Yepsen and Michele Norris of NPR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 96], "content_span": [97, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, January 6, 2004 \u2013 Des Moines, Iowa\nThe tenth debate was held in Des Moines, Iowa on January 6, 2004. Sponsored by NPR News and WOI Radio Group, it was moderated by Neal Conan. It was the first radio-only debate since Republicans Thomas Dewey and Harold Stassen debated before the 1948 Oregon primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 98], "content_span": [99, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, January 11, 2004 \u2013 Des Moines, Iowa\nThe eleventh debate was held at Polk County Convention Center in Des Moines, Iowa on January 11, 2004. Sponsored by the Iowa Brown & Black Presidential Forum and MSNBC, it was moderated by Lester Holt and Mar\u00eda Celeste Arrar\u00e1s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, January 22, 2004 \u2013 Goffstown, New Hampshire\nThe twelfth debate was held at Koonz Auditorium at Saint Anselm College in Goffstown, New Hampshire on January 22, 2004. Sponsored by WMUR-TV, New Hampshire Union Leader and Fox News, it was moderated by Brit Hume, joined by Tom Griffith of WMUR-TV, John DiStaso of the New Hampshire Union Leader, and Peter Jennings of ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 107], "content_span": [108, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, January 29, 2004 \u2013 Greenville, South Carolina\nThe thirteenth debate was held at the Peace Center at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina on January 29, 2004. Sponsored by MSNBC, Young Democrats of South Carolina and Furman University, it was moderated by Tom Brokaw of NBC. The contenders attacked President Bush on Iraq, terrorism and the economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 109], "content_span": [110, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, February 15, 2004 \u2013 Milwaukee, Wisconsin\nThe fourteenth debate was held at Alumni Memorial Union at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on February 15, 2004. Sponsored by Journal Communications, WTMJ-TV, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and MSNBC, it was moderated by Mike Gousha of WTMJ-TV, joined by Craig Gilbert of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Gloria Borger of CNBC/U.S. News & World Report and Lester Holt of MSNBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, February 26, 2004 \u2013 Los Angeles, California\nThe fifteenth debate was held at Bovard Auditorium at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, California on February 26, 2004 at 6:00 p.m. PST. Sponsored by CNN and the Los Angeles Times, it was moderated by Larry King of CNN, joined by Janet Clayton and Ron Brownstein of the Los Angeles Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 107], "content_span": [108, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Debates, February 29, 2004 \u2013 New York, New York\nThe sixteenth and final debate was held at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York, New York on February 29, 2004. Sponsored by CBS News, WCBS-TV, and The New York Times, it was moderated by Dan Rather, joined by Elisabeth Bumiller of The New York Times and Andrew Kirtzman of WCBS-TV. It was John Edwards' last chance to boost himself before the Super Tuesday primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 102], "content_span": [103, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177185-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential debates and forums, Forums, November 4, 2003 \u2013 Boston, Massachusetts\nAmerica Rocks the Vote was held at Faneuil Hall in Boston, Massachusetts on November 4, 2003. Sponsored by CNN and Rock the Vote, it was moderated by Anderson Cooper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 103], "content_span": [104, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries\nFrom January 14 to June 8, 2004, voters of the Democratic Party chose its nominee for president in the 2004 United States presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries\nSenator John Kerry of Massachusetts was selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 2004 Democratic National Convention held from July 26 to July 29, 2004, in Boston, Massachusetts. Kerry went on to lose the general election on November 2, 2004, to incumbent Republican President George W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Candidates, Withdrew during primaries\nThe following candidates received more than 1% of the national popular vote or were included in multiple major national polls:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 83], "content_span": [84, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview\nTen candidates vied for the nomination, including retired four-star general Wesley Clark, former Vermont Governor Howard Dean, and Senators John Edwards and John Kerry. For most of 2003, Howard Dean had been the apparent front-runner for the nomination, performing strongly in most polls and leading the pack in fund-raising. However, Kerry won the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary, which gave him enough momentum to carry the majority of the rest of the states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues\nAccording to exit polls taking during the Iowa Caucuses, the top 4 issues were ranked as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 84], "content_span": [85, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Economy\nDespite being characterized by many as an election on Iraq, the economy and jobs were repeatedly cited as voters' top or one of top three concerns during the course of the primary season. In Iowa, of those who cited the economy as their most important issue, 34% supported Kerry, while 33% supported Edwards, with Dean trailing at 16% and Gephardt at 12%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Economy\nEventual nominee John Kerry, much like other Democrats adopted policy stances of tax-cuts for the middle class, increased spending for Social Security, and assisting small businesses. On the aspect of job creation, Kerry strongly supported the creation and safety of infrastructure-related jobs, like those in the railroad industry. During the course of the primary Kerry continued to advocate positions such as fiscal responsibility and end state fiscal crises by giving states increased fiscal aid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Economy\nRunner up John Edwards ran a position of support for the middle class as well as budget caps and enforcement. Strongly opposing Social Security privatization, and interested in middle class tax cuts, Edwards's main economic theme was support for the middle class touting his own struggle, growing up the son of a poor mill worker in South Carolina. Another major component of Edwards's message was to be able to reinstate fiscal responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Economy\nHoward Dean, despite taking many of the same positions of his rivals including Edwards and Kerry, had a starkly different approach on the issue of Social Security and tax cuts. On taxes, Dean favored repealing the Bush Tax cuts not only for the wealthiest of Americans as Senator Edwards and Senator Kerry proposed, but for all, including middle and lower classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 93], "content_span": [94, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Iraq War\nAfter the 9/11 attacks, the Bush administration argued that the need to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq had now become urgent. Over the course of several months, Bush presented several premises for war, but the turning point was the allegation that Saddam's regime had tried to acquire nuclear material and had not properly accounted for biological and chemical material it was known to have possessed, potential weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in violation of U.N. sanctions. Thissituation escalated to the point that the United States assembled a group of about forty nations, including the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, and Poland, which Bush called the \"coalition of the willing\", to invade Iraq without UN authorization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Iraq War\nThe coalition invaded Iraq on March 20, 2003. Most contenders for the nomination were supportive of the effort. Only Dean and Kucinich firmly questioned the aims and tactics of the administration, setting themselves apart in the eyes of war protesters. John Kerry, who had voted in favor of coalition invasion, said Bush had \u201cfailed miserably\u201d in building that coalition and that \"We need a regime change not just in Iraq. We need a regime change here in the United States.\" Republicans criticized Kerry for speaking out against a wartime president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Iraq War\nThe invasion was swift, with the collapse of the Iraq government and the military of Iraq in about three weeks. The oil infrastructure of Iraq was rapidly secured with limited damage in that time. On May 1, George W. Bush landed on the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln in a Lockheed S-3 Viking, where he gave a speech announcing the end of major combat in the Iraq war. Clearly visible in the background was a banner stating \"Mission Accomplished\". Bush's landing was criticized by opponents as being overly theatrical and expensive. The banner, made by White House personnel (according to a CNN story:) and placed there by the U.S. Navy, was criticized as premature. Nonetheless, Bush's approval rating in the month of May rode at 66%, according to a CNN-USA Today-Gallup poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Election issues, Iraq War\nOn May 3, 2003, Democrats met at the University of South Carolina in the first formal debate between the nine challengers for the nomination. The candidates disagreed on the war against Iraq, health insurance, President Bush's tax cuts, but united in criticizing Bush's handling of the economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 94], "content_span": [95, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nOn May 31, 2002, Vermont Governor Howard Dean formed a presidential exploratory committee. Though this was almost two years before the Iowa Caucus, Dean hoped the early start would give him some much needed name recognition. As a governor of a small state, Dean was not well known outside of New England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nIn December of that year, John F. Kerry, U.S. senator from Massachusetts, announced on NBC's Meet the Press his plans to form an exploratory committee for a possible 2004 presidential run, anticipating a formal announcement \"down the road some months\". Kerry's experience as a decorated Vietnam veteran generated some excitement among Democrats tired of being on the defensive about their candidates' suitability in the role of \"commander in chief\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nTwo weeks later, former Vice President and 2000 presidential candidate Al Gore announced on the CBS program 60 Minutes that he would not seek election to the presidency in 2004. Gore had recently wrapped up a nationwide book tour and had been widely expected to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nOther potential candidates were likely waiting to see what Gore's plans were, and thus the floodgates opened in January 2003. Senator Joseph Lieberman, Gore's 2000 vice presidential running mate, had previously promised not to run should Gore seek their party's nomination. Freed from that obligation, Lieberman announced his intention to run. Additionally, many other candidates announced their intention to form committees (a formality usually indicating an official run): U.S. Sen. John R. Edwards of North Carolina, U.S. Rep. Richard A. \"Dick\" Gephardt of Missouri, and Reverend Al Sharpton of New York. In February, more candidates announced their intentions: former Senator from Illinois Carol Moseley Braun, U.S. Representative from Ohio Dennis Kucinich, and Senator Bob Graham of Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nThere were other potential candidates for whom some speculation was buzzing about a potential run. These candidates felt it necessary to officially state that they would not seek the party nomination. These included United States Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle, U.S. Senator Christopher Dodd of Connecticut, and former U.S. Senator Gary Hart from Colorado.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nIn April, Democratic fund-raising totals for the first quarter of 2003 were reported. John Edwards raised $7.4 million, John Kerry raised $7.0 million, Dick Gephardt raised $3.5 million, Joe Lieberman raised $3.0 million, Howard Dean raised $2.6 million, Bob Graham raised $1.1 million, and Dennis Kucinich and Carol Moseley Braun raised less than $1 million each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nIn June 2003, Howard Dean aired the first television advertising of the 2004 campaign, spending more than $300,000. During that time, he formally announced his run for president, filing to form a presidential election campaign with the FEC. Later that month, liberal advocacy website MoveOn held the first ever online Democratic \"primary\", which lasted just over 48 hours. It was an unofficial and nonbinding affair, but with important symbolic and financial value. Of 317,647 votes, Howard Dean received 44%, Dennis Kucinich 24%, and John Kerry 16%. Had any candidate received 50% of the vote, the candidate would have received MoveOn's endorsement and financial support. Instead, MoveOn supported all the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nIn July, the Democratic fund-raising numbers for the second quarter of 2003 were reported and announced. Howard Dean surprised many raising $7.5 million, John Kerry raised $6 million, while John Edwards and Joseph Lieberman raised roughly $5 million each. Dean's strength as a fund-raiser was attributed mainly to his innovative embrace of the Internet for campaigning. The majority of his donations came from individual Dean supporters, who came to be known as Deanites, or, more commonly, Deaniacs. His campaign's innovative use of the Internet helped to build a strongly supportive grassroots constituency, much of which remained intensely loyal to him long after the end of his candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nBy autumn of 2003, Dean had become the apparent front-runner for the Democratic nomination, performing strongly in most polls. Generally regarded as a pragmatic centrist during his time as governor, Dean emerged during his presidential campaign as something of a populist, denouncing the policies of the Bush administration (especially the 2003 invasion of Iraq) as well as fellow Democrats, who, in his view, failed to strongly oppose them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Dean emerges as front-runner\nDuring his presidential campaign, critics on the right labeled Dean's political views as those of an extreme liberal; however, in liberal Vermont, Dean, long known as a staunch advocate of fiscal restraint, was regarded as a moderate. Many critics on the left, who supported fellow Democrat Dennis Kucinich or independent Ralph Nader, charged that, at heart, Dean was a \"Rockefeller Republican\"\u2014socially liberal, while fiscally conservative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 97], "content_span": [98, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Wesley Clark enters\nOver the summer of 2003, several organized groups began a nationwide campaign to \"draft\" retired four-star general Wesley Clark for the Democratic Party's nomination for the 2004 presidential election. CNN on August 13 showed a commercial by one of these groups and interviewed Clark. He disavowed any connection with the \"draft Clark\" groups, but said he had been considering his position and that within a few weeks he would likely make public his decision on whether torun. He also fueled speculation with a television interview in which he first declared himself a Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Wesley Clark enters\nOn September 17, 2003, in Little Rock, Arkansas, Clark announced his intention to run in the presidential primary election for the Democratic Party nomination, becoming the tenth and last Democrat to do so (coming many months after the others): \"My name is Wes Clark. I am from Little Rock, Arkansas, and I am here to announce that I intend to seek the presidency of the United States of America.\" He said, \"We're going to run a campaign that will move this country forward, not back.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Wesley Clark enters\nHis campaign focused on themes of leadership and patriotism; early campaign ads relied heavily on biography. His late start left him with relatively few detailed policy proposals. This weakness was apparent in his first few debates, although he soon presented a range of position papers, including a major tax-relief plan. Nevertheless, many Democrats flocked to his campaign. They were drawn by his military background, and saw such foreign policy credentials as a valuable asset in challenging George W. Bush post-September 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Wesley Clark enters\nAdvisors and supporters portrayed him as more electable than Howard Dean, who was still the front-runner for the party's nomination. Despite the burst of enthusiasm for Clark in late 2003, Dean maintained a strong lead in the polls for the latter half of the year. Clark won the Democratic Presidential Primary in Oklahoma, the only state carried by Clark in the primary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Wesley Clark enters\nCriticism of Clark began almost the moment he entered the race. Originally heralded as an antiwar general, he stumbled in the first few days of his candidacy. He was perceived as changing his answer on how he would have voted on the Iraq war resolution. His supporters argued that his perceived indecision was due to lack of experience with the media and their insistence on short \"sound bite\" answers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 88], "content_span": [89, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nThroughout the early campaigning season, the Iowa caucuses appeared to be a two-way contest between former Vermont Governor Howard Dean and Missouri Congressman Richard Gephardt. Dean, the national front runner, had been able to pour money into Iowa and New Hampshire. In total, Dean spent nearly $40 million in the two states. Gephardt, coming from neighboring Missouri, won the state's caucus in 1988 when he first ran for the party nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nHowever, days before the Iowa caucuses were held, negative campaigning by Dean and Gephardt took a late toll on the two campaigns in Iowa as well as nationally. This, along with the resurgence of John Kerry and the emergence of John Edwards as major contenders in Iowa, put the Gephardt and Dean campaigns on edge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nA poll released by the Des Moines Register days before the caucus was held showed Dean and Gephardt had lost all of their lead in Iowa. In the poll, Kerry led with 26% of those surveyed, Edwards came in second with 23%, Dean came in third with 20%, and Gephardt came in fourth with 18%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nOn caucus night, as results were being tallied, it became evident that Kerry and Edwards were in a battle for first and Dean and Gephardt were in a battle for third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nAfter all votes were tallied, John Kerry received 38% of the delegates, John Edwards received 32%, Howard Dean received 18%, and Richard Gephardt received 11%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nAfter his poor showing, Gephardt dropped out of the race. Kerry and Edwards claimed newfound momentum, while Dean attempted to downplay the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Iowa and New Hampshire\nIn the New Hampshire primary, Kerry was able to defeat Howard Dean once again, beating him 38%-26%. The final debate before the primary was held at Saint Anselm College; Kerry's performance was superior to the others, helping him win the primary a few days later. Kerry carried nearly all constituencies during the primary according to exit polling data. Clark came in third with 12%, Edwards fourth with 12%, and Lieberman fifth with 9%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 91], "content_span": [92, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Final stretch\nEdwards's late stage momentum, as well as his departure from the negative campaigning which characterized other leading candidates, carried him into a surprising second-place finish in Iowa with the support of 32% of caucus delegates, behind only John Kerry's 38% and ahead of former front-runner Howard Dean at 18%. He finished with 12% in the New Hampshire primary one week later, essentially tied for third-place position with retired general Wesley Clark. The following week, Edwards won in South Carolina and nearly beat Clark in Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Final stretch\nAfter Dean's withdrawal from the contest, Edwards became the only major challenger to Kerry for the nomination. However, Kerry continued to dominate, taking in wins in Michigan, Washington, Maine, Tennessee, Washington, D.C., Nevada, Wisconsin, Utah, Hawaii and Idaho. Remarking on an unexpectedly strong finish in Wisconsin on February 17, Edwards humorously cautioned Kerry: \"Objects in your mirror may be closer than they appear.\" Many other candidates dropped out during this time, leaving only Kerry, Edwards, Sharpton and Kucinich in the running. Dean, while not officially running, did not release his delegates, and still put in a strong showing considering that he was no longer mounting an official campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Final stretch\nEdwards maintained a positive campaign and largely avoided attacking Kerry until a February 29, 2004, debate in New York City, where he attempted to put Kerry on the defensive by characterizing the front-runner as a \"Washington insider\" and by mocking Kerry's plan to form a committee to examine trade agreements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Final stretch\nIn Super Tuesday, March 2, Kerry won decisive victories in the California, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio and Rhode Island primaries and the Minnesota caucuses. Dean, despite having withdrawn from the race two weeks earlier, won his home state of Vermont. Edwards finished only slightly behind Kerry in Georgia but, failing to win a single state, chose to withdraw, making Kerry the presumptive nominee. President Bush called Senator Kerry to congratulate him that evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Final stretch\nOn March 11, after meetings with Democratic superdelegates in Washington, D.C., and former primary election opponents, Kerry accumulated the 2,162 delegates required to clinch the nomination. The DNC's website acknowledged him as the party's nominee at that time, four and a half months prior to the Convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 82], "content_span": [83, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Nomination\nOn July 6, John Kerry selected John Edwards as his running mate shortly before the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston, Massachusetts, held later that month. Senators Kerry and Edwards were formally nominated by the Democratic Party at the convention. The Kerry/Edwards ticket was on the ballot in all 50 states, plus the District of Columbia. In New York, the ticket was also on the ballot as candidates of the Working Families Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Nomination\nNew Mexico Governor Bill Richardson served as chairman of the convention while former presidential advisor to Bill Clinton Lottie Shackelford served as vice chairman. Defining moments of the 2004 Democratic National Convention included the featured keynote speech of Barack Obama, a Honolulu native and candidate for the United States Senate from Illinois, Bill Clinton's opening night speech and the confirmation of the nomination of John Kerry as the candidate for president and of John Edwards as the candidate for vice president. Kerry made his Vietnam War experience a prominent theme. In accepting the nomination, he began his speech with \"I'm John Kerry and I'm reporting for duty.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Nomination\nKerry and Edwards faced incumbents George W. Bush and Dick Cheney of the Republican Party in the 2004 presidential election. Following his official nomination at the convention, Kerry received only a small bounce in the polls and remained \"neck and neck\" with Bush. This was the first time in recent political history that a candidate failed to receive a substantial boost in post-convention poll numbers. Some political pundits attributed this small boost to the unusually small number of undecided voters as compared with previous presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview, Nomination\nThe general election was won by Bush, who defeated Kerry. The election was fought primarily on the issue of the conduct of the War on Terror. Bush defended the actions of his administration, while Kerry contended that the war had been fought incompetently, and that the Iraq War was a distraction from the War on Terror, not a part of it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 79], "content_span": [80, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177186-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries, Results, Nationwide\nThere were 4,353 total delegates to the 2004 Democratic National Convention, of which 802 were superdelegates: party leaders, even including some of the candidates, who were not bound by any state's primary or caucus votes and could change their support at any time. A candidate needed 2,162 delegates to become the nominee. Except for the Northern Mariana Islands and Midway Atoll, all states, territories, and other inhabited areas of the United States offered delegates to the 2004 Democratic National Convention. John Kerry won 4,255 votes at the convention, including those won by all of his former rivals except Dennis Kucinich, who received 37 votes. There were 26 abstentions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177187-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection\nJohn Kerry's vice-presidential candidate selection process began after Kerry became the presumptive Democratic Party presidential nominee in the 2004 election campaign. Kerry announced on July 6, 2004 that his choice for running mate was Senator John Edwards of North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177187-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection, Selection\nOne of the major criteria considered to be a factor in selecting a vice-presidential candidate was the ability to deliver a traditionally Republican or a swing state in the November election. Every successful Democratic presidential campaign since 1960 had included a politician from a swing state (usually in the South) who helped deliver one or more states for the Democrats. As of late June, the charismatic Edwards was the first choice of Democratic voters, according to several polls; some pundits attributed this to high name recognition, due to his runner-up status in the primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 70], "content_span": [71, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177187-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection, Selection, Reported Shortlist\nPundits and those close to the Kerry campaign indicated that the vice-presidential selection had narrowed to five potential choices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 90], "content_span": [91, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177187-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Democratic Party vice presidential candidate selection, Announcement\nOn the morning of July 6, 2004, Kerry announced the selection of John Edwards as his running mate. However, at 10 p.m. on the night before the official announcement, the information was leaked by an airport worker who saw Edwards's name being painted on Kerry's plane, which was to be used to announce his choice of running mate. On July 6, the Kerry campaign sent an e-mail message to his supporters at about 8:15 a.m. EDT informing them of the choice, and made the formal announcement for 9 a.m. EDT in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 73], "content_span": [74, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177188-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Democrats Abroad presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Democrats Abroad presidential caucuses were held between February 6, 2004 and February 9 as one of the Democratic Party's nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177189-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Denmark Open darts\n2004 Denmark Open is a darts tournament, which took place in Denmark in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177190-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Denver Broncos season\nThe 2004 Denver Broncos season was the franchise's 35th season in the National Football League and the 45th overall. Under head coach Mike Shanahan the Broncos equalled their 10\u20136 record from 2003, and again finished second in the AFC West. In a repeat of 2003, the Broncos\u2019 season ended in defeat to the Indianapolis Colts 49\u201324 in the AFC Wild Card playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177190-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Denver Broncos season\nStarting quarterback Jake Plummer finished the season with 4,089 passing yards (4th in the league). During the offseason, the Broncos traded running back Clinton Portis to the Washington Redskins in exchange for cornerback Champ Bailey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177190-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Denver Broncos season, Off Season\nThe Broncos acquired cornerback Champ Bailey in a trade with the Washington Redskins, sending running back Clinton Portis to Washington in return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177190-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Denver Broncos season, Off Season\nDuring the offseason, the Broncos failed to retain linebackers Keith Burns and Ian Gold. Both would sign with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, but however, both players would return to the team in the following season. Also, the Broncos failed to retain defensive end Bertrand Berry, who would sign with the Arizona Cardinals as a free agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177190-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Denver Broncos season, Off Season\nThe Broncos also signed safety John Lynch as a free agent after he was released by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177190-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Denver Broncos season, Schedule\nIn addition to their regular games with AFC West rivals, the Broncos played teams from the AFC South and NFC South as per the schedule rotation, and also played intraconference games against the Dolphins and the Bengals based on their common divisional position vis-\u00e0-vis the Broncos from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177191-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Derailment of Joetsu Shinkansen\nThe Derailment of J\u014detsu Shinkansen (\u4e0a\u8d8a\u65b0\u5e79\u7dda\u8131\u7dda\u4e8b\u6545), occurred when a bullet train derailed on October 23, 2004 during an earthquake in the Ch\u016betsu region of Niigata Prefecture, Japan. It is the first derailment of a commercially operated Shinkansen (high speed rail in Japan).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177191-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Derailment of Joetsu Shinkansen, Summary\nAt JST 17:56 October 23, 2004, an earthquake occurred, the epicenter near a 200 series Shinkansen train carrying about 155 passengers between Urasa Station and Nagaoka Station of J\u014detsu Shinkansen, the north entrance of Takiya Tunnel. The train, which was heading for Niigata Prefecture from Tokyo with train number \"Toki 325 (\u3068\u304d325\u53f7)\", had 8 of 10 cars (except cars 6 and 7) derailed due to the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177191-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Derailment of Joetsu Shinkansen, Summary\nAs the earthquake occurred, the trains were running with a speed of 200\u00a0km/h for Nagaoka, the emergency braking system started to work immediately at the alert of the earthquake. This is the first derailment of Shinkansen ever since the operation of T\u014dkaid\u014d Shinkansen in October 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177191-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Derailment of Joetsu Shinkansen, Aftermath\nThe aftershocks continued to occur at Niigata region afterward, causing great difficulty in cleaning derailment wrecks. By November 18, 2004, the train wreck had been cleared and operations were resumed on December 28. Due to severe damage, the train was abandoned from service on February 25, 2005, and replaced by E2 Series Shinkansen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177191-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Derailment of Joetsu Shinkansen, Investigation\nOn November 30, 2007, Japanese Aircraft and Railway Accidents Investigation Commission released the official report regarding to this derailment of J\u014detsu Shinkansen, and it gave advice readjusting the operations of Shinkansen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177192-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Derby City Council election\nThe 2004 Derby City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Derby City Council in England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177192-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Derby City Council election\nThe results saw the Labour party gain a seat from the Conservatives but lose one to the Liberal Democrats. They also saw Frank Leeming from the United Kingdom Independence Party win the party's first council seat in Derby, gaining a seat that had formerly been held by independent, Ron Allen, who had died in March. Leeming was expected to hold the balance of power on the council between Labour and a Liberal Democrat/Conservative alliance depending on the outcome of a by-election in July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177193-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Derry Senior Football Championship\nThe 2004 Derry Senior Football Championship was the 81st edition of Derry GAA's premier gaelic football tournament for the sixteen senior clubs in Derry Football League football. The winners receive the John McLaughlin Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177193-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Derry Senior Football Championship\nSlaughtneil won their first title, beating Bellaghy by 1-08 to 0-09 in the final at Watty Graham Park on 24 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177193-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Derry Senior Football Championship\nLoup were the defending champions, having won their first title since 1936.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177193-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Derry Senior Football Championship, Senior Championship Bracket\nThe Preliminary Round was played between Ballinascreen and Lavey. Ballinascreen won on a scoreline of 1-08 to 0-06", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177194-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Desaf\u00edo Corona season\nThe 2004 Desafio Corona season was the first season of stock car racing in Mexico. The serial was presented in March as Desaf\u00edo Corona. After 14 races Carlos Pardo of Equipo Telcel was declared champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177194-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Desaf\u00edo Corona season, Cars\nPontiac Grand Am was the car used for almost drivers. Only two Dodge Stratus, both of Seeman-Baker team, was used. Pontiac won 13 of 14 runs and the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177195-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Lions season\nThe 2004 Detroit Lions season was the franchise's 75th season in the National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177195-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Lions season\nThe team began attempting to improve on their 5\u201311 record from 2003, they improved to 6\u201310 that season but, the Lions couldn't make the playoffs for a sixth consecutive season. In week 1, the Lions defeated the Chicago Bears in Chicago, 20\u201316, to snap a 24-game road losing streak, which was the longest road losing streak in franchise history. It was the first road win for the Lions under Matt Millen. The Lions would defeat the Houston Texans the next week, 28\u201316, to start the season 2\u20130. In week 7, the Lions defeated the New York Giants 28\u201313 on the road to begin the season 4\u20132, while going 3\u20130 on the road during that span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177195-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Lions season\nHowever, in the following weeks, the Lions played poorly, as they would lose 5 straight games to sit at 4\u20137. The Lions would then defeat the Arizona Cardinals 26\u201312 the following week. However, the week after that, the Lions were eliminated from the playoffs after they lost to the Packers 16\u201313 in Green Bay. The Lions would only win 1 more game the rest of the season, as they defeated the Bears in week 16, 19\u201313 at home. The Lions sweep over the Bears during the season would be one of 2 times during the Matt Millen era that saw the Lions sweep a divisional opponent. They also did this against the Bears in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177195-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Lions season, Offseason\nDuring the offseason, the Lions signed former New England Patriots guard Damien Woody and former Jacksonville Jaguars cornerback Fernando Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177195-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Lions season, Regular season, Schedule\nIn addition to their regular games with NFC North divisional rivals, the Lions played teams from the NFC East and AFC South according to the NFL's schedule rotation, and also played games against the Atlanta Falcons and the Arizona Cardinals, who had finished fourth in their respective divisions in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177196-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Shock season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the seventh season for the Detroit Shock. They were unable to defend their title the year before, losing in the first round to the New York Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177196-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Shock season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Shock's 2004 record, they would pick 13th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Shock picked Jennifer Rizzotti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177196-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Shock season, Player stats\nNote: GP = Games Played; REB = Rebound; AST = Assists; STL = Steals; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177197-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Tigers season\nThe Detroit Tigers' 2004 season was a season in American baseball. It involved the Detroit Tigers attempting to win the AL Central. The team set a major league record with 11 players on the team hitting at least 10 home runs. The Tigers' 104th season ended with the team finishing in fourth place at 72-90, 29 games better than their disastrous season of the previous year. However, they were still 20 games behind the AL Central Champion Minnesota Twins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177197-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Tigers season\nThe Tigers tied their own major league record for most home runs by a losing team when they hit seven homers in an 11\u20139 defeat to the Boston Red Sox on August 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177197-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Detroit Tigers season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177198-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nThe 2004 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters was the eighteenth season of premier German touring car championship and also fifth season under the moniker of Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters since the series' resumption in 2000. There were 10 championship race weekend with one round each, plus a non-championship round at the streets of Shanghai. Originally each track hosted one race each with the exception of Hockenheimring (two races, premier and finale). Each track hosted one race, with the exception of Hockenheim, which hosted two. As in 2003 each weekend compromised one race of circa one hour and with two compulsory pit stops for each contender.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177198-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Teams and drivers\nThe following manufacturers, teams and drivers competed in the 2004 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. All teams competed with tyres supplied by Dunlop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177198-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Championship standings, Drivers' championship\n\u2020 Driver retired, but was classified as they completed 90% of the winner's race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177199-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Deutschland Tour\nThese are the results for the 2004 edition of the Deutschland Tour cycling race, which was won by Germany's Patrik Sinkewitz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack\nThe 2004 Dhaka grenade attack took place at an anti-terrorism rally organised by Awami League on Bangabandhu Avenue on 21 August 2004. The attack left 24 dead and more than 300 injured. The attack was carried out at 5.22 PM after Sheikh Hasina, the leader of opposition had finished addressing a crowd of 20,000 people from the back of a truck. The attacks targeted Awami League president Sheikh Hasina. Hasina was injured in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Events and casualties\nAwami League chief Sheikh Hasina had been speaking at a public meeting on Bangabandhu Avenue, protesting blasts against the party's workers in Sylhet. The rally drew a crowd of 20,000 people. As Hasina finished her speech, a total of 13 grenades were thrown into the crowd from the rooftops of nearby buildings, killing at least 16 people on spot, later the death toll reached 24. The blast left more than 500 injured. Among the dead were Hasina's bodyguard, Mahbubur Rahman and Awami League Women's Affairs Secretary Ivy Rahman, who died from her injuries three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Events and casualties, Reaction\nThe Awami League called for a nationwide hartal on 23 and 24 August 2004 following the incident. Khaleda Zia, then Prime Minister of Bangladesh condemned the attacks, and also vowed a thorough probe to catch the culprits. An intercity train was burned down by Awami League activists on strike in Bhairab. Awami Leagues activists also organized protests in Chittagong and furled black flags at the sight of the attack. A funeral service for the victims at Baitul Mokarram National Mosque was attended by 20 thousand people. Protests in Dhaka were attacked by members of Bangladesh Police and Jatiyatabadi Sramik Dal, the workers wing of Bangladesh Nationalist Party. The Jatiyatabadi Sramik Dal activists also attacked and injured six members of the press.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Events and casualties, Reaction\nPresident of the United States, George W. Bush, expressed \"shock\" at the attack and conveyed his message to Prime Minister Khaleda Zia and Opposition leader Sheikh Hasina through the Secretary of State of the United States, Colin Powell. The attack was also condemned by the United Kingdom, Royal Netherlands, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, and Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Initial investigation\nBangladesh Police refused to register any criminal case filed by Bangladesh Awami League over the attack and only registered a general diary. The government initially refused to hand over the bodies of the victims. Investigators from the Federal Bureau of Investigations and Interpol made repeated visits to Bangladesh to provide technical support. The Government also tried to implicate Mokhlesur Rahman, an Awami League activists, and Shaibal Saha Partha. They were arrested by Bangladesh Police. Shaibal Saha Partha and Joj Miah were tortured in custody and forced to give a false confessional statement. An investigation by the Supreme Court Bar Association accused the government of destroying evidence. The government was also criticised for hurriedly burying two unidentified dead bodies from the terror attack in the middle of the night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 909]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Initial investigation\nIn 2004, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party-led alliance government assigned Crime Investigation Department of Police to foresee the investigation. They came up with a story that some Joj Miah, also known as Jamal Ahmed from Noakhali district, along with 14 other criminals of Seven Star terrorist group of Subrata Bain attacked the Awami League rally. They met at Moghbazar before the attack, and rehearsed at a remote island before the attack. The government of Bangladesh formed a one-man judicial probe led by Justice Joynul Abedin. The Awami League rejected the commission which blamed the attack on a neighboring country. The Daily Star described Abedin as a \"shame\" for the judiciary in Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Initial investigation\nOn 26 June 2005 Joj Mia, a petty criminal, confessed his involvement in the crime under section 164, to the magistrate. The story collapsed following investigative journalism who discovered holes in the official story.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Fresh investigation\nIn 2007, after the military-backed government assumed office, many of the BNP and Awami League leaders were rounded up by the government agencies, and fresh investigation into the case was launched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Fresh investigation\nAfter almost one year, in November 2007, Mufti Hannan, a militant leader from Gopalganj who was arrested by the BNP-led government in 2005, revealed that the attack was operated by the militant outfit Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami of which he was a leader. He also admitted that he got support from Maulana Tazuddin, brother of BNP leader and former deputy minister Abdus Salam Pintu while coordinating the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Fresh investigation\nAccording to his statement, Abdus Salam Pintu had knowledge of the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Fresh investigation\nIn 2008, after the detailed investigation, the then CID high official Mohammad Javed Patwary concluded that the attack was aimed at killing Sheikh Hasina and was guided by the common grievance of both Mufti Hannan and Abdus Salam Pintu against Sheikh Hasina for her role in \"subduing\" Islam. The investigation report mentioned that, Abdus Salam Pintu was personally responsible for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Further investigation\nIn 2009, Awami League came to office and decided to launch a further investigation into the incident and appointed a retired CID official Abdul Kahar Akhand as the person in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Further investigation\nIn the same year, Abdul Majed Bhat alias Yusuf Bhat gave a confessional statement with the details regarding the source of grenade used in the attack. He claimed that Muzaffar Ahmad Shah of Tehrik-e-Jihad Islami (TEJI) gave the grenades to Maulana Tajuddin to send those to Indian militant groups. Tajuddin, instead of sending those to India, kept those with him. According to Yusuf Bhat, these grenades were later handed over to Mufti Hannan to carry out the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Further investigation\nAfter two years, in 2011, Mufti Hannan gave another confessional statement implicating many big names, mostly BNP leaders and some former officials of the government including the son of opposition leader and former prime minister Khaleda Zia, Tarique Rahman, former deputy minister Abdus Salam Pintu, former member of parliament Kazi Shah Mofazzal Hossain Kaikobad and some officials of the Home Ministry, police, Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI), National Security Intelligence (NSI) and Prime Minister's Office (PMO) with involvement in the planning of the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Investigation, Further investigation\nIn the statement, Mufti Hannan claimed that the attack was aimed at destroying the top leadership of Awami League including Sheikh Hasina, and BNP leader Tarique Rahman along with Jamaat leader Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujahid and the then Home Minister Lutfuzzaman Babor assured them with government support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Perpetrators\nHarkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI) leader Mufti Abdul Hannan was arrested on 30 September 2005 for the grenade attacks, and was later charged in connection with it. He reportedly confessed to the attacks in November 2007. He was sentenced to death in December 2008 for attempting to kill Anwar Choudhury in 2004. In March 2012, the son of opposition leader and former prime minister Khaleda Zia, Tarique Rahman, and 28 others were tried in absentia for their alleged involvement in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Perpetrators\nThe supplementary charge sheets charges Huji, influential leaders of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and the Jamaat, including former deputy minister Abdus Salam Pintu, former member of parliament Kazi Shah Mofazzal Hossain Kaikobad and some officials of the Home Ministry, police, DGFI, NSI and PMO with involvement in the planning of the bombing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Perpetrators\nJamal Ahmed, also known as Joj Mia was coerced into giving a false confession. He was forced to implicate Seven-Star Group, led by Subrata Bain through torture by security forces during BNP rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Charges and punishments\nOn 10 October 2018, a special court, Speedy Trial Tribunal-1, delivered verdicts in relevant cases and accused 49 persons in total. It ruled the grenade attack \"was a well-orchestrated plan, executed through abuse of state power\". Judge Shahed Nuruddin said, \"The specialised deadly Arges grenades that are used in wars were blasted at the Awami League's central office on 23 Bangabandhu Avenue in broad daylight with the help of the then state machinery\". On charges of killing through common intention, planning and criminal conspiracy, 38 persons were found guilty. 19 of them were sentenced to death:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Charges and punishments\nOn the same charges, 19 others were given life term in prison sentences:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Charges and punishments\nAll of the 38 were also found guilty of grievously injuring victims through common intention, planning and criminal conspiracy and sentenced to jail for 20 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Charges and punishments\nOn the charge for harbouring the offenders, former Inspectors General of Police Ashraful Huda and Shahudul Haque were sentenced to two years in jail. For the charges of harbouring and protecting the offenders, Saiful Islam Duke, Saiful Islam Joarder, ATM Amin were given four years in jail. For the charge of misleading the investigation and cooking up the \"Joj Mia\" story, IGP Khoda Baksh Chowdhury, SP of CID Ruhul Amin, ASPs of CID Abdur Rashid and Munshi Atikur Rahman were sentenced to two years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177200-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhaka grenade attack, Charges and punishments\nTotal 18 convicts were on the run at the time of the verdict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing\nThe 2004 Dhemaji school bombing occurred on 15 August 2004, on the occasion of Independence Day in Dhemaji, Assam. The bombing by the Assamese militant group called the United Liberation Front of Assam (ULFA) killed 18 people and injured many others. Most of the victims were schoolchildren aged between 12 and 14 and their mothers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, Details\nOn the occasion of Independence Day, 15 August 2004, people, mostly were school children and their mothers, gathered at Dhemaji College ground for an Independence Day parade. At around 09:30 a bomb went off killing at least 18 and injuring many more. According to police, the bomb was planted near the college-gate and triggered by a remote-controlled device. It was exploded when the students and teachers of various schools were passing through the gate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, Investigations\nPolice blamed ULFA, a banned Assamese militant group, which had called for a boycott of the event. The group continued denying responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, Aftermath\nSoon after the incident the local people allegedly attacked the police vehicles at the site for failure to protect the parade. Police had to launch a lathi charge and fire tear gas to bring the situation under control. The Superintendent of Police T. Thangou and the Additional Superintendent of Police Abu Sufian of Dhemaji were suspended for negligence of duty. The Deputy Commissioner was transferred for security lapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, Reactions\nThe injured were admitted to the Dhemaji Civil Hospital and other 10 being critically injured were shifted to Dibrugarh Civil Hospital. Chief Minister of Assam Tarun Gogoi condemned the blast stating it to be \u201cmost barbaric, inhuman and pathetic\u201d incident. He also announced that the state would be observing the 16 August of every year as Mourning Day in memory of those killed. The chief minister announced Rs 300,000 for the victims and Rs 50,000 for the seriously injured. The Dhemaji and Lakhimpur unit of AASU called a 12-hour bandh on 16 August 2004 in protest of the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, Reactions\nThe AASU had also demanded the resignation of the chief minister. The Assam State Committee of CPI(M) vehemently condemned the incident. It also organized a protest rally in the capital city of Guwahati on 17 August against the extremists for the killings and against the administration for the failure of protection. The committee had also called a 12-hour Assam-bandh on 18 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, Armed Forces Special Powers Act\nThe chief minister Tarun Gogoi said that the Armed Forces Special Powers Act should stay in the disturbed areas to avoid the increasing activities by the rebel groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177201-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhemaji school bombing, ULFA takes responsibility after five years\nOn 16 August 2004, one day after the blast, in a statement, Arabinda Rajkhowa, the chairman of the group, stated that the \u201cIndian Occupation Force\u201d and its agents used the schoolchildren as shield to defy the boycott call of the outfit. On 13 December 2009, Paresh Barua, the C-in-C of the group, sought public apology and forgiveness for the blast. He stated in an e-mail that the ULFA leadership was misled by some of their cadres and junior leaders about the blast, which is why the leadership had to deny its involvement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177202-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dhivehi League, Overview\nClub Valencia won the Dhivehi League. New Radiant SC won the Maldives National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177203-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 District of Columbia Democratic presidential primary and caucuses\nThe District of Columbia held a primary on January 13, 2004 and caucuses on February 14, 2004 during the 2004 Democratic presidential primary season. Delegates were only allocated in the February 14 caucuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177203-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 District of Columbia Democratic presidential primary and caucuses, Non-binding primary\nThe primary was held on January 13, 2004, a week before the Iowa caucuses. Early favorite Howard Dean won the primary. Polling two months before had him leading civil rights activist Al Sharpton 45% to 11%. Then his poll numbers went down considerably, to 27% to 5%. The other candidates, John Kerry, John Edwards, Wesley Clark, Dick Gephardt and Joe Lieberman, were not on the ballot. Dean benefited from the endorsement of popular councilman Jack Evans. Following the primary, Carol Moseley Braun dropped out of the race and endorsed Dean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 91], "content_span": [92, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177203-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 District of Columbia Democratic presidential primary and caucuses, Caucuses\nThe District of Columbia caucuses were held on February 14, 2004. John Kerry won the caucuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 80], "content_span": [81, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177204-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF season, Squad information, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177205-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dominican Republic presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in the Dominican Republic on 16 May 2004. The result was a victory for former president Leonel Fern\u00e1ndez, who defeated incumbent Hip\u00f3lito Mej\u00eda. Voter turnout was 72.8%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177205-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dominican Republic presidential election, Candidates\nOpinion polls in the run-up to election day showed Fern\u00e1ndez leading with 54%, Mej\u00eda on 27%, and Estrella on 14%. In the previous weeks, however, Mej\u00eda had been gaining support while Fern\u00e1ndez's numbers had been falling and, as a result, at one point it seemed possible that a second round run-off vote would have to be held between the two top candidates. Fern\u00e1ndez's final result, in excess of 50%, meant that the second round was not necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177205-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dominican Republic presidential election, Candidates, Overseas voting\nThe Dominican Republic introduced legislation in 1997 to enable Dominican citizens residing abroad to vote in presidential elections. This was the first time the provisions of that law were put into practice, with some 52,500 registered overseas voters eligible to vote at polling stations set up in several American cities including Miami and New York, as well as Montr\u00e9al, Caracas, Madrid and Barcelona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177205-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Dominican Republic presidential election, Candidates, Overseas voting\nElectoral officials noted that 52,500 was only a fraction of the overseas voters actually eligible to vote (one million Dominicans are estimated to live in the United States alone), but that the take-up rate was hampered by a lack of information regarding the necessary formalities and by bureaucratic hurdles (particularly, the requirement that up-to-date national ID cards be presented).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177206-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Donegal County Council election\nAn election to Donegal County Council took place on 5 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 29 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177207-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Do\u011fubayaz\u0131t earthquake\n2004 Do\u011fubayaz\u0131t earthquake was a 5.1 Mw or 5.2 Mw earthquake that rocked Do\u011fubayaz\u0131t, A\u011fr\u0131, Turkey on 2 July 2004 at 01.30 local time. 18 people were killed and 32 were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177207-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Do\u011fubayaz\u0131t earthquake\nThe greatest damage was at Y\u0131\u011f\u0131n\u00e7al village, while Kutlubulak and Sa\u011fl\u0131ksuyu villages were also affected. Kandilli Observatory stated that around 1000 buildings were damaged. The earthquake was felt from A\u011fr\u0131, I\u011fd\u0131r, Kars, and areas near Iran-Turkey border. The intensity of the shock was reported as VII, while the depth was reported as 5\u00a0km. The earthquake happened during the local mountain pasture season where villagers were in the mountains, which prevented a higher number of casualties. Various organizations sent relief to the area. Three ministers of Turkish government visited the area, Greece offered help and France sent messages of solidarity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177208-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Drake Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 Drake Bulldogs football team represented Drake University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. It was the 111th year for the football program. The season ended with a 10\u20132 record and a Pioneer Football League Championship. The Bulldogs were chosen as a 2004 Sports Network Cup Finalist, finishing second to Monmouth in both overall votes and first place votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177209-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 Dubai Duty Free Men's and Women's Tennis Championships was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the Aviation Club Tennis Centre in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates that was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. The men's tournament was held from March 1 through March 7, 2004 while the women's tournament was held from February 23 through February 28, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177209-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships, Finals, Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi / Fabrice Santoro defeated Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Leander Paes 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177209-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships, Finals, Women's Doubles\nJanette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 / Conchita Mart\u00ednez defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva 6\u20130, 1\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177210-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nLeander Paes and David Rikl were the defending champions but only Paes competed that year with Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177210-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBj\u00f6rkman and Paes lost in the final 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20134 against Mahesh Bhupathi and Fabrice Santoro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177211-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion and won in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20132 against Feliciano L\u00f3pez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177211-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177212-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova and Martina Navratilova were the defending champions, but Navratilova did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177212-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKuznetsova teamed up with Elena Likhovtseva and lost in the final to Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 and Conchita Mart\u00ednez. The score was 6\u20130, 1\u20136, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177213-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion and successfully defended her title, by defeating Svetlana Kuznetsova 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177213-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177214-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai World Cup\nThe 2004 Dubai World Cup was a horse race held at Nad Al Sheba Racecourse on Saturday 27 March 2004. It was the 9th running of the Dubai World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177214-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai World Cup\nThe winner was Diamond A Racing Corporation's Pleasantly Perfect, a six-year-old brown horse trained in the United States by Richard Mandella and ridden by Alex Solis. Pleasantly Perfect's victory was the first in the race for his owner, trainer and jockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177214-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubai World Cup\nPleasantly Perfect had been one of the leading dirt performers in the United States in 2003 when his wins included the Breeders' Cup Classic. Before being shipped to Dubai he won the San Antonio Handicap on 31 January. In the 2004 Dubai World Cup he started the 5/2 second favourite and won by three quarters of a length from the 2/1 favourite Medaglia d'Oro with the South African challenger Victory Moon five length back in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177215-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubbo state by-election\nA by-election was held for the New South Wales Legislative Assembly district of Dubbo on 20 November 2004. It was triggered by the death of Tony McGrane (Independent).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177215-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubbo state by-election\nThe by-election saw McGrane succeeded by another independent in Dawn Fardell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177215-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubbo state by-election, Background\nOn 15 September 2004, the independent sitting member Tony McGrane for Dubbo died after a battle with liver cancer. McGrane was first elected at the 1999 state election and re-elected at the 2003 state election. His death triggered a by-election for the vacant seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177215-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubbo state by-election, Background\nThe by-election presented the National with an opportunity to regain the seat they had held for 18 years from 1981 before losing it to McGrane in 1999. However, the seat was won instead by another independent, Dubbo deputy mayor Dawn Fardell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177215-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Dubbo state by-election, Background\nThe by-election was not contested by the Labor, the party in government at the time. Nor was it contested by the opposition Liberal, who deferred to their junior coalition partner the National Party, as is typical in regional districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177216-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dublin City Council election\nAn election to Dublin City Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 52 councillors were elected from thirteen electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177217-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dublin Senior Football Championship\nKilmacud Crokes won the 2005 Dublin Senior Football Championship against Ballyboden St Endas. Kilmacud won by 1-11 to 2-02 against Ballyboden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177218-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Duke Blue Devils football team\nThe 2004 Duke Blue Devils football team represented the Duke University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was led by head coach Ted Roof. They played their homes games at Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177219-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dunedin mayoral election\nThe 2004 Dunedin mayoral election elected Peter Chin as Mayor of Dunedin. The election was conducted under the Single transferable vote voting system. Chin replaced Sukhi Turner, who retired from the mayoralty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177219-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dunedin mayoral election, Results\nThe following table shows the detailed results for the 9 October 2004 election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177220-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Durango state election\nThe Mexican state of Durango held an election on Sunday, July 4, 2004. At stake was the office of the Durango State Governor, all 25 members of the unicameral Durango State Congress, and 39 mayors and municipal councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177220-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Durango state election\nTurnout was 49.7% of the 977,699 duranguenses eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177220-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Durango state election, Governor\nAt the time of the election, the sitting governor was \u00c1ngel Sergio Guerrero Mier of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI). No party other than the PRI has ever governed Durango.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177220-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Durango state election, Governor\nWith 90% of the results counted, Ismael Hern\u00e1ndez of the PRI was set for victory with around 52% of the votes cast. Andr\u00e9s Galv\u00e1n of the PAN was in second place with about 30%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177220-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Durango state election, Governor\nThe new governor of Durango was sworn in on 15 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177221-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Dutch Figure Skating Championships took place between 2 and 4 January 2004 in Groningen. Skaters competed in the disciplines of ladies' singles and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177222-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open (tennis)\nThe 2004 Dutch Open, also known by its sponsored name Priority Telecom Open, was an ATP men's tennis tournament staged on outdoor clay courts in Amersfoort, Netherlands and part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177222-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open (tennis)\nThe tournament was held from 12 July until 18 July 2004. Fourth-seeded Martin Verkerk won his first event of the year, and the second title of his professional career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177222-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open (tennis), Finals, Doubles\nJaroslav Levinsk\u00fd / David \u0160koch defeated Jos\u00e9 Acasuso / Luis Horna 6\u20130, 2\u20136, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177223-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open \u2013 Doubles\nDevin Bowen and Ashley Fisher were the defending champions, but Bowen did not participate this year. Fisher partnered Stephen Huss, losing in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177223-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open \u2013 Doubles\nJaroslav Levinsk\u00fd and David \u0160koch won in the final 6\u20130, 2\u20136, 7\u20135, against Jos\u00e9 Acasuso and Luis Horna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177224-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open \u2013 Singles\nNicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177224-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch Open \u2013 Singles\nMartin Verkerk won the tournament, beating Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20135), 4\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177225-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch TT\nThe 2004 Dutch TT was the sixth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 24\u201326 June 2004 at the TT Circuit Assen located in Assen, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177225-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Dutch TT, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round six has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 61], "content_span": [62, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177226-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Dwars door Vlaanderen\nThe 2004 Dwars door Vlaanderen was the 59th edition of the Dwars door Vlaanderen cycle race and was held on 24 March 2004. The race started in Kortrijk and finished in Waregem. The race was won by Ludovic Capelle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177227-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown County Council election\nAn election to D\u00fan Laoghaire\u2013Rathdown County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 28 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177228-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 D\u0119bak hunger strikes\n2004 D\u0119bak Asylum Seeker Hunger Strikes The hunger strikes in the D\u0119bak reception centre for asylum seekers occurred in December 2004 in response to the insufficient conditions and undignified treatment in centres for asylum seekers in Poland. The approximately 200 striking asylum seekers\u2013primarily from Chechnya\u2013were refusing to eat for close to two weeks (it is unclear exactly how long the strikes lasted based on available sources). The hunger strikes ended after a discussion in which the centre\u2019s management team promised the strikers that their healthcare, clothing distribution, and food quality would all be improved. The strikes were part of a larger resistance by asylum seekers in Poland who were demanding passage to western European countries, which they had been denied based on Dublin II regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177229-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 E3 Prijs Vlaanderen\nThe 2004 E3 Prijs Vlaanderen was the 47th edition of the E3 Harelbeke cycle race and was held on 27 March 2004. The race started and finished in Harelbeke. The race was won by Tom Boonen of the Quick-Step team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177230-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 EA Sports 500\nThe 2004 EA Sports 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race that took place on October 3, 2004 at Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega, Alabama. It was the 29th race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series and the third in the ten-race, season-ending Chase for the Nextel Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177231-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 EBSA European Snooker Championship\nThe 2004 EBSA European Snooker Championships was an amateur snooker tournament that took place from 26 May to 5 June 2004 in V\u00f6lkermarkt, Austria It was the 13th edition of the EBSA European Snooker Championships and also doubles as a qualification event for the World Snooker Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177231-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 EBSA European Snooker Championship\nThe tournament was won by 14th seed Mark Allen who defeated 13th seed Alex Borg 7\u20136 in the final. Almost four years later Allen cemented his reputation as one of the most promising upcoming snooker talents in the world at the time by reaching the top 16 on the World Snooker Tour for the first time in his career. Alex Borg would himself go on to win the EBSA European Snooker Championship the following year and secure World Snooker Tour for the 2005/2006 season. Borg would also retain the tournament in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177232-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 EBSA European Under-19 Snooker Championship\nThe 2004 EBSA European Under-19 Snooker Championship was an amateur snooker tournament that took place from 5 April to 8 April 2004 in Wellingborough, England. It was the 8th edition of the EBSA European Under-19 Snooker Championships. The tournament was won by Welshman Jamie Jones who defeated Mark Allen 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177233-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 43rd tournament in league history. It was played between March 5 and March 20, 2004. First Round and Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the Pepsi Arena in Albany, New York. By winning the tournament, Harvard received the ECAC's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177233-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured four rounds of play. The teams that finish above fifth place in the standings receive a bye to the quarterfinal round. In the first round, the fifth and twelfth seeds, the sixth and eleventh seeds, the seventh and tenth seeds and the eighth and ninth seeds played a best-of-three series with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177233-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nIn the quarterfinals the one seed plays the lowest remaining seed, the second seed plays the second-lowest remaining seed, the third seed plays the third-lowest remaining seed and the fourth seed plays the fourth-lowest remaining seed another best-of-three series with the winners of these the series advancing to the Semifinals. In the semifinals the top remaining seed plays the lowest remaining seed while the two remaining teams play against each other. The winners of the semifinals play in the championship game while the losers play in a third-place game. All series after the quarterfinals are single-elimination games. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177233-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177234-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 East Carolina Pirates football team\nThe 2004 East Carolina Pirates football team represented East Carolina University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177235-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastbourne Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Eastbourne Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Eastbourne Borough Council in East Sussex, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177235-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastbourne Borough Council election, Background\n10 seats were contested at the election, with 2 seats being available in Old Town ward after Liberal Democrat councillor Bert Leggett stood down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177235-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastbourne Borough Council election, Background\nDuring the campaign both the national Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy and Conservative leader Michael Howard came to Eastbourne to support their parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177235-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastbourne Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives gained a seat from the Liberal Democrats to take a one-seat majority on the council with 14 councillors, compared to 13 for the Liberal Democrats. The Conservative gain came in Old Town ward, where Conservative Simon Herbert gained one of the two seats from the Liberal Democrats with 1,926 votes, while Liberal Democrat Maurice Skilton held the other seat with 1,854 votes. Overall turnout at the election was 40.97%, up from 33.6% at the 2003 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177236-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team\nThe 2004 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team represented Eastern Illinois University as a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by 18th-year head coach Bob Spoo, the Panthers compiled an overall record of 5\u20136 with a mark of 4\u20134 in conference play, placing fourth in the OVC. Eastern Illinois played their home games at O'Brien Stadium in Charleston, Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177237-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern League season\nThe 2004 Eastern League season began on approximately April 1 and the regular season ended on approximately September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177237-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern League season\nThe New Hampshire Fisher Cats defeated the Altoona Curve 3 games to 0 to win the Eastern League Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177237-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern League season, Playoffs, Divisional Series, Northern Division\nThe New Hampshire Fisher Cats defeated the Binghamton Mets in the Northern Division playoffs 3 games to 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177237-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern League season, Playoffs, Divisional Series, Southern Division\nThe Altoona Curve defeated the Erie SeaWolves in the Southern Division playoffs 3 games to 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177237-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern League season, Playoffs, Championship Series\nThe New Hampshire Fisher Cats defeated the Altoona Curve in the ELCS 3 games to 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177238-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team\nThe 2004 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team represented Eastern Michigan University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their first season under head coach Jeff Genyk, the Eagles compiled a 4\u20137 record, finished in fourth place in the West Division of the Mid-American Conference, and were outscored by their opponents 458 to 328. The team's statistical leaders included Matt Bohnet with 2,807 passing yards, Anthony Sherrell with 854 rushing yards, and Eric Deslauriers with 1,252 receiving yards. Eric Deslauriers received the team's most valuable player award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177239-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Eastleigh Borough Council election\nElections to Eastleigh Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrat party kept overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 41.4%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177240-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe 2004 East\u2013West Shrine Game was the 79th staging of the all-star college football exhibition game featuring NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision players. The game featured over 90 players from the 2003 college football season, and prospects for the 2004 Draft of the professional National Football League (NFL). The proceeds from the East\u2013West Shrine Game benefit Shriners Hospitals for Children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177240-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe game was played on January 10, 2004, at 11\u00a0a.m. PT at SBC Park in San Francisco, and was televised by ESPN. One of the players in the game was Neil Parry of San Jose State, whose lower right leg had been amputated in October 2000; Parry played on special teams for the West squad and registered a tackle in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177240-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe offensive MVP was Ryan Dinwiddie (QB, Boise State), while the defensive MVP was Brandon Chillar (LB, UCLA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177240-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 East\u2013West Shrine Game, Coaching staff\nEast head coach: Walt HarrisEast assistants: Tom Freeman & Paul RhoadsWest head coach: John RobinsonWest assistants: Bruce Snyder & Mike BradesonSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177240-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 East\u2013West Shrine Game, 2004 NFL Draft\nShrine game records indicate that 40 players in the game were selected in the 2004 NFL Draft. Players taken in the first three rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177241-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Edmonton Eskimos season\nThe 2004 Edmonton Eskimos finished 2nd in the West Division with a 9\u20139 record winning the tie-breaker with the Saskatchewan Roughriders, who also finished 9\u20139\u20130, and denying them a home playoff date. The Roughriders defeated the Eskimos in the West Semi-Final, ending their season and a chance to defend their Grey Cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177242-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Edmonton municipal election\nThe 2004 Edmonton municipal election was held on October 18, 2004 to elect a mayor and twelve councillors to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177242-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Edmonton municipal election, Voter turnout\nThere were 212,105 ballots cast out of 507,577 eligible voters, for a voter turnout of 41.8%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177242-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Edmonton municipal election, Results, Councillors\nTwelve councillors, two elected in each of six wards, with voters having up two votes each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177242-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Edmonton municipal election, Results, Separate (Catholic) school trustees\nOne trustee is elected from each ward, and the non-victorious candidate with the most total votes is also elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy\nThe 2004 Eisenhower Trophy took place 28\u201331 October at Rio Mar Country Club in R\u00edo Grande, Puerto Rico. It was the 24th World Amateur Team Championship for the Eisenhower Trophy. The tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event with 66 three-man teams. The best two scores for each round counted towards the team total. Each team was due to play two rounds on the two courses. The leading teams played on the River course on the third day and were due to play on the Ocean course on the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy\nHeavy rain and lightning caused the final day to be abandoned and the event was reduced to 54 holes. The leading 36 teams had played their third round on the River course while the others played on the Ocean course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy\nThe United States won their 13th Eisenhower Trophy, nine strokes ahead of Spain, who took the silver medal. Sweden took the bronze medal while Canada, Italy and Switzerland finished tied for fourth place. Ryan Moore had the best 54-hole aggregate of 204, 12 under par.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy\nThe 2004 Espirito Santo Trophy was played on the same courses one week prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy, Teams\nThe following table lists the players on the leading teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy, Results\nThe leading 36 teams played their third round on the River course with the remaining teams playing on the Ocean course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy, Individual leaders\nThere was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177243-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Eisenhower Trophy, Individual leaders\nPlayers in the leading teams played two rounds on the River course and one on the Ocean course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177244-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Electron-Land Cup\nThe following 3 teams of players competed in the 2004 Electron-Land Cup - a professional Go tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season\nThe 2004 Elite League speedway season was the 70th season of the top division of speedway in the United Kingdom and governed by the Speedway Control Bureau (SCB), in conjunction with the British Speedway Promoters' Association (BSPA). Poole Pirates completed the double (league and cup winners) for the second year running. They were the first team to achieve this since Oxford Cheetahs in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Season summary\nIn 2004, the league increased to ten teams, with the Arena Essex Hammers and the Swindon Robins moving up from the Premier League. The title was decided by a play-off between the top five teams. The team that finished top of the table were seeded directly to the final and the next four met in quarter and semi final rounds. The winner of these rounds qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Season summary\nPoole Pirates dominated the season again and completed the 'double double' meaning winning the league and cup for two consecutive seasons. This had not been achieved since Oxford Cheetahs during the 1985 and 1986 seasons. Poole retained the majority of their 2003 squad, five time World Champion Tony Rickardsson, Magnus Zetterstr\u00f6m, Antonio Lindb\u00e4ck and Bjarne Pedersen but Ryan Sullivan was brought in from Peterborough to replace Leigh Adams who moved to Swindon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Season summary\nRickardsson topped the league averages but only raced part of the season returning to Sweden to spend more time with his family. Arguably Leigh Adams was the star rider of the season helping new Elite League side Swindon to a respectable mid-table position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Play-offs\nQuarter-Final and Semi-Final decided over one leg. Grand Final decided by aggregate scores over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Play-offs, Final, Second leg\nThe Poole Pirates were declared League Champions, winning on aggregate 112-71.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Elite League Knockout Cup\nThe 2004 Elite League Knockout Cup was the 66th edition of the Knockout Cup for tier one teams. Poole Pirates were the winners of the competition. Poole had started the final second leg under protest because of the Ipswich team changes that included a late replacement rider Davey Watt, who Poole considered was ineligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177245-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite League speedway season, Elite League Knockout Cup, Final, Second leg\nThe Poole Pirates were declared Knockout Cup Champions, winning on aggregate 99-87.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177246-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Elite Women's Hockey League\nThe 2004 Elite Women's Hockey League season was the first season of the Elite Women's Hockey League, a multi-national women's ice hockey league. The EHV Sabres of Austria won the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177247-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ellesmere Port and Neston Borough Council election\nElections to Ellesmere Port and Neston Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl\nThe 2004 Emerald Bowl was a post-season college football bowl game between the New Mexico Lobos and the Navy Midshipmen on December 30, 2004 at SBC Park in San Francisco, United States. The game, which Navy won with a final score of 34\u201319, was highlighted by a 26-play drive from the Midshipmen that took up almost 15 minutes of game time and set the record for the longest drive in a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) college football game. The contest was the third time the Emerald Bowl was played and the final game of the 2004 NCAA football season for both teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl\nThe conference independent Navy Midshipmen, who finished the regular season with a 9\u20132 record, accepted an invitation to play in the game on November 22, 2004. Eight days later, the 7\u20134 New Mexico Lobos agreed to fill the open spot reserved for a Mountain West Conference team. Leading up to the game, sports writers predicted that a major highlight of the contest would be the rushing offenses of Midshipmen head coach Paul Johnson and Lobos head coach Rocky Long; both teams ranked in the top rushing offenses in the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). The Lobos also ranked as one of the nation's top rushing defenses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl\nThe game began at 1:35\u00a0p.m. PST in rainy conditions that had affected the San Francisco Bay Area for days before the contest. The Lobos scored a touchdown on the game's first drive to take an early lead, but the Midshipmen scored three touchdowns to bring the score to 21\u20137 early in the second quarter. After the Lobos narrowed that lead to 12 points by the end of the third quarter, the Midshipmen began a long drive which took up much of the fourth quarter. The drive ended with a field goal, which gave Navy a 15-point lead with a little over two minutes remaining in the game. On the next drive from the Lobos, the Midshipmen forced a turnover on downs and ran out the clock with their last possession to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl\nMidshipmen players Aaron Polanco and Vaughn Kelley were named the game's offensive and defensive Most Valuable Players, respectively. The win caused the Midshipmen to finish the season with a 10\u20132 record, their best record since the 1905 season. After the game, the Associated Press College Poll and the USA Today Coaches' Poll ranked the team as the 24th best in the nation. The loss caused the Lobos' record to fall to 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Team selection\nFirst played in 2002 when it was called the Diamond Walnut San Francisco Bowl, organizers announced a new name in May 2004 for that year's iteration of the annual game for the 2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl season. The new title for the game was derived from the Emerald Nuts brand owned by the game's primary sponsor, Diamond Foods. Originally, the game was to feature the sixth bowl eligible team from the Pacific-10 Conference and the third eligible team from the Mountain West Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Team selection, Navy\nSince only two teams from the Pacific-10 Conference had become bowl eligible near the end of the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, organizers looked to the United States Naval Academy Midshipmen, who were not a member of any athletic conference, to fill the open spot. The team accepted their invitation to play in the Emerald Bowl on November 22, two days after defeating the Rutgers Scarlet Knights with a score of 54\u201321 to earn an 8\u20132 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Team selection, Navy\nThe Midshipmen had originally intended to play in the 2004 Liberty Bowl, but chose the Emerald Bowl when it looked as though Liberty Bowl organizers were seeking a matchup of more \"high-powered offenses\". After defeating the Army Black Knights with a score of 42\u201313 in that year's Army\u2013Navy Game, the Midshipmen ended the regular season with a record of 9\u20132, the first time since the 1963 college football season that Navy had won nine or more games in a season. Wins over Army and the Air Force Falcons secured Navy's second consecutive Commander-in-Chief's Trophy. Navy's previous bowl game, the 2003 Houston Bowl, had ended in a 38\u201314 loss to the Texas Tech Red Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Team selection, New Mexico\nThe University of New Mexico Lobos accepted the game's other invitation on December 30, 2004. The Lobos finished the regular season with five straight wins, culminating in a 16\u20139 win over conference rival Wyoming to finish with a record of 7\u20134. The game marked the first time in the program's history the team had played in three straight bowl games, having lost in the 2002 and 2003 editions of the Las Vegas Bowl to the UCLA Bruins and the Oregon State Beavers, respectively. The bowl game was the first meeting between was the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Pre-game buildup\nPrior to the game, spread bettors favored the New Mexico Lobos by a single point. Given both teams' propensity for running the ball and the rainy weather conditions that had affected the San Francisco area for days prior to the game, analysts expected that it would center around both teams' rushing offenses. The Baltimore Sun sports writer Kent Baker predicted that \"the teams' non-reliance on the pass will serve both well. The game should be fairly low scoring and rapidly played, with the Midshipmen eking out a victory.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Pre-game buildup, Navy\nThe Midshipmen triple option rushing offense, including future National Football League (NFL) fullback Kyle Eckel, ranked third among FBS teams in total rushing yards and averaged 291 rushing yards per game. The Midshipmen passing offense, however, ranked 116th out of 117 FBS teams. Using a 3\u20134 defensive scheme, the Midshipmen had experienced mixed levels of defensive success. Although the defensive backs had set a team record for interceptions returned for touchdowns during the season, analysts and fans criticized the squad for a 42\u201310 loss to the Tulane Green Wave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Pre-game buildup, Navy\nSpecial teams play was a noted weakness for Navy; kicker Geoff Blumenfeld had missed seven of ten field goal attempts during the season, including three at distances shorter than 30 yards. The Midshipmen, who had recently completed rigorous midterm exams, were also mourning the death of former teammate J. P. Blecksmith, who had been killed at the Second Battle of Fallujah in the Iraq war in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Pre-game buildup, New Mexico\nThe Lobos also relied heavily on their rushing offense. Running back DonTrell Moore had gained 3,667 career yards and averaged 106 rushing yards per game coming into the contest. When both Moore and quarterback Kole McKamey played for the Lobos, the team had a record of 6\u20131, averaging 21.4 offensive points per game; however, when either player was sidelined with an injury, the team's record dropped to 1\u20133 and the offense averaged 10.3 points per game. The Lobos' passing offense also ranked near the bottom of the FBS, at 115th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Pre-game buildup, New Mexico\nWide receiver Hank Baskett led the team with 49 receptions for 793 yards during the season. The Lobos entered the bowl game with the eighth best rushing defense in the country, allowing an average of 93.6 rushing yards per game. The team had allowed 107 yards of rushing offense in its previous four games combined; it ranked first in the Mountain West Conference in fewest points allowed and most sacks, and had not allowed a rushing touchdown in its last five games. With a win, Lobos head coach Rocky Long would set a team record for most wins as a head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary\nThe 2004 Emerald Bowl began with a 1:35\u00a0p.m. PST kickoff time in SBC Park. Because the field had been converted from the baseball diamond typically used by the San Francisco Giants, both teams shared the same sideline during the game. Rainy conditions caused the field's natural grass surface to become muddier as the game progressed. Although 30,563 tickets were sold, an increase of 19 percent from the 2003 game, official in-stadium attendance was listed at 28,856, an increase of 28 percent over the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary\nDespite New Mexico's closer proximity to the bowl site, Midshipmen fans comprised a large portion of the crowd; Navy directly sold 18,000 tickets prior to the game and was given credit for 22,000. The game aired live on ESPN2, with Eric Collins and Andre Ware serving as announcers. With a Nielsen rating of 2.04, the game was watched by over four million households, approximately 65 percent more viewers than the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe Midshipmen kicked off to the Lobos to begin the game. New Mexico then executed a 66-yard drive that comprised nearly seven minutes of game time, which ended when quarterback Kole McKamey threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to Logan Hall. Midshipmen quarterback Aaron Polanco responded on the next drive by scoring a 14-yard rushing touchdown, tying the score at 7\u20137. On the following drive from the Lobos, running back DonTrell Moore tore his anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) when Midshipmen cornerback Vaughn Kelley made a low tackle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nMoore fumbled the ball as he was tackled, and did not return for the remainder of the game. Midshipmen linebacker Lane Jackson recovered the fumble. On the Midshipmen's next drive, running back Frank Divis executed a halfback option pass trick play to Polanco for 17 yards, the team's biggest gain of the first quarter. Two plays later, Polanco scored another touchdown on a 1-yard run up the middle, giving Navy a 14\u20137 lead at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nThe Midshipmen began the second quarter with a two-play, 30-second drive that ended with a 61-yard touchdown pass from Polanco to receiver Corey Dryden, increasing the team's lead to 21\u20137. The Lobos responded with a rushing touchdown from running back Rodney Ferguson, but kicker Wes Zunker's extra point attempt was no good, making the score 21\u201313. Midshipmen kicker Geoff Blumenfeld added a 27-yard field goal to bring the score to 24\u201313. McKamey scored another rushing touchdown to cap off another long drive, this time taking up over five minutes of game time, but the team's two-point conversion attempt failed. Lane Jackson intercepted McKamey's pass on the Lobos final drive before half-time, ending the first half of the game with a score of 24\u201319 in favor of the Midshipmen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nThe Lobos began the second half of the game with a kickoff to Navy, and after an unsuccessful drive from each team, the Midshipmen began a drive on their own 25-yard line with 11:30 left in the quarter. With 7:01 left, Polanco scored another rushing touchdown for the Midshipmen, this time for 28 yards. The next Lobos drive began with two penalties from the Midshipmen, moving New Mexico from its own 31-yard line to Navy's 49 before their first snap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nThe Lobos moved 48 yards over the course of eight plays and almost five minutes of game time, but the team committed a turnover on downs inches away from the goal line when running back D.D. Cox was forced out of bounds on fourth down, preventing the team from scoring any points. Getting the ball back with a 31\u201319 lead, Navy began their next drive on their own 1-yard line with 1:41 remaining in the third quarter. Polanco rushed for three more plays before the end of the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nContinuing Navy's drive from the previous quarter, Polanco and Eckel continued to run up the middle and the right side of New Mexico's defense for small gains. Polanco attempted two passes, the first of which was incomplete and the second to slotback Marco Nelson for a first down at the Midshipmen 44-yard line. After 12 plays and over six minutes of game time, the drive reached midfield. After six more rushing plays from Polanco, Eckel, and slotback Eric Roberts, the team reached the Lobos' 28-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nNeeding three yards to achieve a fourth down conversion, Navy coach Paul Johnson called a time-out. On the next play, Frank Divis threw his second halfback option pass of the day to Polanco, gaining six yards to keep the drive alive. Eckel, Divis, and Roberts rushed for six more plays before the drive came to a halt at the Lobos' 5-yard line. On the final play of the drive, Midshipman kicker Geoff Blumenfeld kicked a 22-yard field goal to make the score 34\u201319 with 2:07 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe Lobos gained three more first downs on their final drive, but were unable to score again before turning the ball over on downs. The Midshipmen ran one more quarterback kneel play to run out the clock, winning the game with a final score of 34\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Final statistics\nThough the Lobos gained more first downs and yards on offense than the Midshipmen, their three turnovers and Navy's extended drive in the third and fourth quarters led to the lopsided final score. The 14-minute, 26-second final drive from the Midshipmen, measured by its 26 total plays, set a record for the longest drive in a game. Prior to the contest, the NCAA had not kept a record for longest drive, but began keeping track for the 2005 edition of the record book. No drive in either college football or in the NFL has exceeded the record in terms of total plays or in time of possession since the game was played. At post-game press conferences, both coaches discussed the characteristics of the drive:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Final statistics\nI think that you have to give the defense on the other side some credit because they kept us out of the end zone and we had 26 plays. I wasn't a lot of big plays, it was four yards, five yards. Running the clock was kinda just what the doctor ordered at that point in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Final statistics\nI've never seen a drive like that\u00a0... In fact it wasn't even as if we were playing bad defense. I think their average gain was 3.6 yards; we just couldn't make them punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Final statistics\nMidshipmen quarterback Aaron Polanco was named as the offensive Most Valuable Player (MVP) of the game, finishing the contest with 101 passing yards and 136 rushing yards, a new team bowl record for the Midshipmen. Polanco also had two receptions for 23 yards, achieving the rare feat of leading his team in rushing yards, passing yards, and receptions. Polanco finished the season with 16 touchdowns, more than any other quarterback in the nation. Additionally, Midshipmen fullback Kyle Eckel ran for 85 yards on 24 carries, becoming the Midshipmen's fourth-leading rusher of all time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Final statistics\nNavy cornerback Vaughn Kelley had nine tackles in the game, including the forced fumble in the first quarter, and was named as the defensive MVP of the game. Navy kicker Geoff Blumenfeld exceeded analysts' expectations by making all three of his field goal attempts during the game, and New Mexico kicker Wes Zunker missed his first extra point attempt after 46 consecutive conversions, one away from the school record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game images\nAaron Polanco runs for a touchdown in the 1st quarter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game images\nMidshipman safety Hunter Reddick and Lobos wide receiver Hank Baskett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game images\nAaron Polanco runs for yardage in the 3rd quarter of play", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Game images\nMidshipmen slot back Eric Roberts and Lobos linebacker Fola Fashola, 4th quarter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Post-game effects\nThe win lifted the Midshipmen's record for that season to 10\u20132, Navy's second 10-win season in its history and first in 99 years. It was the first bowl game victory for the Midshipmen since the 1996 Aloha Bowl. As a result of the win, the team finished the season ranked 24th in both the Associated Press and USA Today Coaches' Poll, the first time since 1978 that the Midshipmen finished the season ranked in any major poll. For his coaching accomplishments that year, head coach Paul Johnson was awarded the 2004 Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year Award. The next season, Navy played in the inaugural 2005 Poinsettia Bowl, defeating the Colorado State Rams 51\u201330. In November 2012, Navy accepted an invitation to Kraft Fight Hunger Bowl, the newest name for the Emerald Bowl, based on the team's positive experiences from this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177248-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Emerald Bowl, Post-game effects\nThe Lobos ended the season with a 7\u20135 record, finishing second in the Mountain West Conference behind the Utah Utes. After undergoing surgery to repair his ACL, running back DonTrell Moore returned to compete for the 2005 New Mexico Lobos football team, becoming the sixth college player to rush for over 1,000 yards for four straight seasons. The team finished with a 6\u20135 record in 2005, but did not play in a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 36], "content_span": [37, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177249-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Emperor's Cup, Overview\nIt was contested by 80 teams, and Tokyo Verdy won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177250-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Emperor's Cup Final\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 00:19, 8 January 2020 (\u2192\u200etop: Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (1\u00d7);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177250-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Emperor's Cup Final\n2004 Emperor's Cup Final was the 84th final of the Emperor's Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on January 1, 2005. Tokyo Verdy won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177251-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Empress's Cup, Overview\nIt was contested by 24 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177252-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Empress's Cup Final\n2004 Empress's Cup Final was the 26th final of the Empress's Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on January 1, 2005. Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177252-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Empress's Cup Final, Overview\nNippon TV Beleza won their 6th title, by defeating Saitama Reinas FC 3\u20131 with Eriko Arakawa and Shinobu Ono goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177253-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 England rugby union tour of Australasia\nThe 2004 England rugby union tour of Australia and New Zealand was a series of matches played in June 2004 in Australia and New Zealand by the England national rugby union team. It was the first tour of England, after the victory in the 2003 Rugby World Cup. The English team lost all three Tests decisively, a shock result after the World Cup victory the year before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177253-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 England rugby union tour of Australasia, Matches\nNew Zealand: 15. Mils Muliaina, 14. Doug Howlett, 13. Tana Umaga (capt. ), 12. Dan Carter, 11. Joe Rokocoko, 10. Carlos Spencer, 9. Justin Marshall, 8. Xavier Rush, 7. Richie McCaw, 6. Jono Gibbes, 5. Keith Robinson, 4. Chris Jack, 3. Carl Hayman, 2. Keven Mealamu, 1. Kees Meeuws, \u2013 replacements: 16. Andrew Hore, 17. Tony Woodcock, 19. Marty Holah, 21. Nick Evans, 22. Sam Tuitupou \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 18. Jerry Collins, 20. Byron KelleherEngland: 15. Josh Lewsey, 14. James Simpson-Daniel, 13. Mike Tindall, 12. Mike Catt, 11. Ben Cohen, 10. Charlie Hodgson, 9. Matt Dawson, 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177253-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 England rugby union tour of Australasia, Matches\nLawrence Dallaglio (capt. ), 7. Richard Hill, 6. Chris Jones, 5. Danny Grewcock, 4. Simon Shaw, 3. Julian White, 2. Steve Thompson, 1. Trevor Woodman, \u2013 replacements: 16. Mark Regan, 17. Matt Stevens, 18. Steve Borthwick, 19. Joe Worsley, 20. Andy Gomarsall, 21. Stuart Abbott \u2013 No entry: 22. Olly Barkley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177253-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 England rugby union tour of Australasia, Matches\nNew Zealand: 15. Nick Evans, 14. Mils Muliaina, 13. Tana Umaga (capt. ), 12. Dan Carter, 11. Joe Rokocoko, 10. Carlos Spencer, 9. Justin Marshall, 8. Xavier Rush, 7.Marty Holah , 6. Jono Gibbes, 5.Keith Robinson, 4. Chris Jack, 3. Carl Hayman, 2. Keven Mealamu, 1. Kees Meeuws, \u2013 replacements: 16. Andrew Hore, 17. Tony Woodcock, 18. Jerry Collins, 19. Craig Newby, 21. Andrew Mehrtens, 22. Sam Tuitupou \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 20. Byron KelleherEngland: 15. Josh Lewsey, 14. Tom Voyce, 13. Stuart Abbott, 12.Mike Tindall, 11. Ben Cohen, 10. Charlie Hodgson, 9.Andy Gomarsall, 8. Lawrence Dallaglio (capt. ), 7. Richard Hill, 6. Joe Worsley, 5. Steve Borthwick, 4. Simon Shaw , 3. Julian White, 2. Mark Regan, 1. Trevor Woodman, \u2013 replacements: 16. Andy Titterrell, 17. Matt Stevens, 18. Danny Grewcock, 19. Michael Lipman, 20. Matt Dawson, 21. Olly Barkley, 22. Fraser Waters", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 925]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177253-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 England rugby union tour of Australasia, Matches\nAustralia: 15. Joe Roff, 14. Clyde Rathbone, 13. Stirling Mortlock, 12. Matt Giteau, 11. Lote Tuqiri, 10. Stephen Larkham, 9. George Gregan (capt), 8. David Lyons, 7. Phil Waugh, 6. Radike Samo, 5. Nathan Sharpe, 4. Justin Harrison, 3. Al Baxter, 2. Brendan Cannon, 1. Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 16. Jeremy Paul, 17. Matt Dunning, 18. Dan Vickerman, 19. George Smith, 20. Matt Henjak, 21. John Roe, 22. Chris Latham England: 15. Josh Lewsey, 14. Tom Voyce, 13. Mike Catt, 12. Mike Tindall, 11. Ben Cohen, 10. Charlie Hodgson, 9. Andy Gomarsall, 8. Lawrence Dallaglio (capt. ), 7. Richard Hill, 6. Joe Worsley, 5. Steve Borthwick, 4. Simon Shaw, 3. Julian White, 2. Mark Regan, 1. Tim Payne, \u2013 replacements: 16. Steve Thompson, 17. Mike Worsley, 18. Martin Corry, 19. Michael Lipman, 20. Matt Dawson, 21. Fraser Waters, 22. Olly Barkley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 892]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby\nThe 2004 William Hill Greyhound Derby took place during May & June with the final being held on 5 June 2004 at Wimbledon Stadium. The winner Droopys Scholes received \u00a3100,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Final result, Distances\n\u00be , \u00bd, neck, 2\u00bd, \u00be (lengths)The distances between the greyhounds are in finishing order and shown in lengths. One length is equal to 0.08 of one second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nOne of the ante-post favorites Droopys Shearer bypassed the event recuperating following a turbulent Scottish Greyhound Derby campaign. The very first heat on 6 May resulted in the fastest winner of the night when Tels Coogee Boy won in 28.85; the Pall Mall champion Tims Crow also started well with a customary fast starting win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe following night saw two of the big Irish favourites impress, Droopys Scholes recorded a very fast 28.60 and the Premier Fantasy won in 28.80, the latter had come to prominence in December 2003 when he won the Comerford Cakes National Puppy Stakes at Shelbourne Park, a competition that saw Droopys Scholes win the consolation final. The best of the third set of Derby heats was Drop Goal Jonny (28.81).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe second round resulted in many of the major contenders duly posting a second consecutive win including Droopys Scholes, Big Freeze, Droopys Demaggio, defending champion and the new Scottish Derby champion Farloe Verdict, Premier Fantasy and Drop Goal Jonny. Round three ended with undefeated campaigns for Droopys Scholes, Farloe Verdict and Premier Fantasy while Rhincrew Seagal went fastest in 28.52 and looked a major threat. Both Indian Ruler and Droopys Cahill suffered unlucky exits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nA star studded quarter final line up would have to result in at least one of the undefeated records going but they started with Droopys Demaggio claiming the first heat from Big Freeze and Tims Crow. The eagerly awaited second heat was won by Ballymac Kewell with Droopys Scholes finishing second and Farloe Verdict and Drop Goal Jonny crashing out of the competition. Premier Fantasy duly won and was the only undefeated runner left. The fourth and final heat went to Fire Height Dan who was showing great stamina for an early paced runner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe semi finals would be a third quick run for the 12 runners left and that surprisingly had no effect on Tims Crow and Fire Height Dan who both qualified for the final split by Rhincrew Seagal; the pair were performing superbly over a distance that was slightly longer than they were used to. The second semi was won by Ballymac Kewell beating Droopys Scholes and Big Freeze, the event favourite Premier Fantasy finished badly lame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177254-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nIn a competitive final Tims Crow bolted from the traps which effectively ended the hopes of Fire Height Dan who needed to lead but soon had to settle for an early third place position behind both Tims Crow and Droopys Scholes who also made a great start. The other three runners made poor starts, particularly favourite Rhincrew Seagal, although he did finish well. Tims Crow maintained his lead but ominously Droopys Scholes was within striking distance. As they approached the finish Droopys Scholes took a decisive lead overtaking Tims Crow who was pipped to second place by a strong finishing Big Freeze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177255-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 English National Badminton Championships\nThe 2004 English National Badminton Championships were held at the Manchester Velodrome, in Manchester, from 30 January - 1 February, 2004. Simon Archer won his 14th national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177256-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 English cricket season\nThe 2004 English cricket season was the 105th in which the County Championship had been an official competition. England recorded a 4\u20130 Test series whitewash over the West Indies and a comfortable 3-0 win over New Zealand. Their one-day form was sporadic, however. In the Natwest Trophy, they failed to make the final, which saw New Zealand defeat the West Indies by 107 runs. In the Natwest Challenge, they beat India 2-1. In domestic cricket, Warwickshire won the County Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177256-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 English cricket season, Events\nAfter scoring 642 in the first innings of their County Championship against Glamorgan at the County Ground in September, Essex lose the match by 4 wickets. Essex's total of 642 is the highest total in the first innings of a first-class match by the losing side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177257-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Epping Forest District Council election\nElections to Epping Forest Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control. Overall turnout was 37.6%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177257-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Epping Forest District Council election\nThis election saw the British National Party first enter the council chamber. They would go on to double their representation. This also saw the largest loss of Labour seats since they were the council's largest party in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177258-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Epsom Derby\nThe 2004 Epsom Derby was a horse race that took place at Epsom Downs on Saturday 5 June 2004. It was the 225th running of the Derby, won by the pre-race joint favourite North Light. The winner was ridden by Kieren Fallon and trained by Sir Michael Stoute. The other joint favourite Snow Ridge finished seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177258-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Epsom Derby, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter. hd = head; nk = neck.\u2020 Trainers are based in Great Britain unless indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177258-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Two-year-old races\nNotable runs by the future Derby participants as two-year-olds in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177258-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, The road to Epsom\nEarly-season appearances in 2004 and trial races prior to running in the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177258-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Subsequent Group 1 wins\nGroup 1 / Grade I victories after running in the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nThe 2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, also known as the Wonga Coup, failed to replace President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo with exiled opposition politician Severo Moto. Mercenaries organised by mainly British financiers were arrested in Zimbabwe on 7 March 2004 before they could carry out the plot. Prosecutors alleged that Moto was to be installed as the new president in return for preferential oil rights to corporations affiliated to those involved with the coup. The incident received international media attention after the reported involvement of Sir Mark Thatcher in funding the coup, for which he was convicted and fined in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Summary\nOn 7 March 2004 Zimbabwean police in Harare airport impounded a plane which flew in from South Africa. The alleged plot leader, ex-Special Air Service (SAS) officer Simon Mann, was arrested with two colleagues near the runway while waiting for arms to be loaded on a Boeing 727 (N4610), carrying three crew and 64 former soldiers recruited in South Africa. The majority of those alleged to have been the mercenaries planning to carry out the coup are based in South Africa and ex-members of the 32 Buffalo Battalion, a special force unit that fought for the South African apartheid regime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Summary\nOn 9 March 2004 Nick du Toit and 14 other South African and Angolan men were arrested in Equatorial Guinea on suspicion of being the mercenaries' vanguard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Summary\nThe marketing manager of Zimbabwe Defense Industries, Hope Mutize, said in court that Simon Mann had paid him a deposit of $180,000 (\u00a3100,000) in February 2004 and indirectly linked Mann to the alleged plot by saying he was accompanied by a South African, Nick du Toit, the leader of the 14 men arrested in Equatorial Guinea. Their arms requisition included 20 machine guns, 61 AK-47 assault rifles, 150 hand grenades, 10 rocket-propelled grenade launchers (and 100 RPG shells), and 75,000 rounds of ammunition. Mann said he wanted the rifles, mortars and ammunition to guard diamond mines in volatile parts of the Democratic Republic of Congo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Summary\nIt was alleged that those arrested in Zimbabwe made a stopover in Harare city to buy weapons and expected to join a team in Equatorial Guinea to overthrow President Obiang. Nick du Toit, the leader of those detained in Equatorial Guinea, testified at his trial in Equatorial Guinea that he was recruited by Simon Mann and that he was helping with recruitment, acquiring weapons and logistics. He testified he was told they were trying to install an exiled opposition politician, with Severo Moto as the new president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Simon Mann letter\nIn a letter from prison on 31 March, Simon Mann told his wife, Amanda, and his legal team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Simon Mann letter\n\"Our situation is not good and it is very URGENT. It may be that getting us out comes down to a large splodge of wonga! Of course investors did not think this would happen. Did\u00a0!? .... They [the lawyers] get no reply from Smelly and Scratcher [who] asked them to ring back after the Grand Prix race was over!...... We need heavy influence of the sort that ... Smelly, Scratcher ... David Hart and it needs to be used heavily and now. Once we get into a real trial scenario we are fucked.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Simon Mann letter\nDavid Hart was ex-prime minister Margaret Thatcher's unofficial adviser during the miners' strike and served as special adviser to Michael Portillo and Malcolm Rifkind in subsequent Conservative administrations. \"Scratcher\" is thought to be Sir Mark Thatcher and \"Smelly\" Ely Calil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, 'Wonga list' of the financial backers\nThe names were allegedly on a so-called \"Wonga List\" by James Kershaw \u2013 then 24-year-old, who was believed to have acted as Simon Mann's accountant. Kershaw is said to have been brought in by Nigel Morgan, a security consultant and former Irish Guards officer who had employed Kershaw as an IT expert and accountant at a diamond mine in the DR Congo operated by his then employer, MIBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, 'Wonga list' of the financial backers\nMorgan, a friend of Mann, refused to comment when asked whether he had been involved in the coup attempt, but was known for his connections to the South African Secret Service and was suspected of reporting on the plotters to the authorities. He may have installed Kershaw in the scheme to keep tabs on Mann and the other plotters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, 'Wonga list' of the financial backers\nKershaw entered a witness protection scheme after voluntarily surrendering to police on the advice of his lawyers. He was given 24-hour police protection because of assassination concerns. The list, said to have been handed over to South African police by Kershaw and other former colleagues of Mr Mann, who have turned state's evidence, has been seen by The Guardian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 113], "content_span": [114, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports\nIn December 2003 and January 2004 two separate highly detailed reports of the planned coup were sent to two senior officers in British intelligence and to Michael Westphal, then senior colleague of Donald Rumsfeld. The documents were from Johann Smith, a former commander in South African Special Forces and an internationally renowned security analyst who has been an occasional adviser to President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports\nIn a statement by Smith given to lawyers representing the government of Equatorial Guinea, he says he began hearing rumours of a coup in both Equatorial Guinea and Sao Tom\u00e9 in November 2003 from two ex-soldiers of the 32 Buffalo Battalion who told him they had been recruited for a coup by Nick du Toit:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports\nBecause I was continuing to work in Equatorial Guinea with government, it was not in my interest that there be a coup d'etat.....'I therefore wanted to warn the Equatorial Guinea authorities. I also considered it my duty to warn the authorities in US and England because some of their nationals might be killed. I submitted a report in December 2003 of what I had discovered to Michael Westphal of the Pentagon (in Donald Rumsfeld's department). I expected the US government to take steps to warn Equatorial Guinea or to stop the coup. This was also my expectation as regard the British government, which I warned through two SIS people I knew, and to whom I sent the report by email, also in December 2003, to their personal email addresses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports\nThe report named several major players arrested in March and now on trial for their involvement in the failed putsch. Smith said the group had hired two fishing trawlers to operate off the West African coast, despite the fact that all but one member of the group had no seagoing or fishing experience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports\nThe report concluded that the commercial fishing operation was a front for the movement of men and arms for a coup. The report also mentioned the group's connections with the Equatorial Guinea opposition leader Severo Moto and warned that any operation would pose a threat to stability in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports, Second report\nWhen Smith began to get more intelligence of the plot in January from his former military colleagues who were working for Nick du Toit's South African firm, he sent another report to the Pentagon and SIS marked strictly confidential:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 124], "content_span": [125, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports, Second report\n'After preparing and sending my December report I received further information.... I put this in a second report, which I sent by email to the same people as the first one: Michael Westphal of the US and to British SIS contacts'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 124], "content_span": [125, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports, Second report\nDocuments seen by The Observer reveal that by the end of January, the Foreign Office was being told:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 124], "content_span": [125, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports, Second report\n\"According to the latest planning, Carlos Cardoso (ex-South African special forces soldier) would, on his return, recruit a total of 75 ex-SADF [South African Defence Force] members, mainly from within the former 32 Buffalo's (battalions) and Special Forces ranks to launch simultaneous actions in STP and EG. These actions are planned to take place in mid-March 2004 (The alleged plotters were arrested on 7 March en route to Equatorial Guinea).... Knowing the individuals as well as I do, this timeline is very realistic and will provide for ample time to plan, mobile, equip and deploy the force.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 124], "content_span": [125, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports, Second report\nSmith, who claims he has received death threats since the plot was thwarted, said there was no response from British or US authorities to his warnings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 124], "content_span": [125, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Prosecution and media evidence, Johann Smith intelligence reports, Second report\nThe only thing that happened was that the US authorities froze the Equatorial Guinea money with the Riggs Bank in USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 124], "content_span": [125, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Sir Mark Thatcher, 2nd Baronet\nOn 25 August 2004, Mark Thatcher, the son of the former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Margaret Thatcher, was arrested under anti-mercenary laws in South Africa after being accused of helping to finance the coup to remove President Obiang. Crause Steyl was one of the pilots picked to fly the key planners of the coup in a chartered King 200 twin turbo prop aircraft, registered ZS-NBJ, who later turned prosecution witness in South Africa. :", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Sir Mark Thatcher, 2nd Baronet\nCrause Steyl: \"I met Mark (Thatcher) three or four times. He was a partner in the venture. He put in about $250,000. The money was wired to my company account in various installments. The helicopters cost about $600 an hour plus $5,000 each for the pilots and $10,000 a month for special insurance.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Sir Mark Thatcher, 2nd Baronet\nThatcher has admitted putting money into Steyl's company, Triple A Aviation, but he has said it was to cover the cost of an air ambulance project. Steyl dismissed this explanation. \"He knew what was going on,\" he said. \"I only knew him in the context of the Equatorial Guinea business. I didn't know him before and I haven't met him since.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Sir Mark Thatcher, 2nd Baronet\nOn 13 October 2004 in London, a lawyer for the Equatorial Guinea government said that telephone records showed four calls between the homes of one of the alleged financiers behind the plot, Ely Calil, and Lord Archer in the run-up to the coup attempt in March. Another alleged plotter, Greg Wales, also made five calls to Sir Mark Thatcher in the days after the failed coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Sir Mark Thatcher, 2nd Baronet\nOn 13 January 2005, Mark Thatcher, in a South African court, pleaded guilty to helping finance a coup plot in Equatorial Guinea. South African police were able to prove that Mr Thatcher had transferred about US$285,000 to the mercenaries that were to execute the operation and had met and talked frequently to them prior to the coup attempt. After pleading guilty, he was given a four-year suspended sentence and a fine of about US$560,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Ely Calil\nEly Calil, the Chelsea-based Lebanese oil billionaire who is being sued in London by the Government of Equatorial Guinea, is alleged to have raised another $750,000. Mr Calil's solicitor said that he did not wish to respond to the claim that he had raised money for the plotters. But he denied any knowledge of the plot. Nigel Morgan, who is said to have interviewed Calil in the aftermath, claimed Calil offered to provide information about the plot to the South African government and betray the other plotters in exchange for staving off prosecution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 88], "content_span": [89, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, David Tremain\nDavid Tremain, a South Africa-based British businessman, is alleged to have raised $500,000. Mr Tremain is alleged to have been \"fronting\" for a syndicate of South African and other minor investors. Tremain denies any involvement in the coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Jeffrey Archer\nBank details of Simon Mann's Guernsey firm, Logo Logistics, reveal that a JH Archer made a payment of $134,000 (\u00a374,000) into his account in the days before the failed coup attempt. Lord Archer initially issued a statement through his lawyers stating that he had \"no prior knowledge\" of the alleged coup and that he had not spoken to Sir Mark for \"approximately 10 years\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Jeffrey Archer\nIn January, on the same day the plotters were meeting at Sandton in Johannesburg, Ely Calil called Lord Archer and the pair apparently spoke for 15 minutes. Other calls followed in the run-up to the coup attempt. A lawyer for the Equatorial Guinea government said in London that telephone records showed four calls between Ely Calil and Lord Archer in the run-up to the coup attempt in March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 93], "content_span": [94, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Severo Moto\nProsecutors said Equatorial Guinea's opposition leader, Severo Moto, based in Spain, offered the group $1.8m and oil rights to overthrow the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 90], "content_span": [91, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Tim Bell, Baron Bell\nTimothy Bell, Lady Thatcher's former spin doctor, is linked to the case by \"advising\" Mr Mann's friends. Baron Bell has said that as far as he was aware neither Sir Mark nor Mr Hart were involved in the alleged coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 99], "content_span": [100, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Greg Wales / US administration\nPresident Obiang accused the US of backing the plot, but the Pentagon denies supporting it. US officials say it was Greg Wales who made all the approaches to them. Greg Wales, a London-based property dealer, is alleged to have raised $500,000. Equatorial Guinea official sources claim that in November 2003 wrong date?, when the plot was in its early stages, an Old Etonian mercenary, Simon Mann, paid Mr Wales about $8,000. Mr Wales denies any involvement in the coup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Greg Wales / US administration\nTheresa Whelan, a member of the Bush administration in charge of African affairs at the Pentagon, twice met a London-based businessman, Greg Wales, in Washington before the coup attempt. Mr Wales has been accused of being one of its organisers, but has denied any involvement. A US defence official told Newsweek magazine:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Network of support and financiers, Greg Wales / US administration\nMr Wales mentioned in passing [...] there might be some trouble brewing in Equatorial Guinea. Specifically, he had heard from some business associates of his that wealthy citizens of the country were planning to flee in case of a crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 109], "content_span": [110, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, UK prior knowledge\nBritain was given a full outline of the coup plot, including the dates, details of arms shipments and key players, months before the coup was launched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, UK prior knowledge\nUntil 9 November 2004, cabinet ministers had denied any prior knowledge of the attempted illegal coup. Jack Straw and minister for Africa Chris Mullin were however personally told of the plot on Friday, 30 January. After receiving news of the coup, Jack Straw ordered a change to evacuation plans for British citizens in Equatorial Guinea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, UK prior knowledge\nPresident Obiang commented on the lack of warning despite admissions of prior knowledge:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, UK prior knowledge\nThis is particularly surprising in view of the fact that a number of British citizens and residents of the UK appear to be central to the conspiracy to overthrow the government of Equatorial Guinea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, UK prior knowledge\nJack Straw had told parliament that the Foreign and Commonwealth Office did investigate if there were any British companies involved in the plot after receiving confidential reports, but failed to find any evidence. British officials, and Jack Straw, were forced to apologise to The Observer after categorically denying they had prior knowledge of the coup plot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 62], "content_span": [63, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Spain\nPresident Obiang accused the Spanish government of supporting the plot. The allegation could explain the position of two Spanish warships off the coast of Equatorial Guinea, at the time of the arrests of the alleged plotters. Miguel Mifuno, special adviser to Equatorial Guinea's president, accused the Spanish government of funding opposition groups in exile and supporting the coup directly:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Spain\nOur intelligence sources say that the warship was going to arrive on the same date that the coup attempt was going to take place \u2013 8 March..... It [the war ship] was already in our territorial waters with 500 soldiers aboard. Meanwhile there was a team of foreign mercenaries already in Equatorial Guinea who knew where we lived. They had plans to kill 50 people and to arrest others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177259-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinea coup d'\u00e9tat attempt, Spain\nThe Spanish foreign ministry spokeswoman denied the allegations; \"There was no ship there, we deny any kind of implication in any attempted coup\". However the Spanish foreign minister, Ana Palacio seemed to contradict the spokeswoman's statement; \"They weren't on a mission of war, but one of cooperation.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177260-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinean legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Equatorial Guinea on 25 April 2004. They were won by the Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea of President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, which won 68 of the 100 seats in the Chamber of People's Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177260-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinean legislative election, Results\nThis Equatorial Guinea-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177260-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Equatorial Guinean legislative election, Results\nThis African election-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177261-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Erbil bombings\nThe 2004 Erbil bombings was a double suicide attack on the offices of Iraqi Kurdish political parties in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan on 1 February 2004. The attackers detonated explosives strapped to their bodies as hundreds gathered to celebrate Eid Al-Adha in Erbil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177261-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Erbil bombings\nA former government minister, the deputy governor of Erbil Governorate and the city's police chief were among those killed at offices of northern Iraq's main political groups, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK). The attacks occurred as party leaders were receiving hundreds of visitors to mark the start of Eid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177261-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Erbil bombings\nThe Al-Hayat newspaper speculated that the bombings may have been retribution for the capture of bin Laden's courier Hassan Ghul in Iraqi Kurdistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing\nThe Erez Crossing bombing was a suicide bombing which occurred on January 14, 2004 at the pedestrian/cargo terminal Erez Crossing located on the Israeli Gaza Strip barrier. Four Israelis were killed in the attack. 10 people, including four Palestinians, were injured in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing\nHamas and the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed joint responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The attack\nOn Wednesday, 14 January 2004, around 9:30 am, a female Palestinian suicide bomber, approached the pedestrian/cargo terminal Erez Crossing (the main crossing point between Israel and the Gaza Strip where Israeli security forces tend to perform routine security checks to the Palestinian workers before they are allowed to enter Israel).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The attack\nThe suicide bomber was faking a limp and she told the security guards at the site that she had a metal plate in her leg which would most likely trigger the alarm. As a result, a female soldier was sent to check her. As the suicide bomber was waiting for the arrival of the female soldier, she managed to infiltrate into the inspection hall, and detonated the hidden explosive device which was concealed on her body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The attack\nThree soldiers and one civilian employee of the Erez crossing were killed in the attack. 10 people, including four Palestinians, were injured in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The perpetrators\nHamas and the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades claimed joint responsibility for the attack. Hamas spokesman stated that the suicide bomber was a 22-year-old Palestinian mother of two named Reem al-Reyashi who originated from Gaza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The perpetrators\nIn addition, after the attack a video of the suicide bomber, which was filmed before the attack, was published in which al-Reyashi was wearing combat fatigues and holding an automatic rifle with a rocket-propelled grenade in the foreground. In the video al-Riyashi said that since age 13 she had dreamed of turning \"my body into deadly shrapnel against the Zionists\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The perpetrators\nShe continued: \"I always wanted to be the first woman to carry out a martyrdom operation, where parts of my body can fly all over ... God has given me two children. I love them [with] a kind of love that only God knows, but my love to meet God is stronger still.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The perpetrators\nHamas founder Sheikh Ahmed Yassin stated in an interview with the Reuters news agency that \"The fact that a woman took part for the first time in a Hamas operation marks a significant evolution\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177262-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Erez Crossing bombing, The perpetrators\nIn a Netflix documentary about the attack, The Israeli Honey Trap, it was revealed that al-Reyashi had been targeted for death after it was revealed she had an affair with a senior Hamas commander, who was later eliminated in a targeted killing by Israel, as was Sheik Ahmed Yassin who gave approval for the attack. Yassin gave approval for her to die a martyr to atone for her sin of adultery. It is common in Islamic culture for women to be killed and men not held responsible for adulterous relationships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177263-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Esiliiga\nIn the 2004 season of the Esiliiga, the second-tier league of the Estonian football league system, the Tammeka team finished in top position. Tammeka, Tervis and D\u00fcnamo won promotion to the Meistriliiga and no team was relegated to the II Liiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177263-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Esiliiga, Promotion playoff\nJK D\u00fcnamo Tallinn beat FC Lootus Alutaguse 5\u20132 on aggregate. D\u00fcnamo promoted to Meistriliiga, Lootus relegated to Esiliiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177263-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Esiliiga, Relegation play-off\nTallinna Jalgpalliklubi beat FC Puuma Tallinn 4\u20131 on aggregate. TJK stayed in Esiliiga, Puuma in Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 34], "content_span": [35, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy\nThe 2004 Espirito Santo Trophy took place 20\u201323 October at Rio Mar Country Club, on its River Course and Ocean Course, in R\u00edo Grande, Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy\nIt was the 21st women's golf World Amateur Team Championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy\nThe tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event. There were 48 team entries, each with two or three players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy\nEach team played two rounds at the River Course and two rounds at the Ocean Course in different orders, but all the leading teams played the fourth round at the Ocean Course. The best two scores for each round counted towards the team total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy\nTeam Sweden won the Trophy for their first title. The silver medal was shared between team Canada and team United States, who finished tied second, three strokes back. Defending champion team Australia finished 16th and was never in contention to retain the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy\nThe individual title was shared between Julieta Granada, Paraguay, and Karin Sj\u00f6din, Sweden, whose score of 8-under-par, 280, was four strokes ahead of Jane Park, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy, Teams\n48 teams entered the event and 47 teams completed the competition. Each team had three players, except the teams from Egypt, Greece and Lithuania, which had only two players. One player representing Virgin Islands withdraw from the third and fourth round and one player representing Lithuania withdraw from the third and fourth round thereby withdrawing the team from the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177264-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Espirito Santo Trophy, Individual leaders\nThere was no official recognition for the lowest individual scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177265-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Estonian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Estonian Figure Skating Championships (Estonian: Eesti Meistriv\u00f5istlused) were held in Tallinn from December 20 to 22, 2003. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177265-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Estonian Figure Skating Championships, Junior results\nThe 2004 Estonian Junior Figure Skating Championships took place in Tallinn from January 23 through 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177266-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open\nThe 2004 Estoril Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Estoril Court Central in Oeiras in Portugal that was part of the International Series of the men's 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier IV of the women's 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 15th edition of the tournament for the men (the 8th for the women) and was held from 12 April until 18 April 2004. Juan Ignacio Chela and \u00c9milie Loit won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177266-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open, Finals, Men's Doubles\nJuan Ignacio Chela / Gast\u00f3n Gaudio defeated Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl 6\u20132, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177266-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open, Finals, Women's Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi / Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 defeated Olga Blahotova / Gabriela Navr\u00e1tilov\u00e1 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177267-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177267-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJuan Ignacio Chela and Gast\u00f3n Gaudio won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20131 against Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177268-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nNikolay Davydenko was the defending champion but lost in the first round to Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177268-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nJuan Ignacio Chela won in the final 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20133 against Marat Safin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177269-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nPetra Mandula and Patricia Wartusch were the defending champions, but Mandula did not compete this year. Wartusch teamed up with Barbara Schett and lost in quarterfinals to Kira Nagy and Adriana Serra Zanetti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177269-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi and Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 won the title by defeating Olga Blahotov\u00e1 and Gabriela Navr\u00e1tilov\u00e1 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final. It was the 1st title for Gagliardi and the 17th title for Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 in their respective doubles careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177270-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nMag\u00fci Serna was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177270-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Singles\n\u00c9milie Loit won the title by defeating Iveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20131) in the final. It was the 2nd title in the year for Loit and the 8th title in her singles career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177271-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer Cup\nThe 2004 Euro Beach Soccer Cup was the sixth Euro Beach Soccer Cup, one of Europe's two major beach soccer championships at the time, held in June 2004, in Lisbon, Portugal. Hosts Portugal won the championship, claiming their fourth successive title and fifth overall, with Spain finishing second. Italy beat France in the third place play off to finish third and fourth respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177271-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer Cup\nEight teams participated in the tournament who played in a straightforward knockout tournament, starting with the quarter finals, with extra matches deciding the nations who finished in fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177271-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer Cup, Matches, Fifth to eighth place deciding matches\nThe following matches took place between the losing nations in the quarter finals to determine the final standings of the nations finishing in fifth to eighth place. The semi finals took place on the same day of the semi finals of the main tournament and the play offs took place on the day of the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThe 2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, was the seventh edition of the Euro Beach Soccer League (EBSL), originally known as the European Pro Beach Soccer League, the premier beach soccer competition contested between European men's national teams, occurring annually since its establishment in 1998. The league was organised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW) between July 2 and September 5, 2004 in ten different nations across Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThis season, BSWW introduced a third division, Division C, to the EBSL alongside the already existing Divisions A and B. Each team continued, as in the previous seasons, to compete in their respective division, including the newly added Division C nations, to try and earn a place in the season-finale event, the Superfinal, in which the league title was then contested directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League\nSpain, who entered as defending champions, had looked odds on favourites to reclaim their title after dominating the top Division but suffered a shock loss to the Division C qualifiers and debutants, Ukraine, in the first round of the Superfinal. This opened the door for France, who had originally narrowly qualified for the season-finale, to ultimately be crowned champions, winning their first and to date only European title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThe league also doubled as the qualification process for the first FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in 2005. The nations finishing in first, second and third place qualified directly whilst the teams in fourth through seventh place competed in a final play off stage to decide which nation would gain the remaining berth at the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Teams\nThis season 18 nations took part in the Euro Beach Soccer League whom were and were distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Teams, Superfinal berths\nThere were eight berths available in this season's Superfinal, expanded from the six spots in previous seasons. The table summarises in what positions nations needed to finish in their respective divisions in order to qualify to the Superfinal, what round of the Superfinal they would enter finishing in said positions, and the seeding they would receive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A\nDivision A consisted of six rounds of fixtures known as stages, with one stage hosted in each of the six countries participating as shown. Four teams took part in each, with each team taking part in a total of four of the six stages. In each stage, the teams played each other once. The nation who earned the most points at the end of the stage was crowned stage winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A\nAt the end of the six stages all results were tallied up in a final league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 1\nThe first stage took place in Marsielle, France. Portugal claimed the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 2\nThe second stage took place in Scoglitti, Italy. Spain won their first stage of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 3\nThe third stage took place in Portim\u00e3o, Portugal. The hosts earned their second stage crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 4\nThe fourth stage took place in Stavanger, Norway. A second stage victory was claimed by Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 5\nThe penultimate fifth stage took place in Palma de Mallorca, Mallorca, Spain. The hosts won their third stage title of the season. The Spanish also earned enough points during this stage to secure first place in the final division standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 6\nThe sixth and final stage was due to be the English stage of Division A, to be held in Brighton (originally to be stage 1 of the division, held at the end of June). However, the sponsors of the English event in previous years, Kronenbourg, and other potential sponsors, were deterred from investing in the event again due to this year's fixtures clashing with Euro 2004, in which it was believed audiences would be far more interested and therefore a risk to invest money into this event. Sky continued to offer TV coverage, but no new sponsor could be found, and so the stage was ultimately cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 6\nBSWW subsequently made an attempt to reorganise the stage as stage 6 in Catanzaro, Italy at the end of August, but this ultimately fell through too.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Final Division A table\nThe top four Division A teams qualified to the Superfinal. The final positions of the nations occupying first through fourth respectively determined seedings in the quarter-finals. Spain were crowned runaway winners of the division, earning the top seed in the Superfinal. France, finishing in the last qualifying position, claimed the lowest seed on offer in Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Final Division A table\nDespite the teams playing different numbers of games due to stage 6 being cancelled, this ultimately proved inconsequential to the final league table since, after the completion of stage 5, Norway had no fixtures remaining and it was impossible for England to gain enough points in the final round of matches to move up into a Superfinal qualification spot. Hence the four qualifiers were confirmed at this point. If played, the matches of stage 6 would have been dead rubbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B\nLike the top tier, Division B consisted of five rounds of fixtures known as stages, with one stage hosted in each of the five countries participating as shown. Four teams took part in each stage, with each nation participating in four of the five stages overall. In every round of fixtures the teams played each other once. The nation who earned the most points at the end of the stage was crowned stage winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B\nAt the end of the five stages all results were tallied up in a final league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Stage 1\nThe first stage took place in Istanbul, Turkey. Belgium won the first stage of Division B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Stage 2\nThe second stage took place in Linz, Austria. Switzerland won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Stage 3\nThe third stage took place in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, alongside the running of the Division A and C events. Austria claimed their first stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Stage 4\nThe fourth and next to last stage took place in Interlaken, Switzerland. The hosts won their second stage crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Stage 5\nThe fifth and final stage took place in Brussels, Belgium. The hosts won the event, their second of the season, and secured the division title after beating Germany on the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Final Division B table\nThe top three Division B teams qualified to the Superfinal. The final positions of the nations occupying first through third respectively determined seedings in the quarter-finals. The remaining Division B nations exited this season's EBSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Final Division B table\nBelgium were crowned winners. Switzerland and Austria were the other two successful teams, qualifying ahead of Germany by a slim margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C, Results\nThe inaugural season of Division C was played as a straight knockout tournament. All teams contesting the division started in the quarter-finals, playing one match per round until the final when the winner was crowned. The losers of the quarter-finals played in consolation matches to determine their final division placements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C, Results\nSlovenia withdrew immediately prior to the start of the event, giving Poland a walkover into the semi-finals, Monaco a bye in the consolation matches with no opponent to face, and meant there was no seventh place play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C, Final Division C standings\nThe winner of the division qualified into the Superfinal quarter-finals. The remaining Division C nations exited this season's EBSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C, Final Division C standings\nThe Ukraine won the Division C tournament title, comfortably beating Hungary in the final. Since they withdrew, Slovenia did not receive a placing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Qualified teams\nThis is a summary of the teams who qualified for the Superfinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Results\nThis season the Superfinal was played as a straight knockout tournament. All eight teams contesting the title started in the quarter-finals, playing one match per round until the final when the winner of the 2004 Euro Beach Soccer League was crowned. The losers of the quarter-finals played in consolation matches to determine their final league placements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Superfinal final standings\nFrance beat Portugal in the final to win their first Euro Beach Soccer League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177272-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Superfinal final standings\nThe success of the three nations finishing in the podium positions meant they earned qualification for the upcoming FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup. The teams in fourth through seventh place competed in a final play off stage to decide which nation would gain the remaining berth at the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177273-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Euro Formula 3000 Series\nThe 2004 Superfund Euro Formula 3000 Series was contested over 10 rounds. 10 different teams and 25 different drivers competed. All teams raced with Lola chassis (Lola T99/50) and Zytek engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177274-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Euroleague Final Four\nThe 2004 Euroleague Final Four was the concluding Euroleague Final Four tournament of the 2003\u201304 Euroleague season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177275-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European 10 m Events Championships\nThe 2004 European 10 m Events Championships were held in Gy\u0151r, Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177276-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European 10,000m Challenge, Results, Men's team\nAthletes in italics did not score for their team but received medals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177276-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European 10,000m Challenge, Results, Women's team\nAthletes in italics did not score for their team but received medals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177277-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe men's 2004 European Amateur Boxing Championships were held in Pula, Croatia, from February 19 to February 29. The 35th edition of thi bi-annual competition was organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, EABA. A total number of 292 fighters from 41 countries competed at these championships. Russia's Gaydarbek Gaydarbekov afterwards received the Best Fighter Award. The tournament served as a qualification event for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. All medal winners earned a berth for the Athens Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177278-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Aquatics Championships\nThe 2004 LEN European Championships were held in Madrid, Spain from 5\u201316 May, at the M-86 Swimming Center in the southeast of the city. The championships brought together the European Championships in swimming (long course), open water swimming, diving and synchronised swimming. Since the event was held less than three months before the Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece, some of the participating nations used the event therefore as a qualifying tournament for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177279-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Athletics Indoor Cup\nThe 2004 European Athletics Indoor Cup was held on 14 February 2004 at the Arena Leipzig in Leipzig, Germany. It was the second edition of the indoor track and field meeting for international teams, which featured the eight top performing nations from the 2003 European Cup. It was the second consecutive year that the event was held at the venue, following on from a successful hosting of the 2003 European Athletics Indoor Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177279-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Athletics Indoor Cup\nThe competition featured nineteen athletics events, nine for men and ten for women. The 400 metres race were held in a dual final format due to size constraints, with athletes' being assigned final positions through their finishing times. The international team points totals were decided by their athletes' finishing positions, with each representative's performance contributing towards their national overall score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177279-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Athletics Indoor Cup\nThe Russian women's team retained their title from the previous year, taking a comprehensive victory \u2013 seven of the ten women's events were won by Russians and the team was eighteen points clear of runner-up Germany. The men's side was a much more closely contested affair. The title was decided in the final Swedish medley relay event, with France just managing to maintain its lead and beat the Russian men by two points in the final rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177280-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Badminton Championships\nThe 19th European Badminton Championships were held in Geneva, Switzerland, between 16 and 24 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177281-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Beach Volleyball Championships\nThese page shows the results of the 2004 European Beach Volleyball Championships, held from June 9 to June 13, 2004 in Timmendorfer Strand, Germany. It was the twelfth official edition of the men's event, which started in 1993, while the women competed for the eleventh time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177282-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2004 European Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Skopje, Macedonia between June 4 and 6, 2004 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA). It was the 5th edition. The competitors took part in 8 events, but medals were awarded for only 6 of them. The C2 team event and the K1 women's team event only had 4 teams participating. An event must have at least 5 nations taking part in order to count as a medal event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177283-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Cross Country Championships\nThe 11th European Cross Country Championships were held at Seebad Heringsdorf in Germany on 12 December 2004. Serhiy Lebid took his fifth title in the men's competition and Hayley Yelling won the women's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177284-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Cup (athletics)\nThe 2004 Spar European Cup took place on 19 and 20 June 2004 at the Zdzis\u0142aw Krzyszkowiak Stadium in Bydgoszcz, Poland. This was the 25th European Cup and the first time the event has been hosted in Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177285-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Curling Championships\nThe 2004 European Curling Championships were held in Sofia, Bulgaria from December 4 to 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177286-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Fencing Championships\nThe 2004 European Fencing Championships were held in Copenhagen. The event took place from 29 June to 4 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177287-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 European Figure Skating Championships was a senior international figure skating competition in the 2003\u201304 season. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The event was held at the Budapest Sports Arena in Budapest, Hungary from February 2 to 8, 2004. The compulsory dance was the Austrian Waltz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177287-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualifying\nThe competition was open to skaters from European ISU member nations who had reached the age of 15 before 1 July 2003. The corresponding competition for non-European skaters was the 2004 Four Continents Championships. National associations selected their entries based on their own criteria. Based on the results of the 2003 European Championships, each country was allowed between one and three entries per discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177287-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Figure Skating Championships, Competition notes\nDue to the large number of participants, the men's qualifying group was split into groups A and B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177288-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Grand Prix\nThe 2004 European Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Formula 1 Allianz Grand Prix of Europe) was a Formula One motor race held on 30 May 2004 at the N\u00fcrburgring. It was Race 7 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. The race was noticeable due to the race strategy employed by Ferrari. Michael Schumacher extended his gap over his rivals to close to 18 seconds in the first 7 laps, when the top-runners seemed to bunch up behind Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177288-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 European Grand Prix\nAfter his pitstop, Schumacher exited in 6th place, moved back up when others made their pitstops and cruised to a dominant victory in front of his teammate Rubens Barrichello. Takuma Sato broke the overall lap record with a time of 1:27.691 in the first qualifying session, and also took his first front row start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177288-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177289-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Judo Championships\nThe 2004 European Judo Championships were the 15th edition of the European Judo Championships, and were held in Bucharest, Romania from 14 May to 16 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177290-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Judo Open Championships\nThe 2004 European Judo Open Championships were the 1st edition of the European Judo Open Championships, and were held in Budapest, Hungary on 4 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177290-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Judo Open Championships\nThe European Judo Open Championships was staged because the open class event had been dropped from the European Judo Championships program from 2004. Unlike the regular European Judo Championships, several competitors from each country are allowed to enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177291-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Junior Swimming Championships\nThe 2004 European Junior Swimming Championships were held from 15 to 18 July 2004 in Lisbon, Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177292-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2004 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Krak\u00f3w, Poland from 10 to 12 September 2004 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA) at the Krak\u00f3w-Kolna Canoe Slalom Course. It was the 6th edition of the competition for Juniors (U18) and the 2nd edition for the Under 23 category. It was also the first time that the two age categories had a joint European Championships. A total of 12 medal events took place. The team events were held as an open event for both junior and U23 athletes. Countries were allowed to enter two teams in each team event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177293-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Karate Championships\nThe 2004 European Karate Championships, the 39th edition, were held in Moscow, Russia from 7 to 9 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177294-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Men's Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 26th European Men's Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held in Ljubljana, Slovenia from 15 to 18 April 2004. This event was for male gymnasts in senior and junior levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177295-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Men's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Men's European Handball Championship was the sixth edition of the tournament and took place from 22 January to 1 February 2004 in Slovenia in the cities of Ljubljana, Celje, Velenje and Koper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177296-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Mountain Running Championships\nThe 2004 European Mountain Running Championships were held in Korbiel\u00f3w, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177297-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Nations Cup\nUnder the same format as the 2003 European Nations Cup, six nations participated in two groups of three, each playing a total of two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177297-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Nations Cup\nEngland were crowned European champions for the third successive time after they defeated Ireland in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker)\nThe 2004 European Open was the 2004 edition of the European Open snooker tournament, held from 1 to 6 March 2004, at the Hilton Conference Centre, Portomaso, Malta. It was the final year the event was known as European Open, as the event was renamed to Malta Cup in next year. Stephen Maguire defeated Jimmy White by nine frames to three (9\u20133) in the final to claim his first ranking-event title, transforming him from \"talented underachiever into a world-ranking event winner\", according to The Times. In the semi-finals Maguire defeated Stephen Lee and White beat Tony Drago. The tournament was the fifth of eight WPBSA ranking events in the 2003/2004 season, following the Welsh Open and preceding the Irish Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary\nPrior to the 1988/1989 season no ranking tournament had been continuously staged outside of the United Kingdom (although the World Championship had been held twice in Australia). The snooker governing body, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA), decided to include overseas events and the first two locations chosen were Canada and Europe. The European Open was first held in 1989 in Deauville, France, and was suspended for 1997/1998 and 2000/2001. It moved to the Hilton Conference Centre, Portomaso, Malta for the first time in 2004 and was renamed the Malta Cup the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary\nThe 2004 tournament was the fifth of eight WPBSA ranking events in the 2003/2004 season, following the Welsh Open and preceding the Irish Masters. Held in January, the Welsh Open was won by Ronnie O'Sullivan, who defeated Steve Davis by nine frames to eight (9\u20138) in the final. The defending European Open champion was also O'Sullivan, who defeated Stephen Hendry 9\u20136 in last year's final. Paul Hunter, who had defeated O'Sullivan in the final of the non-ranking Masters in February, entered the tournament \"playing the best snooker of his career\", according to Phil Yates of The Times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Qualifying\nThe qualifying stage was played between players ranked 17 and those ranked lower for one of 16 places in the final stage. The matches were best-of-9 frames until the semi-finals. In March 2004 Maltese player Tony Drago defeated Adrian Gunnell 5\u20132 in a match held over from the qualifying stage in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 1\nThe qualifiers went through to face members of the top 16. In this round, Davis came from 2\u20134 down to beat Joe Swail 5\u20134, in a match where both players missed chances. In the deciding frame, Davis won on the pink ball after Swail had missed the brown. After the match, Davis said it was a historic day as he had never won a match in the country. Stephen Lee received a walkover to the next round after his opponent Robin Hull withdrew due to medical reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 1\nWorld number 41 Stephen Maguire made a break of 89 in the final frame of his match against Peter Ebdon to win 5\u20134, and world number three O'Sullivan opened his match against Marco Fu with a century break of 110 and went on to win 5\u20131. Chris Small, who suffers from the spinal condition ankylosing spondylitis, whitewashed UK champion Matthew Stevens 5\u20130, in a match lasting almost three hours and which saw Stevens lose two frames on the black ball. Neil Robertson defeated Ken Doherty 5\u20133, and Joe Perry beat David Roe by the same scoreline. In the last match of the day, David Gray beat Fergal O'Brien 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 1\nWorld number one Mark Williams was defeated 1\u20135 by Anthony Hamilton, who made a break of 133. Williams refused to answer questions at the post-match press conference, explaining: \"I'm not saying anything because if I do I could be in trouble so I'm keeping my mouth shut.\" Hunter and Hendry made high breaks of 49 and 55 in defeating Brian Morgan and Jimmy Michie 5\u20131, respectively. After the match Hendry\u2014the world number two and a seven-time world champion said \"I feel like going to apologise to each fan one by one because it was such a bad match\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 1\nJohn Higgins whitewashed Barry Pinches 5\u20130, compiling a 132 break in the last frame in a match where Pinches made a high break of 33. Jimmy White overcame James Wattana 5\u20134 having trailed 2\u20133. Graeme Dott defeated Drew Henry 5-3 and Quinten Hann beat Simon Bedford 5\u20130. In the last game of the day, Drago beat Alan McManus 5\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 2\nIn round two O'Sullivan defeated Small 5\u20131, coming from behind to win in each of the first three frames with breaks of 58, 81, and 46. A break of 112 completed the victory, after which O'Sullivan said his opponent had made him work. In the fifth frame O'Sullivan continued playing despite needing snookers, later explaining, \"I wanted to keep playing because I was enjoying it so much\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 2\nWhite made breaks of 72, 52, 69, 51, and 65 in defeating Hendry 5\u20133, after which Hendry said his performance was \"horrendous\", and White said his refusal to go out the night before contributed to his performance. In the sixth frame White led by 41 points before missing an easy red, allowing Hendry to win on the black with a 55 break to level at 3\u20133. White dominated the next two frames for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Round 2\nHiggins, without a tournament victory for over two years, whitewashed Dott 5\u20130 with breaks of 82, 81, 57, and 52, and said it was the \"best [he had] felt for ages\". Drago defeated Hunter 5\u20132 to reach the quarter-finals of a ranking events for the first time since 1998, in a low-quality match where Drago made one break over 50. Lee defeated Davis 5\u20133 in a four-hour match, and Higgins completed a second whitewash when he beat Dott 5\u20130, bringing his career record against Dott to 9\u20131. Maguire defeated Perry 5\u20134 to reach his first ranking quarter-final, and Hann beat Hamilton 5\u20131 to claim the final place in the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals Lee defeated O'Sullivan 5\u20134 in a match that lasted 3 hours and 32 minutes. O'Sullivan came from 2\u20133 down to lead 4\u20133 before Lee leveled the match. In the final frame O'Sullivan led 36\u20130, before Lee made a 46 break and fluked a snooker that enabled him to claim victory. O'Sullivan said his performance was very poor, while Lee said he was quietly confident. White defeated Robertson 5\u20133 to reach his third semi-final of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nWhite led 4\u20131 and was 56 points ahead in the sixth but missed a straightforward green, allowing Robertson to win on the black with a 67 break. Robertson took the next frame before a risky long pot in the eighth allowed White to win the match. White\u2014who last won a ranking title 12 years ago prior at this event\u2014said, \"Everyone knows I've been in front so many times in the past and tossed it away so I was having nightmares out there\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nDrago quickly won the first four frames of his match against Hann, conceding the fifth, before completing a 5\u20131 victory, after which he said the crowd support helped him. Maguire caused an upset when he beat Higgins 5\u20133, a match that saw Maguire lose the first two frames before winning the next four. After the match Maguire he said he had \"starting to think about winning it now\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were best-of-11 frames. White reached his first final in four years when he defeated Drago 6\u20134. Leading 4\u20131 White made a break of 104 to win the sixth frame, before missing a straightforward red to allow his opponent to win the seventh with an 84 break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nDrago won the next two in 15 minutes with breaks of 44 and 109\u2014completing the latter in four minutes\u2014before an 86 break gave White the victory, after which White said, \"Playing Tony here, I got a taste of what players have against me at the Masters when the crowd are all on my side but they were fair and I enjoyed every minute of it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nIn the other semi-final Maguire beat Lee 6\u20134 in an error-strewn match which lasted four hours. After winning the first two frames Maguire lost the next three, but \"kept his cool\" to seal the victory. Maguire said the match was a \"battle\" and that he was surprised at how badly his opponents had played in the tournament, while Lee said he \"just blew up\" and that, \"When you\u2019re as poor as that you get into such a state of mind that you can\u2019t think straight\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 61], "content_span": [62, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nThe match was White's 23rd appearance in a final and his first since the 2000 British Open. In the best-of-17 final Maguire defeated White 9\u20133 to win his first ranking title at the age of 22, earning \u00a348,000 in prize money. The victory, according to The Times, transformed Maguire from \"talented underachiever into a world-ranking event winner\"; according to BBC Sport his victory was a surprise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nIn the afternoon session Maguire made two sizeable breaks and one of 137 to lead 3\u20130. He won the next frame and compiled a century in the fifth. The sixth frame was awarded to Maguire, when White violated the three-miss rule. Snookered in the jaws of a corner pocket, White twice attempted to hit the pack of five reds off a side cushion and missed. On his third attempt he adopted a slow roll to the pack and again missed. In the evening session, trailing 0\u20136, White won his first frame before the next four were shared, the last of which included a break of 125 by White. At 8\u20132 a break of 57 gave Maguire the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nAfter his victory Maguire acknowledged the influence of Terry Griffiths who had been working with him on the mental side of the game: \"He's been on the phone just telling me to keep calm and that I can do it if I believe in myself\". Maguire said he always knew he was good enough to win a tournament and that he would aim for a top-16 finish for the season. White said, \"Stephen outplayed me in safety, potting and position so he deserved to win\" and, \"He gave me a good bashing. I'm pleased for him because he's a nice lad but I'm disappointed because I didn't compete\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Main draw\nNumbers to the left of the players' names are the tournament seedings. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177298-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 European Open (snooker), Final\nScores in bold denote winning frame scores and the winning participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177299-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Pairs Speedway Championship\nThe 2004 European Pairs Speedway Championship was the inaugural edition of the European Pairs Speedway Championship. The final was held in Debrecen, Hungary on 12 September. The Cezch Republic won the first edition of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177299-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Pairs Speedway Championship, Semifinal 1\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fellns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177299-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Pairs Speedway Championship, Semifinal 2\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fellns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177299-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Pairs Speedway Championship, Final\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fellns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election\nElections to the European Parliament were held between 10 and 13 June 2004 in the 25 member states of the European Union, using varying election days according to local custom. The European Parliamental parties could not be voted for, but elected national parties aggregated in European Parliamental parties after the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election\nVotes were counted as the polls closed, but results were not announced until 13 and 14 June so results from one country would not influence voters in another where polls were still open; however, the Netherlands, voting on Thursday 10, announced nearly complete provisional results as soon as they were counted, on the evening of its election day, a move heavily criticized by the European Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election\n342 million people were eligible to vote, the second-largest democratic electorate in the world after India. It was the biggest transnational direct election in history, and the 10 new member states elected MEPs for the first time. The new (6th) Parliament consisted of 732 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election\nResults showed a general defeat of governing parties and an increase in representatives from eurosceptic parties. No majority was achieved. The balance of power in the Parliament remained the same (largest party EPP-ED, second largest PES) despite the 10 new member states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by country\nThe national results as at 21 July 2004 are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by EU party (2004 estimated result)\nRegistered voters: 353,460,958 (est.) Votes cast: 154,317,718 (43.66%) (est.) Total seats: 732", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by EU party (2004 estimated result)\n1. The figures for the Nordic Green Left Alliance and the European Anticapitalist Left include only those members that are not full members of the Party of the European Left. 2 . See above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by EU party (2007 national result)\nThe notional results by EU party as at 8 January 2007 are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by EU party (2007 national result)\nRegistered voters: 378,106,633 (est.) Votes cast: 168,317,718 (44.49%) (est.) Total seats: 785 (+53)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by EU party (2007 national result)\n1. Roger Helmer was expelled from the EPP-ED group in 2005, but retains the whip of the British Conservative Party. 2 . The figures for the Nordic Green Left Alliance and the European Anticapitalist Left include only those members that are not full members of the Party of the European Left. 3 . See 2 above. 4 . The EUDemocrats, while having a preference for the IND/DEM group, is currently split between UEN and IND/DEM.5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Results by EU party (2007 national result)\nIn addition to the majority of AIDE MEPs which sit in the IND/DEM group, AIDE also includes Non-Inscrit MEP, Jim Allister, as an individual member. 6. The figures for the European Christian Political Movement exclude a number of members who hold concurrent membership of the European Peoples Party. 7 . See 4 above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, New inclusion\nGibraltar participated as a result of the judgement in Matthews v. United Kingdom", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177300-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election, Other elections\nThe elections coincided with legislative elections in Luxembourg and presidential elections in Lithuania. They also coincided with local and regional elections in England and Wales, Irish local elections, regional elections in Belgium, local or regional elections in most of Italy, and state parliament elections in the German state of Thuringia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177301-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Aosta Valley\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004. The Valdostan Union was the most voted party in Aosta Valley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177302-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Austria\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Austria was the election of MEP representing Austria constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177302-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Austria\nThe parties of the left, the Austrian Social Democratic Party and the Greens, improved their share of the vote. The ruling conservative party, the Austrian People's Party, also improved its share, but this was at the expense of its coalition partner, the Austrian Freedom Party, whose vote dropped sharply. The anti-corruption campaigner Hans-Peter Martin polled strongly and his list won two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177303-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Belgium\nElections to the European Parliament were held in Belgium on 13 June 2004. The elections produced little overall change in the distribution of seats in the European Parliament among Belgium's many political parties. The two socialist parties improved their vote, while the Green parties lost ground. The Flemish nationalist party the Flemish Bloc (Vlaams Blok) registered the largest gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177304-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Cyprus was the election of MEPs representing Cyprus constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177304-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nThis was the first time Cypriot voters had elected members of the European Parliament. They were election of the six deputies who would be representing the Republic of Cyprus at the European Parliament. The number of registered voters was 483,311 \u2013 out of which 503 were Turkish Cypriots and 2054 EU nationals \u2013 while the total number of people who voted was 350.387 or 72,50% of the registered voters. The number of polling stations was 1077, allocated to each polling district in the following manner: Nicosia 416, Limassol 323, Famagusta (Republic of Cyprus-administered area) 50, Larnaca 169 and Paphos 119.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177304-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Cyprus\nThe six seats were contested by 59 candidates, belonging to parties or party coalitions or running as individuals. The conservative Democratic Rally and the left-wing Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL) achieved the largest shares of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177305-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Denmark\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Denmark was the election of MEP representing Denmark constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June. The opposition Social Democrats made major gains, mainly at the expense of Eurosceptic parties such as the June Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177305-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Denmark, Results\nNote - seats are allocated first by the D'Hondt method to Electoral coalitions, which were (A + F), (B + Q), (C + V), (J + N) with (O) by themselves; then subsequently between the parties in each coalition. Compared to straight allocation by party, The People's Movement Against the EU gained one seat at the expense of the Conservative People's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177306-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Estonia\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Estonia was the election of MEP representing Estonia constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177306-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Estonia\nThe election was conducted using the D'Hondt method with open list. The voter turnout in Estonia was one of the lowest of all member countries at only 26.8%. A similar trend was visible in most of the new member states that joined the EU in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177306-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Estonia\nThe biggest winner was the Social Democratic Party, due to the popularity of their leading candidate Toomas Hendrik Ilves, who received the vast majority of the party's votes. The governing Res Publica Party and People's Union polled poorly. Ilves went on to become President of Estonia in October 2006, leaving his MEP seat to Katrin Saks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177307-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Finland\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Finland was the election of MEP representing Finland constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June. Both the Finnish Social Democratic Party and the Finnish Centre Party improved their vote at the expense of the conservative National Coalition Party and the Greens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177308-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in France\nElections to the European Parliament were held in France on 13 June 2004. The opposition Socialist Party made substantial gains, although this was mainly at the expense of minor parties. The governing Union for a Popular Movement and Union for French Democracy also made gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177308-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in France, Seats\nThe elections were conducted in seven regional constituencies in metropolitan France, plus an eighth consisting of all overseas departments and territories. Allocation of seats was by proportional representation, with closed lists and no preferential voting, using the rule of the highest average, with a threshold of 5% of the votes in each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177308-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in France, Members elected\nFor a national list in alphabetical order, see List of members of the European Parliament for France, 2004\u201309", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177309-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Germany\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Germany was the election of MEP representing Germany constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. The vote was held on 13 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177309-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Germany\nThe elections saw a heavy defeat for the ruling Social Democratic Party, which polled its lowest share of the vote since World War II. More than half of this loss, however, went to other parties of the left, particularly the Greens. The votes of the opposition conservative parties, the Christian Democratic Union and the Christian Social Union, also fell, though not as sharply as the SPD's. The liberal Free Democratic Party improved its vote and gained representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177310-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar\nGibraltar's first participation in the elections to the European Parliament were held on 10 June 2004 as part of Europe-wide elections. Although part of the European Union, Gibraltar had never before voted in European Parliamentary elections, in part due to its small electorate of just over 20,000 which would cause Gibraltar to be over-represented by about 30 times if even a single seat were to be assigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177310-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar\nThis disenfranchisement applied by the United Kingdom was successfully challenged before the European Court of Human Rights in 1999. As a result, from 2004 Gibraltar was included by the United Kingdom within the South West England region for electoral purposes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177310-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar\nSpain took a complaint about Gibraltar participating in EU elections to the Court of Justice of the European Union, objecting to the enfranchisement of Commonwealth citizens and the creation of a combined electoral region, but its case was unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177310-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar\nNone of the main Gibraltar political parties contested the election, so voters chose from United Kingdom party lists. However, Lyana Armstrong-Emery of the small Reform Party had a place on a joint list with the Green Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177310-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar\nThe Conservative Party polled over two-thirds of the Gibraltar vote, with no other party exceeding 10% support. This was to a large part due to the perception that the Labour Government in Britain had \"betrayed\" Gibraltar by attempting to negotiate a constitutional settlement involving joint sovereignty with Spain. This arrangement was rejected overwhelmingly by Gibraltarians in the 2002 sovereignty referendum. The Conservatives were perceived as being unequivocal in their support for Gibraltar's continued British status. In addition both the leader of the Conservative Party, Michael Howard, and his deputy, Michael Ancram, flew in to rally support. Before the election the local Conservatives mounted a vigorous campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177310-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Gibraltar, Results\nTurnout was 57.5% in Gibraltar, higher than the 37.6% for the electoral region as a whole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177311-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Greece\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Greece for the election of the delegation from Greece to the European Parliament took place on June 13. The election system used in Greece was a party-list proportional representation with a 3% threshold for any party. The number of seats allocated to Greece was 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177311-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Greece, Results\nThe 2004 European election was the sixth election to the European Parliament. The ruling New Democracy party made strong gains, while the opposition Panhellenic Socialist Movement made smaller gains, both at the expense of minor parties. The traditional party, Popular Orthodox Rally contested the election for the first time and elected a Euro Member of Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177312-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Hungary\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Hungary was the election of MEP representing Hungary constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177312-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Hungary\nThe vote took place on 13 June. The ruling Hungarian Socialist Party was heavily defeated by the opposition conservative Hungarian Civic Union and other conservative parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177313-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Ireland\nThe 2004 European Parliament election in Ireland was the Irish component of the 2004 European Parliament election. The voting was held on Friday, 11 June 2004. The election coincided with the 2004 local elections. The election was conducted under the single transferable vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177313-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Ireland\nSince the 1999 European Parliament election Ireland's entitlement had fallen from 15 seats to 13 seats due to European Union expansion and some constituencies boundaries and names were changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177313-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Ireland, Results\nThe election was organised by city/county council area, the basis for the local elections being held simultaneously. Voters received different-coloured ballot papers for the European election, city/county council election, and a constitutional referendum, all of which went into the same ballot box and were separated by colour once the boxes arrived at the count centre for the city/county. Not all voters received all ballots as the franchises differ. The European ballots were all counted in one city/county, necessitating a second transportation of the separated ballots from the other city/county centres. For example, the East ballots were counted in Navan, County Meath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177314-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Italy\nElections to the European Parliament were held in Italy on 12 and 13 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177314-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Italy\nItaly's highly fragmented party system made it hard to identify an overall trend, but the results were generally seen as a defeat for Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and a victory for the centre-left opposition coalition identified with Romano Prodi, who was President of the European Commission until 2004, and was widely expected to re-enter Italian politics at the next election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177314-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Italy\nThe common list of The Olive Tree, comprising mainly the Democrats of the Left and The Daisy became the largest list, with an important psychological effect. However, expectations for this list were originally somewhat larger, and Massimo D'Alema had proclaimed that \"If the unity list reaches 33%, the government has to go\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177314-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Italy\nWhile the Olive Tree's performance was not as phenomenal as it had hoped, the test indicated a somewhat reduced support for the centre-right coalition. However, in European elections, Italians tend to vote in a more candidate-oriented way, giving their vote more easily to a candidate outside their usual party; this generally reduces the significance of these elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177314-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Italy, Electoral system\nThe pure party-list proportional representation was the traditional electoral system of the Italian Republic since its foundation in 1946, so it had been adopted to elect the Italian representatives to the European Parliament too. Two levels were used: a national level to divide seats between parties, and a constituency level to distribute them between candidates. Italian regions were united in 5 constituencies, each electing a group of deputies. At national level, seats were divided between party lists using the largest remainder method with Hare quota. All seats gained by each party were automatically distributed to their local open lists and their most voted candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177314-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Italy, Seats\nSeats are allocated to party lists on a national basis using an electoral quota, with the residue given to the lists with the largest excess over whole quotas. An electoral quota is then calculated for each list and used to allocate seats to each list in each of the five electoral regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177315-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Latvia\nThe 2004 European Parliament election in Latvia was the election of MEPs representing Latvia constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 12 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177315-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Latvia\nThere were lists of candidates from 16 political parties. with a total of 1019 candidates. The voter turnout was 41.20%, with 574,674 voters casting votes. It was significantly lower than the usual turnout for Latvian parliamentary elections (which has been between 71% and 73% for previous three elections) but higher than the turnout in most of other countries which joined EU together with Latvia in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177315-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Latvia\nThe election was conducted according to party-list proportional representation system, with at least 5% of votes necessary to gain seats in the parliament. Out of 16 parties, five won seats in the European parliament. Several parties narrowly missed the 5% threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177315-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Latvia, Results\nThe elections were a major loss for the coalition government in power, as the three coalition parties together won only 14.2% of popular vote. Tautas Partija was the only coalition party to win a seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177315-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Latvia, Results\nThe winning party T\u0113vzemei un Br\u012bv\u012bbai/LNNK had most votes in 22 of 26 counties and 5 of 7 cities. The exception was Southeast Latvia (Daugavpils, Kr\u0101slava and Rezekne districts and cities of Daugavpils and R\u0113zekne) which were won by the Par Cilv\u0113ka Ties\u012bb\u0101m Vienot\u0101 Latvij\u0101 party and Ludza district won by Socialist Party of Latvia, due to large percentage of ethnically Russian voters in this area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177316-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Lithuania\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Lithuania was the election of MEP representing Lithuania constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177316-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Lithuania, Results\nThe Labour Party received the most votes (30.16 per cent) and won in 55 municipalities. The Social Democratic Party of Lithuania received 14.43 per cent of the votes and won in 1 municipality. The Homeland Union received 12.58 per cent of the votes and won in 1 municipality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177317-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Lombardy\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177317-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Lombardy\nThe Olive Tree was the most voted list in Lombardy with 26.3%, followed by Forza Italia (25.7%) and Lega Lombarda\u2013Lega Nord (13.8%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177317-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Lombardy, Results\nThis article about the European Union is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177318-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Luxembourg\nThe 2004 European Parliament election in Luxembourg was the election of MEP representing Luxembourg constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. It was held on 13 June 2004. The national parliamentary elections took place simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177318-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Luxembourg\nThe ruling Christian Social People's Party polled strongly, while the opposition Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party lost ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177318-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Luxembourg, Results\nThe Luxembourg electoral system allows each voter to cast as many votes as there aremembers to be elected. These figures show the number of votes cast for each party, not the number of voters who cast them. Voting at European Parliament elections is obligatory (as is the case with all other kinds of elections in the country).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177318-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Luxembourg, Results\nThis Luxembourg elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177318-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Luxembourg, Results\nThis article about the European Union is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177319-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Malta\nThe 2004 European Parliament election in Malta was the election of MEP representing Malta constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 12 June 2004 and used Single Transferable Vote. The opposition Malta Labour Party polled strongly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177320-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Piedmont\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177320-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Piedmont\nThe Olive Tree was the most voted list in Piedmont with 29.0%, followed by Forza Italia (22.1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177321-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Poland\nElections to the European Parliament were held in Poland on 13 June 2004. 20.87% of eligible citizens voted; of these, 97.33% of the votes cast were valid. The elections resulted in a heavy defeat for the governing Alliance of the Democratic Left and Labor Union parties, although the very low turnout makes a direct comparison with national election results difficult. As expected the most successful party was the Civic Platform. Second place was taken by the strongly anti-EU League of Polish Families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177321-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Poland\nThe radical populist Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland, which some opinion polls had predicted would come second, came fourth after the Law and Justice party. The election results were a success for Social Democracy of Poland, which managed to cross the required 5% threshold, and the Freedom Union, which got over twice the expected percentage of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Portugal was the election of MEPs representing Portugal for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. In Portugal the election was held on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe Socialist Party (PS) was the big winner of the elections, achieving their best result in a European election ever. The party won 44.5% of the votes, an increase of 1.5%, and held on to the 12 seats won in 1999. However the Socialist victory, and the campaign overall, was overshadowed by the sudden death of the PS top candidate, Ant\u00f3nio Sousa Franco. Sousa Franco died of a heart attack while campaigning in Matosinhos, just four days before election day. Ant\u00f3nio Costa, number 2 on the list, became the Socialists' top candidate after Sousa Franco's death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe Social Democrats (PSD) and the People's Party (CDS\u2013PP) contested the election in a coalition called \"Forward Portugal\" (FP). The coalition had a very weak performance, winning just 33% of the votes, a big drop compared with the combined total of 39% the PSD+CDS had in 1999. The PSD lost two seats, while CDS\u2013PP held on to their two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal\nThe Democratic Unity Coalition (CDU) dropped 1% and fell below 10% of the votes for the first time. CDU was still able to hold on to the two seats they had won in 1999. The Left Bloc (BE) gained a seat for the EU parliament for the first time, and saw its share of vote increase to almost 5%, an increase of more than 3% compared with 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal\nTurnout dropped compared with 1999, with 38.6% of voters casting a ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal, Electoral System\nThe voting method used for the election of European members of parliament, is proportional representation using the d'Hondt method, which is known to benefit the largest parties slightly. In the 2004 EU elections, Portugal had 24 seats to be filled. Deputies are elected in a single constituency, corresponding to the entire national territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal, Parties and candidates\nThe major parties that partook in the election, and their EP list leaders, were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal, National summary of votes and seats, Maps\nMost voted political force by district. (Azores and Madeira not shown)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177322-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Portugal, National summary of votes and seats, Maps\nStrongest party by municipality. Pink: PS; Darkblue: PSD-CDS; Red: CDU", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177323-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Sardinia\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177323-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Sardinia\nThe Olive Tree was the most voted list in Sardinia with 23.5%, followed by Forza Italia (21.9%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177324-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Sicily\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177324-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Sicily\nThe Olive Tree was the most voted list in Sicily with 28.6%, followed by Forza Italia (21.5%), National Alliance (14.5%) and the Union of Christian and Centre Democrats (14.0%). Raffaele Lombardo, who was elected to the European Parliament for the Christian Democrats, left that party in 2005 to launch the Movement for Autonomy, which would have become a stable political force in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177325-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Slovakia\nThe 2004 European Parliament election in Slovakia was the election of MEP representing Slovakia constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June. The turnout was lowest of any country in the European Union. Support evenly distributed among five parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177326-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Slovenia\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Slovenia was the election of MEP representing Slovenia constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177326-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Slovenia\nThe biggest surprise was the victory of the New Slovenia \u2013 Christian People's Party over the Liberal Democracy of Slovenia and the defeat of the Slovene People's Party, which did not win a seat. The parties on the right of centre that form the opposition in the Slovenian national parliament won this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain\nThe 2004 European Parliament election in Spain was held on Sunday, 13 June 2004, as part of the EU-wide election to elect the 6th European Parliament. All 54 seats allocated to Spain as per the Treaty of Nice were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain\nThe election saw a close race between the centre-left Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), which had accessed power earlier in April in the wake of the 11M train bombings leading up to the 14 March general election, and the centre-left People's Party (PP), still reeling from its election defeat. It marked the only time the PSOE emerged as the largest party in a European Parliament election in Spain between 1989 and 2019. It also saw a considerable drop in turnout down to 45.1%, the lowest up until that point\u2014a figure that would be outmatched by the turnout in the two subsequent European Parliament elections, 2009 (44.9%) and 2014 (43.8%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain, Electoral system\nThe 54 members of the European Parliament allocated to Spain as per the Treaty of Nice were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with no electoral threshold being applied to be entitled to enter seat distribution. Seats were allocated to a single multi-member constituency comprising the entire national territory. Voting was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals and resident non-national European citizens over eighteen and in full enjoyment of their political rights. However, the use of the D'Hondt method might result in an effective threshold depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nIn order to be entitled to run, parties, federations, coalitions and groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least 15,000 registered electors; this requirement could be lifted and replaced through the signature of at least 50 elected officials\u2014deputies, senators, MEPs or members from the legislative assemblies of autonomous communities or from local city councils. Electors and elected officials were disallowed from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain, Parties and candidates\nThe abertzale left tried to run under the umbrella of the Herritarren Zerrenda list (Basque for \"Citizens' List\"). However, the Spanish Supreme Court annulled HZ lists and banned them from running on 22 May 2004, as it considered that the candidacy's promoters and half of its candidates had links with the outlawed Batasuna and with the ETA environment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177327-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Spain, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177328-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Sweden\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in Sweden was the election of MEP representing Sweden constituency for the 2004-2009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. The vote took place on 13 June. The ruling Social Democrats polled poorly, but virtually all the established parties lost ground to the eurosceptic June List.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177328-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Sweden, Results\nThe Insight Party, Struggle of the Union Citizens, International Integration Party, Vision Europe Party, International Integration Party, Republicans right and all the various lists of Bosse Persson had only one candidate on their lists. The Communist League had 4 candidates, but only got 2 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177329-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177329-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Trentino-Alto Adige/S\u00fcdtirol\nThe Olive Tree was the most voted list in Trentino, while the South Tyrolean People's Party (SVP) came first as usual in South Tyrol. However the SVP lost many votes to the Greens, which had their best result ever, and to the Union for South Tyrol (UfS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177330-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Veneto\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177330-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in Veneto\nThe Olive Tree was the most voted list in Veneto with 26.7%, followed by Forza Italia (24.1%) and Liga Veneta\u2013Lega Nord (14.1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177331-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in the Czech Republic was the election of members of the European Parliament (MEPs) representing the Czech Republic for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177331-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Czech Republic\nThese were the first European elections after the country's EU accession and hence the first to be held in the Czech Republic. They took place on 11 and 12 June 2004. On a very low turnout, the ruling Czech Social Democratic Party suffered a heavy defeat, losing ground to both the conservative Civic Democratic Party and the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia. The debacle of his party was one of the reasons for the resignation of Prime Minister Vladim\u00edr \u0160pidla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands\nThe European Parliament election of 2004 in the Netherlands was the election of MEP representing Netherlands constituency for the 2004\u20132009 term of the European Parliament. It was part of the wider 2004 European election. It was held on 10 June 2004. Fifteen parties competed in a D'Hondt type election for 27 seats. (down from 31).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Combined lists\nSeveral parties combined in one list to take part in this European Election and increase their chance on a seat in the European Parliament. These combined lists are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Electoral alliances\nThe alliance between Christian Democratic Appeal and Christian Union-SGP cost the Christian Democratic Appeal a seat, which goes to Christian Union-SGP. Other alliances had no effect on the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 85], "content_span": [86, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Background, Treaty of Nice\nThe exact number of seats allocated to each country is determined by the treaties, currently the Treaty of Nice, and is adjusted by the accession treaty of each new member. Hence no change to the seats occurs without ratification by all states. According to the treaties, the maximum number of members in the Parliament is 732. This why the seats for the Netherlands was reduced from 31 to 27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results\nAccording to the European Commission, the publication of national results prior to Sunday evening is considered illegal. However, all the municipalities in the Netherlands published the results on Thursday, giving the media the opportunity to give an almost complete national result, only missing votes cast abroad. The complete and official result were publicised according to the rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 61], "content_span": [62, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Turnout\nThe voter turnout was 39.26%, a lot higher than the turnout in 1999 (30.02%.) A total of 12,168,878 people were entitled to vote. Of these 4,777,121 did so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 70], "content_span": [71, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Electoral quota\nThe electoral quota is the number of votes needed for one seat. It is the total valid number of votes divided by the number of seats. For this election it was 4,765,677 valid votes, divided by 27 seats. The electoral quota was established as: 176,506", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Electoral alliances\nThe results of the electoral alliances. Both parties of both alliances reached the electoral quota and are eligible for remainder seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 99], "content_span": [100, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Assigning full seats\nFull seats are assigned by number of votes divided by the electoral quota. Electoral alliances are marked as a letter, instead of a number. Any seats left over are not yet assigned to a specific party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 100], "content_span": [101, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Remainder seats\nThe remaining, or left over, seats are awarded sequentially to the lists with the highest average number of votes per seat. Only lists that reached the electoral quota are eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 95], "content_span": [96, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Awarding seats within electoral alliances\nTo decide the seats per party for electoral alliances, the combination quota is first determined. Combination quota for electoral alliances are determined by the total number valid votes divided by the awarded seats. The party with the most votes left after the full seats are assigned gets the seat remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 121], "content_span": [122, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Awarding seats within electoral alliances\nList 1For list 1, there were 1,444,311 votes divided by 9 seats. The combination quota was established as: 160,479 votes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 121], "content_span": [122, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Awarding seats within electoral alliances\nList 2For list 2, there were 1,476,750 votes divided by 9 seats. The combination quota was established as: 164,083 votes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 121], "content_span": [122, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Seat assignment, Awarding seats within electoral alliances\nList 3For list 3, there were 831,700 votes divided by 5 seats. The combination quota was established as: 166,340 votes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 121], "content_span": [122, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Final results\nThe ruling centre-right parties, the Christian Democratic Appeal and the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy polled poorly, while the opposition Labour Party and Socialist Party gained ground. The anti-fraud party Europe Transparent of whistle blower Paul van Buitenen unexpectedly won two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 76], "content_span": [77, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, European groups\nThe EPP-ED group lost 2 seats, making it just as big as the PES group. The ELDR becomes 3rd group after PES. After the elections ELDR and European Democratic Party (EDP) formed a new European Group named ALDE in the European parliament. The EDP did not have member party's in the Netherlands. Also the Europe of Democracies and Diversities (EDD) group reforms itself with party's from Eastern-Europe. They rename their group to Independence/Democracy (ID). The Christian Union \u2013 Reformed Political Party is part of this new group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, Results, Elected members\nBelow are all the elected members of European parliament. People with enough preference votes are in bold. The following MEP were officially announced by the Central Electoral Commission on 15 June 2004:21 members were elected by preference vote. Emine Bozkurt for the Labour Party was purely elected on his preference votes and would otherwise not made it into the European Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 78], "content_span": [79, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177332-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the Netherlands, MEPs period 2004\u20132009\nBelow is a list of members of the European Parliament for the period 2009\u20132014 as a result of this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nThe 2004 European Parliament election was the United Kingdom's part of the wider 2004 European Parliament election which was held between 10 and 13 June 2004 in the 25 member states of the European Union. The United Kingdom's part of this election was held on Thursday 10 June 2004. The election also coincided with the 2004 local elections and the London Assembly and mayoral elections. In total, 78 Members of the European Parliament were elected from the United Kingdom using proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom\nThe Conservative Party and the Labour Party both polled poorly. The Conservatives experienced their second-lowest ever recorded vote share in a national election (even less than their 1832 nadir, although the party would do worse still in the 2014 and 2019 elections), and Labour their lowest since 1918. The UK Independence Party (UKIP) saw a large increase in support, increasing its number of MEPs from 3 to 12 and on popular vote pushed the Liberal Democrats, who themselves had increased their representation from 10 to 12 seats into fourth place. In Northern Ireland, Sinn F\u00e9in beat the SDLP in the polls and took its first Northern Ireland seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Electoral system\nThe United Kingdom elected 78 Members of the European Parliament using proportional representation. The United Kingdom was divided into twelve multi-member constituencies. The eleven of these regions which form Great Britain used a closed-list party list system method of proportional representation, calculated using the D'Hondt method. Northern Ireland used the Single Transferable Vote (STV). As a consequence of the 2004 enlargement of the European Union, the number of seats allocated to the United Kingdom was fewer than in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Electoral system\nIt was the first European election to be held in the United Kingdom using postal-only voting in four areas: the North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Humber, and East Midlandsregions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Regional seat allocations\nA combination of the effects of the Treaty of Nice and the 2004 enlargement of the European Union meant that the number of seats allocated to the United Kingdom for the 2004 election was reduced from the 87 MEPs allocated for the 1999 election to 78 MEPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 94], "content_span": [95, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Regional seat allocations\nAs a result of the successful challenge of Matthews v United Kingdom before the European Court of Human Rights in 1999 residents of Gibraltar, voted in the European Parliament election for the first time, as part of the South West England region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 94], "content_span": [95, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Background, Regional seat allocations\n1 Includes Gibraltar, the only British overseas territory which is part of the EU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 94], "content_span": [95, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results\nTurnout for all the regions was 37.6% on an electorate of 45,309,760. The Conservatives and Labour both polled poorly. The Conservatives, although getting a vote share 4.1% greater than Labour, experienced their lowest vote share in a national election since 1832. Labour's vote share was its lowest since 1918. Labour's decline in votes was regarded as being largely due to widespread public dissatisfaction about the Iraq War and, as with the Conservatives, the increased popularity of UKIP. UKIP saw a large increase in support, increasing its number of MEPs from 3 to 12, drawing level with the Liberal Democrats, who themselves had increased their representation from 10 to 12 seats. UKIP polled higher than the Liberal Democrats and pushing them into fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results\nTurnout was lowest in Scotland, which did not hold local elections on the same day. In Scotland, Labour topped the poll, followed by the Scottish National Party (SNP). The Conservative Party's share of the vote declined by 2 percent, making it the region with the smallest swing against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results\nWales was the only region were Labour increased its share of the vote compared to 1999. The Conservatives managed to make gains pushing Plaid Cymru into third and whose share of the vote fell by 12 percentage points relative to 1999. Similarly UKIP narrowly beat the Liberal Democrats into fourth place. Wales was the region were the Green Party polled their lowest share of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 64], "content_span": [65, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, United Kingdom\n\u2020Loss/gain figures for seats are losses/gains versus the 1999 notional result, as the number of MEPs overall fell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Great Britain\n\u2020Loss/gain figures for seats are losses/gains versus the 1999 notional result, as the number of MEPs overall fell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Gibraltar\nGibraltar participated in the United Kingdom's election for the first time in 2004 as part of the South West England constituency. Gibraltar is a British overseas territory (BOT) and therefore is under the jurisdiction and sovereignty of the United Kingdom but does not form part of it. Gibraltar is however part of the EU, the only BOT to be so. Following however, the result of the successful challenge of Matthews v United Kingdom before the European Court of Human Rights in 1999 residents of Gibraltar were given the right to vote in the European Parliament elections. The British government decided not to give Gibraltar its own seat due to its small electorate of just over 20,000 which would have meant with just one seat Gibraltar would have been over-represented by about 30 times the average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 879]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Gibraltar\nNone of the main Gibraltar political parties contested the election, so voters chose from United Kingdom party lists. However, Lyana Armstrong-Emery of Gibraltar's Reform Party had a place on a joint list with the Green Party. In addition both the leader of the Conservative Party, Michael Howard, and his deputy, Michael Ancram, campaigned in Gibraltar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Gibraltar\nTurnout in Gibraltar was 57.5%, higher than the 37.6% for the South West England electoral region as a whole. The Conservative Party polled over two-thirds of the Gibraltar vote, with no other party exceeding 10% support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Results, Northern Ireland\nTurnout in Northern Ireland was 51.2%. Sinn F\u00e9in beat the SDLP in the polls and took its first Northern Ireland seat. Sinn F\u00e9in also won a seat in the corresponding elections in the Republic of Ireland. Sinn F\u00e9in and the DUP increased their shares of the vote relative to the 1999 European Parliament elections, while the shares for both the SDLP and the UUP fell. This was also the final election in which a Unionist candidate topped the poll in Northern Ireland. Jim Allister of the DUP and Bairbre de Br\u00fan of Sinn F\u00e9in were elected in the first round while Jim Nicholson of the UUP was elected in the third stage, after the votes of the other candidates were reallocated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Aftermath\nBoth Tony Blair and Michael Howard faced criticism for their results with then Secretary of State for Health John Reid calling the results \"disappointing\" for Labour and \"disastrous\" for the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Aftermath\nShortly after the election UKIP's Robert Kilroy-Silk, who was credited with raising the profile of the party during the election, was interviewed by Channel 4 television about leadership ambitions, Kilroy-Silk did not deny having ambitions to lead the party, but stressed that Roger Knapman would lead it into the next general election. However, the next day, on Breakfast with Frost, he criticised Knapman's leadership. After further disagreement with the leadership, Kilroy-Silk resigned the UKIP whip in the European Parliament on 27 October 2004. Initially, he remained a member, while seeking a bid for the party leadership. However, this was not successful and he resigned completely from UKIP on 20 January 2005, calling it a \"joke\". Two weeks later, he founded his own party, Veritas, taking a number of UKIP members, including both of the London Assembly members, with him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 949]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177333-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, Aftermath\nUKIP formed a new European Parliament Group, Independence/Democracy which was co-chaired by Nigel Farage and Hanne Dahl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177334-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Promotion Cup for Men\nThe 2004 European Promotion Cup for Men was the 9th edition of this tournament. It was hosted in Andorra, whose national team won its third tournament by defeating Luxembourg in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177335-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Promotion Cup for Women\nThe 2004 European Promotion Cup for Women was the eighth edition of the basketball European Promotion Cup for Women, today known as FIBA Women's European Championship for Small Countries. The tournament took place in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, from 26 to 31 July 2004. Iceland women's national basketball team won the tournament for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177335-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Promotion Cup for Women, First round\nIn the first round, the teams were drawn into two groups of five. The winners of each group advance to the final, the other teams will play their respective classification matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177336-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 20st Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships were held in Kyiv, Ukraine, from June 4 to 6, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177336-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\n27 national teams participated in the championships. Medals were contested in two disciplines: team and individual all-round. Alina Kabaeva became for the fifth time in a row European champion in individual all-around and Russia \u2013 for the third time in a row European team champion. The winner of the medal tally was Russia with two gold and one bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177336-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nIt was the first major rhythmic gymnastics competition which was contested in Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177337-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Road Championships\nThe 2004 European Road Championships were held in Otep\u00e4\u00e4, Estonia between 6 August and 10 August 2004, regulated by the European Cycling Union. The event consisted of a road race and a time trial for men and women under 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177338-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Seniors Tour\nThe 2004 European Seniors Tour was the 13th season of the European Seniors Tour, the professional golf tour for men aged 50 and above operated by the PGA European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177338-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Seniors Tour, Tournament results\nThe numbers in brackets after the winners' names show the number of career wins they had on the European Seniors Tour up to and including that event. This is only shown for players who are members of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177338-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Seniors Tour, Tournament results\nFor the tour schedule on the European Senior Tour's website, including links to full results, click .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177338-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Seniors Tour, Leading money winners\nThere is a complete list on the official site .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177339-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Sevens Championship\nThe 2004 European Sevens Championship was a rugby sevens competition, with the final held in Palma de Mallorca, Spain. It was the third edition of the European Sevens championship. The event was organised by rugby's European governing body, the FIRA \u2013 Association of European Rugby (FIRA-AER).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177340-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Short Course Swimming Championships\nThe 8th European Short Course Swimming Championships was an international swimming meet organized by LEN, and held in Vienna, Austria, December 9\u201312, 2004. The meet featured teams from Europe, swimming in 38 short course events. It was held in Vienna's arena (Wiener Stadthalle), in a temporary pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177340-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Participating nations\n36 nations had swimmers at the 2004 Short Course Europeans:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177340-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Performance awards\nBest newcomers: Kateryna Zubkova (UKR) and Igor Borysik (UKR). (Both were voted by the media, and received a special prize of Euro 1500 each.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177340-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Short Course Swimming Championships, Performance awards\nTop performances: a total of 32,000 Euro was awarded to the overall top-7 male and female performances. The athletes sharing the prize money were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177341-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2004 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships took place between 16 and 18 January 2004 in Zoetermeer, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177342-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Shotgun Championships\nThe 2004 European Shooting Championships was the 50th edition (included the of the European Shooting Championships), of the global shotgun competition, European Shotgun Championships, organised by the International Shooting Sport Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177343-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2004 European Speed Skating Championships were held at Thialf in Heerenveen, Netherlands, from 9 January until 11 January 2004. Mark Tuitert and Anni Friesinger won the titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177343-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Speed Skating Championships, Men's championships, Allround results\nNQ = Not qualified for the 10000\u00a0m (only the best 16 are qualified)DNS = Did not startDQ = Disqualified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177343-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Speed Skating Championships, Women's championships, Allround results\nNQ = Not qualified for the 5000\u00a0m (only the best 16 are qualified)DNS = Did not startDQ = Disqualified* fall", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 82], "content_span": [83, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177343-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Speed Skating Championships, Rules\nAll participating skaters are allowed to skate the first three distances; 16 skaters may take part on the fourth distance. These 16 skaters are determined by taking the standings on the longest of the first three distances, as well as the samalog standings after three distances, and comparing these lists as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177345-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Tour\nThe 2004 European Tour was the 33rd golf season since the European Tour officially began in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177345-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Tour\nErnie Els won the Order of Merit, defending the title he won in 2003. Despite Els dominance of the European money-list, Vijay Singh was crowned European Tour Golfer of the Year, having won the PGA Championship and deposed Tiger Woods at the top of the Official World Golf Ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177345-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Tour, Major tournaments\nFor a summary of the major tournaments and events of 2004, including the major championships and the World Golf Championships, see 2004 in golf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177345-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows the 2004 European Tour schedule which was made up of 45 tournaments counting towards the Order of Merit, which included the four major championships and three World Golf Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177345-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 European Tour, Schedule\nChanges from 2003 included two new tournaments, the Open de Sevilla and The Heritage, and the loss of the Benson & Hedges International Open, the Troph\u00e9e Lanc\u00f4me and the Nordic Open. The HSBC World Match Play Championship also became an official money-list event for the first time with an increased field determined by qualification criteria, which also meant it regained world ranking status, and the Mallorca Classic became a full European Tour event having been a dual-ranking event in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177345-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 European Tour, Order of Merit\nIn 2004, the European Tour's money list was known as the \"Order of Merit\". It was calculated in euro, although around half of the events had prize funds which were fixed in other currencies, mostly either British pounds or U.S. dollars. In these instances the amounts were converted into euro at the exchange rate for the week that the tournament was played. The top 10 golfers in 2004 were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177346-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Touring Car Championship\nThe 2004 FIA European Touring Car Championship season was the last European Touring Car Championship season. For 2005, the European Championship would become the World Touring Car Championship, and a one-off European Touring Car Cup would be held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177346-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Touring Car Championship\nThe season began at Monza on 28 March, and finished at Dubai after twenty races over ten meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177346-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Touring Car Championship\nThe Drivers' Championship title was won by Andy Priaulx for BMW Team Great Britain, who tied on points with BMW Team Deutschland's Dirk M\u00fcller, although Priaulx earned the title due to his greater number of victories during the season. AutoDelta's Gabriele Tarquini was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177346-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Touring Car Championship\nBMW won the Manufacturers Championship ahead of Alfa Romeo and SEAT. Tom Coronel won the Michelin Independents Trophy, while AutoDelta won the Michelin Teams Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177347-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Union Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe Men's 2004 European Union Amateur Boxing Championships were held in Madrid, Spain from June 20 to June 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177347-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Union Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 4th edition of the annual competition was organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, EABA. A total number of 92 fighters from across Europe competed at these championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177348-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2004 European Weightlifting Championships were held in Kyiv, Ukraine between 20-25 April 2004. It was the 83rd edition of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177349-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Winter Throwing Challenge\nThe 2004 European Winter Throwing Challenge was held on 13 and 14 March at St. John Athletic Stadium in Marsa, Malta. It was the fourth edition of the athletics competition for throwing events organised by the European Athletics Association. The 2004 event was the last to use the challenge name, as subsequent editions were known as European Cup Winter Throwing events. A total of 147 athletes from 28 countries entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177349-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Winter Throwing Challenge\nThe competition featured men's and women's contests in shot put, discus throw, javelin throw and hammer throw. Athletes were seeded into \"A\" and \"B\" groups in each competition. Russia topped the points table in the women's and men's division of the team competition. With four medals, it shared the greatest medal haul alongside Germany, which was runner-up in the points table but was the only nation to have two winners from the eight events on offer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177349-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Winter Throwing Challenge\nThe host nation, Malta, had only one athlete at the event \u2013 men's javelin thrower Jean Paul Callus. Callus broke the Maltese record with his opening throw, recording a new best mark of 59.93\u00a0m (196\u00a0ft 7\u00a01\u20444\u00a0in) for his country. The weather was not conducive to high standard performances and Callus gave the sole record performance of the challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177349-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 European Winter Throwing Challenge\nFive athletes went on to take medals at the 2004 Athens Olympics: E\u015fref Apak was a bronze medallist, Vadims Vasi\u013cevskis, Nadine Kleinert and Steffi Nerius took Olympic silver, and Natalya Sadova became the Olympic champion in women's discus. Despite going on to this success, among these only Vasi\u013cevskis was a winner in the European Winter Throwing Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177350-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women Sevens Championship\nThe 2004 European Women Sevens Championship \u2013 the second edition of the European Women's Sevens Championship. It took place between the 21 and 22 May 2004 at Limoges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177350-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women Sevens Championship\nIt was England who take home the first European Women's Sevens Championship after defeating Italy 38-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177351-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women's Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 25th European Women's Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held from 29 April to 2 May 2004 in Amsterdam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177351-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women's Artistic Gymnastics Championships, Seniors, Team\nThe team competition also served as qualification for the individual finals. The top eight placing teams are shown below; the other teams competing were Bulgaria, Greece, Switzerland, Germany, Czech Republic, Belgium, Poland, Belarus, Slovakia, Finland, Austria, Norway, Lithuania, Hungary, Cyprus and Iceland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177352-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 EHF European Women's Handball Championship was held in Hungary from 9\u201319 December, it was won by Norway after beating Denmark 27\u201325 in the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177352-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women's Handball Championship, Venues\nThe 2004 European Championship was held in the following cities:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177352-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women's Handball Championship, Ranking and Statistics, Final ranking\nElse-Marthe S\u00f8rlie Lybekk, Kristine Lunde, Kari Mette Johansen, Isabel Blanco, Vigdis H\u00e5rsaker, Randi Gustad, Elisabeth Hilmo, Karoline Dyhre Breivang, Gro Hammerseng, Katja Nyberg, Ragnhild Aamodt, Camilla Thorsen, Linn-Kristin Riegelhuth, G\u00f8ril Snorroeggen, Kjersti Beck, Terese Pedersen and Katrine Lunde. Head Coach: Marit Breivik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177353-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Women's Handball Championship squads\nThe following squads and players competed in the European Women's Handball Championship in 2006 in Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177354-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 European Wrestling Championships\nThe 2004 European Wrestling Championships were held in the men's freestyle in Ankara and men's Greco-Roman style, and the women's freestyle in Haparanda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177355-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Exeter City Council election\nThe 2004 Exeter City Council election took place on 10 June 2004, to elect members of Exeter City Council in Devon, England. The election was held concurrently with other local elections in England. One third of the council was up for election and the council remained under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield\nThe 2004 Football Association Community Shield (also known as The FA Community Shield in partnership with McDonald's for sponsorship reasons) was the 82nd staging of the FA Community Shield, an annual football match contested by the reigning champions of the Premier League and the holders of the FA Cup. It was contested on 8 August 2004 by Arsenal, champions of the 2003\u201304 Premier League, and Manchester United, who beat Millwall in the final of the 2003\u201304 FA Cup. Watched by a crowd of 63,317 at the Millennium Stadium, Arsenal won the match 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield\nThis was Manchester United's 23rd Community Shield appearance and Arsenal's 18th. Manchester United were without seven of their first-choice players for the game, which meant David Bellion and Eric Djemba-Djemba came into the starting 11. Cesc F\u00e0bregas started alongside Gilberto Silva in midfield for Arsenal as captain Patrick Vieira was absent. After a goalless first half, Arsenal took the lead when Gilberto scored in the 50th minute. Striker Alan Smith equalised for Manchester United soon after, but Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes put Arsenal back in front after United's defenders failed to clear the ball. Mika\u00ebl Silvestre scored an own goal 11 minutes before the end that ensured Arsenal's victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield\nManchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson was complimentary of his opponents afterwards and was pleased there were no new injuries to report. Opposing manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger praised F\u00e0bregas's performance and reiterated his desire to keep Vieira at Arsenal, after speculation regarding the player's impending transfer to Real Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Background\nFounded in 1908 as a successor to the Sheriff of London Charity Shield, the FA Community Shield began as a contest between the respective champions of the Football League and Southern League, although in 1913, it was played between an Amateurs XI and a Professionals XI. In 1921, it was played by the league champions of the top division and FA Cup winners for the first time. Wembley Stadium acted as the host of the Shield from 1974. Cardiff's Millennium Stadium was hosting the Shield for the fourth time; it took over as the venue for the event while Wembley Stadium underwent a six-year renovation between 2001 and 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Background\nArsenal qualified for the 2004 FA Community Shield as winners of the Premier League. They finished their league campaign without a single defeat and earned the nickname \"The Invincibles\", akin to the Preston North End team that went unbeaten in the inaugural Football League season. The other Community Shield place went to Manchester United who had defeated Millwall 3\u20130 in the 2004 FA Cup Final. This was the fifth meeting between the two clubs in the Community Shield; Arsenal had won three of those meetings to Manchester United's two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Background\nMeetings between Manchester United and Arsenal were often eventful encounters, as both clubs vied for domestic honours. A goalless draw between the two clubs in September 2003, in which Ruud van Nistelrooy missed a penalty in stoppage time, resulted in an altercation between both teams. Several Arsenal players were charged and fined accordingly by The Football Association (FA) for instigating the brawl; the club was later fined \u00a3175,000, the largest ever given to a club by the FA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\nManchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson said in his press conference: \"The game will be competitive. Prestige comes into it, pride comes into it, so it is always competitive when we play Arsenal.\" He wanted to use the game as a means of preparing his team for their UEFA Champions League third qualifying round game against Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti the following Wednesday. Ferguson was concerned about the state of his squad, with several first team players injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\nHe was irked that senior players Cristiano Ronaldo and Gabriel Heinze were absent, on duty for their respective national teams at the Summer Olympics: \"Apparently, it's supposed to be for amateurs, and money earned is put in trust, but we will be paying their wages while they are away so I don't know what that's all about.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\nWhen asked about Arsenal's unbeaten run and whether it would be repeated in English football, Ferguson replied:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\n\"That was a one-off. Arsenal accumulated most points last season so they won the title fairly enough, but they didn't display championship form. They had too many draws. I think they came to a point around January where they realised they could go through the season undefeated, and that was a great driving force for them, but they had to stay undefeated to compensate for the number of draws. It was still an incredible achievement, though.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\nArsenal manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger responded by saying: \"Everybody has the freedom to make a judgement. In the last 20 minutes of every game last season, we were never behind. That means we had already done the job before.\" He insisted the draws did not reflect on his team's negative tactics, but \"because of other teams coming back into the game\". On the issue of Patrick Vieira's anticipated move to Real Madrid, Wenger told reporters the player would remain at Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\nWenger acknowledged his team were short on experience as a result of selling players and missing Vieira, Sol Campbell and Thierry Henry, who all were injured. He considered this to be a disadvantage, but argued \"...the younger ones have to be given a chance. They all have to take some responsibility.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Pre-match\nTickets for the game went on general sale on 28 July 2004. They were advertised on the FA website at a cost of between \u00a315 and \u00a340. Sir Geoff Hurst was named as the event's chief guest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Team selection\nFor Arsenal, Thierry Henry was declared fit to start and played alongside Dennis Bergkamp up front. 17-year-old Cesc F\u00e0bregas partnered Gilberto Silva in central midfield, with Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes and Jermaine Pennant providing width on either side. Manchester United were without seven of their first-team players, including Ruud van Nistelrooy, who required surgery on his hernia. Wes Brown and Louis Saha were also ruled out because of injury, so David Bellion and Eric Djemba-Djemba came into the first team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nArsenal kicked off the match and within the first two minutes forced Manchester United defender Gary Neville to concede a throw-in. In the fifth minute, Manchester United won a free kick, but nothing came out of it as Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes blocked Paul Scholes's shot. Good play by Reyes and Henry fashioned a chance for Bergkamp in the ninth minute, but his strike was off target. Two minutes later a shot by Bergkamp from outside the box was saved by Manchester United goalkeeper Tim Howard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nBefore Henry was about to take a corner for Arsenal in the 16th minute, a cigarette lighter was thrown at him from the section occupied by Manchester United supporters \u2013 this resulted in police making two arrests during the game. Quinton Fortune used his pace to get the better of Lauren, but his cross into the Arsenal penalty area was cleared by Pascal Cygan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nArsenal continued to threaten \u2013 Henry's free kick prompted Howard to make a save and tip the ball over the crossbar, and Bergkamp came close to scoring in the 27th minute after clever play to lose his marker John O'Shea. The football continued to move from one end to the other, with Giggs and Reyes causing problems for their respective defences. In stoppage time at the end of the first half, Henry had his shot saved by Howard, while Scholes was similarly denied by Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nManchester United made a slight change before the second half commenced, with Neville and O'Shea switching positions, while Arsenal brought Robin van Persie on in place of Henry. Arsenal began the half more strongly \u2013 Reyes sprinted past the Manchester United defence and went past Howard in the 48th minute, but his shot hit the side-netting. A minute later Arsenal scored. Bergkamp's pass put Reyes clear to run down the right-hand side of the pitch. He squared the ball to Gilberto, who side-footed it into the empty goal net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nManchester United responded by making three substitutions \u2013 Fortune, Giggs and Roy Keane off for Phil Neville, Diego Forl\u00e1n and Darren Fletcher. Five minutes after going behind, Alan Smith equalised for Manchester United. A mistake in the Arsenal defence presented him with the chance to hit a half-volley; the ball dipped over Lehmann in goal. Arsenal retook the lead in the 59th minute \u2013 a disjointed move that ended with Reyes shooting the ball low in the bottom left hand corner. Phil Neville was shown the game's first yellow card in the 62nd minute, after fouling Reyes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0013-0002", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nVan Persie's free kick a minute later was deflected for a corner, which came to nothing. J\u00e9r\u00e9mie Aliadi\u00e8re who came on for Bergkamp sustained a knee injury and had to come off after only a few minutes on the field. He was replaced by Ga\u00ebl Clichy, whose arrival according to journalist Henry Winter \"\u2026accelerated Arsenal's drive further, particularly down the left where he kept combining well with Ashley Cole.\" In the 72nd minute, Eric Djemba-Djemba and Cole were each shown a yellow card for clashing with one another. Arsenal scored their third goal of the match 11 minutes before the end. Cole carried the ball into United's penalty box and his attempted cross hit defender Mika\u00ebl Silvestre, who was helpless to prevent the ball going into his own net.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nWenger clarified Vieira's future after the match: \"My intention is clear: to keep him [\u2026 ] The challenge in front of us is hugely difficult and we need a complete focus. I'm not resigned to let the story go on. It has all to be sorted out before the season.\" He added that if Vieira chose to leave, the club could sufficiently replace him: \"We've worked very hard in the last five years to get good young players in and you saw that today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nReyes, who was named man of the match, was frustrated at his missed chance early in the second half, but continued: \"I set one up and then scored myself so I was much happier.\" Bergkamp was impressed with F\u00e0bregas's performance in the match: \"Normally at 17, you might be a bit unsure when you step out. But with players like Cesc, the way he has developed in one year is quite amazing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nFerguson congratulated Arsenal on their win and said of the game: \"It was about trying to make sure everyone was fit for Wednesday. I think we have managed to do that. There are no new injuries so far. Hopefully by tomorrow morning it will be a definite.\" He believed it was important to substitute Giggs and Keane early in the second half in order for them to recuperate in time for the Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti game. Scholes, however, \"\u2026needed a game, which is why I left him on that bit longer.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nFerguson felt Manchester United's preparations to the new season were hampered because of the injuries: \"It's got a lot to do with summer football. It's not down to the European Championship, but you do wonder why the Copa Am\u00e9rica can't be at the same time. That harmony is never quite right, from Africa to America to Europe. Something should be done about that.\" Giggs said Manchester United needed to take the positives out of the match and anticipated Arsenal as their main rivals in the league: \"[They] know what to do and how to handle the pressure when it comes around.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177356-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nThe two clubs next faced each other in a league fixture at Old Trafford on 23 October 2004, where Arsenal's unbeaten league run of 49 matches came to an end as Manchester United beat them 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final\nThe 2004 FA Cup Final was the 123rd FA Cup Final and the fourth to be played at the Millennium Stadium, the Welsh national stadium in Cardiff, due to the ongoing reconstruction of the usual venue, London's Wembley Stadium. The match took place on 22 May 2004 and it was contested by Manchester United, who had finished third in the Premier League that season, and Millwall, who had finished 10th in the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final\nManchester United secured a record 11th FA Cup victory with a headed goal from Cristiano Ronaldo and a brace from Ruud van Nistelrooy, which included a penalty kick. In contrast, it was Millwall's first appearance in a final of either the FA Cup or the Football League Cup. At the trophy presentation after the match, the Manchester United players wore shirts bearing the name and number of midfielder Jimmy Davis, who died in a road accident in August 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final\nThe match was refereed by Jeff Winter. Tony Green and Roger East were the assistant referees and Matt Messias was the fourth official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Background\nManchester United were appearing in their 16th FA Cup final and had won it on 10 of their previous 15 appearances. Two of these victories had yielded a League and FA Cup double (in 1994 and 1996) and in 1999 they had won the FA Cup as part of an unprecedented treble of Premier League, Champions League and FA Cup wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Background\nFor Millwall, 2004 was their first appearance in an FA Cup final, although they had reached the semi-finals on three prior occasions: 1900, 1903 and 1937. Their appearance in the 1937 semi-final was notable as Millwall were the first team in the old Third Division to reach that stage. They also became only the second team from outside the top flight of English football to reach the final since 1982, and the first team from outside the Premier League since its foundation in 1992. Millwall reached the 2004 decider without having met any club from the Premier League along the way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Pre-match, Venue\nDue to the ongoing reconstruction of Wembley Stadium, the match was played at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff for the fourth year in a row. The stadium was built in 1998 ahead of the 1999 Rugby World Cup in Wales, with a capacity of 72,500. While it was being built, the Wales national rugby union team played its home matches at the old Wembley Stadium, so after Wembley was torn down in 2000, the Millennium Stadium was selected to host the finals of the FA Cup, the League Cup and the Football League play-offs until at least 2003. Delays to the construction of the new Wembley meant that deal was later extended until 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Pre-match, Referee\nThe referee for the final was Jeff Winter from Middlesbrough, North Yorkshire, who was officiating in his last match as a professional referee, having reached the mandatory retirement age of 45. Winter's assistant referees were Roger East and Tony Green, while Matt Messias was the fourth official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Pre-match, Broadcasting\nThe match was broadcast live on television in the United Kingdom on both BBC One and Sky Sports 1. The BBC broadcast was presented by Gary Lineker, with Alan Hansen, Peter Schmeichel and Michael Owen in the studio, and commentary from John Motson in his 25th FA Cup Final as lead commentator. The BBC also provided live radio coverage on BBC Radio 5 Live, presented by Mark Pougatch, with commentary from Alan Green and Mike Ingham, and analysis from Jimmy Armfield and Steve Claridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nManchester United goalkeeper Roy Carroll appeared to have earned his place in the team for the FA Cup final after a run of good performances between the end of March and mid-April 2004, conceding just two goals in five games, including the semi-final win over Arsenal on 3 April. However, a 1\u20130 defeat away to Portsmouth on 17 April led to a recall for American goalkeeper Tim Howard for the last five games of the season. Although Howard conceded three goals in that time, he retained his place in the team for the cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nFollowing the recurrence of a knee injury against Arsenal on 28 March, striker Ruud van Nistelrooy was only able to play in one match in April 2004 and was expected to miss the last two league games against Chelsea and Aston Villa to ensure his fitness for the final; however, he recovered in time to play and score in both games, guaranteeing his place up front against Millwall. One surprise selection saw Darren Fletcher named in central midfield alongside Roy Keane ahead of both Nicky Butt and Phil Neville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nMillwall went into the final with doubts over the fitness of player-manager Dennis Wise (knee), captain Kevin Muscat (knee) and midfielder Paul Ifill (groin); Wise and Ifill recovered in time to play in the final, but Muscat was ruled out for the rest of the season. Bob Peeters, Andy Roberts, Tony Warner and Charley Hearn also missed the game through injury, while striker Danny Dichio was suspended. Because they were unable to play in the game, and with manager Wise in the starting line-up, Muscat and Warner led the Millwall team out for the national anthem before kick-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe first chances of the match fell to Manchester United's Paul Scholes, who took a couple of long-range efforts at goal \u2013 one went just wide while another was tipped away by Millwall goalkeeper Andy Marshall. Scholes was presented with another opportunity on the six-yard line, when a rabona cross from Cristiano Ronaldo found him unmarked; the midfielder seemed as surprised by the cross as everyone else and completely missed the ball with his hooked shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nMillwall's only chance of the first half came when Paul Ifill broke down the right-hand side of the pitch and arrowed in towards the penalty area, only to have his shot blocked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThey looked to have survived the first half without conceding until a minute before the interval, when Roy Keane played in Gary Neville as the right-back moved into the penalty area and Neville chipped a cross back across the box; Millwall player-manager Dennis Wise waited for the ball to arrive, but in doing so, he allowed Ronaldo to steal in and head the ball past Marshall, to give United a 1\u20130 lead going into the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nManchester United went 2\u20130 up 20 minutes into the second half, when Ryan Giggs went on a run down the right wing into the Millwall box only to be brought down by David Livermore. Referee Jeff Winter awarded a penalty for the foul and Ruud van Nistelrooy scored with a powerful shot into the top-corner to the goalkeeper's right. United now held a comfortable advantage and Millwall struggled to find a way back into the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nUnited's defence kept Neil Harris and Tim Cahill at bay, and the Red Devils eventually scored a third when Giggs went on a run down the left and crossed for Van Nistelrooy to tap in from three yards out. There were suggestions that Van Nistelrooy was offside at the moment of Giggs' pass, but television replays showed his feet were grounded in an onside position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary\nMillwall had a chance near the end when substitute Mark McCammon almost found a way through United's defence, while Scholes had a late effort for the Reds, before Curtis Weston (aged 17 years and 119 days) replaced Wise to become the youngest player to appear in an FA Cup final, beating the record set by James F. M. Prinsep of Clapham Rovers, when he appeared in the 1879 FA Cup Final at the age of 17 years and 245 days. The match finished 3\u20130 to Manchester United, their 11th success in the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nManchester United were presented with the FA Cup by England manager Sven-G\u00f6ran Eriksson, who selected Ruud van Nistelrooy as the man of the match. For the trophy presentation, the Manchester United squad changed into shirts bearing the name and squad number of Jimmy Davis, who died in a road accident while on loan to Watford in August 2003. Eriksson's selection of Van Nistelrooy as man of the match was met with criticism from some members of the media, with both the BBC and The Guardian naming Cristiano Ronaldo as the game's best player. Ronaldo received praise from both his manager Alex Ferguson and teammate Gary Neville after the game, as well as BBC pundit Alan Hansen and The Guardian's Andy Gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nDennis Wise claimed Ronaldo's goal at the end of the first half proved the turning point in the match, but he felt there were plenty of positives for his team to take from the game. It was Tim Cahill's last game for Millwall, as he signed for Everton in July 2004, and Nicky Butt's last game for Manchester United, as he signed for Newcastle United later that same month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177357-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nSince Manchester United had already qualified for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League by virtue of their league position, Millwall qualified for the first round of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup. Club owner Theo Paphitis said the club had made around \u00a32.5\u00a0million for making it to the FA Cup final, but that the club could stand to lose money if they failed to reach the group stage of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177358-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Summer Tournament\nThe 2004 FA Summer Tournament was a minor international football competition which took place in England from 30 May to 5 June 2004. Host nation England, Japan and Iceland all participated in the tournament. All matches took place at the City of Manchester Stadium, home of club Manchester City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177358-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Summer Tournament\nThis three nation mini tournament was arranged as the preparatory exercise for England just before UEFA Euro 2004 began. It featured England\u2019s squad for that tournament which had been named on 17 May 2004. They won the tournament on goal difference from Japan, having been held to a draw by them but defeating Iceland via a greater margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177359-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Trophy Final\nThe 2003\u201304 FA Trophy is the 34th season of the FA Trophy, the Football Association's cup competition for teams at levels 5\u20138 of the English football league system. It was contested by Hednesford Town and Canvey Island on 23 May 2004 at Villa Park, Birmingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177359-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Trophy Final\nHednesford Town won the match 3\u20132 to win the competition for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177360-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FA Women's Cup Final\nThe 2004 FA Women's Cup Final was the 34th final of the FA Women's Cup, England's primary cup competition for women's football teams. It was the 11th final to be held under the direct control of the Football Association (FA) and was known as the FA Women's Cup Final in partnership with Nationwide for sponsorship reasons. The final was contested between Arsenal and Charlton Athletic on 4 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177361-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FAI Cup\nThe FAI Cup 2004 was the 84th staging of The Football Association of Ireland Challenge Cup or Carlsberg FAI Cup. It officially kicked off in late May, when twenty clubs from the junior and intermediate leagues battled it out for the chance to face League of Ireland opposition in the second round. The ten winners of those ties were joined in the second round by the 22 eircom League of Ireland clubs. The competition ran until October, with the final taking place on Sunday, October 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177361-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FAI Cup, Second round\nMatches played on the weekend of Sunday, 25 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177361-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FAI Cup, Third round\nMatches played on the week of Monday, 16 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177362-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FAI Cup Final\nThe 2004 FAI Cup Final was the deciding match of the 2004 FAI Cup. Defending champions Longford Town contested the final against Waterford United. The match was played at Lansdowne Road in Dublin. Longford won the match 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177363-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Moscow season\nThe 2004 FC Moscow season was the club's 1st season in existence after taking over the licence of Torpedo-Metallurg. They finished the season in 9th place, and reached the Round of 32 in the Russian Cup, with the Round of 16 taking place in the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177363-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Moscow season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177363-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Moscow season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177363-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Moscow season, Competitions, Russian Cup, 2004\u201305\nThe Round of 16 games took place during the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177364-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Rubin Kazan season\nThe 2004 FC Rubin Kazan season was the club's 2nd season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the season in tenth position, were knocked out of the UEFA Cup in the Second qualifying round by Rapid Wien and reached the Last 16 of the 2003\u201304 Russian Cup and Last 32 of the 2004\u201305 Russian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177364-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Rubin Kazan season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177364-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Rubin Kazan season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177365-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Seoul season, Players, Team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177365-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Seoul season, Players, Out on loan & military service\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177365-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Starting eleven and formation\nThis section shows the most used players for each position considering a 3-4-3 formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177365-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Starting eleven and formation\nSource: Squad stats and Start formations. Only competitive matches. Using the most used start formation. Ordered by position on pitch (from back right to front left).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177365-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Substitutes\nSource: Squad stats and Start formations. Only competitive matches. Using the most used start formation. Ordered by position on pitch (from back right to front left).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177366-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Spartak Moscow season\nThe 2004 FC Spartak Moscow season was the club's 13th season in the Russian Premier League season. Spartak finished the season in 8th position, and were knocked out of the 2004\u201305 Russian Cup by Metallurg Lipetsk at the Round of 32 stage. In Europe, Spartak where knockout of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup by Mallorca in the Third Round, whilst reaching the Third Round of the 2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup where they were knocked out by Villarreal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177366-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Spartak Moscow season, Season events\nPrior to the start of the season, Yegor Titov was handed a 12-month ban from football for failing a drugs test after Russia's 0\u20130 against Wales on 15 November 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177366-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Spartak Moscow season, Season events\nOn 30 August, Nevio Scala was sacked as manager of Spartak, with Aleksandrs Starkovs appointed as his replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177366-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Spartak Moscow season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177366-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Spartak Moscow season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177367-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg season\nThe 2004 Zenit St.Petersburg season was the club's tenth season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177368-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FCSL season\nThe 2004 FCSL season was the inaugural season of the Florida Collegiate Summer League, a collegiate summer baseball league operating in the southeastern United States region of central Florida. The league contained four franchises during its inaugural season, the Daytona Beach Barracudas, Orlando Shockers, Sanford River Rats, and Winter Park Diamond Dawgs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177368-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FCSL season\nThe Sanford River Rats won the league championship game after a double elimination playoff series to become the league's inaugural champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177368-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FCSL season, All-Star game\nThe 2004 FCSL All-Star Day occurred on July 4 at Sanford's Memorial Stadium and consisted of a home run derby and all-star game between the Northern Division's Sanford River Rats and Daytona Beach Barracudas and the Southern Division's Orlando Shockers and Winter Park Diamond Dawgs. Orlando's Ron Baptiste won the Home Run Derby, and he and his Southern Division teammates won the All-Star Game 9-0. The All-Star Game MVP was awarded to Orlando's J.P. Castro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FH\n2004 FH is a micro-asteroid and near-Earth object of the Aten group, approximately 30 meters in diameter, that passed just 43,000\u00a0km (27,000\u00a0mi) above the Earth's surface on 18 March 2004, at 22:08 UTC. It was the 11th closest approach to Earth recorded as of 21\u00a0November\u00a02008. The asteroid was first observed on 16 March 2004, by astronomers of the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research at the Lincoln Laboratory's Experimental Test Site near Socorro, New Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [7, 7], "content_span": [8, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Orbit and classification\n2004 FH is an Aten asteroid. It passed 43,000\u00a0km from the Earth on 18 March 2004. For comparison, geostationary satellites orbit Earth at 35,790 kilometers. Despite its small size, it is still the fourth largest asteroid detected coming closer to the Earth than the Moon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Orbit and classification\nHad this object hit Earth, it would probably have detonated high in the atmosphere. It might have produced a blast measured in hundreds of kilotons of TNT, but may not have produced any effect on the ground. It could also have been an Earth-grazing fireball if it had been much closer but not close enough to impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 33], "content_span": [34, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Orbit and classification\nOn 17 March 2044 the asteroid will pass no closer than 0.0116\u00a0AU (1,740,000\u00a0km; 1,080,000\u00a0mi) from the Earth. 2004 FH also has the distinction of having the lowest inclination of any known near-Earth asteroids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 33], "content_span": [34, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Orbit and classification\nTwo weeks later another asteroid approached even closer, 2004 FU162, which was smaller, and a few years later 2009 DD45, which was closer in size passed by at similar distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 33], "content_span": [34, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Physical characteristics, Rotation period\nIn March 2004, two rotational lightcurves of 2004 FH were obtained from photometric observations by astronomers Petr Pravec, Stefano Sposetti and Raoul Behrend. Lightcurve analysis gave a rotation period of 0.0504 hours (3.02 minutes) with a brightness amplitude of 1.16 and 0.75 magnitude, respectively (U=3/2+).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 50], "content_span": [51, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Physical characteristics, Rotation period\nThis makes this object a fast rotator, currently among the Top 100 known to exist. The photometric observations also revealed, that 2004 FH is a tumbler with a non-principal axis rotation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 50], "content_span": [51, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177369-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 FH, Physical characteristics, Diameter and albedo\nhas been estimated to measure approximately 30 meters (100 feet) in diameter. The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes a standard albedo for stony asteroids of 0.20 and calculates a diameter of 24 meters based on an absolute magnitude of 25.7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 7], "section_span": [9, 54], "content_span": [55, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177370-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Brno 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Brno 500\u00a0km was the fifth round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Brno Circuit, Czech Republic, on May 30, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177370-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Brno 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177371-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Championship\nThe 2004 FIA GT Championship season was the 8th season of the FIA GT Championship. It was a series contested by Grand Touring style cars broken into two classes based on power and manufacturer involvement, called GT and N-GT. It began on 28 March 2004 and ended 14 November 2004 after 11 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177371-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Championship, Drivers Championship, GT standings\nThe GT Drivers Championship was won jointly by Luca Cappellari and Fabrizio Gollin who shared a Ferrari 550 Maranello entered by BMS Scuderia Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177371-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Championship, Drivers Championship, N-GT standings\nThe N-GT Drivers Championship was won jointly by Sascha Maassen and Lucas Luhr who shared a Porsche 996 GT3 RSR entered by Freisinger Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177371-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Championship, Teams Championship\nPoints were awarded separately in both GT and N-GT to the top 8 class finishers in the order of 10\u20138\u20136\u20135\u20134\u20133\u20132\u20131. At the Spa 24 Hours only, half points were also granted to the leading eight cars at the 12-hour mark. Both cars scored points towards the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177371-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Championship, Teams Championship, GT Standings\nDue to the Maserati MC12 not being homologated, AF Corse was not eligible to score points from Round 8 through Round 10. Championship points were redistributed to other GT competitors, ignoring the placing of the AF Corse cars. At Round 11 the homologation was approved and AF Corse was then allowed to score points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177372-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Donington 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Donington 500\u00a0km was the sixth round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Donington Park, United Kingdom, on 27 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177372-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Donington 500km\nSeveral competitors from the British GT Championship participated in this event, although the TVR Tuscans were required to run in a separate special class due to the cars not meeting N-GT homologation requirements. The #5 Vitaphone Saleen overtook the #17 JMB Ferrari for the lead, then quickly build up a gap of 8 seconds. In the last lap at the chicane, the #5 had come together with the #99 Porsche and the former suffered a puncture. The damage to the Saleen was enough to lose the win as Jaime Melo retake the lead in the final corner. Matteo Bobbi was able to unlap the #17 Ferrari on the final corner as well and gained a lap advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177372-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Donington 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177373-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Dubai 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Dubai 500\u00a0km was the tenth round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Dubai Autodrome, United Arab Emirates, on October 8, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177373-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Dubai 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177374-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Hockenheim 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Hockenheim 500\u00a0km was the fourth round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Hockenheimring, Germany, on May 16, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177374-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Hockenheim 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177375-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Imola 500 km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Imola 500\u00a0km was the eighth round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Italy, on September 5, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177375-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Imola 500 km\nThis race featured the competition debut of the Maserati MC12, with AF Corse entering two cars. The FIA had initially refused homologation of the road versions of the MC12 due to the car being wider than the current regulations allow. However, with agreement from other FIA GT teams, the MC12 was allowed to participate in the GT1 class with revised bodywork, a narrower rear wing, and no ability to score championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177375-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Imola 500 km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177375-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Imola 500 km, Official results\n\u2020 \u2013 #62 G.P.C. Giesse Squadra Corse was disqualified after failing post-race technical inspection. The car's airbox was larger than regulations allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177376-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Magny-Cours 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Magny-Cours 500\u00a0km was the third round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours, France, on 2 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177376-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Magny-Cours 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177377-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Monza 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Monza 500\u00a0km was the first round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza, Italy, on March 28, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177377-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Monza 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177378-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Oschersleben 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Oschersleben 500\u00a0km was the ninth round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Motorsport Arena Oschersleben, Germany, on September 19, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177378-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Oschersleben 500km\nFollowing the debut of the MC12 at the previous round in Imola, AF Corse scored their maiden victory here in Oschersleben. The team and their drivers were however still ineligible to score points due to the MC12's homologations problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177378-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Oschersleben 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177379-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Valencia 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Valencia 500\u00a0km was the second round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Circuit de Valencia, Spain, on April 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177379-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Valencia 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177380-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Zhuhai 500km\nThe 2004 FIA GT Zhuhai 500\u00a0km was the eleventh and final round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Zhuhai International Circuit, China, on November 14, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177380-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Zhuhai 500km\nFollowing three straight races in which AF Corse's Maserati MC12s were allowed to race but ineligible for points, the FIA finally approved the car for homologation. Although this meant that the MC12s were still restricted, Maserati was able to score their first and only points all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177380-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIA GT Zhuhai 500km, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177381-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup\nThe 2004 FIBA Africa Basketball Club Championship (19th edition), was an international basketball tournament held in Cairo, Egypt, from November 20 to 27, 2004. The tournament, organized by FIBA Africa and hosted by Al Ahly, was contested by 7 teams in two groups, in a preliminary round robin system followed by a knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177381-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup\nThe tournament was won by Primeiro de Agosto from Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177382-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Clubs Champions Cup squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2004 FIBA Africa Club Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177383-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women\nThe 2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women was the 8th FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women, played under the rules of FIBA, the world governing body for basketball, and the FIBA Africa thereof. The tournament was hosted by Tunisia from December 17 to 26, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177383-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women\nTunisia ended the round-robin tournament with a 6\u20130 unbeaten record to win their first title and qualify, alongside DR Congo, for the 2005 FIBA U19 Women's World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177383-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women, Participating teams\nAngola\u00a0Central African Republic\u00a0DR Congo\u00a0Mali\u00a0Mozambique\u00a0South Africa\u00a0Tunisia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177383-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women, Final standings\nTunisia rosterEmna Jlida, Fatma Jouini, Fatma Mahmoud, Hajer Hafsi, Mariem Ouertani, Maroua Boumenjel, Mouna Ghalleb, Nedra Dhouibi, Olfa Ouerghi, Samah Grioui, Saousen Jebali, Selma M'Nasria, Coach:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177384-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2004 FIBA Africa Under-18 Championship for Women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177385-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship\nThe 2004 FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship was the only FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship, played under the rules of FIBA, the world governing body for basketball, and the FIBA Africa thereof. The tournament was hosted by Senegal from July 23 to August 1, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177385-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship\nNigeria defeated Cameroon 83\u201382 in the final to win the championship. and secured a spot at the 2005 U-21 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177386-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Africa Under-20 Championship squads\nThis article displays the rosters for the participating teams at the 2004 FIBA Africa Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177387-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Champions Cup\nThe FIBA Asia Champions Cup 2004 was the 15th staging of the FIBA Asia Champions Cup, the basketball club tournament of FIBA Asia. The tournament was held in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates between May 15 to 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177387-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Champions Cup\nThe Sagesse team from Lebanon was the first club to win three FIBA Asia Champions Cup titles after narrowly defeating the reigning champions Al-Wahda from Syria in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177388-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Championship for Women\nThe 2004 FIBA Asia Championship for Women is the qualifying tournament for FIBA Asia at the women's basketball tournament at the 2004 Summer Olympics at Athens. The tournament was held on Sendai, Japan from January 13 to January 19. The championship is divided into two levels: Level I and Level II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177389-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Stankovi\u0107 Cup\nThe FIBA Asia Stankovi\u0107 Cup 2004 served as the qualifying tournament for the 2005 FIBA Asia Championship. This competition is distinct from the Stankovi\u0107 Cup intercontinental tournament attended by teams outside the FIBA Asia zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177389-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Stankovi\u0107 Cup, Qualification\nAccording to the FIBA Asia rules, each zone had one place, and the hosts team (Chinese Taipei) and Asian champion (China) were automatically qualified. The other three places are allocated to the zones according to performance in the 2003 ABC Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177390-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship\nThe FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship 2004 is the 2004 edition of the FIBA Asia's youth championship for basketball. The games were held at Bangalore, India from September 14\u201323, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177391-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship for Women\nABC Under-18 Championship for Women 2004 is the 17th edition of ABC's basketball championship for females under 18 years old. The games were held at Shenzhen, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177391-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship for Women\nThe championship is divided into two levels: Level I and Level II. The last finishers of Level I are relegated to Level II and the top finisher of Level II qualify for Level I 2007's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177392-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Under-20 Championship\nThe FIBA Asia Under-20 Championship 2004 is the 4th edition of the FIBA Asia's young men championship for basketball. The games were held at Tehran, Iran", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177392-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Asia Under-20 Championship, Qualification\nAccording to the FIBA Asia rules, each zone had two places, and the hosts (Iran) and holders (Qatar) were automatically qualified. The other four places are allocated to the zones according to performance in the 2000 ABC Under-20 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177393-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Diamond Ball\nThe 2004 FIBA Diamond Ball was a basketball tournament held in Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro, from July 31 until August 3, 2004. The FIBA Diamond Ball was an official international basketball tournament organised by FIBA, held every Olympic year prior to the Olympics. It was the 2nd edition of the FIBA Diamond Ball. The six participating teams were Angola, Argentina, Australia, host Serbia and Montenegro, China and Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177394-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Diamond Ball for Women\nThe 2004 FIBA Diamond Ball was a basketball tournament held in Heraklion, Greece, from August 5 until August 8, 2004. The FIBA Diamond Ball was an official international basketball tournament organised by FIBA, held every Olympic year prior to the Olympics. It was the 1st edition of the FIBA Diamond Ball. The six participating teams were Australia, China host Greece, Brazil, Nigeria and South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177394-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Diamond Ball for Women\nThe United States women's team did not participate in the 2004 event although they were the then-reigning World champions and Olympic champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177395-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship\nThe 2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship was the 18th edition of the FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship. The cities of Amaliada and Pyrgos, in Greece, hosted the tournament. France won the trophy for the first time. Georgia and Germany were relegated to Division B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177395-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship, System of competition\nThe tournament format changed with the inclusion of the Division System. The sixteen teams from Division A entered the tournament. In the Preliminary Round, the sixteen teams were allocated in four groups of four teams each. The two top teams from each group qualify for the Quarterfinals. The eight teams were allocated on two groups of four teams each, with the two top teams qualifying for the semifinals. The two teams qualified 15th and 16th were relegated to Division B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177396-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship Division B\nThe 2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship Division B was an international basketball competition held in England and Bulgaria in 2004. Iceland, the winner of Group A (Brighton, England) and Ukraine, the winner of Group B (Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria) qualified for Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177397-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division B\nThe 2004 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division B was the first edition of the Division B of the European basketball championship for women's national under-16 teams. 17 teams were drawn into two groups. Group A tournament was played in Br\u010dko, Bosnia and Herzegovina, from 30 July to 6 August 2004 and Group B tournament was played in Rakvere, Estonia, from 30 July to 8 August 2004. Ukraine and Lithuania won the tournaments and were promoted to the 2005 FIBA Europe Under-16 Championship for Women Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177398-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship\nThe 2004 FIBA Europe Under-18 Championship was an international basketball competition held in Spain in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177399-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship\nThe 2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship was the seventh edition of the FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship. The city of Brno, in the Czech Republic, hosted the tournament. Slovenia won their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177399-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, Qualification\nTwenty-five national teams entered the qualifying round. They were allocated in five groups. The first two teams from groups A, B, C, D and the first three teams from group E qualified for the tournament, where they joined Czech Republic (qualified as hosts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177399-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship, Preliminary round\nThe twelve teams were allocated in two groups of six teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177400-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women\nThe 2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women was the third edition of the FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women. 12 teams participated in the competition, held in Vannes, France, from 23 July to 1 August 2004. Russia won their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177400-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women, Qualification\nTwenty-three national teams entered the qualifying round. They were allocated in four groups. The first three teams from groups A, B, C and the first two teams from group D qualified for the tournament, where they joined France (qualified as hosts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177400-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women, Preliminary round\nIn this round, the twelve teams were allocated in two groups of six teams each. The top four teams qualify for the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177401-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship\nThe 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship was the fifth FIFA Futsal World Championship, the quadrennial international futsal championship contested by the men's national teams of the member associations of FIFA. It was held between 21 November and 5 December 2004 in Chinese Taipei. It was the first FIFA tournament held in the country and was the last to feature 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177401-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship\nSpain won their second successive title, defeating Italy in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177401-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship, Top goalscorers\nThe top 10 scorers from the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Cup are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177402-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship qualification\nThe qualification competition for the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship was a series of tournaments organised by the six FIFA confederations. Each confederation \u2014 the AFC (Asia), CAF (Africa), CONCACAF (North, Central America and Caribbean), CONMEBOL (South America), OFC (Oceania), and UEFA (Europe) \u2014 was allocated a certain number of the 16 places at the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177403-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship squads\nThis article lists the confirmed national futsal squads for the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Championship tournament held in Chinese Taipei, between November 21 and December 5, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177404-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship\nThe 2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship was held from 10 to 27 November 2004. It was the second edition of the youth tournament for women put together by FIFA, before being renamed FIFA U-20 Women's World Championship for the 2006 edition. The tournament was hosted by Thailand, in two stadiums in Bangkok, one in Chiang Mai and another in Phuket. This was the first FIFA women's tournament held in Southeast Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177404-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship\nBrazil's Marta was the Adidas Golden Ball recipient, as the tournament's most valuable player (MVP), and Canada's Brittany Timko won the Golden Shoe with 7 goals in 4 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177404-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship, Qualified teams\nThe places have been allocated as follows to confederations: CAF (1), AFC (2), UEFA (4), CONCACAF (2), CONMEBOL (1), OFC (1), plus the host country (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177404-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship, Awards, All star team\nWang Kun Akudo Sabi Elena Semenchenko Supaphon Kaeobaen Becky Sauerbrunn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177404-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship, Awards, All star team\nZhang Ying Marta Simone Laudehr Patricia Hanebeck Lee Jang-mi Svetlana Tsidikova Angie Woznuk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 64], "content_span": [65, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177405-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship squads\nThis article lists the team squads of the 2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship, held in Thailand from 10 to 27 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177405-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship squads, Group C, South Korea\nThe South Korea squad consisted of 21 players. Coach: Baek Jong-chul", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177405-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship squads, Group C, Spain\nThe Spain squad consisted of 21 players. Coach: Ignacio Quereda", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177406-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIFA World Player of the Year\nThe 2004 FIFA World Player of the Year award was won by Brazilian Ronaldinho for the first time, Thierry Henry finished second for the second year in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177407-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup Final\nThe 2004 Artistic Gymnastics World Cup Final was held in Birmingham, England in 2004. This was the fourth edition of the World Cup Final. From 2003 to 2004, a series of qualifying events were held, culminating in a final event, the World Cup Final. The different stages, sometimes referred to as World Cup Qualifiers, mostly served the purpose of awarding points to individual gymnasts and groups according to their placements. These points would be added up over the two-year period to qualify a limited number of athletes to the biennial World Cup Final event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177408-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Final\nThe 2004 FIG Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Final was the sixth edition of the Rhythmic Gymnastics World Cup Final, held from November 27 to November 28, 2004 in Moscow, Russia. The competition was officially organized by the International Gymnastics Federation as the last stage of a series of competitions through the 2003\u20132004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177409-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA Diving World Cup\nThe 2004 FINA Diving World Cup was held in Athens, Grece and was a qualifying event for 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177410-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA Men's Water Polo World League\nThe 2004 FINA Men's Water Polo World League was the third edition of the annual event, organised by the world's governing body in aquatics, the FINA. After a preliminary round, the Super Final was held in Long Beach, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177410-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA Men's Water Polo World League, Preliminary round\nPool winners advanced to the semifinals, while the second and third placed teams in each pool competed in the quarterfinals. The bottom team in each pool was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177411-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA Women's Water Polo World League\nThe 2004 FINA Women's Water Polo World League was the initial edition of an annual tournament organized by the International Swimming Federation (FINA). The tournament was held in Long Beach, California from June 23 to June 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177412-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA World Junior Synchronised Swimming Championships\nThe 9th FINA World Junior Synchronised Swimming Championships was held August 15\u201318, 2002 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The synchronised swimmers are aged between 15 and 18 years old, from 31 nations, swimming in four events: Solo, Duet, Team and Free combination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177412-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA World Junior Synchronised Swimming Championships, Participating nations\n31 nations swam at the 2004 World Junior Championships were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177413-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA World Open Water Swimming Championships\nThe 3rd FINA Open Water Swimming World Championships were held November 26 \u2013 December 2, 2004 in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. The championships featured 90 swimmers from 26 countries competing in six races:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177414-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m)\nThe 7th FINA Short Course World Championships were held at the Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States from October 7 through October 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177415-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIRA Women's European Championship\nFor the 2004 competition Pool A reverted to a single eight nation knockout, while Pool B was a round-robin. France repeated Netherlands feat of winning as hosts. The tournament took place at grounds in and around the Midi-Pyr\u00e9n\u00e9es region of France (near to Toulouse) between 30 April to 9 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177416-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIRS Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2004 FIRS Intercontinental Cup was the eighth edition of the roller hockey tournament known as the Intercontinental Cup, played between 14 and 16 of May, 2004 (after a five-year hiatus). This edition rolled back to a two-legged final. HC Liceo La Coru\u00f1a won the cup, defeating CDU Estudiantil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177417-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nThe 2004 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix was the 11th Summer Grand Prix season in ski jumping on plastic. The season began on 31 July 2004 in Hinterzarten, Germany and ended on 26 September 2004 in Hakuba, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177417-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIS Ski Jumping Grand Prix\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup and the Continental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177418-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIU Golden Panthers football team\nThe 2004 FIU Golden Panthers football team represented Florida International University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Panthers were led by head coach Don Strock in his third season and finished with a record of zero wins and seven losses (0\u20137). In 2008, the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions found major violations within the football program and as such vacated the Panthers' three wins from the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177419-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World Grand Prix\nThe FIVB World Grand Prix 2004 was the twelfth edition of the annual women's volleyball tournament, which is the female equivalent of the Men's Volleyball World League. The 2004 edition was played by twelve countries from July 9 to August 1, 2004, with the final round held in Reggio Calabria, Italy. Hosts Italy and the top five ranked teams after the preliminary rounds qualified for the last round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177420-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League\nThe 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League was the 15th edition of the annual men's international volleyball tournament, played by 12 countries from 4 June to 18 July 2004. The Final Round was held in Rome, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads\nThis article show all participating team squads at the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League, played by 12 countries from 4 May to 18 July 2004. The Final Round was held in Rome, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Brazil\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Bulgaria\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, China\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Cuba\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 46], "content_span": [47, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, France\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Greece\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Italy\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Japan\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Poland\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Portugal\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Serbia and Montenegro\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177421-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Volleyball World League squads, Spain\nThe following is the roster in the 2004 FIVB Volleyball World League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177422-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB Women's World Olympic Qualification Tournament\nThe 2004 FIVB Women's World Olympic Qualification Tournament was a women's volleyball tournament to determine which four teams would compete in the women's event at the 2004 Athens Olympics. It was held on 8\u201316 May 2004 in Tokyo, Japan. The winning teams were \u00a0Japan, \u00a0South Korea, \u00a0Russia and \u00a0Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177423-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FIVB World Grand Prix squads\nThis article show all participating team squads at the 2004 FIVB Women's Volleyball World Grand Prix, played by twelve countries from 9 July to 1 August 2004 with the final round held in Reggio Calabria, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162\n2004 FU162 is an Aten near-Earth asteroid less than 20 meters in diameter crudely estimated to have passed roughly 6500 km above the surface of Earth on 31 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162\nIt was only observed for 44 minutes on 31 March 2004, by the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) team at Lincoln Laboratory's Experimental Test Site in Socorro, New Mexico, and remains a lost asteroid. The estimated 4 to 6 meter sized body made one of the closest known approaches to Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\nOn 31 March 2004, around 15:35 UTC, the asteroid is crudely estimated to have passed within approximately 1 Earth radius (R\u2295) or 6,400 kilometers of the surface of the Earth (or 2.02\u00a0R\u2295 from Earth's center). But due to the very short observation arc, the uncertainty in the close approach distance is a large \u00b115000 km. By comparison, geostationary satellites orbit at 5.6 R\u2295 and GPS satellites orbit at 3.17 R\u2295 from the center of the Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\nAs of 2008 this was the third or fourth closest approach. The first observation of 2004 FU162 was not announced until 22 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\nIt was only observed four times in the space of 44 minutes and could not be followed up. Nevertheless, \"the orbit is quite determinate and, given the exceptional nature of this close approach, the object is now receiving a designation\". No precovery images have been found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\n2004 FU162 is estimated to be approximately 6 meters in diameter. This means that it would burn up from atmospheric friction before striking the ground in the case of an Earth impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\nOn 26 March 2010, it may have come within 0.0825\u00a0AU (12.3 million km) of Earth, but with an uncertainty parameter of 9, the orbit is poorly determined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\nAnother, larger near-Earth asteroid, 2004 FH passed just two weeks prior to 2004 FU162.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177424-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 FU162, Description\nA closer non-impacting approach to Earth was not known until 2008 TS26 on 9 October 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 23], "content_span": [24, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177425-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fallujah ambush\nThe 2004 Fallujah Blackwater incident occurred on March 31, 2004, when Iraqi insurgents attacked a convoy containing four American contractors from the private military company Blackwater USA who were conducting a delivery for food caterers ESS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177425-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fallujah ambush, The ambush\nThe four armed contractors, Scott Helvenston, Jerry Zovko, Wesley Batalona, and Mike Teague, were killed and dragged from their vehicles. Their bodies were beaten and burned, with their charred corpses then dragged through the city streets before being hung over a bridge crossing the Euphrates River.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177425-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fallujah ambush, Reactions\nPhotos of the event, showing jubilant Iraqis posing with the charred corpses, were then released to news agencies worldwide, which caused a great deal of indignation in the United States. This prompted the announcement of a counter-insurgency campaign in the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177425-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fallujah ambush, Response\nThe ambush led to the First Battle of Fallujah, a U.S.-led operation to retake control of the city. However, the battle was halted mid-way for political reasons, an outcome which commentators have described as either a stalemate or an insurgent victory. Seven months later, in November 2004, a second attempt at capturing the city, the Second Battle of Fallujah, proved successful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177425-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Fallujah ambush, Response\nIntelligence reports concluded that Ahmad Hashim Abd al-Isawi was the mastermind behind the attack, and was not captured until a successful Navy SEAL operation in 2009. al-Isawi was held for a time by the United States intelligence community and testified at one of the 2010 courts-martial of SEALs he accused of mistreating him while detained at Camp Schwedler. He was subsequently handed over to Iraqi authorities for trial and executed by hanging some time before November 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177425-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Fallujah ambush, 2005 lawsuit\nThe families of the victims filed suit (Helvenston et al. v. Blackwater Security) against Blackwater USA for wrongful death in January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177426-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup\nThe 2004 Family Circle Cup was a women's tennis tournament and the 32nd edition of the Family Circle Cup. This WTA Tier I Event was held on outdoor clay courts at the Family Circle Tennis Center in Charleston, South Carolina, United States. Fourth-seeded Venus Williams won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177426-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup, Finals, Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Martina Navratilova / Lisa Raymond 6\u20134, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177427-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, by defeating Martina Navratilova and Lisa Raymond 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177427-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Doubles\nIt was the 26th title for Ruano Pascual and the 33rd for Su\u00e1rez in their respective careers. It was also the 3rd title for the pair during the season, after their wins in the Australian Open and Indian Wells.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177427-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177428-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but did not compete this year due to a hypoglycemia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177428-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Singles\nVenus Williams won the title, defeating Conchita Mart\u00ednez in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20131. This was Williams' 30th career title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177428-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Family Circle Cup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first nine seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177429-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fareham Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Fareham Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Fareham Borough Council in Hampshire, England. Half of the council was up for election, with the Conservative Party increasing their majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177429-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fareham Borough Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election there were 18 Conservative and 12 Liberal Democrat councillors, with 15 of the 31 seats being contested. One of the 15 seats, in Fareham South ward, was vacant after an independent, former Liberal Democrat, councillor had stepped down, after being fined for false housing and council tax benefit claims. Fareham South was among a number of wards which were reported as being vulnerable to a change in party control including Fareham East, Fareham North, Portchester West, Stubbington and Titchfield Common. A couple of former councillors who had been defeated in the 2002 election stood again, former Labour group leader Mick Prior in Fareham North-West and Conservative Nick Walker in Portchester West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177429-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fareham Borough Council election, Campaign\nIssues in the election included council tax levels and plans by the government to build 1,000 houses near Sarisbury. The national issue of the Iraq War was also seen as being likely to sway votes in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177429-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fareham Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives increase their majority on the council after gaining 3 seats from the Liberal Democrats. Conservative gains included Stubbington where they won by only 8 votes over the Liberal Democrats after a recount and in Portchester West where Nick Walker returned to the council. The Conservatives also gained a seat in Fareham South from an independent in a seat which had previously been seen as strongly Liberal Democrat. The Liberal Democrats partly blamed their defeats on the election being held at the same time as the European elections, while a defeated Labour candidate said their failure to win any seats was in line with the national performance by the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177429-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Fareham Borough Council election, Election result\nOverall turnout increased to 40.3% with a rise in postal votes to 6,000 contributing to the increase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177430-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Faroese general election\nParliamentary elections were held in the Faroe Islands on 20 January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177431-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup\nThe 2004 Fed Cup was the 42nd edition of the most important competition between national teams in women's tennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177431-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup\nThe final was held at the Ice Palace Krylatskoye in Moscow, Russia, on 27\u201328 November. The home team Russia defeated the defending champion France to win their first title after five final appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177431-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup, World Group Play-offs\nThe eight losing teams in the World Group first round ties and eight winners of the Zonal Group I sections competed in the World Group Play-offs for spots in the 2005 World Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177431-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup, Rankings\nThe rankings were measured after the three points during the year that play took place, and were collated by combining points earned from the previous four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 22], "content_span": [23, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177432-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone\nThe Americas Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2004 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177432-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone, Group I\nThe nine teams were divided into two pools of four and five teams. The teams that finished first in the pools played-off against those that placed second to determine which team would partake in the World Group Play-offs. The four nations coming last or second-to-last in the pools also played-off to determine which would be relegated to Group II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177432-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone, Group II\nThe nine teams were divided into one pool of four and one pool of five teams. The top two teams of both pools play off to decide which nation is promoted to the Americas Zone Group I for 2005, while the rest played against each other to determine overall placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177433-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from the Americas. Using the positions determined in their pools, the nine teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I, the top two countries of each pool played for first to fourth placings, while the bottom two of each pool competed for sixth to ninth. The teams that ended up placing first overall advanced to World Group Play-offs, whilst those coming in eighth were relegated down to Group II for the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177433-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first and second placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The winner of the rounds advanced to the World Group Play-offs, where they would get a chance to advance to the World Group for next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177433-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Fifth\nAs there were only four teams from Pool A compared to the five from Pool B, the third-placed team from Pool B (\u00a0Cuba) had no equivalent to play against. Thus the Cubans were automatically awarded fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177433-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe last and second-to-last placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The losing team of the rounds were relegated to Group II for next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177434-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Americas Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the World Group Play-offs, while the bottom teams face potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177435-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Americas Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the World Group Play-offs, while the bottom teams face potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177436-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group I were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from the Americas. Using the positions determined in their pools, the seven teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II. The top two teams advanced to Group II for the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177436-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first and second placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The winner of the rounds advanced to Group II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177436-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Fifth\nAs there was only three teams from Pool B as opposed to the four from Pool A, the third-placed team from Pool A (\u00a0Ecuador) had no equivalent to play against. Thus the Ecuadorians were automatically allocated fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177436-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, 6th to 7th Play-Offs\nThe last-placed teams from each pool were drawn in head-to-head rounds to find the sixth and seventh placed teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177437-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Americas Zone Group II of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177438-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2004 Fed Cup Americas Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Americas Zone Group II of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177439-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2004 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177439-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group I\nThe nine teams were divided into two pools of four and five teams. The teams that finished first and second in the pools played-off to determine which team would partake in the World Group Play-offs. The two nations coming second-last and last in the pools also played-off to determine which two would be relegated to Group II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177439-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group II\nThe five teams played in one pool of five, with the two teams placing first and second in the pool advancing to Group I for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177440-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from Asia and Oceania. Using the positions determined in their pools, the nine teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I, the top two countries of each pool played for first to fourth placings, while the bottom two of each pool competed for sixth to ninth. The teams that ended up placing first overall advanced to World Group Play-offs, whilst those coming in eighth were relegated down to Group II for the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177440-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first and second placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The winner of the rounds advanced to the World Group Play-offs, where they would get a chance to advance to the World Group for next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177440-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Fifth\nAs there was only four teams from Pool A as opposed to the five from Pool B, the third-placed team from Pool B (\u00a0South Korea) had no equivalent to play against. Thus the South Koreans were automatically allocated fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177440-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe last and second-to-last placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The losing team of the rounds were relegated to Group II for next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177441-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the World Group Play-offs, while the bottom teams face potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177442-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I was one of two pools in the Asia/Oceania Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the World Group Play-offs, while the bottom teams face potential relegation to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177443-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II \u2013 Pool\nThe Pool of the 2004 Fed Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group II composed of five teams competing in a round robin competition. The top two teams qualified for Group I next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177444-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone\nThe Europe/Africa Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2004 Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177444-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group I\nThe fourteen teams were divided into two pools of three teams and two pools of four. The top teams of each pool played-off against the second-placed teams to decide which four nations progress to World Group Play-offs. The four nations coming last played-off against each other to decide which teams are relegated to Group II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177444-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group II\nThe nine teams were divided into a pool of four teams and a pool of five. The top teams of each pool played-off against the second-placed teams to decide which two nations progress to Group I for 2005. The four nations coming last played-off against the second-to-last placed teams to determine which teams would be relegated to Group III for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177444-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group III\nThe eight teams were divided into two pools of four teams. The top teams of each pool played-off against the second-placed teams to decide which two nations progress to Group II for 2005. The other teams played against each other to determine overall placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177445-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from Europe and Africa. Those that qualified for this stage placed first and second in their respective pools, and also last in their pools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177445-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Play-offs\nThe eight top teams were then randomly paired up the team from a different placing of another group for a play-off tie, with the winners being promoted to the World Group Play-offs. The four bottom teams were also randomly paired up in play-off ties with the losers being relegated down to Group II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177446-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams advancing to the advancement play-offs and the bottom team being relegated down to the relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177447-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams advancing to the advancement play-offs and the bottom team being relegated down to the relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177448-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool C\nGroup C of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams advancing to the advancement play-offs and the bottom team being relegated down to the relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177449-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I \u2013 Pool D\nGroup D of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I was one of four pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group I of the 2004 Fed Cup. Three teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams advancing to the advancement play-offs and the bottom team being relegated down to the relegation play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177450-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from Europe and Africa. Using the positions determined in their pools, the nine teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II. The top two teams advanced to Group I for next year, and the bottom two teams were relegated down to the Europe/Africa Zone Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177450-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first and second placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The winner of the rounds advanced to Group I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177450-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Fifth\nAs there was only four teams from Pool A as opposed to the five from Pool B, the third-placed team from Pool B (\u00a0Latvia) had no equivalent to play against. Thus the Latvians were automatically allocated fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 59], "content_span": [60, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177450-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Play-offs, Relegation Play-Offs\nThe last and second-to-last placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The losing team of the rounds were relegated to Group III for next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177451-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group II of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top two teams play for advancement to Group I, while the bottom two teams face potential relegation to Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177452-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group II was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group II of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top two teams play for advancement to Group I, while the bottom two teams face potential relegation to Group III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177453-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs\nThe Play-offs of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III were the final stages of the Group I Zonal Competition involving teams from Europe and Africa. Using the positions determined in their pools, the eight teams faced off to determine their placing in the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III. The top two teams advanced to Group II for next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177453-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, Promotional Play-Offs\nThe first and second placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The winner of the rounds advanced to Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177453-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Play-offs, Fifth to Seventh Play-off\nThe third and fourth placed teams of each pool were placed against each other in two head-to-head rounds. The winner of the rounds were allocated fifth place in the Group, while the losers were allocated seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 80], "content_span": [81, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177454-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool A\nGroup A of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group III of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177455-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III \u2013 Pool B\nGroup B of the 2004 Fed Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group III was one of two pools in the Europe/Africa Zone Group III of the 2004 Fed Cup. Four teams competed in a round robin competition, with the top two teams and the bottom two teams proceeding to their respective sections of the play-offs: the top teams play for advancement to the Group II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177456-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup World Group\nThe World Group was the highest level of Fed Cup competition in 2004. Sixteen nations competed in a four-round knockout competition. World No. 1 team France was the defending champion, but they were defeated in the final by World No. 5 team and four-time finalist Russia. As such, Russia ascended to World No. 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177457-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fed Cup World Group Play-offs\nThe 2004 World Group Play-offs decided which nations featured in World Group in the 2005 Fed Cup. The play-off winners went on to feature in World Group in 2005, while the losing nations joined Zonal Competition for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl\nThe 2004 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, played on January 2, 2004, was the 33rd edition of the Fiesta Bowl. The game pitted #7 Ohio State against #8 Kansas State. It was a match-up between a perennial powerhouse in Ohio State, and a school that was only recently accustomed to winning in Kansas State. Despite Kansas State's historically losing record, head coach Bill Snyder had turned around the program in the decade before the bowl game, and K-State was actually making its second Fiesta Bowl appearance in 7 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl\nKansas State was the Big 12 Conference champion, and came into the game on a seven-game win streak, winning those games by an average of 39\u20139. In the game immediately before the Fiesta Bowl, Kansas State had soundly defeated #1-ranked Oklahoma 35\u20137 in the Big 12 Championship Game. However, the K-State team was badly distracted one night before the bowl game when its quarterback and team leader Ell Roberson was accused of sexual assault. (No charges were ultimately filed against Roberson.) In fact, it was not known whether Roberson would play until game time. Kansas State had been favored to win by 7 points, but some casinos pulled the line over the uncertainty about Roberson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl\nDespite being outgained 378\u2013337 in the bowl game, and has a turnover margin of -1, Ohio State prevailed 35\u201328. It was Ohio State's second straight Fiesta Bowl win; they went on to win another one in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl, Game summary\nKansas State won the coin toss and elected to defer. Ohio State's first drive stalled, but its punt gave Kansas State a horrible field position. On Kansas State's first drive, they went 3 and out, and were forced to punt from their 7-yard line. Harlan Jacobs of Ohio State blocked the K-State punt and John Hollins returned it 7 yards for a touchdown, and Ohio State opened up an early 7\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl, Game summary\nLater in the first quarter, Ohio State's quarterback Craig Krenzel fired a pass to Santonio Holmes for a 6-yard touchdown, and Ohio State extended its lead to 14\u20130. In the second quarter, Krenzel fired a 17-yard pass to Michael Jenkins for his second touchdown pass. At this point, Ohio State appeared to have the game under control, as it had a 21\u20130 lead. But Kansas State wouldn't quit. The Wildcats' star running back Darren Sproles ran 6 yards for a touchdown to make the score 21\u20137. Kansas State's defense stopped Ohio State on their next position, and the first half ended with the same score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl, Game summary\nWith 9 minutes to go in the third quarter, Kansas State quarterback Ell Roberson scrambled 14 yards for a touchdown, and Kansas State closed the gap to 21\u201314. It appeared as though Kansas State was back in the game, but Ohio State wouldn't be denied. With 4 minutes to go in the third quarter Krenzel found Michael Jenkins again for an 8-yard touchdown. Ohio State's lead went back to 14, and the score was 28-14. Later, with only 36 seconds left in the third quarter, Craig Krenzel found Santonio Holmes again for a 31-yard touchdown, and Ohio State led 35\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177458-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Fiesta Bowl, Game summary\nKansas State's Ayo Saba ran 2 yards for a touchdown, and the score was 35\u201321. Later on, Ell Roberson found the end zone for the second time, and the score was 35\u201328. However, it was too little, too late for the Wildcats, as there was only 2:47 left to go in the game. Ohio State recovered an onside kick, and melted the clock to preserve a 35\u201328 win. Craig Krenzel, with his 4 touchdown passes, was named the Fiesta Bowl Offensive MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177459-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fingal County Council election\nAn election to Fingal County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 24 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177460-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Finlandia Trophy\nThe 2004 Finlandia Trophy is an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Finland. It was held in Helsinki on October 9\u201310, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177461-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Finnish Cup\nThe 2004 Finnish Cup (Finnish: Suomen Cup) was the 50th season of the main annual association football cup competition in Finland. It was organised as a single-elimination knock\u2013out tournament and participation in the competition was voluntary. A total of 386 teams registered for the competition. The final was held at the Finnair Stadium, Helsinki on 30 October 2004 with MyPa defeating FC H\u00e4meenlinna by 2-1 before an attendance of 2,650 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177462-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Finnish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Finnish Figure Skating Championships took place between January 3 and 4, 2004 in Vantaa. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, women's singles, and ice dancing on the senior and junior levels. The event was used to help determine the Finnish team to the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177463-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Finnish municipal elections\nFinnish municipal election, 2004 was held in Finland on 24 October with advance voting between 13 and 19 October 2004. 11,966 municipal council seats were open for election in 416 municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177464-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Atlantic Owls football team\nThe 2004 Florida Atlantic University Owls football team represented Florida Atlantic University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The team was coached by Howard Schnellenberger and played their home games at Lockhart Stadium in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177465-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Florida Democratic presidential primary was held on March 9 in the U.S. state of Florida as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177466-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators baseball team\nThe 2004 Florida Gators baseball team represented the University of Florida in the sport of baseball during the 2004 college baseball season. The Gators competed in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They played their home games at Alfred A. McKethan Stadium, on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus. The team was coached by Pat McMahon, who was in his third season at Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177467-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators football team\nThe 2004 Florida Gators football team represented the University of Florida in the sport of American football during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Gators competed in Division I-A of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and played their home games at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus. The season was the third and last for head coach Ron Zook, who led the Gators to a regular season record of 7\u20134 (.636).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177467-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators football team, Pre-season\nFor the fifth time in school history, Florida played five of its first six games at home. Four of the last five games were on the road. Florida's record for the two prior seasons under Zook on the road in conference play was an SEC league best 7\u20131. Eight starters returned and true sophomore Chris Leak would start the first game of the season at the helm for the first time. The Gators opened the season against Eastern Michigan from the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177467-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee State\nThe match with MTSU was intended to be the season opener for the Gators, but was canceled and rescheduled because of Hurricane Frances. This left the Gators without a regular-season bye week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 73], "content_span": [74, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177467-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nFollowing this loss, head coach Ron Zook was fired, but allowed to coach the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 68], "content_span": [69, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177467-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, Florida State\nRon Zook's last game as head coach of the Florida Gators and spoiled the dedication of the field for Bobby Bowden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177467-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Gators football team, Game summaries, Peach Bowl\nDefensive coordinator Charlie Strong was interim head coach for the bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177468-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Marlins season\nThe Florida Marlins' 2004 season was the 12th season for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise in the National League. It would begin with the team attempting to improve on their season from 2003, where they were the defending World Series champion, having won the World Series in six games against the New York Yankees. Their manager was Jack McKeon. They played most of their home games at Pro Player Stadium. They played two against the Montreal Expos at Chicago's U.S. Cellular Field due to Hurricane Ivan. The team started off 8-1, but then collapsed and finished with a record of 83-79, 3rd in the NL East, and missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177468-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida Marlins season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team\nThe 2004 Florida State Seminoles football team represented Florida State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Bobby Bowden and played their home games at Doak Campbell Stadium in Tallahassee, Florida. They were members of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, Miami\nOriginally scheduled for September 6, 2004, the game between Miami and Florida State was postponed due to Hurricane Frances. On September 10, both teams met at the Orange Bowl in Miami. The Seminoles took the upper hand in the first half with a 45-yard field goal by Xavier Beitia and a 61-yard defensive fumble return by Antonio Cromartie. In the fourth quarter the Miami Hurricanes tied the score with an 18-yard field goal Jon Peattie and a 30-yard pass from Brock Berlin to Sinorice Moss with 30 seconds remaining. In overtime, Frank Gore broke an 18-yard run for the Hurricanes to seal the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, UAB\nReturning to Tallahassee after a road loss to Miami, Florida State opened the game with a 17-point lead over the Blazers with two short runs from Chris Rix and James Coleman in addition to a 30-yard kick from Xavier Beitia. In the second half, two more short runs by BJ Dean and Leon Washington in addition to a Xavier Beitia kick sealed the score at 34\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, Clemson\nEntering the game as the #8 team in the nation, the Seminoles allowed a 97-yard kickoff return by Clemson's Justin Miller and a 3rd quarter return by Miller that went 86 yards for six points. Florida State responded with a final 17 unanswered points that began with a 35-yard rushing touchdown from Leon Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, North Carolina\nFlorida State balanced offense choose to go to the air against North Carolina as Wyatt Sexton threw for 263 yards and three touchdowns. It was Sexton's first start for the Seminoles. On the ground, Leon Washington rushed for 153 yards on 10 carries, the longest being a 53-yard run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, @ Syracuse\nIn their first road game in a month, Florida State scrapped out a win against the Syracuse Orange. Going into the half, Florida State trailed 3\u201310, but provided an explosion of offense with two rushing touchdowns from Leon Washington. The second of two Washington touchdowns came on the second play of a late drive in which Washington ran for 45 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, Virginia\nThe most lop-sided victory of the 2004 year, the Seminole defense dominated Virginia's running game by allowing only 20 rushing yards on 29 plays. #6 Virginia gave up a safety and seventeen points to follow before kicking a field goal as time expired in the 1st half, their only points of the game. The Seminoles than put the Cavs away with 2 unanswered touchdowns in the final quarter. Wyatt Sexton played an instrumental part in the Seminole victory achieving 20 completions on 26 attempts for 275 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 68], "content_span": [69, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, @ Wake Forest\nIn one of the closest games of the year, three turnovers by Wyatt Sexton kept the Demon Deacons ahead of the Seminoles until the final minutes of the game. A 48-yard punt return by Willie Reid put the Seminoles in place for a 20-yard pass from Sexton to Greg Reid. In the fourth quarter, a 46-yard run by Lorenzo Booker led to the game-winning field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, @ Maryland\nFlorida State's 14 game win streak against Maryland was snapped. Maryland aggressively defended the Seminole's running game to 50 yards. Moreover, Wyatt Sexton threw 14 completions for 30 attempts and allowed two interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, Duke\nThe #13 Seminoles handled the Blue Devils in a lop-sided victory driven by Wyatt Sexton's 220 yard second-half. Florida State's two touchdowns came off a 45-yard pass from Wyatt Sexton to Chris Davis and a 4-yard run by Lamar Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, @ N.C. State\nWith the exception of a 44-yard Gary Cisemsia kick, the Seminoles scored only on the ground with rushing touchdowns by Lorenzo Booker and James Coleman. N.C. State was limited to a paltry 23 rushing yards and 1 for 16 on third down attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 72], "content_span": [73, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177469-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Florida State Seminoles football team, Game summaries, Florida\nFlorida won for the first time in Tallahassee since 1986 under Coach Ron Zook. The Florida State offense was limited to 1 for 15 on third down conversions although Sexton and Rix threw for a combined 314 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 67], "content_span": [68, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177470-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football Conference play-off Final\nThe 2004 Football Conference play-off Final took place on 16 May 2004 and was contested between Aldershot Town and Shrewsbury Town. It was held at the Britannia Stadium, Stoke-on-Trent. A crowd of 19,216 attended the game (a Conference Play-off final record at the time), with just over 12,000 travelling from Shropshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177470-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Football Conference play-off Final, Match, Summary\nAldershot had the first real chance of the game when Roscoe Dsane got on the end of a ball over the top of the defence and held off Shrews captain Darren Tinson, only to drag his shot wide. Jon Challinor then had a chance but failed to connect properly with Aaron McLean's cutback. At the other end it took a crucial intervention from Dominic Sterling to deny Jamie Tolley after a good surging run from the midfielder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177470-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Football Conference play-off Final, Match, Summary\nAldershot took the lead in the 36th minute when Shots captain Ray Warburton headed on a free kick and McLean powered the ball into the net. However Shrewsbury were level just minutes later, with Duane Darby smashing in an almost identical goal. In the second half the Shropshire side should have taken the lead when Luke Rodgers crossed for Ryan Lowe, who blazed over from inside the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177470-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Football Conference play-off Final, Match, Summary\nWith the scores level at 1\u20131, silver goal extra time was required, and Lee Charles had a couple of chances to win it for the Shots. Ultimately the match needed a penalty shoot-out to be settled. After Rodgers had missed Shrewsbury's first kick, goalkeeper Scott Howie was the hero, saving all three of Aldershot's penalties while teammates Tolley, Jake Sedgemore and finally Trevor Challis scored theirs to send Shrewsbury back into the Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final\nThe 2004 Football League Cup Final (known as the Carling Cup final for sponsorship reasons) was a football match that took place on 29 February 2004 at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff. It was the final match of the 2003\u201304 Football League Cup, the 44th edition of the Football League Cup, a competition for the 92 teams in the Premier League and The Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final\nIt was contested between Premier League sides Bolton Wanderers and Middlesbrough, both of whom had never won in their previous appearances in the final. Bolton's run to the final included a win away to holders Liverpool in the fourth round, while requiring extra time against Southampton in the next round and losing the second leg of the semi-final against Aston Villa. Middlesbrough needed extra time against lowly Brighton & Hove Albion in their first game, and later advanced on penalty shootouts against top-flight Everton and Tottenham Hotspur; they then won home and away against league leaders Arsenal in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final\nMiddlesbrough scored two goals in the first seven minutes, from Joseph-D\u00e9sir\u00e9 Job and a Boudewijn Zenden penalty. Kevin Davies got a goal back in the first half after an error by Boro goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer, but Middlesbrough kept the score at 2\u20131 for their first major trophy. In doing so, they qualified for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, their first European competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Background\nBolton were playing in their second League Cup Final, having lost the 1995 edition 2\u20131 to Liverpool. Middlesbrough too had never previously won the competition: in 1997 they lost the final after extra time in a replay against Leicester City, and a year later they lost 2\u20130 to Chelsea after extra time. In 1997, they also lost the FA Cup final to Chelsea, and were relegated from the Premier League. Although Middlesbrough, founded in 1876, were without a major trophy, Bolton had 4 FA Cups from 7 finals between 1894 and 1958.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Background\nBolton and Middlesbrough had already met once in the league season, at the former's Reebok Stadium on 13 September 2003. The hosts won 2\u20130 with goals by Bruno Ngotty and Kevin Davies in each half for a first victory of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Bolton\nAs a Premier League team, Bolton began in the second round, hosting Walsall of the First Division at the Reebok Stadium. They won 3\u20131 with two goals \u2013 one a penalty kick \u2013 by Brazilian debutant M\u00e1rio Jardel. In the next round on 28 October, they again hosted a second-tier team, this time Gillingham, and won 2\u20130 with goals by Stelios Giannakopoulos and Henrik Pedersen, in front of a notably low crowd of 5,258.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Bolton\nIn the fourth round, Bolton had their first trip, and their first game against top-flight opposition, facing Liverpool at Anfield on 3 December. Jardel scored the first goal within five minutes, with Danny Murphy equalising with 20 minutes remaining. Youri Djorkaeff would have put Bolton back into the lead, but referee Mike Riley disallowed it for an earlier handball; they scored minutes later from Jay-Jay Okocha's free kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Bolton\nLiverpool got a second equaliser from a 25-yard Vladim\u00edr \u0160micer strike, but with a minute remaining Salif Diao fouled Kevin Davies in the penalty area and Djorkaeff sent the resulting spot-kick past Liverpool goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek to win the game. Thirteen days later, in extra time at home to the Premier League's Southampton, Pedersen volleyed the only goal with five minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Bolton\nOn 21 January 2004, Bolton hosted Aston Villa in the first leg of an all-Premier League semi-final. Okocha gave them the lead with a second-minute free kick, and further strikes from Kevin Nolan and Stelios gave them a 3\u20130 lead after 17 minutes, with Juan Pablo \u00c1ngel getting one back for the visitors soon after. \u00c1ngel got another goal in the second half, before Ngotty's header and a second Okocha free kick gave Bolton a 5\u20132 victory. Six days later in the second leg at Villa Park, Bolton lost 2\u20130 to a Villa team who had Gavin McCann sent off in the first half, but advanced to the final 5\u20134 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Middlesbrough\nMiddlesbrough, also of the Premier League, began the competition in the second round by hosting Brighton & Hove Albion at the Riverside Stadium, and defeated the Second Division team 1\u20130 with a goal from Malcolm Christie at the start of extra time. In the next round, they travelled to Wigan Athletic of the First Division and won 2\u20131 with Massimo Maccarone and Gaizka Mendieta's first goals of the season, despite the hosts at the JJB Stadium scoring a late free kick through Jimmy Bullard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Middlesbrough\nThey met their first top-flight opposition in the fourth round, hosting Everton. After 120 goalless minutes, the match went to a penalty shootout in which Mendieta scored the winner after Middlesbrough goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer saved from Leon Osman. The quarter-final at another Premier League team, Tottenham Hotspur, also went to a shootout. Darren Anderton scored for the hosts within 63 seconds, the first goal Boro conceded for over 11 hours. With four minutes to play, Middlesbrough striker Michael Ricketts equalised after a cross from George Boateng. The shootout, in which Schwarzer denied Mauricio Taricco and Kasey Keller blocked from Mendieta, went to sudden death, in which Middlesbrough's goalkeeper saved from Gus Poyet and Franck Queudrue scored Boro's winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Route to the Final, Middlesbrough\nIn the semi-finals, Boro faced Arsenal, the leaders and eventual unbeaten champions of the Premier League season. In the first leg at Highbury on 20 January 2004, Queudrue exploited a mistake by Arsenal defender Martin Keown and passed to Mendieta, who then assisted Juninho for the only goal of the game. On 3 February, Boro hosted Arsenal in the second leg; Keown was sent off at the end of the first half for a professional foul on Maccarone. In the second half, Boudewijn Zenden put Middlesbrough ahead and Edu equalised. With five minutes remaining, Arsenal's Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes scored an own goal by deflecting Stuart Parnaby's shot, making Middlesbrough advance to the final 3\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nBolton manager Sam Allardyce, who was building a reputation for signing unwanted foreign veterans such as Ngotty, Djorkaeff and Iv\u00e1n Campo, predicted that a win would help him sign more players in the summer. However, he thought that success would also lead his 13 players who would be out of contract, to demand more money for a renewal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Match, Pre-match\nOn-loan Middlesbrough right-back Danny Mills, a self-acknowledged \"hate figure\" from opposition fans due to his physical style of play, declared that he would ignore any abuse from Bolton fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Match, Summary\nMiddlesbrough manager Steve McClaren had not even sat down when his team took the lead. Mendieta's pass let Zenden run down the left wing and cross for striker Joseph-D\u00e9sir\u00e9 Job to put Middlesbrough ahead in the second minute. It was the fastest goal scored in a final, a record broken the following year by Liverpool's John Arne Riise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Match, Summary\nAfter Job's early goal, Bolton went on the attack, with Djorkaeff forcing Schwarzer to make a near-post save. In the seventh minute however, Middlesbrough won a penalty when Job was tripped in the Bolton box by Emerson Thome, under \"minimal contact\". Zenden stepped up to take the spot kick and beat Bolton goalkeeper Jussi J\u00e4\u00e4skel\u00e4inen, despite slipping and the goalkeeper's foot touching the ball. Later, Thome nearly scored an own goal from Juninho's cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Match, Summary\nDavies scored for Bolton on 21 minutes when an error by Middlesbrough goalkeeper Schwarzer allowed his shot to go inside his near post. Bolton continued to attack, and Schwarzer made a double save from winger Per Frandsen and Djorkaeff. The latter had two more chances soon after, missing the target with the first. Boro pleaded for a second penalty when Nicky Hunt pulled Job, but referee Riley did not give it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Match, Summary\nThe second half had fewer incidents. Schwarzer saved a header from Nolan, while Juninho had two opportunities for Middlesbrough. In the final few minutes, Thome made a crucial block against Mendieta, and at the other side of the pitch Ugo Ehiogu did the same to thwart Stelios.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Post-match\nWinning manager McClaren called the victory a \"great reward\" for Middlesbrough's players, managers and chairman Steve Gibson. Captain Gareth Southgate also dedicated the win to the fans and Gibson, calling the chairman \"the biggest fan we've got\". Gibson himself called the win \"128 years in the making\" and predicted the team would \"kick on\" from it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Post-match\nMcClaren praised his goalkeeper Schwarzer for recovering from his error that allowed Bolton's goal, in order to make saves that won the match. He also said that the team should not become carried away by their qualification for Europe, and instead concentrate on the upcoming game against Birmingham City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Post-match\nBy winning the final, Middlesbrough qualified for the following season's UEFA Cup, their first European competition. They beat Ban\u00edk Ostrava in the first round and came first in their group featuring Villarreal, Partizan, Lazio and Egaleo. They then defeated Grazer AK in the third round before being eliminated by Sporting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Post-match\nColumnist Henry Winter The Daily Telegraph wrote that it was the best League Cup Final since Luton Town beat Arsenal in 1988. He praised all four of Middlesbrough's back line for their \"alert defending\", and noted the hard work in midfield by Boateng that allowed Zenden, Juninho and Mendieta to create chances. He also lauded Bolton's fans and the efforts of Okocha, Djorkaeff and Davies, while noting how Bolton's Campo was effective despite \"the odd pantomime dive\". Alan Smith of the same newspaper opined that 33-year-old Southgate was the most deserving winner, as reward for his consistency since arriving in an \"average\" Boro side in 2001. Southgate's only other medal had come in the same competition for Aston Villa eight years prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177471-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Cup Final, Post-match\nIn June 2013, Juninho said that winning the League Cup with Middlesbrough was better than when he won the FIFA World Cup with Brazil in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final\nThe 2004 Football League First Division play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 29 May 2004 at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, between Crystal Palace and West Ham United. The match was to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from the Football League First Division, the second tier of English football, to the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final\nThe top two teams of the 2003\u201304 Football League First Division season gained automatic promotion to the Premier League, while the clubs placed from third to sixth place in the table took part in play-off semi-finals; West Ham ended the season in fourth position while Crystal Palace finished sixth. The winners of these semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2004\u201305 season in the Premier League. Ipswich Town and Sunderland were the losing semi-finalists. Winning the final was estimated to be worth up to \u00a330\u00a0million to the successful team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final\nThe 2005 final was played in front of a crowd of 72,523 and was refereed by Graham Poll. After a goalless first half, Crystal Palace took the lead with a goal from Neil Shipperley in the 62nd minute. West Ham twice had goals ruled out for offside and were denied a penalty late in the second half, and Palace held on to win 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final\nWest Ham finished the following season in sixth place in the Championship and gained promotion through the play-offs, beating Preston North End in the final. Palace were relegated on the final day of the following season finishing in 18th place in the table, making an immediate return to the second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nWest Ham United finished the regular 2003\u201304 season in fifth place in the Football League First Division, the second tier of the English football league system, two places and one point ahead of Crystal Palace. Both therefore missed out on the two automatic places for promotion to the Premier League and instead took part in the play-offs, along with Sunderland and Ipswich Town, to determine the third promoted team. West Ham finished twelve points behind West Bromwich Albion (who were promoted in second place) and twenty behind league winners Norwich City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nCrystal Palace manager Iain Dowie had been appointed in December 2003 with the club in 19th position, before losing just six times in the final half of the season to finish sixth, a turnaround in form described by the BBC as \"a remarkable transformation\". Their qualification for the play-offs was secured in injury time of the final game of the season when West Ham's Brian Deane equalised against Wigan Athletic. Palace faced Sunderland in their play-off semi-final with the first leg being played at Selhurst Park on 14 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nAfter a goalless first half, Sunderland took the lead early in the second through a Marcus Stewart penalty. Within a minute, Neil Shipperley equalised with a header before Danny Butterfield's deflected shot gave Palace the lead ten minutes later. Kevin Kyle levelled the tie with five minutes to go before Andrew Johnson restored Palace's lead two minutes later, with the match ending 3\u20132. The second leg took place at the Stadium of Light in Sunderland three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nAlthough Palace's Aki Riihilahti hit the woodwork in the sixth minute, Kyle scored in the 42nd minute to level the tie on aggregate. Stewart scored with a header just before half-time to make it 4\u20133 to Sunderland before substitute Darren Powell's header made it 4\u20134 on aggregate and sent the semi-final to penalties. John Oster and Jason McAteer both missed penalties for Sunderland while Mart Poom saved twice, from Shaun Derry and Wayne Routledge. Jeff Whitley then failed to score and Michael Hughes struck the winning spot-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nWest Ham's play-off semi-final opponents were Ipswich Town, and the first leg took place at Portman Road in Ipswich on 15 May 2004. Ian Westlake's shot was cleared off the line by West Ham's Andy Melville in the first half, which ended goalless. Twelve minutes into the second half, Darren Bent scored with a header after Richard Naylor's initial shot rebounded off the crossbar, and the game ended 1\u20130. The return leg was played at the Boleyn Ground three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nBent missed an early chance to extend Ipswich's lead and Steve Lomas hit the post for West Ham, the first half ending goalless. In the 50th minute, Matthew Etherington scored from inside the Ipswich penalty area with a strike described by the BBC as a \"screamer\" to level the tie. Twenty minutes later, an Etherington corner was poorly defended by Ipswich, and Christian Dailly's shot was deflected into the Ipswich goal off Tommy Miller's heel. Westlake hit the post in the last minute but West Ham held on to win the semi-final 2\u20131 on aggregate to qualify for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nThis was Crystal Palace's fourth appearance in the second tier play-off final, with their most recent being in the 1997 final at the old Wembley Stadium which they won 1\u20130 against Sheffield United. Palace had also won the 1989 final (over two legs) against Blackburn Rovers and had lost the 1996 final in extra time against Leicester City. West Ham were making their first appearance in a second-tier playoff final. Crystal Palace's Johnson was the league's leading scorer with 27 goals in the regular season, while his teammate Dougie Freedman was the club's second highest scorer with 13. West Ham's top scorer was Marlon Harewood who had struck 25 goals during the regular league season, although 12 of them were for his previous club, Nottingham Forest, from whom he moved in November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nDuring the regular league season, both sides won at home in the matches between them: in October 2003, West Ham won 3\u20130 at Boleyn Park while six months later, Palace triumphed 1\u20130 at Selhurst Park. The referee for the match was Graham Poll representing the Hertfordshire County Football Association. Winning the final was estimated to be worth up to \u00a330\u00a0million to the successful team. It was the fourth time the second tier play-off final was hosted by the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe match kicked off around 3\u00a0p.m. in front of a Millennium Stadium crowd of 72,523 spectators. Early in the first half, Dailly fouled Riihilahti and from the resulting Palace free kick, Butterfield's shot was just wide of the West Ham goalpost. On 17 minutes, Johnson's free header from a Routledge cross went over the crossbar despite Shipperley being in a better position. Palace defender Danny Granville subsequently missed a chance after West Ham's goalkeeper Stephen Bywater fumbled a Shaun Derry corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nIn the 20th minute, Michael Carrick's chipped through-ball sent Bobby Zamora free but his shot was straight into Nico Vaesen's legs. Approaching half time, Routledge played in a cross and Hughes' initial strike was blocked. His second attempt from the rebound beat Bywater but was cleared off the line by Tom\u00e1\u0161 \u0158epka. Zamora then saw a penalty appeal denied after he felt he was fouled by Mikele Leigertwood on the edge of the Palace box. The first half ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nEarly in the second half, West Ham increased the pressure with Vaesen saving a 25 yards (23\u00a0m) Lomas shot, and Melville's appeal for a penalty was turned down mafter his shot was blocked. The deadlock was broken in the 62nd minute as Shipperley scored for Palace. Johnson twisted and struck a shot through Dailly's legs which Bywater failed to hold, allowing Shipperley to tap the ball in from close range. David Connolly and subsequently Zamora then saw goals disallowed for offside. Carrick's shot from distance was then saved by Vaesen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nIn the 68th minute, West Ham made a double substitution with Deane and Nigel Reo-Coker coming on to replace Zamora and Harewood. A minute later Palace brought on Powell for Butterfield before Palace made their third and final substitution, with Don Hutchison replacing Connolly. In the 83rd minute, Leigertwood appeared to bring down Carrick in front of Poll, but no penalty was awarded. Palace held on to win 1\u20130 and secure promotion to the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Post-match\nWinning manager Dowie was quick to praise his team: \"The players have shown great commitment and desire. We showed today that we are a good football side and now we have to take on the superpowers\". He was realistic about the forthcoming season, noting \"we have got to come up with a format for keeping us in the Premier League; it is a huge ask\". His counterpart Alan Pardew described it as a \"dark day\" for West Ham, suggesting: \"all our fans, their dreams and ambitions for the club, have been ended and it hits your right between the eyes\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177472-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League First Division play-off Final, Post-match\nWest Ham finished the following season in sixth place in the Championship and gained promotion through the play-offs, beating Preston North End 1\u20130 in the final. Palace were relegated on the final day of the following season after a 2\u20132 draw with Charlton Athletic consigned them to 18th place in the table and assured their immediate return to the second tier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final\nThe 2004 Football Second Division play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 30 May 2004 at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, between Brighton & Hove Albion and Bristol City to determine the third and final team to gain promotion from the Football League Second Division to the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final\nThe top two teams of the 2003\u201304 Second Division season, Plymouth Argyle and Queens Park Rangers, gained automatic promotion to the Championship, while the teams placed from third to sixth place in the table took part in play-off semi-finals; the winners of these semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2004\u201305 season in the Championship. Brighton and Bristol defeated Swindon Town and Hartlepool United, respectively, in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final\nThe final kicked off around 3\u00a0p.m. in front of a crowd of 65,167 and was refereed by Richard Beeby. The first half ended scoreless: Brian Tinnion's free kick was kept out by Brighton's goalkeeper Ben Roberts, and after Tommy Doherty fouled Nathan Jones in the 43rd minute, Leon Knight's curling free kick from 20 yards (18 metres) struck the Bristol City crossbar. Neither side made any changes to their personnel during the interval. On 84 minutes, Chris Iwelumo was brought down by Danny Coles in the Bristol City penalty area. The referee awarded a penalty which Knight struck past Steve Phillips in the Bristol City goal. Bristol City pressured late but could not score, and the match ended 1\u20130 with Brighton being promoted to the newly renamed Football League Championship (formerly Football League First Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final\nBrighton ended the next season in twentieth place in the First Division, two places and one point above the relegation zone. Bristol City manager Danny Wilson left the club the week after the final. In their following season, Bristol City finished in seventh position in the Second Division and missed out on the play-offs by one place and one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nBristol City finished the regular 2003\u201304 season in third place in Football League Second Division, the third tier of the English football league system, one place ahead of Brighton & Hove Albion. Both therefore missed out on the two automatic places for promotion to the Football League Championship and instead took part in the play-offs to determine the third promoted team. Bristol City finished one point behind Queens Park Rangers (who were promoted in second place) and eight behind league winners Plymouth Argyle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nBrighton's opponents for their play-off semi-final were Swindon Town with the first match of the two-legged tie taking place at the County Ground in Swindon on 16 May 2004. In the 35th minute, a shot from Swindon's Sammy Igoe hit the Brighton goalpost, and midway through the second half, Tommy Mooney's strike hit the underside of Brighton's crossbar. With 18 minutes remaining, Richard Carpenter's deflected shot beat Rhys Evans in the Swindon goal to secure a 1\u20130 victory for the visitors. The second leg was played four days later at the Withdean Stadium in Brighton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nAfter a goalless first half, Sam Parkin put Swindon ahead with a close-range shot in the 81st minute. With the aggregate score level 1\u20131 at full time, the game went into extra time, and midway through the first period, Rory Fallon put Swindon ahead with a low shot under Brighton's goalkeeper Ben Roberts. A diving header from Adam Virgo in the last moments of extra time made it 2\u20132 on aggregate and sent the match to a penalty shootout. Mooney missed his penalty and Andy Gurney's spot kick hit the post, and with all the other shots being converted, allowed Brighton to progress to the final with a 4\u20133 win on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nIn the second semi-final, Bristol City faced Hartlepool United; the first leg took place at Victoria Park in Hartlepool on 15 May 2004. The visitors took the lead after four minutes when Tony Rougier headed in Lee Peacock's cross. Joel Porter equalised for Hartlepool in the 74th minute to secure a 1\u20131 draw. The second leg was held three days at Ashton Gate in Bristol. Five minutes before half-time, Adam Boyd hit Bristol City's goalpost and the half ended goalless. Midway through the second half, Hartlepool's Antony Sweeney scored with a header from an Eifion Williams cross. With two minutes remaining, Marc Goodfellow levelled the match with a header before Christian Roberts made it 2\u20131 to Bristol City in the last minute, sending his side to the final with a 3\u20132 aggregate victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nBrighton had participated in one play-off final prior to 2004, when they lost 3\u20131 to Notts County in the 1991 Football League play-offs. This was Bristol City's fourth involvement in the play-offs and their second final; they had lost in the semi-finals in 1997 and 2003, and in the 1988 Football League Third Division play-off Final 4\u20130 by Walsall after a replay. Brighton had been relegated from the First Division the previous season so were aiming for an immediate return, while Bristol City had played in the Second Division since suffering relegation from the First Division in the 1998\u201399 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nIn the matches between the clubs during the regular season, Bristol City won the game at the Withdean 4\u20131 in November 2003, while the game the following April at Ashton Gate ended in a goalless draw. Brighton's top scorer during the regular season was Leon Knight with 25 goals, all in the league. For Bristol City, Peacock led the scoring with 16 goals (14 in the league and 2 in the League Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nBrighton manager Mark McGhee expressed hope that his club's exposure at a major final would bring publicity to their aim to build a new ground, saying he believed \"the final would be a fantastic platform to demonstrate how badly we need a bigger stadium\". McGhee had lost in three previous play-off semi-finals and was \"happy for City to be favourites\" to win this final. He had taken the job as Brighton manager in October 2003, having left Millwall two weeks earlier \"by mutual consent\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nHis counterpart, Danny Wilson, had been in charge at Bristol City since 2000, and had led the team to victory in the 2003 Football League Trophy Final at the Millennium Stadium. He said: \"There's so much at stake, it'll be very tense. What I will guarantee is that we'll give everything\u00a0... All that work we did as far back as last July now hinges on 90 minutes or even one penalty kick.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nPeacock's availability was in doubt for Bristol City with an injured ankle while Mickey Bell was suffering from a jarred knee. The final was broadcast live in the UK on Sky Sports and live commentary was available on BBC Radio 5 Live. Both sides adopted a 4\u20134\u20132 formation. The referee for the match was Richard Beeby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe final kicked off around 3\u00a0p.m. at the Millennium Stadium on 30 May 2004 in front of a crowd of 65,167. According to Nick Szczepanik, writing in The Times, the first half was \"a half of fouls and free kicks\". Brian Tinnion's free kick was kept out by Ben Roberts. In the 33rd minute, Virgo was shown the first yellow card of the game. In the 40th minute, Roberts dropped a cross from Craig Woodman only for Tony Butler to shoot over the crossbar. Knight went closest to breaking the deadlock in the 43rd minute: Tommy Doherty had fouled Nathan Jones, and Knight's curling free kick from 20 yards (18 metres) struck the Bristol City crossbar. The first half ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nNeither side made any changes to their personnel during the interval. On 62 minutes, both sides made their first substitutions, with Brighton's Paul Reid coming on for Carpenter and Scott Murray replacing Lee Miller for Bristol City. In the 69th minute, Doherty became the first Bristol City player to be booked. On 78 minutes, Brighton made their second personnel change with John Piercy for Jones. Four minutes later Bristol City's Luke Wilkshire was brought on for Tinnion. On 84 minutes, Chris Iwelumo ran into the Bristol City penalty area, where he was brought down by Danny Coles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe referee awarded a penalty which Knight struck past Steve Phillips in the Bristol City goal to make it 1\u20130 to Brighton. It was his 26th goal of the season and made him the highest scorer in the league. In the 88th minute, Goodfellow came on for Butler. Bristol City could not score despite late pressure, and the match ended 1\u20130; Brighton was promoted to the newly renamed Football League Championship (formerly Football League First Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 67], "content_span": [68, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Post-match\nMcGhee claimed the best team won, saying: \"They never hurt us and I cannot remember any critical saves that Ben Roberts had to make\u00a0... To be a part of a day like this is incredible \u2013 as good as anything you will ever experience in football.\" Knight, the winning goalscorer, said he was confident that he was going to score the decisive penalty, recalling his recent success rate: \"I have taken eight this season and scored every one.\" The Brighton chairman Dick Knight reiterated the importance of the new stadium to the club and its fans: \"I just hope John Prescott realises just how much this means to the people of Brighton.\" Some of Brighton's players dropped the trophy while celebrating, damaging it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Post-match\nWilson suggested both disappointed and that the game was even: \"There was nothing between the two clubs and they've just had that little bit of luck that gave them the win\u00a0... It was always going to take something like a penalty to win because it was so nervy.\" He left Bristol City the following month with club chairman Stephen Lansdown, confirming that the play-off final defeat \"unquestionably caused the momentum of the club to falter\", and that \"the board believes it is time for a change\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177473-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Second Division play-off Final, Post-match\nBrighton ended the next season in twentieth place in the First Division, two places and one point above the relegation zone. In their following season, Bristol City finished in seventh position in the Second Division and missed out on the play-offs by one place and one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 63], "content_span": [64, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final\nThe 2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final was an association football match which was played on 31 May 2004 at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, between Huddersfield Town and Mansfield Town to determine the fourth and final team to gain promotion from the Football League Third Division to Football League One (the renamed Second Division). The top three teams of the 2003\u201304 Third Division season, Doncaster Rovers, Hull City and Torquay United, gained automatic promotion to League One, while those placed from fourth to seventh place in the table took part in play-offs. The winners of the semi-finals competed for the final place for the 2004\u201305 season in Football League One. Huddersfield and Mansfield defeated Lincoln City and Northampton Town, respectively, in the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final\nThe final kicked off around 3\u00a0p.m. in front of a crowd of 37,298 and was refereed by Mark Clattenburg. Both sides had chances to score in regular time and in the final minute of the match, Colin Larkin put the ball into the Huddersfield net but the goal was disallowed as the ball had gone out of play during the build-up. The match was goalless after 90 minutes, sending it into extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final\nTony Carss went close for Huddersfield in the first period of additional time while Laurent D'Jaffo and Wayne Corden missed chances for Mansfield, but with no score after 120 minutes, a penalty shootout was required to decide the outcome of the match. Huddersfield scored their first three penalties while Mansfield converted one, and Lee Fowler scored Huddersfield's fourth penalty to secure a 4\u20131 victory for his side and promotion to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final\nHuddersfield's next season saw them finish in ninth place in Football League One, three positions and one point below the play-offs. Mansfield ended their following season in thirteenth position in Football League Two (the renamed Third Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nHuddersfield Town finished the regular 2003\u201304 season in fourth place in the Football League Third Division, the fourth tier of the English football league system, one position ahead of Mansfield Town. Both therefore missed out on the three automatic places for promotion to the Second Division and instead took part in the play-offs to determine the fourth promoted team. Huddersfield Town finished level on points with Torquay United (who were promoted in third place with superior goal difference), seven behind Hull City (who were promoted in second) and eleven behind league winners Doncaster Rovers. Huddersfield missed out on automatic promotion on the final day of the regular season when they drew with Cheltenham Town, allowing Torquay to secure third place, after they beat Southend United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nMansfield Town faced Northampton Town in their play-off semi-final with the first match of the two-legged tie taking place at Sixfields in Northampton on 16 May 2004. The home side dominated the first half but Mansfield took the lead five minutes before half-time when Rhys Day scored with a header from a Liam Lawrence cross. Midway through the second half, Junior Mendes doubled the lead from close range after the Northampton goalkeeper Lee Harper failed to keep hold of Tom Curtis' shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nIn the final minute of the match, Northampton were reduced to ten men when Ashley Westwood was sent off for a foul on Colin Larkin, and the match ended 2\u20130. The second leg took place four days later at Field Mill in Mansfield. Ten minutes before half-time, Mansfield went ahead after Marc Richards scored with a volley from a Paul Trollope pass. Chris Hargreaves then scored with a header from a Martin Smith free kick to make it 2\u20130 at half time, levelling the tie on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nThirty seconds into the second half, Smith made it 3\u20130 after Trollope capitalised on a misplaced pass from Wayne Corden. Northampton levelled the tie on aggregate when Curtis scored from a rebound. Regular time finished with the aggregate score 3\u20133 and the game went into extra time, but with no change to the scoreline, a penalty shootout was required to decide the tie. Both sides scored their first three penalties before Northampton's \u00c9ric Sabin saw his spotkick saved by Kevin Pilkington, the Mansfield goalkeeper. All the remaining penalties were scored so Mansfield won 5\u20134 to progress to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nHuddersfield Town's opposition for their semi-final were Lincoln City and the first leg was held at Sincil Bank in Lincoln on 15 May 2004. Iffy Onuora put the visiting side ahead after five minutes with a close-range header from a Rob Edwards corner. In the 51st minute, Lincoln equalised: a long throw-in from Kevin Ellison eventually found Simon Yeo whose volley was saved by Paul Rachubka but the rebound was scored by Gary Fletcher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Route to the final\nHuddersfield regained the lead through David Mirfin: Andy Holdsworth's corner was headed goalward by Andy Booth and saved by Alan Marriott but the ball fell to Mirfin who scored from a tight angle, ending the match 2\u20131 to Huddersfield. The second leg was played four days later at the McAlpine Stadium in Huddersfield. Richard Butcher scored in the 38th minute after a defensive mix-up between Rachubka and Efe Sodje to give Lincoln a 1\u20130 lead before Mark Bailey doubled the lead with a shot from the edge of the Huddersfield penalty area. In the 60th minute, Lincoln's Jamie McCombe fouled Booth to concede a penalty which Danny Schofield converted. Late in the match, Edwards scored from the edge of the Lincoln box to make it 2\u20132 and give Huddersfield a 4\u20133 aggregate victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nThis was Huddersfield's fourth appearance in the play-offs and their second final, having won the 1995 Football League Second Division play-off Final 2\u20131 against Bristol Rovers at Wembley Stadium. They had been relegated to the Third Division the previous season and were aiming for an immediate return. Mansfield were playing in their first play-off final, having been knocked out in the semi-finals on one prior occasion, in 1995. They had also been relegated to the Third Division the preceding season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nIn the two matches between the sides during the regular season, the first ended in a 3\u20133 at Field Mill in November 2003 while the return game saw Mansfield win 3\u20131 at Sixfields the following May. Lawrence was Mansfield's top scorer with 22 goals in the regular season (19 in the league and 3 in the FA Cup) followed by Mendes on 12 (11 in the League and 1 in the FA Cup). Jon Stead, who had joined Blackburn Rovers in January 2004, led the scoring for Huddersfield with 18 goals (16 in the league and 2 in the League Cup) followed by Booth on 14 (13 in the league and 1 in the League Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Background\nThe referee for the match was Mark Clattenburg. Huddersfield were considered favourites to win the match according to the Racing Post. Mansfield adopted a 4\u20134\u20132 formation while Huddersfield played as a 3\u20135\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe match kicked off around 3\u00a0p.m. on 31 May 2004 at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff in front of a crowd of 37,298. Six minutes into the game, Booth headed a cross from Anthony Lloyd narrowly wide of the Mansfield goal before Lawrence shot wide. Mansfield's Bobby Hassell also struck the ball wide of the Huddersfield goal. Midway through the first half, the Mansfield goalkeeper Pilkington saved from Schofield. A strike from Lawrence then went high over the Mansfield crossbar before Pawel Abbott's shot from close range was caught by Pilkington. Just before half time, Adam Eaton's shot was wide of the Huddersfield goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nNeither side made any changes to their personnel during the interval and nine minutes into the second half, Schofield had a chance to score after a jinking run but was tackled by Eaton. As the half progressed, fouls crept into the game with both Eaton and Sodje booked for poor challenges. Booth's header was then saved before Lloyd's mis-hit shot found Schofield whose strike was blocked by Curtis. In the 76th minute Corden's cross from the left wing found substitute Larkin who missed the ball with an attempted header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nBooth then sent a chip wide of Mansfield's goal after making a break. Corden's last-minute shot from long range was saved by Rachubka before Larkin's goal was disallowed after Laurent D'Jaffo's cross to him was adjudged to have gone out, and regular time ended goalless, sending the match into extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Match, Summary\nIn the 94th minute, Tony Carss sent a curling shot from around 25 yards (23\u00a0m) just wide of the Mansfield goal before both D'Jaffo and Corden missed opportunities to score at the other end of the pitch. With the game still without a goal at the conclusion of the additional period of play, a penalty shootout was required to determine the result. Huddersfield's Edwards took the first penalty and scored before Corden's shot was saved. Schofield then made it 2\u20130 and Lawrence missed Mansfield's second penalty. Carss converted Huddersfield's third spot kick before Neil MacKenzie scored for Mansfield to make it 3\u20131. Lee Fowler scored Huddersfield's fourth penalty to secure a 4\u20131 victory for his side and promotion to the Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Post-match\nPeter Jackson, the Huddersfield manager, reflected on his side's success despite recent financial struggles as a year prior the club had gone into administration: \"I'm absolutely thrilled to bits with what we've achieved this year\u00a0... Nine months ago, when only eight players turn up, you think you've got a difficult job.\" He paid tribute to his counterpart, Keith Curle, saying \"We are all delighted but we have to feel sorry for Keith Curle and his team because it is a terrible way to lose.\" Curle was downbeat: \"More than cruel. That hurts.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177474-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Third Division play-off Final, Post-match\nHuddersfield's next season saw them finish in ninth place in Football League One (the renamed Second Division), three positions and one point below the play-offs. Mansfield ended their following season in thirteenth position in Football League Two (the renamed Third Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177475-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League Trophy Final\nThe 2004 Football League Trophy Final was the 21st final of the domestic football cup competition for teams from Football Leagues One, Two and The Conference, the Football League Trophy. The final was played at Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 21 March 2004. The match was contested between Blackpool and Southend United. Blackpool won the match 2\u20130 with goals from John Murphy and Danny Coid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177476-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League play-offs\nThe Football League play-offs for the 2003\u201304 season were held in May 2004, with the finals taking place at Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. The play-off semi-finals will be played over two legs and will be contested by the teams who finish in 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th place in the Football League First Division and Football League Second Division and the 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th placed teams in the Football League Third Division table. The winners of the semi-finals will go through to the finals, with the winner of the matches gaining promotion for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177476-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League play-offs, Background\nThe Football League play-offs have been held every year since 1987. They take place for each division following the conclusion of the regular season and are contested by the four clubs finishing below the automatic promotion places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177476-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League play-offs, Background\nIn the First Division, Sunderland, who are aiming to return to the top flight after relegation last season, finished 7 points behind second placed West Bromwich Albion, who in turn finished 8 points behind champions Norwich City, who returned to the Premier League for the first time since 1995. West Ham United who are also along with Sunderland aiming to return to the top flight after relegation last season, finished in fourth place in the table. Ipswich Town who are looking for a place back in the top flight at the second attempt, finished in fifth place. Crystal Palace finished level on points with Ipswich Town and were looking for a place back in the Premiership for the first time since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177476-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League play-offs, First Division, Semi-finals\nSunderland 4\u20134 Crystal Palace on aggregate. Crystal Palace won 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177476-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League play-offs, Second Division, Semi-finals\nBrighton & Hove Albion 2\u20132 Swindon Town on aggregate. Brighton & Hove Albion won 4\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177476-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Football League play-offs, Third Division, Semi-finals\nMansfield Town 3\u20133 Northampton Town on aggregate. Mansfield Town won 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ford 400\nThe 2004 Ford 400 was an NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on November 21, 2004 at Homestead Miami Speedway in Homestead, Florida. Contested over 267 laps on the 1.5 mile (2.4\u00a0km) speedway, it was the 36th and final race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Greg Biffle won the race and Kurt Busch won the championship, both driving for Roush Racing. This was the last race without Kyle Busch until the 2015 Daytona 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ford 400, Background\nHomestead-Miami Speedway is a motor racing track located in Homestead, Florida. The track, which has several configurations, has promoted several series of racing, including NASCAR, the IndyCar Series, the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series and the Championship Cup Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ford 400, Background\nSince 2002, Homestead-Miami Speedway has hosted the final race of the season in all three of NASCAR's series: the Sprint Cup Series, Xfinity Series and the Camping World Truck Series. Ford Motor Company sponsors all three of the season-ending races; the races have the names Ford 400, Ford 300 and Ford 200, respectively, and the weekend is marketed as Ford Championship Weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ford 400, Qualifying\nQualifying took place on November 19, 2004. During Casey Mears' warmup lap, Mears would lose the back end of his car in the middle of Turns 3-4, slamming the back end into the wall and destroying the car. Mears would not be able to complete a lap in qualifying, so the #41 team took a provisional because the team was in the Top 35 in owner's points. However, they would have to start in the back because they had to bring in a backup car. The #93 of Geoff Bodine would also not run qualifying laps, this time due to unspecified reasons and would withdraw from the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ford 400, Race recap\nThis race was known as the deciding race of the 2004 Nextel Cup champion in the first ever Chase for the Nextel Cup, in which five drivers were still mathematically alive for the championship including the points leader, Kurt Busch with an 18-point margin ahead of Jimmie Johnson, who earned the most wins in 2004, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and veteran Mark Martin. Those five chasers are separated by an 82-point margin from first to fifth for the final race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Ford 400, Race recap\nAt the start of lap 1, Hermie Sadler got turned sideways while Mike Bliss was spun around but Johnson survived the wreck in the following caution. On lap 93, championship leader Kurt Busch lost a tire when he entered pit road, he lost the championship lead to Jeff Gordon, though Busch took back the points lead. With 3 laps to go, race leader Ryan Newman made some contact and lost the right side of the tire, the caution was out and set a Green-white-checker finish at Homestead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177477-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 Ford 400, Race recap\nAt the restart, Greg Biffle held off the hard charging Hendrick teams of Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon for the race lead and took the checkered flag to win the Ford 400, while Johnson and Gordon finished 2nd and 3rd. Kurt Busch won the 2004 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Championship by just 8 points over Johnson with a 5th-place finish after starting on the Pole and leading the opening 4 laps, the closest margin in Cup history until the 2011 season, won by Tony Stewart. Stewart and Carl Edwards were tied following the 2011 season's last race, the Cup going to Stewart by virtue of more wins on the season, 5 to 1 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 25], "content_span": [26, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177478-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fordham Rams football team\nThe 2004 Fordham Rams football team was an American football team that represented Fordham University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Fordham finished fifth in the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177478-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fordham Rams football team\nIn their first year under head coach Ed Foley, the Rams compiled a 5\u20136 record. Jared Amatuzzo, NaQuinton Gainous, Edward Gordon and Tad Kornegay were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177478-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fordham Rams football team\nDespite their losing record, the Rams outscored opponents 288 to 270. Their 2\u20134 conference record placed fifth out of seven in the Patriot League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177478-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Fordham Rams football team\nFordham played its home games at Jack Coffey Field on the university's Rose Hill campus in The Bronx, in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177479-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula 3 Euro Series\nThe 2004 Formula 3 Euro Series season was the second championship year of Europe's premier Formula Three series. The championship consisted of ten rounds\u00a0\u2013 each with two races\u00a0\u2013 held at a variety of European circuits. Each weekend consisted of 1 hour and 30 minutes of free practice on Friday\u00a0\u2013 in either one or two sessions\u00a0\u2013 and two 30-minute qualifying sessions. This was followed by a c.110\u00a0km race on Saturday and a c.80\u00a0km race on Sunday. Each qualifying session awarded one bonus point for pole position and each race awarded points for the top eight finishers, with ten points per win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177479-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula 3 Euro Series, Season standings, Drivers' standings\n\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177479-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula 3 Euro Series, Season standings, Drivers' standings\n1 Note: Eric Salignon's pole position for race 1 at Pau was initially withdrawn due to a 10-place grid penalty for an engine change after an accident in race 1. Salignon's team successfully claimed force majeure and the pole was reinstated, but the bonus point was not awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177479-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula 3 Euro Series, Season standings, Rookie Cup\nRookie drivers are only eligible for the Rookie Cup title if they have not previously competed in a national or international Formula 3 championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177480-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula 3 Sudamericana season\nThe 2004 Formula 3 Sudamericana season was the 15th Formula 3 Sudamericana season. It began on 24 April 2004, at Aut\u00f3dromo Internacional Nelson Piquet in Bras\u00edlia and ended on 19 December at Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace in S\u00e3o Paulo. Brazilian driver Alexandre Sarnes Negr\u00e3o won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177481-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW ADAC season\nThe 2004 Formula BMW ADAC season was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship featured drivers competing in 1.2 litre Formula BMW single seat race cars. The 2004 season was the seventh Formula BMW ADAC season organized by BMW Motorsport and ADAC. The season began at Hockenheimring on 17 April and finished at the same place on 3 October, after twenty races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177481-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW ADAC season\nSebastian Vettel won 18 of 20 races, on his way to championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177481-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW ADAC season, 2004 Schedule\nThe series supported the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters at nine rounds, with additional round at the European Grand Prix on 29\u201330 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177481-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW ADAC season, Standings\n\u2020\u00a0\u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177482-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW Asia season\nThe 2004 Formula BMW Asia season was won by Marchy Lee of Hong Kong, driving for Team Meritus. Lee finished the season on 250 points, followed by BMW Junior driver, 24-year-old You Kyong-Ouk and Rookie Cup winner Mehdi Bennani), both on 124 points. Lee receive an extra prize in recognition of his extraordinary achievements \u2013 a three-day test with the Team Rosberg Formula 3 outfit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177483-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW UK season\nThe 2004 Formula BMW UK season was the inaugural season of the British Formula BMW championship for young drivers making the transition to car racing. The series supported every BTCC round apart from round nine at Rockingham which supported the Days of Thunder championship. Tim Bridgman won the championship with his small family fun team after scoring in every round. Ayrton Senna's nephew Bruno Senna also took part in the championship towards the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177483-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW UK season, Teams and drivers\nAll cars were Mygale FB02 chassis powered by BMW engines. Guest drivers in italics. All teams were British-registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177484-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW USA season\nThe 2004 Formula BMW USA season was the inaugural season of the American Formula BMW championship for young drivers making the transition to car racing. The Overall Championship was won by Andreas Wirth as the Rookie Cup was won by James Hinchcliffe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177484-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula BMW USA season, Teams and drivers\nAll cars were Mygale FB02 chassis powered by BMW engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177485-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Ford Zetec Championship Series\nThe 2004 Formula Ford Zetec Cooper Tires Championship Series was the fourth the USF2000 Ford Zetec championship. Cape Motorsports driver Bobby Wilson took the title in a Van Diemen RF03. Jason Bowles won the rookie of the year title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177486-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Nippon Championship\nThe 2004 Formula Nippon Championship was contested over 9 rounds. 8 teams and 17 drivers competed. All teams had to use Lola chassis (Lola B3/51) and Mugen Honda (Mugen MF308) engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship\nThe 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship was the 58th season of FIA Formula One motor racing. It was the 55th FIA Formula One World Championship, and was contested over eighteen races from 7 March to 24 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship\nThe championship was dominated by Michael Schumacher and Ferrari, with Schumacher winning the Drivers' Championship for the seventh and last time. Schumacher's teammate Rubens Barrichello finished the championship in second with Jenson Button coming in third for BAR. Ferrari won the Constructors' Championship for a record 14th time ahead of BAR and Renault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship\nIn this championship, several records were broken. Michael Schumacher won 13 races, breaking his record of 11 race wins in one season from 2002. He also broke the record for most consecutive World Drivers' titles (5) and Ferrari broke the record for most consecutive Constructors' titles (6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers\nFour of the ten teams, Ferrari, Renault, Jaguar, and Toyota, were subsidiaries of major car companies. However, BAR was a division of British American Tobacco. Williams and McLaren, both privately-owned teams, had engine supply agreements with BMW and Mercedes-Benz respectively, and Honda produced engines for BAR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Teams and drivers\nThe other three teams, Jordan, Sauber and Minardi, were also privately owned but received little substantial sponsorship and consequently tended to end up toward the back of the grid. Sauber received Ferrari engines badged under the Petronas name and received sponsorship from the Malaysian oil and gas company.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Rule changes\nFrom the 2004 season onward, all the teams that did not finish in the top four in the previous year's Constructors' Championship were allowed to run a third car in the Friday practice session before each Grand Prix, for testing purposes. While other teams were permitted to have test drivers, they were not allowed to compete in the Friday practice. Sauber chose not to run its third driver in these sessions because of the added expense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Rule changes\nThe 2004 season also saw a change in technical regulations, including the banning of two electronic driver aid systems, namely fully-automatic gearboxes and launch control, both of which had been used for the past three seasons, marking the first time since the beginning of 2001 (pre-Spanish Grand Prix) that cars competed without using these systems. However, the use of traction control was still permitted by the FIA, and continued to be allowed for use over the next three seasons, until it was officially banned for the 2008 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season calendar\nThe 2004 Formula One calendar featured two new events: the Bahrain Grand Prix and the Chinese Grand Prix, held at two newly built circuits in Sakhir and Shanghai. The season featured the most races outside Europe to that point; eight Grands Prix were held in the Americas, Asia, and Oceania. The Brazilian Grand Prix moved from its traditional early season slot to become the season finale, whereas the United States Grand Prix moved from its previous date in late September to late June as a back-to-back race with the Canadian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season calendar\nThe only exit was the Austrian Grand Prix, after seven years of racing at the A1-Ring, the modified circuit old \u00d6sterreichring. The grandstands and pit buildings were demolished during the year, rendering the track unusable for any motorsport category. The circuit eventually reopened in 2011 as the Red Bull Ring and was later reinstated to the F1 calendar in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nFerrari dominated the opening weekend at Albert Park in Australia, comfortably locking out the front row in qualifying and earning a 1\u20132 in the race. Michael Schumacher set the fastest lap of the race on his way to a lights-to-flag victory, with teammate Rubens Barrichello and Renault's Fernando Alonso joining him on the podium. Schumacher followed that up with another pole and victory at Sepang, finishing ahead of Juan Pablo Montoya and Jenson Button, the British driver scoring his first career podium and the BAR Honda team's best result since the 2001 German Grand Prix. Mark Webber, who split the Ferraris in qualifying in his unfancied Jaguar, suffered a poor start before colliding with Ralf Schumacher and spinning out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Opening rounds\nFormula One's first visit to the Arab world since the 1958 Moroccan Grand Prix took place at the Bahrain International Circuit. The Ferrari duo of Schumacher and Barrichello once again finished 1\u20132 in both qualifying and the race, with Button's second consecutive podium elevating him to third in the Drivers' Championship as the series headed for Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European rounds\nJenson Button scored his and BAR's maiden pole at the San Marino Grand Prix, but Michael Schumacher overtook him on the eighth lap and finished nearly ten seconds ahead. Button and Juan Pablo Montoya completed the rostrum\u2014the latter beating Fernando Alonso to the line by just two seconds\u2014while Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen recorded his first finish of the season in eighth, using a two-stop strategy to claim the final point from last on the grid. Despite suffering from a defective exhaust, Schumacher dominated the Spanish Grand Prix as well, as front-row starter Montoya retired with brake problems and early leader Jarno Trulli took third behind Rubens Barrichello.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European rounds\nAt the Monaco Grand Prix, Trulli scored his first career victory from pole after surviving intense pressure from Jenson Button. Rubens Barrichello in third was the only other driver on the lead lap, albeit more than a minute behind the leaders. Teammate Schumacher was one of several front-runners who retired, the championship leader's five-win streak ending after a collision with Juan Pablo Montoya under the safety car. That safety car period was necessitated by Fernando Alonso, who slammed the barrier on lap 42 while attempting to lap the Williams of Ralf Schumacher in the tunnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European rounds\nEarlier in the race, a fast-starting Takuma Sato suffered a spectacular engine failure on the third lap at the Tabac corner; the smoke from the rear of his BAR machine blinded the queue behind him, causing Giancarlo Fisichella to mount the back of David Coulthard's McLaren and flip over. Olivier Panis stalled as the race was due to begin, shortening the race to 77 laps as the remaining drivers completed a second formation lap. Panis later recovered to eighth place as he and sixth-placed Cristiano da Matta scored Toyota's first points of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, European rounds\nMichael Schumacher returned to his winning ways by leading the majority of the European Grand Prix at the N\u00fcrburgring, with Barrichello and Button following him home in second and third. Ralf Schumacher, meanwhile, collided with da Matta at the start, causing both cars to retire from the race. Front-row starter and one-time leader Sato joined the list of retirements with a late engine failure, as did the McLaren duo of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Coulthard, both of whose Mercedes engines expired at the manufacturer's home race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nAt the Canadian Grand Prix, Timo Glock replaced Giorgio Pantano at Jordan for financial reasons. Ralf Schumacher qualified on pole position, joined by Jenson Button on the front row, with Michael Schumacher only starting from sixth. After a series of lead changes, the elder Schumacher ultimately crossed the line first, followed by his brother and Rubens Barrichello.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nBut the Williams of Ralf Schumacher\u2014along with his fifth-placed teammate Juan Pablo Montoya and the Toyotas of Cristiano da Matta and Olivier Panis in eighth and tenth\u2014would later be excluded from the results due to an irregularity in the brake ducts, promoting Barrichello to second and Button to third. The McLaren and Jordan teams were also beneficiaries of the four disqualifications, with Glock\u2014in his Formula One d\u00e9but\u2014and Nick Heidfeld both scoring points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nBarrichello qualified on pole for the United States Grand Prix, with Michael Schumacher alongside him. Schumacher would go on to win once more as Barrichello and Takuma Sato\u2014scoring his first and only Formula One podium\u2014completed the top three. It was a race dominated by accidents, however, beginning with a first-lap incident that eliminated Gianmaria Bruni, Giorgio Pantano, Felipe Massa \u00e9s Christian Klien. On the ninth lap, Fernando Alonso suffered a puncture and crashed at the end of the start-finish straight, with Ralf Schumacher crashing at the oval section for the same reason on the following lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nSchumacher suffered a concussion and fractured vertebrae in that final-corner accident, which kept him out of the following six races. Thanks to the high attrition rate, only eight cars crossed the line; the final finisher was Zsolt Baumgartner, who became Hungary's first points scorer and earned the Minardi team their first point since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nIn France, Michael Schumacher beat Alonso with a clever four-stop strategy. Barrichello overtook the second Renault of Jarno Trulli on the final corner of the race to snatch third place, while Marc Gen\u00e9, who replaced the injured Ralf Schumacher at Williams for the French and British Grands Prix, finished tenth. Michael Schumacher overpowered polesitter Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen to take his tenth win of the season at Silverstone. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who finished second, bagged McLaren's first podium in 2004, ahead of Barrichello in third. The race was notable for Jarno Trulli's massive accident, the Italian losing control of his car at Bridge and hitting the tyre barrier before rolling in the gravel trap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nSchumacher won from pole at the German Grand Prix, beating Jenson Button\u2014who started thirteenth after a ten-place penalty for an engine change\u2014and Fernando Alonso. Front-row starter Juan Pablo Montoya could only manage a fifth-place finish, while his new teammate Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia finished seventh. After setting the fastest lap of the race, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen suffered a high-speed rear wing failure at the end of the start-finish straight on lap 14 and crashed into the tyre wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nA string of disappointing results from Toyota's Cristiano da Matta led to his replacement by test driver Ricardo Zonta from the Hungarian Grand Prix onward. There, Schumacher led another Ferrari 1\u20132 in both qualifying and the race to secure Ferrari the Constructors' trophy, with the race's 2003 winner Alonso completing the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, North American doubleheader and return to Europe\nThe Belgian Grand Prix also included numerous accidents and safety car periods. A first-lap collision between Mark Webber and Takuma Sato eliminated both of them; Zsolt Baumgartner avoided the initial wreckage but knocked teammate Gianmaria Bruni's car into the wall, which then bounced back and collected Giorgio Pantano. On the thirtieth lap, Jenson Button suffered a right-rear puncture and lost control of his car, crashing into the Minardi of Zsolt Baumgartner that he was attempting to lap. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen eventually won the race, his first of the year, from a lowly 10th place on the grid. Michael Schumacher finished second and thus secured himself the world title, as his forty-point gap to Rubens Barrichello\u2014who finished the race third\u2014was by that point insurmountable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 100], "content_span": [101, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Concluding rounds\nAt the Italian Grand Prix, Barrichello led a Ferrari 1\u20132 in front of the loyal Tifosi, although Schumacher, who started third, spun off on the first lap and had to rejoin the race at the back of the field. Following the race, Jarno Trulli parted ways with Renault, with 1997 world champion Jacques Villeneuve returning to Formula One as his replacement. Immediately before the Chinese Grand Prix, fellow Italian Giorgio Pantano was dropped by the Jordan team and replaced once more by Timo Glock for the last three races. That race was also won by Barrichello from pole, with Button and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen less than 2 seconds behind. Michael Schumacher started from the pit lane and could only make it to 12th place following several mistakes and a puncture, while a returning Ralf Schumacher retired with suspension damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Concluding rounds\nThe Japanese Grand Prix weekend was affected by Typhoon Ma-on, which caused widespread damage to parts of Japan and saw the postponement of qualifying to the morning of race day. With the rain dying down in time for the race, Michael Schumacher took his 13th win from pole, with his brother Ralf starting and finishing second and Jenson Button completing the podium. A collision between David Coulthard and Rubens Barrichello\u2014who set the fastest lap of the race\u2014eliminated both of them from the Grand Prix. Following his acrimonious split from Renault, Jarno Trulli finished eleventh in his first race for Toyota, while his teammate Olivier Panis retired from the sport after the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177487-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula One World Championship, Season report, Concluding rounds\nThe Brazilian Grand Prix was won by Juan Pablo Montoya\u2014who also set the fastest lap\u2014from second on the grid, with his soon-to-be McLaren teammate Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and polesitter Barrichello finishing behind him. It was Montoya's last outing for Williams and the team's last victory until the 2012 Spanish Grand Prix. It was also the final race for Minardi duo Zsolt Baumgartner and Gianmaria Bruni and the Jaguar team's last entry before they were bought by Red Bull. David Coulthard finished his last season with McLaren (the team he had been with since 1996) without a podium finished during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177488-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2.0 UK Championship\nThe 2004 Formula Renault 2.0 UK Championship was the 16th British Formula Renault Championship. The season began at Thruxton on 11 April and ended on 26 September at Donington, after twenty rounds held in England, all apart from round 5 supporting the British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177489-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup\nThe 2004 Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup season was the fourteenth Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season. The season began at Monza on 27 March and finished at Oschersleben on 18 September, after seventeen races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177489-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup\nAmerican driver Scott Speed scored eight victories at Hockenheimring, Brno, Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Imola and Oschersleben during the season. He took the championship with a round to spare at the wheel of his Motopark Academy-run car, giving team based at Oschersleben their first Eurocup championship after double win on fellow circuit. Second place was not resolved until the final round, as Graff Racing's Simon Pagenaud and Jenzer Motorsport's Colin Fleming battled over the placing. Despite that Fleming was ahead of Pagenaud in both races of final round and scored more points, the French driver became runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177489-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup\nJD Motorsport's Reinhard Kofler took fourth place with one victory at Valencia and took three further podium finishes to confirm fourth. Fleming's team-mate Pascal Kochem won race at Imola and completed the top-five. Cram Competition's Pastor Maldonado won both races in opening round at Monza on his way to eighth place. Other races were won by French drivers Patrick Pilet and Yann Clairay who completed the top-ten. Guest Formula Renault 2000 UK driver Mike Conway claimed win at Donington Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177489-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup, Calendar\nAll races were part of LG Super Racing Weekends, that also included FIA GT Championship and Formula Renault V6 Eurocup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177490-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2000 Germany season\nThe 2004 Formula Renault 2000 Germany season was the thirteenth Formula Renault 2000 Germany season. The season began at Oschersleben on 8 May and finished on 9 October at the same venue, after fourteen races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177490-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault 2000 Germany season\nMotopark Oschersleben driver Scott Speed won four races on his way to championship title. His compatriot Colin Fleming of the Jenzer Motorsport won races at Salzburgring and Lausitz. Michael Ammerm\u00fcller completed the top 3 without winning a race. The same number of wins as the champion had Pascal Kochem, who finished fourth. Other wins were shared between Frank Kechele, Reinhard Kofler and Pekka Saarinen, who finished sixth, seventh and eighth respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177491-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault V6 Eurocup\nThe 2004 Formula Renault V6 Eurocup season began on the weekend of 27 March at Monza. 2004 was the last season of this championship because Renault created World Series by Renault in 2005, merging Formula Renault V6 Eurocup and World Series by Nissan. The titles went to Swiss driver Giorgio Mondini and Italian team EuroInternational.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177491-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault V6 Eurocup, Championship standings\nPoints are awarded in both races as follows: 30, 24, 20, 14, 10, 8, 6, 4, 2 and 2 bonus points for fastest lap. Due to climatic conditions, the French sprint race had to be stopped. Half points were awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons\nThis page describe all the 2004 seasons of Formula Renault series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons, Formula Renault 2.0L, 2004 Formula Renault 2000 UK season\nAll races held in United Kingdom. Mike Conway won the championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons, Formula Renault 2.0L, 2004 Renault Speed Trophy F2000 season\nSome venues include non Suisse drivers who not compete for the final standing. These drivers aren't included in the following result table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons, Formula Renault 2.0L, 2004 Formula Renault 2.0 Brazil season\nGalid Osman Didi, Jr. finish first in the Category B Championship with 60 points behind William Starostik (24pts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons, Formula Renault 1.6L, 2004 Championnat de France FFSA Formule Campus Renault Elf season\nAll drivers use the La Filli\u00e8re car. The calendar include 7 venues in various French circuits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 117], "content_span": [118, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons, Formula Renault 1.6L, 2004 Formula TR 1600 Pro Series season\nThe Formula TR 1600 Pro Series is held with the Formula TR 2000 Pro Series. The same point system is used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177492-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula Renault seasons, Other Formulas powered by Renault championships\nThis section resume unofficial and/or renault engine supplier formula serie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177493-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Formula SCCA season\nThe 2004 Formula SCCA season was the first season of the Formula SCCA Pro series. Elivan Goulart won the inaugural championship. After this season the series went on a five-year hiatus to return in 2010. All drivers competed in Cooper Tire shod, Mazda powered Van Diemen chassis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177494-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fort Worth Bowl\nThe 2004 edition to the Fort Worth Bowl, the second edition, featured the Marshall Thundering Herd, and the Cincinnati Bearcats. It had a title sponsor of PlainsCapital Bank. The game was particularly notable because it featured an incoming school (Marshall) to and outgoing school (Cincinnati) from Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177494-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fort Worth Bowl\nCincinnati scored first, when Antauwn Gibbons recovered a blocked punt, and rushed it in 9 yards for a touchdown, giving Cincinnati an early 7\u20130 lead. Kevin Lovell added a 23-yard field goal to give Cincinnati a 10\u20130 lead. Marshall got on the scoreboard following a 14-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Stan Hill to wide receiver Josh Davis making it 10\u20137. They later took the lead when cornerback Willie Smith intercepted a pass, and returned it 32 yards for a touchdown, putting Marshall on top 14\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177494-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Fort Worth Bowl\nThe second quarter belonged to Cincinnati. Quarterback Gino Guidugli fired a 15-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Brent Celek to put Cincinnati back on top 17\u201314. He later threw another touchdown pass to Earnest Jackson increasing Cincinnati's lead to 24\u201314. That score stood up at halftime. After a scoreless third quarter, Cincinnati scored two field goals and recorded a safety to make the final margin 32\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177495-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Forward Operating Base Marez bombing\nThe Forward Operating Base Marez bombing took place on December 21, 2004. Fourteen U.S. soldiers, four U.S. citizen Halliburton employees, and four Iraqi soldiers allied with the U.S. military were killed by a suicide bomber in a dining hall at the Forward Operating Base next to the main U.S. military airfield at Mosul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177495-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Forward Operating Base Marez bombing, Pentagon report\nThe Pentagon reported that 72 other personnel were injured in the attack carried out by a suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest and the uniform of the Iraqi security services. The Islamist insurgent group Army of Ansar al-Sunna (partly evolved from Ansar al-Islam) released an internet message taking credit for the attack. The bomber entered the mess tent and approached a large group of U.S. soldiers, detonating himself and killing 22 people. It was the single deadliest suicide attack against the US military in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177495-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Forward Operating Base Marez bombing, After attack\nWeeks before the attack, soldiers from the base intercepted a document that mentioned a proposal for a massive \"Beirut\"-type attack on U.S. forces. The reference was apparently to the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing in which 241 U.S. service members were killed. Following the discovery of the papers, commanders at the base \u2014 which is about three miles south of Mosul and is used by both U.S. troops and the interim Iraqi National Guard forces \u2014 ratcheted up already tight security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177495-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Forward Operating Base Marez bombing, After attack\nAnsar al-Sunnah said the suicide bomber was a 24-year-old man from Mosul who worked at the base for two months and had provided information about the base to the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177495-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Forward Operating Base Marez bombing, After attack\nThe AP reported that the bomber was a twenty-year-old medical student from Saudi Arabia. A US Army report identified a different Saudi national as the suicide bomber and said he got help from Iraqi troops working at the base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177496-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships was an international figure skating competition in the 2003\u201304 season. It was held at the Copps Coliseum in Hamilton, Canada on January 19\u201325. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The compulsory dance was the Yankee Polka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177497-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Four Nations Tournament (women's football)\nThe 2004 Four Nations Tournament was the fourth edition of this invitational women's football tournament held in China with four national teams participating in a round robin format. It was held from January 30 to February 3, 2004, in the city of Shenzhen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177498-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 France rugby union tour of North America\nThe 2004 France rugby union tour of North America was a series of matches played in July 2004 in Canada and in the United States by France national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177498-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 France rugby union tour of North America, Matches\nUnited States: 15.Francois Viljoen, 14.Jovesa Naivalu, 13.Paul Emerick, 12.Salesi Sika, 11.David Fee, 10.Mike Hercus, 9.Mose Timoteo, 8.Shaun Paga, 7.Tony Petruzzella, 6.Kort Schubert (capt. ), 5.Matt Kane, 4.Dave Hodges, 3.Jacob Waasdorp, 2.Matt Wyatt, 1.Mike MacDonald, \u2013 replacements: 16.Mark Griffin, 17.Dan Dorsey, 18.Brian Surgener, 19.Tasi Mo'unga, 20.David Williams, 22.Riaan van Zyl \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 21.Kain CrossFrance: 15.Cl\u00e9ment Poitrenaud, 14.Aurelien Rougerie, 13.Ludovic Valbon, 12.Brian Liebenberg, 11.Cedric Heymans, 10.Alexandre Peclier, 9.Mathieu Barrau, 8.Thomas Lievremont, 7.Patrick Tabacco, 6.Yannick Nyanga Kabasele, 5.David Couzinet, 4.Fabien Pelous (capt. ), 3.Pieter de Villiers, 2.William Servat, 1.Olivier Milloud, \u2013 replacements: 18.Romain Froment, 19.Pierre Rabadan \u2013 No entry: 16.Dimitri Szarzewski, 17.David Attoub, 20.Ludovic Loustau, 21.Julien Peyrelongue", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177498-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 France rugby union tour of North America, Matches\nCanada: 15.Quentin Fyffe, 14.Marco di Girolamo, 13.Ryan Smith, 12.John Cannon, 11.Stirling Richmond, 10.Jared Barker, 9.Morgan Williams, 8.Stan McKeen, 7.Mike Webb, 6.Phil Murphy, 5.Jamie Cudmore, 4.Colin Yukes, 3.Forrest Gainer, 2.Aaron Abrams, 1.Kevin Tkachuk (capt. ), \u2013 replacements: 16.Mark Lawson, 17.Jon Thiel, 18.Mike Burak, 19.Jim Douglas, 20.Ed Fairhurst, 21.Mike Danskin, 22.Derek Daypuck France: 15.Cl\u00e9ment Poitrenaud, 14.Philippe Bidabe, 13.Tony Marsh, 12.Brian Liebenberg, 11.Aurelien Rougerie, 10.Alexandre Peclier, 9.Ludovic Loustau, 8.Thomas Lievremont, 7.Bernard Goutta, 6.Yannick Nyanga Kabasele, 5.Pascal Pape, 4.Fabien Pelous (capt. ), 3.Pieter de Villiers, 2.William Servat, 1.Arnaud Martinez, \u2013 replacements: 16.Dimitri Szarzewski, 17.Olivier Milloud, 18.David Couzinet, 19.Pierre Rabadan, 20.Mathieu Barrau, 21.Julien Peyrelongue, 22.Cedric Heymans", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177499-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Franche-Comt\u00e9 regional election\nA regional election took place in Franche-Comt\u00e9, France on 21 and 28 March 2004, along with all other regions. Raymond Forni (PS) was elected President, defeating incumbent Jean-Fran\u00e7ois Humbert (UMP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177500-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Frankfurt Galaxy season\nThe 2004 Frankfurt Galaxy season was the 12th season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Mike Jones in his first year, and played its home games at Waldstadion in Frankfurt, Germany. They finished the regular season in second place with a record of seven wins and three losses. In World Bowl XII, Frankfurt lost to the Berlin Thunder 30\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177501-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Franklin Templeton Classic\nThe 2004 Franklin Templeton Classic was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Scottsdale, Arizona in the United States that was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 17th edition of the tournament and was held from March 1 through March 7, 2004. Fourth-seeded Vince Spadea won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177501-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Franklin Templeton Classic, Finals, Doubles\nRick Leach / Brian MacPhie defeated Jeff Coetzee / Chris Haggard 6\u20133, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177502-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Franklin Templeton Classic \u2013 Doubles\nJames Blake and Mark Merklein were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Jeff Coetzee and Chris Haggard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177502-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Franklin Templeton Classic \u2013 Doubles\nRick Leach and Brian MacPhie won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20131 against Coetzee and Haggard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177503-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Franklin Templeton Classic \u2013 Singles\nLleyton Hewitt was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177503-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Franklin Templeton Classic \u2013 Singles\nVince Spadea won in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20133 against Nicolas Kiefer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177504-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 French Figure Skating Championships (French: Championnat de France Elite) took place between December 20th and 21st, 2003 in Brian\u00e7on. Skaters competed at the senior level in the disciplines of men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, ice dancing, and synchronized skating. The event was used to help determine the French team to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177505-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Grand Prix\nThe 2004 French Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Mobil 1 Grand Prix de France 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 4 July 2004 at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours. It was Race 10 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. This race has become famous for a 4 stop strategy used by Michael Schumacher to beat Fernando Alonso's Renault. Rubens Barrichello finished third in his Ferrari, having overtaken Jarno Trulli in the last corners of the last lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177505-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open\nThe 2004 French Open was the 108th edition of the tournament. Gast\u00f3n Gaudio became the first men's Open Era Grand Slam title winner to save two match points in the final; the last time that had happened was 70 years earlier. Gaudio also became the first Argentine man since Guillermo Vilas to win a grand slam, in 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 French Open\nFellow Argentine Guillermo Coria, widely regarded as the favourite and best clay court player in the world coming into the tournament, was seeded 3rd for the event, whereas Gaudio was unseeded (ranked 44th) and with only two titles to his name, both of which he had won over two years before. After winning the first two sets convincingly, Coria began suffering from leg cramps. Gaudio won the next two sets; however, Coria came back and was up two breaks of serve in the final set. Coria had two match points at 6\u20135 before Gaudio prevailed 0\u20136, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131, 8\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0000-0002", "contents": "2004 French Open\nGaudio also became the first man to win a Grand Slam tournament final after being bagelled in the first set. The tournament was noted for the excellent performance of the Argentine players \u2013 in addition to the two finalists, there were a semifinalist (David Nalbandian) and a quarterfinalist (Juan Ignacio Chela).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0000-0003", "contents": "2004 French Open\nIt was also highlighted by a first round match between Fabrice Santoro and Arnaud Cl\u00e9ment, lasting 6 hours and 33 minutes and ending in Clement's defeat 6\u20134, 6\u20133, 6\u20137, 3\u20136, 16\u201314, setting a new record for the longest singles match in the open era, which would stand until Wimbledon 2010. It was also the last Grand Slam tournament to feature neither Roger Federer nor Rafael Nadal in the semi-finals until the 2012 US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open\nIn the women's draw, Anastasia Myskina became first Russian female tennis player to win a Grand Slam title. The next two Grand Slams were also won by Russian women (Maria Sharapova at Wimbledon and Svetlana Kuznetsova at the US Open). She also became the first French Open women's title winner after having saved a match point en route to the title (against Svetlana Kuznetsova in the 4th round).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open\nIn the mixed doubles, French players Tatiana Golovin and Richard Gasquet (aged 16 and 17 respectively) won the tournament after entering as wildcards. France also saw success in the boys' singles, where Ga\u00ebl Monfils won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open\nJuan Carlos Ferrero and Justine Henin-Hardenne were both unsuccessful in defending their 2003 titles; both being eliminated in the second round. It would be the last time until the 2009 French Open that both defending champions were defeated in the same round. In Henin's case, her early exit would be the last time a top seed lost within the first two rounds of any Grand Slam until Ana Ivanovic lost in the second round of the 2008 US Open. Henin's loss to Tathiana Garbin in the second round was her only defeat at the tournament between 2003 and 2009 (she did not play in 2008 and 2009).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open\nThis was the last Grand Slam where two first time singles players (both men's and women's) won in the first major titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Point distribution\nBelow are the tables with the point distribution for each discipline of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Men's Singles\nGast\u00f3n Gaudio defeated Guillermo Coria, 0\u20136, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131, 8\u20136", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Men's Doubles\nXavier Malisse / Olivier Rochus defeated Micha\u00ebl Llodra / Fabrice Santoro, 7\u20135, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva, 6\u20130, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Champions, Seniors, Mixed Doubles\nTatiana Golovin / Richard Gasquet defeated Cara Black / Wayne Black, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Champions, Juniors, Boys' Doubles\nPablo And\u00fajar / Marcel Granollers defeated Alex Kuznetsov / Mischa Zverev, 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Champions, Juniors, Girls' Doubles\nKate\u0159ina B\u00f6hmov\u00e1 / Micha\u00eblla Krajicek defeated Irina Kotkina / Yaroslava Shvedova, 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177506-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open, Wildcard entries\nBelow are the lists of the wildcard awardees entering in the main draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177507-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nGy\u00f6rgy Bal\u00e1zs and Dudi Sela were the defending champions, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177507-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nPablo And\u00fajar and Marcel Granollers won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20132 against Alex Kuznetsov and Mischa Zverev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177508-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nThe 2004 French Open \u2013 Boys' Singles tournament was an event during the 2004 French Open tennis tournament. Stanislas Wawrinka was the defending champion, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177508-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nGa\u00ebl Monfils won in the final 6\u20132, 6-2, against Alex Kuznetsov.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177509-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nMarta Fraga and Adriana Gonz\u00e1lez-Pe\u00f1as were the defending champions, but did not compete in the Juniors that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177509-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nKate\u0159ina B\u00f6hmov\u00e1 and Micha\u00eblla Krajicek won the title, defeating Irina Kotkina and Yaroslava Shvedova in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177510-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nThe 2004 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles tournament was an event during the 2004 French Open tennis tournament. Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld was the defending champion, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177510-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nSesil Karatantcheva won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20130, against M\u0103d\u0103lina Gojnea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177511-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, they lost to sixth-seeded Micha\u00ebl Llodra and Fabrice Santoro in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177511-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nUnseeded Belgian pair Xavier Malisse and Olivier Rochus defeated Llodra and Santoro, 7\u20135, 7\u20135 to win the Men's Doubles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nGast\u00f3n Gaudio (ranked 44th) won in the final 0\u20136, 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20131, 8\u20136 against Guillermo Coria to capture the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2004 French Open. Gaudio became the first Argentine player to win a major since Guillermo Vilas in the 1979 Australian Open. Juan Carlos Ferrero was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Igor Andreev, his first loss at the event prior to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis was the first Grand Slam tournament in which Roger Federer competed as No. 1. He lost in the third round to former No. 1 and three-time champion Gustavo Kuerten in what would be Federer\u2019s last pre-quarterfinal exit from a major until his second round loss to Sergiy Stakhovsky in the 2013 Wimbledon Championships, a run of 36 quarterfinals (or better) in a row. Until the 2020 US Open, this was the last Grand Slam without any of the Big Three players in the quarterfinals. This was also the most recent French Open tournament not to feature future thirteen-time champion Rafael Nadal, who withdrew prior to the tournament due to an ankle injury sustained in Estoril tournament in mid-April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis was the first Grand Slam in the Open Era to feature 4 Argentinean men in the quarterfinals, that being Gaudio and Coria, David Nalbandian and Juan Ignacio Chela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nUntil the 2017 Australian Open, this would be the last Grand Slam event where the top two seeds would fail to reach the quarterfinals of a major. With Federer's loss to Kuerten, number two seed Andy Roddick also lost in the second round to Olivier Mutis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe first round match between Fabrice Santoro and Arnaud Cl\u00e9ment was the longest match of the Open Era in 6 hours and 33 minutes under two days. John Isner and Nicolas Mahut would break this record at the 2010 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nUntil the 2020 US Open, this was both the last Grand Slam in which none of the semi-finalists had previously won a Grand Slam singles tournament, and the last Grand Slam final in which the winner came back from trailing two sets to love; until 2021, this was also the most recent French Open final to be decided in five sets; on that occasion, Novak Djokovic came from two sets down to defeat Stefanos Tsitsipas to win his 19th Major title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177512-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis was also the last time until the 2019 Wimbledon Championships that the winner had to save a match point in a championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177513-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Men's Singles at the 2004 French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177514-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nDefending champions Lisa Raymond and Mike Bryan lost in the first round to Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario and Daniel Nestor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177514-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nTatiana Golovin and Richard Gasquet won the title, defeating Cara Black and Wayne Black in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177515-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, but Clijsters chose not to participate. Sugiyama played alongside Liezel Huber, but they lost in the first round to Shinobu Asagoe and Rika Fujiwara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177515-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez won the title, defeating Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva in the final 6\u20130, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177516-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAnastasia Myskina won her only Grand Slam title and defeated Elena Dementieva in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20132, to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2004 French Open. Myskina had previously never passed the second round. She became the first Russian woman to win a Major. Myskina became the first woman in the Open Era to win the French Open after saving a match point in the fourth round against Svetlana Kuznetsova. This was the first time two new Grand Slam finalists competed each other in the final since the 1979 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177516-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Tathiana Garbin. This was Henin-Hardenne's only loss at the French Open between 2003 and 2007. Martina Navratilova played in her first Grand Slam since 1994 Wimbledon Championships, having been unseeded for the first time since the 1973 US Open and was being awarded a wild card, it was her final French Open singles appearance. She lost in the first round to Gisela Dulko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177516-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was also the first Grand Slam tournament in which future two-time champion Maria Sharapova reached the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177516-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThe final between Myskina and Dementieva made Russia the fourth country (the other ones are Australia, the United States and Belgium) to have had two countrywomen play in a Grand Slam final in the Open Era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177517-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Women's Singles at the 2004 French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election\nElections for the Assembly of French Polynesia, the Territorial Assembly of French Polynesia, were held on May 23, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election\nIn a surprise result Oscar Temaru's pro-independence progressive coalition formed Government with a one-seat majority in the 57 seat parliament, defeating the conservative party led by Gaston Flosse (see also List of political parties in French Polynesia). On October 8, 2004, the Gaston Flosse led opposition party succeeded in passing a censure motion against the Government. This provoked a political crisis, and controversy about whether the national government of France should use its exceptional power to call for new elections in a local government, in case of a grave political crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n23 May 2004: Elections for the Assembly of French Polynesia (Assembl\u00e9e de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise), the territorial assembly of French Polynesia, held. A progressive coalition led by pro-independence Oscar Temaru wins 26 (27 respectively) seats and forms a coalition with 3 (2 respectively) autonomist members to form a Government with a majority of one (see also List of political parties in French Polynesia). The conservative party led by Gaston Flosse has 28 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n10 June 2004: Former President, Gaston Flosse, and his conservative party, Tahoeraa Huiraatira, stayed away from the presidential (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) election, thus invalidating it, as a three-fifths quorum was required. He subsequently lost one defector to Oscar Temaru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n14 June 2004: Oscar Temaru elected President (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) (when a simple majority quorum was required), gaining 30 out of 57 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n5 October 2004: Two motions of censure tabled in the Assembly of French Polynesia (Assembl\u00e9e de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise). One from Gaston Flosse's Tahoeraa Huiraatira party, and one from a new group, Te Ara, that includes three former members of Flosse\u2019s party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n9 October 2004: A motion of censure tabled by the conservative Tahoeraa Huiraatira, was adopted by 29 votes out of 57. The motion was proposed by opposition leader Gaston Flosse after Oscar Temaru ordered an audit of the previous government, which was led by Gaston Flosse. A second censure motion was not voted upon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n12 October 2004: Tahoeraa Huiraatira, endorses its President, Gaston Flosse, as its official candidate for the Presidency in the French administered territory of French Polynesia (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\nThe President of the Assembly of French Polynesia (Le pr\u00e9sident de l'Assembl\u00e9e de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise), Antony G\u00e9ros, from Oscar Temaru's coalition government, insisted that the parliament should meet on October 25 to elect a new government president (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\nHowever, this date was against the advice of the French High Commissioner of the Republic in French Polynesia (Le Haut-Commissaire de la R\u00e9publique en Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) Michel Mathieu who stated in written letters that the Assembly of French Polynesia (Assembl\u00e9e de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) is required to vote on a new government president (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) within 15 days of the passage of a censure motion. The third Vice president of the Assembly of French Polynesia, Lana Tetuanui from Gaston Flosse\u2019s party, called for the Assembly to sit on October 20, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n15 October 2004: Second request by Oscar Temaru for fresh elections denied by French minister for overseas Territories (la Ministre de l\u2019Outre-mer) Brigitte Girardin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n16 October 2004: More than 20,000 people march through Papeete on Tahiti, the main island of French Polynesia, in support of Oscar Temaru demanding new elections. Demonstrations also occur across French Polynesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n19 October 2004: French Polynesia\u2019s caretaker government president, Oscar Temaru, has asked the Papeete administrative court (Le Tribunal administratif de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) to suspend, then cancel the October 9 adopted censure motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n20 October 2004: The Assembly of French Polynesia meets, but is unable to elect a new president (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) as there is not a required quorum in attendance due to a boycott of members supporting Oscar Temaru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n22 October 2004: The Assembly of French Polynesia meets to elect President (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise). Simple Majority required. Gaston Flosse was re-elected (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) by a one-vote majority and sworn in immediately during a parliamentary session boycotted by caretaker President Oscar Temaru. The parliament elected Flosse with 29 of 57 votes; the 28 pro-independence members boycotted the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\nAntony G\u00e9ros, the president of the Assembly of French Polynesia (Le pr\u00e9sident de l'Assembl\u00e9e de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise), did not participate in Friday\u2019s session, and also described Flosse\u2019s election Friday as an \"election of the president of the Tahoeraa Huiraatira\", which is a reference to Flosse\u2019s pro-autonomy and anti-independence party. Geros said that Monday, October 25, is the only legitimate date for the parliament to elect a government president following the censure motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n23 October 2004: a Council of State (French national supreme administrative court) judge rejected two petitions from Tahiti to suspend the October 9 censure motion that toppled French Polynesia President (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) Oscar Temaru\u2019s majority coalition government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n26 October 2004: Tensions remain high in French Polynesia as the Leadership remains in doubt. The Legislative Assembly failed to sit on Monday, October 25. Assembly Speaker (Le pr\u00e9sident de l'Assembl\u00e9e de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise), Antony G\u00e9ros, failed to turn up and chair the sitting he himself had scheduled. Gaston Flosse, who was elected President (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) by an assembly sitting on October 22, attempted to enter the Presidential palace on the weekend but was met by closed gates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n15 November 2004: The Council of State, judging on a request from Gaston Flosse, cancels the May elections in the Windward Islands-circonscription (French: la circonscription des \u00celes du Vent). (,, in French language), for the reason that the neutrality of election officials was not observed in one of the communes, which, given the small difference of vote counts, may have altered the electoral results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n13 February 2005: By-elections for the Assembly of French Polynesia are held in the Windward Islands-circumscription (French: la circonscription des \u00celes du Vent). . The pro-independence-coalition wins 30 seats: Part of the pro-independence-coalition is the Union for the Democracy (Union pour la D\u00e9mocratie) with Oscar Temaru's Tavini Huiraatira (People's servant) which wins 27 seats and the Alliance for a New Democracy (Alliance pour une D\u00e9mocratie Nouvelle) which wins 3 seats. The Conservative coalition (consisting of one party only), the pro-autonomy, anti-independence Tahoera'a Huiraatira (Popular Rally), wins only 27 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177518-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 French Polynesian legislative election, Timeline\n3 March 2005: Oscar Temaru elected President of French Polynesia (Le pr\u00e9sident de la Polyn\u00e9sie fran\u00e7aise) for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177519-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French Senate election\nFollowing the end of the 9-year terms of 127 \"series C\" senators, indirect senatorial elections were held in France on September 26, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177519-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French Senate election\nThis was the last renewal of serie C senators- following the electoral reform, senators are not elected by thirds to nine-year terms but by halves to six-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177519-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French Senate election\nSince 2001, 10 seats had been added to Senate. This election elected Senators from 28 departments on the mainland (115 seats including 107 incumbents and 8 new seats), 2 from Guadeloupe and Martinique (5 seats including 4 incumbents and one new seat), 2 from overseas territories, Mayotte and Saint-Pierre-et-Miquelon (3 seats including 2 incumbents and one new seat), and 4 senators representing French citizens abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177520-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French cantonal elections\nCantonal elections to elect half the membership of the general councils of France's 100 departments were held on 21 and 28 March 2004. These elections coincided with the left's landslide in the regional elections held at the same time and also resulted in strong performances by the Socialist Party (PS) and its allies on the left, leaving the Socialists in control of a majority of departments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177520-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French cantonal elections, Electoral system\nThe cantonal elections use a two-round system similar to that employed in the country's legislative elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177521-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 French motorcycle Grand Prix was the third round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 14\u201316 May 2004 at the Bugatti Circuit located in Le Mans, France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177521-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round three has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections\nRegional elections in were held in France on 21 and 28 March 2004. At stake were the presidencies of each of France's 26 regions which, although they do not have legislative powers, manage sizeable budgets. The results were a triumph for the parties of the left, led by the French Socialist Party (PS) in alliance with minor parties including the French Communist Party (PCF), the Left Radical Party (PRG) and The Greens (Les Verts). The left has usually fared moderately well in regional elections, but this was their best result since the regional system was introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections\nThe left won control of twenty of the twenty-two regions of metropolitan France, defeating the parties of the mainstream right, the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) and the Union for French Democracy (UDF), and the extreme right National Front (FN). The results were seen as a major setback for the then President Jacques Chirac and Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region\nThe first round was held on 21 March. Since no candidate gained a majority in any region, a second round was held on 28 March, in which only candidates who polled more than 10% in the first round were eligible to run (except in Corsica, where the threshold is 5%). The UMP seat numbers are compared to those of the RPR and RPR dissidents together in 1998, the UDF seat numbers are compared to those of the UDF and UDF dissidents together in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Alsace, Regional Council\nConservative Alsace is one of only two regions retained by the right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Auvergne, Regional Council\nThe former President of France, Val\u00e9ry Giscard d'Estaing, was seeking a fourth term as President of Auvergne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Burgundy, Regional Council\nBurgundy returned to its usual left-wing loyalty. It is suspected that the incumbent Jean-Pierre Soisson was punished for his coalition with the National Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Centre, Regional Council\nThe left retains control of this region. Sapin replaces the retiring incumbent Alain Rafesthain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Corsica, Regional Council\nConservative Corsica is the right's only success apart from Alsace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, \u00cele-de-France, Regional Council\nThe left retains control of \u00cele-de-France, the region surrounding Paris and gets a comfortable majority. Huchon previously could not rely on a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Limousin, Regional Council\nThe left retains control of Limousin, with Denanot succeeding the retiring incumbent Robert Savy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Lower Normandy, Regional Council\nThe left had never before won control of Lower Normandy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 83], "content_span": [84, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Pays de la Loire, Regional Council\nThe right loses the normally conservative Pays de la Loire region. Fillon was the candidate of the right in succession to the retiring Jean-Luc Harousseau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Picardy, Regional Council\nThe left captured the Picardy region, following the retirement of the incumbent, Charles Baur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Poitou-Charentes, Regional Council\nPoitou-Charentes, a region where right and left are traditionally equal, falls to the left. It is the home region of Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177522-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 French regional elections, Results by region, Provence-Alpes-C\u00f4te d'Azur, Regional Council\nJean-Marie Le Pen, who intended to run in this region, was disqualified because he did not fulfill the legal conditions: he neither lived there, nor was registered as a taxpayer there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 95], "content_span": [96, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes\nIn 2004, an armed conflict took place between France and C\u00f4te d'Ivoire. On 6 November 2004, Ivorians launched an air attack on French peacekeepers in the northern part of C\u00f4te d'Ivoire who were stationed there as part of Op\u00e9ration Licorne (Unicorn), the French military operation in support of the United Nations Operation in C\u00f4te d'Ivoire (UNOCI). French military forces subsequently clashed with Ivorian troops and government-loyal mobs, destroying the entire Ivorian Air Force. Those incidents were followed by massive anti-French protests in C\u00f4te d'Ivoire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Background\nIn 2002, a civil war broke out in C\u00f4te d'Ivoire between Ivorian military and other forces loyal to Laurent Gbagbo, the Ivorian president since 2000, and rebel forces identified with the Forces Nouvelles de C\u00f4te d'Ivoire. Although most of the fighting ended by late 2004, the country remained split in two, with a rebel-held north and a government-held south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Ivorian attack on French forces\nOn 4 November 2004, Gbagbo ordered the counter-offensive to the rebel town of Bouak\u00e9 to be backed by air strikes. France did not directly react, but on 5 November put three Dassault Mirage F.1 jet fighters based in nearby Gabon on standby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Ivorian attack on French forces\nOn 6 November, two Ivorian Sukhoi Su-25 bombers, crewed by two Belarusian mercenaries and two Ivorian pilots, fired on the Ivorian rebels led by Issiaka Ouattara. One of the bombers attacked the French peacekeeping position in the town at 1\u00a0pm, killing nine French soldiers and wounding 31. An American development worker, reported to have been a missionary, was also killed. The Ivorian government claimed the attack on the French was unintentional, but the French insisted that the attack had been deliberate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Retaliation by the French and subsequent riots\nPresident Jacques Chirac ordered the destruction of the two Ivorian jets. At 2:20\u00a0pm, the Su-25s landed at Abidjan airport and were destroyed by MILAN missiles fired by soldiers of the 2nd Marine Infantry Regiment, garrisoned at the airport. The French were then attacked by an Ivorian Mil Mi-24 helicopter gunship, but repelled it with machine gun fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Retaliation by the French and subsequent riots\nAt 3\u00a0pm, armed mobs of Ivorians loyal to the government took to the streets of Abidjan to protest against France and began to mass near the airport and near the 43rd Marine Infantry Batalion base. At Abidjan's airport, French and Ivorian troops exchanged fire, and a French Transall C-160 military transport plane was damaged by RPGs at 4\u00a0pm. The remaining aircraft of the Ivorian air force (two other Su-25s, two Mi-24s and one BAC Strikemaster) were destroyed on direct orders from General Henri Poncet, before Ivorian protesters entered the terminal. Meanwhile, two Mi-24s and one Mil Mi-8 were \"annihilated\" in Yamoussoukro presidential palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Retaliation by the French and subsequent riots\nOn 7 November, thousands of Ivorian loyalists attacked a French school and army base. Crowds of young Ivorians attacked a residential district made up of French citizens, which had to be evacuated by airlift as mobs burst into their apartment buildings. Armored cars carried armed protesters to join the fight, and French helicopters flew over Abidjan and dropped concussion grenades, while French armored vehicles carried troops to put down the riots. Protesters erected burning roadblocks, and French gunboats were positioned beneath the bridges. Fighting continued, and, by Sunday, French forces were still not in control of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Retaliation by the French and subsequent riots\nAs the riots in the streets continued, French soldiers opened fire on Ivorian rioters; the French government stated that 20 were killed while Ivorian authorities placed the death toll at 60. At Du\u00e9kou\u00e9 and in the northern suburbs of Abidjan, French reinforcements and Ivorian troops exchanged fire, and Ivorian soldiers and civilians were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Retaliation by the French and subsequent riots\nFrench forces evacuated nearly 5,000 foreign nationals from Ivory Coast in the first half of November. The United Nations Security Council unanimously passed an arms embargo on the country on 15 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Retaliation by the French and subsequent riots\nFrench Foreign Minister Michel Barnier stated President Gbagbo was \"personally responsible for what has happened\", and declared that the violence was \"unexplainable, unjustifiable\". Ivorian National Assembly President Mamadou Koulibaly told state television: \"Ivory Coast has become an overseas territory in Jacques Chirac\u2019s head\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Aftermath\nFrance reportedly let the two foreign pilots leave the country in a group consisting of fifteen Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian mercenaries. Questions were subsequently raised about possible French manipulation and a judiciary inquiry is still ongoing as of 2020 in France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Aftermath\nC\u00f4te d'Ivoire had begun rebuilding its air force with help from Belarus and Ukraine a year after the French attack. A 2014 publication shows that two Sukhoi Su-25s were almost completely repaired at Abidjan Airport but not put back into service. This was due to an arms embargo, which left all four aircraft in storage, along with two Mil Mi-24 helicopters. The assorted equipment of the aircraft were discovered at the former residence of F\u00e9lix Houphou\u00ebt-Boigny by Alassane Ouattara in April 2011, at the end of the post-electoral conflict which saw Gbagbo ousted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177523-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 French\u2013Ivorian clashes, Aftermath\nFrench judge Brigitte Raynaud issued an international arrest warrant for the two pilots suspected of the bombing, Patrice Ouei and Ange-Magloire Gnanduillet, in January 2006. An Ivorian military court was also seeking to find former defence minister Rene Amani and the former head of the loyalist army, Mathias Dou\u00e9, over the bombing. By 2008, relations between C\u00f4te d'Ivoire and France had returned to normal, with French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner being the first French foreign minister to visit since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177524-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fresno State Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 Fresno State football team represented California State University, Fresno in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Bulldog Stadium in Fresno, California and were coached by Pat Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177525-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Fresno mayoral election\nThe 2004 Fresno mayoral election was held on March 2, 2004 to elect the mayor of Fresno, California. It saw the reelection of Alan Autry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177525-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Fresno mayoral election\nSince Autry won a majority in the first round, no runoff was required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177526-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Furman Paladins football team\nThe 2004 Furman Paladins football team represented the Furman Paladins of Furman University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177527-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Futrono mudflows\nOn August 28, 2004, following heavy rainfall, mudflows overran several houses in near Futrono, southern Chile. Chile Route T-55 between Futrono and Llif\u00e9n was cut off by the landslide. At least three separate mudflows occurred in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177527-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Futrono mudflows\nThree people were injured by the mudflows and about five thousand became temporarily isolated as roads were blocked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177528-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 F\u00f3rmula Truck season\nThe 2004 F\u00f3rmula Truck season was the 9th F\u00f3rmula Truck season. It began on March 14 at Caruaru and ended on December 5 at Bras\u00edlia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177529-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 GMAC Bowl\nThe 2004 GMAC Bowl was an American college football bowl game. It was part of the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, and was the 7th edition. It was played in December 2004, and featured the Memphis Tigers, and the Bowling Green Falcons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177529-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 GMAC Bowl, Game recap\nBefore the game, heavy rains soaked the field and continued through almost the whole game. Running back PJ Pope scored on a 1-yard touchdown run, to give Bowling Green an early 7\u20130 lead. Quarterback Omar Jacobs threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Charles Sharon, stretching the lead out to 14\u20130. Memphis's quarterback Danny Wimprine threw a 42-yard touchdown pass to John Doucette to cut the lead to 14\u20137. Omar Jacobs again hooked up with Charlie Sharon, this time on a 36-yard touchdown pass to gain a 21\u20137 lead after the 1st quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 26], "content_span": [27, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177529-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 GMAC Bowl, Game recap\nIn the second quarter, Danny Wimprine found wide receiver Chris Kelly for a 61-yard touchdown pass, to get within 21\u201314. Omar Jacobs found Steve Sanders for a 31-yard touchdown pass to extend the lead to 28\u201314. Danny Wimprine found Maurice Avery for a 38-yard touchdown pass, and the lead was 28\u201321. DeAngelo Williams later scored on a 31-yard touchdown run to tie the game at 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 26], "content_span": [27, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177529-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 GMAC Bowl, Game recap\nBefore halftime, Omar Jacobs found Steve Sanders again, this time for a 17-yard touchdown pass to regain the lead at 35\u201328. In the third quarter, he threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to PJ Pope, to extend the lead to 42\u201328. A Shaun Suisham field goal increased the lead to 45\u201328. A PJ Pope touchdown run in the fourth quarter increased the lead to 52\u201328. John Doucette scored on a 14-yard touchdown pass from Danny Wimprine, to make the final score 52\u201335.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 26], "content_span": [27, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177530-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in\nThe 2004 GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in was the 51st edition of the GP Miguel Indur\u00e1in cycle race and was held on 3 April 2004. The race was won by Matthias Kessler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177531-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 GP Ouest\u2013France\nThe 2004 GP Ouest-France was the 68th edition of the GP Ouest-France cycle race and was held on 29 August 2004. The race started and finished in Plouay. The race was won by Didier Rous of the Brioches La Boulang\u00e8re team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177532-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Galway City Council election\nAn election to Galway City Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 15 councillors were elected from three electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177533-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Galway County Council election\nAn election to Galway County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 30 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177534-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gamba Osaka season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 17:54, 4 January 2020 (\u2192\u200eOther pages: Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (1\u00d7);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177535-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Gateshead Council election was held on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Gateshead Council in Tyne and Wear, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177535-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nThe boundary changes kept the number of wards and seats on the council unchanged while changing many of the wards. In total 216 candidates stood in the election, with the Labour and Conservative parties standing for all of the seats. The Liberal Democrats stood in all but two wards where the Liberal Party stood instead. There were also 17 British National Party candidates and one independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177535-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nThe council was expected to remain under Labour control as it had been for the previous 30 years but the Liberal Democrats hoped to make gains. Labour called on voters to re-elect them in order to keep the services provided by the council improving. The Liberal Democrats claimed that a local maternity unit and library were under threat of being closed but Labour accused them of scaremongering. Local businessman Sir John Hall called on voters to re-elect the Labour council in order that a partnership with Newcastle council could continue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177535-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Gateshead Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nPrinting problems meant that ballot papers for the election, which was held with all postal voting, were about a week late in being sent out with 150,000 ballots having to be reprinted. As a result, extra printers were used and ballot boxes were placed in local libraries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl\nThe 2004 Gator Bowl was a post-season American college football bowl game between the Maryland Terrapins and the West Virginia Mountaineers. The 59th edition of the Gator Bowl, it was played at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, on January 1, 2004. The game was the final contest of the 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season for both teams, and ended in a 41\u20137 victory for Maryland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl\nThe Maryland Terrapins (more often, simply 'Terps') earned a bid to the Gator Bowl following a 9\u20133 record during the 2003 regular season. It was Ralph Friedgen's third season as Maryland head coach and third consecutive bowl game, making him just the second Maryland head coach to do so in his first three seasons\u2014the other being Bobby Ross. At the conclusion of this game, Friedgen also became the first Atlantic Coast Conference coach to ever win at least ten games in his first three seasons. Going into the game, Maryland's 30-win three seasons was the best three-year total in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl\nThe West Virginia Mountaineers had finished the regular season with a record of 8\u20134, which already included a defeat at the hands of Maryland. Like Friedgen, it was Rich Rodriguez's third year as head coach of his program. West Virginia entered the game on a seven-game winning streak, as co-champions of the Big East conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl\nThe game took place in front of a crowd of 78,892 fans. The Terps got off to a quick lead, and never relented. Early in the third quarter, Maryland led 31-0 before West Virginia scored its only points. Oddly enough, the game was a bowl rematch of a regular season game which had similarly lop-sided results: Maryland had won that contest too, 34-7. It marked the fourth Terps' win over the Mountaineers in three years, by an average score of 35-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Team selection, Maryland\nThe 2003 season was Ralph Friedgen's third as head coach at Maryland. He had already compiled an impressive record in his first two years, elevating Terrapins football back to the national stage for the first time since Bobby Ross left the program in the wake of the Len Bias tragedy. His first year as head coach in 2001, Friedgen had led the Terrapins to a 10-2 record and the BCS Orange Bowl, for the team's first winning season in five years and the first bowl game in eleven years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Team selection, West Virginia\nWest Virginia's 2003 season started off badly, with a 1-4 record including losses to Wisconsin, Cincinnati, Maryland, and fellow Big East foe Miami. However, the Mountaineers recovered to win their next seven games and secure a conference co-championship with Miami. With it they also received a bowl bid to travel to Jacksonville to face the Terps in a post-season rematch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe game started with a West Virginia kick off into the Maryland endzone where Steve Suter returned it for 23 yards. Quarterback Scott McBrien led the Terps on a drive with Bruce Perry carrying 22 yards and a pass to Steve Suter for 16 and Jo Jo Walker for 29 yards. The Mountaineers held fast at their own 10-yard line and forced a field goal attempt. Nick Novak made good a 27-yard kick for the first points in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nIn the next two series, West Virginia and Maryland exchanged punts. Mountaineer running back Kay-Jay Harris then fumbled the ball which was recovered by Shawne Merriman for the Terps. Maryland suffered two fumbles, by running back Bruce Perry and Scott McBrien, but recovered both. They again tried for a field goal, but Nick Novak missed the 51-yard attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nWest Virginia took over on downs on their 34-yard line and rushed three times for 16 yards before quarterback Rasheed Marshall fumbled and Maryland linebacker Andrew Henley recovered it at midfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nOn their next possession, the Terps pushed to the Mountaineer 31-yard line before Scott McBrien completed a pass to Jafar Williams for a 31-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nThe Terps kicked off to start to 2nd quarter, and with a touchback, West Virginia took over on their 20-yard line. After a three-and-out series, they brought on their special teams unit. Steve Suter received the punt on the Maryland 24 and ran it 76 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nWest Virginia took over and made a first-down, but was forced to punt again. Scott McBrien then led the Terps on an 81-yard drive capped by a 22-yard touchdown pass again to Jafar Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nThe Mountaineers were forced three-and-out and punted once more. Maryland drove down to the West Virginia 18, but a 35-yard field goal attempt by Nick Novak was again missed. Likewise, West Virginia pushed to the Maryland 24, before missing a 41-yard field goal of their own to end the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nAfter Grant Wiley returned the kick 28 yards for the Mountaineers, they were once again held three-and-out and forced to punt. After driving to mid-field, Scott McBrien launched a 43-yard pass to Steve Suter. Despite good coverage from cornerback Lance Frazier, Suter was able to tip the ball with one hand and catch it in mid-air as he was diving to the ground in a tangle with Frazier. This set up a two-yard rush by McBrien for a touchdown, and Maryland expanded its lead to 31-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nWest Virginia received the kick and Adam Jones made a short return for six yards. Rasheed Marshall held onto the ball and rushed for another six yards. Kay-Jay Harris then broke free for a 29-yard run. The Mountaineers picked up another eight yards with a pass to Chris Henry. This set up a 15-yard run up the middle by quarterback Marshall for what would be West Virginia's only points of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nMaryland responded with another drive, including a 28-yard pass to the right to Josh Allen and a 43-yard pass up the middle to Dan Melendez. After another short run and short pass, Maryland settle for a 24-yard field goal by Novak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe teams traded punts, and then the Mountaineers punted once more. A 73-yard drive was then capped with a 14-yard pass to Jo Jo Walker for another touchdown, and the final points of the game. The next Mountaineers' possession was ended with a sack of second-string quarterback Charles Hales and a turnover on downs. Maryland took over on the West Virginia 38, and pushed to the 6-yard line before the game ended on 4th and 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Postgame effects\nThe New York Times computer ranking system rated the Maryland Terrapins as the number-three team in the nation, after split-national champions USC and LSU. The rating put the Terps considerably ahead of number-four Ohio State, number-five Miami, and number-six Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Postgame effects\nThe Associated Press poll placed Maryland as #17 and the ESPN/USA Today Coaches' poll ranked them as #20 in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177536-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Gator Bowl, Postgame effects\nTerps' head coach Ralph Friedgen was picked as a coach of the Kai team for the Hula Bowl opposite Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel. Maryland players Lamar Bryant (OG), Eric Dumas (OL), Dennard Wilson (S), and Jeff Dugan (TE) were selected to play for the Kai squad. Scott Smith (DE) was selected for the Las Vegas All-American Classic, while Madieu Williams (FS) played in the Senior Bowl. Bruce Perry (TB), Scott McBrien (QB), and Leon Joe (LB) played in the Gridiron Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177537-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars\nThe 2004 Gaz de France Stars was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the inaugural edition of the Gaz de France Stars, and was part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place in Hasselt, Belgium, in late September to early October, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177537-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177537-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars, Singles entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry as a Glossary of tennis terms#Lucky Loser:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177537-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars, Champions, Doubles\n\u00c9milie Loit / Katarina Srebotnik def. Micha\u00eblla Krajicek / \u00c1gnes Sz\u00e1vay, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177538-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars \u2013 Doubles\nThe Doubles Tournament at the 2004 Gaz de France Stars took place in late September to early October, 2004, on indoor hard courts in Hasselt, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177538-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds get a bye into round two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177539-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars \u2013 Singles\nThe Singles Tournament at the 2004 Gaz de France Stars took place in late September to early October, 2004, on indoor hard courts in Hasselt, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177539-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars \u2013 Singles\nElena Dementieva won the title with a bizarre scoreline in the final, becoming the first winner of this tournament in an all-Russian final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177539-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Gaz de France Stars \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds get a bye into round two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177540-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 General Cup International\nThe 2004 General Cup was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that took place between 11\u201316 September 2004 at the General Snooker Club in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177541-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz\nThe 2004 Generali Ladies Linz is the 2004 Tier II WTA Tour tournament of the annually-held Generali Ladies Linz tennis tournament. It was the 18th edition of the tournament and was held from October 23\u201330, 2004 at the TipsArena Linz. Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177541-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177541-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pairs received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177541-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received entry into the main draw via a protected ranking:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177541-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz, Champions, Singles\nIt was Mauresmo's 14th WTA singles title, and fourth title of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177541-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz, Champions, Doubles\nIt was Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1's 18th WTA doubles title, and third of the year. It was Likhovtseva's 20th WTA doubles title, and third of the year. This was the first of two doubles titles they won together as a pair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177542-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, but they were defeated in the quarterfinals by Nathalie Dechy and Patty Schnyder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177542-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Doubles\nJanette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 and Elena Likhovtseva won the title, defeating Dechy and Schnyder in the final 6\u20132, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177543-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Singles\nAi Sugiyama was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177543-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Singles\nMauresmo went on to win the title, defeating Elena Bovina in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20130. This is, to date, Bovina's final WTA tour final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177543-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Ladies Linz \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds who played received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177544-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Open\nThe 2004 Generali Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Tennis Stadium Kitzb\u00fchel in Kitzb\u00fchel, Austria and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 49th edition of the tournament and ran from 19 July until 25 July 2004. Third-seeded Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177544-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Open, Finals, Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl defeated Lucas Arnold Ker / Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda 6\u20133, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177545-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Open \u2013 Doubles\nMartin Damm and Cyril Suk were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Lucas Arnold Ker and Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177545-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Open \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl won the tournament by defeating Arnold Ker and Garc\u00eda 6\u20133, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177546-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Open \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Coria was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177546-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Generali Open \u2013 Singles\nNicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa won the title by defeating Gast\u00f3n Gaudio 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177547-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gent\u2013Wevelgem\nThese page shows the results for the 66th edition of the Gent\u2013Wevelgem cycling classic over 208 kilometres, held on Wednesday April 7, 2004. There were a total of 186 competitors, with 56 finishing the race, which was won by Belgium's Tom Boonen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177548-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgetown Hoyas football team\nThe 2004 Georgetown Hoyas football team was an American football team that represented Georgetown University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Georgetown finished last in the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177548-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgetown Hoyas football team\nIn their 12th year under head coach Bob Benson, the Hoyas compiled a 3\u20138 record. Ryan Goethals, Brandon Small and Frank Terrazzino were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177548-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgetown Hoyas football team\nThe Hoyas were outscored 280 to 174. Their winless (0\u20136) conference record was the worst in the seven-team Patriot League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177548-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgetown Hoyas football team\nGeorgetown played its home games at Harbin Field on the university campus in Washington, D.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177549-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Amendment 1\nGeorgia Constitutional Amendment 1 of 2004, is an amendment to the Georgia Constitution that previously made it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil unions. The referendum was approved by 76% of the voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177549-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Amendment 1\nThe amendment was challenged in court. On May 16, 2006 a lower court in Georgia struck down the amendment, but on July 7, 2006 the Supreme Court of Georgia overturned the lower court thus leaving the amendment as part of the Georgia Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177549-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Amendment 1\nAs a result of the Supreme Court ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges Amendment 1 was declared unconstitutional on June 26, 2015, legalizing same-sex marriage in Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177550-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 Georgia Bulldogs football team represented the University of Georgia during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season The Bulldogs completed the season with a 10\u20132 record. The Bulldogs had a regular season Southeastern Conference (SEC) record of 6\u20132, but did not win the SEC East, having lost to Tennessee and Auburn. Georgia beat Wisconsin in the 2005 Outback Bowl and finished the season ranked 6th in the Coaches' Poll. This was the Georgia Bulldogs' fourth season under the guidance of head coach Mark Richt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177551-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Georgia Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2 in the U.S. state of Georgia as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177552-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Southern Eagles football team\nThe 2004 Georgia Southern Eagles football team represented the Georgia Southern Eagles of Georgia Southern University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Eagles played their home games at Paulson Stadium in Statesboro, Georgia. The team was coached by Mike Sewak, in his third year as head coach for the Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177553-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team\nThe 2004 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team represented the Georgia Institute of Technology in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's coach was former University of Florida quarterback Chan Gailey. It played its home games at Bobby Dodd Stadium in Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177554-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Georgia on 28 March 2004. They followed the partial annulment of the November 2003 parliamentary elections, which were widely believed to have been rigged by the former President Eduard Shevardnadze. New elections for the 150 seats elected by proportional representation were ordered following the resignation of Shevardnadze and the election of new president Mikhail Saakashvili in January 2004. The results of the 75 seats elected in single-member constituencies in 2003 were not annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177554-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian parliamentary election\nThe elections were won by the National Movement\u2013Democrats, which won 135 of the 150 proportional seats, giving it control of 153 of the 235 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177554-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian parliamentary election, Conduct\nA preliminary report by observers from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) praised the conduct of the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177554-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian parliamentary election, Conduct\n\"The 28 March 2004 repeat parliamentary election in Georgia demonstrated commendable progress in relation to previous elections. The Georgian authorities have seized the opportunity, since the 4 January presidential election, to further bring Georgia's election process in closer alignment with European standards for democratic elections, including OSCE commitments and Council of Europe standards,\" the report said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177554-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian parliamentary election, Conduct\n\"However, in the wake of the events of November 2003, the political life of Georgia, as reflected in the election process, is not yet fully normalized. The consolidation of the democratic election process will only be fully tested in a more competitive environment, once a genuine level of political pluralism is re-established.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177554-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian parliamentary election, Conduct\nIn an attempt to produce an election result acceptable to both domestic and international opinion, the Georgian government allowed the votes to be counted simultaneously by the CEC and by a non-government organisation, the International Society for Fair Elections and Society (ISFED). This was called the parallel vote tabulation (PVT). Figures released by ISFED on 31 March showed results almost identical to those released by the CEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177555-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Georgia on January 4, 2004. The election followed the resignation of former President Eduard Shevardnadze. As expected, the main opposition leader, Mikhail Saakashvili, was soon shown by exit polls to be heading for an overwhelming victory. According to preliminary results issued on January 6 by the Central Election Commission, Saakashvili won over 97% of the votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177555-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian presidential election\nThe other candidates received less than 2% each. They were former presidential envoy to the Imereti region Temur Shashiashvili, leader of the Lawyers of Georgia Party Kartlos Garibashvili, one of the leaders of the political organization Mdzleveli, Zurab Kelekhsashvili, the President of the Coalition of Non-Government Organisations of the Disabled Zaza Sikharulidze, and leader of the David Agmashenebeli Party Roin Liparteliani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177555-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian presidential election, Results\nEarly on 5 January Saakashvili claimed victory, although no official figures had been released at that time. He thanked his supporters, who were gathered in the Philharmonic Hall in Tbilisi, and also thanked the voters. \"The whole of Georgia has won,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177555-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian presidential election, Results\n\"The primary tasks to be implemented from the first days of my presidency include introduction of a Prime Minister's post, appointment of a date for parliamentary elections and implementation of anti-corruption measures in the country,\" Saakashvili said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177555-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Georgian presidential election, Aftermath\nSaakashvili was inaugurated as President in Tbilisi on January 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177556-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 German Athletics Championships were held at the Eintracht-Stadion in Braunschweig on 10\u201311 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177557-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 German Figure Skating Championships (German: Deutsche Meisterschaften im Eiskunstlaufen) took place on January 2\u20134, 2004 in Berlin. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, ice dancing, and synchronized skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177558-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German Formula Three Championship\nThe 2004 ATS Formel 3 Cup was a multi-event motor racing championship for single-seat open wheel formula racing cars that held across Europe. The championship featured drivers competing in two-litre Formula Three racing cars built by Dallara which conform to the technical regulations, or formula, for the championship. It was the second edition of the ATS F3 Cup. It commenced on 24 April at Hockenheim and ended on 9 October at Oschersleben after nine double-header rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177558-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 German Formula Three Championship\nHS Technik Motorsport driver Bastian Kolmsee clinched both championship and rookie title. He achieved four wins, to overcome his closest rival Timo Lienemann by nine points, who won two races. The third place went to Jan Heylen, who started his season at Lausitz and won six races. His JB Motorsport teammate Michael Devaney won races at Oschersleben and Assen. Thomas Holzer, who completed the top-five, lost 54 points to Devaney in the main standings. Other wins were shared between opening round winner Jan Seyffarth and Jochen Nerpel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177558-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 German Formula Three Championship, Teams and drivers\nAll cars were powered by Opel engines, excepting Seyffarth Motorsport cars that were powered by Renault. All drivers competed in Dallara chassis; model listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177558-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 German Formula Three Championship, Race calendar and results\nWith the exception of round at TT Circuit Assen, all rounds took place on German soil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177559-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German Grand Prix\nThe 2004 German Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Grosser Mobil 1 Preis von Deutschland 2004) was a Formula One motor race held at Hockenheim on 25 July 2004. It was Race 12 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177559-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 German Grand Prix\nThe 66-lap race was won by local driver Michael Schumacher, driving a Ferrari. Schumacher took his eleventh victory of the season, equalling his record from 2002, after starting from pole position. Englishman Jenson Button finished second in a BAR-Honda despite a ten-place grid penalty for an engine change in practice, and a loose helmet strap during the race, with Spaniard Fernando Alonso third in a Renault. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen of McLaren-Mercedes set the fastest lap of the race but retired on lap 14 after his rear wing gave way at Turn 1, sending his car into the barriers at high speed. The first start was aborted after Olivier Panis indicated a problem with his Toyota. This led to a second formation lap, and the shortening of the race by one lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177559-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 German Grand Prix\nThis was the final Grand Prix for Brazilian driver Cristiano da Matta, and the final time Williams used the \"Walrus\" front wing. Marc Gen\u00e9 was replaced at Williams by Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia, returning to Formula One after being sacked by Jaguar following the 2003 British Grand Prix. Pizzonia scored his first points by finishing seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177559-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 German Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177560-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German Skeleton Championship\nThe 38th German Skeleton Championship 2004 was held on 10-11 January 2004 at the K\u00f6nigssee track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177561-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 German motorcycle Grand Prix was the eighth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 16\u201318 July 2004 at the Sachsenring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177561-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 German motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round eight has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nThe President of Germany (Bundespr\u00e4sident) is the titular head of state of the Federal Republic of Germany. The president's tasks are mostly ceremonial, but for the signing of all new federal laws before they go into effect. In practice however, all presidents have had informal influence on politics and society but mostly in a non-partisan way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nThe president is not elected directly by the voters but by a special Federal Convention (Bundesversammlung) which is assembled every five years for this task alone. This body consists of the members of the Bundestag and an equal number of members selected by the sixteen federal state parliaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nThe election date was set for 23 May in Berlin, the anniversary of the adoption of the German constitution. Of the 1,206 members only 549 belonged to the parties that controlled the federal government - the Social Democrats (SPD)) and the German Green Party. Also in their camp were the 31 members of the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS). The opposition parties, the (Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union (CDU/CSU) and Free Democratic Party (FDP), however, had a majority of 624 members because they commanded more seats in the federal states. One member belonged to a regional party; one was non-aligned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nParties nominate candidates for the position, although the outcome of the election is very predictable because the members of the convention normally vote with strict party loyalty. As the majority of the opposition was not overwhelming (624 of 604 needed), \"dissident\" members could cause a surprise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nCDU/CSU and FDP nominated Horst K\u00f6hler, the head of the International Monetary Fund in Washington, D.C.. Before that, he had been a senior official and was involved in negotiating both the German reunification treaty and the Maastricht Treaty on behalf of the German government. He is said to be rather modest but independently minded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nSPD and Greens had nominated Gesine Schwan, the head of the Viadrina European University in Frankfurt (Oder). She is a political scientist who also has been active for a long time in politics for the SPD - but has not always been in line with the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nAll eight preceding presidents had been men. Once in office, the President can be subsequently re-elected only once. The previous president Johannes Rau (SPD) cited personal reasons for his decision not to run for a second term and died in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177562-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 German presidential election\nK\u00f6hler won in the first voting round, receiving an immediate absolute majority of 604 (50.1%). Schwan won 589 votes, apparently attracting opposition voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177563-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gerry Weber Open\nThe 2004 Gerry Weber Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor grass courts. It was the 12th edition of the Gerry Weber Open, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Gerry Weber Stadion in Halle, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, from 7 June through 14 June 2004. First-seeded Roger Federer won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177563-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gerry Weber Open, Finals, Doubles\nLeander Paes / David Rikl defeated Tom\u00e1\u0161 Cibulec / Petr P\u00e1la 6\u20132, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177564-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge were the defending champions, but lost in the first round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177564-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and David Rikl won in the final 6\u20132, 7\u20135, against Tom\u00e1\u0161 Cibulec and Petr P\u00e1la.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177565-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, and won in the final 6\u20130, 6\u20133, against Mardy Fish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177565-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Gerry Weber Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177566-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ghanaian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Ghana on 7 December 2004. The presidential elections resulted in a victory for incumbent John Kufuor of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), who defeated John Atta-Mills of the National Democratic Congress with 52 percent of the vote in the first round, enough to win without the need for a runoff. The parliamentary elections saw the NPP win 128 seats in the expanded 230-seat Parliament, an outright majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177567-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Girabola\nThe 2004 Girabola was the 26th season of top-tier football in Angola. The season ran from 15 February to 6 November 2004. ASA were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177567-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Girabola\nThe league comprised 14 teams, the bottom three of which were relegated to the 2005 Gira Angola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177567-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Girabola\nASA were crowned champions, winning a third title in a row, while Acad\u00e9mica do Soyo, Benfica do Lubango and Bravos do Maquis, the three clubs that were promoted that same season, were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177567-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Girabola\nArs\u00e9nio Kabungula aka Love of ASA finished as the top scorer with 17 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177567-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Girabola, Changes from the 2004 season\nRelegated: Benfica de Luanda, Desportivo da Hu\u00edla and Ritondo Promoted: Acad\u00e9mica do Soyo, Benfica do Lubango and Bravos do Maquis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia\nThe 2004 Giro d'Italia was the 87th\u00a0edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro began in Genoa with a 6.9\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) prologue. The race came to a close with a 133\u00a0km (82.6\u00a0mi) mass-start road stage that stretched from Clusone to Milan. Nineteen teams entered the race that was won by the Italian Damiano Cunego of the Saeco Macchine per Caff\u00e8 team. Second and third were the Ukrainian Serhiy Honchar and Italian Gilberto Simoni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia\nIn the race's other classifications, Gerolsteiner rider Fabian Wegmann won the mountains classification, Raffaele Illiano of the Colombia\u2013Selle Italia team won the intergiro classification, and Fassa Bortolo rider Alessandro Petacchi won the points classification. In addition to the points classification, Petacchi also won the secondary most combative and Azzurri d'Italia classifications. Saeco Macchine per Caff\u00e8 finished as the winners of the Trofeo Fast Team classification, ranking each of the nineteen teams contesting the race by lowest cumulative time. The other team classification, the Trofeo Super Team classification, where the teams' riders are awarded points for placing within the top twenty in each stage and the points are then totaled for each team was won by Alessio\u2013Bianchi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Teams\nA total of 19 teams were invited to participate in the 2004 Giro d'Italia. Each team sent a squad of nine riders, so the Giro began with a peloton of 171 cyclists. Out of the 171 riders that started this edition of the Giro d'Italia, a total of 140 riders made it to the finish in Milan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Teams\nThe 19 teams that took part in the race were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 71]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nThe route for the 2004 Giro d'Italia was unveiled by race director Angelo Zomegnan on 8 November 2003 in Milan. It contained two time trial events, all of which were individual. The organizers divided the remaining nineteen stages into three categories: flat stages, rolling stages, and mountain stages. Twelve of the stages were declared flat stages. Of the seven stages remaining, three stages were designated rolling stages and three were ranked as mountain stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Route and stages\nIn the stages containing categorized climbs, three had summit finishes: stage 3, to Corno alle Scale; stage 7, to Montevergine di Mercogliano; and stage 18, to Bormio 2000. The organizers chose to include two rest days. When compared to the previous year's race, the race was 52.6\u00a0km (33\u00a0mi) shorter, contained the same amount of rest days, and the same amount of time trials. In addition, this race opened with a prologue, which the last year's race did not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nThe 2004 Giro d'Italia began with a 6.9\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) prologue around the Italian city of Genoa. Bradley McGee won the first leg of the race after besting the second place rider Olaf Pollack by ten seconds. The race's first mass-start stage came down to a sprint finish in the city of Alba. The stage was won by Italian sprinter Alessandro Petacchi and Pollack managed to take the race lead after earning a twelve-second time bonus by finishing second on the stage. Stage 2 saw the race lead switch back to McGee after he finished second to the stage winner Damiano Cunego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nSuccess in stages was limited to eight of the competing teams, three of which achieved multiple stage victories, while two individual riders won multiple stages. The riders that won more than once were Alessandro Petacchi in stages 1, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15, and 20 and Damiano Cunego in stages 2, 7, 16, and 18. Fassa Bortolo won nine stages with Petacchi. Saeco Macchine per Caff\u00e8 won five stages, four with Cunego and one with Gilberto Simoni in stage 3. Vini Caldirola\u2013Nobili Rubinetterie won two stages, with Pavel Tonkov in stage 17 and Stefano Garzelli in stage 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Race overview\nFDJeux.com, Lotto\u2013Domo, Acqua & Sapone, Ceramica Panaria\u2013Margres, and De Nardi each won one stage at the Giro d'Italia. FDJeux.com won the opening prologue with Bradley McGee. Lotto-Domo's Robbie McEwen won stage 4 by out-sprinting the rest of the field for the stage win, as did Acqua & Sapone rider Fred Rodriguez in stage 9. Ceramica Panaria-Margres's Emanuele Sella won the hilly stage 11. De Nardi rider Serhiy Honchar won the stage 13 individual time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nIn the 2004 Giro d'Italia, four different jerseys were awarded. For the general classification, calculated by adding each cyclist's finishing times on each stage, and allowing time bonuses for the first three finishers on mass-start stages, the leader received a pink jersey. This classification is considered the most important of the Giro d'Italia, and the winner is considered the winner of the Giro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nAdditionally, there was a points classification, which awarded a mauve jersey. In the points classification, cyclists got points for finishing in the top 15 in a stage. The stage win awarded 25\u00a0points, second place awarded 20\u00a0points, third 16, fourth 14, fifth 12, sixth 10, and one point fewer per place down the line, to a single point for 15th. In addition, points could be won in intermediate sprints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThere was also a mountains classification, which awarded a green jersey. In the mountains classifications, points were won by reaching the top of a mountain before other cyclists. Each climb was categorized as either first, second, or third category, with more points available for the higher-categorized climbs. The highest point in the Giro (called the Cima Coppi), which in 2004 was Passo di Gavia, afforded more points than the other first-category climbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe fourth jersey represented the intergiro classification, marked by a blue jersey. The calculation for the intergiro is similar to that of the general classification, in each stage there is a midway point that the riders pass through a point and where their time is stopped. As the race goes on, their times compiled and the person with the lowest time is the leader of the intergiro classification and wears the blue jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThere were also two classifications for teams. The first was the Trofeo Fast Team. In this classification, the times of the best three cyclists per team on each stage were added; the leading team was the team with the lowest total time. The Trofeo Super Team was a team points classification, with the top 20\u00a0placed riders on each stage earning points (20 for first place, 19 for second place and so on, down to a single point for 20th) for their team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Classification leadership\nThe rows in the following table correspond to the jerseys awarded after that stage was run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Final standings, Minor classifications\nOther less well-known classifications, whose leaders did not receive a special jersey, were awarded during the Giro. Other awards included the Combativity classification, which was a compilation of points gained for position on crossing intermediate sprints, mountain passes and stage finishes. Italian Alessandro Petacchi won the Most Combative classification. The Azzurri d'Italia classification was based on finishing order, but points were awarded only to the top three finishers in each stage. The Azzurri d'Italia classification was also won by Alessandro Petacchi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177568-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Final standings, Minor classifications\nThe Trofeo Fuga Piaggio classification rewarded riders who took part in a breakaway at the head of the field, each rider in an escape of ten or fewer riders getting one point for each kilometre that the group stayed clear. The classification was won by Daniele Righi. Teams were given penalty points for minor technical infringements. Phonak was the most successful in avoiding penalties, and so won the Fair Play classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 58], "content_span": [59, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10\nThe 2004 Giro d'Italia was the 87th edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro began in Genoa, with a Prologue individual time trial on 8 May, and Stage 10 occurred on 19 May with a stage to Ascoli Piceno. The race finished in Milan on 30 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Prologue\n8 May 2004 \u2014 Genoa, 6.9\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 1\n9 May 2004 \u2014 Genoa to Alba, 143\u00a0km (89\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 2\n10 May 2004 \u2014 Novi Ligure to Pontremoli, 184\u00a0km (114\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 3\n11 May 2004 \u2014 Pontremoli to Corno alle Scale, 191\u00a0km (119\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 4\n12 May 2004 \u2014 Porretta Terme to Civitella in Val di Chiana, 184\u00a0km (114\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 5\n13 May 2004 \u2014 Civitella in Val di Chiana to Spoleto, 177\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 6\n14 May 2004 \u2014 Spoleto to Valmontone, 164\u00a0km (102\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 7\n15 May 2004 \u2014 Frosinone to Montevergine di Mercogliano, 214\u00a0km (133\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 8\n16 May 2004 \u2014 Giffoni Valle Piana to Policoro, 214\u00a0km (133\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 9\n17 May 2004 \u2014 Policoro to Carovigno, 142\u00a0km (88\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177569-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10, Stage 10\n19 May 2004 \u2014 Porto Sant'Elpidio to Ascoli Piceno, 146\u00a0km (91\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20\nThe 2004 Giro d'Italia was the 87th edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro began in Genoa, with a Prologue individual time trial on 8 May, and Stage 11 occurred on 20 May with a stage from Porto Sant'Elpidio. The race finished in Milan on 30 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 11\n20 May 2004 \u2014 Porto Sant'Elpidio to Cesena, 228\u00a0km (142\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 12\n21 May 2004 \u2014 Cesena to Treviso, 210\u00a0km (130\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 13\n22 May 2004 \u2014 Trieste to Trieste, 52\u00a0km (32\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 14\n23 May 2004 \u2014 Trieste to Pula, 175\u00a0km (109\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 15\n24 May 2004 \u2014 Pore\u010d to San Vendemiano, 243\u00a0km (151\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 16\n25 May 2004 \u2014 San Vendemiano to Pfalzen, 217\u00a0km (135\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 17\n27 May 2004 \u2014 Bruneck to Fondo/Sarnonico, 153\u00a0km (95\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 18\n28 May 2004 \u2014 Cles to Bormio 2000, 118\u00a0km (73\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 19\n29 May 2004 \u2014 Bormio to Presolana, 122\u00a0km (76\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177570-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro d'Italia, Stage 11 to Stage 20, Stage 20\n30 May 2004 \u2014 Clusone to Milan, 154\u00a0km (96\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177571-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro del Trentino\nThe 2004 Giro del Trentino was the 28th edition of the Tour of the Alps cycle race and was held on 20 April to 23 April 2004. The race started and finished in Arco. The race was won by Damiano Cunego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177572-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Giro di Lombardia\nThe 2004 Giro di Lombardia was the 98th edition of the Giro di Lombardia cycle race and was held on 16 October 2004. The race started in Mendrisio and finished in Bergamo. The race was won by Damiano Cunego of the Saeco team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177573-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gloucester City Council election\nThe 2004 Gloucester City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Gloucester City Council in England. One-third of council were up for election and still a No Overall Control council and there were no elections for Kingsholm and Wotton, Podsmead, Quedgeley Fieldcourt, Quedgeley Severn Vale or Westgate in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177574-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Golden Corral 500\nThe 2004 Golden Corral 500 was the 4th race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season, held at Atlanta Motor Speedway on March 14, 2004. The race was won by Dale Earnhardt Jr., who led 55 laps that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177574-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Golden Corral 500\nRyan Newman of Penske Racing would win the pole, while Tony Stewart of Joe Gibbs Racing would lead the most laps with 127 laps led. 125,000 were in attendance for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177574-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Golden Corral 500, Qualifying\nRyan Newman would win the pole with a 28.640. Kirk Shelmerdine would qualify for his first ever NASCAR Cup Series race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177575-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Golden Globes (Portugal)\nThe 2004 Golden Globes (Portugal) were held at the Coliseu dos Recreios, Lisbon on 25 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177576-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Golden Spin of Zagreb\nThe 2004 Golden Spin of Zagreb was the 37th edition of an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Zagreb, Croatia. It was held at the Dom Sportova between November 11 and 14, 2004. Figure skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. The Junior-level equivalent was the 2004 Golden Bear of Zagreb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177577-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gosport Borough Council election\nElections to Gosport Council were held on 10 June 2004. Half of the council was up for election, and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177578-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Governor General's Awards\nThe 2004 Governor General's Awards for Literary Merit: Finalists in 14 categories (68 books) were announced October 26, the four children's literature winners announced and presented November 15, other winners announced and presented November 16. The prize for writers and illustrators was $15,000 and \"a specially crafted copy of the winning book bound by master bookbinder Pierre Ouvrard\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177578-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Governor General's Awards\nAs introduced in 2003, the four children's literature awards were announced and presented separately from the others. The event at Rideau Hall, the Governor General's residence in Ottawa, was scheduled to begin at 10:00 on a Monday morning. \"Children from across the National Capital Region will be invited to attend the event, which will also include readings and workshops related to children's literature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177579-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Gran Premio Telmex/Tecate\nThe 2004 Gran Premio Telmex/Tecate was the fourteenth and final round of the2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on November 7, 2004, at the Aut\u00f3dromo Hermanos Rodr\u00edguez in Mexico City, Mexico. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais won the pole and the race and in doing so also secured his first of four Champ Car titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National\nThe 2004 Grand National (officially known as the Martell Grand National for sponsorship reasons) was the 157th official annual running of the world-famous Grand National steeplechase which took place at Aintree near Liverpool, England, on 3 April 2004 and attracted the maximum permitted field of 40 competitors for total prize money of \u00a3600,000 including \u00a3348,000 to the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National\n39 of the 40 original entrants took part in the race \u2013 Tyneandthyneagain was withdrawn. On the run-in after the final fence (where Hedgehunter fell when in close contention), any one of three horses looked capable of clinching victory, but it was 16\u20131 shot Amberleigh House who finished first, three lengths ahead of Clan Royal, who in turn was two lengths from Lord Atterbury. The winning horse was trained by Ginger McCain, who secured his fourth Grand National win, 31 years after his first with Red Rum. 11 of the 39 starters completed the course, with all of the fallers returning safely to the stables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National\nFor the second year running Bramblehill Duke was a late replacement for the withdrawn Red Striker a day before the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Leading contenders\nThe public gambled an estimated \u00a3200\u00a0million on the outcome of the race but no clear favourite emerged as four horses started off as joint-favourites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Leading contenders\n2002 National winner Bindaree was one of the 10\u20131 joint-favourites after winning the Welsh National at Chepstow in the last December. He had also run well to finish second over one circuit of the Aintree course in the Becher Chase in November where he had been beaten another joint-favourite, Clan Royal. The inexperienced Jurancon II also attracted public attention after being chosen as the ride of champion jockey Tony McCoy having won the Red Square Vodka Gold Cup in February, and Joss Naylor completed the quartet after finishing second in the Hennessy Cognac Gold Cup in November. Hedgehunter was 11\u20131, the 2001 Irish Grand National winner David's Lad was 12/1, and 2003 National winner Monty's Pass was also among the leading fancies at 20/1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, The race\nAlexander Banquet led the field over Melling Road towards the first fence, were Artic Jack was a faller and Kelami was brought down by the fall of Luzcadou. Alcapone led the field onto the next fences before Beecher's Brook. At the third fence which was the first open ditch Shardam blundered and unseated its rider, when chasing the leaders. At the next fence one of the joint favourites Jurancon II fell in mid division. There was no fallers at the fifth fence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand National, The race\nAt Beecher's Brook the loose horse Shardam caused pandemonium when badly hampering and causing the fall of Akarus, who brought down Montreal, Bindaree and What's Up Boys. Bounce Back also fell, Risk Accessor unseated its rider as did Skycab who was badly hampered. Bramblehill Duke and Blowing Wind both refused the fence. The horses still running managed to negotiate the Foinavon and Canal Turn fence safely. Exit to Wave was pulled up towards the rear of the field before Valentine's Brook. Hedgehunter followed by Puntal and Lord Atterbury led them towards The Chair, where Takagi blundered and unseated its rider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Grand National, The race\nMantle's Prince tailed off and was pulled up at the Water Jump. Twenty two horses were still left standing as they began the second circuit of the course with one of the joint favourites Joss Naylor at the back the field. At the 18th fence Alexander Banquet fell and Southern Star was pulled up. The 19th fence which is was an open ditch claimed Puntal who unseated its rider while just behind the leaders, where Clan Royal blundered and made a mistake. Joss Naylor tailed off and was pulled up. At the next fence Gunner Welburn was pulled up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0005-0003", "contents": "2004 Grand National, The race\nOnto Beecher's Brook second time where Le Coudray fell, after this fence was Foinavon which saw Just In Debt who unseated its rider after being hampered by a loose horse when behind. Alcapone was pulled up at 25th fence after weakening, Wonder Weasel was pulled up 3 out after tailing off. Two fences from the finish Clan Royal, Lord Atterbury and Hedgehunter gained a lead of a couple of lengths from Amberleigh House in fourth. Clan Royal led over the last ahead of Lord Atterbury and Hedgehunter who fell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0005-0004", "contents": "2004 Grand National, The race\nAs they went up the run-in Clan Royal wandered to the left after his rider Liam Cooper had lost his whip earlier in the race, at the elbow Clan Royal still held the lead from Lord Atterbury and Amberleigh House who had joined the two. Amberleigh House stayed on well to lead the final 100 yards of the race and win by 3 lengths from Clan Royal in 2nd followed by Lord Atterbury in 3rd, nearly 30 lengths ahead of Monty's Pass and Spot Thedifference in 4th and 5th respectively. Behind these were Smarty, Ardent Scout, Bear on Board, Kingsmark, The Bunny Boiler and last to complete David's Lad. Eleven horses completed the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Media coverage\nThe race was covered live on television and radio by the BBC, in accordance with the Ofcom Code on Sports and Other Listed and Designated Events, for the 46th consecutive year. The coverage was also syndicated globally and broadcast on the Internet for the first time to UK subscribers on the BBC website. The television coverage was presented by Claire Balding and Sue Barker. The race commentary team consisted of Ian Bartlett, Tony O'Hehir, Darren Owen and lead commentator Jim McGrath, who called the runners home for the seventh year. After the race Lydia Hislop, Richard Pitman, Peter Scudamore and Norman Williamson talked the viewers through a full re-run of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Media coverage\nBoth Bartlett and Owen were covering their first Grand National on television after the retirement of John Hanmer; Bartlett had previously been part of the radio commentary team. This was also the first time since 1967 that the race was commentated on by a team of four rather than three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Media coverage\nRacing UK provided its own coverage of the race to bookmakers' outlets across the country. The BBC also broadcast radio commentary of the race on national radio for the 74th year as part of its Radio Five Saturday sports show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Media coverage\nAll of the leading daily newspapers in the United Kingdom ran centre spread pullouts of various sizes with colour guides and profiles of all the runners, while office sweepstake kits were printed by three major dailys during the week prior to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Jockeys\nCarl Llewellyn was the most experienced rider in the race, being only the twelfth man to weigh out for the fourteenth time for a Grand National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177580-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand National, Jockeys\nSix riders made their debut in the race with Andrew Tinkler and Ross Geraghty completing the course. James Barry, Bobby McNally, James Davies and Joey Elliott failed to reach the finishing post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker)\nThe 2004 Snooker Grand Prix (known as the 2004 Totesport Grand Prix for sponsorship reasons) was the 2004 edition of the Grand Prix snooker tournament and was held from 2 to 10 October 2004 at the Guild Hall in Preston, England. World number one Ronnie O'Sullivan won the tournament defeating Ian McCulloch by nine frames to five (9\u20135) in the final. In the semi-finals O'Sullivan defeated Paul Hunter 6\u20133 and McCulloch beat Michael Judge 6\u20131. Mark Williams, who won the same event under the name LG Cup the year before, lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker)\nJohn Higgins made the highest break with a 147. The 64-man tournament was the first of eight World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) ranking events in the 2004/2005 snooker season and the next event following last season's World Championship, which was won by O'Sullivan. It preceded the second ranking event of the season, the British Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary\nThe tournament was created as the Professional Players Tournament in 1982 by the snooker governing body, the World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA), to provide another ranking event. It was renamed the Grand Prix for the 1984 event until 2001, when it was called the LG Cup, before reverting to the Grand Prix this year. The tournament was the first of eight WPBSA ranking events in the 2004/2005 snooker season, and the next event following last season's World Championship, which was won by Ronnie O'Sullivan, now a two-time world champion and the world number one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary\nMark Williams won the same event under the name LG Cup last year. The tournament preceded the second ranking event of the season, the British Open. Sponsored by totesport for the first time after signing a one-year contract announced the day before the event started, it had a prize fund of \u00a3400,000 and was broadcast on the BBC and Eurosport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Qualifying\nThe qualifying rounds were played between players on the main tour ranked 33 and lower for one of 32 places in the final stage at Pontin's Snooker Centre in Prestatyn, Wales. The matches were best-of-9 frames until the semi-finals. Highly regarded 17-year-old Chinese player Ding Junhui narrowly missed out in qualifying. The other successful qualifiers included the likes of Mark Selby, Barry Hawkins, Shaun Murphy and Neil Robertson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nIn round one the 32 qualifiers faced members of the top 32, including the top 16 seeds. In this round O'Sullivan defeated Mark Davis 5\u20132, compiling a century break of 114. After the match O'Sullivan praised his mentor Ray Reardon. World number 51 Andy Hicks won against the UK champion Matthew Stevens 5\u20131, compiling two century breaks and three half-centuries in the 72-minute match. After struggling early on, 1997 world champion Ken Doherty went through by beating Anthony Davies 5\u20131. Dominic Dale, the 1997 winner, made breaks of 108, 68, 61 and 58 in defeating Scott MacKenzie 5\u20131. David Gray whitewashed Lee Walker 5\u20130, while Joe Perry beat Pakistan's Shokat Ali 5\u20131. James Wattana lost a frame after three consecutive misses from an unsnookered position, but still defeated John Parrott 5\u20132, a match in which Parrott's highest break was 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 904]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nSix-time world champion Steve Davis, at 47 the oldest player on the tour, defeated Sean Storey 5\u20131, after which he said \"At the start I couldn't hit the side of a bus station, but Sean let me off and in the end I didn't play badly.\" Seven-time world champion Stephen Hendry prevailed 5\u20134 over Jamie Burnett in a narrowly fought contest. Burnett, the world number 49, was 4\u20133 ahead and had potted the final red, but he missed the black, however, and Hendry forced a deciding frame which he won. After the match, Hendry said \"I got out of jail\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nBreaks of 75, 61 and 56 enabled 2002 world champion Peter Ebdon to claim a 5\u20132 victory over Simon Bedford. Chinese player Jin Long, in his first appearance in the final stage of a ranking event, led Tony Drago 3\u20130 before Drago won five consecutive frames. Nigel Bond defeated Gerard Greene 5\u20132, while Anthony Hamilton overcame Jimmy Michie by the same scoreline. Marco Fu, a former Grand Prix runner-up, claimed a 5\u20132 victory over David Roe. After coming back from 3\u20134 down to beat Patrick Wallace 5\u20134, Jimmy White revealed he nearly withdrew from the tournament because of a back injury he sustained in a charity pool match the week before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nWilliams, the world number two, was the highest ranked player to lose in the round when he lost 2\u20135 against Michael Judge. In the fifth frame, at 2\u20132, Williams was 64\u20130 ahead but a black ball clearance of 70 gave Judge the lead, who went on to win the match. After the match, Williams said that he was nowhere near the player he was a year ago. World number four and Masters champion Paul Hunter made breaks of 108 and 127 in defeating Darren Morgan 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nEuropean Open winner Stephen Maguire defeated Murphy 5\u20132, a match in which Maguire had a frame docked. As the match was about to begin and after they had shaken hands, Maguire realised he had not brought his chalk with him. He asked for permission to retrieve it from referee Johan Oomen, which was granted. As Maguire was away, Murphy spoke to the referee and questioned whether Maguire should be docked a frame, as he was technically not ready to play at the scheduled time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nMike Ganley, the tournament director, was called and docked a frame from Maguire, a ruling which angered Maguire. Of the incident Maguire said \"Rules are rules but I've never heard of anything like that happening before.\" The incident was said to be a key point in the rivalry between Maguire and Murphy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round one\nJohn Higgins made the highest break in the tournament with a maximum break in his 3\u20135 loss to Ricky Walden. It was his fifth maximum and the 49th in snooker history. It also earned him a bonus of \u00a320,000. For Walden it was the second time he reached the second round of a ranking event. In a match in which the deciding frame lasted 64 minutes and ended past midnight, Alan McManus overcame Fergal O'Brien 5\u20134. Graeme Dott, the surprise runner-up at the World Championship, emerged a 5\u20134 winner over Ryan Day. Of the other seeded players, Chris Small lost 4\u20135 to Selby, Stephen Lee beat Hugh Abernethy 5\u20132 and Quinten Hann lost 3\u20135 against Marcus Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round two\nDavis became the first player through to the last 16 when he defeated Drago 5\u20131, after which he expressed his surprise he was still in the tournament. O'Sullivan overcame a chest infection to beat Joe Swail 5\u20131, but missed his post-match press conference. Hunter came from 2\u20134 down with a score of 0\u201339 in the seventh to beat Ali Carter, compiling a century break in the decider. Preston's Ian McCulloch beat White 5\u20134 with a break of 73 in the deciding frame. After beating Robert Milkins 5\u20133, Hendry expressed dissatisfaction with his performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round two\nMaguire, the Snooker Writers' Association Young Player of the Year, saw off Walden 5\u20133 and said of the chalk incident \"I made sure I had it this time.\" In the match between Fu and Hawkins Fu led 4\u20132, before Hawkins forced a deciding frame, which Fu won. Judge continued his run by defeating Campbell 5\u20134 with breaks of 76, 61, and 52, and said his victory over Williams had given him confidence. Although he fluked the final brown from a snooker, Wattana potted the blue and pink balls in the final frame of his match against Doherty to win 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round two\nDoherty said \"It was a cruel blow. ... I had James in a really good snooker and from where I was sat it did not even look as though he could hit it.\" Of the other seeds, Lee enjoyed a 5\u20131 victory over Hamilton, Dott defeated Dale 5\u20132, Ebdon beat Joe Jogia 5\u20134, Perry beat David Gray 5\u20133 and McManus lost 4\u20135 against Nigel Bond. The other non-seeded victors were Selby and Australian Robertson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round three\nIn the third round Dott failed to comeback from his loss in the final of the World Championship, as he was defeated 3\u20135 by O'Sullivan. After beating Davis 5\u20131, Hunter said he wished Davis would speed up his play. In the match Hunter made his fourth century break of the tournament and had breaks of 71, 66, 43, and 53. Hendry was defeated 3\u20135 by McCulloch by losing five of the last six frames, and said he was not the player he was.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Round three\nHis break of 67 in the last frame was eclipsed by McCulloch's 72, who also made a break of 105 in the match. Breaks of 133 and 103 plus further runs of 41, 70, and 87 enabled Perry to beat Robertson 5\u20133 from 1\u20133 down. Selby saw off Ebdon 5\u20133 and said \"Hopefully there's more to come.\" Maguire defeated Bond 5\u20131, while Wattana beat Lee and Judge beat Fu by the same scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals O'Sullivan took 71 minutes to whitewash Selby 5\u20130, compiling two breaks of 135 and outscoring Selby 522\u201346. After the match O'Sullivan said \"My safety was good, so was my thinking, and so was my break-building. It's as well as I have played in the tournament.\" Another whitewash occurred when Wattana was defeated 0\u20135 by Hunter, a match eight minutes longer than O'Sullivan's, whom he would face in the semi-finals. After the match Hunter said \"I was racing Ronnie. I could see from the scoreboard that he was 3\u20130 up when I was leading 2\u20130.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nIn the other quarter-finals McCulloch defeated Maguire 5\u20132 after an error from Maguire, when he missed the pink for a probable 2\u20130 lead. The match included a 137 clearance from McCulloch. After the match Maguire said \"I went for a crazy one and paid the price but I think today I was just a bit too cocky. I didn't believe I was going to lose.\" Judge beat Perry 5\u20131 to face McCulloch in his first ranking event semi-final, and became the fourth Irish player to achieve this feat after Eugene Hughes, Doherty and Fergal O'Brien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 61], "content_span": [62, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nIn the semi-final, now best-of-11 frames, O'Sullivan defeated Hunter 6\u20133. O'Sullivan started strongly and opened up a lead of 3\u20131 at the mid-session interval. Hunter closed the gap to 2\u20133, before O'Sullivan won the sixth frame. A break of 80 from Hunter followed, before O'Sullivan won the next two for the match, compiling a 107 in the final frame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nThe other semi-final saw McCulloch beat Judge 6\u20131, a match in which Judge's highest break was 44 early in the game. McCulloch achieved runs of 132 and 89 after Judge hit a kick shot on a red ball that went away from its projected path on his way to victory. After his defeat Judge said he was happy with his form during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nIn the best-of-17 frame final O'Sullivan defeated McCulloch 9\u20135 to win his second consecutive ranking title. It was his 21st ranking final and 16th ranking title, which meant he was now third on the list ahead of Williams and Higgins. The victory earned him \u00a360,000 and meant he had won all the ranking events on the calendar at least once. After the match O'Sullivan said he could still improve: \"I have set myself high standards and I don't think I was firing on any cylinders.\" McCulloch said he was sure he would win a ranking title: \"I have lost two finals now but I will win one\u2014it is just a matter of when.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nIn the first session of the final O'Sullivan won the first frame with a break of 86. The next two frames were shared, before O'Sullivan made a century, which he followed with a 72 in the frame after. The sixth frame lasted 36 minutes, when O\u2019Sullivan struck in the pink to a distant pocket before clipping in a tricky black for a 5\u20131 lead. McCulloch won the next to bring the score to 5\u20132 in O'Sullivan's favour at the end of the first session. In the second session O'Sullivan took the first two frames with breaks of 66 and 104. O'Sullivan won two of the next three frames to bring the score to 8\u20134, before missing a relatively straightforward pot in the 13th, which allowed McCulloch to take the frame. A break of 71 in the next gave O'Sullivan the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Main draw\nNumbers to the left of the players' names are the tournament seedings. Players in bold indicate match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Final\nScores in bold denote winning frame scores and the winning participant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Qualifying\nThe qualifying for the tournament took place between 8 and 9 September 2004 at Pontin's in Prestatyn, Wales. All matches were best of 9 frames. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Century breaks, Qualifying stage centuries\nThe qualifying stage of the 2004 Grand Prix yielded a total of eight century breaks compiled by eight different players. The highest was a 142 made by Rory McLeod.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177581-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix (snooker), Century breaks, Televised stage centuries\nA total of 34 century breaks were made by 16 different players during the main stages of the 2004 Grand Prix. The highest break was a maximum break which was made by Higgins in his first round 3\u20135 loss to Walden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177582-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix Hassan II\nThe 2004 Grand Prix Hassan II was an Association of Tennis Professionals tennis tournament held in Casablanca, Morocco. It was the 20th edition of the tournament and was held from May 17 to May 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177582-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix Hassan II, Finals, Doubles\nEnzo Artoni / Fernando Vicente defeated Yves Allegro / Michael Kohlmann 3\u20136, 6\u20130, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177583-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177583-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Doubles\nEnzo Artoni and Fernando Vicente won in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20130, 6\u20134, against Yves Allegro and Michael Kohlmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177584-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Singles\nJulien Boutter was the defending champion, but lost in the second round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177584-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix Hassan II \u2013 Singles\nSantiago Ventura won the title, defeating Dominik Hrbat\u00fd 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177585-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem\nThe 2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Casablanca, Morocco that was part of the Tier V category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the fourth edition of the tournament and was held from 5 April until 11 April 2004. First-seeded \u00c9milie Loit won the singles title and earned $16,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177585-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem, Finals, Doubles\nMarion Bartoli / \u00c9milie Loit defeated Els Callens / Katarina Srebotnik 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177586-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Doubles\nGisela Dulko and Mar\u00eda Emilia Salerni were the defending champions, but none competed this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177586-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Doubles\nMarion Bartoli and \u00c9milie Loit won the title by defeating Els Callens and Katarina Srebotnik 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177587-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Singles\nRita Grande was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to \u00c9milie Loit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177587-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix SAR La Princesse Lalla Meryem \u2013 Singles\nLoit defeated \u013dudmila Cervanov\u00e1 6\u20132, 6\u20132 in the final to win her WTA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177588-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix de Denain\nThe 2004 Grand Prix de Denain was the 46th edition of the Grand Prix de Denain cycle race and was held on 15 April 2004. The race was won by Thor Hushovd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177589-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon\nThe 2004 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was played at the Palais des Sports de Gerland in Lyon, France, and was part of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 18th edition of the tournament and took place from 4 October through 11 October 2004. Unseeded Robin S\u00f6derling won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177589-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon, Finals, Doubles\nJonathan Erlich / Andy Ram defeated Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177590-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon \u2013 Doubles\nJonathan Erlich and Andy Ram were the defending champions and successfully defended their title, defeating Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177591-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon \u2013 Singles\nRainer Sch\u00fcttler was the defending champion, but lost in the first round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177591-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix de Tennis de Lyon \u2013 Singles\nRobin S\u00f6derling won the tournament, beating Xavier Malisse 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season\nThe 2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season was the 56th F.I.M. Road racing World Championship season. The season consisted of 16 races, beginning with the South African motorcycle Grand Prix on 18 April 2004 and ending with the Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix on 31 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, MotoGP class\nAt the end of 2003, HRC and Valentino Rossi had parted ways, and HRC held Rossi to the letter of their contract which stipulated he could not ride another manufacturer's machine until 31 December 2003. Rossi's move to Yamaha, therefore, was a gamble on a manufacturer that hadn't had won a world championship in 12 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, MotoGP class\nRossi won the first round of the season and lay to rest doubts about whether the rider or the motorcycle was more important when he achieved what no rider since Eddie Lawson had done in the history of the premier-class: he won back-to-back championships on different machines, Honda in 2003 and Yamaha in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, MotoGP class\nRunner-up Sete Gibernau gave Rossi a strong challenge initially, but faded towards the end of the season. The friendship between him and Rossi frayed over the season, and snapped completely at the Qatar round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, MotoGP class\nAnother change in 2004 was also d'Antin Team, who switched their alliance from Yamaha to Ducati motorcycles after five-year alliance with Yamaha, marked the first time Ducati MotoGP manufacturer introduced a satellite customer team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, MotoGP class\nAt the Italian round, the race ran for 17 laps before rain started, and according to the rules at the time, the race was decided on a second, 6-lap race and the previous 17 laps only counted for grid positions. Conditions dried enough that the riders started the new race in slicks instead of wet-weather tires. In 2005 the rules were changed so that rain would no longer stop a race in MotoGP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, 250cc class\nThe 250cc title was won by Dani Pedrosa on a Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Season summary, 125cc class\nThe 125cc title was won by Andrea Dovizioso on a Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, 2004 Grand Prix season calendar\nOn 19 August 2003, the FIM released the initial 2004 calendar. In it, both the Japanese and the Pacific GPs were originally scheduled to take place. On 24 October 2003, the FIM confirmed the 2004 calendar. In it, the Japanese GP at Suzuka had been scrapped and was moved to Motegi and the all-new Qatar GP were to be held on a Saturday. On 16 December 2003, changes were made to the calendar. The date of the British GP was moved from 11 to 25 July and the date and day of the Rio GP were moved from Saturday 31 July to Sunday 4 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, 2004 Grand Prix season calendar\nThe following Grands Prix were scheduled to take place in 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Regulation changes\nThe following changes are made to the regulation for the 2004 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Regulation changes, Sporting regulations\nThis rule was additionally added on the 27th of March 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 82], "content_span": [83, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Regulation changes, Technical regulations\nThese rules were additionally added on the 27th of March 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Standings, MotoGP riders' standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Standings, 250cc riders' standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Standings, 125cc riders' standings\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177592-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season, Standings, Teams' standings, MotoGP\nPoints are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 77], "content_span": [78, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177593-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Mosport\nThe 2004 Toronto Grand Prix of Mosport was an American Le Mans Series professional sports car race held at Mosport International Raceway near Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada from August 6 to the 8, 2004. It was the sixth race of the 2004 American Le Mans Series season and the 19th IMSA sanctioned sports car race held at the facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177593-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Mosport, Race\nThe LMP1 and overall race victory went to Dyson Racing drivers Butch Leitzinger and James Weaver for their first victory of the season in the MG-Lola EX257. After winning the previous four rounds, ADT Champion Racing drivers Marco Werner and JJ Lehto finished second in the Audi R8, with the second Dyson Racing entry of Chris Dyson and Andy Wallace finishing third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177593-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Mosport, Race\nThe GTS class win went to Corvette Racing's Oliver Gavin and Olivier Beretta in the Chevrolet Corvette C5-R, with Intersport Racing's Clint Field and Robin Liddell taking the LMP2 victory in the Lola B2K/40. Alex Job Racing drivers J\u00f6rg Bergmeister and Timo Bernhard won the GT class in a Porsche 911 GT3-RSR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177593-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Mosport, Race\nThe race was broadcast across North America on CBS Sports with Ralph Sheheen and Bill Adam calling the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177593-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Mosport, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177594-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Portoro\u017e\nThe 2004 Grand Prix of Portoro\u017e was a non-championship Formula 3000 race held on a temporary circuit at Portoro\u017e Airport, Portoro\u017e, Slovenia on 2 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177594-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Portoro\u017e\nIt was contested over five laps by eight drivers from four Italian teams that had contested that year's International F3000 championship: Coloni Motorsport, CMS Performance, Durango and AEZ IE Engineering. All eight drivers used Lola B02/50 chassis with Zytek engines, as in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177594-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Portoro\u017e\nAustrian driver Patrick Friesacher won the race for Coloni, with Italians Matteo Meneghello and Matteo Bobbi second and third respectively for CMS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177595-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Road America\nThe 2004 Grand Prix of Road America was the eighth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presented the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on August 8, 2004 at Road America in Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais won the pole and Alex Tagliani won the race, his first and only win in his Champ Car/IndyCar career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177596-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma\nThe 2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma was the fourth race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season held at Infineon Raceway. It took place on July 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177596-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma\nThis race saw Corvette Racing enter a third Corvette C5-R for Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and co-driven by Boris Said. The car was successfully qualified but in warm-up the morning of the race, Earnhardt, Jr. went off course and collided with a barrier, causing a rupture of a fuel line. The broken fuel line was sparked when the car came to a stop and caused the car to be engulfed in flames, with Earnhardt, Jr. inside dazed by the accident and unable to get himself out immediately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177596-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma\nOnce Earnhardt, Jr. was able to become aware of his situation and rescue crews were able to arrive, Earnhardt, Jr. was successfully pulled from the burning vehicle. He received second and third degree burns to his neck, chest, and legs, partially due to not wearing a fire-retardant balaclava with his helmet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177596-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma\nThe Corvette C5-R was burned beyond repair and did not race. The Corvette Racing team quickly examined the car and found that there was no design flaw in their fuel system. At the end of the 2004 ALMS season, Corvette Racing restored the car (Chassis No. C5-009) to its 2003 Le Mans specification and sold it to a collector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177596-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma\nEarnhardt, Jr. was forced to return to the Nextel Cup Series unable to complete full races as he underwent treatment, being relieved the next two races by Martin Truex, Jr. and John Andretti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177596-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Grand Prix of Sonoma, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177597-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Great Yarmouth Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Great Yarmouth Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Great Yarmouth Borough Council in Norfolk, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by 9. The Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election\nParliamentary elections were held in Greece on 7 March 2004. The New Democracy Party of Kostas Karamanlis won the elections, ending eleven years of rule by PASOK. PASOK was led into the elections by George Papandreou, who succeeded retiring Prime Minister Costas Simitis as party leader in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, Leaders\nGreek politics is strongly dynastic. Kostas Karamanlis is the nephew of Konstantinos Karamanlis, who was six times (1955, 1956, 1958, 1961, 1974, 1977) Prime Minister and twice President of Greece (1980\u20131985, 1990\u20131995), and the founder of New Democracy after the restoration of democracy in 1974. George Papandreou is the son of Andreas Papandreou, three times (1981, 1985, 1993) Prime Minister and the founder of PASOK, and the grandson of Georgios Papandreou, a liberal centrist who entered national politics in the 1920s and was twice Prime Minister (1944, 1963). Athens daily Kathimerini quoted a voter during the campaign as saying: \"We Greeks like to know where our leaders come from. We feel we know these families as well as we know our own.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, The campaign\nIn January New Democracy was leading PASOK in opinion polls by 7%. But Papandreou's election to the party leadership allowed PASOK to regain ground. During February Papandreou campaigned on \"the need for change\" in Greece, hoping to neutralise the strong sentiment for a change of government. By late February New Democracy's lead in the opinion polls had been cut to 3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, The campaign\nThe Athens daily Kathemerini commented: \"Now, two weeks before the elections, all opinion polls show PASOK 3 to 4.5 percentage points behind ND. This raises the question of whether PASOK can snatch victory away from ND. The fact is that much is unclear. For example, although PASOK has little support, its leader has a good image in public opinion polls.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, The campaign\nThe electoral campaign concluded on in the traditional manner, with huge televised mass rallies in the centre of Athens by each of the major parties. On the evening of 4 March Karamanlis addressed an estimated 200,000 at the ND's concluding rally. PASOK claimed that twice that number attended their rally on 6 March, but these numbers cannot be independently verified. At the ND rally, Karamanlis said that PASOK had been in power too long and had grown lazy and corrupt. At the PASOK rally, Papandreou evoked the memory of his father but said that he would lead a government dedicated to reform and change, as well as action against corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, The campaign\nSince publication of opinion polls is banned in the last two weeks of Greek election campaigns, it was not possible to predict the outcome of the election, except to say that ND appeared to have been leading when the last polls were published, and that most commentators expected the result in terms of votes to be close. Greek electoral law ensures, through a complex algorithm of parliamentary seat redistribution, that a party polling a plurality of the vote (that is, more than any other party but also more than 40%) is practically guaranteed a majority in Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, The campaign\nA \"threshold\" of 3% of the total popular vote is also required by law for a party to be eligible for representation in Parliament. This provision kept all but the four top-polling parties from securing parliamentary seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177598-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Greek legislative election, Results\nThe result of the election was not as close as observers expected. It appears that ND regained its earlier lead over PASOK in the two weeks after the last opinion polls, and that the election of George Papandreou as PASOK leader was not sufficient to overcome the desire of the electorate for a change after a long period of PASOK rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177599-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Green Bay Packers season\nThe 2004 season was the Green Bay Packers' 84th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 86th overall. The team started the season by losing four of their first five games, before winning their next six in a row, followed by victories over their three divisional opponents in their last five to finish with a 10\u20136 record and qualify for the playoffs for the fourth year in a row. As the number three seed in the NFC, they hosted their divisional rivals, the Minnesota Vikings in the Wild Card round, but lost 31\u201317; it was the second time the Packers had lost a playoff game at Lambeau Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177599-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Green Bay Packers season, Offseason\nThe Packers did not make many offseason moves, signing safety Mark Roman, cornerback Chris Watson, as well as quarterback Tim Couch who was cut after the preseason. They lost punter Josh Bidwell and safety Antuan Edwards to free agency and released defensive tackle Gilbert Brown, defensive end Jamal Reynolds, and wide receiver Travis Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177599-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Green Bay Packers season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nWith the 25th pick of the 2004 NFL Draft, the Packers selected cornerback Ahmad Carroll from the University of Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177600-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Green National Convention\nThe 2004 national convention of the Green Party of the United States was held at the Hyatt Regency and the Midwest Airlines Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin on June 23\u201328, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177600-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Green National Convention\nRalph Nader, the Green Party nominee for president in 2000, did not seek the nomination of the Green Party, but instead sought the endorsement of his independent candidacy by the party. An endorsement of Nader's campaign would have allowed for each state party affiliated with the national Green Party to choose their own candidate. On the opening day of the convention, Nader's running mate and former Green Party nominee for Governor of California Peter Camejo debated David Cobb of Texas, who was seeking the Green Party's nomination against the Nader candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177600-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Green National Convention\nIn that interview, Camejo called on the Green National Convention to endorse both Nader and David Cobb and allow individual parties to choose which candidate to put on their primary ballot. Cobb criticized the Nader-Camejo ticket for not seeking the Green Party's nomination and running independently of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177600-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Green National Convention, Round 1 of presidential nomination voting\nThe voting at the national convention was complicated by the broad support for Ralph Nader, the 2000 nominee, in spite of his not seeking nor expressing interest in accepting the Green nomination in 2004. Several candidates, most notably Peter Camejo, presented themselves in various states as stand-ins for Nader. Many Nader supporters voted \"no nominee\" in order to free the convention and state parties to endorse Nader's independent candidacy. At the time of the convention, Nader had already been endorsed by the Reform Party of the United States of America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177600-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Green National Convention, Round 2 of presidential nomination voting\nAccording to the Green papers website, Peter Camejo, Carol Miller, Ralph Nader, and Lorna Salzman were eliminated because they did not indicate, in writing, that they would accept the nomination as the Green Party candidate for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177600-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Green National Convention, Vice-presidential candidate\nThe party also nominated former gubernatorial candidate Pat LaMarche of Maine as its candidate for vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177601-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Greenlandic Men's Football Championship\nThe 2004 Coca-Cola GM was the 34th edition of the Greenlandic Men's Football Championship. The final round was held in Nuuk, Greenland. It was won by FC Malamuk for the first time in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177601-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Greenlandic Men's Football Championship, Qualifying Stage, Central Greenland\nB-67 Nuuk and Nuuk IL qualified for the Final Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177602-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens\nThe 2004 Grote Prijs Jef Scherens was the 38th edition of the Grote Prijs Jef Scherens cycle race and was held on 5 September 2004. The race started and finished in Leuven. The race was won by Allan Johansen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing\nThe 2004 Grozny stadium bombing occurred on 9 May 2004 when a bomb exploded in the Dynamo Stadium in the Chechen capital, Grozny, killing 10 people including the republic's president Akhmad Kadyrov. Another 100 people were wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing, Background\nThe attack occurred during a parade and concert celebrating the 59th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Second World War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing, Bombing\nThe explosion was caused by a bomb planted underneath the concrete floor of the VIP podium and occurred at 10:35 am during a cultural presentation that followed the parade. The blast tore a hole in the section designated for dignitaries. Other fatalities of the attack included Khussein Isayev (Chairman of the State Council), and Adlan Khasanov (a reporter for Reuters). Colonel General Valery Baranov, the de facto commander of the Russian Army in the northern Caucasus, lost a leg in the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing, Bombing\nAlthough estimates of total casualties varied, at least ten people were killed and around a hundred more injured, including many civilians and war veterans who were attending the celebrations. The blast was detonated by remote control and was installed below the VIP section where Kadyrov was sitting. It was supposedly planted some time before during the recent renovations to the venue. The type of explosive was identical to one used to blow up a similar parade two years prior in the Dagestani city of Kaspiysk. Two other blasts were prevented as emergency services defused a landmine and an additional explosive device. On 12 May, another explosive device was found in the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing, Investigation\nInitial investigations focused on the security staff at the stadium and the builders who took part in the renovations. Investigators had given a more specific list of suspects who were under investigation to the State Duma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing, Reactions\nRebel leader Shamil Basayev claimed that he was involved in and had organized the blast. The attack may have been intended to sow panic and disorder among the pro-Russian Chechen leadership. The Russian-appointed Prime Minister Sergei Abramov served as president until new elections were held sometime before September, as stipulated by the republic's constitution. The attack served a blow to President Vladimir Putin and his strategy for ending the conflict in Chechnya. On 5 August, three suspects were arrested in connection with the attack. Another man was later arrested and cooperated with the investigators in providing useful information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177603-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Grozny stadium bombing, Legacy\nThe Victory Day holiday has subsequently also served as a day of remembrance for the victims of the attack. On 9 May, the entire leadership of the republic visit the grave of the president in Tsentoroy and pray there. This takes place prior to a Victory Day parade on a square named in Kadyrov's honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Guam on November 2, 2004 in order to elect all 15 members of the legislature, the federal delegate, mayors of 14 cities, vice mayors of three cities, the public auditor, the Consolidated Commission on Utilities, two judges of the Superior Court, running for retention and the Guam Public Education Policy Board. Voters also voted on the President of the United States although the territory sent no representatives to the electoral college. There was also a referendum on allowing gambling, which was rejected by voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Background\nIn the United States territory of Guam, elections to the Legislature and multi-member boards are run via open primary (This following the outlawing of the previous blanket primary similar to Louisiana).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Background\nBoth the Public Auditor and Consolidated Commission on Utilities are required to be nonpartisan and as such candidates are not allowed to state affiliations or list them on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Background\nIn the case of the Auditor, affiliating with a party is grounds for disqualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Campaign\nA total of 30 candidates ran for 15 seats in the Legislature, with both the Democratic and Republican parties nominating a full slate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Campaign\nThe Guam Bar Association conducted an internal survey to determine feelings towards the two judges running for retention. Both were given strong marks of approval by the less than 100 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Campaign\nDuring the run-up, \"Proposition A\", the gaming/gambling legalization measure received significant coverage. A group called \"Citizens for Economic Diversity\" proposed it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Results, President of the United States\nDespite not having any electoral votes, Guam approved of George W. Bush by 64% over John Kerry. Ralph Nader and Michael Badnarik both received less than one percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Results, Legislature\nIn the election to the legislature, the top fifteen vote-getters are elected, and the remaining candidates aren't. A recount was held due to the closeness of the vote counts of the critical 15th/16th candidates. As a result, Joanne Brown (Republican), an incumbent, pushed then Speaker Ben Pangelinan into 16th place with a two-vote lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Results, Judicial retention\nBoth judges standing for retention kept their seats by large majorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Results, Education board\nElections for the Guam Education Policy Board suffered for a shortage of candidates: Only in the district of Luchan were there more running then returned (4, including write-in, for two seats). In the other two 2 seat districts, the second had to be filled by write-in, and in the 3 seat Lagu district, NO candidates were on the ballot, resulting in a 100% write-in return.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Results, Mayors\nTen Republican mayors were elected against four Democratic mayors and all three vice mayors. The vice mayor of Barrigada, June Blas was elected without opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177605-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Guamanian general election, Results, Referendum\nShall proposal A, an initiative to establish the Guam Casino Gaming Control Commission Act be adopted by the voters of Guam?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177606-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nGuangdong-Hong Kong Cup 2003\u201304 is the 26th staging of this two-leg competition between Hong Kong and Guangdong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177606-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nThe first leg was played in Hong Kong Stadium while the second leg was played in Guangzhou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177606-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup\nHong Kong captured champion again by winning an aggregate 2\u20131 against Guangdong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177606-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangdong\u2013Hong Kong Cup, Squads, Guangdong\nThe team was formed mainly by players from Jia B League 2003 third-placed team Guangzhou Xiangxue. The rest of the team include a few players from Guangzhou Kejian and Tan Ende from Zhejiang L\u00fccheng. Some of the players in the squad include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177607-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangzhou F.C. season\nThe 2004 season is the 53rd year in Guangzhou Football Club's existence, their 39th season in the Chinese football league and the 13th season in the professional football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177608-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangzhou International Women's Open\nThe 2004 Guangzhou International Women's Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the inaugural edition of the Guangzhou International Women's Open, and was a Tier III event on the 2004 WTA Tour. It was held in Guangzhou, People's Republic of China, from late September through early October, 2004. Total prize money for the tournament was $170,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177608-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangzhou International Women's Open, Finals results, Doubles\nLi Ting / Sun Tiantian def. Yang Shu-jing / Yu Ying, 6\u20134, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 66], "content_span": [67, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177609-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nLi Ting and Sun Tiantian won the first edition of this tournament in an all-Chinese final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177610-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guangzhou International Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nLi Na won her maiden WTA singles title, defeating Martina Such\u00e1 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134. Li also became the first Chinese player to win a WTA singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177611-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guernsey general election\nThe 2004 Guernsey general election was held on 21 April 2004 to elect 45 members of the States of Guernsey. All 45 elected members were independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177611-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Guernsey general election\nThere was a by-election in September 2005 to fill a vacancy in the district of St Peter Port South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177612-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Guinea-Bissau legislative election\nParliamentary elections were held in Guinea-Bissau on 28 March 2004 after repeated postponements caused by political and financial chaos in the country, including a coup d'\u00e9tat that overthrew President Kumba Ial\u00e1 in September 2003. The former ruling party, the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC), won the largest number of seats, but did not obtain a majority. Former President Yala's party, the Party for Social Renewal (PRS), came second with 35 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177612-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Guinea-Bissau legislative election\nThe PAIGC reached an agreement with the PRS for its legislative support (a previous attempt at reaching a deal with the United Social Democratic Party, which won 17 seats, failed), and in May 2004 the new parliament was sworn in, with PAIGC leader Carlos Gomes J\u00fanior becoming Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177612-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Guinea-Bissau legislative election, Conduct\nAlthough voting reportedly took place on time in the interior of Guinea-Bissau, it was delayed in much of the capital Bissau, as electoral materials were delivered late to many polling stations. The National Electoral Commission ordered the polling stations that opened late to remain open past the scheduled end of voting to ensure that everyone would have a chance to vote. About a third of polling stations in Bissau reportedly never opened on the day of the election, and these stations were ordered to open on the following day, March 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177612-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Guinea-Bissau legislative election, Conduct\nOver 100 international observers were present for the election. The United Nations, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the Community of Portuguese Language Countries, and La Francophonie sent observers, as did Portugal, Russia and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177613-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 HEW Cyclassics\nThe 2004 HEW Cyclassics was the ninth edition of the German single-day race. It took place August 1, 2004 and it was won by Stuart O'Grady, racing for Cofidis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177614-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 HR56\n2004 HR56, is a micro-asteroid, classified as near-Earth object belonging to the Apollo group. It was first observed by Spacewatch at Kitt Peak National Observatory on 25 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177614-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 HR56, Description\n2004 HR56 and was visible between 25 April 25 to 10 May 2005. This find was documented as part of the FMO Project and was reported by six different observatories. Reports indicate that the object is about 74 meters wide and has an absolute magnitude of 23.28. The object could also be classified as a meteoroid, although the most common definition uses a diameter of 10\u00a0m as the demarcation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177614-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 HR56, Description\nIt orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.9\u20132.2\u00a0AU once every 23 months (708 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.44 and an inclination of 6\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177615-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 HSBC World Match Play Championship\nThe 2004 HSBC World Match Play Championship was the 41st HSBC World Match Play Championship played and the 1st time played as an official European Tour event. It was played from 14\u201317 October at the Wentworth Club. The champion received \u20ac1,443,830 (\u00a31,000,000 or $2,042,513.20) making it the biggest first prize in golf at the time. Each match was played over 36 holes. Ernie Els defeated Lee Westwood 2 and 1 in the final to win the tournament for the sixth time, (his first official HSBC World Match Play Championship victory on the European Tour).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177616-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Haarlem Baseball Week\nThe 2004 Haarlem Baseball Week was an international baseball competition held at the Pim Mulier Stadium in Haarlem, the Netherlands from July 23 to August 1, 2004. It was the 22nd edition of the tournament and featured teams from Chinese Taipei, Cuba, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177616-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Haarlem Baseball Week\nIn the end the team from the Netherlands won the tournament for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177616-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Haarlem Baseball Week, Group stage, Standings\nChinese Taipei is the official IBAF designation for the team representing the state officially referred to as the Republic of China, more commonly known as Taiwan. (See also political status of Taiwan for details.) The United States were represented by a semi-pro unaffiliated baseball team from Reno, Nevada named the Reno Astros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177616-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Haarlem Baseball Week, Group stage, Game results\nRegarding a benefit game, the results didn't affect the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat\nA coup d'\u00e9tat in Haiti during February 2004, which occurred after conflicts lasting for several weeks, resulted in the removal of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide from office. Aristide was flown from Haiti by U.S. military/security personnel, preventing him from finishing his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat\nAristide afterwards claimed that he had been \"kidnapped\" by U.S. forces and stated that the United States had orchestrated a coup d'\u00e9tat in Haiti, a claim disputed by U.S. officials. Haiti's neighboring Caribbean countries, through the Caribbean Community, deplored the \"dangerous precedent for democratically elected governments anywhere and everywhere, as it promotes the removal of duly elected persons from office.\" Aristide was forced into exile, being flown directly out of Haiti to the Central African Republic, eventually settling in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat\nAn interim government led by Prime Minister G\u00e9rard Latortue and President Boniface Alexandre was installed in Haiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Controversy over Aristide's election in 2000\nThe opposition in Haiti accused the government party of election fraud in the Haitian general election, 2000, as did Europe and the United States. The National Coalition for Haitian Rights (NCHR) stated that there were delays in the distribution of voter identification cards. U.S. Congressman John Conyers wrote:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 103], "content_span": [104, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Controversy over Aristide's election in 2000\nUnfortunately, there were irregularities that occurred in the election and there is a post-election problem of the vote count that is threatening to undo the democratic work of the citizens of Haiti. Without doubt there were irregularities that occurred in the election which have been conceded by the CEP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 103], "content_span": [104, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Controversy over Aristide's election in 2000\nIn contrast, Aristide's supporters claim that an opposition boycott of the election was used as a ploy in order to discredit it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 103], "content_span": [104, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Controversy over Aristide's election in 2000\nIn response to this election, European nations suspended government-to-government assistance to Haiti. The U.S. Congress banned any U.S. assistance from being channeled through the Haitian government, codifying an existing situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 103], "content_span": [104, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Aristide's request for reparations from France\nIn 2003, Aristide requested that France pay Haiti over US$21 billion in reparations, which he said was the equivalent in today's money of the 90 million gold francs Haiti was forced to pay Paris after winning independence from France 200 years ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Aristide's request for reparations from France\nThe United Nations Security Council, of which France is a permanent member, rejected a 26 February 2004, appeal from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) for international peacekeeping forces to be sent into its member state Haiti, but voted unanimously to send in troops three days later, just hours after Aristide's forced resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Aristide's request for reparations from France\n\"I believe that (the call for reparations) could have something to do with it, because they (France) were definitely not happy about it, and made some very hostile comments,\" Myrtha Desulme, chairperson of the Haiti-Jamaica Exchange Committee, told IPS. \"(But) I believe that he did have grounds for that demand, because that is what started the downfall of Haiti,\" she says.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Aristide's request for reparations from France\nFollowing the 2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, the appointed provisional prime minister Gerard Latortue rescinded the reparations demand, calling it \"foolish\" and \"illegal\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 105], "content_span": [106, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Cross-border paramilitary campaign against Haiti's state 2001\u20132004\nThe role of rightwing paramilitary groups in violently targeting activists and government officials aligned with the Aristide government has been well documented. Freedom of Information Act documents have shown how paramilitary forces received support from sectors of Haiti's elite as well as from sectors of the Dominican military and government at the time. It is also believed that they had contact with U.S. and French intelligence. While the paramilitary campaign was launched in late 2001 and immediately targeted key governmental infrastructure in Port-au-Prince, during 2002 and 2003 it targeted rural areas of the country. In early 2004, paramilitary forces launched a ramped up offensive into the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 125], "content_span": [126, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Ottawa Initiative\nThe Ottawa Initiative on Haiti was a conference hosted by Canada that took place at Meech Lake, Quebec (a federal government resort near Ottawa) on 31 January and 1 February 2003, to decide the future of Haiti's government, though no Haitian government officials were invited. The conference was attended by Canadian, French, and U.S. and Latin American officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Ottawa Initiative\nJournalist Michel Vastel leaked information about the conference that he says was told to him by his friend and conference host Denis Paradis, Canada's Secretary of State for Latin America, Africa, and the French-speaking world, in his 15 March 2003, article in Quebec news magazine L'actualit\u00e9. In the article, he claims that the officials at the conference wanted to see regime change in Haiti in less than a year. \"Michel Vastel wrote that the possibility of Aristide's departure, the need for a potential trusteeship over Haiti, and the return of Haiti's dreaded military were discussed by Paradis and the French Minister for La Francophonie, Pierre-Andr\u00e9 Wiltzer.\" Paradis later denied this, but neither Vastel nor L'actualite retracted the story.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 76], "content_span": [77, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Events prior to the coup d'\u00e9tat, Student protests\nMultiple protests by Haitian students were organized in 2002, 2003 and 2004 against the Aristide government. On 5 December 2003, some of Aristide's supporters, backed by the police according to witnesses, entered the social studies department of the Universit\u00e9 d'\u00c9tat d'Ha\u00efti to attack students who were rallying for an anti-government protest later that day. Dozens of students were injured and the University dean had his legs broken. This tragic event led to more protests by students, eventually joined by other groups. A student protest against Aristide on 7 January 2004 led to a clash with police and Aristide supporters that left two dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 75], "content_span": [76, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Coup d'\u00e9tat\nIn September 2003, Amiot M\u00e9tayer was found dead, his eyes shot out and his heart cut out, most likely the result of machete-inflicted wounds. He was, prior to his death, the leader of the Gonaives gang known as \"The Cannibal Army.\" After his death, his brother Buteur M\u00e9tayer swore vengeance against those he felt responsible for Amiot's death\u2014namely, President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Buteur took charge of the Cannibal Army and promptly renamed it the National Revolutionary Front for the Liberation of Haiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Coup d'\u00e9tat\nOn 5 February 2004, this rebel group seized control of Haiti's fourth-largest city, Gona\u00efves, marking the beginning of a minor revolt against Aristide. During their sack of the city, they burned the police station and looted it for weapons and vehicles, which they used to continue their campaign down the coast. By 22 February, the rebels had captured Haiti's second-largest city, Cap-Ha\u00eftien. As the end of February approached, rebels threatened to take the capital, Port-au-Prince, fueling increasing political unrest and the building of barricades throughout the capital. Haitians fled their country on boats, seeking to get to the United States. After a three-week rebellion, Aristide involuntarily left Haiti on a US plane accompanied by US security personnel as the rebels took over the capital and was flown without knowledge of his route and destination, via Antigua to Bangui, Central African Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 950]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Coup d'\u00e9tat\nMany international politicians, including members of the U.S. congress and the Jamaican Prime Minister, expressed concern that the United States had interfered with Haiti's democratic process by removing Aristide with excessive force. According to Rep. Maxine Waters D-California, Mildred Aristide called her at her home at 6:30\u00a0am to inform her \"the coup d'etat has been completed\", and Jean-Bertrand Aristide said the U.S. Embassy in Haiti's chief of staff came to his house to say he would be killed \"and a lot of Haitians would be killed\" if he refused to resign immediately and said he \"has to go now.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Coup d'\u00e9tat\nRep. Charles Rangel, D-New York expressed similar words, saying Aristide had told him he was \"disappointed that the international community had let him down\" and \"that he resigned under pressure\" \u2013 \"As a matter of fact, he was very apprehensive for his life. They made it clear that he had to go now or he would be killed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0016-0002", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Coup d'\u00e9tat\nWhen asked for his response to these statements Colin Powell said that \"it might have been better for members of Congress who have heard these stories to ask us about the stories before going public with them so we don't make a difficult situation that much more difficult\" and he alleged that Aristide \"did not democratically govern or govern well\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0016-0003", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Coup d'\u00e9tat\nJamaican Prime Minister P. J. Patterson released a statement saying \"we are bound to question whether his resignation was truly voluntary, as it comes after the capture of sections of Haiti by armed insurgents and the failure of the international community to provide the requisite support. The removal of President Aristide in these circumstances sets a dangerous precedent for democratically elected governments anywhere and everywhere, as it promotes the removal of duly elected persons from office by the power of rebel forces.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nSupreme Court Chief Justice Boniface Alexandre succeeded Aristide as interim president and petitioned the United Nations Security Council for the intervention of an international peacekeeping force. The Security Council passed a resolution the same day, \"[t]aking note of the resignation of Jean-Bertrand Aristide as President of Haiti and the swearing-in of President Boniface Alexandre as the acting President of Haitiin accordance with the Constitution of Haiti\" and authorized such a mission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nAs a vanguard of the official UN force and Operation Secure Tomorrow, a force of about 1,000 United States Marines arrived in Ha\u00efti within the day, and Canadian, French and Chilean troops arrived the next morning; the United Nations indicated it would send a team to assess the situation within days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nOn 1 June 2004, the peacekeeping mission was passed to MINUSTAH and comprised a 7000-person force led by Brazil and backed up by Argentina, Chile, Jordan, Morocco, Nepal, Peru, Philippines, Spain, Sri Lanka and Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nIn November 2004, the University of Miami School of Law carried out a Human Rights Investigation in Haiti and documented serious human rights abuses. It stated that \"Summary executions are a police tactic.\" It also stated the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nU.S. officials blame the crisis on armed gangs in the poor neighborhoods, not the official abuses and atrocities, nor the unconstitutional ouster of the elected president. Their support for the interim government is not surprising, as top officials, including the Minister of Justice, worked for U.S. government projects that undermined their elected predecessors. Coupled with the U.S. government\u2019s development assistance embargo from 2000\u20132004, the projects suggest a disturbing pattern.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nOn 15 October 2005, Brazil called for more troops to be sent due to the worsening situation in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nA number of figures from Haiti's past re-appeared in government after the rebellion, including H\u00e9rard Abraham at the Ministry of the Interior, Williams R\u00e9gala (a former aide to Henri Namphy) and Colonel Henri-Robert Marc-Charles, a member of the post-1991 military junta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, Aftermath\nIn the Haitian general election, 2006, Ren\u00e9 Pr\u00e9val was elected president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, CARICOM\nCARICOM (The Caribbean Community) governments denounced the removal of Aristide from government. They also questioned the legality of the new government. The Prime Minister of Jamaica, P. J. Patterson, said that the episode set \"a dangerous precedent for democratically elected governments anywhere and everywhere, as it promotes the removal of duly elected persons from office by the power of rebel forces.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, CARICOM\nAs reported by the BBC, on 3 March 2004, CARICOM called for an independent inquiry into the departure of former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and says it would not be sending peacekeepers. Patterson said there had been no indication during discussions with the U.S. and France that the plan which CARICOM had put forward prior to Aristide's departure was not acceptable. \"In respect of our partners we can only say this, at no time in our discussions did they convey to us that the plan was unacceptable so long as president Aristide remained in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, CARICOM\nNor did they suggest to us anything of a nature pertaining to the conduct of President Aristide in office that would cause us to come to the judgment ourselves that he was unsuited to be the President of Ha\u00efti,\" Mr. Patterson said. The U.S. and France have been accused of using pressure on CARICOM to not make a formal UN request for an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Aristide's removal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, CARICOM\nThe CARICOM initially refused to recognize the interim government, but in 2006 the newly elected Ren\u00e9 Pr\u00e9val resumed his country's membership in the organization.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nOn 1 March 2004, US Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA), along with Aristide family friend Randall Robinson, reported that Aristide had told them (using a smuggled cellular phone), that he had been forced to resign and abducted from the country by the United States. He claimed to be held hostage by an armed military guard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nAristide later repeated similar claims, in an interview with Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! on 16 March. Goodman asked Aristide if he resigned, and President Aristide replied: \"No, I didn't resign. What some people call 'resignation' is a 'new coup d'\u00e9tat,' or 'modern kidnapping.'\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nMany supporters of the Fanmi Lavalas party and Aristide, as well as some foreign supporters, denounced the rebellion as a foreign controlled coup d'\u00e9tat orchestrated by Canada, France and the United States (Goodman, et al., 2004) to remove a democratically elected president. A new book on the subject, Damming the Flood: Haiti, Aristide and the Politics of Containment by Peter Hallward, documents the events leading up to 29 February 2004, and concludes that what occurred during the \"rebellion\" was in fact a modern coup d'\u00e9tat, financed and orchestrated by forces allied with the US government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nIn a report published on 28 October 2005, Granma, the official Cuban news service, alleged that United States politician Caleb McCarry engineered Aristide's overthrow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nSome have come forward to support his claim saying they witnessed him being escorted out by American soldiers at gunpoint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nSources close to Aristide also claim the Bush administration blocked attempts to reinforce his bodyguards. The Steele Foundation, the San Francisco-based organization which supplied Aristide's bodyguards, declined to comment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nMr. Aristide, who accuses the United States and France of conspiring to force him out of power, filed a lawsuit in Paris last week accusing unnamed French officials of 'death threats, kidnapping and sequestration' in connection with his flight to Africa. The Bush administration insists that Mr. Aristide had personally asked for help and voluntarily boarded a U.S. plane. ' He drafted and signed his letter of resignation all by himself and then voluntarily departed with his wife and his own security team,' Mr. Powell said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nThe US has denied the accusations. \"He was not kidnapped,\" Secretary of State Colin Powell said. \"We did not force him onto the airplane. He went on the airplane willingly and that's the truth.\" The kidnapping claim is \"absolutely false,\" concurred Parfait Mbaye, the communications minister for the Central African Republic, where Aristide's party was taken. The minister told CNN that Aristide had been granted permission to land in the country after Aristide himself \u2013 as well as the U.S. and French governments \u2013 requested it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nAccording to the US, as the rebels approached the capital, James B. Foley, U.S. ambassador to Haiti, got a phone call from a high-level aide to Aristide, asking if the U.S. could protect Aristide and help facilitate his departure if he resigned. The call prompted a series of events that included a middle-of-the-night phone call to President Bush and a scramble to find a plane to carry Aristide into exile. He traveled voluntarily via motorcade to the airport with his own retinue of security guards, including some contracted Americans. Before takeoff, Aristide gave a copy of his resignation letter to Foley's aide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nThe Associated Press reported that the Central African Republic tried to get Aristide to stop repeating his charges to the press.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177617-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Haitian coup d'\u00e9tat, U.S. involvement\nAristide has also denied that a letter he left behind constitutes an official resignation. \"There is a document that was signed to avoid a bloodbath, but there was no formal resignation,\" he said. \"This political kidnapping was the price to pay to avoid a bloodbath.\" According to the US embassy translation it reads \"Tonight I am resigning in order to avoid a bloodbath. I accept to leave, with the hope that there will be life and not death.\" A slightly different translation was given by Albert Valdman, a linguistics professor and specialist in Haitian Creole at Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind. \"If tonight it is my resignation that will avoid a bloodbath, I accept to leave with the hope that there will be life and not death.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177618-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hajj stampede\nThe 2004 Hajj stampede resulted in the deaths of at least 251 pilgrims on 1 February 2004 during the Hajj in Mecca. The incident took place during the ritual stoning of three pillars in the Mina valley, close to Mecca, on the final day of Hajj ceremonies. More than 200 people were injured, and the incident became the worst tragedy during the Hajj since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177619-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Halifax municipal election\nThe 2004 municipal elections of the Halifax Regional Municipality took place on 16 October 2004. Elections have been held every four years since the amalgamation of the cities of Halifax and Dartmouth, the town of Bedford and Halifax County into the Halifax Regional Municipality in 1996. The regional council is made up of twenty three councillors and one mayor, all positions were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177619-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Halifax municipal election\nThere are no political parties at the municipal level in Nova Scotia, so all candidates run as independents. Voter turnout in the mayoral election was 48.39%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177620-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships (also known as 2004 Miller Lite Hall of Fame Championships for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on grass courts at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in the United States and was part of the ATP International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 28th edition of the tournament and was held from July 5 through July 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177620-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships, Finals, Doubles\nJordan Kerr / Jim Thomas defeated Gregory Carraz / Nicolas Mahut 6\u20133, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177621-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nRobby Ginepri was the defending champion, but did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177621-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hall of Fame Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nGreg Rusedski won the title, defeating Alexander Popp 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20136(7\u20132) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado\nDuring the afternoon of May 22, 2004, a long-track F4 tornado formed during a tornado outbreak and tore through multiple counties in southeast Nebraska. The tornado damaged many towns along its path, but its most significant destructive effect occurred at the town of Hallam. The Hallam tornado is recognized by NOAA as the second-largest tornado on record, peaking at 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) wide at Hallam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado, Tornado sequence\nThe Hallam tornado formed west and northwest of Daykin at 7:30 pm CDT as an F1 on the Fujita Scale (the EF scale had not been established yet in 2004). One satellite tornado, rated an F1 in intensity, formed and quickly dissipated northeast of town. The main storm turned and traveled east-northeast from Daykin to a point south-southeast of Western and then to about 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) north of Swanton. During this time, the tornado fluctuated between an F0/1 and intensified. The only damage reported in the area was to farmhouses and silos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado, Tornado sequence\nThe tornado remained confined within the F0-1 range until it hit southern Wilber, where it became an F2. The damage here was slight, with only roofs blown off. The tornado continued east-northeast, grazing the east side of Wilber as it moved towards Clatonia. Here it is estimated that the tornado was an F3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado, Tornado sequence\nAfter passing just northwest of Clatonia, the tornado moved through Hallam at 8:35 pm CDT, where damage reached a high-end F4 in intensity. At Hallam, the tornado was a record-breaking 2.5 miles (4.0\u00a0km) wide (the widest tornado ever recorded at the time). Most houses in Hallam were completely demolished, along with farming equipment and structures. A coal train was tossed off its tracks on the west side of town. Hallam escaped the most intense winds of the storm though, which were to the south.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado, Tornado sequence\nEast of Hallam, the tornado was rated a F2-3 as it turned east and began to cycle. It decreased in size to just about a mile wide as it passed north of Cortland, where it turned northeast and passed 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) north of Firth. Norris School District 160 suffered severe damage, with the middle school being hit the worst. The auditorium roof and other walls within the school caved in. Buses were tossed and homes northeast of the school were flattened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado, Tornado sequence\nAt this point, the storm regained intensity, reaching F4 status. Damage continued northeast to Holland and to a point north-northwest of Panama. Here, tornado damage was light \u2013 F2 at best. The tornado then tracked north-northeast to Bennet, where some houses received F3 tornadic damage. At Bennet, the twister turned east-northeast and began to thin out. Damage east-northeast of Bennet was within the F0/1 scale. The tornado finally dissipated a mile west-southwest of Palmyra at 9:10 pm Central Daylight Time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177622-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Hallam tornado, Damage\nThe storm was long-lived, having been on the ground for more than 100 minutes. It was also a long-track tornado, having covered 52 miles (84\u00a0km). Even though it damaged towns and demolished many buildings, there were no damage-cost estimates available. The Hallam tornado became the widest on record until it was barely surpassed on May 31, 2013 by the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado, which had a width of 2.6 miles (4.2\u00a0km).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177623-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Halton Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Halton Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Halton Unitary Council in Cheshire, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2002. The Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177623-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Halton Borough Council election, Campaign\nAll 56 seats were being contested after boundary changes had taken place, with 119 candidates competing for election. Labour contested all 56 seats, compared to 32 for the Conservatives, 19 Liberal Democrats, 3 Green party, 2 British National Party, 1 Legalise Cannabis Alliance and 1 independent. There were also 4 candidates from the new Citizens Party of Halton, with 3 of them being former Labour councillors. The election in Halton, along with the rest of North West England, was held with all postal voting as part of an attempt to increase turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177623-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Halton Borough Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election Labour dominated the council with 47 of the 56 seats. As a result, the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives were aiming just to reduced Labour's majority to provide a better opposition, with the Conservatives standing in every ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177623-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Halton Borough Council election, Campaign\nA major issue in the election was the attempt by the council to secure funding for a second crossing over the River Mersey. The Labour party defended their record in control of the council, pointing to the regeneration of the town centres of Widnes and Runcorn and improvements in services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177623-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Halton Borough Council election, Results\nThe results saw both the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives make significant gains against Labour, but with Labour keeping a safe majority on the council. The Liberal Democrats made gains in Halton Brook, Norton North and Windmill Hill wards, while the Conservatives picked up seats in Birchfield and Farnworth wards. Windmill Hill required 2 recounts before the Liberal Democrat, Kelly Marlow, was declared the winner by a single vote over the Labour candidate. Labour councillors who failed to be re-elected included the deputy mayor, Dennis Middlemass, who lost in Mersey ward to the Liberal Democrats after 12 years on the council. Overall turnout in the election was 38%, almost double what was seen at the last election in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177623-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Halton Borough Council election, Results\nLabour's leader of the council, Tony McDermott, blamed national policies and mid term votes against the government for the losses, but was pleased at preserving a good majority which he said demonstrated \"a welcome level of support\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177624-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg Masters\nThe 2004 Hamburg Masters was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 98th edition of the Hamburg Masters, and was part of the ATP Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Rothenbaum Tennis Center in Hamburg, Germany, from 10 May through 17 May 2004. First-seeded Roger Federer won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177624-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg Masters, Finals, Doubles\nWayne Black / Kevin Ullyett defeated Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177625-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg Masters \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions, but lost in Quarterfinals to Wayne Black and Kevin Ullyett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177625-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg Masters \u2013 Doubles\nBlack and Ullyett won the title, defeating Bob and Mike Bryan in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177626-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg Masters \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Coria was the defending champion but lost in the final to Roger Federer 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20132, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177626-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg Masters \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177627-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg state election\nThe 2004 Hamburg state election was held on 29 February 2004 to elect the members of the 18th Hamburg Parliament. The election was triggered by the collapse of the coalition government between the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), Party for a Rule of Law Offensive (PRO), and Free Democratic Party (FDP). The election saw a collapse in support for PRO which had split after its leader Ronald Schill left in 2003. The original party and Schill's new party captured 3.5% of the vote between them, down from 19.4% in 2001. A huge amount of support flowed to the CDU, which won 63 of the 121 seats in Parliament, forming a majority government. First Mayor Ole von Beust continued in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177627-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 17th Hamburg Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177627-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamburg state election, Background\nIn August 2003, Mayor von Beust made moves to dismiss an Interior official suspected of corruption. In response, Senator of the Interior Ronald Schill threatened to spread rumours of an affair between von Beust and the Senator of Justice. Schill was subsequently dismissed from the government. In December of the same year, Schill left his own party along with five of its members of Parliament, depriving the government of its majority. He subsequently joined Pro DM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177628-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season\nThe 2004 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season was the 47th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 55th overall. The Tiger-Cats finished in 3rd place in the East Division with a 9\u20138\u20131 record, which surprised many as they had gone 1\u201317 the year before. They played in the East Semi-Final against the Toronto Argonauts, but lost 24\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177629-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hansol Korea Open\nThe 2004 Hansol Korea Open was a women's tennis tournament and was held from September 27 \u2013 October 3, 2004, in Seoul, South Korea. It was a Tier-IV event on the 2004 WTA Tour. Maria Sharapova won the inaugural edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177629-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hansol Korea Open, Finals, Doubles\nCho Yoon-jeong / Jeon Mi-ra defeated Chuang Chia-jung / Hsieh Su-wei 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177630-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hansol Korea Open \u2013 Doubles\nCho Yoon-jeong and Jeon Mi-ra won the title, by defeating Chuang Chia-jung and Hsieh Su-wei 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 7\u20135 in the final. It was the 1st and only title for both players in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177631-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hansol Korea Open \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sharapova won the title, defeating Marta Domachowska in straight sets in the final. This was Sharapova's third WTA Tour title of the year and fifth of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177632-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Harlow District Council election\nThe 2004 Harlow District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Harlow District Council in Essex, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177632-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Harlow District Council election, Background\nAfter the last election in 2003 both the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats had 12 seats, while Labour had 9 councillors. However, in July 2003 councillor Jane Steer defected from the Liberal Democrats to the Conservatives, making the Conservatives the largest group on the council for the first time in almost 50 years with 13 seats. The joint administration between the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats continued to run the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177632-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Harlow District Council election, Background\nMeanwhile, in January 2004 the Liberal Democrat group on the council expelled Matthew Shepherd from the party's group on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177633-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Harrogate Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Harrogate Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Harrogate Borough Council in North Yorkshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177633-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Harrogate Borough Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the Conservatives ran the council with 28 seats, while the Liberal Democrats had 21 seats and there were 4 independents. The Conservatives had gained a majority after 2 Liberal Democrats defected to the Conservatives in autumn 2003. 16 seats were contested in the election, all from the rural areas of the council. The candidates in the election were 16 Conservatives, 16 Liberal Democrats, 2 independents and 1 candidate from the British National Party. The election was held under all postal voting, for the first time in Harrogate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177633-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Harrogate Borough Council election, Campaign\nA significant issue in the election was the future of the Royal Hall in Harrogate. The Conservative administration refused to fund the restoration of the building and said they would consider financing other projects elsewhere in the council area from the money saved. However the Liberal Democrats would have put 2.6 million pounds towards restoring it, as they said future generations would have to spend even more if the council did not take action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177633-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Harrogate Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives stay in control, with no change in the party composition of the council. The Conservatives gained Lower Nidderdale from the Liberal Democrats, but Conservative cabinet member Brian Lumsden was defeated in Boroughbridge by Liberal Democrat Peter Phillips, in what had been considered a safe seat. The Conservatives won 62.5% of the vote, compared to 34.2% for the Liberal Democrats. As a result, the Conservatives remained on 29 seats, the Liberal Democrats on 21 and 4 independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177633-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Harrogate Borough Council election, Election result\nMeanwhile, the British National Party came in last in the only seat they contested in Nidd Valley with 131 votes, with Leslie Ellington holding the seat for the Conservatives, after having defected from the Liberal Democrats since the 2003 election. Overall turnout in the election was 55.2%, an increase on the 34.7% in the 2003 election and the 38.7% at the 2002 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177634-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hart District Council election\nThe 2004 Hart Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Hart District Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177634-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hart District Council election, Campaign\nIn early May 2004 the Conservative leader of the council, Lorraine Fullbrook, resigned as a councillor in order to stand for the seat of South Ribble in the 2005 general election. This meant an extra seat in Church Crookham West would be contested in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177634-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hart District Council election, Campaign\nThe election saw the Conservatives challenged by a new Community Campaign (Hart) group as well as from the main political parties. The group had been formed in 2003 in protest against plans to develop a barracks in Church Crookham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177634-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hart District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives stay in control of the council despite losing 2 seats to the new Community Campaign (Hart) group and 1 seat to the Liberal Democrats. Community Campaign (Hart) gained the seats of Church Crookham East and West and came second in two additional wards. Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats gained Fleet Courtmoor from the Conservatives, while holding the other 4 seats they had been defending. However the Conservatives did manage to gain one seat in Crondall, where they defeated Brian Leversha who had resigned from the Conservatives to sit as an Independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177634-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hart District Council election, Election result\nMeanwhile, no Independents were successful in being elected with former councillor Peter Carr coming closest after losing by 66 votes. The other candidates from the Labour Party, British National Party and Official Monster Raving Loony Party each failed to get more than 200 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election\nOn 23 July 2004, the Member of Parliament for Hartlepool, in England, Peter Mandelson (Labour), was nominated as the United Kingdom's new European Commissioner for Trade. On 8 September, he accepted the office of Steward of the Manor of Northstead, thereby disqualifying himself from Parliament, and causing a by-election. Polling took place on 30 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election\nIt was the last of six by elections held during the 2001\u20132005 Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nOut of a registered electorate of 68,517, there were 31,362 valid votes, making a turnout of 45.77%. This was the highest by-election turnout since the Romsey by-election in May 2000. The Labour Party candidate Iain Wright won the seat with a majority of 2,033, a substantially reduced majority. The Liberal Democrat vote more than doubled, leaving that party a close second. The United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) held its deposit, and beat the Conservative Party into fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nThis marked the first time UKIP had come third in a by-election (and followed a successful European election in June 2004, in which countrywide it had come third and won twelve seats). It would be over six years before the party improved on this position, when it took second place at Barnsley Central in 2011. It would go on to win a by-election for the first time a little over a decade after the Hartlepool contest, in Clacton in October 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nThe Conservative vote in Hartlepool dropped considerably, leaving the party in fourth place for the first time in an English by-election since Liverpool Walton in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nRobert Kilroy-Silk of UKIP initially suggested he might stand but later ruled this out, as did Hartlepool and Middlesbrough mayors Stuart Drummond and Ray Mallon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nPreceding by-elections had seen the Liberal Democrats come from third place to beat the Conservative Party, and in Brent East and Leicester South take seats from Labour. The seat was safer (judging by the 2001 result) than Leicester but was vulnerable to swings such as achieved in Brent, or in Birmingham Hodge Hill where the Liberal Democrats narrowly failed to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nIn the event, the Liberal Democrats were not quite able to repeat these performances. Their campaign suffered from the choice of a candidate who was not from Hartlepool, while the Labour candidate had been born and brought up in the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nIn addition, the Liberal Democrat candidate made reference, on a campaign blog, to having canvassed a street where everyone she met \"was either drunk, flanked by an angry dog, or undressed\"; this happened despite a Liberal Democrat minder, Ed Fordham, having been appointed by the party's Campaigns Department to proof read Dunn's blog before any posts went up. Fordham removed a reference to some of the people canvassed being Labour supporters, but he thought the rest of the comment was fine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nLabour gave wide publicity to this remark and asserted that it was an insult to the people of Hartlepool. Dunn defended her remarks on the Today programme, in a performance that was perceived to be unconvincing, so Labour Party vans toured the constituency playing her Today interview on loudspeakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nHartlepool had no significant ethnic minority vote, unlike the other three by-elections. The Liberal Democrats were nevertheless content to claim the large swing to them, and the Conservatives' fourth place established the Liberal Democrats as the main opposition party to Labour in the seat. UKIP did well with a local candidate, and its message of opposition to European Union fishing rules was a popular one in a port town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nThe Conservative Party dropped from second place at the 2001 general election to fourth place, its worst place in an English by-election since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177635-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Hartlepool by-election, Results\nLabour believed its performance good, for it came at the end of a very long campaign (effectively seventy-one days), and with a swing markedly smaller than in other seats over the previous year; the party also regarded the result \u2013 along with that in Hodge Hill \u2013 as a vindication of its decision to aggressively attack the Liberal Democrats and essentially ignore the Conservative challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177636-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard Crimson football team\nThe 2004 Harvard Crimson football team represented Harvard University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Harvard finished the season with an overall record of 10\u20130, winning the Ivy league championship with a conference mark of 7\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177637-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank\nThe 2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank was a practical joke performed on November 20, 2004, at the annual Harvard\u2013Yale football game in which Yale students perpetrated a card stunt, costumed as a Harvard \"pep squad\". They gave out placards to a section of Harvard fans which, when raised together, read \"We Suck\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177637-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank\nThe stunt was conceived of and coordinated by Michael Kai and David Aulicino, two Yale students in the class of 2005, and was executed with the help of 20 classmates disguised as the \"Harvard Pep Squad\". The perpetrators handed crimson-and-white placards to fans in the central area of the Harvard side of the stadium\u2014mostly Harvard alumni, with a few faculty, students, and others. The group told the crowd that, by lifting the placards, they would spell \"Go Harvard\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177637-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank\nMost Harvard students were sitting in a section off to the side of the alumni area where the prank was executed, and they left the stands unaware of the prank; however, players on the field did see the placards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177637-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank, Response\nInitially, many at Harvard denied that the prank had happened. In response, Yale students registered the domain name \"harvardsucks.org\" (as well as \"yalesucks.com\" in a preemptive move) and posted a video detailing their efforts. Chuck Sullivan, Harvard's director of athletic communications, said, \"[It was] all in good fun.\" In an interview with The Harvard Crimson, the prank's organizers claimed that members of the Harvard Band were complicit with the Yale pranksters. This was a further hoax designed to \u201ctoss salt in the wound\u201d, as stated by Kai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177637-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank, Media and Internet coverage\nThe prank was covered by newspapers, radio programs, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, MSNBC, and several other TV shows. Several magazines have listed the prank among the greatest in college history. A satirical article in Maxim says that Yale perpetrated \"the greatest prank this side of the Mason\u2013Dixon line since the Boston Tea Party ... and caused dozens of stoic, blue-blooded Harvard men to spit port wine all over their smoking jackets.\" Sports Illustrated featured the prank with \"some of the best attempts to get the other guy's goat\". ESPN and ESPN2 featured the prank in a 15-minute documentary on the rivalry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177637-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Harvard\u2013Yale prank, Similar pranks\nThis prank echoes many similar stunts, most notably the Great Rose Bowl Hoax of 1961. In that Rose Bowl game, California Institute of Technology students had manipulated several of the ending card stunts led by Washington cheerleaders, the last of which caused the letters in \"Caltech\" to be spelled out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177638-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Borough Council election\nElections to Hastings Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. Half of the council was up for election and the Labour Party lost overall control of the council to no overall control. Overall turnout was 34.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177639-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships\nThe 2004 Hastings Direct International Championships was a women's tennis tournament played on grass courts at the Eastbourne Tennis Centre in Eastbourne in the United Kingdom that was part of Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 30th edition of the tournament and was held from June 14 through June 19, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177639-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships, Finals, Doubles\nAlicia Molik / Mag\u00fci Serna defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177640-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Doubles\nLindsay Davenport and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions but only Raymond competed that year with Martina Navratilova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177640-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Doubles\nNavratilova and Raymond lost in the quarterfinals to Alicia Molik and Mag\u00fci Serna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177640-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Doubles\nMolik and Serna won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20134 against Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177640-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nText in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177641-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Singles\nThe Singles competition of the 2004 Hastings Direct International Championships was part of the 30th edition of the Eastbourne International tennis tournament, Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was won by Svetlana Kuznetsova, who defeated Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 2\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177641-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Singles\nChanda Rubin was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177641-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hastings Direct International Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe champion seed is indicated in bold text. Text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. The top four seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 65], "content_span": [66, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177642-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Havant Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Havant Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Havant Borough Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177642-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Havant Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives gained seats to hold 27 of the 38 seats on the council, while Labour fell to 6 seats and the Liberal Democrats dropped to hold 5 seats. The Conservative gains included taking Barncroft and Battins wards in Leigh Park from Labour; the first time in over 30 years that Labour had not won all the seats in Leigh Park. Overall turnout at the election was 32.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl\nThe 2004 Sheraton Hawaii Bowl, part of the 2004 bowl game season, took place on Christmas Eve 2004, at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii. The competing teams were the UAB Blazers, representing Conference USA (C-USA) and the Hawaii Warriors, representing the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). Hawaii won the game, 59\u201340. This was the third Hawaii Bowl, and was sponsored by Sheraton Hotels and Resorts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Teams, Hawaii\nHawaii finished the 2004 season with an 8\u20135 record, going 4\u20134 in WAC play. The Warriors made their third straight appearance in the Hawai\u02bbi Bowl, facing off against UAB. The Warriors would go on to defeat the Blazers and cap off their third straight winning season, the fifth in six seasons under head coach June Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Teams, UAB\nThe Blazers finished the 2004 season with a record of 7\u20135 (5\u20133 C-USA). The Blazers would also make their first and so far only appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Game summary\nThe 2004 Hawaii Bowl kicked off at 2:06\u00a0p.m. HST (8:06\u00a0p.m. EST) on December 24, 2004 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The contest concluded at 6:12\u00a0p.m. HST, lasting a total of four hours and six minutes. Official attendance for the game was listed as 39,754, placing it at fifteenth highest in at dance for non-BCS bowls during the season. It also set an attendance record for the Hawaii Bowl and currently stands as the third-highest attended game. At kickoff, the weather was cloudy with a temperature of approximately 75 degrees. The wind was from the northeast at 6 miles per hour (10\u00a0km/h). There was a possibility of rain throughout the game, although only a minimal amount of rainfall was recorded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nUAB won the ceremonial pre-game coin toss to select first possession and deferred its option to the second half; Hawaii elected to receive the opening kick. The Warriors began the game's opening drive at their own 20-yard line after the opening kickoff was fielded in the end zone for a touchback. On the team's first two plays, Timmy Chang threw an incompletion and a short pass to running back West Keliikipi. On a short third down, a rush by Chang was stopped one yard shy of a first down, forcing Hawaii to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nUAB started the scoring with a 51-yard touchdown strike from quarterback Darrell Hackney to wide receiver Roddy White. The extra point attempt was blocked, and UAB opened up a 6\u20130 lead. Hawaii came right back with a 74-yard touchdown pass from Timmy Chang to Jason Rivers to take a 7\u20136 lead. UAB's Dan Burks scored on a 4-yard touchdown run to make the score 13\u20137 UAB. However, the Warriors responded with a pair of touchdowns to take a 21\u201313 lead at the end of the first quarter. West Keliikipi scored first on a 4-yard run, and Chang threw a 29-yard pass to Gerald Welch for the second score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nIn the second quarter, Nick Hayes opened the scoring with a 22-yard field goal to bring UAB within 21\u201316. Hawaii answered with a 13-yard touchdown pass from Chang to Chad Owens bringing the lead to 28\u201316. Norris Drinkard scored on a 10-yard touchdown run for UAB to cut the lead to 28\u201323. Hayes second field goal of the quarter from 36-yards out with three seconds remaining in the half trimmed the lead to 28\u201326.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nHawaii blew the game wide open in the third quarter. First, Chad Owens caught a 15-yard touchdown pass from Timmy Chang, and then he scored on a 59-yard punt return. A Justin Ayat 43-yard field goal pushed the lead to 45\u201326. UAB's Hackney scored on a 4-yard touchdown run to bring the score to 45\u201333, but the Warriors would not fold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177643-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nIn the fourth quarter, Timmy Chang drove Hawaii the length of the field, and capped a time consuming drive with a 4-yard touchdown run. Lance Rhodes caught a 17-yard touchdown pass from Hackney, to bring the score to 52\u201340. But the ensuing onside kick was returned by Hawaii's Britton Komine 42-yards for a Hawaii touchdown. That provided the final score, 59\u201340.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 46], "content_span": [47, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177644-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Hawaii Democratic presidential caucuses were held on February 24 in the U.S. state of Hawaii as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177645-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Warriors football team\nThe 2004 Hawaii Warriors football team represented the University of Hawaii at Manoa in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Hawaii finished the 2004 season with an 8\u20135 record, going 4\u20134 in Western Athletic Conference (WAC) play. The Warriors made their third straight appearance in the Hawaii Bowl, facing off against the UAB Blazers. The Warriors would go on to defeat the Blazers and cap off their third straight winning season, the fifth in six seasons under head coach June Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177645-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Hawaii Warriors football team\nIn his final season, quarterback Timmy Chang set the NCAA Division I-A all-time passing yards record with 17,072, surpassing the old mark held by BYU quarterback Ty Detmer (15,031). Chang also set records for total offensive yards (17,183), most offensive plays (2,610), and most interceptions (77). Wide receiver Chad Owens won the Mosi Tatupu Award for the best special teams player in the country and would earn second team AP All-American honors as an all purpose player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177646-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hawthorn Football Club season\nThe 2004 season was the Hawthorn Football Club's 80th season in the Australian Football League and 103rd overall. Following the season Alastair Clarkson was appointed as coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177647-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hazfi Cup Final\nThe 2004 Hazfi Cup Final was a two-legged football tie in order to determine the 2003\u201304 Hazfi Cup champion of Iranian football clubs. Sepahan faced Esteghlal in this final game.. The first leg took place on July 8, 2004 at Naghsh Jahan Stadium in Esfahan and the second leg took place on July 15, 2004 at Azadi Stadium, Tehran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177647-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hazfi Cup Final, Format\nThe rules for the final were exactly the same as the one in the previous knockout rounds. The tie was contested over two legs with away goals deciding the winner if the two teams were level on goals after the second leg. If the teams could still not be separated at that stage, then extra time would have been played with a penalty shootout (taking place if the teams were still level after extra time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177648-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Cup Final\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 178.101.93.166 (talk) at 13:26, 7 February 2020 (\u2192\u200eMatch details). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177648-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Cup Final\nThe 2004 Heineken Cup Final was the final match of the 2003\u201304 Heineken Cup, the ninth season of Europe's top club rugby union competition. The match was played on 23 May 2004 at Twickenham Stadium in London. The match was contested by London Wasps of England and Toulouse of France. Wasps won the match 27\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177649-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open\nThe 2004 Heineken Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland in New Zealand and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 12 January through 18 January 2004. Unseeded Dominik Hrbat\u00fd won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177649-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open, Finals, Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi / Fabrice Santoro defeated Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k / Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177650-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open \u2013 Doubles\nDavid Adams and Robbie Koenig were the defending champions of the doubles event of the Heineken Open tennis tournament, held in Auckland, New Zealand, but only Koenig competed that year with Petr P\u00e1la. Koenig and P\u00e1la lost in the first round to Jan-Michael Gambill and Brian MacPhie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177650-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open \u2013 Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Fabrice Santoro won in the final 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20133 against Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177650-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177651-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open \u2013 Singles\nGustavo Kuerten was the defending champion of the singles event at the Heineken Open tennis tournament, held in Auckland, New Zealand, but lost in the semifinals to Dominik Hrbat\u00fd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177651-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open \u2013 Singles\nHrbat\u00fd won in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 7\u20135 against Rafael Nadal, on his first ATP tour level final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177651-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Heineken Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177652-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hel van het Mergelland\nThe 2004 Hel van het Mergelland was the 31st edition of the Volta Limburg Classic cycle race and was held on 3 April 2004. The race started and finished in Eijsden. The race was won by Allan Johansen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash\nOn October 24, 2004, a Beechcraft Super King Air aircraft, registered N501RH and owned by NASCAR team Hendrick Motorsports, crashed into mountainous terrain in Stuart, Virginia, during a missed approach to Blue Ridge Airport in Martinsville, Virginia. The aircraft was transporting eight passengers and two flight crew to Martinsville so they could attend the NASCAR event at Martinsville Speedway that afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash\nAll ten people on board were killed; among them, members of the Hendrick family including John Hendrick, president of Hendrick Motorsports, his twin daughters, Ricky Hendrick, former Busch Series driver and heir to the Hendrick empire. Hendrick Motorsports staff involved includes Kimberly and Jennifer Hendrick, general Manager Jeff Turner, and chief engine builder Randy Dorton. The pilots were Richard Tracy and Elizabeth Morrison. Other passengers include Joe Jackson, an executive at DuPoint and Scott Lathram, Tony Stewart's pilot driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Crash\nThe King Air took off from Concord, North Carolina, at 12\u00a0pm EST, carrying eight passengers and two flight crew. Among them were several key Hendrick Motorsports staff, including team president John Hendrick and his twin daughters, Kimberly and Jennifer Hendrick; Ricky Hendrick, son of Rick Hendrick; general manager Jeff Turner; and chief engine builder Randy Dorton. The other people on board were Joe Jackson, a DuPont executive; Scott Lathram, a pilot for driver Tony Stewart; and pilots Richard Tracy and Elizabeth Morrison, who was scheduled to come to her brother's (Rick Morrison) birthday party that night after the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Crash\nThe plane was reported missing at 3:00\u00a0pm. Eventually 9-1-1 was called, and fire trucks and police cars patrolled the Virginia area during the race itself. Around midway through the race, a Civil Air Patrol search team patrolling the nearby Bull Mountain's peak found airplane wreckage on the summit. When removing the wreckage from the summit, response teams found the bodies of the Hendrick group at 11:05 pm. Everyone on board had been killed. A search by firefighters also discovered a scar on the mountain of moved dirt; the discovery proved that the airplane crashed on the side of the mountain and the explosion blew the wreckage and group upward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Crash\nNASCAR received word of the plane crash halfway through the race at Martinsville. Jimmie Johnson, a Hendrick driver, won the race. Due to the circumstances, the usual victory lane celebration did not take place. Upon the conclusion of the race, NASCAR called all Hendrick personnel to its mobile operations trailer where details of the accident were disclosed to the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Investigation\nAn investigation conducted by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) followed soon after the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Investigation, Weather\nThere were foggy conditions at the time of the plane crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Investigation, Pilot error as a cause\nThe NTSB suggested that pilot error was the cause of the crash, partly by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Investigation, Pilot error as a cause\nThe NTSB concluded its investigation by suggesting that the pilots failed to execute an instrument approach procedure and that both failed to use all navigational aids to confirm the airplane's position during its approach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 79], "content_span": [80, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Aftermath, Impact on Hendrick Motorsports\nOn February 18, 2005, Marshall Carlson, Rick Hendrick's son-in-law, signed on as new general manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Aftermath, Memorials\nThe week following the crash, officials at the Atlanta Motor Speedway held a moment of silence before both the Busch and Nextel Cup races and lowered the flags to half staff. All the Hendrick Motorsports cars, as well as the No. 0 driven by Ward Burton of Hendrick-affiliated Haas CNC Racing, carried tributes on the hoods for those who were lost the week before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Aftermath, Memorials\nJimmie Johnson (who won the Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 race) and the rest of his teammates and crew wore their caps backwards in victory lane as a tribute to Ricky Hendrick, who had a habit of doing the same. At the Hendrick museum in Concord, North Carolina, 300 people showed up for a candlelight vigil in honor of the ten victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177653-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Hendrick Motorsports aircraft crash, Aftermath, Memorials\nThe Randy Dorton Trophy now goes to the winner of the Mahle Engine Builders Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177654-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hertsmere Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Hertsmere Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Hertsmere Borough Council in Hertfordshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177654-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hertsmere Borough Council election, Background\nBefore the election the Conservatives controlled the council with 25 councillors, compared to 8 for Labour and 6 Liberal Democrats. 39 candidates stood for the 13 seats being contested, with 13 each from the Conservative and Labour parties, 12 Liberal Democrats and 1 from the Socialist Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177654-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hertsmere Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservative party remained on 25 seats, after both gaining and losing 2 seats. Labour finished 1 down on 7 seats, to be level with the Liberal Democrats for the first time, after the Liberal Democrats picked up a seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177654-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hertsmere Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservative gains from Labour came in Borehamwood Hillside where they won by 235 votes and in the former Labour stronghold of Borehamwood Brookmeadow, which had been held by Tim Sandle since 1995 (the area had been subject to a recent boundary change, with the main Labur voting part of the ward being reallocated to Cowley ward). Labour did take one seat back from the Conservatives in Borehamwood Cowley Hill by 87 votes, after the sitting Conservative councillor for Cowley Hill, Martin Heywood, contested and held Potters Bar Oakmere instead with a 709-vote majority for the Conservatives. Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats picked up a seat from the Conservatives in Bushey St James by 59 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177654-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hertsmere Borough Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties shared the main opposition role as both parties were on the same number of seats. Meanwhile, Labour chose a new leader, Leon Reefe, after Len Silverstone stood down as leader of the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177655-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Historic Grand Prix of Monaco\nThe 2004 Historic Grand Prix of Monaco was the fourth running of the Historic Grand Prix of Monaco, a motor racing event for heritage Grand Prix, Voiturettes, Formula One, Formula Two and Sports cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177655-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Historic Grand Prix of Monaco, Report\nThe event featured former Formula One drivers Phil Hill, Stirling Moss and Roberto Mieres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177655-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Historic Grand Prix of Monaco, Report\nFestivities included the official opening of a new pit complex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177655-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Historic Grand Prix of Monaco, Report\nIn Race B, Philip Walker started from the back of the grid due to mechanical issues in practice. He put on a strong recovery drive to finish sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177656-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 20th Tournament in the history of the conference. It was played between March 11 and March 20, 2004. Quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the Fleet Center in Boston, Massachusetts, the home venue of the NHL's Boston Bruins. By winning the tournament Maine received the Hockey East's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177656-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured three rounds of play. The team that finishes ninth in the conference is not eligible for tournament play. In the first round, the first and eighth seeds, the second and seventh seeds, the third seed and sixth seeds, and the fourth seed and fifth seeds played a best-of-three with the winner advancing to the semifinals. In the semifinals, the highest and lowest seeds and second highest and second lowest seeds play a single-elimination game, with the winner advancing to the championship game. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177656-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hockey East Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl\nThe 2004 Holiday Bowl was the third bowl game (also the second of three in California) played of the 2004\u201305 bowl season on December 30, 2004. The game was held at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, pitting the Pac-10's California Golden Bears and the Big 12's Texas Tech Red Raiders. Cal was edged out for a BCS bowl berth by Texas in the last week of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Teams\nIn 2004 Cal posted a 10\u20131 record under head coach Jeff Tedford and quarterback Aaron Rodgers, with their only regular season loss coming against the eventual national champion, USC. They finished the regular season ranked No. 4 according to polls, and appeared to have an excellent chance to receive an at-large BCS bowl berth, most likely in the Rose Bowl. Under normal circumstances, the Bears, as Pac-10 runner-up, would have had first crack at a Rose Bowl berth since conference champion USC was playing for the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Teams\nThe Bears entered their final game of the regular season ranked No. 4 in BCS standings and a 24-point favorite over Southern Miss. They won 26\u201316 in a closer than-expected game. With 13 seconds left in the game and Cal with the ball at the Southern Miss 22-yard, Tedford elected to run out the clock instead of attempting to increase the margin of victory to possibly impress some voters. Leading up to the game, Tedford said he had no interest to run up the score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Teams\nIn a controversial case, the Texas coach Mack Brown made impassioned pleas to media asking poll voters reconsider their final votes. Several Associated Press (AP) voters were besieged by fan emails and phone calls attempting to sway their votes, apparently spurred from Brown's pleas to rank Texas ahead of other \"less deserving teams.\" Nine of the 65 AP voters switched Texas ahead of Cal, and three of them were from Texas. In the Coaches Poll, four voters moved Cal down to No. 7 and two to No. 8, when the week before none had them lower than No. 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Teams\nMeanwhile, two coaches moved Texas up to No. 3 when the team did not play that week. The Los Angeles Times wrote that accusations were raised about coaches manipulated voting, but the individual coaches votes were not released to prove or disprove the allegations. The AP Poll makes its voters' records public. No. 6 Texas gained 23 points on No. 4 Cal in the AP poll, and the fifth-ranked Longhorns closed 43 points on the fourth-ranked Bears in the coaches poll. That allowed Texas to earn a BCS berth, finishing .0129 points ahead of Cal in the BCS standings after being .0013 points behind. The Longhorns went on to beat Michigan 38\u201337 in the Rose Bowl. In part because of the controversy with Cal's BCS ranking, the AP poll withdrew from the BCS after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Teams\nTexas Tech entered the game with a 7\u20134 overall record and a 5\u20133 record in the Big XII. The Red Raiders entered the game with the top-ranked passing offense in the NCAA, averaging just over 399 yards per game, and with the NCAA season leader in passing yardage, Sonny Cumbie. Earlier in the season, Tech had shown its offensive prowess with a 70\u201310 victory over Nebraska, the most points ever given up by Nebraska in the team's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Game summary\nCal played well at first, finishing the first quarter with a 14\u20137 lead. However, the Texas Tech passing assault exploded after that. In the second and third quarters, the Red Raiders outscored the Bears 31\u20133, going on to record the biggest upset of the bowl season. Red Raiders quarterback Sonny Cumbie torched the Bears defense for 520 passing yards, going 40-for-60 with three touchdowns and no interceptions. The brightest spot for Cal was running back J.J. Arrington, who ran for 173 yards and a touchdown, making him only the third Pac-10 running back to reach 2,000 yards rushing in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Game summary\nTech got on the board first with a touchdown pass from Sonny Cumbie to Jarrett Hicks, but the Bears responded with two touchdowns on runs by J.J. Arrington and Marshawn Lynch to go up 14\u20137 in the first quarter. The Red Raiders outscored the Bears 17\u20130 in the second quarter, with an Alex Trlica field goal, a touchdown run by Taurean Henderson, and another Cumbie-to-Hicks touchdown pass. Cumbie's second touchdown pass came three plays after Tech's Vincent Meeks intercepted an Aaron Rodgers pass and returned it 48 yards to California's 22-yard line. Meeks was named the Defensive MVP of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177657-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Holiday Bowl, Game summary\nIn the second half, Tech took the opening kickoff and marched 85 yards in just four plays, scoring on a 60-yard catch and run by Joel Filani to make the score 31\u201314. Tech's Johnny Mack scored on an 11-yard run later in the third quarter as the Red Raiders took a 38\u201317 lead into the fourth quarter. California's Aaron Rodgers threw for one touchdown and ran for another in the fourth quarter, but Texas Tech added their final touchdown on a Taurean Henderson run that capped a 12-play drive covering 74 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177658-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Holy Cross Crusaders football team\nThe 2004 Holy Cross Crusaders football team was an American football team that represented the College of the Holy Cross during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Holy Cross finished second-to-last in the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177658-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Holy Cross Crusaders football team\nIn their first year under head coach Tom Gilmore, the Crusaders compiled a 3\u20138 record. David Mitchell and Steve Silva were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177658-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Holy Cross Crusaders football team\nThe Crusaders were outscored 367 to 240. Their 1\u20135 conference record placed sixth in the seven-team Patriot League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177658-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Holy Cross Crusaders football team\nHoly Cross played its home games at Fitton Field on the college campus in Worcester, Massachusetts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177659-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong Sevens\nThe 2004 Hong Kong Sevens was an international rugby sevens tournament that took place at the Hong Kong Stadium between 26\u201328 March 2004. It was the 29th edition of the Hong Kong Sevens and was the fifth tournament of the 2003\u201304 World Sevens Series. Twenty-four teams competed in the tournament and were separated into six groups of four with the top eight teams qualifying through to the cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177659-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong Sevens\nAfter winning all three of their group stage matches, England took out the Hong Kong title for the third year running, defeating Argentina in the cup final 22\u201312. The plate-final saw Scotland defeat France while the Cook Islands took home the bowl defeating Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177659-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong Sevens, Teams\nCompared to other tournament of the series, the Hong Kong Sevens had 24 teams compete for the title instead of the regular sixteen teams that usually competed in a World Series event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177659-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong Sevens, Format\nThe teams were drawn into six pools of four teams each. Each team played the other teams in their pool once, with three points awarded for a win, two points for a draw, and one point for a loss (no points awarded for a forfeit). The pool stage was played over the first two days of the tournament. The top team from each pool along with the two best runners-up advanced to the Cup quarter finals. The remaining four runners-up along with the four best third-placed teams advanced to the Plate quarter finals. The remaining eight teams went on to the Bowl quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election\nThe 2004 Hong Kong Legislative Council election was held on 12 September 2004 for members of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (LegCo). The election returned 30 members from directly elected geographical constituencies and 30 members from functional constituencies, of which 11 were unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election\nAn unprecedented number of 3.2 million people registered to vote in the election. The turnout rate was an unprecedented 55.6% with 1,784,406 voters casting ballots, beating the previous record set in 1998 by 200,000 votes. While pro-democratic opposition candidates gained new seats in the legislature, their gains fell short of their expectations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election\nIn the geographical constituencies, candidates from the pro-democratic camp secured 60 percent of the seats in the geographical sectors of the election, taking 18 seats (up from 17) in this category, and 62 percent of the popular vote. On the other hand, the pro-Beijing and pro-business candidates made greater gains, winning 12 directly elected seats (up from 7). In the functional constituencies which the pro-democratic camp sought to abolish, the camp made more gains (from 5 to 7 seats).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election\nOverall, the democrats took 25 seats and the pro-government camp 35 seats. Bills initiated by the government can still be passed on pro-government support alone, but bills originated by members cannot be passed without democratic support, since these bills require absolute majorities in each sector (geographical and functional) of the legislature. Constitutional amendments require a two-thirds vote and thereby also require support from the democratic camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election\nDespite the increase in the number of seats returned by geographical constituencies and the record turnout, the Democratic Party lost the status of being the largest political party in the Legislative Council to the pro-government Democratic Alliance for Betterment of Hong Kong, DAB, who secured 12 seats if including the two members who ran under the banner of the Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions, and pro-business Liberal Party who secured 10 seats, thereby becoming only the third-largest party. Some attributed the poor performance of the pro-democratic camp to tactical miscalculation in vote allocation. This was not helped by some of the democratic parties' personal scandals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election\nThe pro-Beijing and pro-business parties succeeded in retaining the majority in the legislature. However, pro-democracy candidates have maintained the threshold to block changes, if necessary, to the Basic Law of Hong Kong, since a two-thirds vote is required for amendment. The current Legislative Council also saw the entry of more radical members of the democratic camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Change in composition\nAccording to the Annex II of the Basic Law of Hong Kong, the 6-seat Election Committee constituency indirectly elected by the 800-member Election Committee would be abolished, while the directly elected geographical constituency seats would increase from 24 to 30, same number of the indirectly elected functional constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Change in composition\nAs a result, Hong Kong Island and Kowloon East was added one extra seat each, from five to six and four to five respectively, and the New Territories West and New Territories East was added two extra seats each, from six to eight and five to seven respectively, while the number of seats in Kowloon West remained four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Background\nThe election came amidst the deteriorating governance and intense debates over constitutional reforms in Hong Kong. The Tung Chee-hwa administration had been embattling with economic recession brought by the 1997 financial crisis and the more prominent SARS outbreak in 2003. Nevertheless, the Tung administration push forward the controversial Hong Kong Basic Law Article 23 legislation which outlawed \"treason\" and \"subversive activities\" and raised concerns on its potential threats against Hong Kong people's civil liberties. A group of barristers formed the Basic Law Article 23 Concern Group and rallied against the national security legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Background\nOver 500,000 people to protested on 1 July 2003, the sixth anniversary of the establishment of the HKSAR, against the legislation, the largest demonstration since the handover. The Article 23 legislation further crippled the Tung administration as the government saw its popularity dropped to a new low. The Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong (DAB), the largest pro-Beijing party saw its largest defeat in the District Council elections in November 2003, which alarmed the Beijing and the Hong Kong government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Background\nThe Annex I and Annex II of the Basic Law state that the method for selecting the Chief Executive and for forming the Legislative Council could be amended after 2007. The pro-democracy camp argued that the third term of Chief Executive and fourth term of Legislative Council should be elected on the basis of universal suffrage in 2007 and 2008 as stipulated in the Article 45 and 68 of the Basic Law respectively. In 2004, the Article 23 Concern Group transformed into the Article 45 Concern Group calling for the early implementation of the universal suffrage. Facing the pro-democracy pressure for full democratisation, in April 2004, the National People's Congress Standing Committee (NPCSC) ruled out the 2007/08 universal suffrage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Retiring incumbents\nWith the cancellation of the Election Committee constituency, there were total of twelve incumbents chose not to run for re-election. Ip Kwok-him lost his seat in the Central and Western District Council therefore was not qualified for running in the District Council functional constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 56], "content_span": [57, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results\nNote: For the joint list of pro-democrats in Hong Kong Island, Kowloon East and New Territories East, the votes are divided equally to each candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Overview\nThe election was largely seen as a contest between the pro-democracy coalition and the pro-business and pro-Beijing coalitions. There were 162 candidates for 60 seats in the LegCo. Before the election, the pro-democratic camp was widely expected to gain the most votes and increase its representation from 22 seats in the LegCo. Some members of the pro-democratic camp aimed at securing an absolute majority of the seats in the legislature so that they would have the power to veto all government proposals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Overview\nThe democratic camp called for direct elections for the Chief Executive of Hong Kong in 2007 and for LegCo in 2008, as well as rapid political reform. In contrast, the pro-Beijing and pro-business candidates placed more emphasis on economic growth and social stability. Most of the political parties are now setting 2012 as the ideal time for electoral reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Overview\nWhile the democratic camp hoped to play up the issue of universal suffrage as a prominent issue in the election, the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress ruled out universal suffrage for the Chief Executive election in 2007 and for LegCo elections in 2008 in April 2004 before the election. Despite this, the pro-democratic camp insisted on promoting their agenda, which seemed to backfire when the campaign lost its original momentum. This was not helped by various sex and financial scandals of a few pro-democracy candidates. There were some allegations by the pro-democracy camp of Mainland Chinese influence behind this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Irregularities\nThere were a few reports of irregularities. Some polling stations ran out of ballot boxes, causing long delays in voting. To fit more ballots into the ballot boxes, some election workers forcefully stuffed ballots into the box using objects such as barbecue forks and metal rulers. Some stations also used random cardboard boxes without official seals. Some ballot boxes were opened before the close of polling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Irregularities\nThe polling station operating manual had mistakes in it, so some candidate representatives were kicked out after the closing of the poll and were prevented from witnessing the counting, as required by law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Irregularities\nSome candidates have tried to challenge the election results, but have remained unsuccessful thus far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Results, Irregularities\nA report on the election process was published shortly after the election. Another report was commissioned by the government to suggest future improvements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Candidate lists and results, Geographical Constituencies (30 seats)\nVoting system: Party-list proportional representation with largest remainder method and Hare quota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 104], "content_span": [105, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177660-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election, Candidate lists and results, Functional Constituencies (30 seats)\nVoting systems: Different voting systems apply to different functional constituencies, namely for the Heung Yee Kuk, Agriculture and Fisheries, Insurance and Transport, the preferential elimination system of voting; and for the remaining 24 FCs used the first-past-the-post voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 102], "content_span": [103, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177661-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in Hong Kong Island\nThese are the Hong Kong Island results of the 2004 Hong Kong legislative election. The election was held on 12 September 2004 and all 6 seats in Hong Kong Island were contested. The pro-democracy camp failed to win four out of six seats with the two tickets of the Democratic Party and Article 45 Concern Group's Audrey Eu and The Frontier's Cyd Ho joint ticket. The last-minute emergency call of Martin Lee cost the defeat of Cyd Ho in a narrow margin to Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong's (DAB) Choy So-yuk. Legislative Council President Rita Fan also contested in Hong Kong Island for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177661-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in Hong Kong Island\nSix tickets took part in the election, with the DAB fielding a ticket of chairman Ma Lik and Choy So-yuk and the pro-democrats fielding two tickets, one consisted of Martin Lee, Yeung Sum and Joseph Lai of the Democratic Party and the other consisted of Audrey Eu and Cyd Ho. Other candidates included former Democratic Party member Tsang Kin-shing and independent insurance agent Kelvin Wong Kam-fai. Rita Fan also fielded her one-candidate ticket, aiming at the votes from the middle and upper class voters from the sandwich of Hong Kong's pro-Beijing vs. pro-democracy political spectrum, despite herself was supported by the pro-Beijing camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177661-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in Hong Kong Island\nThe two pro-democracy tickets with the slogan \"1+1=4\" provided that their supporters would have cast their votes evenly to the two tickets. Pre -election polls showed, nevertheless, that the Eu-Ho ticket had far more supporters, causing the Democratic Party to request all supporters of the camp to vote instead for their ticket just two weeks before the election. It turned out that the Democratic Party drew too many votes from the Eu-Ho ticket, causing Cyd Ho defeat by DAB's Choy So-yuk, by a slim margin of 815 votes (or 0.23% of all valid votes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177661-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in Hong Kong Island\nShould the Democratic Party drew around 1900 more votes from the Eu-Ho ticket, the third-rank candidate on their list would have defeated Choy. When the results were announced in the morning of the following day, Martin Lee said before cameras \"I'd rather lose with dignity than win like this\", on the \"unexpected\" defeat of Cyd Ho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177662-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in Kowloon East\nThese are the Kowloon East results of the 2004 Hong Kong legislative election. The election was held on 12 September 2004 and all 5 seats in Kowloon East where consisted of Wong Tai Sin District and Kwun Tong District were contested. All four incumbents were elected with famous pro-democrat radio host Albert Cheng won a new seat with Andrew To of The Frontier on a joint ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177663-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in Kowloon West\nThese are the Kowloon West results of the 2004 Hong Kong legislative election. The election was held on 12 September 2004 and all 4 seats in Kowloon West where consisted of Yau Tsim Mong District, Sham Shui Po District and Kowloon City District were contested. All four incumbents were re-elected, with Democratic Party's Lau Chin-shek ran as independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177664-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in New Territories East\nThese are the New Territories East results of the 2004 Hong Kong legislative election. The election was held on 12 September 2004 and all 7 seats in New Territories East where consisted of North District, Tai Po District, Sai Kung District and Sha Tin District were contested. The pro-democracy camp formed a electoral coalition \"7.1 United Front\" aimed at four seats, however due to the largest remainder method the wasted votes contributed to Li Kwok-ying who placed second on the Democratic Alliance for the Betterment of Hong Kong ticket. Radical democrat Leung Kwok-hung of April Fifth Action also won a seat for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177665-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong legislative election in New Territories West\nThese are the New Territories West results of the 2004 Hong Kong legislative election. The election was held on 12 September 2004 and all 8 seats in New Territories West, which consists of Tsuen Wan District, Tuen Mun District, Yuen Long District, Kwai Tsing District and Islands District, were contested. All the incumbents were elected with the new two seats gained by Lee Wing-tat of the Democratic Party and Selina Chow of the Liberal Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177666-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong\u2013Macau Interport\nThe 60th Hong Kong\u2013Macau Interport was held in Macau on 11 June 2004. Hong Kong captured the champion by winning 2-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177666-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hong Kong\u2013Macau Interport, Squads, Macau\nThe following only shows the players played in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177667-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hopman Cup\nThe 2004 Hopman Cup (also known as the Hyundai Hopman Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the sixteenth Hopman Cup tennis tournament held at the Burswood Entertainment Complex in Perth from 3 through 10 January 2004. Slovakia's Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Karol Ku\u010dera made the final, but lost to Americans Lindsay Davenport and James Blake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177667-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hopman Cup, Group B, Teams and Standings\n1Due to an injury to Alicia Molik, Australia was unable to compete in the final. Slovakia competed in the final in their place. 2Canada lost in qualifying to Hungary, but then took the place of Belgium in the Hungary-Belgium tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177668-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament took place at the end of the 2003\u201304 regular season. The better seed hosted each first round match. Butler hosted the second round and semifinals. As the highest remaining seed, Milwaukee hosted the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177668-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll Horizon League schools played in the tournament. Teams were seeded by 2003\u201304 Horizon League season record, with a tiebreaker system to seed teams with identical conference records. The top 2 teams received a bye to the semifinals and the third seed received a bye to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177668-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nFirst round games at campus sites of higher seedsSecond round and semifinals hosted by Butler. Championship hosted by best remaining seed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season\nThe 2004 Houston Astros season was the 43rd season for the Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise in Houston, Texas. Five years removed from opening Minute Maid Park, the Astros hosted the All-Star Game, which was the first held in Houston since 1986. Having limped into the All-Star break with a 44\u201344 record, Phil Garner was named to replace Jimy Williams as manager. The Astros finished second in the Central division and captured the NL Wild Card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season\nThe Astros won a postseason series for the first time in franchise history by defeating the Atlanta Braves in the National League Division Series (NLDS), scoring an NLDS-record 36 runs. Roger Clemens won the NL Cy Young Award, becoming the fourth pitcher to win the award in both leagues, and the only one with seven overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, First half\nWhen he hit his sixth career grand slam against the Milwaukee Brewers on April 9, first baseman Jeff Bagwell tied a club record. Starting pitcher Roger Clemens was named National League Pitcher of the Month in April after going 5\u20130 in a win\u2013loss record (W\u2013L) with a 1.95 earned run average (ERA), 32 strikeouts and 14 bases on balls in 32+1\u20443 innings pitched. In just one start did he allow more than one run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, First half\nClemens passed Steve Carlton to move into then-second place behind Nolan Ryan on the all-time strikeout list on May 6 against the Pittsburgh Pirates in a 6\u20132 victory while striking out nine and bringing his career total to 4,140. In May, outfielder Lance Berkman produced a .785 slugging percentage with 24 runs batted in (RBI), winning his first career National League Player of the Month honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, First half\nIn a three-team deal involving the Kansas City Royals and Oakland Athletics, the Astros acquired center fielder Carlos Beltr\u00e1n. The Royals sent Beltr\u00e1n to Houston for minor league catcher John Buck and cash. The A's sent minor leaguers pitcher Mike Wood and first baseman Mark Teahen to the Royals. The Astros sent relief pitcher Octavio Dotel to the A's. Dotel, the Astros' closer, had a 0\u20134 W\u2013L with a 3.12 ERA in 34+1\u20443 innings pitched, 50 strikeouts and 14 saves in 17 opportunities. He had replaced Billy Wagner in that role following his trade to Philadelphia in the previous off-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, First half\nThe Astros fired manager Jimy Williams and replaced him with Phil Garner at the All-Star break. With a 44\u201344 record, the team had been slumping after spending the first month and a half of the season in first place in the National League Central division. That was considered a disappointment due to hopes of reaching the World Series after signing free agent starting pitchers Clemens and Pettitte, and acquiring Beltr\u00e1n weeks earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Minute Maid Park\nThe 2004 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was the 75th playing of the midseason exhibition baseball game between the all-stars of the American League (AL) and National League (NL). The game was held on July 13, 2004 at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, the Houston Astros' home stadium. The previous All-Star Game held in Houston was in 1986 in the Astrodome. In the Home Run Derby, Miguel Tejada of the Baltimore Orioles defeated Berkman in the final round, 5\u20134. Tejada established records of both 27 home runs overall, and 15 in a single round, while Berkman hit the longest home run of the competition at 497 feet (151\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 109], "content_span": [110, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, Major League Baseball All-Star Game at Minute Maid Park\nThree members of the Astros were in the starting lineup; Roger Clemens, who had played in the 1986 All-Star Game, was the starting pitcher, Jeff Kent was at second base, and Berkman was one of the three outfielders starting in the game. Beltr\u00e1n, first named to the American League team before the trade, was added to the National League team as a reserve. The game had an attendance of 41,886 and boxing legend Muhammad Ali threw the ceremonial first pitch of the game. The final result was the American League defeating the National League 9-4, thus awarding an AL team (which would eventually be the Boston Red Sox) home-field advantage in the World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 109], "content_span": [110, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, Second half\nA triple play and a seven-run seventh inning on August 19 against Philadelphia highlighted an Astros 12\u201310 win. With the Phillies leading 7\u20132, Todd Pratt grounded into a bases-loaded triple play in the fifth inning, Houston's first in 13 years. Berkman, Craig Biggio, and Eric Bruntlett each homered in the seventh inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, Second half\nBagwell recorded his 200th career stolen base on August 30 against the Cincinnati Reds to become the tenth player in MLB history to reach that plateau while hitting 400 home runs. On September 18, Bagwell collected his 1,500th career RBI with a single in the third inning against the Brewers. Two innings later, he homered for his 1,500th run scored, becoming just 29th player in MLB history and first Astro to reach both milestones. Bagwell finished with 27 home runs, stopping a streak of eight consecutive seasons with at least 30 but extending a streak of 12 with at least 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, Second half\nThe Astros won 36 of their final 46 games to win the National League wild card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, Regular season, Overview, Second half\nAfter the Astros acquired Beltr\u00e1n from the Royals, he played 90 games batting .258 with 23 home runs, 53 RBI, and 28 stolen bases. His combined totals in 2004 included 159 games with a .267 batting average, 38 home runs, 104 RBI, 42 stolen bases, and 121 runs scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 65], "content_span": [66, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, National League Divisional Playoffs, Atlanta Braves vs. Houston Astros\nIn Game 2, Bagwell hit his first career postseason home run off Mike Hampton in the first inning in a 4\u20132 extra-inning loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 98], "content_span": [99, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, National League Divisional Playoffs, Atlanta Braves vs. Houston Astros\nAfter seven failed attempts in 43 years of franchise history to win a playoff series, the Astros defeated the Atlanta Braves in five games for their first. Behind the quartet dubbed the \"Killer B's\" \u2013 composed of Bagwell, Beltr\u00e1n, Berkman and Biggio \u2013 who batted .395 (34-for-86) with eight home runs, 21 RBI and 24 runs scored, the Astros' offense ignited, scoring an NLDS-record 36 runs. Beltr\u00e1n homered four times in this series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 98], "content_span": [99, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, National League Championship Series, St. Louis Cardinals vs. Houston Astros\nThe Astros faced the St. Louis Cardinals in the playoffs for the first time in 2004 in the National League Championship Series (NLCS). By hitting one home run in each of the first four home runs in the NLCS, including the game-winner in Game 4, Beltr\u00e1n tied Barry Bonds' record for home runs in single postseason-record with eight, continuing a strong performance from the NLDS. Counting a two home-run performance in Game 5 of the NLDS, that gave Beltr\u00e1n at least one home run in a record-setting five consecutive postseason games, later eclipsed by Daniel Murphy's home runs in six consecutive postseason games in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 103], "content_span": [104, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177669-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Astros season, National League Championship Series, St. Louis Cardinals vs. Houston Astros\nCardinals center fielder Jim Edmonds hit the game-winning home run off Dan Miceli in the 12th inning of Game 6, for a 6\u20134 final score and forcing a Game 7. It was the third game Miceli lost of the 2004 postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 103], "content_span": [104, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177670-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Bowl\nThe 2004 EV1.net Houston Bowl was the fifth edition of the college football bowl game, and was played at Reliant Stadium in Houston, Texas. The game pitted the Colorado Buffaloes from the Big 12 Conference and the UTEP Miners from the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). The game was the final competition of the 2004 football season for each team and resulted in a 33\u201328 Colorado victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177671-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Comets season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the eighth season for the Houston Comets. The Comets missed the playoffs for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177671-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Comets season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Comets' 2003 record, they would pick 8th and 11th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Comets picked Pollyanna Johns Kimbrough and Lucienne Berthieu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177672-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Cougars football team\nThe 2004 Houston Cougars football team, also known as the Houston Cougars, Houston, or UH represented the University of Houston in the 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season. It was the 59th year of season play for Houston. The team was coached by second year head football coach, Art Briles. The team played its home games at Robertson Stadium, a 32,000-person capacity stadium on-campus in Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177673-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Houston Texans season\nThe 2004 season was the Houston Texans' third in the National Football League, all of which they had spent under head coach Dom Capers. The team finished 7\u20139, two games better than the previous season, and came third in the AFC South, the first time they had not finished bottom. The Texans also earned their first victory over the Tennessee Titans, the franchise previously known as the Oilers, who had left Houston after the 1996 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election\nThe 2004 Hull City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Hull City Council in England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the Labour party formed the administration after becoming the largest party in the 2003 election. Their administration however was criticised by the Audit Commission, which raised the hopes of the Liberal Democrats that could regain control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Campaign\nLabour campaigned saying that voters should choose \"order and progress\" under themselves rather than the chaos they said the Liberal Democrats had brought while they were in office. They hoped to expand their pilot programme of free school meals for all children to all schools within the city. The Liberal Democrats however wanted to abolish the programme and pledged to establish crime prevention funds for neighbourhoods, free off-peak bus travel for pensioners and expand recycling. The Liberal Democrats also pledged to keep council tax increases to the same level as rises in earnings for the 2 years after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Campaign\n20 of the 59 seats on the council were contested in the election, which was conducted with all postal voting in common with councils across 4 of the English regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Labour party remain the largest party on the council with 27 seats but with the Liberal Democrats gaining 2 seats to hold 24 after the election. As a result, the council remained hung with no party having a majority on the council. The most high-profile result saw the United Kingdom Independence Party win their first local council seat after John Cornforth defeated the independent councillor, John Considine, in Derringham ward by 7 votes after 6 recounts. However the independents immediately said that they would mount a legal challenge to the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Legal challenge\nThe independent candidate in Derringham said he would make a legal challenge to the result as the Returning Officer had said 3,540 ballot papers had been returned but that when the results were declared 140 ballot papers were missing. The independents claimed that these missing papers had ended up in counting rooms for other wards. They also said that people in Derringham had received ballots in the post that were intended for Marfleet ward and that no one knew how many people this had affected and were thus unable to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Legal challenge\nThe court challenge was successful with the High Court ruling that the result \"may well have been affected\". As a result, a new vote was ordered to be held, with the election set for 13 January 2005. The by-election was won by Michael Rouse-Deane of the Liberal Democrats who had come fourth in the original election in Derringham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177674-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Hull City Council election, Ward results\nNo elections were held in Bransholme East, Bransholme West and University wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177675-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Humanitarian Bowl\nThe 2004 Humanitarian Bowl was the 7th edition of the bowl game. The next edition was played in December 2004, almost a year from this game, and the name was changed after this contest to the \"MPC Computers Bowl\". This game featured the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, and the Tulsa Golden Hurricane. In this game Georgia Tech set several Humanitarian Bowl records. The 42 point margin of victory is a bowl game record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177675-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Humanitarian Bowl\nGeorgia Tech running back P. J. Daniels started the scoring on a 9-yard touchdown run, giving the Yellow Jackets a 7\u20130 lead. He would finish with a bowl game record 307 yards on 31 carries for the game. In the second quarter Tulsa's Brad DeVault kicked a 22-yard field goal to draw Tulsa to within 7\u20133. Georgia Tech kicker Dan Burnett kicked a 29-yard field goal in the second quarter to help Georgia Tech claim a 10-3 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177675-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Humanitarian Bowl\nIn the third quarter, Daniels scored on a 1-yard touchdown run for Georgia Tech to bump its lead up to 17\u20133. Chris Woods added a 2-yard touchdown run to increase the lead to 24\u20133. Daniels scored on a 33-yard touchdown scamper to make the score 31\u20133, to close out the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177675-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Humanitarian Bowl\nIn the fourth quarter, Daniels went on a 38-yard touchdown scamper to increase the lead to 38\u20133. Jermaine Hatch added a 1-yard touchdown run to make it 45\u20133, as Georgia Tech had scored 38 unanswered points. Quarterback Paul Smith found Garrett Mills for a 13-yard touchdown, for Tulsa to cut it to 45\u201310. Jermaine Hatch scored from 8 yards out, as Georgia Tech completed the game 52\u201310. Georgia Tech held Tulsa to -56 rushing yards, the lowest ever in Tulsa history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177675-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Humanitarian Bowl\nThis was the third meeting between the schools - both previous meetings were also bowl games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177676-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team\nThe 2004 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team represented Humboldt State University during the 2004 NCAA Division II football season. Humboldt State competed in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference (GNAC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177676-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team\nThe 2004 Lumberjacks were led by fifth-year head coach Doug Adkins. They played home games at the Redwood Bowl in Arcata, California. Humboldt State finished the season with a record of five wins and five losses (5\u20135, 3\u20133 GNAC). The Lumberjacks were outscored by their opponents 221\u2013253 for the 2004 season. This season marked a change in scheduling for the GNAC. Each team played the other conference teams twice during the season (home and away) instead of just once. That practice would continue through the 2013 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177676-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Humboldt State Lumberjacks football team, Team players in the NFL\nNo Humboldt State players were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177677-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Hungarian Figure Skating Championships (Hungarian: Senior Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g 2004) took place on January 17 and 18, 2004 in Budapest. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing on the senior level. The results were used to choose the Hungarian teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177678-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Hungarian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Marlboro Magyar Nagyd\u00edj 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 15 August 2004 at the Hungaroring, Budapest, Hungary. It was Race 13 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship and the 20th Hungarian Grand Prix. The 70-lap race was won from pole position by Michael Schumacher, driving a Ferrari, with teammate Rubens Barrichello second and Fernando Alonso third in a Renault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177678-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian Grand Prix\nThe win was Michael Schumacher's twelfth of the season and his seventh in succession. The result meant that Schumacher increased his lead in the Drivers' Championship to 38 points over Barrichello. Jenson Button, who finished fifth in the race in his BAR-Honda, remained in third but was mathematically eliminated from the championship. Ferrari's one-two finish meant that they secured their sixth consecutive Constructors' Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177678-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nHeading into the thirteenth race of the season, Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher led the Drivers' Championship with 110 points, ahead of teammate Rubens Barrichello on 74 points and Jenson Button on 65. Jarno Trulli was fourth with 46 points with his Renault teammate Fernando Alonso in fifth place on 39 points. Ferrari were leading the Constructors' Championship with 184 points; Renault (85 points) and BAR (76) contended for second place with Williams in fourth on 47 points and McLaren were a further ten points adrift in fifth place. Ferrari had dominated the championship; Michael Schumacher had won eleven races for the team, while Trulli had clinched the victory in the Monaco Grand Prix. Barrichello, Button, Alonso, Juan Pablo Montoya and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen had finished in second and third positions during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177678-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThere was one driver change heading into the race. Cristiano da Matta was dropped by Toyota and was replaced by the team's third driver Ricardo Zonta. Da Matta was dropped because of his poor performance relative to teammate Olivier Panis, but remained at the team as a driver and would perform marketing work while Toyota test driver Ryan Briscoe assumed Zonta's former position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177678-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177679-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian dual citizenship referendum\nA two-part referendum was held in Hungary on 5 December 2004. Voters were asked two questions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177679-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Hungarian dual citizenship referendum\nBoth measures were approved by voters, but the referendum failed due to a voter turnout of 37.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177680-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Huntingdonshire District Council election\nThe 2004 Huntingdonshire District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Huntingdonshire District Council in Cambridgeshire, England. The whole council was up for election after boundary changes reduced the number of seats by 1. The Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177681-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hyndburn Borough Council election\nElections to Hyndburn Borough Council, England were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177682-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Hypo-Meeting\nThe 30th edition of the annual Hypo-Meeting took place on May 29 and May 30, 2004 in G\u00f6tzis, Austria. The track and field competition, featuring a decathlon (men) and a heptathlon (women) event was part of the 2004 IAAF World Combined Events Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177683-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF Golden League\nThe 2004 IAAF Golden League was a series of track and field meetings organised by the International Association of Athletics Federations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177683-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF Golden League\nOriginally taking place in Oslo, Rome, Monaco, Z\u00fcrich, Brussels and Berlin, the Bislett Games was temporarily moved from Oslo to Fana (Bergen) due to the redevelopment of the Bislett stadion. The athletes (in selected events) who won their event at all six meetings took a share of a $1 million jackpot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177684-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Athletics Final\nThe 2nd IAAF World Athletics Final was held at the Stade Louis II, in Monte Carlo, Monaco on September 18, and September 19, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177684-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Athletics Final\nThe hammer throw event for men and women had to take place in Szombathely, Hungary a week previous as the Monaco stadium was not large enough to hold the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177684-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Athletics Final\nOne of the main highlights was the men's 3000 metres steeplechase. This was won by Saif Saeed Shaheen of Qatar, (formerly Stephen Cherono of Kenya), who won in a championship record of 7:56.94 despite the fact that the field had been held up by Wesley Kiprotich clattering into the first barrier. Shaheen had been unable to compete in the recent 2004 Summer Olympics due to his change of nationality but had set the world record of 7:53.63 minutes in Brussels just ten days after the Olympic final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177684-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Athletics Final\nAnother highlight was the pole vault competition where Timothy Mack cleared 6.01\u00a0m to join the exclusive 6 metres club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177685-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Athletics Final \u2013 Results\nThese are the results of the 2004 IAAF World Athletics Final, which took place in at the Stade Louis II in Monte Carlo, Monaco on 18\u201319 September. The hammer throw events were staged separately on 5 September in Szombathely, Hungary, due to stadium limitations in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177685-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Athletics Final \u2013 Results\nThe year's top seven athletes, based on their points ranking of the 2004 IAAF World Athletics Tour, qualified to compete in each event, with an extra four athletes selected for races of 1500 metres and above. One additional athlete, a wildcard, was allocated to each event by the IAAF and replacement athletes were admitted to replace the qualified athletes that could not attend the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177686-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships\nThe 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships took place on March 20/21, 2004. The races were held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, the capital of Belgium. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177686-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships\nThe new team scores introduced in 2002 were reverted to the original form as used in 2001 and earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177686-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships\nComplete results for senior men, for senior men's teams, for men's short race, for men's short race teams, for junior men, for junior men's teams, senior women, for senior women's teams, for women's short race, for women's short race teams, for junior women, for junior women's teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177686-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 673 athletes from 72 countries participated. This is in agreement with the official numbers as published. The announced athletes from \u00a0Guinea did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177687-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior men's race\nThe Junior men's race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, Belgium, on March 21, 2004. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177687-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior men's race\nComplete results for individuals, for teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177687-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior men's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 120 athletes from 40 countries participated in the Junior men's race. This is in agreement with the official numbers as published. The announced athlete from \u00a0Guinea did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177688-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior women's race\nThe Junior women's race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, Belgium, on March 20, 2004. Reports on the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177688-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior women's race\nComplete results for individuals, for teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177688-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Junior women's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 115 athletes from 35 countries participated in the Junior women's race. This is in agreement with the official numbers as published. The announced athlete from \u00a0Zimbabwe did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177689-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Men's short race\nThe Men's short race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, Belgium, on March 20, 2004. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177689-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Men's short race\nComplete results for individuals, for teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177689-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Men's short race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 140 athletes from 47 countries participated in the Men's short race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177690-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior men's race\nThe Senior men's race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, Belgium, on March 21, 2004. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177690-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior men's race\nComplete results for individuals, for teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177690-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior men's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 136 athletes from 48 countries participated in the Senior men's race. The announced athletes from \u00a0Burundi did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177691-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior women's race\nThe Senior women's race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, Belgium, on March 20, 2004. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177691-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior women's race\nComplete results for individuals, for teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177691-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Senior women's race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 97 athletes from 30 countries participated in the Senior women's race. The announced athlete from \u00a0Malawi did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177692-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Women's short race\nThe Women's short race at the 2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships was held at the Ossegem Park in Brussels, Belgium, on March 21, 2004. Reports of the event were given in The New York Times, and for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177692-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Women's short race\nComplete results for individuals, for teams, medallists, and the results of British athletes who took part were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177692-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Cross Country Championships \u2013 Women's short race, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 91 athletes from 29 countries participated in the Women's short race. The announced athletes from \u00a0Guinea and the \u00a0Netherlands did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177693-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships\nThe 13th IAAF World Half Marathon Championships was held on October 3, 2004 in New Delhi, India. A total of 152 athletes, 91 men and 61 women, from 55 countries took part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177693-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships\nDetailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results were given bothfor the men's race and for the women's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177693-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships\nComplete results were published for the men's race, for the women's race, for men's team, and for women's team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177693-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships\nThe competition also incorporated the 1st Asian Half Marathon Championships. Abdullah Ahmed Hassan of Qatar and Sun Yingjie of China were the inaugural winners. The tournament has not been held since, however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177693-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Half Marathon Championships, Participation\nThe participation of 152 athletes (91 men/61 women) from 55 countries is reported. Although announced, athletes from \u00a0Tajikistan and \u00a0Yemen did not show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177694-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships\nThe 10th IAAF World Indoor Championships in Athletics under the auspices of the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) were held in the Budapest Arena, Hungary between March 5 and March 7, 2004. A total off 139 countries were represented by 677 athletes at the championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177694-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships\nIt was the second visit of the championships to Budapest having previously visited there 15 years earlier in 1989. The newly built 13,000 capacity arena was built on the site of a former stadium that was destroyed by fire in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177694-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships\nThis was the last World Indoor Championships where the 200\u00a0m event was contested. The event was discontinued as the tight bends involved in running indoors left athletes drawn to run on the inside lanes with minimal or no chance of winning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177695-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe Men's 1500 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177695-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Medalists\nNote: Michael East had originally won the bronze but was disqualified for obstructing Laban Rotich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 67], "content_span": [68, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177695-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177696-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe Men's 200 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177696-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 1 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177696-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 2 of each semifinal (Q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177697-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres\nThe Men's 3000 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177697-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 4 of each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177698-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Men's 4x400 metres relay event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177698-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Medalists\n* Runners who participated in the heats only and received medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 76], "content_span": [77, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177698-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 teams of each heat (Q) plus the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177699-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe Men's 400 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177699-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177699-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 3 of each semifinal (Q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177700-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres\nThe Men's 60 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177700-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 8 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 69], "content_span": [70, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177700-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 2 of each semifinal (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177701-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles\nThe Men's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177701-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Heat\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177701-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 2 of each semifinal (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 83], "content_span": [84, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177702-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe Men's 800 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177702-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 6 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177702-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 2 of each semifinal (Q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 76], "content_span": [77, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177703-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's heptathlon\nThe men's heptathlon event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177704-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe Men's high jump event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177704-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 2.30 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177705-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe Men's long jump event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177705-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 8.00 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177706-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe Men's pole vault event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177706-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 5.75 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177707-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe Men's shot put event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177707-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualifying performance 20.50 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 77], "content_span": [78, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177708-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe Men's triple jump event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177708-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying performance 16.95 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177709-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe Women's 1500 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177709-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177710-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe Women's 200 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177710-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Medalists\nNote: Anastasiya Kapachinskaya of Russia originally won the gold medal, but was disqualified after she tested positive for performance enhancing drugs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177710-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177710-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 3 of each semifinal (Q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177711-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nThe Women's 3000 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177711-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 4 of each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177712-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Women's 4x400 metres relay event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177712-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Medalists\n* Runners who participated in the heats only and received medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 78], "content_span": [79, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177712-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\nQualification: First 2 teams of each heat (Q) plus the next 2 fastest (q) advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 83], "content_span": [84, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177713-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe Women's 400 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177713-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177713-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 3 of each semifinal (Q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177714-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres\nThe Women's 60 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177714-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 4 of each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177714-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 2 of each semifinal (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 77], "content_span": [78, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177715-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles\nThe Women's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177715-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Heat\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177715-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 4 of each semifinal (Q) qualified directly for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177716-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe Women's 800 metres event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177716-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heat\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and next 2 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177716-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 3 of each semifinal (Q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 78], "content_span": [79, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177717-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe Women's high jump event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177717-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 1.96 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177718-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe Women's long jump event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 6\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177718-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 6.62 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177719-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pentathlon\nThe Women's pentathlon event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177720-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe Women's pole vault event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177720-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 4.45 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 81], "content_span": [82, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177721-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe Women's shot put event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177721-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Medalists\nNote: Vita Pavlysh had originally won the gold but was later stripped off it for the use of anabolic steroids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177721-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualifying performance 18.50 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 79], "content_span": [80, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177722-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe Women's triple jump event at the 2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177722-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying performance 14.30 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 82], "content_span": [83, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177723-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Outdoor Meetings\nThe 2004 IAAF World Outdoor Meetings was the second edition of the annual global series of one-day track and field competitions organized by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF). The series had four levels: 2004 IAAF Golden League, IAAF Super Grand Prix, IAAF Grand Prix and IAAF Grand Prix II. There were 6 Golden League meetings, 8 Super Grand Prix category meetings, 9 IAAF Grand Prix category meetings and 11 Grand Prix II meetings, making a combined total of 34 meetings for the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177723-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Outdoor Meetings\nThe series hosted the same number of meetings as the previous year. The Qatar Athletic Super Grand Prix was added to Super Grand Prix, the Helsinki Grand Prix was dropped from the Grand Prix circuit and the Cena Slovenska - Slovak Gold Grand Prix II meeting was replaced by the Grande Premio Rio de Atletismo. Three meetings changed venue from 2003: the Bislett Games moved from Oslo to Bergen due to stadium developments, the Athens Grand Prix Tsiklitiria was moved from Trikala to Heraklion, and the Brother Znamensky Memorial moved from Tula, Russia to Kazan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177723-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Outdoor Meetings\nPerformances on designated events on the circuit earned athletes points which qualified them for entry to the 2004 IAAF World Athletics Final, held on 18\u201319 September in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177724-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Race Walking Cup\nThe 2004 IAAF World Race Walking Cup was held on 1 and 2 May 2004 in the streets of Naumburg, Germany. Detailed reports on the event and an appraisal of the results was given for the IAAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177724-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IAAF World Race Walking Cup, Participation\nThe participation of 424 athletes (272 men/152 women) from 54 countries is reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177725-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IBF World Junior Championships\nThe 2004 IBF World Junior Championships was an international badminton tournament held in Richmond, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177725-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IBF World Junior Championships, Team competition\nA total of 20 countries competed at the team competition in 2004 IBF World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship\nThe 2004 ICC Americas Championship was a cricket tournament in Bermuda, taking place between 6 July and 16 July 2004. It gave six North and South American Associate and Affiliate members of the International Cricket Council experience of international one-day cricket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Teams\nThere were 6 teams that played in the tournament. These teams were non-test member nations of the Americas Cricket Association. The teams that played were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Squads\nDerek CulleyAlejandro FergusonPablo FergusonDonald ForresterDiego LordEsteban MacDermottLucas PaterliniMatias PaterliniHernan PereyraPablo RyanMartin SiriMalcolm van Steeden", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Squads\nGary ArmstrongWhitcliff AtkinsonVenris BennettGarcha BlairGary CampbellRandolph CoakleyNarendra EkanayakeAndrew FordMario FordK SeeramGregory TaylorL TaylorDwight Weakley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Squads\nGlenn BlakeneyDelyone BordenLionel CannMichael CraneJekon EdnessKevin HurdleDwayne LeverockCharles MarshallSaleem MukuddemSteven OuterbridgeOliver PitcherClay SmithWendale White", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Squads\nIan BillcliffA BrownDesmond ChumneyAustin CodringtonJohn DavisonNicholas de GrootSunil DhaniramHaninder DhillonDon MaxwellAshish PatelZubin SurkariZahid Hussain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Squads\nRyan BovellOmar BryanLawrence CunninghamRonald EbanksSteve GordonFranklyn HindsJoseph KirkconnellSaheed MohamedKenute TullochChristopher WightDavid WightMichael WightPhilip Wight", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177726-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Americas Championship, Squads\nAijaz AliZamin AminDonovan BlakeJignesh DesaiNaseer IslamNasir JavedHoward JohnsonMark JohnsonRahul KukretiClayton LambertSteve MassiahTony ReidRichard Staple", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards\nThe 2004 ICC Awards were held at Alexandra Palace in London, England on 7 September 2004. They were the inaugural episode and were aimed at recognizing the best individual and team performances of the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards, Sponsors\nIn association with the Federation of International Cricketers' Associations (FICA), Hyundai were the presenting sponsors of the 2004 ICC Awards ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards, Selection Committee\nNominees were voted on by a 50-member academy of current and ex-players and officials from among players chosen by the ICC Selection Committee, chaired by ICC Cricket Hall of Famer Richie Benaud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards, Winners and nominees, Cricketer of the Year\nDravid's 2003\u201304 performance:Tests: 9 matches, 1241 runs, 3 centuries, 4 half-centuries, 11 catchesODIs: 30 matches, 960 runs, 1 century, 8 half-centuries, 15 catches, 4 stumpings", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards, Winners and nominees, Cricketer of the Year\nNominees: Andrew Flintoff (Eng), Steve Harmison (Eng), Matthew Hayden (Aus), Jacques Kallis (SA), Brian Lara (WI), V.V.S. Laxman (Ind), Muttiah Muralitharan (SL), Ricky Ponting (Aus), Virender Sehwag (Ind)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 60], "content_span": [61, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC Test Team of the Year\nRicky Ponting was selected as the captain of the Test Team of the Year. In addition to a wicket-keeper, 9 other players were announced as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 62], "content_span": [63, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177727-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Awards, ICC World XI Teams, ICC ODI Team of the Year\nRicky Ponting was also selected as the captain of the ODI Team of the Year. In addition to a wicket-keeper, 9 other players were announced as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177728-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy\nThe 2004 ICC Champions Trophy was held in England in September 2004. Twelve teams competed in 15 matches spread over 16 days at three venues: Edgbaston, The Rose Bowl and The Oval. The nations competing included the ten Test nations, Kenya (ODI status), and \u2013 making their One Day International debut \u2013 the United States who qualified by winning the 2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge by the smallest of margins (coming down to net run rate over Canada, Namibia, and the Netherlands who had all recently played in the 2003 Cricket World Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177728-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy\nThe ICC Champions Trophy was won by the West Indies in front of a sell-out Oval crowd. Ramnaresh Sarwan was named the Player of the Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177729-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy Final\nThe final of the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy was played on 25 September 2004 between West Indies and England at the Oval, London. England qualified into the final by defeating Australia in the first semi final at Edgbaston while West Indies defeated Pakistan at the Rose Bowl in the second semi final. West Indies won the final by 2 wickets at the Oval, winning the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy. This was their first major tournament win since the 1979 Cricket World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177729-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Road to the Final, First Semi-Final\nThe first semi final was played between Australia and England on 21 September 2004 at the Edgbaston, Birmingham. England won the toss and decided to field first. Australia scored 259 runs for 9 wickets in 50 overs, with Damien Martyn scoring 65 runs from 91 balls. Darren Gough took 3 wickets giving away 48 runs in 7 overs. England, in the reply, chased the target of 260 runs in 46.3 overs losing 4 wickets. They won the match by 6 wickets and reached the final. Michael Vaughan scored 86 runs and received the man of the match award. With this victory, England achieved their first win over Australia since 17 June 1999 and ended a run of 14 consecutive defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177729-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Road to the Final, Second Semi-Final\nWest Indies played Pakistan in the second semi-final at the Rose Bowl, Southampton on 22 September 2004, and defeated them by 7 wickets. Pakistan won the toss and surprisingly elected to bat first on a pitch known for favouring the chasing teams. They scored 131 runs all out in 38.2 overs, with Yasir Hameed being the highest run-scorer\u201439 runs off 56 balls. West Indies achieved the target of 132 runs in 28.1 overs, their highest scorer was Ramnaresh Sarwan, with 56 not out. He was named the man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177729-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Result\nThe final of the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy was played between West Indies and England at the Oval on 25 September 2004. West Indies made England bat first after winning the toss. Despite a century (104 runs) from Marcus Trescothick, England were restricted to 217 runs in 49.4 overs. Wavell Hinds and Ian Bradshaw took 3 and 2 wickets respectively. West Indies started their batting with the early losses of Hinds and Sarwan, and at one moment they were restricted to 147 runs for 8 wickets; the highest run-scorer Shivnarine Chanderpaul (47 runs) had also departed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177729-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy Final, Result\nCourtney Browne and Ian Bradshaw scored 35 and 34 not out respectively which was the highest scoring innings of both their respective careers at the time and guided West Indies to victory without any further loss. They chased the target in 48.5 overs, and Browne and Bradshaw shared an unbeaten 71 run ninth wicket partnership, a West Indian record. Andrew Flintoff took 3 wickets for 38 runs in 10 overs. Bradshaw was given the man of the match award for his all-round performance while Sarwan was named the man of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads\nThese were the 11 squads picked to take part in the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy, the third instalment of the Champions Trophy cricket tournament. The tournament was held in England from 10 September to 25 September 2004. Teams could name a preliminary squad of 30, but only 14-man squads were permitted for the actual tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nEngland = Michael Vaughan (c), James Anderson, Gareth Batty, Paul Collingwood, Ashley Giles, Darren Gough , Steve Harmison, Geraint Jones (wk) , Anthony McGrath, Vikram Solanki, Andrew Strauss, Marcus Trescothick, Alex Wharf and Andrew Flintoff", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nIndia = Sourav Ganguly (c) , Virender Sehwag, Rahul Dravid (wk), Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Dinesh Karthik (wk) , Ajit Agarkar, Lakshmipathy Balaji , Anil Kumble , Harbhajan Singh , Irfan Pathan , Ashish Nehra, VVS Laxman and Rohan Gavaskar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nKenya = Steve Tikolo (c) , Kennedy Otieno (wk) , Ravindu Shah, Hitesh Modi , Malhar Patel , Thomas Odoyo , Ragheb Aga , Martin Suji , Tony Suji , Maurice Ouma (wk) , Lameck Onyango , Peter Ongonda , Josephat Ababu and Brijal Patel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nNew Zealand = Stephen Fleming (c) , Brendon McCullum (wk) , Nathan Astle , Ian Butler , Chris Cairns , Chris Harris , Hamish Marshall , Craig McMillan , Kyle Mills , Jacob Oram , Michael Papps , Scott Styris , Daryl Tuffney and Daniel Vettori", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nPakistan = Inzaman ul Haq (c) , Moin Khan (wk) , Yasir Hameed , Imran Farhat , Salman Butt , Yousuf Youhana , Younis Khan , Shoaib Malik , Abdul Razzaq , Shaid Afridi , Mohammad Sami , Naved ul Hasan, Azhar Mahmood and Shoaib Akhtar", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nSouth Africa = Graeme Smith (c) , Mark Boucher (wk) , Nicky Boje , Alan Dawson , Jean Paul Duminy , Herschelle Gibbs , Lance Klusener , Makhaya Ntini , Robin Peterson , Shaun Pollock , Jacques Kallis , Jacques Rudolph , Martin van Jaarsveld and Charl Langeveldt", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nSri Lanka = Marvan Atapattu (c) , Kumar Sangakkara (wk) , Sanath Jayasuriya , Mahela Jayavardene , Tillakaratne Dilshan , Farveez Maharoof , Chaminda Vaas , Lasith Malinga , Nuwan Zoysa , Dilhara Fernando , Saman Jayantha , Avishka Gunawardene , Upul Chandana and Kaushal Lokuarachchi", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nUnited States of America = Richard Staple (c) , Mark Johnson (wk) , Nasir Javed , Charles Reid , Jignesh Desai , Howard Johnson , Ajaz Ali , Naseer Islam , Leon Romero , Rohan Alexander , Rashid Zia , Steve Massiah , Clayton Lambert and Donovan Blake", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nWest Indies = Brian Lara (c) , Courtney Browne (wk) , Dwayne Bravo , Ian Bradshaw , Shivnarine Chanderpaul , Corey Collymore , Mervyn Dillon , Chris Gayle , Ryan Hinds , Wavell Hinds , Ramnaresh Sarwan , Darren Sammy , Sylvester Joseph and Richardo Powell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177730-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Champions Trophy squads, Bangladesh\nZimbabwe = Tatenda Taibu (c) (wk) , Alester Maregwede , Dion Ebrahim , Vusi Sibanda , Mark Vermeulen , Brendon Taylor (wk) , Stuart Matsikenyeri , Tawanda Mupariwa , Mluleki Nikala , Tinashe Panyangara , Douglas Hondo , Edward Rainsford , Elton Chigumbura and Prosper Utseya", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177731-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup was the inaugural edition of the ICC Intercontinental Cup first class cricket tournament, an international cricket tournament between nations who have not been awarded Test status by the International Cricket Council. The tournament took place last from 25 March to 23 November 2004. The competition included 12 teams, divided by geographical region into four groups of three, followed by semi-finals and a final which were all played in Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177731-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup, Points System\nIn order to encourage competitive play and avoid deadlocks, a point system including bonus points was used:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177731-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup, Results, Africa Group\nThe major surprise in the African group was the victory of Uganda over Namibia. Uganda's subsequent loss against Kenya paved the way for the Kenyans to the next round, despite a player's strike the day before their match against Namibia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177731-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup, Final round, Semi-finals\nThe semifinals was played in UAE, but were delayed because the death of Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan. Originally were scheduled to start on 16 November and were postponed one day. Canada and Scotland advanced to the final, both in draws by points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177731-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Intercontinental Cup, Final round, Final\nThe final started at 21 November. Canada won the toss and elected to bat. However Canada had a poor start, losing Ashif Mulla to the last ball of the first over of the match, bowled by John Blain. In the same day, Scotland took advantage of 80 runs. In the second day Scotland declared with 177 runs ahead. Canada only scored 93 runs for the easy victory of Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177732-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge\nThe 2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge was an international limited-overs cricket tournament held in the United Arab Emirates from 29 February to 6 March 2004. Matches were played in Dubai and Sharjah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177732-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge\nThe tournament was the third and final edition of the ICC Six Nations Challenge, and featured six associate members of the International Cricket Council (ICC). Canada, Namibia, and the Netherlands had competed in the 2003 World Cup, while the three other teams invited were Scotland, the United Arab Emirates, and the United States. The six teams played each other once in a round-robin, with five teams finishing with three wins and two losses. The United States emerged as the winners based on net run rate, and consequently qualified for the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy in England, making their One Day International (ODI) debut. American all-rounder Clayton Lambert led the tournament in runs, while Scotland's John Blain was the leading wicket-taker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177732-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge, Squads\nEach team named a squad of 14 players, one coach, one team manager, one physiotherapist, and one umpire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177732-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five run-scorers are included in this table, ranked by runs scored and then by batting average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177732-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 ICC Six Nations Challenge, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe top five wicket-takers are listed in this table, ranked by wickets taken and then by bowling average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177733-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup was the first tournament held for the IIHF European Women's Champions Cup. AIK Hockey Dam of Sweden's Riksserien won the tournament for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177733-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup, Qualification\nThe qualification round was played during 15\u201317 October 2004. The winner of each group moved on to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177733-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF European Women's Champions Cup, Finals\nThe tournament Finals were held 16\u201318 December 2004. The round was hosted in Solna, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177734-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Men's InLine Hockey World Championship\nThe 2004 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships was the 9th such event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation. It took place between July 10 and July 17, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177734-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Men's InLine Hockey World Championship, Tournament Format\nThe preliminary round will be played in 4 groups (A-D) with 4 teams each. The groups A and B form the Top Division, the groups C and D form Division I. The two last-placed teams of the groups A and B and the two first-placed teams of the groups C and D play for 4th place in group A and B to participate in the Top Division playoffs. The losers of those games play as first placed teams in group C and D to participate in the Division I playoffs. Playoffs starting with the quarterfinals and placement games will be played both in the Top Division and in Division I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177734-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Men's InLine Hockey World Championship, Tournament Format\nAll games in the preliminary round and in the playoffs will be played with 5-minute sudden-death overtime and a penalty shootout in case of a tie. The final games will be played with a 12- minute sudden-death overtime, followed by a penalty shootout competition in case of a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177734-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Men's InLine Hockey World Championship, Participating teams\nGroups are based on the results of the previous World Championships and Qualifying Series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship\nThe 2004 IIHF World Women's Championships were held March 30 \u2013 April 6, 2004 in Halifax and Dartmouth, Canada. The Canadian national women's hockey team won their eighth straight World Championships. The event had 9 teams, because the 2003 event was cancelled due to the SARS epidemic, therefore no teams were relegated and the winners of the 2002 and 2003 Division I tournaments qualified. Canada won their 37th consecutive World Championship game before losing 3\u20131 in their third game. They later avenged their loss to the US by defeating them in the gold medal game 2\u20131. Sweden and Finland also met each other twice, with Finland winning the bronze medal game 3\u20132 improving on the earlier draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship\nIn addition to being the qualifications for the 2005 world tournaments, this year also finalized the qualification for the Torino Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Top Division, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division I\nThe Division I IIHF World Women's Championships were held March 14\u201320, 2004 in Ventspils, Latvia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division I\nKazakhstan is promoted to the 2005 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships, \u00a0Norway and \u00a0North Korea are demoted to Division II", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division I, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 88], "content_span": [89, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division I, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 92], "content_span": [93, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II\nThe Division II IIHF World Women's Championships will be held March 14\u201320, 2004 in Sterzing, Italy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II\nDenmark is promoted to Division I while \u00a0Australia and \u00a0Great Britain are demoted to Division III in the 2005 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division II, Awards and statistics, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 93], "content_span": [94, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division III\nThe Division III IIHF Women World Championships were held March 21\u201328, 2004 in Maribor, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division III\nAustria was promoted to Division II at the 2005 Women's World Ice Hockey Championships, while both \u00a0Romania and \u00a0South Korea were relegated to the newly formed Division IV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177735-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF Women's World Championship, Division III, Awards and statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource: [ IIHF.com]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship\nThe 2004 IIHF World Championship was held between April 24 and May 9, 2004 in Prague and Ostrava, Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship\nIt was the 68th ice Hockey World Championships, and was run by the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Qualification\nFar Eastern Qualification for the tournament was held on 6 September 2003 in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Final tournament, Preliminary round\nSixteen participating teams were placed in the following four groups. After playing a round-robin, the top three teams in each group advanced to the Qualifying Round while the last team competed in the relegation round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Final tournament, Qualifying round\nThe top three teams in the standings of each group of the Preliminary Round advance to the Qualifying Round, and are placed in two groups: teams from Groups A and D compete in Group E, while teams from Groups B and C compete in Group F.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Final tournament, Qualifying round\nEach team is to play three games in this round, one against each of the three teams from the other group with which they have been paired. These three games, along with the two games already played against the other two advancing teams from the same group in the Preliminary Round, will count in the Qualifying Round standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Final tournament, Qualifying round\nThe top four teams in both groups E and F advanced to the Playoff round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Ranking and Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top skaters sorted by points, then goals. If the list exceeds 10 skaters because of a tie in points, all of the tied skaters are left out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177736-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship, Ranking and Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177737-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship Final\nThe 2004 IIHF World Championship Final was an ice hockey match that took place on May 9, 2004 in Prague, Czech Republic, to determine the winner of the 2004 IIHF World Championship. Canada defeated Sweden to win its 23rd championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177738-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World Championship rosters\nRosters at the 2004 IIHF World Championship in the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I\nThe 2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I was a pair of international under-18 ice hockey tournaments run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division I tournaments made up the second level of competition at the 2004 IIHF World U18 Championships. The Group A tournament took place between 27 March and 2 April 2004 in Amstetten, Austria and the Group B tournament took place between 29 March and 4 April 2004 in Asiago, Italy. Switzerland and Germany won the Group A and Group B tournaments respectively and gained promotion to the Championship Division for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. While Romania finished last in Group A and South Korea last in Group B and were both relegated to Division II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group A tournament\nThe Group A tournament began on 27 March 2004 in Amstetten, Austria. Austria, Latvia, Poland and Slovenia all returned to compete in this year's Division I tournament after missing promotion to the Championship Division at the previous years World Championships. Romania gained promotion to Division I after finishing first in lasts years Division II tournament and Switzerland was relegated from the Championship Division after failing to survive the relegation round at the 2003 IIHF World U18 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group A tournament\nSwitzerland won the tournament after winning all five of their games, finishing first in the group standings and gained promotion to the Championship Division for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Slovenia finished in second place and Austria finished third after only losing to Switzerland and Slovenia. Romania finished in last place, managing only to tie one game and lose the other four and were relegated back to Division II for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Rafael Rotter of Austria finished as the top scorer of the tournament with eleven points including five goals and six assists. Latvia's Kristaps Stigis finished as the tournaments leading goaltender with a save percentage of 92.93.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 80], "content_span": [81, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group A tournament, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group B tournament\nThe Group B tournament began on 29 March 2004 in Asiago, Italy. France, Germany, Italy and Japan all returned to compete in this year's Division I tournament after missing promotion to the Championship Division at the previous years World Championships. South Korea gained promotion to Division I after finishing first in lasts years Division II tournament and Kazakhstan was relegated from the Championship Division after failing to survive the relegation round at the 2003 IIHF World U18 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group B tournament\nGermany won the tournament after winning all five of their games, finishing first in the group standings and gained promotion to the Championship Division for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Japan finished second after losing only to Germany and Italy finished in third place. South Korea finished in last place, managing only to tie one game and lose the other four and were relegated back to Division II for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Daniel Pietta of Germany finished as the top scorer of the tournament with eleven points including eight goals and three assists. Japan's Yuto Takashima finished as the tournaments leading goaltender with a save percentage of 96.59.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 80], "content_span": [81, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177739-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I, Group B tournament, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II\nThe 2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II was a pair of international under-18 ice hockey tournaments run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division II tournaments made up the third level of competition at the 2004 IIHF World U18 Championships. The Group A tournament took place between 28 March and 3 April 2004 in Debrecen, Hungary and the Group B tournament took place between 1 and 7 March 2004 in Elektr\u0117nai and Kaunas, Lithuania. Ukraine and Great Britain won the Group A and Group B tournaments respectively and gained promotion to Division I for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. While Belgium finished last in Group A and Australia last in Group B and were both relegated to Division III for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group A tournament\nThe Group A tournament began on 28 March 2004 in Debrecen, Hungary. Belgium, Hungary, the Netherlands and Spain returned to compete in the Division II competition after missing promotion at the previous years World Championships. Ukraine entered the Division II competition after being relegated from Division I and Iceland entered the tournament after gaining promotion from Division III at the 2003 IIHF World U18 Championships. Ukraine won the tournament after winning all five of their games and gained promotion back to Division I for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group A tournament\nHungary finished in second place and the Netherlands finished in third. Belgium finished in last place after losing four of their five games and were relegated to Division III for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Yegor Yegorov of Ukraine finished as the top scorer of the tournament with 18 points including six goals and 12 assists. Martijn Maghielse of the Netherlands finished as the tournaments leading goaltender with a save percentage of 88.46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten ranked skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group A tournament, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage, who have played 40% of their team's minutes are included in this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 85], "content_span": [86, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group B tournament\nThe Group B tournament began on 1 March 2004 in Elektr\u0117nai and Kaunas, Lithuania. Croatia, Estonia and Lithuania all returned to compete in the Division II tournament after missing promotion to Division I at the previous years World Championship. Great Britain entered the Division II competition after being relegated from Division I and Australia entered the tournament after gaining promotion from Division III at the 2003 IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group B tournament\nThe Serbia and Montenegro men's national under-18 ice hockey team made their debut at the World Championships after replacing the Yugoslavia men's national under-18 ice hockey team, the change in team coinciding with the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia being reconstituted as the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro. Great Britain won the tournament after winning all five of their games and gained promotion back to Division I for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Estonia finished second after losing only to Great Britain and Croatia finished in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group B tournament\nAustralia finished in last place after losing four of their five games and drawing the fifth and were relegated back to Division III for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. Thomas Carlon of Great Britain finished as the top scorer of the tournament with 14 points including ten goals and four assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177740-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II, Group B tournament, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten ranked skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177741-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III\nThe 2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III was an international under-18 ice hockey tournament run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The Division III tournament made up the fourth level of competition at the 2004 IIHF World U18 Championships and took place between 6 and 14 March 2004 in Sofia, Bulgaria. The tournament was won by Mexico who upon winning gained promotion, along with South Africa who finished in second place, to Division II of the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177741-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Overview\nThe 2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III began on 6 March 2004 in Sofia, Bulgaria. Bosnia and Herzegovina, Israel, Mexico, New Zealand and Turkey returned to compete in the Division III competition after missing promotion at the previous years World Championships. Bulgaria and South Africa entered the Division III competition after being relegated from the Division II tournaments of the 2003 World U18 Championships. Mexico finished first after winning all six of their games and gained promotion to Division II of the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177741-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Overview\nSouth Africa who finished in second place also gained promotion to Division II and New Zealand finished in third place missing out on promotion only by goal difference. Turkey and Bosnia and Herzegovina finished in sixth and seventh place and were relegated to the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III Qualification tournament. Eduardo Glennie of Mexico finished as the tournaments top scorer after recording 20 points including 13 goals and seven assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177741-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III, Scoring leaders\nList shows the top ten skaters sorted by points, then goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships\nThe 2004 IIHF World U18 Championships were held in Minsk, Belarus. The championships began on April 8, 2004, and finished on April 18, 2004. Games were played at the Ice Palace and Palace sport in Minsk. Russia defeated the United States 3\u20132 in the final to claim the gold medal, while the Czech Republic defeated Canada 3\u20132 to capture the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships, Championship results, Final standings\nBelarus and \u00a0Norway are relegated to Division I for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships, Championship results, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In MinutesSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 84], "content_span": [85, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships, Championship results, Statistics, Goaltending leaders\nTOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; SA = Shots Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = ShutoutsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 88], "content_span": [89, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division I\nDivision I consisted of two separate tournaments. The Group A tournament was held between 27 March and 2 April 2004 in Amstetten, Austria and the Group B tournament was held between 29 March and 4 April 2004 in Asiago, Italy. Switzerland and Germany won the Group A and Group B tournaments respectively and gained promotion to the Championship Division for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. While Romania finished last in Group A and South Korea last in Group B and were both relegated to Division II for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division II\nDivision II consisted of two separate tournaments. The Group A tournament was held between 28 March and 3 April 2004 in Debrecen, Hungary and the Group B tournament was held between 1 and 7 March 2004 in Elektr\u0117nai and Kaunas, Lithuania. Ukraine and Great Britain won the Group A and Group B tournaments respectively and gained promotion to Division I for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. While Belgium finished last in Group A and Australia last in Group B and were both relegated to Division III for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177742-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 IIHF World U18 Championships, Division III\nThe Division III tournament was held between 6 and 14 March 2004 in Sofia, Bulgaria. Mexico and South Africa finished first and second respectively and both gained promotion to Division II for the 2005 IIHF World U18 Championships. While Turkey and Bosnia and Herzegovina finished sixth and seventh respectively and were relegated to the Division III Qualification tournament for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177743-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IPC Ice Sledge Hockey World Championships\nThe 3rd IPC Ice Sledge Hockey World Championships was held between April 13, 2004 and April 24, 2004 at Kempehallen in \u00d6rnsk\u00f6ldsvik, Sweden. \u00d6rnsk\u00f6ldsvik was also the host of the first Paralympic Winter Games in 1976. Participating countries: 104 athletes from eight nations Canada, Estonia, Germany, Great Britain, Japan, Norway, Sweden, United States. The USA, Norway and Sweden were automatically qualified for their performance at the Salt Lake 2002 Paralympic Winter Games, while the other five teams were selected through regional championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177744-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ISSF World Cup\nFor the 2004 ISSF World Cup Final in the seventeen Olympic shooting events, the World Cup Final was held in September 2004 in Maribor, Slovenia for the shotgun events, and in October 2004 in Bangkok, Thailand for the rifle, pistol and running target events. It was the last World Cup Final for the women's Double Trap event and the men's 10 m Running Target event, as they were taken off the Olympic program after 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177744-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ISSF World Cup, \u00a7Rifle, pistol and running target\nMunich, Germany is traditionally the steady home of this competition, but 2004 was the second year in a row that it was held at another venue. The winners in Bangkok were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 54], "content_span": [55, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177745-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Jounieh Open\nThe 2004 ITF Jounieh Open was a tennis tournament played on Clay courts. It was the 1st edition of the ITF Jounieh Open, and was part of the $50,000 tournaments of the 2004 ITF Women's Circuit. It took place in Jounieh, Lebanon, from September 21\u201326, 2004. The total prize money offered at this tournament was US$50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177745-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Jounieh Open, WTA entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177745-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Jounieh Open, Champions, Singles\nNuria Llagostera Vives def. Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino, 2\u20136, 6\u20130, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177745-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Jounieh Open, Champions, Doubles\nPetra Cetkovsk\u00e1 / Hana \u0160romov\u00e1 def. Nuria Llagostera Vives / Frederica Piedade, 6\u20134, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177746-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Jounieh Open \u2013 Singles\nNuria Llagostera Vives won in the final, defeating compatriot Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino 2\u20136, 6\u20130, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177747-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Men's Circuit\nThe 2004 ITF Men's Circuit was the 2004 edition of the third tier tour for men's professional tennis. It was organised by the International Tennis Federation and is a tier below the ATP Challenger Tour. The ITF Men's Circuit included satellite events and 357 'Futures' tournaments played year round across six continents, with prize money ranging from $10,000 to $15,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177748-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Women's Circuit\nThe ITF Women's Circuit is the second tier tour for women's professional tennis organised by the International Tennis Federation, and is the tier below the WTA Tour. In 2004, the ITF Women's circuit included tournaments with prize money ranging from $10,000 to $75,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177748-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Women's Circuit\nThe ITF world champions in 2004 were Anastasia Myskina (senior singles), Virginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez (senior doubles) and Micha\u00eblla Krajicek (combined junior ranking).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177748-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Women's Circuit, Tournament breakdown by region\n*Includes figures for events in Central America and the Caribbean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177748-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 ITF Women's Circuit, Singles titles by nation\nThis list displays only the top 20 nations in terms of singles titles wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177749-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 ITU Triathlon World Championships\nThe 2004 ITU Triathlon World Championships were held in Madeira, Portugal on May 9, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177750-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics\nThe 2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics (Spanish: XI Campeonato Iberoamericano de Atletismo) was the eleventh edition of the international athletics competition between Ibero-American nations which was held at the Estadio Iberoamericano in Huelva, Spain on 6\u20138 August 2004. A record high of 27 nations took part while the number of participating athletes (430) was the second highest in the competition's history after the 1992 edition. The programme featured 44 track and field events, 22 each for men and women, and 16 championship records were broken or equalled at the three-day competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177750-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics\nThe host stadium was built specifically for the championships and it was the first major event to be held there. An opening ceremony was held outside the stadium at La R\u00e1bida (the monastery where Christopher Columbus stayed and successfully proposed his voyage to the Indies, which led to the Discovery of the Americas). High participation was attributed to the competition's proximity to the 2004 Summer Olympics, which was held in Athens two weeks later. The legacy of the championships is found in the Meeting Iberoamericano de Atletismo, an annual track and field meeting which is held at the same stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177750-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics\nThe host nation, Spain, topped the medal table with 16 gold medals and 38 medals overall. Cuba (typically strong at the meeting) came second with fourteen gold medals and 22 medals overall. Brazil came third, producing six event winners, but had the second highest medal haul with a total of 23 medallists. Spain sent the largest delegation, entering 90 athletes, while Brazil (63), Portugal (51) and Cuba (33) were the next most numerous teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177750-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics\nA number of medallists went on to have Olympic success. Joan Lino Mart\u00ednez, winner in the men's long jump, took an Olympic bronze medal. Cuba's female throwers performed well in Athens: Yumileidi Cumb\u00e1 and Osleidys Men\u00e9ndez were crowned Olympic champions, while Yipsi Moreno and Yunaika Crawford both reached the podium in the hammer throw. Fernanda Ribeiro, a 1996 Olympic champion, won the women's 5000 metres in Huelva, but retired in the Olympic final due to injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177750-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics, Participation\nTwenty-seven nations of the Asociaci\u00f3n Iberoamericana de Atletismo sent delegations to the 2004 championships, marking a new record. This represented all the organisation's members but for Guinea-Bissau. A total of 430 athletes (443 including out of competition contestants) took part in the competition \u2013 the second highest number that it had attracted at that point, after the 1992 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177751-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThese are the official results of the 2004 Ibero-American Championships in Athletics which took place on August 6\u20138, 2004 in Huelva, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177752-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic Cup\nThe Visa-Bikar 2004 was the forty-fifth season of the Icelandic national football cup. It started on May 16, 2004 and concluded with the final on October 2, 2004. The winners qualified for the first qualifying round of the UEFA Cup 2005\u201306.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177752-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic Cup, Second round\n1The match finished 2-2 a.e.t. with \u00cdR winning 5-4 on penalties. However, \u00cdH were awarded the match 3-0 after \u00cdR fielded an ineligible player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177753-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup\nThe 2004 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup was the ninth staging of the Icelandic Men's League Cup. It featured all the 2003 \u00darvalsdeild karla teams and the top 6 teams from 1. deild karla in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177753-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic Men's Football League Cup\nThe competition started on 20 February 2004 and concluded on 8 May 2004 with FH beating KR 2-1 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177754-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic presidential election\nA presidential election was held in Iceland on Saturday, 26 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177754-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic presidential election\nTraditionally, Icelandic presidential elections in which the incumbent president indicates a wish to obtain a new mandate are uncontested. The current president, \u00d3lafur Ragnar Gr\u00edmsson, was first elected in 1996 with 41.4% of the vote, in an election with an 85.9% turnout contested by four candidates. In 2000 he was re-elected without opposition. When \u00d3lafur Ragnar announced his intention to seek another mandate in 2004, two other candidates emerged:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177754-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic presidential election\nUnlike parliamentary elections in Iceland, presidential elections are not fought on the basis of party politics; instead, candidates attempt to use their personalities to attract supporters and appear as a living symbol of national unity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177754-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic presidential election\nBy tradition, the presidency is an almost entirely powerless office, as the presidents almost never use the powers granted to them by the constitution, instead just exercising moral authority. \u00d3lafur Ragnar, however, has expressed a wish to have a public discussion on the role of the head of state. Unprecedentedly in the history of the Icelandic Republic, on 2 June 2004 \u00d3lafur Ragnar vetoed a media ownership law passed by the Althing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177754-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Icelandic presidential election\nDav\u00ed\u00f0 Oddsson, who was Prime Minister at the time, claimed that the veto was tainted because the president's daughter worked for Baugur Group, which had recently acquired roughly half of the country's media. There was little doubt that \u00d3lafur Ragnar would be re-elected, but the veto controversy had an effect on the voting \u2013 the unprecedentedly high number of empty ballots (20.6% of the total) was thought to be largely a protest of the veto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177754-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Icelandic presidential election, Source\nThis Icelandic elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177755-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idaho Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Idaho Democratic presidential caucuses were held on February 24 in the U.S. state of Idaho as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177756-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idaho Vandals football team\nThe 2004 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Idaho competed as a member of the Sun Belt Conference, and played their home games in the Kibbie Dome, an indoor facility on campus. The Vandals were led by first-year head coach Nick Holt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177757-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open\nThe 2004 Idea Prokom Open was the seventh edition of the professional tennis tournament later known as the Warsaw Open. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and a Tier III event on the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place on outdoor clay courts in the seaside resort of Sopot, Poland from 9 August through 15 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177757-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open\nIn the men's singles event, eighteen-year-old future world number one Rafael Nadal won his first ATP title. Future Grand Slam champion Flavia Pennetta also won her first WTA title in the women's singles event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177757-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open, Finals, Men's Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl defeated Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda / Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto, 2\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177757-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open, Finals, Women's Doubles\nNuria Llagostera Vives / Marta Marrero defeated Klaudia Jans / Alicja Rosolska, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177758-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski were the defending champions, but declined to participate to focus for the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177758-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl won the title by defeating Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda and Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto 2\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177759-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nGuillermo Coria was the defending champion, but did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177759-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRafael Nadal won the title, defeating Jos\u00e9 Acasuso 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final. It was his first career title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177760-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nTatiana Perebiynis and Silvija Talaja were the defending champions, but Perebiynis did not compete this year. Talaja teamed up with St\u00e9phanie Cohen-Aloro and lost in semifinals to tournament winners Nuria Llagostera Vives and Marta Marrero.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177760-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLlagostera Vives and Marrero defeated Klaudia Jans and Alicja Rosolska 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177761-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAnna Smashnova-Pistolesi was the defending champion, but lost in second round to Marta Domachowska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177761-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nFlavia Pennetta won the title by defeating Kl\u00e1ra Koukalov\u00e1 7\u20135, 3\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177761-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Idea Prokom Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177762-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 If Stockholm Open\nThe 2004 If Stockholm Open was an ATP men's tennis tournament played on hard courts and held at the Kungliga tennishallen in Stockholm, Sweden. It was the 36th edition of the event and part of the ATP International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament was held from 25 October through 31 October 2004. Unseeded Thomas Johansson won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177762-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 If Stockholm Open, Finals, Doubles\nFeliciano L\u00f3pez / Fernando Verdasco defeated Wayne Arthurs / Paul Hanley, 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177763-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177763-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Doubles\nFeliciano L\u00f3pez and Fernando Verdasco won the title, defeating Wayne Arthurs and Paul Hanley 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177764-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Singles\nMardy Fish was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177764-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 If Stockholm Open \u2013 Singles\nThomas Johansson won the singles event at the 2004 If Stockholm Open tennis tournament, beating Andre Agassi in the final, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177765-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Illinois Democratic -presidential primary was held on March 16 in the U.S. state of Illinois as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177766-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois Fighting Illini football team\nThe 2004 Illinois Fighting Illini football team represented the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They participated as members of the Big Ten Conference. Their home games were played at Memorial Stadium in Champaign, Illinois. The team's head coach was Ron Turner, who was in his eighth season with the Illini and was fired at the conclusion of the season. Illinois had a record of 3\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections\nThe Illinois general election was held on November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Election information, Turnout, Primary election\nFor the primary election, turnout was 28.97%, with 2,067,824 votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Election information, Turnout, General election\nFor the general election, turnout was 71.34%, with 5,350,493 votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Federal elections, United States President\nIllinois voted for the Democratic ticket of John Kerry and John Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Federal elections, United States President\nThis was the fourth consecutive presidential election in which Illinois had voted for the Democratic ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Federal elections, United States Senate\nIncumbent first-term Republican Senator Peter Fitzgerald did not seek reelection. Democrat Barack Obama was elected to succeed him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Federal elections, United States House\nAll 19 of Illinois\u2019 seats in the United States House of Representatives were up for election in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Federal elections, United States House\nThe Democratic Party flipped one Republican-held seat, making the composition of Illinois' House delegation 10 Democrats and 9 Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, State elections, State Senate\n23 seats of the Illinois Senate were up for election in 2004. Democrats retained their control of the chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, State elections, State House of Representatives\nAll of the seats in the Illinois House of Representatives were up for election in 2004. Democrats retained their control of the chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 72], "content_span": [73, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177767-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Illinois elections, Local elections\nLocal elections were held. These included county elections, such as the Cook County elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177768-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Incomparable Concert\n2004 Incomparable Concert (simplified Chinese: 2004\u65e0\u4e0e\u4f26\u6bd4\u6f14\u5531\u4f1a; traditional Chinese: 2004\u7121\u8207\u502b\u6bd4\u6f14\u5531\u6703) is the second live album by Taiwanese singer Jay Chou, released as of 21 January 2005 by Sony Music Taiwan and JVR Music, included a date filmed at Taipei Municipal Stadium on 2 October 2004 from the 2004 Incomparable Concert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177769-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Independence Bowl\nThe 2004 Independence Bowl was a post-season college football bowl game between the Iowa State Cyclones and the Miami RedHawks on December 28, 2004, at Independence Stadium in Shreveport, Louisiana. It was the twenty-ninth time the Independence Bowl had been played and the final game of the 2004 NCAA Division I FBS football season for both teams. Iowa State defeated Miami 17-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177769-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Independence Bowl, Background\nTypically the Independence Bowl featured teams from the Southeastern Conference and Big 12 Conference, but the entire post-season bowl picture was thrown into chaos after a brawl between Clemson (Atlantic Coast Conference) and South Carolina (SEC) caused both teams, which had been bowl eligible, to remove themselves from consideration. With the SEC no longer able to supply enough bowl-eligible teams, Independence Bowl organizers looked elsewhere, and settled on Miami, coming off a second consecutive East Division championship in the Mid-American Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177769-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Independence Bowl, Background\nIowa State came back from a 2-10 2003 season to finish 6-5. A Big 12 team, Iowa State normally would have gone to the Houston Bowl, but with fellow conference members Texas and Oklahoma headed for BCS bowls the remaining Big 12 teams received bids to better games. Iowa State accepted the bid on December 6, 2004. Iowa State previously played in the 2001 Independence Bowl, losing in the last seconds to Alabama 14-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177769-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Independence Bowl, Game summary\nBret Meyer threw 10-of-28 for 144 yards, but he also rushed for 122 yards on 23 carries in an MVP effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177770-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor \u2013 Doubles\nPetr Luxa and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were the defending champions but only \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek competed that year with Martin Damm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177770-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor \u2013 Doubles\nDamm and \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek lost in the semifinals to Jared Palmer and Pavel V\u00edzner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177770-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor \u2013 Doubles\nPalmer and V\u00edzner won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20134 against Daniele Bracciali and Giorgio Galimberti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177771-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor \u2013 Singles\nMartin Verkerk was the defending champion but lost in the quarterfinals to Gr\u00e9gory Carraz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177771-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor \u2013 Singles\nAntony Dupuis won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20137(12\u201314), 7\u20136(7\u20135) against Mario An\u010di\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177771-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177772-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 India-Pakistan field hockey test series\nThe 2004 Indo-Pak series was the 7th series of bilateral field hockey matches between Pakistan and India. The series was played over eight matches on home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177772-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 India-Pakistan field hockey test series\nEach side hosted four matches from 24 September 20004 to 10 October 2004. Pakistan won the series 4\u20132. This was the first time both sides were coached by foreign coaches in a bilateral series with Gerhard Roch of Germany coaching India and Roelant Oltmans of Netherlands coach for Pakistan. During the match in Amritsar of the series Pakistan's Sohail Abbas broke the record of most goals in international men's hockey scoring his 268th goal surpassing Paul Litjens of Netherlands who held the record for 22 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177772-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 India-Pakistan field hockey test series, Background\nPrior to the start of the series Pakistan and India had faced each other 6 times since January 2004. They first met at the 2004 Azlan Shah Cup in Kuala Lumpur with Pakistan winning 3\u20132. They met twice in the 2004 Olympic Qualifiers in Madrid with Pakistan winning both matches. In June Pakistan again defeated India twice this time by a huge margin of 6\u20131 at the Hockey RaboTrophy in Amsterdam. Both teams had a disappointing campaign at the Olympics in Athens Pakistan defeated India in the crossover rounds to finish 5th while India finished 7th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177772-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 India-Pakistan field hockey test series, Background\nSohail Abbas scored 12 goals against India in these matches including two hat-tricks. This series was also in lead up to the 2004 Champions Trophy to be held in Lahore from December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177772-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 India-Pakistan field hockey test series, Squads\nIndia announced an 18-member squad on 20 September 2004. The Indian selection ignored veterans like Dhanraj Pillay, Baljit Singh Dhillon, Deepak Thakur and Gagan Ajit Singh, who all were part of the team at the Athens Olympics after the players made themselves unavailable for selection for different reasons. Pakistan announced its squad on 20 September as well. Waseem Ahmed was made captain after former captain Muhammad Nadeem announced his retirement from international hockey after the last months Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177772-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 India-Pakistan field hockey test series, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 32 goals scored in 8 matches for an average of 4 goals per match", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 69], "content_span": [70, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami\nThe 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami (also known as the Boxing Day Tsunami and, by the scientific community, the Sumatra\u2013Andaman earthquake) occurred at 07:58:53 in local time (UTC+7) on 26 December, with an epicentre off the west coast of northern Sumatra, Indonesia. It was an undersea megathrust earthquake that registered a magnitude of 9.1\u20139.3 Mw, reaching a Mercalli intensity up to IX in certain areas. The earthquake was caused by a rupture along the fault between the Burma Plate and the Indian Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami\nA series of massive tsunami waves grew up to 30\u00a0m (100\u00a0ft) high once heading inland, after being created by the underwater seismic activity offshore. Communities along the surrounding coasts of the Indian Ocean were devastated, and the tsunamis killed an estimated 227,898 people in 14 countries, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history. The direct results caused major disruptions to living conditions and commerce in coastal provinces of surrounded countries, including Aceh (Indonesia), Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu (India) and Khao Lak (Thailand). Banda Aceh reported the largest number of deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami\nThe earthquake was the third-largest ever recorded, the largest in the 21st century and had the longest duration of faulting ever observed, between eight and ten minutes. It caused the planet to vibrate as much as 10\u00a0mm (0.4\u00a0in), and also remotely triggered earthquakes as far away as Alaska. Its epicentre was between Simeulue and mainland Sumatra. The plight of the affected people and countries prompted a worldwide humanitarian response, with donations totalling more than US$14 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nThe 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake was initially documented as having a moment magnitude of 8.8. In February 2005, scientists revised the estimate of the magnitude to 9.0. Although the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center has accepted these new numbers, the United States Geological Survey has so far not changed its estimate of 9.1. A 2006 study estimated a magnitude of Mw 9.1\u20139.3; Hiroo Kanamori of the California Institute of Technology estimates that Mw\u202f 9.2 is representative of the earthquake's size.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nThe hypocentre of the main earthquake was approximately 160\u00a0km (100\u00a0mi) off the western coast of northern Sumatra, in the Indian Ocean just north of Simeulue island at a depth of 30\u00a0km (19\u00a0mi) below mean sea level (initially reported as 10\u00a0km or 6.2\u00a0mi). The northern section of the Sunda megathrust ruptured over a length of 1,300\u00a0km (810\u00a0mi). The earthquake (followed by the tsunami) was felt in Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Sri Lanka and the Maldives. Splay faults, or secondary \"pop up faults\", caused long, narrow parts of the seafloor to pop up in seconds. This quickly elevated the height and increased the speed of waves, destroying the nearby Indonesian town of Lhoknga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nIndonesia lies between the Pacific Ring of Fire along the north-eastern islands adjacent to New Guinea, and the Alpide belt that runs along the south and west from Sumatra, Java, Bali, Flores to Timor. The 2002 Sumatra earthquake is believed to have been a foreshock, preceding the main event by over two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nGreat earthquakes, such as the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, are associated with megathrust events in subduction zones. Their seismic moments can account for a significant fraction of the global seismic moment across century-scale periods. Of all the moment released by earthquakes in the 100 years from 1906 through 2005, roughly one eighth was due to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake. This quake, together with the Great Alaskan earthquake (1964) and the Great Chilean earthquake (1960), account for almost half of the total moment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nSince 1900, the only earthquakes recorded with a greater magnitude were the 1960 Valdivia earthquake (magnitude 9.5) and the 1964 Alaska earthquake in Prince William Sound (magnitude 9.2). The only other recorded earthquakes of magnitude 9.0 or greater were off Kamchatka, Russia, on 4 November 1952 (magnitude 9.0) and T\u014dhoku, Japan (magnitude 9.1) in March 2011. Each of these megathrust earthquakes also spawned tsunamis in the Pacific Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nIn comparison to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake, the death toll from these earthquakes was significantly lower, primarily because of the lower population density along the coasts near affected areas, the much greater distances to more populated coasts, and the superior infrastructure and warning systems in MEDCs (More Economically Developed Countries) such as Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake\nOther huge megathrust earthquakes occurred in 1868 (Peru, Nazca Plate and South American Plate); 1827 (Colombia, Nazca Plate and South American Plate); 1812 (Venezuela, Caribbean Plate and South American Plate) and 1700 (western North America, Juan de Fuca Plate and North American Plate). All of them are believed to be greater than magnitude 9, but no accurate measurements were available at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Tectonic plates\nThe 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake was unusually large in geographical and geological extent. An estimated 1,600\u00a0km (1,000\u00a0mi) of fault surface slipped (or ruptured) about 15\u00a0m (50\u00a0ft) along the subduction zone where the Indian Plate slides (or subducts) under the overriding Burma Plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Tectonic plates\nThe slip did not happen instantaneously but took place in two phases over several minutes:Seismographic and acoustic data indicate that the first phase involved a rupture about 400\u00a0km (250\u00a0mi) long and 100\u00a0km (60\u00a0mi) wide, 30\u00a0km (19\u00a0mi) beneath the sea bed\u2014the largest rupture ever known to have been caused by an earthquake. The rupture proceeded at about 2.8\u00a0km/s (1.7\u00a0mi/s; 10,000\u00a0km/h; 6,300\u00a0mph), beginning off the coast of Aceh and proceeding north-westerly over about 100 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0009-0002", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Tectonic plates\nAfter a pause of about another 100 seconds, the rupture continued northwards towards the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The northern rupture occurred more slowly than in the south, at about 2.1\u00a0km/s (1.3\u00a0mi/s; 7,600\u00a0km/h; 4,700\u00a0mph), continuing north for another five minutes to a plate boundary where the fault type changes from subduction to strike-slip (the two plates slide past one another in opposite directions).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Tectonic plates\nThe Indian Plate is part of the great Indo-Australian Plate, which underlies the Indian Ocean and Bay of Bengal, and is moving north-east at an average of 60\u00a0mm/a (0.075\u00a0in/Ms). The India Plate meets the Burma Plate (which is considered a portion of the great Eurasian Plate) at the Sunda Trench. At this point, the India Plate subducts beneath the Burma Plate, which carries the Nicobar Islands, the Andaman Islands, and northern Sumatra. The India Plate sinks deeper and deeper beneath the Burma Plate until the increasing temperature and pressure drive volatiles out of the subducting plate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Tectonic plates\nThese volatiles rise into the overlying plate, causing partial melting and the formation of magma. The rising magma intrudes into the crust above and exits the Earth's crust through volcanoes in the form of a volcanic arc. The volcanic activity that results as the Indo-Australian Plate subducts the Eurasian Plate has created the Sunda Arc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Tectonic plates\nAs well as the sideways movement between the plates, the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake resulted in a rise of the seafloor by several metres, displacing an estimated 30\u00a0km3 (7.2\u00a0cu\u00a0mi) of water and triggering devastating tsunami waves. The waves radiated outwards along the entire 1,600\u00a0km (1,000\u00a0mi) length of the rupture (acting as a line source). This greatly increased the geographical area over which the waves were observed, reaching as far as Mexico, Chile, and the Arctic. The raising of the seafloor significantly reduced the capacity of the Indian Ocean, producing a permanent rise in the global sea level by an estimated 0.1\u00a0mm (0.004\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Aftershocks and other earthquakes\nNumerous aftershocks were reported off the Andaman Islands, the Nicobar Islands and the region of the original epicentre in the hours and days that followed. The magnitude 8.7 2005 Nias\u2013Simeulue earthquake, which originated off the coast of the Sumatran island of Nias, is not considered an aftershock, despite its proximity to the epicentre, and was most likely triggered by stress changes associated with the 2004 event. The earthquake produced its own aftershocks (some registering a magnitude of as high as 6.1) and presently ranks as the third-largest earthquake ever recorded on the moment magnitude or Richter magnitude scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Aftershocks and other earthquakes\nOther aftershocks of up to magnitude 6.6 continued to shake the region daily for three or four months. As well as continuing aftershocks, the energy released by the original earthquake continued to make its presence felt well after the event. A week after the earthquake, its reverberations could still be measured, providing valuable scientific data about the Earth's interior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Aftershocks and other earthquakes\nThe 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake came just three days after a magnitude 8.1 earthquake in the sub-antarctic Auckland Islands, an uninhabited region west of New Zealand, and Macquarie Island to Australia's north. This is unusual since earthquakes of magnitude eight or more occur only about once per year on average. The U.S. Geological Survey sees no evidence of a causal relationship between these events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Aftershocks and other earthquakes\nThe 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake is thought to have triggered activity in both Leuser Mountain and Mount Talang, volcanoes in Aceh along the same range of peaks, while the 2005 Nias\u2013Simeulue earthquake had sparked activity in Lake Toba, an ancient crater in Sumatra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 87], "content_span": [88, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThe energy released on the Earth's surface (ME, which is the seismic potential for damage) by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake was estimated at 1.1\u00d71017 joules (110\u00a0PJ; 26\u00a0Mt). This energy is equivalent to over 1,500 times that of the Hiroshima atomic bomb, but less than that of Tsar Bomba, the largest nuclear weapon ever detonated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThe total physical work done MW (and thus energy) by the quake was 4.0\u00d71022 joules (40\u00a0ZJ), the vast majority underground, which is over 360,000 times more than its ME, equivalent to 9,600 gigatons of TNT equivalent (550 million times that of Hiroshima) or about 370 years of energy use in the United States at 2005 levels of 1.08\u00d71020 joules (108\u00a0EJ). The only recorded earthquakes with a larger MW were the 1960 Chilean and 1964 Alaskan quakes, with 2.5\u00d71023 joules (250\u00a0ZJ) and 7.5\u00d71022 joules (75\u00a0ZJ), respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThe earthquake generated a seismic oscillation of the Earth's surface of up to 200\u2013300\u00a0mm (8\u201312\u00a0in), equivalent to the effect of the tidal forces caused by the Sun and Moon. The seismic waves of the earthquake were felt across the planet; as far away as the U.S. state of Oklahoma, where vertical movements of 3\u00a0mm (0.12\u00a0in) were recorded. By February 2005, the earthquake's effects were still detectable as a 20\u00a0\u03bcm (0.02\u00a0mm; 0.0008\u00a0in) complex harmonic oscillation of the Earth's surface, which gradually diminished and merged with the incessant free oscillation of the Earth more than four months after the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nBecause of its enormous energy release and shallow rupture depth, the earthquake generated remarkable seismic ground motions around the globe, particularly due to huge Rayleigh (surface) elastic waves that exceeded 10\u00a0mm (0.4\u00a0in) in vertical amplitude everywhere on Earth. The record section plot displays vertical displacements of the Earth's surface recorded by seismometers from the IRIS/USGS Global Seismographic Network plotted with respect to time (since the earthquake initiation) on the horizontal axis, and vertical displacements of the Earth on the vertical axis (note the 1\u00a0cm scale bar at the bottom for scale).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThe seismograms are arranged vertically by distance from the epicentre in degrees. The earliest, lower amplitude signal is that of the compressional (P) wave, which takes about 22 minutes to reach the other side of the planet (the antipode; in this case near Ecuador). The largest amplitude signals are seismic surface waves that reach the antipode after about 100 minutes. The surface waves can be clearly seen to reinforce near the antipode (with the closest seismic stations in Ecuador), and to subsequently encircle the planet to return to the epicentral region after about 200 minutes. A major aftershock (magnitude 7.1) can be seen at the closest stations starting just after the 200-minute mark. The aftershock would be considered a major earthquake under ordinary circumstances but is dwarfed by the mainshock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThe shift of mass and the massive release of energy slightly altered the Earth's rotation. The exact amount is not yet known, but theoretical models suggest the earthquake shortened the length of a day by 2.68 microseconds, due to a decrease in the oblateness of the Earth. It also caused the Earth to minutely \"wobble\" on its axis by up to 25\u00a0mm (1\u00a0in) in the direction of 145\u00b0 east longitude, or perhaps by up to 50 or 60\u00a0mm (2.0 or 2.4\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nBecause of tidal effects of the Moon, the length of a day increases at an average of 15 microseconds per year, so any rotational change due to the earthquake will be lost quickly. Similarly, the natural Chandler wobble of the Earth, which in some cases can be up to 15\u00a0m (50\u00a0ft), will eventually offset the minor wobble produced by the earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThere was 10\u00a0m (33\u00a0ft) movement laterally and 4\u20135\u00a0m (13\u201316\u00a0ft) vertically along the fault line. Early speculation was that some of the smaller islands south-west of Sumatra, which is on the Burma Plate (the southern regions are on the Sunda Plate), might have moved south-west by up to 36\u00a0m (120\u00a0ft), but more accurate data released more than a month after the earthquake found the movement to be about 0.2\u00a0m (8\u00a0in). Since movement was vertical as well as lateral, some coastal areas may have been moved to below sea level. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands appear to have shifted south-west by around 1.25\u00a0m (4\u00a0ft 1\u00a0in) and to have sunk by 1\u00a0m (3\u00a0ft 3\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nIn February 2005, the Royal Navy vessel HMS\u00a0Scott surveyed the seabed around the earthquake zone, which varies in depth between 1,000 and 5,000\u00a0m (550 and 2,730 fathoms; 3,300 and 16,400\u00a0ft). The survey, conducted using a high-resolution, multi-beam sonar system, revealed that the earthquake had made a considerable impact on the topography of the seabed. 1,500-metre-high (5,000\u00a0ft) thrust ridges created by previous geologic activity along the fault had collapsed, generating landslides several kilometres wide. One such landslide consisted of a single block of rock some 100\u00a0m (330\u00a0ft) high and 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) long. The momentum of the water displaced by tectonic uplift had also dragged massive slabs of rock, each weighing millions of tonnes, as far as 10\u00a0km (6\u00a0mi) across the seabed. An oceanic trench several kilometres wide was exposed in the earthquake zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 937]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Earthquake, Energy released\nThe TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason-1 satellites happened to pass over the tsunami as it was crossing the ocean. These satellites carry radars that measure precisely the height of the water surface; anomalies in the order of 500\u00a0mm (20\u00a0in) were measured. Measurements from these satellites may prove invaluable for the understanding of the earthquake and tsunami. Unlike data from tide gauges installed on shores, measurements obtained in the middle of the ocean can be used for computing the parameters of the source earthquake without having to compensate for the complex ways in which proximity to the coast changes the size and shape of a wave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nThe sudden vertical rise of the seabed by several metres during the earthquake displaced massive volumes of water, resulting in a tsunami that struck the coasts of the Indian Ocean. A tsunami that causes damage far away from its source is sometimes called a teletsunami and is much more likely to be produced by the vertical motion of the seabed than by horizontal motion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nThe tsunami, like all others, behaved differently in deep water than in shallow water. In deep ocean water, tsunami waves form only a low, broad hump, barely noticeable and harmless, which generally travels at high speed of 500 to 1,000\u00a0km/h (310 to 620\u00a0mph); in shallow water near coastlines, a tsunami slows down to only tens of kilometres per hour but, in doing so, forms large destructive waves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nScientists investigating the damage in Aceh found evidence that the wave reached a height of 24\u00a0m (80\u00a0ft) when coming ashore along large stretches of the coastline, rising to 30\u00a0m (100\u00a0ft) in some areas when travelling inland. Radar satellites recorded the heights of tsunami waves in deep water: maximum height was at 600\u00a0mm (2\u00a0ft) two hours after the earthquake, the first such observations ever made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nAccording to Tad Murty, vice-president of the Tsunami Society, the total energy of the tsunami waves was equivalent to about 5 megatons of TNT (21\u00a0PJ), which is more than twice the total explosive energy used during all of World War II (including the two atomic bombs) but still a couple of orders of magnitude less than the energy released in the earthquake itself. In many places, the waves reached as far as 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) inland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nBecause the 1,600\u00a0km (1,000\u00a0mi) fault affected by the earthquake was in a nearly north\u2013south orientation, the greatest strength of the tsunami waves was in an east\u2013west direction. Bangladesh, which lies at the northern end of the Bay of Bengal, had few casualties despite being a low-lying country relatively near the epicentre. It also benefited from the fact that the earthquake proceeded more slowly in the northern rupture zone, greatly reducing the energy of the water displacements in that region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nCoasts that have a landmass between them and the tsunami's location of origin are usually safe; however, tsunami waves can sometimes diffract around such landmasses. Thus, the state of Kerala was hit by the tsunami despite being on the western coast of India, and the western coast of Sri Lanka suffered substantial impacts. Distance alone was no guarantee of safety, as Somalia was hit harder than Bangladesh despite being much farther away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nBecause of the distances involved, the tsunami took anywhere from fifteen minutes to seven hours to reach the coastlines. The northern regions of the Indonesian island of Sumatra were hit quickly, while Sri Lanka and the east coast of India were hit roughly 90 minutes to two hours later. Thailand was struck about two hours later despite being closer to the epicentre because the tsunami travelled more slowly in the shallow Andaman Sea off its western coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nThe tsunami was noticed as far as Struisbaai in South Africa, about 8,500\u00a0km (5,300\u00a0mi) away, where a 1.5-metre-high (5\u00a0ft) tide surged on shore about 16 hours after the earthquake. It took a relatively long time to reach Struisbaai at the southernmost point of Africa, probably because of the broad continental shelf off South Africa and because the tsunami would have followed the South African coast from east to west. The tsunami also reached Antarctica, where tidal gauges at Japan's Showa Base recorded oscillations of up to a metre (3\u00a0ft 3\u00a0in), with disturbances lasting a couple of days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami\nSome of the tsunami's energy escaped into the Pacific Ocean, where it produced small but measurable tsunamis along the western coasts of North and South America, typically around 200 to 400\u00a0mm (7.9 to 15.7\u00a0in). At Manzanillo, Mexico, a 2.6\u00a0m (8.5\u00a0ft) crest-to-trough tsunami was measured. As well, the tsunami was large enough to be detected in Vancouver, which puzzled many scientists, as the tsunamis measured in some parts of South America were larger than those measured in some parts of the Indian Ocean. It has been theorized that the tsunamis were focused and directed at long ranges by the mid-ocean ridges which run along the margins of the continental plates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Early signs and warnings\nDespite a delay of up to several hours between the earthquake and the impact of the tsunami, nearly all of the victims were taken by surprise. There were no tsunami warning systems in the Indian Ocean to detect tsunamis or to warn the general population living around the ocean. Tsunami detection is not easy because while a tsunami is in deep water, it has little height and a network of sensors is needed to detect it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Early signs and warnings\nTsunamis are more frequent in the Pacific Ocean than in other oceans because of earthquakes in the \"Ring of Fire\". Although the extreme western edge of the Ring of Fire extends into the Indian Ocean (the point where the earthquake struck), no warning system exists in that ocean. Tsunamis there are relatively rare despite earthquakes being relatively frequent in Indonesia. The last major tsunami was caused by the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa. Not every earthquake produces large tsunamis: on 28 March 2005, a magnitude 8.7 earthquake hit roughly the same area of the Indian Ocean but did not result in a major tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Early signs and warnings\nThe first warning sign of a possible tsunami is the earthquake itself. However, tsunamis can strike thousands of kilometres away where the earthquake is felt only weakly or not at all. Also, in the minutes preceding a tsunami strike, the sea sometimes recedes temporarily from the coast, which was observed on the eastern earthquake rupture zone such as the coastlines of Aceh, Phuket island, and Khao Lak area in Thailand, Penang island of Malaysia, and the Andaman and Nicobar islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Early signs and warnings\nThis rare sight reportedly induced people, especially children, to visit the coast to investigate and collect stranded fish on as much as 2.5\u00a0km (1.6\u00a0mi) of exposed beach, with fatal results. However, not all tsunamis cause this \"disappearing sea\" effect. In some cases, there are no warning signs at all: the sea will suddenly swell without retreating, surprising many people and giving them little time to flee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Early signs and warnings\nOne of the few coastal areas to evacuate ahead of the tsunami was on the Indonesian island of Simeulue, close to the epicentre. Island folklore recounted an earthquake and tsunami in 1907, and the islanders fled to inland hills after the initial shaking and before the tsunami struck. These tales and oral folklore from previous generations may have helped the survival of the inhabitants. On Maikhao Beach in north Phuket City, Thailand, a 10-year-old British tourist named Tilly Smith had studied tsunamis in geography at school and recognised the warning signs of the receding ocean and frothing bubbles. She and her parents warned others on the beach, which was evacuated safely. John Chroston, a biology teacher from Scotland, also recognised the signs at Kamala Bay north of Phuket, taking a busload of vacationers and locals to safety on higher ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 935]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Early signs and warnings\nAnthropologists had initially expected the aboriginal population of the Andaman Islands to be badly affected by the tsunami and even feared the already depopulated Onge tribe could have been wiped out. Many of the aboriginal tribes evacuated and suffered fewer casualties, however. Oral traditions developed from previous earthquakes helped the aboriginal tribes escape the tsunami. For example, the folklore of the Onges talks of \"huge shaking of ground followed by high wall of water\". Almost all of the Onge people seemed to have survived the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nThe tsunami devastated the coastline of Aceh province, about 20 minutes after the earthquake. Banda Aceh, the closest major city, suffered severe casualties. The sea receded and exposed the seabed, prompting locals to collect stranded fish and explore the area. Local eyewitnesses described three large waves, with the first wave rising gently to the foundation of the buildings, followed minutes later by a sudden withdrawal of the sea near the port of Ulee Lheue. This was succeeded by the appearance of two large black-coloured steep waves which then travelled inland into the capital city as a large turbulent bore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0036-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nEyewitnesses described the tsunami as a \"black giant\", \"mountain\" and a \"wall of water\". Video footage revealed torrents of black water, surging by windows of a two-story residential area situated about 3.2\u00a0km (2.0\u00a0mi) inland. Additionally, amateur footage recorded in the middle of the city captured an approaching black surge flowing down the city streets, full of debris, inundating them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nThe level of destruction was extreme on the northwestern areas of the city, immediately inland of the aquaculture ponds, and directly facing the Indian Ocean. The tsunami height was reduced from 12\u00a0m (39\u00a0ft) at Ulee Lheue to 6\u00a0m (20\u00a0ft) a further 8\u00a0km (5.0\u00a0mi) to the north-east. The inundation was observed to extend 3\u20134\u00a0km (1.9\u20132.5\u00a0mi) inland throughout the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nWithin 2\u20133\u00a0km (1.2\u20131.9\u00a0mi) of the shoreline, houses, except for strongly-built reinforced concrete ones with brick walls, which seemed to have been partially damaged by the earthquake before the tsunami attack, were swept away or destroyed by the tsunami. The area toward the sea was wiped clean of nearly every structure, while closer to the river, dense construction in a commercial district showed the effects of severe flooding. The flow depth at the city was just at the level of the second floor, and there were large amounts of debris piled along the streets and in the ground-floor storefronts. In the seaside section of Ulee Lheue, the flow depths were over 9\u00a0m (30\u00a0ft). Footage showed evidence of back-flowing of the Aceh River, carrying debris and people from destroyed villages at the coast and transporting them up to 40\u00a0km (25\u00a0mi) inland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nA group of small islands: Weh, Breueh, Nasi, Teunom, Bunta, Lumpat and Batee island lie just north of the capital city. The tsunami reached a run-up of 10\u201320\u00a0m (33\u201366\u00a0ft) on the western shoreline of Breueh Island and Nasi Island. Coastal villages were destroyed by the tsunami waves. On Pulau Weh, the island experienced strong surges in the port of Sabang, yet there was little damage with a reported runup values of 3\u20135\u00a0m (9.8\u201316.4\u00a0ft), most likely due to the island being sheltered from the direct tsunami attack by the islands to the south-west.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nLhoknga is a small coastal community about 13\u00a0km (8.1\u00a0mi) south-west of Banda Aceh, located on a flat coastal plain in between two rainforest-covered hills, overlooking a large bay and famous for its large swathe of white sandy beach and surfing activities. The locals reported 10 to 12 tsunamis, with the second and third waves being the highest and most destructive. Interview with the locals revealed that the sea temporarily receded and exposed coral reefs. In the distant horizon, gigantic black waves about 30\u00a0m (98\u00a0ft) high made explosion-like sounds as it broke and approached the shore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0039-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nThe first wave came rapidly landward from the south-west as a turbulent bore about 0.5\u20132.5\u00a0m (1.6\u20138.2\u00a0ft) high. The second and third waves were 15\u201330\u00a0m (49\u201398\u00a0ft) high at the coast and appeared like gigantic surfing waves but \"taller than the coconut trees and was like a mountain\". The second wave was the largest; it came from the west-southwest within five minutes of the first wave. The tsunami stranded cargo ships, barges and destroyed a cement mining facility near the Lampuuk coast, where the tsunami reached the fourth level of the building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nMeulaboh, a remote coastal city, was among the hardest hit by the tsunami. The waves arrived after the sea receded about 500\u00a0m (1,600\u00a0ft), followed by an advancing small tsunami. The second and third destructive waves arrived later, which exceeded the height of the coconut trees. The inundation distance is about 5\u00a0km (3.1\u00a0mi). Other towns on Aceh's west coast hit by the disaster included Leupung, Lhokruet, Lamno, Patek, Calang, and Teunom. Affected or destroyed towns on the region's north and east coast were Pidie Regency, Samalanga, Panteraja, and Lhokseumawe. The high fatality rate in the area was mainly due to lack of preparation of the community towards a tsunami and limited knowledge and education among the population regarding the natural phenomenon. Helicopter surveys showed entire settlements virtually destroyed with destruction within miles inland, and only some mosques left standing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 973]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Indonesia, Aceh\nThe greatest run-up height of the tsunami was measured at a hill between Lhoknga and Leupung, on the western coast of the northern tip of Sumatra, near Banda Aceh, and reached 51\u00a0m (167\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Sri Lanka\nThe island country of Sri Lanka, located about 1,700\u00a0km (1,100\u00a0mi) from Sumatra, was ravaged by the tsunami around 2 hours after the earthquake. The tsunami first struck the eastern coastline and subsequently refracted around the southern point of Sri Lanka (Dondra Head). The refracted tsunami waves then inundated the southwestern part of Sri Lanka after some of its energy was reflected from impact with the Maldives. In Sri Lanka, the civilian casualties were second only to those in Indonesia, with approximately 35,000 killed by the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0042-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Sri Lanka\nThe eastern shores of Sri Lanka were the hardest hit since it faced the epicentre of the earthquake, while the southwestern shores were hit later, but the death toll was just as severe. The southwestern shores are a hotspot for tourists and fishing. The degradation of the natural environment in Sri Lanka contributed to the high death tolls. Approximately 90,000 buildings and many wooden houses were destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Sri Lanka\nThe tsunami arrived on the island as a small brown-orange colored flood. Moments later, the ocean floor was exposed to as much as 1\u00a0km (0.62\u00a0mi) in places, which was followed by a massive second and third tsunami wave. Amateur video recorded at the city of Galle showed a large deluge flooding the city, carrying debris and sweeping away people while in the coastal resort town of Beruwala, the tsunami appeared as a huge brown-orange colored bore which reached the first level of a hotel, causing destruction and taking people unaware. Other videos recorded showed that the tsunami appeared like a flood raging inland. The construction of seawalls and breakwaters reduced the power of waves at some locations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Sri Lanka\nThe largest run-up measured was at 12.5\u00a0m (41\u00a0ft) with inundation distance of 390\u20131,500\u00a0m (1,280\u20134,920\u00a0ft) in Yala. In Hambantota, tsunami run-ups measured 11\u00a0m (36\u00a0ft) with the greatest inundation distance of 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi). Tsunami run-up measurements along the Sri Lankan coasts are at 2.4\u20134.11\u00a0m (7\u00a0ft 10\u00a0in\u201313\u00a0ft 6\u00a0in). Tsunami waves measured on the east coast ranged from 4.5\u20139\u00a0m (15\u201330\u00a0ft) at Pottuvill to Batticaloa at 2.6\u20135\u00a0m (8\u00a0ft 6\u00a0in\u201316\u00a0ft 5\u00a0in) in the north-east around Trincomalee and 4\u20135\u00a0m (13\u201316\u00a0ft) in the west coast from Moratuwa to Ambalangoda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Sri Lanka\nA regular passenger train operating between Maradana and Matara was derailed and overturned by the tsunami and claimed at least 1,700 lives, the largest single rail disaster death toll in history. Estimates based on the state of the shoreline and a high-water mark on a nearby building place the tsunami 7.5\u20139\u00a0m (25\u201330\u00a0ft) above sea level and 2\u20133\u00a0m (6\u00a0ft 7\u00a0in\u20139\u00a0ft 10\u00a0in) higher than the top of the train.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 60], "content_span": [61, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nThe tsunami travelled eastward through the Andaman Sea and hit the south-western coasts of Thailand, about 2 hours after the earthquake. Located about 500\u00a0km (310\u00a0mi) from the epicentre, at the time, the region was popular with tourists because of Christmas. Many of these tourists were caught off-guard by the tsunami, as they had no prior warning. The tsunami hit during high tide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0046-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nMajor locations damaged included the western shores of Phuket island, the resort town of Khao Lak in Phang Nga Province, the coastal provinces of Krabi, Satun, Ranong and Trang and small offshore islands like Ko Racha Yai, the Phi Phi islands, the Surin Islands and the Similan archipelago. Approximately 8,000 people were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nThailand experienced the second largest tsunami run-up. The tsunami heights recorded:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nThe province of Phang Nga was the most affected area in Thailand. The quiet resort town of Khao Lak is located on a stretch of golden sandy beach, famed for its hotels overlooking the Andaman Sea and hilly rainforests. A video, taken by a local restaurant manager from a hill adjacent to the beach, showed that the tsunami's arrival was preceded by a sudden retreat of the sea exposing the seafloor. Many tourists and locals can be seen trying to gather fish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0048-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nMoments later, the tsunami arrives as a wall of foaming water that slams into the coast, washing away numerous people who had no time to escape. Another amateur video, captured by a German family at beach level, showed the tsunami appearing as a white horizontal line in the distant horizon, gradually becoming bigger (bore-like), engulfing a jet skier and lifting two police boats. A maximum inundation of approximately 2\u00a0km (1.2\u00a0mi) was measured, the inundated depths were 4\u20137\u00a0m (13\u201323\u00a0ft) and there was evidence that the tsunami reached the third floor of a resort hotel. The tsunami in Khao Lak was bigger due to offshore coral reefs and shallow seafloor which caused the tsunami to pile-up. This was similar to eyewitness accounts of the tsunami at Banda Aceh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nKhao Lak also experienced the largest tsunami run-up height outside of Sumatra.. The highest-recorded tsunami run-up was measured 19.6\u00a0m (64\u00a0ft) at Ban Thung Dap, on the south-west tip of Ko Phra Thong Island and the second-highest at 15.8\u00a0m (52\u00a0ft) at Ban Nam Kim. Moreover, the largest death toll occurred at Khao Lak, with about 5,000 people killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nIn addition, the tsunami inflicted damage to the popular resort town of Ao Nang in Krabi Province. Video footage showed that the tsunami appeared as multiple white surfs violently lifting up yachts, boats and crashing onto beaches. Footage captured at Koh Lanta showed a wall of water swamping the beach, while another video taken at another location showed a large surfing wave like tsunami approaching the shore, lifting up a yacht and flooding the beach. At Koh Sriboya, the tsunami advanced inland as a turbulent medium bore, while at Koh Phayam, Ranong Province, the tsunami appeared as a wall of water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nAt Phuket Province, the island province's western beaches were struck by the tsunami. At Patong Beach, a tourist mecca, the tsunami first arrived as a small flood, which swept away cars and unexpected people. About 10 minutes later, the sea receded for a while before the tsunami arrived again as a large wall of water looming over the skyline and flooding the coast. Another video from Kamala Beach showed the tsunami flooding the ground floor of a restaurant sweeping away an elderly couple.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0051-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nOn Karon Beach, Kamala Beach and Kata Beach, the tsunami came in like a surging flood inland carrying people and cars. On some locations, a coastal road was built which was higher than the shore, protecting a hotel which was behind it. On the east coast of Phuket Island, the tsunami height was about 2 m. In one river mouth, many boats were damaged. The tsunami moved counter-clockwise around Phuket Island, as was the case at Okushiri Island in the 1993 Hokkaido earthquake. According to interviews, the second wave was the largest. The tsunami heights were 5\u20136\u00a0m (16\u201320\u00a0ft) and the inundated depth was about 2\u00a0m (6.6\u00a0ft). The tsunami surprised many tourists at Koh Racha Yai, where it flooded the resorts. About 250 people perished directly in the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nThe Phi Phi Islands are a group of small islands that were affected by the tsunami. The north bay of Phi Phi Don Island opens to the north-west in the direction of the tsunami. The measured tsunami height on this beach was 5.8\u00a0m (19\u00a0ft). According to eyewitness accounts, the tsunami came from the north and south. The ground level was about 2 m above sea level, where there were many cottages and hotels. The south bay opens to the south-east and faces in the opposite direction from the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0052-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nFurthermore, Phi Phi Le Island shields the port of Phi Phi Don Island. The measured tsunami height was 4.6\u00a0m (15\u00a0ft) in the port. Amateur camcorder footage taken by Israeli tourists showed the tsunami advancing inland suddenly as a small flood, gradually becoming more powerful and engulfing the whole beach and resort, with the tsunami carrying a yacht out to sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Thailand\nMoreover, the tsunami was detected by scuba divers around offshore islands like the Similan Islands and the Surin Islands. The divers reported being caught in a violent, swirling current suddenly while underwater. Local camcorder footage showed the tsunami surging inland and flooding camping equipment at the Similan Islands while the tsunami caught tourists unaware at the Surin Islands, and dragging them out towards the sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nThe tsunami reached the states of Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu along the southeastern coastline of the Indian mainland about 2 hours after the earthquake. At the same time, it arrived in the state of Kerala, on the southwestern coast. There were two to five tsunamis that coincided with the local high tide in some areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nThe tsunami runup height measured in mainland India by Ministry of Home Affairs includes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nAlong the coast of Tamil Nadu, the 13\u00a0km (8.1\u00a0mi) Marina Beach in Chennai was battered by the tsunami which swept across the beach taking morning walkers unaware. Amateur video recorded taken at a resort beach showed the tsunami arriving as a large wall of water as it approached the coast and flooding it as it advanced inland. Besides that, a 10\u00a0m (33\u00a0ft) black muddy tsunami ravaged the city of Karaikal, where 492 lives were lost. The city of Pondicherry, protected by seawalls was relatively unscathed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0056-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nLocal video recorded that before the arrival of the tsunami, people can be seen swarming the beach to check on stranded fish from the exposed beach. Furthermore, at the coastal town of Kanyakumari, the seabed was exposed briefly before a large wall of water can be seen on the horizon and subsequently flooding the town. Other footage showed the tsunami dramatically crashed into the Vivekananda Rock Memorial. The worst affected area in Tamil Nadu was Nagapattinam district, with 6,051 fatalities caused by a 5\u00a0m (16\u00a0ft) tsunami, followed by Cuddalore district, with many villages destroyed. Most of the people killed were members of the fishing community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nThe state of Kerala experienced tsunami-related damage in three southern densely populated districts, Ernakulam, Alappuzha, and Kollam, due to diffraction of the waves around Sri Lanka. The southernmost district of Thiruvananthapuram, however, escaped damage, possibly due to the wide turn of the diffracted waves at the peninsular tip. Major damage occurred in two narrow strips of land bound on the west by the Arabian Sea and on the east by the Kerala backwaters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0057-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nThe waves receded before the first tsunami with the highest fatality reported from the densely populated Alappad panchayat (including the villages of Cheriya Azhikkal and Azhikkal) at Kollam district, caused by a 4\u00a0m (13\u00a0ft) tsunami. A video recorded by locals showed the tsunami flooding the beach and villages causing despair amongst the villagers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nMany villages in the state of Andhra Pradesh were destroyed. In the Krishna district, the tsunami created havoc in Manginapudi and on Machalipattanam Beach. The most affected was Prakasham District, recording 35 deaths, with maximum damage at Singraikonda. Given the enormous power of the tsunami, the fishing industry suffered the greatest. Moreover, the cost of damage in the transport sector was reported in the tens of thousands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nThe tsunami run-up was only 1.6\u00a0m (5.2\u00a0ft) in areas in the state of Tamil Nadu shielded by the island of Sri Lanka but was 4\u20135\u00a0m (13\u201316\u00a0ft) in coastal districts such as Nagapattinam in Tamil Nadu directly across from Sumatra. On the western coast, the runup elevations were 4.5\u00a0m (15\u00a0ft) at Kanyakumari District in Tamil Nadu and 3.4\u00a0m (11\u00a0ft) each at Kollam and Ernakulam districts in Kerala. The time between the waves ranged from about 15 minutes to 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0059-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India\nThe tsunami varied in height from 2\u00a0m (6.6\u00a0ft) to 10\u00a0m (33\u00a0ft) based on survivors' accounts. The tsunami travelled 2.5\u00a0km (1.6\u00a0mi) at its maximum inland at Karaikal, Puducherry. The inundation distance varied between 1,006\u2013500\u00a0m (3,301\u20131,640\u00a0ft) in most areas, except at river mouths, where it was more than 1\u00a0km (0.62\u00a0mi). Areas with dense coconut groves or mangroves had much smaller inundation distances, and those with river mouths or backwaters saw larger inundation distances. Presence of seawalls at the Kerala and Tamil Nadu coasts reduced the impact of the waves. However, when the seawalls were made of loose stones, the stones were displaced and carried a few metres inland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nDue to close proximity to the earthquake, the tsunami took just minutes to devastate the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The Andaman Islands were moderately affected while the island of Little Andaman and the Nicobar Islands were severely affected by the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nIn South Andaman island, based on local eyewitnesses, there were three tsunami waves, with the third being the most destructive. Flooding occurred at the coast and low-lying areas inland, which were connected to open sea through creeks. Inundation was observed, along the east coast of South Andaman Island, restricted to Chidiyatapu, Burmanallah, Kodiaghat, Beadnabad, Corbyn's cove and Marina Park/Aberdeen Jetty areas. Along the west coast, the inundation was observed around Guptapara, Manjeri, Wandoor, Collinpur and Tirur regions. Several near-shore establishments and numerous infrastructures such as seawalls and a 20 MW diesel-generated power plant at Bamboo Flat were destroyed. At Port Blair, the water receded before the first wave, and the third wave was the tallest and caused the most damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nResults of the tsunami survey in South Andaman along Chiriyatapu, Corbyn's Cove and Wandoor beaches:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nMeanwhile, in the Little Andaman, tsunami waves impinged on the eastern shore about 25 to 30 minutes after the earthquake in a four-wave cycle of which the fourth tsunami was the most devastating with a wave height of about 10\u00a0m (33\u00a0ft). The tsunami destroyed settlements at Hut Bay within a range of 1\u00a0km (0.62\u00a0mi) from the seashore. Run up level up to 3.8\u00a0m (12\u00a0ft) have been measured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nIn Malacca, located on the island of Car Nicobar, there were three tsunami waves. The sea was observed to rise suddenly before the onset of the first wave. The first wave came 5 minutes after the earthquake, preceded by a recession of the sea up to 600\u2013700\u00a0m (2,000\u20132,300\u00a0ft).. The second and third waves came in 10 minutes intervals after the first wave. The third wave was the strongest, with a maximum tsunami wave height of 11\u00a0m (36\u00a0ft). Waves nearly three stories high devastated the Indian Air Force base, located just south of Malacca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0064-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nThe maximum tsunami wave height of 11\u00a0m (36\u00a0ft). Inundation limit was found to be up to 1.25\u00a0km (0.78\u00a0mi) inland. The impact of the waves was so severe that four oil tankers were thrown almost 800\u00a0m (2,600\u00a0ft) from the seashore near Malacca to the Air force colony main gate. In Chuckchucha and Lapati, the tsunami arrived in a three-wave cycle with a maximum tsunami wave height of 12\u00a0m (39\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nIn Campbell Bay of Great Nicobar Island, the tsunami waves hit the area three times with an inundation limit of 250\u2013500\u00a0m (820\u20131,640\u00a0ft). A rise in sea level was observed before the first wave came within 5 minutes of the earthquake. The second and third waves came in 10-minute intervals after the first. The second wave was the strongest. The tsunami waves wreaked havoc in the densely populated Jogindar Nagar area, situated 13\u00a0km (8.1\u00a0mi) south of Campbell Bay. According to local accounts, tsunami waves attacked the area three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0065-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nThe first wave came five minutes after the mainshock (0629 hrs.) with a marginal drop in sea level. The second wave came 10 minutes after the first one with a maximum height of 4.8\u00a0m (16\u00a0ft) to 8\u00a0m (26\u00a0ft) and caused the major destruction. The third wave came within 15 minutes after the second with lower wave height. The maximum inundation limit due to tsunami water was about 500\u00a0m (1,600\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, India, Andaman and Nicobar Islands\nThe worst affected island in the Andaman & Nicobar chain is Katchall Island, with 303 people confirmed dead and 4,354 missing out of a total population of 5,312. The significant shielding of Port Blair and Campbell Bay by steep mountainous outcrops contributed to the relatively low wave heights at these locations, whereas the open terrain along the eastern coast at Malacca and Hut Bay contributed to the great height of the tsunami waves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Maldives\nThe tsunami severely affected the Maldives at a distance of 2,500\u00a0km (1,600\u00a0mi) from the epicentre. Similar to Sri Lanka, survivors reported three waves with the second wave being the most powerful. Being rich in coral reefs, the Maldives provides an opportunity for scientists to assess the impact of a tsunami on coral atolls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0067-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Maldives\nThe significantly lower tsunami impact on the Maldives compared to Sri Lanka is mostly due to the topography and bathymetry of the atoll chain with offshore coral reefs, deep channels separating individual atolls and its arrival within low tide which decreased the power of the tsunami. After the tsunami, there was some concern that the country might be submerged entirely and become uninhabitable. However, this was proven untrue. The highest tsunami wave measured was 4\u00a0m (13\u00a0ft) at Vilufushi Island. The tsunami arrived approximately 2 hours after the earthquake. The greatest tsunami inundation occurred at North Male Atoll, Male island at 250\u00a0m (820\u00a0ft) along the streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Maldives\nLocal footage recorded showed the tsunami flooding the streets up to knee level in town, while another video taken at the beach showed the tsunami slowly flooding and gradually surging inland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Myanmar\nIn Myanmar, the tsunami caused only moderate damage, which arrived between 2 and 5.5 hours after the earthquake. Although the country's western Andaman Sea coastline lies at the proximity of the rupture zone, there were smaller tsunamis than the neighbouring Thai coast, because the main tsunami source did not extend to the Andaman Islands. Another factor is that some coasts of Taninthayi Division were protected by the Myeik Archipelago. Based on scientific surveys from Ayeyarwaddy Delta through Taninthayi Division, it was revealed that tsunami heights along the Myanmar coast were between 0.4\u20132.9\u00a0m (1\u00a0ft 4\u00a0in\u20139\u00a0ft 6\u00a0in). Eyewitnesses compared the tsunami with the \"rainy-season high tide\"; although at most locations, the tsunami height was similar or smaller than the \"rainy-season high tide\" level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Myanmar\nInterviews with local people indicate that they did not feel the earthquake in Taninthayi Division or Ayeyarwaddy Delta. The 71 casualties can be attributed to poor housing infrastructure and additionally, the fact that the coastal residents in the surveyed areas live on flat land along the coast, especially in the Ayeyarwaddy Delta, and that there is no higher ground to which to evacuate. The tsunami heights from the 2004 December earthquake were not more than 3\u00a0m (9.8\u00a0ft) along the Myanmar coast, the amplitudes were slightly large off the Ayeyarwaddy Delta, probably because the shallow delta caused a concentration in tsunami energy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Somalia\nThe tsunami travelled 5,000\u00a0km (3,100\u00a0mi) west across the open ocean before striking the East African country of Somalia. Around 289 fatalities were reported in the Horn of Africa, drowned by four tsunami waves. The hardest-hit was a 650\u00a0km (400\u00a0mi) stretch of the Somalia coastline between Garacad (Mudug region) and Xaafuun (Bari region), which forms part of the Puntland province. Most of the victims were reported along the low-lying Xaafuun Peninsula. The Puntland coast in northern Somalia was by far the area hardest hit by the waves to the west of the Indian subcontinent. The waves arrived around noon local time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Somalia\nConsequently, tsunami runup heights vary from 5\u00a0m (16\u00a0ft) to 9\u00a0m (30\u00a0ft) with inundation distances varying from 44\u00a0m (144\u00a0ft) to 704\u00a0m (2,310\u00a0ft). The maximum runup height of almost 9\u00a0m (30\u00a0ft) was recorded in Bandarbeyla. An even higher runup point was measured on a cliff near the town of Eyl, solely on an eyewitness account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Somalia\nThe highest death toll was in Hafun, with 19 dead and 160 people presumed missing out of its 5,000 inhabitants. This was the highest number of casualties in a single African town and the largest tsunami death toll in a single town to the west of the Indian subcontinent. In Xaafuun, small drawbacks were observed before the third and most powerful tsunami wave flooded the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Other locations\nThe tsunami also reached Malaysia, mainly on the northern states such as Kedah, Perak and Penang and on offshore islands such as Langkawi island. Peninsular Malaysia was shielded by the full force of the tsunami due to the protection offered by the island of Sumatra, which lies just off the western coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Other locations\nBangladesh escaped major damage and deaths because the water displaced by the strike-slip fault was relatively little on the northern section of the rupture zone, which ruptured slowly. In Yemen, the tsunami killed two people with a maximum runup of 2\u00a0m (6.6\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Other locations\nThe tsunami was detected in the southern parts of east Africa, where rough seas were reported, specifically on the eastern and southern coasts that face the Indian Ocean. A few other African countries also recorded fatalities; one in Kenya, three in Seychelles, ten in Tanzania, and South Africa, where two were killed as a direct result of the tsunami\u2014the furthest from the epicentre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Tsunami, Other locations\nTidal surges also occurred along the Western Australian coast that lasted for several hours, resulting in boats losing their moorings and two people needing to be rescued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 66], "content_span": [67, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Countries affected\nAccording to the U.S. Geological Survey, a total of 227,898 people died. Measured in lives lost, this is one of the ten worst earthquakes in recorded history, as well as the single worst tsunami in history. Indonesia was the worst affected area, with most death toll estimates at around 170,000. An initial report by Siti Fadilah Supari, the Indonesian Minister of Health at the time, estimated the death total to be as high as 220,000 in Indonesia alone, giving a total of 280,000 fatalities. However, the estimated number of dead and missing in Indonesia were later reduced by over 50,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0078-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Countries affected\nIn their report, the Tsunami Evaluation Coalition stated, \"It should be remembered that all such data are subject to error, as data on missing persons especially are not always as good as one might wish\". A much higher number of deaths has been suggested for Myanmar based on reports from Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Countries affected\nThe tsunami caused severe damage and deaths as far as the east coast of Africa, with the furthest recorded fatality directly attributed to the tsunami at Rooi-Els, close to Cape Town, 8,000\u00a0km (5,000\u00a0mi) from the epicentre. In total, eight people in South Africa died due to high sea levels and waves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Countries affected\nRelief agencies reported that one third of the dead appeared to be children. This was a result of the high proportion of children in the populations of many of the affected regions and because children were the least able to resist being overcome by the surging waters. Oxfam went on to report that as many as four times more women than men were killed in some regions because they were waiting on the beach for the fishers to return and looking after their children in the houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Countries affected\nStates of emergency were declared in Sri Lanka, Indonesia, and the Maldives. The United Nations estimated at the outset that the relief operation would be the costliest in human history. Then-UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan stated that reconstruction would probably take between five and ten years. Governments and non-governmental organizations feared that the final death toll might double as a result of diseases, prompting a massive humanitarian response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Countries affected\nIn addition to a large number of local residents, up to 9,000 foreign tourists (mostly Europeans) enjoying the peak holiday travel season were among the dead or missing, especially people from the Nordic countries. The European nation hardest hit was Sweden, with a death toll of 543. Germany was close behind with 539 identified victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nBeyond the heavy toll on human lives, the Indian Ocean earthquake has caused an enormous environmental impact that will affect the region for many years to come. It has been reported that severe damage has been inflicted on ecosystems such as mangroves, coral reefs, forests, coastal wetlands, vegetation, sand dunes and rock formations, animal and plant biodiversity and groundwater. Also, the spread of solid and liquid waste and industrial chemicals, water pollution and the destruction of sewage collectors and treatment plants threaten the environment even further, in untold ways. The environmental impact will take a long time and significant resources to assess.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nAccording to specialists, the main effect is being caused by poisoning of the freshwater supplies and of the soil by saltwater infiltration and a deposit of a salt layer over arable land. It has been reported that in the Maldives, 16 to 17 coral reef atolls that were overcome by sea waves are without fresh water and could be rendered uninhabitable for decades. Uncountable wells that served communities were invaded by sea, sand, and earth; and aquifers were invaded through porous rock. On the island's east coast, the tsunami contaminated wells on which many villagers relied for drinking water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nThe Colombo-based International Water Management Institute monitored the effects of saltwater and concluded that the wells recovered to pre-tsunami drinking water quality one-and-a-half years after the event. The IWMI developed protocols for cleaning wells contaminated by saltwater; these were subsequently officially endorsed by the World Health Organization as part of its series of Emergency Guidelines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nSalted-over soil becomes sterile, and it is difficult and costly to restore for agriculture. It also causes the death of plants and important soil micro-organisms. Thousands of rice, mango, and banana plantations in Sri Lanka were destroyed almost entirely and will take years to recover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nIn addition to other forms of aid, the Australian government sent ecological experts to help develop strategies for reef-monitoring and rehabilitation of marine environments and coral reefs in the Maldives, Seychelles and other areas. Scientists had developed significant ecological expertise from work with the Great Barrier Reef, in Australia's northeastern waters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nIn response to the unprecedented situation, the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) worked with governments in the region to determine the severity of the ecological impact and how to address it. UNEP established an emergency fund, set up a Task Force to respond to requests for assistance from countries affected by the tsunami, and was able to mobilize and distribute approximately US$ 9.3 million for environmental recovery and disaster risk reduction between 2004-2007. Funding came from other international agencies and from countries including Finland, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0089-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Environmental impact\nEvidence suggested that the presence of mangroves in coastal areas had provided some protection, when compared to areas that had been cleared for aquaculture or development. As a result, mangrove restoration become a focus of a number of projects, with varied success. Such approaches to ecosystem-based disaster risk reduction appear to be most successful when local communities are closely involved as stakeholders throughout the process, and when careful attention is paid to the physical conditions of chosen sites to ensure that mangroves can thrive there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0090-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nThe level of damage to the economy resulting from the tsunami depends on the scale examined. While the overall impact on the national economies was minor, local economies were devastated. The two main occupations affected by the tsunami were fishing and tourism. Some economists believe that damage to the affected national economies will be minor because losses in the tourism and fishing industries are a relatively small percentage of the GDP. However, others caution that damage to infrastructure is an overriding factor. In some areas drinking water supplies and farm fields may have been contaminated for years by saltwater from the ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0091-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nThe impact on coastal fishing communities and the people living there, some of the poorest in the region, has been devastating with high losses of income earners as well as boats and fishing gear. In Sri Lanka artisanal fishery, where the use of fish baskets, fishing traps, and spears are commonly used, is an important source of fish for local markets; industrial fishery is the major economic activity, providing direct employment to about 250,000 people. In recent years the fishery industry has emerged as a dynamic export-oriented sector, generating substantial foreign exchange earnings. Preliminary estimates indicate that 66% of the fishing fleet and industrial infrastructure in coastal regions have been destroyed by the wave surges, which will have adverse economic effects both at local and national levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0092-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nWhile the tsunami destroyed many of the boats vital to Sri Lanka's fishing industry, it also created a demand for fibreglass reinforced plastic catamarans in boatyards of Tamil Nadu. Since over 51,000 vessels were lost to the tsunami, the industry boomed. However, the huge demand has led to lower quality in the process, and some important materials were sacrificed to cut prices for those who were impoverished by the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0093-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nEven though only coastal regions were directly affected by the waters of the tsunami, the indirect effects have spread to inland provinces as well. Since the media coverage of the event was so extensive, many tourists cancelled vacations and trips to that part of the world, even though their travel destinations may not have been affected. This ripple effect could especially be felt in the inland provinces of Thailand, such as Krabi, which acted as a starting point for many other tourist destinations in Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0094-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nCountries in the region appealed to tourists to return, pointing out that most tourist infrastructure is undamaged. However, tourists were reluctant to do so for psychological reasons. Even beach resorts in parts of Thailand which were untouched by the tsunami were hit by cancellations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0095-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nBoth the earthquake and the tsunami may have affected shipping in the Malacca Straits, which separate Malaysia and the Indonesian island of Sumatra, by changing the depth of the seabed and by disturbing navigational buoys and old shipwrecks. In one area of the Strait, water depths were previously up to 1,200\u00a0m (4,000\u00a0ft), and are now only 30\u00a0m (100\u00a0ft) in some areas, making shipping impossible and dangerous. These problems also made the delivery of relief aid more challenging. Compiling new navigational charts may take months or years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0095-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Economic impact\nOfficials also hoped that piracy in the region would drop off, since the tsunami had killed pirates and destroyed their boats. Due to multiple factors, there was a 71.6% drop in the number of piracy incidents between 2004 and 2005, from 60 to 17 incidents. Levels remained relatively low for some years. However, between 2013 and 2014, piracy incidents rose dramatically by 73.2% to exceed pre-tsunami levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0096-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Historical context\nThe last major tsunami in the Indian Ocean was about A.D. 1400. In 2008, a team of scientists working on Phra Thong, a barrier island along the hard-hit west coast of Thailand, reported evidence of at least three previous major tsunamis in the preceding 2,800 years, the most recent from about 700 years ago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0096-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Historical context\nA second team found similar evidence of previous tsunamis in Aceh, a province at the northern tip of Sumatra; radiocarbon dating of bark fragments in the soil below the second sand layer led the scientists to estimate that the most recent predecessor to the 2004 tsunami probably occurred between A.D. 1300 and 1450.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0097-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Historical context\nThe 2004 earthquake and tsunami combined is the world's deadliest natural disaster since the 1976 Tangshan earthquake. The earthquake was the third-most-powerful earthquake recorded since 1900. The deadliest-known earthquake in history occurred in 1556 in Shaanxi, China, with an estimated death toll of 830,000, though figures from this period may not be as reliable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0098-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Historical context\nBefore 2004, the tsunami created in both Indian and Pacific Ocean waters by the 1883 eruption of Krakatoa, thought to have resulted in anywhere from 36,000 to 120,000 deaths, had probably been the deadliest in the region. In 1782, about 40,000 people are thought to have been killed by a tsunami (or a cyclone) in the South China Sea. The deadliest tsunami before 2004 was Italy's 1908 Messina earthquake on the Mediterranean Sea where the earthquake and tsunami killed about 123,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0099-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nMany health professionals and aid workers have reported widespread psychological trauma associated with the tsunami. Traditional beliefs in many of the affected regions state that a relative of the family must bury the body of the dead, and in many cases, no body remained to be buried. Women in Aceh required a special approach from foreign aid agencies, and continue to have unique needs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0100-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nThe hardest-hit area, Aceh, is a religiously conservative Islamic society and has had no tourism nor any Western presence in recent years due to the insurgency between the Indonesian military and Free Aceh Movement (GAM). Some believe that the tsunami was divine punishment for lay Muslims shirking their daily prayers or following a materialistic lifestyle. Others have said that Allah was angry that Muslims were killing each other in an ongoing conflict. Saudi cleric Muhammad Al-Munajjid attributed it to divine retribution against non-Muslim vacationers \"who used to sprawl all over the beaches and in pubs overflowing with wine\" during Christmas break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0101-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nThe widespread devastation caused by the tsunami led GAM to declare a cease-fire on 28 December 2004 followed by the Indonesian government, and the two groups resumed long-stalled peace talks, which resulted in a peace agreement signed 15 August 2005. The agreement explicitly cites the tsunami as a justification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0102-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nIn a poll conducted in 27 countries, 15% of respondents named the tsunami the most significant event of the year. Only the Iraq War was named by as many respondents. The extensive international media coverage of the tsunami, and the role of mass media and journalists in reconstruction, were discussed by editors of newspapers and broadcast media in tsunami-affected areas, in special video-conferences set up by the Asia Pacific Journalism Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0103-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nThe tsunami left both the people and government of India in a state of heightened alert. On 30 December 2004, four days after the tsunami, Terra Research notified the India government that its sensors indicated there was a possibility of 7.9 to 8.1 magnitude tectonic shift in the next 12 hours between Sumatra and New Zealand. In response, the Indian Minister of Home Affairs announced that a fresh onslaught of deadly tsunami was likely along the southern Indian coast and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, even as there was no sign of turbulence in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0103-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nThe announcement generated panic in the Indian Ocean region and caused thousands to flee their homes, which resulted in jammed roads. The announcement was a false alarm, and the Home Affairs minister withdrew their announcement. On further investigation, the India government learned that the consulting company Terra Research was run from the home of a self-described earthquake forecaster who had no telephone listing and maintained a website where he sold copies of his detection system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0104-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nThe tsunami had a severe humanitarian and political impact in Sweden. The hardest-hit country outside Asia, Sweden, lost 543 tourists, mainly in Thailand. The Persson Cabinet was heavily criticized for its inaction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0105-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nSmith Dharmasaroja, a meteorologist who had predicted that an earthquake and tsunami \"is going to occur for sure\" way back in 1994, was assigned the development of the Thai tsunami warning system. The Indian Ocean Tsunami warning system was formed in early 2005 to provide an early warning of tsunamis for inhabitants around the Indian Ocean coasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0106-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Impact, Other effects\nThe changes in the distribution of masses inside the Earth due to the earthquake had several consequences. It displaced the North Pole by 25\u00a0mm (0.98\u00a0in). It also slightly changed the shape of the Earth, specifically by decreasing Earth's oblateness by about one part in 10 billion, consequentially increasing Earth's rotation a little and thus shortening the length of the day by 2.68 microseconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0107-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nA great deal of humanitarian aid was needed because of widespread damage to the infrastructure, shortages of food and water, and economic damage. Epidemics were of particular concern due to the high population density and tropical climate of the affected areas. The main concern of humanitarian and government agencies was to provide sanitation facilities and fresh drinking water to contain the spread of diseases such as cholera, diphtheria, dysentery, typhoid and hepatitis A and hepatitis B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0108-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nThere was also a great concern that the death toll could increase as disease and hunger spread. However, because of the initial quick response, this was minimized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0109-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nIn the days following the tsunami, significant effort was spent in burying bodies hurriedly due to fear of disease spreading. However, the public health risks may have been exaggerated, and therefore this may not have been the best way to allocate resources. The World Food Programme provided food aid to more than 1.3 million people affected by the tsunami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0110-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nNations all over the world provided over US$14 billion in aid for damaged regions, with the governments of Australia pledging US$819.9 million (including a US$760.6 million aid package for Indonesia), Germany offering US$660 million, Japan offering US$500 million, Canada offering US$343 million, Norway and the Netherlands offering both US$183 million, the United States offering US$35 million initially (increased to US$350 million), and the World Bank offering US$250 million. Also, Italy offered US$95 million, increased later to US$113 million of which US$42 million was donated by the population using the SMS systemFour countries, Australia, India, Japan and the United States formed an ad-hoc corroborative group, and it was the origin of Quadrilateral Security Dialogue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0111-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nAccording to USAID, the US has pledged additional funds in long-term U.S. support to help the tsunami victims rebuild their lives. On 9 February 2005, President Bush asked Congress to increase the U.S. commitment to a total of US$950 million. Officials estimated that billions of dollars would be needed. Bush also asked his father, former President George H. W. Bush, and former President Bill Clinton to lead a U.S. effort to provide private aid to the tsunami victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0112-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nIn mid-March, the Asian Development Bank reported that over US$4 billion in aid promised by governments was behind schedule. Sri Lanka reported that it had received no foreign government aid, while foreign individuals had been generous. Many charities were given considerable donations from the public. For example, in the United Kingdom, the public donated roughly \u00a3330 million sterling (nearly US$600 million). This considerably outweighed the allocation by the government to disaster relief and reconstruction of \u00a375 million and came to an average of about \u00a35.50 (US$10) donated by every citizen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177773-0113-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami, Humanitarian response\nIn August 2006, fifteen local aid staff working on post-tsunami rebuilding were found executed in north-east Sri Lanka after heavy fighting, the main umbrella body for aid agencies in the country said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177774-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Rajya Sabha elections\nRajya Sabha elections were held in 2004, to elect members of the Rajya Sabha, Indian Parliament's upper chamber. The elections were held to elect respectively 13 members from six states, 49 members from 12 states, six members from Andhra Pradesh, and two members from Haryana, for the Council of States, the Rajya Sabha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177774-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Rajya Sabha elections, Elections\nElections were held in 2004 to elect members from various states. The list is incomplete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177774-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Rajya Sabha elections, Elections, Members elected\nThe following members are elected in the elections held in 2004. They are members for the term 2004\u20132010 and retire in year 2010, except in case of the resignation or death before the term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177774-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian Rajya Sabha elections, Bye-elections\nThe following bye elections were held in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election\nGeneral elections were held in India in four phases between 20 April and 10 May 2004. Over 670 million people were eligible to vote, electing 543 members of the 14th Lok Sabha. Seven states also held assembly elections to elect state governments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election\nOn 13 May the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), the lead party of the National Democratic Alliance conceded defeat. The Indian National Congress, which had governed India for all but five years from independence until 1996, returned to power after a record eight years out of office. It was able to put together a comfortable majority of more than 335 members out of 543 with the help of its allies. The 335 members included both the Congress-led United Progressive Alliance, the governing coalition formed after the election, as well as external support from the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), Samajwadi Party (SP), Kerala Congress (KC) and the Left Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election\nAfter facing criticism from her own party and from the country Congress President Sonia Gandhi asked the 22nd Finance Minister Manmohan Singh, an economist, to head the new government. Singh had previously served in the Congress government of Prime Minister P. V. Narasimha Rao in the early 1990s, when he was seen as one of the architects of India's first economic liberalisation plan, which staved off an impending monetary crisis. Despite the fact that Singh had never won a Lok Sabha seat, his considerable goodwill and Sonia Gandhi's nomination won him the support of the UPA allies and the Left Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election\nThe elections saw the evolution of a Two-party system with political competition primarily concentrated between the UPA and NDA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Background\nPrime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee had recommended premature dissolution of the 13th Lok Sabha (in accordance with a provision of the Constitution) to pave the way for early elections apparently in view of the recent good showing of the BJP in the Assembly elections in four states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Organisation\nCounting began simultaneously on 13 May. Over 370 million of the 675 million eligible citizens voted, with election violence claiming 48 lives, less than half the number killed during the 1999 election. The Indian elections were held in phases in order to maintain law and order. A few states considered sensitive areas required deployment of the armed forces. The average enrolment of voters in each constituency is 1.2 million, although the largest constituency has 3.1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Organisation\nThe Election Commission of India is responsible for deciding the dates and conducting elections according to constitutional provisions. The Election Commission employed more than a million electronic voting machines for these elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Organisation\nAccording to the magazine India Today, 115.62 billion rupees (approx US$2.6 billion) were expected to have been spent in campaigning for the elections by all political parties combined. Most of the money was spent on the people involved in the election. The Election Commission limited poll expenses to Rs. 2.5 million ($57,000 approx.) per constituency. Thus, the actual spending is expected to have been approximately 10 times the limit. About 6.5 billion rupees (approx. $150 million) are estimated to have been spent on mobilising 150,000 vehicles. About a billion rupees are estimated to have been spent on helicopters and aircraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Pre-poll alliances\nIn these elections, compared to all the Lok Sabha elections of the 1990s, the battle was more of a head-to-head contest in the sense that there was no viable third front alternative. Largely the contest was between BJP and its allies on one hand and Congress and its allies on the other. The situation did, however, show large regional differences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Pre-poll alliances\nThe BJP fought the elections as part of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), although some of its seat-sharing agreements were made with strong regional parties outside of the NDA such as Telugu Desam Party (TDP) in Andhra Pradesh and All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (AIADMK) in Tamil Nadu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Pre-poll alliances\nAhead of the elections there were attempts to form a Congress-led national level joint opposition front. In the end, an agreement could not be reached, but on regional level alliances between Congress and regional parties were made in several states. This was the first time that Congress contested with that type of alliances in a parliamentary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Pre-poll alliances\nThe left parties, most notably the Communist Party of India (Marxist) and the Communist Party of India, contested on their own in their strongholds West Bengal, Tripura and Kerala, confronting both Congress and NDA forces. In several other states, such as Punjab and Andhra Pradesh, they took part in seat sharings with Congress. In Tamil Nadu they were part of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK)-led Democratic Progressive Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Pre-poll alliances\nTwo parties refused to go along with either Congress or BJP, Bahujan Samaj Party and Samajwadi Party. Both are based in Uttar Pradesh, the largest state of India (in terms of population). Congress made several attempts to form alliances with them, but in vain. Many believed that they would become the 'spoilers' that would rob Congress of an electoral victory. The result was a four-cornered contest in UP, which didn't really hurt or benefit Congress or BJP significantly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Forecast and campaigns\nMost analysts believed the NDA would win the elections. This assessment was also supported by opinion polls. The economy had shown steady growth in the last few months and the disinvestment of government owned production units (a continuation of India's liberalisation policies initiated in the early 1990s) had been on track. The Foreign Exchange Reserves of India stood at more than US$100 billion (7th largest in the world and a record for India). The service sector had also generated a lot of jobs. The party was supposed to have been riding on a wave of the so-called \"feel good factor\", typified by its promotional campaign \"India Shining\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Forecast and campaigns\nIn the past, BJP has largely been seen as a hard-line Hindu party with close ties with the Hindu organisation the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS). Over the years, the party has slightly distanced itself from its Hindutva policies, a change that is being questioned after the party's poor showing in the elections. These elections were marked by the campaign's emphasis on economic gains. From the last few elections, BJP had realised that its voter base had reached a ceiling and had concentrated on pre-poll rather than post-poll alliances. The foreign origin of Sonia Gandhi also constituted part of the NDA's campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Analysis\nThough pre-poll predictions were for an overwhelming majority for the BJP, the exit polls (immediately after the elections and before the counting began) predicted a hung parliament. However, even the exit polls could only indicate the general trend and nowhere close to the final figures. There is also the general perception that as soon as the BJP started realising that events might not proceed entirely in its favour, it changed the focus of its campaign from India Shining to issues of stability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Analysis\nThe Congress, who was regarded as \"old-fashioned\" by the ruling BJP, was largely backed by poor, rural, lower-caste and minority voters that did not participate in the economic boom of previous years that created a large wealthy middle class and thus achieved its overwhelming victory. Another reason which was not mentioned much but still spoken of in the public was that BJP supporters are working-class people, and the poll surveys predicted BJP win, and therefore they did not reach the ballot. Whereas the Congress support base, the weaker sections of the society, don't miss voting at all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Analysis\nAnother more prominent reason came from checking the RSS contribution, RSS cadres reached Vajpayee over the killing of 4 RSS workers in Tripura (August 1999), and Vajpayee disappointed them. RSS backed off, and results were evident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Analysis\nOther possible reasons that have been given for the NDA defeat are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Impact\nThe rout of the ruling parties in the states of Tamil Nadu and Kerala in the general elections led to calls for the dissolution of the governments of these states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177775-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election, Impact\nThe stock market (Bombay Stock Exchange) fell in the week prior to the announcement of the results due to fears of an unstable coalition. As soon as counting began, however, it became clear that the Congress coalition was headed for a sizeable lead over the NDA and the market surged, only to crash the following day when the left parties, whose support would be required for government formation, announced that it was their intention to do away with the disinvestment ministry. Following this, Manmohan Singh, the Prime Minister (in office 2004\u201314) and the prime architect of the economic liberalisation of the early 1990s, hurried to reassure investors that the new government would strive to create a business-friendly climate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 36], "content_span": [37, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177776-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election analysis\nThe 2004 general elections defied the predictions made by pre-poll predictions and exit polls and allowed the newly formed UPA alliance led by Sonia Gandhi, to come to power. This election also saw the rise of marginalized parties like the left, to join forces with the opposition, which led to a major realignment in social and political power. Though pre-poll predictions were for an overwhelming majority for the BJP, the exit polls (immediately after the elections and before the counting began) predicted a hung parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177776-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian general election analysis\nHowever, even the exit polls could only indicate the general trend and nowhere close to the final figures. There is also the general perception that as soon as the BJP started realising that events might not proceed entirely in its favour, it changed the focus of its campaign from India Shining to issues of stability. The Congress, who was regarded as \"old-fashioned\" by the ruling BJP, was largely backed by poor, rural, lower-caste and minority voters that did not participate in the economic boom of previous years that created a large wealthy middle class and thus achieved its overwhelming victory. The reverses in the pre-poll predictions are ascribed to various reasons depending on the point of view.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177777-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Andhra Pradesh\nIn Andhra Pradesh, the general elections and state assembly elections were held simultaneously. In both, the ruling Telugu Desam Party-Bharatiya Janata Party (TDP-BJP) combine was routed. BJP could not win a single seat. The result was a landslide victory for the United Progressive Alliance which won 34 out of 42 seats, which reflects the state elections that occurred before the general elections, where National Democratic Alliance (NDA) member, TDP, was defeated soundly by Y.S. Rajasekhara Reddy and the Indian National Congress. Alliance with CPM and CPI helped the Congress party. Congress had contested in alliance with the communist parties and the TRS. The Islamist All India Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimen retained their stronghold in the Hyderabad constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177778-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Arunachal Pradesh\nThe Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh represents two Lok Sabha constituencies. Following the 25 July 2003 Congress split, Gegong Apang formed the state government with the help of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP). Congress had an alliance with its splinter group Arunachal Congress. Congress candidate and former Arunachal Congress leader Wangcha Rajkumar contested Arunachal East and AC candidate Kamen Ringu contested Arunachal West. Nationalist Trinamool Congress had a candidate in Arunachal West, competing against BJP. BJP won both seats with comfortable margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177778-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Arunachal Pradesh\nAhead of the 2004 Lok Sabha elections Arunachal Congress talked about calling for a boycott as a protest against Chakma and Hajong refugees having been given the right to vote in the state. In the end the party did however decide to contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177778-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Arunachal Pradesh\n(*)= 1999 numbers are those of the Nationalist Congress Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177779-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Assam\nThe 2004 Indian general election polls in Assam were held for 14 seats in the state. The result was United Progressive Alliance winning 9 out of the 14 seats, while the National Democratic Alliance, captured only 2 seats. Asom Gana Parishad managed to get 2 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177779-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Assam\nIn Assam there was a three-cornered contest between Congress, BJP and Asom Gana Parishad (the main regional party of the state). Congress contested all 14 seats in the states, BJP 12 and AGP 12. BJP supported one JD(U) candidate and the Bodo nationalist candidate in Kokrajhar. The left parties (CPI(M), CPI and CPI(ML)L) had a joint front. Congress won nine seats. AGP got a comeback, winning two seats. BJP also won two seats, although one of them was the popular singer Bhupen Hazarika.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177779-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Assam\nHazarika stood in Guwahati, and his election ought to reflect his personal popularity, rather than that of the party he had just joined. CPI(ML)L lost its seat in the Karbi Anlong hills, largely due to a split in their mass organisation there and the resurgence of communal violence in the area. In Kokrajhar the Bodo nationalist and NDA-supported candidate, Sansuma Khunggur Bwiswmuthiary, retained his seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar\nIn Bihar the RJD leader Laloo Prasad Yadav, husband of the Bihar Chief Minister Rabri Devi, was able to assemble a broad coalition of anti-NDA parties. It included RJD, Congress, Lok Janshakti, NCP and CPI(M). Congress was sceptical of the coalition, since the party was only allotted four seats by Laloo. The other coalition partners argued that four seats actually reflected the decreasing strength of Congress in the state. Lok Janshakti, a party with strong support amongst Dalit communities, were allotted eight seats. NCP and CPI(M) were allotted one seat each. RJD itself contested 26 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar\nTwo large non-NDA parties in the state, CPI and CPI(ML) Liberation, did not join the Laloo-led front but contested individually. CPI(ML)L contested 21 seats and CPI six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar\nThe NDA front consisted of BJP and JD(U). The alliance was threatened at several points, over disagreements on seat-sharing formulas. In the end JD(U) contested 24 seats and BJP 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar\nBSP contested all 40 seats and SP 32 on their own, unsuccessfully. Lok Janshakti held sway over Dalit votes and RJD over Yadav votes, thus making it impossible for the Uttar Pradesh-based caste parties to make a breakthrough in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar\nThe result was an overwhelming victory for the Laloo-led coalition. It won 29 seats. The rest went to the BJP-JD(U) combine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar\nVoting in the state was confronted with many irregularities, and repolling was ordered in four constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177780-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Bihar, Voting and results, Results by Party\nNote: In 1999, before Jharkhand was created as a separate state, Bihar had 54 constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 75], "content_span": [76, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177781-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Chhattisgarh\nThe 2004 Indian general election polls in Chhattisgarh were held for 11 seats in the state. This is the first time, that an election took place in this state after it achieved statehood from Madhya Pradesh in 2000. The result was National Democratic Alliance winning overwhelmingly by capturing 10 out of the 11 seats, while the United Progressive Alliance, captured only 1 seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177781-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Chhattisgarh, Results by Alliance\nThis Indian elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177782-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Delhi\nThe 2004 Indian general election in Delhi, occurred for 7 seats in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177783-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Gujarat\nIn the 2004 Indian general election for Gujarat polls were held for 26 seats in the state. The result was a victory for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which won 14 seats. The remaining 12 seats were won by Indian National Congress (INC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177784-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Haryana\nThe 2004 Indian general election occurred in Haryana for 10 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177785-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir\nThe 2004 Indian general election in Jammu and Kashmir to the 14th Lok Sabha were held for 6 seats. Jammu and Kashmir National Conference won 2 seats, Indian National Congress won 2, Jammu and Kashmir Peoples Democratic Party won one seat and one was won by an Independent politician Thupstan Chhewang from Ladakh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177786-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Karnataka\nThe 2004 Indian general election in Karnataka, occurred for 28 seats in the state. Of the 28 seats, 24 belonged to the general category and 4 were belonging to SC category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177787-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Kerala\nThe 2004 Indian general election in Kerala were held for 20 Lok Sabha seats in the state. The result was an overwhelming victory for the Left Democratic Front (LDF) which won 15 seats. Indian National Congress, who had won 8 seats in the 1999 elections, won none this election. The other 5 seats were won by Kerala Congress (1), P.C. Thomas's Indian Federal Democratic Party (1), Indian Union Muslim League (1), Janata Dal (Secular) (1), and by an LDF supported Independent candidate (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177787-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Kerala\nIn the aftermath of this election, the then Chief Minister of the state A. K. Antony resigned taking sole responsibility for the INC's poor electoral performance. Despite this, the outside support from the Left Front proved valuable for Congress to have a stable government in the Lok Sabha for the next 5 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177787-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Kerala, Results, 2005 By-election\nDue to the death of the sitting MP P. K. Vasudevan Nair, Trivandrum constituency went to bypolls. Turnout for the election was 68.15%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177788-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Madhya Pradesh\nIn the 2004 Indian general election for Madhya Pradesh polls were held for 29 seats in the state. The result was a major victory for the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) which won 25 seats. The remaining 4 seats were won by Indian National Congress (INC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177789-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Maharashtra\nThe Indian general election, 2004 in Maharashtra were held for 48 seats with the state going to polls in the first three phases of the general elections. The major contenders in the state where the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and National Democratic Alliance (NDA). UPA consisted of the Indian National Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party whereas the NDA consisted of the Bharatiya Janata Party and the Shiv Sena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177790-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Sikkim\nIn the 2004 Indian general election for Sikkim polls the one seat of the state was one by the regional Sikkim Democratic Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177791-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu\nThe 2004 Indian general election polls in Tamil Nadu were held for 39 seats in the state. The result was a victory for the Democratic Progressive Alliance, which included the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and its allies the Left Front which won all 39 seats in the state. DMK and its allies were also able to hold on to Pondicherry, which has 1 seat, which allowed the UPA to win all 40 seats in Tamil Nadu and Pondicherry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177791-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu\nThe 2 larger partners Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) (16) and Indian National Congress (INC) (10) won the majority of seats, with the junior partners Pattali Makkal Katchi (PMK) (5) and Marumaralarchi Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (MDMK) (4) winning the rest. The remaining 4 seats were won by the Left Front parties. Due to the support of the Left Front for the government at the centre, all 39 seats in Tamil Nadu, supported the formation of the UPA-led government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177791-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu\nThe DPA was formed, because DMK, PMK and MDMK, left the NDA mostly on the Ayodhya issue and created an alliance that supported the UPA. The NDA paid a price for it, when their BJP-AIADMK alliance couldn't even win a seat in this state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177791-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu, Voting and results, Results by Pre-Poll Alliance\n\u2020: Seat change represents seats won in terms of the current alliances, which is considerably different from the last election. Also the seat change for BJP, includes the merged party MADMK, who won 1 seat in the last election. \u2021: Vote\u00a0% reflects the percentage of votes the party received compared to the entire electorate that voted in this election. Adjusted (Adj.) Vote\u00a0%, reflects the\u00a0% of votes the party received per constituency that they contested. Sources: Election Commission of India", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 92], "content_span": [93, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177791-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Tamil Nadu, Post-election Union Council of Ministers from Tamil Nadu\nSource: The HinduAfter the UPA victory in this election, Tamil Nadu was rewarded with 12 berths in Union Council of Ministers, with 6 cabinet berths, which is the most this state has ever received after an election. 7 of the Ministers were from DMK, 2 from PMK, while the rest were from Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 100], "content_span": [101, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177792-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Uttarakhand\nThe 2004 Indian general election in Uttarakhand, occurred for 5 seats in the state. 3 seats were won by the Bharatiya Janata Party, 1 seat by Indian National Congress and 1 seat by Samajwadi Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177792-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Uttarakhand, By-election\nBy-elections were held in 2007 for Tehri Garhwal constituency on the death of Elected MP Manabendra Shah and for Garhwal constituency as Elected MP B. C. Khanduri became the Chief Minister of Uttarakhand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177792-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Uttarakhand, By-election\nIn the election for Tehri Garhwal constituency, Indian National Congress candidate Vijay Bahuguna defeated Manujendra Shah, son of Manabendra Shah by margin of over 22,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177792-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indian general election in Uttarakhand, By-election\nIn the election for Garhwal constituency, Bharatiya Janata Party candidate Tejpal Singh Rawat defeated Satpal Maharaj.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177793-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Indiana Democratic presidential primary was held on May 4 in the U.S. state of Indiana as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177794-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana Fever season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the 5th season for the Indiana Fever. The Fever missed the playoffs due to the strong competitivity in the Eastern Conference. As of the 2010 season, this was the last season Indiana had missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177794-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana Fever season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Fever's 2003 record, they would pick 5th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Fever picked Deanna Jackson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177795-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana Hoosiers football team\nThe 2004 Indiana Hoosiers football team represented Indiana University Bloomington during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They participated as members of the Big Ten Conference. The Hoosiers played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington, Indiana. The team was coached by Gerry DiNardo in his third and final year as head coach. At the end of the season, DiNardo was fired and replaced by Terry Hoeppner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177796-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana elections, Senate\nPopular Incumbent Evan Bayh won by a considerably large margin, even as George W. Bush won this state by 20 points at the national level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177796-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana elections, Governor\nIncumbent Joe Kernan lost in an upset against Mitch Daniels, this was the first time that the Republicans had held the office in 16 years, and that the Republican Party had control of most of the most important statewide offices", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177796-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana elections, Attorney General\nIncumbent Republican Steve Carter won with 59% of the vote against Democrat Joseph Hogsett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Indiana gubernatorial election took place on November 2, 2004, to elect the Governor of Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election\nIncumbent Democratic Governor Joe Kernan was defeated by Republican Mitch Daniels. Daniels' victory was the first time the Republican Party had held the governor's office for 16 years and gave the party control of all the important statewide offices. It was also the first time an incumbent governor had been defeated since the Constitution of Indiana was amended in 1972 to permit governors to serve two consecutive terms. This was part of the larger 2004 Indiana elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, Primaries, Republican\nFormer White House Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mitch Daniels easily defeated conservative activist Eric Miller in the Republican primary on May 4, 2004. The Republican candidate for governor in 2000, David M. McIntosh, had earlier dropped out of the race after President George W. Bush gave his support to Daniels. Daniels had quit as White House budget director in 2003 so he could return to Indiana and run for governor. President Bush came to South Bend, Indiana before the primary to support Daniels, and the President's nickname for Daniels, \"My Man Mitch\", became his campaign slogan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, Primaries, Democratic\nFrank O'Bannon had been re-elected governor of Indiana in 2000 and was prevented from running for governor again by term limits. His lieutenant governor, Joe Kernan, in 15 December 2002 said that he would not be a candidate for governor. State Senator Vi Simpson and Joe Andrew then vied for nomination for the next ten months. However, in 13 September 2003, O'Bannon had a stroke and died, resulting in Kernan taking over as governor. Kernan decided two months later, in 4 November 2003, that he would run for governor in 2004 and was unopposed in the Democratic primary after both Simpson and Andrew dropped out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nDaniels campaigned by traveling throughout Indiana in his RV visiting all 92 Indiana counties at least three times. Kernan fell behind in the polls in May 2004 and never caught up, despite closing the gap in September after attacking Daniels' plan to sell an Indiana utility to an out of state firm. The economy of Indiana was a major issue in the campaign with Kernan, as incumbent, facing pressure over the state\u2019s budget troubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nIn addition to the two major party tickets, there was the Libertarian ticket of Kenn Gividen and Elaine Badnarik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nAll three candidates took part in two debates during the campaign. The first was held on September 28, 2004 at Franklin College with the candidates clashing over the state's economy, prescription drugs and the extension of Interstate 69 from Indianapolis to Evansville. The second debate was held on October 17, 2004 in New Albany, Indiana. Negative campaigning was the major issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nBetween Daniels and Kernan the two candidates raised over 28 million dollars, easily surpassing the previous record set in 2000 of 19.2 million dollars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177797-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Indiana gubernatorial election, General election, County Results\nKernan won 17 of Indiana's counties compared to 73 for Daniels. The candidates finish tied in 2 counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500\nThe 88th Indianapolis 500 was held at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana on Sunday, May 30, 2004. It was part of the 2004 IndyCar Series season and the ninth Indy 500 sanctioned by the Indy Racing League. Buddy Rice won the pole position, the pit stop contest, led the most laps, and won the race for team owners Bobby Rahal and David Letterman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500\nThe race began about two hours behind schedule due to a morning rain delay. After 27 laps had been completed, rain began to fall again and threatened to wash out the rest of the day. About two hours later, the rain had ceased, and the track was dried. The race resumed on lap 28, and cruised beyond the halfway point to make the race official. At the 150-lap mark, the race had been very competitive up to that point, but was destined to come down to the final round of pit stops to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500\nMoreover, dark skies were looming, and inclement weather was moving back into the area. The race appeared to be turning into a crap-shoot. Some leaders headed for the pits for their final pit stops. At the same time, a handful of teams gambled by staying out, in hopes that they could stretch their fuel and be leading the race when the approaching rain arrived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500\nDespite desperate attempts to prevail over the approaching rain storm, all of the leaders ultimately were forced to cycle through their final round of pit stops. Nobody was able to stretch their fuel long enough to beat the rain. Buddy Rice, who had led the most laps thus far, re-emerged as the leader. The race was ended after 450 miles (180 laps), just 50 miles (20 laps) short of the scheduled distance. A severe thunderstorm, which eventually produced an F2 tornado, formed in the area of the speedway, shutting the track down, and sending the spectators and competitors for cover. Buddy Rice was declared the winner, his first victory in championship-level competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race schedule\n* Includes days where track activitywas significantly limited due to rain", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice\nRules changes were implemented before the start of the season, which reduced engine displacement from 3.5 L down to 3.0 L. In addition, on-board capacity of fuel was reduced from 35 gallons down to 30. The changes were made in an effort to curtail speeds, which had crept up into the low 230\u00a0mph range in 2003. It was also in the wake of a fatal accident at the Speedway. On October 22, 2003, during an off-season tire test, Tony Renna was killed in a crash. On a cool 50 degree morning, Renna spun in turn three, became airborne, and crashed into the outside wall and catch fence. The car was heavily damaged, and Renna died of massive internal trauma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice\nFor the first time, single-point refueling rigs were allowed. During pit stops, teams were now allowed to utilize a single combined fuel/vent hose assembly. This eliminated the need for a separate vent hose and dedicated vent hose operator, improving safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Rookie Orientation\nRookie orientation was held April 26, with seven drivers participating. Newcomers Ed Carpenter, Kosuke Matsuura, Mark Taylor, and Luis D\u00edaz passed all four phases of the rookie tests. Jeff Simmons and Marty Roth passed three phases, and can pass the fourth phase during routine practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Rookie Orientation\nLarry Foyt participated, but due to previous high-speed oval experience, was exempted from needing to pass the four-phase test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Rookie Orientation\nCarpenter led the speed chart at 215.584\u00a0mph. Though D\u00edaz passed the rookie test, he did not return with Ganassi for practice come May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Sunday May 9\nScott Dixon led the speed chart with a lap of 219.760\u00a0mph on opening day. No incidents were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Monday May 10\nTrack remained closed most of the afternoon, due to thunder storms. The track re-opened just before 5 p.m. and H\u00e9lio Castroneves set the fastest lap of the month at 220.300\u00a0mph. Late in the day, Robby Gordon spun and hit the outside wall in turn 2 but was uninjured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Tuesday May 11\nFelipe Giaffone brushed the wall in the north chute, then slid along the wall to the entrance to the pits. He was uninjured. Adri\u00e1n Fern\u00e1ndez became the first driver of the month to break the 221\u00a0mph barrier but Kosuke Matsuura (221.857\u00a0mph) ended up with the fastest lap of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Wednesday May 12\nTony Kanaan drove the fastest lap of the month, at 222.668\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, Thursday May 13\nRain kept the track closed until 3 p.m. The session was ended about 10 minutes early when Scott Sharp crashed in turn 1. H\u00e9lio Castroneves turned the fastest lap of the day (221.156\u00a0mph). Buddy Rice was among the top 5 for the first time all week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice, \"Fast\" Friday May 14\nThe track opened at 11 a.m. but lasted only four minutes, as rain began falling and closed the track for the day. During the brief session, only four cars had entered the track with Sarah Fisher (212.616\u00a0mph) the only car to run a single lap at speed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials: weekend 1, Pole Day - Saturday May 15\nPole day dawned cool and damp. Overnight rain kept the track closed until shortly after 12 noon. During the first practice session, Tony Kanaan reached 223.224\u00a0mph, the fastest lap of the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials: weekend 1, Pole Day - Saturday May 15\nPole qualifying began at 2:15\u00a0p.m. Roger Yasukawa earned the distinction as the first driver in the field. Shortly after, Robby Gordon qualified his car and immediately boarded a plane to Richmond to participate in the NASCAR event that evening. At 3:06\u00a0p.m., Dan Wheldon placed himself on the provisional pole position after a qualifying run of 221.524\u00a0mph. Several wave offs and two wrecks (Bryan Herta and Felipe Giaffone) characterized the early attempts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials: weekend 1, Pole Day - Saturday May 15\nAt 4:14\u00a0p.m., Buddy Rice took over the pole position with a run of 222.024\u00a0mph. Rice held off late runs by Dario Franchitti and Tony Kanaan to secure his first Indy 500 pole. At the end of the day, the field was filled to 22 cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials: weekend 1, Second Day - Sunday May 16\nFour cars completed attempts to fill the field to 26 cars. After wrecking the day before, both Bryan Herta and Felipe Giaffone put their cars safely in the field. Herta was the fastest qualifier of the afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice: week 2, Wednesday May 19\nMark Taylor brushed the wall in turn 2, but suffered only minor damage. Scott Dixon led all drivers at 220.576\u00a0mph, while Marty Roth was the fastest of the non-qualified cars (212.292\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice: week 2, Thursday May 20\nA. J. Foyt IV spun in turn 3 and brushed the inside wall, suffering minor damage. Kosuke Matsuura was the fastest of the day (220.784\u00a0mph). Marty Roth once again led the non-qualified cars (212.352\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice: week 2, Friday May 21\nAdri\u00e1n Fern\u00e1ndez topped the speed chart at 218.257\u00a0mph. Meanwhile, Buddy Lazier joined DRR to drive the #24 car (which later became #91 in a joint entry with Hemelgarn). On his first day of track activity, Lazier led non-qualified cars at 215.513\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 54], "content_span": [55, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Practice: week 2, Saturday May 22\nThe final full day of practice saw heavy activity. P. J. Jones took to the track for the first time but only managed 208\u00a0mph. Buddy Lazier led the non-qualified car at over 214\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials - weekend 2, Bump Day - Sunday May 23\nThe final day of qualifying saw seven positions open in the field. P. J. Jones was the first car to qualify (213.355\u00a0mph), followed by Marty Roth and others. At 1:45\u00a0p.m., Greg Ray filled the field to 33 cars with a run of 216.641\u00a0mph; the fastest attempt of the afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials - weekend 2, Bump Day - Sunday May 23\nA short rain shower followed, with Robby McGehee sitting on the bubble as the slowest qualifier at 211.631\u00a0mph. At that point, it did not appear that any further cars would attempt to qualify. The only driver left on the sidelines was Jaques Lazier, who briefly practiced during the week for Foyt. However, the ride fizzled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials - weekend 2, Bump Day - Sunday May 23\nDuring the afternoon, Tony Stewart came to visit the track. He was running full-time in NASCAR, and had raced in the NEXTEL All-Star Challenge the night prior. A. J. Foyt reportedly called Stewart while he was at the track and invited him to practice in one of his back-up cars. Stewart quickly passed his physical and went to the pit area to prepare for a possible qualifying attempt. With little else going on during the afternoon, the rumors quickly buzzed around the track and throngs of media surrounded Stewart to cover the breaking story.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials - weekend 2, Bump Day - Sunday May 23\nWith about an hour left in the day, a car was prepared for Stewart and fired up on pit lane. Stewart had yet to climb in the car but was suited up in his drivers uniform. At 5:36\u00a0p.m., however, Stewart left the pits on foot and announced he would not make an attempt to qualify. Stewart's contracts with Joe Gibbs Racing, Home Depot, and Chevrolet precluded him from driving Foyt's Toyota Indy car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 72], "content_span": [73, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Time trials - weekend 2, Carb Day - Thursday May 26\nThe final practice was held Thursday May 26. Rahal Letterman Racing with driver Buddy Rice and chief mechanic Ricardo Nault won the Checkers/Rally's Pit Stop Challenge", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 74], "content_span": [75, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, First rain delay\nRain fell early in the morning between 6:00-6:20\u00a0a.m. Rain resumed at 9:18\u00a0a.m. and continued intermittently until about 10:30\u00a0a.m. Track drying efforts began and the start of the race was delayed by a little over two hours. Mari Hulman George gave the traditional command to start engines at 1:02\u00a0p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Start\nAt 1:07\u00a0p.m., the field pulled away for the pace laps, about two hours and fifteen minutes behind schedule. At the start, Buddy Rice took the lead from the pole position. Rice led Dario Franchitti, Tony Kanaan, Dan Wheldon, and H\u00e9lio Castroneves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Start\nOn lap 10, A. J. Foyt IV brushed the wall in turn four and spun and crashed in turn 1. Foyt was uninjured. Several of the leaders pitted under the caution. Bryan Herta led the field back to green on lap 16. Three laps later, Wheldon took the lead but on lap 22, rain began to fall again and the caution was out again. The field circulated under yellow for several laps and, on lap 28, the red flag came out. Rain was falling hard and the cars were parked in the pits. Many believed the resumption would have to be delayed until Monday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Re-start\nAfter a delay of 1 hour and 47 minutes, the race was ready to resume. Robby Gordon, who was attempting to race in both the Indy 500 and Coca-Cola 600, departed the grounds and flew to Charlotte. Jaques Lazier was standing by, and climbed in the car to drive relief.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Re-start\nShortly after 3:30\u00a0p.m., the race continued. Dan Wheldon led at the green but Buddy Rice quickly assumed the lead. An intense segment of racing saw several changes in position amongst the top 10 and the leaders racing closely together. On lap 56, Larry Foyt wrecked in turn two guaranteeing the Foyt team would finish 32nd-33rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, First half\nBuddy Rice continued to lead during the next stretch of green flag racing. Dan Wheldon and Sam Hornish, Jr. ran 2nd-3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, First half\nThe third crash of the day involved Ed Carpenter and Mark Taylor on lap 64.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, First half\nAs the race approached the halfway point, Rice still led and Wheldon and Hornish continued to battle for 2nd and 3rd. The top five were still within seconds of each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, First half\nOn lap 94, P. J. Jones made contact with the wall exiting turn 2. Jaques Lazier dropped out with a broken axle and leader Buddy Rice stalled exiting the pits. Dan Wheldon took over the lead with H\u00e9lio Castroneves now second and Rice dropping down to 8th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Second half\nAs the race completed the 101st lap, it was scored official and would not need to carry over into a second day. On lap 105, Darren Manning and Greg Ray got together, crashing in turn four and collecting Sam Hornish, Jr. The three cars slid into the end of the pit wall and came to rest at the entrance of the pits. Tony Kanaan now led with Rice still mired back in 8th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Second half\nKanaan and Wheldon traded the lead a couple times until Marty Roth brought out the next caution by crashing in turn 4. Buddy Rice worked his way up to 5th for the restart. Meanwhile, Bruno Junqueira stayed out while the leaders pitted and took over the lead. Junquiera was gambling that his fuel would outlast the leaders in case rain were to resume.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Finish\nAt lap 150, Bruno Junqueira led Buddy Rice and Tony Kanaan. Approaching rain and one final round of pit stops for the leaders was looming and threatened to turn the result into a crap shoot. The first driver to go was Junqueira, who pitted for fuel and tires on lap 151.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Finish\nThe lead went back to Buddy Rice, who was followed closely by Tony Kanaan and Dan Wheldon. Kanaan ducked into the pits for fuel on lap 164 and Wheldon pitted on lap 165. Two laps later, Rice was in the pits, handing the lead over to Bryan Herta. Rain was fast approaching the Speedway and the race was not expected to reach the full distance before the rain fell. More of the leaders cycled into the pits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Finish\nHerta gave up the lead on lap 169 in order to pit for fuel. That handed the race lead to Adrian Fernandez as slight moisture was being reported around the track. Fernandez made it to lap 171 but significant rain was not falling yet and green flag conditions still prevailed. Fernandez made a quick 9-second pit stop but lost the lead. After the hectic sequence of pit stops, Buddy Rice was back into the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Finish\nWith Rice leading, Kanaan second, and Wheldon back to third, rain started falling on lap 174. The yellow came out with Rice the certain winner. A severe thunderstorm approached the area and the race was halted after the completion of lap 180 (450 miles (720\u00a0km)), 20 laps short of the finish. Lightning forced the victory celebration indoors to the Pagoda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Finish\nRice became the first American winner since Eddie Cheever in 1998. It was also the first rain-shortened 500 since 1976. An F2 tornado missed the Speedway and its quarter-million spectators by six miles as it raked across the south central portion of Indianapolis. The tornado caused widespread damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Race recap, Finish\nOn race day, May 30, precipitation in Indianapolis totaled 3.80\u00a0inches; a record single-day amount for that date, and any date during the month since records had been kept.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Results\nW\u00a0 = Former Indianapolis 500 winner; \u00a0R\u00a0 = Indianapolis 500 rookie", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Results\nAll cars in the 2004 Indianapolis 500 used Firestone tires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Results\nNotes: Race halted on lap 27 due to rain. The race was resumed and when rain pelted the Speedway again late in the race, officials waved the checkered flag 15 minutes after the traditional 6 PM closing time. It was only the second time in IMS history racing went past the traditional 6 PM EST closing time; in 1995, the Brickyard 400 raced into 7 PM EST (8 PM EDT) because of rain delays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0047-0001", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Results\nSince the state's adoption of Daylight Saving Time, there have been years where Indianapolis 500 qualifying has passed 6 PM, and the Brickyard 400 has reached past that time on occasion. It is the only Indianapolis 500 to have reached 7 PM EDT. Two races, the 1995 Brickyard 400 (8:07 PM EDT) and the 2017 Brantley Gilbert Big Machine Brickyard 400 (8:57 PM EDT), have reached the 8 PM EDT hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Results\nDuring the rain delay, Robby Gordon flew to Charlotte for the Coca-Cola 600, which prompted the team to put Jaques Lazier in the car, but a mechanical failure forced the car not to finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nThe race was carried live on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway Radio Network. Mike King served as chief announcer. Kenny Br\u00e4ck served as \"driver expert\" up until the rain delay. Br\u00e4ck sat out the 2004 IndyCar season due to a major crash suffered at Texas in October 2003. This was the only time, other than 2011, that Br\u00e4ck served as the driver expert on an American broadcast, however, he would serve in later years on international broadcasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nDeparting from the broadcast team were two longtime members, Howdy Bell and Chuck Marlowe. Donald Davidson celebrated his 40th year as a member of the crew, while Jerry Baker reached his milestone 30th race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nKevin Lee moved from turn two to the pit area. Adam Alexander moved from the pits to the turn two location. This was Dave Argabright's first year on the network. This was the last year for both Jim Murphy and Kim Morris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nChief Announcer: Mike KingDriver expert: Kenny Br\u00e4ckHistorian: Donald DavidsonColor analyst: Dave WilsonCommentary: Chris Economaki", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Radio\nTurn 1: Jerry BakerTurn 2: Adam AlexanderTurn 3: Mark JaynesTurn 4: Chris Denari", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nThe race was carried live flag-to-flag coverage in the United States on ABC Sports. The broadcast was billed as the Indianapolis 500 Presented by 7-Eleven. The broadcasting crew moved to a new booth, located in the Pit Road Suites next to the Pagoda. Several innovations were introduced, including the first 180-degree on-board rotating camera, and a Skycam along the mainstretch. The network celebrated its 40th anniversary covering the Indianapolis 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nBob Jenkins was released from ABC and ESPN after 2003, and his position as \"host\" was taken by Terry Gannon. Paul Page continued as play-by-play, along with Scott Goodyear. Jack Arute, who had been in the pit area from 1984-1998 and 2000-2003, moved into the booth as analyst for the 2004 race. Joining the crew for the first time were Todd Harris and Jamie Little, both as pit reporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nDespite a lengthy rain delay throughout the afternoon, ABC stayed on-air all day with coverage, and filled the downtime with highlights and interviews. The marathon broadcast totaled 8 hours and 22 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177798-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis 500, Broadcasting, Television\nThe introduction, titled \"The Chase,\" featuring Henry Rollins, would earn a Sports Emmy nomination for outstanding post produced audio/sound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177799-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis Colts season\nThe 2004 Indianapolis Colts season was the 52nd season for the team in the National Football League and 21st in Indianapolis. The 2004 Colts season began with the team trying to maintain or improve on their 12\u20134 record from 2003, and advance farther into the playoffs. The Colts finished the season 12\u20134, and defeated the Denver Broncos for the second straight time in the playoffs, but they were halted in the Divisional round by the defending and eventual Super Bowl Champion New England Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177799-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis Colts season\nPeyton Manning had one of the best seasons ever by an NFL quarterback, throwing 49 touchdown passes and breaking the previous record of 48 held by Dan Marino. At season's end, Peyton Manning was named the NFL MVP. For the season the Colts set an NFL record with 51 total touchdown passes. The Colts led the NFL with 522 points scored. The Colts tallied more points in the first half of each of their games of the 2004 NFL season (277 points) than seven other NFL teams managed in the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177799-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis Colts season\nDespite throwing for 49 touchdown passes, Peyton Manning attempted fewer than 500 passes for the first time in his NFL career. Sports statistics site Football Outsiders calculates that Manning had the best-ever season by a quarterback, play-for-play, in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177799-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis Colts season\nThe 2004 Colts are the only team in NFL history to convert five or more passing touchdowns in a game four different times during the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177799-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indianapolis Colts season, Offseason, Free Agency\nDuring Free Agency, the Colts failed to re-sign linebacker Marcus Washington and cornerback Walt Harris. Both signed with the Washington Redskins in free agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177800-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Ice Speedway World Championship\nThe 2004 Individual Ice Speedway World Championship was the 39th edition of the World Championship The Championship was held as a Grand Prix series over eight rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177801-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Long Track World Championship\nThe 2004 Individual Long Track/Grasstrack World Championship was the 34th edition of the FIM speedway Individual Long Track World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177801-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Long Track World Championship\nThe world title was won by Gerd Riss of Germany for the fifth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177802-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Speedway European Championship, Final\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fell \u2022 ns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177803-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Speedway Junior European Championship\nThe 2004 European Individual Speedway Junior Championship was the seventh edition of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177803-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Speedway Junior European Championship, Final\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fell \u2022 ns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 60], "content_span": [61, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177804-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship\nThe 2004 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship was the 28th edition of the World motorcycle speedway Under-21 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177804-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship\nThe final was won by Robert Mi\u015bkowiak of the Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177804-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Individual Speedway Junior World Championship, World final\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fell \u2022 ns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 63], "content_span": [64, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177805-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesia Open (badminton)\nThe 2004 Indonesia Open in badminton was held in Jakarta, from December 13 to December 19, 2004. It was a five-star tournament and the prize money was US$250,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177806-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesia national football team results\nThis article details the fixtures and results of the Indonesia national football team in 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election\nIndonesia held legislative elections on 5 April 2004 for both houses of the People's Consultative Assembly, the country's national legislature. This included all 550 seats in the People's Representative Council and 128 seats of the new Regional Representative Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election\nFinal results of the popular vote tally showed that Golkar, the former ruling party of the New Order era, received the most votes. It had lost to the Indonesian Democratic Party \u2013 Struggle in the 1999 legislative election. The Democratic Party and the Prosperous Justice Party, two of the newest parties to participate in the elections, received a combined 14.8% of the popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election\nBased on the final allocation of seats in the People's Representative Council, Golkar, the Indonesian Democratic Party \u2013 Struggle, the National Awakening Party, the United Development Party, the Democratic Party, the Prosperous Justice Party, and the National Mandate Party were qualified to submit candidates for the country's first direct presidential election later in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election\nThe election has been described as the most complicated election in the history of democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Background\nDuring its 2002 annual session, the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR) added 14 amendments to the Constitution of Indonesia. Included in these amendments were measures to reorganise the legislature. Beginning in 2004, the MPR was composed of the existing People's Representative Council (DPR) and a new Regional Representative Council (DPD). Because all the seats in the MPR were directly elected, this called for the removal of the military from the legislature, whose 38 seats in the Assembly were appointed. This change and an amendment for direct election of the President and Vice President were significant steps for Indonesia on the road towards full democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Background\nOn 13 July 2003, President Megawati Sukarnoputri signed into effect a law outlining the composition of the reorganised MPR. The new DPD was composed of four representatives from each of the 32 provinces of Indonesia, not totalling more than one-third of the members of the DPR. The revised constitution also set membership in the DPR at 550.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Electoral campaign\nDuring the first phases of registration, 150 parties were registered with the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights. However, this number was reduced to 50 and then 24 after scrutiny from the newly created General Election Commission. This reduction from the 48 parties that stood in the 1999 legislative election was attributed mainly to a new election law that allowed only parties that had won 2% of seats in the DPR, or 3% of seats in provincial and regental legislatures in half of the provinces to stand in the 2004 election. Only six parties met this requirement, and the remaining parties were required to merge or reorganise into a new party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Electoral campaign\nThe campaign period for parties and candidates began on 11 March and continued until 1 April. It was split into two phases by Nyepi, the Balinese day of silence. Parties delivered their national agendas indoors between 11 and 25 March. Although this was meant to encourage dialogue between parties and their constituents, these events were poorly attended. The International Foundation for Electoral Systems conducted a tracking survey that showed not all voters knew how to vote for candidates of the new DPD, or were even aware it existed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Electoral campaign\nUp to 475,000 candidates were nominated by the political parties in the national, provincial, and regental levels. More than 1,200 candidates stood for 128 seats in the DPD, and 7,756 candidates stood for 550 seats in the DPR. Candidates were elected in an open list system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Electoral campaign, Conduct\nElection day, 5 April, was relatively free of major incidents and irregularities. Minor violations included officials helping elderly voters cast and submit ballots. Two Indonesian election officials were also reported killed when delivering voting equipment in Papua. The Australian Parliamentary Observer Delegation and the European Union Election Observer Mission were among the organisations observing the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results\nThe election results determined which political parties were eligible to submit candidates for Indonesia's first direct presidential election, which was held on 5 July. Only parties that received 5% of the popular vote or 3% of seats in the People's Representative Council could submit candidates. Parties that did not meet these criteria had to join with other parties to meet at least one criterion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results\nThe counting of votes took one month, and the final results were announced on 5 May, one week later than was initially scheduled. Of 148,000,369 registered voters, 124,420,339 ballots (84.06%) were submitted. Of these ballots, 113,462,414 were considered valid, and 10,957,925 were declared invalid. In the People's Representative Council, the Party of the Functional Groups (Golkar) received the most number of seats. It had previously lost to the Indonesian Democratic Party \u2013 Struggle in the 1999 legislative election after being in power since 1970. However, fourteen of the twenty-four participating parties refused to certify the election results after allegations of irregular vote counting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Seat allocation\nTo achieve proportional representation, seat allocation was conducted using the largest remainder method, whereby the Hare quota was used to determine seats automatically secured by individual parties. Any remaining seats assigned to the electoral region were allocated to remaining political parties based on the rank order of their remaining votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Seat allocation\nA total of 273 disputes were brought before the Constitutional Court, the last of which were decided on 21 June. Of these cases, 38 decisions affected the final allocation of seats in the People's Representative Council and provincial and regental legislatures. The Democratic Party lost two seats, one to the National Mandate Party and Prosperous Peace Party each. The Pioneers' Party gained one seat from the United Democratic Nationhood Party. Meanwhile, the only seat allocated to the Freedom Bull National Party by the General Election Commission was reassigned to the Reform Star Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Seat allocation\nAfter the resolution of all disputes, sixteen parties received at least one seat in the People's Representative Council, while eight received none. The inconsistency in the order of parties according to votes received and seats allocated arose due to a special rule created to address uneven population distribution between Java and other islands. This rule stipulates that the Hare quota values for the provinces in Java were on average higher than those for the outer islands. A party require fewer votes to automatically secure a seat outside of Java.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Seat allocation\nFor example, the National Awakening Party (PKB) received more votes than the National Mandate Party (PAN) but received nearly the same number of seats. More than half of PKB seats were received in the party's stronghold of East Java, where the quota value was higher. In contrast, only four of PAN seats were automatically secured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Analysis\nResults showed that Golkar, the former ruling party of the New Order era led by People's Representative Council Speaker Akbar Tanjung, had won the most number of seats, defeating President Megawati Sukarnoputri's Indonesian Democratic Party \u2013 Struggle (PDI\u2013P). Golkar received more votes than other parties in twenty-six out of thirty-two provinces. However, these results occurred because of declining PDI\u2013P popularity rather than an increase in Golkar's popularity. Golkar's support in its traditional stronghold of Sulawesi declined due to the performance of medium and small parties in the region. Despite winning the largest share of vote once again in Bali, PDI\u2013P performance there suffered the greatest after the 2002 bombings by terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah devastated the island province's economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Analysis\nBoth the National Awakening Party (PKB) and the United Development Party (PPP), both of whom were considered Islamist parties, maintained their rankings in the People's Representative Council. The PKB, co-founded by former President and former Nahdlatul Ulama Chairman Abdurrahman Wahid, continued to perform well in its stronghold of East Java despite losing votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Analysis\nThe Islamic Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) and the Democratic Party (PD) finished first and second, respectively, in Jakarta, where voting patterns were considered a \"barometer of Indonesian politics\". Together, both parties received 42.5% of votes in the capital city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Results, Analysis\nPolarisation of voting patterns based on religion was evident in the eastern provinces. Christianity-based Prosperous Peace Party (PDS) received 14.8% of votes in Christian-dominant North Sulawesi and 13 seats overall in the People's Representative Council. Likewise, Muslims were more likely to vote for the PKS in regions where religious conflict has been historically prevalent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Aftermath\nThe 2004 legislative election was the most complicated in Indonesian history because Indonesians had to vote for representatives at the national, provincial, and regental levels. These factors made Indonesia's electoral system unique from other systems in the world. The election was described as the longest and most complicated election in the history of democracy and secured the nation's place as the world's third-largest democracy. Even before the election, the seat allocation system for the People's Representative Council was also deemed \"the most complicated in the world\" by several news sources across the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Aftermath\nSeven political parties met the criteria to submit candidates for the July presidential election: Golkar, the Indonesian Democratic Party \u2013 Struggle (PDI\u2013P), the National Awakening Party (PKB), the United Development Party (PPP), the Democratic Party (PD), the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), and the National Mandate Party (PAN). The PKS was the only party not to nominate candidates, but it threw its support behind PAN's Amien Rais.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Aftermath\nNewly elected members of the People's Representative Council (DPR) and the Regional Representative Council (DPD) took the oath of office in separate sessions on 1 October, one day later than was scheduled. Both houses then convened together in the early morning of 2 October and took the oath of office as the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR). Ginandjar Kartasasmita was elected the inaugural chairman of the DPD with 72 of 128 votes in a run-off against Irman Gusman on 1 October. The following day, Agung Laksono of Golkar was elected Speaker of the DPR by a vote of 280 to 257. The Chairman of the MPR was not elected until several days later when Hidayat Nur Wahid of the PKS won the vote 326 to 324 against PDI\u2013P's Sutjipto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177807-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian legislative election, Aftermath\nOn 5 October, three regencies were carved out of the province of South Sulawesi to form West Sulawesi as the 33rd province of Indonesia. Because this occurred after the elections, West Sulawesi was not represented in the Regional Representative Council until the 2009 legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election\nThe first direct presidential election in Indonesia was held in two rounds on 5 July and 20 September 2004. Before a 2002 amendment to the Constitution of Indonesia, the President and Vice President were elected by the country's top legislative body, the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election\nUnder the new amendment, a candidate pair is elected into office after receiving more than 50% of the vote nationally with at least 2% of the vote in more than half of the provinces of Indonesia. If no pair receives the number of votes required, the election will continue into the second round with the pairs receiving the highest and second-highest number of votes. Further regulations set by the General Election Commission (KPU) state that each pair must be nominated by a political party or coalition of parties which received at least 5% of the popular vote or 3% of the seats to the People's Representative Council (DPR) in the April legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election\nThe incumbent president, Megawati Sukarnoputri, was sworn into office in 2001 after the legislature impeached and removed her predecessor, president Abdurrahman Wahid (often known as \"Gus Dur\"), from office. Megawati's re-election bid was challenged by four candidates, including incumbent vice president Hamzah Haz. In the first round, former cabinet member and retired general Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono received a plurality of the valid ballots submitted, followed by Megawati. Yudhoyono eventually defeated Megawati with 60.62% of the valid ballots in the second round. He was inaugurated as the sixth president of Indonesia on 20 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Background\nIn the 1999 legislative election, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) won the most number of seats in the DPR and became the largest faction in the MPR, the legislative body responsible for electing the President. The PDI\u2013P was led by Megawati Sukarnoputri, daughter of Sukarno, Indonesia's first president. Megawati's supporters had expected her to be elected president by the MPR, but she failed to reach out to parties other than the National Awakening Party (PKB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Background\nHer only opponent at the time was President B. J. Habibie, who came into office in May 1998, but he withdrew his candidacy after his accountability speech was rejected by the MPR. The PKB, which was led by Abdurrahman Wahid, the leader of Indonesia's largest Islamic organisation Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), had also pledged to support Megawati for President. However, it became clear that Megawati did not have enough votes to back her candidacy. Additionally, National Mandate Party (PAN) leader Amien Rais and his Central Axis (Indonesian: Poros Tengah), a coalition of Islamic and reform parties, began pushing for Abdurrahman's candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Background\nAbdurrahman eventually won the MPR's presidential election, and Megawati was elected as Vice President. As President, he repealed many of the laws enacted during the Suharto era that discriminated against Chinese Indonesians. Among these was the banning on the use of Chinese characters and display of images relating to Chinese culture. Following this act, many political parties began to reach out to Chinese Indonesians for their votes by displaying Chinese characters on campaign material.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Background\nFollowing Abdurrahman's impeachment and removal from office by the MPR in July 2001, the legislative body elevated Megawati to the presidency. She would complete the remainder of Abdurrahman's five-year term, ending in October 2004. During its 2002 annual session, the MPR added a series of amendments to the Constitution of Indonesia, including the removal of the military's 38 appointed seats in the Assembly, and an amendment for direct election of the President and Vice President. This presidential election process would involve political parties nominating a presidential and vice-presidential ticket with the option of a runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates\nIn December 2003, the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) began a tracking survey in order to assess the popularity of potential candidates. The survey continued until the start of the first election round on 5 July and included thirteen possible candidates for president. The first IFES survey indicated that incumbent President Megawati Sukarnoputri received a plurality of the votes. However, by the time of the April 2004 legislative election, retired General Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had taken the lead from Megawati after resigning from her cabinet in March. Other potential candidates included DPR Speaker Akbar Tanjung and Yogyakarta Sultan Hamengkubuwana X.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates\nThe results of the legislative election determined which political parties were eligible to submit presidential tickets. Only parties which received at least 5% of the popular vote or 3% of seats (17 of 550 seats) in the DPR would be allowed to submit candidates. Parties that did not meet these criteria must join with other parties to meet at least one criterion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates\nSeven political parties met these criteria: the Party of the Functional Groups (Golkar), the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), the National Awakening Party (PKB), the United Development Party (PPP), the Democratic Party (PD), the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), and the National Mandate Party (PAN). The PKS was the only party not to nominate candidates, but it later threw its support behind the PAN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates\nThe KPU announced the final list of candidates on 14 May. Following the announcement, all candidates were required to undergo medical screening. On 22 May, the commission announced that the PKB's presidential candidate, former President Abdurrahman Wahid, had failed the eye test and was not allowed to enter in the election. He initially told supporters not to vote for a presidential candidate on election day but decided to retract that statement after pressure from the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Wiranto and Salahuddin Wahid\nGolkar had won the April legislative election after losing to the PDI\u2013P five years prior. The party nominated retired General Wiranto and Salahuddin Wahid, deputy chairman of the National Human Rights Commission, for its presidential ticket. The pair was assigned the number 1 for its ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Wiranto and Salahuddin Wahid\nWiranto was an adjutant to former President Suharto in 1989\u20131993. During this time, he rapidly rose to the rank of full general and eventually became the head of the National Armed Forces. When riots broke out throughout the country in 1998 against Suharto, he refused to take control in order to avoid the deaths of protesting university students. In 1999, as East Timor held an independence referendum, Wiranto was accused of having taken part in inciting violence among East Timorese along with several other officers; however, he was never issued an arrest warrant by Interpol. Under President Abdurrahman Wahid, Wiranto served as the Coordinating Minister for Political and Security Affairs but was later dismissed. On 20 April 2004, the Golkar Convention voted to nominate him for president over DPR Speaker Akbar Tanjung in the second round of voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 938]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Wiranto and Salahuddin Wahid\nOn 9 May, Golkar selected Salahuddin Wahid (also known as Gus Sholah) as its vice-presidential candidate after an endorsement was made by his brother Abdurrahman. Because Salahuddin was also a deputy chairman of the Central Board of Nahdlatul Ulama, many NU members criticised him for not adhering to the organisation's khittah, which affirmed the NU's status as a non-political organisation. With this nomination, PKB leaders officially supported the Wiranto\u2013Salahuddin pair for the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Wiranto and Salahuddin Wahid\nSalahuddin's position on the human rights commission helped the reputation of Wiranto. However, because both candidates were of Javanese background, they were not expected to attract as many voters who were not Javanese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Megawati Sukarnoputri and Hasyim Muzadi\nIncumbent President Megawati Sukarnoputri was the PDI\u2013P's top nominee. She was joined by vice-presidential candidate Hasyim Muzadi, general chairman of Indonesia's largest Islamic organisation Nahdlatul Ulama (NU). The pair was assigned the number 2 for its ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Megawati Sukarnoputri and Hasyim Muzadi\nAccording to a report released by the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, Megawati has a \"unique burden of being the only candidate in the race who is held responsible for the current situation most voters are unhappy with\" although several other candidates have been members of her government. However, the general discontent for her presidency was attributed mainly to the failure of the government to communicate Megawati's achievements rather than the state of the country itself. The PDI\u2013P came in second during the April legislative election with 18.5% of the votes, a reduction by almost half from the 33.7% it had received in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Megawati Sukarnoputri and Hasyim Muzadi\nHasyim Muzadi had been mentioned as a possible running mate for Megawati as early as November 2003. His candidacy was officially announced by Megawati on 6 May. As Chairman of the Central Board of Nahdlatul Ulama, he was criticised by many NU members for not adhering to the organisation's khittah and the principle of political neutrality. Muslim intellectual Nurcholish Madjid had called on him to step down from the position following the announcement of the candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Megawati Sukarnoputri and Hasyim Muzadi\nThe two candidates' Javanese background were not expected to attract as many non-Javanese voters. However, the candidates' status as civilians attracted those who did not favour candidates with a military background, and they also were expected to attract both secular and religious voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 90], "content_span": [91, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Amien Rais and Siswono Yudohusodo\nThe PAN nominated Amien Rais, chairman of the MPR, as its presidential candidate. His running mate was Siswono Yudohusodo. The pair was assigned the number 3 for its ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Amien Rais and Siswono Yudohusodo\nAmien Rais had once served as the chairman of Muhammadiyah. However, despite leading the second-largest Islamic organisation in Indonesia, Amien established the PAN following the resignation of President Suharto as a party not based on religious affiliation. He became an influential figure in the early days of the reform period and was eventually elected to lead the MPR. Among voters, he was seen as a candidate who had no association with the corruption that was endemic to the nation's government. Voters also saw him as an ambitious person and as one who was known for being an orator. Amien's party had received 6.4% of the votes during the legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Amien Rais and Siswono Yudohusodo\nOn the other hand, Siswono Yudohusodo was a relative newcomer to the political scene. He served as the chairman of the Indonesian Farmers' Association (HKTI) and held ministerial positions during the later years of Suharto's presidency. Siswono was the wealthiest of any candidate for president or vice president based on reports submitted by candidates to the Corruption Eradication Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Amien Rais and Siswono Yudohusodo\nLike Megawati and Hasyim, Amien and Siswono were also not expected to attract many non-Javanese voters. The pair was supported by the PKS, the seventh party which met the criteria to submit presidential and vice-presidential candidates but did not do so, and a number of smaller parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla\nThe Democratic Party, supported by the Indonesian Justice and Unity Party (PKPI) and Crescent Star Party (PBB), nominated retired General Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono for its presidential candidate. He was later joined by Jusuf Kalla as running mate, and the pair was assigned the number 4 for its ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 91], "content_span": [92, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla\nSusilo Bambang Yudhoyono has served in the cabinets of two previous administrations. While serving as Coordinating Minister for Political, Social and Security Affairs under Abdurrahman Wahid, he refused an order to declare a state of emergency that would have stopped the parliamentary process to impeach the President and was subsequently dismissed. Yudhoyono was nominated for vice president after the MPR selected Megawati to succeed Abdurrahman Wahid, but he lost the election to PPP Chairman Hamzah Haz and DPR Speaker Akbar Tanjung.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 91], "content_span": [92, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla\nHe reprised his prior cabinet position in Megawati's administration but resigned on 1 March 2004 to join the race for the presidency. The Democratic Party, established as a vehicle for Yudhoyono's political career by secular nationalists who saw the potential of his leadership, received 7.45% of votes and 10% of DPR seats in the April legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 91], "content_span": [92, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla\nYudhoyono's running mate was Jusuf Kalla, a wealthy Bugis businessman and member of Golkar who served as Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare under Megawati. He mediated two separate peaceful resolutions to inter-religious conflicts between Christians and Muslims in his native Sulawesi in 2001 and Maluku in 2002. Kalla joined Golkar's selection process for the party's presidential nominee in August 2003 but withdrew his candidacy days before the party convention the following April. Several days later, he resigned his cabinet position and announced his alliance with Yudhoyono. Kalla was also seen as a potential vice-presidential candidate for the incumbent Megawati.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 91], "content_span": [92, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla\nThe combination brought together two men with very different backgrounds that added to the attractiveness of their ticket. Yudhoyono, who was raised in densely populated Java, is seen as more secular and has a military background. On the other hand, Kalla is a devout Muslim who grew up in the outer province of South Sulawesi and came from a civilian background.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 91], "content_span": [92, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Hamzah Haz and Agum Gumelar\nIncumbent Vice President Hamzah Haz was the presidential nominee of the PPP. He was joined by Minister of Transportation Agum Gumelar for the vice-presidential candidate. The pair was assigned the number 5 for its ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Hamzah Haz and Agum Gumelar\nHamzah Haz was elected vice president by the MPR after defeating DPR Speaker Akbar Tanjung when it removed President Abdurrahman Wahid from office in 2001. Although the BBC reported him once stating that \"no woman was fit to head the world's leading Muslim nation\", he came into office as the deputy to Indonesia's first female president. Haz served in the cabinet of President B. J. Habibie and was the first minister to resign from the Abdurrahman Wahid administration. He was accused of graft and nepotism but was never subjected to an investigation. As Vice President, Haz had been a proponent of an amendment to the Constitution which would impose Islamic law on Muslims in the country. However, other political parties and the Islamic organisations Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah opposed such amendment for fear of more extreme forms of Islam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 930]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Hamzah Haz and Agum Gumelar\nA relatively unknown figure in the political scene, Agum Gumelar served as Minister of Transportation under Abdurrahman Wahid and Megawati. In September 2003, Agum had recommended Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono or Jusuf Kalla as Megawati's running mate in the presidential election after predicting that the PDI\u2013P would lose a significant number of votes in the April legislative election. However, both men eventually formed their own ticket, and Agum declined a vice-presidential candidate offer from Amien Rais in order to remain on the cabinet. He eventually accepted an offer from the PPP leadership to become Haz's running mate and resigned from Megawati's administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Candidates, Hamzah Haz and Agum Gumelar\nNeither candidate was of Javanese origin; hence, they might have attracted constituencies of the outer provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Campaign\nCorruption, collusion, and nepotism are the most consistently cited concerns among voters surveyed by the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Results\nFormer security minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono won the first round with 33% of the vote. Incumbent President Megawati Sukarnoputri was second with 26%, ahead of former armed forces chief Wiranto on 22%. Yudhoyono did not do as well as earlier opinion polls had suggested, while Megawati did better. This was attributed by Indonesian observers to Yudhoyono's lack of a nationwide party machine, such as Megawati's PDI-P and Wiranto's Golkar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Results\nThe counting of 113 million votes, already a massive task in such a large and diverse country, was made more difficult by problems with the ballot papers. Voters cast their ballots by making a hole in the ballot paper with a nail, above the photo of their preferred candidate. Because the ballot paper was handed to voters folded in half, many made the hole without unfolding the ballot, thus making two holes and invalidating their vote. Hundreds of thousands of these votes were invalidated before the General Election Committee (KPU) ruled that such ballots should be accepted. This necessitated recounts in many places, slowing the count and raising fears of a disputed result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Results, First round\nWiranto refused to accept the election results and petitioned the Constitutional Court. Wiranto and Salahuddin argued that, due to irregularities in ballot counting by the KPU, they had lost 5,434,660 votes from twenty-six provinces. Those ballots would have made the total popular vote for the pair higher than that for Megawati and Hasyim, putting the former pair instead of the latter in the second round. However, the Court ruled on 10 August that it found no irregularities and upheld the commission's final count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Aftermath\nSusilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Jusuf Kalla were sworn in as president and vice president on 20 October. It was the first Indonesian presidential inauguration to be attended by foreign leaders. After a selection process that began on 15 October, the United Indonesia Cabinet was announced later following the inauguration. The 36-member cabinet was sworn in at the State Palace on 21 October. The process of selecting candidates for Yudhoyono's cabinet was considered \"decent, intelligent, and indecisive\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177808-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Indonesian presidential election, Aftermath\nWhile attempting to satisfy as many members as possible in his coalition of small parties, Yudhoyono created a cabinet that was neither quite as cohesive nor effective. However, Kalla soon became the party chairman of Golkar in late 2004 and turned the party's votes in the DPR to those in favour of the government, creating an effective bloc and leaving Megawati's PDI\u2013P as the largest non-government party in the DPR. Although the first one hundred days of Yudhoyono's administration saw continuing economic stability, it was overshadowed by the events of the Indian Ocean earthquake which occurred on 26 December. The earthquake triggered tsunamis that destroyed the coastline of the provinces of Aceh and North Sumatra and killed more than 200,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177809-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Indoor Cricket World Cup\nThe 2004 Indoor Cricket World Cup was an Indoor Cricket tournament that took place in Colombo, Sri Lanka from the 10th to 16 October 2004 involving both a men's and a women's division. There were a total of 25 matches played in the men's division and 19 matches played in the women's division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177809-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Indoor Cricket World Cup\nIn both divisions a round robin tournament was played with each team playing the other once after which the top four ranked sides progressed through to the semi finals. Australia, New Zealand, Sri Lanka and South Africa contested the men's finals with Australia eventually defeating Sri Lanka in the final itself. The same four sides featured in the women's semi finals (though in a different order), with Australia prevailing over South Africa in the final. This represented the 5th consecutive title for Australia in the men's division and the 4th in the women's division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177809-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Indoor Cricket World Cup, Host Selection\nThe World Cup was awarded to Sri Lanka by the WICF at the conclusion of the previous World Cup. This was the first time the event had been held in Sri Lanka and was seen as an important step towards expanding the game outside of the originating nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177809-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Indoor Cricket World Cup, Host Selection, Venue\nThe Ceylon Indoor Cricket Association operated out of a single facility in Colombo, the Austasia Indoor Cricket Complex. As the only functional indoor cricket facility in Sri Lanka this venue hosted all World Cup matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series\nThe 2004 IRL IndyCar Series was dominated by two teams, Andretti Green Racing and Rahal Letterman Racing. While there was great parity in 2003 between Honda and Toyota powered teams, in 2004 Honda began to outshine Toyota bringing their teams Penske Racing and Chip Ganassi Racing down with it, leaving Scott Dixon winless and in 10th place in his attempt to defend his 2003 championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series\nSeason champion Tony Kanaan set a record by completing all 3,305 possible laps, the first IndyCar driver in modern history to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series\nThis season was the last to feature an all oval tracks schedule, which was part of the concept that led to the creation of the Indy Racing League. By 2005, road and street courses started to appear in the schedule, and by 2015, there are more races run in road/street courses than in oval tracks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Toyota Indy 300\nThis race was held at Homestead-Miami Speedway on February 29. Buddy Rice won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Copper World Indy 200\nThis race was held at Phoenix International Raceway on March 21. Dan Wheldon won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Indy Japan 300\nThis race was held at Twin Ring Motegi on April 17. This was Honda's first win in the annual oval race held at their own track. Dan Wheldon won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, 88th Indianapolis 500\nThe 88th Indianapolis 500-mile (800\u00a0km) race was held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on May 30. Buddy Rice sat on pole. The race was shortened to 180 laps (450 miles) due to rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 74], "content_span": [75, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Bombardier 500\nThis race was held at Texas Motor Speedway on June 12. Dario Franchitti won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, SunTrust Indy Challenge\nThis race was held at Richmond International Raceway on June 26. H\u00e9lio Castroneves won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Argent Mortgage 300\nThis race was held at Kansas Speedway on July 4. Buddy Rice won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Firestone Indy 200\nThis race was held at Nashville Superspeedway on July 17. Buddy Rice won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 71], "content_span": [72, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Menards A. J. Foyt 225\nThis race was held at the Milwaukee Mile on July 25. V\u00edtor Meira won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Michigan Indy 400\nThis race was held at Michigan International Speedway on August 1. Tony Kanaan won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 70], "content_span": [71, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Belterra Casino Indy 300\nThis race was held at Kentucky Speedway on August 15. Buddy Rice won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 77], "content_span": [78, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Honda Indy 225\nThis race was held at Pikes Peak International Raceway on August 22. Tony Kanaan won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Firestone Indy 225\nThis race was held at Nazareth Speedway on August 29. H\u00e9lio Castroneves won the pole. The race was heralded as the series' 100th event. This was also the final IndyCar race at the track which closed down following this race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 71], "content_span": [72, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Delphi Indy 300\nThis race was held at Chicagoland Speedway on September 12. H\u00e9lio Castroneves won the pole. This race was memorable due to a scary crash involving Buddy Rice with 15 laps remaining as he slid down the backstretch upside down. Adri\u00e1n Fern\u00e1ndez won the race, despite having a broken on-board pneumatic air jack. His pit crew had to use a manual jack to service his car during pit stops, losing several seconds each time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Toyota Indy 400\nThis race was held at California Speedway on October 3. H\u00e9lio Castroneves won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Toyota Indy 400\nBy finishing in 2nd, Tony Kannan clinched the championship with 1 race remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177810-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 IndyCar Series, Season Summary, Race summaries, Chevy 500\nThis race was held at Texas Motor Speedway on October 17. H\u00e9lio Castroneves won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series\nThe 2004 Menards IRL Infiniti Pro Series Season was the series' third. It consisted of 12 races and the champion was Thiago Medeiros. All teams used Dallara chassis and Infiniti engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Calendar\nRace 4 no qualifying held due to rain, starting grid depend on free practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Homestead-Miami 100\nThe Homestead-Miami 100 was held February 29 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Paul Dana won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Phoenix 100\nThe Phoenix 100 was held March 20 at Phoenix International Raceway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Futaba Freedom 100\nThe Futaba Freedom 100 was held May 22 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Aventis Racing for Kids 100\nThe Aventis Racing for Kids 100 was held July 3 at Kansas Speedway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 69], "content_span": [70, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Cleanevent 100\nThe Cleanevent 100 was held July 17 at Nashville Superspeedway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Milwaukee 100\nThe Milwaukee 100 was held July 25 at the Milwaukee Mile. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Paramount Health Insurance 100\nThe Paramount Health Insurance 100 was held August 1 at Michigan International Speedway. Alfred Unser won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Paramount Health Insurance 100\nLeonardo Maia finished fifth, but set down to seventh place due to technical infringement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Kentucky 100\nThe Kentucky 100 was held August 14 at Kentucky Speedway. Travis Gregg won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Pikes Peak 100\nThe Pikes Peak 100 was held August 22 at Pikes Peak International Raceway. Jeff Simmons won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Chicagoland 100\nThe Chicagoland 100 was held September 11 at Chicagoland Speedway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, California 100\nThe California 100 was held October 2 at the California Speedway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Race Summaries, Texas 100\nThe Texas 100 was held October 16 at Texas Motor Speedway. Thiago Medeiros won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Final points standings\nFor every race points were awarded to all starters: 50 points to the winner, 40 for runner-up, 35 for third place, 32 for fourth place, 30 for fifth place, 28 for sixth place, 26 seventh place, 24 eighth place, 22 for ninth place, 20 for tenth place, winding down to 1 points for 28th place. Additional points were awarded to the driver leading the most laps (2 point). No additional points were awarded for the qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177811-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Infiniti Pro Series, Final points standings\nRace 12 P. J. Chesson had 25 points deduction, because he was responsible for debris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash\nAt around 17:00 BST on 11 April 2004, a double-decker bus was involved in a collision with a car and a number of pedestrians outside the Fantasy Island amusement park on Sea Lane in Ingoldmells, Lincolnshire. The accident killed five pedestrians and injured six more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash\nThe bus, a Volvo double-decker operated by Lincolnshire RoadCar, was operating a scheduled passenger service between Skegness and Chapel St Leonards when the driver, 50-year-old Stephen Topasna, lost control of the vehicle on Sea Lane in Ingoldmells. The bus veered onto the pavement, striking a number of pedestrians, before swerving back into the road coming to a stop after colliding with a BMW car just beyond a pelican crossing, where it had struck another group of pedestrians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash\nWith five fatalities, the Ingoldmells bus crash was the worst accident involving a bus in the United Kingdom since the M40 minibus crash in 1993. The accident remained the deadliest bus accident in the United Kingdom during the 21st century until it was surpassed by the 2017 M1 motorway crash involving a minibus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Accident\nThe bus was being driven along Sea Lane in Ingoldmells, close to the Fantasy Island amusement park, at the time of the accident. Immediately prior to the accident, driver Stephen Topasna pulled the bus into a bus stop in a lay-by by the side of the road in order to pick up passengers. The accident occurred as Topasna accelerated the bus away from the lay-by; due to pedal confusion, Topasna unintentionally caused the bus to accelerate instead of brake after pulling back into the road, leading to a loss of control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Accident\nThe bus continued to accelerate for 22 seconds after pulling away from the bus stop, reaching a top speed of 41\u00a0mph before losing control and mounting the pavement. Passengers on board reported hearing the driver shouting that the bus had no brakes. After losing control, the bus struck a number of pedestrians on the pavement, before veering back into the road. The bus then struck a BMW car in the road, before failing to stop in time for a pelican crossing, striking a group of pedestrians on the crossing before finally coming to a halt 176 metres after setting off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Accident\nThe accident occurred on the busiest day of the year for the amusement park, and the area was busy with pedestrians. In total, the accident killed five pedestrians and injured six more, including two critically. Two people remained trapped underneath the bus for around half an hour after it came to a halt. Three people were pronounced dead immediately at the site of the accident; a fourth died several hours later, while a fifth pedestrian died the following day in hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath\nThe pedestrians who were killed in the accident were later named as 37-year-old Joanne Warren and her two sons, 5-year-old Jacob Warren and 4-month-old Leyton Warren, all from Leicester; and husband and wife 33-year-old Richard Rhodes and 30-year-old Paula Rhodes from Mansfield, Nottinghamshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath\nInquests into the accident were opened on 19 April. Following the accident, the section of Sea Lane on which the accident took place was pedestrianised, following numerous protests and a petition signed by 5,000 people. However, the pedestrianisation of Sea Lane was later criticised for splitting Ingoldmells in half, causing further traffic problems, which resulted in Sea Lane being reopened to traffic again, but with safety measures in place, such as a 20mph zone, speed bumps, crash barriers and new pedestrian crossings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath\nA memorial stone to the victims of the accident was unveiled on 25 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath, Charges against Lincolnshire RoadCar\nBus company Lincolnshire RoadCar appeared in court in connection with the accident in February 2005, potentially facing a charge of operating a vehicle with defective brakes, which the company denied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath, Charges against Lincolnshire RoadCar\nOn 8 August, Lincolnshire RoadCar were found guilty of breaching safety provisions for allowing the driver to operate the vehicle type without proper training and for operating a vehicle with faulty brakes; they were fined \u00a32,000 at Skegness Magistrates Court. The bus had been serviced two days prior to the accident, and an engineer spotted and rectified three faults with the braking system; however, they failed to rectify a fault with the brake slack adjuster. However, it was also confirmed that the faulty brakes had not caused the accident and would have had only a minor effect on the outcome of the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath, Charges against Lincolnshire RoadCar\nLincolnshire RoadCar initially planned to appeal the verdict. However, the appeal was dropped in October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177812-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Ingoldmells bus crash, Aftermath, Charges\nTopasna was later charged with five counts of causing death by dangerous driving and one count of driving without due care and attention. Topasna admitted the charges upon appearance at Lincoln Crown Court on 18 October 2005, stating that he had mistakenly pressed the accelerator instead of the brake in a case of pedal confusion. On 9 November, Topasna was sentenced to five years in prison in connection with the accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177813-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Insight Bowl\nThe 2004 Insight Bowl was the 16th edition of the bowl game. It featured the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, and the Oregon State Beavers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177813-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Insight Bowl\nOregon State scored first on a 12-yard touchdown pass from Derek Anderson to wide receiver George Gillett to take a 7\u20130 lead. Derek Anderson later found tight end Joe Newton for an 11-yard touchdown pass to take a 14\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177813-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Insight Bowl\nIn the second quarter Derek Anderson threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Derek Haines, making it 21\u20130 OSU. Notre Dame got on the board with a 13-yard touchdown pass from Brady Quinn to Anthony Fasano, making the halftime score 21\u20137 Oregon State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177813-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Insight Bowl\nIn the third quarter, Alexis Serna made a 38-yard field goal to increase Oregon State's lead to 24\u20137. Notre Dame running back Darius Walker scored on a 5-yard touchdown run to make it 24\u201314 Oregon State. In the fourth quarter, Derek Anderson threw his fourth touchdown pass of the game, a 1-yarder to Joe Newton to make it 31\u201314 Oregon State. Brady Quinn's 18-yard touchdown pass to Rhema McKnight, made it 31\u201321 OSU. A 2-yard Dwight Wright touchdown run made the final score 38\u201321 Oregon State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177814-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Intense Football League season\nThe 2004 Intense Football League season was the first season of the Intense Football League. The league champions were the Amarillo Dusters, who defeated the Lubbock Lone Stars in Intense Bowl I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177815-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 InterLiga\nInterLiga 2004 was the 1st edition of the tournament in which two Mexican clubs got the opportunity to represent the FMF and Mexico in 2004 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177816-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Intercontinental Cup\nThe 2004 Intercontinental Cup was an association football match that took place on 12 December 2004 between Porto of Portugal, winners of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, and Once Caldas of Colombia, winners of the 2004 Copa Libertadores. The match was played at the neutral venue of the International Stadium Yokohama in Yokohama, Japan, in front of 45,748 fans. The match ended 0\u20130 after extra time, where Porto eventually won 8\u20137 in the penalty shoot-out. Maniche of Porto, despite being the only Porto player to miss his penalty kick, was named as man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177816-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Intercontinental Cup\nThis was the last Intercontinental Cup final as the competition was subsequently expanded from a single game between European and South American champions into the FIFA Club World Cup, also including North & Central American, Asian, African and Oceanian continental champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177816-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Intercontinental Cup, Match details\nAssistant referees: Amelio Andino (Paraguay) Winston Reategui (Peru)Fourth official: Toshimitsu Yoshida (Japan)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 40], "content_span": [41, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177817-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 International Formula 3000 Championship\nThe 2004 International Formula 3000 season was the thirty-eight season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also twentieth and final season under the International Formula 3000 Championship moniker. It featured the 2004 FIA Formula 3000 International Championship, which was contested over ten rounds from 24 April to 11 September 2004. Two titles were awarded, a Championship for Drivers and a Championship for Teams. This was the final FIA Formula 3000 International Championship before it was replaced by the GP2 Series in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177817-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 International Formula 3000 Championship, Drivers and teams\nThe following drivers and teams contested the 2004 FIA Formula 3000 International Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177817-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 International Formula 3000 Championship, Drivers and teams\nAll entries used Lola B02/50 chassis with Zytek-Judd KV engines and Avon tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177817-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 International Formula 3000 Championship, Complete Overview\nR14=retired, but classified R=retired NS=did not start NT=no time set in qualifying", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177818-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 International League season\nThe 2004 International League season took place between April and September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177818-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 International League season\nThe Buffalo Bisons defeated the Richmond Braves to win the league championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177818-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 International League season, Playoffs\nThe following teams qualified for the postseason: Buffalo Bisons, Columbus Clippers, Durham Bulls, and Richmond Braves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177818-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 International League season, Playoffs, Championship series\nBuffalo defeated the Richmond Braves 3 games to 1Note: all games were played in Buffalo due to weather conditions (the remnants of Hurricane Ivan) in Richmond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177819-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 International Raiffeisen Grand Prix\nThe 2004 International Raiffeisen Grand Prix was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Sankt P\u00f6lten, Austria and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 24th edition of the tournament and was held from 17 May through 23 May 2004. Eighth-seeded Filippo Volandri won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177819-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 International Raiffeisen Grand Prix, Finals, Doubles\nMariano Hood / Petr P\u00e1la defeated Tom\u00e1\u0161 Cibulec / Leo\u0161 Friedl 3\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series\nThe 2004 International Rules Series was the 11th annual International Rules Series and the seventh time a test series of International rules football has been played between Ireland and Australia since the series resumed in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series\nThe series was won by Ireland, who won both test matches by comfortable margins and recorded their sixth overall series victory. The series was the first to be played under the new trophy name of the Cormac McAnallen Cup, after the Tyrone team captain, whose death that year from a heart condition came after he had represented Ireland in the previous three series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nGarry Lyon returned for what would be his fourth and final series as coach of the Australian side, whilst Pete McGrath replaced John O'Keefe as manager of Ireland. The Australian selection panel was forced into many last minute team changes, with 17 of the original 24 selected players drawn largely from the All-Australian team forced to withdraw due to injury or fatigue. Regardless, it remained a very strong line-up, with 18 of the 26-man squad finishing in the top six of their club's best-and-fairest count that year. Australia warmed up for the series with an impressive 14-point win over a Dublin clubs side, winning 55-41.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nThe first test match at Croke Park was dominated by Ireland, with a hat-trick of overs from Dessie Dolan and some brilliant combination play between Stephen McDonnell and Benny Coulter resulting in a goal to the latter helping Ireland take a 28-5 lead at quarter time, the Australians lacking the familiar physical touch they had come to be renowned for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nTrailing 36-10 mid-way through the second quarter, the Australian cause was left in dire straits when Mattie Forde cut through the middle like knife through butter before skilfully slipping the ball along the ground past the diving Mal Michael in the Australia goal. Ireland led 43-13 at half time. A more competitive Australian side emerged from the tunnel after half time, and two early overs from Nathan Brown and Nick Riewoldt narrowed the margin slightly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0003-0002", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nIreland responded with overs of their own from Padraig Joyce and Dolan again, yet the decisive moment came with a goal to Joyce which left the visitors trailing 57-31, only moments after a Nathan Brown Australian goal appeared to get the visitors back in the contest. Although the likes of James Hird and Jason Johnson tried hard for Australia in the midfield and managed some consolation overs, it was the Irish players who ran out the game better, overs going to Sean Cavanagh and Tadgh Kennelly to conclude at 77-41 in Ireland's favour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nThe second test was a far more competitive affair, a brilliant lightning quick first quarter being punctuated with a pre-game brawl and a canine intrusion on the pitch, much to the comic relief of the spectators. Journalists noted how the Australian physicality returned with some more vigorous tackling for much of the game and it appeared to pay dividends. Despite captain Hird and Ireland's Joe Bergin being sent off as part of the pre-match/early-match fighting, the Australians skipped away to 9-0 lead mid-way through the quarter thanks to some sharp shooting from forward targets Brown and Riewoldt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nIreland though absorbed the Australian pressure and eventually got their running game going, and a frenetic opening quarter finished with some classy scores to Cavanagh and Kennelly. Locked at 12-12 with three quarters to play, the Australians upped the ante in the second quarter, Brown not missing an opportunity up forward and Luke Ball being very unlucky not to score a major six-pointer to stretch the Aussie lead. At half time it was the Australians leading 26-23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nThe third quarter proved to be the Achilles heel for Australia, early third quarter overs to Joyce and Coulter giving the homesters the lead for the first time in the match. Austinn Jones and Dolan traded overs, yet a crucial goal mid-way through the quarter by arguably Ireland's best player - Padraig Joyce - gave Ireland an insurmountable 44-35 lead with one quarter to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0004-0003", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nBrown continued playing out of his skin in the fourth quarter, notching his seventh over at the halfway mark and being cruelly denied a goal by a decisive Irish block in the dying moments, yet he was the only bright spot in a disappointing tour for Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0004-0004", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Series overview\nFor Ireland, the likes of Alan Brogan and Eoin Brosnan scored overs to push out the lead into double figures and the final two minutes were played out with little resistance from the visitors, leaving captain Joyce to lift the Cormac McAnallen Cup with a 55-41 test match win, an aggregate score of 132-82. Stephen Cluxton's solid performance in goal earned him the medal for Irish player of the series, whilst the majestic Nathan Brown of Australia deservedly won the Jim Stynes Medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Squads\nSource: 2011 International Rules Series AFL Record, p 43 & Footy Stats", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Squads\nIrelandPadraig Joyce (C), Joe Bergin, Alan Brogan, Graham Canty, Sean Cavanagh, Stephen Cluxton (GK), Brendan Coulter, Brian Cullen, Dessie Dolan, Mattie Forde, Paul Galvin, David Heaney, Tom Kelly, Tadgh Kennelly, Sean Martin Lockhart, Ciaran McDonald, Steven McDonnell, Martin McGrath, Brian McGuigan, Declan Browne Ciaran McManus, James Nallen, Sean Og O'hAilpin, Setanta O'hAilpin, Eoin Brosnan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Squads\nAustraliaJames Hird (C), Luke Ball, Craig Bolton, Jude Bolton, Joel Bowden, Nathan Brown, Cameron Bruce, Joel Corey, Jared Crouch, Nick Dal Santo, Alan Didak, Andrew Embley, Brad Green, Robert Hadrill, Max Hudghton, Austinn Jones, Jason Johnson, Brett Kirk, Adam McPhee, Mark McVeigh, Mal Michael (GK), Brady Rawlings, Nick Riewoldt, Dean Solomon, Michael Braun", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Match results, First test (17 October)\nOvers: Dolan 4, Bergin 2, S. Cavanagh 2, Coulter 2, Kennelly 2, McDonnell 2, Forde, Joyce, T. Kelly, A. Brogan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Match results, Second test (24 October)\nOvers: Kennelly 3, Joyce 2, Cavanagh 2, Brogan 2, Galvin, Coulter, Dolan, Forde", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177820-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 International Rules Series, Match results, Second test (24 October)\nOvers: Brown 7, Riewoldt 2, Jones 2, Ball, J. Bolton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177821-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Internationaux de Strasbourg\nThe 2004 Internationaux de Strasbourg was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 18st edition of the Internationaux de Strasbourg, and was part of the Tier III category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place at the Centre Sportif de Hautepierre in Strasbourg, France from 17 May until 22 May 2004. Unseeded Claudine Schaul won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177823-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Internationaux de Strasbourg \u2013 Singles\nSilvia Farina Elia was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Lindsay Davenport. Claudine Schaul won her first WTA singles title, defeating Davenport in the final 2\u20136, 6\u20130, 6\u20133. This also proved to be Schaul's only singles title on the WTA tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177824-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo\nThe 2004 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Palermo, Italy that was part of the Tier V category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 17th edition of the Internazionali Femminili di Palermo and took place from 19 July until 25 July 2004. Second-seeded Anabel Medina Garrigues won the singles title and earned $16,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177824-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo, Finals, Doubles\nAnabel Medina Garrigues / Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario defeated \u013dubom\u00edra Kurhajcov\u00e1 / Henrieta Nagyov\u00e1, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177825-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Doubles\nAdriana Serra Zanetti and Emily Stellato were the defending champions, but lost in the first round to eventual champions Anabel Medina Garrigues and Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177826-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Singles\nThe defending champion, Dinara Safina, did not participate in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177826-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Internazionali Femminili di Palermo \u2013 Singles\nAnabel Medina Garrigues won her second WTA title here in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177827-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Interprovincial Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Interprovincial Hurling Championship was the 77th series of the inter-provincial hurling championship, also known as the Railway Cup. Three matches were played between 23 October 2004 and 5 December 2004 to decide the title. It was contested by Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177827-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Interprovincial Hurling Championship\nLeinster entered the championship as the defending champions, however, they were defeated by Munster at the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177827-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Interprovincial Hurling Championship\nOn 5 December 2004, Connacht won the Railway Cup after a 1-15 to 0-09 defeat of Munster in the final at Pearse Stadium in Galway. It was their 11th Railway Cup title overall and their first title since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177827-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Interprovincial Hurling Championship\nConnacht's Niall Healy and Munster's Eoin Kelly were the Interprovincial Championship joint top scorers with 0-12 each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177828-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Invercargill mayoral election\nThe 2004 Invercargill mayoral election commenced on Saturday, 9 October 2004 and was conducted under the First Past the Post system using the postal voting system. It was held as part of the 2004 New Zealand local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177828-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Invercargill mayoral election\nThe incumbent mayor Tim Shadbolt was comfortably returned to his position with 84% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses were an election held on January 19 as part of the United States presidential primary. They were the first major test of some of the leading contenders for the Democratic Party's nomination as its candidate for the 2004 United States presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Campaign\nThe first contenders for the nomination arrived in Iowa almost two years before the caucuses were held. The first to arrive were Dick Gephardt and Howard Dean, who began to make occasional speeches there and started to build an organization. In 2003, John Kerry, John Edwards, Carol Moseley Braun, and Dennis Kucinich all began to campaign heavily in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Campaign\nGephardt went into the campaign with high expectations. He was from a neighboring state, Missouri, had strong union backing, and he had won the state in 1988. During 2003, however, Howard Dean began to grow in popularity across the country on a strong anti-war message that appealed to the party base. Gephardt continued to do well, but Kerry and Edwards both sank to single-digit levels of support. Kucinich and Moseley Braun were never considered strong contenders and polled poorly throughout the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Campaign\nThree of the Democratic candidates sat out the caucuses. Joe Lieberman and Al Sharpton did not believe they could get sufficient support in the state and concentrated their efforts on New Hampshire. Wesley Clark got into the race too late to be competitive in Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Campaign\nOn January 10, Howard Dean got a major boost when Iowa's senior Senator Tom Harkin endorsed him. On January 15, Carol Moseley Braun withdrew from the race and also threw her support behind Dean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Campaign\nDuring the last weeks of the campaign, however, the polls began to indicate a significant change in support. Dean and Gephardt had been hammering each other with negative advertisements, and both began losing support to revived Edwards and Kerry campaigns. Edwards received a major boost when he was endorsed by Iowa's largest newspaper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Campaign\nShortly before the caucus, Edwards and Kucinich reached an agreement in which they would ask their supporters to back the other camp in any precinct where they lacked the necessary numbers to qualify for delegates. The deal was widely seen as a blow to the Gephardt campaign, which had expected to pick up the compatibly pro-union Kucinich supporters in such circumstances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Results\nThe results were very similar to that indicated by last-minute polling but were a surprise compared with weeks earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Results\nIt was reported that 124,331 Iowans participated in the caucuses. The initial county caucuses assigned delegates for further caucuses with delegates not being bound to vote for the candidate. Actual delegates to the Democratic National Convention would be chosen later: 29 at the district caucuses on April 24, 2004 and 16 at the state convention on June 12, 2004. Besides these 45 delegates assigned through the caucus system, 10 other delegates are assigned by the state party and one is elected at large at the state convention. The successful candidate at the 2004 Democratic National Convention required approximately 2,160 delegates to win the nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Results\nThe results showed a similar pattern across the state. Dean failed to win the support of the college areas as he had hoped, and Gephardt was not successful in winning the union areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Consequences\nThe Iowa caucuses revived the once moribund campaign of Kerry, who proceeded to the New Hampshire primary as one of the front-runners, and ultimately captured the Democratic nomination. Edwards, who had been written off even more than Kerry, used the Iowa results and the later South Carolina primary to give him another boost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Consequences\nThe results were a blow to Dean, who had for weeks been expected to win the caucuses. He planned afterward to move quickly to New Hampshire where he expected to do well and regain momentum. At the time, he had far more money than any other candidate and did not spend much of it in Iowa. Dean's aggressive post-caucus speech to his supporters, culminating with a hoarse scream that came to be known as the Dean Scream, was widely shown and mocked on television, although the effect on his campaign was unclear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Consequences\nThe results were disastrous for Dick Gephardt. He had frequently stated that a win in Iowa was essential for his candidacy. He had been seen as the front-runner for well over a year but ended up fourth, effectively ending his campaign. He cancelled planned campaign stops in New Hampshire and dropped out of the race on January 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177829-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Democratic presidential caucuses, Consequences\nDennis Kucinich was never expected to win much support in Iowa. His fifth-place finish did not affect his plans to continue campaigning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nThe 2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team represented the University of Iowa in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games in Kinnick Stadium and were coached by Kirk Ferentz. Finishing the 2003 season with a 10\u20133 record and an Outback Bowl victory, the Hawkeyes began the season 2\u20130 with wins over Kent State and Iowa State. But after rocky performances at Arizona State and Michigan, the Hawkeyes sat at 2\u20132 going into their game with Michigan State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nThe Hawkeyes handily defeated the Spartans 38\u201316, and turned their attention to Ohio State, a team whom the Hawkeyes had not beaten at home since 1983. Behind a strong defensive performance that allowed only 177 yards, the Hawkeyes easily defeated the Buckeyes by 26 points, the largest margin of victory over Ohio State in Iowa history at the time. However, tragedy struck soon thereafter, when head coach Kirk Ferentz's father died. In the emotional game that ensued, the Hawkeyes narrowly defeated Penn State 6\u20134 on two Kyle Schlicher field goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nThe Hawkeyes then raised their record to 8\u20132 with victories over Illinois, Purdue, and Minnesota. With a share of the Big Ten championship on the line, the Hawkeyes met Wisconsin in the final regular season game of the year. Iowa won the game, completing its second consecutive unbeaten season at home, and thousands of Hawkeye fans swarmed the field in celebration. Several weeks following the victory, Iowa accepted a bid to play the LSU Tigers in the 2005 Capital One Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team\nIn a game that was originally thought to be a defensive matchup, the Hawkeyes took a 24\u201312 lead early in the fourth quarter. But behind freshman quarterback JaMarcus Russell, the Tigers stormed back, and took a one-point lead with 46 seconds remaining. However, LSU's comeback was all for naught, as Iowa's Drew Tate completed a 56-yard touchdown pass to Warren Holloway as time expired, giving Iowa the 30\u201325 win and a 10\u20132 final record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Previous season\nIn 2003, Iowa began the season 4\u20130 and would eventually complete the regular season with a 9\u20133 record that included wins over Iowa State, Michigan (Iowa's second straight victory against Michigan), and Minnesota. However, the Hawkeyes lost to Michigan State, Ohio State, and Purdue. Finishing fourth in the Big Ten standings, the Hawkeyes accepted a bid to play the Florida Gators in the Outback Bowl. Despite falling behind early on a 70-yard touchdown pass from Chris Leak to Kelvin Knight, the Hawkeyes reeled off 27 straight points en route to a 37\u201317 victory. It was a milestone victory, as it gave Iowa its second consecutive 10-win season along with the first Hawkeye victory in a January bowl game since the Rose Bowl in 1959.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Previous season\nFollowing the season, five Iowa players were selected in the 2004 NFL Draft. Robert Gallery, the 2003 Outland Trophy winner, became the second-highest pick in school history when he was selected 2nd by the Oakland Raiders. Following Gallery in Iowa's draft order were Bob Sanders, taken 44th by Indianapolis, Nate Kaeding, taken 65th by San Diego, Jared Clauss, taken in the seventh round by Tennessee, and Erik Jensen, who was taken in the seventh round by St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Before the season\nPrior to the season, the Hawkeyes looked to replace seven offensive starters and four defensive starters. Key losses from 2003 included Maurice Brown, Robert Gallery, Nate Chandler, Fred Russell, and Ramon Ochoa on offense. Defensively, the Hawkeyes looked to replace Howard Hodges, Jared Clauss, Grant Steen, and Bob Sanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Before the season\nReplacement starters on offense were Drew Tate, Champ Davis, Jermelle Lewis, Calvin Davis, Tony Jackson, Lee Gray, Mike Elgin, and Chris Felder. On defense, Derreck Robinson, Tyler Luebke, George Lewis, and Marcus Paschal assumed their roles on the starting lineup. On special teams, David Bradley returned for his senior season as punter, while Kyle Schlicher replaced Nate Kaeding as the starting kicker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Before the season, Recruiting class\nIowa signed 21 players on National Signing Day, which was February 4, 2004. The Hawkeyes added other late commits to the class with the late additions of defensive lineman Ettore Ewen .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Before the season, Recruiting class\nAnother recruit, Kyle Williams, later de-committed from the Hawkeyes and committed to the Purdue Boilermakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Schedule, Schedule note\nDue to the Big Ten's rotating schedule, the Hawkeyes did not play either Northwestern or Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Ohio State\nKirk Ferentz was able to get his first win over Ohio State in this dominant victory. Iowa's defense was relentless and held the Buckeyes to just 27 yards rushing on 29 attempts. Additionally, Ohio State only ran six plays in Hawkeye territory through the first three quarters of the game. Sophomore quarterback Drew Tate had four touchdowns (1 rushing).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nIowa's first win without a touchdown since beating Michigan in 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nIn one of the more unlikely victories of the season, Iowa traveled to the Metrodome to challenge the Golden Gophers powerful rushing duo of Marion Barber III and Laurence Maroney. The Hawkeye defense came into the game rated #1 in the country in rushing defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nDespite that, the Gopher tandem shredded the Hawkeye defense with the Gophers outrushing Iowa by an outlandish margin of 338 to 6 in yards gained. The Hawkeyes prevailed however behind the deft passing and scrambling of sophomore quarterback Drew Tate, a pass defense that held the Gophers to 64 yards through the air and forced three turnovers, and Iowa's sophomore place-kicker Kyle Schlicher, who was a perfect 5\u20135 in field goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nThe Hawkeyes led virtually the entire game, but needed a huge defensive stop in the closing minutes, with Jr. linebacker Chad Greenway stopping Marion Barber III for a key loss on 2nd down in Iowa territory and eventually forcing Minnesota to attempt a 51-yard field goal, trailing by two. Although Gopher placekicker Rhyss Lloyd had won three games in his career with last-minute field goals, this time his attempt shanked wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nQB Drew Tate then guided the Hawks to one closing first down with the help of an offside penalty on Minnesota, and the Hawks survived, winning their sixth consecutive game, all against Big 10 teams. By the time the Hawkeyes kicked off in their next (and final) regular-season game, they learned they would be playing for a portion of the Big Ten title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nIowa clinched a share of Big Ten title with this victory over Wisconsin. The Hawkeyes' defense was smothering, holding a top-ten Badger team to just seven points. Fans rushed the field as it capped off a historic run and an undefeated home season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177830-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Hawkeyes football team, Game summaries, Capital One Bowl\nLSU would not go away in this back-and-forth bowl game. The Tigers took the lead with under a minute to play. Drew Tate was able to find Warren Holloway for a 56-yard pass as time expired to give the Hawkeyes a miracle victory which would become to be known as \"The Catch\" among Iowa fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177831-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Senate election\nThe 2004 Iowa State Senate elections took place as part of the biennial 2004 United States elections. Iowa voters elected state senators in half of the state senate's districts--the 25 even-numbered state senate districts. State senators serve four-year terms in the Iowa State Senate, with half of the seats up for election each cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177831-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Senate election\nThe primary election on June 8, 2004 determined which candidates appeared on the November 2, 2004 general election ballot. Primary election results can be obtained here. General election results can be obtained here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177831-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Senate election\nOn election day in November 2004, Republicans had control of the Iowa state Senate with 29 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177831-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Senate election\nTo take control of the chamber from Republicans, the Democrats needed to net 5 Senate seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177831-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa Senate election\nThe result of the 2004 election was an evenly-divided Iowa state Senate with Democrats netting 4 flips and the resulting balance being 25 seats held both by Democrats and Republicans. As a result, Jeff Lamberti and Jack Kibbie were deemed co-Senate Presidents for the Republican & Democratic halves, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177832-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iowa State Cyclones football team\nThe 2004 Iowa State Cyclones football team represented Iowa State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Jack Trice Stadium in Ames, Iowa. They participated as members of the Big 12 Conference in the North Division. They were coached by head coach Dan McCarney and defeated Miami (OH) in the Independence Bowl 17\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177833-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ipswich Borough Council election\nElections for Ipswich Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour Party lost overall control of the council to no overall control. A Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition was formed after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election\nThe Iranian parliamentary elections of February 20 and May 7, 2004 were a victory for Islamic conservatives over the reformist parties. Assisting the conservative victory was the disqualification of about 2500 reformist candidates earlier in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Background\nThe first round of the 2004 elections to the Iranian Parliament were held on February 20, 2004. Most of the 290 seats were decided at that time but a runoff was held 2\u00bd months later on May 7, 2004, for the remaining thirty-nine seats where no candidate gained sufficient votes in the first round. In the Tehran area, the runoff elections were postponed to be held with the Iranian presidential election of June 17, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Background\nThe elections took place amidst a serious political crisis following the January 2004 decision to ban about 2500 candidates \u2014 nearly half of the total \u2014 including 80 sitting Parliament deputies. This decision, by the conservative Council of Guardians vetting body, \"shattered any pretense of Iranian democracy\", according to some observers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Background\nThe victims of the ban were reformists, particularly members of the Islamic Iran Participation Front (IIPF), and included several leaders. Prominent banned candidates included Ebrahim Asgharzadeh, Mohsen Mirdamadi, Mohammad-Reza Khatami and Jamileh Kadivar. In many parts of Iran, there weren't even enough independent candidates approved, so the reformists couldn't form an alliance with them. Out of a possible 285 seats (5 seats are reserved for religious minorities: Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians), the participating reformist parties could only introduce 191 candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Background\nMany pro-reform social and political figures, including Shirin Ebadi, asked people not to vote (although some reformist party leaders, such as those in the IIPF, specifically mentioned they would not be boycotting the elections). Some moderate reformists, however, including President Mohammad Khatami, urged citizens to vote in order to deny the conservative candidates an easy majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Background\nConservative political groups included the Militant Clergy Association and the Islamic Coalition Society. Liberal\u2013reformist groups included the Militant Clerics Society, Islamic Iran Participation Front, Construction Executives, and Worker's House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Background\nThe day before the election, the reformist newspapers Yas-e-no and Shargh were banned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Results\nAccording to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) analysis, conservatives won 190 seats, reformists won 50 and independents won 43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177834-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian legislative election, Results, Analysis\nPolitical historian Ervand Abrahamian credits the victory of Abadgaran and other conservatives in the 2004 elections (as well as the 2003 and 2005 elections) to the conservatives' retention of their core base of 25% of the voting population; their recruiting of war veteran candidates; their wooing of independents using the issue of national security; and most of all \"because large numbers of women, college students, and other members of the salaried middle class\" who make up the reformists' base of support \"stayed home\". Pro -reform voters were discouraged by division in the reform movement and by the disqualifying of reform candidates from running for office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177835-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian seizure of Royal Navy personnel\nThe 2004 Iranian seizure of Royal Navy personnel took place in the Shatt al-Arab (Arvand Rud in Persian) waterway on 21 June. Six Royal Marines and two Royal Navy sailors were captured. The British servicemen were seized while training Iraqi river patrol personnel after Iran said they had strayed to the Iranian side of the waterway. They were threatened with legal action initially but released three days later following diplomatic discussions between Jack Straw, then British Foreign Secretary, and Kamal Kharazi, then Iranian Minister of Foreign Affairs. The weapons and boats of the British personnel were confiscated and have not been returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177835-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iranian seizure of Royal Navy personnel\nThey were released unharmed three days later, on 24 June, after the British and Iranian governments agreed there had been a misunderstanding. Their equipment was not returned and a rigid inflatable boat (RIB) was put on display in a museum in Tehran. During their detention, according to former detainee Marine Scott Fallon, they endured a mock execution in which they were marched into the desert and made to stand blindfolded in front of a ditch while their captors cocked their weapons. They also appeared blindfolded on Iranian TV, where they were forced to apologise for their \"mistake\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177835-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Iranian seizure of Royal Navy personnel\nThe Royal Navy boats were operating close to the northern coast of the Persian Gulf in the mouth of the Shatt al-Arab waterway which divides southern Iran and Iraq. The weather was bad causing negligible visibility which may have contributed to a potential crossing of the Iranian border by the Royal Navy. After the crew were returned and events analysed the British government affirmed its belief that the personnel were actually still in Iraqi waters, however they consigned the incident to a misunderstanding and requested the return of the equipment. In 2015, an FOIA request released a redacted report.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush\nThe Good Friday Ambush 2004 was an attack by Iraqi insurgents on April 9, 2004 during the Iraq War on a convoy of U.S. supply trucks near Baghdad International Airport. It happened in the midst of the Iraq spring fighting of 2004, which saw intensified clashes throughout the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, History\nOn April 5, 2004, Muslim cleric Muqtada al-Sadr called for a jihad against coalition forces and Thursday night, April 8, his Mahdi Militia dropped eight bridges and over-spans around Camp Scania, thus severing the northbound traffic into the Sunni Triangle. He was hoping to starve the 1st Cavalry Division of fuel and ammunition. Consequently, the 724th Transportation Company was tasked to haul fuel to the north gate of Baghdad Airport from Camp Anaconda, 60 miles away the next morning - Good Friday and the first anniversary of the U.S. capture of Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, History\nUnknown to the truck drivers, elements of the 1st Cavalry Division had pushed militants into the suburbs of Abu Graib, through which the convoy had to travel. Up until this time, the convoy ambushes consisted of four or five insurgents firing on passing convoys with rocket-propelled grenades and small arms. The reaction to enemy contact at time was to return fire and clear the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, History\nThat morning, five vehicles of the 724th armed with crew-served weapons escorted a convoy of 17 fuel trucks and two bobtail tractors operated by U.S. defense contractor KBR. Enroute, the convoy ran through a well planned, large scale ambush that included improvised explosive devices, rocket-propelled grenades and small arms, believed to be from one or more of al-Qaeda in Iraq, the Badr Organization, and the Mahdi Army. Convoy commander Lieutenant Matthew Brown was wounded in the head and blacked out, leaving his driver, Private First Class Jeremy Church, to lead the convoy to safety.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, History\nThe attack damaged or destroyed numerous convoy vehicles and those that made the turn on the overpass drove through the mob of insurgents that had been driven into the neighborhood the day before. Church reached the safety of a dairy factory where a company of tanks waited. He then led a rescue of the stranded trucks and remained in the ambush area when the Humvee he was riding in was full of wounded. Tanks drove the length of the area while scout vehicles recovered Church and Specialist Patrick Pelz. Five civilian contractors and one U.S. Army soldier were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, History\nPFC Gregory R. Goodrich was killed by small arms fire during an intense firefight for which he received the Bronze Star. Twelve soldiers and four KBR drivers were wounded. Three civilian contractors, Thomas Hamill, Timothy Bell and William Bradley, and U.S. Army soldiers Sergeant Elmer Krause and Private First Class Keith Matthew Maupin, disappeared. Hamill escaped from his captors and was recovered by U.S. forces 27 days later. Bradley's body was recovered in January 2005. Krause's body was recovered on April 23 and Maupin was held captive for an undetermined time before being murdered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nOn Good Friday, the Iraqi insurgents ambushed any and every convoy that tried to drive in or out of the Baghdad Airport. The ambush of the 724th Transportation Company was the worst convoy ambush of the entire war. No other transportation company suffered as many casualties in one ambush. That Easter weekend was a turning point in the war in Iraq for convoy ambushes. For the next year the insurgents would spar with the truck drivers for control of the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nAs vehicle armor improved along with convoy tactics, the insurgents suffered heavy casualties during the Palm Sunday Ambush on March 20, 2005, which inspired them to resort more to improvised explosive devices as weapon of choice. Maupin's fate remained unknown until 2008, when his remains were found. Timothy Bell remains missing and is presumed dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nPrivate First Class Jeremy Church was the first truck driver and Army Reserve soldier to receive the Silver Star Medal since the Vietnam War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nAfter the ambush, several hundred KBR drivers quit and flew home, forcing the 13th Corps Support Command to find licensed military drivers to drive the tankers. Many of those KBR drivers who remained would continue driving for several more years. KBR then renegotiated its contract with the military standardizing the minimum requirement for convoy escort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nFamily members of two of the wounded and one of the killed civilians later sued KBR, charging that the company had knowingly placed its employees in a battle zone in spite of promises not to do so. Six other families of KBR drivers killed in Iraq later joined the suit. In April 2009, U.S. District Judge Gray Miller ruled that the plaintiffs could continue their suit against KBR and allowed KBR to include Iraqi insurgent forces in the case. The court ruled that the U.S. Army was not liable. KBR appealed the ruling. KBR has asked retired U.S. Army Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez to testify on the company's behalf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nIn early 2010, KBR notified the U.S. Army that it would bill the U.S. government for any damages awards or legal expenses it incurred in relation to contract work it did in Iraq. In December 2011, KBR settled out-of-court with one of the injured drivers, Reginald Cecil Lane, for an undisclosed amount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Aftermath\nOne of the contractors, Steven Fisher, a native of Brooklyn, New York who lived in Virginia Beach, Virginia, was killed as a result of the attack. He was carried by other contractors he worked with and bled to death in the entrance of the Baghdad International Airport from three gunshot wounds. He was 43 years old and a father of three children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177836-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq KBR convoy ambush, Legacy\nMaupin was the first U.S. soldier to be missing in action during the Iraq War. After his death was confirmed in 2008, Interstate 275 in his native Clermont County, Ohio was officially renamed Staff Sergeant Matt Maupin Memorial Freeway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks\nOn August 1, 2004, a series of car bomb attacks took place during the Sunday evening Mass in churches of two Iraqi cities, Baghdad and Mosul. The six attacks killed at least 12 people and wounded at least 71. No one claimed responsibility for the attacks, but Iraq's national security adviser, Mowaffaq al-Rubaie, blamed the attacks on Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The bombings marked the first major attack against the Christian community since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Attacks\nThe attacks happened within a few minutes of each another. The rigged cars were parked outside churches and detonated when parishioners were leaving services. Only one of the bombings is believed to have been a suicide attack. The witnesses reported that \"body parts were scattered across the area\". Of the six bombs, one did not explode and the police was able to remove it safely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Attacks\nIn Mosul, hospitals reported two persons killed and 15 wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Attacks\nOne of the bombed churches the Our Lady of Salvation Syriac Catholic cathedral was the same church that was attacked with hostages taken and killed on October 31, 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Responsibility\nAl-Qaeda in Iraq claimed responsibility for the attacks on an Islamic website. Iraq's national security adviser, Mowaffaq al-Rubaie, blamed the attacks on Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Reaction\nA Vatican spokesman, Rev. Ciro Benedettini, called the attacks \"terrible and worrisome\". The Pope \"firmly deplored the unjust aggressions against those whose only aim is to collaborate for peace and reconciliation in the country\". The Russian Orthodox Church issued a statement saying \"the attacks were an attempt to spark a religious conflict.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Reaction\nMuslims around the country condemned the attacks. In a statement to Al-Jazeera television, a spokesman for Muqtada al-Sadr said: \"This is a cowardly act and targets all Iraqis\". Ali al-Sistani issued a statement in which he wrote: \"We stress the need to respect the rights of Christians in Iraq and those of other religious faiths and their right to live in their home, Iraq, peacefully.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177837-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Iraq churches attacks, Reaction\nAlthough only comprising about three percent of the population, Iraqi Christians make up 20% of Iraqis leaving the country as refugees. After 2004 churches bombing, which was the worst act of violence against Christian minority by that time, a member of Christian community, Layla Isitfan, in her interview with Time correspondents said: \"If I can't go to church because I'm scared, if I can't dress how I want, if I can't drink because it's against Islam, what kind of freedom is that?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177838-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa\nThe 2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa was a series of matches played in June 2004 in South Africa by Ireland national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177838-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa\nIreland travelled to South Africa in June 2004, having won their first Triple Crown since 1985, and beaten the champions of the 2003 Rugby World Cup, England in their first home game since the final. As a result, the Irish manager, Eddie O'Sullivan, was confident that Ireland would achieve their first win over South Africa in 39 years, their only previous victory having come in Dublin in 1965.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177838-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa\nBy contrast, South Africa had just changed their coach to Jake White and he had radically changed the team for his first test since taking charge of the Springboks. The first of the two game test series was played at altitude in Bloemfontein and South Africa eventually won the match 31\u201317, despite the scores being level at 11-all at half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177838-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa\nThe second match was played in the Newlands Stadium in Cape Town, and was a closer affair. However, South Africa maintained their unbeaten record against Ireland on home soil by winning 26\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177838-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa, Matches\nSouth Africa: 15.Gaffie du Toit, 14.Breyton Paulse, 13.Marius Joubert, 12.Wayne Julies, 11.Henno Mentz, 10.Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9.Fourie du Preez, 8.Jacques Cronje, 7.Pedrie Wannenburg, 6.Schalk Burger , 5.Victor Matfield, 4.Bakkies Botha, 3.Eddie Andrews, 2.John Smit (capt. ), 1.Os du Randt, \u2013 replacements: 17.CJ van der Linde, 18.Quinton Davids, 19.Gerrie Britz \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Hanyani Shimange, 19.Gerrie Britz, 20.Bolla Conradie, 21.Jaque Fourie, 22.Brent RussellIreland: 15.Girvan Dempsey, 14.Shane Horgan, 13.Brian O'Driscoll (capt. ), 12.Gordon D'Arcy, 11.Geordan Murphy, 10.Ronan O'Gara, 9.Peter Stringer, 8.Anthony Foley, 7.David Wallace, 6.Simon Easterby, 5.Paul O'Connell, 4.Malcolm O'Kelly, 3.John Hayes, 2.Shane Byrne, 1.Reggie Corrigan, \u2013 replacements: 16.Frankie Sheahan, 17.Marcus Horan, 19.Alan Quinlan, 22.Kevin Maggs \u2013 No entry: 18.Donncha O'Callaghan, 20.Guy Easterby, 21.David Humphreys", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 983]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177838-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ireland rugby union tour of South Africa, Matches\nSouth Africa: 15.Percy Montgomery, 14.Breyton Paulse, 13.Marius Joubert, 12.Wayne Julies , 11.Jaque Fourie, 10.Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9.Fourie du Preez, 8.Jacques Cronje, 7.Pedrie Wannenburg, 6.Schalk Burger, 5.Victor Matfield, 4.Quinton Davids, 3.Eddie Andrews, 2.John Smit (capt. ), 1.Os du Randt, \u2013 replacements: 17.CJ van der Linde, 18.Geo Cronje, 19.Gerrie Britz, 22.Brent Russell \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Hanyani Shimange, 20.Bolla Conradie, 21.Gaffie du ToitIreland: 15.Girvan Dempsey, 14.Shane Horgan, 13.Brian O'Driscoll (capt. ), 12.Kevin Maggs, 11.Tyrone Howe, 10.Ronan O'Gara, 9.Peter Stringer, 8.Anthony Foley, 7.David Wallace, 6.Simon Easterby, 5.Paul O'Connell, 4.Malcolm O'Kelly, 3.John Hayes, 2.Shane Byrne, 1.Reggie Corrigan , \u2013 replacements: 16.Frankie Sheahan, 17.Marcus Horan, 18.Alan Quinlan, 19.Donncha O'Callaghan, 20.Guy Easterby, 21.David Humphreys, 22.Gavin Duffy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 946]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby\nThe 2004 Irish Greyhound Derby took place during August and September with the final being held at Shelbourne Park in Dublin on 18 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby\nThe winner Like A Shot won \u20ac150,000 and was trained by Owen McKenna, owned by Michael Kelly and bred by Patrick 'Paddy' Sinnott. The race was sponsored by the Paddy Power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\n162 greyhounds lined up for the 2004 Paddy Power Irish Derby including the 2004 English Greyhound Derby champion Droopys Scholes. The increase in entries resulted in the first round being spread over three nights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nDroopys Shearer provided the best time in the opening round, the Ted Soppitt Select Stakes winner recorded 29.54. Persian Ruler won in 29.74 and Droopys Scholes in 29.75. In the second round Persian Ruler won again in 29.55 as did Droopys Shearer in 29.64 but there was a major shock with the elimination of Droopys Scholes, he found trouble and could not recover to qualify for the next round. World Class also returned to form with a 29.82 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nIn the third round Deerfield Site went fastest in 29.63 and Droopys Maldini crossed the line in 29.74. Droopys Maldini then won again in the quarter finals going even better in a fast 29.52. Deerfield Site won well again as did Mineola Farloe with the remaining heat being won by Disguised. Like A Shot and World Class also qualified for the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nGeldrops Touch won the first semi-final from Droopys Marco with World Class making the final holding off Deerfield Site. The second semi-final was a troubled heat that led to the unbeaten Disguised winning it from Like A Shot and Droopys Maldini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177839-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Greyhound Derby, Competition Report\nDroopys Marco trapped well in the final to take an early lead from the fast starting Disguised, Marcos litter brother Droopys Maldini became the new leader by halfway, pursued by outsider Like A Shot despite the latter having to check behind Disguised. Like A Shot finished strongly to negotiate a path passed Droopys Maldini and Disguised to claim the title. The McKenna family continued their association with the Irish Derby history, the winning trainer was Owen McKenna son of Ger McKenna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177840-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Masters\nThe 2004 Citywest Irish Masters was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 21 and 28 March 2004 at the Citywest Hotel in Dublin, Republic of Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177840-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Masters\nRonnie O'Sullivan was the defending champion, however he lost 2\u20136 to eventual champion Peter Ebdon in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177840-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Masters\nPeter Ebdon won the title by defeating Mark King 10\u20137 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177840-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish Masters, Qualifying\nQualifying for the tournament took place between 5\u201310 January 2004 at Pontin's in Prestatyn, Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177841-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish local elections\nThe 2004 Irish local elections were held in all the counties, cities and towns of Ireland on 11 June 2004, on the same day as the European elections and referendum on the twenty-seventh amendment of the constitution. Polling was delayed until 19 June 2004 in County Roscommon, due to the sudden death of Councillor Gerry Donnelly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177841-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish local elections\nTurnout was the highest for 20 years at around 60%, helped by the extra publicity of the referendum. The result was a major setback for Fianna F\u00e1il, which saw its share of the vote drop by 7 percentage points from its 1999 result to only 32%, losing 20% of its council seats. The party lost its majority on Clare County Council for the first time in 70 years, and fell behind Fine Gael in Galway, Limerick and Waterford city councils. Labour's share of the vote remained static at 11% while Fine Gael dropped 1%. Both parties however won seats with the Labour Party becoming the largest party on Dublin City Council. Major gains were made by Sinn F\u00e9in which managed to double the number of seats it held, mainly at the expense of Fianna F\u00e1il.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177841-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish local elections\nThese were the first elections since the Local Government Act 2001 modernised council structures and abolished the dual mandate. Many new councillors were elected for the first time, most notably on Dublin City Council, where 33 of the 52 members were first-timers, which the City Manager described as \"unprecedented in the history of local government\". Many of the seats vacated by TDs and senators were won by family members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177841-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish local elections, Results\nVoters received different-coloured ballot papers for the European election, city/county council election, and referendum, all of which went into the same ballot box and were separated by colour once the boxes arrived at the count centre for the city/county. Not all voters received all ballots as the franchises differ. Voters in towns with town councils received an additional ballot for that election, cast in a separate ballot box and counted locally within the town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177841-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish local elections, Results, County and City Councils\nVote Share of different parties in the election for County and City Councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election\nThe 2004 Irish presidential election was scheduled for 22 October 2004. However, nominations closed at noon on 1 October and the incumbent president, Mary McAleese, who had nominated herself in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, was the only candidate nominated. Accordingly, she was re-elected for a second seven-year term of office without the need to hold an election. This was the third time a president was returned unopposed, following Se\u00e1n T. O'Kelly in 1952, and Patrick Hillery in 1983. McAleese was inaugurated for her second term on 11 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Nomination procedure\nUnder Article 12 of the Constitution of Ireland, a candidate for president could be nominated by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Nomination procedure\nThe Minister for the Environment, Heritage and Local Government made the order opening nominations on 13 September, with noon on 1 October as the deadline for nominations, and 22 October set as the date for a contest, if any.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Nomination by Mary McAleese\nMary McAleese nominated herself as a candidate on 24 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Nomination by Mary McAleese\nMcAleese had the support of the government parties Fianna F\u00e1il and the Progressive Democrats, who had nominated her in the 1997 election. She also had the support of opposition parties Fine Gael and Sinn F\u00e9in, while the Labour Party and the Green Party had considered contesting the election, but ultimately voted against doing so (see below).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Other potential candidates, Dana Rosemary Scallon\nDana Rosemary Scallon had contested the 1997 presidential election and had served as an MEP from 1999 until her defeat in 2004. Dana sought a nomination from local authorities, as she had done in 1997, but received only the nomination of Galway City Council. After failing to secure a nomination from local authorities, she wrote to every member of the Oireachtas seeking a nomination. She had the support for a time of Independent TD Jerry Cowley, but he later withdrew his support. Dana made an appeal to the President of the High Court on the day of the close of nominations, but was unsuccessful. A challenge by a lay litigant to extend the time for nomination to allow for Dana to be nominated failed in the High Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 83], "content_span": [84, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Other potential candidates, Labour Party\nIn early 2003, the Labour Party stated that it would run a candidate, irrespective of the attitudes of other parties, and even in the event of the president seeking a second term. But party leader Pat Rabbitte appeared less committed during a television interview in November 2003, pointing out that all the party's attentions were focused on the two Irish elections already set for 2004, the European Parliament election and the local elections to be held on 11 June 2004. However, former Minister for Arts, Culture and the Gaeltacht Michael D. Higgins expressed in interest in contesting the election for the Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Other potential candidates, Labour Party\nOn 15 September 2004, the party's parliamentary party recommended not running a candidate. The final decision was taken by the party's executive body, the National Executive, on 17 September 2004, which decided by 13 votes to 12 against running a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Other potential candidates, Green Party\nGreen Party TD Eamon Ryan let it be known that he was interested in seeking a nomination to run. However, practical difficulties included a lack of support from non-Green Party parliamentarians (fourteen of whom would be needed to nominate, as well as the six Green Party TDs), Mary McAleese's personal popularity, and funding issues. Having been endorsed by the party leadership, Ryan subsequently withdrew his name before a meeting of the Green Party National Council and the Green Party ultimately did not run a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177842-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Irish presidential election, Result\nThe only candidate nominated was Mary McAleese and she was declared elected at the close of nominations on 1 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177843-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Isle of Anglesey County Council election\nThe 2004 Isle of Anglesey County Council election took place on Thursday 10 June 2004 to elect members of the Isle of Anglesey County Council in Wales. This was the same day as other United Kingdom local elections. The next full council election was on 1 May 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177843-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Isle of Anglesey County Council election, Election result\nForty county councillors were elected from forty electoral wards. Fourteen seats had no election because there were no opposing candidates .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177843-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Isle of Anglesey County Council election, Election result\nPrior to the election the county council had been governed for 15 months by a coalition led by Plaid Cymru's Bob Parry. After the 2004 election Plaid Cymru became the official opposition with 8 councillors. There were 28 councillors not affiliated to any political party, comprising ten declared Independents and eighteen who gave no description.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177843-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Isle of Anglesey County Council election, Events prior to 2008 election\nThe Plaid Cymru councillor for the Llanfihangel Ysgeifiog ward, Hughie Noel Thomas, resigned from the party group in October 2006. He was jailed for nine months on 6 November 2006 (and disqualified from being a county councillor) for falsifying Post Office records. He had been sub-postmaster in the village of Gaerwen. Independent councillor Eric Jones was elected at a by-election in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah\nIn 2004 the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) launched Operation Rainbow (Hebrew: Mivtza Keshet Be-Anan, \u05de\u05d1\u05e6\u05e2 \u05e7\u05e9\u05ea \u05d1\u05e2\u05e0\u05df) in the southern Gaza Strip from 12\u201324 May 2004, involving an invasion and siege of Rafah. The operation was started after the deaths of eleven Israeli soldiers in two Palestinian attacks, in which M113 armored vehicles were attacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah\nHuman Rights Watch reported 59 Palestinians killed from 12\u201324 May, including 11 under age eighteen and 18 armed men. The IDF razed some 300 homes to expand the buffer zone along the Egypt\u2013Gaza border, expanding it far inside the Gaza Strip. Also a zoo and at least 700 dunams (70 ha) of agricultural land were destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah\nIsrael's declared aims of Operation Rainbow were finding and destroying smuggling tunnels, targeting terrorists, and securing the Philadelphi Route by expanding the buffer zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Background\nIn response to a repeated shelling of Israeli communities with Qassam rockets and mortar shells from Gaza, the IDF operated mainly in Rafah \u2013 to search and destroy smuggling tunnels used by militants to obtain weapons, ammunition, fugitives, cigarettes, car parts, electrical goods, foreign currency, gold, drugs, and cloth from Egypt. The IDF launched a series of armored raids on the Gaza Strip (mainly Rafah and refugee camps around Gaza). On 22 March 2004, an Israeli helicopter gunship killed Hamas leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin and on 17 April, Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi was killed by IDF helicopter gunship strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Background, Buffer zone\nSince 2001, the IDF has routinely demolished Palestinian houses in Rafah, to create a buffer zone. Persons entering or approaching the buffer zone, including humanitarian workers, foreign dignitaries and UN observers came under fire. Until 2000, the IDF used a 20-40 meter wide buffer zone along the Gaza/Egypt border with a 2.5 to 3 meters high concrete wall topped with barbed wire. In 2002, the IDF destroyed hundreds of houses in Rafah, needed for expansion of the buffer zone and the building of an eight meter high and 1.6 kilometers long metal wall along the border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Background, Buffer zone\nThe wall also extends two meters underground. The wall is built some eighty to ninety meters from the border, which doubled the width of the patrol corridor. After the metal wall was completed in early 2003, the demolitions continued and were even increased dramatically. According to Human Rights Watch, the wall was built far inside the demolished area to create a new starting point for justifying further demolitions. Between 1 April 2003 and 30 April 2004, 487 more houses were demolished in Rafah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Background, Buffer zone\nIn May 2004, the Israeli government approved a plan to further expand the buffer zone. The Israeli military recommended demolishing all homes within three hundred meters of its positions, or about four hundred meters from the border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Background, Buffer zone\nHuman rights group PCHR recorded 290 destroyed houses in Rafah in May 2004. According to UNWRA, the total number of house buildings destroyed by the IDF in May 2004 was some 298. 131 homes were destroyed between 1 and 10 May, already before the Government's decision; some 100 houses between 14 and 16 May (Human Rights Watch mentions several rows of houses on 12 May and quotes 88 to 116 between 14 and 16 May).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Background, Buffer zone\nAccording to HRW, the IDF's justifications for the destruction were doubtful and rather consistent with the goal of having a wide and empty border area to facilitate long-term control over the Gaza Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Aims of the operation\nInitially, the operation just started as a response on the death of five soldiers in the Philadelphi corridor on 12 May 2004; on 13 May, the Israeli government reportedly approved a plan to widen the Philadelphi Route by destroying \u201cdozens or perhaps hundreds\u201d of homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Aims of the operation\nOn 17 May, the IDF launched \"Operation Rainbow\" with the objectives: finding and destroying smuggling tunnels, targeting \"terrorists\", and securing the Philadelphi Route. On 18 May, rumours were spread about arms shipments in the Sinai from Iran, waiting to be smuggled through the tunnels into Gaza. Israeli media mentioned anti-aircraft missiles and long-range rockets waiting to get in, possibly via tunnels underneath the Suez canal. Justice Minister Yosef Lapid said on 20 May that the Rafah operation was necessary to protect Israeli civilian airliners from anti-aircraft missiles that smugglers were attempting to bring into Rafah. No captures of such weapons are known, and a high-ranking Egyptian official interviewed by Human Rights Watch denied the existence of the shipment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Aims of the operation\nMany saw the assault on Rafah as excessive, and mainly motivated by an IDF desire to appear strong in the event of disengagement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Preceding military actions\nOn May 11 and May 12, two M-113 armoured personnel carriers, one of Givati's Dolev combat engineering company and of the Combat Engineering Corps \"Tunnels' Team\", were destroyed by Palestinian militants. The two separate attacks, in Gaza City's Zeitoun neighbourhood and the Philadelphi Route near Rafah and the Egyptian border, claimed the lives of 11 IDF soldiers. Soon, Israeli troops entered the buffer zone to recover body parts of the dead soldiers. In the evening, the IDF attacked Rafah with tanks and helicopter gunships, firing shells and missiles as residents fled. Several rows of houses were demolished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Preceding military actions\nOn 14 May, a large IDF force entered the \"Brazil block\" of Rafah and in a heavy fighting, as reported by UNWRA, 12 Palestinians were killed and 52 injured. Israeli forces began demolishing houses in the Qishta neighborhood. and destroyed scores of houses. Around midnight the same day, the Israeli High Court of Justice issued an interim order temporarily barring the IDF from demolishing homes in the refugee camp, if the action was not part of \"a regular military operation\". Nevertheless, the IDF continued the destruction of homes until 15 May 5:00 am because of \"immediate military necessity, a risk to soldiers, or a hindrance to a military operation\", raising the number of destroyed houses to just over 100, according to Mezan, even to circa 120.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Preceding military actions\nOn 16 May, the High Court ruled that the IDF may destroy homes according to their needs; the IDF had pledged that it would refrain from unnecessarily demolishing houses. The ruling caused panic among the residents and hundreds of Palestinians fled from their homes. Israeli helicopters fired missiles on the office of the weekly newspaper al-Resala in Gaza City, destroying its offices. The next day, Israel started \"Operation Rainbow\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nIn the morning of 17 May 2004, the Israel army launched \"Operation Rainbow\". At 1 pm, the IDF closed the only road between Rafah and Khan Yunis and initiated a total siege. Armoured vehicles, main battle tanks and armoured bulldozers entered Rafah from the east through the Sofa Crossing, effectively cutting off Rafah from the rest of the Gaza Strip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nThe next day before dawn, the army surrounded Tel al-Sultan. Armoured vehicles, tanks and bulldozers supported by helicopter gunships entered the Tel al-Sultan quarter of Rafah simultaneously from several directions; the troops established a cordon around the area and separated the area from the rest of Rafah. A number of armoured vehicles entered through UNRWA schools in the southeastern part, causing extensive damage to the school grounds. Ambulances were prevented from evacuating the casualties out of fear that they would be hijacked by terrorists. Palestinians were prevented from accessing UNRWA's health clinic in the area. An ambulance was fired at.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nWhen a convoy of four ambulances accompanied by a Reuters vehicle were sent, they were also fired at. When they arrived at the victim, Israeli soldiers continued to fire. Israeli IDF Caterpillar D9 armoured bulldozers erected sand-barriers around Rafah to isolate it. Later, the D9s entered into the Rafah in order to open routes and demolish houses, allegedly used by militants. Extensive damage was caused to roads, water and sewage pipes and agricultural areas with greenhouses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nUnder pressure of sharp international criticism, the Israel government declared on 18 May that the plan to widen a buffer zone along the Egyptian border was cancelled, while the same day, the army massively invaded Rafah and continued its large-scale destruction. The next day, the United Nations Security Council adopted \"Resolution 1544\", condemning the killing of Palestinian civilians and the demolition of homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nOn 19 May, the IDF ordered all males in Tel al-Sultan aged 16 years and above to gather at an UNRWA school and carried out house-to-house searches. An IDF tank fired 4 tank shells and a helicopter fired a missile on a group of demonstrating residents in Tel al-Sultan, killing 9 Palestinians and injuring 40\u201350 others. The IDF asserted there were gunmen in the crowd, although it did not claim to have come under fire. The IDF claimed that the shelling was intended as a warning to deter protesters and was not meant to cause casualties. IDF snipers used abandoned houses as firing positions. Many houses were damaged or destroyed. Israeli snipers shot at suspected militants who claimed they were civilians looking for water. The gunfire claimed the life of a Palestinian teen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nOn 20 May the IDF entered the \"Brazil\", \"As-Salam\" and \"Junena\" areas of eastern Rafah and sealed off the areas. In some cases, water and electricity were cut off during the operation. Tens of homes were demolished in Brazil and As Salam without warning. Some Palestinians claimed that the IDF commenced the demolitions when they were still in their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nA testimony describes attacks on an ambulance: When the ambulance arrived at al-Brazil to pick up a woman and her three wounded children, Israeli tanks fired. With bulldozers and tanks, the ambulance was surrounded. A bulldozer started to place sand barriers in front of the ambulance, while another bulldozer was demolishing houses and putting the ruins behind the ambulance to lock it in. When the medical workers tried to leave the car, Israeli tanks fired. After 3 hours, the army started to remove the barriers and the ambulance returned, without the wounded civilians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nOn 21 May, the Rafah zoo adjacent to the \"Brazil\" section of the Rafah refugee camp was destroyed during the operation. Some 60 homes were demolished and 35 others partially destroyed. also greenhouses and equipment were destroyed. The IDF withdrew their main forces from the center of Tel al-Sultan and the curfew was lifted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nOn 22 and 23 May, a new incursion into the Brazil district took place. The IDF ordered all males in Abu Halaweh aged 16 years and above to gather and carried out house-to-house searches and demolitions. The IDF deliberately demolished two houses with the family who refused to leave inside. A soldier entered a house with a Palestinian as human shield. In Tel al-Sultan, the IDF destroyed with bulldozers and tanks two large agricultural areas full of greenhouses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nDuring the early hours of 24 May, Israeli forces withdrew completely from Tel al-Sultan, but remained present in the Brazil area until the end of the month. About 40 homes were destroyed from early in the morning until 6 pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, The operation, Operation Rainbow\nOn 1 June the operation officially ended. Surprisingly, the IDF choose to invade areas where armed resistance was limited, apparently to minimize confrontation with armed groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Destruction of the Rafah zoo\nOn 21 May the Israeli army completely destroyed the Rafah zoo, nearly 800 meters from the border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Destruction of the Rafah zoo\nAfter bulldozing paths on their way to the zoo, cutting across houses, a factory and fields, the IDF with bulldozers and tanks crushed all cages along with the animals. Many animals were killed, others escaped wounded. The army took more than six hours to thoroughly level the entire zoo and the adjacent decades-old olive grove. After the destruction, soldiers took possession of the house of one of the owners of the zoo, Mohammed Ahmed Juma, in the same compound and held him and his family hostage, while securing the terrain with tanks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Destruction of the Rafah zoo\nThe IDF said they had destroyed the zoo while en route to another objective and because an alternate route had been booby-trapped. According to Human Rights Watch, the deliberate and time-consuming nature of the destruction, the seizure of the four-story Juma\u2019 house, and the stationing of several tanks there for over a day means that it was not an action en route, but rather part of enforcing a cordon. The Guardian alleged that the IDF issued multiple discrepant accounts to explain its actions. Mohammed Juma also accused Israeli soldiers of stealing valuable African parrots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Accusations of human rights violations\nAl Mezan reported grave human rights violations. Many Palestinian civilians were killed. Many homes were destroyed or damaged. Medical services were obstructed, ambulances attacked, dead bodies could not be collected. Humanitarian assistance was denied. Large-scale wilful destruction of properties was reported; properties were stolen, soldiers urinated on mattresses and furniture. Civilians were systematically used as human shields. According to Al Mezan, the use as human shield was common use in such Israeli operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Results, Casualties\nFrom 12 to 15 May the IDF reportedly killed 9 Palestinian civilians and 6 fighters. Eleven IDF soldiers died on 12\u201313 May, later during the military operation two Israeli soldiers were killed and two more wounded. Al Mezan reported 15 killed Palestinians, all from missile attacks on 14 and 15 May, and at least 44 Palestinians during Operation Rainbow, making a total of at least 59.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Results, Casualties\nThe IDF reportedly killed 32 Palestinian civilians, of whom 10 under age eighteen, as well as 12 armed fighters. Based on a variety of reports, accounts and statements, Human Rights Watch reported 59 Palestinians killed from 12\u201324 May, including 11 under age eighteen and 18 armed men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Results, Casualties\nAccording to the IDF, 41 militants and 12 civilians were killed during the operation, where some of the civilians were killed by Palestinian fire. During the operation, from 18 May to 25 May, no Israeli soldier was killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Results, Damage\nPictures from Rafah showed a devastated city. Due to the use of armored bulldozers and tanks, extensive damage was caused to schools, roads, water and sewage pipes and agricultural areas with greenhouses, resulting in floods and risk of disease. At least 700 dunams (70 ha) of agricultural land were destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Results, Damage\nAs of 23 May 2004 one smuggling tunnel had been found, which according to the Israeli army was 25 feet deep and contained explosives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Results, Damage\nAccording to UN relief agency UNRWA, the IDF destroyed 45 buildings during the operation and 155 buildings in Rafah over the past month. Human rights groups estimated that the army had demolished some 170-180 buildings in Rafah, including some 300 homes. Circa 2,000 people became homeless in Operation Rainbow. According to Human Rights Watch, from 12\u201324 May, 254 houses were destroyed, leaving nearly 3,800 people homeless, and 44 another houses in the Rafah area during the same month in other operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177844-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in Rafah, Aftermath\nOn 29 June 2004, Israel started an invasion of Beit Hanoun. On 29 September, after a Qassam rocket hit the Israeli town of Sderot and killed two Israeli children, the IDF launched an invasion of the north of the Gaza Strip. The operation's stated aim was to remove the threat of Qassam rockets from Sderot. The operation ended on 16 October, leaving widespread destruction and some 130 Palestinians dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip\nIn 2004 the Israeli Defense Forces launched Operation \"Days of Penitence\" (Hebrew: \u05de\u05d1\u05e6\u05e2 \u05d9\u05de\u05d9 \u05ea\u05e9\u05d5\u05d1\u05d4), otherwise known as Operation \"Days of Repentance\" in the northern Gaza Strip. The operation lasted between 29 September and 16 October 2004. About 130 Palestinians, and 1 Israeli were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip\nThe operation, focused on the town of Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia and Jabalia refugee camps, which were said to have been used as launching sites of Qassam rockets on the Israeli town of Sderot and Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip, and in particular in response to the death of two children in Sderot. The operation's name corresponds to the Hebrew name for the High Holiday season during which the operation was carried out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nFollowing the death of two Israeli children from a Qassam rocket launched by Palestinian militants, Israel launched a major military invasion of the northern Gaza strip, focusing on the towns of Beit Hanoun and Beit Lahia and the Jabaliya refugee camp. The stated goal of the operation, code-named \"Days of Penitence\" (\u05d9\u05de\u05d9 \u05ea\u05e9\u05d5\u05d1\u05d4) by the Israeli Defence Force, was to prevent Palestinians from launching rockets and mortar shells into Israeli settlements in Gaza and the town of Sderot in Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nDuring this 17 day attack the Israeli military killed some 130 Palestinians; demolished at least 85 houses and damaged hundreds more; damaged public facilities, including schools, kindergartens and mosques, and destroyed farmland. According to Israeli soldiers, many of the buildings that were demolished were used by Palestinian militants as a cover for launching Qassam rockets and for shooting anti-tank missiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nDuring the UN Security Council deliberations over censuring Israel for this military attack, Israel accused the United Nations Relief and Welfare Agency (UNRWA) of complicity in Palestinian attacks by allowing its vehicles to transport rockets. The Israeli government released a video claiming that it showed rockets being loaded into the UNRWA ambulance. UNRWA denied the accusation and demanded an apology stating that the object was a stretcher, not a rocket (the person in the video was carrying the lightweight object with just one hand). On October 6, Israel retracted the accusation. See further discussion here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nThe attack resulted in a proposed Security Council resolution condemning the Israeli action, calling for Israeli withdrawal and respect for human rights of Palestinians. The resolution was vetoed by the United States on October 5 who criticized it for ignoring terrorism against Israelis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nOver the weekend of October 17, the Israeli military announced that its troops withdrew from the Jabalia refugee camp and other populated areas and redeployed to positions nearby and proclaimed the attack a success, with a warning that the troops would return if the rocket attacks resume, which analysts from both sides say is likely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nCapt. Jacob Dallal, an Israeli Defence Forces spokesman, acclaimed the operation's success: \"We really impaired the ability to shoot Qassams from Jabalya. We engaged many cells and now there are fewer Hamas members to shoot rockets,\" he says. \"We dealt a hard blow to the whole Hamas infrastructure in Jabalia.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Overview\nThe published a statement by Hamas spokesman Ismail Hanneya who asserted that the problem was not in resistance or in Qassam missiles but rather in what Hamas views as the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land: \"Hamas achieved a victory over the Zionist enemy ... the blows of the resistance and the steadfastness of the people caused the occupying forces to withdraw without achieving any of their goals.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Allegations of Israeli war crimes\nIn 2005 and 2006 Adalah requested the Military Advocate General (MAG) to initiate a criminal investigation into events that took place during Operation Rainbow. In 2007 also for Operation Days of Penitence. All requests had been denied. On 15 April 2007, Adalah, PCHR and Al-Haq filed a petition, in which they asked the Israeli High Court of Justice to order a criminal investigation, referring to many local and international organizations who had accused Israel of committing war crimes. Not earlier than two years later, on 6 May 2009, the Court held a hearing. Another 1.5 years later, on 8 December 2011, the Court rejected the petition because, according to the Israeli judges, the request was too late and too unspecific, the aim of the operations was justified, and a criminal investigation was not the most appropriate tool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 919]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177845-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Israeli operation in the northern Gaza Strip, Casualties\nThe casualties from 28 September to 16 October 2004 are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal\nThe 2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal was an incident of passport fraud in July 2004 that led New Zealand to take diplomatic sanctions against Israel. High-level contacts between the two countries were suspended after two Israeli citizens suspected of being Mossad agents, Uriel Kelman and Eli Cara, were caught trying to fraudulently acquire a New Zealand passport using the identity of a man with cerebral palsy. Prime Minister Helen Clark declared that New Zealand government viewed the acts carried out by Kelman and Cara as \"not only utterly unacceptable but also a breach of New Zealand sovereignty and international law.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, History\nHoward Way, a Lynfield general practitioner testified that a man asked him to witness his passport application because he was going to Australia to get married. Way said the man was \"calm and gave me no reason not to believe him. I filled out the form.\" A fake post office box and voicemail phone service were set up in the name of a man suffering from cerebral palsy, whose birth certificate was used in the passport application. New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs official Ian Tingey detected the irregularity and called the applicant, who had a Canadian or American accent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, History\n\"When I quizzed him on his accent his explanation to me was he had not travelled or held a New Zealand passport before but had spent a lot of time in New Zealand with Canadian friends and family.\" Tingey contacted the father of the disabled man and realised the application was a fraud. The police bugged Kelman's and Cara's phones, set up a sting operation, and caught Kelman and Cara in March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, History\nThe case was presided over by Judge Chris Field. Cara was represented by Grant Illingworth and Kelman was represented by Nigel Faigan. Illingworth and Faigan unsuccessfully tried to get the case dismissed early by saying that pre-trial publicity was \"highly prejudicial.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, History\nKelman and Cara denied membership in Mossad but pleaded guilty to trying to enter the country illegally and working with organised criminal gangs. They were sentenced to six months in jail and ordered to pay US$32,500 to a cerebral palsy charity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, History\nAfter serving either two or three months they were deported. Cara, who visited New Zealand 24 times between October 2000 and March 2004, claims he was working as a travel agent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Repercussions\nPrime Minister Clark cancelled a planned visit to New Zealand in August by Israeli President Moshe Katzav, delayed approval for a new Israeli ambassador to New Zealand, and called the case \"far more than simple criminal behaviour by two individuals\" which \"seriously strained our relationship.\" Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom expressed sorrow, and said that Israel would work to repair the relationship. Dr. Alon Liel, former Director-General of the Israeli Foreign Ministry, said that Israel must protest the diplomatic sanctions, \"for if not, it's a silent admission that the two men worked for the Mossad.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Repercussions\nThe sanctions included suspending official visits to Israel and foreign ministry contacts, requiring visas for Israeli officials to enter New Zealand. Clark said, \"The ball is in Israel's court as to where it wants to move from here. Three months ago we asked for an apology and an explanation. That has not been forthcoming.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Repercussions\nClark said that an official inquiry that began after the arrests revealed that an Israeli passport factory had been issuing New Zealand passports. \"We turned up a very small number that emanated from what we believe to be Israeli intelligence. Those passports have been cancelled and it would be futile to attempt to use them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Repercussions\nJewish graves in Wellington were subsequently vandalised with Swastikas and Nazi slogans carved into and around 16 Jewish graves. The head of the New Zealand Jewish community, David Zwartz, said, \"there is a direct connection between the very strong expressions against Israel and people here feeling they can take it out on Jews. It seems to me Israel-bashing one day, Jew-bashing the next day.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Reconciliation\nOn 26 June 2005 Foreign Minister Shalom sent a letter of apology to the New Zealand government saying, \"In this context, we wish to express our regret for the activities which resulted in the arrest and conviction of two Israel citizens in New Zealand on criminal charges and apologize for the involvement of Israeli citizens in such activities. Israel commits itself to taking steps to prevent a recurrence of similar incidents in the future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Reconciliation\nDiplomatic relations were fully re-established on 30 August 2005 when Naftali Tamir presented his credentials, which were accepted, to Governor-General Dame Silvia Cartwright before a guard of honour. The Foreign Minister's deputy director for Asia and the Pacific, Amos Nadav, said, \"We are happy the crisis is behind us and look ahead to the future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Reconciliation\nWhen Shalom and Jan Henderson, the New Zealand ambassador to Turkey, met for reconciliation talks on 26 October 2005, an Israeli government statement noted that the meeting was the first between high ranking New Zealand and Israel officials \"since the incident with the Mossad\". Israel's Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev denied that it was an official admission of Mossad activity in New Zealand and said the \"incident with the Mossad\" should have been in inverted commas to reflect that the espionage is alleged only by the New Zealand government. \"We have never said more than we have said in the case. This issue has been solved in a satisfactory way with the New Zealand government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Reconciliation\nAustralian Jewish News credited NZ MP Taito Phillip Field, a Jewish-Samoan political novice, of acting as a bridge between the two governments when he visited Nissan Krupsky, the former Israeli ambassador to New Zealand, in Israel in December. AJN reported that Field met with Israel's Foreign Ministry officials secretly because of the NZ ban on meetings between the government's officials. New Zealand Foreign Minister Phil Goff denied Field played any significant role in overcoming the diplomatic impasse on 1 July. \"It wasn't a high-level visit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Reconciliation\nWhat he was doing was in a private capacity to see people he knew in Israel and I didn't raise any objection to him going.\" According to AJN, \"While Field's visit eventually turned out to have critical diplomatic significance, it was described as private so as not to be seen as violating the sanctions imposed by Clark. Nonetheless, throughout his visit Field served as middleman between the two Governments, maintaining phone contacts with Wellington in order to secure Clark's approval for the start of the Ankara talks.\" Foreign Minister Goff denied that the talks between Israel's FM official Michael Ronen and Ambassador Henderson were a direct result of Field's visit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177846-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Israel\u2013New Zealand passport scandal, Reconciliation\nNadav said New Zealand once \"had excellent warm and friendly relations before and we wish to restore them to that same intensity. Yet we don't want to rush things by inundating New Zealand with ideas and programmes.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit\nThe 2004 Istanbul summit was held in Istanbul, Turkey from 28 to 29 June 2004. It was the 17th NATO summit in which NATO's Heads of State and Governments met to make formal decisions about security topics. In general, the summit is seen as a continuation of the transformation process that began in the 2002 Prague summit, which hoped to create a shift from a Cold War alliance against Soviet aggression to a 21st-century coalition against new and out-of-area security threats. The summit consisted of four meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit\nNATO members welcomed seven new alliance members during the North Atlantic Council meeting, decided to expand the alliance's presence in the War in Afghanistan and to end its presence in Bosnia, agreed to assist Iraq with training, launched a new partnership initiative and adopted measures to improve NATO's operational capabilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit\nThe NATO-Russia Council meeting was mostly noted by the absence of both Russian president Vladimir Putin and of any progress concerning the ratification of the adapted CFE treaty or the withdrawal of Russian troops from Georgia and Moldova. NATO leaders further welcomed progress made by Ukraine towards membership in the NATO-Ukraine Commission meeting and discussed some general and mostly symbolic topics with its non-NATO counterparts during the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit\nDue to Turkish government fears of a terrorist attack, security measures during the summit were tight. Demonstrators from around the world gathered to protest against NATO or the American foreign policy under the George W. Bush Administration, while the summit itself was blown off the front pages of the world press by the unexpected transfer of Iraqi sovereignty, coinciding with the first day of the NATO summit on 28 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Security measures\nUnprecedented security measures were made by the Turkish government to safeguard the NATO summit from terrorist attacks. They especially feared a repetition of the Istanbul bombings of 2003 that killed more than 60 people. Their fear was proven by the arrest of 16 people in Bursa in early May on suspicion of planning to bomb the summit. Police seized guns, explosives, bomb-making booklets and 4,000 compact discs with training advice from Osama Bin Laden, and believed that the suspects were members of the radical Islamic group Ansar al-Islam, thought to be linked with al-Qaeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Security measures\nOn 24 June two bombs also exploded. One bomb went off in a bus in Istanbul killing 4 people (including the bomber), the other outside a hotel in Ankara where US president George W. Bush would be staying. Additionally, on 25 June, explosives were found in a parked car at Istanbul's main airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Security measures\nSecurity measures included Turkish war ships and Turkish commandos in rubber boats patrolling the Bosporus, AWACS surveillance planes and F-16 warplanes circling above the city to monitor a no-fly zone over the city, and the assignment of 23,000 to 24,000 police officers, supported by police helicopters and armoured vehicles. The Bosphorus Strait was also closed to oil tankers, the underground rail system was suspended and whole city districts were sealed off. Nevertheless, a small bomb or explosive devise blew up on an empty Turkish Airlines plane on 29 June as workers were cleaning it at the main Istanbul airport. Three of the workers were slightly injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Security measures\nThe extent of disruption caused by the security measures was criticized by several Turkish newspapers. The newspaper Cumhuriyet for instance called the situation \"a total disgrace\" and commented that Istanbul and Ankara looked like \"ghost cities for a couple of days, imprisoning the people, emptying the streets and stopping boats from leaving.\" The newspaper further added that people died because emergency services were unable to reach them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Demonstrations\nDuring June, there was a surge in demonstrations against the upcoming NATO summit, resulting in almost daily protests in Turkey. For instance on 16 June, Turkish riot police detained some 40 people during a demonstration and on 21 June, police used water cannon, tear gas and armoured vehicles to disperse activists who barricaded streets and threw petrol bombs. Throughout June, anti-NATO protestors from around the world gathered at Istanbul to demonstrate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Demonstrations\nProtests included opposition to US foreign policy (especially opposition against the US-led Afghanistan War and the Iraq War), opposition to NATO's presence in the Balkans, opposition against NATO itself or against a new role for NATO, opposition against the continuing existence of nuclear weapons, and claims the USA abused NATO to support its policies in Iraq, the wider Middle East, and Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Demonstrations\nA day before the summit, US president George W. Bush traveled to Ankara, the capital of Turkey for advance meetings with Turkish leaders. Then and during the summit demonstrations became larger and tens of thousands of Turks demonstrated in the streets of Istanbul. On 28 June, demonstrators tried to disrupt the NATO meeting by staging several simultaneous mass demonstrations around the city. Riot police sprayed tear gas at anti-NATO demonstrators as protesters and police clashed in running street battles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Demonstrations\nAt least 30 people, including five police officers, were injured when anti-NATO protesters throwing stones and petrol bombs clashed with riot police. Some 20 persons were detained in these protests. The police broke up a smaller crowd, detaining at least six persons, in the Mecidiyek\u00f6y area when they tried to march towards the summit about 3\u00a0km to the south. In a separate protest, Greenpeace activists, dangling from a bridge over the Bosphorus Strait, unfurled a 30-meter banner showing a dove of peace with a nuclear missile in its beak and the phrase \"Nukes out of NATO\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings\nJune 2004 was arguably one of the most intense months of summitry in the history of transatlantic relations. The NATO summit followed on the D-Day's 60th anniversary celebrations in Normandy (France) on 6 June; on the 30th G8 summit from 8 June until 10 June in Georgia (United States); and on the meetings with EU leaders in Dublin (Ireland) on 24 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings\nThe 2004 Istanbul summit consisted of four main meetings, all held in the Istanbul L\u00fctfi K\u0131rdar Convention and Exhibition Center: the North Atlantic Council (NATO's highest decision-making body, attended by heads of state and government from each of the 26 Alliance member countries); the NATO-Russia Council (which met only at the level of foreign ministers, since Russian President Vladimir Putin stayed away, reflecting ongoing tension between NATO and Russia over NATO enlargement and the Adapted Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty); the NATO-Ukraine Commission; and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council (46 countries including many former Eastern bloc and former Soviet states).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings\nBesides these meetings, several visits and question sessions were made on 26 and 27 June, and several press conferences by heads of government of state or government were made after or in between the above-mentioned meetings. Once the North Atlantic Council meeting on 28 June was concluded, a statement called the \"Istanbul Declaration: Our security in a new era\" was issued. In this statement the leaders summarized the main conclusions of the discussions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings\nAlmost forgotten in coverage of the summit was that six new members from the former Warsaw Pact \u2013 Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Romania \u2013 plus Slovenia, joined NATO in March 2004 and were formally welcomed into the Alliance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Missions\nSeveral days before the summit, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer described Afghanistan as \"priority number one\". During the summit, NATO members officially agreed that the NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) would take on command of four additional Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs) (one in Mazar-e-Sharif, Meymana, Feyzabad and Baghlan), falling short of the initial target of five. Until then ISAF only provided security in around the capital city Kabul and commanded one PRT in Kunduz. The 26 members agreed to contribute between them an additional 600 troops (23.08 per country) and three helicopters to the Afghan mission. The three helicopters came from Turkey, and had gone back within three months. NATO also vowed to beef up its Afghanistan peace force from 6,500 to 10,000 to help make the 2004 Afghan presidential election secure, but no actual agreement for that many additional troops was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 89], "content_span": [90, 1034]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Missions\nNATO members agreed to end the NATO-led Stabilisation Force (SFOR) in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which began its mission in 1996. NATO stressed that it would maintain a presence in the country to assist in certain areas such as defence reform, or the pursuit of persons indicted for war crimes. Heads of State and Government also welcomed a decision by the European Union to establish a follow-on mission, which would take over the 7,500-member mission and which will be supported by NATO under existing NATO-EU agreements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 89], "content_span": [90, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nThe summit marked a shift in Alliance priorities towards greater involvement in the Middle East, a strategically important region, whose security and stability was regarded as closely linked to the Euro-Atlantic security. The existing Mediterranean Dialogue (MD) cooperation was broadened, and two new major engagements were launched: the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative (ICI) and a training mission for Iraqi troops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nThe summit was dominated by divisions over the Iraq War as NATO members were only able to agree to limited assistance in the form of training for Iraqi security forces. The NATO support given to Iraq troop training was in response to a request by the Iraqi Interim Government, and in accordance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 1546, which requests international and regional organisations to contribute assistance to the multinational force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nEven this limited agreement contained areas of contention, with France insisting that it would only help with training outside Iraq, while the United States favored that the training would take place inside Iraq. As a consequence, the deal was left deliberately vague and differences remained on whether NATO should train Iraqi officers inside Iraq, or limit itself to training outside the country and acting as a clearing house for national efforts. The commitment was also vague as it was not made clear what the size of the training mission would be or exactly when and where it would take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0017-0002", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nGerman chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, known for his earlier opposition to the Iraq War, commented: \"The engagement of NATO is reduced to training and only training. We have made clear that we don't want to see German soldiers in Iraq.\" Despite outwardly optimistic statements by the US concerning NATO's commitment towards Iraqi troop training after the summit, France and Germany had refused to share the burden of responsibility for the situation in Iraq and did not support the US and British demand for sending NATO troops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0017-0003", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nPut differently, participation in the multinational forces in Iraq was left to the discretion of the particular alliance members and the USA relunctantly consented to troop training outside Iraq. Consequently, despite an outward show of NATO unity, the split over Iraq still persisted and tensions in interstate relations within the alliance were not resolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nNATO's leaders invited their Mediterranean Dialogue (MD) partners (Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Mauritania, Morocco and Tunisia) to elevate the MD to a genuine partnership by establishing a more ambitious and expanded framework for cooperation. This cooperation would be guided by the principle of joint ownership and taking into consideration their particular interests and needs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nNATO leaders also decided to launch the Istanbul Cooperation Initiative (ICI) with selected states in the Greater Middle East, thus exceeding a Mediterranean scope. The initiative was an offer to engage in practical security cooperation activities with these states and each interested country would be considered by the North Atlantic Council on a case-by-case basis and on its own merit. The words \"country\" and \"countries\" in the ICI document do not exclude participation of the Palestinian Authority, but such partnership would be\u2014like any other partnership\u2014subject to the North Atlantic Council's approval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nThis initiative stands alongside NATO's Partnership for Peace Program and the Mediterranean Dialogue. NATO members regard these partnerships as a response to the new challenges of the 21st century and as a complement to the G8 and US-EU decisions to support calls for reform from within the Broader Middle East region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Middle East\nThe ICI offers practical cooperation with interested nations in the Greater Middle East in such areas as: counter-WMD; counterterrorism; training and education; participation in NATO exercises; the promotion of military interoperability; disaster preparedness and civil emergency planning; tailored advice on defense reform and civil-military relations; and cooperation on border security to help prevent illicit trafficking of drugs, weapons, and people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 92], "content_span": [93, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Plans\nNATO leaders endorsed measures to improve NATO's ability to take on operations when and where necessary, committing themselves to be able at all times to deploy and sustain larger proportions of their forces on operations to ensure that NATO has a permanently available pool of assets and forces that can deployed. They also endorsed changes to NATO's defence planning, hoping that the Alliance's long-term defence planning process would become more flexible, thereby helping member countries generate forces that can reach further, faster and still take on the full range of missions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 86], "content_span": [87, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, North Atlantic Council meeting (28 June), Plans\nNATO leaders hoped to boost the Alliance's anti-terrorism efforts with an agreement to improve intelligence sharing and to develop new, high-tech defences against terrorist attacks. NATO members committed themselves to improve intelligence sharing through a Terrorist Threat Intelligence Unit. This Unit, created after the September 11 attacks, became permanent and . Its function is to analyze general terrorist threats, as well as those that are more specifically aimed at NATO. NATO also pledged itself to stand ready to assist any member country in dealing with potential or real terrorist attacks. The Alliance's AWACS early warning radar aircraft and Chemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear Defence Battalion would be made available to any member that requests such assistance. Heads of State and Government also gave direction to develop a package of high-tech capabilities to protect civilians and forces from terrorist attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 86], "content_span": [87, 1028]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nDiscussions with Russia on NATO concessions in return for Russian President Vladimir Putin's attendance had been underway for some months before the summit, and intensified as the summit date drew closer. On 17 May, in the run-up to the NATO summit, NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer indicated in a speech that Putin signalled that he might honor the summit with his presence if \"the conditions will be right\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nIt is unclear what conditions were under discussion, but it is speculated that Putin's conditions included an enhanced Russian role in NATO decision-making through the NATO-Russia Council (NRC), NATO acceptance of Russia's continued military presence in Moldova and Georgia (the withdrawal of these troops was an obligation Russia had assumed at the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe's (OSCE) 1999 Istanbul summit); a move of NATO members to ratify that same treaty and to place the three Baltic states, that joined NATO in March 2004, under military restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0023-0002", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nAs Putin did not receive satisfaction in discussions ahead of the NATO summit \u2013 at least not to the extent that he hoped, he refused to attend the meeting. When NATO officials indicated that Putin would probably not attend the summit, Russia's Foreign Affairs Minister Sergei Lavrov reacted on the same day (2 June) by stressing the importance that Moscow attaches to enhancing its role in NRC and that Russia had not declined the invitation to attend the NRC meeting. Due to the replacement of Putin by Lavrov, the meeting was not held at the level of the Heads of State and Government (as normally would be the case), but at the level of foreign ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nOn 26 June, two days before the summit, US Under Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns and US Ambassador to Russia Alexander Vershbow wrote a joint newspaper article in which they commented that the relations between NATO and Russia were good and that NATO and Russia took \"a little-noticed but enormous step in our maturing partnership\", referring to \"Exercise Kaliningrad 2004\" which brought together some 1,000 personnel from 22 NATO member and partner countries for a terrorism response exercise. In practice, several rifts between Russia and NATO were visible and became increasingly more so during the summit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nOne rift existed about NATO's non-ratification of the adapted CFE treaty and Russia's non-fulfillment of its OSCE obligations (the withdrawal of Russian troops from Moldova and Georgia). Even before the summit commenced, the rift was visible as US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld stopped, en route to Istanbul, in Moldova where he called for the withdrawal of Russian forces from the country. Another reason for tension was the accession of seven Eastern European states to NATO in March 2004 and NATO's increasing cooperation with other Eastern European and Caucasian states. On 27 June, Russia warned NATO to respect its security interests and expressed concern over NATO's stepped up activity in the Caucasus and Central Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nDuring the NRC meeting, NATO leaders and NATO's Secretary General made a clear linkage between their Adapted Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty (adapted CFE treaty) ratification and the withdrawal of Russian troops from Moldova and Georgia, and took no notice of Russia's proposals for the earliest possible entry into force of the treaty and Russia's ratification on the eve of the summit. According to Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov these withdrawal demands were incorrect, because \"the political understandings did not set any time limit for physical action\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nPut differently, Russia denied that it made clear commitments to withdraw its forces from Georgia and Moldova, a policy to which it adhered since 2002,and reaffirmed its policy of seeking bilateral agreement with Georgia on the status and functioning of Russian military bases in that country. In addition, Russia argued that it faced new threats on its southern borders: the possibility of missile launches from Iran and the expansion of Islamist terrorism, which required \u2013 in the perspective of Russia \u2013 Russian military presence in Georgia and Armenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0025-0002", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Linkage between the CFE ratification and the OSCE obligations\nColonel Anatoli Tesiganouk, Head of Russia's Military Forecasting Center, argued that NATO took no notice of Russia's position because NATO's leaders still had the same mental stereotypes that took shape during the Cold War; that a large part of the Western elite still regarded Russia as a kind of USSR, ignoring the fact that Russia has not only new borders, but also new aspirations, new international partners, and new threats. These stereotypes could have wittingly or unwittingly affected the relations in the NATO-Russia Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 139], "content_span": [140, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Russia Council meeting (28 June), Russia's Iraq and Afghanistan proposals\nOn Iraq, Lavrov proposed to hold a general conference with the participation of all Iraqi political forces (including all opposition forces and including the \"armed resistance to the occupation\") and Iraq's neighboring countries and the international community, including Russia. Regarding Afghanistan, Lavrov expressed the interest of Russia and other members of the Commonwealth of Independent States in suppressing terrorism and called for \"establishing ties\" and \"developing cooperation\" between NATO and the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). Both proposals received at most a lukewarm response by NATO leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 117], "content_span": [118, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Ukraine Commission meeting (29 June)\nThis meeting was between NATO leaders and president of Ukraine Leonid Kuchma. NATO members expressed appreciation for Ukraine's contributions to NATO-led and other international peace support efforts such as KFOR. Ukraine also offered to support Operation Active Endeavour in the Mediterranean (a naval operation of NATO which is designed to prevent the movement of terrorists or weapons of mass destruction), an offer which NATO would consider. Defence cooperation between NATO and Ukraine was reviewed and the possible launching of a Partnership for Peace Trust Fund to help Ukraine destroy the surplus munitions, small arms and light weapons was discussed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 80], "content_span": [81, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, NATO-Ukraine Commission meeting (29 June)\nNATO further welcomed Ukraine's desire to achieve full integration into NATO, but stressed that this would require more than troop contributions and defence reform. This would require showing commitment to the values that underpin the Alliance (democracy, rule of law, freedom of speech and media, and fair elections) as was foreseen in the NATO-Ukraine Action Plan, which was adopted during the 2002 Prague Summit. In particular NATO Secretary General de Hoop Scheffer criticized Kuchma's record on freedom of press and preparations for the Ukrainian presidential election of November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 80], "content_span": [81, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council meeting (29 June)\nThis meeting was mostly symbolic and did not have any concrete proposals or results. Nevertheless, some policies or earlier decisions were reaffirmed or emphasized. First of all, the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council (EAPC) Heads of State and Government met with President Hamid Karzai of the Transitional Islamic State of Afghanistan and discussed the progress in that country, and recognized the valuable role played by both Allies and Partners who make up the ISAF, but also emphasized that much remains to be done for Afghanistan to become a peaceful and stable country, fully integrated into the international community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 90], "content_span": [91, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council meeting (29 June)\nSecondly, the commitment of the Euro-Atlantic community to peace, security and stability in the Balkans was reaffirmed. Further, the presence of the Heads of State of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and Montenegro at their meeting as observers was welcomed, and these leaders were urged them to meet the outstanding conditions set for Partnership for Peace membership by Allies. Thirdly, the resolve to fight terrorism was reaffirmed and some initiatives aimed at increasing the EAPC's contribution in this fight were taken, thereby endorsing the further implementation of the Partnership Action Plan against Terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 90], "content_span": [91, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council meeting (29 June)\nFourthly, support for a major report on the future development of the Euro-Atlantic Partnership, which outlines the core objectives of Partnership (political dialogue and practical co-operation, the promotion of democratic values across the Euro-Atlantic area, preparing interested Partners for participation in NATO-led operations and support Partners who wish to join the Alliance). Fifthly, the commitment to building a Partnership which would be tailored to the different needs of individual Partners was reaffirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 90], "content_span": [91, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0030-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council meeting (29 June)\nIn this respect, NATO's intention to place a special focus on relations with the states of the Caucasus and Central Asia was welcomed, including the decision by the Alliance to appoint one liaison officer for each region. They also welcomed the launching of the Individual Partnership Action Plan process by several states of these two regions. Sixthly, NATO's Policy on Combating Trafficking in Human Beings, which was developed in consultation with the EAPC partners, was endorsed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 90], "content_span": [91, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Summit meetings, Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council meeting (29 June)\nThe absence of Armenian president Robert Kocharyan drew some media attention. Kocharyan refused to join the summit to draw the alliance's attention to problems in relations between the Turkey and Armenia, in particular Turkey's refusal to consider the deaths of almost one million Armenians during World War I a genocide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 90], "content_span": [91, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Announcement of the transfer of Iraqi sovereignty\nWhile the transfer of Iraqi sovereignty was not decided during the summit, this transfer had some connections to the summit. First of all, the news of the unexpected transfer was made public during the summit. BBC News reports that Iraq's foreign minister Hoshyar Zebari, speaking after a breakfast meeting with Blair in Istanbul on 28 June, \"slipped\" prematurely that the handover of sovereignty to his country was being brought forward to coincide with the meeting. Later that day, US National Security advisor Condoleezza Rice gave US president Bush during the summit the following note: \"Mr. President, Iraq is sovereign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 71], "content_span": [72, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0032-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Announcement of the transfer of Iraqi sovereignty\nLetter was passed from [Paul] Bremer at 10:26\u00a0am Iraq time \u2013 Condi\". Bush scribbled in the margin of this note: \"Let freedom reign!\". Bush then turned to British prime minister Tony Blair, seated next to him, whispered that the handover had happened, and the two men shook hands. Later that day, Bush and Blair held a joint press conference, in which they welcomed the transfer. Secondly, the news of the handover pushed the summit from the front pages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 71], "content_span": [72, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nThe international media reported that expectations for a successful summit were deliberately set low, because NATO leaders wanted to avoid a flare-up over the Iraq War. Therefore, they agreed to meet the modest goals the Alliance had already set for itself in trying to stabilize Afghanistan, and endorsed a tepid version of the Bush administration's initiative to promote modernization and democracy in the Arab world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nThe newspaper further commented that the summit had \"a sort of \"Waiting for Godot\" quality about it \u2013 European leaders biding time, neither creating a crisis nor mending fences, in the hope that the American election in November will somehow spare them from the choice between having to deal with Bush and letting Iraq, and NATO, slide into further disarray.\" Other analysis were even more critical: \"There have been NATO summits at which neither a special occasion was acknowledged nor decisions of particular relevance made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0033-0002", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nOne example is the NATO summit in Istanbul in 2004, where the concluded measures hardly required a meeting of the heads of state and government, and the media presence was not justified by the agreed-upon resolutions.\" US and other government officials however emphasized that the summit was significant in terms of the alliance's unprecedented outreach beyond its traditional North Atlantic focus and its aggressive emphasis on force planning to tackle new challenges worldwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nWhether or not the summit is considered important for its content, the meeting held some symbolic importance. First of all, it was the first NATO summit between the leaders of the North-American and Western European states, and Eastern European states, states that were finally, after decades of Cold War tensions, together in the same alliance. The media attention that these new members received during the summit, opened public debates about whether there was still a consensus about the purpose, the perceived threats and the future borders of NATO among its 26 members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0034-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nThat this was not the case, became clear in the run-up to the 2006 Riga Summit. Secondly, the holding of the summit in Istanbul made it the most eastern summit in NATO's history. It marked the increasingly key role played by Turkey as a major strategic hub due to its location close to the hotbeds of tension and conflict in the South Caucasus and the Middle East. The location of the summit made clear that NATO's security concerns had shifted towards the southeastern part of the European continent. By shifting eastwards, the Alliance's centre of gravity ventured into very different areas from those on which the Cold War military NATO had focused.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nNATO's 2004 Istanbul summit was also remarkably silent on the subject of nuclear weapons policy and non-proliferation, as opposed to pre-summit diplomacy and earlier post-Cold War NATO summits and contrary to the demonstrations going on in Istanbul. In June 2004, shortly before the summit, NATO issued two fact sheets on nuclear policy, portraying the developments within NATO in a favourable light in the run up to the 2005 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Review Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177847-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 Istanbul summit, Reviews\nIn practice, no real changes since the end of the Cold War were implemented, as since the 1994 US Nuclear posture review the number of US nuclear weapons based in Europe remained unchanged, and as Cold War nuclear sharing arrangements dating back to the 1960s remained in force. Additionally, no changes were made to Alliance nuclear policy since the 1999 Strategic Concept.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177848-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Italian Figure Skating Championships (Italian: Campionati Italiani Assoluti 2004 Pattinaggio Di Figura Su Ghiaccio) was held in Milan from January 15 through 17, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing. The results were used to choose the teams to the 2004 World Championships, the 2004 European Championships, and the 2004 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177849-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Formula Three Championship\nThe 2004 Italian Formula Three Championship was the 40th Italian Formula Three Championship season. It began on 4 April at Adria and ended on 24 October at Misano after fourteen races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177849-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Formula Three Championship\nMatteo Cressoni of Ombra Racing won the opening race at Adria, race at Pergusa and had another six podiums and ultimately clinched the title. Coloni Motorsport's Toni Vilander had six wins and the same number of points as Cressoni, but he was ineligible to contest for the title. Third place went to Lucidi Motors driver Alex Frassineti, who took one victory, and he finished ahead of Imola winner Michele Rugolo, who competed with Team Ghinzani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177849-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Formula Three Championship, Teams and drivers\nAll teams were Italian-registered and all cars competed on Hankook tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177850-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Italian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Gran Premio Vodafone d'Italia 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 12 September 2004 at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza. It was Race 15 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. Ferrari took a 1\u20132 in front of the delighted Tifosi, with Rubens Barrichello ahead of teammate Michael Schumacher. Both cars had to make their way through the field from the back, Barrichello having made an early pitstop after choosing the wrong tyres at the start and Schumacher having spun on the first lap. This was the last race for Giorgio Pantano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177850-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Grand Prix\nThe race was perhaps best known for speed records set during the race. In the first part of qualifying (which did not count towards grid positions), Juan Pablo Montoya lapped Monza in his Williams FW26 at an average speed of 262.242\u00a0km/h (162.9\u00a0mph), the fastest lap ever, at the time, in the history of Formula One which was subsequently surpassed by Lewis Hamilton, Sebastian Vettel and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen at the 2018 edition. The next day in the race, Montoya's teammate Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia reached a top speed of 369.9\u00a0km/h (229.9\u00a0mph), the fastest speed ever recorded in Formula One at the time (it was to be exceeded by Montoya in 2005).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177850-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Grand Prix\nIn the Minardi pit garage, the car of Gianmaria Bruni caught fire after fuel escaped from the hose onto the hot bodywork during a routine pit-stop, and it was put out without any serious injury. Bruni inhaled some of the extinguishant and was having trouble breathing and so the team decided to retire the car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177850-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Grand Prix\nThis race was Scuderia Ferrari's 700th start in a World Championship event as a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177850-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177851-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open (tennis)\nThe 2004 Italian Open (also as 2004 Rome Masters or sponsored title 2004 Telecom Italia Masters) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 61st edition of the Italian Open and was part of the Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier I of the 2004 WTA Tour. Both the men's and women's events took place at the Foro Italico in Rome in Italy. The men's tournament was played from May 3 through May 9, 2004 while the women's tournament was played from May 10 through May 16, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177851-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open (tennis), Finals, Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi / Max Mirnyi defeated Wayne Arthurs / Paul Hanley 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177851-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open (tennis), Finals, Women's Doubles\nNadia Petrova / Meghann Shaughnessy defeated Virginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177852-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Max Mirnyi defeated defending champions Wayne Arthurs and Paul Hanley 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final. It was the 34th title for Bhupathi and the 20th title for Mirnyi in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177853-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nF\u00e9lix Mantilla was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Mariano Zabaleta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177853-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nCarlos Moy\u00e1 won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20133, 6\u20131 against David Nalbandian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177853-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177854-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova and Martina Navratilova were the defending champions, but Kuznetsova decided not to compete this year. Navratilova teamed up with Lisa Raymond and lost in second round to Elena Likhovtseva and Anastasia Myskina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177854-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy won the title, defeating Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final. It was the 8th title for Petrova and the 8th title for Shaughnessy in their respective careers. It was also the 4th title for the pair during this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177854-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177855-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but did not compete this year due to a wrist injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177855-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nAm\u00e9lie Mauresmo, who was the runner-up last year, won the title by defeating Jennifer Capriati 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(8\u20136) in the final. It was the 2nd title of the year for Mauresmo and the 12th of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177855-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe first eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177856-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix was the fourth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 4\u20136 June 2004 at the Mugello Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177856-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP classification\nThe race, scheduled to be run for 23 laps, was stopped after 17 full laps due to rain. It was later restarted for the remaining 6 laps, with the grid determined by the running order before the suspension. The second part of the race determined the final result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177856-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italian motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round four has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177857-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Italy rugby union tour\nThe 2004 Italy Rugby Union Tour of Romania and Japan was a series of matches played during 2004 in Romania and Japan by the Italian national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177857-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Italy rugby union tour, Results\nRomania: 15.Dan Dumbrava, 14.Vasile Ghioc, 13.Cristian Sauan, 12.Romeo Gontineac, 11.Bogdan Voicu, 10.Ionut Tofan, 9.Lucian Sirbu, 8.Alin Petrache(capt. ), 7.Ovidiu Tonita, 6.Costica Mersoiu, 5.Cristian Petre, 4.Cornel Tatu, 3.Marcel Socaciu, 2.Bogdan Zebega Suman, 1.Petru Balan, \u2013 replacements: 16.Paulica Ion, 17.Petrisor Toderasc, 18.Valentin Ursache, 19.Marius Bejan, 20.Iulian Andrei, 21.Stefan Dumitru, 22.Ionut Dimofte Italy: 15.Gonzalo Canale, 14.Nicola Mazzucato, 13.Andrea Masi, 12.Walter Pozzebon, 11.Kaine Robertson, 10.Francesco Mazzariol, 9.Alessandro Troncon (capt), 8.Andrea de Rossi, 7.Aaron Persico, 6.Enrico Pavanello, 5.Carlo Antonio del Fava, 4.Marco Bortolami, 3.Salvatore Costanzo, 2.Fabio Ongaro, 1.Andrea Lo Cicero, \u2013 replacements: 16.Giorgio Intoppa, 17.Mario Savi, 18.Roberto Mandelli, 19.Scott Palmer, 20.Paul Griffen, 21.Danilo Carpente, 22.Matteo Barbini", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177857-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Italy rugby union tour, Results\nJapan: 15.Kosuke Endo, 14.Takafumi Hirao, 13.Daisuke Ohata, 12.Yukio Motoki, 11.Hirotoki Onozawa, 10.Kyohei Morita, 9.Wataru Ikeda, 8.Takeomi Ito, 7.Takuro Miuchi (capt), 6.Feletikiki Mau, 5.Takanori Kumagae, 4.Adam Parker, 3.Ryo Yamamura, 2.Yuji Matsubara, 1.Yuichi Hisadomi, \u2013 replacements: 16.Takashi Yamaoka, 18.Lautangi Vatuvei, 19.Koichi Kubo, 21.Masatoshi Mukoyama, 22.Keiji Takei \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 17.Yasumasa Miyamoto, 20.Mamoru ItoItaly: 15.Gonzalo Canale, 14.Kaine Robertson, 13.Andrea Masi, 12.Matteo Barbini, 11.Walter Pozzebon, 10.Rima Wakarua, 9.Paul Griffen, 8.David dal Maso, 7.Mauro Bergamasco, 6.Enrico Pavanello, 5.Marco Bortolami (capt. ), 4.Carlo Antonio del Fava, 3.Martin Castrogiovanni, 2.Fabio Ongaro, 1.Andrea Lo Cicero, \u2013 replacements: 16.Giorgio Intoppa, 17.Mario Savi, 18.Roberto Mandelli, 19.Aaron Persico, 20.Alessandro Troncon, 21.Danilo Carpente, 22.Nicola Mazzucato", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177858-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series\nThe 2004 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series took place at Red Rolfe Field at Biondi Park in Hanover, New Hampshire on May 8, 2004. The series matched the regular season champions of each of the league's two divisions. Princeton, the winner of the series, claimed their second consecutive, and fifth overall, title and the Ivy League's automatic berth in the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Princeton's ninth appearance in the Championship Series, all of which were consecutive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177858-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ivy League Baseball Championship Series\nDartmouth made their third appearance in the Championship Series, also having lost to Princeton in 2000 and 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177859-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J&S Cup\nThe 2004 J&S Cup was a Tier II tennis event on the 2004 WTA Tour that run from April 26 - May 2, 2004. It was held in Warsaw, Poland, and was the 9th year that the event was staged. The 2003 J&S Cup finalist Venus Williams won her first Warsaw title and second overall of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177859-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 J&S Cup, Finals, Doubles\nSilvia Farina Elia / Francesca Schiavone defeated Gisela Dulko / Patricia Tarabini, 3-6, 6-2, 6-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 29], "content_span": [30, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177860-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J&S Cup \u2013 Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Magdalena Maleeva were the defending champions, but they both chose not to compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177860-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 J&S Cup \u2013 Doubles\nSilvia Farina Elia and Francesca Schiavone won in the final 3-6, 6-2, 6-1 against Gisela Dulko and Patricia Tarabini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177861-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J&S Cup \u2013 Singles\nAm\u00e9lie Mauresmo was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals to Francesca Schiavone", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177861-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 J&S Cup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177862-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Cup\nThe J. League Cup 2004, officially the Yamasaki Nabisco Cup 2004, was the 2nd edition of Japan soccer league cup tournament and the 12th edition under the current J. League Cup format. The championship started on March 27, and finished on November 3, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177862-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Cup\nTeams from the J1 took part in the tournament. The tournament started from the group stage, where they're divided into four groups. The group winners and runners-up of each group qualifies for the quarter-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177863-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Cup Final\n2004 J.League Cup Final was the 12th final of the J.League Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on November 3, 2004. FC Tokyo won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1\nThe 2004 J.League Division 1 season was the 12th season of the J1 League. The league fixture began on March 13, 2004 and ended on December 11, 2004. The Suntory Championship 2004 took place on December 5 and December 11, 2004. The first ever J.League Promotion / Relegation Series took place on December 4 and December 12, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1, Clubs\nFollowing sixteen clubs participated in J.League Division 1 during 2004 season. Of these clubs, Albirex Nigata and Sanfrecce Hiroshima were newly promoted from Division 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1, Format\nIn the 2004 season, the league was conducted split-season format, 1st Stage and 2nd Stage. In each stage, sixteen clubs played in a single round-robin format, a total of 15 games per club (per stage). A club received 3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, and 0 points for a loss. The club were ranked by points, and tie breakers are, in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1, Format\nA draw would be conducted, if necessary. The club that finished at the top of the table is declared stage champion and qualifies for the Suntory Championship. The first stage winner, hosts the first leg in the championship series. If a single club wins both stages, the club is declared the season champions and championship series will not be held. Meanwhile, the last-placed (16th-placed) club must play Pro/Rele Series at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1, Suntory Championship\nYokohama F. Marinos won the first stage and thus hosted the first game. They won the first leg by 1\u20130 thanks to Ryuji Kawai's goal. In the second leg, Alessandro Santos scored from the free kick in 76th minute to level the aggregate score. The clubs played in sudden death extra time, however neither club could break the scoreline. Yokohama upset the home club in the penalties winning them and series overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1, Attendance figures\nUpdated to games played on November 28, 2004Source: J.League Division 1: , Notes:\u2020 Team played previous season in J2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177864-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 1, Awards, Best Eleven\n* The number in brackets denotes the number of times that the footballer has appeared in the Best 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2\nThe 2004 J. League Division 2 season is the 33rd season of the second-tier club football in Japan and the 6th season since the establishment of J2 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2\nIn this season, twelve clubs competed in the quadruple round-robin format. Starting this season, promotion slots increased to 2.5 slots. The top two received automatic promotion and the third-placed finisher advanced to the Pro/Rele Series for the promotion. There were no relegation to the third-tier Japan Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2, Clubs\nFollowing twelve clubs played in J. League Division 2 during 2004 season. Of these clubs, Vegalta Sendai and Kyoto Purple Sanga relegated from Division 1 last year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2, League format\nTwelve clubs will play in quadruple round-robin format, a total of 44 games each. A club receives 3 points for a win, 1 point for a tie, and 0 points for a loss. The clubs are ranked by points, and tie breakers are, in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2, League format\nA draw would be conducted, if necessary. However, if two clubs are tied at the first place, both clubs will be declared as the champions. The top two clubs will be promoted to J1, while the 3rd placed club plays a two-legged Promotion/Relegation series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2, Promotion / Relegation Playoff\nKashiwa Reysol won on 4-0 on aggregate, and therefore both clubs remained in their respective leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177865-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 J.League Division 2, Attendance figures\nUpdated to games played on November 27, 2004Source: Notes:\u2020 Team played previous season in J1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177866-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open\nThe 2004 JPMorgan Chase Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Carson, California in the United States that was part of the Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 31st edition of the tournament and held from July 19 through July 25, 2004. Third-seeded Lindsay Davenport won the singles title and earned $93,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177866-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open, Finals, Doubles\nNadia Petrova / Meghann Shaughnessy defeated Conchita Mart\u00ednez / Virginia Ruano Pascual, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177867-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open \u2013 Doubles\nMary Pierce and Rennae Stubbs were the defending champions, but had different outcomes. While Pierce did not compete this year, Stubbs partnered with Cara Black, but they lost in first round to Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Chanda Rubin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177867-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open \u2013 Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy won the title, defeating Conchita Mart\u00ednez and Virginia Ruano Pascual 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final. It was the 5th title of the year for the pair, and the 9th title for both Petrova and Shaughnessy in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177868-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but did not compete this year due to a recovery from a cyst surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177868-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport won the tournament, defeating Serena Williams 6\u20131, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177868-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 JPMorgan Chase Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177869-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Jacksonville Jaguars season\nThe 2004 Jacksonville Jaguars season was the tenth season in franchise history, Jack Del Rio\u2019s second year as the head coach of the Jacksonville Jaguars and Byron Leftwich\u2019s first full year as starting quarterback. In a time of transition for the franchise, Del Rio\u2019s coaching and Leftwich\u2019s play helped to pull the Jaguars out of a four season slump to a finish of 9\u20137, placing second in the AFC South. However, they missed the playoffs for the fifth successive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177869-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Jacksonville Jaguars season, Schedule\nIn addition to their regular games with AFC South rivals, the Jaguars played teams from the AFC West and NFC North as per the schedule rotation, and also played intraconference games against the Steelers and the Bills based on divisional positions from 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177870-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation\nThe 2004 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation (Chinese: 2004\u5e74\u5ea6\u5341\u5927\u52c1\u6b4c\u91d1\u66f2\u9812\u734e\u5178\u79ae) was held on January 2005. It is part of the Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation series held in Hong Kong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177870-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Jade Solid Gold Best Ten Music Awards Presentation, Top 10 song awards\nThe top 10 songs (\u5341\u5927\u52c1\u6b4c\u91d1\u66f2) of 2004 are as follows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177871-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Jalna Mosque bomb attack\nThe 2004 Jalna Mosque bomb attack comprises two separate crude bomb attacks at local mosques in Jalna, Maharashtra on 27 August 2004. According to senior police officer, the first blast occurred at Kadriya Masjid in Jalna at 1:45 pm and the second explosion occurred barely 15 minutes later at another mosque on the outskirts of Poorna town in Parbhani district. The attacks were carried out during Friday prayer and total 18 people were injured. Later on 18 July 2012 all seven accused were acquitted in the case due to lack of evidence by a district and sessions court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177872-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 James Madison Dukes football team\nThe 2004 James Madison Dukes football team represented James Madison University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season, and completed the 32nd season of Dukes football. They were led by head coach Mickey Matthews and played their home games at Bridgeforth Stadium in Harrisonburg, Virginia. The 2004 team came off of a 6\u20136 record the previous season. JMU finished the season 13\u20132 with a record of 7\u20131 in Atlantic 10 Conference play en route to the program's first NCAA Division I-AA national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177873-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Football League\nThe 2004 Japan Football League (Japanese: \u7b2c6\u56de\u65e5\u672c\u30d5\u30c3\u30c8\u30dc\u30fc\u30eb\u30ea\u30fc\u30b0, Hepburn: Dai Rokkai Nihon Futtob\u014dru R\u012bgu) was the sixth season of the Japan Football League, the third tier of the Japanese football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177873-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Football League, Overview\nIt was contested by 16 teams, and Otsuka Pharmaceuticals won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177873-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Football League, Promotion and relegation\nBecause of promotion of Otsuka Pharmaceuticals and Thespa Kusatsu and expulsion of Kokushikan University, no relegation has occurred. After the season, Honda Lock, Mitsubishi Motors Mizushima and Ryutsu Keizai University were promoted from Regional Leagues by the virtue of their placing in the Regional League promotion series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177874-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Golf Tour\nThe 2004 Japan Golf Tour season was played from 18 December 2003 to 5 December 2004. The season consisted of 29 official money events in Japan, as well as the four majors and the three World Golf Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177874-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Golf Tour, Tournament results\nThe following table shows all the official money events in Japan for the 2004 season. The number in parentheses after each winner's name is the number of Japan Golf Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for Japan Golf Tour members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series\nThe 2004 Japan Series, the 55th edition of Nippon Professional Baseball's championship series, began on October 16 and ended on October 25, and matched the Pacific League playoffs winner Seibu Lions against the Central League Champion, Chunichi Dragons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Seibu Lions\nAfter an embarrassing sweep at the hands of the Yomiuri Giants in the 2002 Japan Series and losing out on the Pacific League pennant to the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks in 2003, the Lions were back in the Japan Series in 2004 thanks in no small part to the healthy arm of Daisuke Matsuzaka. Also helping the cause offensively was Venezuelan import Alex Cabrera, who hit a record-tying 55 home runs in 2002. Seibu had not won the Japan Series since 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Chunichi Dragons\nUnlike the Lions, the Dragons had not had any success in winning the Japan Series since 1954, and this was their first appearance in the series since 1999, when they lost in 5 games to the Hawks. The Dragons pitching staff was led by Kenshin Kawakami and Masahiro Yamamoto, while Hitoki Iwase anchored the back of the bullpen. Offensively, the Dragons were led by Alex Ochoa and Kosuke Fukudome. In the middle of the infield, the Dragons were led by the amazing double-play tandem of Hirokazu Ibata and Masahiro Araki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nThe first Japan Series game held in Nagoya Dome since Game 5 of the 1999 Japan Series turned out to be quite the close game, but the end result was the same: the Dragons were defeated by great pitching, this time from unheralded Takashi Ishii, who only won four games in the regular season. Chunichi had their ace on the mound in Kenshin Kawakami, who bounced back nicely from an injury-plagued 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nThe two teams matched zeroes for the first three innings as Ishii struck out four and Kawakami ducked in and out of trouble. Jose Fern\u00e1ndez hit a two-out single in the first but was stranded there, and Kawakami left Kazuhiro Wada at third after he hit a leadoff triple, but Hiroyuki Nakajima and Kosuke Noda both grounded out, Hiroyuki Takagi drew an intentional walk to get to the pitcher Ishii, who struck out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nWada would make sure he crossed the plate in his next at-bat. The fourth inning would also see the first run of the series on a towering home run to left field to give the Lions a 1-0 lead. That lead would be doubled in the next inning as Shogo Akada drove in Tomoaki Satoh with a single after Satoh doubled to lead off the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nThe 2-0 lead would be enough for the Seibu pitching staff, as Ishii would work seven shutout innings, giving up just two hits and striking out six. Kiyoshi Toyoda worked a perfect 9th for the Lions to preserve the win. The shutout was also the third time in the last four home Japan Series games that Chunichi had been shut out, and it was the fourth time out of the last six overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThis would be the first of a few wild games in this series. The Dragons finally ended their home playoff futility by winning their first playoff game at Nagoya Dome at the expense of Lions ace Matsuzaka. However, the game did not start well for the Dragons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nPitching in his third Japan Series, wily veteran screwballer Masa Yamamoto was lit up for two runs in the first inning off the bat of Fernandez, who also drove in Satoh who led off the game with a single. The quick 2-0 lead was enough for Matsuzaka for the first two innings, but he ran into his first bit of trouble in the 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nShogo Mori led off the inning with a single, and Yamamoto reached on a dropped third strike. Matsuzaka got himself into further trouble when he hit Masahiro Araki with a pitch to load the bases with nobody out. Hirokazu Ibata got a hit but saw Mori get gunned down at home. With the rally in trouble after Tatsunami grounded out, Alex Ochoa tied the game up with a two-run single to right. Matsuzaka made matters worse by plunking his second batter of the inning, this time Masahiko Morino, to re-load the bases. Finally, light-hitting catcher Motonobu Tanishige walked to force another run home and give Chunichi their first-ever lead at Nagoya Dome in the Japan series, 3-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nBoth Yamamoto and Matsuzaka would regain their composure in the following innings. Yamamoto struck out five batters between the 2nd and the 5th, and Dice-K only gave up one hit from the 4th to the 6th, striking out five in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nSeibu would chase Yamamoto and regain the lead in the 5th with a three-run barrage of their own. Takagi led the inning off with a single, then Satoh and Akada bot hit doubles to vault Seibu into the lead, 4-3. Eiji Ochiai came in to replace Yamamoto for the righty-on-righty matchup to Fernandez. After a sacrifice by Fernandez, the dangerous Cabrera was intentionally walked. Wada followed up the walk with a double that gave the Lions the 5-3 lead. Wada would double the Seibu advantage in the 7th with his second home run of the series, a shot that gave Seibu a seemingly safe 6-3 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThen, Matsuzaka imploded. He was lit up for five runs in the 7th inning, with the rally having been started by pinch-hitter Takayuki Ohnishi. Araki lined out to right, but the rally truly began with Ibata's single to center. Tatsunami followed it up with three of his four RBIs on the day, as he hit his first home run of the series to right field, a three-run blast that tied the game at 6-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nHowever, the Dragons weren't done. Ochoa drew a walk and Morino was plunked for the second time on the day, and Tanishige got in on the fun by singling home Ochoa to give the Dragons the 7-6 lead. Pinch-hitter Mitsunobu Takahashi then singled home another run to finish Matsuzaka's day and give Chunichi an 8-6 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThe Dragons would add three more in the 9th off Shinji Mori. Ibata collected his fourth hit of the day, stole second, and was driven home by Tatsunami. After Ochoa reached again, an RBI triple and another Tanishige RBI single ended the scoring with an 11-6 win for the Dragons. With the series going back to Seibu Dome for the next three, the Dragons were tied. They had beaten Seibu's best in Matsuzaka. Could they keep the ball rolling and win their first Japan Series since 1954?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nIn what was one of the wildest games in Japan Series history, Game 3 was also the first time in Japan Series history that two grand slams were hit in the same game. Kazuyuki Hoashi faced off against Domingo Guzm\u00e1n for the starting pitching matchup. The first three innings were a scoreless deadlock, with Chunichi having only one hit to their credit, and Seibu having no hits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nThe fourth inning saw the first runs of the game, as the potent Seibu bats once again came alive, and the feared slugger Alex Cabrera finally came to life himself. Satoh and Fernandez both singled their way on, and then Cabrera launched his first home run of the series to give Seibu the 3-0 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nHoashi would make it stand up, and he got another run in support of him in the 4th when young shortstop Hiroyuki Nakajima clubbed his first home run of the series. However, he ran into trouble in the 6th: trouble that would give the Dragons a 5-4 lead. The rally started when Nakajima muffed a ground ball. After Hoashi got the first out of the inning, Tatsunami and Ochoa both singled their way on to load the bases, and Takahashi drew a walk to force in one run. Hoashi was taken out and replaced by Shuichiro Osada, who faced Tanishige as his first batter. Tanishige took a 3-1 inside fastball and crushed it down the line in left for his first career grand slam. All of a sudden, the Lions were trailing 5-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nWith Guzman out of the game after five innings, Shinya Okamoto took over. He preserved the Dragons lead, and his teammates got him another run in the 6th when Ochoa got a bases-loaded RBI single to give the Dragons a 6-4 lead. However, the 7th truly was the lucky inning for the Lions, as Okamoto suffered an implosion of his own, similar to Matsuzaka's in the previous game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nWith one out, Nakajima singled his way on, Yoshihito Ishii walked, and Takagi was hit by a pitch. Satoh doubled Nakajima and Ishii in to tie the game up at 6. At this point, conventional wisdom would say that Okamoto should have been relieved, but he was allowed to continue. Akada grounded out, and Fernandez walked. With two down, the game was hanging in the balance as Okamoto pitched to Cabrera, even though it was only the 7th inning. Cabrera responded with a towering home run to left on a 1-1 pitch that was hit out of Seibu Dome. It was Cabrera's second home run of the day, and it was also the second grand slam of the day in total. The slam gave Seibu a 10-6 lead going into the 8th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177875-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nChunichi would not go quietly though. Against Koji Ohnuma, Omar Linares got in on the home run derby by leading off with a home run to the back screen in center to pull the Dragons to within 10-7. Morino followed it up with a double, and he came around to score on two groundouts for a 10-8 score. However, Toyoda would not let the Dragons get any closer in the 9th, as he stuck out two batters in the 9th to record the save and give Seibu a 2-1 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177876-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan national football team\nThis page records the details of the Japan national football team in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177877-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan rugby union tour of Europe\nThe 2004 Japan rugby union tour of Europe was a series of test-matches played in November 2004 in Scotland, Romania and Wales Europe by Japan rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177877-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nScotland: 15.Hugo Southwell, 14.Chris Paterson, 13.Ben Hinshelwood, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Sean Lamont, 10.Dan Parks, 9.Chris Cusiter, 8.Jon Petrie, 7.Donnie Macfadyen, 6.Ally Hogg, 5.Nathan Hines, 4.Stuart Grimes, 3.Gavin Kerr, 2.Gordon Bulloch (capt. ), 1.Allan Jacobsen, \u2013 replacements: 16.Robbie Russell, 17.Craig Smith, 18.Scott Macleod, 19.Jason White, 20.Mike Blair, 21.Gordon Ross, 22.Graeme Morrison Japan: 15.Ryohei Miki, 14.Koichiro Kubota, 13.Seiichi Shimomura, 12.Yukio Motoki, 11.Hayato Daimon, 10.Keisuke Sawaki, 9.Wataru Ikeda, 8.Takuro Miuchi (capt. ), 7.Hajime Kiso, 6.Naoya Okubo, 5.Hitoshi Ono, 4.Takanori Kumagae, 3.Ryo Yamamura, 2.Takashi Yamaoka, 1.Yuichi Hisadomi, \u2013 replacements: 16.Mitsugu Yamamoto, 17.Masahito Yamamoto, 18.Feletikiki Mau, 19.Takatoyo Yamaguchi, 20.Kiyonori Tanaka, 21.Masatoshi Mukoyama, 22.Hideyuki Yoshida", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177877-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nRomania: 15.Valentin Maftei, 14.Bogdan Voicu, 13.Cristian Sauan, 12.Romeo Gontineac, 11.Ion Teodorescu, 10.Ionut Tofan, 9.Vali Calafeteanu, 8.Alin Petrache (capt. ), 7.Alex Tudori, 6.Costica Mersoiu , 5.Cristian Petre, 4.George Oprisor, 3.Marcel Socaciu, 2.Razvan Mavrodin, 1.Petru Balan, \u2013 replacements: 16.Bogdan Zebega Suman, 17.Cezar Popescu, 18.Petrisor Toderasc, 19.Valentin Ursache, 20.Iulian Andrei, 21.Ionut Dimofte, 22.Dan Dumbrava Japan: 15.Ryohei Miki, 14.Koichiro Kubota, 13.Seiichi Shimomura, 12.Masatoshi Mukoyama, 11.Hiroki Mizuno, 10.Hideyuki Yoshida, 9.Kiyonori Tanaka, 8.Takuro Miuchi (capt. ), 7.Takatoyo Yamaguchi, 6.Naoya Okubo, 5.Hajime Kiso, 4.Takanori Kumagae, 3.Ryo Yamamura, 2.Takashi Yamaoka, 1.Masahito Yamamoto, \u2013 replacements: 17.Yuichi Hisadomi, 19.Feletikiki Mau, 20.Wataru Ikeda, 21.Yukio Motoki \u2013 No entry: 16.Mitsugu Yamamoto, 18.Hitoshi Ono, 22.Hayato Daimon", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 950]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177877-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nWales: 15.Rhys Williams, 14.Hal Luscombe, 13.Tom Shanklin, 12.Gavin Henson, 11.Shane Williams, 10.Ceri Sweeney, 9.Gareth Cooper, 8.Michael Owen, 7.Colin Charvis (capt. ), 6.Dafydd Jones, 5.Jonathan Thomas, 4.Ryan Jones, 3.Gethin Jenkins, 2.Mefin Davies, 1.Duncan Jones, \u2013 replacements: 16.Steve Jones, 17.Adam R. Jones, 18.Alix Popham, 19.Martyn Williams, 21.Mike Phillips, 22.Kevin Morgan \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 20.Matthew WatkinsJapan: 15.Ryohei Miki, 14.Koichiro Kubota, 13.Masatoshi Mukoyama, 12.Yukio Motoki, 11.Hayato Daimon, 10.Hideyuki Yoshida, 9.Wataru Ikeda, 8.Takuro Miuchi (capt. ), 7.Feletikiki Mau, 6.Naoya Okubo, 5.Takanori Kumagae, 4.Hajime Kiso, 3.Ryo Yamamura, 2.Takashi Yamaoka, 1.Masahito Yamamoto, \u2013 replacements: 16.Mitsugu Yamamoto, 17.Tatsukichi Nishiura, 19.Takatoyo Yamaguchi, 20.Kiyonori Tanaka, 22.Tatsuhiko Otao \u2013 No entry: 18.Koichi Kubo, 21.Sadanobu Imari", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 934]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177878-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japan women's national football team\nThis page records the details of the Japan women's national football team in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177879-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Formula 3 Championship\nThe 2004 Japanese Formula 3 Championship was the 25th edition of the Japanese Formula 3 Championship. It began on 28 March at Suzuka and ended on 24 October at Motegi. Italian driver Ronnie Quintarelli took the championship title, winning eight from 20 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177880-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Japanese Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Formula 1 Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 10 October 2004 at the Suzuka Circuit. It was Race 17 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. All the running on Saturday was cancelled due to Typhoon Ma-on, meaning that both the qualifying sessions were run on Sunday morning. The grid was shaken up due to rain, Ralf Schumacher and Mark Webber taking fortunate grid positions due to being allotted early running in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177880-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Grand Prix\nWhile Michael Schumacher was not as competitive towards the end of the season as he had been en route to his seventh title, Japan could be seen as normal service resumed, the German winning comfortably from pole. This was his 13th and last win of the season, breaking his own record from 2002 with 11. Ralf was behind him, taking his first podium since breaking his back at Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177880-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Japanese Grand Prix\nIt was the last time the Schumacher brothers finished in 1\u20132 formation (having done so on four other occasions: 2001 Canadian Grand Prix, 2001 French Grand Prix, 2002 Brazilian Grand Prix, 2003 Canadian Grand Prix). At Suzuka in 2003 BAR upset the form book with a double points finish \u2013 in 2004 this was commonplace, although 11 points was still their biggest haul of the season. Contact between David Coulthard and Rubens Barrichello ended the race for both drivers. Webber retired in bizarre circumstances \u2013 part of the seat had overheated, causing burns to his buttocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177880-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Grand Prix\nThis was Jarno Trulli's first race with the Toyota team after missing the previous race. This was Olivier Panis's last race as he decided to retire from the race seat. But he stayed with the Toyota team, as the test driver. This was Rubens Barrichello's only DNF of the season after colliding with David Coulthard on lap 38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177880-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177880-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nWirdheim and Briscoe was entered as third driver, but did not run due to bad weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177881-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese House of Councillors election\nHouse of Councillors elections were held in Japan on 11 July 2004. The House of Councillors consists of 242 members who serve six-year terms. Approximately half the members are elected every three years. At these elections 121 members were elected. Of these 73 were elected from the 47 prefectural districts and 48 were elected from a nationwide list by proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177881-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese House of Councillors election, Results\nThe opposition Democratic Party won a plurality of the popular vote and seats contested in the election, sweeping the liberal urban areas. The ruling Liberal Democratic Party failed to win in its strongholds but once more received most of its support from the agrarian areas. New Komeito did well, reaching its goals, as did the Social Democratic Party. The Japanese Communist Party did not reach its goals, while independents won the rest of the seats. The Liberal League and Green Political Assembly failed to win any seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177883-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese Super Cup\n2004 Japanese Super Cup was the Japanese Super Cup competition. The match was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on March 6, 2004. J\u00fabilo Iwata won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix was the twelfth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 17\u201319 September 2004 at the Twin Ring Motegi circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThis race was most notable for Makoto Tamada's home victory starting from pole, as well as Nakano's third place podium for Kawasaki and Barros' climb up to fourth from tenth on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOne day before the race, on Saturday, Daijiro Kato's father presented two minibikes which will be sold this Fall in Japan. This was done to commemorate his son, who tragically died last year during the 2003 Japanese Grand Prix at the now scrapped Suzuka Circuit after a high-speed collision with the barriers at the Casio Triangle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAfter eleven rounds, Valentino Rossi is ahead of the rest with 209 points. Not far behind is Sete Gibernau in second with 180 points and third in the standings is Max Biaggi with 158 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nHome hero Makoto Tamada has given the Japanese fans something to get exciting for when he took pole position on Saturday with a time of 1:46.673. Close second is John Hopkins and third is Valentino Rossi. The second row of the grid consists out of Max Biaggi in fourth, Colin Edwards in fifth and Marco Melandri in sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAll riders take off and do their usual warm-up lap before lining up in their respective grid slots. As the lights go out, it is Hopkins who initially gets the better start and looks to lead going into Turn 1. However, it is Rossi manages to lunge ahead and leads going into the corner. As Hopkins turns in, he fails to spot Loris Capirossi who had a great start from seventh on the grid and collides with him as Capirossi loses the front and rear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThis causes a chain reaction, bringing down Kenny Roberts Jr., Max Biaggi and Nicky Hayden with them. Six riders had now been eliminated on the opening lap, but Tamada - who had a bad start and thus lost multiple positions - was not one of the casualties. The marshalls run up to the stranded riders as the dust settles, revealing that all the riders except for Hayden had gone down (Hayden was stuck in the gravel). Biaggi is also stuck, the marshalls pushing his bike as a wounded Hopkins lies injured in the gravel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nCapirossi has not moved since the incident and has been put on a stretcher, two of the marshalls lifting him up to bring him to the medical centre. Rossi meanwhile has been able to open up a gap to second place Tamada already. However, he quickly closes this entering Turn 11, pursuing Rossi for the remainder of the lap. Also at the straight before Turn 11, Sete Gibernau tries to pass Norifumi Abe by going up his inside, failing and having to stay behind him for the time being.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap two, the top six is as follows: Rossi, Tamada, Melandri, Shinya Nakano, Abe and Gibernau. Tamada has opened up a big gap to third place Melandri, who himself is coming under pressure from Nakano. At Turn 11, Tamada looks to be passing Rossi but stays behind for the time being.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap three and Tamada is still right behind Rossi, biting his time and not yet making a move. Behind him, Melandri is still being followed by Nakano, Abe, Gibernau and Carlos Checa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap four, Tamada sets the fastest lap of the race. Abe has overtaken Nakano for fourth before Turn 9. Nakano then tries to retake the position at the end of the straight coming up to Turn 11, deciding to stay behind for the time being.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap five and Tamada sets another fastest lap of the race. Checa is now losing touch with the back of Gibernau while Tamada is still all over the rear of Rossi. Exiting Turn 11, Nakano's exhaust started to blow some light smoke, but it does not indicate an engine problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap six, Tamada is still all over the rear of Rossi. At the end of the straight leading up to Turn 11, he makes the move, going side by side with Rossi and getting ahead upon entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap seven and Tamada now leads his home grand prix, Rossi still right behind him and ready to strike if he makes a mistake, however. At Turn 10, Rossi goes in a bit too deep and runs wide, allowing Tamada to open up a slight gap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eight, Tamada is now increasing his gap slightly. His teammate further back - Abe - is now coming under pressure from Nakano however. Exiting Turn 11, he manages to get closer again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap nine and Rossi is still close to Tamada. Tohru Ukawa has crashed out of the race, the Japanese rider walking away unhurt and disappointed as the marshalls recover his bike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap ten, it is revealed that Capirossi - who was taken away by stretcher earlier in the race - has a small fracture in his foot, as well as a minor concussion. Hopkins has minor bruises and a dislocated elbow for Roberts Jr. Troy Bayliss has now closed right up to Checa, then Abe suddenly slows down as a mechanical problem ends his good run in fourth, the Japanese shaking his head. This promotes Melandri to third, Nakano to fourth, Gibernau to fifth and Checa to sixth. At the straight before Turn 11, Bayliss has a look up the inside of Checa, deciding better of it and staying behind for now. Behind Bayliss, Alex Barros has also closed the gap and is now behind Bayliss in eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap eleven and Tamada's gap back to Rossi is +0.594 seconds. The top six is as follows: Tamada, Rossi, Melandri, Nakano, Gibernau and Checa. Abe enters the pits to retire his bike, visibly shaking his head in disappointment. At the straight coming up to Turn 4, Bayliss goes alongside Checa and passes him for sixth, sliding his Marlboro Ducati into the corner and just hanging on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twelve - the halfway point of the race -, Barros goes side by side with Checa at the start/finish straight, passing the Spaniard and taking seventh from him. In sector two, the gap Tamada has to Rossi is +1.116 seconds, which increases to +1.139 seconds in sector three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap thirteen and Tamada continues to slowly extend his lead over Rossi. No overtakes happened at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap fourteen, Nakano has closed up on Melandri, shadowing the Italian for third. Behind them, Bayliss has closed up on Gibernau for fifth, Barros closing up on the duo as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap fifteen and Bayliss has gotten past Gibernau. He goes up the inside of the Spaniard at the straight heading towards Turn 4, promoting him up to fifth position. Barros has also caught up with a now struggling Gibernau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap sixteen, Tamada's gap back to Rossi is now +2.393 seconds. At the end of the straight, heading up to Turn 4, Barros passes Gibernau by lunging up his inside and outbreaking him entering the corner, moving him up to sixth place. The Brazilian is now catching up with Bayliss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap seventeen and Tamada is still in front, slowly extending his lead still. The top six is as follows: Tamada, Rossi, Melandri, Nakano, Bayliss and Barros. No overtakes happened at the front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eighteen, Nakano is still behind Melandri, shadowing him and waiting for the right moment to strike. Barros is doing likewise behind Bayliss. Gibernau behind them is still struggling down in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap nineteen and Nakano is now right behind Melandri. Exiting Turn 4, he tries to pass Melandri on the outside, heading into Turn 5, the Italian blocking him off and preventing him from getting by. At the straight heading up to Turn 11, Nakano goes side by side and passes Melandri for third, who then does a switchback move and tries to retake the position. However, he runs wide, loses momentum exiting the corner and hands Nakano the position at last, the Kawasaki section of fans on the grandstands going wild after he does so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty, the top six is as follows: Tamada, Rossi, Nakano, Melandri, Bayliss and Barros. At the front, Tamada has pulled a significant gap back to Rossi by now. Bayliss has gone down, the rider angrily walking away from the crash site as a marshall guides him off the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-one and Tamada's gap back to Rossi is now +4.079 seconds. Barros has also passed Melandri by diving down his inside at Turn 7, promoting him to fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty-two, Barros now pulls away from the Italian and is going after third place Nakano for the podium. Tamada's gap back to Rossi is now +4.672 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-three, the penultimate lap, and the top six is as follows: Tamada, Rossi, Nakano, Barros, Melandri and Gibernau. Barros has not been able to get much closer to Nakano so far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThe last lap - lap twenty-four - has begun and Tamada is still out in front, with Rossi a distant second. The Japanese fans at the Camel Honda booth go wild as Tamada approaches the last set of corners and heads onto the start/finish straight, the Japanese briefly looking behind him before doing a wheelie and crossing the line to win the race - his second race win of the season and his MotoGP career. Rossi finishes second and Nakano, on the Kawasaki, finishes a sensational third for the young constructor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn the parade lap back to parc-ferm\u00e9, Rossi shakes hands with Tamada while still on the bike, congratulating him on his win. The marshalls also wave their flags and congratulate all the riders as well. Tamada celebrates by putting his arms up in the air to signal victory. The fans in the grandstand put up a big banner of the Camel Honda team to celebrate Tamada's and the team's victory. Tamada waves at the crowd and a rider shakes his hand as congratulations, then pulls another wheelie in joy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nNakano waves the Kawasaki flag, celebrating his and the team's first podium in the premier class since their return in 2002. The Kawasaki stand also goes wild, waving flags in salute of Nakano and the team. Rossi also celebrates, doing a wheelie at the straight before Turn 11 as well, briefly waving at the crowd. Tamada meanwhile is still happily waving at the crowd, Rossi doing likewise, then pulling right to stop his bike at the barrier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0029-0002", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nTamada stops at the straight before Turn 11, two Japanese fans invading the track to run up to him and give him the Japanese flag. The fans then run off the circuit, Tamada riding again and proudly displaying the Japanese flag for everyone to see. He waves his arms around a bit more before going under the tunnel and heading onto the start/finish straight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nRossi is the first one to arrive to parc-ferm\u00e9, unbuckling his helmet and waving to the camera. Tamada also heads to the pits and parc-ferm\u00e9, then gets greeted cheerfully by his crewmembers who - one hugging him and the other holding the Japanese flag. Tamada then hugs his other crewmember also before running up to his team and celebrating with them. Nakano also arrives at parc-ferm\u00e9, stepping off his bike with the Kawasaki flag still in his hand. One of his crewmembers hugs him, then another one does so as well, dragging him to the rest of the team to celebrate third place. Tamada is now being interviewed by Japanese television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThe riders head up to the podium, the first one being Nakano, who gets a very warm welcome as the Japanese fans clap and cheer loudly for him. Second is Rossi who also gets a warm welcome from the fans. Rossi then shakes hands with Nakano. Then Tamada is announced, sending the home fans into a frenzy, the airhorns blowing and the cheers being heard loudly. He shakes hands with Rossi and Nakano, then steps onto the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nIkuo Shimizu, then president of the Twin Ring Motegi, hands out third-place trophy to Nakano, the fans clapping loudly as he receives it. Next up is Rossi, who also gets a loud applause as he lifts his trophy and then Martyn Griffiths, then Vice-President Marketing Asia of Japan Tobacco International, hands Tamada the winners trophy. He happily receives it and lifts it up, the fans loudly cheering and blowing their airhorns as a result. The Japanese nation anthem plays for Tamada, the fans once again cheering loudly once it stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0031-0002", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThe girls on the podium hand the riders the champagne, Rossi then cheekily spraying one of them as the other two spray into the crowd, then each other. Once they're done, they put the champagne down and pose for the group photo. Tamada then thanks the fans in a short interview on the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nRossi's second place, Gibernau's sixth place and Biaggi's back-to-back DNF now means that Rossi extends his lead in the championship. ' The Doctor' leads the title hunt with 229 points, followed by Gibernau with 190 points and Biaggi, still stuck in 158 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, 125 cc classification\nThe race, scheduled to be run for 21 laps, was stopped after 8 full laps due to an accident. It was later restarted for the remaining 13 laps, with the grid determined by the running order before the suspension. The second part of the race determined the final result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177884-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round twelve has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder\nThe Jenner, California, double murder of 2004 occurred the night of August 14\u201315, 2004, in which a young couple was shot to death as they slept on a state beach. The bodies of Lindsay Cutshall, 22, and her fianc\u00e9 Jason S. Allen, 26, were found on Fish Head Beach, between Russian Gulch and the mouth of the Russian River, in the small coastal hamlet of Jenner, California. Both Cutshall and Allen were killed with a .45-caliber Marlin rifle as they slept in their sleeping bags on the beach. The Sonoma County Coroner's Office estimated that the couple was slain on either the night of August 14, 2004 or in the early morning hours of August 15, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder\nThe case has received considerable national attention, but the crime remained unsolved, until news given at a press conference on May 5, 2017, suggesting that authorities had solved the crime. In 2019 Shaun Gallon was sentenced to life in prison for the murders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, The victims\nLindsay Cutshall and Jason Allen grew up in the Midwestern United States. Cutshall was from Fresno, Ohio and Allen was from Zeeland, Michigan. The couple met in 2002 while Cutshall was a student at the Appalachian Bible College in West Virginia, and became engaged six weeks later. They planned to marry in autumn of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, The victims\nBoth Cutshall and Allen were counselors at Rock-N-Water, a Christian summer camp in El Dorado County, California. According to acquaintances, Cutshall and Allen had left the camp on a road trip the day before they were killed. Credit card receipts placed the duo at Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco on August 14, 2004. Witnesses also reported seeing Cutshall's 1992 red Ford Tempo in the towns of Guerneville, Sebastopol, Forestville, and Jenner before the murders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, The victims\nOn Saturday - the probable night of the murder - it is speculated, but not confirmed, that the couple went to a local motel and restaurant called River's End but were unable to rent a room. They learned about the nearby beach, which is less than a mile from the restaurant. Since camping on the beach is illegal, it is unlikely the couple planned to camp for more than one night.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, The victims\nThe bodies of the slain couple were not discovered until Wednesday, August 18, when the Sheriff's helicopter was dispatched following a report of a man who was stranded on a cliff above Fish Head Beach. The helicopter spotted the bodies and notified the department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation\nHomicide detectives from the Sonoma County Sheriff's Department launched an investigation into the deaths. The detectives quickly eliminated murder-suicide as an explanation to the killings. They also confirmed that none of Cutshall's or Allen's belongings had been taken, ruling out robbery as a motive, and that neither of them had been sexually assaulted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation\nCamping is prohibited on the rural stretch of beach where Cutshall and Allen met their deaths, but drifters and hitchhikers on State Route 1 (which runs alongside Fish Head Beach) are known to use the oceanfront site for sleeping. Initially, it was postulated that a drifter had murdered the young couple and then left the area. Despite an exhaustive effort by detectives, this avenue of the investigation never yielded any solid leads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation\nThe weapon used was a .45-caliber Marlin Model 1894 long rifle, either a long colt style, or a carbine magazine. Although ballistics determined the gun type, police declined to publicly disclose it, in order \"to eliminate false leads.\" The rifle is uncommon, considered too high caliber for most ranchers, and most likely would have required hand loaded ammunition. Shell casings were not found at the scene of the crime, suggesting the killer retrieved them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation\nOn July 16, 2009, a 62-year-old drifter named Joseph Henry Burgess was killed in a shoot-out in the remote Jemez Mountains of New Mexico. Initially believed to be a suspect, Burgess's DNA was tested, and did not match that left at the Jenner crime scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2006 evidence\nIn May 2006, 21 months after Cutshall and Allen were slain, Sonoma County Sheriff's detectives released new evidence in the case, which they hoped would generate new leads. New evidence including poems found near the crime scene, writings contained in a journal left for visitors inside a nearby driftwood hut, an empty 40-ounce bottle of Camo beer, and drawings inked onto pieces of driftwood near the site of the killings. Camo beer originates in Wisconsin, is no longer made, and is an uncommon beer in California. They also found a distinctive hat on a turnout above the beach on Hwy 1. Police wanted to know how the hat and beer bottle came to be in the places they were found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2006 evidence\nThe case remained unsolved at that time. The Sonoma County Sheriff's department offered a $50,000 reward for information.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nThe Sonoma County Sheriff's Office held a press conference on Friday, May 5, 2017 regarding major developments in the 2004 Jenner double murder case. The press conference was held at the Sheriff's Office building at 2796 Ventura Avenue in Santa Rosa. Attendees had been instructed to arrive by 10:15 AM. No additional information was provided until the press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nAt 10:30 AM on May 5, 2017, Sonoma County Sheriff Steve Freitas read the following statement regarding the 2004 Jenner double murder case:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\n\"Good morning ladies and gentlemen. I'm Steve Freitas, the Sheriff here in Sonoma County. I'd like to make a brief statement and then I will take some questions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nI'm pleased to announce that the Sheriff's Office has made a major break-thru in the investigation surrounding the murders of Jason Allen and Lindsay Cutshall that took place in August, 2004 in Jenner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nMany of us will never forget when Sonoma County was rocked by the discovery of a young innocent couple found murdered on a secluded beach where they spent the night. Jason and Lindsay were just 26 and 22 years old at the time of their deaths. Jason, from Michigan, and Lindsay, from Ohio, were in California working at a Christian youth white water rafting camp in El Dorado County and were on a three day sight-seeing trip of the Northern California coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nThe Sheriff's Office has identified Shaun Gallon, a 38 year old resident of Forestville, California, as Jason and Lindsay's killer. Gallon was recently arrested for the murder of his brother in their Forestville home. Gallon is well known to Sheriff's Office Investigators, and early on in the Jenner murder investigation Gallon was a person of interest who detectives never ruled out as a possible suspect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nUpon Gallon's arrest for the murder of his brother, Sheriff's Office Detectives took another opportunity to talk to him about the murders in Jenner. Gallon made statements to the detectives with new information and additional investigative leads into the case. He had information about the killings that no other person could have known and we have located evidence that corroborates his information. Based on what detectives have been able to learn, we feel confident that we have Jason and Lindsay's killer in custody.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nSheriff's Office detectives are continuing to follow-up on leads and are working hard to complete the investigation. We will be presenting our report to the District Attorney's Office in the near future. However, we are still encouraging anyone with information about this case and/or Shaun Gallon to contact our detectives. For that reason, we are releasing a photo of Shaun Gallon. Sergeant Crum has that picture for those who want it and it will be posted at the end of this press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nI'd like to a take moment to thank the other law enforcement agencies who assisted on this investigation over the years: The Santa Rosa Police Department, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms, California State Parks and the California Department of Justice. Additionally, I want to thank the members of our community who have come forward with information on this case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nI also want to thank the many men and women of the Sheriff's Office who have worked on this investigation over the years. I'm grateful to the dozens of detectives, from all of the Sheriff's Office investigative units, who persistently and faithfully worked on this case for nearly 13 years. I wish I could name them all, but there are too many to list. I would like to acknowledge and thank the current investigative team: Lieutenant Tim Duke, Sgt. Shannon McAlvain, Lead Detective Joe Horsemen, Detectives Jeff Toney, Jayson Fowler and Jesse Hanshew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nThis case is further proof that the men and women of the Sheriff's Office will never give up in protecting our community and seeking justice for crime victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nMost importantly I want to thank the Cutshall and Allen families, who have consistently been supportive and patient during this 13 year investigation. I'd like to read a statement from Bob and Delores Allen and Chris and Kathy Cutshall:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\n\"We are extremely pleased that our children's murderer is in custody where he belongs. We praise the Lord for his capture and we trust in the due process of the law. We would like to thank the heartfelt concern of the people of Jenner and Sonoma County. We have appreciated your support for this case throughout our thirteen-year ordeal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nWe are especially grateful to the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office for their tireless pursuit of Jason's and Lindsay's killer. The strong support for us and for the case by the former sheriff, Sheriff Cogbill, and the current sheriff, Sheriff Freitas, has been outstanding. And the dedication of all the lieutenants, sergeants, detectives, and support personnel of Sheriff's Office Investigations throughout the years has totally amazed us. The combination of their humanity and professionalism would not allow them to give up on this case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nAnd when we at times wondered if this day would ever come, the detectives in particular wouldn't allow us to lose hope. To all who have worked this case over the years, we can't thank you enough . You are true heroes to us and we thank God for you. Finally and most importantly, we want to thank our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ for sustaining us and our families throughout this long journey. We know that we have miles to go before the case is closed with a conviction, but we also know the power and wonder of God's grace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nOur prayers continue to be for the Sheriff's Office as they build their case, for the families of the deputies, who have given them their undying support, for all the dear folks of Sonoma County who have prayed for us, and even for Shaun Gallon who heartlessly committed this senseless and wicked crime. Thank you.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nI will now take some questions...and while I want to be as transparent as possible, please understand that I don't want to jeopardize the continued investigation and prosecution of this case, so I will not be answering any questions that might disclose information that should be saved for the courtroom.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nWith this statement, police believe that they have identified the perpetrator of the double homicide as 38 year old Shaun Gallon, a resident of Forestville, California. Gallon had previously been arrested for the shooting death of his brother Shamus at their mother's home. Sheriff Steve Fritas of Sonoma County said that Gallon made statements about the crime that only the killer would know, and that his office had also found corroborating evidence tying Gallon to the murders. The nature of this evidence has not been released by the authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, 2017 police press conferenc\nGallon's motive for the killings of the couple and his brother have not yet been ascertained. No known connection to him between Lindsay Cutshall or Jason Allen has been uncovered yet either.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, Charges and sentencing\nOn May 17, 2018, Gallon was officially charged with the murders. Gallon had a history of criminal misconduct, including attempted murder with a package bomb in June 2004, a conviction for wounding a man with an arrow and allegedly killing his younger brother in March 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177885-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Jenner, California, double murder, Investigation, Charges and sentencing\nIn June 2019 Gallon entered no-contest pleas and admitted guilt in the crimes. The following month he was sentenced to serve three consecutive life terms without parole plus another 94 years in state prison for his crimes: the murders of Cutshall and Allen; the 2017 killing of his brother, Shamus Gallon; and an attempted murder in 2004 of a man in Monte Rio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177886-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Jersey City mayoral special election\nThe Jersey City 2004 mayoral special election took place on November 2, 2004. Democrat Jerramiah Healy won the election with 28% of the vote over his nearest rivals (Assemblyman Lou Manzo, 24%, and Acting Mayor L. Harvey Smith, 22%). The previous Mayor Glenn Cunningham, the first African-American Mayor died of a heart attack five months prior and L. Harvey Smith became Acting Mayor. There was also an election in 2005, which Healy also won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177886-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Jersey City mayoral special election\nThe election was marked by attempts to claim the legacy of deceased Mayor Cunningham, innuendo, and a picture of the eventual winner drunk and naked on his front porch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177888-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Johan Cruyff Shield\nThe ninth edition of the Johan Cruyff Shield (Dutch: Johan Cruijff Schaal) was held on 8 August 2004 between 2003\u201304 Eredivisie champions Ajax and 2003\u201304 KNVB Cup winners FC Utrecht. FC Utrecht won the match 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177889-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ju-Jitsu World Championships\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Kaltenmeyer (talk | contribs) at 02:51, 16 December 2019 (clean up, replaced: Shedule \u2192 Schedule). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177889-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ju-Jitsu World Championships\nThe 2004 Ju-Jitsu World Championship were the 6th edition of the Ju-Jitsu World Championships, and were held in M\u00f3stoles, Spain from November 26 to November 28, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177890-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 June rugby union tests\nThe 2004 mid-year rugby union tests (also known as the Summer Internationals in the Northern Hemisphere) refer to international rugby union matches that are played through June, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177890-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 June rugby union tests\nFour test series took place in the window with Argentina hosting Wales, Australia hosting Scotland, New Zealand hosting England and South Africa hosting Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177890-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 June rugby union tests\nThe Pacific Islanders played matches against Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, losing all three matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177891-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Junior League World Series\nThe 2004 Junior League World Series took place from August 15\u201321 in Taylor, Michigan, United States. Tampa, Florida defeated Punto Fijo, Venezuela in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177892-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Junior Oceania Cup\nThe 2004 Junior Oceania Cup was an international field hockey tournament hosted by New Zealand. The quadrennial tournament serves as the Junior Championship of Oceania organized by the Oceania Hockey Federation. It was held in Wellington, New Zealand, between 7 and 11 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177892-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Junior Oceania Cup\nAustralia won the tournament in both the men's and women's competitions. The tournament also served as a qualifier for the 2005 men's and women's Junior World Cups, with Australia qualifying for both.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177893-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Junior Pan American Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2004 Junior Pan American Artistic Gymnastics Championships was held in San Salvador, El Salvador, October 14\u201318, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177894-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Junior Pan American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2004 Junior Pan American Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships was held in San Salvador, El Salvador, October 14\u201318, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177895-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 K League\nThe 2004 K League was the 22nd season of the K League. The previous single format of the league was replaced by two regular stages and playoffs in this season. Each team played a total of 12 matches against every other team in each stage. After both stages were finished, two winners and the top two clubs in the overall table qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177895-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 K League, Regular season, Overall table\nThe top two teams in the overall table qualified for the championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177895-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 K League, Top scorers\nThis list includes goals of the championship playoffs. The official top goalscorer was decided with records of only regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177896-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 K League Championship\nThe 2004 K League Championship was the eighth competition of the K League Championship, and was held to decide the 22nd champions of the K League. After the regular season was finished, the first stage winners, the second stage winners, and the top two clubs in the overall table qualified for the championship. Each semi-final was played as a single match, and the final consisted of two matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177896-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 K League Championship, Semi-finals, Pohang vs Ulsan\nAssistant referees:Kim Sun-jin (South Korea)Won Chang-ho (South Korea)Fourth official:Park Jong-gyu (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177896-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 K League Championship, Semi-finals, Suwon vs Jeonnam\nAssistant referees:Kim Ke-soo (South Korea)An Sang-ki (South Korea)Fourth official:Lee Jong-kuk (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177896-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 K League Championship, Final, First leg\nAssistant referees:Lee Young-chul (South Korea)Kang Chang-gu (South Korea)Fourth official:Choi Gwang-bo (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177896-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 K League Championship, Final, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Won Chang-ho (South Korea)Kim Kye-su (South Korea)Fourth official:Kim Sung-ho (South Korea)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177896-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 K League Championship, Final, Second leg\n0\u20130 on aggregate. Suwon Samsung Bluewings won 4\u20133 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177897-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 K2 League\nThe K2 League 2004 season operates its season in two stages, with the winners of each stage to the post-season championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177897-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 K2 League\nIn the event of the same team winning both stages, there will be no playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177898-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 K2 League Championship\nThe K2 League Championship 2004 was a cup competition of the K2 League in South Korea. The first edition of K2 League Championship was held from June 15 to June 22 in Namhae, Gyeongsangnam-do. The participating teams included 10 teams from the N-League, and the National Police Agency FC from the R-League. 11 teams participated in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177898-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 K2 League Championship\nSuwon City won the competition by defeating Ulsan Hyundai Mipo Dockyard in the finals on 22 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177899-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 KV18\n2004 KV18 is an eccentric Neptune trojan trailing Neptune's orbit in the outer Solar System, approximately 70 kilometers in diameter. It was first observed on 24 May 2004, by astronomers at the Mauna Kea Observatories on Hawaii, United States. It was the eighth Neptune trojan identified and the second in Neptune's L5 Lagrangian point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177899-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 KV18, Orbit and classification\nNeptune trojans are resonant trans-Neptunian objects (TNO) in a 1:1 mean-motion orbital resonance with Neptune. These Trojans have a semi-major axis and an orbital period very similar to Neptune's (30.10 AU; 164.8 years).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177899-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 KV18, Orbit and classification\n2004 KV18 belongs to the trailing L5 group, which follow 60\u00b0 behind Neptune's orbit. It orbits the Sun with a semi-major axis of 30.370\u00a0AU at a distance of 24.7\u201336.1\u00a0AU once every 167 years and 4 months (61,132 days). Its orbit has a notably high eccentricity of 0.19 and an inclination of 14\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177899-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 KV18, Orbit and classification, Orbital instability\n2004 KV18 is not a primordial Neptune trojan, and will leave the region on a relatively short time scale. The orbit of a Neptune trojan can only be stable when the eccentricity is less than 0.12. Its lifetime as a trailing Neptune trojan is on the order of 100,000 years into the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 56], "content_span": [57, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177899-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 KV18, Physical properties, Diameter and albedo\nBased on a generic magnitude-to-diameter conversion, it measures approximately 71 kilometers in diameter using an absolute magnitude of 8.9 and an assumed albedo of 0.10. It is one of the smaller bodies among the first 17 Neptune trojans discovered so far, which measure between 60 and 200 kilometers (for an absolute magnitude of 9.3\u20136.6 and an assumed albedo of 0.10). Other estimates, implying a higher albedo than 0.10, gave a diameter of approximately 56 kilometers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 51], "content_span": [52, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177899-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 KV18, Numbering and naming\nDue to its orbital uncertainty, this minor planet has not been numbered and its official discoverers have not been determined. If named, it will follow the naming scheme already established with 385571\u00a0Otrera, which is to name these objects after figures related to the Amazons, an all-female warrior tribe that fought in the Trojan War on the side of the Trojans against the Greek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 31], "content_span": [32, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177900-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style)\n2004 Kabaddi World Cup was the first ever Kabaddi World Cup and was hosted by India. India won the title defeating Iran 55\u201327 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177900-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style), Teams\nWith last minute withdrawal of Pakistan and Afghanistan, 12 teams competed in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177900-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style), Pools\nThe teams were divided into three pools of four teams each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177900-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style), Competition format\nNine teams competed in tournament consisting of two rounds. In the first round, teams were divided into three pools of four teams each, and followed round-robin format with each of the team playing all other teams in the pool once. Following the completion of the league matches, teams placed first and second in each pool advanced to a single elimination round consisting of four quarterfinals, two semifinal games, and a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177900-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style), Schedule\nAll matches' timings were according to Indian Standard Time (UTC +5:30).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2\nLeague tables for teams participating in Kakkonen, the third tier of the Finnish Soccer League system, in 2004. Kakkonen was reduced to 3 groups of 14 teams for season 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Southern Group, Etel\u00e4lohko\nNB: Jokerit withdrew from Premier Division and were bought by HJK. The revamped club was named Klubi-04 and became HJK's \"reserve\" team. They obtained a place in Division Two South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 89], "content_span": [90, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Eastern Group, It\u00e4lohko\nNB: S\u00e4yRi's place in Division Two was taken by Jyv\u00e4skyl\u00e4 United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 86], "content_span": [87, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Northern Group, Pohjoislohko\nNB: Because GBK were promoted to Division One, Division Two North was played with 11 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 91], "content_span": [92, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Promotion Playoff\nAtlantis 2-1 JIPPO [aet, 4-3 pen]JJK 0-1 PK-35FJK 2-2 OLSKPV 1-0 TPV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Promotion Playoff\nAtlantis and PK-35 promoted, KPV and OLS to division one/division two playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Division One/Division Two Playoff\nKPV promoted, N\u00e4rpes Kraft relegated. VG-62 remain at second level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 96], "content_span": [97, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Relegation Playoff\nPS-44 3-2 TKTJaro II 2-2 TervaritFutura 1-5 K\u00e4PaPonnistus 2-0 PantteritFCV 1-3 KajHa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Relegation Playoff\nTKT 4-1 PS-44Pantterit 3-1 PonnistusTervarit 5-2 Jaro IIK\u00e4Pa 3-1 FuturaKajHa 6-1 FCV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177901-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Kakkonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 2, League tables 2004, Relegation Playoff\nPonnistus promoted, Pantterit relegated. TKT, Tervarit, K\u00e4Pa and KajHa remain at third level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence\nThe 2004 Kalapatti violence refers to the violence against Dalits by dominant-caste villagers in the village of Kalapatti, Tamil Nadu on 16 May 2004. About 100 Dalit houses have been burned down by a mob of 200 villagers and Dalits who attempted to escape were attacked, including the reports of sexual assaults against Dalit women. The attacks lasted for 2 hours and 14 people were seriously injured in the violence including a man's arm reportedly hacked off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence\nTensions reportedly started after Dalits in the village boycotted the 2004 Lok Sabha election as a protest because some of their grievances remained unattended. This is said to have angered the dominant caste villagers and also the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) workers when the dalits remained unconcerned during the BJP general secretary's visit to the village. Other incidents include an attack against a Dalit youth who was pasting posters to celebrate Dr. Ambedkar's birthday and an altercation between Dalit youths and the dominant-caste men in an auto-rickshaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence\nThe attacks started after the loss of BJP's state general secretary in the polls. The United states Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor reported that the attackers blamed the loss of their candidate on the Dalits. Several Dalit leaders and political parties blamed the BJP for the violence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Background\nThe village of Kalapatti is situated in the district of Coimbatore, the village comprised 2,000 families of the Gounder caste, the politically and economically powerful caste in the village. The Dalit settlement comprised 250 families belonging to the Arunthathiyar caste, 10 families of the Parayar caste and 150 families of the Boyar caste.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Background, Caste discrimination\nThe World Organisation Against Torture reported the members of the Dalit community in the village were not allowed to walk in the streets belonging to the dominant caste members, not allowed entry inside the village Mariamman temple and were not allowed to walk in the streets talking among themselves. Casteist slurs and intimidation were often used against the Dalits and they were forced to lower their heads in public to punctuate their lower status. Dalit women were often subjected to sexual assaults and harassment. Dalits also had to use separate glasses in tea shops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Background, Election boycott\nDuring the 2004 Indian general election, the Dalits in the village announced that they would boycott the elections as a protest because many of their problems remained unconsidered. One of their key demands of the Dalit community is their entry into the common village temple which had been opposed by caste-Hindus for years. Nothing could be done about it by the State Government or Sangh Parivar, which exerted significant influence over the Dalits in the region. However, the Dalits were resistant on their resolution to boycott the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Background, Election boycott\nIt is reported that when the Bharatiya Janata Party's state president visited the village, the Dalits remained unconcerned which angered the BJP cadres. The local dominant caste members were also opposed to the boycott decision of the Dalit community. The BJP candidate C.P Radhakrishnan lost the polls to K Subbarayan of the Communist party of India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Background, Incidents preceding the violence\nA Dalit youth was attacked on 14 May by some men from the Gounder caste when he was pasting posters to celebrate the birthday of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar. On 15 May, a group of Dalit youth who traveled with a group of Gounder men in an auto rickshaw were allegedly verbally abused them in derogatory words because the Dalit youth were enjoying themselves in front of the dominant caste men and slapped one of them after getting out of the rickshaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Background, Incidents preceding the violence\nThe Dalit youth who went to the Kovilpalayam Police to complaint about the incident but the police men took no action and allegedly told the youth to leave out statements mentioning the use of derogatory language by the attackers but when the Dalit youth included everything in the complaint, the police did not register the complaint. Although, this incident was believed to be the immediate cause for the assault, the underlying cause is assumed to be the growing fear of the development of Dalits in the village due to the active position played by certain Dalit organisations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Attacks\nThe attack occurred on 16 May 2004 within the fortnight of the elections in the Dalit localities of New Colony and Shastri Nagar in the Kalapatti village by 200 dominant-caste villagers, armed with swords, iron rods and other weapons. They ransacked about 100 homes and damaged the household items and television sets. When the Dalits ran for their safety, they were attacked with sickles, iron rods, long sticks and knives. The attacks lasted for two hours and 14 people including a 75 year old man were seriously injured and were hospitalized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Attacks\nSeveral women were allegedly sexually assaulted and the attackers used derogatory language against them during the attacks. The attackers also set fire to cattle sheds, bikes and the Dalit temples, a man's hand was cut off during the attack. It is reported that 100 homes were completely burned and were razed to the ground, some of the attackers molested the Dalit women and also looted jewelry and money from the houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Attacks\nAs per the 2005 annual report of United Nations special rapporteur on Racism, the dominant caste villagers forced the Dalits to the ground and stomped on them using derogatory caste terms against them. The saris of the Dalit women were stripped off. In other cases, an 8-month-old infant was thrown against a wall, a 75-year-old man was assaulted, and a middle-aged woman was struck in her head while she attempted to defend her son. Almost 100 homes were burned down and cattle belonging to the Dalits were also killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Attacks\nThe offices of the Adhi Thamizhar Viduthalai Munnani were among the places attacked. A photo of the B.R. Ambedkar is reported to have been burned down. University and School certificates and land pattas have been burnt according to the reports of a number of fact-finding committees, such as the People's Watch-Tamil Nadu, the Tamil Nadu Division of the People's Congress for Civil Liberties and the Dalit Human Rights Monitoring. As per the reports of these teams, the attackers had not even spared the cattle belonging to the Dalit people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Attacks\nMany Dalits of the village of Kalapatti escaped to neighboring villages out of fear. The Government allotted \u20b9 20 lakh for relief work to the Dalits, but only \u20b9 2,42,000 was granted as immediate remuneration. Despite this, there were reports that the Dalits have been forced by the police to conceal the burning items and are trying to mitigate the extent of the atrocities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Arrests\nThe cops detained 54 people and filed cases on them under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes Act on Atrocities and Indian Penal Code. The research teams, argued that the police appeared on the scene only after 2.5 hours after the attack, while the closest police station is inside 7 kilo-meters of the village but some Dalit youths had made complaints to the police when the mob was on the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Investigations\nThe United states Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor reported that the violence was because the dominant caste members blamed the Dalits for the loss of their candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Investigations\nThe local villagers alleged that C.P Radhakrishnan, the then general secretary of the BJP threatened to \"deal with them later\" for boycotting the elections. Dalit leader, Thol. Thirumavalavan, who visited the village after the violence, accused the Bharatiya Janata Party for the violence. The Communist Party of India (Marxist) and Communist Party of India (CPI) members also accused the BJP and called for the arrest of all those implicated in the crime and the payment of compensations to those affected in the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177902-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Kalapatti violence, Investigations\nHindutva factions have been using Arunthathiyar youngsters to commit violent activities in and outside of Coimbatore until the attacks. Dalit leaders said the tragedy only demonstrates that the Sangh Parivar, which is evidently continuing to lose its grip on the Arunthathiyars, as indicated by the choice of the Dalits to boycott the polls in which the BJP tried to preserve its seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177903-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Chiefs season\nThe 2004 Kansas City Chiefs season was the franchise's 45th season, their 42nd in Kansas City, and 35th in the National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177903-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Chiefs season\nThe 2004 season proved not to be as successful as the team's previous season. Though the Chiefs finished the regular season with the most yards and the second highest number of points, they also had a losing record of 7\u20139 and no playoff appearance. In fact, the Chiefs' 483 points-scored was the highest total in NFL history for a team that finished the season with a losing record. The Chiefs joined the 1975 Buffalo Bills as the only teams in NFL history to score an average of at least 30 points per game and miss the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177904-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Royals season\nThe 2004 Kansas City Royals season was a season in American baseball. It involved the Royals finishing 5th in the American League Central with a record of 58 wins and 104 losses. It was one of the most disappointing seasons in Royals' history. The team had been picked by many sporting magazines to win the AL Central following their third-place finish in 2003. Injuries of veteran acquisitions did the Royals in. Catcher Benito Santiago and outfielder Juan Gonz\u00e1lez both played very few games for the boys in blue. Mike Sweeney was also injured during the campaign. As a result, the Royals set a new record for most losses in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177904-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Royals season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 75], "content_span": [76, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177904-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Royals season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177905-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Wizards season\nKansas City Wizards 2004 season- Winners of Open Cup- runners up to MLS cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177905-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas City Wizards season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177906-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Kansas Democratic presidential caucuses were held on March 13 in the U.S. state of Kansas as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177907-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas Jayhawks football team\nThe 2004 Kansas Jayhawks football team represented the University of Kansas in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were coached by Mark Mangino and played their home games at Memorial Stadium in Lawrence, KS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177908-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kansas State Wildcats football team\nThe 2004 Kansas State Wildcats football team represented Kansas State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head football coach was Bill Snyder. The Wildcats played their home games in KSU Stadium. The team finished the season with a win-loss record of 4\u20137 and a Big 12 Conference record of 2\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177909-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Karbala and Najaf bombings\nThe 2004 Karbala and Najaf bombings were car bombings that tore through a funeral procession in Najaf and through the main bus station in nearby Karbala\u2014two Shia holy cities - on 19 December 2004. 66 people were killed and 191 wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177909-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Karbala and Najaf bombings, Perpetrators\nAbu Musab al-Zarqawi's group Tanzim Qaidat al-Jihad fi Bilad al-Rafidayn ('al-Qaeda in Iraq') said that the group was not responsible for these attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177910-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Karl Sch\u00e4fer Memorial\nThe 2004 Karl Sch\u00e4fer Memorial (also known as the Vienna Cup) took place from October 13 through 16th, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177911-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election\nThe 2004 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election took place on 20 April and 26 April 2004 in 224 constituencies in Karnataka, India. The elections were conducted to elect the government in the state of Karnataka for the next five years. The votes were counted on 13 May 2004. None of the parties were able to win a majority and the Bharatiya Janata Party emerged as the single largest party with 79 seats. Subsequently, the Indian National Congress with 65 members and Janata Dal (Secular) with 58 members formed a coalition to run the government with Dharam Singh as the chief minister. This was the first ever coalition government in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177911-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Karnataka Legislative Assembly election, Government formation\nIn the elections, the BJP emerged as the single largest party winning 79 of the 224 seats. However, the Indian National Congress with 65 members and the Janata Dal (Secular) with 58 members formed a coalition to run the government. Dharam Singh of the Congress was sworn in as the chief minister on 28 May 2004. However, in early 2006, the JD(S) withdrew its support to the government and instead forged an alliance with the BJP. A new government was formed with H. D. Kumaraswamy of the JD(S) as Chief minister and B.S. Yeddyurappa of the BJP as Deputy Chief minister .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177912-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakh legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Kazakhstan on 19 September and 3 October 2004. The Otan party won 42 of the 77 seats, gaining a majority in the Mazhilis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177912-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakh legislative election, Background\nBy 2003 the Kazakh economy was on a recovery with its GDP growth rate being 9.2% which was one of the highest rates among the CIS countries. The primary cause was due to the increased cost of petroleum as a result of the American-led war in Afghanistan, which allowed the government to repay its debts and raise pensions, average salaries and improve medical services. The quality of life in Kazakhstan was improving, as the average monthly salaries increased to about 28,000 Tenge ($198) or about 8.3% increase from 2002. This increase however was not spread evenly. Some groups benefited greatly from the increasing wages, while about 25% of Kazakhs especially in the southwestern districts and regions around the Caspian Sea continued to live below the poverty line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177912-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakh legislative election, Background\nDespite improvements in the economy and social issues, Kazakhstan faced problems with the lack of independent media, a poor human rights record and the unfair treatment of independent journalists, including the case of Sergei Duvanov who was arrested in October 2002, a few days before his travel to the United States to discuss corruption and the situation with the Kazakh medi, when he was accused of sexually assaulting a minor. Due to international pressure, including from American Secretary of State Colin Powell, Duvanov was released in January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177912-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakh legislative election, Background\nIn the years leading up to the elections, political parties had been significantly weakened. The process of re-registration of parties in spring 2003 particularly affected the opposition due to a law that raised the minimum number of members for parties to be able to register to 50,000. Several opposition parties were unable to meet this requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177913-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakhstan Hockey Cup\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Trappist the monk (talk | contribs) at 12:14, 28 November 2019 (\u2192\u200etop: cite repair;). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177913-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakhstan Hockey Cup\nThe 2004 Kazakhstan Hockey Cup was the 3rd edition of the Kazakhstan Hockey Cup, the national ice hockey cup competition in Kazakhstan. Four teams participated and Kazzinc-Torpedo won its 3rd cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177914-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakhstan Premier League\nThe 2004 Kazakhstan Premier League was the 13th season of the Kazakhstan Premier League, the highest football league competition in Kazakhstan, and took place between 3 April and 2 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177914-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams\nFor the 2004 season, the league was expanded to 19 teams from 17. This meant that Almaty and FC Yassi were promoted to the Premier League, and no teams were relegated the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177914-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams\nBefore the start of the season Yelimay were renamed Semey, Batys became Akzhayik, Esil Kokshetau became Okzhetpes and promoted teams Tsesna and Yassi became Alma-Ata and Yassi Sairam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177914-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kazakhstan Premier League, Teams\nOnly Kairat obtained a UEFA license for the 2005/2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177915-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kent State Golden Flashes football team\nThe 2004 Kent State Golden Flashes football team represented the Kent State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Kent State competed as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC), and played their home games at Dix Stadium. The Golden Flashes were led by first-year head coach Doug Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177916-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Amendment 1\nKentucky Constitutional Amendment 1 of 2004, is an amendment to the Kentucky Constitution that made it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil unions. The referendum was approved by 75% of the voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177916-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Amendment 1\nOnly a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in Kentucky. A legal status identical or substantially similar to that of marriage for unmarried individuals shall not be valid or recognized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177916-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Amendment 1, Legal Challenges\nOn September 10, 2013 the Kentucky Equality Federation sued the Commonwealth of Kentucky in Franklin Circuit Court claiming Kentucky's 2004 Constitutional Amendment banning same-sex marriage violated sections of the commonwealth's constitution. Case # 13-CI-1074 was assigned by the Franklin County Court Clerk (the location of the Kentucky State Capitol). The lawsuit was conceived by President Jordan Palmer, written and signed by Vice President of Legal Jillian Hall, Esq. On April 16, 2015 the case was decided in favor of the plaintiff by Franklin County Circuit Court Judge Thomas D. Wingate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177916-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Amendment 1, Legal Challenges\nThis provision also became void in 2015 when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell v. Hodges that the fundamental right to marry is guaranteed to same-sex couples by both the Due Process Clause and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177917-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Kentucky Democratic presidential primary was held on May 18 in the U.S. state of Kentucky as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby\nThe 2004 Kentucky Derby was the 130th running of the Kentucky Derby. The race took place on May 1, 2004 and was won by Smarty Jones, who earned a $5 million bonus. There were 140,054 in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Contenders\nSmarty Jones was the 4-1 favorite for the race. He came into the Derby with an undefeated record, including wins in the Rebel Stakes and Arkansas Derby, both held at Oaklawn Park. If he won the Kentucky Derby, he stood to earn a $5 million \"Centennial Bonus\" offered by Oaklawn to celebrate its 100th anniversary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Contenders\nHis leading rivals included Lion Heart (Hollywood Futurity, 2nd in Blue Grass Stakes), Castledale (Santa Anita Derby), The Cliff's Edge (Blue Grass Stakes), Tapit (Wood Memorial), Friends Lake (Florida Dery), and Imperialism (San Rafael, 2nd in Santa Anita Derby).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Contenders\nSt. Averil and Wimbledon were originally entered but scratched from the race, meaning there were only 18 starters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Full results\nA \"deluge\" started about two hours before the race, turning a fast track sloppy. Lion Heart, breaking near the rail, ran a quick opening quarter mile of 22.99 seconds to get good position going into the first turn. His jockey Mike Smith then started to slow down the pace, completing the half mile in 46.73 and three-quarters in 1:11.80. Smarty Jones rated a few lengths behind then started his move on the far turn. The two raced heads apart as they entered the stretch, then Smarty Jones started to edge away to win by \u200b2\u00a03\u20444 lengths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Full results\nSmarty Jones became the first horse to win the Derby while undefeated since Seattle Slew in 1977. It was the first Derby win for his trainer, jockey and owner, all of whom were well known in the Mid Atlantic racing circuit but making their first start in the race. His 77-year-old owner Roy Chapman also bred the colt at Someday Farm in Pennsylvania. Chapman and his wife Patricia had owned and bred many horses over the years, but none had raced at the highest level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Full results\n\"We had a lot of ham-and-eggers,\" he said, \"but sometimes you can cheer just as loud and get just as excited about winning a $10,000 claimer as a stakes. But we never raced at this level until Smarty came along. To have bred him and had him born on your farm, it's something... He is from Philly and I'm very proud of everything he's done.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177918-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Derby, Full results\nTimes: \u200b1\u20444 mile \u2013 22.99; \u200b1\u20442 mile \u2013 46.73; \u200b3\u20444 mile \u2013 1:11.80; mile \u2013 1:37.35; final \u2013 2:04.06. Splits for each quarter-mile: (22.99) (23.74) (25.07) (25.55) (26.71)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177919-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Wildcats football team\nThe 2004 Kentucky Wildcats football team represented the University of Kentucky during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team participated as members of the Southeastern Conference in the Eastern Division. They played their home games at Commonwealth Stadium in Lexington, Kentucky. The team was coached by Rich Brooks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177919-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky Wildcats football team\nOffensive coordinator Ron Hudson resigned prior to the last game of the season against Tennessee. Wide receivers coach Joker Phillips took over play calling duties as the Wildcats nearly upset the 15th ranked Volunteers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177920-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky's 6th congressional district special election\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives special election in Kentucky's 6th congressional district was held on February 17, 2004, to select the successor to Ernie Fletcher (R) who resigned upon being elected Governor of Kentucky. Each party held a nominating convention to choose their nominee for the special election. Republicans selected state Senator Alice Kerr over state Representatives Stan Lee and Lonnie Napier and Lexington city councilman Charles Ellinger II as their nominee while Democrats chose former state Attorney General and 2003 Democratic gubernatorial nominee Ben Chandler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177920-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kentucky's 6th congressional district special election\nChandler won the election to fill out the rest of Fletcher's unexpired term. This was a symbolic victory for Democrats considering that the man Chandler succeeded was the same one he lost to in the Gubernatorial election months earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177920-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Kentucky's 6th congressional district special election\nThough Kerr was able to out raise and out spend Chandler, it was not enough to overcome his popularity, who in addition to having served as state attorney general was also the grandson of Happy Chandler, a former governor, U.S. Senator, and Commissioner of Baseball, in this conservative, but generally ticket-splitting Lexington centered District, which supported Fletcher with 71% in 2002, and George W. Bush over Al Gore by a smaller but nonetheless substantial 55% to 42% margin in the Presidential election of 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177921-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kerry County Council election\nAn election to Kerry County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 27 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre\nOn 29 May 2004, a Saturday, four men armed with guns and bombs attacked two oil industry installations and a residential compound, in Al-Khobar, Saudi Arabia\u2014the hub of the Saudi oil industry. Over approximately 25 hours, the gunmen, describing themselves as members of \"The Jerusalem Squadron\" or \"Jerusalem Brigade\", killed 22 and injured 25, mainly third country national personnel working in Khobar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre\nTheir targets were the Arab Petroleum Investments Corporation building and the Al-Khobar Petroleum Centre, and a foreign workers' housing complex, the Oasis Compound, in the Gulf city of Khobar. Their victims included 19 foreigners from nine countries\u2014eight people from India, three from the Philippines, two from Sri Lanka, one each from Sweden, Italy, the United Kingdom, the United States, South Africa and Egypt. According to witnesses the attackers asked the hostages if they were Christian or Muslim, letting the Muslims go with a lecture, and slitting the throats of non-Muslims. One victim was tied to the back of a vehicle and dragged through the street.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Perpetrators\nMost news describe the attackers being four in number. Claiming responsibility was a previously unheard-of militant group calling itself \"The Jerusalem Squadron\" or 'Jerusalem Brigade' of the 'Mujahedin of the Arabian Peninsula'\u2014a local Saudi Arabia-based faction of al-Qaeda. The group said it was attacking \"Zionists and Crusaders\" who are in Saudi Arabia to \"steal our oil and resources.\" According to the then Saudi Ambassador in Washington, Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the goal of the terrorists was to harm Saudi Arabia's stability and harm its economy. An audio tape was released in which Abdulaziz al-Muqrin, thought to be one of al-Qaeda's leaders in Saudi Arabia, took responsibility. Jamestown Foundation's Terrorism Monitor identified its leader as Turki bin Fahd al-Moteiri (known as Fawwaz al-Nashami).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Perpetrators\nKidnappers asked the hostages if they were Christian or Muslim, letting the Muslims go, and slitting the throats of non-Muslims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Perpetrators\nIn a 3000 word account of the killings posted on a website by the operation's commander, Fawaz Bin Mohammed Al-Nashmi, Nashmi describes the killing of an Italian expatriate after the captive has pleaded for his life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Perpetrators\nBrother Husayn spotted the Italian infidel lout. He pointed his weapon at him and ordered him to approach. The infidel lout approached. We examined his identification papers and decided to contact Al-Jazeera so that he could address his countrymen and send them a message warning against fighting a war against Islam and its people. We would then cut his throat to send a message to the Italians who are fighting our brothers in Iraq and to the idiot leader of Italy, who wants to confront the lions of Islam. We contacted Al-Jazeera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Perpetrators\nI told the announcer to talk to him [the Italian]. He began to talk to him. The announcer asked me, \"Does he speak English?\" I told the announcer, \"Do you have Italian translators?\" He said, \"Yes.\" I said, \"So let him speak his language.\" He spoke for several minutes. I asked the announcer, \"Did you record that?\" He said, \"Yes.\" Then the hero Nimr cut his throat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Perpetrators\nSaudi security forces have been criticized for allowing the perpetrators to move freely from one target to another as late as five hours into the attack, to eat and sleep at the hotel and to give an interview to al-Jazeera television over the phone during their operation. Government forces also failed to prevent the attackers from fighting their way out of the compound and escaping. According to author Michael Griffin, the seeming \"impotence\" of the security forces and the \"stolen SUVs, pilfered uniforms and a freedom in their savagery\" of the attackers, may indicate that the attacks were \"condoned, if not encouraged, by the security forces set up\" to protect the foreign workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Sources for attack details\nVarious accounts exist of the precise details of this attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Al-Khobar Petroleum Centre\nAt 06:45 a group of four terrorists, separate from the group that attacked the Oasis compound, arrive in a vehicle and shot at guards and employees around the front gate of the Al-Khobar Petroleum Centre, which is next to the DHL building on the main Doha to Khobar road. An American and two Filipinos protecting the American were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 72], "content_span": [73, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Arab Petroleum Investments Corporation Building\nAt 7:15 terrorists in a vehicle attacked the Apicorp Compound. The compound is a quarter of a mile away down the Khobar Dammam highway next to Raka compound. They used an RPG on the gatehouse and killed two security guards. A school bus was coming out at the time and was shot at, killing a 10-year-old Egyptian boy who was the son of an Apicorp employee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 93], "content_span": [94, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Arab Petroleum Investments Corporation Building\nMichael Hamilton, British, a leading member of the Apicorp Corporation, who had just dropped his wife off, arrived at the gate. His car was shot at and the gunmen dragged him out of the car still alive and tied him to the back of their four-wheel-drive vehicle, driving up the Raka road to the Dammam highway. Hamilton's facial features were unrecognizable when his body and car were later found dumped under a causeway. The terrorist vehicle with Hamilton tied behind made it as far as the intersection lights before a Saudi civilian rammed their car off the road. The terrorist shot the Saudi dead before he could get out of his car. The police shot the terrorists before they could make their escape. In honour of Michael Hamilton\u2019s death, British International School of Al Khobar (BISAK) named one of their halls after him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 93], "content_span": [94, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Oasis 3 Compound\nAt 7:30 six terrorists scaled the walls of Oasis 3 compound. Another five drove up to the main Vehicle Check Point. A civilian car was in front of the attackers and a school bus behind in the queue. The checkpoint had two closed gates. A car drove through one gate, was inspected after the first gate closed, and then the second gate opened to let the car through. On the morning of the attack, the second was continuously open, so when the first gate opened, the terrorists drove straight through the second gate. While doing so, a terrorist opened the sunroof of their vehicle and killed the two armed guards with a machine gun. Turning back, he fired on the school bus, killing two children and wounding four children. 5-year-old and 7-year-old children were critically wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Oasis 3 Compound\nThe terrorists then drove into the main compound area. A security guard then got the children off the school bus and conducted them to a safe area in the compound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Oasis 3 Compound\nThey then exited their vehicle and moved on foot into the residential complex. They kicked in the doors and slit the throats of any non-Muslims they could find. Among those murdered were an Italian cook, Antonio Amato (35), and a Swedish ma\u00eetre d'h\u00f4tel, Magnus Johansson (50), both of whom had taken jobs in Saudi Arabia for the higher pay. Both were beheaded. The terrorists killed one American\u2014Frank Floyd, an assistant marketing director for Resources Sciences Arabia Ltd. Most of the killings took place inside the compound's Italian restaurant, Casa Mia, where Amato and Johansson worked. According to an account by terrorist Fawaz al-Nashimi, captives were also executed with bullets to the head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Oasis 3 Compound\nIn the morning, the terrorists ate breakfast in the restaurant. They then returned to the first floor with the intention of killing Hindus. Eight Indians were killed. Al-Nashmi lists 3 cohorts, Nimr al-Baqmi, Husayn, and Nadir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Oasis 3 Compound\nBooby-traps were placed at the exits of the Soha Towers Hotel. Al-Nashmi and two cohorts then escaped over the wall and stole a car to make a getaway. This was despite the compound being surrounded by soldiers and reporters with live television. \"We were now on a road with trees shadowing the way, and all the security forces thought we were still in the hotel,\" Nashmi wrote. Nimr al-Baqmi was wounded while firing out of his vehicle, and was captured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Rescue operation\nBy 21:30 Saudi Special Emergency Forces had surrounded the complex and extracted the school bus children who were hiding in an underground parking garage. A few British nursery workers were rescued from the Oasis compound, and were returned to the Las Dunas compound, where their families and friends had been waiting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Rescue operation\nAt 2:00 the next morning Saudi Special Emergency Forces attempted to enter the booby-trapped hotel. Several were injured in two explosions, and the group pulled back after receiving threats from the remaining terrorists to kill the hostages. At 02:30 two American military officers were injured and subsequently admitted to SAAD Specialist hospital and later flown out to Kuwait.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Rescue operation\nSaudi forces in four National Guard Kawasaki KC113 helicopters arrived at 06:30 and were lowered onto the roof of the Soha Hotel to storm the building, while ground attackers fired into the building as a diversion. Following the operation, Saudi authorities announced that all the hostages were free and that they had killed two terrorists and captured another. Apparently, most of the attackers had fled before the Saudi raid. However, according to the Jamestown Terrorism Monitor, the terrorist cell was miles away by the next morning when the counter-terrorism forces landing on the hotel rooftop, and none of the terrorists were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Rescue operation\nThe Saudi Interior Ministry issued a statement claiming 41 hostages had been rescued by the commandos. According to a Western diplomat the hostages had been hiding in parts of the complex to avoid being killed by the gunmen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 62], "content_span": [63, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Downtown Khobar\nDuring the same day, shooting broke out in downtown Khobar, about twenty minutes away from the Oasis 3 compound. A vehicle was reported to be driving around the Khobar area with four armed men on board. They proceeded to kill and injure another 11 security and military personnel located at approximately five other compounds with one being confirmed as the Golden Belt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Emergency response in schools away from attack sites\nThe British and American schools around Khobar and Dhahran were put on lock-down during the terror attacks. In Dhahran, British Grammar School and the Dhahran elementary and middle schools as well as high school (all on the same campus next to the American consulate), children were not released from school until over an hour after the usual time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 98], "content_span": [99, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Timeline of the attack, Emergency response in schools away from attack sites\nInternational Indian School, Dammam (IISD) is a school about 30 minutes away in Dammam. Several of their students lived in the Dhahran/Khobar area. The school was on lockdown until it was time for school to dismiss, with many of the kids not knowing what was happening. Many area schools ceased their term a few weeks early due to the events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 98], "content_span": [99, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Aftermath of the attacks\nFollowing the attacks, some foreign workers either fled the country or were evacuated by the companies they worked for, as they felt it was too dangerous to stay. The attack provided \"a significant morale boost for al-Qaeda\" according to the Jamestown Terrorism Monitor. However, an expert from the Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies interviewed by the New York Times stated the lack of strategic importance of the sites indicates the weakness of the extremists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Aftermath of the attacks\nWorld crude oil prices rose by 6.1% to $42 a barrel after the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Aftermath of the attacks\nSeveral of the nearby compounds like al Mohawis, Rolaco, TIG, al Bustan, and others had around 3 to 6 Saudi army soldiers stationed at the gates checking each car thoroughly before allowing them in (including residents). Security at Oasis was hyped to the point where there was a lane out of each of the surrounding streets that was taken and dedicated to security lines. Each lane was blocked from the road by barricades, and eyewitnesses describe it as pretty much impenetrable. There were several stages of army protection including thorough checkups. Each army personnel was armed with machine guns. Several schools shut down a few weeks early including ISG schools like Dhahran Academy and ISG Dammam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177922-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Khobar massacre, Aftermath of the attacks\nIn early 2016, Saudi Arabia executed some of the terrorists who were arrested in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177923-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kids' Choice Awards\nThe 17th Annual Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards was held on April 3, 2004. The event was hosted by Mike Myers and Cameron Diaz to promote Shrek 2. This would be the first time the award show was held at the Pauley Pavilion since 1999. The ceremony is also notable as leading into \"Mystery Meat\", the pilot episode and first airing of the animated series Danny Phantom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177923-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kids' Choice Awards, Celebrity appearances\nPeople who appeared in the ceremony: Mike Myers, Cameron Diaz, Mischa Barton, Drake Bell, Amanda Bynes, Nick Cannon, Jim Carrey, Ellen DeGeneres, Hilary Duff, Kirsten Dunst, Jennifer Garner, Anne Hathaway, Tony Hawk, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Mat Hoffman, Hugh Jackman, Queen Latifah, Avril Lavigne, Lindsay Lohan, George Lopez, Jennifer Lopez, Tobey Maguire, Ben McKenzie, Frankie Muniz, Ashley & Mary-Kate Olsen, Josh Peck, Raven Symon\u00e9, Joe Rogan, Adam Sandler, David Spade, Jamie Lynn Spears, Justin Timberlake, Serena Williams, the American Idol (season 3) top 9 finalists, and OutKast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177924-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kildare County Council election\nAn election to Kildare County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 25 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177925-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kilkenny County Council election\nAn election to Kilkenny County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 26 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177926-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship was the 110th staging of the Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Kilkenny County Board in 1887. The championship began on 25 September 2004 and ended on 31 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177926-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nO'Loughlin Gaels were the defending champions, however, they were defeated by James Stephens at the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177926-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 17 October 2004, Dicksboro were relegated following a 0-12 to 1-08 defeat by St. Martin's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177926-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 31 October 2004, James Stephens won the title after a 2-12 to 3-12 defeat of Young Irelands in the final at Nowlan Park. It was their seventh championship title overall and their first title since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177926-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kilkenny Senior Hurling Championship\nD. J. Carey from the Young Irelands club was the championship's top scorer with 5-35.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177927-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThe 2004 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes was a horse race held at Ascot Racecourse on Saturday 24 July 2004. It was the 54th King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177927-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes\nThe winner was Godolphin's Doyen, a four-year-old bay colt trained at Newmarket, Suffolk by Saeed bin Suroor and ridden by Frankie Dettori. Doyen's victory was the fifth for bin Suroor after Lammtarra (1995), Swain (1997, 1998) and Daylami (1999), the fourth for Godolphin and the third for Dettori. In addition, Godolphin's leader Sheikh Mohammed, had won the race with Belmez (1990), Opera House (1993) and King's Theatre (1994).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177927-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The race\nThe race attracted a field of eleven runners from the United Kingdom, France, Ireland and the United States. Doyen, previously trained in France by Andr\u00e9 Fabre was made favourite after a six-length win in the Hardwicke Stakes at Royal Ascot in June, and was accompanied by his stable companion Lunar Sovereign, who ran as a pacemaker. The third Godolphin runner was Sulamani, the winner of the Prix du Jockey Club, Dubai Sheema Classic and Arlington Million. France was represented by the filly Vallee Enchantee, the winner of the Hong Kong Vase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177927-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The race\nThe race also feature a rare North American challenger in the form of Hard Buck, a Brazilian-bred five-year-old whose wins included the Gulfstream Park Turf Handicap. The only three-year-old in the field was the Irish-trained Tycoon, who had finished third to Grey Swallow in the Irish Derby. The British runners included the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud winner Gamut and Warrsan, who had defeated Doyen in the Coronation Cup. Doyen headed the betting at odds of 11/10 ahead of Vallee Enchantee (6/1), Warrsan (13/2) and Sulamani (7/1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177927-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth Stakes, The race\nAs expected, the pacemaker Lunar Sovereign took the lead and set a steady pace from Hard Buck, Warrsan and Phoenix Reach. with Doyen settling in fifth place. Ted Durcan on Lunar Sovereign quickened the pace at half-way and went clear of the field but began to tire in the straight and was overtaken by Hard Buck two furlongs from the finish. Frankie Dettori produced Doyen on the outside to gain the lead from the American challenger a few strides later and quickly went clear of the field. Doyen won by three lengths from Hard Buck, who held off the fast-finishing Sulamani by a head for second place. Gamut, Vallee Enchantee and Tycoon filled the next three places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177928-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 King's Cup\nThe 2004 King's Cup finals were held from November 30 to December 1, 2006, in Bangkok The King's Cup (\u0e04\u0e34\u0e07\u0e2a\u0e4c\u0e04\u0e31\u0e1e) is an annual football tournament; the first tournament was played in 1968.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177928-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 King's Cup\nThe tournament was reverted to a knockout competition, starting from the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177928-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 King's Cup\nSlovakia won the tournament defeating Thailand on penalties. Hungary and Estonia were the other teams to play in this tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177929-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Kirklees Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177930-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kisima Music Awards\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Onel5969 (talk | contribs) at 11:01, 17 November 2019 (Disambiguating links to Abbi (link changed to Abbi (musician); link changed to Abbi (musician)) using DisamAssist.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177930-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kisima Music Awards\nThe 2004 Kisima Music Awards featured a newly expanded scheme which aimed to incorporate artists from across East Africa, most predominately Uganda and Tanzania. It was also a source of controversy when the organisation's CEO Tedd Josiah was awarded the category for Best Producer. The ceremony was hosted by veteran music artist Eric Wainaina and radio presenters Patricia Amira and Robert Warobi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177931-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Knowsley Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of councillors by three. The Labour Party kept overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 33.7%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177932-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kolmonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 3\nLeague tables for teams participating in Kolmonen, the fourth tier of the Finnish soccer league system, in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177932-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kolmonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 3, League Tables 2004, Vaasa/Central Ostrobothnia Promotion Playoff Group\nNB: \u00d6ja-73, NIK and Sundom IF withdrew from Promotion Playoff and then Sepsi-78 and Jaro II took their places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 113], "content_span": [114, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177932-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kolmonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 3, League Tables 2004, Division Two/Division Three Playoffs\nPS-44 3-2 TKTJaro II 2-2 TervaritFutura 1-5 K\u00e4PaPonnistus 2-0 PantteritFCV 1-3 KajHa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177932-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kolmonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 3, League Tables 2004, Division Two/Division Three Playoffs\nTKT 4-1 PS-44Pantterit 3-1 PonnistusTervarit 5-2 Jaro IIK\u00e4Pa 3-1 FuturaKajHa 6-1 FCV", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177932-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kolmonen \u2013 Finnish League Division 3, League Tables 2004, Division Two/Division Three Playoffs\nPonnistus promoted, Pantterit relegated. TKT, Tervarit, K\u00e4Pa and KajHa remain at third level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 99], "content_span": [100, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177933-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series\nThe 2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series was an Australian touring car series held for V8 Supercars. It was the fifth series held for second tier V8 Supercars. The season began on 22 February 2004 at Wakefield Park and finished on 22 August at Mallala Motor Sport Park. The season consisted of six rounds held across four different states, returning to Queensland for the first time since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177933-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series\nThe tightest series in the history of the second-tier V8 Supercar competition saw the point score tied at the end of the final race. Brad Jones Racing Ford driver, Andrew Jones was adjudged the series champion on a countback as he won Winton Motor Raceway and Eastern Creek Raceway rounds whereas rival Supercheap Auto Racing Ford driver Luke Youlden did not have a round win to his credit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177933-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series\nThe pointscore underlined the necessity of consistency in race results, Dick Johnson Racing Ford driver Owen Kelly took the most race wins for the season, seven in total, but did not figure in the final points, losing too many through poor results. Jones had two wins, Youlden just one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177933-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series\nThe remaining wins were scattered between Alan Gurr, Mal Rose, Lee Holdsworth, Kurt Wimmer and Wayne Wakefield, most of those through the benefit of reverse grid races with Greg Ritter taking two wins and the final round in a guest drive of the Speed FX Racing Falcon Brad Tilley had driven all season. New Zealander Mark Porter had his best series result (and also the best Holden), finishing third, 68 points behind the top two after taking one second and a pair of third during the season. Jos\u00e9 Fern\u00e1ndez finished fourth in the series despite never finishing higher than fourth in a race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177933-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series, Teams and drivers\nThe following teams and drivers have competed during the 2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177933-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series, Results and standings\nThe season consisted of six rounds across three different states. Rounds 1 and 3\u20136 consisted of three races. The second race of each weekend saw the finishing order of race 1 reversed to form the grid, a 'reverse grid' race. Round 2 consisted of a pair of races. Points were awarded for all cars who finished each race in finishing order. Points may have been offered beyond the 30th position but at no point during the season did more than 30 cars finish a race. Round 2's pair of races carried 50% more points than a single race elsewhere in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177934-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Korean FA Cup\n2004 Korean FA Cup, known as the Hana Bank FA Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the 9th edition of the Korean FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177934-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Korean FA Cup, Results, Preliminary Round, Second Round\nNB\u00a0: Daejeon Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power FC withdraw before first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 60], "content_span": [61, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177935-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Korean League Cup\nKorean League Cup 2004, known as Samsung Hauzen Cup 2004 due to the competition's sponsorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177936-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kosovan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Kosovo on 24 October 2004. This was the second time the Assembly of Kosovo had a national election. The first form of national elections in Kosovo were in the 2001 Kosovan parliamentary election. They were the first national elections that were only partially dependent on OSCE institutions. The next election would be the 2007 Kosovan parliamentary election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177937-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kraft Nabisco Championship\nThe 2004 Kraft Nabisco Championship was a women's professional golf tournament, held March 25\u201328 at Mission Hills Country Club in Rancho Mirage, California. This was the 33rd edition of the Kraft Nabisco Championship, and the 22nd edition as a major championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177937-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kraft Nabisco Championship\nGrace Park won her only major title by one stroke, sinking a 6-foot (1.8\u00a0m) birdie putt on the 72nd hole. Only moments earlier, runner-up Aree Song had dropped a 30-foot (9\u00a0m) eagle putt to tie. Long-time tournament director Terry Wilcox called this Kraft Nabisco \"the most thrilling he can recall.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177937-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kraft Nabisco Championship\nThe top amateur was 14-year-old Michelle Wie, four strokes back in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177937-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kraft Nabisco Championship, Final leaderboard\nAmateurs: Michelle Wie (\u22127), Jane Park (+2), Liz Janangelo (+6), Paula Creamer (+7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177938-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup\nThe 2004 Kremlin Cup was a tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 14th edition of the Kremlin Cup, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour, and of the Tier I Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place at the Olympic Stadium in Moscow, Russia, from 11 October through 17 October 2004. The tournament ended up with victories by Russian players in both male and female singles/doubles competitions and Elena Dementieva additionally finished runner-up in the women's singles. Anastasia Myskina won the ladies singles and the doubles with Vera Zvonareva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177938-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup, Finals, Men's Doubles\nIgor Andreev / Nikolay Davydenko defeated Mahesh Bhupati / Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman, 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177938-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup, Finals, Women's Doubles\nAnastasia Myskina / Vera Zvonareva defeated Virginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez, 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177939-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions, but did not play together this year. Bhupathi partnered Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman, losing in the final. Mirnyi partnered Marat Safin, withdrawing from the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177939-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Doubles\nIgor Andreev and Nikolay Davydenko won the title, defeating Bhupathi and Bj\u00f6rkman 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177940-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe 2004 Kremlin Cup - Men's Singles was a male tennis tournament which took place at the Olympic Stadium in Moscow. Taylor Dent did not return to defend his title from the 2003 Cup. Nikolay Davydenko won in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20133, 7\u20135 against Greg Rusedski. It was Davydenko's 2nd title of the year and 4th title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177941-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy were the defending champions, but Shaughnessy did not compete this year. Petrova teamed up with Elena Bovina and lost in semifinals to tournament winners Anastasia Myskina and Vera Zvonareva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177941-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Doubles\nMyskina and Zvonareva won the title by defeating Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177942-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles\nAnastasia Myskina was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Elena Dementieva in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177942-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kremlin Cup \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. The top four seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177943-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International and the Cellular South Cup\nThe 2004 Kroger St. Jude International and the Cellular South Cup were tennis tournaments played on indoor hard courts at the Racquet Club of Memphis in Memphis, Tennessee in the United States that were part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier III of the 2004 WTA Tour. The tournaments ran from February 15 through February 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177943-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International and the Cellular South Cup, Finals, Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Jeff Coetzee / Chris Haggard 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 84], "content_span": [85, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177943-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International and the Cellular South Cup, Finals, Women's Doubles\n\u00c5sa Svensson / Meilen Tu defeated Maria Sharapova / Vera Zvonareva 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 86], "content_span": [87, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177944-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Nicolas Kiefer and Wesley Moodie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177944-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134 against Jeff Coetzee and Chris Haggard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177945-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International \u2013 Singles\nTaylor Dent was the defending champion but lost in the first round to Jan-Michael Gambill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177945-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kroger St. Jude International \u2013 Singles\nJoachim Johansson won in the final 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20133 against Nicolas Kiefer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177946-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kufa shelling\nThe 2004 Kufa shelling occurred on August 26, 2004 when the main mosque in Kufa, Iraq was hit by a barrage of mortar rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177946-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kufa shelling\nThe mortar rounds struck the mosque, killing 74 people, and injuring 315. Weeks before the attack happened there had been heavy fighting between U.S. forces and fighters loyal to Muqtada al-Sadr around Kufa, and Najaf. As a result of the shelling, the U.S. halted all operations around the area for 24 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire\nThe 2004 Kumbakonam school fire incident happened in a school in Kumbakonam in the Thanjavur district of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. On 16 July 2004, the day of the accident, a total of 94 students of the Krishna English Medium School's primary section were burnt to death in their classroom as the thatched roof caught fire. The accident was one of the four most significant fire accidents and the most significant school accident in the history of Tamil Nadu, and the second-largest school fire in India in terms of casualties, the first being the Dabwali fire accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire\nA committee set up under the retired Judge Sampath found out that the heavy casualties were due to the management's wrong tactics to admit extra students to a primary school and mislead the authorities about the student-teacher ratio. The Chief Minister who visited the site ordered the withdrawal of the recognition of the three schools, prosecution of the school authorities, the correspondent, and the suspension of the Chief Educational Officer, the District Elementary Educational Officer, and the Assistant Elementary Educational Officer of the Thanjavur school district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire\nA compensation of \u20b9 1,000,000 was provided to the next of the kin of the deceased, \u20b9 25,000 to the severely injured, and \u20b9 10,000 to other injured victims from the Chief Minister\u2019s Public Relief Fund. The district administration arranged another primary school in Natham village and accommodated 46 students under the government's Educational Guarantee Scheme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire\nAfter a long delay, a trial began on 24 September 2012 in the Thanjavur district court. The case had 21 accused and 488 witnesses that included 18 children who survived the accident. The headmaster Prabharan and three others were charged in the case. Charges were also filed against 17 others, including Pulavar Palanichamy, his wife and correspondent of the school Saraswati, three teachers, six officers of the Elementary Education Department, the Kumbakonam Municipal Commissioner, the town planning officer, and four assistants of the education department. On 30 July 2014, the court sentenced the school founder Pulavar Palanichamy to life imprisonment and fined \u20b951,65,700. Ten others, including school staff and officials from Kumbakonam and the state education department, were sentenced to five years imprisonment. Eleven of those accused, including three teachers, were acquitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Background\nThere were three schools, namely, Sri Krishna Aided Primary School, Saraswathy Nursery and Primary School, and Sri Krishna Girls High School, operating in the same building in Kasiraman street in Kumbakonam, a town in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The school was located amidst residential buildings, 15\u00a0m (49\u00a0ft) away from the main road. The school had a small gate 4\u00a0ft (1.2\u00a0m) wide, immediately beyond which the classrooms were located. The classrooms did not have any partition, and there was a stage at the end of the classroom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Background\nOn the northwest side of the stage were the noon meal kitchen and a cycle stand, both of which were thatched structures. The northern wing in the ground floor accommodated the Saraswathy Nursery and Primary School, which had six classes, one each for LKG (Lower Kinter Garden), UKG (Upper Kinter Garden), I, II, IV, and V. There was another entrance to the school on the eastern side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident\nOn 16 July 2004, a fire broke out, with the school's thatched roof structure catching fire initially. The school started at 9:15\u00a0a.m., and during one of the breaks at 10:30\u00a0a.m., one of the girl students noticed the fire and alerted the teacher, and the news spread to other classes. The fire sparked from the midday meal kitchen thatch and spread to the upper level, which also had a thatched roof and spread rapidly. The narrow staircase had sundry material that prevented the exit of children. The staircase was also located close to the kitchen. The kitchen used fire logs for cooking unlike other schools, which had gas stoves. The school was overcrowded, having 900 children enrolled. The thatch and the supporting bamboo poles caught fire, fell on the children, and also blocked the exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident\nThe buildings in the nursery and primary schools had no ventilation. Near the eastern entrance, there was a narrow staircase 4.5\u00a0ft (1.4\u00a0m) wide leading to the first floor of the building. The layout of the first floor was similar to the ground floor, where classes had no separation, and the exit was through a narrow collapsible door. The lower end of the class on the western side was connected to the noon meal kitchen thatched roof and the cycle stand roof, where the accident occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident\nThe Sri Krishna Girls High School had 179, Sri Krishna Aided Primary School had 477, and Saraswathy Nursery and Primary School had 126 students in their roles, totaling 782 students in the three schools. The second floor measured 62.5\u00a0ft (19.1\u00a0m) * 13\u00a0ft (4.0\u00a0m) and had classes for standards VI, VII, VIII, and IX of the girls' high school. The third floor had an open terrace having a water tank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident\nThe fire service was informed at 11 a.m., and the personnel arrived in a few minutes. But since they were unprepared for such a large-scale fire, the rescue services were not effective. The locals also helped by breaking the concrete window. The injured children were admitted to the Government hospital in Kumbakonam and some of them later got shifted to Thanjavur Medical College hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Victims\nThe deceased children were taken to the government hospital for postmortem. By the end of the day of the accident, 76 children were reported killed, and their bodies had been handed over to their families by the district administration. The Collector of the district administration arranged for temporary wards in the Government hospital for the parents to identify their children. The digging of graves for 56 bodies went on until 2 a.m. the next morning, with the help of additional diggers arranged by the district administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Victims\nOn 16 July, additional doctors arrived from Kilpauk Medical College, JIPMER Medical College Hospital, C.M.C., Vellore, Salem, and Coimbatore to treat the injured. The casualty increased to 90, 89 of whom were identified and handed over to the parents. Some of the injured were shifted to private hospitals in Kumbakonam, Madurai, and Chennai as requested by the parents. There were 65 who were still undergoing treatment on 16 July, although four of them later died, increasing the total death toll to 94.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\n\"Oh dear little ones! Oh dear little ones! For you, parents had glorious dream! And You were all immersed in your own dreamsYet, Agni engulfed you and all those dreamsTaking you to Almighty's divine presenceUsually, departed old parents and buried by sonsWhereas, Kumbakonam, saw a sad scene! Crying parents burying their little ones!! Oh Almighty! show your grace on those little onesAnd keep them in Thy holiest presence!! Oh Almighty! bless those parents wailing in griefTo have the strength to bear this great lossMay Thy compassion and grace pervade all soulsAnd bring down the pain and wipe away the tearsOh Almighty! show your grace on those little ones\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\n~ A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, Prayer for departed children of Kumbakonam, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nThe accident was one of the four major fire accidents in the state following the Brihadeeswarar Temple fire on 7 June 1997, when 60 people were killed, Erwadi fire incident on 6 August 2001 that killed 30 mentally challenged people and fire at a marriage hall on 23 January 2005 at Srirangam where 30 people including the bridegroom were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nThe accident was the second in terms of casualties for fire accidents in schools after the one in 1995 in Dabwali, Mandi in Sirsa District of the Haryana State, where 400 people were killed in a school fire during a prize distribution ceremony of the DAV Public School. It was the largest school accident in Tamil Nadu, followed by a private school building collapse in Madurai during the 1950s that killed 35 girls and injured 137 others. The accident raised several questions on the Tamil Nadu Educational Department on the safety rule implementation, training of school teachers in civil defense, and enforcement of rules imparting education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nThe Chief Minister who visited the site ordered the withdrawal of recognition of the three schools, prosecution of the school authorities and the correspondent, Suspension of the Chief Educational Officer, the District Elementary Educational Officer, and the Assistant Elementary Educational Officer of Thanjur school district. A compensation of \u20b9 one lakh was provided to the relatives of the deceased, \u20b925,000 to the severely injured and \u20b9 10,000 to other injured from the Chief Minister\u2019s Public Relief Fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nCounseling sessions were arranged for the children affected by the trauma and arrangements were made to facilitate the surviving children to join other schools. A central minister also visited the site on behalf of the Prime Minister of India. The relief announced by the state and central government were disbursed on 17 July 2004. The district administration arranged a primary school in Natham village and accommodated 46 students under the Educational Guarantee Scheme of the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nYadava College constructed a park in memory of the 94 children by planting 94 saplings and termed in Kumbakonam Park in an idea to create environmental awareness among future generations. The state government constructed a memorial park near Palakarai, the Cauvery bridge, in Kumbakonam in memory of the lost lives. The park was opened by the then Deputy Chief Minister, M.K. Stalin on 6 June 2010. The park was constructed at a cost of \u20b9 19 lakh, housing children's amusement equipment in an area of 7,300\u00a0sq\u00a0ft (680\u00a0m2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nThe government allotted housing plots to 59 homeless parents of the deceased of the total 89. A charitable trust named Amritha helped construct houses in the plots and the colony was named Amrithapuram. In 2012, 25 families of the victims constructed an Amritha Vinayagar temple on the premises in memory of the lost lives. The temple was consecrated on 21 June 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Accident, Aftermath\nThe state government constructed a memorial park near Palakarai, Kumbakonam, in memory of the lost lives, which opened on 6 June 2010. The government also allotted housing plots to 59 homeless parents of the 89 deceased students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial\nThe case trial started after a long delay on 24 September 2012 in the Thanjavur district sessions court. The case had 21 accused and had 488 witnesses that included 18 children affected in the accident. The headmaster, Prabharan, and three others turned approvers. There was a petition filed in the court to include the then collector of the district, J Radhakrishnan, and three others in the case, but it was dismissed. A total of 17 people were charge-sheeted in the case and were set to face trial. The seventeen included Pulavar Palanichamy, his wife and correspondent of school Saraswati, three teachers, six officers in the education department (elementary), the Kumbakonam municipal commissioner, town planning officer, and four assistants in the education department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial\nThe education department officials were accused of negligence in their duties and the lower level officers for colluding with the officials to obtain and renew the licenses. The three teachers were accused of showing negligence in rescuing the children. Pulavar Palanichamy, Saraswati, and the three teachers filed petitions in the lower court to discharge them from the case. Their plea was dismissed both in the lower court and Madras High Court on 14 July 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nThe Tamil Nadu state government deputed a committee under Justice K. Sampath on 20th July 2004 to inquire into the circumstances and causes of the fire accident. The committee assumed office on 1 August 2004 and was constituted with expert members Dr. Rani Kandhaswami (Former Principal, Lady Willington Institute of Advanced Studies in Education, Chennai), S.K. Saxena (Fire Officer, Madras Atomic Power Station, Kalpakkam), K. Vijayan (Clinical Psychologist, Institute of Mental Health, Chennai) and P.A. Annamalai (retired Head Master).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nThe committee was given a timeline of four months but the timeline was extended four times; the investigation was completed on 30 June 2005. The investigations revealed that the school had not been inspected by the Education Department officials for three years. The fire officials reported that the building laws were not followed as the school had a thatched kitchen and classroom, had no emergency exits and was a \"death trap\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nThe schools had to follow minimum safety standards, the chapter IV on fire and safety of National Building Code of India 2005 and 14435:1997 states the code of practice of fire safety in educational institutions. A public interest litigation was filed in the Supreme Court of India by Avinash Mehrotra quoting the accident and pleading protection of life and safety of school children across various other schools in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nThe school teachers were not trained properly to handle the situation. The investigation revealed that the role of teachers was highly questionable. One view held that most of them found ways to escape themselves rather than saving the children as many came out unscathed. Some of the student eyewitnesses revealed that the teachers asked them to remain in the classes. However, some hold that the teachers tried their best to rescue the children and some of them asked the children to stay in the classes as they thought the fire was just the regular smoke from the kitchen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nThe committee found that the major reason for the heavy casualty was the false tactics of the management to bring the other two school students to the aided primary school to mislead the inspecting authorities about the student-teacher ratio. The management was held responsible for the whole accident. The report pointed out that the teachers were not trained in disaster management and the prohibited thatch structure was close to the classrooms. It also stated that the schools had inadequate exit facilities and had no firefighting capabilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nPulavar Palanichamy, the owner of the schools, was reported to have used his political clout and coalesced with the municipal and the revenue department officials for getting the permits for the schools. Vijayalakshmi, the noon meal organizer and teacher of the English Medium School, was held accountable for not performing her duties of taking safety precautions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nVasanthi, the head cook, lit the oven in the absence of her assistant, Sivasankari, who usually lights it. There were contrasting reports on whether Sivasankari was present in the school during the event. The Tahsildar of Kumbakonam Taluk, Paramasivam, was reported \"dishonest\" for granting a license under the Tamil Nadu Public Buildings (Licensing) Act, 1965 to the school. The chartered engineer Jayachandran was also held dishonest of giving stability certificate to the building without visiting the school once. The additional assistant educational officer, Madhavan for allowing the school to run without recognition for 6 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nSivaprakasam, the assistant elementary education officer, was held accountable for allowing Madhavan, who was not competent to allow a permit to the school. Balaji, the deputy education elementary officer was accused of carelessly passing the papers signed by Madhavan. The local health officer Dr. Sivapunyam was accused of giving a false sanitary certificate to the school. Annadurai, a friend of Pulavar Palanichamy was accounted for advising circumvention of rules. Pingapani, the deputy educational officer, who inspected the high school, did not show interest in learning that the same campus had a primary school acting beyond rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0021-0002", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Investigation\nThe other officers who were earlier responsible for permitting the nursery school against the rules during 1999, namely, Shanmughavelu, Sethuramachandran, Chandrasekharan, and Dr. Palanivelu. The Deputy elementary educational officer, Durairaj, and assistant elementary educational officer, Balakrishnan, were held less culpable for knowing about the thatched structure and the exaggerated attendance, but not initiating any action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Verdict\nThe trial was concluded on 17 July 2014. On 30 July 2014, Thanjavur district session court sentenced school founder Pulavar Palanichamy to life imprisonment and fined \u20b95,165,700 (US$72,000). Palanichamy's wife and school correspondent P Saraswathi, headmistress J Santhalakshmi, noon meal organizer R Vijayalakshmi, cook R Vasanthi were sentenced to five years imprisonment. Officials in the district elementary education office, officer R Balaji, his assistant S Sivaprakasam, superintendent T Thandavan, and assistant G Durairaj were also sentenced to five years in jail. Total fine of \u20b95,257,000 (US$74,000) was imposed and ordered the compensation of \u20b950,000 (US$700) to parents of each victim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Verdict\nThe chartered engineer, B Jayachandran was sentenced to two years of jail time and a fine of \u20b950,000 (US$700) but later the court suspended his punishment. The court cleared charges of other eleven accused, including three teachers, six education department officials, and two municipality officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Verdict\nThe bench of Madras High Court in Madurai allowed the appeal filed by the state government against the release of 11 accused in the case on 13 September 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177947-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Kumbakonam School fire, Trial, Verdict\nThe eleven who were acquitted by the Principal District Court were B. Palaniswamy, the District Elementary Educational Officer, R. Narayanaswamy, the District Educational Officer, J. Radhakrishnan, the Assistant Elementary Educational Officer, V. Balasubramanian, the Assistant Elementary Educational Officer (Nursery), K. Balakrishnan and G. Madhavan, Additional Assistant Elementary Educational Officers, P. Devi, R. Mahalakshmi, and T. Anthoniammal, the teachers of the school, R. Sathiyamoorthy, the then Kumbakonam Municipal Commissioner and K. Murugan, the Town Planning Officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177948-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kvalserien\nThe 2004 Kvalserien was the 30th edition of the Kvalserien. It determined two teams of the participating ones would play in the 2004\u201305 Elitserien season and which four teams would play in the 2004\u201305 Allsvenskan season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177949-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kyrgyzstan League, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and Dordoi-Dynamo Naryn won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177950-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Kyrgyzstan Second Level\nFinal tables for the 2004 season of the Kyrgyzstan League Second Level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177950-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Kyrgyzstan Second Level\nThere was no final stage this year, because only Shumkar-M Kara-Su displayed intent to play in the Kyrgyzstan League the following year. Luch Frunze withdrew to be replaced by FK Alamudun and KGUSTA changed their name to Dinamo-Chuy UVD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177951-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 LFF Lyga\nFinal tables of the Lithuanian Championship in 2004 are presented below. The Lithuanian Football Federation (LFF) organized three football leagues: A Lyga (the highest), 1 Lyga (second-tier), and 2 Lyga (third-tier), which comprised four regional zones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177952-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 LG Cup (Nigeria)\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Rasdir (talk | contribs) at 22:02, 19 December 2019 (\u2192\u200eThird place match). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177952-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 LG Cup (Nigeria)\nThe LG Cup Four Nations is an exhibition association football tournament that took place in National Stadium, Lagos, Nigeria in April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177953-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 LNBP season\nThe 2004 LNBP was the 5th season of the Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional, one of the professional basketball leagues of Mexico. It started on July 1, 2004 and ended on December 8, 2004. The league title was won by Santos Reales de San Luis, which defeated Halcones UV Xalapa in the championship series, 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177953-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 LNBP season, Format\n20 teams participate. The teams are divided in 2 groups of 10 teams each, called Zonas (zones): Zona Norte (North) and Zona Sur (South). The first 8 teams of each group qualify for the playoffs. The group playoffs have quarterfinals (best-of-5), semifinals (best-of-7) and finals (best-of-7). The winner of each group series qualify for the championship series (best-of-7), named Campe\u00f3n de Campeones (Champion of Champions).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177953-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 LNBP season, Regular season, Zona Sur standings\nNote: The LNBP website calculates 51 points for Garzas de Plata de la UAEH, thus ranking the team below Coras de la UAN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 52], "content_span": [53, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177953-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 LNBP season, Copa Independencia\nThe first edition of the Copa Independencia, a tournament that took place in September, was played between the 8 best ranked teams at the end of the first part of the season. The tournament was won by Lobos de la UAdeC, which defeated Lechugueros de Le\u00f3n, 94\u201388 in the final game played at Gimnasio Hermanos Carre\u00f3n in Aguascalientes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177953-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 LNBP season, All-Star Game\nThe 2004 LNBP All-Star Game was played in San Luis Potos\u00ed at the Auditorio Miguel Barrag\u00e1n on August 31, 2004. The game was played between a team of Mexican players (Mexicanos) and a team of foreign players (Extranjeros). The Mexican won, 111\u2013106.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 31], "content_span": [32, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177954-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Championship\nThe 2004 LPGA Championship was the 50th LPGA Championship, played June 10\u201313 at DuPont Country Club in Wilmington, Delaware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177954-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Championship\nDefending champion Annika S\u00f6renstam won the second of her three consecutive LPGA championships, three strokes ahead of runner-up Shi Hyun Ahn. Due to heavy rains on Friday, the final 36 holes were played on Sunday. It was the seventh of S\u00f6renstam's ten major titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177954-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Championship\nBeginning in 1994, the DuPont Country Club hosted this championship for eleven consecutive seasons, ending with this edition. The next five were played in nearby Maryland, at Bulle Rock Golf Course in Havre de Grace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177955-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Tour\nThe 2004 LPGA Tour was a series of weekly golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world which took place from March through December 2004. The tournaments were sanctioned by the United States-based Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA). This was the 55th season since the LPGA Tour officially began in 1950. The season consisted of 32 official money events. Total prize money for all tournaments was $42,875,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177955-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Tour\nAnnika S\u00f6renstam continued to dominate women's golf in 2004, winning eight tournaments and $2,544,707 in prize money. Four other players earned over $1 million. There were six first-time winners in 2004: Moira Dunn, Christina Kim, Lorena Ochoa, the first Mexican winner, Jennifer Rosales, Kim Saiki, and Karen Stupples.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177955-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Tour\nFor details of what happened in the main tournaments of the year see 2004 in golf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177955-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Tour, Tournament schedule and results\nThe number in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number of official money, individual event wins on the LPGA Tour including that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 47], "content_span": [48, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177955-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 LPGA Tour, Award winners\nThe three competitive awards given out by the LPGA each year are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177956-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 LSU Tigers football team\nThe 2004 LSU Tigers football team represented Louisiana State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Coached by Nick Saban in his final season coaching at LSU, the Tigers played their home games at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The team finished with a 9\u20133 record and an appearance in the Capital One Bowl against Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177957-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne\nThe 2004 La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne was the 68th edition of La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne cycle race and was held on 21 April 2004. The race started in Charleroi and finished in Huy. The race was won by Davide Rebellin of the Gerolsteiner team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177958-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ladies European Tour\nThe 2004 Ladies European Tour was a series of golf tournaments for elite female golfers from around the world which took place from January through December 2004. The tournaments were sanctioned by the Ladies European Tour (LET).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177958-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ladies European Tour, Tournaments\nThe table below shows the 2004 schedule. The numbers in brackets after the winners' names show the number of career wins they had on the Ladies European Tour up to and including that event. This is only shown for members of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177959-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ladies German Open\nThe 2004 Ladies German Open was a women's tennis event that was played in Berlin, Germany from 3 May to 9 May 2004. It was one of two Tier I events that took place on red clay in the build-up to the second Grand Slam of the year, the French Open. Second-seeded Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo won the singles title and earned $189,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177959-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ladies German Open, Finals, Doubles\nNadia Petrova / Meghann Shaughnessy defeated Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 / Conchita Mart\u00ednez, 6\u20132, 2\u20136, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177960-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lafayette Leopards football team\nThe 2004 Lafayette Leopards football team represented Lafayette College in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The team was led by Frank Tavani, in his fifth season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177960-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lafayette Leopards football team\nLafayette played in its first post-season game ever at Delaware by virtue of winning the Patriot League co-championship. Tavani was named a finalist for the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177960-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Lafayette Leopards football team\nThe Leopards played their home games at Fisher Field in Easton, Pennsylvania. All games were televised by the Lafayette Sports Network (LSN).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177961-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lahsuna massacre\nOn 18 May 2004, four people were massacred at Lahsuna village in Bihar state of India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177961-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lahsuna massacre\nMembers of the People's War Group, an outlawed naxal group, were accused of the crime. About 100 armed members of the group reportedly dragged the victims out of their homes and killed them for casting their votes in favour of Janata Dal (United).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177961-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Lahsuna massacre\nThe victims were identified as Uday Paswan, Naga Paswan, Vijay Paswan and Sarwan Paswan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177961-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Lahsuna massacre\nIn 2008, three members of the group were found guilty of the killings and were awarded capital punishment by a court in Patna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177962-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Langerado Music Festival\nThe second Langerado Music Festival was held on March 6, 2004, in the heart of downtown Hollywood, FL at the Young Circle Park. In excess of 4,000 people attended this show, which followed in the tradition of the previous year and was a single day event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177962-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Langerado Music Festival, Lineup\nThe artists that attended the festival included Cake, moe., The Wailers, G. Love & Special Sauce, Sound Tribe Sector 9, Cracker, Drive By Truckers, MOFRO, Moshi Moshi, Perpetual Groove, ulu, Brothers Past, Rana, the Spam Allstars, Seth Yacovone Band, Whirlaway, louque, the Yoko Theory and Way of the Groove.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177963-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Languedoc-Roussillon regional election\nA regional election took place in Languedoc-Roussillon on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Georges Fr\u00eache (PS) was elected President of the former Languedoc-Roussillon Council (now merged to Regional Council of Occitanie), defeating incumbent Jacques Blanc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177964-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lao League, Overview\nIt was contested by 11 teams, and MCTPC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177964-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lao League, Relegation playoff\nPrime Minister's Office FC and No-8 Road Construction FC were automatically promoted from Lao League 2. A play off was held between the third place team and the third bottom team in the top division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177965-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Laois County Council election\nAn election to Laois County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 25 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177966-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Bowl\nThe 2004 Pioneer PureVision Las Vegas Bowl was a post\u2013season American college football bowl game, held on December 23, 2004, at Sam Boyd Stadium on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, as a part of 2004\u201305 NCAA Bowl season. It was the 13th edition of the Las Vegas Bowl. The game featured the UCLA Bruins from the Pac-10 Conference and the Wyoming Cowboys from the Mountain West Conference. The game marked the first meeting between the two programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177966-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Bowl\nUCLA made its second trip to the Las Vegas bowl, their 26th trip to a bowl, and third consecutive bowl trip. The Bruins had defeated the New Mexico Lobos 27\u201313 in the 2002 Las Vegas Bowl. Wyoming appeared in their first Las Vegas Bowl, and their first trip to a bowl game since appearing in the 1993 Copper Bowl. It was their 11th bowl appearance in program history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177966-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Bowl\nWyoming upset UCLA, 24\u201321, on a 12\u2013yard touchdown pass from Corey Bramlet to John Wadkowski with 57 seconds left in the game. The game was televised by ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177966-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Bowl, Game summary\nUCLA wore their home blue uniforms, and Wyoming wore white visitor uniforms. MVP Corey Bramlet went 20\u201334 for 307 yards and 2 touchdowns. Maurice Jones-Drew rushed for 126 yards on 26 carries for the Bruins. The Cowboys out gained the Bruins in yardage, 405 to 311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic\nThe 2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, promoted at the time as the Las Vegas Desert Classic III, was the third year that the Professional Darts Corporation held a major darts tournament in the United States. It was held between 30 June and July 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic\nThe tournament was held at the MGM Grand Las Vegas in Las Vegas, Nevada and was broadcast in the UK by Sky Sports. The layout of the playing hall had been modified from the previous year, and attracted larger crowds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic\nManley defending Champion in 2003, who losing to Kevin Painter of England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic\nTaylor has Two Times Desert Classic Champion he beating Wayne Mardle 6\u20134 (sets).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Results, Men's Tournament\n\u2020 Ricky Villanueva withdrew from the tournament for unknown reasons", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Round One\nFeatured the last 32 and was not televised. Phil Taylor had the highest average in the best of 3 sets matches of 100.6 and coverage began live on Sky Sports with Round Two, the last 16 on Thursday 1 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Round Two\nThe first match featured Kevin Painter against Peter Manley. Manley was erratic in the first set which went to Painter, who then went on to beat Manley 3-0 including checkouts of 143, 124 and 102. Painter averaged of 94.5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Round Two\nThe last American in the tournament, Darin Young (who was World Soft Tip Darts Champion) had beaten Lionel Sams in the first round and faced \"Hawaii 501\" \u2013 Wayne Mardle. The first two sets were close, but Mardle went through comfortably 3-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Round Two\nJohn Part also had a comfortable win against Adrian Gray and in the early stages of the match he was averaging 111.33. It was a 3\u20130 win for Part who also checked out 161 and a 164.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Round Two\nAlan Warriner faced Phil Taylor and started well. \"The Ice Man\" was two legs up in the first set only for Taylor to level at 2\u20132 before Warriner took the deciding leg. Taylor won the next two sets and started the fourth with a 147 checkout. Although Warriner won the next leg, Taylor pulled away to win the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Round Two\nThe battle of two former World Champions saw Richie Burnett beat Dennis Priestley \u2013 the Welshman had to hit a 117 checkout to tie the match at 1\u20131, which was possibly the turning point and Burnett went on to win 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Quarter Finals\nJohn Part overcame Richie Burnett 3-1 in a match that wasn't necessarily reflected by the scoreline. Burnett came close to winning the first set having levelled it with a 137 finish. But Part won the decider. Even as Part looked to be coasting to victory at 2\u20130 in both sets and legs, Burnett put on a fightback to win 3 consecutive legs. Part held him off in the end for a 3\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Quarter Finals\nVegas-loving Wayne Mardle, took the first set against Ronnie Baxter \u2013 averaging 101 to Baxter's 94.30. Mardle then appeared to slow the game down which possibly affected both players. Baxter was possibly affected the most as he lost 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Quarter Finals\nSteve Coote put up a valiant battle against Phil Taylor. The first set went to the deciding leg, and Coote held a 2\u20131 lead in the second \u2013 but Taylor always had the better of his opponent when it mattered and won the match 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Quarter Finals\nDennis Smith had been suffering from toothache throughout the tournament and combined with an in-form Kevin Painter was too much for \"Smiffy\" winning 3\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Semi Finals\nPart was dogged by a failure to hit his doubles against Mardle in the semi. Neither player was outstanding, yet Mardle raced to a 3\u20130 lead. Despite a mini-fightback from the Canadian to win the 4th set, it was Mardle who went to the final a 4\u20131 winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Semi Finals\nKevin Painter v Phil Taylor was a repeat of the World Final from January. Taylor started the better, with a 114 winning the first set. Painter levelled and both players traded blows to stay level at 2\u20132. Taylor then surged to win the fifth and sixth sets to claim his place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Final\nTaylor and Mardle had exchanged some verbal battles in the run-up to the match. The match started with Taylor in fine form, a first set average of 104 gave him the set 3 legs to 1. Taylor also took the second and started the third set with a 10 dart leg \u2013 his average now at 103.0. Mardle fought back to win the next two legs, but after Mardle missed darts to close the gap to 2 sets to 1, Taylor stretched the lead to 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Final\n\"Hawaii 501\" began to hit back. He took the fourth set by 3 legs to 1 with a 12 dart leg for the set. Close again in the next set and Taylor checked out a 135 to go 2 legs to 1 up and then the next leg for the set and a 4 sets to 1 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177967-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Desert Classic, Tournament Summary, Final\nMardle then began an amazing comeback. He took the sixth set to make it 2\u20134 and despite being 2 legs behind in the seventh set \u2013 three consecutive legs made it 3\u20134. His surge continued as he tied the match at 4\u20134 and the ninth set went to the deciding leg. Taylor kept his match average at 101 and won that crucial deciding leg for a 5\u20134 set lead and was then able to win the 10th set to clinch the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177968-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Gladiators season\nThe 2004 Las Vegas Gladiators season was the 8th season for the franchise. This was the first season in which the Gladiators were members of the AFL's Western Division. They finished at 8\u20138, 4th in the Western Division. The Gladiators did not qualify for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177968-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Las Vegas Gladiators season, Coaching\nFrank Haege entered his third and final season as the head coach of the Gladiators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177969-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Latin Billboard Music Awards\nBelow are the winners of the 2004 Billboard Latin Music Awards, handed out April 29 in Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177970-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Latvian Higher League\nThe 2004 season in the Latvian Higher League, named Virsl\u012bga, was the 14th domestic competition since the Baltic nation gained independence from the Soviet Union on 6 September 1991. Eight teams competed in this edition, with Skonto FC claiming the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177970-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Latvian Higher League, Relegation play-offs\nThe matches were played on 14 and 17 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177971-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Laurence Olivier Awards\nThe 2004 Laurence Olivier Awards were held in 2004 in London celebrating excellence in West End theatre by the Society of London Theatre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177971-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Laurence Olivier Awards, Productions with multiple nominations and awards\nThe following 14 productions, including one opera, received multiple nominations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177972-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Le Mans Endurance Series\nThe 2004 Le Mans Endurance Series was the inaugural season of ACO's Le Mans Endurance Series. It is a series for Le Mans prototype and Grand Touring style cars broken into 4 classes: LMP1, LMP2, GTS, and GT. It began on 9 May 2004 and ended on 13 November 2004 after 4 rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177972-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Le Mans Endurance Series\nThis season was preceded by the 1000km of Le Mans held in 2003 as a development race for the creation of the LMES.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177972-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Le Mans Endurance Series, Teams Championships\nPoints are awarded to the top 8 finishers in the order of 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1. Teams with multiple entries do not have their cars combined, each entry number is scored separately in the championship. Cars failing to complete 70% of the winner's distance are not awarded points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177972-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Le Mans Endurance Series, Teams Championships, GTS Standings\n\u2020 - Half points were awarded due to a lack of competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177973-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Cup\nThe League of Ireland Cup 2004 was the 31st staging of the League of Ireland Cup, which was won by Longford Town, the club's first victory in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177973-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Cup\nThe 2004 League Cup kicked off in May. It featured two teams representing the Kerry and Mayo Leagues plus the 10 teams from the Premier Division and the 12 from the First Division. There was 24 teams drawn into eight groups of three. Each team played the other two in their group. The winner of each group progressed to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177974-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland First Division\nThe 2004 League of Ireland First Division season was the 20th season of the League of Ireland First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177974-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland First Division, Overview\nThe First Division was contested by 12 teams and Finn Harps won the division. Each team played the other teams three times, totalling 33 games. The 2005 season would see the League of Ireland Premier Division revert to 12 twelve teams. To facilitate this expansion there was no promotion/relegation play-off this season and the second and third placed teams, UCD and Bray Wanderers, were automatically promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177974-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland First Division, Gallery\nThe locations of the clubs that competed in the 2004 League of Ireland season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177975-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Premier Division\nThe 2004 League of Ireland Premier Division was the 20th season of the League of Ireland Premier Division. The division was made up of 10 teams. Shelbourne were champions while Cork City finished as runners-up. Both clubs also enjoyed respectable runs in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177975-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Premier Division, Overview\nThe season began on 19 March and ended on 22 November. Each team played four rounds of games, totalling 36 games each. The 2005 season would see the League of Ireland Premier Division revert to 12 twelve teams. To facilitate this expansion there was no promotion/relegation play-off this season and only one team, Dublin City, were automatically relegated. At the end of October, Drogheda United and Bohemians were all but out of the title race. Drogheda United and Bohemians were twelve points and eight points behind leaders Shelbourne respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177975-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Premier Division, Overview\nShelbourne had not quite sealed the title yet, though, as Cork City had reached second place and were just four points behind with four games remaining. On 5 November it looked like the Cork City's league challenge might have been over after they could only draw at home to Derry City. If Shelbourne had beaten Longford Town the following day they would be nine points clear with Cork City having just three games remaining. Longford won 4\u20131. Both Cork City and Shelbourne won their remaining games before the final round of matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177975-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Premier Division, Overview\nThis meant that Cork City were three points behind Shelbourne. Cork had to win and Shelbourne lose for the title to go the Cork instead of Shelbourne. It turned out that neither result went the way Cork wanted as both they and Shelbourne drew. This meant that Shelbourne retained the league title and Cork City would have to be satisfied with second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177975-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Premier Division, UEFA coefficient\nThe League of Ireland Premier Division performances in Europe this season meant that the league received a coefficient of 1.333 added to their overall coefficient which now accumulated to 4.164. This gave them a ranking 38th place as shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177975-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 League of Ireland Premier Division, Gallery\nThe locations of the clubs that competed in the 2004 League of Ireland season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177976-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Leeds City Council election\nThe 2004 Leeds City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of City of Leeds Metropolitan Borough Council in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177976-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Leeds City Council election\nFollowing a full boundary review of Leeds' electoral wards by the Boundary Committee for England, all of the council's 99 seats were contested on the new ward boundaries. The previous all-out election in Leeds was in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177976-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Leeds City Council election\nThe election saw the previously Labour-run council falling into no overall control. The Liberal Democrats and Conservatives agreed to take control of the council in a formal coalition, the first non-Labour administration in 24 years since 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177976-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Leeds City Council election, Election result\nThis result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the council after the elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177977-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic\nThe 2004 Legg Mason Tenis Classic was the 36th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was held at the William H.G. FitzGerald Tennis Center in Washington, D.C. from August 16 through August 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177977-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic, Finals, Doubles\nChris Haggard / Robbie Koenig defeated Travis Parrott / Dmitry Tursunov 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177978-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nYevgeny Kafelnikov and Sargis Sargsian were the defending champions, but did not compete this year, with Kafelnikov retired at the end of the 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177978-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic \u2013 Doubles\nChris Haggard and Robbie Koenig won the title, defeating Travis Parrott and Dmitry Tursunov 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20131 in the final. It was the 1st and only title in the year for the pair, and the 5th title for Haggard and 5th and final title for Koenig, in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177979-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nTim Henman was the defending champion but chose to participate in the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177979-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Legg Mason Tennis Classic \u2013 Singles\nLleyton Hewitt won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134 against Gilles M\u00fcller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177980-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team\nThe 2004 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team was an American football team that represented Lehigh University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Lehigh won the Patriot League co-championship but lost in the first round of the national playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177980-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team\nIn their fourth year under head coach Pete Lembo, the Mountain Hawks compiled a 9\u20133 record. Kaloma Cardwell, Karrie Ford, Jason Morrell and Justin Terry were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177980-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team\nThe Mountain Hawks outscored opponents 345 to 193. Their 5\u20131 conference record tied for best in the Patriot League standings. Though their co-champion Lafayette was awarded the Patriot League's automatic berth in the national Division I-AA playoffs, Lehigh qualified as an at-large selection. Both Patriot League representatives lost their first-round games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177980-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team\nLehigh was ranked No. 23 in the preseason national Division I-AA poll, and remained ranked throughout the season. The Mountain Hawks' ranking peaked at No. 8 in mid-November, but losses to archrival Lafayette and in the first round of the playoffs dropped them to No. 15 in the postseason poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177980-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Lehigh Mountain Hawks football team\nLehigh played its home games, including its one playoff game, at Goodman Stadium on the university's Goodman Campus in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177981-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Leicester South by-election\nA by-election was held in Leicester South on 15 July, the same day as the Birmingham Hodge Hill by-election. It was won by Parmjit Singh Gill of the Liberal Democrats, over-turning a Labour majority of 13,243 votes at the 2001 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177981-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Leicester South by-election\nThe MP for Leicester South, Jim Marshall, from the Labour Party died on 27 May 2004, shortly before the local and European elections in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177981-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Leicester South by-election\nThe seat was first won by Marshall in 1974. He lost it to the Conservative Party candidate, Derek Spencer, in the 1983 general election by 7 votes, but won it back at the 1987 election. Marshall had a large personal vote, and both the Liberal Democrat and Conservative Parties targeted the seat at the 2004 by-election. At the 2005 general election, the Liberal Democrats were unable to retain the seat and Peter Soulsby became Leicester South's MP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177981-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Leicester South by-election\nThe constituency is diverse, covering leafy suburbs such as Stoneygate and Knighton along with inner city areas with a strong Asian community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177981-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Leicester South by-election, Results\nThe by-election was considered a referendum on Blair's policies, especially the ongoing Iraq War; Leicester South has one of the largest South Asian populations of any constituency in the UK. In his victory speech, Gill said, \"Yesterday, Lord Butler gave his views on Tony Blair's reasoning for backing the invasion of Iraq. Today, people in Leicester have given theirs.\" He then went on to say, \"The justification which Tony Blair gave for backing George Bush was wrong. The people of Leicester South have spoken for the people of Britain. Their message is that the prime minister has abused and lost their trust. He should apologize and he should apologize now.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177982-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final\nThe 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final was the final football match of the 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship, contested by Laois and Westmeath over two games in Croke Park, Dublin. The first game finished level so a replay occurred. Westmeath won their first ever title at senior level, leaving Wicklow and Fermanagh as the only other counties yet to achieve this. The season also saw the emergence of Denis Glennon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177982-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final, Pre-match\nWestmeath had only ever appeared in two Leinster Senior Football Championship finals in their history: in 1931 and 1949. They went into the 2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship bidding to win their first ever title at senior level, with the only other counties still to achieve this being Wicklow and Fermanagh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177982-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final, Pre-match\nWestmeath midfielder Rory O'Connell was banned for 12-weeks for stamping on Offaly's Pascal Kellaghan during Westmeath's Leinster Senior Football Championship win on 23 May 2004. This threatened O'Connell's participation in the final. Kellaghan submitted a letter saying the offence had not happened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 59], "content_span": [60, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177982-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Leinster Senior Football Championship Final, Reaction\nCommentators hailed Westmeath's win as monumental, with the Irish Independent's Eamonn Sweeney, 'Richard Stakelum famously greeted Tipperary's first Munster title in sixteen years with the words, \"The famine is over.\" What Westmeath have endured makes the famine of other counties look more like minor spells of peckishness. There was a song a few years back which described the failures of the English soccer team as \"thirty years of hurt.\" Thirty years? How about one hundred and twenty years of hurt. And those years never stopped Westmeath dreaming either.' Colm O'Rourke said it was \"one of the greatest days ever in Croke Park and must have given rise to the biggest street party ever in [the Westmeath capital] Mullingar last night\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177983-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Leitrim County Council election\nAn election to Leitrim County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 22 councillors were elected from four electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177984-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Leitrim Senior Football Championship\nThis is a round-up of the 2004 Leitrim Senior Football Championship. Annaduff claimed their first title in 76 years after a narrow win over another Southern side, Gortlettragh, in the final. They had dethroned St. Mary's of Carrick previously in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177984-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Leitrim Senior Football Championship, Group stages\nThe Championship was contested by 20 teams, divided into four groups of five. The top two sides in each group advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177984-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Leitrim Senior Football Championship, Leitrim Senior Football Championship Final\nTeam:K. LudlowJ. CoxG. CoxD. CoxD. DuignanD. McHughM. FaughnanR. McCormackB. GuckianS. BeirneT. McNabola (0-5)G. GarveyA. CoxR. Cox (0-1)M. Rowley", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177984-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Leitrim Senior Football Championship, Leitrim Senior Football Championship Final\nTeam:C. McCrannD. KennedyS. ReillyK. McGrathM. QuinnS. Quinn (0-1)M. DuffyP. McGarryC. QuinnG. Mitchell (0-1)D. KennedyS. Dorrigan (0-3)P. KaneD. DuignanD. Kelleher", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake\nThe 2004 Les Saintes earthquake occurred at 07:41:07 local time on November 21 with a moment magnitude of 6.3 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). The shock was named for \u00celes des Saintes \"Island of the Saints\", a small island to the south of Guadeloupe, which is an overseas department of France. Although it occurred near the Lesser Antilles subduction zone, this was an intraplate, normal fault event. It resulted in one death, thirteen injuries, and forty people being made homeless, but the overall damage was considered moderate. A small, nondestructive tsunami was reported, but runup and inundation distances were difficult to measure due to a storm that occurred on the day of the event. Unusual effects at a volcanic lake on Dominica were also documented, and an aftershock caused additional damage three months later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 870]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Tectonic setting\nWhile the northern and southern boundary of the Caribbean Plate are complex and diffuse, with zones of seismicity stretching several hundred kilometers across, the eastern boundary is that of the Lesser Antilles subduction zone. This 850\u00a0km (530\u00a0mi) long subduction zone lacks a uniform curve and has an average dip of 50\u201360\u00b0. The largest known earthquake on the plate interface was a M7.5\u20138.0 event in 1843, but it did not generate a large tsunami. In opposition, the three largest events between 1950 and 1978 were intraplate normal faulting events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Earthquake\nThe mainshock and the primary aftershock occurred on the previously mapped Roseau Fault, a 15\u00a0km (9.3\u00a0mi), northeast-dipping normal fault that forms the western portion of the northwest-trending Les Saintes channel graben within the overriding North American Plate. Late 1990s bathymetric studies showed that it had vertical fault scarps approaching 120\u00a0m (390\u00a0ft). The type of slip was primarily extensional, but included a small amount of left-lateral slip, and may have contributed to hydrological/volcanic effects that were observed on the island of Dominica, where a flooded fumarole drained twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Earthquake, Damage\nA maximum intensity of VIII (Heavily damaging) was recorded at Terre-de-Haut, where some serious damage occurred to a school, a church, and to some homes near the sugar loaf. The same intensity was observed at Terre-de-Bas, where damage was moderate and non-structural in nature. At Petite-Anse, a small area contained some damaged walls, but no complete collapses occurred. At Grand-Bourg on the island of Marie-Galante (where the intensity was deemed to be VI\u2013VII (Slightly damaging\u2013Damaging)) the town hall, a church, and a college were red-tagged. The same intensity was assigned to the nearby commune of Saint-Louis, where the newly built town hall had visible cracks and the church was closed due to the potential of aftershocks breaking stained glass windows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Earthquake, Boiling Lake\nIn the weeks following the mainshock, no abnormal geochemical or seismic activity was observed at La Grande Soufri\u00e8re (an active stratovolcano) on Guadaloupe, but on southern Dominica near the Valley of Desolation, a flooded fumarole known as Boiling Lake was discovered empty by tourists on Christmas Day. The 10\u201315\u00a0m (33\u201349\u00a0ft) deep lake lies in an active geothermal area and is normally stable in terms of temperature (80\u201390\u00a0\u00b0C (176\u2013194\u00a0\u00b0F)) and water level. By mid-February the lake was again full again, but the temperature had not returned to normal, and the water level dropped again following the M5.8 aftershock on February 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Earthquake, Aftershocks\nBy mid-February, aftershock activity had essentially ceased, with events becoming increasingly far apart. On February 14, a strong and slightly-damaging aftershock occurred. This was also a normal slip event that occurred about 7\u00a0km (4.3\u00a0mi) to the northwest of the November 21 mainshock. The damage was minimal, with cracks developing on the roads, some broken water pipes, and wall and roof damage (including at some locations that were damaged during the mainshock).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Tsunami\nA small tsunami took place following the shock, and while no tide gauges captured the event, scientists were on scene within several days to investigate. A large storm occurred on the day of the event, and this might have prevented visual observation of the tsunami, but witnesses on Guadelouple reported that the sea dropped \"a few\" to as many as 50\u00a0cm (20\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177985-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Les Saintes earthquake, Tsunami\nAt Anse des M\u00fbriers on \u00celes des Saintes, a ship captain reported that three minutes after the earthquake the sea dropped about 80\u00a0cm (31\u00a0in) and also receded from the coast about 5\u00a0m (16\u00a0ft). Investigators documented a 70\u00a0cm (28\u00a0in) runup at Grande-Anse and a 50\u00a0cm (20\u00a0in) runup was measured at Anse Pajot, but these findings were difficult to distinguish from the storm surge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177986-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Letterkenny Town Council election\nAn election to Letterkenny Town Council took place on 5 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 9 councillors were elected by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell\n2004 Lexell, provisional designation 1973 SV2, is a stony Florian asteroid from the inner regions of the asteroid belt, approximately 7.5 kilometers in diameter. The asteroid was discovered on 22 September 1973, by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Chernykh at the Crimean Astrophysical Observatory in Nauchnij, on the Crimean peninsula, and later named for Swedish-Russian astronomer and mathematician Anders Johan Lexell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Classification and orbit\nLexell is a member of the Flora family, one of the largest collisional populations of stony asteroids. It orbits the Sun at a distance of 2.0\u20132.3\u00a0AU once every 3 years and 2 months (1,169 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.08 and an inclination of 2\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 37], "content_span": [38, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Classification and orbit\nThe asteroid was first identified as 1938 WL at the Finnish Turku Observatory in November 1938, extending the body's observation arc by 35 years prior to its official discovery observation at Nauchnij.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 37], "content_span": [38, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Physical characteristics\nPan-STARRS' photometric survey characterized Lexell as a LS-type asteroid, which transitions between the common S-type and rare L-type asteroid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 37], "content_span": [38, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Physical characteristics, Rotation period\nIn March 2013, two rotational lightcurves of Lexell were obtained from photometric observations by Gary Haagen at Stonegate Observatory, Massachusetts, and by a group of astronomers at the Oakley Southern Sky Observatory (E09), Australia. Lightcurve analysis gave a well-defined rotation period of 5.441 and 5.4429 hours with a brightness variation of 0.45 and 0.42 magnitude, respectively (U=3/3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 54], "content_span": [55, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Physical characteristics, Rotation period\nIn February 2013, observations made by French amateur astronomer Pierre Antonini gave a concurring period of 5.44 hours with an amplitude of 0.51 magnitude (U=3-).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 54], "content_span": [55, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Physical characteristics, Diameter and albedo\nAccording to the survey carried out by the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, Lexell measures 7.255 and 7.456 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an albedo of 0.306 and 0.2908, respectively. The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes an albedo of 0.24 \u2013 derived from 8\u00a0Flora, the largest member and namesake of the Flora family \u2013 and calculates a diameter of 7.82 kilometers based on an absolute magnitude of 12.7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 58], "content_span": [59, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177987-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexell, Naming\nThis minor planet was named after Anders Johan Lexell (1740\u20131784), a Swedish-Russian astronomer and mathematician. The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 15 October 1977 (M.P.C. 4238). The lunar crater Lexell was also named in his honor, as is Lexell's Comet, of which he computed its orbit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 19], "content_span": [20, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177988-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexmark Indy 300\nThe 2004 Lexmark Indy 300 was the thirteenth and penultimate round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on October 24, 2004 on the Surfers Paradise Street Circuit, Queensland, Australia. Paul Tracy won the pole and Bruno Junqueira won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177988-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lexmark Indy 300, Qualifying results\n* Oriol Servi\u00e0's time from Qualification Session #1 was forfeited after he switched to his backup car for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting\nThe period between Paul Martin's assumption of the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada (November 14, 2003) and the announcement of the 2004 federal election (May 23, 2004) saw a considerable amount of infighting within the party. The divisions in the Liberal Party, the party's embroilment in the Sponsorship Scandal, and a united Conservative opposition, all combined to end 12 continuous years of Liberal rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Turner's leadership\nWhile the Liberal Party has had internal conflicts during its history, it has had a tumultuous period during the later leadership of Pierre Trudeau. In 1975, John Turner unexpectedly resigned as Minister of Finance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Turner's leadership\nInternal unrest began after Turner was elected leader, defeating Trudeau-loyalist Jean Chr\u00e9tien. Trudeau had resigned due to slipping approval ratings, which showed his party headed for certain defeat against newly elected Progressive Conservative leader Brian Mulroney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Turner's leadership\nTurner then immediately led the Liberals into a disastrous election, finishing with 40 seats, only ten more than the New Democratic Party. For his part, Turner initially did not give any Trudeau loyalists important campaign positions until near the end of the campaign when it was too late. Some suggested that the Liberals would follow their British namesake into oblivion, as NDP leader Ed Broadbent consistently out-polled Turner in personal approval ratings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Turner's leadership\nConsequently, Turner's leadership was frequently questioned, and in the lead up to the 1986 Liberal convention, a vote of confidence loomed large. Chr\u00e9tien, supposedly still bitter over his loss at the 1984 convention, resigned his seat. The ongoing and often open lack of popularity of Turner within his own party led to many editorial cartoonists to draw him with a back stabbed full of knives. Keith Davey and other Liberals began a public campaign against Turner, coinciding with backroom struggles involving Chr\u00e9tien's supporters. However, the public conflict influenced many Liberals to support Turner, and he ended up getting 75% of the delegate vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Turner's leadership\nFurther infighting dogged the party during the 1988 election but they were successfully able to re-establish themselves as the main opposition to Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservatives. Despite doubling their number of seats, the results were considered a disappointment as polls in mid-campaign had predicted a Liberal majority, and Turner resigned as party leader in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Turner's leadership\nBack in 1986, a group of young Liberals approached Paul Martin as an ideological equivalent of Turner. While Martin did not take part in an attempt to overthrow Turner, he did prepare to succeed him in the leadership should the position open, and he entered Parliament in the 1988 election. From the moment Martin announced his intentions to become an MP, he was touted as a possible leadership candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, 1990 Convention\nChr\u00e9tien and Martin squared off in the 1990 leadership convention after Turner resigned, with Martin being acknowledged as the ideological successor to Turner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, 1990 Convention\nThe Meech Lake Accord had been a potentially divisive issue for the Liberals. Trudeau came out of retirement to campaign against the Accord, while Turner and Martin declared their support for it. While Turner had privately opposed many of Trudeau's policies while in Cabinet, Meech Lake was seen as one of the signs of open disagreement among both factions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, 1990 Convention\nChr\u00e9tien himself said that he never forgave Martin for some of the \"wounds\" that the latter inflicted; the most notable was during a leadership debate when Martin supporters shouted \"vendu\", a French insult meaning sellout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, 1990 Convention\nAlthough Chr\u00e9tien won on the first ballot, Martin had a strong second-place showing, which allowed him to force concessions. Martin played a major role in drafting policy during the 1993 federal election. The Liberals, as it turned out, won a landslide majority government, and Martin was appointed to the key post of Minister of Finance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Chr\u00e9tien government\nThe Liberals were re-elected with a razor-thin majority in the 1997 campaign, although they were still by far the largest party in the House of Commons. Several MPs such as Reg Alcock had opposed the timing of the vote, in wake of the devastating Red River Flood in Manitoba. Others felt that it was too early to call an election, since the government had only been in power for three and a half years, and the resulting drop in Liberal support likely undermined confidence in Chr\u00e9tien's leadership of the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Chr\u00e9tien government\nRumours of a division between Chr\u00e9tien and Martin intensified around the 2000 election, with Martin's supporters wanting to take over before the campaign. However, the party managed to win almost as many seats as in 1993 (at the expense of all the other political parties) persuading Chr\u00e9tien to stay on. Around this time, Martin had worked throughout this time to position himself as the clear successor to Chr\u00e9tien, ensuring that most of the institutions of the Liberal Party were controlled by his allies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Chr\u00e9tien government, Chr\u00e9tien-Martin split\nThe dispute between the two men came to a head in the summer of 2002, when Chr\u00e9tien tried to curtail Martin's open campaigning for the leadership. What ensued is of some debate. Martin claims that he was fired from cabinet by Chr\u00e9tien, which is what was widely reported in the media, while Chr\u00e9tien claims that Martin had resigned. In either case, Martin's departure from cabinet aided his leadership campaign since he did not have to disclose donors, unlike Martin's rivals (John Manley, Allan Rock, and Sheila Copps) who were still in cabinet and were thus obliged to follow the rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Chr\u00e9tien government, Chr\u00e9tien-Martin split\nMartin's influence and the backlash from his dismissal compelled Chr\u00e9tien to set a date for his retirement. After Martin's dismissal/resignation, he toured the country campaigning for the leadership while his Liberal organizers prepared to challenge Chr\u00e9tien during a review vote in January 2003. During the fall, Chr\u00e9tien announced that he would step down in February 2004 after less than half of caucus agreed to sign a commitment supporting him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Chr\u00e9tien government, Chr\u00e9tien-Martin split\nShortly before Chr\u00e9tien stepped down, Parliament passed a law that banned parties from accepting campaign contributions from corporations, as well as granting parties a subsidy based on their share of popular vote from the most recent election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Chr\u00e9tien government, Chr\u00e9tien-Martin split\nWhile viewed positively among the public as an electoral reform after some early revelations of the sponsorship scandal, Bill C-24 was opposed by many of his own MPs who saw it as a poison pill since it effectively cut off the main source of funding for the Liberals; they had enjoyed the majority of company donations for the last decade due to a fragmented opposition. Party president Stephen LeDrew famously derided Bill C-24 as \"dumb as a bag of hammers\". While the opposition parties were well poised to reap the benefits of Bill C-24 due to their established grassroots fund raising, the Liberals were caught unprepared for this change. This would hamper them in the 2004 and 2006 campaigns, leaving them in heavy debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Martin's Cabinet\nIn November 2003, Martin was elected as Liberal leader by capturing 3,242 of 3,455 delegates. He had won the leadership almost unopposed, due to his hold on the party machinery, and because Chr\u00e9tien supporters did not rally around either of Martin's leadership opponents (with Martin's large lead, even most Chr\u00e9tien supporters grudgingly voted for Martin). Potential contenders Brian Tobin and Allan Rock never formally entered the race, while John Manley dropped out and Sheila Copps received at most marginal support. Martin was sworn in as Prime Minister in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Martin's Cabinet\nWhile the issue of the party leadership was settled, at the lower levels unprecedented intraparty warfare began. Martin replaced half of Chr\u00e9tien's ministers, one of the largest cabinet turnovers in Canadian history for a ruling party undergoing a leadership change. Ministers such as John Manley, Allan Rock, Don Boudria, David Collenette, and Sheila Copps, who had played key roles during Chr\u00e9tien's decade in power, were reduced to minor roles or compelled to take patronage appointments, and many of them decided to retire from politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Martin's Cabinet\nBesides excluding experienced Chr\u00e9tien supporters from cabinet, Martin also outraged many of them by guaranteeing his star candidates powerful cabinet posts, despite many being newcomers to federal politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Martin's Cabinet\nSeveral Chr\u00e9tien loyalists wanted to remain as backbenchers. In some cases, they were defeated in the riding nomination process, with widespread allegations of tampering by Martin supporters. Unlike in previous elections, incumbent Liberals were not automatically granted their local nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Sponsorship Scandal\nChr\u00e9tien's supporters have suggested that Martin had used the sponsorship scandal as a pretense to remove many Chr\u00e9tien supporters, such as Andr\u00e9 Ouellet, Alfonso Gagliano, and Jean Pelletier, from their positions in government, crown corporations, and the party. The Chr\u00e9tien camp contends that the Gomery commission was set up to make them look bad, and that it was not a fair investigation. The scandal also cast skepticism on Martin's cabinet appointments, prompting speculation Martin was simply ridding the government of Chr\u00e9tien's supporters to distance the Liberals from the scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Sponsorship Scandal\nThe first volume of the Gomery Report, released on November 1, 2005, cleared Martin of any wrongdoing while placing blame for the scandal on Chr\u00e9tien. However, many have criticized the Gomery Inquiry as not having the scope to assign criminal responsibility for the Scandal or to investigate Martin's role, and indeed some have accused Martin of purposely \"tying Gomery's hands.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Sponsorship Scandal\nWhile the Gomery Report: Phase 1 exonerated Martin from responsibility and liability for the misspending of public funds, Chr\u00e9tien has decided to take an action in Federal Court to review the commission report on the grounds that Gomery showed a \"reasonable apprehension of bias\", and that some conclusions didn't have an \"evidentiary\" basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Sponsorship Scandal\nThe controversy over responsibility for Chr\u00e9tien's legal fees also proved another potentially divisive issue. Many of Martin's ministers wanted to deny Chr\u00e9tien and his supporters further federal aid, as it would be criticized by opposition parties and the public alike, though such a position would anger many Chr\u00e9tien loyalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Sponsorship Scandal\nOutgoing minister Reg Alcock did approve a payment of up to $40,000 to assist Jean Pelletier with legal fees in a court challenge against the Gomery Commission after the Liberals were defeated in the 2006 federal election. Representatives of other parties criticized this payment, though Pelletier's lawyer argued that it followed a long-standing government policy for high-ranking functionaries in judicial proceedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Public\nFormally, Chr\u00e9tien and Martin have remained publicly respectful of each other; while much of the verbal sparring was between their supporters. After being dismissed or resigning from cabinet, Martin did not comment on the government, as he was focused upon leadership campaigning. At the November 2003 Liberal leadership convention, Chr\u00e9tien pledged that he would help Martin to win the Liberals' fourth consecutive majority government, while Martin said that many of his initiatives as Finance Minister were credited to Chr\u00e9tien's support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Public\nAt the 2006 leadership convention in Montreal, Martin's final speech as outgoing leader paid tribute to Chr\u00e9tien, but the latter was not present for the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Nomination battles\nIn Canadian federal politics, would-be electoral candidates will generally seek the nomination of their chosen party within the local constituency. The nominee is chosen by members of the party within the constituency, and consequently the candidates attempt to sign up as many new members as possible to support them prior to the nomination meeting. In previous elections, incumbent Liberal Members of Parliament (MPs) were protected from nomination challenges; this rule was not applied in 2004, especially towards Chr\u00e9tien supporters. Martin claimed that he wanted to make the process more democratic, but he was heavily criticized when he overruled the new process to parachute in his handpicked star candidates, often against the wishes of the local riding association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Nomination battles\nThe highest profile battle was in the riding of Hamilton East\u2014Stoney Creek between former Deputy Prime Minister and leadership candidate Sheila Copps and Martin loyalist and newly appointed Minister of Transport Tony Valeri. Copps had been one of the most noted representatives of the party's left wing for over two decades, dating to the party's nadir in the mid-1980s. However, Elections Canada had merged her riding with Valeri's in a way that slightly favoured Valeri. Copps lost the nomination battle, which she blamed on dirty tricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177989-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberal Party of Canada infighting, Nomination battles\nIn several ridings, the nomination battles resulted in the splitting of the Liberal vote, as disgruntled party members supported the Conservatives, NDP or Bloc, costing the Liberals several otherwise safe seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177990-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberian Premier League, Overview\nIt was contested by 7 teams, and Mighty Barrolle won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention\nThe 2004 Libertarian National Convention was held from May 28 to May 31, 2004 at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in Atlanta, Georgia. The delegates at the convention, on behalf of the U.S. Libertarian Party, nominated Michael Badnarik for president and Richard Campagna for vice president in the 2004 presidential election. The convention was televised nationally on C-SPAN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention\nLibertarians hold a National Convention every two years to vote on party bylaws, platform and resolutions and elect national party officers and a judicial committee. Every four years it nominates presidential and vice presidential candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention, Voting for presidential nomination, First ballot\nAfter the first round, a motion was passed to suspend the rules and allow only the top three candidates from the first round to proceed to the second ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention, Voting for presidential nomination, Second ballot\nAfter the second round, Gary Nolan, not receiving the necessary votes to advance, endorsed Michael Badnarik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 87], "content_span": [88, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention, Voting for presidential nomination, Third ballot\nAfter the second round of voting, Gary Nolan addressed the convention, endorsing Michael Badnarik for the 2004 nomination of the Libertarian Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention, Voting for vice presidential nomination\nA separate vote was held for the vice presidential nomination. Per convention rules, nominee Michael Badnarik addressed the crowd, however he declined to declare his preferred running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177991-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian National Convention, Voting for vice presidential nomination, First ballot\nRichard Campagna of Iowa was nominated as vice presidential candidate on the first ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 91], "content_span": [92, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries\nThe 2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries allowed voters to indicate non-binding preferences for the Libertarian Party's presidential candidate. These differed from the Republican or Democratic presidential primaries and caucuses in that they did not appoint delegates to represent a candidate at the party's convention to select the party's nominee for the United States presidential election. The party's nominee for the 2004 presidential election was chosen directly by registered delegates at the 2004 Libertarian National Convention, which ran from May 28 to 31, 2008. The delegates nominated Michael Badnarik for president and Richard Campagna for vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries\nFive primaries were held. A total of 26,701 votes were cast in these primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries, Primaries and caucuses, Missouri primary\nIn the Wisconsin primary on February 3, the Libertarian Party had a state-run primary held alongside the Democratic, Republican primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries, Primaries and caucuses, Wisconsin primary\nIn the Wisconsin primary on February 17, the Libertarian Party had a state-run primary held alongside the Democratic, Republican primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries, Primaries and caucuses, California primary\nIn the California primary on March 2, the Libertarian Party had a state-run primary held alongside those for the Republicans, Democrats, the Green Party, and the Peace and Freedom Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries, Primaries and caucuses, Massachusetts primary\nIn the Massachusetts primary on March 2, the Libertarian Party had a state-run primary held alongside the Democratic, Republican, and Green primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177992-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Libertarian Party presidential primaries, Primaries and caucuses, Nebraska primary\nIn the Nebraska primary on May 11, the Libertarian Party had a state-run primary held alongside the Democratic and Republican primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177993-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberty Bowl\nThe 2004 Liberty Bowl was a college football postseason bowl game played on December 31, 2004, in Memphis, Tennessee. The 46th edition of the Liberty Bowl was played between the Boise State Broncos and the Louisville Cardinals in front of 58,355 fans. With sponsorship from AutoZone, the game was officially the AutoZone Liberty Bowl. Louisville overcame a 10-point halftime deficit to win, 44\u201340.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177993-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Liberty Bowl\nOf non-Bowl Championship Series (BCS) bowl games following the 2004 regular season, this game featured the highest ranking teams, with Boise State 9th and Louisville 10th in the BCS rankings. Boise State played in place of the Mountain West Conference champions, the Utah Utes, who played in the Fiesta Bowl instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177994-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Libyan Super Cup\nThe 2004 Libyan Super Cup was the 8th edition of the Super Cup, and was played on Friday, August 27, 2004 between LPL winners Al Olympic and Libyan Cup winners Al Ittihad. Al Olympic ended the game with 9 men, Nader Kara and Younes Al Shibani having both been sent off, Kara going for taking his shirt off after scoring, and Al Shibani walking for a poor tackle. Al Ittihad comfortably won the game 5-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177995-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liechtenstein referendum\nA double referendum was held in Liechtenstein on 4 April 2004. Voters were asked whether they approved of amending the law on compulsory accident insurance and funding a new building for the security forces. Both proposals were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177996-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito season\nLiga Deportiva Universitaria de Quito's 2004 season was the club's 74th year of existence, the 51st year in professional football, and the 43rd in the top level of professional football in Ecuador.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177997-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liga Indonesia Premier Division\nThe 2004 Liga Indonesia Premier Division (also known as the Liga Bank Mandiri for sponsorship reasons) was the tenth season of the Liga Indonesia Premier Division, the top Indonesian professional league for association football clubs. The season began on 4 January and ended on 23 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177997-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Liga Indonesia Premier Division, Awards, Top scorers\nThis is a list of the top scorers from the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177998-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano\nThe 2004 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano (Professional Football League of Bolivia) season had 12 teams in competition. Club Bol\u00edvar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177998-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Liga de F\u00fatbol Profesional Boliviano, Results\nNote: The season is divided into Torneo Apertura and Torneo Clausura, played in different formats. The above table is only for the Torneo Apertura; information for the Torneo Clausura is missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00177999-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Limerick City Council election\nAn election to Limerick City Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 17 councillors were elected from four electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178000-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Limerick County Council election\nAn election to Limerick County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 28 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178001-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship was the 110th staging of the Limerick Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Limerick County Board in 1887.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178001-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Limerick Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 10 October 2004, Ahane won the championship after a 1-11 to 0-13 defeat of Garryspillane in the final. It was their 19th championship title overall and their first title since 1999. It remains their last championship triumph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178002-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian Athletics Championships\nThe 81st 2004 Lithuanian Athletics Championships were held in S. Darius and S. Gir\u0117nas Stadium, Kaunas on 24\u201325 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Lithuania on 10 October 2004, with a second round on 24 October 2004 in the constituencies where no candidate won a majority in the first round of voting. All 141 seats in the Seimas were up for election; 71 in single-seat constituencies elected by majority vote and the remaining 70 in a nationwide constituency based on proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election\nThe elections were won by the Labour Party with around 28% of the vote in the nationwide constituency and 39 seats in the Eighth Seimas, far short of the 71-seat majority. Outgoing government coalition \"Working for Lithuania\", consisting of the ruling Social Democratic Party of Lithuania and New Union (Social Liberals), won a total of 31 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election\nDespite finishing behind Labour, the Social Democrats led a coalition government with New Union, Labour and the Peasants and New Democratic Party Union. Algirdas Brazauskas continued as the Prime Minister of Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Background\nThe previous parliamentary elections were held on 8 October 2000. The Liberal Union of Lithuania emerged as the largest party in the parliament, with 34 of the 141 seats in the Eighth Seimas, followed by New Union (Social Liberals) with 29. The two parties formed a coalition government, with Rolandas Paksas of the Liberal Union as Prime Minister and Art\u016bras Paulauskas of the New Union as Speaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Background\nHowever, the coalition was not long-lived, and at the end of June 2001, the New Union formed a new coalition government with the Social Democratic Party, with Algirdas Brazauskas as Prime Minister. In the 2000 elections, the Social-Democratic Coalition of Algirdas Brazauskas, consisting of Democratic Labour Party, the Social Democratic Party, the Union of the Russians of Lithuania and the New Democracy Party, had won 51 seats. The Democratic Labour Party and Social Democrats, which had together won 45 of those seats, merged in 2001 under the name of the latter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Background\nPaksas, who had left the Liberal Union by the end of 2001, was elected President of Lithuania in 2003. In April 2004 he was impeached by the Seimas and removed from office, with Paulauskas serving as the acting president until elections later that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Background\nLithuania became a member of the European Union on 9 May 2004. The first elections to the European Parliament took place at the same day as the presidential election. The Labour Party, which was founded in October 2003, received almost one-third of all votes in the European elections and the party was seen as the frontrunner for the parliamentary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nAll seats in the 141-member Seimas were up for election in parallel voting, with 71 members elected in single-seat constituencies and 70 members elected by proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency. Voting in the elections was open to all citizens of Lithuania who are at least 18-years-old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nDue to amendment in the Constitution of Lithuania, the first round took place on 10 October 2004 (the second Sunday of October). 70 seats were allocated to the participating political parties using the largest remainder method, with a 5% threshold (7% for multi-party lists) to enter the parliament. Candidates took the seats allocated to their parties based on the preference lists submitted before the elections and adjusted by preference votes given by the voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nIn a change from the elections in 2000, members of the Seimas in the 71 single-seat constituencies were once again elected by a majority vote, with a run-off held on 24 October. Also, these elections were first ones with permanently set voting day (in 1992, 1996 and 2000 parliamentary elections voting date were set on initiative of Supreme Soviet or President of Republic).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nTo be eligible for election, candidates had to be at least 25-years-old on the election day, not under allegiance to a foreign state and permanently resident in Lithuania. Persons serving or due to serve a sentence imposed by the court 65 days before the elections were not eligible. Also, judges, citizens performing military service, and servicemen of professional military service and officials of statutory institutions and establishments could not stand for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nIn May 2004, the Constitutional Court of Lithuania decided that a person removed from office through impeachement for breaching the oath of office can not stand in parliamentary or presidential elections, or serve on the government, disqualifying Paksas from the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nOpinion polls suggested that Labour Party, coalition \"Working for Lithuania\", Homeland Union and Liberal and Centre Union would be the main contenders in the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nLabour Party was founded in October 2003, a year before the elections, by a Russian-born businessman and member of the Seimas Viktor Uspaskich and won the elections to the European Parliament earlier in 2004. The populist party campaigned on the promise of increasing living standards and fighting corruption. Many of its promises, such as lowering prices by 10 to 20%, increasing the minimum salary and pensions, tax holidays for newly established companies, all within less than three years, were criticized by economists as unfeasible. Nevertheless, the party garnered strong support in rural areas and small towns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Campaign\n\"Working for Lithuania\" was the coalition of the Social Democrats (led by Prime Minister, Algirdas Brazauskas) and the New Union (led by the Speaker of the Seimas, Art\u016bras Paulauskas) parties, which had led the government since 2001. The coalition campaigned on their record in the government and promised further economic growth, lower unemployment and increases in salaries and pensions. The prospects for electoral coalition was raised by July of 2004, when the New Union (Social Liberals) failed to reach five per cent threshold in 2004 European Parliament elections. In two single-member constituencies (No. 30 (Alytus) and No. 56 (Trakai-Elektr\u0117nai)) Julius Sabatauskas and Dangut\u0117 Mikutien\u0117 competed with Art\u016bras Skard\u017eius and Vytautas Petkevi\u010dius respectively, who were supported by the coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nConservative Homeland Union, led by Andrius Kubilius, once again campaigned pointed to dangers posed to Lithuania by Russia. The party allied itself with the Liberal and Centre Union, led by Art\u016bras Zuokas but headed in the elections by Petras Au\u0161trevi\u010dius. Several members of the party, including Zuokas, had been under investigation for corruption and financial fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nFinally, the Liberal Democratic Party of Rolandas Paksas led a coalition \"For the Order and Justice\". Since Paksas was barred from participating in the elections, its electoral list was headed by Valentinas Mazuronis. Paksas had expressed hopes that the electoral list would win 50 seats in the Seimas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Campaign\nAltogether, around 600 candidates competed in the single-seat constituencies, while over 1,100 candidates were included in the electoral lists for the nationwide constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Results\nThe elections were won by the Labour Party, which claimed 39 of the 141 seats in the Seimas. Nevertheless, newspaper Rzeczpospolita indicated that the result was a disappointment for the party, which had expected a better result in the second round of voting in single-seat constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Results\nCoalition \"Working for Lithuania\" finished second in elections, with Social Democrats and New Union winning 20 and 11 seats, respectively. Homeland Union won 25 seats, more than double their tally in the previous elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Voting irregularities\nSeveral aspects of the electoral campaign and voting came under criticism. In particular, allegations of vote buying, mostly implicating the Labour Party, emerged in voting by post, prompting the Seimas to consider changes in voting procedures. Social Democrats and New Union also accused the Labour Party of violating the rules for electoral campaigns and exceeding campaign spending limits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178003-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian parliamentary election, Government formation\nSeveral possible coalitions emerged after the elections. Homeland Union and Liberal and Centre Union indicated their willingness to join a \"rainbow\" coalition with the Social Democratic Party, excluding only Labour and Liberal Democrats. Labour joined forces with Peasants and New Democratic Party Union and invited Social Democratic Party to join. Brazauskas initially ruled out a coalition with Labour Party, but eventually Social Democratic Party and New Union (Social Liberals) joined forces with the Labour Party and the Peasants, with Brazauskas as the Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178004-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Lithuania in June 2004 alongside European elections. They were held following the impeachment of President Rolandas Paksas, who was elected in January 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178004-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian presidential election, Background\nPaksas was impeached for allegedly leaking classified material, and granting citizenship to Russian businessman Jurij Borisov in exchange for financial support. The Constitutional Court of Lithuania ruled that Paksas could not seek re-election as president. In accordance with the constitution, the speaker of parliament, Art\u016bras Paulauskas, became acting president pending new elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178004-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian presidential election, Candidates\nThe candidates for the presidency were Adamkus, who had been President from 1998 to 2003 and who was running as an independent, Prunskien\u0117 of the Peasants and New Democratic Party Union (VNDS), Vilija Blinkevi\u010di\u016bt\u0117 of the New Union (Social Liberals) (NS), Petras Au\u0161trevi\u010dius (independent), and \u010ceslovas Jur\u0161\u0117nas of the Social Democratic Party (LSDP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178004-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Lithuanian presidential election, Results\nIn the first round on 13 June, former President, Valdas Adamkus, led the vote tally over the former Prime Minister Kazimira Prunskien\u0117. Adamkus defeated Prunskien\u0117 in the second round on 27 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178005-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series\nThe 2004 Little League World Series took place between August 20 and August 29 in South Williamsport, Pennsylvania. The Pabao Little League of Willemstad, Cura\u00e7ao, defeated Conejo Valley Little League of Thousand Oaks, California, in the championship game of the 58th Little League World Series. This was the first LLWS title for the Caribbean island of Cura\u00e7ao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178005-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series, Pool play\nThe top two teams in each pool move on to their respective semifinals. The winners of each will meet August 29 to play for the Little League world championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification\nQualification for the 2004 Little League World Series took place in sixteen different parts of the world during July and August 2004, with formats and number of teams varying by region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Great Lakes\nThe tournament took place in Indianapolis, Indiana from July 31 to August 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Mid-Atlantic Region\nThe tournament took place in Bristol, Connecticut from August 6\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Midwest\nThe tournament took place in Indianapolis, Indiana from July 31-August 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, New England\nThe tournament was held in Bristol, Connecticut from August 6\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Northwest\nThe tournament was held in San Bernardino, California from August 1\u201312", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Southeast\nThe tournament took place in St. Petersburg, Florida from August 1\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, Southwest\nThe tournament took place in Waco, Texas from August 5\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, United States, West\nThe tournament took place in San Bernardino from August 1\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Asia\nThe tournament took place in Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a, Guam from July 23\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Canada\nThe tournament was held in Brossard, Quebec from August 7\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Caribbean\nThe tournament took place in Oranjestad, Aruba from July 18\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Europe, Middle East and Africa\nThe tournament took place in Kutno, Poland from July 26-August 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 92], "content_span": [93, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Latin America\nThe tournament took place in Panama City, Panama from July 25\u201331", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Mexico\nThe tournament took place in Monterrey, Nuevo Le\u00f3n from July 3\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Pacific\nThe tournament took place in Hag\u00e5t\u00f1a, Guam from July 23\u201329.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178006-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Little League World Series qualification, International, Transatlantic\nThe tournament was held in Kutno, Poland from August 5\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178007-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Liverpool City Council election\nElections to Liverpool City Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election, with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by nine. The Liberal Democrat party kept overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178008-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge\nThe 2004 Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge took place April 25, 2004 and saw Davide Rebellin win his first Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge, capping a victorious week having already won the Amstel Gold Race and La Fl\u00e8che Wallonne to complete a rare Ardennes triple. The previous year's winner, Tyler Hamilton, finished in ninth position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178009-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 London Assembly election\nAn election to the Assembly of London took place on 10 June 2004, along with the 2004 London mayoral election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178009-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 London Assembly election\nThe Assembly is elected by the Additional Member System. There are fourteen directly elected constituencies, nine of which were won by the Conservatives and five by the Labour Party. An additional eleven members were allocated by a London wide top-up vote, with the proviso that parties must win at least 5% of the vote to qualify for list seats. This latter rule prevented both the British National Party and the Respect Party from winning a seat each as both fell just short of the 5% threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178009-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 London Assembly election\nThis election saw losses for Labour and the Greens and gains for both the Liberal Democrats and UKIP, who achieved their first representation in the Assembly since its creation in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178009-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 London Assembly election, Results\nThe Conservative Party gained Brent and Harrow from Labour (who lost 7.6% of their vote), however they lost it again in the 2008 election. There were also large swings away from Labour in Barnet and Camden, City and East, Ealing and Hillingdon, Greenwich and Lewisham, Havering and Redbridge and West Central. The Liberal Democrats lost votes in most constituencies, but made gains in Enfield and Haringey, Lambeth and Southwark and Merton and Wandsworth. UKIP gained large percentages of the vote in Bexley and Bromley, Croydon and Sutton, Greenwich and Lewisham and Havering and Redbridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178010-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 London Broncos season\nThe 2004 London Broncos season was the twenty-fifth in the club's history and their ninth season in the Super League. The club was coached by Tony Rea, competing in Super League IX and finishing in 10th place. The club also got to the fifth round of the Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178010-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 London Broncos season, Super League table IX\nSources: Classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178010-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 London Broncos season, 2004 Challenge Cup\nFor the fifth consecutive year, the Broncos were knocked out of the cup at the fifth round stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178011-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 London Labour Party mayoral selection\nThe London Labour Party mayoral selection of 2004 was the process by which the Labour Party selected its candidate for Mayor of London, to stand in the 2004 mayoral election. Ken Livingstone, the incumbent Mayor of London, was selected to stand after Labour's previous candidate, Nicky Gavron, stood aside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178011-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 London Labour Party mayoral selection, Background\nKen Livingstone had been elected Mayor of London in the 2000 election as an independent, after unsuccessfully seeking the Labour Party nomination. This resulted in his expulsion from the Labour Party. In 2002, Labour selected Nicky Gavron as its Mayoral candidate for the 2004 election. Livingstone had made public his intention to seek a second term as Mayor, leading to fears that the Labour vote could be split once again between Livingstone and Gavron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178011-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 London Labour Party mayoral selection, Background\nHowever, in 2004, Livingstone was readmitted to the Labour Party, after passing a \"loyalty test\" interview with senior Labour Party officials. Gavron announced she would step aside, leaving a vacancy for Labour's Mayoral candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178011-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 London Labour Party mayoral selection, Process\nLondon Labour Party members and affiliates were balloted on whether Livingstone should be nominated as Labour's Mayoral candidate; they were given the option to answer 'yes' or 'no' to whether they wanted Livingstone as the candidate. Affiliates and members had 50% of the votes each in an Electoral College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon\nThe 2004 London Marathon was the 24th running of the annual marathon race in London, United Kingdom, which took place on Sunday 18 April. The race was the coldest London Marathon in history, and the wettest race in history until it was surpassed in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon\nThe elite men's race was won by Kenya's Evans Rutto in a time of 2:06:18 and the women's race was won in 2:22:35 by Margaret Okayo, also of Kenya. In the wheelchair races, Mexico's Sa\u00fal Mendoza (1:36:56) and Italy's Francesca Porcellato (2:04:58) won the men's and women's divisions, respectively. In the mass-participation race, a total of 31,659 runners, 23,265 men and 8,394 women, finished the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Competitors\nThe men's race featured 2003 winner Gezahegne Abera and Evans Rutto, whose debut time at the 2003 Chicago Marathon was the fastest first race time by anyone, and was enough to win the event. Sammy Korir, who had recorded the second fastest marathon of all-time also competed, as did Moroccan world champion Jaouad Gharib. Paul Tergat, the world record holder in the men's marathon, did not compete due to an injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Competitors\nThe women's race featured Margaret Okayo, who had won two New York City Marathons, and Sun Yingjie was a favourite for the race. Sun had set the third fastest time ever at the 2003 Beijing Marathon. Paula Radcliffe, who won the 2003 race did not compete; she had set the women's marathon world record at that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary\nThe elite and wheelchair races started in dry conditions, though the course became wet later on. It was the coldest London Marathon in history, as the temperature was 5.3\u00a0\u00b0C (41.5\u00a0\u00b0F) at the start of the races. There was 12.4 millimetres (0.49\u00a0in) of rain during the race, making it at the time the wettest London Marathon event in history; the 2020 London Marathon later surpassed the 2004 race for amount of rain, as it was run during Storm Alex.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary\nThe men's race was won by Kenyan Evans Rutto. Sammy Korir finished second and Jaouad Gharib finished third. Gezahegne Abera withdrew from the race after about 10 kilometres (6.2\u00a0mi). Rutto, Korir and John Yuda Msuri broke away from the pack around 25 kilometres (16\u00a0mi) into the race, and Yuda was distanced from the pair about 6 miles (9.7\u00a0km) from the finish line. During the race, Rutto fell on a cobblestone section near to the Tower of London and brought down Korir; the 2005 race was rerouted to avoid these cobblestones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary\nAt the time, Rutto's time of 2:06:18 was the best finishing time for a marathon that year. Rutto was not selected in the Kenyan team for the 2004 Summer Olympics, as Korir was chosen instead. Jon Brown was the highest place British finisher, and he finished faster than the Olympic qualifying time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary\nThe women's race was won by Kenyan Margaret Okayo, ahead of Lyudmila Petrova in second, and Constantina Di\u021b\u0103 in third. It was the first time that Kenyan athletes had won both the men's and women's London Marathon events in the same year. Okayo fell behind the leading pack containing Di\u021b\u0103 after around 10 miles (16\u00a0km) of the race, but caught and passed the leaders around 20 miles (32\u00a0km) into the race. Di\u021b\u0103 was overtaken in the closing stages of the race. Tracey Morris was the highest finishing Briton in the race; as a result, she was selected for the British marathon team for the 2004 Summer Olympics, alongside Paula Radcliffe and Liz Yelling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary\nThe men's wheelchair race was won by Mexican Sa\u00fal Mendoza, with David Weir finishing second. During the race, Mendoza accidentally followed a police motorbike which diverted him away from the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary\nThe women's wheelchair race was won by Italian Francesca Porcellato for the second successive year. Briton Paula Craig finished second, with Swedish debutant Gunilla Wallengren finishing third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary, Non-elite race\nThe mass-participation event had three start points. The races from those locations were started by former runner Roger Bannister, rugby union player Jonny Wilkinson and then IAAF president Lamine Diack respectively. A total of 108,000 people applied to enter the race: 45,219 had their applications accepted and 32,746 started the race. A total of 31,659 runners, 23,265 men and 8,394 women, finished the race. Finishers included Fauja Singh, who was aged 93, and finished in a time of 6:07:13. Singh was the oldest finisher at any London Marathon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178012-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 London Marathon, Race summary, Non-elite race\nEmmerdale star Tony Audenshaw was the first celebrity to finish, and other notable celebrity participants included chefs Gordon Ramsay and Michel Roux, as well as jockey Richard Dunwoody, former cricketer Graham Gooch, former swimmer Adrian Moorhouse, former England football manager Graham Taylor, former leader of the Conservative Party Iain Duncan Smith and politician Jeffrey Archer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178013-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 London mayoral election\nThe 2004 election to the post of Mayor of London took place on 10 June 2004. It was being held on the same day as other local elections and the UK part of the 2004 European Parliament elections, so Londoners had a total of five votes on three ballot papers. Polling opened at 07:00 local time, and closed at 22:00. See : 2004 UK elections. The Supplementary Vote system was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178013-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 London mayoral election\nKen Livingstone gained the Labour party's nomination on 2 January 2004, three weeks after being re-admitted to the Labour Party, after deputy Mayor Nicky Gavron, the previous candidate-elect, stepped down in favour of Livingstone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178013-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 London mayoral election, Candidate selection, Liberal Democrats\nOn 5 March 2003 Simon Hughes, MP for North Southwark and Bermondsey and Frontbench Spokesman for Home Affairs was selected as the Liberal Democrats candidate over Susan Kramer, the Liberal Democrats 2000 candidate for the mayorship and the Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Richmond Park, and environmentalist Donnachadh McCarthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178013-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 London mayoral election, Summary of policies\nSimon Hughes - A New Mayor for a Greater London", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178013-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 London mayoral election, Potential candidates\nLondon-born comedian Lee Hurst seriously considered standing as a candidate in the election. His comedy club had been under threat of redevelopment, and this had re-ignited a spark of political ambition. His manifesto would probably have included policies such as scrapping bus lanes and the congestion charge, improving public transport (including the re-introduction of bus conductors and AEC Routemaster buses), and tackling crime and abandoned cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178014-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 London\u2013Sydney Marathon\nThe 2004 London\u2013Sydney Marathon was the fifth running of the London\u2013Sydney Marathon. The rally took place between the 5th of June and the 4th of July 2004. The event covered 9,300 miles (15,000\u00a0km) through Europe, Asia and Australia. It was won by Joe McAndrew and Murray Cole in a Honda Integra Type-R.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178014-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 London\u2013Sydney Marathon, Background\nIn 2004, Nick Brittan and his company, Trans World Events, who had organise long-distance endurance rallies for the last decade including the last two London\u2013Sydney Marathons in 1993 and in 2000 decided to organise another London-Sydney Marathon but this time featuring pre-1978 classic cars and modern FIA Group N showroom cars, limited to two wheel drive and naturally aspirated engines up to 2000cc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178014-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 London\u2013Sydney Marathon, Background\nThe route would see competitors cross Europe in the first twelve days of the event before the cars would be airlifted by the Antonov An-124 cargo planes hired by TWE from Turkey to India with competitors driving through India for the next eight days before being airlifted to Australia for the last ten days of the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178015-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Longford County Council election\nAn election to Longford County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 21 councillors were elected from four electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178016-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season\nThe 2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season was the 116th for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 47th season in Los Angeles, California. It brought change to the Dodgers as the sale of the franchise to developer Frank McCourt was finalized during spring training. McCourt promptly dismissed General Manager Dan Evans and hired Paul DePodesta to take over the team. That led to a flurry of trade activity as the new group attempted to rebuild the Dodgers in their image.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178016-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season\nDespite it all, the Dodgers managed to finish the season in first place in the Western Division of the National League and won their first post season game since 1988. However they lost the NL Division Series 3-1 to the St. Louis Cardinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178016-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season, 2004 National League Division Series\nThe 2004 National League Division Series was played between the Los Angeles Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals. St. Louis ended up winning the series 3-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178016-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Major League Baseball Draft\nThe Dodgers selected 52 players in this draft. Of those, nine of them would eventually play Major League baseball. They gained an extra first round pick and a supplemental first round pick as compensation for the loss of free agent pitcher Paul Quantrill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178016-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Dodgers season, Major League Baseball Draft\nWith their three first round picks, the Dodgers selected left handed pitcher Scott Elbert from Seneca High School, right-handed pitcher Justin Orenduff from Virginia Commonwealth University and second baseman Blake DeWitt from Sikeston High School. Elbert became a relief pitcher for the Dodgers, but numerous injuries kept him from reaching his potential. Orenduff never reached the Majors, pitching in 131 minor league games through 2011. DeWitt hit .257 in 426 games in the Majors, primarily as a utility player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178017-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards\nThe 30th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, announced on 11 December 2004 by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, honored the best in film for 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178018-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Sparks season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the eighth for the Los Angeles Sparks. The Sparks' head coach, Michael Cooper, left the team during the season. Despite with that, the team finished in first place in the West, but they were unable to make another playoff run, losing in the opening round to the Sacramento Monarchs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178018-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Los Angeles Sparks season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Sparks' 2003 record, they would pick 2nd in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Sparks picked Isabelle Fijalkowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178019-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana Amendment 1\nLouisiana Constitutional Amendment 1 of 2004, is an amendment to the Louisiana Constitution that makes it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil unions. The referendum was approved by 78% of the voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178019-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana Amendment 1\nMarriage in the state of Louisiana shall consist only of the union of one man and one woman. No official or court of the state of Louisiana shall construe this constitution or any state law to require that marriage or the legal incidents thereof be conferred upon any member of a union other than the union of one man and one woman. A legal status identical or substantially similar to that of marriage for unmarried individuals shall not be valid or recognized. No official or court of the state of Louisiana shall recognize any marriage contracted in any other jurisdiction which is not the union of one man and one woman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178020-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Louisiana Democratic presidential primary was held on March 9 in the U.S. state of Louisiana as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178021-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana Republican presidential primary\nThe 2004 Louisiana Republican presidential primary was held on March 9 in the U.S. state of Louisiana as one of the Republican Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178022-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 Louisiana Tech Bulldogs football team represented Louisiana Tech University as a member of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Led by sixth-year head coach Jack Bicknell Jr., the Bulldogs played their home games at Joe Aillet Stadium in Ruston, Louisiana and Independence Stadium in Shreveport, Louisiana. Louisiana Tech finished the season with a record of 6\u20136 overall and a mark of 5\u20133 in conference play, tying for third place in the WAC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178023-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns football team\nThe 2004 Louisiana\u2013Lafayette Ragin' Cajuns football team represented the University of Louisiana at Lafayette as a member of the Sun Belt Conference in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were led by third-year head coach Rickey Bustle played their home games at Cajun Field in Lafayette, Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178024-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Indians football team\nThe 2004 Louisiana\u2013Monroe Indians football team represented the University of Louisiana at Monroe in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A college football season. The Indians offense scored 211 points while the defense allowed 303 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178025-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisville Cardinals football team\nThe 2004 Louisville Cardinals football team represented the University of Louisville in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team, led by Bobby Petrino in his second year at the school, played their home games in Papa John's Cardinal Stadium. They finished 11\u20131 and were the Conference USA champions with a perfect 8\u20130 conference record in their last season before leaving to join the Big East Conference. They were invited to and won the Liberty Bowl, defeating Western Athletic Conference champion Boise State 44\u201340.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178025-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Louisville Cardinals football team, Previous season\nThe Cardinals finished the 2003 season with a 9\u20134 record, losing to Miami (OH) in the 2003 GMAC Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178026-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Louth County Council election\nAn election to Louth County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 26 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178027-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Lunar New Year Cup\nThe 2004 Lunar New Year Cup (aka Carlsberg Cup) was a football tournament held in Hong Kong over the first and fourth day of the Chinese New Year holiday (22 January 2004 and 25 January 2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178028-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Luxembourg general election\nGeneral elections were held in Luxembourg on 13 June 2004, alongside European Parliament elections. The ruling Christian Social People's Party (CSV) of Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker won the election, increasing its number of seats to its highest since before 1989 and its share of the vote to levels not seen since the 1959 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178028-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Luxembourg general election\nAs expected, the CSV won a plurality of seats, adding 5 new deputies, and continued as the majority partner in the coalition government. However, the junior partner changed from the liberal Democratic Party (DP), which lost 5 seats, to the Luxembourg Socialist Workers' Party (LSAP), which gained one seat. The Greens also slightly increased their representation, whilst the Alternative Democratic Reform Party (ADR) lost ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178028-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Luxembourg general election, Results, By locality\nThe CSV won pluralities in all four districts; in the previous election, the Democratic Party had won a plurality in Centre. However, the CSV won a better-than-average increase in their vote share in Luxembourg City (of 7.4%) and Centre generally (7.5%), wiping out the DP's advantage and winning 2 deputies in that circonscription alone. The CSV's vote remaining roughly constant across all circonscriptions (in all cases between 35.5% and 38.6%):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178028-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Luxembourg general election, Results, By locality\nThe CSV won pluralities across almost all of the country, winning more votes than any other party in 111 of the country's (then) 118 communes. The LSAP won pluralities in five communes in the industrial Red Lands: Differdange, Dudelange, Kayl, Rumelange, Schifflange. The DP won the northern communes of Schieren and Pr\u00e9izerdaul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178029-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MAC Championship Game\nThe 2004 MAC Championship Game was played on December 2, 2004 at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. The game featured the winner of each division of the Mid-American Conference. The game featured the Miami RedHawks, of the East Division, and the Toledo Rockets, of the West Division. The Rockets beat the RedHawks 35\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178030-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament, a part of the 2003-04 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, took place from March 8\u201313 at Gund Arena in Cleveland. Its winner received the Mid-American Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament. It was a single-elimination tournament with four rounds, and the three highest seeds received byes in the first round. All MAC teams were invited to participate. Western Michigan, the MAC regular season winner, received the number one seed in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178031-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MLB Japan All-Star Series\nThe 2004 MLB Japan All-Star Series was the ninth edition of the championship, a best-of-eight series between the All-Star teams from Major League Baseball (MLB) and Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178031-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MLB Japan All-Star Series\nMLB won the series by 5\u20133\u20130 and Vernon Wells was named MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178032-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS All-Star Game\nThe 2004 Major League Soccer All-Star Game was the 9th Major League Soccer All-Star Game, played on July 31, 2004 at RFK Stadium in Washington, D.C. between the Eastern Conference All-Stars and Western Conference All-Stars. The Eastern Conference earned the victory after a hard-fought 3-2 win over the West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178032-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS All-Star Game, Overview\nThe game was originally scheduled to be between the MLS All-Stars against Real Madrid at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts. Once the Spanish team instead decided to play friendlies in Japan, they opted out of the game in the United States and MLS was forced to change the All-Star Game's format. The MLS All-Stars eventually played Real Madrid at their home stadium Santiago Bernab\u00e9u in the 2005 Trofeo Santiago Bernab\u00e9u.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178032-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS All-Star Game, Legends game\nPrior to the All-Star Game, a celebration of the tenth anniversary of the 1994 FIFA World Cup saw the U.S. Team that played the Cup against played a selection of international MLS veterans in two 25-minute halves. The game finished 2-2, with Ra\u00fal D\u00edaz Arce and Mauricio Cienfuegos tying the game in the second-half after the Americans built a lead with Eric Wynalda and Hugo Perez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178033-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS Expansion Draft\nThe 2004 MLS Expansion Draft was held on November 19, 2004 and consisted of 10 rounds. The two new teams, Chivas USA and Real Salt Lake, drafted players from the other 10 Major League Soccer teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178033-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS Expansion Draft\nExisting MLS teams were allowed to protect 12 players on their senior roster, and players on the developmental roster were exempt from the draft. Teams were allowed to leave no more than one Senior International player unprotected. After each player was selected, his team was allowed to remove one exposed player from their list. Teams were not able to lose more than three players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178034-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS SuperDraft\nThe 2004 MLS SuperDraft, held in Charlotte, North Carolina on January 16, 2004, was the fifth incarnation of the annual Major League Soccer SuperDraft. The draft was most notable at the time for the selection of one of the youngest athletes in American sporting history, Freddy Adu, with the first pick by D.C. United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178034-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS SuperDraft\nThe draft also included Clint Dempsey (1st round) and teenager Michael Bradley (4th round). Both players went on to earn over 120 caps with the U.S. national team; additionally, after an initial stint in MLS, both players had successful careers in Europe, and returned to MLS as designated players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178034-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 MLS SuperDraft, Player selection\nAny player whose name is marked with an * was contracted under the Project-40 program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178035-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MPC Computers Bowl\nThe 2004 MPC Computers Bowl was a post-season college football bowl game between the Fresno State Bulldogs and the Virginia Cavaliers on December 27, 2004, at Bronco Stadium in Boise, Idaho. Fresno State won the game 37\u201334 in overtime on a 25-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Paul Pinegar to Stephen Spach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178035-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MPC Computers Bowl\nVirginia had a complicated route to the MPC Computers bowl. Strong hopes based on a 5\u20130 start and a #6 ranking were dashed by a 36\u20133 blowout loss to Florida State and a third-place finish in the ACC. The Champs Sports Bowl typically took the fourth-place bowl eligible ACC team, but Virginia declined the bid as the game (played on December 21) would have conflicted with final exams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178035-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 MPC Computers Bowl\nFor a time the Independence Bowl was a possibility, as the Southeastern Conference (SEC) failed to produce enough bowl-eligible teams, but this was contingent on the MPC Computers Bowl getting a Big East school\u2014either Boston College, Connecticut or Syracuse\u2014to replace an ACC team. The MPC Computers bowl normally had the sixth choice of ACC teams, which would have been Georgia Tech or Clemson. Clemson declined all bowl invitations after a season-ending brawl, while Georgia Tech took Virginia's place at the Champs Sports Bowl. The Big East declined to send a team to the MPC Computers Bowl, so on December 1 Virginia accepted the bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178035-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 MPC Computers Bowl\nFresno State accepted a bid on December 1 as well, after finishing third in the Western Athletic Conference. It was Fresno State's six straight bowl game and its first one outside of California since the 1999 Las Vegas Bowl. Virginia and Fresno State had never played each other before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178036-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MPSL season\nThe 2004 Men's Premier Soccer League season was the 2nd season of the MPSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178036-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MPSL season\nUtah Salt Ratz finished the season as national champions, beating Arizona Sahuaros in the MPSL Championship game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178036-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 MPSL season, Final standings\nPurple indicates regular season title clinchedGreen indicates playoff berth clinched", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178036-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 MPSL season, Playoffs, Semi finals\nUtah Salt Ratz 1-0 Chico RooksArizona Sahuaros 4-1 Albuquerque Asylum", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178037-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Europe Music Awards\nThe 2004 MTV Europe Music Awards were held at Tor di Valle Racecourse, Rome, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178037-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Europe Music Awards\nAward presenters on the night included Jamelia, Alicia Keys, N.E.R.D, Naomi Campbell, Andre 3000, Kid Rock and Kanye West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178038-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Movie Awards\nThe 2004 MTV Movie Awards were held June 5, 2004, and were hosted by Lindsay Lohan and featured performances by Beastie Boys, D12 and Yeah Yeah Yeahs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178039-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards\nThe 2004 MTV Video Music Awards aired live on August 29, 2004, honoring the best music videos from the previous year. The show took place at the American Airlines Arena in Miami, Florida, and, unlike in previous years, had no host.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178039-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards, Nominations, Best Choreography in a Video\nThe Black Eyed Peas \u2013 \"Hey Mama\" (Choreographer: Fatima Robinson)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178039-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards, Nominations, Best Special Effects in a Video\nOutKast \u2013 \"Hey Ya!\" (Special Effects: Elad Offer, Chris Eckardt and Money Shots)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178040-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards Japan\nThe MTV Video Music Awards Japan 2004 were hosted by entertainer and singer Tomomitsu Yamaguchi at Tokyo Bay NK Hall in Urayasu, Chiba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178040-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, Awards, Best Video from a film\nPink featuring William Orbit \u2014 \"Feel Good Time\" (from Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178040-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, Special awards, Best Director\nThe White Stripes \u2014 \"The Hardest Button To Button\" (directed by Michael Gondry)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178040-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 MTV Video Music Awards Japan, Special awards, Best Special Effects\nThe Chemical Brothers \u2014 \"Get Yourself High\" (Special Effects: Joseph Kahn)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Macau Grand Prix (formally the 51st Macau Grand Prix) was a motor race for Formula Three cars that was held on the streets of Macau on 21 November 2004. Unlike other races, such as the Masters of Formula 3, the 2004 Macau Grand Prix was not a part of any Formula Three championship, but was open to entries from all Formula Three championships. For the first time in the history of the Macau Grand Prix, the race itself was made up of two races: a ten-lap qualifying race that decided the starting grid for the fifteen-lap main race. The 2004 race was the 51st running of the Macau Grand Prix and the 22nd for Formula Three cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix\nThe Grand Prix was won by ASM Formule 3 driver Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat, having finished third in previous day's qualification race which was won by Lewis Hamilton of Manor Motorsport. Pr\u00e9mat took the lead of the Grand Prix when Nico Rosberg and Hamilton went too fast into a corner and slid into a tyre barrier at Lisboa corner and held it for the rest of the race to win after it ended early for a four-car pile up at Police Bend that made the circuit impassable on the thirteenth lap. Second place went to the other Manor Motorsport car driven by Robert Kubica while third was Lucas di Grassi of Hitech Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Background and entry list\nThe Macau Grand Prix is a Formula Three race considered to be a stepping stone to higher motor racing categories such as Formula One and has been termed the territory's most prestigious international sporting event. The 2004 Macau Grand Prix was the fifty-first running of the event and the twenty-second time the race was held to Formula Three regulations. It took place on the 6.2 kilometres (3.9\u00a0mi) twenty-two turn Guia Circuit on 21 November 2004 with three preceding days of practice and qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Background and entry list\nIn order to compete in Macau, drivers had to compete in a F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA)-regulated championship meeting during the calendar year, in either the Formula Three Euro Series or one of the domestic championships, with the highest-placed drivers given priority in receiving an invitation to the race. Within the 32 car grid of the event, each of the three major Formula Three series were represented by their respective champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Background and entry list\nJamie Green, the Formula Three Euro Series champion, was joined in Macau by the British champion Nelson Piquet Jr., Japanese series victor Ronnie Quintarelli, Italian champion Matteo Cressoni and Asian series winner Christian Jones. The sole driver to represent the German series in Macau was Ho-Pin Tung. Five competitors who did not take part in any Formula Three championship throughout the year received invitations from race organisers to participate in the Macau Grand Prix. They were Formula BMW Asia series winner Marchy Lee, and Macau natives Jo Merszei, Michael Ho, Lei Kit Meng and Rodolfo \u00c1vila.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Background and entry list\nAfter the race was held over two legs since its establishment in 1983, the Macau Grand Prix Committee changed the format for 2004 onward to a ten-lap qualification race on Saturday afternoon which determined the starting order for the Grand Prix itself the day after. Furthermore, any driver who retired from the qualification race could start at the back of the grid for the main event and allow themselves a chance of winning. This was in contrast to previous years when any driver who failed to finish every lap of the first leg could not clinch the overall win. Co -Coordinator of the Macau Grand Prix Committee Jo\u00e3o Manuel Costa Antunes said the changes were made to simplify the Grand Prix for motor racing fans, enhance tension over the weekend, and to provide a larger incentive for drivers to push hard without worrying about losing their chance of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nTwo practice sessions lasting half an hour were held before the race on Sunday: one on Thursday morning and one on Friday morning. In the first practice session, ThreeBond Racing's F\u00e1bio Carbone set the fastest lap at 2 minutes and 15.216 seconds. Carbone was six-tenths of a second faster than Richard Antinucci in second. Lewis Hamilton (participating as a free agent after his contract with McLaren had expired), Robert Kubica, Nico Rosberg, Kazuki Nakajima, Quintarelli, Danny Watts, Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat and Naoki Yokomizo were third to tenth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nHamilton's front wheel nut loosened, which prevented him from viewing in his mirrors because of visibility problems. He entered the pit lane to have the problem corrected. Kubica then grazed a barrier at Lisboa corner after swerving to avoid ramming into \u00c1lvaro Parente. He later ran wide on cement that was laid to clear oil left from a support series and understeered into the Melco hairpin wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nQualifying was divided into two 45-minute sessions; the first was held on Thursday afternoon, and the second on Friday afternoon. The fastest time set by each driver from either session counted towards his final starting position for the qualification race. The start of the opening qualifying session was delayed by fifteen minutes due to multiple accidents during practice for the GT Tires Asian Formula Renault Challenge and the CTM Touring Car Cup races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nWhen it did begin in warm and sunny weather, Hamilton led early on and never ceded first as he continued to improve his lap time and finished at 2 minutes and 12.344 seconds. He avoided wrecking his car in a wall after going wide onto some dust. Green was consistently quick and his best lap came at his final attempt. It put him second but more than a second adrift of Hamilton. 2003 pole sitter Carbone was third and Antinucci moved up the order in the closing minutes to place fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nWatts was as high as second early on but fell to fifth by the end due to him electing to save a set of tyres for Friday. Rosberg finished sixth, ahead of Franck Perera and Nakajima. Both Quintarelli and Parente were in the top five early on but finished ninth and tenth. The fastest driver not to set a top ten lap was Adam Carroll and he was followed by his British compatriot James Rossiter. Pr\u00e9mat and Nokomizo were provisionally on the grid's seventh row and were joined in the order by Lo\u00efc Duval and Piquet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0006-0003", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nRob Austin and Katsuyuki Hiranaka were next up ahead of Tung, Kubica, Ho, Cressoni, Daisuke Ikeda, Lee, Jones, Lucas di Grassi, Marko Asmer, \u00c9ric Salignon, Lei, Avila, Merszei and Giedo van der Garde. Van Der Garde crashed on his out-lap at San Francisco Bend corner and removed two of his car's wheels. The first red flag came a third of the way through as Salignon had an accident at Maternity Bend turn and needed extricating. After a short interval, Kubica, Lee, di Grassi, Ikeda and Asmer stopped at the Melco hairpin and track marshals moved their cars. A second red flag came with ten minutes left as Parente heavily damaged his car in an impact with the Teddy Yip Bend corner wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nIn the second half-hour practice session, Kubica was consistently fast and paced the field with a lap of 2 minutes and 12.303 seconds. Hamilton made some changes to his car but was 0,646 seconds behind his teammate in second and Carbone was third. In fourth place was Antinucci, Pr\u00e9mat was fifth and Green sixth. Perera, Rosberg, Rossiter and Quintarelli completed the top ten ahead of second qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nAlthough the session passed without a stoppage being necessitated, three minor incidents were observed as Jones lost control of his vehicle at Moorish Hill corner and Van der Garde and Carroll were caught off guard at the same turn but all three did not sustain any significant damage to their cars. Nakajima crashed into a wall just before the entrance to the Melco hairpin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nThe start of the second qualifying session was disrupted when a car appeared to be grounded at the Melco hairpin, which prompted everybody else to scramble for space on the narrow part of the track. Lei put his car into a wall at Faraway turn 12 minutes in and was about to recover when Avila collected him. This caused the session's first red flag since the circuit became impassable. As drivers began improving their times, Salignon triggered the second red flags as he crashed into the Maternity Bend corner wall while attempting to avoid Kubica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nThe final red flag was waved as Nakajima ran wide at the R-Bend turn, spun into a wall, ricocheted into the track's centre, and littered debris. Hamilton did not improve due to the interruptions to the session and him causing a multi-car accident at the Melco hairpin. His teammate Kubica became the first Polish driver to claim pole position in Macau in the final five minutes with a 2 minutes and 12.155 seconds lap. Hamilton joined Kubica on the grid's front row and Anuticci moved up one place at the session's end to start from third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying\nRosberg claimed fourth and Piquet moved eleven places from the first qualifying session to take fifth. Although Green and Carbone improved their times, they fell to sixth and seventh. Pr\u00e9mat and di Grassi moved to eighth and tenth and separated Nakajima in ninth. Behind them the rest of the field composed of Watts, Duval, Perera, Parente, Quintarelli, Yokomizo, Rossiter, Carroll, Salignon, Hiranaka, Austin, Ikeda, Cressoni, Asmer, Lee, Van der Garde, Tung, Jones, Ho, Avila, Lei and Merszei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Practice and qualifying, Qualifying classification\nEach of the driver's fastest lap times from the two qualifying sessions are denoted in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 73], "content_span": [74, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Warm-up one\nA ten-minute warm-up session was held on the morning of the qualifying race. Hamilton carried over his strong form to pace the session with a time of 2 minutes and 12.904 seconds having been more than two seconds faster than any one else in the session's early moments. His closest challenger was Carbone in second and Kubica was third. Rosberg was fourth fastest, ahead of Duval and Watts. Di Grassi, Antinucci, Piquet and Nakajima followed in the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nThe qualifying race to set the starting order for the main race started in dry and sunny weather at 14:00 Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00) on 20 November. Hamilton made a good getaway to cling onto the slipstream of his teammate Kubica who was on the inside line going into Reservoir turn. Hamilton steered left to frighten Kubica into slowing and claimed the lead on the approach to Mandarin Bend corner and he kept it entering Lisboa turn. Further back, a series of incidents on the grid called for the safety car's deployment for four laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nAntinucci was slow leaving his starting slot and Piquet went to the right to overtake him but the latter's manoeuvre ended up with him removing his car's left-front wheel. A larger accident was triggered when Nakajima stalled in his grid slot and the rear of his vehicle was run into by Salignon, who then speared into a barrier alongside the track just after the start/finish line. Tung glimpsed space to drive through but he was launched airborne after striking the rear of Lee's car, who aggressively turned to the right as Avila got collected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nWith debris on the track, the remaining drivers were circumspect across the start/finish line and avoided sharp debris to avoid a punctured tyre. Under the safety car, Piquet returned to the pit lane without his front-left wheel fully attached and he retired because his team could not repair it before the race's conclusion. Salignon was trapped in his car and required external assistance from course officials. This was attributed to the long amount of time the safety car was on the circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nLater, he was transported to a local hospital for precautionary observations and was released with no major injuries found. In the meantime, circuit marshals extricated the stricken cars from the track via crane and laid cement dust. Hamilton held the lead at the lap five restart and Rosberg moved past Kubica entering Mandarin Bend corner. Carroll hassled Perera for eleventh and overtook him before the conclusion of the fifth lap. Carroll then set himself about drawing closer to Rossiter. Elsewhere, Green passed Carbone to claim fourth. Carbone tried to retake the position but could not do so as Green defended. As he pushed hard, Pr\u00e9mat got close to a barrier at Maternity Bend and got past Kubica on the run to Lisboa turn on lap six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nDuval led a pack of cars further down the order as Rossiter overtook Watts (who carried front wing damage) and the latter contended with Perera. Both slipstreamed each other on the circuit's main straights. But when Antinucci became involved, it went awry as Carroll passed Watts going into Lisboa corner on lap seven. Antinucci was caught off guard by this and had to venture onto the turn's escape road. Antinucci tried to restart his car but was unsuccessful and marshals extricated it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Qualifying race\nHamilton set the race's fastest lap on lap nine at 2 minutes and 12.801 seconds to pull out a lead of 2.2 seconds and win the race for pole position in the Grand Prix itself. Rosberg was second and Pr\u00e9mat completed the podium in third. Off the podium Kubica withstood pressure from Green in the event's closing stages to claim fourth. Behind them Carbone, Duval, di Grassi, Rossiter and Watts rounded out the top ten. Outside the top ten, Carroll, Perera, Hiranaka, Austin, Yokomizo, Quintarelli, Parente, Ikeda, Asmer, Cressoni, Van Der Garde, Jones, Ho, Lei and Merszei were the final classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Warm-up two\nA second warm-up session held over 20 minutes took place on the morning of the main race. Kubica recovered from his fourth-place finish in the qualification race and was able to top the time sheets with a lap of 2 minutes and 11.485 seconds. Pr\u00e9mat was almost three-tenths of a second adrift in second and Hamilton was third. Fourth place went to Green, Rosberg placed fifth and Antinucci sixth. The rest of the top ten were Rossiter, Piquet, Watts and Yokomizo. After warm-up, but before the Grand Prix, there was one less driver on the grid as the chassis of Salignon's vehicle sustained enough damage from his qualification race crash to warrant its withdrawal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nThe race began on 21 November at 15:45 local time under dry and sunny weather. On the grid, Hamilton was slow off the line and Rosberg moved into the lead going into Mandarin Bend corner. Behind the two Pr\u00e9mat held off a challenge from Kubica for third. Rossiter and his teammate Duval made contact on the approach to Lisboa turn. Both went onto the corner's run-off area and their races ended on the first lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nAt the start of the second lap, Rosberg was pushing hard in his attempt to give himself some space over Hamilton and spent too much time observing the latter in his rear-view mirrors, causing him to drive into Lisboa turn too quickly with his brakes locked and slid sideways on oil laid by the support races. Rosberg ran into a tyre barrier with his car's front. Hamilton was also pushing hard when he ran wide. That rendered him unable to avoid piling into the rear of Rosberg's car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0015-0002", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nThey were joined by Watts who was alongside Carroll on the straight and braked late. He saw Hamilton's stricken car and ventured onto the escape road. Hiranaka then spun into Watts but the latter avoided any noticeable damage as he returned to the track but the former lost a lot of time restarting his vehicle. Rosberg retired but Hamilton disentangled from his car and rejoined down the order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nHamilton and Rosberg's crashes promoted Pr\u00e9mat into the lead with Kubica second. That lap Pr\u00e9mat got sideways at Moorish Hill corner and grazed a wall heavily with his left-rear tyre. He avoided retirement as there was no significant damage to his car. It did allow Kubica to close up but he could not affect an overtaking manoeuvre on Pr\u00e9mat. Further back, Carbone bent the right-hand side of his front wing when he ran into the rear of di Grassi's car and damaged the latter's diffuser. Nevertheless, the collision did not appear to slow di Grassi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nThe safety car was dispatched on lap three when Parente crashed heavily at the Solitude Esses complex. Track marshals extricated his car and debris was cleared. Under the safety car, Pr\u00e9mat checked his car's steering and found no problems with it. The race restarted at the start on the sixth lap and Pr\u00e9mat led. Kubica misjudged its timing and Green used this to slipstream past Kubica for second going into Lisboa corner. Kubica's tyres reached their optimum operating temperatures and he began to challenge Green for second as di Grassi blocked his Brazilian compatriot Carbone from a pass for fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nCarroll challenged Perera but was unsuccessful. Carbone then slowed as Carroll was near him and it enabled di Grassi to pull away slightly. Perera reclaimed sixth from Carroll on lap eight and Austin pressured the former. That lap, Green's chance of victory was over when he picked up a left-rear puncture from possible debris. He lost time running wide at Fisherman's Bend corner. Kubica overtook Green for second and he slowed on his way to the pit lane for new tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nIt appeared that the finishing order had been settled by this point but Ikeda disrupted the rhythm with an accident into a barrier and had to be extricated via crane. Avila and Jones collided at the Solitude Esses complex soon after and the safety car was deployed at the end of the ninth lap since the track was temporarily blocked. Yokomizo went off the track under the safety car; it did not extend its on-track time as it was withdrawn at the end of lap eleven. Pr\u00e9mat maintained the lead at the restart. As Pr\u00e9mat pulled away from Kubica, Carbone took the opportunity to overtake di Grassi for third at Lisboa corner and the latter immediately planned a counter-attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nCarroll tried again at getting ahead of Perera but this did not succeed as he lost control of his car but kept off a barrier. In the meantime, Hamilton attempted to pass Nakajima when he went into a wall going uphill to Maternity Bend corner. Elsewhere, di Grassi sought to overtake Carbone only for the latter to block him. On lap 13, Asmer spun across the track at Police Bend; it became impassable when the trio of Hiranka, Jones and Tung piled into the corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nOfficials elected to wave the red flags on the lap and the result of the race was counted back to the running order at the conclusion of lap eleven. This gave Pr\u00e9mat the victory and he became the third driver after David Coulthard (1991) and Takuma Sato (2001) to win the Macau Grand Prix and the Masters of Formula 3 in the same year. Kubica was 0.675 seconds behind in second. Carbone's overtake on di Grassi was nullified because of the red flags and the latter took third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178041-0018-0002", "contents": "2004 Macau Grand Prix, Main Race\nOff the podium, Carbone was fourth, Perera fifth and the British duo of Carroll and Austin sixth and seventh. Quintarelli placed eighth, Antinucci gained seventeen positions to finish ninth and Piquet rounded out the top ten. Asmer, Watts, Nakajima, Hamilton, Van Der Garde, Tung, Jones, Lee, Lei, Green, Merszei, Yokomizo and Hiranka were the last of the classified finishers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum\nAn autonomy referendum was held in North Macedonia on 7 November 2004. Voters were asked whether they approved of overturning the municipal redistricting plans that gave greater autonomy to ethnic Albanians following the Ohrid Agreement that ended the 2001 conflict between ethnic Albanian militants and the predominantly ethnic Macedonian government forces. These had been changed to give ethnic Albanians greater control in districts where they had significant presence and gives local authorities greater control over education, health and development. It also reduced the number of municipalities from 123 to 84.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum\nAlthough 95% voted in favour of the change, the voter turnout of 27% was well below the 50% threshold, resulting in it failing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum, Background\nThe referendum was initiated by the World Macedonian Congress, led by Todor Petrov, whose \"group of Voters\" party won 0.25% of the vote in the 1998 parliamentary election. It was backed by conservative parties, notably VMRO-DPMNE, and non-Albanian ethnic minority parties. Backers were opposed to the Ohrid Accord and said the law was divisive and would lead to the breakup of the Republic of Macedonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum, Background\nThe then Prime Minister, Hari Kostov said he would quit if the referendum succeeded and urged voters to boycott the vote, so it would fail to meet the 50% turnout requirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum, Background\nThe European Union and United States also urged a boycott, and said that accession to the EU and NATO would be more difficult. Four days before the vote the United States announced they would start referring to the country as the Republic of Macedonia rather than the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia in a move said to strengthen the government position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum, Background\nPrior to the vote, a Macedonian newspaper carried a story suggesting that if the referendum succeeded, Albanian militants had planned to blow up a pipeline carrying water to the capital Skopje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum, Background\nOpinion polls prior to the vote suggested support of between 56 and 65% of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178042-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian autonomy referendum, Question\nAre you for the territorial organization of the local self-government (the municipalities and City of Skopje) as determined by the Law on Territorial Division of the Republic of Macedonia and Determination of the Areas of the Local Self-Government Units (Official Gazette of the Republic of Macedonia no. 49/1996) and the Law on the City of Skopje (Official Gazette of the Republic of Macedonia no. 49/1996).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178043-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Macedonia on 14 April 2004, with a second round on 28 April. They followed the death in an air crash in February of incumbent President Boris Trajkovski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178043-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Macedonian presidential election\nPrime Minister Branko Crvenkovski of the Social Democratic Union won the first round. As he failed to cross the 50% threshold, a second round was held in which he defeated Sa\u0161ko Kedev of Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization \u2013 Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity. In the immediate aftermath, Kedev alleged massive electoral fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178044-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Madeiran regional election\nA regional election was held in Madeira on 17 October 2004, to determine the composition of the Legislative Assembly of the Autonomous Region of Madeira. All 68 members of the regional parliament were up for an election, an increase of 6 compared with 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178044-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Madeiran regional election\nThe winner of the election in Madeira was, once more, the Social Democratic Party, and Alberto Jo\u00e3o Jardim was elected president of the Regional Government with an absolute majority for an 8th consecutive time. The percentage gathered by the Social Democrats decreased by 2%, however, due to the increase of the overall number of MPs, the party gained 3 seats and achieved 44 seats. The People's Party decreased its voting share and its number of MPs, gathering just 2 seats, one of their worst performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178044-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Madeiran regional election\nOn the left, the Socialist Party achieved one of their best result until this date, only surpassed by the results in the 2019 elections, by winning more than 27% of the votes and election 19 members to the regional parliament. The Unitarian Democratic Coalition, led by the Portuguese Communist Party, was able to hold on to their 2000 voting share and the 2 MPs of the previous election. The Left Bloc elected one MPs in their first run for the Madeira regional parliament and gathered 3.7% of the votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178044-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Madeiran regional election\nVoter turnout was lower, compared with 2000, with 60.5% of the electorate casting their ballot on election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178044-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Madeiran regional election, Electoral system\nIn this election, the members of the regional parliament were elected in 11 constituencies, representing the 11 municipalities of Madeira, that were awarded a determined number of member to elect according with the number of registered voters in those constituencies. The method use to elect the members was the D'Hondt method. In this election the number of MPs to be elected rose from 61 in 2000 to 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178044-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Madeiran regional election, Political parties\nA total of 5 political parties presented lists of candidates for the regional elections in Madeira, where 277,774 electors could elect 68 deputies to the Legislative Assembly. The list of parties running was the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings\nThe 2004 Madrid train bombings (also known in Spain as 11M) were nearly simultaneous, coordinated bombings against the Cercan\u00edas commuter train system of Madrid, Spain, on the morning of 11 March 2004\u2014three days before Spain's general elections. The explosions killed 193 people and injured around 2,000. The bombings constituted the deadliest terrorist attack carried out in the history of Spain and the deadliest in Europe since 1988. The official investigation by the Spanish judiciary found that the attacks were directed by Al-Qaeda in Iraq, allegedly as a reaction to Spain's involvement in the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq. Although they had no role in the planning or implementation, the Spanish miners who sold the explosives to the terrorists were also arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings\nControversy regarding the handling and representation of the bombings by the government arose, with Spain's two main political parties \u2014 Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) and Partido Popular (PP) \u2014 accusing each other of concealing or distorting evidence for electoral reasons. The bombings occurred three days before general elections in which incumbent Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Aznar's PP was defeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings\nImmediately after the bombing, leaders of the PP claimed evidence indicating the Basque separatist organization ETA (Euskadi Ta Askatasuna) was responsible for the bombings, while the opposition claimed that the PP was trying to prevent the public from knowing it had been an islamist attack, which would be interpreted as the direct result of Spain's involvement in Iraq, an unpopular war which the government had entered without the approval of the Spanish Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings\nFollowing the attacks, there were nationwide demonstrations and protests demanding that the government \"tell the truth\". The prevailing opinion of political analysts is that the Aznar administration lost the general elections as a result of the handling and representation of the terrorist attacks, rather than because of the bombings per se. Results published in The Review of Economics and Statistics by economist Jose G. Montalvo seem to suggest that indeed the bombings had important electoral impact (turning the electoral outcome against the incumbent People's Party and handing government over to the Socialist Party, PSOE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings\nAfter 21 months of investigation, judge Juan del Olmo tried Moroccan national Jamal Zougam, among several others, for his participation carrying out the attack. The September 2007 sentence established no known mastermind nor direct al-Qaeda link.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Description\nDuring the peak of Madrid rush hour on the morning of Thursday, 11 March 2004, ten explosions occurred aboard four commuter trains (cercan\u00edas). The date led to the popular abbreviation of the incident as \"11-M\". All the affected trains were traveling on the same line and in the same direction between Alcal\u00e1 de Henares and the Atocha station in Madrid. It was later reported that thirteen improvised explosive devices (IEDs) had been placed on the trains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Description\nBomb disposal teams (TEDAX) arriving at the scenes of the explosions detonated two of the remaining three IEDs in controlled explosions, but the third was not found until later in the evening, having been stored inadvertently with luggage taken from one of the trains. The following time-line of events comes from the judicial investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Description\nAll four trains had departed the Alcal\u00e1 de Henares station between 07:01 and 07:14. The explosions took place between 07:37 and 07:40, as described below (all timings given are in local time CET, UTC +1):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Description\nAt 08:00, emergency relief workers began arriving at the scenes of the bombings. The police reported numerous victims and spoke of 50 wounded and several dead. By 08:30 the emergency ambulance service, SAMUR (Servicio de Asistencia Municipal de Urgencia y Rescate), had set up a field hospital at the Daoiz y Velarde sports facility. Bystanders and local residents helped relief workers, as hospitals were told to expect the arrival of many casualties. At 08:43, firefighters reported 15 dead at El Pozo. By 09:00, the police had confirmed the death of at least 30 people \u2013 20 at El Pozo and about 10 in Santa Eugenia and Atocha. People combed the city's major hospitals in search of family members who they thought were aboard the trains. There were 193 confirmed dead victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Description\nThe total number of victims was higher than in any other terrorist attack in Spain, far surpassing the 21 killed and 40 wounded from a 1987 bombing at a Hipercor chain supermarket in Barcelona. On that occasion, responsibility was claimed by ETA. It was Europe's worst terror attack since the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in December 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation\nA device composed of 12 kilograms of Goma-2 ECO with a detonator and 136\u00a0meters of wire (connected to nothing) was found on the track of a high-speed railway line (AVE) on 2 April. The Spanish judiciary chose not to investigate that incident and the perpetrators remain unknown. The device used in the AVE incident was unable to explode because it lacked an initiation system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation\nShortly after the AVE incident, police identified an apartment in Legan\u00e9s, south of Madrid, as the base of operations for the individuals suspected of being the perpetrators of the Madrid and AVE attacks. The suspected militants, Sarhane Abdelmaji \"the Tunisian\" and Jamal Ahmidan \"the Chinese\", were trapped inside the apartment by a police raid on the evening of Saturday 3 April. At 9:03\u00a0pm, when the police started to assault the premises, the militants committed suicide by setting off explosives, killing themselves and one of the police officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation\nInvestigators subsequently found that the explosives used in the Legan\u00e9s explosion were of the same type as those used in the 11 March attacks (though it had not been possible to identify a brand of dynamite from samples taken from the trains) and in the thwarted bombing of the AVE line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation\nBased on the assumption that the militants killed at Legan\u00e9s were indeed the individuals responsible for the train bombings, the ensuing investigation focused on how they obtained their estimated 200\u00a0kg of explosives. The investigation revealed that they had been bought from a retired miner who still had access to blasting equipment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation\nFive to eight suspects believed to be involved in the 11 March attacks managed to escape. In December 2006, the newspaper ABC reported that ETA reminded Spanish Prime Minister Zapatero about 11 March 2004 as an example of what could happen unless the government considered their petitions (in reference to the 2004 electoral swing), although the source also makes it clear that ETA 'had nothing to do' with the attack itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation, Aftermath\nIn France, the Vigipirate plan was upgraded to orange level. In Italy, the government declared a state of high alert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation, Aftermath\nIn December 2004, Jos\u00e9 Luis Rodr\u00edguez Zapatero claimed that the PP government erased all of the computer files related to the Madrid bombings, leaving only the documents on paper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation, Aftermath\nOn 25 March 2005, prosecutor Olga S\u00e1nchez asserted that the bombings happened 911 days after the 11 September attacks due to the \"highly symbolic and qabbalistic charge for local Al-Qaida groups\" of choosing that day. Because 2004 was a leap year, 912 days had elapsed between 11 September 2001 and 11 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation, Aftermath\nOn 27 May 2005, the Pr\u00fcm Convention, implementing inter alia the principle of availability which began to be discussed after the Madrid bombings, was signed by Germany, Spain, France, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Austria, and Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation, Aftermath\nOn 4 January 2007, El Pa\u00eds reported that Algerian Ouhnane Daoud, who is considered to be the mastermind of the 11-M bombings, has been searching for ways to return to Spain to prepare further attacks, though this has not been confirmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Further bombings spur investigation, Aftermath\nOn 17 March 2008, Basel Ghalyoun, Mohamed Almallah Dabas, Abdelillah El-Fadual El-Akil and Ra\u00fal Gonz\u00e1lez Pe\u00f1a, having been previously found guilty by the Audiencia Nacional, were released after a Higher Court ruling. This court also verified the release of the Egyptian Rabei Osman al-Sayed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nOn 14 March 2004, Abu Dujana al-Afghani, a purported spokesman for al-Qaeda in Europe, appeared in a videotape claiming responsibility for the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nThe Spanish judiciary stated that a loose group of Moroccan, Syrian, and Algerian Muslims and two Guardia Civil and Spanish police informants were suspected of having carried out the attacks. On 11 April 2006, Judge Juan del Olmo charged 29 suspects for their involvement in the train bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nNo evidence has been found of al-Qaeda involvement, although an al-Qaeda claim was made the day of the attacks by the Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades. U.S. officials note that this group is \"notoriously unreliable\". In August 2007, al-Qaeda claimed to be \"proud\" about the Madrid 2004 bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nThe Independent reported that \"Those who invented the new kind of rucksack bomb used in the attacks are said to have been taught in training camps in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, under instruction from members of Morocco's radical Islamist Combat Group.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nMohamed Darif, a professor of political science at Hassan II University in Mohammedia, stated in 2004 that the history of the Moroccan Combat Group is directly tied to the rise of al-Qaeda in Afghanistan. According to Darif, \"Since its inception at the end of the 1990s and until 2001, the role of the organisation was restricted to giving logistic support to al-Qaeda in Morocco, finding its members places to live, providing them with false papers, with the opportunity of marrying Moroccans and with false identities to allow them to travel to Europe. Since 11 September, however, which brought the Kingdom of Morocco in on the side of the fight against terrorism, the organisation switched strategies and opted for terrorist attacks within Morocco itself.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nScholar Rogelio Alonso said in 2007, \"the investigation had uncovered a link between the Madrid suspects and the wider world of al-Qaida\". Scott Atran said \"There isn't the slightest bit of evidence of any relationship with al-Qaida. We've been looking at it closely for years and we've been briefed by everybody under the sun... and nothing connects them.\" He provides a detailed timeline that lends credence to this view.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nAccording to the European Strategic Intelligence and Security Center, this is the only extremist terrorist act in the history of Europe where international Islamic extremists collaborated with non-Muslims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility\nFormer Spanish Prime Minister Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Aznar said in 2011 that Abdelhakim Belhadj, leader of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group and current head of the Tripoli Military Council, was suspected of complicity in the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Allegations of ETA involvement\nImmediate reactions to the attacks in Madrid were the several press conferences held by the Spanish prime minister Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Aznar involving ETA. The Spanish government maintained this theory for two days. Because the bombs were detonated three days before the general elections in Spain, the situation had many political interpretations. The United States also initially believed ETA was responsible, then questioning if Islamic extremists were responsible. Spain's third-largest newspaper, ABC, immediately labelled the attacks as \"ETA's bloodiest attack.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Allegations of ETA involvement\nDue to the government theory, statements issued shortly after the Madrid attacks, including from lehendakari Juan Jos\u00e9 Ibarretxe identified ETA as the prime suspect, but the group, which usually claims responsibility for its actions, denied any involvement. Later evidence strongly pointed to the involvement of extremist Islamist groups, with the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group named as a focus of investigations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Allegations of ETA involvement\nAlthough ETA has a history of mounting bomb attacks in Madrid, the 11 March attacks exceeded any attack previously attempted by a European organisation. This led some experts to point out that the tactics used were more typical of militant Islamic extremist groups, perhaps with a certain link to al-Qaeda, or maybe to a new generation of ETA activists using al-Qaeda as a role model. Observers also noted that ETA customarily, but not always, issues warnings before its mass bombings and that there had been no warning for this attack. Europol director J\u00fcrgen Storbeck commented that the bombings \"could have been ETA... But we're dealing with an attack that doesn't correspond to the modus operandi they have adopted up to now\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Allegations of ETA involvement\nPolitical analysts believe ETA's guilt would have strengthened the PP's chances of being re-elected, as this would have been regarded as the death throes of a terrorist organisation reduced to desperate measures by the strong anti-terrorist policy of the Aznar administration. On the other hand, an Islamic extremist attack would have been perceived as the direct result of Spain's involvement in Iraq, an unpopular war that had not been approved by the Spanish Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Investigation\nAll of the devices are thought to have been hidden inside backpacks. The police investigated reports of three people in ski masks getting on and off the trains several times at Alcal\u00e1 de Henares between 7:00 and 7:10. A Renault Kangoo van was found parked outside the station at Alcal\u00e1 de Henares containing detonators, audio tapes with Qur'anic verses, and cell phones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Investigation\nThe provincial chief of TEDAX (the bomb disposal experts of the Spanish police) declared on 12 July 2004 that damage in the trains could not be caused by dynamite, but by some type of military explosive, like C3 or C4. An unnamed source from the Aznar administration claimed that the explosive used in the attacks had been Titadine (used by ETA, and intercepted on its way to Madrid 11 days before).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Investigation\nIn March 2007, the TEDAX chief claimed that they knew that the unexploded explosive found in the Kangoo van was Goma-2 ECO the very day of the bombings. He also asserted that \"it is impossible to know\" the components of the explosives that went off in the trains \u2013 though he later asserted that it was dynamite. The Judge Javier G\u00f3mez Berm\u00fadez replied \"I cannot understand\" to these assertions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Examination of unexploded devices\nA radio report mentioned a plastic explosive called \"Special C\". However, the government said that the explosive found in an unexploded device, discovered among bags thought to be victims' lost luggage, was the Spanish made Goma-2 ECO. The unexploded device contained 10\u00a0kg (22\u00a0lb) of explosive with 1\u00a0kg (2.2\u00a0lb) of nails and screws packed around it as shrapnel. In the aftermath of the attacks, however, the chief coroner alleged that no shrapnel was found in any of the victims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Examination of unexploded devices\nGoma-2 ECO was never before used by al-Qaeda, but the explosive and the modus operandi were described by The Independent as ETA trademarks, although the Daily Telegraph came to the opposite conclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Examination of unexploded devices\nTwo bombs, one in Atocha and another in El Pozo stations, numbers 11 and 12, were detonated accidentally by the TEDAX. According to the provincial chief of the TEDAX, deactivated rucksacks contained some other type of explosive. The 13th bomb, which was transferred to a police station, contained dynamite, although it did not explode because it was missing two wires connecting the explosives to the detonator. That bomb used a mobile phone (Mitsubishi Trium) as a timer, requiring a SIM card to activate the alarm and thereby detonate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Examination of unexploded devices\nThe analysis of the SIM card allowed the police to arrest an alleged perpetrator. On Saturday, 13 March, when three Moroccans and two Pakistani Muslims were arrested for the attacks, it was confirmed that the attacks came from an Islamic group. Only one of the five persons (the Moroccan Jamal Zougam) detained that day was finally prosecuted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Examination of unexploded devices\nThe Guardia Civil developed an extensive action plan to monitor records corresponding with the use of weapons and explosives. There were 166,000 inspections conducted throughout the country between March 2004 and November 2004. About 2,500 violations were discovered and over 3 tons of explosives, 11 kilometers of detonating cord, and over 15,000 detonators were seized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 77], "content_span": [78, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Suicide of suspects\nOn 3 April 2004, in Legan\u00e9s, south Madrid, four terrorists died in an apparent suicide explosion, killing one Grupo Especial de Operaciones (GEO) (Spanish special police assault unit) police officer and wounding eleven policemen. According to witnesses and media, between five and eight suspects escaped that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Suicide of suspects\nSecurity forces carried out a controlled explosion of a suspicious package found near the Atocha station and subsequently deactivated the two undetonated devices on the T\u00e9llez train. A third unexploded device was later brought from the station at El Pozo to a police station in Vallecas, and became a central piece of evidence for the investigation. It appears that the El Pozo bomb failed to detonate because a cell-phone alarm used to trigger the bomb was set 12 hours late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Conspiracy theories\nSectors of the People's Party (PP), and certain media, such as El Mundo newspaper and the COPE radio station, continue to support theories relating the attack to a vast conspiracy to remove the governing party from power. Support for the conspiracy was also given by the Asociaci\u00f3n de V\u00edctimas del Terrorismo (AVT), Spain's largest association of victims of terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Conspiracy theories\nThese theories speculate that ETA and members of the security forces and national and foreign (Morocco) secret services were involved in the bombings. Defenders of the claims that ETA participated in some form in the 11 March attacks have affirmed that there is circumstantial evidence linking the Islamic extremists with two ETA members who were detained while driving the outskirts of Madrid in a van containing 500\u00a0kg of explosives 11 days before the train bombings. The Madrid judge Coro Cill\u00e1n is continuing to hear conspiracy theory cases, including one accusing government officials of ordering the scrapping of the bombed train cars in order to destroy evidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Invasion of Iraq policy\nThe public seemed convinced that the Madrid Bombings were a result of the Aznar government's alignment with the U.S. and its invasion of Iraq. The terrorists behind the 11-M attack were somewhat successful because of the election outcome. Before the attack, the incumbent Popular Party led the polls by 5 percent. It is believed that the Popular Party would have won the election if it had not been for the terrorist attack. The Socialist Party, led by Jos\u00e9 Luis Rodr\u00edguez Zapatero, ended up winning the election by 5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0041-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Invasion of Iraq policy\nThe Socialist Party had called for the removal of Spanish troops from Iraq during its campaigning. Zapatero promised to remove Spanish troops by 30 June 2004, and the troops were withdrawn a month earlier than expected. Twenty-eight percent of voters said that the bombings influenced their opinions and vote. An estimated 1 million voters switched their vote to the Socialist Party after the Madrid bombings. These voters who switched their votes were no longer willing to support the Popular Party's stance on war policy. The bombings also influenced 1,700,000 citizens to vote who did not plan on originally voting. On the other hand, the terrorist attacks discouraged 300,000 people from voting. Overall, there was a net 4 percent increase in voter turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nJudge Juan del Olmo found \"local cells of Islamic extremists inspired through the Internet\" guilty for the 11 March attacks, not Armed Islamic Group or Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group. These local cells consist of hashish traffickers of Moroccan origin, remotely linked to an al-Qaeda cell that had been already captured. These groups bought the explosives (dynamite Goma-2 ECO) from low-level thieves, police and Guardia Civil informers in Asturias using money from the small-scale drug trafficking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nAccording to El Mundo, \"the notes found on the Moroccan informer 'Cartagena' prove that the Police had the leaders of the cell responsible for the 11 March attacks under surveillance.\" However, none of the notes refer to the preparation of any terrorist attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nThe trial of 29 defendants began on 15 February 2007. According to El Pa\u00eds, \"the Court dismantled one by one all conspiracy theories\" and demonstrated that any link with or involvement in the bombings by ETA was either misleading or groundless. During the trial the defendants retracted their previous statements and denied any involvement. According to El Mundo the questions of \"by whom, why, when and where the Madrid train attacks were planned\" are still \"unanswered\", because the alleged masterminds of the attacks were acquitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0044-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nEl Mundo also claimed -among other misgivings- that the Spanish judiciary reached \"scientifically unsound\" conclusions about the kind of explosives used in the trains, and that no direct al-Qaeda link was found, thus \"debunking the key argument of the official version\". Anthropologist Scott Atran described the Madrid trial as \"a complete farce\" pointing out the fact that \"There isn't the slightest bit of evidence of any operational relationship with al-Qaida\". Instead, \"The overwhelming majority of [terrorist cells] in Europe have nothing to do with al-Qaida other than a vague relationship of ideology.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nThough the trial proceeded smoothly in its opening months, 14 of the 29 defendants began a hunger strike in May, protesting against the allegedly \"unfair\" role of political parties and media in the legal proceedings. Judge Javier G\u00f3mez Berm\u00fadez refused to suspend the trial despite the strike, and the hunger strikers ended their fast on 21 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nThe last hearing of the trial was held on 2 July 2007. Transcripts and videos of the hearings can be seen on datadiar.tv.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Responsibility, Trial\nOn 31 October 2007, the Audiencia Nacional of Spain handed down its judgements. Of the 28 defendants in the trial, 21 were found guilty on a range of charges from forgery to murder. Two of the defendants were sentenced each to more than 40,000 years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Police surveillance and informants\nIn the investigations carried out to find out what went wrong in the security services, many individual negligences and miscoordinations between different branches of the police were found. The group dealing with Islamist extremists was very small and in spite of having carried out some surveillances, they were unable to stop the bombings. Also, some of the criminals involved in the \"Little Mafia\" who provided the explosives were police informants and had leaked to their case officers some tips that were not followed up on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Police surveillance and informants\nSome of the alleged perpetrators of the bombing were reportedly under surveillance by the Spanish police since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Police surveillance and informants\nAt the time of the Madrid bombings, Spain was well equipped with internal security structures that were, for the most part, effective in the fight against terrorism. It became evident that there were coordination issues between police forces as well as within each of them. The Interior Ministry focused on correcting these weaknesses. It was Spain's goal to strengthen its police intelligence in order to deal with the risks and threats of international terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0050-0001", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Police surveillance and informants\nThis decision for the National Police and the Guardia Civil to strengthen their counter-terrorism services, led to an increase in jobs aimed at preventing and fighting global terrorism. Counter-terrorism services increased its employment by nearly 35% during the legislature. Human resources in external information services, dealing with international terrorism, grew by 72% in the National Police force and 22% in the Guardia Civil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Controversies\nThe authorship of the bombings remains a controversial issue in Spain. Sectors of the Partido Popular (PP) and some of the PP-friendly media outlets (primarily El Mundo and the Libertad Digital radio station) claim that there are inconsistencies and contradictions in the Spanish judicial investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Controversies\nAs Spanish and international investigations continue to claim the unlikeliness of ETA's active implication, these claims have shifted from direct accusations involving the Basque separatist organisation to less specific insinuations and general scepticism. Additionally, there is controversy over the events that took place between the bombings and the general elections held three days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Reactions\nIn the aftermath of the bombings, there were massive street demonstrations across Spain to protest against the train bombings. The international reaction was also notable, as the scale of the attack became clearer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178045-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings, Memorial service for victims\nA memorial service for the victims of this incident was held on 25 March 2004 at the Almudena Cathedral. It was attended by King Juan Carlos I, Queen Sof\u00eda, victims' families, and representatives from numerous other countries, including British prime minister Tony Blair, French president Jacques Chirac, German chancellor Gerhard Schr\u00f6der, and U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects\nA list of suspects and convictions related to the 2004 Madrid Train Bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nJamal Zougam \u2013 guilty and given a 50,000-year jail sentence, was arrested two days after the March 2004 attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nJos\u00e9 Emilio Su\u00e1rez Trashorras- guilty and given between a 25,000 to 35,000-year jail sentence. and was one of the first to be arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nHamid Ahmidan \u2013 found guilty and given between a 23- to 25-year sentence. Moroccan and a cousin of Jamal Ahmidan, these men took part in drug trafficking. His release date from prison is November 2030. After his release, he will be deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nAbdelmajid Bouchar \u2013 acquitted of all the bombings and still given between a 15- to 18-year sentence, was detained in Belgrade in August 2005 by Serbian officials. His release date is set for November 2023. He will be deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nRachid Aglif \u2013 found guilty and given between a 15- to 18-year sentence. he was arrested in April and he was an alleged lieutenant of Jamal Ahmidan, who was suspected of having helped acquire the explosives. His release date is set for November 2025. He will be deported to Morocco. While a prisoner in El Castell\u00f3n, he established a \"special friendship\" with imam Abdelbaki Es Satty, main suspect of the 2017 Barcelona attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nYoussef Belhadj \u2013 30, acquitted of bombings but given 12.5-year sentence for membership of a terrorist organisation. He was arrested in Belgium in February 2005 by the Belgian Police, he allegedly set the date for the attacks and was in Spain for the last-minute preparations. Released November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nHassan el-Haski \u2013 45 acquitted of bombings but handed 12-year sentence for membership of a terrorist organisation. He was the leader of the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group in Spain, which prosecutors blamed for the bombings. Haski, from Morocco, but having been \"a long time resident of Molenbeek\" (Brussels), was arrested in the Canary Islands in December 2004. He was accused of having been aware of and having instigated the attacks. Released on November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nMohamed Bouharrat, guilty and given 12-year sentence, was responsible for recruitment and gathering information on targets. Released on November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nFouad el-Morabit \u2013 guilty, 12-year sentence was being held in March 2004 for allegedly belonging to the Madrid terror cell, he also had contacts with Rabei Osman. Released on November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nMouhannad Almallah Dabas \u2013 guilty, 12-year sentence. Released and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nSaed el-Harrak \u2013 guilty, 12-year sentence, currently described as an active cell member. Released on November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nMohamed Larbi Ben Sellam, guilty, 12-year sentence, was allegedly in charge of bringing propaganda material to meetings of the cell. Prosecutors had asked for 27 years. Released on November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nBasel Ghalyoun \u2013 26, guilty, 12-year sentence, was allegedly had links to Rabei Osman and the presumed ideological mastermind, Serhan Ben Abdelmajid Fakhet, a Tunisian who also died in the apartment blast. Prosecutors had sought a 12-year sentence. Released on November 2019 and deported to Morocco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nRafa Zouhier \u2013 27, guilty of obtaining explosives and given 10-year sentence. Released on November 2017 and deported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nAbdelilah el-Fadual el-Akil, guilty, nine-year sentence, was alleged close associate of Jamal Ahmidan, he had worked at a house on the outskirts of Madrid where some bombs had been made there. Prosecutors had asked for 12 years. Released and deported on November 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nR\u00e1ul Gonz\u00e1lez Pel\u00e1ez \u2013 guilty and given a 5-year sentence, was allegedly helped him gain access to the explosives in exchange for cocaine. Prosecutors had sought an eight-year sentence. Released in November 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nSergio Alvarez S\u00e1nchez \u2013 guilty, 3-year sentence travelled in January 2004 to Madrid with a sports bag containing up to 15\u00a0kg (33\u00a0lbs) of explosives for Jamal Ahmidan. Prosecutors had sought a four-year sentence. Released in November 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nAntonio Iv\u00e1n Reis Palacio \u2013 guilty, given 3-year sentence, transported explosives to Madrid, Spain. Spanish prosecutors had sought a four-year jail term. Released in November 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nNasreddine Bousbaa \u2013 guilty, 3-year sentence, he was allegedly helped forge fake documents. Spanish prosecutors had asked for 13 years in jail. Released in November 2010 and deported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Convicted defendants\nMahmoud Slimane Aoun \u2013 guilty, 3-year sentence. he was allegedly trying to help Jamal Ahmidan forge documents. Spanish prosecutors had asked for 13 years in jail. Released in November 2010 and deported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Acquitted defendants\nRabei Osman \u2013 arrested in Milan, Italy in June 2004 by Italian State Police for supporting terrorism in Europe. He was held in an Italian prison before being transferred to Spain in 2007 and he was an alleged member of al-Jihad by Ayman al-Zawahiri. Osman was sentenced in Italy on 11 June 2006 to 10 years in prison for plotting terror attack in Italy and afterwards was extradited to Spain in 2007. In February 2007 Osman's trial began in Madrid, along with other 28 defendants, for having a key role in the 2004 Madrid train bombings. In October 2007 Osman was acquitted in Madrid from all charges with other 5 suspects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Wrongful arrest\nBrandon Mayfield was arrested 6 May 2004 on a material witness charge, on the basis of a fingerprint found after 11 March 2004 Madrid attacks. Although Spanish authorities were doubtful that the identification was correct, he was held for two weeks in federal custody until they conclusively identified the fingerprint as belonging to another man and was released by the FBI authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Other suspects\nMustafa Setmariam Nasar \u2013 arrested in Quetta, Pakistan in October 2005 as he was shopping for breakfast, close to the Pakistani-Afghan border by the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence. He was held as a Spanish citizenship since the late 1980s following marriage to a Spanish woman. He was wanted for the 2004 Madrid bombings and the 2005 London Bombings. The FBI had offered a US$5 million reward for his capture and President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan stated in that his country has received a huge amount of substantial sums in bounties from American authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Other suspects\nAbdelilah Hriz \u2013 arrested in his native Morocco in January 2008 by Moroccan police. In Rabat, Hriz was found guilty and sentenced up to 20 years in prison in December 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178046-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Madrid train bombings suspects, Other suspects\nOn 29 April 2011, the German Federal Police arrested 3 Moroccans in the western German city of D\u00fcsseldorf and one in nearby Bochum. The Moroccans were linked with the 2004 Madrid train bombings and 2005 London transit attacks. The arrests were based on suspicion they were planning a terror attack in the country, they said. Local media reports that officers had seized large amounts of explosives when the three were arrested. The three alleged terrorists were brought to a judge the next day and they are to remain in detention pending an awaiting trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178047-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election\nAssembly elections was held in Maharashtra, India on October 13, 2004. The major alliances were the Democratic Front and the Bharatiya Janata Party - Shiv Sena alliance. Other political parties contested were the Bahujan Samaj Party, the Samajwadi Party, the Rashtriya Janata Dal, and the LJP. 66,000 electronic voting machines were used to elect the 288 members of the Maharashtra legislative assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178047-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Maharashtra Legislative Assembly election, Results\nThe result was announced on October 17, 2004 in which Congress and its alliance got majority votes. BJP lost elections that leads to resignation of Venkaiah Naidu and followed by leading command of party to Lal Krishna Advani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178048-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mahoran legislative election\nParliamentary elections were held in Mayotte on 21 March and 28 March 2004. The Mahoran branch of the Union for a Popular Movement won the most seats despite receiving fewer votes than the Mahor\u00e9 Departementalist Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178049-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maidstone Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Maidstone Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Maidstone Borough Council in Kent, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178049-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Maidstone Borough Council election, Background\nBefore the election both the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties had 21 seats, with 10 Labour and 3 independent councillors making up the council. 19 seats were being contested with the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats defending 7 each, Labour 4 and an independent 1 seat. A total of 80 candidates were standing in the election with both the Conservative and Labour parties having a full 19 candidates. The Liberal Democrats had 18 candidates, the United Kingdom Independence Party 17, Green Party 5, British National Party 1 and 1 independent candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178050-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maine Black Bears football team\nThe 2004 Maine Black Bears football team was an American football team that represented the University of Maine as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their 12th season under head coach Jack Cosgrove, the Black Bears compiled a 5\u20136 record (3\u20135 against conference opponents) and finished in a three-way tie for sixth place in the conference. Mike Leconte, Marcus Walton, and Marcus Williams were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178051-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maine Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Maine Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 8, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional. the candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received and is open to registered Democrats only. A total of 24 (of 34) delegates are awarded proportionally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178052-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball All-Star Game\nThe 2004 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was the 75th edition of the midseason exhibition baseball game between the all-stars of the American League (AL) and National League (NL), the two leagues comprising Major League Baseball. The game was held on July 13, 2004 at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, the home of the Houston Astros of the National League. The game resulted in the American League defeating the National League 9\u20134, thus awarding the AL home-field advantage in the 2004 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178052-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball All-Star Game, Rosters\nPlayers in italics have since been inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178053-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball draft\nThe 2004 First-Year Player Draft, Major League Baseball's annual amateur draft, was held on June 7 and 8. It was conducted via conference call with representatives from each of the league's 30 teams. The draft marked the first time three players from the same university were chosen in the first ten picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178053-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball draft, Background\nThe San Diego Padres stayed close to home with the first overall pick of the 2004 First-Year Player Draft, tabbing high school shortstop Matt Bush from Mission Bay (CA) High School. Bush, the first high school shortstop taken first overall since the Seattle Mariners chose Alex Rodriguez in 1993, batted .450 with 11 home runs, 35 RBI and 12 stolen bases during his senior year. The 18-year-old helped lead the Buccaneers to two San Diego Section Division III championships in three years, setting state records for career hits (211) and runs scored (188) in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178053-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball draft, Background\nHuston Street, drafted in the supplemental first round, was the first 2004 draftee to make the major leagues. Justin Verlander was the first 2004 draftee to be selected to an All-Star Game in 2007. Dustin Pedroia, drafted in the second round, was the first 2004 draftee to be selected to start an All-Star Game and the first to win a World Series championship and the first to win a League MVP Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178053-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball draft, Background\nThree members of the 2003 NCAA Champions Rice Owls pitching staff were selected within the first eight picks. The Baltimore Orioles could not reach an agreement with Wade Townsend leading to Tampa Bay drafting him in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178053-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball draft, Background\nNick Adenhart, who was selected in the 14th round by the Anaheim Angels, was killed in a car accident a day after his only start of the 2009 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178053-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball draft, Background\nDuring the 2012 season, first round picks Philip Humber, Homer Bailey, and Jered Weaver threw no hitters (Humber's was a perfect game).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season\nThe 2004 Major League Baseball season ended when the Boston Red Sox defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in a four-game World Series sweep. This season was particularly notable since the Red Sox championship broke the 86-year-long popular myth known as the Curse of the Bambino. The Red Sox were also the first team in MLB history and the third team from a major North American professional sports league ever to come back from a 3\u20130 postseason series deficit, in the ALCS against the New York Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season\nThe Montreal Expos would play their last season in Montreal, before re-locating to Washington DC, becoming the Washington Nationals in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season, Postseason, Bracket\nNote: Two teams in the same division could not meet in the division series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season, Milestones, Perfect game\nRandy Johnson pitched the 17th perfect game in MLB history on May 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season, Milestones, 4000 strikeouts\nRandy Johnson struck out Jeff Cirillo on June 29, 2004 for his 4000th strikeout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season, Milestones, Single-Season Hits Record Broken\nIchiro Suzuki \u2013 262 Hits (broke George Sisler's 84-year-old record of 257)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178054-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Baseball season, Milestones, Walk-off home runs\nThere were a total of 80 walk-off home runs, which was then the MLB single-season record until 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178056-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Lacrosse season\nThe 2004 Major League Lacrosse season was the fourth season of the league. The season began on May 22 and concluded with the championship game on August 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178056-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Lacrosse season, General information\nThe Bridgeport Barrage relocated to Philadelphia and became the Philadelphia Barrage before the season started. They played their home games at Villanova Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178056-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Lacrosse season, General information\nThe Baltimore Bayhawks moved their home games to Johnny Unitas Stadium. The Boston Cannons moved theirs to Nickerson Field. The New Jersey Pride moved theirs to Sprague Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178056-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Lacrosse season, General information\nMajor League Lacrosse played the first-ever regular season games in the western United States as Baltimore defeated Rochester by a 24-18 margin in Seahawks Stadium in Seattle on May 22. Baltimore defeated New Jersey 22-19 on June 5 at INVESCO Field in Denver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178056-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Lacrosse season, Regular season\nW = Wins, L = Losses, , PCT= Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178056-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Lacrosse season, Awards, Weekly Awards\nThe MLL gave out awards weekly for the best offensive player, best defensive player and best rookie. No Rookie of the Week award was given Weeks 1 and 2; rookies did not play until after the Collegiate Draft on June 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 56], "content_span": [57, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season\nThe 2004 Major League Soccer season culminated with D.C. United winning its fourth MLS Cup championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season\nThe biggest news in the beginning of the season was the signing of 14-year-old prodigy Freddy Adu, who made his debut as a substitute in United's season opener and scored his first goal several games later against the rival MetroStars. Adu contributed as a substitute on D.C.'s championship team, scoring five goals as the youngest player in North American sports history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season\nThe season saw the emergence of forwards Brian Ching (San Jose) and Eddie Johnson (Dallas Burn) as formidable forwards, not only for their MLS teams, but for the United States national team as well. The two shared Golden Boot honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season\nThe Columbus Crew emerged as a dominant team in the second half of the regular season, running off an MLS-record 18-game unbeaten streak en route to the Supporters' Shield title, won after finishing level on points with Kansas City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season, Playoffs\nIn the playoffs, the Crew were taken down by the New England Revolution, who ended the Crew's streak in the opening leg, and goalkeeper Matt Reis, who saved two penalty kicks in the second leg. United cruised past the rival MetroStars (and league MVP Amado Guevara) 4\u20130 on aggregate in the other Eastern Conference semifinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season, Playoffs\nIn the Western Conference, Kansas City rallied from a 2\u20130 first-leg deficit for a dramatic 3\u20130 win in stoppage time over the defending MLS Cup champion San Jose Earthquakes in their conference semifinal. The Los Angeles Galaxy used a 2\u20130 home victory in the second leg to overcome the Colorado Rapids and goalie Joe Cannon, who had led the Rapids to a 1\u20130 victory in the opener.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season, Playoffs\nIn the conference finals, Kansas City used two goals from unsung forward Davy Arnaud, who enjoyed a breakout season, to beat the Galaxy and return to the final for the first time since 2000. D.C. United and New England hooked up in the Eastern Conference final in one of the best games in MLS playoff history. Playing at home, D.C. United took three different leads, only to see New England recover each time to tie the match 3\u20133 in a game full of highlight-reel goals. The match was finally decided by the first conventional shootout in MLS history, with Nick Rimando saving the first 'sudden death' penalty from Rookie of the Year Clint Dempsey to send D.C. to the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season, Playoffs\nIn the second consecutive final held at the Home Depot Center, D.C. rebounded from an early Jose Burciaga goal by scoring three goals in eight minutes, including two from Alecko Eskandarian to take a 3\u20131 lead. In the second half, Dema Kovalenko became the first player to be sent off in an MLS Cup final after knocking a shot off the goal line with his hand. Although Josh Wolff converted the penalty kick, D.C. United held on with only 10 men to win its fourth championship in the nine-year history of MLS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season, MLS Cup Playoffs, Conference finals\nD.C. United advance 4\u20133 on penalties (3\u20133 after full time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178057-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Major League Soccer season, MLS Cup Playoffs, MLS Cup 2004\nD.C. United wins the MLS CupKansas City Wizards and D.C. United earn MLS berths toCONCACAF Champions' Cup 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178058-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malawian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Malawi on 20 May 2004 to elect a President and the National Assembly. The election had originally been scheduled for 18 May but was postponed for two days in response to opposition complaints of irregularities in the voter roll. By 22 May no results had been announced, leading to protests from the opposition and threats of disorder. On 25 May the Malawi Electoral Commission finally announced the results of the election. Bingu wa Mutharika, the candidate of the ruling United Democratic Front, was declared the winner of the presidential poll, whilst the Malawi Congress Party had won most seats in the National Assembly vote. Voter turnout was around 62%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178058-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malawian general election, Campaign, National Assembly\nA total of 1,268 candidates ran in the election of which 373 were independents and the rest representing fifteen parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178058-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Malawian general election, Campaign, National Assembly\nSeven parties contested the elections as the Mgwirizano Coalition; the Republican Party, the People's Progressive Movement, the Movement for Genuine Democratic Change, the People's Transformation Party, the Malawi Forum for Unity and Development, the National Unity Party and the Malawi Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178058-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Malawian general election, Results, National Assembly\nPolling in six constituencies was delayed due to printing errors on the ballot papers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178059-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Premier League\nThe 2004 Liga Premier (English: 2004 Premier League), also known as the Dunhill Liga Premier for sponsorship reasons, is the inaugural season of the Liga Premier, the new second-tier professional football league in Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178059-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Premier League\nThe season was held from 14 February and concluded in 14 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178059-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Premier League\nThe Liga Premier champions for 2004 was MPPJ which beaten TM during the final with a score of 3-2. Both clubs were promoted to 2005 Liga Super.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178060-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Super League\nThe 2004 Liga Super (English: 2004 Super League) also known as the Dunhill Liga Super, based from the original format of the first season (1994/1995) and second season (1995/1996) of the Indonesian league premier division, is the inaugural season of the Liga Super, the new top-tier professional football league in Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178060-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Super League\nThe season was held from 14 February and concluded in 14 August 2004. This league participated by 8 teams, six west teams and two east teams, Sabah and Sarawak. The original Indonesian format with the same name, first organized 10 years ago from November 1994 till July 1995, participated by 34 teams divided by 17 west teams and 17 east teams. The Liga Super champions for 2004 was Pahang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178060-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Super League\nPahang dominated the season and ended up winning the title by a wide margin and this was down to their efforts in securing the services of the nation's top players prior to the start of the new season. Pahang's Indra Putra Mahayuddin was the season's top goalscorer with 15 goals. He held the record as the only local players which won the accolade until the end of 2009 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178060-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Super League\nThe highest scoring match of the season was Perlis 6\u20132 defeat of Kedah on 31 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178060-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysia Super League\nA plus point was the surprisingly strong finish of club side Public Bank. At this time, the Football Association of Malaysia were trying to promote clubs as the future of Malaysian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Malaysian Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 21 March 2004 at the Sepang International Circuit. It was Race 2 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. The race was won by Michael Schumacher for Ferrari. This was also the first podium for future World Champion Jenson Button, who finished in 3rd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nWith all drivers starting on dry tyres, the action started sooner than expected as on the parade lap Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen spun but was able to retake his grid position. Mark Webber, starting from P2, made a woeful start and slid down the field to be 9th by the 1st lap. Fernando Alonso on the other hand, made a brilliant start from 19th (2nd last) and was up behind Webber in 10th after lap 1. Michael Schumacher led from the start while drivers behind jostled for position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nBy the second lap, rain started to fall and cars were starting to lose traction on the dry tyres. Jarno Trulli overtook Button but the Brit promptly took the place back again. Alonso barreled past Webber for eighth and closed in on the McLaren of David Coulthard. From the back to a points position within four laps was an outstanding performance from Alonso but it was the best he got all race. By this time Michael Schumacher had already built up quite an advantage, but this was quickly eroded by the hard-charging Juan Pablo Montoya. It was to prove to be just a brief shower as soon the precipitation passed and Schumacher was back on his way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nWebber managed to get past Ralf but the Williams retaliated and got ahead again, puncturing the Jaguar's rear right tyre on his way. Takuma Sato spun into the gravel but recovered the BAR smartly and Webber had to pit for a tyre change. To add insult to injury he got a drive-through penalty for speeding in the pit lane and finally compounded his misery by spinning out of the race a few laps later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nA string of cars in the midfield were jostling for position, starting with Nick Heidfeld's Jordan in 11th, then Cristiano da Matta's Toyota, the second Jaguar of Christian Klien, Sauber's Giancarlo Fisichella and da Matta's teammate Olivier Panis. In the first round of pit stops Heidfeld's fuel rig failed and he had to go out and back in again. He eventually pulled into the pits to retire with a gearbox problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nTrulli got ahead of Coulthard in the first stops and running order at the front, where not much was happening, was Michael, Montoya, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. Montoya was falling away from the Ferrari in the second stint of the race but not letting him get too far ahead. Alonso took Coulthard for sixth but then the pair pitted for the second time and the McLaren got out ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nAlonso swapped to a two-stop strategy but it gave him no advantage and he seemed resigned to staying behind Coulthard, while Trulli, who had been on quite an early charge, also seemed to lose momentum. Ralf's engine unexpectedly gave up midway through the race, the first failure for BMW for 17 races. Felipe Massa, who was having a pretty good race, got held up by a Minardi and did a bit of agitated hand waving as he went by.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nThe gap between Michael and Montoya was holding at around four seconds and Button moved up to third, jumping R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in the second pit stops. Both of the Finn's stops seemed quite long and eventually he pulled off to the side of the track with a transmission failure. Disappointing for R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and McLaren as Kimi was showing good pace until then.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nPanis ducked into the pits only to find no crew ready for him and had to go straight back out. Then next lap he was back in again to serve a drive-through for speeding on his previous effort. Not a good day for Panis, or Toyota in general. Da Matta finished ninth after a fairly anonymous race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nIn the final laps the BAR crew froze as one of the cars pulled off with an engine failure but it was Sato rather than third placed Button. Bad luck for Sato but the relief that it wasn't his teammate was palpable. Barrichello was gaining ground on Button but with only a few laps to go, he was not in a position to challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178061-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian Grand Prix, Race report\nMichael took the win with Montoya five seconds behind. BAR and Button were by far the happiest of the lot and the Englishman got the biggest cheer from the crowd as he lifted his first trophy on the third step of the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election\nA general election was held on Sunday, 21 March 2004 for members of the 11th Parliament of Malaysia. Voting took place in all 219 parliamentary constituencies of Malaysia, each electing one Member of Parliament to the Dewan Rakyat, the dominant house of Parliament. This is first election for Abdullah as Prime Minister since appointed for this position in 2003. State elections also took place in 505 state constituencies in 12 out of 13 states of Malaysia (except Sarawak) on the same day as Sabah took the first time election was parallel with the rest of Peninsular Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election results\nThe National Front gained a popular vote of 63.9%, but would have gained a higher vote had all seats been contested. Reports in the Malaysian media 23 March showed the Front winning 198 parliamentary seats to the combined opposition parties' 20 seats, with one independent. This is the largest majority that National Front has won since the 1978 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election results\nThe dominant party in the National Front, the Prime Minister's United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), won 109 seats, a gain of 32. UMNO's allies also gained seats. The Malaysian Chinese Association won 31 seats, a gain of two, and the Malaysian Indian Congress won nine seats, a gain of two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election results\nPan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) managed to retain only seven of its 27 seats. PAS ran on a platform promising an Islamic nation. The PAS opposition leader, Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang, lost his parliamentary seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election results\nAnother opposition party, the People's Justice Party (Parti Keadilan Nasional) lost four of its five seats. After five recounts the party's leader, Datin Seri Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail (the wife of imprisoned former Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim), retained her seat with a majority of 590 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election results\nThe third opposition party, the Democratic Action Party, which was routed in the 1999 elections, improved its performance with the re-election of party chairman Lim Kit Siang at Ipoh Timor seat and his deputy, Karpal Singh at Bukit Gelugor seat while chairman Kerk Kim Hock lost his seat. The DAP won 12 seats and regained the official leadership of the opposition in the national parliament from PAS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election results\nMost candidates who campaigned on platforms of Islamic issues lost their seats. This is a significant turnaround since the last election where, generally, the more \"Islamic\" candidates had a greater chance of winning in the Malay heartland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Results, State Assemblies\nElections for the assemblies of all the Malaysian states except Sarawak were also held on 21 March. The National Front and its allies won majorities in all states except Kelantan where, despite earlier reports to the contrary, PAS retained control with a narrow majority of 24 seats to BN's 21 seats. The National Front regained control of the state of Terengganu, which it lost to PAS in 1999. The PAS opposition leader, Datuk Seri Abdul Hadi Awang, who lost his parliamentary seat as mentioned earlier, managed to retain his state seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Background\nOn 2 March, the 10th national parliament and all state assemblies in Malaysia (with the exception of Sarawak) were dissolved by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong upon the advice of the Prime Minister. Sarawak's last state election was held in 2001, and elections for the state assembly are not due till 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Background\nThe election was held nine months earlier than required by the constitution. The constitution allows that parliament has a mandate of 5 years. Elections are required to be called three months after parliament is dissolved. The government had until the end of November 2004 to call elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Background\nCandidates nominated on 13 March, with the National Front winning 15 seats uncontested, and another two seats after the opposing candidates withdrew. The right to withdraw was only introduced as a new rule at these elections. Under this rule candidates are allowed a three-day period to withdraw following nomination day. Of the 17 parliamentary seats won uncontested, nine were in the state of Sabah, six in Sarawak and two in Johor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Background\nPAS won a state assembly seat Senggarang in Johor for the first time, after the National Front candidate was disqualified because she was seconded by someone who was not a registered voter in the constituency which she wanted to contest. The requirement that the seconder be registered in the same constituency was only introduced in 2004. This seat was influenced by other opposition parties to gain many state seat in 2008 contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election irregularities\nThe elections were marred by discrepancies, which were admitted by the electoral authorities. The head of the Election Commission (Tan Sri Ab Rashid Ab Rahman) made the statement \"I have been in this line for so long... it should not have happened at all. There must be reasons why this happened.\" He has served in the election commission for the last five elections, and has stated that he intends to resign if a report on the discrepancies implicates him in the foul-ups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election irregularities\nAmong the discrepancies were wrongly printed ballots, registered voters being unable to vote and wide discrepancies in votes in various seats upon re-counting the ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178062-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian general election, Election irregularities\nIn the seat of Sungai Lembing in state of Pahang, the Keadilan symbol was printed wrongly on the ballot paper for PAS candidate Idris Ahmad. Illiterate voters tend to rely on familiar party symbols for voting purposes as they are unable to read the candidate's names on the ballot. Voting was suspended for 5 hours before resuming. Polling was re-held for the seat on 28 March.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178063-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix was the fourteenth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 8\u201310 October 2004 at the Sepang International Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178063-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round fourteen has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178064-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malaysian state elections\nState assembly elections were held in Malaysia on 21 March 2004 in all states except Sarawak. The elections took place alongside general elections, and saw Barisan Nasional and its allies won majorities in all states except Kelantan where, despite earlier reports to the contrary, Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) retained control with a narrow majority of 24 seats to BN's 21. The National Front regained control of the state of Terengganu, which it lost to the PAS in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178065-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maldives FA Cup\nThe 2004 Maldives FA Cup, was the 17th edition of the Maldives FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178066-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malm\u00f6 FF season\nMalm\u00f6 FF won its first league title since 1988, thanks to smart spending of the 9 million \u20ac transfer money of Zlatan Ibrahimovi\u0107 three years earlier. Afonso Alves was the bearing player in the team, having signed from \u00d6rgryte IS for an estimated 1.2 million \u20ac. The title was won in front of 27 343 ecstatic supporters at Malm\u00f6 Stadion. Malm\u00f6 beat IF Elfsborg 1-0 thanks to Jon Inge H\u00f8iland scoring on a rebound, following Niklas Skoog's miss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178066-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Malm\u00f6 FF season\nFollowing a 2-1 victory at IFK G\u00f6teborg in front of almost 40 000 spectators earlier that week, IFK gave Malm\u00f6 a helping hand by drawing against Halmstads BK 1-1 away from home, which proved crucial in securing Malm\u00f6's title. The club competed in Allsvenskan, Svenska Cupen and The UEFA Intertoto Cup for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178066-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Malm\u00f6 FF season, Club, Other information\nUpdated to match played 19 OctoberSource:\u00a0Malm\u00f6 FF and Malm\u00f6 Stadion", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178067-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Malta Open darts\n2004 Malta Open is a darts tournament, which took place in Malta in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178068-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mal\u00e9 League\nThe 2004 Mal\u00e9 League was the fourth season of the Mal\u00e9 League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178069-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Manchester City Council election\nElections to Manchester City Council were held on 10 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178069-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Manchester City Council election\nDue to demographic changes in the Borough since its formation in 1973, and in common with most other English Councils in 2004, substantial boundary changes were implemented in time for these elections. Due to these changes, it was necessary for the whole Council to be re-elected for the first time since 1973. Each ward elected three candidates, with the first-placed candidate serving a four-year term of office, expiring in 2008, the second-placed candidate serving a three-year term of office, expiring in 2007, and the third-placed candidate serving a two-year term of office, expiring in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178069-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Manchester City Council election\nThe three Independent Labour candidates stood as \"Independent Progressive Labour\". Turnout was dramatically improved at 34.3%, up by a third upon the previous election and much higher than the norm set in recent elections of low twenties. The Labour Party retained overall control of the council, but with a majority reduced to the teens for the first time since the 1970s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178069-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Manchester City Council election, Election result\nAfter the election, the composition of the council was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178069-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Manchester City Council election, Ward results\nBelow is a list of the 32 individual wards with the candidates standing in those wards and the number of votes the candidates acquired. The winning candidates per ward are in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178070-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Marbella Football Cup\nThe 2004 Marbella Football Cup was held in January 2004 in Marbella, Spain. Four teams participated in tournaments, two from Germany and one from China and the Netherlands. This tournaments was a predecessor of the current Marbella Cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, Australian Open series\nSharapova began her season at the Australian Open, as the 28th seed. She lost in the third round to Anastasia Myskina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, European clay court season\nSharapova reached her first Major quarter-final at the French Open, defeating 2003 quarter-finalist Vera Zvonareva en route. She eventually lost in the quarter-finals to Paola Su\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season\nSharapova won her first title for the year in Birmingham, defeating Tatiana Golovin in the final in three sets. At Wimbledon, Sharapova was seeded 13th, meaning she could have faced a potential fourth round meeting against the French Open champion, Anastasia Myskina, who had defeated her in Australia earlier in the year. However, Sharapova was able to take advantage of Myskina's early exit to reach the quarter-finals, where she dropped her first set of the tournament to Ai Sugiyama, before winning in three sets. In the semi-finals, she faced 1999 champion Lindsay Davenport, trailing by a set and a break before making a comeback to prevail in three sets after the rain appeared to halt Davenport's momentum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, Grass court season\nThe final saw Sharapova face two-time defending champion Serena Williams, who had defeated her in Miami earlier in the year, in what was their first meeting. Williams entered the match as the favourite, but Sharapova would produce a stunning straight-sets victory to become the third-youngest woman (after Lottie Dod and Martina Hingis) to triumph at Wimbledon. The victory was hailed by the media as \"the most stunning upset in memory\". By virtue of winning Wimbledon, Sharapova would enter the Top Ten for the first time in her career, and would remain there until January 2009, when she decided not to defend her 2008 Australian Open title due to a serious shoulder injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 70], "content_span": [71, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, US Open series\nSharapova entered the US Open as the seventh seed, but she was defeated in the third round by Mary Pierce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, Fall series\nDuring the fall of the season Sharapova played and won consecutive titles at the hansol korea open and at the japan tennis championships thus extending her title tally to 4 .She also reached the final of the zurich open defeating venus williams en route but eventually lost to alicia molik in three tight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, WTA Tour Championships\nSharapova qualified for the year-end WTA Tour Championships by virtue of her impressive season, which saw her capture four titles for the year to date. She was drawn in the Black Group along with Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo, US Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova and Vera Zvonareva. Sharapova won two of her three matches, the only loss coming to Mauresmo in her first match. Sharapova qualified for the semi-finals after finishing second in the group behind Mauresmo; thus, the semi-final saw her drawn against French Open champion and Red Group leader Anastasia Myskina, which she won in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, Yearly summary, WTA Tour Championships\nThe final saw her up against Serena Williams for the third time in the year. After losing the first set, and trailing 0\u20134 in the final set, Sharapova defeated her for the second (and to date last) time this year, to become the second player in WTA Tour Championships history to win the title on her first attempt (Petra Kvitov\u00e1 would later achieve this feat in 2011, Dominika Cibulkov\u00e1 in 2016 and Ashleigh Barty in 2019). She would finish the year ranked World No. 4, and be recognised by the WTA as the \"Player of the Year\" and \"Most Improved Player of the Year\". Additionally, she would earn $2,506,263 in prize money, the most by any player this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178071-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Maria Sharapova tennis season, All matches\nThis table chronicles all the matches of Sharapova in 2004, including walkovers (W/O) which the WTA does not count as wins. They are marked ND for non-decision or no decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178072-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Marshall Thundering Herd football team\nThe 2004 Marshall Thundering Herd football team represented Marshall University in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I \u2013A college football during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Marshall competed as a member of the East Division of Mid-American Conference, and played their home games at Joan C. Edwards Stadium. They were coached by Bob Pruett, who would retire from coaching at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178073-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maryland Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Maryland Democratic presidential primary took place on March 2, 2004 as part of the 2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is proportional; candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received, open to registered Democrats only. Frontrunner John Kerry won the primary with former Senator John Edwards coming in a distant second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178074-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maryland Terrapins football team\nThe 2004 Maryland Terrapins football team represented the University of Maryland in 2004 NCAA Division I FBS football season. It was the Terrapins' 52nd season as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). Ralph Friedgen led the team for his fourth season as head coach. It was his first as a head coach without a bowl game appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178074-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Maryland Terrapins football team, 2005 NFL Draft\nThe following players were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178075-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Massachusetts Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Massachusetts Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2 in the U.S. state of Massachusetts as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178076-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Massachusetts Senate election\nElections to the 185th Massachusetts Senate were held on November 2, 2004. The Democrats picked up one former Republican seat. The 185th Massachusetts General Court began in January 2005, and consisted of 34 Democrats and 6 Republican State Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178076-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Massachusetts Senate election\nThe 2004 Massachusetts House election was held on the same date as the Senate election, as well as Federal and Congressional elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178076-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Massachusetts Senate election, Complete list of Senate contests in 2004\nOfficial results from (PDF, 459k) on the Massachusetts Elections Division website", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178076-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Massachusetts Senate election, Primary Results\nOfficial results from (PDF, 424k) on the Massachusetts Elections Division website", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker)\nThe 2004 Masters was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament held in February 2004. It was the 30th staging of the Masters tournament, one of three Triple Crown events on the Snooker Tour, the eighth of fifteen World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) events in the 2003/2004 season, and was held at the Wembley Conference Centre in London, United Kingdom from 1 to 8 February 2004. The tournament was broadcast in the United Kingdom by the BBC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker)\nPaul Hunter won the tournament, defeating 1995 winner and world number three Ronnie O'Sullivan by ten frames to nine (10\u20139), claiming the third Masters title of his career in four years. Hunter joined Cliff Thorburn and Stephen Hendry as the third player to win the Masters three or more times. In the semi-finals, Hunter defeated John Higgins 6\u20133 and O'Sullivan beat Jimmy White 6\u20134. O'Sullivan compiled a 138 break, the highest of the tournament, in the second frame of his semi-final match against White.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Background\nThe Masters was first held in 1975 at the West Centre Hotel with the sport's top ten ranking players invited to participate. It moved to the New London Theatre the following year, before it resided at the Wembley Conference Centre in 1979 where all editions of the tournament had been held going into the 2004 tournament. It is part of snooker's Triple Crown events alongside the World Snooker Championship and the UK Championship, but does not have official ranking status. The tournament was sponsored by Benson & Hedges until 2003 when the company was required to end its association with the Masters due to restrictions on tobacco advertising in the United Kingdom. Thus, the tournament went without sponsorship in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Background\nThe 2004 tournament was the eighth of fifteen World Professional Billiards and Snooker Association (WPBSA) events in the 2003/2004 season, following the Welsh Open and preceding the third Challenge Tour event. Held in January, the Welsh Open was won by Ronnie O'Sullivan, who defeated Steve Davis by nine frames to eight (9\u20138) in the final. The defending Masters champion was Mark Williams, who defeated Stephen Hendry 10\u20134 in the previous year's final. The tournament had a prize fund of \u00a3400,000, and was broadcast on television by the BBC. For the 2004 tournament, a new trophy commissioned by the WPBSA and designed by crystal manufacturer Waterford Crystal was awarded to the Masters champion for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Format and wild-card matches\nMark Williams, the defending Masters champion and 2003 World Snooker Champion, was the number 1 seed. Places were allocated to the top 16 players in the world rankings. Players seeded 15 and 16 played in the wild-card round against Neil Robertson (the winner of the qualifying event in the Welsh town of Prestatyn during December 2003), and Ding Junhui, who was the wild-card selection. All matches were played to the best of 11 frames, up until the final which was played to a maximum of 19 frames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 72], "content_span": [73, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Format and wild-card matches\nFor the wild-card round, Robertson was drawn against world number 15 Jimmy White, the 1984 Masters champion. White won the match 6\u20132 by compiling six half-centuries and a match-best break of 83. World number 16 Joe Perry was assigned as Ding's opponent, the youngest player in the history of the Masters at age 16. Ding compiled breaks of 58 and 108, and Perry took frame four before the mid-session interval. A further break of 118 in the sixth frame, along with Perry potting the cue ball, enabled Ding to claim the final two frames and win the match 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 72], "content_span": [73, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nThe first round of the competition, in which sixteen players took part, was played between 1 and 4 February 2004. In the first match, defending champion Mark Williams won against fellow Welshman and world number nine Matthew Stevens, 6\u20135. Stevens compiled breaks of 105 and 92, to take a 3\u20131 lead, but Williamsn went ahead 5\u20133 after winning four frames in a row. However, Stevens claimed the next two frames after fluking a red ball and potting the coloured balls, to force a final frame decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nStevens was leading 48\u20130 in points when he missed a blue ball shot to the middle pocket, allowing Williams to win the match. Two-time Masters champion Paul Hunter faced David Gray in his first round match. The first frame was restarted after 17 minutes due to inactivity on the table; Hunter clinched the frame on a black ball after Gray incurred 10 penalty points while leading 66\u20131. Hunter extended his lead with a break of 51, but Gray responded with a 70 break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nHunter led 3\u20131 at the mid-session interval, but Gray reduced Hunter's advantage again, this time with a break of 67. Hunter won two of the next three frames to take the score to 5\u20133, and a break of 74 in the ninth frame gave him a 6\u20133 win, setting up a quarter-final encounter with Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nWorld number three and 1995 Masters champion, Ronnie O'Sullivan, took a 6\u20130 whitewash over 1994 winner Alan McManus . During a match that lasted 1 hour and 50 minutes, McManus' highest break was just 44. O'Sullivan equalled that in the second frame and compiled a 75 break in the fourth. He took advantage of McManus missing two opportunities to pot the blue ball, claiming match victory and giving McManus his first Masters whitewash in his 13th appearance. John Higgins, world number four and 1999 Masters champion, defeated fellow Scotsman Graeme Dott 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nPlaying with a new cue (having intentionally destroyed his old one at a motorway service station), Dott took the first frame with a clearance of 34. Higgins then compiled breaks of 70, 63, and 100, to lead 3\u20131 at the mid-session interval. However, Dott managed to level the scoreline after the next two frames, thanks to a poor positional shot from Higgins on a final blue ball, and they shared the next two frames bringing the score to 4\u20134. Higgins took the ninth frame, winning a safety battle over the pink, and he clinched frame 10 to advance to the quarter-finals. Higgins' victory continued Dott's streak of failing to win any matches at the Wembley Conference Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nKen Doherty compiled breaks of 89 and 81 to hold a 3\u20131 advantage over his opponent Steve Davis at the mid-session interval of their first round match. Davis denied Doherty an early victory in frame seven when he potted the last four coloured balls to snatch the frame; he also took the next frame to reduce his deficit to 3\u20135. However, a 33 break from Doherty ended the match 6\u20133 in his favour, after more than 3 and a half hours of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nAfterwards, Davis complained about cold air entering the venue, which dampened the cloth and caused the chalk to stick to the cue ball. Stephen Lee took the first frame of his match against Ding Junhui, who won the next three frames\u2014with the help of an 84 break\u2014for a 3\u20131 lead at the interval. Following Lee's fifth frame win, Ding compiled breaks of 81, 83, and 89, to go 5\u20132 ahead, but Lee responded to claim frame eight on a re-spotted black ball, before taking the ninth with a clearance of 54. Lee also took the tenth frame to force a final frame decider; he then made a break of 85 in the last frame to claim a 6\u20135 victory, booking his place in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nJimmy White defeated six-time Masters champion Stephen Hendry 6\u20134, in a match disrupted by noise from an over-enthusiastic partisan crowd that referee Colin Brinded had attempted to control. White won the first frame with a 54 break, but a fluke on a red ball in the second gave Hendry the impetus to win the next two frames with breaks of 97 and 75. White took the fourth frame to equalise the scoreline, until Hendry made his 632nd career century break (102) to win the fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nWhite then made a clearance of 40, after Hendry missed a shot on the pink ball to a middle pocket in frame six, and White took the lead. A 36 clearance and a 51 break won him the match, his first against Hendry at the Wembley Conference Centre in seven attempts. After the match, White apologised to Hendry for the crowd's disrespectful behaviour; a female spectator had been ejected and escorted out of the arena by security after she ignored repeated warnings over disrupting the match. White also voiced a complaint about the playing conditions, and the WPBSA conducted a meticulous investigation of the table's mechanics on 4 February, to correct any imperfections prior to the start of the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nIn the last of the first round matches, Quinten Hann responded to an early century break from his opponent Peter Ebdon to take a 2\u20131 lead, but a playing error, in which Hann potted the cue ball from a screwback on the pink ball, allowed Ebdon to level the scoreline with a break of 55. They shared the next two frames, but Hann conceded the seventh after missing the final red ball, despite trailing by only 21 points in the frame. Edbon forged ahead, claiming the next two frames to win the match 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, First round\nAt the post-match press conference, Hann put the decline in his performance down to hunger, which had lowered his concentration after the mid-session interval, \"This wasn't the first time it's happened. I enjoy playing Peter but the game did drag on. I got some chocolate at the end but it was too little too late.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nThe quarter-finals took place on 5 and 6 February 2004. Hunter took an early lead of 3\u20131 in the first quarter-final, but Williams then won four of the next five frames, with breaks of 66, 77, 52 and 101, to move 5\u20134 ahead. Williams looked set to win the match in frame ten with a 51\u201312 lead, but a strong ricochet off the top right-hand corner pocket sent the cue ball down the table and Hunter made a 65 clearance to force a final frame decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nHunter built a 63\u201316 lead, and despite a missed long-range red ball that provided Williams with a failed opportunity to pot a long-range yellow in the bottom right-hand pocket, won the match for his third career victory over Williams. Higgins won the 34-minute opening frame of his quarter-final match against Lee, who then compiled a half-century break of 51 in the second frame, before ending the next with a black ball shot on a 36 run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0011-0002", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nThe match levelled at 4\u20134 and Higgins won the next two frames (with a 71 break in the ninth) to end it 6\u20134 and advance to the semi-finals. Higgins criticised the table conditions afterwards: \"The table was atrocious. We played with a light white, and the cushions were bouncing all over the place. Neither of us played well, but the conditions didn't help.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nO'Sullivan defeated Doherty 6\u20133 in the third quarter-final. Doherty began well by winning the first frame but O'Sullivan went unchallenged in the next three frames to score 260 points, including breaks of 43, 87 and 75, to lead 3\u20131 going into the mid-session interval. They shared frames five and six; Doherty won frame seven after O'Sullivan was snookered on the final red, and O'Sullivan took the next frame on the pink ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nAlthough Doherty scored a break of 61 in the ninth frame, he could not sustain his form and O'Sullivan claimed victory on the black ball from a 38 clearance. The last quarter-final saw Ebdon compete against White, in front of a calmer crowd. White made century breaks of 118 and 101 in the first and fifth frames, followed by another by Ebdon in the sixth, and the score went level at 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Quarter-finals\nEbdon won the next frame to briefly take the lead, but White won frames eight and nine, and with Ebdon unable to respond, White won the match 6\u20134 with a break of 45 in the tenth frame. He entered the semi-finals of the Masters at the Wembley Conference Centre for the tenth time in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nBoth of the semi-finals were played on 7 February 2004. Hunter opened proceedings with a break of 96 in the first frame of his semi-final match against Higgins, but his lead was short-lived as Higgins responded by compiling a 110 break in the second frame and winning frames three and four to enter the mid-session interval 3\u20131 ahead. Higgins took the fifth frame on the blue ball and Hunter won the sixth with a break of 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nHiggins clinched the 27-minute-long seventh frame on a re-spotted black ball, but his chances of victory were over when Hunter claimed the next two frames to win the match 6\u20133, following a safety shot exchange on the final pink ball. Higgins again voiced criticism of the table's playing conditions after the match, \"It was torture out there. We were playing with a light white, and the cushions were an absolute joke. I just couldn't get hold of the cue ball, and we shouldn't have to play on that. The table was a disgrace. Top players are not used to it. I've asked for something to be done. It's a sad day for snooker when no one listens to the players.\" Cloth manufacturer Milliken & Company concluded that the table conditions were \"perfect as they could be\" for the cloth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nO'Sullivan faced White in the second semi-final match later that evening. White won the opening frame and O'Sullivan produced the tournament's highest break (a 138 clearance) in the second frame to level the score. He then took frame three after an early foul from White on a black ball, but the two players were equal at the mid-session interval, after which play became disjointed and the two remained tied after the eighth frame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nA break of 56 from O'Sullivan, and a shot from his opponent that left a red ball over a corner pocket, allowed him to win 6\u20134 and set up an encounter with Hunter in the final. Following the semi-final, O'Sullivan stated his belief that he was benefiting from a different approach and attitude, \"There is no point in being attacking and being careless at the same time and I was enjoying the struggle out there. It was a psychological battle I was having with myself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Semi-finals\nIt was a chance for me to see how deep I could go and deal with things and be at one with myself.\" White admitted his past mental and physical effort during the Masters wore him out, \"I am sad because I didn't feel right at all and if I had been playing anywhere near the way I have, I might have won.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nThe best-of-19 frames final match took place over two sessions on 8 February 2004. Hunter defeated O'Sullivan to lift his third Masters title in four years (having previously won the 2001 and 2002 tournaments). In doing so, he joined Cliff Thorburn and Stephen Hendry as one of only three players to win the Masters tournament three or more times. The victory earned Hunter \u00a3100,000, while O'Sullivan received \u00a350,000 and an extra \u00a310,000 for compiling the tournament's highest break (138).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nThe correspondent for The Scotsman noted that the match was hailed as \"one of the highest-quality matches witnessed in snooker\", and Brian Burside of The Independent recorded that Hunter had \"scored the most remarkable win in the history of the Masters\". The match was broadcast on BBC Two, with an average television audience of 3.4\u00a0million, up by 900,000 over the 2003 final, with a peak audience of 5 million viewers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nO'Sullivan took advantage of Hunter's aggressive playing style to win the first two frames with breaks of 56 and 80; Hunter responded with a 117 break to clinch the third. O'Sullivan then moved ahead 6\u20131 within 42 minutes, with further breaks of 86, 87, 84, and 79, while Hunter potted a solitary ball during this period. However, Hunter concluded the 100-minute afternoon session with a 127 break to go 2\u20136 behind. In the first frame of the evening session, O'Sullivan overcame playing errors to take the ninth frame with a late break of 34.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nHunter clinched the next four frames to take the score to 7\u20136 with breaks of 102 and 82 and executing successful long-range pots. O'Sullivan missed pottable red balls on scores of 28\u20130 and 59\u201316 but Hunter also faltered and O'Sullivan won the 14th frame. In the 15th, O'Sullivan missed a red ball shot along the top cushion and Hunter made a 109 break to again reduce the deficit to one frame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0016-0002", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nO'Sullivan restored his two-frame advantage in the next frame but Hunter compiled his fifth match century in the 17th, with a 110 clearance and a small clearance of 58; the 31-minute 18th frame took the match to a final frame decider. Hunter won the match and the tournament following a protracted safety exchange.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Tournament summary, Final\nAfter his victory, Hunter praised O'Sullivan's performance in the first session and said of his own achievement: \"I played really well all day. Even though I was 6\u20132 behind [after the first session] I'd made two centuries and I knew I was playing well. I was 6\u20132 down a few years ago against Fergal and I just stuck in there and that is what I did again and it went my way.\" O'Sullivan was philosophical about his defeat and said he was pleased for Hunter and his family, adding: \"I was a little disappointed, but it is only a game of snooker. Someone has to win and someone has to lose and this time it was my turn to lose.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 49], "content_span": [50, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Results, Wild-card round\nNumbers given in brackets after players names show the 15th and 16th seeds in the competition. Players in bold indicate match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Results, Main draw\nNumbers to the left of players' names show the remainder of the seeds in the tournament. Players in bold denote match winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Results, Final\nScores in bold are the winning frame scores and the winning player. Breaks over 50 are indicated in brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178077-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters (snooker), Century breaks\nThe 2004 Masters featured a total of 19 century breaks made by 9 different players over the course of the competition. O'Sullivan made the highest break of a 138 in the second frame of his semi-final match with White.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament\nThe 2004 Masters Tournament was the 68th Masters Tournament, held April 8\u201311 at Augusta National Golf Club in Augusta, Georgia. Phil Mickelson, 33, won his first major championship with a birdie on the final hole to win by one stroke over runner-up Ernie Els. The purse was $6.0 million and the winner's share was $1.17 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament\nThis was the 50th consecutive and final Masters appearance for four-time champion Arnold Palmer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Playoff alteration\nPrior to this Masters, the sudden-death playoff was changed to begin on the 18th hole and alternate with the 10th hole. This new starting point was first used the following year in 2005. When the playoff format was changed to sudden-death for 1976, it began at the 10th hole, then went to the 11th, and was first used in 1979. Prior to 1976, playoffs at Augusta were full 18-hole rounds on Monday, and the last was won by Billy Casper in 1970. The exception was the first playoff in 1935, which was 36 holes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Field\nTommy Aaron, Charles Coody, Fred Couples (14,16,17), Ben Crenshaw, Nick Faldo, Raymond Floyd, Bernhard Langer, Sandy Lyle, Larry Mize, Jack Nicklaus, Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Olaz\u00e1bal (10), Mark O'Meara (10), Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Vijay Singh (10,12,14,15,16,17), Craig Stadler, Tom Watson, Mike Weir (10,11,14,15,16,17), Tiger Woods (2,3,4,10,12,14,15,16,17), Ian Woosnam, Fuzzy Zoeller", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Field\nJonathan Byrd, \u00c1ngel Cabrera, K. J. Choi (14,16,17), Tim Clark (12), Jeff Maggert, Len Mattiace, Phil Mickelson (14,16,17), Scott Verplank (14,16,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Field\nFreddie Jacobson (16,17), Stephen Leaney (16,17), Kenny Perry (14,16,17), Nick Price (14,16,17), Justin Rose", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Field\nRobert Allenby (16,17), Stuart Appleby (15,16,17), Briny Baird, Stewart Cink (17), Chris DiMarco (16,17), Bob Estes (16), Brad Faxon (16,17), Steve Flesch (17), Fred Funk (16,17), Jay Haas (16,17), Tim Herron (16), Charles Howell III (16,17), Jonathan Kaye (15,16,17), Jerry Kelly (16,17), Justin Leonard (16,17), J. L. Lewis, Shigeki Maruyama (16,17), Rocco Mediate (16,17), Tim Petrovic, Chris Riley (16,17), John Rollins, Jeff Sluman, Kirk Triplett (17), Bob Tway (16,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Field\nMichael Campbell, Paul Casey (17), Darren Clarke (17), Sergio Garc\u00eda (17), P\u00e1draig Harrington (17), Toshimitsu Izawa, Peter Lonard (17), Colin Montgomerie (17), Ian Poulter (17), Phillip Price, Eduardo Romero", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, First round\n23-year-old Englishman Justin Rose posted a five-under 67 to lead after the first round. Americans Chris DiMarco and Jay Haas shot 69 (\u22123) and two-time U.S. Open champion Ernie Els was among a group tied for fourth with 70 (\u22122). Among the seven players tied at 71 (\u22121) was two-time Masters champion, Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Olaz\u00e1bal. Phil Mickelson shot an even-par 72, and three-time Masters champion Tiger Woods shot a 75 (+3). The winner of the previous major (2003 PGA Championship), Shaun Micheel, was at even-par 72. Play was suspended for roughly two hours due to rain, so 18 players completed their opening round on Friday morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Second round\nFirst round leader Rose put together another good round (71) to take the 36-hole lead at 138 (\u22126). Olaz\u00e1bal shot a 69 to close within two strokes of the lead in a tie for second with Alex \u010cejka, who shot 70.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Second round\nMickelson, trying to remove the best player never to win a major championship label, moved into a share of fourth with a 69, alongside K. J. Choi. Davis Love III was one of two to shoot the round of the day with a 67 (\u22125), which moved him into a tie for sixth with Els, DiMarco, Charles Howell III, and 1992 champion Fred Couples. Most notables made the cut at 148 (+4), but among those failing to advance were defending champion Mike Weir and Ben Curtis, the 2003 Open Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Second round\nAmateurs: Snedeker (+4), Wittenberg (+4), Smith (+6), Flanagan (+8), Wolstenholme (+9).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Third round\nMickelson moved from fourth to a share of the 54-hole lead with a three-under 69, while the top three golfers after round two collapsed. Rose shot an 81, Olaz\u00e1bal a 79, and \u010cejka a 78. This collective meltdown by the top three allowed Mickelson and DiMarco to rise to the top. DiMarco finished tied for the 54-hole lead with a four-under 68. Paul Casey put together a 68 as well to move within two strokes of the co-leaders at the end of the day. Els continued his steady play with a one-under 71 to move into a three-way tie for fourth. Kirk Triplett and Freddie Jacobson put themselves in contention at seventh and eighth, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 60], "content_span": [61, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Final round, Summary\nIn one of the most exciting back nines in Masters history, Mickelson dueled Els to claim his first major championship. Mickelson shot a final round 69, sealed with an 18-foot (5\u00a0m) birdie on the 18th green to win by a stroke. Playing two groups ahead of Mickelson, Els started the day at \u22123 and posted a 67 (\u22125). As Mickelson approached the final hole, Els' total of 280 (\u22128) appeared enough to at least get him into a playoff. Els stumbled out of the gate with two bogeys in his first five holes, but quickly regained his form.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Final round, Summary\nHe collected two eagles on his round, at the par-5 8th and 13th holes. Els also connected on a birdie at the 15th to get him to \u22128. Seeing his first major possibly slip away with a 38 (+2) on his front nine, Mickelson had to match Els' fire on the back nine, and shot a bogey-free 31, with birdies on five of the final seven holes. Mickelson birdied the par-3 12th and par-5 13th. He briefly tied Els with his third consecutive birdie at the par-4 14th, then had a disappointing par on the par-5 15th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Final round, Summary\nAt the par-3 16th, Mickelson put his tee shot 20 feet (6\u00a0m) above the pin and holed the dramatic putt to tie for the lead. He remained tied heading to the final tee, and when his approach shot landed on the green, a winning putt was before him. As Mickelson sunk the putt, he jumped for joy as he won his first major title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178078-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters Tournament, Round-by-round results, Final round, Summary\nK. J. Choi finished third, which was his best major finish, with a final round 69 to total 282 (\u22126). Sergio Garc\u00eda shot the round of the tournament with a 66 (\u22126) to tie for fourth with two-time Masters champion Bernhard Langer. Four major champions, including two former Masters champions (Vijay Singh, Couples, Love, and Nick Price) were in the group who finished tied for sixth at 286 (\u22122). Woods' streak of not winning a major extended to seven with a disappointing 290 (+2), the same score tallied by first and second round leader Rose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178079-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Masters of Formula 3\nThe 2004 Marlboro Masters of Formula 3 was the fourteenth Masters of Formula 3 race held at Circuit Park Zandvoort on 8 August 2004. It was won by Alexandre Pr\u00e9mat, for ASM Formule 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178080-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Maui Invitational Tournament\nThe 2004 Maui Invitational Tournament was an early-season college basketball tournament that was played, for the 21st time, from November 22 to November 24, 2004. The tournament began in 1984, and was part of the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The tournament was played at the Lahaina Civic Center in Maui, Hawaii and was won by the North Carolina Tar Heels. It was UNC's second Maui title and the second for head coach Roy Williams, who led the Kansas Jayhawks to the 1996 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178081-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mayo County Council election\nAn election to Mayo County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 31 councillors were elected from seven electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game\nThe 2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game was an all-star basketball game played on Wednesday, March 31, 2004 at the Ford Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, the future home of the NBA's Oklahoma City Thunder (then the Seattle SuperSonics). The game's rosters featured the best and most highly recruited high school boys graduating in 2004. The game was the 27th annual version of the McDonald's All-American Game first played in 1978.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game\nThe 48 players were selected from 2,500 nominees by a committee of basketball experts. They were chosen not only for their on-court skills, but for their performances off the court as well. Coach Morgan Wootten, who had more than 1,200 wins as head basketball coach at DeMatha High School, was chairman of the selection committee. Legendary UCLA coach John Wooden, who has been involved in the McDonald's All American Games since its inception, served as chairman of the Games and as an advisor to the selection committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game\nProceeds from the 2004 McDonald's All American High School Basketball Games went to Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC\u00ae) of Oklahoma and its Ronald McDonald House\u00ae program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, 2004 game\nThe game was telecast live by ESPN. In the game's first appearance in the state of Oklahoma, the 14,424 in attendance were treated to a high scoring affair which featured seven NBA first round draft picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, 2004 game\nThe East broke out to an early lead with their impressive inside-outside game. Five East Team players scored in double figures, led by J.R. Smith\u2019s (Denver Nuggets) game high 25 points. J.R. excited the crowd on numerous occasions with his high flying dunks and long distance jumpers. The East also saw a solid contribution from Dwight Howard (Orlando Magic), who amassed 19 points and eight rebounds. J.R. and Dwight shared the John R. Wooden Most Valuable Player Award. The East controlled the second half of the game, en route to their 126-96 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, 2004 game\nOther key contributors for the East included, power forward Al Jefferson (Boston Celtics), who recorded 16 points and 11rebounds, and swingman Rudy Gay (Memphis Grizzlies), who put up 10 points and four assists. Point guard Sebastian Telfair (Boston Celtics), dished out a game high 11 assists and Rajon Rondo (Boston Celtics), had 14 points and four assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, 2004 game\nThe West Team had several outstanding players who shared the spotlight. DeMarcus Nelson led the West with 22 points and five rebounds. High school teammates from Detroit, Joe Crawford (Kentucky) and Malik Hairston (Oregon) contributed 15 and 11 pointsrespectively, while 6\u201911 center and first round draft pick Robert Swift (Oklahoma City Thunder) added 10 points and fiverebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178082-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 McDonald's All-American Boys Game, All-American Week, Schedule\nThe Powerade JamFest is a skills-competition evening featuring basketball players who demonstrate their skills in two crowd-entertaining ways. The slam dunk contest was first held in 1987, and a 3-point shooting challenge was added in 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178083-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath County Council election\nAn election to Meath County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 29 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nThe 2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship is the 78th edition of the Meath GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for intermediate graded teams in County Meath, Ireland. The tournament consists of 16 teams, with the winner going on to represent Meath in the Leinster Intermediate Club Football Championship. The championship starts with a group stage and then progresses to a knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nThis was Ballivor's first year in this grade since 2002, after just 1 years in the Senior grade since being relegated in 2003. .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nWolfe Tones were promoted after claiming the 2003 Meath Junior Football Championship title, their first year in the intermediate grade since being relegated in the 1980s and only their 2nd ever period as an intermediate club, and in 2004, Wolfe Tones claimed their 1st ever Intermediate championship title when they defeated Duleek 2-10 to 1-12 .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship\nCurraha were relegated after 3 years as an Intermediate club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2003 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Group stage\nThere are 2 groups called Group A and B. The 4 top finishers in Group A and B will qualify for the quarter finals. The 2 teams that finish last in their groups will play in a relegation play off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Knock-out stage, Relegation play off\nThe two bottom finishers from the group stage qualify for the relegation final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178084-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Intermediate Football Championship, Knock-out stage, Finals\nThe teams in the quarter-finals are the second placed teams from each group and one group winner. The teams in the semi finals are two group winners and the quarter final winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship\nThe 2004 Meath Senior Football Championship was the 112th edition of the Meath GAA's premier club Gaelic football tournament for senior graded teams in County Meath, Ireland. The tournament consists of 16 teams, with the winner going on to represent Meath in the Leinster Senior Club Football Championship. The championship starts with a group stage and then progresses to a knock out stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship\nBlackhall Gaels were the defending champions after they defeated Simonstown Gaels in the previous years final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship\nNavan O'Mahonys were promoted after claiming the 2003 Meath Intermediate Football Championship title, their second Intermediate win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship\nOn 10 October 2004, Skryne claimed their 12th Senior Championship title when they defeated Simonstown Gaels 1-9 to 0-7. John Quinn raised the Keegan Cup for Skryne while Mick O'Dowd claimed the 'Man of the Match' award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship\nGaeil Colmcille were relegated after 18 years in the senior grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship, Team changes\nThe following teams have changed division since the 2003 championship season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship, Group stage\nThere are 2 groups called Group A and B. The 4 top finishers in Group A and B will qualify for the quarter finals. The 2 teams that finish last in their groups will play in a relegation play off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178085-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Meath Senior Football Championship, Knock-out Stage, Relegation Play Off\nIn Group B, 2 teams finished on equal points. To decide who would play Gaeil Colmcille (Bottom Group A) in the Relegation Final, a Preliminary Relegation Play Off was played between Summerhill and Dunderry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178086-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Meistriliiga\n2004 Meistriliiga was the 14th season of the Meistriliiga, Estonia's premier football league. Levadia won their third title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178086-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Meistriliiga, Season overview\nLevadia Tallinn won their third title with a six-point advantage over the runners-up TVMK Tallinn. Tammeka Tartu and Tervis P\u00e4rnu won promotion to the Meistriliiga as the Esiliiga champions and third placed team respectively, the runners-up Levadia Tallinn II were ineligible for promotion. Expansion of the league to ten teams from eight, for the upcoming season, also ensured that even the last placed Lootus Alutaguse had a chance to stay in the top flight, but were defeated by Esiliiga's fourth team D\u00fcnamo Tallinn, winning the away leg 2-1, but then losing at home 0-4 a week later. Tervis P\u00e4rnu were later denied the Meistriliiga license, sealing an unlikely promotion for the fifth-placed FC Kuressaare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178086-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Meistriliiga, League table, Relegation play-off\nTallinna D\u00fcnamo won 5-2 on aggregate and were promoted for the 2005 Meistriliiga. Alutaguse Lootus were relegated to the 2005 Esiliiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178086-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Meistriliiga, Results\nEach team played every opponent four times, twice at home and twice on the road, for a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178087-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Cup\nThe 2004 Melbourne Cup was the 144th running of the Melbourne Cup, a prestigious Australian Thoroughbred horse race. The race, run over 3,200 metres (1.988\u00a0mi), was held on 2 November 2004 at Melbourne's Flemington Racecourse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178087-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Cup\nIt was won by Makybe Diva at the age of six, trained by Lee Freedman and ridden by Glen Boss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178087-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Cup, Field\nThis is a list of horses which ran in the 2004 Melbourne Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season\nThe 2004 Melbourne Storm season was the 7th in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2004 Telstra Premiership and finished the regular season 6th out of 15 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season\nInconsistency plagued Storm in Craig Bellamy\u2019s second season in charge, but the team won four games in a row during the middle part of the year to move into the top four. They could not maintain their run though, eventually finishing sixth. Once again Storm won its first final, a 31-14 triumph over the Broncos at Suncorp Stadium before bowing out to the Bulldogs for the second straight season the following week. John Ribot departed the club early in the 2004 season with Frank Stanton stepping in as acting CEO for the next 12 months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season, Season Summary, Jerseys\nMelbourne's jerseys were unchanged from the designs implemented by Canterbury of New Zealand in 2003. The home jersey design was still unchanged from the 2001-02 jersey, but for a white collar replacing the gold. The club's clash colours were again a mostly white design with a purple chevron and gold thunderbolts, worn with navy shorts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season, Representative honours\nThis table lists all players who have played a representative match in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season, Statistics\nThis table contains playing statistics for all Melbourne Storm players to have played in the 2004 NRL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season, Feeder Team\nMelbourne Storm reserve players again travelled to Brisbane each week to play with Queensland Cup team Norths Devils. Coached for a second season by Gary Greinke, Norths returned to the finals, finishing second in the regular season behind eventual premiers Burleigh Bears. However, the Devils were bundled out of the finals in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178088-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Melbourne Storm season, Feeder Team\nDuring the season, Greg Inglis made his first grade debut as a 17-year-old, scoring two tries. Inglis would play six Queensland Cup games for the season, scoring eight tries, also representing Queensland in underage representative games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178089-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Memorial Cup\nThe 2004 Memorial Cup (branded as the 2004 Mastercard Memorial Cup for sponsorship reasons) occurred May 15\u201323 at Prospera Place in Kelowna, British Columbia. It was the 86th annual Memorial Cup competition and determined the major junior ice hockey champion of the Canadian Hockey League (CHL). It featured the host team, the Kelowna Rockets as well as the winners of the Ontario Hockey League, Quebec Major Junior Hockey League and the Western Hockey League which were the Guelph Storm, Gatineau Olympiques and the Medicine Hat Tigers respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178089-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Memorial Cup\nThe Kelowna Rockets would be the eventual winners, and would become only the fourth host team to win without winning their league as well. (The first time was in 1983, when the Portland Winter Hawks won it, the second was in 1993 when the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds won it, and the third was in 1999 when the Ottawa 67's won it.) Kelowna defeated the Olympiques who made their second straight Memorial Cup final, but as with 2003, the 'Piques came up short. Kelowna also participated in the 2003 tournament as WHL champions but did not advance to the final, and would participate as WHL champions in the 2005 Memorial Cup as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178089-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Memorial Cup, Winning team\nMichal Blanar, Troy Bodie, Mike Card, Blake Comeau, Ryan Constant, Kyle Cumiskey, Darren Deschamps, Simon Ferguson, Randall Gelech, Josh Gorges, Kelly Guard, Joel Henituik, Brent Howarth, Justin Keller, D. J. King, Josh Lepp, Joni Lindlof, Tyler Mosienko, Mark Olafson, Cam Paddock, Brett Palin, Chris Ray, Kevin Reinholt, Tyler Spurgeon, Stephen Sunderman, Stewart Thiessen, Patrik Valcak, Nolan Waker, Shea Weber, Derek Yeomans. Coach: Marc Habscheid", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178090-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Memphis Tigers football team\nThe 2004 Memphis Tigers football team represented the University of Memphis in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Memphis competed as a member of the Conference USA. The team was led by head coach Tommy West. The Tigers played their home games at the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178091-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's British Open Squash Championship\nThe 2004 Harris British Open Championships was held at the Albert Hall, Nottingham from 31 October \u2013 6 November 2004. David Palmer retained his title defeating Amr Shabana in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178092-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's European Volleyball League\nThe 2004 Men's European Volleyball League was the first edition of the European Volleyball League, organised by Europe's governing volleyball body, the CEV. The Final Four was held in Opava, Czech Republic from 10 to 11 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178093-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Field Hockey Olympic Qualifier\nThe Men's Field Hockey Olympic Qualifier was the fourth edition of the Men's Field hockey Olympic Qualification Tournament. It was held at Club de Campo in Madrid, Spain from 2 until 13 March 2004. Twelve nations took part, and they played a round-robin tournament in two groups of six. The top six or seven teams qualified for the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178094-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy\nThe 2004 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy was the 26th edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy men's field hockey tournament. It was held in Lahore, Pakistan from December 4\u201312, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178094-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey Champions Trophy, Umpires\nBelow is the eight umpires appointed by International Hockey Federation (FIH):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178095-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters\nThe 2004 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters was the tenth edition of the Hamburg Masters, consisting of a series of test matches. It was held in Hamburg, Germany, from 18 to 20 June 2004, and featured four of the top nations in men's field hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178095-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters, Competition Format\nThe tournament featured the national teams of Argentina, Pakistan, South Korea, and the hosts, Germany, competing in a round-robin format, with each team playing each other once. Three points were be awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178095-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters, Officials\nThe following umpires were appointed by the International Hockey Federation to officiate the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178095-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey Hamburg Masters, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 36 goals scored in 6 matches, for an average of 6 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy\nThe 2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy was the second edition of the men's field hockey tournament. The RaboTrophy was held in Amsterdam from 26 June to 4 July 2004, and featured four of the top nations in men's field hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy\nGermany won the tournament for the first time, defeating the Netherlands 5\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy\nThe tournament was held in conjunction with the Women's RaboTrophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy, Competition format\nThe four teams competed in a pool stage, played in a single round robin format. At the conclusion of the pool stage, the top two teams contested the final, while the remaining teams played off for third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy, Officials\nThe following umpires were appointed by the International Hockey Federation to officiate the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy, Statistics, Final standings\nAs per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178096-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Hockey RaboTrophy, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 45 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 5.62 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178097-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships\nThe 2004 Men's Ice Hockey Championships was the 68th such event hosted by the International Ice Hockey Federation. Teams participated at several levels of competition. The competition also served as qualifications for division placements in the 2005 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178097-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division I, Group B\nBelarus and \u00a0Slovenia were promoted to the 2005 Men's World Ice Hockey Championships. Belgium0and \u00a0South Korea were demoted to Division II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178097-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Ice Hockey World Championships, Division II, Group B\nChina and \u00a0Lithuania were promoted to Division I while \u00a0Luxembourg and \u00a0South Africa were demoted to Division III.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178098-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Pan American Cup\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Justwagen (talk | contribs) at 18:20, 26 January 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178098-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Pan American Cup\nThe 2004 Men's Pan American Cup was the second edition of the Men's Pan American Cup, the quadrennial men's international field hockey championship of the Americas organized by the Pan American Hockey Federation. It was held between 12 and 23 May 2004 in London, Ontario, Canada. The tournament doubled as the qualifier to the 2006 World Cup to be held in M\u00f6nchengladbach, Germany. The winner would qualify directly while the runner-up would have the chance to obtain one of five berths at the World Cup Qualifier in Changzhou, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178098-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Pan American Cup\nArgentina won the tournament for the first time after defeating Canada 2\u20131 in the final, earning an automatic berth at the 2006 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178098-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Pan American Cup, Umpires\nBelow are the 13 umpires appointed by the Pan American Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178099-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Softball World Championship\nThe 2004 ISF Men's World Championship was an international softball tournament. The final was held in Christchurch, New Zealand on 2 September 2004. It was the 11th time the World Championship took place. Fifteen nations competed, including defending champions New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178099-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's Softball World Championship\nIn the end, New Zealand won their third consecutive World Cup, over a win against runner-up Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178100-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's World Floorball Championships\nThe 2004 Men's Floorball Championships were the fifth men's Floorball World Championships. It was held in May 2004 in Switzerland, and won by Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178101-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's World Floorball Championships C-Division\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by WOSlinkerBot (talk | contribs) at 22:03, 14 June 2020 (remove un-needed options from tables). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178101-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's World Floorball Championships C-Division\nThe 2004 Men's World Floorball Championships C-Division took place over April 21 to 25, 2004 in Legan\u00e9s, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178101-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's World Floorball Championships C-Division\nThe 2004 Men's World Floorball Championships were the first men's floorball championships that required a C-Division. Up until 2004, all teams played in just two divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178101-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's World Floorball Championships C-Division\nA Georgian team was scheduled to take part in the tournament, but withdrew due to problems obtaining visas from Spanish authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178102-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Men's World Open Squash Championship\nThe 2004 Men's World Open Squash Championship is the men's edition of the World Open, which serves as the individual world championship for squash players. The event took place in Doha in Qatar from 28 November to 3 December 2004. Thierry Lincou won his first World Open title, defeating Lee Beachill in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178103-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup\nThe 2004 Mercedes Cup was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Tennis Club Weissenhof in Stuttgart, Germany and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from July 12 through July 18, 2004. Guillermo Ca\u00f1as won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178103-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup, Finals, Singles\nGuillermo Ca\u00f1as defeated Gast\u00f3n Gaudio 5\u20137, 6\u20132, 6\u20130, 1\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178103-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup, Finals, Doubles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k / Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek defeated Simon Aspelin / Todd Perry 6\u20132, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178104-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup \u2013 Doubles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Cibulec and Pavel V\u00edzner were the defending champions, but competed this year with different partners. Cibulec teamed up with Petr P\u00e1la and lost in the first round to Guillermo Ca\u00f1as and Feliciano L\u00f3pez, while V\u00edzner teamed up with Jared Palmer and lost in the first round to Simon Aspelin and Todd Perry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178104-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won the title by defeating Simon Aspelin and Todd Perry 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178105-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Coria was the defending champion, but did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178105-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes Cup \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Ca\u00f1as won the title, defeating Gast\u00f3n Gaudio 5\u20137, 6\u20132, 6\u20130, 1\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178106-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup\nThe 2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup was the 2004 edition of the Los Angeles Open men's tennis tournament. The tournament was held from July 12, 2004 through July 18, 2004 and total prize money awarded was $380,000. The event was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and of the 2004 US Open Series. Unseeded Tommy Haas won the singles title and the accompanying $52,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178106-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup, Finals, Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Wayne Arthurs / Paul Hanley 6\u20133, 7\u20136(8\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178107-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup \u2013 Doubles\nJan-Michael Gambill and Travis Parrott were the defending champions, but Gambill did not participate this year. Parrott partnered Robby Ginepri, losing in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178107-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 6\u20133, 7\u20136(8\u20136), against Wayne Arthurs and Paul Hanley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178108-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup \u2013 Singles\nWayne Ferreira was the defending champion, but lost in the first round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178108-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mercedes-Benz Cup \u2013 Singles\nTommy Haas won the tournament, beating Nicolas Kiefer in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178109-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Meteor Awards\nThe 2004 Meteor Music Awards were held on Monday 1 March 2004, hosted by comedian Dara \u00d3 Briain. It was the fourth edition of Ireland's national music awards. At the ceremony Damien Dempsey was presented with two awards, Best Folk/ Traditional Act and Best Irish Country/Roots Artist. Samantha Mumba made an appearance in a revealing see-through dress, Colin Farrell was pictured with both Bono and Chris Pontius whilst Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith posed with Sharon Corr after both collected awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178109-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Meteor Awards\nPerformers included Lionel Richie, Katie Melua, Counting Crows, The Corrs, Sugababes, Westlife, Hothouse Flowers, The Frames, The Dubliners, Snow Patrol, Paddy Casey and Jerry Fish and the Mudbug Club. Award presenters included Dominic West, Bic Runga and Alex Zane, actors George McMahon and Patrick Bergin, No Frontiers presenter Kathryn Thomas alongside Kerry McFadden, Miss World Rosanna Davison, Keith Duffy, Niall Quinn, Deirdre O'Kane, Denis Hickie, Joe Elliott and Hector \u00d3 hEochag\u00e1in. The event was broadcast on RT\u00c9 Two on Wednesday 3 March at 21:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178110-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament took place from May 27\u201329, 2004. The top four regular season finishers of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at Dutchess Stadium in Wappingers Falls, New York. Le Moyne won their third tournament championship and earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178110-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe top four teams were seeded one through four based on their conference winning percentage. They then played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 68], "content_span": [69, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178110-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nBrian Hansen was named Most Valuable Player. Hansen was a catcher for Le Moyne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 102], "content_span": [103, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178111-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Metro Manila Film Festival\nThe 30th Metro Manila Film Festival was held in Manila, Philippines, from December 25, 2004 to January 5, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178111-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Metro Manila Film Festival\nVilma Santos, Christopher de Leon and their movie, Mano Po III: My Love topped the 2004 Metro Manila Film Festival. Santos and de Leon won the Best Actress and Best Actor awards respectively for their roles in Mano Po III: My Love, which was also awarded the Festival's Best Picture. The Best Supporting Actor and Actress awards went to Dennis Trillo for Aishite Imasu 1941: Mahal Kita and Rebecca Lusterio for Panaghoy sa Suba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178111-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Metro Manila Film Festival\nCesar Montano's Panaghoy sa Suba also received six other awards including the prestigious Gatpuno Antonio J. Villegas Cultural Awards, Best Director for Montano, and the Second Best Picture among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178112-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mexican Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Mexican Figure Skating Championships took place in Guadalajara. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles on the senior level. The results were used to choose the Mexican teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 Four Continents Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178113-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mexican elections\nA number of local elections took place in Mexico during 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178114-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Dolphins season\nThe 2004 Miami Dolphins season was the team's 39th overall, and 35th as a member of the National Football League. The Dolphins were unable to improve upon their previous season's output of 10\u20136, instead only going 4\u201312 after starting the season 0\u20136. The team was adversely affected by the premature retirement of their star running back, Ricky Williams, and the trade of holdout defensive end Adewale Ogunleye for wide receiver Marty Booker, as well as career ending injuries to fullback Rob Konrad and defensive tackle Tim Bowens. With this season record below .500 the team would have their first losing season since 1988. To make matters worse, two of their games were postponed due to Hurricane Ivan and Hurricane Jeanne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178114-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Dolphins season\nDespite the disappointing season, the Dolphins, at 2\u201311 were able to upset the defending Super Bowl champion 12\u20131 New England Patriots, a memorable game of the Dolphins-Patriots rivalry known as \"The Night That Courage Wore Orange\", and handed the Patriots their second loss of the season. During Week 6, their match with the Buffalo Bills is the only time in the NFL since 1968 that the last two winless teams have met each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178114-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, \"The Night That Courage Wore Orange\"\nOn December 20, the 2\u201311 Dolphins upset the 12\u20131 defending Super Bowl champion Patriots on Monday Night Football by a score of 29\u201328. Late in the game, A. J. Feeley threw a game-winning touchdown to Derrius Thompson on 4th down and 10. Bleacher Report writer Thomas Galicia nicknamed the game \"The Night That Courage Wore Orange\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178114-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Dolphins season, Schedule, Images\nMiami at the Jets in the 2004 season, week 8", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178115-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Hurricanes baseball team\nThe 2004 Miami Hurricanes baseball team represented the University of Miami in the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Hurricanes played their home games at Mark Light Field. The team was coached by Jim Morris in his eleventh season at Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178115-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Hurricanes baseball team\nThe Hurricanes reached the College World Series, where they finished tied for fifth after recording an opening round win against LSU and losses to eventual champion Cal State Fullerton and South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178116-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami Hurricanes football team\nThe 2004 Miami Hurricanes football team represented the University of Miami during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. It was the Hurricanes' 79th season of football and 1st as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Hurricanes were led by fourth-year head coach Larry Coker and played their home games at the Orange Bowl. They finished the season 9\u20133 overall and 5\u20133 in the ACC to finish in a three-way tie for third place. They were invited to the Peach Bowl where they defeated Florida, 27\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178117-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Miami RedHawks football team\nThe 2004 Miami RedHawks football team represented the Miami University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Yager Stadium in Oxford, Ohio and competed as members of the Mid-American Conference. The team was coached by head coach Terry Hoeppner, who resigned after the season to become the head coach at Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178118-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Michigan Democratic presidential caucuses were held on February 7, 2004, as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. Frontrunner John Kerry won the caucuses in a landslide victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178119-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan House of Representatives election\nThe 2004 Michigan House of Representatives elections were held on November 2, 2004, with partisan primaries to select the parties' nominees in the various districts on August 3, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2\nMichigan Proposal 04-2 of 2004, is an amendment to the Michigan Constitution that made it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil unions. The referendum was approved by 59% of the voters. The amendment faced multiple legal challenges and was finally overturned in Obergefell v. Hodges by the U.S. Supreme Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Contents\nTo secure and preserve the benefits of marriage for our society and for future generations of children, the union of one man and one woman in marriage shall be the only agreement recognized as a marriage or similar union for any purpose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Aftermath\nIn May 2008, the Michigan Supreme Court held that the amendment bans not only same-sex marriage and civil unions, but also public employee domestic partnership benefits such as health insurance. However, the ruling had little effect since most public employers relaxed their eligibility criteria to not run afoul of the amendment. On June 28, 2013, U.S. District Judge David M. Lawson issued a preliminary injunction blocking the state from enforcing its law banning local governments and school districts from offering health benefits to their employees' domestic partners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Aftermath\nHe wrote: \"It is hard to argue with a straight face that the primary purpose\u2014indeed, perhaps the sole purpose\u2014of the statute is other than to deny health benefits to the same-sex partners of public employees. But that can never be a legitimate governmental purpose\". He rejected the state's arguments that \"fiscal responsibility\" was the law's rationale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Aftermath\nOn March 21, 2014, a federal judge ruled that Michigan's ban on same-sex marriage is unconstitutional and did not stay the ruling, although the ruling was later suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Aftermath\nOn November 6, 2014, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit overturned the lower court in DeBoer v. Snyder declaring that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Aftermath\nWhen the courts do not let the people resolve new social issues like this one, they perpetuate the idea that the heroes inthese change events are judges and lawyers. Better in this instance, we think, to allow change through the customary political processes, in which the people, gay and straight alike, become the heroes of their own stories by meeting each other not as adversaries in a court system but as fellow citizens seeking to resolve a new social issue in a fair-minded way. For these reasons, we reverse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178120-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Proposal 2, Aftermath\nOn January 16, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari to the same-sex marriage cases arising out of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Oral arguments were held on April 28, 2015 and a ruling was made on June 26, 2015 allowing same-sex marriage in every state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178121-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan State Spartans football team\nThe 2004 Michigan State Spartans football team represented Michigan State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Michigan State competed as a member of the Big Ten Conference, and played their home games at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan. The Spartans were led by second-year head coach John L. Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178121-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan State Spartans football team, 2005 NFL Draft\nThe following players were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178122-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Wolverines football team\nThe 2004 Michigan Wolverines football team represented the University of Michigan during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head football coach was Lloyd Carr. The Wolverines played their home games at Michigan Stadium. The team finished the season with an overall record 9\u20133 and a mark of 7\u20131 in Big Ten Conference play, winning its second consecutive conference title. Michigan concluded to the season with a loss to Texas in the Rose Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178122-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Wolverines football team, Statistical achievements\nBraylon Edwards surpassed Anthony Carter's 22-year-old career conference record of 37 touchdown receptions by totaling 39, which continues to be the conference record. He tied the NCAA record with three 1000-receiving yard seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178122-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Wolverines football team, Statistical achievements\nMike Hart was the Big Ten rushing individual statistical champion (151.8 yards per conference games and 121.2 yards per game). Braylon Edwards was the Big Ten receiving statistical champion for all games with 8.1 receptions per contest, but Purdue's Taylor Stubblefield won the title for conference games. Edwards swept the yardage titles with 110.8 per game and 108.9 per conference game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178122-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Wolverines football team, Statistical achievements\nHart set the current school record for single-season 200-yard games (3), surpassing five predecessors with 2 each. Braylon Edwards set numerous school records: single-season receptions (97), surpassing Marquise Walker's 86 from 2001; single-season receiving yards (1330), surpassing Walker's 1143; career receptions (252), surpassing Walker's 176; career yards (3541) surpassing Anthony Carter's 3076 set in 1982; career touchdown receptions (39), surpassing Carter's 37; consecutive games with a reception (38), surpassing Walker's 32; consecutive 100-yard reception games (4 tying his own record from the prior year), surpassing Desmond Howard, Carter and Marcus Knight who all had 3 in various seasons. Only consecutive 100-yard games has been surpassed (by Mario Manningham in 2007). Chad Henne tied Elvis Grbac's 1991 single-season record of 25 touchdown passes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 932]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178122-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Michigan Wolverines football team, Awards and honors\nThe individuals in the sections below earned recognition for meritorious performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178123-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament took place in May 2004. The top six regular season finishers met in the double-elimination tournament held at Bill Theunissen Stadium on the campus of Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. This was the sixteenth Mid-American Conference postseason tournament to determine a champion. Fourth seed Kent State won their fifth tournament championship to earn the conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178123-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe winner of each division claimed the top two seeds, while the next four finishers based on conference winning percentage only, regardless of division, participated in the tournament. The teams played double-elimination tournament. This was the seventh year of the six team tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 68], "content_span": [69, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178123-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mid-American Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nRyan Ford and Andy Sonnanstine were named co-Most Valuable Players. Ford played for Eastern Michigan while Sonnanstine was a pitcher for Kent State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 91], "content_span": [92, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178124-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament began on April 29 and ended on May 2, 2004 at Cracker Jack Stadium, on the campus of in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. It was a seven-team double elimination tournament. Bethune-Cookman won the tournament, as they had done each year since 1999. The Wildcats claimed the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178124-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe teams were seeded one through seven based on conference winning percentage only, with the top seed receiving a single bye while the second seed played the seventh seed, third seed played the sixth, and so on for first round matchups. The winners advanced in the winners' bracket, while first round losers played elimination games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 76], "content_span": [77, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178124-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Outstanding Performer\nJon Roberts was named Tournament Outstanding Performer. Roberts was an outfielder for Bethune-Cookman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 100], "content_span": [101, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178125-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football team\nThe 2004 Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders football team represented Middle Tennessee State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Middle Tennessee entered the 2004 season coming off a losing 4\u20138 record (4\u20133 SBC) in 2003. The team's head coach was Andy McCollum. The Blue Raiders played their home games at Johnny \"Red\" Floyd Stadium and compete in the Sun Belt Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178126-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mieczys\u0142aw Po\u0142ukard Criterium of Polish Speedway Leagues Aces\nThe 23rd Mieczys\u0142aw Po\u0142ukard Criterium of Polish Speedway League Aces was the 2004 version of the Mieczys\u0142aw Po\u0142ukard Criterium of Polish Speedway Leagues Aces. It took place on March 21 in the Polonia Stadium in Bydgoszcz, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178126-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mieczys\u0142aw Po\u0142ukard Criterium of Polish Speedway Leagues Aces, Heat details\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fell \u2022 ns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 80], "content_span": [81, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178127-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Milan Indoor\nThe 2004 Indesit ATP Milan Indoor was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the PalaLido in Milan, Italy and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and took place from 9 February through 15 February 2004. Unseeded Antony Dupuis won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178127-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Milan Indoor, Finals, Doubles\nJared Palmer / Pavel V\u00edzner defeated Daniele Bracciali / Giorgio Galimberti 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178128-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Milan\u2013San Remo\nThe 2004 Milan\u2013San Remo cycling race was the 95th edition of the monument classic Milan\u2013San Remo and was won for the first time by Spaniard \u00d3scar Freire of Rabobank. It was held on 20 March 2004 over 294\u00a0kilometres. Four times winner Erik Zabel lifted his arms to celebrate too soon and Freire won by 3 centimeters by a bike throw at the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178129-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Milton Keynes Council election\nThe 2004 Milton Keynes Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Milton Keynes Unitary Council in Buckinghamshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrats stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178129-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Milton Keynes Council election, Election result\nThe results saw no change in the political composition, with the Liberal Democrats remaining in control of the council. The closest result came in Middleton ward, with the Liberal Democrats holding the seat by 2 votes after 8 recounts. Overall turnout in the election was 37%, an increase of 10% on the 2003 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178130-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Milwaukee Brewers season\nThe Milwaukee Brewers' 2004 season involved the Brewers' finishing 6th in the National League Central with a record of 67 wins and 94 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178130-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Milwaukee Brewers season, Farm system\nThe Brewers' farm system consisted of six minor league affiliates in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178131-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Milwaukee mayoral election\nThe 2004 Milwaukee mayoral election was held on Tuesday, April 6, 2004, to elect the mayor for Milwaukee. Tom Barrett defeated incumbent acting mayor Marvin Pratt. This election coincided with other municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178132-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Minnesota Democratic caucuses were held on March 2 in the U.S. state of Minnesota as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178133-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team\nThe 2004 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team represented the University of Minnesota during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's coach was Glen Mason. It played its home games at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis Minnesota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178133-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team, Previous season\n2003 was the seventh season under head coach Glen Mason. He led the team to a 10\u20133 record and an appearance in the Sun Bowl. It was the first time since 1905 the Gophers had won 10 games in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178133-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team, Polls\nThe 2004 Minnesota Golden Gophers football team was not ranked in either the final Coaches' Poll or AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178134-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota House of Representatives election\nThe 2004 Minnesota House of Representatives election was held in the U.S. state of Minnesota on November 2, 2004, to elect members to the House of Representatives of the 84th Minnesota Legislature. A primary election was held on September 14, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178134-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota House of Representatives election\nThe Republican Party of Minnesota won a majority of seats, remaining the majority party, followed by the Minnesota Democratic\u2013Farmer\u2013Labor Party (DFL). The new Legislature convened on January 4, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178135-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Lynx season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the sixth for the Minnesota Lynx. The Lynx qualified for their second consecutive playoff berth, but lost in the opening round to eventual champion Seattle Storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178135-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Lynx season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Lynx's 2003 record, they would pick 7th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Lynx picked Helen Darling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season\nThe 2004 Minnesota Twins season was the 104th season in the franchise's history and its 44th season in the Twin Cities. The Twins were managed by Ron Gardenhire and played in the Metrodome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season\nThe Twins finished with a 92-70 record and won the American League Central division. They advanced to the American League Division Series, but they lost the series to the New York Yankees in four games. It was the second year in a row in which the Yankees eliminated the Twins in the ALDS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season\nTwins pitcher Johan Santana won the 2004 Cy Young Award on a unanimous vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Spring training\nThe Twins posted a 20\u201310 record in spring training, the best of any major league team in 2004. This includes split-squad games but not ties or exhibition games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Offense\nFor a playoff team, the offense was not strong. This was partly due to injuries and starters absent from the lineup. Lew Ford surprised many by batting .299 in his first full year in the major leagues. Free agent acquisition Jos\u00e9 Offerman saw a majority of time in the designated hitter spot, but hit only .256 with two home runs. Shannon Stewart did hit .304, but injuries limited him to 378 at bats. In 107 at bats, Mauer was able to hit .307. In his absence, catcher Henry Blanco hit only .206. First baseman Doug Mientkiewicz's hitting continued to decline, as he hit .246 with five home runs before being dealt to the Boston Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Offense\nNine players hit ten or more home runs. When the Twins hit their record 225 homers in 1963, only eight players reached double figures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Pitching\nBrad Radke was the opening day starter, but he was soon overshadowed by Johan Santana's Cy Young year. Radke, Santana, and Carlos Silva anchored the starting rotation. Unfortunately, Kyle Lohse had a bad year that saw his ERA balloon to 5.34, while the fifth spot in the rotation was nebulous. (41-year-old Terry Mulholland made 15 starts, while Seth Greisinger made nine.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Pitching\nThe Twins set their club record of 32 consecutive scoreless innings in June, which included back-to-back-to-back shutouts by Radke, Santana and Lohse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Pitching\nIn the bullpen, Joe Nathan blew everyone away during his first year as a closer at any level, earning 44 saves with a 1.62 ERA. Juan Rinc\u00f3n and J. C. Romero continued playing as excellent set-up men, while the rest of the bullpen was weaker. Romero set a Twins record by going 36 innings over 32 appearances without allowing a run to score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Pitching\nSantana finished the year with thirteen straight wins without a loss, then went 1-0 with a no-decision in the American League Division Series. He set the Twins record with 265 strikeouts this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Regular season, Defense\nBlanco and Mauer (when he played) were solid catchers, both with .991 fielding percentages. Mientkiewicz was a one-time Gold Glove winner, but his successor Justin Morneau surprised people with his .995 fielding percentage. Luis Rivas was dependable at second base, while Cristian Guzm\u00e1n could turn exceptional plays at shortstop. (It was the routine ones that fooled him.) Corey Koskie was defensively average, while the outfield quartet of Hunter, Jacque Jones, Shannon Stewart and Ford were solid \u2013 especially Hunter, who won a Gold Glove.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Post Season\nThe Twins entered and exited the postseason nearly the same as the previous season, losing to the Yankees, 3 games to 1 in the Division Series. The Twins won the first game by a score of 2-0, with starting pitcher Johan Santana getting the win. However, the Twins lost the next three games, with the Yankees taking the series 3 games to 1. Game 1 of this series represents the Twins most recent postseason victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Post Season\nGame 2 began a 18 game postseason losing streak for the team, tied with the 1975-79 Chicago Blackhawks for the longest such losing streak in North American sports history. The Twins\u2019 streak is still currently active. The Yankees would go on to be upset by the Boston Red Sox on their way to breaking the curse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178136-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Twins season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season\nThe 2004 season was the Minnesota Vikings' 44th in the National Football League. The Vikings finished the 2004 season going 3\u20137 over the final 10 weeks, just like they did in 2003; however, they made the playoffs with an overall 8\u20138 record. Quarterback Daunte Culpepper amassed MVP-level statistics, throwing for 4,717 passing yards (leading the NFL), 39 passing touchdowns (a franchise record) and 5,123 total yards (an NFL record).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season\nIn the wildcard round of the playoffs, the Vikings defeated their rival Green Bay Packers 31\u201317 in their first ever playoff meeting, making them the second team in NFL history to have a .500 record (8\u20138) in the regular season and win a playoff game (following the St. Louis Rams, who had beaten the Seattle Seahawks the previous day). In the divisional round, the Vikings were defeated 27\u201314 by the eventual NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles and did not return to the playoffs for four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season\nFollowing the season, Randy Moss was traded to the Oakland Raiders; he returned briefly to the Vikings in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nThe Vikings kicked off the season hosting the Bill Parcells coached Dallas Cowboys. After an opening quarter that only saw the Cowboys recording a field goal, Daunte Culpepper caught fire, throwing two-second quarter touchdowns to Onterrio Smith and Marcus Robinson. Vinny Testaverde responded down 14\u20133, finding Terry Glenn for a 32-yard touchdown as the half expired. Randy Moss found his groove in the third quarter, finding himself on the receiving end of two Daunte Culpepper touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nIn the fourth quarter, the Cowboys drove into the red zone down 28\u201317, but Antoine Winfield forced and recovered a Richie Anderson fumble, which led to Daunte Culpepper's fifth touchdown pass, via a 43-yard pass to Kelly Campbell. Onterrio Smith helped ice the game away, finishing with 76 yards rushing, giving him 139 yards from scrimmage. The Vikings defense did show some holes in the win, allowing 41-year-old Vinny Testaverde to pass for 355 yards, while also allowing 71 yards rushing on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Vikings traveled to Philadelphia for a Monday night showdown with the NFC favorite Eagles. The Vikings started the game with a Morten Andersen field goal. The Eagles then responded with a strong drive by Brian Westbrook, resulting in an 11-yard touchdown pass from Donovan McNabb to L. J. Smith. The remaining second half resulted in a series of frustrations for the Vikings, twice having a 1st-and-goal within the 2-yard line, only to result in a field goal and a Culpepper fumble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 93], "content_span": [94, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Philadelphia Eagles\nIn the second half, the Eagles scored on their opening possession, capped off with a 20-yard touchdown run by Donovan McNabb. Morten Andersen then missed a field goal with the Vikings down 17\u20139, which the Eagles responded to with a 45-yard touchdown reception by Terrell Owens three plays later. The Vikings finally found the end zone with three minutes remaining on a 4-yard Randy Moss reception to bring the Vikings within 8, only to be countered by a David Akers field goal with 1:15 remaining, putting the game away. The Vikings defense put together a second-straight poor effort, allowing 353 yards of offense. Daunte Culpepper continued his strong start in the loss, throwing for 348 yards, while also being the Vikings leading rusher, finishing with 41 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 93], "content_span": [94, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Vikings returned home in week 3 to face the 1\u20131 Bears. The Bears scored a field goal on the opening drive, with the game devolving to a slop fest over the next quarter. The Vikings missed a field goal, responded with Lance Johnstone forcing a Rex Grossman fumble, only for Onterrio Smith to fumble on the following play. After falling behind 6\u20130, the Vikings finally found offensive success, with Culpepper finding Kelly Campbell for 40 yards, followed several plays later with a 3-yard Randy Moss touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nThe Vikings extended their lead following a long third quarter drive, culminating with a 1-yard Culpepper touchdown run, giving the Vikings a 17\u20136 lead. After trading field goals, the Bears cut the lead to 20\u201316 on a Thomas Jones touchdown run. The Vikings again responded, with Culpepper throwing a 63-yard pass to Nate Burleson, setting up a 2-yard touchdown connection to Randy Moss. Rex Grossman led the Bears in their comeback attempt, as he dove for the pylon, and appeared to fumble out of the back of the end zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Chicago Bears\nA Lovie Smith challenge showed Grossman crossed the plane prior to fumbling, but Grossman tore his ACL on the play, ending his 2004 season. The Bears got the ball with 1:16 left trailing 27\u201322, but backup quarterback Jonathan Quinn threw three consecutive incompletions, and then be sacked on fourth down by Kevin Williams, sealing the victory for the Vikings. Daunte Culpepper continued to have stellar numbers, throwing for 360 yards, with Randy Moss having 119 yards receiving, and Onterrio Smith having 104 yards receiving, and 94 yards rushing. The defense continued to act as a sieve, with Grossman throwing for 248 yards, and running back Thomas Jones rushing for 110 yards, and adding 71 yards receiving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Houston Texans\nThe Vikings came out of their bye week to face the 2\u20132 Houston Texans for the first time in franchise history. The Vikings defense appeared fresh, shutting down David Carr and the Texans in the first half, while Daunte Culpepper and the Vikings offense continued humming, with Culpepper finding Nate Burleson and Randy Moss for second quarter touchdowns, giving the Vikings a 14\u20130 halftime advantage. The Vikings defense continued strongly in the second half, forcing a three-and-out, which the Vikings followed with three Culpepper completions, capped off with a 10-yard Burleson touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Houston Texans\nDavid Carr found some success, leading the Texans on two long scoring drives, resulting in touchdowns by Andre Johnson and Dominack Williams. The Vikings seemingly put the game out of reach on a 50-yard touchdown pass from Culpepper to Randy Moss with 6:58 remaining. David Carr continued his career best game, leading two long drives, capping them off with touchdown passes to Derrick Armstrong and David Carr, sandwiching a Vikings three-and-out, forcing overtime. In overtime, the Vikings won the toss, and the teams traded punts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Houston Texans\nOn the Vikings second possession of overtime, Culpepper found Marcus Robinson on a post on 3rd-and-12 from the 50, earning the walk-off win for the Vikings. Culpepper finished with 396 yards passing and five touchdowns, with Mewelde Moore adding 92 yards rushing and 90 yards receiving. The defense ended up allowing David Carr to pass for 372 yards and three touchdowns, with Andre Johnson burning the Vikings for 170 yards receiving on 12 catches. The win did bring the Vikings record to 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 88], "content_span": [89, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178137-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Minnesota Vikings season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Tennessee Titans\nThe Vikings returned home to host the 2\u20134 Titans. After a Darren Bennett punt, Steve McNair led the Titans down the field, setting up a Gary Anderson 40-yard field goal. The Vikings immediately responded with an eight-minute drive of their own, resulting in a 29-yard Morten Andersen field goal. Steve McNair was injured on the ensuing drive, and was replaced by Billy Volek. Volek was overwhelmed by the Vikings defense, throwing three interceptions, and getting sacked twice. Moe Williams and Marcus Robinson scored on short touchdowns for the Vikings, and Mewelde Moore added 138 yards rushing to ice a defensive second half. The Vikings defense had their season best performance, holding the Titans to 243 yards in the victory, which improved their record to 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 91], "content_span": [92, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178138-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mississippi Amendment 1\nAmendment 1 of 2004 is an amendment to the Mississippi Constitution that prohibited same-sex marriages from being conducted or recognized in Mississippi. The Amendment passed a public referendum on November 2, 2004 with 86% of voters supporting and 14% opposing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178138-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mississippi Amendment 1\nWhen compared to all similar amendments passed in the United States, Mississippi Amendment 1 had the highest percentage of votes for the amendment, outpacing the next two states, Alabama and Tennessee, at 81%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178138-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mississippi Amendment 1, Contents\nThe text of the adopted amendment, which is found at Article XIV, section 263A of the Mississippi Constitution, states:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178138-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Mississippi Amendment 1, Contents\nMarriage may take place and may be valid under the laws of this state only between a man and a woman. A marriage in another state or foreign jurisdiction between persons of the same gender, regardless of when the marriage took place, may not be recognized in this state and is void and unenforceable under the laws of this state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178139-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 Mississippi State Bulldogs football team represented Mississippi State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head coach was Sylvester Croom. The Bulldogs played their home games in 2004 at Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field in Starkville, Mississippi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178140-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils football team\nThe 2004 Mississippi Valley State Delta Devils football team represented Mississippi Valley State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178141-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Amendment 2\nConstitutional Amendment 2 of 2004 is an amendment to the Missouri Constitution that prohibited same-sex marriages from being recognized in Missouri. The Amendment passed via public referendum on August 3, 2004 with 71% of voters supporting and 29% opposing. Every county voted in favor of the amendment, with only the independent city of St. Louis voting against it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178141-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Amendment 2\nThe text of the adopted amendment, which is found at Article I, section 33 of the Missouri Constitution, states:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178141-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Amendment 2\nThat to be valid and recognized in this state, a marriage shall exist only between a man and a woman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178141-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Amendment 2\nThis amendment was voided by the 2015 decision of the United States Supreme Court in Obergefell v Hodges, which overturned statewide bans on same-sex marriage nationwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178142-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Missouri Democratic presidential primary on February 3, 2004 determined the recipient of the state's 88 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in the process to elect the 44th President of the United States. It was an open primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178142-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Democratic presidential primary, Endorsements\nSeveral major endorsements, such as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, helped John Kerry to clinch the primary. John Edwards got former speaker of the house Jim Kreider and Buchanan County Auditor Susan Montee as endorsements. Governor Howard Dean got the endorsement of Chairman and CEO of King Hershey Richard A. King.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 59], "content_span": [60, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178142-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Democratic presidential primary, Results\nJohn Kerry won a majority of the Missouri vote. He won every congressional district and county except Knox County and Lawrence County which Edwards won. Howard Dean received 9%, Clark got 4%, and several other candidates split the remainder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178143-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Republican presidential primary\nThe 2004 Missouri Republican presidential primary on February 3, 2004 determined the recipient of 57 of the state's 58 delegates to the Republican National Convention in the process to elect the 44th President of the United States. It was an open primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178144-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Tigers football team\nThe 2004 Missouri Tigers football team represented the University of Missouri during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Faurot Field in Columbia, Missouri. They were members of the Big 12 Conference in the North Division. The team was coached by head coach Gary Pinkel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178145-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament will be played in St. Louis, Missouri at the conclusion of the 2003\u20132004 regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178146-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2004 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season was the 14th season of men's varsity soccer in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178146-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri Valley Conference men's soccer season\nThe 2004 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Soccer Tournament was hosted by Creighton and won by SMU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Missouri gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2004 for the post of Governor of Missouri. The Republican nominee, Missouri Secretary of State Matt Blunt, defeated Democratic State Auditor Claire McCaskill. This gave the Republican Party control of both the governorship and the Missouri General Assembly for the first time in 80 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election\nMcCaskill had earlier defeated incumbent Governor Bob Holden in the Democratic primary. This was the first time a sitting Governor of Missouri had been defeated in a primary and the first time any United States governor had lost in a primary since the 1994 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election\nCoincidentally, McCaskill's mother Betty Anne had previously been defeated by Blunt's grandfather, Leroy Blunt, in a 1978 General Assembly election. Blunt's father Roy Blunt was a Congressman and served with McCaskill in the U.S. Senate from 2011 to 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, Republican primary, Campaign\nMissouri Secretary of State Matt Blunt faced only token opposition in the Republican primary, easily defeating several lesser known opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Campaign\nBob Holden had a difficult term as Missouri governor, starting at his inauguration on January 8, 2001, which cost $1 million, and which he struggled to pay for. The state economy suffered a downturn forcing him to make budget cuts and the Republican party gained control of the State Senate for the first time in 50 years. Holden was nicknamed by his opponents as \"One Term Bob\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Campaign\nHolden announced that he would run for re-election in March 2003, blaming the Republican party for many of the problems during his term as governor. However, Holden was challenged by State Auditor Claire McCaskill for the Democratic nomination, who said that she would be a stronger candidate in the General election against Blunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Campaign\nMcCaskill attacked Holden for delays in education funding, the state's deteriorating roads and increases in tuition fees at Missouri's universities. Holden sought to defend his term in office and attacked McCaskill for the people she accepted campaign contributions from. McCaskill picked up most newspaper endorsements during the primary and won the primary on August 3 against Holden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nAfter the primaries finished Holden and McCaskill met to unite the Democratic party for the general election for what was always seen as being a close race against Blunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nThe first of two debates between Blunt and McCaskill was held on 18 October where McCaskill compared her experience to Blunt's inexperience; while Blunt said that McCaskill would not support the Marriage protection amendment to the State Constitution. In the two debates Blunt described himself as bringing change to Missouri and was assisted by President George W. Bush during the campaign. McCaskill kept her distance from Democratic Presidential candidate John Kerry due to Bush's lead in Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178147-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nIn the end Blunt narrowly defeated McCaskill with surveys showing his conservative stance on social issues and the strong showing of President Bush in Missouri helped him to victory. Blunt obtained strong leads in the rural parts of the state, as well as the large cities of southwest Missouri, Springfield and Joplin, which was sufficient to overcome McCaskill's leads in St. Louis and Jackson County. Blunt thus became Missouri's second youngest governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178148-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Missouri lieutenant gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Missouri lieutenant gubernatorial election was an election for the Lieutenant Governor of Missouri, held on November 4, 2008. Republican Peter Kinder won the election narrowly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede\nThe 2004 Miyun stampede (Chinese: 2004\u5e74\u5317\u4eac\u5bc6\u4e91\u706f\u4f1a\u8e29\u8e0f\u4e8b\u6545) also known as Beijing lantern festival stampede was a human stampede that occurred in a crowded lantern festival in Miyun District, Beijing, resulting in 37 deaths and 15 persons injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede, Background\nThe Lantern Festival or the Spring Lantern Festival is a Chinese festival celebrated on the fifteenth day of the first month in the lunisolar Chinese calendar. It marks the final day of the traditional Chinese New Year celebrations, and falls on some day in February or March in the Gregorian calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede, Disaster\nAt the Mihong Park, when people were celebrating the lantern festival on a bridge, a spectator tripped on an open grate and fell, causing a chain-reaction of people falling upon each others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede, Disaster\nWu Kun, a spokesman for the Beijing city government described the stampede:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede, Disaster\nOne person fell down on a grate in the park and caused many people to fall down, there was a stampede. It was a lot of people. I'm not sure how many. These things are packed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede, Aftermath\nAfter the accident, Beijing Mayor Liu Qi, rushed to the scene of the disaster, and Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao ordered local authorities to investigate how the accident happened and \"to try their best to save the injured and make suitable arrangement for the families of the dead.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178149-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Miyun stampede, Aftermath\nTwo police officers, Sun Yong and Chen Bainian, were sentenced to three years in jail for dereliction of duty by the 2nd Branch of Beijing Municipal People's Procuratorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178150-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival\nThe 2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival (MKMF) was the sixth of the annual music awards in Seoul, South Korea, that took place on December 4, 2004, at the Kyung Hee University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178150-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival\nSolo artists Rain and BoA lead the nominees with three nominations each. Although each of them received the daesang awards, boyband Shinhwa was the only artist/group to receive two awards by the end of the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178150-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival, Background\nThe award-giving body continued to use the name \"M.net Korean Music Festival\" (MKMF) for the sixth consecutive time, and the grand awards (or daesang) were still the Best Popular Music Video and Music Video of the Year. For the second time, the event took place at the Kyung Hee University, and Shin Dong-yup and Kim Jung-eun hosted the event together again, the first was during the fourth MKMF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178150-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival, Background\nDuring this year, the category for Best OST was introduced for the first time. Three international artists performed in one night; Jerry Yan became the first Taiwanese singer to perform on the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178150-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival, Multiple awards, Artist(s) with multiple wins\nThe following artist(s) received two or more wins (excluding the special awards):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178150-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Mnet Km Music Video Festival, Presenters and performers\nThe following individuals and groups, listed in order of appearance, presented awards or performed musical numbers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178151-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mojo Awards\nThe first annual Mojo Awards, distributed by Mojo magazine, were held during Spring 2004 in London. The awards were produced by the Mojo magazine team and attendance was by invitation only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178152-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Molde FK season\nThe 2004 season was Molde's 29th season in the top flight of Norwegian football. In Tippeligaen they finished in 11th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178152-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Molde FK season\nMolde participated in the Norwegian Cup. On 9 June 2004, Molde was defeated 1\u20132 by Vard Haugesund in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178152-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Molde FK season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census\nThe 2004 Moldovan census was carried out between October 5 and October 12, 2004. The breakaway Transnistria failed to come into an agreement with the central government in Chi\u015fin\u0103u, and carried out its own census between November 11 and November 18, 2004. The results of the census in Transnistria were put into question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census\nMoldova's previous census was performed in 1989, when the territory of the country was part of the former Soviet Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census\nThe census was delayed several times and had difficulties because of political problems, ethnic tensions, and a lack of financial resources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census, Terminology\nThe questionnaires used the term \"Nationality\", but the sense of this term must be understood as a synonym of ethnicity, as nation can also be defined as a grouping based on language and cultural self-determination rather than on relations with a sovereign state. In the context of former the Soviet Union, nationality is often used as translation of the Russian terms (\u043d\u0430\u0446\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u043b\u044c\u043d\u043e\u0441\u0442\u044c / natsional'nost) used for ethnic groups, and local affiliations within the post-Soviet countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census, Criticism\nAccording to a May 19, 2005 article carried by the Moldova Azi news agency, the expert group of the International Census Observation Mission to the Republic of Moldova described the Moldovan census as \"generally conducted in a professional manner\", but consider that \"there were a few topics in the census that were potentially more problematic\". These were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census, Criticism\nThe expert group recommended that the Moldovan National Bureau of Statistics carry out an evaluation study, offered its assistance in doing so, and indicated its intention of further studying the matter itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178153-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Moldovan census, Criticism\nVitalie Valcov, the then director of the Department of Statistics and Sociology, stated that Transnistria did not comply with the international recommendations for carrying out a census and, thus, the data collected in Transnistria \u2014 where almost 17% of Moldova's population live \u2014 may not be taken together with the data from the rest of Moldova, since it was gathered without international monitoring. Therefore, all census figures released by the Department of Statistics and Sociology do not include territories that are under the control of the breakaway Transnistrian authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178154-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mole Valley District Council election\nElections to Mole Valley Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control. Overall turnout was 49.8%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178155-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Molson Indy Montreal\nThe 2004 Molson Indy Montreal was the tenth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on August 29, 2004 at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Quebec. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais took the pole and his teammate Bruno Junqueira won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178156-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Molson Indy Toronto\nThe 2004 Molson Indy Toronto was the sixth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on July 11, 2004 on the streets of Exhibition Place in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais swept the pole and the race win, his third consecutive win and fourth overall for the season. In doing so he also took over the lead in the drivers championship standings, a lead which he would not relinquish for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178157-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Molson Indy Vancouver\nThe 2004 Molson Indy Vancouver was the seventh round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on July 25, 2004 on the streets of Concord Pacific Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Paul Tracy swept the pole and the race win. It was the last Champ Car event to take place in Vancouver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178157-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Molson Indy Vancouver, Race\n* Gast\u00f3n Mazzacane crashed on the pace lap and did not take the green flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Monaco Grand Prix (formally the LXII Grand Prix de Monaco) was a Formula One motor race held on 23 May 2004, at the Circuit de Monaco, contested over 77\u00a0laps. It was Race 6 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. The race was won by the Renault driver Jarno Trulli; this was his only victory in Formula One. BAR driver, Jenson Button finished in second position, one second behind Trulli. Rubens Barrichello took the third and final podium spot for Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix\nIn fine conditions Trulli beat Button to the first corner off the grid, and the fast starting Takuma Sato beat Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Michael Schumacher to fourth place before retiring at the end of the second lap. On lap three the safety car was deployed due to a collision between David Coulthard and Giancarlo Fisichella, with the race resuming on lap seven. The two Renault drivers, Trulli and Fernando Alonso remained close together at the front of the race until the pit stops which briefly saw Michael Schumacher lead the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix\nAlonso retired after crashing trying to lap Ralf Schumacher, and a second safety car period ensued. After briefly leading, Michael Schumacher retired behind the safety car following a collision with Juan-Pablo Montoya, who subsequently finished fourth. Schumacher's retirement elevated Button to second, and Trulli to the lead. Button subsequently reduced Trulli's lead, and the pair raced closely until the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix\nThe race was Trulli's sole victory of his F1 career. The retirement of Michael Schumacher, the defending Drivers' Champion, brought to an end his run of five successive victories from the inaugural race of the season. The race result had no bearing on the Drivers' Championship standings, and despite his retirement, Schumacher departed Monaco as the points leader, ahead of Barrichello and Button. Trulli's victory placed him ten points ahead of his teammate Alonso. Ferrari maintained their lead in the Constructors' Championship, 36\u00a0points ahead of Renault and 48 ahead of BAR, with 12\u00a0races of the season remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nFour practice sessions were held before the qualifying session, two on the Thursday before the race, and two on Saturday morning before the qualifying session. The driver's championship leader, the Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher, was fastest in all four practice sessions, and in the final session set a record lap time for the Monaco circuit, of 1:14.014. Schumacher's record time was set in response to a fast lap time from Jarno Trulli. The Jaguar driver Mark Webber suffered an engine failure in the final practice session, and for changing his engine suffered an automatic 10 place grid penalty for the subsequent qualifying session, a penalty also suffered by Ralf Schumacher, for an engine failure in the first practice session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe Bridgestone tyres used by Schumacher were inferior to the Michelin tyres used by the Renault, BAR and Williams teams at the Monaco weekend. In the weeks before the Monaco race Bridgestone had worked with the Ferrari team on tyres that could perform a fast single lap during qualifying and the opening laps of the race. Schumacher had set his fast practice times on soft tyres, but after his tyres had struggled on a slippery track, Schumacher and the other Bridgestone teams returned to hard tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nMichael Schumacher had won pole at four of the last five races. In recent years the Monaco Grand Prix had rarely been won from pole position, the last winner from pole before 2004 had been Mika H\u00e4kkinen at the 1998 Monaco Grand Prix and Michael Schumacher at the 1994 Monaco Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe first four fastest times in qualifying were set by cars with Michelin tyres. The Sauber team decided to use the soft Bridgestone tyre and their performance had suffered, with their drivers qualifying 10th and 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe Renault driver Jarno Trulli set his pole time of 1m13.985s, it was the fastest ever recorded around the Monaco circuit, and was the first pole position of his career. His time was 0.411 faster than the next driver. Trulli had previously started on the front row at Monaco in 2000. Of his first pole Trulli said that \"I'm pretty impressed over my lap time because I couldn't believe I lapped under the 14s... I put in a very impressive lap. In Monaco, being on pole, which is something I have chased for such a long time, I'm so pleased.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe BAR driver Jenson Button started the race alongside Trulli on the front row, although the Williams driver Ralf Schumacher had qualified second, he was demoted to twelfth for changing his engine. Ralf Schumacher had qualified on pole at Monaco at the previous year's race. Trulli's Renault teammate Fernando Alonso qualified third, with Michael Schumacher eventually qualified fifth. Michael Schumacher was moved to fourth following his brother Ralf's demotion. Takuma Sato qualified seventh after a fast time in the first sector of the circuit, but a driving error damaged his chances of a quick lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\n\"... Where we will end up from our situation is the big question. Monaco is a long race, it's not optimum where we start from, we're not very happy about that, but what can you do?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nFollowing the qualifying session, a mini-bus carrying the session's three fastest drivers was hit by a car. No one was hurt in the incident. Trulli described the accident as \"...a big surprise... Maybe they thought we had not taken enough risks already on the track. But I don't think so. Not during qualifying in Monte Carlo.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race began with Trulli on pole and BAR's Jenson Button behind; Renault's Fernando Alonso and Michael Schumacher occupied the second row. After two aborted starts (Olivier Panis stalled his Toyota and Trulli's Renault leaked coolant onto the track) the parade lap began; Panis stalled again and started the race from the pits. As the race began, BAR's Takuma Sato made an excellent start, moving from eighth to fourth in seconds. Presently Sato's engine began smoking; on the third lap, it exploded spectacularly and released an enormous cloud of smoke, in which Sauber's Giancarlo Fisichella collided with McLaren\u2019s David Coulthard and overturned. Both drivers were unhurt but out of the race, as was Sato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOut came the yellow flags, and the race proceeded under the safety car until the eighth lap, at which point Alonso fought Trulli for the lead, followed by Button. When the race restarted, Juan Pablo Montoya moved past Rubens Barrichello to take sixth position, and Trulli set three consecutive fastest laps, but was only able to increase his lead to 1.2 seconds over Alonso. The leaders began their first pit stops on lap 18, and by Michael Schumacher's stop on lap 26, Trulli led from Alonso, with Schumacher now in third ahead of both Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Button.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 28, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen retired with mechanical troubles, joining Jaguar's Christian Klien and Mark Webber, as well as Jordan's Giorgio Pantano and Minardi's Gianmaria Bruni on the sidelines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\n\"...I've been waiting so long to win and it came at the best race in Monaco... In the end I just took no risks. I was just doing what I had to do and just responding to the lap times and there was no point taking any risks. Everything was under control... It has been a faultless weekend and it is the best way to win \u2013 being on top all weekend\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nIn an attempt to lap Ralf Schumacher, who was down in 11th position, Alonso tried to pass him offline around the outside in the tunnel and crashed heavily. Alonso was enraged by this incident, and publicly accused Ralf of dangerous driving. The safety car was immediately deployed, and all of the front-runners (except Michael Schumacher and Montoya) took the opportunity to pit. While following the safety car, Schumacher locked his left front tyre in the tunnel in an apparent attempt to generate heat in his brake pads and discs ahead of the restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMontoya, directly behind, moved to the inside trying to avoid running into the back of Schumacher. However, as Schumacher continued there was no space between his car and the barrier for Montoya's and he clipped Montoya's left front tyre with his right rear, spun sideways and hit the barriers. This accident ended Schumacher's hopes for a sixth consecutive victory and a perfect season. Upon investigations, the stewards declined to apportion blame to either driver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs the order settled down towards the end of the race, Trulli led from Button, with Barrichello in third. The top three were a lap in front of the rest of the field, and the only drivers with a chance of winning the race. Barrichello needed to pit with 22 laps remaining, and rejoined too far behind the top two in order to make a challenge. From then on, it was a straight fight between Trulli and Button, but Monaco is notoriously the hardest circuit to make a passing move on. Therefore, Button having no chance of passing, Trulli took the win by close to half a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFollowing what would turn out to be the only Grand Prix win of his Formula One career, Trulli was left literally speechless during interviews, having teammate Alonso conduct interviews on his behalf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Thursday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Thursday. These drivers drove on Thursday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178158-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaco Grand Prix, Classification, Race\n\u2020 Olivier Panis started from the pit lane after he stalled at the start of the parade lap. \u2020\u2020 Ralf Schumacher received a 10 position grid penalty for an engine change on Friday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 44], "content_span": [45, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178159-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monaghan County Council election\nAn election to Monaghan County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 20 councillors were elected from four electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178160-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mongolian Premier League\nThe 2004 Mongolian National Championship was the thirty-seventh recorded edition of top flight football in Mongolia and the ninth season of the Mongolian Premier League, which took over as the highest level of competition in the country from the previous Mongolian National Championship. Khangarid from Erdenet were champions, their second title, Khoromkhon were runners up, with Ordiin-Od in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178160-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mongolian Premier League, Format\nThe competition was played in two stages: firstly a regular league competition. Following this, four of the six competing teams qualified for the semi-final play offs, the winners of which advanced to a one off final, with the losers contesting a third place match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178160-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mongolian Premier League, Format, Playoffs\nErchim and Mazalaai were eliminated in the regular stage, the other four participants proceeded to the playoff stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178161-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mongolian legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in Mongolia on 27 June 2004. The Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party remained the largest party in the State Great Khural, winning 36 of the 76 seats. On 27 February 2005 a by-election was held in the 59th constituency and was won by the MPRP, giving them an extra seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178162-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouth Hawks football team\nThe 2004 Monmouth Hawks football team represented Monmouth University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Northeast Conference (NEC). The Hawks were led by 12th-year head coach Kevin Callahan and played their home games at Kessler Field. They finished the season 10\u20131 overall and 6\u20131 in NEC play to share the conference championship with Central Connecticut State. Despite their regular season success, the Hawks did not receive an invitation to participate in the NCAA Division I-AA postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election\nThe 2004 Monmouthshire County Council election were held on 10 June 2004 to Monmouthshire County Council in southeast Wales, on the same day of the European Elections. The election was preceded by the 1999 elections and followed by the 2008 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Background\nThe Conservatives had formed a minority administration from the previous county council election in May 1999, being largest group on the council by one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Background\nFollowing two by-elections in 2002 (the Conservatives losing one seat to the Liberal Democrats and Labour taking a seat from an Independent), the Labour party became the largest group by one seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Background\nHaving secured the support of Independent and Liberal Democrat councillors, Labour formed a minority administration from July 2002 until the election in June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Background\nIN June 2004 the whole council was up for election and following boundary changes the number of seats was increased to 43.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Overview of results\nThe Conservatives gained overall control of the council from a previous minority Labour administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Overview of results\nThe election results were noticeable seeing two Plaid Cymru councillors elected in Caldicot, a first for the Welsh nationalists in heavily anglicised Monmouthshire, and the election of a 21-year-old student, Matthew Jones , for the Liberal Democrats in Chepstow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Overview of results\nThe Labour party suffered heavy losses to the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru and Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178163-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Monmouthshire County Council election, Overview of results\nThe election result saw a fragmentation of the non-conservative vote; the emergence of the Liberal Democrats and Plaid Cymru onto the council. Of note was the number of close races in individual wards, as well as several individual contests where the winning candidate polled far less than a majority of the votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 63], "content_span": [64, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178164-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Montana Democratic presidential primary was held on June 8 in the U.S. state of Montana as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178165-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana Grizzlies football team\nThe 2004 Montana Grizzlies football team represented the University of Montana in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Grizzlies were led by second-year head coach Bobby Hauck and played their home games on campus at Washington\u2013Grizzly Stadium in Missoula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178166-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana House of Representatives election\nAn election was held on November 2, 2004 to elect all 100 members to Montana's House of Representatives. The election coincided with elections for other offices, including U.S. President, U.S. House of Representatives, Governor and State Senate. The primary election was held on June 8, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178166-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana House of Representatives election\nA net loss of three seats by the Republicans resulted in the House being tied at 50 seats each. Democrats regained control of the House after 12 years by virtue of Governor Brian Schweitzer being a Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178166-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana House of Representatives election, Results, Statewide\nStatewide results of the 2004 Montana House of Representatives election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178166-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana House of Representatives election, Results, District\nResults of the 2004 Montana House of Representatives election by district:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178167-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana Initiative 96\nInitiative 96 of 2004 is a ballot initiative that amended the Montana Constitution to prevent same-sex marriages from being conducted or recognized in Montana. The Initiative passed via public referendum on November 2, 2004 with 67% of voters supporting and 33% opposing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178167-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana Initiative 96\nThe text of the adopted amendment, which is found at Article XIII, section 7 of the Montana Constitution, states:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178167-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana Initiative 96\nOnly a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or recognized as a marriage in this state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178168-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana State Bobcats football team\nThe 2004 Montana State Bobcats football team was an American football team that represented Montana State University in the Big Sky Conference (Big Sky) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their fifth season under head coach Mike Kramer, the Bobcats compiled a 6\u20135 record (4\u20133 against Big Sky opponents) and tied for third place in the Big Sky. Quarterback Travis Lulay led the team on offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Montana gubernatorial election took place on November 2, 2004 for the post of Governor of Montana. Democrat Brian Schweitzer defeated Montana Secretary of State and Republican nominee Bob Brown with 50.4% of the vote against 46%. Schweitzer formed a ticket with a Republican running mate, choosing state legislator John Bohlinger for the lieutenant governorship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Candidates\nBrian Schweitzer, a rancher from Whitefish, began campaigning for the Democratic nomination over a year before the primary. He had narrowly lost the Senate race to Conrad Burns in 2000. In February 2004 he announced that liberal Republican State Senator John Bohlinger would be his running mate for the post of lieutenant governor. This would be the first bipartisan gubernatorial team since the Montana Constitution was amended in 1972 to require governors and lieutenant governors to run as a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Candidates\nIn March 2004, John Vincent, a former Speaker of the Montana House of Representatives, entered the race and criticized Schweitzer for taking both sides on some issues. In the end Schweitzer easily won the Democratic primary. Three days after the primary Schweitzer addressed the Montana Democratic Convention; he gave a bear hug to his defeated rival and said he would bring a new kind of leadership to Montana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, Republican primary, Candidates\nIncumbent Governor Judy Martz had a difficult term of office with her approval ratings as governor going as low as 20%. In August 2003 she announced she would not run for re-election as she wanted to spend more time with her family. Lieutenant Governor Karl Ohs was expected to enter the Republican primary race but decided not to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, Republican primary, Candidates\nMontana Secretary of State Bob Brown, conservative businessman Pat Davison and former State Senators Ken Miller and Tom Keating competed for the nomination. Brown was seen as the favorite in the primary but was attacked by Pat Davison for being \"liberal on taxes\". Brown was the only one of the candidates who refused to sign a pledge not to raise taxes as he said he wanted to keep all options open as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nIn mid summer polls showed Schweitzer had a 10-point lead over Brown, but by October the gap had closed to only 4 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nSchweitzer campaigned with plans to lift Montana from its position at the bottom of all 50 states in wages. He called for new uses to be found for crops like mint and for small businesses to pool in purchasing health care. He also supported opening the border with Canada to allow consumers to get cheaper prescription drugs from Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nBrown said that the Democrats harmed business growth and job creation. He touted his government experience including 26 years in the Montana legislature and accused Schweitzer of taking hypocritical stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178169-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Montana gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nSchweitzer won the election to become the first Democrat in 20 years to win an election for governor. According to the exit polls Schweitzer obtained two-thirds of the vote from over 65s and from independent voters. This was despite President George W. Bush winning Montana very easily over John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178170-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters\nThe 2004 Monte Carlo Masters was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 98th edition of the Monte Carlo Masters and was part of the Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Monte Carlo Country Club in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin in France from 19 April through 25 April 2004. Third-seeded Guillermo Coria won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178170-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters, Finals, Doubles\nTim Henman / Nenad Zimonji\u0107 defeated Gast\u00f3n Etlis / Martin Rodr\u00edguez 7\u20135, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178171-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters \u2013 Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions but lost in the quarterfinals to Gast\u00f3n Etlis and Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178171-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters \u2013 Doubles\nTim Henman and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 won in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20132 against Etlis and Rodr\u00edguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178171-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nAll eight seeded teams received byes to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178172-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters \u2013 Singles\nJuan Carlos Ferrero was the defending champion but lost in the first round to \u00c0lex Corretja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178172-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Masters \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Coria won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20131, 6\u20133 against Rainer Sch\u00fcttler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178173-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monte Carlo Rally\nThe 2004 Monte Carlo Rally (formally the 72e Rallye Automobile de Monte-Carlo) was the first round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over three days between 23 and 25 January 2004, and was won by Citro\u00ebn's S\u00e9bastien Loeb, his 5th win in the win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178174-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Monterey Sports Car Championships\nThe 2004 Monterey Sports Car Championships was the final race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season and held at Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. It took place on October 16, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178174-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Monterey Sports Car Championships, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178175-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Alouettes season\nThe 2004 Montreal Alouettes finished in first place in the East Division with a franchise record 14\u20134 record. They appeared in the East final, but with Anthony Calvillo out with injury, they lost to the Toronto Argonauts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season\nThe 2004 Montreal Expos season was the Expos\u2032 36th and final season in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The team finished in fifth and last place in the National League East at 67-95, 29 games behind the first-place Atlanta Braves. After the season, the team \u2013 which had played in Montreal since its foundation as an expansion franchise in 1969 \u2013 relocated to Washington, D.C., and became the Washington Nationals, as Major League Baseball returned to Washington for the 2005 season after a 33-season absence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Spring training\nThe Expos held spring training at Space Coast Stadium in Viera, Florida, in 2004. It was their second year of spring training at the facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Regular season, Attendance\nIncluding both games played in Montreal and \"home\" games played in San Juan, the Expos drew 749,550 fans during the 2004 season, and were 16th in attendance among the 16 National League teams. Their highest attendance for the season was for their final game in Montreal on September 29, which attracted 31,395 fans to see them play the Florida Marlins, while their lowest was for a game in Montreal on May 5 against the Colorado Rockies, which drew only 3,609 fans. For games played in San Juan, the largest crowd was 16,836 for a game against the San Francisco Giants on May 22, and the smallest was a crowd of 7,436 that came to a game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on July 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Regular season, Attendance\nThe Expos lost one home date during the season, when the May 23 \"home\" game at San Juan against the Giants was rained out and rescheduled to be played as an away game in San Francisco as part of a single-admission doubleheader on August 18. The doubleheader drew 42,296.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Player stats, Pitching\nNote: Pos = Position; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Relocation to Washington\nAfter several years in a holding pattern, MLB began actively looking for a relocation site for the Expos. Some of the choices included Orlando, Florida; Dayton, Ohio; Oklahoma City; Washington, D.C.; San Juan, Puerto Rico; Monterrey, Mexico; Portland, Oregon; Northern Virginia; Norfolk, Virginia; and Charlotte, North Carolina. In the decision-making process, Commissioner Bud Selig added Las Vegas, Nevada to the list of potential Expos homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Relocation to Washington\nOn September 29, 2004, MLB officially announced that the Expos would move to Washington, D.C. in 2005. The move was approved by the owners of the other teams in a 28\u20131 vote on December 3 (Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos cast the sole dissenting vote). In addition, on November 15, 2004, a lawsuit by the former team owners against MLB and former majority owner Jeffrey Loria was struck down by arbitrators, ending legal moves to keep the Expos in Montreal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Retired numbers ceremony\nAs a tribute to the Expos, on October 18, 2005, the Montreal Canadiens honoured the departed team by raising an Expos commemorative banner, which lists the retired numbers, to the rafters of the Bell Centre. Gary Carter and Andre Dawson were at the ceremony with Youppi, who was now the Canadiens mascot. The Banner featured all of the Expos retired numbers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178176-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Montreal Expos season, Expos in the Washington Nationals Ring of Honor\nOn August 10, 2010, the Washington Nationals formally presented a new \"Ring of Honor\" at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., to honor Major League Baseball Hall of Fame players with ties to the Washington Nationals, original Washington Senators, expansion Washington Senators, Homestead Grays, or Montreal Expos. Gary Carter and Andre Dawson were the former Expos honored in the Ring of Honor on that day. The Expos logo appears next to their names in the Ring of Honor. On May 9, 2015, the Nationals added former Expos (2002\u20132004) and Nationals (2005\u20132006) manager Frank Robinson to the Ring of Honor at Nationals Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178177-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Montserrat Championship\nThe 2004 season of the Montserrat Championship was the seventh recorded season of top flight association football competition in Montserrat, with records for any competition held between 1975 and 1995 not available, the third iteration of the championship since the 1996\u201397 season was abandoned when the Soufri\u00e8re Hills erupted causing widespread devastation to the island, and, as of 2015, the last recorded season of competitive football on the island. The championship was won by Ideal, their first title to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178178-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International\nThe 2004 Moorilla Hobart International was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts and which was part of the Tier V category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 11th edition of the tournament and took place at the Hobart International Tennis Centre in Hobart, Australia from 12 January until 16 January 2004. Unseeded Amy Frazier won the singles title and earned $16,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178178-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International, Finals, Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe / Seiko Okamoto defeated Els Callens / Barbara Schett 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178179-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Elena Likhovtseva were the defending champions, but none competed this year. Black competed in Sydney at the same week, while Likhovtseva decided to focus only on the singles competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178179-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe and Seiko Okamoto won the title by defeating Els Callens and Barbara Schett 2\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178179-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178180-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Singles\nAlicia Molik was the incumbent champion, but did not compete in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178180-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Moorilla Hobart International \u2013 Singles\nAmy Frazier won the title by defeating Shinobu Asagoe 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster\nThe Morecambe Bay cockling disaster (Chinese: \u62fe\u8c9d\u6158\u6848 Sh\u00ed b\u00e8i c\u01cen'\u00e0n, \"cockle-picking tragedy\") occurred on the evening of 5 February 2004 at Morecambe Bay in North West England, when at least 21 Chinese illegal immigrant labourers were drowned by an incoming tide after picking cockles off the Lancashire coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Disaster\nDavid Anthony Eden, Sr., and David Anthony Eden, Jr., a father and son from England, had allegedly arranged to pay a group of Chinese workers \u00a35 per 25\u00a0kg (9p per lb) of cockles. The Chinese had been trafficked via containers into Liverpool, and were hired out through local criminal agents of international Chinese Triads. The cockles to be collected are best found at low tide on sand flats at Warton Sands, near Hest Bank. The Chinese workers were unfamiliar with local geography, language, and custom. They were cut off by the incoming tide in the bay around 9:30 p.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Disaster\nThe emergency services were alerted by a mobile phone call made by one of the workers, who spoke little English and was only able to say \"sinking water\" before the call was cut off. Twenty-one bodies, of men and women between the ages of 18 and 45, were recovered from the bay after the incident. Two of the victims were women; the vast majority were young men in their 20s and 30s, with only two being over 40 and only one, a male, under 20. Most of the victims were previously employed as farmers, and two were fishermen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Disaster\nAll the bodies were found between the cockling area and shore, indicating that most had attempted to swim but had been overcome by hypothermia. Four of the victims died after the truck they used to reach the cockling area became overwhelmed by water. A further two cocklers were believed to have been with those drowned, with remains of one being found in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Disaster\nAt the subsequent hearing, British cocklers returning to shore on the same evening were reported to have attempted to warn the Chinese group by tapping their watches and trying to speak with them. A survivor testified that the leader of the group had made a mistake about the time of the tides. Fourteen other members of the group are reported to have made it safely to the shore, making 15 survivors in total. The workers were all illegal immigrants, mainly from the Fujian province of China, and have been described as being untrained and inexperienced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Prosecutions\nDavid Anthony Eden, Sr., and David Anthony Eden, Jr., from Prenton, Merseyside, who bought cockles from the work gang, were cleared of helping the workers break immigration law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Prosecutions\nGangmaster Lin Liang Ren was found guilty of the manslaughter of at least 21 people (two further cocklers were thought to have been killed, but their bodies were never found). Ren, his girlfriend Zhao Xiao Qing and his cousin Lin Mu Yong were also convicted of breaking immigration laws. Ren was sentenced to 12 years for manslaughter, 6 years for facilitating illegal immigration (to be served concurrently with the manslaughter sentence), and 2 years for conspiracy to pervert the course of justice (to be served subsequent to the manslaughter sentence). Lin Mu Yong was sentenced to four years and nine months. Zhao Xiao Qing was sentenced to 2 years and 9 months for facilitation of illegal immigration and perverting the course of justice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Media\nThe 2006 film Ghosts, directed by Nick Broomfield, is a dramatisation of the events leading up to the disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Media\nA 2006 documentary Death in the Bay: the Cocklepickers' Story, was commissioned by Channel 4 as part of The Other Side from local filmmaker Loren Slater, who was one of the first people on the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Media\nIn 2009, Ed Pien's work Memento, commissioned by the Chinese Arts Centre, was developed in response to the plight of illegal immigrants, especially those who died at Morecambe Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Media\nIn 2013, artist Isaac Julien released his film Ten Thousand Waves about the disaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178181-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster, Media\nThe 2007 folk song \"On Morecambe Bay\" by folk artist Kevin Littlewood tells the story of the events. This song was later covered by folk musician Christy Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178182-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Moroccan census\nThe 2004 Moroccan census was held in Morocco in 2004, officially referred to as the 2004 Moroccan census or unofficially as the Michael Ngovement. The census was conducted by the High Planning Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178183-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mosconi Cup\nThe 2004 Mosconi Cup, the 11th edition of the annual nine-ball pool competition between teams representing Europe and the United States, took place 16\u201319 December 2004 at the Hotel Zuiderduin in Egmond aan Zee, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178183-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mosconi Cup\nTeam USA won the Mosconi Cup by defeating Team Europe 12\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178184-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mosul bombings\nThe 24 June 2004 Mosul bombings were a series of coordinated car bomb attacks in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, where five car bombs targeted police stations and a city hospital killing at least 62 and injuring at least 220 people, many of them Iraqi policemen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl\nThe 2004 Motor City Bowl, part of the 2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games season, occurred on December 27, 2004 at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Team selection\nThe Toledo Rockets entered the game as the champions of the Mid-American Conference as they defeated Miami University on December 2, 2004 in the MAC Championship Game by a score of 35\u201327. This was Toledo's third trip to the bowl. They also appeared in 2001 and 2002. The Connecticut Huskies qualified for their first ever bowl appearance by finishing 7\u20134 and had a Big East Conference record of 3\u20133. Connecticut was invited to the game when the Big Ten could not provide a qualifying team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary\nThe announced attendance of 52,552 was, at the time, a record crowd for the Motor City Bowl. It has since been surpassed by both the 2006 and 2007 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nLarry Taylor received the opening kickoff for UConn at the eight-yard line and returned the ball 34 yards to the Connecticut 42-yard line. Behind the passing of quarterback Dan Orlovsky and the running of Cornell Brockington, the Huskies moved down the field, earning three first downs. The drive stalled at the Toledo 17-yard line; Matt Nuzie came on to successfully kick a 35-yard field goal. UConn took an early 3\u20130 lead, with 11:55 left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nToledo received the ensuing kickoff, but lost yardage on the return and had to start their opening drive from their own eight-yard line. On their first offensive play they promptly earned their first first down of the game, on a 12-yard pass from quarterback Bruce Gradkowski to wide receiver Kenny Higgins. After being stopped for no gain on the next play, running back Trinity Dawson uncorked a 22-yard run on second down to earn Toledo's second first down of the drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe Rockets were unable to progress further, however, and punted the ball to the Huskies, who likewise were unable to advance. Toledo received the Connecticut punt but could not earn a first down on three plays. On 4th-and-4 on their own 45-yard line, the Rockets faked the punt attempt and attempted to earn a first down, but fumbled the ball; Connecticut's Tyler King recovered. The Huskies made Toledo pay for their mistake. After three plays earned only four yards, UConn went for it on fourth down. Dan Orlovsky connected with wide receiver Jason Williams for 32 yards and a touchdown. After Nuzie kicked the extra-point, the Connecticut lead was extended to 10\u20130, with 4:36 left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe Rockets started their next drive from their own 27-yard line. Two plays netted Toledo five yards, which were promptly lost on a penalty, setting up a 3rd-and-10. Gradkowski's pass was incomplete, forcing the Rockets to punt. Toledo's punt was caught by UConn's Larry Taylor, who ran down the right sideline 68 yards, all the way for a touchdown. After the extra point, the Huskies now had a 17\u20130 lead. UConn's 17 points were a Motor City Bowl-record for most points scored in a first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, First quarter\nThe Rockets got the ball back on their own 31-yard line, and moved down the field on runs by Trinity Dawson, aided by a 15-yard penalty on the Huskies on third down. Dawson's 11-yard run up the middle on 2nd-and-6 set up a 1st-and-10 on the UConn 28-yard line as the first quarter clock expired. At the end of the first quarter, Connecticut held a 17\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nToledo continued their drive down the field as the second quarter began. Twice UConn had a chance to stop the Rockets, forcing them into second- or third-and-long scenarios. Twice Toledo converted the first down, the first time on a 14-yard run by Trinity Dawson, the second time on a 16-yard pass from Gradkowski to tight end Chris Holmes, setting up a 1st-and-goal on the Connecticut 4. On first down Dawson gained three yards; on second down Gradkowski kept the ball himself but was stopped for no gain. Gradkowski tried again on third down, and this time punched the ball in for the touchdown. After the extra point, the Rockets now trailed the Huskies, 17\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nConnecticut promptly responded on their next drive. They began in Toledo territory, after a 54-yard kickoff return by Larry Taylor. After two Cornell Brockington runs and a five-yard penalty against the Huskies set up 3rd-and-2, Orlovsky connected with wide receiver Jason Williams for four yards and the first down. After another Brockington run, Orlovsky and Williams would connect again for a first down, this time gaining five yards. On the next play Orlovsky completed a pass to Brandon LcLean for 11 yards and another first down, moving the ball to the Toledo 7-yard line. After one incompletion, Orlovsky threw over the middle to Brian Sparks, scoring the touchdown. The extra point was good; Connecticut now held a 24\u20137 lead over Toledo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nThe Rockets started their next drive from their own 22-yard line. Gradkowski connected with Chris Holmes for 15 yards and a first down, but after that the drive stalled after a sack and a penalty drove Toledo back to their own 29-yard line and set up 3rd-and-15. Trinity Dawson's 10-yard run still left the Rockets five yards short of the first down; Toledo punted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nConnecticut took over on their own 26-yard line and used a variety of players to move down the field; fullback Deon Anderson and wide receiver Jason Williams carried for three and 16 yards respectively to move the Huskies to midfield. On 3rd-and-5 from the 50-yard line, Orlovsky connected with wide receiver Matt Cutaia for six yards and the first down. After a seven-yard run by running back Chris Bellamy and a fifteen-yard penalty on the Rockets moved the ball to the Toledo 22-yard line, UConn found themselves unable to advance further. A 37-yard field goal by Matt Nuzie gave the Huskies three more points; their lead was now 27\u20137 over the Rockets with less than two minutes left in the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nToledo started their next drive from their own 20-yard line, but went three-and-out after two incomplete passes by Gradkowski and a five-yard run by Dawson, well-short of the required ten yards. After the punt UConn took over on their own 40-yard line with just over a minute left in the half. Orlovsky completed a pass to Keron Henry for eight yards on first down; after an incompletion, Brockington ran up the middle for four yards and the first down, moving the ball into Toledo territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Second quarter\nOn the next play, Orlovsky completed a long 41-yard pass to Matt Cutaia to the Toledo seven-yard line. Orlovsky threw incomplete on the next play; as time was running out, Connecticut elected to kick the field goal rather than risk not scoring any points. Matt Nuzie's 25-yard attempt was good as the halftime clock expired. With one half complete, the Huskies now held a 30\u20137 lead in a game that was rapidly becoming a blowout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nToledo took possession of the ball at the 35-yard line as the third quarter began. New quarterback Marques Council, who replaced the injured Bruce Gradkowski at halftime, led the Rockets down the field, running for 13 yards and a first down and then completing a 29-yard pass to Lance Moore for another first down. Toledo had a 1st-and-goal at the Connecticut 6, but after two rushing plays were stopped for a loss, and an incomplete pass, the Rockets were forced to settle for a 27-yard field goal. The UConn lead was cut to 30\u201310 just three minutes into the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nConnecticut went three-and-out on the ensuing possession, punting the ball back to Toledo. Marques Council continued to give the Rockets new life, leading them to three first downs as they moved down the field into Connecticut territory. On 2nd-and-8 from the UConn 22, Council made his first mistake, throwing a pass over the middle that was intercepted by linebacker Alfred Fincher. The Huskies took advantage of the turnover to advance down the field on a mix of running plays by Cornell Brockington, Chris Bellamy, and Deon Anderson, and passes from Orlovsky to Keron Henry and Dan Murray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Third quarter\nThe drive advanced as far as the Toledo 20-yard line, where Connecticut was stopped. Matt Nuzie was called on once again for the field goal; he successfully kicked the 36-yarder, giving him a Motor City Bowl-record four made field goals. The UConn lead was back to 23 points with less than two minutes left in the third quarter. Toledo started their next drive on their own 20-yard line but went three-and-out; their punt, downed by Connecticut at their own 42-yard line, was the final play of the quarter. At the end of three quarters, the Huskies held a 33\u201310 lead over the Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nOn the first play of the fourth quarter, Dan Orlovsky completed a 44-yard pass to Keron Henry, moving the Huskies to the Toledo 14-yard line. A loss of two on a run by Chris Bellamy and two incomplete passes halted the UConn drive; Matt Nuzie was called on to attempt his fifth field goal of the game. This time, however, Nuzie missed the kick, a 34-yard attempt, keeping the score 33\u201310 and giving possession back to the Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nTaking over on their own 16-yard line, Toledo promptly earned two first downs on passes from Council to Lance Moore for 16 yards and to Chris Holmes for 11, moving the Rockets to midfield. On 1st-and-10 from the 50-yard line, however, Council threw a pass that was intercepted by UConn's Justin Perkins. The Huskies got to the Toledo 39-yard line on a pass from Orlovsky to Keron Henry, but after two incompletions Orlovsky threw an interception to Toledo's Nigel Morris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe Rockets took over with 11:13 left in the game, and led by Marques Council drove down the field as far as the Connecticut 28-yard line. A sack, incomplete pass, and completion from Council to Trinity Dawson for five yards set up a 4th-and-7 from the UConn 25-yard line. The Rockets elected to go for the first down, but Council was sacked, causing Toledo to turn the ball back over on downs. After a three-and-out and punt by the Huskies, the Rockets got the ball back on their own 34-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nCouncil was sacked again, this time for a loss of 16 yards, and on the next play fumbled. Fortunately for him he recovered his own fumble, but the Rockets were unable to get close to first-down yardage and were forced to punt. With 3:17 left in the game, UConn elected to keep the ball on the ground. On 2nd-and-10 from the Toledo 45-yard line, Chris Bellamy ran left for 32 yards. Three plays later, on 3rd-and-8 from the Rocket 11-yard line, Connecticut running back Matt Lawrence ran by the middle for the final touchdown of the game. The extra point was blocked by Toledo; after one complete pass from Council to Quinton Broussard for eleven yards and a first down, two incomplete passes, and a sack, the game was over. UConn won the game 39\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 50], "content_span": [51, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Final statistics\nDan Orlovsky was named the game's MVP by completing 21 of his 40 passes for 239 yards and two touchdowns. Tyler King, playing in his first game since breaking his leg in the Huskies 29\u201317 win over Pittsburgh on September 30, was awarded the United Auto Workers Lineman of the Game Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178185-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Motor City Bowl, Aftermath\nIn the late summer of 2007, ESPN reported that the Toledo football team, and specifically running back Harvey \"Scooter\" McDougle was under federal investigation for a point shaving scandal. The 2004 Motor City Bowl was one of the games in question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178186-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain Dew Southern 500\nThe 2004 Mountain Dew Southern 500, the 55th running of the event was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on November 14, 2004, at Darlington Raceway in Darlington, South Carolina. Contested at 367 laps on the 1.366 miles (2.198 km) speedway, it was the thirty-fifth race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178186-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain Dew Southern 500\nFor the 2004 season, a shuffling of the NASCAR schedule saw the race move to November. Track management believed the November date would allow for cooler, more comfortable weather for fans, who had increasingly voiced concerns about the hot, humid, weather. In addition, it meant the race would be part of the new Chase for the Nextel Cup playoff date. Rockingham lost its fall date to Fontana, and the Pop Secret 500 was moved to the prestigious Labor Day weekend date. The track also installed lights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178186-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain Dew Southern 500\nQualifying was canceled due to rain and the starting lineup was set by owner's points. Kurt Busch was the points leader and sat on the front row. Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178186-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain Dew Southern 500, Background\nDarlington Raceway, nicknamed by many NASCAR fans and drivers as \"The Lady in Black\" or \"The Track Too Tough to Tame\" and advertised as a \"NASCAR Tradition\", is a race track built for NASCAR racing located near Darlington, South Carolina. It is of a unique, somewhat egg-shaped design, an oval with the ends of very different configurations, a condition which supposedly arose from the proximity of one end of the track to a minnow pond the owner refused to relocate. This situation makes it very challenging for the crews to set up their cars' handling in a way that will be effective at both ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178186-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain Dew Southern 500, Background\nThe track, Darlington Raceway, is a four-turn 1.366 miles (2.198\u00a0km) oval. The track's first two turns are banked at twenty-five degrees, while the final two turns are banked two degrees lower at twenty-three degrees. The front stretch (the location of the finish line) and the back stretch is banked at six degrees. Darlington Raceway can seat up to 60,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178187-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament took place from May 26\u201329. All six of the league's teams met in the double-elimination tournament held at University of Nevada, Las Vegas's Earl Wilson Stadium. Third seeded UNLV won their second straight and second overall Mountain West Conference Baseball Championship with a championship game score of 6\u20133 and earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178187-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe teams were seeded based on regular season conference winning percentage only. New Mexico claimed the second seed by winning the season series against UNLV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178187-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain West Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nMatt Luca, a sophomore pitcher for the champion UNLV Rebels, was named the tournament Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 92], "content_span": [93, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178188-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Mountain West Conference men's basketball tournament was played at Pepsi Center in Denver, Colorado from March 10\u201313, 2004. Third-seeded Utah defeated UNLV, which lost its third consecutive tournament title game (all by 3 points or less), 73\u201370 in the championship game to win the Mountain West Conference Tournament and the league's NCAA Tournament automatic bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178188-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThis marked the first time in league history the tournament was held in a venue other than Las Vegas' Thomas and Mack Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178189-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mountain West Conference football season\nThe 2004 Mountain West Conference football season was the sixth since eight former members of the Western Athletic Conference banded together to form the Mountain West Conference. It was the last season of the conference's original eight-team line up, as Texas Christian University (TCU) had agreed to join the conference for the 2005 season. The Utah won the conference championship in 2004, the Utes' third title since the league began in 1999. On the strength of their perfect 11\u20130 record in the regular season, Utah became the first team from a BCS non-AQ conference to be invited to a Bowl Championship Series (BCS) bowl when they accepted an invitation to play Pittsburgh in the Fiesta Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178190-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mozambican general election\nGeneral elections were held in Mozambique on 1 and 2 December 2004 to elect a president and the Assembly of the Republic. Incumbent president Joaquim Chissano stepped down after 18 years in power, with five candidates running to succeed him. Armando Guebuza of the ruling FRELIMO party won, with over 60% of the vote. FRELIMO also won the Assembly elections, taking 160 of the 250 seats. Turnout for both elections was just over 36%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178190-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mozambican general election, Results, President\nOfficials expected the winner to be formally announced on 17 December, but it was delayed until 21 December. Guebuza won with 63.7% of the vote, and took office in February 2005. Afonso Dhlakama of RENAMO came second with 31.7% of the vote, and announced that he did not recognize the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178191-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mr. Olympia\nThe 2004 Mr. Olympia contest was an IFBB professional bodybuilding competition and the feature event of Joe Weider's 2004 Olympia Weekend held October 30\u201331, 2004 at the Mandalay Bay Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178191-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mr. Olympia, Results\nThis Mr. Olympia contest introduced a new Challenge Round to determine the final standings. The top six competitors scores were discarded after round three, and only the final challenge round standings were used to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178191-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mr. Olympia, Results\nThe total prize money for the men's Mr. Olympia was $400,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178192-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ms. Olympia\nThe 2004 Ms. Olympia contest is an IFBB professional bodybuilding competition and part of Joe Weider's Olympia Fitness & Performance Weekend 2004 that was held on October 29, 2004, at the Mandalay Bay Arena in Paradise, Nevada. It was the 25th Ms. Olympia competition held. Other events at the exhibition include the Mr. Olympia, Fitness Olympia, and Figure Olympia contests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178193-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 MuchMusic Video Awards\nThe 2004 MuchMusic Video Awards were held on June 19, 2004 and featured performances by the Beastie Boys, Evanescence, Billy Talent, Hilary Duff, Kanye West and others. The most nominated artist was Sam Roberts with 8 nominations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178194-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Multan bombing\nThe 2004 Multan bombing was a car bombing that took place in Multan, Punjab, Pakistan on October 7, 2004. The death toll was reported at 41 and the number of injured was close to 100.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178194-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Multan bombing, Day of the attack\nTop leaders of the banned outfit Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan along with Ahl-i-Sunnat-Wal Jamaat had organized a meeting to mourn the death of Amjad Hussain Farooqi. The meeting began on 10:30 pm on Wednesday after Isha prayers , and it ran till 4:15 am on Thursday morning. The bomb blast took place as the people were leaving the meeting venue at Rashidabad neighbourhood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178194-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Multan bombing, Incident\nAhl-i-Sunnat-Wal Jamaat had gathered a crowd of 2000 for a meeting when the attack happened around 4:30 am. The bomb, according to Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao was remote-controlled and was placed inside of a Suzuki car. Eyewitnesses reported that they heard two blasts with a 20-second interval. Besides killing innocent civilians the bomb also damaged some nearby buildings and left puddles of blood and human flesh scattered around. Two minutes after the first explosion , another blast went off. According to reports this bomb was attached to a motorcycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178194-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Multan bombing, Aftermath\nAfter the attack the Pakistani police were deployed to the site amid the attacks from protestors who burned tires, damaged windscreens, and attacked two ambulances. The blast left a one and half foot crater at ground zero. After the blast most of shops in the area closed down and people from started gathering to protest. Some of them pelleted passing vehicles with stones and chanted slogans against the government for failure to provide security to its citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178194-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Multan bombing, Aftermath\nLater on the police arrested Irfan Ali Shah who was eventually found guilty on 40 counts of terrorism for masterminding the double bombing and was sentenced to death in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178195-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2004 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final was a hurling match played on 27 June 2004 at Semple Stadium, Thurles, County Tipperary. It was contested by Cork and Waterford. Waterford claimed their second Munster Championship of the decade, beating Cork on a scoreline of 3-16 to 1-21, a 1 point winning margin. Overall, this was Waterford's seventh Munster Senior Hurling Championship. The final, which swung both ways numerous times, including numerous goals and a sending off, is considered one of the greatest Munster Hurling Finals of all time. In Ireland, the match was televised live on the Sunday Game on RT\u00c9 Two with commentary from Ger Canning and Michael Duignan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178195-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Munster Senior Hurling Championship Final, Previous Munster Final encounters\nPrevious to this encounter, the teams had met each other in twelve Munster Hurling Finals, including a replay in 1931. Cork lead the rivalry having won eight finals in comparison to Waterford's three wins. Notable finals include 1982 when Cork beat Waterford by 31 points (Munster Final record) and in the previous year's final when Cork beat Waterford by 4 points even after a hat trick of goals by Waterford's John Mullane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl\nThe 2004 Music City Bowl was held on December 31, 2004, in Nashville, Tennessee at The Coliseum. The game featured the Alabama Crimson Tide, of the SEC, and the Minnesota Golden Gophers, of the Big Ten. The game was ultimately won by Minnesota, 20\u201316. Sponsored by Gaylord Hotels and Bridgestone, it was officially named the Gaylord Hotels Music City Bowl presented by Bridgestone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl\nAlabama was led by head coach Mike Shula and entered a game with a 6\u20135 record, as the team ended their 2004 regular season by losing three of their final four games. The Crimson Tide offense was led by quarterback Spencer Pennginton, who was a backup at the beginning of the season, but was put into the starting role when Brodie Croyle was injured versus Western Carolina. Pennington led the Crimson Tide to a 3\u20134 record as a starter and was the starting quarterback in the bowl game. Alabama also entered to the second-ranked overall defense in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl\nGlen Mason led the Golden Gophers into the bowl game, who also had a 6\u20135 record. The Golden Gophers ended their 2004 regular season by losing five of their final six games after a 5\u20130 start. The Minnesota offense was led by two 1,000-yard rushers in Laurence Maroney and Marion Barber III, the latter of which would be named MVP of the bowl game. The two running backs combined for 2,617\u00a0yards and twenty-three touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, First quarter\nMinnesota began the first drive of the game at their own 20\u2013yard line following a touchback on the opening kickoff. Alabama quickly forced a turnover as Marion Barber III fumbled the ball, which Freddie Roach recovered and returned to the Minnesota 2\u2013yard line. On their first play, Alabama quarterback Spencer Pennington completed a 2\u2013yard touchdown pass to Le'Ron McClain, and following a Brian Bostick PAT, the Crimson Tide took an early 7\u20130 lead. On their next two drives, Minnesota quarterback Bryan Cupito threw two interceptions, which Roman Harper and Anthony Madison intercepted, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, First quarter\nFollowing the interception by Madison, Alabama began their drive at the 2\u2013yard line. The Crimson Tide offense moved the ball only four yards before Spencer Pennington fumbled the ball. Keith Lipka recovered the fumble and returned it for a 1\u2013yard touchdown, Minnesota and Alabama were back level at 7\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, First quarter\nFollowing a return by Tyrone Prothro on the kickoff, Alabama began at their own 15\u2013yard line. The offense quickly picked up a first down after a 14\u2013yard pass from Pennington to D. J. Hall. After the first down, the Crimson Tide offense stalled before Prothro fumbled the ball, recovered by Minnesota defensive back Justin Fraley. Running backs Marion Barber and Laurence Maroney quickly moved the ball forty-two yards in the final 2:54 to the Alabama 5\u2013yard line before the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Second quarter\nOn the first play of the second quarter, Marion Barber rushed up the middle for a 5\u2013yard touchdown. Following the PAT from Rhys Lloyd, Minnesota took a 14\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Second quarter\nAlabama began their first drive of the second quarter at the 35\u2013yard line following the kickoff. The Crimson Tide offense was quickly stifled as Pennington was sacked for an 8\u2013yard loss on the first play. After two more plays, the offense only gained three yards before a Bo Freeland punt to the Minnesota 31\u2013yard line. As usual, the Minnesota offense struck to their ground game as Barber and Maroney combined for sixty yards on ten carries to get the ball to the Alabama 9\u2013yard line. After an incomplete pass and two penalties, the Golden Gophers finished the drive with a 26\u2013yard field goal from Rhys Lloyd, extending their lead to 17\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Second quarter\nOn their second drive of the quarter, Alabama began at their own 27\u2013yard line. Le'Ron McClain caught a 7\u2013yard pass on the first play as the Alabama offense steadily moved down field to the 46\u2013yard line. On a 2nd-and-6, Spencer Pennington completed a 40\u2013yard pass to wide receiver Keith Brown as the offense moved the ball to the Minnesota 6\u2013yard line. On a 3rd-and-goal situation, Minnesota's defense gave the Alabama offense an automatic first down, placing the ball at the 2\u2013yard line. After a 1\u2013yard rush, McClain ran into the endzone for a 1\u2013yard touchdown as Alabama trailed 17\u201314 with less than three minutes left in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Second quarter\nAfter conservative play-calling by Minnesota, the Golden Gophers punted the ball to Alabama with only twenty-eight seconds remaining. After a 15\u2013yard penalty on Minnesota, the Alabama offense moved to the 31\u2013yard line. Spencer Pennington completed two quick passes to Matt Caddell and D. J. Hall, moving the ball to the Minnesota 47\u2013yard line. After a timeout, Pennington completed yet another pass Keith Brown to the 37\u2013yard line. On the final play before halftime, Pennington lateralled the ball to Tyrone Prothro for a 13\u2013yard gain. The offense ran out of time, and failing to score, Alabama trailed 17\u201314 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Third quarter\nMinnesota kicked off to begin the third quarter, which Tyrone Prothro returned to the 26\u2013yard line. Once again, the Alabama offense struggled to move the ball and was forced to punt. Minnesota's first drive began on their own 25\u2013yard line. Laurence Maroney ran for ten yards on the first two plays of the drive, giving Minnesota a first down. Two plays later, Marion Barber broke off a 25\u2013yard run to move the ball to the Alabama 23\u2013yard line. After three more rushes by Barber and two incomplete passes, Rhys Lloyd kicked a 25\u2013yard field goal to give Minnesota a six-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Third quarter\nFor the remainder of the quarter, both offenses struggled to move the ball. Both teams combined for four punts and one turnover in the final 10:10 of the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Fourth quarter\nFollowing another stalled drive for both offenses, Minnesota started a drive at Alabama's 48\u2013yard line. Both Maroney and Barber split the carries again, gradually moving the ball downfield over the next 6:26 to the 14\u2013yard line. Rhys Lloyd missed a 31\u2013yard line to end Minnesota's drive, his sixth missed field goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Fourth quarter\nDown 20\u201314, the Alabama offense started at their own 14\u2013yard line following the missed field goal. Spencer Pennington completed a 23\u2013yard pass to D. J. Hall, moving the ball to the 43\u2013yard line. Three incomplete passes followed, forcing Alabama to punt once again. Minnesota took over at their own 10\u2013yard line and failed to gain a first down, forcing a punt. However, Alabama tackled the Rhys Lloyd in the endzone, gaining two points from the safety, and bringing themselves within four points at 20\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Fourth quarter\nFollowing the safety, Minnesota was forced to give Alabama the ball on a free kick. On the first three plays, Pennington completed three passes, giving Alabama a first down at the Minnesota 19\u2013yard line. On the next three plays, the Pennington threw two incomplete passes, and a short, 4\u2013yard completion to Matt Caddell. On 4th-and-6, Pennington threw another incompletion, turning the ball over on downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178196-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Music City Bowl, Game, Fourth quarter\nMinnesota started their final drive with just 1:26 left. As Alabama had used all three of their timeouts in the second half, Minnesota quarterback Bryan Cupito only needed to take a knee twice to run out the remainder of the clock, giving Minnesota a 20\u201316 win for their seventh victory of the season. The loss sent Alabama to a .500 record at 6\u20136, losing their final three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178197-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid\nThe 2004 Madrid Masters (also known as the Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 3rd edition of the Madrid Masters, and was part of the ATP Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Madrid Arena in Madrid, Spain, from 18 October through 25 October 2004. Third-seeded Marat Safin won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178197-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid\nIn the absence of world number one Roger Federer, the singles field was led by ATP no. 5, French Open and US Open semi-finalist, Wimbledon quarterfinalist and Indian Wells finalist Tim Henman, Cincinnati titlist, 2002 Madrid Masters winner, 2003 Masters Cup winner and eight-time grand slam champion Andre Agassi and Australian Open runner-up, Beijing titlist and Estoril finalist Marat Safin. Other top seeds were Rome Masters runner-up, 2002 Wimbledon Championships titlist David Nalbandian, Olympics gold medalist, Kitzb\u00fchel winner Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa, Juan Carlos Ferrero, Joachim Johansson and Tommy Robredo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178197-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid, Finals, Doubles\nMark Knowles / Daniel Nestor defeated Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178198-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid \u2013 Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions, but lost in semifinals to Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178198-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won the title, defeating Bob and Mike Bryan 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final. It was the 35th doubles title for Knowles and the 37th doubles title for Nestor, in their respective careers. It was also the 5th and final title of the year for the pair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178199-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid \u2013 Singles\nJuan Carlos Ferrero was the defending champion, but lost to Luis Horna in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178199-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid \u2013 Singles\nMarat Safin won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20134, 6\u20133, against David Nalbandian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178199-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Mutua Madrile\u00f1a Masters Madrid \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. All sixteen seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178200-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar Premier League\nThe 2004 Myanmar Premier League season saw 16 teams in competition. Custom FC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone\nThe 2004 Myanmar cyclone was considered the worst to strike the country since 1968. The second tropical cyclone of the 2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, it formed as a depression on May\u00a016 in the central Bay of Bengal. With low wind shear and a surge in the monsoon trough, the storm intensified while meandering over open waters. The storm eventually began a steady northeastward motion due to a ridge to the north over India. While approaching land, an eye developed in the center of the storm, indicative of a strong cyclone. On May\u00a019, the cyclone made landfall along northwestern Myanmar near Sittwe, with maximum sustained winds estimated at 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph) by the India Meteorological Department. The storm rapidly weakened over land, although its remnants spread rainfall into northern Thailand and Yunnan province in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone\nWinds from the cyclone reached 157\u00a0km/h (98\u00a0mph) in Myanmar, occurring in conjunction with heavy rainfall and a high storm surge. Despite the storm's ferocity, the government did not report about the cyclone for ten days, as they usually under-report on landfalling storms. The cyclone caused heavy damage throughout Rakhine State, destroying or heavily damaging 4,035\u00a0homes and leaving 25,000\u00a0people homeless. There was widespread crop damage, resulting in food shortages, and damaged roads disrupted subsequent relief efforts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone\nDamage in Myanmar totaled over K621\u00a0million kyat ($99.2\u00a0million USD), making it the worst storm in the country since 1968, and there were 236\u00a0deaths, with an unofficial death toll as high as 1,000. Although damage was heaviest in Myanmar, the cyclone's effects also spread into neighboring Bangladesh, where strong winds knocked over trees and capsized two ships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Meteorological history\nLate on May\u00a014, an area of convection, or thunderstorms, developed in the central Bay of Bengal about 880\u00a0kilometres (545\u00a0miles) south-southeast of Kolkata, India, associated with the monsoon trough. On May\u00a015, the system developed into a low-pressure area off the west coast of Myanmar (Burma). Initially, the convection was associated with a low-level circulation center, developing good outflow despite the presence of wind shear. As the shear decreased, the thunderstorms increased and organized, with the eastward-moving circulation partially exposed. At 09:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a016, the India Meteorological Department classified the system as a depression, and nine hours later the agency upgraded it to a deep depression as the system turned northwestward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Meteorological history\nThe nascent system quickly organized, aided by the decreasing wind shear, as well as a surge in the monsoon. The IMD upgraded the depression to a cyclonic storm at 03:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a017. At 12:00\u00a0UTC that day, the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) began issuing warnings on the system with its own designation Tropical Cyclone 02B. With weak steering currents, the storm meandered over the central Bay of Bengal, executing a small cyclonic loop over 30\u00a0hours. The cloud pattern organized into a central dense overcast that was initially irregular in nature. However, the storm quickly intensified on May\u00a018, strengthening into a severe cyclonic storm and later very severe cyclonic storm. During this time, the cyclone turned eastward under the influence of a ridge over India to the north.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Meteorological history\nA buoy near the storm's center recorded a pressure of 994\u00a0mbar (29.4\u00a0inHg) on May\u00a018, the lowest recorded pressure in association with the storm. Convection increased around the center and organized into a distinct eye. The JTWC upgraded the cyclone to the equivalent of a minimal hurricane at 00:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a019, estimating peak 1\u00a0minute sustained winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph). The IMD assessed a much higher intensity, estimating peak 3\u00a0minute winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph) at 03:00\u00a0UTC that day. About an hour later, the cyclone made landfall at peak intensity with an estimated pressure of 952\u00a0mbar (28.1\u00a0inHg) in northwestern Myanmar near Sittwe, near the country's border with Bangladesh. It weakened gradually over land, dissipating over Myanmar late on May\u00a019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Impact\nWhile stalling in the Bay of Bengal, the cyclone's outskirts dropped light to moderate rainfall along the eastern coast of India. In Odisha, two locations reported daily rainfall totals of 40\u00a0mm (1.6\u00a0in). Upon making landfall, the cyclone's effects spread into southeastern Bangladesh, where heavy rainfall and high winds forced about 50,000\u00a0people to evacuate to shelters. The winds also knocked down trees and power lines. Two boats sank off Cox's Bazar, leaving five fishermen missing. Later, the remnants of the cyclone dropped heavy rainfall in northern Thailand, reaching 112.4\u00a0mm (4.43\u00a0in) in 24\u00a0hours at the Bhumibol Dam. In the nearby Yunnan province in China, precipitation reached 75.5\u00a0mm (2.97\u00a0in) in Ruili.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Impact, Myanmar\nDamage was heaviest in Myanmar where the storm moved ashore, and winds of 157\u00a0km/h (98\u00a0mph) were reported. Widespread areas reported winds of 40\u00a0km/h (25\u00a0mph). The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission estimated that up to 500\u00a0mm (20\u00a0in) of precipitation fell along the Bay of Bengal coast in Myanmar and Bangladesh. There were reports of waves 15\u00a0m (50\u00a0ft) in height along the coast. A high storm surge and coastal flooding inundated four towns in Rakhine State, causing damage to water systems. Flooding was visible on satellite imagery in the days following the cyclone. Eight townships in the state were affected, five of them severely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Impact, Myanmar\nFor 10\u00a0days, Myanmar's government did not report about the cyclone, which usually under-reports on storms that affect the country. There was also little to no advanced warning of the storm. The storm destroyed over 2,650\u00a0homes and severely damaged another 1,385, leaving around 25,000\u00a0people homeless, mostly in Pauktaw. Four hospitals in the region were heavily damaged, including the one in Sittwe that was unable to continue normal operations. About 300\u00a0schools were damaged or destroyed, including 44 in Sittwe. The storm also damaged or destroyed 133\u00a0religious buildings and 176\u00a0government buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Impact, Myanmar\nAcross the region, high winds knocked down telephone lines and disrupted power supply. About 2,000\u00a0cattle were killed, and many rice mills were knocked down, causing a 70% increase of food prices. Transportation was disrupted after roads were washed away, which contributed to food shortages, while damaged wells caused water shortages. During the storm, 84\u00a0ships were lost at sea, in addition to a lost ocean liner, while the main harbor at Sittwe was damaged, along with several fishing piers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Impact, Myanmar\nThe United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs considered the cyclone as the worst to hit Myanmar since 1968. Damage totaled over K621\u00a0million kyat ($99.2\u00a0million USD). Officially, there were 236\u00a0deaths in the country, although there were unconfirmed reports of a death toll as high as 1,000. In the city of Myebon alone, there were 139\u00a0deaths. Most of the deaths were fishermen from Rakhine State caught at sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Aftermath\nOn May\u00a027, the Myanmar government issued a rare appeal for aid to the international community in response to damage from the storm. The request included $220,000 (USD) worth of rice, tarpaulin sheets for temporary shelter, medicine, and clothing, to assist 14,000\u00a0people. In early June, the government issued an updated appeal to request $337,000 (USD) to help 25,000\u00a0people, after the scope of the disaster became better known. The Red Cross operation responding to the cyclone ended in December 2004, which marked the first time the agency had a major response to a disaster. It worked in conjunction with the World Food Programme, Bridge Asia Japan, and the Myanmar Maternal and Child Welfare Association, utilizing some private donations. Red Cross volunteers helped clear roads and clean ponds to return areas to normalcy. Typically, the government handles relief measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Aftermath\nIn the days following the storm, Myanmar's Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement assessed damage in the affected areas to determine needs, and also coordinated relief efforts. The local Red Cross chapter went to the worst affected villages with water, water purification tablets, blankets, and mosquito nets. Many of the affected families were unable to afford rebuilding their homes. Myanmar's National Disaster Relief Committee distributed 500\u00a0tons of concrete and 50,000\u00a0roofing sheets to help rebuild homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Aftermath\nBy June\u00a08, all displaced residents were either staying with relatives or returned to their homes, with the reconstruction or resettlement process expected to take up to nine months. Myanmar's then-Prime Minister Khin Nyunt surveyed the damaged areas and held a ceremony on June\u00a07 in Sittwe, where domestic donations were transferred to the government in \"the spirit of national consolidation\". The Prime Minister stated that the country rarely experiences devastating cyclones due to their strong religious beliefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Aftermath\nA group of 35\u00a0Rohingya people from Yangon took a tour of Rakhine State after the storm, despite they are usually banned from the region. The group donated about $267,000 (USD), although due to their minority status in the country, the aid did not help other Rohingyas in the state, who also did not receive assistance from the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178201-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Myanmar cyclone, Aftermath\nIn response to the aid request, various United Nations agencies sent $175,000 (USD) worth of financial or material assistance to the country. The World Food Programme provided 50\u00a0kg (110\u00a0lb) of rice to 3,700\u00a0families for three months, and UNICEF provided medicines, corrugated sheeting, and latrine slabs. The government of Japan donated about \u00a510\u00a0million worth of supplies, including blankets and water. The Chinese Red Cross donated about $20,000 (USD) worth of relief. Eight other governments and Red Cross chapters donated CHF331,432 francs worth of aid or supplies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 31], "content_span": [32, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178202-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC U23 Championships in Athletics\nThe 3rd NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics were held inSherbrooke, Quebec, Canada, on July 30-August 1, 2004. For thefirst time the event wasopen for athletes younger than 23 years rather than 25 years. A detailedreport on the results was given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178202-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC U23 Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nMedal winners are published. Complete results can be found on the Athletics Canada, on the AtletismoCR, and the CACACwebsite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178202-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC U23 Championships in Athletics, Medal summary, Women\n\u2020: Julie Bourgon from \u00a0Canada started as guest in the discus throw event and became 2nd with 49.92 m.\u2021: Michelle Fournier and Nathalie Th\u00e9nor, both from \u00a0Canada, started as guests in the hammer throw event and became 3rd and 4th with 58.14 m and 57.82 m, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178202-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC U23 Championships in Athletics, Participation\nThe participation of 243 athletes from 26 countries was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178203-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Tassedethe (talk | contribs) at 22:08, 17 November 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178203-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThese are the full results of the 2004 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics which took place between July 30 and August 1, 2004, at Universit\u00e9 de Sherbrooke Stadium in Sherbrooke, Qu\u00e9bec, Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178203-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Men's results, 100 meters\nHeatsWind: Heat 1: 0.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -0.4\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: 0.0\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 83], "content_span": [84, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178203-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NACAC Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Men's results, 200 meters\nHeatsWind: Heat 1: -0.5\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +0.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: -1.4\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 83], "content_span": [84, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178204-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Buffalo Funds - NAIA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament was held in March at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Missouri. This was the 67th annual NAIA DI basketball tournament and featured 32 teams playing in a single-elimination format. This was the third year the tournament was held in Kansas City. The 2004 NAIA National Championship game featured the #1 ranked Cougars of Mountain State and the #6 ranked Eagles of Concordia University (CA). This match up was a repeat of the 2003 tournament. The Cougars defeated the Eagles 74\u201370. The other teams that rounded out the NAIA National Semifinals were Georgetown College (KY) and University of Mobile, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178205-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NAIA Football National Championship\nThe 2004 NAIA Football Championship Series concluded on December 18, 2004 with the championship game played at Jim Carroll Stadium in Savannah, Tennessee. The game was won by the Carroll Fighting Saints over the Saint Francis Cougars by a score of 15\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178206-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NAIA football rankings\nOne human poll made up the 2004 National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) football rankings, sometimes called the NAIA Coaches' Poll or the football ratings. Once the regular season was complete, the NAIA sponsored a playoff to determine the year's national champion. A final poll was then taken after completion of the 2004 NAIA Football National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178206-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NAIA football rankings, Leading vote-getters\nSince the inception of the Coaches' Poll in 1999, the #1 ranking in the various weekly polls has been held by only a select group of teams. Through the postseason poll of the 2004 season, the teams and the number of times they have held the #1 weekly ranking are shown below. The number of times a team has been ranked #1 in the postseason poll (the national champion) is shown in parentheses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178206-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NAIA football rankings, Leading vote-getters\nIn 1999, the results of a postseason poll, if one was conducted, are not known. Therefore, an additional poll has been presumed, and the #1 postseason ranking has been credited to the postseason tournament champion, the Northwestern Oklahoma State Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series\nThe 2004 NASCAR Busch Series began on February 14 and ended on November 20. Martin Truex Jr. of Chance 2 Motorsports won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Hershey's Kisses 300\nThe Hershey's Kisses 300 started on February 14 but was postponed to February 16 due to rain. The race was held at Daytona International Speedway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole. This was the first of NASCAR's top national touring series races to be broadcast in high definition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Hershey's Kisses 300\nFailed to qualify: Mike Harmon (#24), David Keith (#95), Stanton Barrett (#91), Kevin Conway (#51), Stan Boyd (#57), Regan Smith (#56), Kim Crosby (#28), Robby Benton (#39), Mark Martin (#9), Brian Conz (#05), Norm Benning (#84)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Goody's Headache Powder 200\nThe Goody's Headache Powder 200 was held on February 21 at North Carolina Speedway. Johnny Benson won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Goody's Headache Powder 200\nFailed to qualify: Kenny Wallace (#23)*, Shane Sieg (#51), Eddie Beahr (#94), Paul Wolfe (#6), Jerry Reary (#41)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 60], "content_span": [61, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Sam's Town 300\nThe Sam's Town 300 was held on March 6 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Mike Bliss won the pole. Johnny Sauter, who finished in 16th suffered a 25-point penalty after the race for cursing in his on-air interview.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Sam's Town 300\nFailed to qualify: Andy Ponstein (#39), David Starr (#50), Larry Gunselman (#72), Damon Lusk (#74), Bruce Bechtel (#52), Randy Briggs (#85)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Diamond Hill Plywood 200\nThe Diamond Hill Plywood 200 was held on March 20 at Darlington Raceway. Kyle Busch won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Sharpie Professional 250\nThe Sharpie Professional 250 was held on March 27 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Greg Biffle won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Sharpie Professional 250\nFailed to qualify: Justin Ashburn (#16), Butch Jarvis (#53), Mike Potter (#0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, O'Reilly 300\nThe O'Reilly 300 was held on April 3 at Texas Motor Speedway. Kyle Busch won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, O'Reilly 300\nFailed to qualify: Stan Boyd (#51), Brad Teague (#39), Blake Mallory (#0), Donnie Neuenberger (#77), Justin Ashburn (#16), Bruce Bechtel (#52)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Pepsi 300\nThe Pepsi 300 was held on April 10 at Nashville Superspeedway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole. Michael Waltrip won the race after Robby Gordon, Johnny Benson, Clint Bowyer, and Kyle Busch tangled on the backstretch while battling for the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Pepsi 300\nFailed to qualify: Shane Wallace (#63), Stan Boyd (#51), Justin Ashburn (#16), Chad Chaffin (#77), Mike Harmon (#24), Greg Sacks (#0), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Jimmy Kitchens (#97), Eddie Beahr (#94), Norm Benning (#84), Brad Baker (#85)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Aaron's 312 (Talladega)\nThe Aaron's 312 was held on April 24 at Talladega Superspeedway. Clint Bowyer won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Stater Brothers 300 presented by Gatorade\nThe Stater Brothers 300 presented by Gatorade was held on May 1 at California Speedway. Jason Leffler won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 74], "content_span": [75, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Stater Brothers 300 presented by Gatorade\nFailed to qualify: Johnny Borneman III (#35), David Starr (#50), Bruce Bechtel (#57), Stanton Barrett (#91)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 74], "content_span": [75, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Charter 250\nThe Charter 250 was held on May 8 at Gateway International Raceway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Charter 250\nFailed to qualify: Clint Vahsholtz (#90), Brad Teague (#53), Shane Wallace (#63), Dion Ciccarelli (#84), Randy Briggs (#85)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Funai 250\nThe Funai 250 was held on May 14 at Richmond International Raceway. Kyle Busch won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Goulds Pumps/ITT Industries 200\nThe Goulds Pumps/ITT Industries 200 was held on May 23 at Nazareth Speedway. Kyle Busch won the pole. This was the last race at Nazareth. Jason Rudd, who finished 42nd, suffered a 25-point penalty for unknown reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 64], "content_span": [65, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Carquest Auto Parts 300\nThe Carquest Auto Parts 300 was held on May 29 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Greg Biffle won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Carquest Auto Parts 300\nFailed to qualify: Regan Smith (#56), J. J. Yeley (#18)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, MBNA America 200\nThe MBNA America 200 was held on June 5\u20137 at Dover International Speedway. David Green won the pole. Ron Hornaday Jr., who finished 29th, suffered a 25-point penalty for cursing in a radio interview during the race", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Federated Auto Parts 300\nThe Federated Auto Parts 300 was held on June 12 at Nashville Superspeedway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Federated Auto Parts 300\nFailed to qualify: Justin Ashburn (#16), Joe Buford (#53), Steven Christian (#34), Eddie Beahr (#94), David Keith (#0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Meijer 300 presented by Oreo\nThe Meijer 300 presented by Oreo was held on June 19 at Kentucky Speedway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Meijer 300 presented by Oreo\nFailed to qualify: Brad Teague (#52), Shawna Robinson (#91), Stuart Kirby (#65), Justin Ashburn (#16), Chris Horn (#58)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Alan Kulwicki 250\nThe Alan Kulwicki 250 was held on June 26 at The Milwaukee Mile. David Stremme won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Winn-Dixie 250 presented by PepsiCo\nThe Winn-Dixie 250 presented by PepsiCo was held on July 2 at Daytona International Speedway. Mike Bliss won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Tropicana Twister 300\nThe Twister 300 was held on July 10 at Chicagoland Speedway. Bobby Hamilton Jr. won the pole. Justin Labonte won his first (and only) race, and this win is one of the biggest upsets in the Grand National Series history. With the win, there are three Labonte's with wins in NASCAR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Tropicana Twister 300\nFailed to qualify: Jeff Fuller (#88), Blake Mallory (#51), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Carl Long (#07), Larry Hollenbeck (#62), Stanton Barrett (#91), Kevin Conway (#56)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Siemens 200\nThe Siemens 200 was held on July 24 at New Hampshire International Speedway. Jamie McMurray won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Siemens 200\nFailed to qualify: David Keith (#0), Dion Ciccarelli (#84), Randy MacDonald (#71), Bill Hoff (#93), Stuart Kirby (#65)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, ITT Industries & Goulds Pumps Salute to the Troops 250\nThe ITT Industries & Goulds Pumps Salute to the Troops 250 was held on July 31 at Pikes Peak International Raceway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 87], "content_span": [88, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, ITT Industries & Goulds Pumps Salute to the Troops 250\nFailed to qualify: Mike Harmon (#08), Ron Barfield (#97), Ryck Sanders (#07), Tim Edwards (#73)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 87], "content_span": [88, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Kroger 200 presented by Tom Raper RVs\nThe Kroger 200 presented by Tom Raper RVs was held on August 7 at Indianapolis Raceway Park. Johnny Sauter won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Kroger 200 presented by Tom Raper RVs\nFailed to qualify: John Hayden (#16), Brad Teague (#52), Kenny Hendrick (#35), Roland Isaacs (#71), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Butch Jarvis (#53), Dana White (#51)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Cabela's 250\nThe Cabela's 250 was held on August 21 at Michigan International Speedway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Cabela's 250\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#71), Tony Stewart (#81), Paul Menard (#11), Skip Smith (#67), Shelby Howard (#35), Todd Szegedy (#7)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Food City 250\nThe Food City 250 was held on August 27 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Dale Earnhardt Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Food City 250\nFailed to qualify: Brad Teague (#52), Joe Buford (#53), Mike Potter (#0), Cam Strader (#06), Morgan Shepherd (#51), Rick Markle (#68), Caleb Holman (#96), John Hayden (#16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Target House 300\nThe Target House 300 was held on September 4 at California Speedway. Casey Mears won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Emerson Radio 250\nThe Emerson Radio 250 was held on September 10 at Richmond International Raceway. Kasey Kahne won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Emerson Radio 250\nFailed to qualify: Mike Potter (#0), Todd Bodine (#31), Justin Labonte (#44), Eric McClure (#04), Jay Sauter (#75), Kevin Lepage (#71), Tim Sauter (#56), Eddie Beahr (#94), Wayne Edwards (#70), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Tina Gordon (#39)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Stacker 200 presented by YJ Stinger\nThe Stacker 200 presented by YJ Stinger was on held September 25 at Dover International Speedway. Kasey Kahne won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Stacker 200 presented by YJ Stinger\nFailed to qualify: Morgan Shepherd (#71), Dion Ciccarelli (#84), Matt Kobyluck (#40), Bill Hoff (#93), Stan Boyd (#65)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Mr. Goodcents 300\nThe Mr. Goodcents 300 was held on October 9 at Kansas Speedway. Paul Menard won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Mr. Goodcents 300\nFailed to qualify: John Hayden (#16), Brad Teague (#52), Stan Boyd (#71), Shane Hall (#28), Morgan Shepherd (#0), Chris Horn (#58), Kenny Hendrick (#51), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Bill Eversole (#56), Randy Briggs (#85), Clint Vahsholtz (#90)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Lowe's presents the SpongeBob SquarePants Movie 300\nThe Lowe's presents the SpongeBob SquarePants Movie 300 was held on October 15 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Casey Mears won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 84], "content_span": [85, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Lowe's presents the SpongeBob SquarePants Movie 300\nFailed to qualify: Paul Menard (#11), Eric McClure (#04), Kertus Davis (#0), Kenny Hendrick (#51), Brad Teague (#52), Gus Wasson (#10), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Scott Lynch (#6), Jimmy Henderson (#63), Tina Gordon (#39), Travis Geisler (#36), Brian Sockwell (#41), Robby Benton (#03), Larry Hollenbeck (#62)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 84], "content_span": [85, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Sam's Town 250 benefitting St. Jude\nThe Sam's Town 250 benefitting St. Jude was held on October 23 at Memphis Motorsports Park. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Sam's Town 250 benefitting St. Jude\nFailed to qualify: Joe Buford (#53), Kertus Davis (#0), Jason White (#71), Shane Hall (#28), Bruce Bechtel (#52), Kenny Hendrick (#51), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Tina Gordon (#39), Todd Shafer (#40), Stan Boyd (#70), David Ragan (#95)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 68], "content_span": [69, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Aaron's 312 (Atlanta)\nThe Aaron's 312 was held on October 30 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Mike Bliss won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Aaron's 312 (Atlanta)\nFailed to qualify: John Hayden (#16), Blake Mallory (#51), Kevin Conway (#67), Todd Bodine (#31), Tina Gordon (#39), Mark Gibson (#34), Jimmy Kitchens (#77)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Bashas' Supermarkets 200\nThe Bashas' Supermarkets 200 was held on November 6 at Phoenix International Raceway. Kyle Busch won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Bashas' Supermarkets 200\nFailed to qualify: Eric Jones (#73), Charlie Bradberry (#35), Kevin Lepage (#71), Brad Teague (#52), John Borneman III (#83), Kertus Davis (#0), Joey Miller (#98), Mike Harmon (#54), Clint Vahsholtz (#90), Tina Gordon (#39), Kenny Hendrick (#51)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, BI-LO 200\nThe final BI-LO 200 was held on November 13 at Darlington Raceway. Martin Truex Jr. won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, BI-LO 200\nFailed to qualify: Aaron Fike (#43), Kevin Lepage (#71), Dion Ciccarelli (#84), Randy Briggs (#85), Norm Benning (#84), Mike Harmon (#54), Jimmy Spencer (#98), Carl Long (#83)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Ford 300\nThe Ford 300 was held on November 20 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Casey Mears won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Races, Ford 300\nFailed to qualify: Kertus Davis (#0), Mark Green (#26), Eric McClure (#04), Kevin Lepage (#71), Gus Wasson (#10), Tina Gordon (#39), Dion Ciccarelli (#84), Jimmy Kitchens (#77), Jeff Fuller (#88), Blake Mallory (#28)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Results and standings, Drivers' Championship\n(key)\u00a0Bold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0\u2013 Pole position set by 2004 Owner's points. *\u00a0\u2013 Led Laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178207-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Busch Series, Rookie of the Year\n19-year-old Kyle Busch easily won Rookie of the Year honors in 2004, as he won five races and finished second in points. Runner-up Paul Menard started the year with Andy Petree Racing, then finished the season at Dale Earnhardt, Inc.. Clint Bowyer and J. J. Yeley ran partial schedules and had seven and four top-tens, respectively, while Travis Geisler and Stan Boyd ran with teams on limited budgets. Last-place-finisher Billy Parker, younger brother of Hank Parker Jr., started the season with the new Rusty Wallace, Inc. team, but was released during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series\nThe 2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series was the tenth season of the Craftsman Truck Series, the third highest stock car racing series sanctioned by NASCAR in the United States. Bobby Hamilton of Bobby Hamilton Racing won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, 2004 teams and drivers, Part-time teams\nNote: If under \"team\", the owner's name is listed and in italics, that means the name of the race team that fielded the truck is unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Florida Dodge Dealers 250\nThe Florida Dodge Dealers 250 was held February 13 at Daytona International Speedway. Terry Cook won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Florida Dodge Dealers 250\nFailed to qualify: Kelly Sutton (#02), Phil Bonifield (#25), L. W. Miller (#28), Greg Sacks (#48), Loni Richardson (#0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Easycare Vehicle Contracts 200\nThe inaugural EasyCare Vehicle Service Contracts 200 was held March 13 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. David Reutimann won the pole. Toyota's First Pole in the Truck series. This race suffered a scary crash on lap 45, involving Rick Crawford, Tina Gordon, and Hank Parker Jr..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Easycare Vehicle Contracts 200\nFailed to qualify: Greg Sacks (#48), L. W. Miller (#28), Loni Richardson (#0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 73], "content_span": [74, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Kroger 250\nThe Kroger 250 was held April 17 at Martinsville Speedway. Jack Sprague won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Kroger 250\nFailed to qualify: Geoff Bodine (#03), Chris Wimmer (#63), Johnny Sauter (#43), David Froelich (#57), Kelly Sutton (#02), Wayne Edwards (#48), Richard Hampton (#19), Ricky Gonzalez (#93), Craig Wood (#73)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, UAW/GM Ohio 250\nFor the first time in 50 years a NASCAR race was held in Ohio. The UAW/GM Ohio 250 was held May 16 at Mansfield Motorsports Speedway. Jack Sprague was awarded the pole after rain washed out qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, UAW/GM Ohio 250\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Love (#67), Robert Huffman (#12), David Froelich Jr. (#57), Richard Hampton (#19), Craig Wood (#73), J. C. Stout (#91), Sean Murphy (#30), David Ragan (#66), Chris Winter (#05), Randy Van Zant (#83), Jim Walker (#74)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Infineon 200\nThe Infineon 200 was held May 21 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. David Starr won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, MBNA America 200\nThe MBNA America 200 was held June 4 at Dover International Speedway. Carl Edwards won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, O'Reilly 400K\nThe O'Reilly 400K was held June 11 at Texas Motor Speedway. Ted Musgrave won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, O'Reilly 200\nThe O'Reilly 200 was held June 19 at Memphis Motorsports Park. Jack Sprague won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, O'Reilly 200\nFailed to qualify: Darren Shaw (#04), Jarod Robie (#98), Paul White (#77), Scotty Sands (#97), Dennis Hannel (#94)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Black Cat Fireworks 200\nThe Black Cat Fireworks 200 was held June 25 at The Milwaukee Mile. Ted Musgrave won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, O'Reilly Auto Parts 250\nThe O'Reilly Auto Parts 250 was held July 3 at Kansas Speedway. Dennis Setzer won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Built Ford Tough 225\nThe Built Ford Tough 225 was held July 10 at Kentucky Speedway. Dennis Setzer won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers Ram Tough 200\nThe Missouri-Illinois Dodge Dealers Ram Tough 200 was held July 17 at Gateway International Raceway. Jack Sprague won the pole. This race would be the final to feature unlimited Green-White-Checkered finishing attempts until 2017, as this race took four attempts to finish under green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Line-X Spray-On Truck Bedliners 200\nThe Line-X Spray-On Truck Bedliners 200 was held July 31 at Michigan International Speedway. Dennis Setzer won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 78], "content_span": [79, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Power Stroke Diesel 200\nThe Power Stroke Diesel 200 was held August 6 at Indianapolis Raceway Park. Jack Sprague won the pole. This race marked the NASCAR debut for Denny Hamlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Toyota Tundra 200\nThe Toyota Tundra 200 was held August 14 at Nashville Superspeedway. Local product Bobby Hamilton Jr. won the pole, and his father, Bobby Hamilton, won the race. Both Hamiltons considered Nashville their home track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, O'Reilly 200 presented by Valvoline Maxlife\nThe O'Reilly 200 presented by Valvoline Maxlife was held August 25 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Ken Schrader won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, O'Reilly 200 presented by Valvoline Maxlife\nFailed to qualify: Kelly Sutton (#02), Eric McClure (#72), Darren Shaw (#04), Ryan McGlynn (#00), Loni Richardson (#0), Nicholas Tucker (#48), Craig Wood(#73), Chris Winter (#05)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 86], "content_span": [87, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Kroger 200\nThe Kroger 200 was held September 9 at Richmond International Raceway. Jamie McMurray won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Kroger 200\nFailed to qualify: Jay Sauter (#06), Lance Hooper (#13), Tony Raines (#40), Mark McFarland (#59), Kelly Sutton (#02), Wayne Edwards (#93), Kyle Beattie (#0), Craig Wood (#73), J. C. Stout (#91), James Hylton (#48)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Sylvania 200\nThe Sylvania 200 was held September 18 at New Hampshire International Speedway. Jack Sprague won the pole. Despite starting several hours later than scheduled due to rain from Hurricane Ivan and with the threat of darkness, all 200 laps were completed, although the race ended under caution at the scheduled distance after it was deemed too dark to have an attempt at a Green-White-Checkered finish due to a crash with less than 3 to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Las Vegas 350\nThe Las Vegas 350 was held September 25 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Mike Skinner won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, American Racing Wheels 200\nThe American Racing Wheels 200 was held October 2 at California Speedway. Travis Kvapil won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Silverado 350K\nThe Silverado 350K was held October 16 at Texas Motor Speedway. Mike Skinner won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Silverado 350K\nFailed to qualify: Jay Sauter (#06), Wayne Edwards (#77), Loni Richardson (#0), Blake Mallory (#35)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Kroger 200\nThe Kroger 200 was held October 23 at Martinsville Speedway. Bobby Hamilton won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Kroger 200\nFailed to qualify: Robbie Ferguson (#93), Tony Raines (#40), Davin Scites (#20), Darrell Waltrip (#11), Jim Walker (#74), Eric King (#00), Tam Topham (#70), Craig Wood (#13)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Chevy Silverado 150\nThe Chevy Silverado 150 was held November 5 at Phoenix International Raceway. Jack Sprague won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Darlington 200\nThe Darlington 200 was held November 13 at Darlington Raceway after rain washed out the race November 12. The race was moved to Saturday as part of a day-night doubleheader on the Southern 500 weekend. Carl Edwards won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Ford 200\nThe Ford 200 was held November 19 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. David Reutimann won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Races, Ford 200\nFailed to qualify: Sammy Sanders (#04), Brad Keselowski (#63), Shigeaki Hattori (#01), Derrike Cope (#48), Todd Bodine (#30), Jeff Jefferson (#03), Scott Lynch (#59), Ken Weaver (#08), Danny Bagwell (#41)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178208-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series, Rookie of the Year\n34-year-old David Reutimann, driving for the start-up Darrell Waltrip Motorsports, clinched the 2004 Rookie of the Year title, posting four top-fives and winning two poles. Runner-up Tracy Hines had two top-tens for ThorSport Racing, while neither Brandon Whitt nor Chase Montgomery had a top-ten. Shane Sieg, Kelly Sutton, Ken Weaver, Chris Wimmer and Brad Keselowski had only part-time runs, while Shelby Howard was released from his ride early in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\nThe 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series was the 56th season of professional stock car racing in the United States and the 33rd modern-era Cup series season. The season began on Saturday, February 7, and ended on Sunday, November 21. Kurt Busch, who drove a Ford for Roush Racing, was the Nextel Cup champion. It would be the last time until 2012 that the championship would be won by someone other than Tony Stewart or Jimmie Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\nThis was the first season that NASCAR utilized the Chase for the Nextel Cup format that began with the Sylvania 300 on Sunday, September 19. Under the format rules, the top 10 drivers (and any additional drivers within 400 points of the leader) by the end of the 26th race would be eligible to compete in a final 10-race playoff to determine the NASCAR Nextel Cup champion. Following the 26th race, the eligible drivers would have their points reset to bring the drivers closer together in the standings, with only five points separating each driver. The season would then continue as normal, with the driver with the most points at the end of the season becoming the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\nThe NASCAR Manufacturers' Championship was won by Chevrolet when they captured 26 wins and 266 points. Ford finished in second place with 10 wins, and 224 points, while Dodge followed in third with 4 wins and 194 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\nThis was the first year for the new series sponsorship. Mobile phone provider Nextel assumed sponsorship of the NASCAR championship series from cigarette brand Winston. Winston was the title sponsor of the Cup Series for 33 seasons, from 1971 to 2003. Nextel would become only the second title sponsor in Cup Series history. This was also the first year for Sunoco as it replaced Unocal 76 Brand as the official fuel of NASCAR. Sunoco would become only the second gas company to be NASCAR's official fuel since Unocal had been the official fuel since the sport's inception in 1948.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\nThe season was also marked by tragedy. On October 24, a charter airplane owned by Hendrick Motorsports crashed at Bull Mountain in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, near Martinsville Speedway. Ten people aboard the plane died, including four relatives of team owner Rick Hendrick, as well as Randy Dorton, Hendrick's chief engine builder. Jimmie Johnson, a Hendrick driver, had won the race, but the post-race victory ceremony was canceled as words spread of the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\n2004 was the first season without Pontiac (though a few Pontiacs without factory support ran several early-season races).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series\nIt was the last season until 2021 without Clint Bowyer, and the same time before Denny Hamlin joins NASCAR as a driver (he ran the last 7 races in 2005 before joining full-time in 2006).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Budweiser Shootout\nThe exhibition Budweiser Shootout was held on February 7 at Daytona International Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Gatorade Twin 125s\nThe Gatorade 125s qualifying for the Daytona 500 were held on February 12 at Daytona International Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Subway 400\nThe final Subway 400 was held on February 22 at North Carolina Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400\nThe UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 was held on March 7 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Kasey Kahne won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Golden Corral 500\nThe Golden Corral 500 was held on March 14 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Carolina Dodge Dealers 400\nThe Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 was held on March 21 at Darlington Raceway. Kasey Kahne won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Food City 500\nThe Food City 500 was held on March 28 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Samsung/Radio Shack 500\nThe Samsung/Radio Shack 500 was held on April 4 at Texas Motor Speedway. Bobby Labonte won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Samsung/Radio Shack 500\nFailed to qualify: Kyle Busch (#84), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Andy Hillenburg (#80), Andy Belmont (#02)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Advance Auto Parts 500\nThe Advance Auto Parts 500 was held on April 18 at Martinsville Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Aaron's 499\nThe Aaron's 499 was held on April 25 at Talladega Superspeedway. Ricky Rudd won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Aaron's 499\nFailed to qualify: Larry Foyt (#14), Todd Bodine (#98), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Auto Club 500\nThe Auto Club 500 was held on May 2 at California Speedway. Kasey Kahne won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Chevy American Revolution 400\nThe Chevy American Revolution 400 was held on May 15 at Richmond International Raceway. Brian Vickers won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Nextel Open\nThe Nextel Open was held on May 22 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Dave Blaney won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Nextel All-Star Challenge\nThe Nextel All-Star Challenge was held on May 22 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Rusty Wallace won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Coca-Cola 600\nThe Coca-Cola 600 was held on May 30 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Jimmie Johnson won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Coca-Cola 600\nFailed to qualify: Steve Park (#7), Todd Bodine (#37), Carl Long (#46), Stanton Barrett (#94), Geoff Bodine (#98), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Jeff Fultz (#78), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Andy Hillenburg (#80)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, MBNA America 400 \"A Salute to Heroes\"\nThe MBNA America 400 \"A Salute to Heroes\" was held on June 6 at Dover International Speedway. Jeremy Mayfield won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, MBNA America 400 \"A Salute to Heroes\"\nFailed to qualify: Hermie Sadler (#02), Todd Bodine (#37), Larry Gunselman (#98)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pocono 500\nThe Pocono 500 was held on June 13 at Pocono Raceway. Kasey Kahne won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, DHL 400\nThe DHL 400 was held on June 20 at Michigan International Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole. Kasey Kahne got his fourth second-place finish of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Dodge/Save Mart 350\nThe Dodge/Save Mart 350 was held on June 27 at Infineon Raceway. Jeff Gordon won the pole and led 92 of the 110 laps en route to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pepsi 400\nThe Pepsi 400 was held on July 3 at Daytona International Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pepsi 400\nFailed to qualify: Chad Blount (#37), Tony Raines (#23), Derrike Cope (#94), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Eric McClure (#04), Kenny Wallace (#00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Tropicana 400\nThe Tropicana 400 was held on July 11 at Chicagoland Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Tropicana 400\nFailed to qualify: Todd Bodine (#98), Greg Sacks (#13), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Siemens 300\nThe Siemens 300 was held on July 25 at New Hampshire International Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Siemens 300\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#51), Kyle Busch (#84), Ryan McGlynn (#00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pennsylvania 500\nThe Pennsylvania 500 was held on August 1 at Pocono Raceway. Casey Mears won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pennsylvania 500\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#51), Andy Hillenburg (#37), A. J. Henriksen (#90)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Brickyard 400\nThe Brickyard 400 was held on August 8 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Casey Mears won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Brickyard 400\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#51), Hermie Sadler (#02), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Greg Sacks (#13), Andy Hillenburg (#37), Geoff Bodine (#34), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Sirius Satellite Radio at The Glen\nThe Sirius Satellite Radio at The Glen was held on August 15 at Watkins Glen International. Jimmie Johnson started on the pole after qualifying was rained out. Tony Stewart put up a spectacular race, narrowly beating Ron Fellows for the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Sirius Satellite Radio at The Glen\nFailed to qualify: Scott Pruett (#39), Boris Said (#36), Klaus Graf (#59), Stanton Barrett (#52)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, GFS Marketplace 400\nThe GFS Marketplace 400 was held on August 22 at Michigan International Speedway. Jimmie Johnson started on the pole after qualifying was rained out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, GFS Marketplace 400\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#51), Kerry Earnhardt (#33), Kyle Busch (#84), Kenny Wallace (#00), J. J. Yeley (#11), Mike Wallace (#35), Stan Boyd (#79), Stanton Barrett (#37)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Sharpie 500\nThe Sharpie 500 was held on August 28 at Bristol Motor Speedway. Jeff Gordon won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Sharpie 500\nFailed to qualify: Hermie Sadler (#02), Stanton Barrett (#52), Brad Teague (#72), Tony Ave (#80), Ryan McGlynn (#00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pop Secret 500\nThe inaugural Pop Secret 500 was held on September 5 at California Speedway. Brian Vickers won the pole. Portions of this race were filmed for the movie Herbie Fully Loaded. Kasey Kahne got his fifth second-place finish of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Pop Secret 500\nFailed to qualify: Morgan Shepherd (#89), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Hermie Sadler (#02), Kevin Lepage (#37), Mike Wallace (#35)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Chevy Rock and Roll 400\nThe Chevy Rock and Roll 400 was held on September 11 at Richmond International Raceway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Chevy Rock and Roll 400\nFailed to qualify: Johnny Sauter (#33), Tony Raines (#51), Kevin Lepage (#37), Greg Sacks (#13), Hermie Sadler (#02), Brad Teague (#92), Ryan McGlynn (#00), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Carl Long (#80)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Races, Chevy Rock and Roll 400\nMaking The Chase - Starting with this year, and every year following until 2017, the fall race at Richmond served as the end of the Cup Series' regular season and as the cut off for making the Chase for the Cup. The Chase field for 2004 consisted of the following drivers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Sylvania 300\nThe Sylvania 300 was held on September 19 at New Hampshire International Speedway. Despite the rain washing out the qualifying, the starting lineup was set by owner's points, and Jeff Gordon started on the front row. This was the first race of the new 10-race playoff format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Sylvania 300\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#37), Martin Truex Jr. (#1), Johnny Sauter (#33), Greg Sacks (#13), Ryan McGlynn (#00), Carl Long (#46), Tony Raines (#92), Stan Boyd (#79)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, MBNA America 400\nThe MBNA America 400 was held on September 26 at Dover International Speedway. Jeremy Mayfield won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, MBNA America 400\nFailed to qualify: Hermie Sadler (#02), Derrike Cope (#80), Greg Sacks (#13), Carl Long (#00), Kenny Hendrick (#35), Stanton Barrett (#92), Mike Garvey (#75)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, EA Sports 500\nThe EA Sports 500 was held on October 3 at Talladega Superspeedway. Joe Nemechek won the pole. At the finish line, on the last lap, Elliott Sadler flipped over just as he had done in the same race in 2003. He was uninjured, though.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, EA Sports 500\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#37), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Carl Long (#80)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Banquet 400 presented by ConAgra Foods\nThe Banquet 400 presented by ConAgra Foods was held on October 10 at Kansas Speedway. Joe Nemechek won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Banquet 400 presented by ConAgra Foods\nFailed to qualify: Mike Garvey (#75), Mike Wallace (#35), Carl Long (#00), Morgan Shepherd (#89)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 95], "content_span": [96, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, UAW-GM Quality 500\nThe UAW-GM Quality 500 was held on October 16 at Lowe's Motor Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, UAW-GM Quality 500\nFailed to qualify: Kenny Wallace (#00), Derrike Cope (#94), Mike Wallace (#35), Carl Long (#00), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Larry Foyt (#59), Hermie Sadler (#02), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Geoff Bodine (#98)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Subway 500\nThe Subway 500 was held on October 24 at Martinsville Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Subway 500\nFailed to qualify: Carl Long (#46), Brad Teague (#94), Greg Sacks (#13), Ryan McGlynn (#00), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Mike Garvey (#75), Klaus Graf (#59)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500\nThe Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500 was held on October 31 at Atlanta Motor Speedway. Ryan Newman won the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Bass Pro Shops MBNA 500\nFailed to qualify: Scott Riggs (#10), Scott Wimmer (#22), Kerry Earnhardt (#33), Johnny Sauter (#09), Hermie Sadler (#02), Mike Wallace (#4), Derrike Cope (#94), Randy LaJoie (#98), Greg Sacks (#13), Larry Foyt (#59), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Andy Belmont (#80), Larry Hollenbeck (#62), Kenny Wallace (#00)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 80], "content_span": [81, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Checker Auto Parts 500\nThe Checker Auto Parts 500 was held on November 7 at Phoenix International Raceway. Ryan Newman won the pole. Race extended to 315 laps / 315 miles due to green-white-checkered finish. The race at Phoenix was very cloudy and a short chance of rain in cold weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Checker Auto Parts 500\nFailed to qualify: Mike Garvey (#75), Tony Raines (#51), Stanton Barrett (#94), Mario Gosselin (#80), Ryan McGlynn (#00), Geoff Bodine (#93), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Mountain Dew Southern 500\nThe Mountain Dew Southern 500 was held on November 14 at Darlington Raceway. Qualifying was canceled due to rain and the starting lineup was set by owner's points. Kurt Busch was the points leader and sat on the front row. Jimmie Johnson completed a sweep at Darlington while Tony Stewart and Ryan Newman were eliminated from Chase contention by being greater than 156 points behind the points leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Mountain Dew Southern 500\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#37), John Andretti (#14), Derrike Cope (#94), Carl Long (#00), Travis Kvapil (#06)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400\nThe Ford 400 was held on November 21 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. Kurt Busch won the pole. This race was known as the deciding race of the 2004 Nextel Cup champion, in which five drivers were still mathematically alive for the championship including the points leader, Kurt Busch with an 18-point margin ahead of Jimmie Johnson, who earned the most wins in 2004, Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr., and veteran Mark Martin. Those five chasers are separated by an 82-point margin from first to fifth for the final race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0069-0001", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400\nAt the start of lap 1, Hermie Sadler got turned sideways while Mike Bliss was spun around but Johnson survived the wreck in the following caution. On lap 93, championship leader Kurt Busch lost a tire when he entered pit road, he lost the championship lead to Jeff Gordon, though Busch took back the points lead. With 3 laps to go, race leader Ryan Newman made some contact and lost the right side of the tire, the caution was out and set a Green-white-checkered finish at Homestead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0069-0002", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400\nAt the restart, Greg Biffle held off the hard-charging Hendrick teams of Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon for the race lead and took the checkered flag to win the Ford 400, while Johnson and Gordon finished 2nd and 3rd. Kurt Busch won the 2004 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Championship with 8 points ahead of Johnson, the closest margin in Cup history (until the 2011 season, won by Tony Stewart. Stewart and Carl Edwards were tied following the 2011 season's last race, the Cup going to Stewart by virtue of more wins on the season, 5 to 1 respectively.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400\nFailed to qualify: Kyle Petty (#45), Johnny Sauter (#09), Mike Garvey (#75), Tony Raines (#51), Kevin Lepage (#37), Todd Bodine (#50), Larry Foyt (#70), J. J. Yeley (#11), Randy LaJoie (#98), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Kirk Shelmerdine (#72), Carl Long (#80), Geoff Bodine (#93)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Final points standings\n11. Jamie McMurray\u00a0\u2013 459712. Bobby Labonte\u00a0\u2013 427713. Kasey Kahne\u00a0\u2013 427414. Kevin Harvick\u00a0\u2013 422815. Dale Jarrett\u00a0\u2013 421416. Rusty Wallace\u00a0\u2013 396017. Greg Biffle\u00a0\u2013 390218. Jeff Burton\u00a0\u2013 390219. Joe Nemechek\u00a0\u2013 387820. Michael Waltrip\u00a0\u2013 387821. Sterling Marlin\u00a0\u2013 385722. Casey Mears\u00a0\u2013 369023. Robby Gordon\u00a0\u2013 364624. Ricky Rudd\u00a0\u2013 361525. Brian Vickers\u00a0\u2013 352126. Terry Labonte\u00a0\u2013 351927. Scott Wimmer\u00a0\u2013 319828. Brendan Gaughan\u00a0\u2013 316529. Scott Riggs\u00a0\u2013 309030. Jeff Green\u00a0\u2013 305431. Ken Schrader\u00a0\u2013 303232. Ward Burton\u00a0\u2013 292933. Kyle Petty\u00a0\u2013 281134. Ricky Craven\u00a0\u2013 208635. Jimmy Spencer\u00a0\u2013 196936. Johnny Sauter\u00a0\u2013 143037. Carl Edwards\u00a0\u2013 142438. Dave Blaney\u00a0\u2013 134739. Bobby Hamilton Jr.\u00a0\u2013 127140. Derrike Cope\u00a0\u2013 105841. Todd Bodine\u00a0\u2013 98642. Morgan Shepherd\u00a0\u2013 92543. Kevin Lepage\u00a0\u2013 915", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Full Drivers' Championship\nBold\u00a0- Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0- Pole position set by owner's points standings. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Rookie of the Year\nThe Rookie of the year battle in 2004 marked the first time since 1998 that a rookie driver did not visit victory lane. The winner of the battle was dark horse candidate Kasey Kahne, who went from a 41st-place finish at the season opening Daytona 500, to being narrowly defeated by Matt Kenseth the next week at Rockingham, and he never looked back, grabbing fourteen top ten finishes and thirteen top-five finishes, as well as a couple of pole positions. Pre", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178209-0073-0001", "contents": "2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series, Rookie of the Year\n-season favorites Scott Wimmer and Brian Vickers struggled, although Wimmer placed third in the Daytona 500, but neither made competitive strides during the season. Brendan Gaughan was a pleasant surprise, posting four top tens and finishing runner-up to Kahne for the award, while Scott Riggs only had two-top ten finishes. The only other rookie, Johnny Sauter, was released from his ride mid-season and never made a challenge for the top honor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178210-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open\nThe 2004 NASDAQ-100 Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 20th edition of the Miami Masters and was part of the Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier I of the 2004 WTA Tour. Both the men's and women's events took place at the Tennis Center at Crandon Park in Key Biscayne, Florida in the United States from March 24 through April 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178210-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open\nThe men's tournament was notable as it featured the first ever meeting between Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal, with Nadal winning in straight sets. The women\u2019s tournament was also notable for featuring the first ever meeting between Maria Sharapova and Serena Williams, with Williams winning in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178210-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open, Finals, Men's Singles\nAndy Roddick defeated Guillermo Coria 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20131 (Coria retired)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178210-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open, Finals, Men's Doubles\nWayne Black / Kevin Ullyett defeated Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Todd Woodbridge 6\u20132, 7\u20136(14\u201312)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178210-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open, Finals, Women's Doubles\nNadia Petrova / Meghann Shaughnessy defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178211-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nRoger Federer and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions but only Mirnyi competed that year with Mahesh Bhupathi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178211-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBhupathi and Mirnyi lost in the second round to Arnaud Cl\u00e9ment and S\u00e9bastien Grosjean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178211-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nWayne Black and Kevin Ullyett won in the final 6\u20132, 7\u20136(14\u201312) against Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178212-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndy Roddick defeated Guillermo Coria in the final, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20133, 6\u20131 after Coria retired, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2004 Miami Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178212-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndre Agassi was the three-time defending champion, but he lost in the fourth round to Agust\u00edn Calleri. Agassi's win over Max Mirnyi in the third round was his record 20th consecutive win at the Miami Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178212-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe third round match between Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer marks the first time they faced each other, eventually meeting on 40 occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178212-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nAll thirty-two seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178213-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Magdalena Maleeva were the defending champions, but competed this year with different partners. Huber teamed up with Ai Sugiyama and were eliminated in quarterfinals, while Maleeva teamed up with Katarina Srebotnik and lost in first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178213-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy won the title, defeating Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final. It was the 5th doubles title for both players in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178214-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams was the two-time defending champion and successfully defended her title by defeating Elena Dementieva 6\u20131, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178214-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis tournament featured the first ever career meeting between Williams and Maria Sharapova. Williams won in straight sets in the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178214-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NASDAQ-100 Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nAll seeded players received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game\nThe 2004 NBA All-Star Game was an exhibition basketball game which was played on February 15, 2004 at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, home of the Lakers and Clippers. This game was the 53rd edition of the North American National Basketball Association (NBA) All-Star Game and was played during the 2003\u201304 NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game\nThe West defeated the East 136-132, with Shaquille O'Neal of the Los Angeles Lakers winning the Most Valuable Player for the second time in his career. O'Neal scored 24 points and grabbed 11 rebounds. Jamaal Magloire led the East with 19 points and 8 rebounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Coaches\nThe coach for the Western Conference team was Minnesota Timberwolves head coach Flip Saunders. The Timberwolves had a 37-15 record on February 15. The coach for the Eastern Conference team was Indiana Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle. The Pacers had a 39-14 record on February 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nThe rosters for the All-Star Game were chosen in two ways. The starters were chosen via a fan ballot. Two guards, two forwards and one center who received the highest vote were named the All-Star starters. The reserves were chosen by votes among the NBA head coaches in their respective conferences. The coaches were not permitted to vote for their own players. The reserves consist of two guards, two forwards, one center and two players regardless of position. If a player is unable to participate due to injury, the commissioner will select a replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nFor the fourth time in the last five years, Vince Carter of the Toronto Raptors led the ballots with 2,127,183 votes, which earned him a starting position in the Eastern Conference team for the fifth year in a row. Allen Iverson, Tracy McGrady, Jermaine O'Neal, and Ben Wallace completed the Eastern Conference starting position, which would've been the same starting line-up as the previous year, if Carter hadn't given his spot to Michael Jordan. The Eastern Conference reserves included four first-time selections, Kenyon Martin, Jamaal Magloire, Ron Artest, and Michael Redd. Jason Kidd, Paul Pierce, and Baron Davis rounded out the team. Three teams, Indiana Pacers and New Jersey Nets, and Charlotte Hornets had two representations at the All-Star Game with O'Neal/Artest, Martin/Kidd, and Magloire/Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Game, Players\nThe Western leading vote-getter was Kevin Garnett, who earned his seventh consecutive All-Star Game selection with 1,780,918 votes. Steve Francis, Kobe Bryant, Yao Ming, and Tim Duncan completed the Western Conference starting positions, making it also the same starting line-up as the previous year. The Western Conference reserves included two first-time selections, Sam Cassell of the Minnesota Timberwolves, and Andrei Kirilenko of the Utah Jazz. The team is rounded out by Ray Allen, Brad Miller, Dirk Nowitzki, Peja Stojakovi\u0107, and Shaquille O'Neal. Four teams, Los Angeles Lakers, Minnesota Timberwolves, Houston Rockets, and Sacramento Kings, had two representations at the All-Star Game with Bryant/O'Neal, Garnett/Cassell, Francis/Yao, and Stojakovi\u0107/Miller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178215-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA All-Star Game, All-Star Weekend, Rookie Challenge\nSaid to be the most exciting Rookie Challenge in history due to all the highlight-reel dunks. Much of the hype centered on rookie phenoms LeBron James and Carmelo Anthony, who had 33 and 17 points respectively. Amar'e Stoudemire set a Rookie Challenge record with 36 points (it has since been broken).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 58], "content_span": [59, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals\nThe 2004 NBA Finals was the championship round of the 2003\u201304 National Basketball Association (NBA) season, and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. This season's NBA Finals was contested between the Western Conference playoff champion Los Angeles Lakers and the Eastern Conference playoff champion Detroit Pistons. The Lakers held home court advantage, and the series was played under a best-of-seven format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals\nAlthough the Lakers, headed by Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal, were considered the heavy favorites, the Pistons handily won the series in five games. This win marked the Pistons' fifth win overall as a franchise (including two NBL championships: in 1944 and 1945 as the Fort Wayne Pistons) as well as its first NBA title since two 1989\u201390 NBA championship seasons; nearly fifteen years. The series ultimately featured the perceived underdog Pistons, dominating a Lakers team composed of four future Hall of Famers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals\nPistons' owner William Davidson became the first owner in American sports history to win two championships in one calendar year; eight days earlier, the National Hockey League (NHL)'s Tampa Bay Lightning had defeated the Calgary Flames to win the Stanley Cup Finals in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Los Angeles Lakers\nThe Lakers had won three consecutive championships from 2000 to 2002, but lost to the eventual champions, the San Antonio Spurs in the Western Conference Semifinals in 2003 to end their streak at three. The Spurs beat the Lakers in 6 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Los Angeles Lakers\nIn the 2003 offseason, the Lakers made major changes, with initially varying results. Needing to find a point guard and a power forward to defend against Tim Duncan and the Spurs, the Lakers signed veteran stars Gary Payton and Karl Malone for well below market value; they also hoped to give both veterans their first championship ring. The Lakers were afterwards considered the favorites to win the NBA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Los Angeles Lakers\nDuring the regular season, after starting the season 18\u20133, the Lakers were afflicted by numerous injuries and stumbled to a 56\u201326 record to finish the season with the second seed in the Western Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Los Angeles Lakers\nThe Lakers breezed past their first-round opponent, the Houston Rockets, headlining a matchup between Shaquille O'Neal and a young Yao Ming, defeating the squad 4-1 but then lost the first two games in their series against the Spurs before a dramatic comeback that saw them win 4\u20132. Then, they faced the Minnesota Timberwolves and league MVP Kevin Garnett. The Lakers won the series 4\u20132 to advance to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nThe Pistons won two back-to-back championships in 1989 and 1990, but with retirements and departures of several stars, they faded from relevance. The team hired former star Joe Dumars as general manager of the team in 2000, and he began stockpiling draft picks and trading players. He landed defensive stalwart Ben Wallace and guard Richard Hamilton by trading established stars in controversial trades, signed Chauncey Billups (considered an underachiever), and drafted Tayshaun Prince with the 23rd pick in the 2002 Draft. He was named the NBA Executive of the Year in 2003 for returning the Pistons to prominence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nThe Pistons made another major\u2014perhaps, riskier\u2014coaching change, firing head coach Rick Carlisle, who had led the Pistons to consecutive Central Division titles, 100 regular season wins, and had received the NBA Coach of the Year Award in 2002. In his place, Dumars hired legendary coach Larry Brown, who had most recently led the Philadelphia 76ers to the NBA Finals in 2001 against the Lakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nIn a three-team trade involving the Boston Celtics and Atlanta Hawks at the trade deadline, Dumars traded Chucky Atkins, Lindsey Hunter, Bobby Sura, \u017deljko Rebra\u010da and other considerations for guard Mike James and forward Rasheed Wallace (who had been traded from the Portland Trail Blazers to the Hawks and then to the Pistons at the trade deadline), who proved to be the final pieces of the championship team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nLindsey Hunter would rejoin the Pistons a week later after being waived by the Celtics, and would be partnered with Mike James to create a formidable guard tandem off the bench dubbed \"The Pit Bulls.\" . The Pistons, who were already a good defensive team, became a defensive force to be reckoned with. They became the first team in NBA history to hold five consecutive opponents under 70 points, and finished the season with a 54\u201328 record and the third seed in the Eastern Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nThe Pistons easily overcame the Milwaukee Bucks 4\u20131, but struggled against the defending conference champion New Jersey Nets. After splitting the first four games of the series, the Nets won Game 5 in Detroit in triple overtime to take a 3-2 series lead back to New Jersey. After falling behind by 12 early in Game 6, the Pistons stormed back in the second quarter and held on for an 81-75 victory to force a seventh game. The Pistons never trailed after the midway point of the first quarter and cruised to a 90\u201369 win to take the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nIn the Eastern Conference Finals, a match up with the 61-win, Carlisle-led Indiana Pacers, the Pistons faltered in the final 90 seconds of Game 1, falling 78\u201374. In Game 2, Rasheed Wallace almost squandered a Detroit lead. With Detroit clinging to a 69\u201367 lead with under 30 seconds to play, after Billups recovered the basketball after a Jermaine O'Neal blocked shot of Rasheed Wallace, Jamaal Tinsley stripped Billups and found Reggie Miller open down the court for what appeared to be the tying lay-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Detroit Pistons\nAs Miller approached the basket, Tayshaun Prince ran in from the left wing and blocked Miller's lay-up as it left his fingertips. Richard Hamilton recovered the loose ball before it went out of bounds and was fouled by Tinsley. Hamilton would make three free throws in the game's final 15 seconds to seal the victory 72-67 and tie the series. The Pistons rode the momentum of Game 2 (including dominant wins in Games 3 and 5) to a 4\u20132 series victory, advancing to the NBA Finals for the first time in 14 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Background, Regular season series\nThe teams split the two meetings, each won by the home team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 50], "content_span": [51, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Series summary\nThe Finals were played using a 2\u20133\u20132 site format, where the first two and last two games are held at the team with home court advantage. This format was only used in the Finals; all other playoff series were held in a 2\u20132\u20131\u20131\u20131 format (the team with home court advantage starts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Series summary\nThe Pistons became the fourth team to sweep the middle three games since the NBA started using the 2-3-2 format in 1985, but the first to do so at home; the previous three times this had occurred, it was done by away teams (1990 Pistons, 1991 Chicago Bulls, 2001 Lakers). This feat would later be accomplished by two more teams (the 2006 and 2012 Heat, both on their home floor) before the Finals reverted to 2-2-1-1-1 format in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Series summary\nThis was the first Finals series to be played on a Sunday\u2013Tuesday\u2013Thursday rotation since 1990, the last year CBS had the NBA's national television contract. NBC switched to a Wednesday-Friday-Sunday rotation in 1991, which was used through 2003, save for Monday games in 1999 and 2000 (and a potential Tuesday game in 1999, had that Finals reached 7 games). It is also the last series to have Game 1 be played on a Sunday. Since 2005, Game 1 has been played on a Thursday each year, with the exceptions of 2011 and 2012, when it was played on a Tuesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Series summary, Features\nThe NBA heavily publicized the series as it has done with all other NBA Finals series. There was a sentiment among fans that the Pistons were the clear underdogs, and many described the series as a David vs. Goliath match-up. The Lakers had a lineup of Stars such as Karl Malone, Gary Payton, Kobe Bryant, and Shaquille O'Neal\u2014their offensive capability was expected to overpower Detroit's defensive-based game plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Series summary, Features\nPayton and Malone also added to the publicity of the Finals. Perennial All-Stars who had both previously reached the Finals, Payton had led the Seattle SuperSonics there in 1996, while Malone had led the Utah Jazz there in 1997 and 1998. However, the Chicago Bulls denied them championship rings a total of three times. By the time of Jordan's second retirement in 1998, the two veterans were aged and failed to lead their teams deep into the playoffs. It would be Malone's final chance to win a championship, as he would retire before the subsequent season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 1\nConsidered to be a stunning upset by most of the NBA world, the Detroit Pistons managed to defeat the Lakers with imposing defense. Defensively clamping down on everyone but Bryant and O'Neal, the Pistons managed to hold everyone else to a total of 16 points. O'Neal recorded 34 points and 11 rebounds for the Lakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 1\nThe Pistons trailed the Lakers 41\u201340 at halftime, but by the fourth quarter the Pistons had opened up a 13-point lead; they would not trail for the rest of the game. The Pistons outscored the Lakers 47 to 34 in the 2nd half as they got the road win in Los Angeles. Chauncey Billups recorded 22 points, 4 assists and 3 steals to fuel his team towards the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 2\nIn Game 2, the Lakers had an 8-point lead at halftime, 44-36. However, in the third quarter, the Pistons scored 30 points, cutting the deficit to 68\u201366. Detroit took the lead via Lindsay Hunter's 3-pointer, 71-68. However, the Lakers used a 7-0 run to regain the lead with 7:00 remaining in the 4th Quarter. With 47 seconds remaining, Ben Wallace made a putback to give the Pistons a 6-point advantage. The next play, Kobe Bryant missed a 3-pointer but O'Neal was there to grab the offensive board and made an and-1 to cut the deficit to 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 2\nThe Pistons led by three points with 10.9 seconds remaining in the final period. Coach Brown wanted to foul a Lakers player where they could get only 2 points rather than 3. However, the Pistons' veterans only wanted to intentionally foul O'Neal. Kobe Bryant's 3-point shot with 2.1 seconds left in the fourth quarter would force overtime, where the Pistons would make only one two-point field goal (compared to Los Angeles scoring ten points). Afterwards, on the team bus back to the airport, Billups told the Pistons' players and coaches, \"We're not coming back to L.A.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 3\nIn Game 3, the Pistons were on fire to start. They started the 1st Quarter on a 10-2 run. At halftime, The Pistons led by seven, 39-32. The Pistons beat Los Angeles by 20 in their first NBA Finals appearance together at The Palace of Auburn Hills since 1990 to take a 2\u20131 lead in the series. The 68 points scored by the Lakers set a franchise record for the lowest number of points scored in a playoff game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 4\nAgain, the Pistons defeated the Lakers, although this time by eight, to take a 3\u20131 series advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 4\nO'Neal scored 36 for the Lakers and Bryant scored 20 but shot 32 percent from the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 4\nMalone would play his last game, as a knee injury would not allow him to dress in Game Five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 5\nIn Game 5, the Pistons won their first championship since 1990, and Larry Brown finally won a professional title. The Pistons defense had overcome the high-scoring Laker offense, winning the game by 13, winning the series 4\u20131, and also ending a long Laker dynasty that lasted for many years. The game saw the end of Phil Jackson's first run as the coach (he returned in the 2005\u201306 season), and saw O'Neal, Payton, and Malone's last games in Laker uniforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Game Summaries, Game 5\nThis game also marked the end of Karl Malone's third and final attempt at winning an NBA championship. He went 0\u20133 in NBA Finals competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Broadcast notes\nThe games were broadcast on ABC by Al Michaels and Doc Rivers. This was the first of two NBA Finals assignments for Michaels, better known as the voice of Monday Night Football at the time, while Rivers departed the booth after the series to become head coach of the Boston Celtics. Rivers was replaced by Hubie Brown the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Broadcast notes\nBrent Musburger and Dr. Jack Ramsay broadcast the Finals nationally on ESPN Radio. The finals were shown on Sky Sports in the UK and Ireland. In Canada, Leafs TV and RDS (in French) simulcast ABC, and Azteca 13 broadcast the Finals in Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Broadcast notes\nTo promote the series, the NBA used The Black Eyed Peas' song \"Let's Get It Started\", which it had also used throughout the 2004 NBA Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Aftermath\nThe Pistons made the Finals again in 2005, losing to the Spurs in a heavily contested seven-game series. The 2004-2005 Pistons won 54 games and defeated the Philadelphia 76ers (5 games), Indiana Pacers (6 games) and Miami Heat (7 games) on their way back to the finals. However the Spurs, who play a defensive style similar to the Pistons' would defeat the incumbent in a tough fought Game 7. The Pistons would continue their run of Eastern Conference superiority in the ensuing 3 years; losing in the Conference Finals each time. After a particularly painful loss to the eventual champion Boston Celtics in the 2007-08 season, management would finally break up the core of the team and enter a period of losing seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Aftermath\nThe Lakers' collapse became apparent in the days following the Finals. Head coach Phil Jackson abruptly resigned, Shaquille O'Neal was traded to the Miami Heat; Gary Payton was dealt to the Celtics, and Karl Malone was left unsigned, which subsequently resulted in Malone's retirement following the start of 2005\u201306 NBA season. The following 2004-05 NBA season was a tough one for the Lakers. Winning a mere 34 games and missing the playoffs for only the fifth time in the team's history, the Lakers' 2004-2005 season was wholly forgettable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Aftermath\nJackson returned to the Lakers in the following offseason; despite penning a book dubiously entitled: The Last Season: A Team in Search of Its Soul, in which he voiced disdain for Kobe Bryant; calling him 'uncoachable'. Jackson and Bryant would quickly bury the hatchet once the season began; the duo, in the ensuing years would appear in three more NBA Finals; claiming two victories during those appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178216-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA Finals, Aftermath\nThe Pistons' win was the 21st championship between the four professional sports teams in Detroit (NFL's Lions, MLB's Tigers and NHL's Red Wings). Upon winning the 2008 Stanley Cup Finals, the Red Wings of the NHL increased this total to 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 26], "content_span": [27, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA draft\nThe 2004 NBA draft was held on June 24, 2004, at The Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City, and was broadcast live on ESPN at 7:00\u00a0pm (EDT). In this draft, National Basketball Association teams took turns selecting amateur college basketball players and other first-time eligible players. The NBA announced that 56 college and high school players and 38 international players had filed as early-entry candidates for the 2004 draft. On May 26, the NBA draft lottery was conducted for the teams that did not make the NBA Playoffs in the 2003\u201304 NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 NBA draft\nThe Orlando Magic, who had a 25 percent chance of obtaining the first selection, won the lottery, while the Los Angeles Clippers and the Chicago Bulls were second and third respectively. As an expansion team, the Charlotte Bobcats had been assigned the fourth selection in the draft and did not participate in the lottery. The Minnesota Timberwolves forfeited their first-round pick due to salary cap violations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA draft\nBy the end of the draft, around 40% of the players selected in it were born from countries outside the United States. It would remain the highest influx of international players selected in the modern NBA draft era until the 2016 NBA draft, where almost half of the selected players were born in countries outside the US.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 NBA draft\nIn addition, four of the players selected in the draft were Russians, which not only marked the highest number of players born in that region to be taken in one draft, but also was the highest representation of a country in one draft until 2016 when five Frenchmen would be taken in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA draft\nAfter the completion of the regular season, Emeka Okafor, the Bobcats' historical first rookie draft pick back when they were considered an expansion franchise, was named Rookie of the Year, while Ben Gordon earned the Sixth Man Award, becoming the first rookie in NBA history to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA draft\nDwight Howard has become an eight-time All-Star and has received seven All-NBA selections, and a three-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year. He also had the distinction as the only NBA player straight out of high school to start all 82 games as a rookie. There are also four other players that would be named All-Stars at some point in their careers, and Al Jefferson would be named to an All-NBA team. The draft is also notable for many high schoolers being drafted within a few picks from each other. As of 2021, the only remaining active players from the 2004 NBA draft are Dwight Howard, Andre Iguodala, and Trevor Ariza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178217-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA draft, Notable undrafted players\nThese players not selected in the draft have played at least one game in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178218-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA expansion draft\nThe expansion draft for the construction of the Charlotte Bobcats, the 30th NBA franchise, was held on June 22, 2004. The Bobcats selected 19 players from other teams' unprotected players lists and constructed their squad for, what was regarded, at the time, as their inaugural season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178218-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA expansion draft\nThis was the second time an expansion draft was held for the Charlotte NBA franchise, known since the 2014\u201315 season as the Hornets. The original team relocated to New Orleans prior to the 2002\u201303 season, retaining the Hornets name until 2013, when it was renamed the New Orleans Pelicans. The Charlotte franchise was suspended for two seasons, before an expansion team known as the Bobcats was established in 2004. It was renamed the Hornets prior to the 2014\u201315 season after the Pelicans relinquished the rights to the Hornets name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178218-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA expansion draft, Trades, Pre-draft trades\nPrior to the day of the draft, the following trades were made and resulted in exchanges of future draft picks between the teams, along with a particular agreement in the expansion draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178218-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA expansion draft, Trades, Draft-day trades\nThe following trades involving drafted players were made on the day of the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe 2004 NBA playoffs was the postseason tournament of the National Basketball Association's 2003\u201304 season. The tournament concluded with the Eastern Conference champion Detroit Pistons defeating the Western Conference champion Los Angeles Lakers 4 games to 1 in the NBA Finals. Chauncey Billups was named NBA Finals MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe Minnesota Timberwolves, after missing the playoffs their first seven seasons and losing in the first round the next seven, won their first two playoff series in 2004 before losing to the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals. As of 2019, these are the Wolves' only two series victories. The Timberwolves would not make the playoffs again until 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe Indiana Pacers made the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since their NBA Finals run in 2000, after which they significantly changed the makeup of their team (yet still made the playoffs every year). Game 2 of the series with the Pistons was pivotal, as Tayshaun Prince blocked a lay-up by Reggie Miller late in the game to preserve the victory; the Pistons won 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe 2004 playoffs was the first appearance for the Memphis Grizzlies in their 9-year history which began in Vancouver. However, they failed to win a single game in their first 3 playoff appearances (2004, 2005, 2006), before earning their first playoff game and series victories in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThis was the last playoff appearance for the New York Knicks until 2011, when they would be swept in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe Portland Trail Blazers and Utah Jazz missed the playoffs for the first time since 1982 and 1983, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThis was the Denver Nuggets' first playoff appearance since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe New Orleans Hornets made their final postseason appearance as a member of the East. They would not make the playoffs again until 2008, as a member of the West (the result of a realignment with the addition of the Charlotte Bobcats in the 2004\u201305 NBA season). Their playoff series with the Miami Heat, led by Dwyane Wade, was the last playoff series where the home team won all 7 games until 2008's Boston\u2013Atlanta and Boston\u2013Cleveland playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\n2004 was the first time in 14 years that all Texas teams made the playoffs, and the second time (first in 10 years) that all former ABA teams made the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs\nThe Rockets returned to the playoffs for the first time since 1999. They lost to the Lakers in five games of the opening round. This was Steve Francis' only career playoff appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Playoff qualifying, Eastern Conference, Best record in NBA\nThe Indiana Pacers clinched the best record in the NBA, and had earned home court advantage throughout the entire playoffs. However, when Indiana lost to the Detroit Pistons in the Eastern Conference Finals, home court advantage for the NBA Finals switched to the Western Conference champion Los Angeles Lakers, who had posted a better regular season record at 56-26 than the Eastern Conference champion Detroit Pistons at 54\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 77], "content_span": [78, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Playoff qualifying, Eastern Conference, Clinched a playoff berth\nThe following teams clinched a playoff berth in the East:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 83], "content_span": [84, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Playoff qualifying, Western Conference, Best record in conference\nThe Minnesota Timberwolves clinched the best record in the Western Conference, and had home court advantage throughout the Western Conference playoffs. However, when Minnesota lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in the Western Conference Finals, the Lakers gained home court advantage for the NBA Finals because the Lakers posted a better regular season record at 56-26 than the Eastern Conference champion Detroit Pistons at 54\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 84], "content_span": [85, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Playoff qualifying, Western Conference, Clinched a playoff berth\nThe following teams clinched a playoff berth in the West:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 83], "content_span": [84, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (1) Indiana Pacers vs. (8) Boston Celtics\nThis was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Celtics winning the first three meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 105], "content_span": [106, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (2) New Jersey Nets vs. (7) New York Knicks\nThis was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Knicks winning the first two meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 107], "content_span": [108, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (3) Detroit Pistons vs. (6) Milwaukee Bucks\nThis was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Pistons winning the first two meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 107], "content_span": [108, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Eastern Conference First Round, (4) Miami Heat vs. (5) New Orleans Hornets\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Heat and the New Orleans Pelicans/Hornets franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 106], "content_span": [107, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (1) Minnesota Timberwolves vs. (8) Denver Nuggets\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Nuggets and the Timberwolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 113], "content_span": [114, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (2) Los Angeles Lakers vs. (7) Houston Rockets\nThis was the seventh playoff meeting between these two teams, with each team winning three series apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 110], "content_span": [111, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (3) San Antonio Spurs vs. (6) Memphis Grizzlies\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Grizzlies and the Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 111], "content_span": [112, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, First Round, Western Conference First Round, (4) Sacramento Kings vs. (5) Dallas Mavericks\nThis was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with each team winning one series apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 109], "content_span": [110, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (1) Indiana Pacers vs. (4) Miami Heat\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Pacers and the Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 110], "content_span": [111, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (3) Detroit Pistons vs. (2) New Jersey Nets\nThis was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with each team winning one series apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 116], "content_span": [117, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (1) Minnesota Timberwolves vs. (4) Sacramento Kings\nThis was the first playoff meeting between the Timberwolves and the Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 124], "content_span": [125, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (3) San Antonio Spurs vs. (2) Los Angeles Lakers\nIn the final seconds of Game 5, Tim Duncan hits a fadeaway shot over Shaquille O'Neal to give the Spurs the lead, but with 0.4 seconds left, Derek Fisher off the inbounds pass hits a miracle buzzer beater to give the Lakers the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 121], "content_span": [122, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (3) San Antonio Spurs vs. (2) Los Angeles Lakers\nThis was the tenth playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Lakers winning six of the first nine meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 121], "content_span": [122, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Finals, (1) Indiana Pacers vs. (3) Detroit Pistons\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Pistons winning the first meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 107], "content_span": [108, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Finals, (1) Minnesota Timberwolves vs. (2) Los Angeles Lakers\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Lakers winning the first meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 118], "content_span": [119, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178219-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 NBA playoffs, NBA Finals: (W2) Los Angeles Lakers vs. (E3) Detroit Pistons\nThis was the 12th playoff meeting between these two teams, with the Lakers winning nine of the first 11 meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178220-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NC State Wolfpack football team\nThe 2004 NC State Wolfpack football team represented North Carolina State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head coach was Chuck Amato. N.C. State has been a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) since the league's inception in 1953. The Wolfpack played its home games in 2004 at Carter\u2013Finley Stadium in Raleigh, North Carolina, which has been NC State football's home stadium since 1966.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178221-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Bowling Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Bowling Championship was the first annual tournament to determine the national champion of women's NCAA collegiate ten-pin bowling. The tournament was played at Emerald Bowl in Houston, Texas during April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178221-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Bowling Championship\nNebraska defeated Central Missouri State in the championship match, 4 games to 2, to win their first national title. The Cornhuskers were coached by Bill Straub.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178221-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Bowling Championship\nThe awards for Most outstanding bowler and All-tournament team were not given out until 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178221-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Bowling Championship, Qualification\nSince there is only one national collegiate championship for women's bowling, all NCAA bowling programs (whether from Division I, Division II, or Division III) were eligible. A total of 8 teams were invited to contest the inaugural championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178222-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament was held from June 4 through June 27, 2004. Sixty-four NCAA Division I college baseball teams met after having played their way through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament, to play in the NCAA Tournament. The tournament culminates with 8 teams in the College World Series at historic Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178222-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament\nIn the 58th College World Series and the 55th series held in Omaha, the Cal State Fullerton Titans rode the arm of Jason Windsor, named the Series' Most Outstanding Player, to prevail over the field and claim the 2004 National Championship. The Titans won Bracket II with a 3-1 record and went on to sweep Bracket I winner Texas in two games to claim the title. Windsor picked up two complete game victories and a save, and threw more than 300 pitches in the series. Ricky Romero also recorded two wins for the Titans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178222-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament, Bids, Automatic bids\nConference champions from 30 Division I conferences earned automatic bids to regionals. The remaining 34 spots were awarded to schools as at-large invitees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178223-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships were the 66th annual NCAA Men's Division I Cross Country Championship and the 24th annual NCAA Women's Division I Cross Country Championship to determine the team and individual national champions of NCAA Division I men's and women's collegiate cross country running in the United States. In all, four different titles were contested: men's and women's individual and team championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178223-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships\nHeld on November 22, 2004, the combined meet was the first of eight consecutive championship meets hosted by Indiana State University at the LaVern Gibson Championship Cross Country Course in Terre Haute, Indiana. The distance for the men's race was 10 kilometers (6.21 miles) while the distance for the women's race was 6 kilometers (3.73 miles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178223-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships\nThe men's team championship was won by Colorado (90 points), the Buffaloes' second. The women's team championship was also won by Colorado (63 points), the Buffaloes' second. This was the fourth time that the same program won both the men's and women's national team titles (Stanford, 2003; Stanford, 1996; Wisconsin, 1985).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178223-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships\nThe two individual champions were, for the men, Simon Bairu (Wisconsin, 30:37.7) and, for the women, Kim Smith (Providence, 20:28.5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178224-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Field Hockey Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Field Hockey Championship was the 24th women's collegiate field hockey tournament organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association, to determine the top college field hockey team in the United States. The Wake Forest Demon Deacons won their third consecutive championship, defeating the Duke Blue Devils in the final, a rematch of the previous year's finale. The semifinals and championship were hosted by Wake Forest University at Kentner Stadium in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178225-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships were contested to determine the individual and team national champions of men's and women's NCAA collegiate indoor track and field events in the United States after the 2003\u201304 season, the 40th annual meet for men and 22nd annual meet for women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178225-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships\nFor the fifth consecutive year, the championships were held at the Randal Tyson Track Center at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178225-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships\nLSU won the men's title, the Tigers' second and first since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178225-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships\nLSU also won the women's title, the Lady Tigers' eleventh and third consecutive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178225-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Indoor Track and Field Championships, Qualification\nAll teams and athletes from Division I indoor track and field programs were eligible to compete for this year's individual and team titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 72], "content_span": [73, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game was the finals of the 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament and it determined the national champion for the 2003-04 NCAA Division I men's basketball season The 2004 National Title Game was played on April 5, 2004 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, The 2004 National Title Game was played between the 2004 Phoenix Regional Champions, #2-seeded Connecticut and the 2004 St. Louis Regional Champions, #3-seeded Georgia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game\nConnecticut and Georgia Tech met in the semifinals of the 2003 NIT Season Tip-Off and Georgia Tech upset #1-ranked Connecticut with a 77\u201361 win on their way to winning the 2003 NIT Season Tip-Off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Georgia Tech\nGeorgia Tech entered the 2004 NCAA Tournament as the #3 seed in the St. Louis regional. In the 1st round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament, Georgia Tech survived a scare against Northern Iowa when Ben Jacobson missed a game-tying 3-pointer as Georgia Tech was able to pull away with a 65\u201360 win. In the 2nd round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament, Jarrett Jack made a breakaway dunk with less than six seconds left to hold off Boston College with a 57\u201354 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 83], "content_span": [84, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Georgia Tech\nIn the Sweet 16, Marvin Lewis scored 23 points to lead Georgia Tech to a 72\u201367 victory over Nevada to advance to the Elite Eight. In the Elite Eight, Jarrett Jack scored 29 points to lead Georgia Tech to a 79\u201371 overtime victory over Kansas to advance to the 2004 Final Four. In the 2004 Final Four, Will Bynum made a last second shot to give Georgia Tech a 67\u201365 victory over Oklahoma State and a trip to the 2004 National Title Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 83], "content_span": [84, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Connecticut\nConnecticut entered the 2004 NCAA Tournament as the #2 seed in the Phoenix Regional. In the 1st round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament, Emeka Okafor had a double double with 15 points and 14 rebounds and he was able to limit the nations third-leading scorer Taylor Coppenrath to 12 points as Connecticut beat Vermont 70\u201353. In the 2nd round of the 2004 NCAA Tournament, Connecticut was able to beat DePaul 72-55 despite their coach Jim Calhoun having an upset stomach. In the Sweet 16, Ben Gordon scored 20 points to lead Connecticut to a 73\u201353 victory over Vanderbilt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Participants, Connecticut\nIn the Elite Eight, Emeka Okafor only scored two points due to a tweaked shoulder but Ben Gordon's 36 points and Rashad Anderson's 28 points led Connecticut to an 87\u201371 victory over Alabama for a trip to the 2004 Final Four. In the 2004 Final Four, Emeka Okafor scored all 18 of his points in the 2nd half as he led Connecticut to a 12\u20130 run, down 75\u201367 with less than three minuted remaining, to beat Duke 79-78 and advance to the 2004 National Title Game making their 1st title game appearance since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 82], "content_span": [83, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Game Summary\nEmeka Okafor and Ben Gordon go hot in the 1st half. Ben Gordon hit three three-pointers in the 1st ten minutes while Emeka Okafor dominated Georgia Tech center Luke Schenscher in the lane. Emeka Okafor and Ben Gordon nearly outscored Georgia Tech in the 1st half scoring 24 points combined in the 1st half while Georgia Tech scored 26 points in the 1st half as Connecticut was ahead 41\u201326 at halftime. Georgia Tech could not take advantage of Ben Gordon being on the bench after his 2nd foul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 69], "content_span": [70, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Game Summary\nIn fact, Connecticut was able to extend their lead with Ben Gordon on the bench. Connecticut was able to build a 25-point lead at one point. When Connecticut backed off and slowed the game down, Georgia Tech was able to make a furious rally to cut it to a seven-point deficit. Connecticut was able to hold off Georgia Tech and with 24 points and 15 rebounds from Emeka Okafor and 21 points from Ben Gordon, as Connecticut beat Georgia Tech 82\u201373.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 69], "content_span": [70, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Aftermath\nThousands of people in Connecticut celebrated after Connecticut's victory in the men's National Championship Game, which finished about two hours after the UConn women's team defeated archrival Tennessee for the women's national title. Fans were dancing, cheering, and waving pom poms. However, 35 people were arrested by the police for starting fires and overturning cars in celebration of Connecticut's second men's and fifth women's national championships. The university police reported that a dozen of fires were set outside and two cars were overturned at the Celeron Square apartment complex about a mile month of campus following Connecticut's victory over Georgia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178226-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game, Aftermath\nConnecticut became the first school ever in Division I to win NCAA titles in men's and women's basketball in the same season. The Huskies would repeat this feat in 2014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 66], "content_span": [67, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament involved 65 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 16, 2004, and ended with the championship game on April 5 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. A total of 64 games were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe NCAA named, for the first time, the four tournament regions after regional site host cities instead of the \"East\", \"Midwest\", \"South\", and \"West\" designations. It was also the first year that the matchups for the national semifinals were determined at least in part by the overall seeding of the top team in each regional. The top four teams in the tournament were Kentucky, Duke, Stanford, and Saint Joseph's. Had all of those teams advanced to the Final Four, Kentucky would have played Saint Joseph's and Duke would have played Stanford in the semifinal games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nOf those teams, only Duke advanced to the Final Four. They were joined by Connecticut, making their first appearance since defeating Duke for the national championship in 1999, Oklahoma State, making their first appearance since 1995, and Georgia Tech, making their first appearance since 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nConnecticut defeated Georgia Tech 82\u201373 to win their second national championship in as many tries. Emeka Okafor of Connecticut was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nAs they had in 1999, Connecticut won their regional championship in Phoenix, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nTwo of the tournament's top seeds failed to make it past the opening weekend. Kentucky, number one seed of the St. Louis region, and Stanford, #1 seed of the Phoenix region, both were defeated. Incidentally, both teams were defeated by schools from Alabama, as Kentucky fell to UAB while Stanford lost to Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament\nDue to their strong 2003\u201304 season, Gonzaga achieved its highest NCAA tournament seed until 2013 by receiving the #2 seed in the St. Louis region. Gonzaga would receive a #1 seed in the 2013 tournament. The team failed to advance beyond the first weekend of the tournament, however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule and venues\nThe following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 2008 tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule and venues\nSan Antonio and the Alamodome became the hosts of the Final Four for the second time in 2004. There were no new host cities in this tournament but there were three new venues. For the first time since 1970, the tournament returned to Columbus, Ohio, this time at Nationwide Arena, home to the NHL's Columbus Blue Jackets and sister venue to the Value City Arena on the campus of Ohio State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Schedule and venues\nAfter a shorter absence of only five years, basketball returned to the Mile High City at the Pepsi Center, home to the NBA's Denver Nuggets and the NHL's Colorado Avalanche. And for the first time since 1982, the tournament returned to Raleigh, North Carolina at the RBC Center, the off-campus home to the NC State Wolfpack, which replaced the Reynolds Coliseum, NC State's former basketball arena and the former site of tournament games in the city. This was the last tournament to feature games held at Kemper Arena and the TD Waterhouse Centre; both have been replaced in their respective cities by the Sprint Center and Amway Center, both of which have hosted games since.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Record by conference\nThe America East, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, CAA, Horizon League, Mid-Continent, Ivy, MAC, MEAC, Northeast, Ohio Valley, Patriot, SoCon, Southland, SWAC, and Sun Belt conferences all went 0\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Record by conference\nThe columns R32, S16, E8, F4, and CG respectively stand for the Round of 32, Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight, Final Four, and Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178227-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament, Announcers\nGreg Gumbel once again served as the studio host, joined by analysts Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178228-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championships were contested at the 66th annual NCAA-sanctioned golf tournament for determining the individual and team national champions of men's collegiate golf at the Division I level in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178228-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship\nThe tournament was held at The Homestead in Hot Springs, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178228-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship\nCalifornia won the team championship, the Golden Bears' first NCAA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178228-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship\nRyan Moore, from the University of Nevada Las Vegas, won the individual title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178228-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship, Qualifying\nThe NCAA held three regional qualifying tournaments, with the top ten teams from each event qualifying for the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178229-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament involved 16 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college ice hockey. It began on March 26, 2004, and ended with the championship game on April 10. A total of 15 games were played. This was the first season in which the Atlantic Hockey sent a representative to the tournament. Atlantic Hockey assumed possession of the automatic bid that had been the possession of the MAAC after it collapsed and all remaining ice hockey programs formed the new conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178229-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe University of Denver, coached by George Gwozdecky, won its sixth national title with a 1-0 victory in the final game over the University of Maine, coached by Tim Whitehead before a record crowd of over 18,000 people at Boston's FleetCenter (now known as the TD Garden). While Denver's Gabe Gauthier scored the game's only goal, the game is best remembered for Denver surviving Maine's six skaters to three skaters advantage in the final 90 seconds of the contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178229-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nDenver goaltender Adam Berkhoel was named the tournament Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178229-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Game locations\nThe NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Championship is a single-elimination tournament featuring 16 teams representing all six Division I conferences in the nation. The Championship Committee seeds the entire field from 1 to 16 within four regionals of 4 teams. The winners of the six Division I conference championships receive automatic bids to participate in the NCAA Championship. Regional placements are based primarily on the home location of the top seed in each bracket with an attempt made to put the top-ranked teams close to their home site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 64], "content_span": [65, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178229-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Qualifying teams\nThe at-large bids and seeding for each team in the tournament was announced on March 21, 2004. The Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) and the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) each had five teams receive a berth in the tournament, Hockey East had three teams receive a berth in the tournament, while Atlantic Hockey, College Hockey America (CHA) and the ECAC each received a single bid for their tournament champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178230-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Tournament was the 34th annual Division I NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship tournament. Sixteen NCAA Division I college men's lacrosse teams met after having played their way through a regular season, and for some, a conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178230-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship\nThe championship game was played at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, Maryland in front of 43,898 fans, Syracuse University won the championship title with a 14\u201313 win over United States Naval Academy. The Orange, led by senior Michael Powell who scored the game winner with one minute left in the fourth quarter, won their eighth NCAA championship game. Powell finished the game with one goal and five assists. Syracuse outscored Navy 3-1 in the final five minutes to overcome a 12-11 fourth-quarter deficit. Navy got the ball back with 15 seconds left, but could not get a shot off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178231-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament was a tournament of 48 teams from NCAA Division I. This year's College Cup Final Four was held at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California. All the other games were played at the home field of the higher seeded team. The final was held on December 12, 2004. Duke, Maryland, UC Santa Barbara, and Indiana qualified for the Final Four. UC Santa Barbara beat Duke and Indiana beat Maryland. In the final Indiana beat UC Santa Barbara in a penalty shoot-out following a 1\u20131 regulation tie and two scoreless overtimes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178231-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe tournament began on November 18, 2004. The first round was played on November 18, 19 and 20. The second round followed on November 23, and the third round on November 27 and 28. The Regional Finals were played on November 3\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178231-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, Summary\nA crowd of over 10,000 (led by a large number of UCSB alumni in the Los Angeles area and many others who made the 100 mile drive from Santa Barbara) filed into the Home Depot Center for the semi-finals. In the opener between Maryland and Indiana, the game was tied at 2 and appeared like it would be decided on penalties, but Indiana scored in the final minute of the second overtime. In the 2nd game, UCSB scored in the first minute against a Duke team that had yet to allow a goal in the tournament. The Gauchos scored again to take a 2\u20130 into halftime. Early in the 2nd half, Tony Lochhead scored on a free kick from 35 yards out and UCSB add a couple of late goals for a 5\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178231-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, Summary\nA crowd of nearly 13,000 attended the final between Indiana and UCSB. Early in the year, UCSB defeated Indiana and the Hoosiers had some harsh words about the Gauchos' aggressive and physical style of play. In the final, Indiana scored first and it looked like it might hold up but UCSB equalized late in the game. In the first overtime, Lochead took a corner kick for UCSB and Andy Iro got a head on the ball, sending it skimming over the cross bar. That was as close as either team came to scoring, so the matter was decided on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178231-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, Summary\nUCSB controversially replaced All American goalie Dan Kennedy with Kyle Reynish because of Reynish's 6'4\" frame, and the move appeared to pay off as he stopped 2 Indiana penalties. But UCSB penalty takers were having problems of their own, as Indiana keeper Jay Nolly made one save, and another shot missed the net. On the 5th round, Indiana scored to take a 3\u20132 lead, then UCSB had the final shot saved by Nolly again to secure the Championship for a second straight year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178232-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships took place March 25\u201327, 2004 in the Nassau County Aquatic Center, East Meadow, New York. Twenty-one champions were declared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178232-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Swimming and Diving Championships\nAlong with 2000, this year's meet was held short course meters (25 meters), rather than the NCAA's traditional short-course yards format (25 yards). This allowed for World Records to be set at the meet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178233-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships were the 58th annual tournaments to determine the national champions of NCAA Division I men's singles, doubles, and team collegiate tennis in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178233-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships\nBaylor defeated UCLA in the team championship final, 4\u20130, to claim their first national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178233-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships, Host sites\nThis year's tournaments were played at the Michael D. Case Tennis Center at the University of Tulsa in Tulsa, Oklahoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178233-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Men's Tennis Championships, Host sites\nThe men's and women's tournaments would not be held at the same site until 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178234-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships were contested at the 83rd annual NCAA-sanctioned track meet to determine the individual and team champions of men's and women's Division I collegiate outdoor track and field in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178234-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships\nThis year's meet, the 23rd with both men's and women's championships, was held June 9\u201312, 2004 at Mike A. Myers Stadium at the University of Texas in Austin, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178234-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships\nDefending champions Arkansas won the men's title, although the win was later vacated by the NCAA. No other team has since been awarded the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178234-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships\nUCLA won the women's title, the Bruins' third and first since 1983.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178235-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament was the twenty-third annual tournament to determine the national champion of NCAA women's collegiate softball. Held during May 2004, sixty-four Division I college softball teams contested the championship. The tournament featured eight regionals of eight teams, each in a double elimination format. The 2004 Women's College World Series was held in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma from May 27 through May 31 and marked the conclusion of the 2004 NCAA Division I softball season. UCLA won their eleventh NCAA championship and twelfth overall by defeating California 3\u20131 in the final game. LSU pitcher Kristin Schmidt was named Women's College World Series Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178235-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, Women's College World Series, Participants\n\u2020: Excludes results of the pre-NCAA Women's College World Series of 1969 through 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament began on March 20, 2004 and concluded on April 6, 2004 when Connecticut won a third consecutive national championship, becoming only the second school in history to accomplish such a feat. The Final Four was held at the New Orleans Arena in New Orleans, Louisiana on April 4\u20136, 2004, and was hosted by Tulane University. UConn, coached by Geno Auriemma, defeated archrivals Tennessee, coached by Pat Summitt, 81-67 in the championship game. UConn's Diana Taurasi was named Most Outstanding Player for the second consecutive year. The tournament was also notable as UC Santa Barbara became the first double digit seed not to lose by a double-digit margin in the Sweet 16 as they lost to UConn 63-57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Qualifying teams \u2013 automatic\nSixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2004 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-one conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Qualifying teams \u2013 at-large\nThirty-three additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 79], "content_span": [80, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Bids by conference\nThirty-one conferences earned an automatic bid. In twenty-three cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-three additional at-large teams were selected from eight of the conferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 70], "content_span": [71, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, First and second rounds\nIn 2004, the field remained at 64 teams. The teams were seeded, and assigned to four geographic regions, with seeds 1-16 in each region. In Round 1, seeds 1 and 16 faced each other, as well as seeds 2 and 15, seeds 3 and 14, seeds 4 and 13, seeds 5 and 12, seeds 6 and 11, seeds 7 and 10, and seeds 8 and 9. Sixteen sites for the first two rounds were determined approximately a year before the team selections and seedings were completed, following a practice established in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, First and second rounds\nThe following table lists the region, host school, venue and the sixteen first and second round locations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Regionals and Final Four\nThe Regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 27 to March 30 at these sites:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Regionals and Final Four\nEach regional winner advanced to the Final Four held April 4 and April 6 in New Orleans at the New Orleans Arena (Host: Tulane University)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Bids by state\nThe sixty-four teams came from thirty-two states, plus Washington, D.C. Tennessee had the most teams with six bids. Eighteen states did not have any teams receiving bids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178236-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament, Record by conference\nNineteen conferences went 0-1: America East, Atlantic Sun Conference, Big Sky Conference, Big South ConferenceColonial, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAAC, MAC, Summit League, MEAC, Missouri Valley Conference, Mountain West, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southland, SWAC, and West Coast Conference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178237-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championships were contested at the 23rd annual NCAA-sanctioned golf tournament to determine the individual and team national champions of women's Division I collegiate golf in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178237-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championship\nThe tournament was held at the Auburn Golf Course in Auburn, Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178237-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Golf Championship\nUCLA won the team championship, the Bruins' second and first since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178238-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship was the 23rd annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of Division I NCAA women's college lacrosse. The championship game was played at Princeton Stadium in Princeton, New Jersey during May 2004. All NCAA Division I women's lacrosse programs were eligible for this championship. A total of 16 teams were invited to participate. This was also the first tournament to have a total game attendance exceed 10,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178238-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship\nIn a rematch of the previous year's final, Virginia defeated Princeton, 10\u20134, to win their third national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178238-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Lacrosse Championship\nThe leading scorer for the tournament was Amy Appelt from Virginia (15 goals). Andrea Pfeiffer, also from Virginia, was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament (also known as the 2004 Women's College Cup) was the 23rd annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of NCAA Division I women's collegiate soccer. The semifinals and championship game were played at SAS Soccer Park in Cary, North Carolina from December 3\u20135, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nNotre Dame defeated UCLA in the final, 4\u20133 (in a penalty kick shootout), to win their second national title. The game previously ended 1\u20131 after regulation and two overtime periods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThis tournament was notable for being the first in which North Carolina failed to qualify for the College Cup semifinals. The top-seeded Tar Heels lost in the Third Round to semifinalist Santa Clara.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe Most Outstanding Offensive Player was Katie Thorlakson from Notre Dame, and the Most Outstanding Defensive Player was Erika Bohn, also from Notre Dame. Thorlakson and Bohn, alongside nine other players, were named to the All-Tournament Team. This was also the first All-Tournament Team without a single player from North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament\nThorlakson was also the tournament's leading scorer, with 4 goals and 6 assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament, Qualification\nAll Division I women's soccer programs were eligible to qualify for the tournament. The tournament field remained fixed at 64 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178239-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Soccer Tournament, Format\nJust as before, the final two rounds, deemed the Women's College Cup, were played at a pre-determined neutral site. All other rounds were played on campus sites at the home field of the higher-seeded team. The only exceptions were the first two rounds, which were played at regional campus sites. The top sixteen teams, all of which were seeded for the first time ever, hosted four team-regionals on their home fields during the tournament's first weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178240-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Women's Division I Swimming and Diving Championships were contested at the 23rd annual NCAA-sanctioned swim meet to determine the team and individual national champions of Division I women's collegiate swimming and diving in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178240-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships\nThis year's events were hosted by Texas A&M University at the Student Recreation Center Natatorium in College Station, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178240-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Swimming and Diving Championships\nTwo-time defending champions Auburn again topped the team standings, finishing 138 points ahead of Georgia. This was the Tigers' third women's team title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178241-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships were the 23rd annual tournaments to determine the national champions of NCAA Division I women's singles, doubles, and team collegiate tennis in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178241-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships\nStanford defeated UCLA in the team final, 4\u20131, to claim their thirteenth national title, the Cardinal's fifth title in eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178241-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships\nAdditionally, Stanford's Amber Liu became the fourth player to repeat as the singles national champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178241-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships, Host\nThis year's tournaments were hosted by the University of Georgia at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex in Athens, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 55], "content_span": [56, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178241-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Tennis Championships, Host\nThe men's and women's NCAA tennis championships would not be held jointly until 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 55], "content_span": [56, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament began on December 2, 2004 with 64 teams and ended December 18 when Stanford defeated Minnesota 3 games to 0 in Long Beach, California for the program's sixth NCAA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament\nStanford, who was the tournament's 11th overall seed, became the lowest seed to win the national title. Minnesota was making the school's first national championship match appearance. Stanford's sixth NCAA national championship was the most of any other program in Division I, although UCLA and Southern California had each won six overall national collegiate titles up to that point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament\nOgonna Nnamani, the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, set an NCAA tournament record for kills in a tournament, as she had 165 in six matches, including 29 against Minnesota in the final. Nnamani also set the NCAA tournament record for kill attempts at 356. Stanford setter Bryn Kehoe became the first freshman setter to lead a team to an NCAA national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, National Semifinals, Southern California vs. Minnesota\nBehind 18 kills from Minnesota's Erin Martin, the Golden Gophers knocked out two-time defending NCAA Champion USC with a 3-1 decision to advance to their first NCAA Championship match in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 106], "content_span": [107, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, National Semifinals, Stanford vs. Washington\nStanford, the surprise of the tournament, came through with a 3-1 win over Pac-10 champion Washington. Ogonna Nnamani had 33 kills to lead Stanford to the championship match. During the regular season, Stanford and Washington split the match ups, with Washington sweeping the Cardinal in Seattle and Stanford returning the favor in Palo Alto by defeating the Huskies in five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 96], "content_span": [97, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, National Championship: Stanford vs. Minnesota\nBehind 29 kills from Nnamani, Stanford completed their NCAA run by sweeping the Golden Gophers. Stanford easily won the first set, 30-23. The second was much closer, with Stanford going on a late run to win the second set, 30-27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 97], "content_span": [98, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, National Championship: Stanford vs. Minnesota\nThe third set was not competitive, which may have been due to an injury. Early in the third set, Minnesota's All-American libero, Paula Gentil, collided with a teammate while trying to dig a ball which left her unable to move on the court for over five minutes. Gentil was able to get up, but could not return to the match with a neck injury. Stanford won easily, 30-21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 97], "content_span": [98, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, National Championship: Stanford vs. Minnesota\nStanford's surprising run was due to the fact that they started out the season 15-6 and were ranked outside of the top ten in the beginning of the season. However, the Cardinal found momentum in the middle of the season, winning their last 15 matches including an upset of then-#1 and undefeated Washington in five sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 97], "content_span": [98, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178242-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, NCAA Tournament records\nThere are four NCAA tournament records that were set in the 2004 tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178243-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball rankings\nThe following polls make up the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball rankings. USA Today and ESPN began publishing the Coaches' Poll of 31 active coaches ranking the top 25 teams in the nation in 1992. Each coach is a member of the American Baseball Coaches Association. Baseball America began publishing its poll of the top 20 teams in college baseball in 1981. Beginning with the 1985 season, it expanded to the top 25. Collegiate Baseball Newspaper published its first human poll of the top 20 teams in college baseball in 1957, and expanded to rank the top 30 teams in 1961.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178243-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball rankings, Baseball America\nCurrently, only the final poll from the 2004 season is available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178243-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball rankings, Collegiate Baseball\nThe preseason poll ranked the top 40. Teams not listed above were: 31. Ohio State 32. Texas A&M 33. Oklahoma State 34. UC Riverside 35. Alabama 36. VCU 37. Southern Miss 38. Tennessee 39. San Diego 40. Stetson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, play of college baseball in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I level, began on January 16, 2004. The season progressed through the regular season, many conference tournaments and championship series, and concluded with the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament and 2004 College World Series. The College World Series, which consisted of the eight remaining teams in the NCAA Tournament, was held in its annual location of Omaha, Nebraska at Rosenblatt Stadium. It concluded on June 27, 2004, with the final game of the best of three championship series. Cal State Fullerton defeated Texas two games to none to claim its fourth championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, Realignment, New programs\nThree programs joined Division I for the 2004 season. Dallas Baptist and Northern Colorado joined from Division II, while Utah Valley joined from the NJCAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, Realignment, Dropped programs\nTwo programs left Division I prior to the start of the season\u2013 Drexel, which dropped its varsity baseball program, and Morris Brown, which discontinued its varsity athletics program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, Realignment, Conference changes\nBoth the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) and the Big South Conference (Big South) added two teams entering the season. The OVC added Jacksonville State and Samford, both from the Atlantic Sun Conference (A-Sun). The Big South added Birmingham\u2013Southern, an independent, and VMI, a former Southern Conference (SoCon) member. To compensate for these moves, the A-Sun added Lipscomb, an independent, and the SoCon added Elon from the Big South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, Realignment, Conference changes\nTwo other schools realigned prior to the start of the season. UMBC moved from the Northeast Conference to the America East Conference, and Centenary moved from being an independent to the Mid-Continent Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, Realignment, Conference formats\nBoth the Colonial Athletic Association, which had competed in American and Colonial divisions, and the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, which had competed in North and South divisions, eliminated their divisional formats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178244-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I baseball season, College World Series\nThe 2004 season marked the fifty eighth NCAA Baseball Tournament, which culminated with the eight team College World Series. The College World Series was held in Omaha, Nebraska. The eight teams played a double-elimination format, with Cal State Fullerton claiming their fourth championship with a two games to none series win over Texas in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 58], "content_span": [59, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I softball season, play of college softball in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I level, began in January 2004. The season progressed through the regular season, many conference tournaments and championship series, and concluded with the 2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament and 2004 Women's College World Series. The Women's College World Series, consisting of the eight remaining teams in the NCAA Tournament and held in Oklahoma City at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium, ended on May 31, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season, Women's College World Series\nThe 2004 NCAA Women's College World Series took place from May 27 to May 31, 2004 in Oklahoma City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season, Records\nNCAA Division I season triples:17 \u2013 Dianna Korcak, Jacksonville Dolphins", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season, Records\nNCAA Division I single game strikeouts:28 \u2013 Cristin Vitek, Baylor Bears; May 20, 2004 (16 innings)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season, Records\nFreshman class 7 inning single game strikeouts:20 \u2013 Monica Abbott, Tennessee Volunteers; March 26, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season, Records\nSophomore class consecutive wins streak:32 \u2013 Alicia Hollowell, Arizona Wildcats; February 6-April 24, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178245-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I softball season, Records\nTeam single game doubles:13 \u2013 Charleston Cougars, February 11, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178246-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football rankings\nTwo human polls and one formulaic ranking make up the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football rankings. Unlike most sports, college football's governing body, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), does not bestow a National Championship title for Division I-A football. That title is primarily bestowed by different polling agencies. There are several polls that currently exist. The main weekly polls are the AP Poll and Coaches Poll. About halfway through the season the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) Standings are released. These are the first set of rankings since 1958 that never featured Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178246-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football rankings, AP Poll\nThis season would be the last season that the AP Poll would be included in the BCS formula. The heavy end of the season politicking for ballot position lead the AP to believe that the BCS undermined the independence and integrity of the poll and could hurt the AP's reputation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178246-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football rankings, BCS Standings\nThe Bowl Championship Series determined the two teams that competed in the BCS National Championship Game, the 2005 Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season was the highest level of college football competition in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The regular season began on August 28, 2004 and ended on December 4, 2004. The postseason concluded on January 4, 2005 with the Orange Bowl, which served as the season's BCS National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season\nUSC defeated Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl by a score of 55\u201319, which earned the Trojans their second consecutive AP title and first-ever BCS title. The Orange Bowl win and accompanying BCS title were later vacated as part of the sanctions levied against USC following an NCAA investigation. USC appealed the decision but was denied by the NCAA, and the 2004 BCS title was officially vacated on June 6, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, Rule changes\nThe NCAA Rules Committee adopted the following rule changes for the 2004 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, Conference changes\nPrior to the 2004 season, Miami (FL) and Virginia Tech left the Big East Conference to join the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), giving the ACC 11 members. Connecticut joined the Big East after having been an Independent since ascending to Division I-A in 2000. Troy State also left their Independent status and joined the Sun Belt Conference. Florida Atlantic University and Florida International University moved up from Division I-AA and became I-A Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, Regular season top 10 matchups\nRankings reflect the AP Poll. Rankings for Week 8 and beyond will list BCS Rankings first and AP Poll second. Teams that failed to be a top 10 team for one poll or the other will be noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Undefeated teams\nThe 2004 season ended with five undefeated teams vying for a spot in the national title game. In the 2003 season, no team finished the regular season unbeaten, and five teams finished the season with one loss. In 2004, the situation became even more complicated, as five teams went without losing, a record in the BCS era (later tied in 2009). USC of the Pac-10, Oklahoma of the Big 12, Auburn of the SEC, Utah of the MWC, and Boise State of the WAC all finished the regular season undefeated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Undefeated teams\nUSC and Oklahoma were ranked No. 1 and No. 2, respectively, in the preseason by both the AP and Coaches Polls, but the other three undefeated teams were handicapped by starting the season out of the top 15. Thus USC and OU played for the BCS National Championship in the Orange Bowl, while Auburn, Utah, and Boise State had to settle for other bowl games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Undefeated teams\nAuburn played in the Sugar Bowl and beat Virginia Tech, the ACC champion and ranked No. 8 by the BCS. Utah became the first BCS Buster and beat Pittsburgh, the champion of the Big East and ranked No. 21, in the Fiesta Bowl. Boise State lost a close, high scoring game in the Liberty Bowl to Louisville, the No. 10 ranked Conference USA champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Undefeated teams\nAs with previous seasons, fans of successful teams left out of BCS bowls were disappointed. Auburn, Utah, and Boise State all went unbeaten but were not offered a chance to compete for the BCS championship. Auburn was especially the focus of national media attention on this topic, since Auburn managed to go undefeated in the traditionally tough SEC. Adding to the frustration with the BCS system was the fact that Auburn and Utah, though both picked to play in BCS bowl games, would not be able to play each other as a match-up of highly ranked unbeatens. This confluence of events made 2004 a seminal year for serious momentum building behind a multi-team playoff system in college football, which would later be realized with the advent of the College Football Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Undefeated teams\nUSC was forced to vacate their BCS title win, along with their regular-season victory over rival UCLA, due to NCAA sanctions that stemmed from the USC athletics scandal. The AP title was not vacated, as the AP does not punish teams for violations. The severity of these sanctions has since been criticized by some pundits across college football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Rose Bowl\nControversy also arose in selecting the second at-large team of the BCS after Utah. California expected to get the invitation, having been ranked fourth by the BCS entering the last week of the regular season. Texas, which had been left out of the BCS the previous season, was ranked fifth. Both teams finished with 10\u20131 records, but the Longhorns received a boost of support from poll voters in the final regular season rankings to overtake Cal and move into the fourth position, which ensured they would also receive the final at-large bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, Rose Bowl\nTexas coach Mack Brown was criticized for publicly politicking voters to put Texas ahead of California, and Cal coach Jeff Tedford called for coaches' votes to be made public. Texas went on to defeat Michigan in the Rose Bowl, while California lost to Texas Tech in the Holiday Bowl. Much of the pre-bowl criticisms of Texas being given the spot vs. Michigan evaporated when the Longhorns and Wolverines produced an instant classic game that was marked by a breakthrough performance by Vince Young and a Texas FG as time expired to give them a 38\u201337 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, AP Poll\nThe Associated Press, as a result of two consecutive seasons of BCS controversy, prohibited the BCS from using their poll as part of its ranking formula following the 2004 season. The AP poll was replaced by the Harris Interactive poll starting in 2005, and the AP continues to award its own national championship trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, BCS Controversy, AP Poll\nIn another first, the LSU Tigers lost to the Iowa Hawkeyes on a last second Hail Mary pass in the Capital One Bowl, becoming the first school to lose a non-BCS bowl a year after winning the BCS National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, Final AP Poll\n* USC finished the season with a 13\u20130 record but was forced to vacate two wins in 2010 as a result of NCAA sanctions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178247-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, Heisman Trophy voting\nThe Heisman Trophy is given annually to college football's most outstanding player", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178248-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game was a postseason college football game between the James Madison Dukes and the Montana Grizzlies. The game was played on December 17, 2004, at Finley Stadium, home field of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. The culminating game of the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season, it was won by James Madison, 31\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178248-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game, Teams\nThe participants of the Championship Game were the finalists of the 2004 I-AA Playoffs, which began with a 16-team bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178248-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game, Teams, James Madison Dukes\nJames Madison finished their regular season with a 9\u20132 record (7\u20131 in conference). One of their losses was to West Virginia of Division I-A. The Dukes, unseeded in the tournament, defeated Lehigh, second-seed Furman, and third-seed William & Mary to reach the final. This was the first appearance for James Madison in a Division I-AA championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178248-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game, Teams, Montana Grizzlies\nMontana finished their regular season with a 9\u20132 record (6\u20131 in conference). The Grizzlies, also unseeded in the tournament, defeated Northwestern State, New Hampshire, and Sam Houston State to reach the final. This was the fifth appearance for Montana in a Division I-AA championship game; they had won in 1995 and 2001, and lost in 1996 and 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 76], "content_span": [77, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178249-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-AA football rankings\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football rankings are from the Sports Network poll of Division I-AA head coaches, athletic directors, sports information directors and media members. This is for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178250-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season\nThe 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season, part of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the Division I-AA level, began on August 28, 2004, and concluded with the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship Game on December 17, 2004, at Finley Stadium in Chattanooga, Tennessee. James Madison won their first I-AA championship, defeating Montana by a final score of 31\u221221.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178251-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament was the 48th annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division II college basketball in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178251-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nOfficially culminating the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division II men's basketball season, the tournament featured sixty-four teams from around the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178251-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Elite Eight, national semifinals, and championship were played at the Centennial Garden in Bakersfield, California, previously the venue of the 2001 finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178251-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nKennesaw State (35\u20134) defeated Southern Indiana in the final, 84\u201359, to win their first Division II national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178251-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Owls were coached by Tony Ingle. Kennesaw State's Terrence Hill was the Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178252-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship was the 33rd annual tournament held by the NCAA to determine the top men's Division II college soccer program in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178252-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship\nBobby McAlister's 70th minute goal broke a one-one tie and Seattle (22-0-1) defeated SIU Edwardsville in the tournament final, 2\u20131. It marked the ninth time a team finished a Div. II season without a loss. McAlister was named the offensive MVP of the Final Four. The final and semi-finals were played at the Midwestern State University Soccer Field in Wichita Falls, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178252-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship\nThis was the first national title for the Redhawks, who were coached by Pete Fewing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178253-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament was the 23rd annual tournament hosted by the NCAA to determine the national champion of Division II women's collegiate basketball in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178253-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament\nCalifornia (PA) defeated Drury in the championship game, 75\u201372, to claim the Vulcans' first NCAA Division II national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178253-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament\nAs in 2003, the championship rounds were contested at the St. Joseph Civic Arena in St. Joseph, Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178254-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II football rankings\nThe 2004 NCAA Division II football rankings are from the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA). This is for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178255-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II football season\nThe 2004 NCAA Division II football season, part of college football in the United States organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association at the Division II level, began on August 26, 2004, and concluded with the NCAA Division II Football Championship on December 11, 2004 at Braly Municipal Stadium in Florence, Alabama, hosted by the University of North Alabama. The Valdosta State Blazers defeated the Pittsburg State Gorillas, 36\u201331, to win their first Division II national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178255-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II football season\nThe Harlon Hill Trophy was awarded to Chad Friehauf, quarterback from Colorado Mines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178255-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II football season, Conference changes and new programs, Regional realignment\nThe South Region was renamed the Southeast Region but stayed the same, while the Northeast Region lost the GLIAC. The West Region lost the GNAC, gained the MIAA, and became the Southwest Region. The new Northwest Region contained the GLIAC and GNAC, plus the NCC and NSIC from the former Midwest Region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178255-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II football season, Conference summaries\nCentral Intercollegiate Athletic Association \u2013 ShawGreat Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference \u2013 Michigan Tech and NorthwoodGreat Northwest Athletic Conference \u2013 Central WashingtonGulf South Conference \u2013 Valdosta StateLone Star Conference \u2013 Texas A&M\u2013KingsvilleMid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association \u2013 Pittsburg StateNorth Central Conference \u2013 Nebraska\u2013OmahaNortheast-10 Conference \u2013 Bentley and C.W. PostNorthern Sun Intercollegiate Conference \u2013 Winona StatePennsylvania State Athletic Conference \u2013 West Chester (East), Edinboro, Indiana (PA), and Shippensburg (West)Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference \u2013 Colorado MinesSouth Atlantic Conference \u2013 Carson-NewmanSouthern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference \u2013 Albany StateWest Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference \u2013 Shepherd", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178255-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division II football season, Postseason\nThe 2004 NCAA Division II Football Championship playoffs were the 31st single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division II college football. The championship game was held at Braly Municipal Stadium in Florence, Alabama for the 17th time. This was the first year of a 24-team playoff bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178256-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament was played at the end of the 2004 NCAA Division III baseball season to determine the 29th national champion of college baseball at the NCAA Division III level. The tournament concluded with eight teams competing at Fox Cities Stadium in Grand Chute, Wisconsin for the championship. Eight regional tournaments were held to determine the participants in the World Series. Regional tournaments were contested in double-elimination format, five four regions consisting of six teams and three regions consisting of four teams, for a total of 42 teams participating in the tournament. The tournament champion was George Fox, who defeated Eastern Connecticut State for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178256-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Baseball Tournament, World Series\nFox Cities Stadium-Grand Chute, WI (Host: University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh/Lawrence University)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178257-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament was the 30th annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champions of National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) men's Division III collegiate basketball in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178257-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe field contained sixty-four teams, and each program was allocated to one of four sectionals. All sectional games were played on campus sites, while the national semifinals, third-place final, and championship finals were contested at the Salem Civic Center in Salem, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178257-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament\nWisconsin\u2013Stevens Point defeated defending champions Williams, 84\u201382, in the championship, clinching their first national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178257-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament\nNick Bennett, also from Stevens Point, was named Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178258-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the culmination of the 2003\u201304 season, the 21st such tournament in NCAA history. It concluded with Middlebury defeating St. Norbert in the championship game 1-0 in overtime. All First Round and Quarterfinal matchups were held at home team venues, while all succeeding games were played in Norwich, Vermont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178258-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Qualifying teams\nThe following teams qualified for the tournament. Automatic bids were offered to the conference tournament champion of seven different conferences with one at-large bid for the best remaining team from each region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178258-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured four rounds of play. All rounds were Single-game elimination. For the three eastern Quarterfinals the teams were seeded according to their rankings with the top three teams serving as hosts. For the western quarterfinal, the top-ranked team awaited the winner of a play-in game between the lower-ranked teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 58], "content_span": [59, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178259-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III football season\nThe 2004 NCAA Division III football season, part of the college football season organized by the NCAA at the Division III level in the United States, began in August 2004, and concluded with the NCAA Division III Football Championship, also known as the Stagg Bowl, in December 2004 at Salem Football Stadium in Salem, Virginia. The Linfield Wildcats won their first Division III championship by defeating the Mary Hardin\u2013Baylor Crusaders, 28\u221221.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178259-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III football season\nThe Gagliardi Trophy, given to the most outstanding player in Division III football, was awarded to Rocky Myers, safety from Wesley (DE).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178259-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III football season, Postseason\nThe 2004 NCAA Division III Football Championship playoffs were the 32nd annual single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division III college football. The championship Stagg Bowl game was held at Salem Football Stadium in Salem, Virginia for the 12th time. This was the last bracket to feature 28 teams before expanding to 32 teams in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178259-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III football season, Final D3football.com Poll\nOthers receiving votes: Mount St. Joseph 39, Trinity (Conn.) 33, Alma 31, UW-Eau Claire 30, Whitworth 17, Texas Lutheran 17, Aurora 16, Augustana 16, Muhlenberg 14, Johns Hopkins 12, Springfield 9, Shenandoah 9, Hampden-Sydney 9, Moravian 8, Albright 3, Capital 2, Waynesburg 1, New Jersey 1, Curry 1, McDaniel 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178259-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Division III football season, Awards\nAFCA Regional Coach of the Year: Region 1: Chuck Priore, Trinity College (Conn.) Region 2: G.A. Mangus, Delaware Valley College Region 3: Jimmie Keeling, Hardin-Simmons University Region 4: Tim Rucks, Carthage College Region 5: Terry Horan, Concordia-Moorhead College (Minn.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178260-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans\nThe Consensus 2004 College Basketball All-American team, as determined by aggregating the results of four major All-American teams. To earn \"consensus\" status, a player must win honors from a majority of the following teams: the Associated Press, the USBWA, The Sporting News and the National Association of Basketball Coaches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178261-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Volleyball Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA Men's Volleyball Tournament was the 35th annual tournament to determine the national champion of NCAA men's collegiate indoor volleyball. The single elimination tournament was played at the Stan Sheriff Center in Honolulu, Hawai\u02bbi during May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178261-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Volleyball Tournament\nBYU defeated Long Beach State in the final match, 3\u20132 (15\u201330, 30\u201318, 20\u201330, 32\u201330, 19\u201317), to win their third national title. The Cougars (29\u20134) were coached by Tom Peterson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178261-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Volleyball Tournament\nBYU's Carlos Moreno was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Moreno, along with six other players, also comprised the All Tournament Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178261-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Volleyball Tournament, Qualification\nUntil the creation of the NCAA Men's Division III Volleyball Championship in 2012, there was only a single national championship for men's volleyball. As such, all NCAA men's volleyball programs, whether from Division I, Division II, or Division III, were eligible. A total of 4 teams were invited to contest this championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178262-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship was the 36th annual NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship to determine the national champion of NCAA men's collegiate water polo. Tournament matches were played at the Avery Aquatic Center in Stanford, California during December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178262-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship\nUCLA defeated Stanford in the final, 10\u20139 (in overtime), to win their eighth national title. The Bruins (25\u20133) were coached by Adam Krikorian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178262-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship\nThe Most Outstanding Player of the tournament was Brett Ormsby from UCLA. For the first time, two All-Tournament Teams were named: a First Team (with eight players) and a Second Team (with seven players).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178262-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship\nThe tournament's leading scorer, with 7 goals, was Endre Rex-Kiss from Loyola Marymount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178262-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Men's Water Polo Championship, Qualification\nSince there has only ever been one single national championship for water polo, all NCAA men's water polo programs (whether from Division I, Division II, or Division III) were eligible. A total of 4 teams were invited to contest this championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178263-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey Tournament involved four schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of women's NCAA Division I college ice hockey. It began on March 26, 2004, and ended with the championship game on March 28. A total of four games were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178264-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Rifle Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Rifle Championships were contested at the 25th annual NCAA-sanctioned competition to determine the team and individual national champions of co-ed collegiate rifle shooting in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178264-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Rifle Championships\nThe championships were held at the Pat Spurgin Rifle Range at Murray State University in Murray, Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178264-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Rifle Championships\nFive-time defending champions Alaska won the team championship, the Nanooks' sixth consecutive and seventh overall NCAA national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178264-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Rifle Championships, Qualification\nWith only one national collegiate championship for rifle shooting, all NCAA rifle programs (whether from Division I, Division II, or Division III) were eligible. A total of nine teams contested this championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178265-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Skiing Championships\nThe 2004 NCAA Skiing Championships were contested at the Sugar Bowl Ski Resort in Truckee, California from March 10\u201313, 2004 as part of the 51st annual NCAA-sanctioned ski tournament to determine the individual and team national champions of men's and women's collegiate slalom and cross country skiing in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178265-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Skiing Championships\nNew Mexico, coached by George Brooks, won the team championship, the Lobos' first co-ed title and first overall. It was New Mexico's first team NCAA championship in any sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178265-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Skiing Championships, Venue\nThis year's championships were contested at the Sugar Bowl Ski Resort in Truckee, California. The event was hosted by the University of Nevada, Reno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178265-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Skiing Championships, Venue\nThese were the first NCAA championships hosted at Sugar Bowl and the second in the state of California (1962 and 2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178266-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship\nThe 2004 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship was held in April 2004 and involved 12 schools competing for the national championship of women's NCAA Division I gymnastics. It was the twenty third NCAA gymnastics national championship. The defending NCAA Team Champion for 2003 was UCLA. The competition took place in Los Angeles, California hosted by the UCLA in Pauley Pavilion. The 2004 team championship was won by defending champion UCLA and the individual champion was Jeana Rice of Alabama, 39.650.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178266-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship, 2004 UCLA Championship Roster\nThe 2004 UCLA women's gymnastics team is considered one of the best teams in NCAA gymnastics history, which was led by 7-time National Champion head coach Valorie Kondos Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178266-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NCAA Women's Gymnastics Championship, 2004 UCLA Championship Roster\nUCLA was ranked preseason #1 for the fourth consecutive year and team members had collectively won seven NCAA individual championships, earned 27 All-America honors and made 13 World Championships and five Olympic appearances. The team returned five All-Americans and had talent throughout the depth of their lineup down to the \"dynamic freshmen talent.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178267-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NCBA World Series\nThe 2004 National Club Baseball Association (NCBA) World Series was played at McKechnie Field in Bradenton, FL from May 26 to May 31. The fourth tournament's champion was Colorado State University. The co-MVP's were Andrew Abell and Thomas Ahrens, both of Colorado State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178267-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NCBA World Series, Format\nThe format is similar to the NCAA College World Series in that eight teams participate in two four-team double elimination brackets with the only difference being that in the NCBA, there is only one game that decides the national championship rather than a best-of-3 like the NCAA. A major difference between the NCAA and NCBA World Series is that NCBA World Series games were only 7 innings (until 2006) while NCAA games are 9 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178268-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NECBL All-Star Game\nThe 2004 NECBL All-Star Game was the 12th exhibition game between all-stars from the NECBL's Northern and the Southern Divisions. The Southern All-Stars held off the Northern All-Stars 7-4. P.J. Antoniato of the Manchester Silkworms was named the game's MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178269-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NECBL season\nThe 2004 NECBL season was the 11th season in the history of the New England Collegiate Baseball League. The league's Middletown, Connecticut franchise, the Middletown Giants, moved to Holyoke, Massachusetts and became the Holyoke Giants. Also, the league's Willimantic, Connecticut franchise, the Thread City Tides, moved to Hinsdale, Massachusetts and became the Berkshire Dukes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178269-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NECBL season\nIn the quarterfinal playoff rounds, Riverpoint defeated Manchester 2-1, Sanford defeated North Adams 2-1, Keene defeated Vermont 2-0, and Newport defeated Torrington 2-1. In the semifinal rounds, Sanford defeated Keene 2-1 and Newport defeated Riverpoint 2-1. In the championship round, Sanford defeated Newport 2-1 to win the franchise's first NECBL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft\nThe 2004 NFL draft was the procedure by which National Football League teams selected amateur college football players. It is officially known as the NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting. The draft was held April 24\u201325, 2004 at the Theater at Madison Square Garden in New York City. No teams chose to claim any players in the supplemental draft that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft\nThe draft was shown on ESPN both days and eventually moved to ESPN2 both days. The draft began with the San Diego Chargers selecting Mississippi quarterback Eli Manning with the first overall selection. Due to his refusal to play for the Chargers, Manning was later traded to the New York Giants for their first selection, fourth overall pick Philip Rivers of NC State. There were 32 compensatory selections distributed among 16 teams, with the Eagles, Rams, and Jets each receiving 4 compensatory picks. The draft set several records, including the most wide receivers selected in the first round, with seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft\nAnother record set by the draft was the most trades in the first round, with twenty-eight trades. The University of Miami set an NFL record for the most first rounders drafted with six, which would be tied by Alabama in 2021. Ohio State set an NFL draft record having 14 total players selected through all rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft\nAs of 2012, this draft also has two other records attached to it: it became the draft with the shortest time between having multiple quarterbacks being drafted and starting for Super Bowl winners (Ben Roethlisberger for the 2005 Steelers, and Manning for the 2007 Giants) and it has become the first draft ever to have produced two QBs who each won multiple Super Bowls (with Roethlisberger winning his second in 2008 and Manning his second in 2011).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft\nAs of 2021, Ben Roethlisberger, Andy Lee, and Jason Peters are the only remaining active players from the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft\nThe 255 players chosen in the draft were composed of:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 68]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178270-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Draft, Trades\nIn the explanations below, (D) denotes trades that took place during the 2004 Draft, while (PD) indicates trades completed pre-draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178271-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Europe season\nThe 2004 NFL Europe season was the 12th season in 14 years of the American Football league that started out as the World League of American Football. The Cologne Centurions replaced the FC Barcelona Dragons for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178271-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL Europe season, World Bowl XII\nBerlin 30\u201324 FrankfurtSaturday, June 12, 2004 Arena AufSchalke Gelsenkirchen, Germany", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season\nThe 2004 NFL season was the 85th regular season of the National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season\nWith the New England Patriots as the defending league champions, regular season play was held from September 9, 2004 to January 2, 2005. Hurricanes forced the rescheduling of two Miami Dolphins home games: the game against the Tennessee Titans was moved up one day to Saturday, September 11 to avoid oncoming Hurricane Ivan, while the game versus the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, September 26 was moved back 7\u00bd hours to miss the eye of Hurricane Jeanne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season\nThe playoffs began on January 8, and eventually New England repeated as NFL champions when they defeated the Philadelphia Eagles 24\u201321 in Super Bowl XXXIX, the Super Bowl championship game, at ALLTEL Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida on February 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Transactions, Draft\nThe 2004 NFL Draft was held from April 24 to 25, 2004 at New York City's Theater at Madison Square Garden. With the first pick, the San Diego Chargers selected quarterback Eli Manning from the University of Mississippi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Referee changes\nRon Blum returned to line judge, and Bill Vinovich was promoted to take his place as referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Referee changes\nMidway through the season, Johnny Grier, the NFL's first African-American referee, suffered a leg injury that forced him to retire. He was permanently replaced by the back judge on his crew, Scott Green, who had previous experience as a referee in NFL Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Playoffs\nWithin each conference, the four division winners and the two wild card teams (the top two non-division winners with the best overall regular season records) qualified for the playoffs. The four division winners are seeded 1 through 4 based on their overall won-lost-tied record, and the wild card teams are seeded 5 and 6. The NFL does not use a fixed bracket playoff system, and there are no restrictions regarding teams from the same division matching up in any round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Playoffs\nIn the first round, dubbed the wild-card playoffs or wild-card weekend, the third-seeded division winner hosts the sixth seed wild card, and the fourth seed hosts the fifth. The 1 and 2 seeds from each conference then receive a bye in the first round. In the second round, the divisional playoffs, the number 1 seed hosts the worst surviving seed from the first round (seed 4, 5, or 6), while the number 2 seed will play the other team (seed 3, 4, or 5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Playoffs\nThe two surviving teams from each conference's divisional playoff games then meet in the respective AFC and NFC Conference Championship games, hosted by the higher seed. Although the Super Bowl, the fourth and final round of the playoffs, is played at a neutral site, the designated home team is based on an annual rotation by conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Playoffs\nThe Miami Dolphins were the first team to be eliminated from the playoff race, having reached a 1\u20139 record by week 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Milestones\nThe following teams and players set all-time NFL records during the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178272-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NFL season, Milestones\nThe Colts led the NFL with 522 points scored. The Colts tallied more points in the first half of each of their games of the 2004 NFL season (277 points) than seven other NFL teams managed in the entire season. Despite throwing for 49 touchdown passes, Peyton Manning attempted fewer than 500 passes for the first time in his NFL career. The San Francisco 49ers record 420 consecutive scoring games that had started in Week 5 of the 1977 season ended in Week 2 of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178273-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NHK Trophy\nThe 2004 NHK Trophy was the third event of six in the 2004\u201305 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Rainbow Ice Arena in Nagoya on November 4\u20137. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Midnight Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178274-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NHL Entry Draft\nThe 2004 NHL Entry Draft was the 42nd NHL Entry Draft. It was held on June 26 and 27, 2004 at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina. It is especially notable because it was the last NHL event to take place before the beginning of the lockout, which canceled all the games scheduled for the 2004\u201305 NHL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season\nThe 2004 National Lacrosse League season is the 18th season in the NLL that began on December 26, 2003, with the Arizona Sting hosting the Vancouver Ravens. That game was the Sting's first-ever game and the first event held in the new Glendale Arena (now Gila River Arena) in Glendale, Arizona. The season concluded with the championship game on May 7, 2004. Over 19,000 fans, the second largest crowd ever at an NLL game, packed the Pengrowth Saddledome (now Scotiabank Saddledome) to watch the Calgary Roughnecks defeat the Buffalo Bandits 14\u201311. This game was the first NLL championship game since 1998 that did not feature the Toronto Rock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season\nThe collective bargaining agreement (CBA) between the league and the Professional Lacrosse Players' Association expired before the 2004 season, and the lack of a new agreement caused a 12-day players strike in December 2003. On December 17, the NLL and PLPA announced that the previous CBA had been extended by one year, guaranteeing that the 2004 season would be played without strikes or lockouts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, Team movement\n2004 was a season of turmoil for the NLL \u2013 two franchises disappeared while three others moved cross-country, causing a division realignment. Gone was the three-division format that had been used in the preceding two seasons; the league was now split into East and West divisions. The Ottawa Rebel and New York Saints franchises both folded, and the following teams moved:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, Team movement\nThese three joined Colorado, Calgary, and Vancouver in the West division, while perennial rivals Toronto, Buffalo, Rochester, and Philadelphia were left to fight over three playoff spots in the East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, Final standings, Regular season\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, All Star Game\nThe 2004 All-Star Game was held at Pepsi Center in Denver on February 22, 2004. The East division defeated the West 19\u201315, and Buffalo's Mark Steenhuis was named game MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, Awards, Weekly awards\nThe NLL gives out awards weekly for the best overall player, best offensive player, best defensive player, and best rookie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, Awards, Monthly awards\nAwards are also given out monthly for the best overall player and best rookie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178275-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NLL season, Statistics leaders\nBold numbers indicate new single-season records. Italics indicate tied single-season records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft\nThe 2004 NPF Draft denotes a series of player drafts as a part of the launch of the NPF inaugural season. On December 6, 2003 in conjunction with the National Fastpitch Coaches Association National Convention at the Del Lago Resort in Montgomery, Texas the eight original NPF teams (Akron, Arizona, Colorado, New England, New York/New Jersey, Sacramento, San Antonio, and Texas ) selected players in two drafts: a four-round Elite Draft that selected players who had completed their college eligibility and a six-round College Senior Draft which selected players in their final year of college. Athletes are not allowed by the NCAA to sign professional contracts until their collegiate seasons have ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft\nAfter the decision was made to launch the 2004 season without the Colorado Altitude and San Antonio Armadillos, a Supplemental Draft was held to allocate players whose rights were held by Colorado and San Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft\nSan Antonio selected Michigan State 1B, and Indiana assistant coach Stacey Phillips with the first overall selection in the Elite Draft. In the College Senior Draft Iyhia McMichael of Mississippi State was selected first by the Akron Racers. For the first pick of the Supplemental Draft, New England chose Georgia Tech's Tara Knudsen whose rights were previously held by San Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft, 2004 NPF Draft\nPosition key: C = Catcher; UT = Utility infielder; INF = Infielder; 1B = First base; 2B =Second base SS = Shortstop; 3B = Third base; OF = Outfielder; RF = Right field; CF = Center field; LF = Left field; P = Pitcher; RHP = right-handed Pitcher; LHP = left-handed Pitcher; DP =Designated playerPositions are listed as combined for those who can play multiple positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft, 2004 NPF Draft, Elite Draft\nFollowing are the 32 selections from the 2004 NPF Elite Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft, 2004 NPF Draft, Senior Draft\nFollowing are the 48 selections from the 2004 NPF Senior Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 44], "content_span": [45, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178276-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NPF Draft, 2004 NPF Draft, Supplemental Draft\nFollowing are the 17 selections from the 2004 NPF Supplemental Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final\nThe 2004 NRL Grand Final was the conclusive and premiership-deciding game of the 2004 NRL season. It was contested by the Sydney Roosters, who had finished the regular season in 1st place, and the Bulldogs, who had finished the regular season in 2nd place. After both sides eliminated the rest of 2004's top eight teams over the finals series, they faced each other in a grand final for the first time since the 1980 NSWRFL season's decider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Background\nFor the second consecutive year, the NRL grand final featured two Sydney-based teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Background, Sydney Roosters\nThe Sydney Roosters finished the 2004 regular season in 1st place, taking out the minor premiership. They subsequently won their two finals matches against the Canberra Raiders 38\u201312 and then the North Queensland Cowboys 19\u201316 to make their third consecutive grand final and their fourth in five seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Background, Bulldogs RLFC\nThe Bulldogs finished the 2004 regular season 2nd (out of 15). They lost their first match of the finals series against the North Queensland Cowboys 22\u201330 but won their next two against the Melbourne Storm 43\u201318 and the Penrith Panthers 30\u201314 to reach their first grand final since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Match details\nPre -match entertainment included performances by Chris Isaak and Australian rock band Grinspoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Match details, First half\nAfter thirteen minutes, Sydney took the first try of the game with Chris Walker scoring the try and Craig Fitzgibbon converting giving Sydney a 6\u20130 lead. Ten minutes later Canterbury winger Matt Utai scored the first try with Hazem El Masri failing to convert bringing the score back to 6\u20134. A few minutes later El Masri levelled the scores at 6\u20136 with a penalty goal. Just after the 30 minute mark, Brett Finch kicked a field goal to give Sydney a narrow 7\u20136 lead. Two minutes later Anthony Tupou made a 30-metre break for Sydney before passing to teammate Anthony Minichiello to cross under the posts with Fitzgibbon converting to give Sydney a 13\u20136 lead. At the 37th minute, Minichiello looked to have his second try, but was penalised for an obstruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Match details, Second half\nTwo minutes into the second half, Utai got his second try for Canterbury with El Masri converting bringing the score back to 13\u201312. In the 53rd minute, El Masri crossed over for a controversial four-pointer (opinions were divided on whether the winger had been sufficiently held up or not before eventually grounding the ball), but narrowly missed the conversion giving the Bulldogs the lead 16\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Match details, Second half\nWith one minute left and the score at 16\u201313, Sydney's Michael Crocker made a half break on the Bulldogs 40 meter line but was tackled by stand in Canterbury Captain Andrew Ryan and losing the ball that gave Canterbury their 8th Premiership. It was also former Australian captain Brad Fittler's last game of football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Match details, Second half\nThis marked the first (and only) time in 2004 that the Roosters lost a match after leading at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178277-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL Grand Final, Match details, Second half\n13th \u2013 Sydney 6\u20130 (Walker try, Fitzgibbon goal)23rd \u2013 Sydney 6\u20134 (Utai try)27th \u2013 6\u20136 (El Masri penalty goal)31st \u2013 Sydney 7\u20136 (Finch field goal)33rd \u2013 Sydney 13\u20136 (Minichiello try, Fitzgibbon goal)42nd \u2013 Sydney 13\u201312 (Utai try; El Masri goal)53rd \u2013 Bulldogs 16\u201313 (El Masri try)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 48], "content_span": [49, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season\nThe 2004 NRL season (also known as the 2004 Telstra Premiership due to sponsorship from Telstra) was the 97th season of professional rugby league football in Australia, and the seventh run by the National Rugby League. Fifteen clubs competed during the regular season before the top eight finishing teams contested the finals series. The Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs defeated the Sydney Roosters in the 2004 NRL grand final and in doing so claimed their eighth premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Pre-season\nThe beginning of the season was largely overshadowed with several Bulldogs players questioned by police in relation to an alleged rape of a 20-year-old Coffs Harbour woman. An independent investigator, former New South Wales chief of detectives, would later fail to find any evidence of misconduct on behalf of the players, and no charges were pressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Pre-season\nThe 2004 World Club Challenge was held on Friday, 13 February 2004, at the Alfred McAlpine Stadium, Huddersfield, England. The game was contested by Bradford Bulls and Penrith Panthers and won by the home team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Pre-season\nThe salary cap for the 2004 season was A$3.25 million per club for their 25 highest-paid players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nDue to a perceived emphasis in the game on defence, NRL referees were instructed to call out \"surrender tackle\" this season when ball carriers submit at the ruck, signalling the defence to slow down the tackle in order for defenders to reset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nThe first round of the season began on Friday, 12 March with 2003 champions, the Penrith Panthers losing 14\u201320 to the Newcastle Knights before a crowd of 19,936 at Penrith Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nDuring a match between the Broncos and the Tigers, the Broncos fielded 14 men at one stage of the Campbelltown Stadium match. In the 60th minute, Brisbane's Shane Webcke knocked out by Tiger Bryce Gibbs. Corey Parker was brought onto the ground while Webcke was still being assisted off. Parker immediately scored off a Darren Lockyer pass and started a Broncos revival (they trailed 24\u20138 at halftime) which later saw them win 24\u201332. But, after the fourteenth man was investigated, the Broncos were stripped of the two competition points, which were reinstated weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nA significant comeback was seen in a round 25 clash between the St George Dragons and Manly. Trailing 34\u201310 after 53 minutes, St. George Illawarra came back to win the match 36\u201334. This match stood in second-place in the rankings of the biggest comebacks in Australian premiership history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nSeveral players and coaches also made the headlines for the wrong reasons. Jamie Lyon walked out on the Parramatta club after the first round citing burnout and dissatisfaction with living in Sydney, and would later move to the UK for a successful Super League career. Coaches Daniel Anderson and Paul Langmack would have their contracts terminated at the New Zealand Warriors and South Sydney Rabbitohs respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nAndrew Johns was injured in Newcastle's third game of the season against Parramatta, and subsequently missed the remainder of the season. The Knights missed the finals of the NRL for the first time since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\n2004 was also notable for the emergence of teenage players Sonny Bill Williams (Bulldogs) and Karmichael Hunt (Brisbane Broncos), and their performances, mature beyond their years, would be critical to the fortunes of their clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season\nA quirk of the draw meant that the Sydney Roosters did not play a premiership match in Queensland during the season, while there was only one Queensland derby contested during the regular season, in round six in Townsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season, Teams\nThe line-up of fifteen teams for the 2004 premiership remained unchanged from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season, Advertising\nIn 2004 the NRL and their advertising agency MJW Hakuhodo continued with their use of the Hoodoo Gurus' 1987 hit \"What's My Scene\" with reworked lyrics as \"That's My Team\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Regular season, Advertising\nIn addition to the big 60-second season launch TV commercial, three shorter executions were produced: one targeting young men, another targeting women and one aimed at families. In a year where sexual assault allegations damaged perceptions and the reputation of the code, retaining female fans was seen as a massive challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\nTo decide the grand finalists from the top eight finishing teams, the NRL adopts the McIntyre Final Eight System.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\nThe North Queensland Cowboys qualified for the finals for the first time in their ten-year history, and shocked everybody by finishing just one game short of the grand final. During the finals, they won their first ever game against Queensland rivals Brisbane, thus ending the career of Brisbane stalwart Gorden Tallis. Also retiring after the 2004 finals series were Brad Fittler, Ryan Girdler and Kevin Campion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\nSt. George Illawarra Dragons almost capped a remarkable comeback when they trailed 24\u20130 only after half an hour of play to come back to only lose 31\u201330 against the Penrith Panthers in the first Qualifying Final. In doing so St. George Illawarra became the first team to finish fifth to bow out after the first week of the finals, giving Penrith a home preliminary final; despite leading 8\u20134 at halftime in their preliminary final against Canterbury, they lost 30\u201314, thus ending their premiership defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\nAnother notable game was the seventh-placed North Queensland Cowboys reaching the finals for the first time and upsetting the second-placed and competition favourites the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 30\u201322 in the 3rd Qualifying Final. North Queensland also defeated the Brisbane Broncos for the first time ever during the semi finals but were unable to reach the Grand Final when they lost to the Sydney Roosters in the Preliminary Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\nThe North Queensland vs Brisbane semi-final was originally fixtured to be played at Aussie Stadium, however, at the behest of both clubs, and in accordance with Aussie Stadium management, the NRL agreed to move the game to Dairy Farmers Stadium in Townsville. North Queensland won the game 10\u20130, giving them their first ever win over Brisbane and eliminating from the finals in the process. The game was Broncos' captain and club legend Gorden Tallis' last, who coincidentally was born and raised in Townsville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\nThe Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs claimed their 8th premiership title by beating the Sydney Roosters in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178278-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season, Finals series\n\u00b9 Game relocated to Dairy Farmers Stadium, the Cowboys' home ground, from Aussie Stadium. Cowboys designated home team despite the Broncos finishing higher on the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 30], "content_span": [31, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178279-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NRL season results\nThis is a list of results for matches of the 2004 National Rugby League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178280-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nabire earthquake\nThe 2004 Nabire earthquake occurred on November 26 in Papua, Indonesia. The strike-slip event had a moment magnitude of 7.1 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VIII (Severe). Total deaths for the event amounted to 32, and the total number of injured (as reported by various agencies) was 130\u2013213.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178280-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nabire earthquake, Damage\nDozens of buildings collapsed and nearly two hundred homes, businesses, and a church were lost. Some infrastructure was damaged, including three bridges and a government telecommunications building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178281-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nadeshiko League\nStatistics of L. League in the 2004 season. Saitama Reinas FC won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178282-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nalchik raid\nThe 2004 Nalchik raid was an armed attack against headquarters of the regional branch of the Federal Drug Control Service (FSKN) in Nalchik, capital of the Russian republic of Kabardino-Balkaria in the North Caucasus, which took place at about 3 to 6 a.m. of December 14, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178282-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nalchik raid\nAccording to the investigation, six to ten attackers, possibly helped by former or current FSKN staff, entered the building without any resistance, shot dead four officers (two guards, a driver and a member of a special unit, all of them ethnic Kabardins, who were first captured and then executed in the basement), looted armory of rapid-response unit, and then set the office ablaze before driving away in a GAZelle minibus loaded with the captured weapons. According to an initial statements by the authorities, 36 assault rifles and 136 handguns were stolen in the attack. Later, however, figures for the lost weapons were put at 79 automatic and sniper rifles and 182 handguns of all kinds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178282-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nalchik raid\nIt was the first-high-profile operation conducted by the local Islamist rebel group Yarmuk Jamaat after it has officially declared the beginning of jihad against Russia in August 2004. The attack however resulted a major crackdown against Yarmuk, resulting in several arrests and deaths of suspected insurgents, among them the group's first leader Muslim Atayev and his wife who were killed in a police raid the following month. The following year, police recovered many of the seized weapons in the wake of the 2005 Nalchik raid, and over half of the group's members were killed, or captured. Fourteen are the subject of a manhunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178283-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Namibian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Namibia on 15 and 16 November 2004 to elect the President and National Assembly. The National Assembly election resulted in a landslide win for SWAPO, which won 55 of the 78 seats with over 75% of the vote. SWAPO's candidate for president, Hifikepunye Pohamba, won the presidential election. Following his victory, Pohamba was sworn in as President on 21 March 2005 at Independence Stadium in Windhoek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178284-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Namibian local and regional elections\nNamibia held two subnational elections in 2004. Local Authority Council elections were held on 14 May 2004. Regional Council elections were held from 29-30 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178284-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Namibian local and regional elections, Results, Local Authority Councils\nIn the regions of Helao Nafidi and Outapi only the South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO) fielded any candidates, so no elections were held and all SWAPO candidates were declared elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 77], "content_span": [78, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178285-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 NatWest Series\nThe 2004 NatWest Series was a One Day International cricket tri-series sponsored by the National Westminster Bank that took place in England between 24 June and 10 July 2004. The series involved the national teams of England, New Zealand and the West Indies. Ten matches were played in total, with each team playing one another twice during the group stage. The teams which finished in the top two positions following the group stages qualified for the final, which New Zealand won by defeating the West Indies at Lord's on 10 July by 107 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178285-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 NatWest Series, Fixtures, Final\nIn the final at Lord's, West Indies won the toss and elected to field. On a slow Lord's pitch, New Zealand started their innings with a 120 run opening partnership between captain Stephen Fleming and Nathan Astle, before the former was dismissed by Dwayne Bravo for 67. Astle fell for 57 with the score on 143, with Bravo once again taking the dismissal. Scott Styris fell for a single run soon after, before Hamish Marshall and Craig McMillan came together to add 71 for the fourth wicket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178285-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 NatWest Series, Fixtures, Final\nMarshall eventually fell with the score on 217, dismissed by Chris Gayle, with McMillan being dismissed soon after by Tino Best, having made 52. A flurry of late wickets by Best and Ramnaresh Sarwan contained New Zealand's progress toward the end of the innings, with New Zealand all out after 49.2 overs for 266. Sarwan finished with the best innings bowling figures of 3/31, while Bravo and Best each chipped in with two wickets and Gayle and Devon Smith with one each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178285-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 NatWest Series, Fixtures, Final\nThe West Indies response started poorly, with Gayle dismissed for 4 runs with the score on 5 by Jacob Oram. Devon Smith and Sarwan settled the batting with a sedate partnership of 40 for the second wicket, before Sarwan was run out. Brian Lara and Smith then took the score to 98, before the latter was run out by Daniel Vettori. Lara fell to the bowling of Vettori shortly after with the score on 105, with Bravo following one run later. Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Ricardo Powell took the score to 149, before Powell became the seventh wicket to fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178285-0001-0003", "contents": "2004 NatWest Series, Fixtures, Final\nDevon Smith and Ridley Jacobs both fell with the score on 150, nine runs later Ian Bradshaw fell. Rain arrived and forced a ninety-minute delay, during which half of the Lord's crowd left. With the match seemingly headed for a reserve day, the rain stopped and play resumed with the West Indies on 159/9. No further runs were added as just after 8pm Vettori took the wicket of Chanderpaul, his fifth of the match, to hand New Zealand a 107 run victory. This was New Zealand's largest winning margin over the West Indies in One Day International's. Daniel Vettori was declared Man of the Match, while Stephen Fleming was declared Player of the Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178286-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Basketball Development League draft\nThe 2004 NBDL Draft was the fourth annual draft by the National Basketball Development League. It was held on November 4, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178287-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Camogie League\nThe 2004 National Camogie League, the second most important elite level inter-county competition in the women's team field sport of camogie was won by Tipperary, who defeated Wexford in the final, played at Nowlan Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178287-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Camogie League, Arrangements\nWexford overcame defending champions Cork in the semi-final at Wexford Park with a brilliant second half display. Cork, who had the wind advantage in the opening half, were 0-11 to 0-3 ahead at half time. The Wexford fight back began with a goal four minutes after the break from full-forward Michelle Hearne, who added another with three minutes of remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178287-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Camogie League, Division 2\nThe Junior National League, known since 2006 as Division Two, was won by Kildare who defeated Laois in the final. Susie O'Carroll, with two goals in the opening 20 minutes, inspired Kildare to a fourth title as they withstood a determined Laois recovery", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178287-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Camogie League, The Final\nThe two sides shared goals in the opening five minutes, Deirdre Hughes scoring after 90 seconds from close range, and Michelle Hearne quickly replying for Wexford. Eimear McDonnell and Deirdre Hughes again added further goals as Tipperary led 3-2 to 1-4 at half-time. Tipperary's experience was evident through the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland)\nThe 2004 National Football League, known for sponsorship reasons as the Allianz National Football League, was the 73rd staging of the National Football League (NFL), an annual Gaelic football tournament for the Gaelic Athletic Association county teams of Ireland. Kerry beat Galway in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Format, League structure\nThe top 16 teams were drawn into Divisions 1A and 1B. The other 16 teams were drawn into Divisions 2A and 2B. Each team played all the other teams in its section once: either home or away. Teams earned 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Format, Finals, promotions and relegations\nThe top two teams in Divisions 2A and 2B progressed to the Division 2 semi-finals and were promoted to Division 1. The bottom two teams in Divisions 1A and 1B were relegated. The top two teams in Divisions 1A and 1B progressed to the NFL semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 83], "content_span": [84, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Format, Tie-breaker\nIf two or more teams are level on points, points difference was used to rank the teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Division 1, Division 1A Table\nCompete in Division 1 semi-finals\u00a0\u00a0Automatic relegation to Division 2A", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Division 1, Division 1B Table\nCompete in Division 1 semi-finals\u00a0\u00a0Automatic relegation to Division 2B", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Division 2, Division 2A Table\nCompete in Division 2 semi-finals and automatic promotion to Division 1A", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178289-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National Football League (Ireland), Division 2, Division 2B Table\nCompete in Division 2 semi-finals and automatic promotion to Division 1B", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game\nThe 2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game was held on February 8, 2004, at the Xcel Energy Center in Saint Paul, home of the Minnesota Wild. The Eastern Conference defeated the Western Conference 6\u20134. This was the final All-Star Game until 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game, All-Star weekend, Events\nThe city of Saint Paul in honor of the All Star Game being held built the Ice Castle for the first time in over 20 years at the Saint Paul Winter Carnival right across the street from the Xcel Energy Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 67], "content_span": [68, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game, All-Star weekend, NHL YoungStars Game\nThe YoungStars game, featuring rosters composed entirely of rookies and some second-year players, saw the Western Conference YoungStars defeat the Eastern Conference 7\u20133. Anaheim's Joffrey Lupul scored a hat trick, San Jose's Jonathan Cheechoo picked up four assists and Colorado goaltender Philippe Sauve was named the Game MVP, stopping 18 of 21 shots. It is notable that instead of a regular 5-on-5 hockey game, the YoungStars game is played in a four-on-four format with each roster consisting of six forwards, four defencemen, and one goaltender. The game was played in three 10-minute running-clock periods and a four-minute intermission between each period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game, All-Star weekend, SuperSkills Competition\nThe Eastern Conference were the overall victors of the SuperSkills Competition, in which select all-stars compete in various competitions, including a shootout, a relay race and a fastest skater competition. The East defeated the West 13\u20136. Panthers goaltender Roberto Luongo won the Goaltenders Competition, Islanders defenceman Adrian Aucoin won the Hardest Shot competition and Devils defenceman Scott Niedermayer won the Fastest Skater competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 84], "content_span": [85, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game, The game\nThe Eastern Conference were struck with injuries as Scott Stevens and Wade Redden were forced to pull out of the game. Brian Rafalski and Pavel Kubina replaced the defensemen, respectively, putting the starting rosters at Ilya Kovalchuk, Joe Thornton and Martin St. Louis on offense, Scott Niedermayer and Stevens injury replacement Brian Rafalski on defense and Martin Brodeur in goal for the East, and Todd Bertuzzi, Mike Modano and Bill Guerin on offense, Rob Blake and Nicklas Lidstrom on defense and Marty Turco in goal for the West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game, The game\nThe Eastern Conference cruised to a 6\u20134 victory on goals by Adrian Aucoin, Daniel Alfredsson (who scored twice), Mark Messier, Gary Roberts and Ilya Kovalchuk. However, it was Joe Sakic of the Western Conference who walked away with MVP honors as he scored a hat trick. Coyotes forward Shane Doan also scored for the West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178290-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hockey League All-Star Game, Uniforms\nFor the first time, the NHL used All-Star uniforms inspired by the host team, and opted to go with a retro flavor. The uniforms were distinct for the lack of white - the Eastern Conference uniforms were cream-colored (officially the Minnesota Wild's \"Minnesota Wheat\" color) with red trim, while the Western Conference wore green jerseys with cream trim. In a departure from the overall retro theme of the uniforms, the names on the back of the jersey were in the Kabel typeface used by the Toronto Maple Leafs at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League\nThe 2004 National Hurling League, known for sponsorship reasons as the Allianz National Hurling League, was the 73rd edition of the National Hurling League (NHL), an annual hurling competition for the GAA county teams. Galway won the league, beating Waterford in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Structure, Division 1\nThere are 12 teams in Division 1, divided into 1A and 1B. Each team plays all the others in its group once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Structure, Division 1\nEach team in the Final Group plays the other three teams that it did not play in the first five games. The top two teams go into the NHL final \u2013 only points earned in these last three games count. Each team in the Relegation Group plays the other three teams that it did not play in the first five games. The bottom team is relegated \u2013 only points earned in these last three games count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Structure, Division 2\nThere are 10 teams in Division 2, divided into 2A and 2B. Each team plays all the others in its group once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Structure, Division 2\nEach team in the Promotion Group plays the other three teams that it did not play in the first four games. The top two teams go into the Division 2 final \u2013 only points earned in these last three games count. Final winners are promoted. Each team in the Relegation Group plays the other two teams that it did not play in the first four games. The bottom team is relegated \u2013 only points earned in these last two games count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Structure, Division 3\nThere are 10 teams in Division 3, divided into 3A and 3B. Each team plays all the others in its group once, earning 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Structure, Division 3\nEach team in the Promotion Group plays the other three teams that it did not play in the first four games. The top two teams go into the Division 3 final \u2013 only points earned in these last three games count. Final winners are promoted. Each team in the Shield Group plays the other two teams that it did not play in the first four games. The top two play the Division 3 Shield Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Overview, Division 1\nGalway won their first league title in four seasons, as 'the Westerners' recorded two defeats throughout the entire league. Waterford, who were league runners-up, suffered three defeats in the group stages before falling to Galway in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Overview, Division 1\nDown at the other end of the table, Dublin and Antrim went through the initial group stages without a single victory. However, a relegation group of six teams resulted in Offaly ending up at the bottom and facing relegation for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 1\nKilkenny came into the season as defending champions of the 2003 season. Antrim entered Division 1 as the promoted team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 1\nOn 9 May 2004, Galway won the title following a 2-15 to 1-13 win over Waterford in the final. It was their first league title since 2000 and their 8th National League title overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 1\nOffaly, who were unlucky not to make the final group, were relegated from Division 1 after losing all of their group stage matches in the relegation group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 1\nGalway's Eugene Cloonan was the Division 1 top scorer with 10-62.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 2\nDerry and Mayo entered Division 2 as the respective relegated and promoted teams from the 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 2\nOn 9 May 2004, Down won the title following a 5-15 to 3-7 win over Westmeath in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 2\nMayo were relegated from Division 2 after losing all of their group stage matches in the relegation group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178291-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 National Hurling League, Division 2\nWestmeath's Andrew Mitchell was the Division 2 top scorer with 1-56.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178292-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Indoor Football League season\nThe 2004 National Indoor Football League season was the fourth season of the National Indoor Football League (NIFL). The league champions were the Lexington Horsemen, who defeated the Sioux Falls Storm in Indoor Bowl IV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178293-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Invitation Tournament\nThe 2004 National Invitation Tournament was the 2004 edition of the annual NCAA college basketball competition. Michigan (initially barred from postseason play that season, but overturned on appeal) defeated Rutgers in the final game to capture their third NIT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178293-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Invitation Tournament, Selected teams\nBelow is a list of the 40 teams selected for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178293-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Invitation Tournament, Bracket\nBelow are the four first round brackets, along with the four-team championship bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series\nThe 2004 National League Championship Series (NLCS) was a Major League Baseball playoff series played from October 13 to 21 to determine the champion of the National League, between the Central Division champion St. Louis Cardinals and the wild-card qualifying Houston Astros. This marked the first time in either Major League that two teams from the Central Division met in a Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series\nIn a series in which all seven games were won by the home team, the Cardinals won 4\u20133 to advance to the World Series against the American League champion Boston Red Sox. The Red Sox reached their first World Series since 1986, with the Cardinals playing in their first since 1987. While the NLCS was an exciting back-and-forth series, it was overshadowed in media attention by Boston's comeback in the ALCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series\nThe Cardinals would go on to lose in a sweep to the Boston Red Sox in the World Series in four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nWednesday, October 13, 2004 at Busch Stadium (II) in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nThe series opener at St. Louis' Busch Stadium was a slugfest involving five home runs, 17 runs, and 22 hits, eventually won by St. Louis, 10\u20137. Houston struck the first blow of the series when Carlos Beltr\u00e1n hit a two-run home run in the top of the first inning after a leadoff single off Woody Williams. The Cardinals answered with a home run by Albert Pujols in the bottom half after a one-out triple off Brandon Backe, tying the game at two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nHouston took a 4\u20132 lead in the fourth inning on a two-run home run by Jeff Kent, but the Cards tied it again in the fifth on Larry Walker's RBI double off Backe and Scott Rolen's RBI single off Chad Qualls. In the sixth, Edgar Renteria and Reggie Sanders hit back-to-back leadoff singles before a sacrifice bunt moved them up one base. Pinch hitter Roger Cedeno's groundout scored Renteria to put the Cardinals up 3\u20132 for the first time in this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nTony Womack followed with an RBI single, then stole second before scoring on Walker's single aided by shortstop Jose Vizcaino's error. After Qualls walked Pujols, Chad Harville in relief walked Rolen to load the bases before Jim Edmonds cleared them with a double to put the Cardinals up 10\u20134. The Astros cut it to 10\u22126 with a two-run home run from Lance Berkman in the eighth off Ray King. Next inning, a two-out solo home run from Mike Lamb off Juli\u00e1n Tav\u00e1rez made it 10\u22127. Craig Biggio then hit a ground-rule double before Jason Isringhausen relieved Juli\u00e1n Tav\u00e1rez and got Beltran to ground out to first on the first pitch to end the game. All seven of the Astros' runs in Game 1 were scored on home runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThursday, October 14, 2004 at Busch Stadium (II) in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThe Astros scored three runs off Cardinals' Matt Morris on home runs by Carlos Beltran in the first and Morgan Ensberg in the fourth. Lance Berkman added an RBI single in the fifth with two on, but in the bottom of the inning, two-run home runs from Larry Walker off starter Peter Munro and Scott Rolen off reliever Chad Harville put the Cardinals up 4\u22123.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThe Astros tied it in the seventh off Kiko Calero when Berkman hit a leadoff double, stole third and scored on Ensberg's single, but the Cardinals retook the lead in the bottom of the eighth inning with back-to-back home runs from Albert Pujols and Scott Rolen off Dan Miceli. Jason Isringhausen pitched a scoreless ninth despite allowing two walks as the Cardinals' 6\u22124 win put them up 2\u22120 in the series heading to Houston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nSaturday, October 16, 2004 at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nIn the first game of the series played in Houston's Minute Maid Park, the Cardinals went up 1\u22120 in the first on Larry Walker's one-out home run, but the Astros tied it in the bottom of the inning off Jeff Suppan on Lance Berkman's RBI single before Jeff Kent's two-run home run put them up 3\u22121. Jim Edmonds' leadoff home run in the second cut it to 3\u22122, but the Astros added two insurance runs in the eighth on home runs from Carlos Beltran off Dan Haren and Berkman off Ray King. Roger Clemens pitched seven innings for the 5\u22122 win, which left the Astros trailing 2\u20131 in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nSunday, October 17, 2004 at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe Cardinals struck first in Game 3 when Roy Oswalt walked Larry Walker with one out before Albert Pujols hit a two-run home run. Scott Rolen then doubled, moved to third on a groundout, and after a walk, scored on John Mabry's single to put the Cardinals up 3\u22120. The Astros cut it to 3\u22121 in the bottom of the inning when Carlos Beltran walked with one out off Jeff Bagwell's double off Jason Marquis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nIn the top of the third, Pujols drew a leadoff walk, moved to third on Rolen's single and scored on Jim Edmonds' sacrifice fly, but the Astros cut the lead to 4\u22123 when Beltran and Bagwell singled with one out and scored on Lance Berkman's double. Pujols's single with two on in the fourth put the Cardinals up 5\u22123, but the Astros cut the lead back to one on Berkman's leadoff home run in the sixth off Kiko Calero. Jose Vizcaino doubled two outs later and scored on Raul Chavez's single to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nNext inning, Beltran's home run off Juli\u00e1n Tav\u00e1rez put the Astros up 6\u22125. Brad Lidge pitched two shutout innings for the save as the Astros evened the series with the Cardinals at two games apiece. Beltr\u00e1n tied records for the most home runs in a single postseason (8) and most consecutive postseason games with a home run (5). The latter record would be broken by Daniel Murphy in Game Four of the 2015 NLCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nMonday, October 18, 2004 at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThe Astros defeated the Cardinals 3\u20130 in Game 5 with Jeff Kent driving in the winning runs with a walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth off Jason Isringhausen. Astros starter Brandon Backe took a perfect game into the fifth inning, when he walked Cardinals center fielder Jim Edmonds, and allowed only one hit (a single to second baseman Tony Womack in the sixth) in eight innings. The Cardinals' Woody Williams was nearly as effective, allowing only one hit (a two-out single to Jeff Bagwell in the first) and two walks over seven innings. Houston led the best-of-seven series 3\u20132 and was one win away from their first World Series appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nWednesday, October 20, 2004 at Busch Stadium (II) in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nReturning to St. Louis, Matt Morris started Game 6 for the Cardinals, as did Pete Munro for the Astros. The scoring began with Carlos Beltr\u00e1n walking with one out, stealing second, moving to third on a single, and scoring on Lance Berkman's sacrifice fly in the first. The Cardinals responded in the bottom of the inning with a two-run home run by Albert Pujols. In the third, Beltr\u00e1n singled with two outs and scored on Jeff Bagwell's double to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 6\nAgain, the Cardinals responded when \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda hit a two-run single scoring Albert Pujols and Scott Rolen in the bottom of the inning. Mike Lamb's home run in the fourth cut the Cardinals' lead to 4\u22123. In the top of the ninth inning Bagwell hit a two-out single off Jason Isringhausen, scoring Morgan Ensberg for the tying run. The game went into extra innings and ended when Jim Edmonds, who hit 42 home runs in the regular season, hit a walk-off two-run home run in the bottom of the 12th off Dan Miceli, sending the series to a Game 7 showdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nThursday, October 21, 2004 at Busch Stadium (II) in St. Louis, Missouri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nThe final, deciding Game 7 started off with Astros' leadoff man Craig Biggio smacking a home run in the game's first at-bat off Cardinals' starter Jeff Suppan to make it 1\u20130. The Astros' threat continued in the second by putting two men on, but, thanks to a tremendous catch by center fielder Jim Edmonds, the Cardinals were able to get out of the inning unscathed. In the third, however, the Astros made it 2\u20130 with Carlos Beltr\u00e1n, who walked and stole second, scoring on Jeff Bagwell's sacrifice fly aided by Edmonds's error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178294-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 7\nThe Cardinals cut it to 2\u22121 in the bottom of the inning when Tony Womack hit a leadoff double, moved to third on a groundout, and scored on Jeff Suppan's bunt groundout. Then in the sixth Albert Pujols doubled to score Roger Cedeno from third to tie the game and Scott Rolen put the Redbirds ahead with a two-run home run off Roger Clemens. St. Louis added another run in the eighth off Roy Oswalt when pinch hitter Marlon Anderson hit a leadoff double, moved to third on a sacrifice bunt, and scored on Larry Walker's single. Jason Isringhausen shut down Houston in the ninth to win the Cardinals their first National League pennant in 17 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series\nThe 2004 National League Division Series (NLDS), the opening round of the 2004 National League playoffs, began on Tuesday, October 5, and ended on Monday, October 11, with the champions of the three NL divisions\u2014along with a \"wild card\" team\u2014participating in two best-of-five series. They were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series\nThe National League division and wild card races were some of the most exciting in the wild-card era, as the National League West came down to the final weekend of the season, while there were as many as four teams trying for a post-season berth via the wild card the last week of the season, as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series\nThe St. Louis Cardinals and Houston Astros went on to meet in the NL Championship Series (NLCS). The Cardinals became the National League champion, and lost to the American League champion Boston Red Sox in the 2004 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 1\nOdalis P\u00e9rez faced Woody Williams in Game 1. Albert Pujols got the Cardinals started with a two-out solo homer to make it 1\u20130 in the first. Then in the third, Perez reached his limit after surrendering five two-out runs. Larry Walker's solo homer made it 2\u20130. Pujols singled and Scott Rolen walked before \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda doubled in both, then Jim Edmonds's two-run homer made it 6\u20130 Cardinals. In the fourth, Mike Matheny homered off Elmer Dessens to make it 7\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 1\nThe Dodgers got on the board in the fifth on back-to-back two-out doubles by Cesar Izturis and Jayson Werth, then added another run next inning when Adrian Beltre hit a leadoff single and scored on Alex Cora's two-out triple. The Cardinals added to their lead on Larry Walker's leadoff home run in the seventh off Giovanni Carrara. Kiko Calero and Ray King followed Williams' six solid innings with a perfect seventh and eighth. Jason Isringhausen closed out the game after allowing a home run to Tom Wilson in the ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 2\nJeff Weaver faced Jason Marquis in Game 2. Jayson Werth homered in the first to make it 1\u20130 Dodgers, but in the second, with runners on first and second and one out, Weaver's error on a pickoff attempt allowed Edgar Renteria to score and Reggie Sanders to go to second. One out later, Tony Womack's triple and Larry Walker's double scored a run each, giving the Cardinals a 3\u20131 lead. However, back-to-back homers by Shawn Green and Milton Bradley to lead off the top of the fourth tied the game. Marquis was removed in favor of Cal Eldred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 2\nWith Weaver still pitching in the fifth and runners on first and second and two outs, Renteria's RBI single put the Cardinals back in front 4\u20133. After Sanders was hit by a pitch to load the bases, Mike Matheny's two-run single made it 6\u20133 Cardinals. Matheny would also come through in the seventh with another two-run single off Giovanni Carrara. The Cardinals' solid bullpen held the Dodgers as they cruised to another 8\u20133 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 3\nWith time running out, the Dodgers called on Jos\u00e9 Lima for Game 3. Opposing him would be Matt Morris. Both pitchers kept the game quiet until the third. The Dodgers would take the lead for only the second time in the series with a two-run bases-loaded double by Steve Finley. Then Shawn Green followed with a leadoff homer in the fourth. Lima would keep the Cardinals silent all night and Green would homer once again in the sixth to make it 4\u20130. Lima would pitch a complete-game five-hit shutout to give the Dodgers their first postseason win since the clinching Game 5 of the 1988 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 4\nAll the momentum the Dodgers might have had disappeared in Game 4. Jeff Suppan faced Odalis P\u00e9rez and Jayson Werth struck first against Suppan with a one-out homer in the first to make it 1\u20130 Dodgers, but Reggie Sanders homered as well to tie the game in the second. Then with two on via two walks, \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda gave the Cardinals the lead with an RBI single in the third, but the Dodgers tied the game on a sacrifice fly by Adri\u00e1n Beltr\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Game 4\nHowever, Wilson \u00c1lvarez faced Albert Pujols with two men on in the fourth and surrender a three-run homer to give the Cardinals a commanding 5\u20132 lead. Then Pujols singled home Larry Walker off Yhency Brazoban to give the Cardinals a 6\u20132 lead in the seventh. That marked the end for the Dodgers as Alex Cora struck out against Jason Isringhausen to end the series in the ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, St. Louis vs. Los Angeles, Composite line score\n2004 NLDS (3\u20131): St. Louis Cardinals over Los Angeles Dodgers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 1\nRoger Clemens faced Jaret Wright in Game 1. The Braves loaded the bases in the bottom of the first on an error and two walks before Johnny Estrada's sacrifice fly put them up 1\u20130. Wright cruised through the first two innings but ran into trouble in the third. Brad Ausmus's leadoff homer tied the game and after two quick outs, Carlos Beltr\u00e1n singled. Jeff Bagwell followed with an RBI double. Then Lance Berkman homered to put the Astros up 4\u20131. In the fifth, the Astros got two more on Beltr\u00e1n's two-run homer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 1\nKevin Gryboski relieved Wright and allowed a single to Jeff Bagwell and one out later, Jeff Kent's RBI single made it 7\u20131 Astros. In the bottom of the inning, Andruw Jones's two-out home run made it 7\u20132 Astros. The Braves scored their last run in the sixth when Rafael Furcal hit a leadoff triple and scored on a groundout by Marcus Giles. The Astros added to their lead in the seventh on an RBI single by Morgan Ensberg off Juan Cruz and the ninth on Jason Lane's leadoff home run off Chris Reitsma. Mike Gallo pitched a scoreless bottom of the ninth as the Astros' 9\u20133 win gave them a 1\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 2\nThe Astros jumped off to an early 2\u20130 lead off Braves starter Mike Hampton on homers by Jeff Bagwell in the first and Raul Chavez in the third. Hampton would leave in the seventh with an injured arm. In the seventh, Astros starter Roy Oswalt, who was working on a shutout, began to falter as he allowed a pinch-hit double to DeWayne Wise. Then Rafael Furcal would single him home to make it 2\u20131. In a bizarre incident, the Astros' bullpen phone stopped working and someone had to check the status of their relievers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 2\nIt caused a delay that Braves manager Bobby Cox protested. This occurred after Oswalt gave up his only run of the game. The bullpen would save the inning and the game remained 2\u20131 until the bottom of the eighth, when Adam LaRoche tied the game with an RBI double off Brad Lidge with the Astros five outs away from taking a commanding 2\u20130 lead in the series. As the game moved to extra innings, Charles Thomas singled with one out in the bottom of the 11th off Dan Miceli. After Eli Marrero struck out, Thomas stole second, then Rafael Furcal \u2013 well aware that once the Braves were eliminated he was going to jail \u2013 hit the game-winning two-run home run to tie the series at one game apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 3\nJohn Thomson faced Brandon Backe in Game 3. Thomson would leave the game in the first with a strained muscle on his left side after surrendering a double and a walk with one out. Paul Byrd came on in relief and got out of the inning, but, in the third, Carlos Beltr\u00e1n put the Astros on top with a two-run homer. In the fourth, the Braves issued their response with a homer from Johnny Estrada. Andruw Jones then doubled and, after an intentional walk, scored on Byrd's RBI single to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 3\nIn the bottom of the fifth, Lance Berkman walked with two outs before scoring on Jeff Kent's RBI double off the scoreboard, then Morgan Ensberg's RBI single made it 4\u20132 Astros and Byrd was gone. Against Antonio Alfonseca in the bottom of the sixth, the Astros put two men on and Alfonseca would leave in favor of Tom Martin, who allowed an RBI single to Lance Berkman. After Jeff Kent walked to load the bases, Ensberg's two-run double made it 7\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 3\nThey scored one more run when Brad Ausmus walked to lead off the seventh, moved to second on a wild pitch by Chris Reitsma, then to third on a ground out before scoring on a Mike Lamb sacrifice fly. The Braves put their first two men on in the eighth off Russ Springer and, after two strikeouts, Andruw Jones hit a three-run homer to cut the lead in half, but Brad Lidge pitched a perfect ninth for the save as the Astros' 8\u20135 win left them one win away from the NLCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 4\nWith their backs to the wall in Game 4, the Braves sent Russ Ortiz to the mound to face Roger Clemens. Three consecutive leadoff singles in the second put the Braves up 1\u20130, then Adam LaRoche's double play with runners on second and third made it 2\u20130 Braves. In the bottom of the inning, the Astros loaded the bases on two singles and a walk before Clemens's sacrifice fly cut the Braves' lead to 2\u20131. Then Craig Biggio hit a three-run homer to give the Astros a 4\u20132 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 4\nCarlos Beltr\u00e1n doubled and scored on Jeff Bagwell's single to make it 5\u20132 Astros. Behind Clemens, the Astros were closing in on their first-ever postseason series win, but Clemens left the game in favor of Chad Qualls, who gave up a three-run homer to Adam LaRoche to tie the game in the sixth. The Braves took the lead in the ninth off Russ Springer when Rafael Furcal was hit by a pitch with two outs, stole second and scored on J. D. Drew's single. The Astros got two one-out singles in the bottom of the inning off John Smoltz, but Jeff Kent grounded into the game-ending double play to force a Game 5 in Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 5\nRoy Oswalt took on Jaret Wright in the clinching Game 5. In the top of the second, a leadoff single was followed by a double before Morgan Ensberg's ground out and Jose Vizcaino's sacrifice fly scored a run each. Then Carlos Beltr\u00e1n homered in the third to make it 3\u20130 Astros, but the Braves cut the lead to one on a pair of homers by Rafael Furcal, in what turned out to be his last game before going to jail, and Johnny Estrada in the fifth. Beltr\u00e1n's second homer in the sixth, however, made it 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 5\nWhen Chris Reitsma took the mound in the seventh, the Astros were able to put the series away with a five-run explosion. Vizcaino hit a leadoff single, moved to second on a sacrifice bunt and scored on Craig Biggio's two-out single. Biggio scored on Beltr\u00e1n's single before Jeff Bagwell's two-run homer's made it 8\u20132. Tom Martin relieved Reitsma and allowed a double to Lance Berkman, who scored on Jeff Kent's single. The Braves scored their last run of the series in the bottom of the inning on Johnny Estrada's RBI single off Mike Gallo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178295-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 National League Division Series, Atlanta vs. Houston, Game 5\nThe Astros added to their lead in the eighth off Juan Cruz when Ensberg hit a leadoff double and scored on Jason Lane's two-out single. After Biggio doubled, Beltr\u00e1n's two-run single made it 12\u20133. Dan Wheeler would come on to shut the door on the Braves in the ninth. Chipper Jones's flyout to left gave the Astros the win in Game 5 and gave them their first-ever postseason series win. After multiple losses to the Braves in the playoffs, the Astros won the right to play in the NLCS for the first time since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season\nThe 2004 National Pro Fastpitch season was the first season of professional softball under the name National Pro Fastpitch (NPF) for the only professional women's fastpitch softball league in the United States. From 1997 to 2002, NPF operated under the names Women's Pro Fastpitch (WPF) and Women's Pro Softball League (WPSL). Each year, the playoff teams battle for the Cowles Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events\nThe 2004 season was the culmination of years of work to relaunch the Women's Pro Softball League (WPSL) as a new league. In November 2002 the new name for WPSL - National Pro Fastpitch - was announced, along with a 2003 tour and league play beginning in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events\nNPF initially announced a league roster of teams in Akron, Ohio (Akron Racers), Denver, Colo.(Colorado Altitude), Houston and San Antonio, Texas (Texas Thunder and San Antonio Armadillos), Sacramento, Calif. (California Sunbirds), Tucson, Ariz. (Arizona Heat), Lowell, Mass. (New England Riptide), and Parsippany, NJ (NY/NJ Juggernaut). The Racers were the only NPF team that also played in the WPSL. NPF conducted its first player drafts with these eight teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events\nIn March 2004, NPF released its inaugural schedule for 2004 and did not include the Armadillos and the Altitude. Reports allowed for the possibility of both teams joining the league in 2005 or later, but it never came to be.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Milestones and events\nNPF officially launched its first season on June 1, 2004, with three games: the Akron Racers at the Texas Thunder, the Arizona Heat visiting the California Sunbirds, and the New England Riptide at the New York/New Jersey Juggernaut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Player acquisition, College draft\nNPF held tryouts and its first drafts at the 2003 National Fastpitch Coaches Association (NFCA) Convention, at the Del Lago Resort, in Montgomery, Texas December 3\u20136, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Player acquisition, College draft\nOn December 6 at the 2004 NPF Draft, the eight NPF teams selected players in a four-round Elite Draft and a six-round College Senior Draft. San Antonio selected Michigan State first baseman, and Indiana assistant coach Stacey Phillips with the first overall selection in the Elite Draft. In the College Senior Draft Iyhia McMichael of Mississippi State was selected first by the Akron Racers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Player acquisition, College draft\nAfter the decision was made to launch the 2004 season without the Colorado Altitude and San Antonio Armadillos, a Supplemental Draft was held to allocate players whose rights were held by Colorado and San Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, Player acquisition, Notable transactions\nThe Juggernaut signed Michele Smith, a two-time Olympic gold medal pitcher (1996 and 2000), and five-time Japan Pro League MVP. The Racers brought on board Danielle Henderson, a member of the 2000 gold medal Olympic team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 76], "content_span": [77, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, NPF Championship\nThe 2004 NPF Championship Series was held at Firestone Stadium in Akron, Ohio August 25-9. The top four teams qualified and were seeded based on the final standings. The Racers won the tiebreaker over the Riptide based on winning the head-to-head season series 8-4. All series were planned to be best-of-three games, but that changed when rain cancelled the game 1 of the final on August 28. A single winner-take-all game was played on August 29.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, NPF All-Star Teams\nThe 2004 NPF All-Star Series was held July 13 and 14 at Don E. Porter Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, OK. The East All-Star team included players from NY/NJ Juggernaut, the New England Riptide, and the Akron Racers and was managed by the Racers' Judy Martino. The West All-Star team included players from California Sunbirds, the Arizona Heat, and the Texas Thunder and was managed by the Thunder's Wayne Daigle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178296-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 National Pro Fastpitch season, NPF All-Star Teams\nThe USA Olympic softball team played a doubleheader against each NPF All-Star Team on July 13. The Olympians swept the games beating the East 5-0, and edging the West 5-3 in 9 innings. The West All-Stars beat the East by a score of 1-0 on July 14. Nancy Evans was named the Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178297-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Provincial Championship\nThe National Provincial Championship, or NPC, was the predecessor to the current Air New Zealand Cup and Heartland Championship in New Zealand rugby. 2004 was the 29th year of the National Provincial Championship, Canterbury were the winners of Division 1, Nelson Bays were the winners of Division 2, while Poverty Bay were the winners of Division 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178297-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Provincial Championship, Ranfurly Shield\nAs the holders of the Ranfurly Shield from the end of 2003, Auckland were the Ranfurly Shield holders in 2004 and started with its first defence against Poverty Bay in Auckland. Auckland won this match and defended it successfully once and lost its third defence of the season to Bay of Plenty. With the unions first ever Ranfurly Shield win, Bay of Plenty won its first ever defence of the shield before losing it to Canterbury who successfully defeated its following challengers to keep the shield for the summer of 2004 and into the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final\nThe 2004 National Soccer League Grand Final was held on 4 April 2004 between Parramatta Power and Perth Glory at Parramatta Stadium. Parramatta Power had gained home-ground advantage by beating Perth Glory in the major semi final, while Perth earned their place with a win over Adelaide United in the preliminary final. Perth won the match 1\u20130, with Nik Mrdja scoring a golden goal in extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Background\nThe Australian Soccer Association (ASA) had decided that this would be the last National Soccer League season ahead of the launch of the provisionally-named Australian Premier League (APL) in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Route to the final\nThe two teams were the clear standouts with Perth finishing the season first and Parramatta six points behind. As the top two teams, they earned the right to advance to the second week of the finals series. In the major semi-final, held over two legs at Parramatta Stadium and Perth Oval, Parramatta defeated Perth 6\u20132 on aggregate to advance to the grand final. Perth defeated Adelaide United in the preliminary final 5\u20130 at Subiaco Oval to earn the right to face the Power again. After initially suggesting that they might relinquish home-ground advantage to the Glory, the Power eventually decided to host the grand final at Parramatta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nThe match took place in heavy rain which led to a smaller than expected crowd and affected the pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nPerth had the first real chance on goal in the 14th minute with Damian Mori having a shot from within the six-yard box saved by Clint Bolton, the Power goalkeeper. A Peter Zorbas cross after 23 minutes was spilt by Perth goalkeeper Jason Petkovic, however Power forward Ante Milicic was unable to capitalise. A promising Glory attack was thwarted in the 29th minute with a ball in the penalty area stopping in the mud near the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nWith conditions improving in the second half, Power midfielder Ahmad Elrich put in a cross to Milicic who shot wide. Shortly after, Mori again missed from just outside the six-yard box with only the keeper between him and the goal. In the 74th minute, Power forward Sasho Petrovski shot the ball wide after doing to move past his opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nWith regulation time expiring, the teams began extra time with the Golden goal rule in effect. Mori missed a clear chance to win the grand final five minutes into extra time after Peter Zorbas slipped while trying to clear the ball from the penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Match, Summary\nNik Mrdja, who had been an 82nd minute substitute for striker Bobby Despotovski, ended the match eight minutes into the first period of extra time with a low shot past Power goalkeeper Bolton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178298-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 National Soccer League Grand Final, Post match\nPower midfielder Ahmad Elrich was presented the Joe Marston Medal for best player of the grand final by Joe Marston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards\nThe 39th National Society of Film Critics Awards, given on 9 January 2005, honored the best in film for 2004. (see 2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards nominees).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Picture\n1. Million Dollar Baby (50)2. Sideways (44)3. Before Sunset (28)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Director\n1. Zhang Yimou \u2013 House of Flying Daggers (Shi mian mai fu) and Hero (Ying xiong) (33)2. Alexander Payne \u2013 Sideways (31)3. Clint Eastwood \u2013 Million Dollar Baby (30)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 68], "content_span": [69, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Actor\n1. Jamie Foxx \u2013 Ray and Collateral (31)2. Paul Giamatti \u2013 Sideways (29)3. Clint Eastwood \u2013 Million Dollar Baby (26)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Actress\n1. Imelda Staunton \u2013 Vera Drake (TIE) (52)1. Hilary Swank \u2013 Million Dollar Baby (TIE) (52)3. Julie Delpy \u2013 Before Sunset (40)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Supporting Actor\n1. Thomas Haden Church \u2013 Sideways (55)2. Morgan Freeman \u2013 Million Dollar Baby (54)3. Peter Sarsgaard \u2013 Kinsey (19)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Supporting Actress\n1. Virginia Madsen \u2013 Sideways (58)2. Cate Blanchett \u2013 The Aviator and Coffee and Cigarettes (37)3. Laura Linney \u2013 Kinsey (18)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 78], "content_span": [79, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Screenplay\n1. Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor \u2013 Sideways (60)2. Charlie Kaufman \u2013 Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (55)3. Richard Linklater, Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke \u2013 Before Sunset (29)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 70], "content_span": [71, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Cinematography\n1. Zhao Xiaoding \u2013 House of Flying Daggers (Shi mian mai fu) (39)2. Christopher Doyle \u2013 Hero (Ying xiong) (31)3. Dion Beebe and Paul Cameron \u2013 Collateral (18)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 74], "content_span": [75, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Foreign Language Film\n1. Moolaad\u00e9 (29)2. House of Flying Daggers (Shi mian mai fu) (27)3. Notre musique (15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 81], "content_span": [82, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178299-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards, Winners, Best Non-Fiction Film\n1. Tarnation (27)2. The Story of the Weeping Camel (Die Geschichte vom weinenden Kamel) (25)3. Bright Leaves (16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178300-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards nominees\nList of the 2004 National Society of Film Critics Awards nominees:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178301-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nationwide Tour\nThe 2004 Nationwide Tour season ran from February 5 to October 31. The season consisted of 31 official money golf tournaments; five of which were played outside of the United States. The top 20 players on the year-end money list earned their PGA Tour card for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178301-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nationwide Tour, Schedule\nThe number in parentheses after winners' names show the player's total number of wins on the Nationwide Tour including that event. No one accumulates many wins on the Nationwide Tour because success at this level soon leads to promotion to the PGA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178302-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nationwide Tour graduates\nThis is a list of players who graduated from the Nationwide Tour in 2004. The top 20 players on the Nationwide Tour's money list in 2004 earned their PGA Tour card for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178302-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nationwide Tour graduates\n*PGA Tour rookie for 2005. T = TiedGreen background indicates the player retained his PGA Tour card for 2006 (finished inside the top 125). Yellow background indicates the player did not retain his PGA Tour card for 2006, but retained conditional status (finished between 126\u2013150). Red background indicates the player did not retain his PGA Tour card for 2006 (finished outside the top 150).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178303-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nauruan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Nauru on 23 October 2004. Non -partisan followers of Ludwig Scotty won a majority, and he was elected President by the parliament (the Nauruan president is effectively a Prime Minister as he is also an MP, as is the case in South Africa and Botswana).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178304-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Navy Midshipmen football team\nThe 2004 Navy Midshipmen football team represented the United States Naval Academy (USNA) as an independent during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was led by third-year head coach Paul Johnson. The Midshipmen finished the regular season with a 9\u20132 record, the first time since the 1963 season that Navy had won nine or more games in a season. Wins over Army and the Air Force Falcons secured Navy's second consecutive Commander-in-Chief's Trophy. Navy secured a berth in the 2004 Emerald Bowl when the Pacific-10 Conference did not have enough teams to fill its bowl obligations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178304-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Navy Midshipmen football team\nThe other tie-in was with the Mountain West Conference (MWC), and the Midshipmen ended up playing the New Mexico Lobos. They won the game with a score of 34\u201319, finishing with a 14-minute, 26-play drive that set the record for the longest drive in a college football game. The win gave the Midshipmen a final record of 10\u20132, the first time since the 1905 season that the Midshipmen finished with ten or more wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid\nThe Nazran raid was a large-scale raid carried out in the Republic of Ingushetia, Russia on the night of June 21\u201322, 2004, by a group of mostly Chechen and Ingush militants led by the Chechen commander Shamil Basayev. Basayev's main goal, besides capturing a large cache of weapons, was a show of strength.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Attacks\nThe overnight attacks targeted 15 government buildings in the former Ingush capital and the largest city, Nazran, and three settlements located on the Baku-Rostov highway that crosses the republic from east to west (Karabulak, Sleptsovskaya and Yandare). The targets of simultaneous attacks included the Interior Ministry (MVD) headquarters with an arms depot, an FSB border guard unit, the municipal police headquarters, barracks of the OMON special police, police stations and checkpoints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Attacks\nThe attackers also tried but failed to free 50 prisoners from a temporary jail and dispersed at 3 a.m., before a column of federal army troops managed to reach Nazran just after dawn at 4 a.m. One Russian military convoy was also ambushed en route from North Ossetia and suffered casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Attacks\nWitnesses to the attacks told Russian media that most of the attackers spoke the Ingush language and wore masks and camouflage uniforms similar to those worn by the Russian police. The rebels patrolled Nazran, setting roadblocks and stopping motorists, asking to see their documents. Any law enforcement officials they encountered were then shot and killed, with exception of traffic policemen who were spared. The raid lasted nearly five hours, and the raiders withdrew almost unscathed and with two truckloads with 1,177 seized firearms. The Interior Ministry building and Nazran train station were burned down. Ingush officials said the rebels took some 20 hostages, mostly traffic police officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Attacks\nThe day before the attack, Chechen separatist leader Aslan Maskhadov, speaking for RFE/RL, claimed rebels are \"going to switch to offensive warfare\". In July 2004, Maskhadov publicly accepted responsibility for the attack and promised more similar attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Casualties\nAccording to the official figures, 92 people were killed in the raid, including at least 47 police officials, a number later revised downward to 98. The final toll included 27 civilians, 26 policemen (24 Ingush and two Chechen), 10 special forces servicemen, nine soldiers (six Russian and three Ingush), eight FSB agents, five employees of the local prosecutor's office, at least two guerrillas and three unidentified people. About 106 people were injured, including 51 members of government forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Casualties\nThe largest group of the dead were local police and other law enforcement officials, whom the rebels said they killed for collaborating with Russian security services in kidnappings and killings of Ingush civilians suspected of sympathizing with the rebels. The killed officials included the republic's acting Interior Minister Abukar Kostoyev, his deputy Zyaudin Kotiyev, Nazran city prosecutor Mukharbek Buzurtanov and Nazran district prosecutor Bilan Oziyev.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Casualties\nA number of civilians, including the Ingush health minister and a local UN worker, were killed in the crossfire. Only two dead rebels were found in the morning after attack, but the rebel Kavkaz Center website said the attackers lost six men killed. The KC statement also said that over 120 \"servants of Russia\" were killed in the attack and 30 policemen were captured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Aftermath\nArmy General Vyacheslav Tikhomirov, the Russian Deputy Interior Minister and the commander of Russia's Internal Troops (VV), decided to resign after Federal Interior Minister Rashid Nurgaliyev blamed them for the high number of deaths. After Tikhomirov's resignation, the VV remained without a head for a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178305-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Nazran raid, Aftermath\nSome 30 suspected rebels, mostly Ingush, were arrested in the next two months over their part in the Nazran raid. Several days after the September 2004 Beslan school siege, Deputy Prosecutor General of Russia Vladimir Kolesnikov said 10 of the weapons stolen in Nazran were used in the Beslan attack. One of the demands of Beslan terrorists was also the release of the raid suspects. In 2005, 13 of them were convicted and sentenced to 8\u201325 years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178306-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Neath Port Talbot County Borough Council election\nThe third election to the Neath Port Talbot County Borough Council was held on 10 June 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election. On the same day there were elections to the other 21 local authorities in Wales and community councils in Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178306-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Neath Port Talbot County Borough Council election, Overview\nAll council seats were up for election. These were the second elections held following local government reorganisation. Labour retained its majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178307-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nebelhorn Trophy\nThe 2004 Nebelhorn Trophy took place between September 2 and 5, 2004 at the Eislaufzentrum. The compulsory dance was the Rhumba. It is an international senior-level figure skating competition organized by the Deutsche Eislauf-Union and held annually in Oberstdorf, Germany. The competition is named after the Nebelhorn, a nearby mountain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178307-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nebelhorn Trophy\nIt was one of the first international senior competitions of the season. Skaters were entered by their respective national federations, rather than receiving individual invitations as in the Grand Prix of Figure Skating, and competed in four disciplines: men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The Fritz-Geiger-Memorial Trophy was presented to the country with the highest placements across all disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178308-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team\nThe 2004 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team represented the University of Nebraska\u2013Lincoln in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Bill Callahan and played their home games in Memorial Stadium in Lincoln, Nebraska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178308-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, After the season\nNebraska finished tied for 3rd place in the Big 12 North Division and tied for 7th conference-wide, with a final record of 5-6 (3-5), its first losing season since 1961. Head Coach Bill Callahan's overall career record was established at 5-6 (.455) and 3-5 (.375) in conference. Nebraska did not play in a bowl game for the first time since 1968, ending their consecutive bowl streak at 35.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178308-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nebraska Cornhuskers football team, After the season, NFL and pro players\nThe following Nebraska players who participated in the 2004 season later moved on to the next level and joined a professional or semi-pro team as draftees or free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 78], "content_span": [79, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots\nThe 2004 Nepal riots were a series of riots between 31 August to 6 September 2004. Thousands of people rioted in cities and towns across Nepal, which saw looting, arson, as well as imposed curfew and the deaths of two people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots\nThe protests started in Kathmandu, Nepal, following the Nepal hostage crisis. On 19 August 2004, twelve Nepalis were kidnapped in Iraq by Ansa al-Sunna, and on 31 August, it was confirmed that the twelve Nepalis were murdered. Several violent clashes with police followed the crisis, along with vandalism of Kantipur Publications, Kantipur Television, Space Time Network, and Channel Nepal. The Nepal Association of Foreign Employment Agencies was reported to have lost about billions of Nepali Rupees (NPR), and various companies also lost about 750 million NPR in damages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Background\nOn 19 August 2004, the Ansa al-Sunna website posted that they had taken twelve Nepalis hostage in Iraq and the group did not mention any demands nor gave any schedule for negotiations. The next day, the website showed a video of the Nepalis begging for their lives and they blamed, Pralhad Giri of Moonlight Consultants, for their abduction; the media was aired by various Nepali channels. On 23 August, the Government of Nepal made a plead via the Al Jazeera television channel, however, Nepali diplomats were unable to contact the kidnappers. The Nepali government also wrote to the Iraqi government, nevertheless, on 31 August at 6\u00a0pm, television channels broadcast pictures of the dead bodies of 12 Nepalis. This was later confirmed by the Qatari Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 28], "content_span": [29, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Riots\nThe first demonstrations began shortly after television channels broadcast pictures of the dead bodies. At 6\u00a0pm, 20 people showed up at Maitidevi, Kathmandu, and they started to knock down signs of \"labour recruitment agencies\". Later at Ghanta Ghar, the protester threw rocks at a mosque, later the rioters grew more than 150 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Riots\nOn 1 September, rioters appeared in various areas including, Kathmandu, and Lalitpur. The same day at 7:30\u00a0am, about 100 people shouted a rallying cry against \"Islamic terrorists\" and threw rocks at a mosque near Ghanta Ghar, and some protesters climbed to the roof, but, deployed police force took control of the place. The rioters also targeted Kantipur Publications, Kantipur Television, Space Time Network, and Channel Nepal; their employees were harassed, attacked by rocks, and their vehicles were burned. Jame Masjid in Kathmandu was tried to set on fire however this was intervened by the police. More than hundreds of copies of the Koran, an Islamic holy book, were \"thrown on to the street and burnt\". International airlines from Islamic countries were also vandalised, including Qatar Airways, Saudia, Kuwait Airways, and Pakistan International Airlines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Riots\nAt noon, the government announced it would impose a curfew around the Ring Road, Butwal, and Birtamod from 2:00\u00a0pm. At 1\u00a0pm, the protestors clash with the security guards near the Egyptian Embassy, Pulchok, and one is killed and three injured after they open fire. Half an hour later, near Ratna Park, three people were injured and one later dies at the hospital. The riots cool down after the curfew was deployed at 2\u00a0pm. It was estimated that there were more than 20,000 rioters on 1 September. Areas outside of the capital saw huge protests including in Birtamod, and Butwal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Riots\nOn 2 September, Home Ministry reported that the situation was under control. On 4 September, the curfew was eased and many people were seen outside shopping for food and essential goods. The curfew was officially ended on Monday, 6 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Effects\nThe Nepal Association of Foreign Employment Agencies was criticised and vandalized by rioters for failing to \"protect hundreds of manpower agencies during the rampage\". It was estimated that vandalism cost them billions of Nepali rupees as the protesters destroyed more than 300,000 passports \"deposited with manpower agencies\". The company told the government that they would not send anyone aboard for work until the government provides them with compensation and guaranteed the security of its employees. International airlines including Qatar Airways, Pakistan International Airlines, and Air Sahara stopped their flights to Kathmandu due to riots. Nepali Times estimated that various companies lost 750 million Nepalese rupees (NPR) in damages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Reactions\nKing Gyanendra and Queen Komal expressed their \"condolences to the family and relatives of the people killed by Iraqi militants\". It was reported that they were \"shocked and grieved\" by the cruel acts made by Jamaat Ansar al-Sunna. On 1 September, Prime Minister Sher Bahadur Deuba gave a nationwide speech on Radio Nepal and he called for \"restraint\". Deuba stated he would also provide 1 million Nepalese rupees to victims' family, and proclaimed 2 September to be a national day of mourning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178309-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Nepal riots, Reactions\nIt was also condemned by Indian Prime Minister: Manmohan Singh, United States Secretary of State: Colin Powell, Minister of External Affairs: Natwar Singh, Jack Straw, Pope John Paul II, governments of Bangladesh and Japan. The Kathmandu Post called the militants \"terrorists who have camouflaged themselves in the masks of Islam\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178310-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Nevada Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 14, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional. The candidates were awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received and the caucus was open to registered Democrats only. A total of 20 delegates are awarded proportionally. A 15 percent threshold was required to receive delegates. Frontrunner John Kerry won the primary with Governor Howard Dean coming in a distant second. Kerry won the Democratic nomination for President of the United States, but lost the general election to incumbent George W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178311-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nevada Wolf Pack football team\nThe 2004 Nevada Wolf Pack football team represented the University of Nevada, Reno during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Nevada competed as a member of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). The Wolf Pack were led by Chris Ault in his 20th overall and 1st straight season since taking over as head coach for the third time. They played their home games at Mackay Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178311-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nevada Wolf Pack football team, Previous season\nThe Wolf Pack finished the 2003 season 6\u20136 and 4\u20134 in WAC play to finish in fifth place. Despite being bowl eligible, they were not invited to a bowl game. Head coach Chris Tormey was replaced by Chris Ault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections\nMunicipal elections in the Canadian province of New Brunswick were held on May 10, 2004. All 104 municipalities in New Brunswick elected mayors and councillors. Also held on that day were elections for regional health boards and district education councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections\nThese elections marked the end of three-year terms for elected municipal offices. Beginning in 2004, officials began to serve four-year terms, meaning the next elections will be held in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections, Summary\nIn each of the province's three major cities, the mayoral races were won by non-incumbents:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections, Summary\nA small number of major communities had mayors return to their positions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections, Races in major centres\nBelow are the results of the mayoral races in selected cities and towns across the province:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 62], "content_span": [63, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections, Races in major centres, Moncton, Elected to City Council\nMoncton elects two councillors at-large, and two from each of four wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 96], "content_span": [97, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178312-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New Brunswick municipal elections, Races in major centres, Saint John, Elected to Common Council\nSaint John elects 10 councillors at large. Elected candidates only are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 101], "content_span": [102, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178313-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Caledonian legislative election\nLegislative elections for the Congress were held in New Caledonia on 9 May 2004. Although the Rally for Caledonia in the Republic and Future Together both won 16 seats, Future Together's Marie-No\u00eblle Th\u00e9mereau became President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178314-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Grand Prix\nThe 2004 New England Grand Prix was the third race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season held at Lime Rock Park. It took place on July 5, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178314-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Grand Prix, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season\nThe 2004 New England Patriots season was the franchise's 35th season in the National Football League, the 45th overall and the 5th under head coach Bill Belichick. They finished with their second consecutive 14\u20132 record before advancing to and winning Super Bowl XXXIX, their third Super Bowl victory in four years, and their last until 2014. They are, as of the present, the last team to repeat as NFL Champions and only the second to win 3 Super Bowls in a 4-year span (the other being the Dallas Cowboys from the 1992 to 1995 seasons). As of 2020, this is the most recent time the defending Super Bowl champions have defended their title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season\nFollowing a Super Bowl win in 2003, the Patriots looked to improve their running game in the offseason. They replaced Antowain Smith with longtime but disgruntled Cincinnati Bengals running back Corey Dillon, who was acquired in a trade days before the 2004 NFL Draft; Dillon would rush for a career-high 1,635 yards in 2004. Winning their first six games of the season, the Patriots set the NFL record for consecutive regular season victories (18), which was later broken by the 2006\u20132008 Patriots (21), and consecutive regular season and playoff victories (21) before losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers on October 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season\nIn that game, Pro Bowl cornerback Ty Law was lost for the season with a foot injury. Combined with the loss of other starting cornerback Tyrone Poole two weeks earlier, the Patriots were forced to complete the regular season and playoffs by using second-year cornerback Asante Samuel, undrafted free agent Randall Gay, and longtime Patriots wide receiver Troy Brown at cornerback, among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season\nWith a 14\u20132 record and the second seed in the AFC playoffs, the Patriots defeated the Indianapolis Colts at home in the playoffs for the second-straight year, holding the Colts' top offense to three points. The Patriots then defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers on the road, 41\u201327, in the AFC Championship Game. Prior to the Patriots' matchup with the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX, Eagles wide receiver Freddie Mitchell said he did not know the names of the Patriots' defensive backs, which was taken as a sign of disrespect by the Patriots' \"replacement\" secondary. The Patriots would go on to defeat the Eagles 24\u201321 in their second straight Super Bowl victory and third championship in four seasons, leading to many labeling the Patriots of the era a sports dynasty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Opening training camp roster\nAt the time of the first public training camp practice at Gillette Stadium on July 29, they had the NFL maximum of 80 players signed to their roster. The Patriots received seven roster exemptions for the NFL Europe allocations of Rohan Davey, Jamil Soriano, Chas Gessner, Lawrence Flugence, Scott Farley, Buck Rasmussen, and David Pruce. Additionally, the Patriots allocated safety Jason Perry and cornerback Michael Hall to NFL Europe and received roster exemptions for them, but those players were waived before the start of training camp. Finally, rookie Benjamin Watson had not yet signed a contract by the start of camp and did not count against the roster limit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nOpening the NFL season on a Thursday night with a rematch of the previous season's AFC Championship Game, the Patriots began the game with a heavy reliance on throwing the ball. This led to an opening-drive field goal by Adam Vinatieri and a 3\u20130 lead. Indianapolis then drove inside the Patriots red zone, but the drive ended with no points when Peyton Manning was intercepted by Tedy Bruschi at the New England 1-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nThe Patriots responded by turning to their running game with the newly acquired Corey Dillon carrying the ball a number of times on the Patriots next several drives. After Mike Vanderjagt hit his record 42nd consecutive field goal to tie the game, the teams fired up their offenses in the second quarter, with Edgerrin James carrying much of the workload for the Colts. Indianapolis led 17\u201313 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nTom Brady answered with touchdown passes to David Patten and Daniel Graham in the third quarter. Meanwhile, James fumbled twice in the red zone to take away scoring chances, and while James was very effective rushing the ball, the turnovers would prove costly. A botched punt return by Deion Branch helped set up a Brandon Stokley touchdown from Peyton Manning in the fourth quarter. In the game's final minute, the score still 27\u201324, Manning drove the Colts to the Patriots redzone, but was sacked outside the 30-yard line by Willie McGinest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Indianapolis Colts\nVanderjagt came on for a 48-yard field goal try; he taunted the Patriots bench by rubbing his fingers in a \"money\" motion, having connected on 42 straight field goals, but he missed wide right on this try, securing the Patriots win. Going back to the previous season, it was the Patriots' sixteenth consecutive victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nBefore the game and at halftime, ceremonies took place honoring the late Pat Tillman, who had played for the Cardinals before joining the U.S. Army and had recently been killed by friendly fire in Afghanistan. Tillman's widow spoke along with other dignitaries, and a large banner was hung displaying the bird in the Cardinals' logo shedding a tear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nBoth teams struggled at the outset on offense. Midway through the first quarter, the Patriots finally sustained a significant drive after several runs by Corey Dillon. The drive was capped by a Tom Brady touchdown to Daniel Graham. The Patriots appeared to force a punt on the ensuing Cardinals drive, however an offside penalty on Tyrone Poole gave the Cardinals a second chance. However, Josh McCown wasted the chance on the next play when he was intercepted by Eugene Wilson deep in Cardinals territory. Brady then found Graham again to make it 14\u20130 in favor of New England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nHowever, a fumble by Dillon and an interception by Brady set up the Cardinals with great opportunities to get back in the game. Both chances resulted in sizable losses for the Cardinal offense, on which McCown was sacked a total of five times. Each time Neil Rackers was forced to kick a long field goal, to cut the Patriot lead to 14\u20136. On the final play of the first half the Patriots attempted a Hail Mary pass, which was intercepted, however on the return, Deion Branch was illegally blocked at the knees. Branch would miss the next nine weeks with a serious knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 2: at Arizona Cardinals\nIn the second half, the Cardinals offensive struggles continued, while the Patriots defense continued to dominate, with Wilson notching his second interception of McCown on the day. Dillon completed a breakout game in which he rushed for 158 yards, and sealed the Patriot win with his work in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Buffalo Bills\nA year after being crushed 31\u20130 in Ralph Wilson Stadium the Patriots carried a winning streak that had reached 17 games (regular season and playoff). New England led 7\u20133 early, however it appeared that Terrence McGee intercepted Tom Brady in the end zone to prevent further damage. But referee Scott Green (having taken over for an injured Johnny Grier earlier in the quarter) overturned the play on a Patriots instant replay challenge, allowing the Patriots to kick a field goal and lead 10\u20133. The Bills responded when McGee ran back the ensuing kickoff 98 yards for the tying touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Buffalo Bills\nAfter a Patriots punt, Bledsoe was intercepted by Tyrone Poole. Brady then connected with David Patten for a 43-yard completion inside the Bills 10-yard line. However, Corey Dillon fumbled two plays later, giving the ball back to Buffalo. Several long rushes by Travis Henry got the Bills off of their goal line, however, the drive stalled and Brian Moorman came in to punt. Moorman dropped the snap, however he picked it up and ran all the way to the New England 41-yard line for a first down. On the next play Drew Bledsoe threw a touchdown to Eric Moulds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0009-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Buffalo Bills\nThe Patriots responded and tied the game on a David Patten touchdown catch at the end of the half. In the fourth quarter, an offside penalty against the Bills on a Patriots field goal attempt gave New England a first down. The Patriots then went ahead on a Tom Brady touchdown to Daniel Graham, the fourth touchdown in three games for Graham. The Patriots then iced the game when Bledsoe was strip-sacked and Richard Seymour ran the ball 68 yards for the score, a 31\u201317 Patriots win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 4: at Buffalo Bills\nWith the win, the Patriots became just the fourth NFL team to win 18 consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 110], "content_span": [111, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Patriots played host to the winless Miami Dolphins, who at the time were winless and had the worst offense statistically in the NFL. With Olindo Mare sidelined by a calf injury, the Dolphins called on wide receiver and kick returner Wes Welker into service as a kicker for the game. With Welker kicking, the Patriots received good field position to start the game, but Tom Brady was intercepted by Patrick Surtain. After an exchange of punts, Jay Fiedler was intercepted by Randall Gay, setting the Patriots up deep in Miami territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Miami Dolphins\nBrady then found Daniel Graham for a touchdown, Graham's fifth in four games, and the Patriots took a 7\u20130 lead. The Dolphins last-ranked offense struggled to make any significant plays for the first quarter and a half. However, after Adam Vinatieri missed a 47-yard field goal, his first of the season, the Dolphins inserted third stringer Brock Forsey at running back and began to move the ball, with Fiedler throwing his first touchdown of the season to Chris Chambers, cutting the deficit to 10\u20137. Welker kicked the extra point, the first of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0011-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Miami Dolphins\nWith three minutes left in the first half, punter Matt Turk decided to run for a first down after the snap led him to the left, however he was tackled short of the line to gain giving the Patriots excellent field position. After a personal foul on Dolphins safety Sammy Knight, Brady found David Givens on a 6-yard touchdown to put the Patriots up 17\u20137 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins received the second half kickoff, but immediately turned the ball over when Fiedler fumbled and Ty Law jumped on the ball. The Patriots then moved inside the Miami 5-yard line on a 36-yard rush by Corey Dillon. Rabih Abdullah then rushed for a 3-yard score to put the Patriots up 24\u20137. The Dolphins next drive reached the red zone but stalled, forcing Welker to attempt a 29-yard field goal. He converted on his first and only NFL field goal, cutting the deficit to 24\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAfter a New England punt, Miami again drove into Patriots territory, but failed on a fourth down pass attempt when Fiedler unsuccessfully tried to find Derrius Thompson in the end zone. The Dolphins got the ball back with three minutes to play and after a long Fiedler completion to Marty Booker, the Dolphins had a last chance to get back in the game. However, after a failed quarterback sneak, Fiedler was sacked by Rodney Harrison and had to leave the game in pain. A. J. Feeley came in at quarterback but failed to convert on third or fourth down, giving the Patriots a record 19th consecutive win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nFox NFL Sunday traveled on-location to Gillette Stadium, with Game 4 of the ALCS also airing on Fox later on the same night involving the local Boston Red Sox. With a mostly national audience watching, the Patriots hosted the Seattle Seahawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nOn the opening drive of the game, Seahawks quarterback Matt Hasselbeck (a native of Massachusetts who played college football at Boston College) was intercepted by Willie McGinest after his pass was tipped by Richard Seymour. Seattle native Corey Dillon would score for New England, putting the home team up 7\u20130. The Seahawks' second possession ended the same way as their first did; this time Hasselbeck was intercepted by Ty Law. The Patriots again took advantage, with Adam Vinatieri kicking a field goal to put New England up 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nAfter several Seahawk penalties forced a punt, the Patriots drove methodically down the field with a sizeable rush from Dillon and receptions by David Givens and Kevin Faulk. The drive was capped by a Tom Brady touchdown pass to David Patten to put the Patriots up 17\u20130. On the ensuing drive, the Seahawks would finally get on the scoreboard with a Josh Brown field goal to make it 17\u20133. Both teams would then kick field goals before the half, sending New England to the locker room with a 20\u20136 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nAfter a New England punt to start the second half, the Seahawks drove into Patriots territory. Shaun Alexander fumbled inside the Patriots 40-yard line, but the Seahawks were able to recover the ball and eventually settled for another field goal by Brown. On the fumble play, Patriots starting cornerback Tyrone Poole suffered an injury to his already ailing knee, and would not play meaningful snaps again all season. After three quarters, the Patriots led 20\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nOn the first possession of the fourth quarter, Brady scrambled for a first down in Seattle territory but was hit by Michael Boulware, knocking the ball (and Brady's helmet) free. The Seahawks recovered, but were forced to punt. However, on the ensuing Patriots drive, Brady was intercepted by Boulware in Patriots territory, setting up a 9-yard touchdown run by Alexander. Hasselbeck then found Jeremy Stevens for a two-point conversion to make the deficit 20\u201317. New England responded with a lengthy drive ending with a Vinatieri field goal to go up by 6 points with under 7 minutes to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0015-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nThe Seahawks drove deep into New England territory with a chance to take the lead, but Hasselbeck was assessed a costly intentional grounding penalty and Brown had to kick a field goal. Thus, the Patriots took the ball back with 3 minutes to play leading 23\u201320, both teams having all three timeouts. Facing a 3rd down and 8 from his own 39-yard line, Brady threw a deep pass that Bethel Johnson caught on a full-out diving leap inside the Seahawks 15-yard line. Dillon then sealed the win with a 9-yard touchdown run, which put him over 100 yards for the day. The win was the 20th in a row for New England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New York Jets\nThe Patriots and Jets both came into the game undefeated at 5\u20130 on the season, with the division lead in the AFC East on the line. On the first drive of the game, the Patriots moved into Jets territory on a series of Tom Brady pass plays (including one to reserve linebacker Dan Klecko). The drive would end with Adam Vinatieri kicking a 41-yard field goal to put New England up 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New York Jets\nThe Jets responded by driving into the Patriots red zone, but on 3rd down and 1, Jets fullback Jerald Sowell fumbled after catching a screen pass from Chad Pennington. Randall Gay jumped on the ball for New England preventing the Jets from scoring. The Patriots then drove near midfield but were forced to punt, however on the punt the Jets were penalized for having 12 players on the field giving New England a first down. Brady took advantage by throwing a 42-yard pass play to David Givens, leading to another Vinatieri field goal and a 6\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0016-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New York Jets\nThe Jets responded with a lengthy drive taking up more than 7 minutes and finishing with Pennington scrambling for a 1-yard touchdown run to put the Jets in front 7\u20136 with less than 2 minutes to play in the first half. However Brady completed passes to Bethel Johnson and Kevin Faulk to move into Jets territory with under a minute remaining. Then, after a costly roughing-the-passer penalty on Jets defensive lineman Dewayne Robertson, Brady found David Patten in the end zone with 5 seconds left in the half to take the lead 13\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New York Jets\nThe third quarter consisted entirely of punts, three by the Jets and two by New England. The Patriots began the fourth quarter with the ball and drove into Jets territory, but Klecko fumbled after making his second catch of the day and Eric Barton recovered for the Jets. However, the ensuing drive would stall and the Jets were forced to punt for the fourth consecutive drive. New England would cross midfield but Brady was sacked on 3rd down and 10 forcing the Patriots to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New York Jets\nThis gave the Jets the ball back with just over 7 minutes to play trailing by 6 points. Jets head coach Herm Edwards decided to go for a 4th and inches deep in his own territory, which turned out to be successful after a quarterback sneak by Pennington. The Jets crossed midfield with just over 4 minutes left after a Pennington pass to Justin McCareins. On 2nd down and 5 at the Patriots 27-yard line, Pennington threw to the end zone where McCareins cradled the ball for a split second before Asante Samuel broke up the potential go-ahead touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0017-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. New York Jets\nIt would turn out to be the Jets best opportunity, as NFL rushing leader Curtis Martin was stuffed by Willie McGinest for a loss on third down, and Pennington's fourth down throw into triple coverage to Wayne Chrebet was broken up by Rodney Harrison. The Patriots took over on downs and ran out the remaining two minutes to seal their 21st consecutive win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Steelers began the game with a three and out, giving the ball to a banged up Patriot offense. While Troy Brown returned to the lineup, Deion Branch remained inactive, and Corey Dillon was also inactive for the first time all season with a minor leg injury. The Patriots quickly crossed midfield on a Tom Brady completion to David Patten, and got 15 extra yards after Steelers safety Troy Polamalu was called for grasping Patten's face mask. New England would settle for an Adam Vinatieri field goal and a 3\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Steelers again had a three and out, but the Patriots would be unable to take advantage this time, and were forced to punt as well. On the ensuing possession, the Steelers began to move the ball. They reached midfield when rookie quarterback Ben Roethlisberger found Hines Ward for 23 yards. On the play, Patriots starting cornerback Ty Law suffered a season ending foot injury. The Patriots' other starting cornerback Tyrone Poole had been lost for the season two weeks prior, leaving the New England secondary vulnerable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0018-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nRoethlisberger immediately took advantage, burning Law's replacement Randall Gay on a 47-yard touchdown to Plaxico Burress. On the first play of the Patriots' ensuing drive, Brady was strip-sacked by Joey Porter leading to another Roethlisberger touchdown to Burress. The Patriots next possession again ended after one play, as Brady was intercepted by Deshea Townsend who returned the ball 39 yards for a touchdown. This made the score 21\u20133 Pittsburgh after one quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 8: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Steelers would remain in control for the whole game. Brady tossed two touchdowns to David Givens, one in the second quarter and one in the fourth. However, the battered Patriots defense could not contain Duce Staley, who rushed for 125 yards, and Jerome Bettis, who rushed for 65 yards and notched a touchdown in the third quarter. Jeff Reed also added two field goals to secure a dominating Steelers victory by 14 points. Pittsburgh became the first team to beat the Patriots since Washington had defeated New England in Week 4 of the 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nThis was the first meeting between the Patriots and Rams since Super Bowl XXXVI. Corey Dillon returned from injury to start at running back for the Patriots, providing a much needed offensive boost. Dillon's presence was felt immediately, as he opened the game with a 15-yard run. A long screen pass from Tom Brady to Patrick Pass set up an Adam Vinatieri field goal. The Rams responded with a Marc Bulger pass to Brandon Manumaleuna. However, on the play, Patriots cornerback Asante Samuel injured his shoulder and was lost for the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nWith starters Ty Law and Tyrone Poole already out for the season, Samuel and Randall Gay had been promoted to starters, but the injury to Samuel moved Dexter Reid up the depth chart. The Patriots did not have any other cornerbacks to replace Reid at reserve corner, so wide receiver Troy Brown played both sides of the ball for the remainder of the game whenever the Patriots ran a nickel defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0020-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nAfter the reception by Manumaleuna and the injury to Samuel, the Rams were left with 3rd down and 5 but chose not to attack the vulnerable secondary and were forced to punt. New England's drive resulted a three and out, and punter Josh Miller came in, but Shaun McDonald muffed the punt twice and Lonnie Paxton recovered for the Patriots deep in Rams territory. Vinatieri would kick another field goal to put New England up 6\u20130. After a Rams punt, the Patriots took possession at their own 6-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0020-0003", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nHowever, Brady was strip-sacked by Damione Lewis and Leonard Little recovered in the end zone to put the Rams up 7\u20136. The Patriots responded by driving 66 yards and scoring a touchdown on a Brady pass to linebacker Mike Vrabel, in the game as an extra blocker. On the ensuing Rams possession, Marshall Faulk picked up a key first down before Bulger found Manumaleuna on a 49-yard pass play to move the ball to the Patriots 11-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0020-0004", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nBulger then hit Isaac Bruce on a short pass and Bruce ran for the touchdown to put St. Louis back in front 14\u201313. Again New England would respond, with Brady finding David Givens on a 50-yard pass play to move inside the Rams 30-yard line. Vinatieri would kick a 45-yard field goal to put New England in front 16\u201314. The Rams quickly advanced downfield on two long catches by Torry Holt, but Bulger was then strip-sacked by Willie McGinest on 3rd down, and Jarvis Green recovered for New England. The Patriots attempted to drive downfield, and were assisted by a roughing-the-passer penalty called on Little for a hit on Brady. Vinatieri would kick another field goal to put the Patriots in front 19\u201314 at the end of a wild first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nThe Rams went three-and-out to start the second half. The Patriots then drove deep into St. Louis territory but the drive stalled inside the 10-yard line and Vinatieri was brought out for a 22-yard attempt. However, in lining up for the field goal, Brown moved to the far left side of the formation where the Rams forgot about him. Vinatieri then took a direct snap and lobbed an easy pass for Brown to score a touchdown on the fake field goal and take a 26\u201314 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nOn the second play of the ensuing Rams possession, Bulger's pass was tipped by McGinest and intercepted by Roman Phifer who returned the ball to the St. Louis 21-yard line. Four plays later, Dillon walked in for a touchdown, putting New England in front 33\u201314. The Rams responded with a Bulger touchdown pass to Holt, followed by a Marshall Faulk rush for a two-point conversion. This cut the Patriot lead to 33\u201322, with 14 minutes left to play. After an exchange of punts, the Patriots drove down the field, taking 5 and a half minutes off the clock. Led by Dillon, who completed his fourth 100 yard performance of the year, New England capped the drive and put away the win with a 4-yard touchdown pass from Brady to Bethel Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 9: at St. Louis Rams\nBrown would finish the game with 3 passes defensed on defense, and he also caught passes on offense and special teams. Samuel returned late in the fourth quarter. The win capped a remarkable team performance by New England with Brown, Vrabel and Vinatieri each contributing in multiple phases of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe World Series winning Boston Red Sox were honored at Gillette Stadium before the game and at halftime. Meanwhile, the Patriots hosted their division rivals who they had beaten in Week 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe opening kickoff was received by Terrence McGee, who was originally ruled to have gained possession at his own 1-yard line before taking a knee in the end zone. This would have placed the ball at the Bills 1-yard line to start the game, however coach Mike Mularkey challenged the play successfully, allowing the Bills to start at their own 20-yard line. However, the drive stalled just after crossing midfield and Buffalo punted. The Patriots then drove deep into Bills territory behind the running of Corey Dillon, leading to a field goal by Adam Vinatieri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nAfter the teams exchanged punts, Drew Bledsoe was intercepted by Eugene Wilson inside the New England 5-yard line. The Patriots turned their field position around and drove 92 yards inside the Bills 5-yard line, but again settled for a field goal. After yet another Bills punt, the Patriots drove down the field with several passes from Tom Brady to David Givens. Brady then finished the drive with a touchdown throw to a wide open David Patten. On the ensuing Buffalo possession, Bledsoe was intercepted by Teddy Bruschi, who returned the ball over 40 yards to the Bills 27-yard line. Three plays later, Brady found Christian Fauria for a touchdown. After the kickoff, Bledsoe was sacked by Tully Banta-Cain making the score 20\u20130 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nNew England's domination would continue after halftime. The Patriots received the second half kickoff and drove down the field, aided by a drive-extending holding penalty on Buffalo's London Fletcher. The drive ended inside the 5-yard line but Vinatieri made a chip-shot field goal to extend the New England lead to 23\u20130. The Bills were then forced to punt with their first second half possession. After a Patriots three-and-out, the Bills yet again were forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nOn New England's possession, the officials decided to pick up the flag on a defensive penalty that would have extended the drive on third down, and the Patriots punted again. This time Jonathan Smith returned the punt 70 yards for a touchdown, getting Buffalo on the scoreboard. The Bills had two chances at a two-point conversion after a New England penalty, but could not convert. The Patriots then responded by opening the 4th quarter with a Vinatieri field goal to make it 26\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0025-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBledsoe's humiliation was then completed when he was intercepted by Patriots wide receiver Troy Brown playing defensive back. Brady was then picked off by Nate Clements, but the Bills failed on fourth down when Bledsoe threw a pass to Eric Moulds that led him out of bounds. Dillon then drove the Patriots to another field goal, putting Dillon over 100 yards for the fifth time on the season. On the ensuing Bills possession, Bledsoe was replaced by first round draft pick J. P. Losman. Bledsoe finished the night with just 76 passing yards and 4 interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0025-0003", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. Buffalo Bills\nLosman was greeted on his first NFL series by being strip-sacked by Rosevelt Colvin, with the fumble recovered for New England by Roman Phifer. After Rohan Davey replaced Brady, the Patriots turned the ball over on downs. In the game's final seconds, Losman was intercepted by Banta-Cain. It was the sixth turnover of the night for the Bills offense, an offense that did not score a single point in the game, with Buffalo's only score coming from special teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Kansas City Chiefs\nDeion Branch finally made his return to the Patriots lineup after suffering a knee injury in Week 2. Branch made an immediate impact, catching a Tom Brady pass on 3rd down and 15 on the Patriots' opening drive that moved New England to the Chiefs 5-yard line. Corey Dillon then rushed for a touchdown on the next play to put the Patriots up 7\u20130. The Chiefs were without NFL rushing touchdown leader Priest Holmes, due to a muscle strain. Derrick Blaylock filled in at running back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs offense got off to a good start with Trent Green finding Tony Gonzalez deep in Patriots territory, leading to a Lawrence Tynes field goal. New England then suffered a three and out, the first punt by either side. The Chiefs took advantage with Green tossing a 65-yard touchdown to Eddie Kennison, who beat fourth-string corner Earthwind Moreland. After another New England three and out, the Chiefs began to drive with several fist downs as the first quarter ended with Kansas City leading 10\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0026-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Kansas City Chiefs\nHowever, after the change in quarter, the K.C. drive stalled and the Chiefs were forced to punt. The Patriots then came back with a long drive bolstered by long Brady passes to Branch and Troy Brown. A 1-yard touchdown run by Dillon put the Patriots in front 14\u201310. After a Chiefs punt, a 48-yard completion from Brady to Daniel Graham set up an Adam Vinatieri field goal. The Chiefs drove downfield in the final minutes of the first half, helped by a 4th down conversion. However, Green was intercepted in the end zone by Rodney Harrison with just 42 seconds left in the half, keeping the Chiefs down by 7 at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs took the second half kickoff and proceeded to drive into the Patriots red zone, taking more than 8 minutes and converting three 3rd downs along the way including a 3rd and 17 conversion on a Green pass to Johnnie Morton. However, the drive stalled when Blaylock couldn't convert a 3rd and 1, forcing Kansas City to kick a field goal and cut the deficit to 17\u201313. On the Patriots' first possession of the second half, Brady found David Patten on a 46-yard pass play to move inside the Chiefs 30-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Kansas City Chiefs\nOn the next play, Branch displayed his return to good health by catching a slant pass and making numerous cutbacks on his way to the end zone for a touchdown that put the Patriots up 24\u201313. The Chiefs proceeded to once again drive into Patriots territory but were forced to punt. On the ensuing Patriots possession, New England drove inside the Chiefs 10-yard line, but Greg Wesley stripped the ball from Dillon, with Lional Dalton recovering for the Chiefs at their own 3-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 11: at Kansas City Chiefs\nThe Chiefs subsequently drove 97 yards to score a touchdown on another pass from Green to Kennison. However a two-point attempt failed when Eugene Wilson batted away Green's throw to Kennison, keeping the Patriots in the lead 24\u201319. The Patriots then ran the clock inside the two-minute warning on their way to a field goal, forcing the Chiefs two burn two of their timeouts. Kansas City got the ball back at their own 32-yard line with 1:39 to play down by 8 points. However, the drive never materialized and Green was sacked by Willie McGinest on 4th down to seal a Patriots win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 116], "content_span": [117, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Ravens brought their always stout defense to Gillette Stadium. The game was played in a driving rainstorm, featuring heavy rain in addition to strong wind gusts. The field, real grass at the time, quickly turned into a muddy mess. The Ravens were not helped by the fact that running back Jamal Lewis was unavailable. Chester Taylor replaced Lewis as the starter. Because of the conditions, offense was virtually nonexistent. The first half began with each team punting. Ravens quarterback Kyle Boller was then intercepted by Randall Gay, but the Patriots were forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 115], "content_span": [116, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe Ravens would then punt again, followed by several Corey Dillon runs and a Tom Brady pass to Deion Branch that set up a field goal by Adam Vinatieri, putting New England up 3\u20130. The teams then exchanged punts four times each. In the final minute of the half, Boller drove the Ravens into field goal range, helped by two Patriot personal fouls, and a Matt Stover chip-shot made it 3\u20133 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 115], "content_span": [116, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe sloppy play continued after halftime. With the rain picking up in intensity, the field conditions continued to get worse. Vinatieri booted another field goal to start the second half, and after a Ravens punt, tacked on his third of the game to make it 9\u20133 New England after three quarters. After another Ravens punt, Dillon, who rushed for 123 yards in the game, scored on a 1-yard run. The Patriots then attempted a two-point conversion, again turning to Dillon, who plunged into the end zone to make it 17\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 115], "content_span": [116, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAfter the kickoff, Boller was sacked for a sizable loss by Ted Johnson. On the next play, Tedy Bruschi also sacked Boller, who lost control of the sopping wet football. Taylor tried to recover it for Baltimore but accidentally kicked it into his own end zone, where Jarvis Green jumped on it for a Patriot touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 115], "content_span": [116, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nNew England's defense held the Ravens to 124 yards of total offense (just one more yard than Dillon had rushing on his own), forcing two turnovers and not allowing a touchdown, while scoring a touchdown of its own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 115], "content_span": [116, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Cleveland Browns\nThe 3\u20138 Browns came into the game having just replaced former head coach Butch Davis with Terry Robiskie. Robiskie decided to start rookie Luke McCown at quarterback, his first NFL start. The Patriots had beaten Luke's older brother Josh earlier in the season in Week 2 with their defeat of Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Cleveland Browns\nNew England got off to a flying start when Bethel Johnson returned Phil Dawson's opening kickoff 93 yards for a touchdown. After the teams exchanged punts, McCown was intercepted by Rodney Harrison deep in Patriots territory. New England then drove 96 yards, helped by a 25-yard Tom Brady completion to Christian Fauria. The drive ended with a short Corey Dillon touchdown to make it 14\u20130. The Browns then reached Patriots territory but failed on a 4th down attempt and turned the ball over again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0032-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Patriots were then helped by a Lewis Sanders pass interference inside the Cleveland 10-yard line followed by an incidental face mask against Warrick Holdman. Dillon capped the drive with his second touchdown of the day to make the score 21\u20130. After a Browns punt, the Patriots decided to attempt a 4th down conversion at the Browns 30-yard line with just over two minutes remaining in the half, but Patrick Pass was short of the line to gain, turning the ball back to the Browns. Cleveland finally got on the scoreboard in the final minute of the half with a 16-yard McCown pass to Antonio Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 13: at Cleveland Browns\nThe Browns took the second half kickoff, but William Green was stripped of the ball by Richard Seymour. Randall Gay picked it up and was held back temporarily by Willie McGinest to ensure McGinest could throw Gay a block. Gay would follow McGinest's block and score to make it 28\u20137. After a Browns three-and-out, the Patriots drove to the Cleveland 10-yard line where Kevin Faulk ran for a touchdown to make the score 35\u20137. On the ensuing Browns possession, Dexter Reid stripped Steve Heiden and then recovered the fumble for New England. Then, on 3rd and 22, Brady found David Patten on a 44-yard touchdown to make the score 42\u20137. The Patriots defense turned in another terrific performance, forcing three turnovers, stopping a fourth down attempt, and completely shutting down Green and McCown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nOn the opening possession for the Bengals, rookie quarterback Carson Palmer found T. J. Houshmandzadeh on several passes to move into the Patriots red zone. However, Rudi Johnson had the ball knocked out and Willie McGinest recovered at New England's own 10-yard line. The Patriots offense started hot. First, Tom Brady found Deion Branch over the middle for a sizable completion. Then Corey Dillon, playing for the first time against the Bengals, a team with which he had spent a frustrating seven years, rumbled for 17 yards. Brady then found David Patten inside the Bengal 30-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 117], "content_span": [118, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0034-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nAfter a successful 4th down and inches conversion, Dillon scored on his old team to put his new team in front 7\u20130. After an exchange of punts, Palmer threw a short touchdown pass to Matt Schobel to tie the game. However, Brady responded by tossing a 48-yard touchdown pass to Patten, putting New England in front 14\u20137. Palmer was then intercepted by Asante Samuel, who returned it for a touchdown to make it 21\u20137. Palmer would recover and threw a 6-yard touchdown to Chad Johnson with 2:31 left in the half, cutting the deficit to 21\u201314. On the ensuing kickoff, a long return by Bethel Johnson set up a 4-yard touchdown run by Kevin Faulk, putting New England up 28\u201314 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 117], "content_span": [118, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Patriots opened the second half with the ball. Brady managed a 9-yard completion to Patrick Pass while sitting on the ground after tripping. Brady then ran a quarterback sneak to complete a most unusual first down. He would cap the drive with a 17-yard touchdown pass to Christian Fauria, putting New England in front 35\u201314. Cincinnati would respond, running a fake-field goal play on which Bengals punter Kyle Larson ran for a 19-yard touchdown. This cut the Bengals deficit to 35\u201321 after three quarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 117], "content_span": [118, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nHowever, on the play before the fake-field goal, Palmer suffered a leg injury after being hit by Richard Seymour, and was replaced by Jon Kitna. After a Patriots punt, Kitna drove the Bengals into the red zone, but was intercepted in the end zone by Troy Brown, again playing defensive back. After an exchange of punts, the Patriots drove into Bengal territory, however the drive stalled. Bill Belichick decided to try a fake punt, but Larry Izzo failed to reach the line to gain, turning the ball back to the Bengals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 117], "content_span": [118, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0035-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nStarting cornerback Tyrone Poole, who had not played since week 6, entered the game as a nickelback on the following series, but with his knee too weak to play effectively, Poole was shut down for the season following the game, leaving Samuel and Randall Gay as the starting corners. The drive ended with Kitna throwing a 27-yard touchdown to Kelly Washington, but the Patriots offense was able to run out the remaining three minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 117], "content_span": [118, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the win, the Patriots clinched the AFC East title. Dillon clinched his first ever playoff appearance with a solid performance against his old team, whose inability to win and qualify for the playoffs was a major factor behind his trade to New England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 117], "content_span": [118, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe defending Super Bowl champion Patriots entered the game at 12\u20131, having clinched their second consecutive AFC East title the previous week behind the passing of two-time Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady. Meanwhile, the Dolphins came into the contest at 2\u201311, with the worst record in the AFC. The Dolphins did have a stout defense, led by defensive coordinator-turned-interim head coach Jim Bates. However, the Miami offense was very poor, after Pro Bowl running back Ricky Williams unexpectedly retired before the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe offense was instead led by a rotation of Miami's starting quarterback from previous years Jay Fiedler, and newcomer A. J. Feeley. Fiedler had lost to New England earlier in the year, so for this game Bates chose Feeley to start. In an additional attempt to turn their fortunes, the normally conservative and traditional Dolphins decided to wear unusual bright orange uniforms for the nationally televised ABC Monday Night Football game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Patriots took the opening kickoff and immediately drove down the field. Corey Dillon had a 19-yard run and David Patten had a key catch. Brady would cap it with a 32-yard lob pass to Kevin Faulk for a touchdown, quickly making it 7\u20130 New England. A Jarvis Green third down sack of Feeley forced Miami into a three-and-out on their opening drive. However, the Patriots were forced to punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0038-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nDolphins returner Wes Welker, who had kicked a field goal in the Dolphins week 5 game against New England, returned the Josh Miller punt 71 yards to the Patriots 2-yard line. Future Patriot Sammy Morris dove in for the score to tie the game. Both teams then punted twice, ending the first quarter tied 7\u20137. Despite having 7 points, Miami had -2 yards of total offense in the first quarter, continuing a season-long trend for that unit. The Patriots began their first drive of the second quarter at midfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0038-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nRunning the ball 10 times with Dillon, Faulk and Patrick Pass, New England engaged in a 6 and a half minute march, finished off by Dillon's 3-yard touchdown plunge. Miami responded on their next drive by holding the ball for 5 minutes and finishing with an Olindo Mare field goal, cutting the deficit to 14\u201310. On the ensuing New England drive, Brady threw deep but was intercepted by Sammy Knight. The Dolphins could not do anything with the possession and after a punt and a New England kneeldown the half ended with the Patriots up 14\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins started the second half with the ball, but immediately turned it over on a failed trick play when Marty Booker dropped a hand-off from Chris Chambers and Vincent Wilfork jumped on the ball for New England. The Patriots reached the Miami red zone on a Brady completion to Patten, but then Brady was intercepted by Knight for the second time. Knight returned the ball to his own 40-yard line, and had a post-possession unnecessary roughness penalty on the Patriots' Matt Light tacked on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0039-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins took advantage, driving deep into New England territory and scoring a touchdown when Travis Minor flipped into the end zone from 2 yards out, giving Miami a 17\u201314 lead. The Patriots responded with a drive assisted by two Miami personal fouls, and retook a 21\u201317 lead on a 2-yard touchdown pass from Brady to Dillon. The third quarter would end with the Dolphins going three-and-out after an attempted emergency shovel pass from Feeley to Morris went sour. The Patriots began driving as the fourth quarter started.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0039-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nDeion Branch had a 27-yard reception to get the Patriots near midfield but were stopped on a 3rd down and 1 and had to punt. Miami was forced to bring on Matt Turk for another punt, giving New England the ball at their own 35-yard line. A third down catch by Branch and longs run by Faulk and Dillon set up a 2-yard Brady touchdown pass to Daniel Graham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThus the Patriots had an 11-point lead with just 3:59 to play in the game. Miami, trailing 28\u201317, took possession at their own 32-yard line. They immediately proceeded in hurry-up offense, with Feeley finding Morris on a 16-yard screen pass. After several short passes, Morris picked up another 15 yards on a handoff. After reaching the Patriots 19-yard line, Feeley attempted to find Chambers in the end zone, and instead drew a pass interference penalty on Rodney Harrison, setting Miami up at the 1-yard line. Morris then dove across the goal line for the touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0040-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nHowever, Feeley's two-point pass to Booker fell incomplete. This left Miami down by 5 with 2:07 to play. On the ensuing kickoff return, Patten made the mistake of running out of bounds before the 2-minute warning could occur, thus leaving Miami the warning plus all three timeouts and 2:03. After an incompletion and a short run, the Patriots faced 3rd down and 9. Brady was pressured and was being brought down by Jason Taylor, but threw the ball off to the right as he was falling to the ground. The wild pass was intercepted by Brendon Ayanbadejo at the New England 21-yard line, setting up the Dolphins with two timeouts and a chance to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins failed to net any yardage, with a penalty made up for by a completion, setting up a 4th down and 10 from the Patriots 21-yard line. Both teams used timeouts before the play, building up the tension, and players for both teams could be seen on television with their heads in their hands. Feeley threw a floater off his back foot for Derrius Thompson, who was being covered by wide receiver Troy Brown filling in at cornerback. Thompson reeled in the catch for the touchdown to put Miami in front 29\u201328 with 1:23 to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0041-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nA two-point conversion attempt failed, meaning Adam Vinatieri could win it with a field goal. However Brady was sacked by David Bowens and then was intercepted by Arturo Freeman, sealing the Dolphin win. Afterwards, Freeman engaged in a \"chest bump\" with coach Jim Bates, who was set to interview for the permanent head coaching position the next day (a position he ultimately lost to Nick Saban).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 15: at Miami Dolphins\nNew England had previously won 37 consecutive games when leading at the start of the 4th quarter. Brady had the worst statistical performance of his career, with 4 interceptions, including the costly sack-interception. The story of the 2\u201311 Dolphins upsetting the 12\u20131 defending champion Patriots made national headlines, and was one of the great upsets of the year in 2004. The 11 point comeback with under 4 minutes to play remains one of the largest in NFL history with so little time remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at New York Jets\nThe Patriots bounced back from their loss very quickly. On the first drive of the game Chad Pennington was intercepted by Teddy Bruschi. Bruschi then returned the ball 30 yards into Jets territory. However, the teams would exchange punts twice. New England then took the lead on a short Adam Vinatieri field goal. After the Jets punted, Brady hooked up with David Givens on a long completion, then found Daniel Graham for a touchdown just after the two minute warning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0043-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at New York Jets\nAfter another Jets punt, Brady hit Deion Branch on a long pass, setting up a Vinatieri field goal to lead 13\u20130 with just 7 seconds left in the half. Improbably, Jason Glenn then fumbled the ensuing kickoff and Tully Banta-Cain recovered for New England. However, the Patriots failed to take advantage when Vinatieri missed a 50-yard field goal to close the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 16: at New York Jets\nBoth teams punted to start the second half. The Patriots then engaged in a lengthy drive to another Vinatieri field goal, giving them 16\u20130 lead. Pennington was then intercepted by Eugene Wilson who returned the punt to the Jets 15-yard line. Through 3 quarters, the Jets had not managed more than 5 punts and 3 turnovers. The Patriots took advantage, with Brady finding Branch on a 6-yard touchdown to take a 23\u20130 lead. The Jets would then manage their only score of the day on a 15-yard pass from Pennington to Santana Moss. The game's final 9 minutes were played scoreless, and the Patriots clinched the #2 seed in the AFC, guaranteeing a first round bye in the Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 111], "content_span": [112, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nThe 2\u201313 49ers, having the worst season in franchise history, punted on their first possession. Corey Dillon fumbled on the ensuing Patriots possession to give the ball back to San Francisco. However, the mightily struggling 49er offense immediately committed three consecutive penalties, setting up a 1st down and 32 situation. They would eventually go three-and-out to give the ball back to New England. However, Dwaine Carpenter then intercepted Tom Brady and returned it into the Patriots red zone. This led to a Ken Dorsey touchdown pass to Steve Bush, the only points the 49ers would score all day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 118], "content_span": [119, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0045-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nAfter a Patriots punt, the 49ers would miss a scoring chance when Todd Peterson missed a 39-yard field goal. The Patriots took advantage, with Dillon making several long runs and Brady finding David Givens inside the San Francisco 5-yard line. Brady then found linebacker Mike Vrabel, who caught his fourth career touchdown. After a 49ers punt, the Patriots drove downfield on a Brady completion to reserve tight end Jed Weaver. However, Brady was then strip-sacked by John Engelberger, with Bryant Young recovering for San Francisco. Thus, the half ended with the game tied 7\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 118], "content_span": [119, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, 2004 New England Patriots Schedule, Game summaries, Week 17: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nThe teams exchanged punts to start the second half. The Patriots then marched downfield, bolstered by a 26-yard run by Dillon that put him over the 100 yard mark for the 9th time on the season. Brady then threw a screen pass to Deion Branch, which Branch took to the end zone to put the Patriots in front at 14\u20137. After an exchange of punts, the 49ers entered Patriots territory on a long run by Kevan Barlow and a Dorsey pass to Curtis Conway. However, the drive ended when Maurice Hicks fumbled and Patriots linebacker Tully Banta-Cain recovered. Dillon would then score from 6 yards out to cap another great day rushing and seal a 21\u20137 victory. The win gave New England its second consecutive 14\u20132 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 118], "content_span": [119, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nThe Colts entered the game with the league's top offense, with Peyton Manning having thrown for 49 touchdowns during the regular season and the Colts having scored 49 points against Denver in their first playoff game. Meanwhile, the Patriots came into the game after having a first round bye. Just as in the previous year's postseason meeting between the Patriots and Colts, the game was played in a New England snowstorm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nBoth teams defenses dominated early, as the first five possessions of the game ended in punts. But after that, the Patriots put together a 16-play, 78 yards scoring drive that took 9:07 off the clock. They lost a touchdown when Corey Dillon's 1-yard score was overturned by a penalty, but Adam Vinatieri kicked a 24-yard field goal to give them a 3\u20130 lead. The next time New England got the ball, a 42-yard run by Dillon set up another Vinatieri field goal, increasing the Patriots lead to 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0048-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nThe Colts responded with a drive to New England's 39-yard line, but linebacker Tedy Bruschi ended it by ripping the ball out of the hands of running back Dominic Rhodes and gaining possession himself. After a Patriots punt, Manning led the Colts 67 yards, but was nearly intercepted in the end zone by Asante Samuel. Samuel dropped the interception, allowing Mike Vanderjagt to kick a field goal, cutting the score to 6\u20133 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nBut the Patriots dominated the second half, holding the ball for nearly all the time in regulation with two long drives. After an exchange of punts, they drove 87 yards in 15 plays on a drive that consumed 8:16 and ended with Brady's 5-yard touchdown pass to David Givens. At the end of the Colts next drive, Hunter Smith's 54-yard punt pinned New England back at their own 6-yard line. Sparked by a third down catch by Kevin Faulk to start the drive, the Patriots slowly marched down the field on a 14-play, 94-yard drive that ate up another 7:24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0049-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nDillon rushed for 35 yards and caught a pass for 9 on the drive, including a 27-yard run on third down and 8, while Brady finished it with a 1-yard quarterback sneak, giving the Patriots a 20\u20133 lead with just over 7 minutes left in the game. Then two plays after the ensuing kickoff, safety Rodney Harrison stripped the ball from Reggie Wayne and Bruschi recovered it, allowing his team to take more time off the clock. Indianapolis responded with a drive to the Patriots 20-yard line, but Harrison intercepted Manning's pass in the end zone with 10 seconds left, as overjoyed fans taunted Manning with a sustained chant of \"Cut that meat!\" in reference to a MasterCard commercial their now-defeated rival had filmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nThe Patriots dismantled the league's highest scoring team by forcing three turnovers and holding them to just 276 yards and 3 points, their lowest point total since their opening game of the 2003 season. Peyton Manning suffered his seventh loss in Foxborough, even though he had more yards passing than Brady did in the game. Manning had thrown for a record 49 touchdowns during the regular season, but the Colts did not find the end zone in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0050-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Divisional Round vs. Indianapolis Colts\nJust like the previous year, the snow appeared to help the New England defense blight Manning, as the Patriots limited the Colts quarterback to 238 passing yards with 1 interception and no touchdowns, and Edgerrin James to just 39 rushing yards. The Patriots also held possession of the ball for 37:43, including 21:26 in the second half and recording three long scoring drives that each took over 7 minutes off the clock. Dillon, playing in his first career playoff game after suffering through 7 losing seasons as a member of the Cincinnati Bengals, rushed for 144 yards and caught 5 passes for 17 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe game-time temperature of 11\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221212\u00a0\u00b0C) made it the second-coldest game ever in Pittsburgh and the coldest ever in Steel City playoff annals. However, it was the Patriots that handed Ben Roethlisberger his first loss as a starter after a 14-game winning streak, the longest by a rookie quarterback in NFL history, as the Steelers became the second NFL team ever to record a 15\u20131 record and fail to reach the Super Bowl. The Patriots converted four Pittsburgh turnovers into 24 points, while committing no turnovers themselves. The Patriots' win also prevented an all-Pennsylvania Super Bowl from being played, as well as the first to feature a team led by a rookie starting quarterback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Steelers never recovered from their poor performance in the first quarter. Patriots defensive back Eugene Wilson intercepted Roethlisberger's first pass of the game on his own 48-yard line, setting up Adam Vinatieri's 48-yard field goal to take a 3\u20130 lead. Pittsburgh responded with a drive to the Patriots 39-yard line. But then running back Jerome Bettis lost a fumble while being tackled by Rosevelt Colvin and linebacker Mike Vrabel recovered it. On the next play, Tom Brady threw a 60-yard touchdown pass to receiver Deion Branch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nWith 1:28 left in the first quarter, the Steelers cut their deficit to 10\u20133 with Jeff Reed's 23-yard field goal. But after an exchange of punts, Branch caught a 45-yard reception on Pittsburgh's 14-yard line. Two plays later, Brady threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to David Givens. Then on the Steelers ensuing drive, safety Rodney Harrison intercepted a pass from Roethlisberger and returned it 87 yards for a touchdown, giving the Patriots a 24\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nNew England was forced to punt on the opening drive of the third quarter, and Antwaan Randle El returned the ball 9 yards to the Steelers 44-yard line. Then on the Steelers ensuing possession, he caught two passes for 46 yards as they drove 56 yards in five plays. Bettis finished the drive with a 5-yard touchdown run, cutting their deficit to 24\u201310. It looked like New England would have to punt again, as a Clark Haggans sack of Brady left the Patriots with 3rd and 17 in their own territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0054-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nBrady's 3rd down throw fell incomplete, but Aaron Smith was called for holding Kevin Faulk, giving the Patriots a first down. Brady then found Givens inside the Steeler 40-yard line, however he initially was ruled to have fumbled and Pittsburgh to have possession. Bill Belichick successfully challenged the call, and a Steelers personal foul moved the ball to the Pittsburgh 25-yard line. Corey Dillon then scored on a 25-yard touchdown run, making the score 31\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0054-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nPittsburgh tried to come back, driving 60 yards in ten plays and scoring with Roethlisberger's 30-yard touchdown pass to Hines Ward on a 4th down and 5. Then after forcing a punt, Randle El returned the ball 22 yards to the Steelers 49-yard line. On their ensuing drive, Ward's 26-yard reception on the last play of the third quarter set up Reed's second field goal, making the score 31\u201320 with 13:32 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nHowever, the Patriots took over the rest of the quarter. They responded with a 49-yard drive that took 5:26 off the clock and ended with Vinatieri's 31-yard field goal. Then two plays after the ensuing kickoff, Wilson intercepted another pass from Roethlisberger at New England's 45-yard line. The Patriots subsequently marched down the field on another long scoring drive, taking 5:06 off the clock. Branch capped it off with a 23-yard touchdown run on a reverse play, giving the Patriots a 41\u201320 lead. The Steelers responded with Roethlisberger's 7-yard touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress on their next drive, but by then there was only 1:31 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, AFC Championship at Pittsburgh Steelers\nBrady completed 14 of 21 passes for 207 yards and 2 touchdowns. Dillon rushed for 73 yards and a touchdown. Branch caught 4 passes for 116 yards, rushed for 37 yards, and scored two touchdowns. Roethlisberger threw for 226 yards and 2 touchdowns, and rushed for 45 yards, but was intercepted 3 times. Ward caught 5 passes for 109 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nOn the first drive of the game, Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb fumbled while being sacked by New England linebacker Willie McGinest, and the Patriots recovered the ball at Philadelphia's 34-yard line. Fortunately for the Eagles, coach Andy Reid's instant replay challenge overruled the fumble; officials ruled that McNabb had been down by contact before the ball came out of his hands. Later in the quarter after each team had punted twice, McNabb completed a 30-yard pass to Terrell Owens, with a roughing the passer penalty adding 9 yards, moving the ball inside the Patriots 20-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0057-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nHowever, linebacker Mike Vrabel sacked McNabb for a 16-yard loss on the next play. On the following play, the Eagles once again appeared to turn the ball over: McNabb's pass was intercepted in the end zone by Patriots defensive back Asante Samuel, but it was nullified by an illegal contact penalty on linebacker Roman Phifer, moving the ball back inside the 20 and giving the Eagles a first down. However, McNabb's second chance was wasted as he threw an interception to safety Rodney Harrison on the next play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles defense then forced New England to a three-and-out on their ensuing possession, and Philadelphia got great field position by receiving the punt at the Patriots 45-yard line. But once again, they gave up another turnover: tight end L.J. Smith lost a fumble while being tackled by defensive back Randall Gay, and Samuel recovered the ball at the 38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles defense once again forced New England to punt, and got the ball back at their own 19-yard line. Aided by a pair of completions from McNabb to receiver Todd Pinkston for gains of 17 and 40 yards, the Eagles drove 81 yards in 9 plays and scored on McNabb's 6-yard touchdown pass to Smith, taking a 7\u20130 lead with 9:55 left in the second quarter. It was the first time New England trailed during the entire postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0059-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nOn their ensuing drive, the Patriots moved the ball to the Eagles 4-yard line, mainly on plays by Corey Dillon, who caught two screen passes for 29 yards and rushed for 25. But quarterback Tom Brady fumbled the ball on a fake handoff and Philadelphia defender Darwin Walker recovered it. However, the Eagles could not take advantage of the turnover and had to punt after 3 plays. Eagles punter Dirk Johnson's punt went just 29 yards, giving the Patriots the ball at Philadelphia's 37-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0059-0002", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Patriots then drove 37 yards to score on Brady's 4-yard pass to receiver David Givens with 1:10 remaining in the period, tying the game 7\u20137 by halftime. It was only the second halftime tie in Super Bowl history and the first time both of the game's first 2 quarters ended tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nOn the opening drive of the second half, Patriots receiver Deion Branch caught 4 passes for 71 yards on a drive that ended with Brady's 2-yard pass to Vrabel, who lined up at the tight end spot on the play. The Eagles later tied the game with 3:39 left in the third period with a 74-yard, 10-play drive that was capped by McNabb's 10-yard touchdown pass to running back Brian Westbrook. For the first time in Super Bowl history, the game was tied going into the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nEarly in the final period, the Patriots put together a 9-play, 66-yard scoring drive that was keyed by 3 plays from running back Kevin Faulk, who caught 2 passes for 27 combined yards and rushed once for 12. Dillon capped off the drive with a 2-yard touchdown run to give the Patriots a 21\u201314 lead. Then after forcing another Eagles punt, Branch's 19-yard reception and a roughing-the-passer penalty on Philadelphia defensive lineman Corey Simon set up kicker Adam Vinatieri's 22-yard field goal with 8:43 left in the game to increase the score 24\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles responded by advancing to the New England 36-yard line on their next drive, but it ended with no points after linebacker Tedy Bruschi intercepted a pass from McNabb at the Patriots 24-yard line. After forcing New England to punt, Philadelphia got the ball back at their own 21-yard line with 5:40 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles then drove 79 yards in 13 plays to cut their deficit to 24\u201321 with McNabb's 30-yard touchdown pass to receiver Greg Lewis. However, the drive consumed 3:52 of the clock, and only 1:55 remained in the game by the time Lewis scored. Because of this, many sportswriters later criticized the Eagles for not immediately going to a no-huddle offense at the start of the possession. (Two days after the game, some Eagles players revealed that McNabb was so sick that he had trouble calling the plays.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Eagles failed to recover their ensuing onside kick attempt. The Patriots then played it safe by running the ball 3 times and forcing Philadelphia to use all of its timeouts. New England punter Josh Miller then pinned the Eagles back at their own 4-yard line with just 46 seconds left in the game. Philadelphia then tried one last desperate drive to win or tie the game. But on first down, McNabb was pressured into making a rushed pass to Westbrook at the line of scrimmage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0064-0001", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Postseason, Results, Super Bowl XXXIX at Philadelphia Eagles\nInstead of dropping the pass to stop the clock, Westbrook made the mistake of catching the ball and was immediately tackled for no gain, keeping the clock running and forcing the Eagles to run back to the line of scrimmage for their next play with no huddle. On second down, McNabb threw an incomplete pass intended for Owens. Finally on third down, McNabb threw a pass that went just over the outstretched fingertips of Smith and into the arms of Harrison for an interception with 9 seconds left, sealing the victory for the Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178315-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 New England Patriots season, Awards and honors, Pro Bowl selections\nPatriots kicker Adam Vinatieri and special teamer Larry Izzo were both named as starters to the 2005 Pro Bowl. Quarterback Tom Brady and defensive end Richard Seymour were elected as reserves; Seymour did not play in the game due to injury. Additionally, running back Corey Dillon and linebacker Tedy Bruschi were named as injury replacements, however, Dillon did not participate in the game due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by JCC the Alternate Historian (talk | contribs) at 20:00, 18 July 2020 (Fixed linking with the 2000 and 2008 Democratic presidential primaries in New Hampshire.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary was held on January 27, 2004. Taking place eight days after the Iowa caucuses, it marked the second contest to take place during the Democratic party's 2004 primary season, as well as the first actual primary to take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary, Polling\nPrimary polling taken by American Research Group during the last few days of campaigning (January 23 to January 27, 2004) showed that former New Hampshire poll leader as well as national leader Howard Dean was steadily gaining ground to catch up to now front-runner John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary, Polling\nTracking polling showed that Dean had been catching up to Kerry in the days before the primary, cutting Kerry's 18 point lead to 10 points in a matter of days. With Dean dropping and Kerry rising, it became apparent that the battle for 1st place in New Hampshire would be close. Also, for third place, Wesley Clark, John Edwards and Joe Lieberman were the only ones fighting for third. With Clark and Edwards both taking hits going into the primary, a Lieberman on the rise, the fight for 1st place and third place, according to polls would be intense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary, Results\nAs results began to come in during Primary night, it became apparent Kerry had won the primary and was promptly projected the winner by several media outlets. Dean finished in second place. Clark and Edwards were in a dead-lock for third place, with both candidates at 12% during the night. Earlier returns showed Lieberman in a stronger position to tie with Clark and Edwards, allowing him to declare to his supporters that it was \"a three-way split decision for third place.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary, Results\nAs final results were being tallied, Kerry won the primary with 84,277 votes and 38%, Dean finished second, with 57,761 and 26%, and Clark narrowly defeated Edwards for third place, with 27,314 votes and 12%. Lieberman had fallen back in the count and didn't even reach 10%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 59], "content_span": [60, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178316-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Democratic presidential primary, Results, Exit Polling\nKerry won huge margins of support amongst almost all constituencies, with his only weak point amongst Republicans, who made up 4% of the voting block and was Lieberman's strongest point. Dean repeatedly came distant second or third for almost all categories of voters. Edwards defeated Clark amongst male voters as well as voters under 65, but only by a very tiny margin. Lieberman finished in a distant third in almost all categories except for Republicans, in which he nearly defeated John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election\nIn 2004, Democrats made large gains in Concord, winning the governorship, adding 30 seats in the House, two seats in the Senate, winning an Executive Council seat in District 5 for the first time since the 1960s, one of many races won by Democrats for the first time in decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, Senate, District 1\nJohn T. Gallus (R-Berlin) defeated Jerry Sorlucco (D-Littleton) by a vote of 15,822 (59.5%) to 10,748 (40.4%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, Hillsborough County, Hillsborough 19\nHillsborough 19 consists of the heavily Republican town of Merrimack, which showed during election day as all eight GOP candidates swept the Democratic slate to take the town's eight seats in Concord.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 105], "content_span": [106, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, Hillsborough County, Hillsborough 24\nThe 24th District of Hillsborough County, consisting of Nashua's mostly urban and Democratic Ward 6, was swept by the Democrats, including a dual primary sweep by David Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 105], "content_span": [106, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, Hillsborough County, Hillsborough 24\nThe only Republican running in Hillsborough 24 was City GOP Chairwoman Sandra Ziehm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 105], "content_span": [106, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, Sullivan County, Sullivan 3\nIn the non-floterial first past the post district of Sullivan 3, which consists of the town of Sunapee, Republican Harry S. Gale defeated Democrat \"Hometown\" David Brown in the race to refill the seat of non-returning Republican incumbent Richard Leone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 96], "content_span": [97, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats\nDue to the large number of seats in the House and the relative old age of the Representatives (the current average age is 66), many members often leave the House either from death or resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 119], "content_span": [120, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Strafford 3\nAfter Michael Harrington was appointed as a member of the Public Utility Commission in November 2004, he vacated his seat in Strafford County District 3, which includes Barrington, Farmington, Middleton, Milton, New Durham and Strafford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 132], "content_span": [133, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Strafford 3\nOn March 8, 2005, Democrat Larry Brown of Milton defeated Republican Wilfred Morrison of Farmington 1,858 to 1,551, picking up a seat for the Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 132], "content_span": [133, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Sullivan 4\nThe same day as the special election in Strafford District 3, a special election in Sullivan District 4, which consists of Unity, Lempster and Claremont, was held to replace the departure of Democrat Joe Harris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 131], "content_span": [132, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Sullivan 4\nRepublican challenger Phillip \"Joe\" Osgood defeated former Claremont mayor Ray Gagnon by a tally of 1,125 to 895.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 131], "content_span": [132, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Hillsborough 1\nIn a surprising upset, Democrat Gilman Shattuck defeated former Hillsborough County Sheriff and Republican Walter Morse 669 to 601 on June 14, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 135], "content_span": [136, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Hillsborough 1\nThe two were competing for Republican Larry Elliot's seat in the largely Republican district of Hillsborough 1, consisting of the county's northwesternmost towns: Antrim, Hancock, Hillsborough and Windsor. After Shattuck's victory, Democrats held two of the district's three seats, a feat not copied since before the Civil War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 135], "content_span": [136, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Cheshire 3\nIn Cheshire District 3, consisting of the five wards of Keene, Stephanie Sinclair left her seat in mid-spring 2005 because she moved out of New Hampshire. The opening was filled on October 14, 2005 by Keene City Councilman Chris Coates, who received 250 votes while running unopposed. The Democrats kept the seat in the highly Democratic district, continuing their one-seat pickup from special elections after the 2004 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 131], "content_span": [132, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Hillsborough 10\nOn City Election Day, 2005 (November 8), Democrat Jean Jeudy defeated Republican Rob Fremeau, protecting the party's seat after the departure of Firefighter's Union President William Clayton in a special election in Hillsborough District 10, the State Representative district of Manchester's Ward 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 136], "content_span": [137, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Hillsborough 10\nJeudy defeated Fremeau 508 to 322, keeping the Democrats in complete control of the ward's three seats. The election was largely overshadowed by the simultaneous mayoral race, where Frank Guinta upset incumbent Bob Baines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 136], "content_span": [137, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Grafton 6\nThe Democrats gained another seat as Jim Aguiar of Campton defeated Christopher Whitcomb of Rumney in the Grafton District 6 (Campton, Ellsworth, Orford, Rumney and Wentworth) special election on December 6, 2005. Aguiar won 558-526, replacing Republican John Alger, who died several weeks earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 130], "content_span": [131, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178317-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire General Court election, House of Representatives, 2004/2005 special elections and current open seats, Rockingham 3\nOn January 24, 2006, Democrat John Robinson upset Republican Al Baldasaro 57% to 43% in the heavily Republican district of Rockingham 3, which consists of the towns of Londonderry and Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 133], "content_span": [134, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178318-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire Wildcats football team\nThe 2004 New Hampshire Wildcats football team was an American football team that represented the University of New Hampshire as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In its sixth year under head coach Sean McDonnell, the team compiled a 10\u20133 record (6\u20132 against conference opponents), finished fourth out of twelve teams in the Atlantic 10 Conference, and lost to Montana in the quarterfinal of the NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178319-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 New Hampshire gubernatorial election occurred on November 2, 2004, concurrent with that year's presidential election. Democrat John Lynch, a multimillionaire businessman from Hopkinton, narrowly defeated incumbent Republican Governor Craig Benson of Rye, winning a two-year term. Benson was the first New Hampshire governor in 78 years to lose reelection after one term. Lynch was sworn in on January 6, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178319-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Hampshire gubernatorial election\nTo date, Benson is the most recent incumbent governor to lose reelection in any New England state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178320-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Jersey Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 New Jersey Democratic presidential primary was held on June 8, 2004, and featured the two candidates who were still campaigning for the nomination: presumptive nominee Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts and congressman Dennis Kucinich of Ohio. Kerry won a landslide victory at 92% to Kucinich's 4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178321-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Mexico Democratic presidential caucuses\nSenator John Kerry the frontrunner for the nomination yet again won by a landslide. Third place finisher Howard Dean 2 and a half weeks ago was leading former army general Wesley Clark 16% to 18%. Kerry got the endorsement of Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico Diane D. Denish. Wesley Clark got the most endorsements out of anyone. He got Mayor of Santa Fe Larry Delgado, candidate for offices Roberto A. Mondragon, congressional candidate Richard Romero and the Albuquerque Tribune. Governor Howard Dean got an endorsement from a former senator Fred Harris and former governor Toney Anaya. Joe Lieberman yet again faced another disappointing showing in the primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178322-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Mexico Lobos football team\nThe 2004 New Mexico Lobos football team represented the University of New Mexico during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. New Mexico competed as a member of the Mountain West Conference (MW), and played their home games in the University Stadium. The Lobos were led by seventh-year head coach Rocky Long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178323-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Mexico State Aggies football team\nThe 2004 New Mexico State Aggies football team represented New Mexico State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Aggies were coached by head coach Tony Samuel, whose contract was not renewed after the season and played their home games at Aggie Memorial Stadium in Las Cruces, New Mexico. They participated in their final season as members of the Sun Belt Conference as they would join the Western Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178324-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Orleans Bowl\nThe 2004 Wyndham New Orleans Bowl featured the North Texas Mean Green and the Southern Miss Golden Eagles. It was North Texas's fourth consecutive New Orleans Bowl appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178324-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Orleans Bowl\nSouthern Miss quarterback Dustin Almond got Southern Miss on the board first with a 37-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Otho Graves, to give the Eagles an early 7\u20130 lead. Later in the first quarter, Dustin Almond scored on a 1-yard touchdown run to increase the lead to 14\u20130. In the second quarter, kicker Nick Bazaldua got North Texas on the board with a 24-yard field goal to make it 14\u20133. Before halftime, Darren McCaleb connected on a 45-yard field goal to give USM a 17\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178324-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Orleans Bowl\nIn the fourth quarter, linebacker Michael Boley returned an interception 62 yards for a touchdown to give Southern Miss a 24\u20133 lead. Sherron Moore added a 1-yard touchdown pass to increase the lead to 31\u20133. Quarterback Scott Hall threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Johnny Quinn to cut the lead to 31\u201310. That would be the final score of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178325-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Orleans Saints season\nThe 2004 season was the New Orleans Saints' 38th in the National Football League (NFL). They matched their previous season's output of 8\u20138, and the team finished the season on a four-game winning streak, which was all the more remarkable because the Saints trailed at some point during every game. This record was equalled by the 2012 Cowboys, but before this season the 1978 Falcons and the 2002 Browns come closest to this record, winning eight games out of fifteen where they trailed at some point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178325-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Orleans Saints season, Regular season, Schedule\nDuring the 2004 regular season, the Saints' non-divisional conference opponents were primarily from the NFC West, although they also played the Minnesota Vikings from the NFC North, and the Dallas Cowboys from the NFC East. Their non-conference opponents were from the AFC West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178326-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Year Honours\nThe New Year Honours 2004 were appointments by some of the Commonwealth realms to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by citizens of those countries. The New Year Honours are awarded as part of the New Year celebrations at the start of January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178326-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Year Honours\nThe New Year Honours were announced on 31 December 2003 in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Barbados, Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Belize, and Saint Christopher and Nevis,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178326-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Year Honours\nThe recipients of honours are displayed as they were styled before their new honours and arranged by the country (in order of precedence) whose ministers advised The Queen on the appointments, then by honour with grades i.e. Knight/Dame Grand Cross, Knight/Dame Commander etc. and then divisions i.e. Military and Civil, as appropriate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178327-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Year Honours (New Zealand)\nThe 2004 New Year Honours in New Zealand were appointments by Elizabeth II in her right as Queen of New Zealand, on the advice of the New Zealand government, to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders, and to celebrate the passing of 2003 and the beginning of 2004. They were announced on 31 December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178327-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Year Honours (New Zealand)\nThe recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178328-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York City Marathon\nThe 2004 New York City Marathon was the 35th running of the annual marathon race in New York City, United States, which took place on Sunday, November 7. The men's elite race was won by South Africa's Hendrick Ramaala in a time of 2:09:28 hours while the women's race was won by Great Britain's Paula Radcliffe in 2:23:10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178328-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New York City Marathon\nIn the wheelchair races, Mexico's Sa\u00fal Mendoza (1:33:16) and Switzerland's Edith Hunkeler (1:53:27) won the men's and women's divisions, respectively. In the handcycle race, Australia's Todd Philpott (1:17:12) and Dutchwoman Angelique Simons (1:50:02) were the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178328-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New York City Marathon\nA total of 36,513 runners finished the race, 24,563 men and 11,950 women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178329-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 New York Democratic presidential primary took place on March 2, 2004, also known as Super Tuesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178330-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Film Critics Circle Awards\nThe 70th New York Film Critics Circle Awards, honoring the best in film for 2004, were announced on 13 December 2004 and presented on 9 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season\nThe 2004 season was the New York Giants' 80th in the National Football League. After starting the season 5\u20132 the Giants lost eight games in a row before winning the final game of the season to finish 6\u201310, good enough for second place in the NFC East by tiebreaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Off-season\nFormer Jacksonville Jaguars head coach Tom Coughlin was hired to replace Jim Fassel, who was fired following the conclusion of the 2003 season. Departures: Kerry Collins, Brian Mitchell, Kenny Holmes, Brandon Short, Cornelius Griffin, Keith Hamilton, Michael Barrow, Matt Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Off-season, NFL draft\nThe Giants' poor record for 2003 resulted in their being tied with the San Diego Chargers, the Oakland Raiders and the Arizona Cardinals for the worst record in the league. By virtue of a series of tiebreakers, the Giants landed at the fourth pick in the draft and were forecast to select Robert Gallery, an offensive tackle from Iowa, or Ben Roethlisberger, a quarterback from Miami of Ohio, with the pick. Another scenario was also listed as a possibility, and would prove to be the move the Giants would make.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Off-season, NFL draft\nEntering the draft, the consensus top pick was Ole Miss quarterback Eli Manning. However, Manning had said prior to the draft that he did not want to play for the Chargers and would not sign with them if he was drafted. The Chargers would strike a deal with the Giants before the draft that would shape the future of both franchises. The Chargers would select Manning first overall, as they had intended to. The Giants would then draft quarterback Philip Rivers of North Carolina State, and then swap him and two 2005 draft picks for Manning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Off-season, NFL draft\nThe Giants also selected former Boston College offensive guard Chris Snee, Auburn linebacker Reggie Torbor, and strong safety Gibril Wilson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Regular season\nAlthough the Giants had traded for Eli Manning, the season began with veteran quarterback and former league MVP Kurt Warner as the starter. After a season-opening loss to the Philadelphia Eagles, Warner and the Giants enjoyed surprising success, starting a four-game winning streak that included road victories over the Dallas Cowboys and Green Bay Packers. Following a Halloween rout of the Minnesota Vikings, 34\u201314, the Giants were 5\u20132, trailing the then-undefeated Philadelphia Eagles by just two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Regular season\nThe high-water mark of the Giants season came on November 7, when the Giants led the Bears 14\u20130 at the end of the first quarter. Over the rest of the game, though, the Giants turned the ball over five times, allowed the Bears to score 28 unanswered points (20 in the second quarter) and lost by a score of 28\u201321. After another loss, this time on the road against the Arizona Cardinals, Giants coach Tom Coughlin decided to replace Warner with Manning. The decision did not show immediate success, as the Giants turned the ball over ten times in the next four games, scoring a total of 37 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178331-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Giants season, Regular season\nClose losses to the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Bengals followed, dropping the Giants to 5\u201310. The season did end with a slight possibility of succeeding, as the Giants rallied from a 16\u20137 fourth quarter deficit to end the season with a 28\u201324 victory over division rival Dallas Cowboys. Manning threw two fourth-quarter touchdown passes, and Tiki Barber scored the game winner. The Giants finished 6\u201310, in a three-way tie for 2nd place in the NFC East with the Cowboys and the Redskins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season\nThe 2004 New York Jets season was the franchise's 35th season in the National Football League (NFL), the 45th season overall, and the fourth under head coach Herman Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season\nThe season began with the Jets attempting to improve on their 6\u201310 2003 record. The Jets started the season by winning their first five games, which constituted a franchise record. They ultimately finished 10\u20136, and clinched the fifth seed in the playoffs, reaching the postseason for the third time in four seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season\nThey upset the AFC West champion San Diego Chargers in the Wild Card round, winning in overtime 20\u201317, but would lose in the Divisional round to the Pittsburgh Steelers, also by a score 20\u201317 in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Offseason\nThe Jets signed former Arizona Cardinals cornerback David Barrett and offensive guard Pete Kendall, as well as Seattle Seahawks safety Reggie Tongue and Oakland Raiders linebacker Eric Barton. The Jets also traded for Tennessee Titans wide receiver Justin McCareins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Offseason, NFL Draft\nThe Jets were granted the 12th pick in the first round of the NFL Draft by virtue of their 6\u201310 record in 2003. They used this pick to take linebacker Jonathan Vilma from the University of Miami. They were also granted the maximum four compensatory draft picks as a result of losing premium free agents before the 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Schedule, Regular season\nDuring the 2004 regular season the Jets\u2019 non-divisional, conference opponents were primarily from the AFC North, although they also played the Houston Texans from the AFC South, and the San Diego Chargers from the AFC West. Their non-conference opponents were from the NFC West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 1: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThe major story heading into this game was the professional debut of Bengal quarterback Carson Palmer. However, the Jets\u2019 offense, led by running back Curtis Martin, spearheaded the Jets\u2019 victory. After an early fumble led to a Bengals touchdown, the Jets took the lead late in the first quarter and never trailed. Martin ran for 196 yards and a touchdown, as well as a touchdown reception, and was an opening day record for Jets running backs. Quarterback Chad Pennington, making his first opening day start in his career, threw for 224 yards and two touchdowns and was an efficient 20-for-27 passing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 88], "content_span": [89, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 2: at San Diego Chargers\nThe Jets got out to a 20-point lead before holding off a second-half comeback by San Diego. Two Curtis Martin touchdowns helped stake New York to a 17\u20130 lead, which grew to 27\u20137 after a field goal and a touchdown pass from Chad Pennington to Jerald Sowell. The Chargers finally responded late in the third quarter with a four-yard touchdown run from LaDainian Tomlinson, followed by a 33-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Drew Brees to Reche Caldwell. A one-yard touchdown pass from Pennington to Chris Baker in the fourth quarter put the game out of reach for San Diego.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 2: at San Diego Chargers\nMartin\u2019s 119 yards made him the Jets\u2019 all-time rushing leader, passing Freeman McNeil's mark of 8,074 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 4: at Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins were looking for their first win while the Jets were looking to stay undefeated. Midway through the first quarter, Santana Moss returned a punt 24 yards to set up a 1-yard touchdown run by Curtis Martin. The Dolphins responded with 2 field goals. Leading 10\u20136 late in the 2nd quarter, Jets quarterback Chad Pennington was picked off by Arturo Freeman to set up a third Olindo Mare field goal and a 10\u20139 deficit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 4: at Miami Dolphins\nOn Miami\u2019s opening drive of the second half, quarterback Jay Fielder was intercepted by Donnie Abraham who returned in 66 yards for a touchdown putting the Jets ahead 17\u20139. That was all the cushion the Jets would need as the defense went on the force 3 more turnovers and hold on to beat the Dolphins keeping them undefeated at 3\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe Jets looked to go 4\u20130, while the Bills looked for their first win of the year. The Jets started off strong with a 61-yard drive to the Bills 11, however Doug Brien\u2019s 29-yard field goal attempt on 4th down was wide left. Both teams traded punts before the Jets went on a 79-yard drive which took 4:12 off the clock and ended on a Chris Baker 1-yard touchdown reception from Pennington. Both teams traded punts once again before the Jets advanced to the Bills 19 and Doug Brien nailed a 37-yard field goal seconds before halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nWith 6:56 left in the 3rd Pennington hit Wayne Chrebet on a 27-yard catch which set up a 36-yard field goal by Brien. After a Bills punt Pennington led the Jets down the field before he was intercepted by Jeff Posey. The Bills then advanced 53 yards before Bledsoe hit Mark Campbell on a 16-yard touchdown. After a Jets punt, Bledsoe led the Bills on a 63-yard drive capped off on a 46-yard Lee Evans touchdown giving them the 14\u201313 lead with 6:58 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 5: vs. Buffalo Bills\nHowever, the Jets wouldn\u2019t go down and went on a 60-yard drive which ended on a game winning Doug Brien 38-yard field goal with 59 seconds left in the game. The Bills were able to get to their own 48-yard line before Bledsoe threw a game sealing interception to Terrell Buckley with 2 seconds remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 83], "content_span": [84, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 6: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nAfter the 1\u20134 Niners jumped to a 14\u20130 lead, the Jets clawed back as Lamont Jordan and Curtis Martin touchdowns (marred by two failed 2-point attempts) iced a 22\u201314 Jets lead and a 5\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 7: at New England Patriots\nThe Jets\u2019 win streak ended in a 13\u20137 final\u00e9 and the Patriots\u2019 league-record win streak reached 21 as David Patten\u2019s touchdown catch from Tom Brady wrapped up the second quarter. From there neither team could score: the second half saw seven punts, a Dan Klecko fumble, and a failed fourth down attempt by the Jets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 8: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Jets hosted the Dolphins on Monday Night Football and rebounded from their first loss of the year to pummel Miami 41\u201314. Chad Pennington had three touchdown throws while Curtis Martin and Lamont Jordan added rushing scores; the Jets also intercepted Jay Fiedler twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 9: at Buffalo Bills\nWillis McGahee led the Bills offense with 132 rushing yards and a touchdown as the Bills upended the Jets 22\u201317. Drew Bledsoe had 184 passing yards and a score (to Lee Evans) while Chad Pennington had one touchdown and one pick; he had to come out and former Cowboy Quincy Carter completed two passes, one of them a 51-yard score to Santana Moss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 10: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nWith Carter starting for injured Pennington, the Jets rushed to a 14\u20130 early lead on two Curtis Martin touchdowns, but Kyle Boller led the Ravens to a 17\u201314 lead on two touchdowns to Clarence Moore. The Jets tied it and in overtime Matt Stover won it for the Ravens (20\u201317 final) from 42 yards out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 11: at Cleveland Browns\nOn a fourth quarter touchdown to Justin McCareins, Quincy Carter got his first win since his last season in Dallas as the Jets edged the Browns 10\u20137. Jeff Garcia managed a three-yard score to Aaron Shea but managed only 88 passing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 12: at Arizona Cardinals\nFormer Dallas Cowboys Quincy Carter of the Jets and Emmitt Smith of the Cardinals squared off in a 13\u20133 Jets win. Carter had a 69-yard touchdown to Santana Moss while Smith was held to just 21 yards amid four Cardinals turnovers (two of them interceptions by Josh McCown).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 13: vs. Houston Texans\nChad Pennington returned and threw for 155 yards and two touchdowns as the Jets crushed the Texans 29\u20137, picking off David Carr twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Steelers\u2019 win streak under rookie Ben Roethlisberger continued as \u201cBig Ben\u201d threw for just 144 yards (and was intercepted twice), but the Jets performed worse; the Steelers intercepted Chad Pennington three times and the Jets committed twelve penalties (to two for Pittsburgh) as the Steelers won 17\u20136. Jerome Bettis ran in one touchdown and threw once for ten yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 89], "content_span": [90, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 15: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nThe Jets exploded to five touchdowns, three by Chad Pennington with a missed PAT and two rushing scores by Curtis Martin to rout the Seahawks 37\u201314; they gained 482 yards of offense to 275 yards for the Seahawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 87], "content_span": [88, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 16: vs. New England Patriots\nNew York area media had been critical of the Jets for their inability to beat quality opponents; Kevin Mawae and Pennington were sharp in responses to media criticism (said Mawae following the Jets\u2019 win over Houston, referencing New York\u2019s earlier defeat of the Chargers, \u201cSan Diego is 9\u20133. We\u2019re 9\u20133. Is San Diego not a good team?\u201d), but they fell flat against the Patriots, themselves smarting from an ugly loss in Miami the week earlier. Tom Brady had two touchdowns and Pennington was picked off twice as the Patriots won 23-7; the loss prevented the Jets from clinching a playoff spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 91], "content_span": [92, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Regular season game summaries, Week 17: at St. Louis Rams\nThe Jets clinched a playoff spot despite failing 32\u201329 in overtime; they erased a 21\u201310 Rams lead as Chad Pennington and three Jets backs led by Curtis Martin\u2019s 153 yards almost evenly split 361 yards in the air and on the ground. Marc Bulger managed by himself to outgain the entire Jet offense with 450 passing yards and three touchdowns despite two picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 84], "content_span": [85, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Wild Card Round: at San Diego Chargers\nThe Jets came into the game having lost 2 straight while San Diego was on a roll. The Jets started out the game well driving down the field on their opening drive only to see kicker Doug Brien miss a 33-yard field goal wide right. In the second quarter, Chargers quarterback Drew Brees found receiver Keenan McCardell for a 26-yard touchdown pass to give San Diego a 7\u20130. The Jets responded as Jets quarterback Chad Pennington found Anthony Becht for a 13-yard touchdown pass to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Wild Card Round: at San Diego Chargers\nNew York kept the momentum into the 3rd quarter as Santana Moss pulled in a perfect 46-yard touchdown pass from Pennington to give the Jets a 14\u20137 lead. The teams traded field goals. Then San Diego got the ball back with under 5:00 to play. The Chargers drove down to the Jets 3-yard line but faced a 4th and goal at the 3. Brees\u2019 desperation pass was knocked down for an apparent Jets\u2019 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0023-0002", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Wild Card Round: at San Diego Chargers\nHowever, a roughing the passer penalty on linebacker Eric Barton gave the Chargers a second chance, which they quickly seized as Brees found Antonio Gates for a 1-yard touchdown pass to send the game into overtime. 10 minutes into the extra period the Chargers were in position to win the game off the foot of rookie kicker Nate Kaeding. However, his 40-yard field goal sailed wide right as the Jets took advantage of their second chance driving down to the San Diego 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0023-0003", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Wild Card Round: at San Diego Chargers\nDoug Brien connected on a 28-yard field goal to give the Jets the win and in the process advancing them to the next round to face the Steelers. Pennington\u2019s numbers were very impressive as he was 23 of 33 for 279 and 2 TDs. Brees was 31 of 42 for 319 yards, 2 TDs and 1 interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Divisional Round: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Pittsburgh Steelers were looking to make it 15 straight victories as they hosted the New York Jets in the AFC Divisional Round. Pittsburgh started out well as Jeff Reed hit a 45-yard field goal then Jerome Bettis plowed into the endzone from 3 yards out to give Pittsburgh a 10\u20130 lead. But New York stormed back. Following a field goal by kicker Doug Brien, Santana Moss took a punt return 75 yards for a touchdown to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Divisional Round: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThen late in the third quarter Reggie Tongue intercepted Ben Roethlisberger and returned it 86 yards for a touchdown to give the Jets a 17\u201310 lead. Pittsburgh responded midway through the fourth quarter as Hines Ward scored on a shovel pass to tie the game. Chad Pennington and the Jets offense was shut down for most of the game however drove down the field on the ensuing drive only to see it come to a disappointing halt as Doug Brien\u2019s 47 field goal attempt hit the crossbar and falling just short.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178332-0024-0002", "contents": "2004 New York Jets season, Playoffs, Divisional Round: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nBut on the very next play, Roethlisberger was picked off by David Barrett. Doug Brien was given a chance to win the game on the last play of regulation but missed the 43-yard kick wide left sending the game into overtime. In overtime, Roethlisberger drove the Steelers 73 yards on 13 plays. Jeff Reed then connected on a 33-yard field goal, handing the Jets a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178333-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Liberty season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the eighth season for the New York Liberty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178333-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Liberty season, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Liberty's 2003 record, they would pick 4th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Liberty picked Ann Wauters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178333-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Liberty season, Regular season\nHeading into its eighth WNBA season, the club acquired veteran Ann Wauters in the dispersal draft and Shameka Christon in the college draft. The Liberty opened the season with a 6-1 record. Despite the strong start, Pat Coyle replaced Richie Adubato as head coach. Under Coyle\u2019s guidance, the team registered an 11-6 mark and secured their sixth playoff appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178333-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Liberty season, Regular season\nThere were injuries to starters Ann Wauters and Tari Phillips. The Liberty played to a sellout crowd for six games at the historic Radio City Music Hall. At Radio City Music Hall, the Liberty posted a 5-1 record. The reason for the relocation was that Madison Square Garden was hosting the 2004 Republican National Convention. In addition, the Liberty hosted another unique game: The Game at Radio City, which featured the USA Women\u2019s Olympic team vs. a WNBA Select Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178333-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Liberty season, Player stats\nNote: GP= Games played; REB= Rebounds; AST= Assists; STL = Steals; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178334-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Mets season\nThe New York Mets' 2004 season was the 43rd regular season for the Mets. They went 71-91 and finished 4th in the NL East. They were managed by Art Howe. They played home games at Shea Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178334-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Mets season, Regular season, Game log\nGreen indicates a win, red indicates a loss, and gray indicates a postponement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178334-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Mets season, The Final Montreal Expos Game\nBack in 1969, the New York Mets played the Montreal Expos in their first ever game. The game was played in New York. The Montreal Expos final game was played in New York against the Mets as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 56], "content_span": [57, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178334-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Mets season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178334-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Mets season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178335-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Underground Film Festival\nThese are the films shown at the 11th New York Underground Film Festival, held from March 10\u201316, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178336-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Yankees season\nThe New York Yankees' 2004 season was the 102nd season for the Yankees. The Yankees opened the season by playing two games against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in Japan on March 30, 2004. The team finished with a record of 101-61, finishing 3 games ahead of the Boston Red Sox in the AL East. The 2004 season was the Yankees third straight season of 100+ wins, the first such instance in franchise history. New York was managed by Joe Torre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178336-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 New York Yankees season\nIn the playoffs, the Yankees defeated the Minnesota Twins, 3 games to 1, in the ALDS, before losing to the wild card Boston Red Sox, 4 games to 3, in the ALCS. The 2004 Yankees are notable as the only team in MLB history to lose a 7-game playoff series after taking a 3 games to none lead. This was the fourth straight year in which the Yankees lost to the eventual World Series champions in the postseason. Only the Los Angeles Dodgers (2016\u201319) have duplicated the same feat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178336-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Yankees season, Regular season, Season Summary, July\nDerek Jeter dives into stands chasing and catching a pop up in the 12th inning of a 3 to 3 game against the Boston Red Sox, the play was later named the dive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178336-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Yankees season, Regular season, Season Summary, August\nOn August 31 the Yankees had their worst loss in history by run differential, losing 22\u20130 to the Cleveland Indians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178336-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Yankees season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178336-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New York Yankees season, ALCS\nThe Yankees squared off against the Boston Red Sox in the 2004 American League Championship Series. This is the 2nd straight year these bitter rivals faced off for a trip to the World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 34], "content_span": [35, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178337-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Music Awards\nThe 2004 New Zealand Music Awards was the 39th holding of the annual ceremony featuring awards for musical artists based in or originating from New Zealand. The awards were hosted by Jaquie Brown and Mikey Havoc at Aotea Centre on 22 September 2004. Eligible works were released between 1 January 2003 and 31 May 2004. The ceremony was screened on television channel C4 the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178337-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Music Awards, Nominees and winners\nThree new categories were introduced in 2004: Best Rock Album, the People's Choice Award and Airplay Record of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178338-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand NBL season\nThe 2004 NBL season was the 23rd season of the National Basketball League. The Auckland Stars won the championship in 2004 to claim their eighth league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178339-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Warriors season\nThe 2004 New Zealand Warriors season was the 10th in the club's history. The club competed in Australasia's National Rugby League. The coach of the team was Daniel Anderson while Monty Betham was the club captain. Daniel Anderson resigned in June and was replaced by assistant coach Tony Kemp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178339-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Warriors season, Jersey & Sponsors\nThe Warriors made no changes to their jersey design for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178339-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Warriors season, Fixtures\nThe Warriors used Ericsson Stadium as their home ground in 2004, their only home ground since they entered the competition in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178339-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Warriors season, Fixtures, Pre-season Trials\nThe Warriors played the St. George Illawarra Dragons in Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178339-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Warriors season, Squad\nThirty five players were used by the Warriors in 2004, including seven players who made their first grade debuts. In addition PJ Marsh was in the squad but did not play a game due to a serious injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178339-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand Warriors season, Other Teams\nPlayers not required by the Warriors were released to play in the 2004 Bartercard Cup. These included Iafeta Paleaaesina, who played for the Hibiscus Coast Raiders, Brent Webb, who played for the North Harbour Tigers, Evarn Tuimavave, who played with the Marist-Richmond Brothers, Lance Hohaia, who played with the Waicoa Bay Stallions and the Eastern Tornadoes' Justin Murphy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178340-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand local elections\nTriennial elections for all 74 cities, districts, twelve regional councils and all district health boards in New Zealand were held on 9 October 2004. Most councils were elected using the first-past-the-post method, but ten (of which Wellington City was the largest) were elected using the single transferable vote (STV) method. It was the first time that the STV method was available; the change came through successful lobbying by Rod Donald.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178340-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand local elections, District health board elections\nFor the 2004 elections, single transferable vote was first used for all 21 district health boards (DHBs). In the 2001 elections (the inaugural elections for DHBs), first-past-the-post voting (FPP) was used based on local wards. From 2004 onwards, DHB candidates have been elected at large (i.e. across the whole voting area).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season\nThe 2004 New Zealand rugby league season was the 97th season of rugby league that had been played in New Zealand. The main feature of the year was the fifth season of the Bartercard Cup competition that was run by the New Zealand Rugby League. The Mt Albert Lions won the Cup by defeating the Marist Richmond Brothers 40\u201320 in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nThe New Zealand national rugby league team played Australia at North Harbour Stadium as part of the Tri-Nations tournament. The match was drawn 16-all. New Zealand finished third in the tournament, after failing to win in Great Britain. Earlier in the year New Zealand had lost the ANZAC Test 37\u201310 in Newcastle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nNew Zealand were coached by Daniel Anderson and for the Tri-Nations included; Vinnie and Louis Anderson, Roy Asotasi, Jason and Nathan Cayless, Alex Chan, Joe Galuvao, Dene Halatau, Shontayne Hape, David Kidwell, Wairangi Koopu, Ali Lauiti'iti, Thomas Leuluai, Francis Meli, Robbie Paul, Tony Puletua, Paul Rauhihi, Logan Swann, Motu Tony, Clinton Toopi, Matt Utai, Nigel Vagana, Lesley Vainikolo, Brent Webb, Paul Whatuira, captain Ruben Wiki, Jamahl Lolesi, Henry Fa'afili and Sonny Bill Williams. Sione Faumuina, Tevita Latu, Stephen Kearney and Jerry Seuseu played in the ANZAC Test but did not tour at the end of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nNew Zealand hosted the 2004 Pacific Cup which was played between New Zealand M\u0101ori, Fiji, Samoa, New Caledonia, Tonga and the Cook Islands. New Zealand M\u0101ori were coached by Tawera Nikau who was assisted by Terry Hermansson. The team included Aoterangi Herangi, Charlie Herekotukutuku, Herewini Rangi, Sonny Whakarau and Odell Manuel. During the season the New Zealand M\u0101ori Rugby League was put under New Zealand Rugby League administration after racking up $85,000 worth of debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nA New Zealand A side hosted New South Wales Country and, four months later, a Jim Beam Cup selection. The team included Frank-Paul Nuuausala, Paul Atkins, David Fisiiahi, Paul Fisiiahi, Misi Taulapapa, Karl Johnson, Corey Lawrie, captain Steve Buckingham, Simon Mannering, Daniel Vasau, Kane Ferris and Lee Tamatoa. They defeated the Country side 36-18 but lost to the Jim Beam Cup side 18\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nBoth teams took on Auckland in warm up matches. Auckland were coached by Stan Martin and included Paul Fisiiahi, Karl Johnson, Misi Taulapapa, Herewini Rangi, Anthony Swann and Paul Atkins. Auckland defeated NSW Country 22-14 but lost to the Jim Beam Cup side 30\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nA Residents team had competed at the Rugby League World Sevens earlier in the year. Coached by Graeme Norton, that team included Daniel Floyd, Steve Matai, Regan Wigg, Shannon Stowers and Gary Tupou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nThe Russian team toured the South Island, playing matches against the Tasman Orcas, the West Coast, Southland and Otago. They lost to the Tasman Orcas 32\u201316 in the opening game of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, International competitions\nSonny Bill Williams was named the New Zealand Rugby League's player of the year while referee Glen Black was named referee of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, National competitions, Bartercard Cup\nThe 2004 Bartercard Cup was the fifth season of the Bartercard Cup competition run by the New Zealand Rugby League. There were two major team changes before the start of the season. In Auckland, the Manurewa Marlins were replaced by the Counties Manukau Jetz franchise. Some clubs who had previously been aligned with the Marlins became affiliated with the Eastern Tornadoes. Due to the changing boundaries, the Ellerslie club left the Tornadoes and joined with the Otahuhu Leopards to form the Otahuhu Ellerslie Leopards. Outside of Auckland the Taranaki Wildcats dropped out of the competition after two dreadful seasons. In their place the Waicoa Bay Stallions were formed, representing the Waikato, Bay of Plenty and Coastlines districts. The Canterbury Bulls were again the only non-Auckland team to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, National competitions, Bartercard Cup, The Playoffs\nThe final was held at Ericsson Stadium, with the Fox Memorial Grand Final as a curtin raiser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, Australian competitions\nThe New Zealand Warriors competed in the National Rugby League competition. They finished 14th out of 15 teams and failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Auckland\nThe Mt Albert Lions won the Fox Memorial trophy, defeating the Mangere East Hawks 14\u201310 in the final. Mangere East won the Rukutai Shield (minor premiership). The Ellerslie Eagles won the preseason Roope Rooster trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 65], "content_span": [66, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178341-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby league season, Club competitions, Other Competitions\nThe Ngongotaha Chiefs defeated Ngaruawahia in Rotorua to win the Waicoa Bay championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178342-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby union tour of Europe\nThe 2004 New Zealand rugby union tour of Europe was a series of matches played in November\u2013December 2004 in Italy, France and Great Britain by New Zealand national rugby union team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178342-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nItaly: 15.Kaine Robertson, 14.Ludovico Nitoglia, 13.Walter Pozzebon, 12.Matteo Barbini, 11.Matteo Pratichetti, 10.Rima Wakarua, 9.Paul Griffen, 8.David dal Maso, 7.Mauro Bergamasco, 6.Aaron Persico, 5.Santiago Dellape, 4.Marco Bortolami (capt. ), 3.Salvatore Perugini, 2.Fabio Ongaro, 1.Andrea Lo Cicero, \u2013 replacements: 16.Giorgio Intoppa, 17.Salvatore Costanzo, 18.Enrico Pavanello, 19.Silvio Orlando, 20.Pietro Travagli, 21.Luciano Orquera, 22.Gert Peens New Zealand: 15.Mils Muliaina, 14.Rico Gear, 13.Conrad Smith, 12.Tana Umaga (capt), 11.Joe Rokocoko, 10.Dan Carter, 9.Byron Kelleher, 8.Mose Tuiali'i, 7.Richie McCaw, 6.Jerry Collins, 5.Norm Maxwell, 4.Chris Jack, 3.Carl Hayman, 2.Anton Oliver, 1.Saimone Taumoepeau, \u2013 replacements: 16.Corey Flynn, 17.Greg Somerville, 18.Ali Williams, 19.Steven Bates, 20.Jimmy Cowan, 21.Aaron Mauger, 22.Ma'a Nonu", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 911]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178342-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nWales: 15.Gareth Thomas(capt. ), 14.Tom Shanklin, 13.Sonny Parker, 12.Gavin Henson, 11.Shane Williams, 10.Stephen Jones, 9.Dwayne Peel, 8.Michael Owen, 7.Colin Charvis, 6.Dafydd Jones, 5.Gareth Llewellyn, 4.Brent Cockbain, 3.Adam R. Jones, 2.Mefin Davies, 1.Gethin Jenkins, \u2013 replacements: 16.Steve Jones, 17.Duncan Jones, 18.Ryan Jones, 19.Martyn Williams, 20.Gareth Cooper \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 21.Ceri Sweeney, 22.Rhys WilliamsNew Zealand: 15.Mils Muliaina, 14.Doug Howlett, 13.Casey Laulala, 12.Aaron Mauger, 11.Joe Rokocoko, 10.Dan Carter, 9.Piri Weepu, 8.Mose Tuiali'i, 7.Richie McCaw (capt. ), 6.Rodney So'oialo, 5.Ali Williams, 4.Chris Jack, 3.Greg Somerville, 2.Keven Mealamu, 1.Tony Woodcock, \u2013 replacements: 17.Carl Hayman, 20.Byron Kelleher, 21.Ma'a Nonu \u2013 No entry: 16.Anton Oliver, 18.Reuben Thorne, 19.Marty Holah, 22.Rico Gear", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178342-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 New Zealand rugby union tour of Europe, Results\nFrance: 15.Cl\u00e9ment Poitrenaud, 14.Aurelien Rougerie, 13.Tony Marsh, 12.Brian Liebenberg, 11.Cedric Heymans, 10.Julien Peyrelongue, 9.Frederic Michalak, 8.Imanol Harinordoquy, 7.Olivier Magne, 6.Serge Betsen, 5.Jerome Thion, 4.Fabien Pelous (capt. ), 3.Pieter de Villiers, 2.William Servat, 1.Sylvain Marconnet, \u2013 replacements: 16.Sebastien Bruno, 17.Olivier Milloud, 18.Pascal Pape, 19.Julien Bonnaire, 20.Mathieu Barrau, 21.Yannick Jauzion, 22.Christophe Dominici New Zealand: 15.Mils Muliaina, 14.Doug Howlett, 13.Conrad Smith, 12.Tana Umaga (capt. ), 11.Joe Rokocoko, 10.Dan Carter, 9.Byron Kelleher, 8.Rodney So'oialo, 7.Richie McCaw, 6.Jerry Collins, 5.Norm Maxwell, 4.Chris Jack, 3.Carl Hayman, 2.Anton Oliver, 1.Tony Woodcock, \u2013 replacements: 16.Keven Mealamu, 17.Greg Somerville, 18.Ali Williams, 21.Aaron Mauger, 22.Ma'a Nonu \u2013 No entry: 19.Mose Tuiali'i, 20.Piri Weepu", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 938]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178343-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Newcastle City Council election\nElections were held to Newcastle City Council on 10 June 2004, coinciding with elections to the European Parliament. The entire complement of 78 seats in the City were contested due to major boundary changes that year. The Liberal Democrats ended thirty years of Labour control and the table below shows the composition of the council following the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178344-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council election\nElections to Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178345-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nicholls State Colonels football team\nThe 2004 Nicholls State Colonels football team represented Nicholls State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Colonels were led by first-year head coach Jay Thomas. They played their home games at John L. Guidry Stadium and were a member of the Southland Conference. They finished the season 5\u20135, 2\u20133 in Southland play to finish in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178346-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nigerien general election\nGeneral elections were held in Niger in 2004; the first round of the presidential elections was held on 16 November, with a run-off held alongside National Assembly elections on 4 December. The presidential elections were won by Mamadou Tandja of the National Movement for the Development of Society (MNSD). The MNSD also emerged as the largest party in the National Assembly, winning 47 of the 113 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178346-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nigerien general election, Electoral system\nThe President was elected using the two-round system. The 113 members of the National Assembly were elected by two methods; 105 from eight multi-member constituencies by proportional representation system and the remaining eight members in special single-member constituencies to ensure representation of national minorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178346-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nigerien general election, Results, President\nNo candidate won a majority of votes in the first round, and a second round was held on 4 December between the two leading candidates \u2013 incumbent president Mamadou and Mahamadou Issoufou. All four of the candidates eliminated in the first round backed Tandja in the second round, and Tandja won the elections with 65.53% of the vote. International and local observers declared the entire process as free, fair, and transparent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178346-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nigerien general election, Aftermath\nFollowing the election, MNSD-Nassara resumed its previous ruling coalition with junior partner Democratic and Social Convention, whose 22 seats give a 69-seat majority in the National Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nThe 2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment was a series of events that occurred during the 2004 Nippon Professional Baseball season that changed the landscape of Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB). In June of that season, the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes and the Orix BlueWave announced that, due to financial difficulties, the two teams planned to merge into one for the start of the 2005 season. Both teams were in the Pacific League (PL), and a merger between the two would result in a team imbalance with the PL's opposing league, the Central League (CL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nSoon, it was announced that a second merger was being explored between two of the remaining four PL teams. With the possibility of the PL losing a second team, discussion about possibly restructuring NPB's two-league system into one ten-team league began. PL and CL executives continued to discuss the merits of both systems until it was finally decided that the two-league system would remain intact and interleague play would be introduced in the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nWhen the BlueWave and the Buffaloes first announced their merger plans, the Japan Professional Baseball Players Association (JPBPA) pledged to do everything possible to block the merger in order to protect the rights of NPB players. Leading up the a merger vote by team owners, the JPBPA filed two injunctions in an attempt to block the proposed merger and also began making preparations in anticpation of a labor strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nAfter the injunctions were denied, players association decided that the players would refuse to play in all scheduled Saturday and Sunday games for the final three weekends in September unless three conditions were met by September 10: suspension of the BlueWave/Buffaloes merger for at least one year, assurance that there would be no further team mergers, and reduction of the fees required for setting up a new NPB team. Days later, the owners voted to approve the team merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nThe Friday before the first planned weekend strike, a last-minute agreement was reach between the two parties allowed the players to play through the weekend. The following week, team officials definitively told the JPBPA that a one-year freeze on the merger was impossible. Negotiations continued into Friday, however, no agreement was reached. A two-day strike occurred on Saturday and Sunday, September 18\u201319, 2004. All twelve games scheduled for that weekend were cancelled as a result of the strike. The following Thursday, with the strike set to continue the during the upcoming weekend, players and team management came to an agreement. Players agreed not to stage a strike for the second straight weekend after team representatives eased the rules of entry for new teams into the professional leagues and that one would be allowed to join the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 914]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nIn late September, two Internet services companies, Livedoor and Rakuten, submitted applications to form a new team based in Sendai that would fill the void left by the merger. As the selection process progressed, both companies were given time to discuss their team and budget propositions before a panel of NPB executives. Livedoor, who had unsuccessfully attempted to purchase the Buffaloes from Kintetsu earlier in the year, announced that their new baseball club would be named the \"Sendai Livedoor Phoenix\", with former MLB and NPB player Tom O'Malley attached as manager and Katsunori Kojima as general manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment\nRakuten's new team planned to employ Marty Kuehnert and Yasushi Tao as general manager and manager, respectively, of their newly named \"Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles\" baseball club. In November, NPB selected Rakuten over Livedoor to create a new Pacific League team to be based in Sendai. It was the first time a new team, excluding cases of mergers or acquisitions, joined NPB since 1954.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Background\nUnlike Major League Baseball (MLB), Nippon Professional Baseball (NPB) does not require teams to participate in any revenue sharing strategies that would help correct revenue imbalances between teams because of game attendance and television broadcasting contracts. These issues are problematic because the Yomiuri Giants, the league's most popular team, generates revenue much easier than any other team. Daily Yomiuri baseball reporter Jim Allen, for example, estimates that the Giants account for 40% of all NPB television broadcasting revenue, while the eleven remaining teams account for the other 60%. Compounding this issue, NPB employs a \"reverse designation\" draft system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Background\nInstead of teams choosing players, as in MLB, players can choose what team they would like to play for. According to former Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles general manager Marty Kuehnert, the teams with the most money could offer amateur players money under the table in exchange for their pledge. Traditionally, NPB teams existed to advertise their parent company, unlike MLB teams that are businesses attempting to maximize their profits. With prime-time advertising spots being expensive in Japan, corporations bought NPB teams for the primary purpose of keeping themselves in the public eye for the entirety of a baseball season. For years, potential profits were secondary. The recession of the 1990s and 2000s started to change this mentality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger\nFor several years leading up to 2004, the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes reported yearly losses of approximately $40\u00a0million due to a drop in home-game attendance, rising player salaries and an annual $10\u00a0million charge for the use of the Osaka Dome, their home field. Kintetsu Corporation, the railway company that owned the Buffaloes, announced in January 2004 that it was planning to put the team's name up for sale after the 2005 season in an effort to make the team more profitable. However, NPB commissioner Yasuchika Negoro denied Kintetsu's request and the plan was abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger\nLater that year, Masanori Yamaguchi, president of Kintetsu, stated that the team had \"no prospect of paying dividends (to the parent company)\" in its current state. Meanwhile, the Orix BlueWave was also struggling to post a profit. The BlueWave's home-game attendance had been steadily declining after star player Ichiro Suzuki left the team to play in MLB in 2001, and the team finished the previous two seasons in last place. In June 2004, believing no one had any interest in purchasing the team, Buffaloes officials announced plans to merge with the BlueWave for the 2005 season. Yamaguchi saw the merger with Orix as the most realistic solution to both teams' financial problems. Later that same month, a panel of NPB executives accepted the proposed merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Livedoor attempts to purchase the Buffaloes\nShortly after Kintetsu and Orix announced their plans to merge their two clubs, details emerged that Livedoor Company, an Internet services company, proposed purchasing the Buffaloes. Livedoor President Takafumi Horie confirmed that if Livedoor was to purchase the team, the Buffaloes would be kept independent in order to leave the current 12-team, two-league system intact. Kintetsu quickly issued a statement, however, stating that they had turned down the proposal from Livedoor. Days later, Kintetsu emphasized this sentiment at a press conference by categorically refusing to sell the Buffaloes to Livedoor. Even though the team's players favored the proposed purchase, Yamaguchi refused to even meet with Horie to discuss the proposal and stated that, \u201cI wouldn\u2019t accept such an idea\u201d and \u201cThere isn\u2019t even a 1% [possibility of selling the team to Livedoor].\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 117], "content_span": [118, 984]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Livedoor attempts to purchase the Buffaloes\nA month later, as Livedoor continued to struggle to buy the Buffaloes for reportedly up to 3\u00a0billion yen ($27.5M in 2004), Horie expressed interest in starting a new team if he was unable to complete the purchase. He acknowledged how difficult it was for a new owner to break into Japanese professional baseball but he vowed to do \"whatever [he] could\" to make it happen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 117], "content_span": [118, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nSince its creation in 1950, NPB teams had been divided into two leagues: the Central League (CL) and the Pacific League (PL). The CL is the more popular of the two leagues thanks largely to the popularity of the Yomiuri Giants. In 2004, each league had six teams; both the Buffaloes and the BlueWave were Pacific League teams. The potential merger between the two clubs would drop the number of PL teams from six to five, which would then create a team imbalance between the two leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nDuring a July 7 owners' meeting where the twelve team owners approved the Orix-Kintetsu merger, talk of a second pair of PL teams merging arose. At the meeting, Seibu Lions owner Yoshiaki Tsutsumi stated that another merger between two of the remaining four PL teams was being explored. Rumors then surfaced about an ongoing merger plan between the Chiba Lotte Marines and the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks. Marines owner Akio Shigemitsu denied these rumors, however he made it clear that his team was open to the possibility. Eventually, it was revealed that Daiei had explored merger possibilities with both Seibu and Lotte and talks advanced with Lotte, however no agreement was ever reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nWith the possibility of the PL losing a second team, discussion about possibly restructuring NPB's two-league system into one ten-team league began. Tsutsumi and Yomiuri Giants owner Tsuneo Watanabe favored the idea of combining the Central and Pacific Leagues into one league. Watanabe even outlined a plan for a new championship competition he dubbed the \"Emperor\u2019s Cup\" that would replace the Japan Series if NPB was contracted to one league. His idea involved reducing the number of regular-season games to allow for a tournament that would pit teams against each other based on their geographic location. The regular-season winner and the tournament winner would then play each other to determine a champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nMeanwhile, senior adviser to the Hanshin Tigers Senichi Hoshino, who was manager of the club when they won the CL championship the previous year, argued to keep the current two-league format. He heavily criticized team owners for ignoring the voices of the players and fans, and it is believed that this criticism helped cause some team owners to abandon the movement toward one league. Not long after Hoshino's comments, Tigers team president Katsuyoshi Nozaki suddenly declared he was in favor of keeping the Central and Pacific League set-up and the team became the biggest supporter of the idea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nSoon, the majority of the other CL teams also favored the current two-league system. After garnering the support of fellow CL teams the Yakult Swallows and the Yokohama BayStars, Tigers' executives planned a meeting with all of the Central League teams excluding the Giants to attempt to draft an agreement against the move to a one-league system. Tigers' president Katsuyoshi Nozaki proposed interleague play as a possible solution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0009-0002", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nHe claimed that interleague play would allow Central and Pacific League teams to play each other an equal number of times so that it would seem that it was a one-league system, however the All-Star Series and the Japan Series could be saved. In the past, interleague play had been rejected by the CL teams because they did not want the PL teams to cut into the money they would receive from games played against the hugely popular Giants. Soon the last two CL teams, the Chunichi Dragons and the Hiroshima Carp, both expressed support for maintaining the two-league system, at least through the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nPL executives then came out strongly in favor of the Giants' one-league system with Pacific League President Tadao Koike citing the difficulty in operating a league consisting of only five or even four teams. On July 26, NPB held a seven-hour meeting in order to talk about the merits of both proposals, however no agreement could be reached. The issue was again discussed during a meeting in mid-August, though again the twelve teams could not agree on a solution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nDuring the meeting, all six PL teams reaffirmed that they were looking to move forward with their one-league plan if a second team merger occurred and ultimately brought the PL's team count from six to four, though no details of a second merger were disclosed. Most of the Central League teams requested that the Pacific League teams draw up a concrete timetable that explained the details of their plan to shift NPB into a one-league system so the issue could be further discussed during the next owners meeting on September 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nA week later, CL President Hajime Toyokura acknowledged that PL officials had informed him that they were working on specific plans for a second merger to present at a meeting a week later, however commissioner Yasuchika Negoro confirmed that nothing had yet been presented about a second merger plan and that he knew nothing about it. Citing history and tradition, Negoro also went on record to say that maintaining the two-league system was a priority for him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, One-league system proposed\nThese comments came after meeting with Democratic Party of Japan policy chief Yoshito Sengoku and other lawmakers to discuss the state of Japanese professional baseball. Sengoku himself also opposed the shift to a single league and was leading a campaign to put forward a proposal to keep the two-league system. Public support also seemed to favor keeping the current system. In a nationwide telephone survey conducted by Kyodo News, around 74% of people in Japan were in favor of maintaining the current two six-team leagues with only 12% supporting a shift to one league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 100], "content_span": [101, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nWhile NPB team owners and officials were discussing the possibility of a second team merger, fans and players were still opposing the first planned merger between the Kintetsu Buffaloes and the Orix BlueWave. After the merger plans were first announced in June, a group of supporters of the BlueWave turned in a petition signed by 17,800\u00a0fans who were in favor of maintaining the team's base in Kobe after the probable merger with the Kintetsu Buffaloes next season. Not long after, Buffaloes players began voicing opposition to the plans as well, stressing that all possibilities of keeping the team intact should be explored before a merger is decided upon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nDuring the All-Star Series in mid-July, the Japanese baseball players' union, the Japan Professional Baseball Players Association (JPBPA), gathered and discussed the possibility of a players' strike at some time in the future if the owners refused to talk with the players. Buffaloes and BlueWave fans also assembled near the stadiums hosting the All-Star Series to collect signatures, with the intention of presenting petitions opposing the Kintetsu-Orix merger to baseball officials. By the end of July, the Giants' players association joined the Buffaloes', the Dragons', the BayStars', the Swallows' and the Tigers' to become the sixth team of twelve to hold a signature drive to oppose a move to a one-league format and the planned BlueWave and Buffaloes merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nOn August 10, Kintetsu and Orix advanced merger plans by officially signing an agreement that outlined the basic details of the planned team merger, including that the new merged club would be run by a new company jointly owned by the parent companies of the two teams, 80% by Orix and the rest by Kintetsu. The next day, approximately 300\u00a0fans protested the merger by marching with signs and chantings slogans in Tokyo's Hibiya district. Days later, JPBPA members voted overwhelmingly for the right to strike as part of a bid to maintain the two-league system and prevent team mergers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nOf about 750\u00a0members of the players\u2019 union, 98% voted in favor of strike rights. Fewer than ten members opposed striking. The Japan Trade Union Confederation (RENGO) also supported the association by giving advice on how to set up a strike as well as labor-management negotiation strategies and how to effectively circulate petitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nThe Kintetsu and Orix merger plan was finalized in late August when the two teams signed a formal contract. That same day, JPBPA filed for an injunction against the planned merger with the Tokyo District Court. The suit was filed by the JPBPA head Atsuya Furuta as well as Koichi Isobe and Takashi Miwa, who represented the players of Kintetsu and Orix, respectively. The association decided to take legal action after NPB officials either turned down or ignored a series of demands made by the JPBPA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nThese demands included establishing a special committee to handle contractual issues for the players affected by the merger, including club management and players\u2019 representatives in any decision-making processes of such a committee, and to postpone the merger for at least one year to reassess its advisability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0015-0002", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nThe documents filed with the court outlined the association's demands to establish a special committee that would meet and adopt resolutions before any decisions were made and to allow the JPBPA to conduct collective negotiations on a range of merger-related issues, as a large number of players would be expected to lose their jobs should the merger go through.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nMeanwhile, Pacific League President Koike quoted Giants president Watanabe as telling him that if the number of teams in the PL was reduced to four through team mergers, both the Central League and Pacific League should have five teams each, with the Giants moving to the PL to equalize the number of teams in each league. Commissioner Negoro addressed these statements, saying that NPB was not considering having the Giants switch leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nHe also stated that no decision had been made concerning whether Japanese baseball would contract to one league or keep the two-league system in some form, but that both options were being explored. Lions owner Tsutsumi, who had first revealed plans of a second PL team merger plan back in July, then denied recent reports that his club would merge with the Marines but offered no other details about the rumored second merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nNPB officials agreed to postpone the official merger vote that was planned to occur on September 8 pending a judgement on the JPBA's injunction request, however the Tokyo District Court rejected the association's request one week after it was submitted and the vote proceeded as planned. Following the District Court's decision, the association immediately appealed to the Tokyo High Court, however this appeal was also rejected several days later. The same day the association lost their injunction appeal, NPB executives met to discuss the merger and league realignment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, Merger approved\nThe twelve owners voted and approved the Buffaloes and BlueWave merger plan, leaving the PL with five teams instead of six for the 2005 season. They also agreed to maintain the two-league format but would explore the idea of introducing interleague games for the next season. And finally, while they also agreed to reconsider the requirements for new teams to enter the leagues, they decided that they could not put off the merger plans for another season because of the dire financial circumstances of the Buffaloes, thus setting the stage for a player strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nWhen the Orix BlueWave and the Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes announced their merger plans in June, JPBPA head and then-Yakult Swallows catcher Furuta vowed that his organization would do everything possible to block the merger in order to protect the rights of the 752\u00a0professional players in NPB. It was estimated that up to 100\u00a0players and team personnel could lose their jobs as a result of the merger. Furuta claimed that \"Japanese baseball [was] at a crossroads\u201d and it was \"the most important time in [their] 70-year history\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nIn addition to submitting a court injunction to block the proposed merger, the association received the support of the Japan Fair Trade Commission (JFTC) leading up to the merger vote. The JFTC called on NPB to offer up a clear explanation as to why Livedoor's bid to buy the Buffaloes wasn't considered. Anticipating the possibility of a player strike, the JPBPA also consulted with the Major League Baseball Players Association on how to proceed. According to Furuta, however, Japanese baseball's possible strike situation was different from MLB's 1994 strike because the Japanese players had the support of their fans. By September, close to one million fans had signed petitions opposing the merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nFuruta was skeptical of the losses reported by the teams but conceded that if the losses were accurate then player salaries would have to be adjusted accordingly. The players' association made several suggestions to improve the teams' financial situations, including relaxing the rules on how much player salaries could be reduced as well as proposing a luxury tax that would result in the reduction of player salaries. Furthermore, the JPBPA supported the two-league system, proposed interleague play and a fairer distribution of television broadcast revenue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nDays before the planned merger vote, the players' association decided that they would refuse to play all games scheduled on Saturdays and Sundays for the rest of September unless three conditions were met by September\u00a010: suspension of the BlueWave/Buffaloes merger for at least one year, assurance that there would be no further team mergers, and reduction of the fees required for setting up a new NPB team. Despite this ultimatum, owners went ahead and approved the merger two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nThe next day, team management and players met for six hours in Osaka looking to agree on a compromise deal in an attempt to avert a strike the next day, but failed to reach an agreement. On Friday, the next day and the final day before the proposed strike, a last-minute agreement was reach between the two parties that allowed the players to play through the weekend. The JBLPA conceded some demands once team representatives assured the players that there would be no further mergers and that negotiations on the other two issues would continue until September 17, the next day the players could strike under the association's plans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nOn the following Thursday, during on-going negotiations, team officials definitively told the JPBPA that a one-year freeze on the BlueWave/Buffaloes merger, one of the three demands set by the association to avoid a strike, was impossible. Two Internet service companies had applied to start new Japanese baseball teams in the wake of the professional leagues losing a team, however NPB representatives maintained that the 2006 season would be the earliest a new team could enter. The players wanted any new teams ready for the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nNegotiations continued into Friday and lasted four hours past the 5\u00a0pm deadline, however, no agreement was reached and the players proceeded to stage the first and only strike in Japanese professional baseball history. The two-day strike occurred on Saturday and Sunday, September 18\u201319, 2004. All twelve games scheduled for that weekend were cancelled as a result of the strike. In place of these games, players instead staged a variety of events at stadiums and other venues. These events included autograph sessions, on-field baseball training, and opportunities for fans to meet players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Players strike\nThe following Thursday, with the strike set to continue the during the upcoming weekend, players and management came to an agreement. Players agreed not to stage a strike for the second straight weekend after team representatives eased the rules of entry for new teams into the professional leagues and that one would be allowed to join the following season. The two-day strike caused economic losses totaling approximately 1.89\u00a0billion yen (17.2\u00a0million in 2004), according to researchers from Osaka Prefecture University. Estimated attendance at the 12\u00a0games would have generated 1.68 billion yen through ticket, food and drink sales. Additionally, an estimated 200\u00a0million yen in broadcast revenue was lost from the two cancelled Yomiuri Giants games. Players received salary cuts totaling 190\u00a0million yen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nAfter Livedoor had unsuccessfully attempted to purchase the Buffaloes from Kintetsu earlier in the year, Livedoor President Takafumi Horie indicated that he intended to start a new professional baseball team that would fill the void left by the merger of the Orix BlueWave and the Buffaloes. On September 17, Livedoor established a new professional team and applied for team ownership with NPB. Horie said that the team would be composed of players who were left jobless after the Buffaloes/BlueWave merger and would be based in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture. One week later a second Internet services company, Tokyo-based Rakuten, also submitted a formal application to Japanese professional baseball to form a team. Like Horie, Rakuten president Hiroshi Mikitani also expressed a desire to locate his new team in Sendai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nIn early October, the public screening process to select one of the two companies and allow them form a new NPB team began. Both Livedoor and Rakuten were given an hour and a half to discuss their team and budget propositions before a panel of five Japanese baseball executives. The panel consisted of Central League chairman Hajime Toyokura and the head officials of the Yomiuri Giants, the Yokohama BayStars, the Seibu Lions and the Chiba Lotte Marines. The screening standards include the adequacy of the applications, the prospective continuity and stability of the planned baseball teams, the prospective financial standings of the applicants and planned teams, and their planned baseball facilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nAs screenings were held weekly through October, more details about each potential new team emerged. Livedoor announced that their baseball club would be named the \"Sendai Livedoor Phoenix\", with former MLB and NPB player Tom O'Malley attached as manager and Katsunori Kojima as general manager. Rakuten, likewise, announced Marty Kuehnert and Yasushi Tao as general manager and manager, respectively, of their newly named \"Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles\" baseball club. Both clubs planned play out of Miyagi Stadium. Upon registering the trademark for their name, Rakuten learned that Livedoor had registered an \"eagles\" trademark one day earlier. Livedoor allowed Rakuten to use the name, however, after it placed second behind \"phoenix\" in an internet poll that the company was using to determine the name of their team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nA telephone survey conducted by Kyodo News during the selection period of 300\u00a0people living in the T\u014dhoku region indicated that Livedoor was the early fan favorite to win the right to start a new team in Sendai. In the survey, forty percent of the respondents supported Livedoor's bid compared to only seven percent supporting Rakuten. Rakuten, however, was considered the more likely of the two companies to be chosen by NPB. Rakuten president Mikitani had extensive connections in established Japanese business circles and already operated another sports team, the soccer club Vissel Kobe in Japan's J.League. On November 2, NPB selected Rakuten over Livedoor to create a new Pacific League team to be based in Sendai. It was the first time a new team, excluding cases of mergers or acquisitions, joined NPB since the creation of the now-defunct Takahashi Unions in the Pacific League in 1954.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 965]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nThe Eagles and the newly merged Orix Buffaloes constructed their rosters from the 107\u00a0players left over from the dissolved Kintetsu and original Orix teams during a special distribution draft held on November 8. Before the draft, Orix was allowed to select 25\u00a0players that would be protected from the distribution process and thus giving them preferential signing rights. Included in this list were all free agents and foreign players. Rakuten was then allowed to select 20 unprotected players, not including any first- or second-year players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nAfter that, the first- and second-year players were unprotected and Orix and Rakuten alternating selecting 20\u00a0more players for the last round of the draft. Any player that was not selected during the draft defaulted back to Orix, guaranteeing that all players would play the next season. Of the 40\u00a0players the Eagles selected, 17\u00a0were pitchers and 23\u00a0were position players. On Orix's list of protected players was Hisashi Iwakuma, the Kintetsu Buffaloes' pitcher who led the league in wins the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Creation of a new team\nIwakuma, however, had wished to be left off of the list as he had no intention of playing for the newly formed team because of their involvement in the merger. He insisted that Orix team president Takashi Koizumi live up to his pledge that he would sincerely listen to the players involved in the merger regarding their futures. After four rounds of talks between Iwakuma and Koizumi, negotiations broke down and the JPBPA was brought in to mediate. Eventually, Orix agreed to trade Iwakuma to the Eagles in exchange for cash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Aftermath\nDays after the players' strike, owners met on September 2 and approved a plan to hold interleague regular-season games during the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Aftermath\nThe Osaka Kintetsu Buffaloes ended their 55-year history when the team merged with the Orix BlueWave to form the Orix Buffaloes on December 1. The new team used both Kintetsu's former home stadium, the Osaka Dome, and Orix's, the Yahoo! BB Stadium in Kobe, as their home stadiums. It was the first team merger since the Daiei Unions were absorbed by the Mainichi Orions in November 1957.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178347-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball realignment, Aftermath\nThe results of a nationwide telephone survey conducted by Kyodo News showed that 61.6 percent of respondents believed Japanese baseball would become more interesting with the addition the new Sendai-based Golden Eagles while 26.1 percent said they were unconvinced that the addition of the team would not increase fan interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 56], "content_span": [57, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178348-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball season\nThe 2004 Nippon Professional Baseball season ended with the Seibu Lions defeating the Chunichi Dragons in the 2004 Japan Series. This season also saw the first and only players strike in Japanese professional baseball history. Players went on strike for two days in September because of the potential mergers and realignment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178348-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nippon Professional Baseball season, Standings\nNote:Two games for each team are cancelled due to players' strike", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier\nThe 2004 Nokia Brier was held from March 6 to 14 at Saskatchewan Place in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. The Nova Scotia team skipped by Mark Dacey defeated the Alberta team of Randy Ferbey in dramatic fashion in the final game played on March 14. Ferbey's team was attempting to become Canadian champion for the fourth consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nFourth: David Nedohin Skip: Randy Ferbey Second: Scott Pfeifer Lead: Marcel Rocque Fifth: Dan Holowaychuk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Jay Peachey Third: Ron Leech Second: Kevin Recksiedler Lead: Brad Fenton Fifth: Jamie Smith", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Brent Scales Third: Gord Hardy Second: Grant Spicer Lead: Todd Trevellyan Fifth: Doug Harrison", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Russ Howard Third: James Grattan Second: Marc LeCocq Lead: Grant Odishaw Fifth: Steve Howard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Brad Gushue Third: Mark Nichols Second: Jamie Korab Lead: Mark Ward Fifth: Mike Adam", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Rob Gordon Third: Brian Fawcett Second: Steve Burnett Lead: Jeramie Landry Fifth: Larry Carr", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Mark Dacey Third: Bruce Lohnes Second: Rob Harris Lead: Andrew Gibson Fifth: Mat Harris", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Mike Harris Third: John Base Second: Phil Loevenmark Lead: Trevor Wall Fifth: Ross Scarrow", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Mike Gaudet Third: Evan Sullivan Second: Craig Arsenault Lead: Sean Ledgerwood Fifth: Rod MacDonald", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Daniel Lafleur Third: Steeve Gagnon Second: Jean-S\u00e9bastien Roy Lead: Maurice Cayouette Fifth: Serge Friolet", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Bruce Korte Third: Clint Dieno Second: Roger Korte Lead: Roy Galonowski Fifth: Darrell McKee", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Teams\nSkip : Brian Wasnea Third: Pat Molloy Second: Bruce Hunt Lead: Kevin Sumner Fifth: Clarence Jack", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Round robin standings\nNova Scotia finished first as they defeated Alberta 8\u20137 in draw 13. Most of the draws were televised live on TSN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Round robin results\nAll draw times are listed in Central Standard Time (UTC\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Playoffs\nThe Brier uses the page playoff system, where the top four teams with the best records at the end of round-robin play meet in the playoff rounds. The first and second place teams play each other, with the winner advancing directly to the final. The winner of the other page playoff game between the third and fourth place teams plays the loser of the first/second playoff game in the semi-final. The winner of the semi-final moves on to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Playoffs\nNormally the 3 versus 4 page playoff game is played before the 1 versus 2 playoff game on Friday. However, since a tiebreaker was played this year on the same day to decide fourth place, the 1 versus 2 game was played first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 26], "content_span": [27, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Playoffs, Page playoffs\nGame one of the page playoffs was between Mark Dacey's team from Nova Scotia (first overall) versus Randy Ferbey's team from Alberta (second overall).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Playoffs, Page playoffs\nGame two of the page playoffs was between Brad Gushue's team from Newfoundland and Labrador (third overall) versus Jay Peachey's team from British Columbia (fourth overall).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Playoffs, Semifinal\nThe semifinal was played between Mark Dacey's team from Nova Scotia and Jay Peachey's team from British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178349-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Nokia Brier, Playoffs, Final\nThe final was played and televised on the CBC across Canada. Ferbey led 8\u20134 after the 7th end but Dacey's team put themselves back into the game with a big 3 point 8th end. Forcing Alberta to take a single in the 9th, Dacey was 2 down coming home but had last rock advantage. A couple of errors by Ferbey's team and some good shot making, gave Nova Scotia 3 points in the 10th end and the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178350-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nord-Pas-de-Calais regional election\nA regional election took place in Nord-Pas-de-Calais on 21 and 28 March 2004, along with all other regions. Daniel Percheron (PS) was re-elected President of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178351-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open\nThe 2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts that was part of the Tier IV category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the third edition of the tournament and took place in Stockholm, Sweden from 2 August until 8 August 2004. Third-seeded Alicia Molik won the singles title and earned $22,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178351-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open, Finals, Doubles\nAlicia Molik / Barbara Schett defeated Emmanuelle Gagliardi / Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178352-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open \u2013 Doubles\nEvgenia Kulikovskaya and Elena Tatarkova were the defending champions, but Kulikovskaya did not compete this year. Tatarkova teamed up with Martina Navratilova and lost in first round to Maria Elena Camerin and Flavia Pennetta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178352-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open \u2013 Doubles\nAlicia Molik and Barbara Schett won the title by defeating Emmanuelle Gagliardi and Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178353-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open \u2013 Singles\nAnna Smashnova-Pistolesi was the defending champion, but was forced to retire in her second round match against Sandra Kleinov\u00e1 due to a hamstring injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178353-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordea Nordic Light Open \u2013 Singles\nAlicia Molik won the title by defeating Tatiana Perebiynis 6\u20131, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178354-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordic Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Nordic Figure Skating Championships were held from February 13th through 15th, 2004 at the Olympiarinken in Helsingborg, Sweden. The competition was open to elite figure skaters from Nordic countries. Skaters competed in two disciplines, men's singles and ladies' singles, across two levels: senior (Olympic-level) and junior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178355-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships\nThe FIS Nordic Junior World Ski Championships 2004 took place in Stryn, Norway from 3 February to 8 February 2004. It was the 27th Junior World Championships in nordic skiing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election\nElections to choose members of the North Carolina Council of State (who head executive branch departments) were held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election\nIn all but two races (Superintendent of Public Instruction and Labor Commissioner), incumbent Democrats sought re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election\nThe U.S. Presidential election, U.S. House election, U.S. Senate election, North Carolina gubernatorial election, North Carolina General Assembly election, and North Carolina judicial elections were all held on the same day. Note that the Governor and Lt. Governor are also members of the Council of State, but their elections are covered in the article on the 2004 gubernatorial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election\nOn a national level, Republican George W. Bush captured the state's electoral votes while incumbent Democratic governor Mike Easley won a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, Secretary of State\nIncumbent Democratic Secretary of State Elaine Marshall defeated both a primary challenge from Doris A. Sanders and from Republican challenger Jay Rao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, State Auditor\nLes Merritt, a former Wake County commissioner, and 2000 candidate, narrowly defeated 3-term incumbent State Auditor Ralph Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, Attorney General\nNorth Carolina's incumbent Attorney General, Roy Cooper, defeated Republican challenger Joe Knott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, State Treasurer\nIncumbent State Treasurer Richard H. Moore defeated Republican challenger Edward Meyer by an eight-point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, Superintendent of Public Instruction, General Assembly vote of August 24, 2005\nWith the resignation of Mike Ward, the Superintendent of Public Instruction race was the only 2004 Council of State contest in which there was no incumbent; consequently both major parties saw contested primaries. On the Republican side, former Wake County board of education member Bill Fletcher easily bested retired professor Jeanne Smoot. The Democratic primary between state Department of Instruction official June Atkinson, North Carolina Board of Education member J. B. Buxton and state agricultural education coordinator Marshall Stewart led to a second primary. Stewart polled narrowly ahead of Atkinson in the first primary, but failed to capture the 40% support needed to take the nomination. In a statewide runoff primary, Atkinson captured the Democratic nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 125], "content_span": [126, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, Superintendent of Public Instruction, General Assembly vote of August 24, 2005\nThe race, along with the race for Agriculture Commissioner (see below) was caught up for nearly a month in a statewide recount because of the narrow margin. Fletcher argued that provisional ballots, required under the Help America Vote Act of 2002 for federal races, were improperly counted in state races under North Carolina law. However, on 30 November 2004, the State Board of Elections certified Atkinson the winner. Fletcher appealed the recision to the North Carolina Supreme Court. Atkinson, in turn, petitioned the North Carolina General Assembly to resolve the disputed election. On August 24, 2005, the General Assembly met in a joint session to vote on the disputed election, as the state constitution called for. Atkinson won this vote and was sworn-in that afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 125], "content_span": [126, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, Superintendent of Public Instruction, General Assembly vote of August 24, 2005\nThe election of the Superintendent of Public Instruction was the last American election from 2004 to be decided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 125], "content_span": [126, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, North Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture\nInterim Agriculture Commissioner Britt Cobb defeated former state representative Tom Gilmore to take the Democratic nomination; Steve Troxler, the 2000 candidate for this position, was unopposed for the Republican nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, North Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture\nBecause of the loss of about 4,000 votes in Carteret County, North Carolina, the race for State Agriculture Commissioner could not be resolved for several months. Although the North Carolina Board of Elections certified the close race for State Superintendent of Public Instruction on 30 November 2004, they reached an impasse on the Agriculture Commissioner Race, splitting 3-2 in favor of calling a new statewide election for the seat over calling a new election in Carteret County alone; 4 votes would have been required to take action on either option.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, North Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture\nIn early December, the North Carolina Board of Elections ordered a new election for January 11, 2005, in Carteret County alone, for voters whose ballots had been lost or who had not voted in the November 2 election. Both candidates appealed the decision, Cobb arguing that a statewide revote should be held, Troxler arguing that a revote should be limited to those voters whose votes were lost. A Wake County superior court judge overturned this decision on December 17, calling it \"arbitrary and capricious\" and \"contrary to law,\" requiring the State Board of Elections to revisit the issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, North Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture\nOn December 29, the State Board of Elections ordered a new statewide election for the post. On January 13, 2005, the superior court invalidated this order as well, and sent the contest back to the Elections Board for resolution. Following this ruling, Cobb conceded defeat. On February 4, the State Board of Elections officially certified Troxler as the winner of the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 89], "content_span": [90, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, Commissioner of Labor\nIncumbent Cherie Berry, the only sitting Republican on the Council of State, defeated both a primary challenge from Lloyd T. Funderburg and a general election challenge from state representative Wayne Goodwin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178356-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Council of State election, State Insurance Commissioner\nFive-term incumbent Jim Long defeated a challenge from Republican C. Robert Brawley to win the greatest number of votes for any candidate in the 2004 Council of State elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 75], "content_span": [76, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election\nAn election was held on November 2, 2004 to elect all 120 members to North Carolina's House of Representatives. The election coincided with elections for other offices, including the Presidency, U.S Senate, Governorship, U.S. House of Representatives, Council of State, and state senate. The primary election was held on July 20, 2004 with a run-off occurring on August 17, 2004. These elections were the first to use new district lines drawn by the General Assembly to account the for changes in population amongst each of the districts after the 2000 census. The 2002 elections had been conducted under a map ordered by the North Carolina Superior Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 1\nIncumbent Democrat Bill Owens has represented the 1st District since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 2\nIncumbent Democrat Bill Culpepper has represented the 2nd district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 3\nIncumbent Republican Michael Gorman has represented the 3rd district since 2003. Gorman lost re-nomination to fellow Republican Michael Speciale. Former Democratic representative Alice Graham Underhill defeated Speciale in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 4\nThe new 4th district includes all of Duplin County and a portion of Onslow County. Former Democratic representative Russell Tucker won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 5\nIncumbent Democrat Howard Hunter Jr. has represented the 5th district since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 6\nThe new 6th district includes the homes Incumbent Democrats Arthur Williams, who has represented the 6th district since 2003, and Charles Elliott Johnson, who has represented the 4th district since 2003. Johnson sought the Democratic nomination for Senate District 3 challenging incumbent Clark Jenkins, but he was defeated by Jenkins. Williams was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 7\nIncumbent Democrat John Hall has represented the 7th district since his appointment on 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 8\nIncumbent Democrat Edith Warren has represented the 8th district and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 9\nIncumbent Democrat Marian McLawhorn has represented the 9th district since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 99], "content_span": [100, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 10\nIncumbent Republican Stephen LaRoque has represented the 10th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 11\nIncumbent Republican Louis Pate has represented the 11th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 12\nIncumbent Democrat William Wainwright has represented the 12th district and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 13\nIncumbent Republican Jean Preston has represented the 13th district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 14\nIncumbent Republican Keith Williams has represented the 14th district since 2005. Williams lost re-nomination to fellow Republican George Cleveland. Cleveland won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 15\nIncumbent Republican Robert Grady has represented the 15th district and its predecessors since 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 16\nIncumbent Republican Carolyn Justice has represented the 16th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 17\nIncumbent Republican Bonner Stiller has represented the 17th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 18\nIncumbent Democrat Thomas Wright has represented the 18th district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-19, District 19\nIncumbent Republican Danny McComas has represented the 19th district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 100], "content_span": [101, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 20\nIncumbent Democrat Dewey Hill has represented the 20th district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 21\nIncumbent Democrat Larry Bell has represented the 21st district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 22\nIncumbent Democrat Edd Nye has represented the 22nd district and its predecessors since 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 23\nIncumbent Democrat Joe Tolson has represented the 23rd district and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 24\nIncumbent Democrat Jean Farmer-Butterfield has represented the 24th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 25\nIncumbent Republican Bill Daughtridge has represented the 25th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 26\nThe new 26th district includes the homes Incumbent Republicans Billy Creech, who has represented the 26th district and its predecessors since 1989, and Leo Daughtry, who has represented the 28th district and its predecessors since 1993. Creech ran for the U.S House and Daughtry was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 27\nIncumbent Democrat Stanley Fox has represented the 27th district and its predecessors since 1995. Fox didn\u2019t seek re-election and fellow Democrat Michael Wray won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 28\nThe new 28th district continues to be based in Johnston County and continues to favor Republicans. Republican James Langdon Jr. won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 29\nIncumbent Democrat Paul Miller has represented the 29th district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 30\nIncumbent Democrat Paul Luebke has represented the 30th district and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 31\nIncumbent Democrat Mickey Michaux has represented the 31st district and its predecessors since 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 32\nIncumbent Democrat Jim Crawford has represented the 32nd district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 33\nIncumbent Democrat Bernard Allen has represented the 33rd district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 34\nIncumbent Republican Don Munford has represented the 34th district since 2003. Munford lost re-election to Democrat Grier Martin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 35\nIncumbent Democrat Jennifer Weiss has represented the 35th district and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 36\nIncumbent Republican David Miner has represented the 36th district since 1993. Miner lost re-nomination to fellow Republican Nelson Dollar. Dollar won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 37\nIncumbent Republican Paul Stam has represented the 37th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 38\nIncumbent Democrat Deborah Ross has represented the 38th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 20-39, District 39\nIncumbent Republican Sam Ellis has represented the 39th district and its predecessors since 1993. Ellis lost re-election to Democrat Linda Coleman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 40\nIncumbent Republican Rick Eddins has represented the 40th district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 41\nThe new 41st district overlaps with much of the former 50th district. Incumbent Republican Russell Capps, who has represented the 50th district and its predecessors since 1995, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 42\nIncumbent Democrat Marvin Lucas has represented the 42nd district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 43\nIncumbent Democrat Mary McAllister has represented the 43rd district and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 44\nThe new 44th district overlaps with much of the former 41st district. Incumbent Democrat Margaret Dickson, who has represented the 41st district since 2003, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 45\nThe new 45th district includes the homes of Incumbent Democrats Alex Warner, who has represented the 45th district and its predecessors since 1987, and Rick Glazier, who has represented the 44th district since 2003. Glazier defeated Warner in the Democratic primary and won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 46\nIncumbent Democrat Douglas Yongue has represented the 46th district and its predecessors since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 47\nIncumbent Democrat Ronnie Sutton has represented the 47th district since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 48\nIncumbent Democrat Donald Bonner has represented the 48th district and its predecessors since 1997. Bonner didn\u2019t seek re-election and fellow Democrat Garland Pierce won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 49\nIncumbent Democrat Lucy Allen has represented the 49th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 50\nThe new 50th district includes all of Caswell County and part of Orange County. Democrat Bill Faison won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 51\nIncumbent Republican John Sauls has represented the 51st district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 52\nIncumbent Republican Co-Speaker of the House Richard Morgan has represented the 52nd district and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 53\nIncumbent Republican David Lewis has represented the 53rd district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 54\nIncumbent Democratic Majority Leader Joe Hackney has represented the 54th district and its predecessors since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 55\nIncumbent Democrat Gordon Allen has represented the 55th district and its predecessors since 1997. Allen didn\u2019t seek re-election and Democrat Winkie Wilkins won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 56\nIncumbent Democrat Verla Insko has represented the 56th district and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 57\nIncumbent Republican Joanne Bowie has represented the 57th district and its predecessors since 1989. Bowie lost re-election to Democrat Pricey Harrison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 58\nIncumbent Democrat Alma Adams has represented the 58th district and its predecessors since 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 40-59, District 59\nIncumbent Democrat Maggie Jeffus has represented the 59th district since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 60\nIncumbent Democrat Earl Jones has represented the 60th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 61\nIncumbent Republican Stephen Wood has represented the 61st District since 2003. Wood lost re-nomination to fellow Republican Republican Laura Wiley. Wiley won the general election unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 62\nIncumbent Republican John Blust has represented the 62nd District and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 63\nIncumbent Democrat Alice Bordsen has represented the 63rd District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 64\nIncumbent Republican Cary Allred has represented the 64th District and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 65\nThe new 65th district includes the homes of Incumbent Democrat Nelson Cole, who has represented the 65th District since and its predecessors since 1997, and Incumbent Republican Wayne Sexton, who has represented the 66th district and its predecessors since 1993. Cole defeated Sexton in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 66\nThe new 66th district overlaps with much of the former 68th district. Incumbent Democrat Wayne Goodwin, who has represented the 68th district and its predecessors since 1997, didn\u2019t seek re-election. He instead ran for Labor Commissioner and his wife, Democrat Melanie Wade Goodwin won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 67\nThe new 67th district overlaps with much of the former 70th district. Incumbent Republican Bobby Barbee Sr, who has represented the 70th District since 1987, lost re-nomination here to fellow Republican David Almond. Almond won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 68\nThe new 68th district overlaps with much of the former 73rd district. Incumbent Republican Curtis Blackwood, who has represented the 73rd District since 2003, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 69\nIncumbent Democrat Pryor Gibson has represented the 69th district and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 70\nThe new 70th district overlaps with much of the former 67th district. Incumbent Republican Arlie Culp, who has represented the 67th District and its predecessors since 1989, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 71\nIncumbent Democrat Larry Womble has represented the 71st District and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 72\nIncumbent Democrat Earline Parmon has represented the 72nd District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 73\nThe new 73rd district overlaps with much of the former 94th district. Incumbent Republican Michael Decker(though he had spent much of the last term as a Democrat), who has represented the 94th district and its predecessors since 1985 lost re-nomination here to fellow Republican Larry Brown, who won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 74\nThe 74th district is based in Forsyth County and it is expected to favor Republicans. Republican Dale Folwell won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 75\nThe new 75th district overlaps with much of the former 93rd district. Incumbent Republican Bill McGee, who has represented the 93rd District since 2003 was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 76\nIncumbent Republican Fred Steen II has represented the 76th District since his appointment in February 2004. Steen was elected to a full term unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 77\nIncumbent Democrat Lorene Coates has represented the 77th District since and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 78\nIncumbent Republican Harold Brubaker has represented the 78th District and its predecessors since 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 60-79, District 79\nThe new 79th district includes the homes of Incumbent Republicans Julia Craven Howard, who has represented the 79th District and its predecessors since 1989, and Frank Mitchell, who has represented the 96th district and its predecessors since 1993. Howard defeated Mitchell in the Republican primary and won the general election unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 80\nIncumbent Republican Jerry Dockham has represented the 80th district and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 81\nIncumbent Democrat Hugh Holliman has represented the 81st District and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 82\nThe new 82nd district overlaps with much of the former 75th district. Incumbent Republican Jeff Barnhart, who has represented the 75th district since 2001, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 83\nThe new 83rd district overlaps with much of the former 74th district. Incumbent Republican Linda Johnson, who has represented the 74th District and its predecessors since 2001, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 84\nIncumbent Republican Phillip Frye has represented the 84th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 85\nIncumbent Republican Mitch Gillespie has represented the 85th District since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 86\nIncumbent Republican Walt Church has represented the 86th District and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 87\nIncumbent Republican Edgar Starnes has represented the 87th District and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 88\nThe new 88th district includes all of Alexander County and a portion of Catawba County. Republican Mark Hollo won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0089-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 89\nIncumbent Republican Mitchell Setzer has represented the 89th District and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0090-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 90\nIncumbent Democrat Jim Harrell has represented the 90th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0091-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 91\nIncumbent Republican Rex Baker, who has represented the 91st District and its predecessors since 1995, lost re-nomination to fellow Republican Bryan Holloway. Holloway won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0092-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 92\nIncumbent Republican George Holmes has represented the 92nd district and its predecessors since 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0093-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 93\nThe new 93rd district overlaps with much of the former 82nd district. Incumbent Republican Gene Wilson, who has represented the 82nd district and its predecessors since 1995, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0094-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 94\nThe new 94th district overlaps with much of the former 83rd district. Incumbent Republican Tracy Walker, who has represented the 83rd District and its predecessors since 2001, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0095-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 95\nIncumbent Republican Karen Ray has represented the 95th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0096-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 96\nThe new 96th district overlaps with much of the former 88th district. Incumbent Republican Mark Hilton, who has represented the 88th District and its predecessors since 2001, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0097-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 97\nIncumbent Republican Minority Leader Joe Kiser has represented the 97th District and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0098-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 98\nIncumbent Republican John Rhodes has represented the 98th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0099-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 80-99, District 99\nIncumbent Democrat Drew Saunders has represented the 99th District and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 101], "content_span": [102, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0100-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 100\nIncumbent Democrat Co-Speaker of the House Jim Black has represented the 100th District and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0101-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 101\nIncumbent Democrat Beverly Earle has represented the 101st District and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0102-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 102\nIncumbent Democrat Becky Carney has represented the 102nd District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0103-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 103\nIncumbent Republican Jim Gulley has represented the 103rd District and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0104-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 104\nThe new 104th district contains the homes of Incumbent Republicans Connie Wilson, who has represented the 104th district and its predecessors since 1993, and Ed McMahan, who has represented the 105th District and its predecessors since 1995. Wilson didn't seek re-election and McMahan was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0105-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 105\nThe new 105th district continues to be based in Mecklenburg County and it is expected to favor Republicans. Republican Doug Vinson won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0106-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 106\nIncumbent Democrat Martha Alexander has represented the 106th district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0107-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 107\nIncumbent Democrat Pete Cunningham has represented the 107th District and its predecessors since 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0108-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 108\nIncumbent Republican John Rayfield has represented the 108th District and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0109-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 109\nIncumbent Republican Patrick McHenry has represented the 109th District since 2003. McHenry ran for the U.S House and fellow Republican William Current won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0110-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 110\nIncumbent Republican Debbie Clary has represented the 110th District and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0111-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 111\nIncumbent Republican Tim Moore has represented the 111th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0112-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 112\nIncumbent Democrat Bob England has represented the 112th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0113-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 113\nIncumbent Republican Trudi Walend has represented the 113th District and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0114-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 114\nIncumbent Democrat Susan Fisher has represented the 114th District since her appointment in February 2004. Fisher was elected to a full term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0115-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 115\nIncumbent Democrat Bruce Goforth has represented the 115th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0116-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 116\nIncumbent Republican Wilma Sherrill has represented the 116th district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0117-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 117\nIncumbent Republican Carolyn Justus has represented the 117th District since October 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0118-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 118\nIncumbent Democrat Ray Rapp has represented the 118th District since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0119-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 119\nIncumbent Democrat Phil Haire has represented the 119th District and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178357-0120-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina House of Representatives election, Detailed Results, Districts 100-120, District 120\nIncumbent Republican Roger West has represented the 120th District and its predecessors since 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 104], "content_span": [105, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election\nThe 2004 North Carolina Senate elections were held on November 2, 2004 to elect members to all fifty seats in the North Carolina Senate. The election coincided with the elections for other offices including the Presidency, U.S. Senate, Governorship, U.S. House of Representatives, Council of State, and state house. The primary election was held on July 20, 2004 with a primary run-off occurring on August 17, 2004. These elections were the first to use new district lines drawn by the General Assembly to account the for changes in population amongst each of the districts after the 2000 census. The 2002 elections had been conducted under a map ordered by the North Carolina Superior Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 1\nIncumbent Democrat President Pro Tempore Marc Basnight has represented the 1st district since 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 2\nIncumbent Democrat Scott Thomas has represented the 2nd district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 3\nIncumbent Democrat Clark Jenkins has represented the 3rd district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 4\nIncumbent Democrat Robert Holloman has represented the 4th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 5\nThe new 5th district includes the homes of Incumbent Democrat turned Republican Tony Moore, who has represented the 5th district since 2003 and Incumbent Democrat John Kerr, who has represented the 7th district and its predecessors since 1993. Kerr defeated Moore in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 6\nIncumbent Democrat Cecil Hargett has represented the 6th district since 2003. Hargett lost re-election to Republican Harry Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 7\nThe new 7th district includes all of Franklin, Granville, Vance, and Warren Counties. Democrat Doug Berger won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 8\nIncumbent Democrat R. C. Soles Jr. has represented the 8th district and its predecessors since 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 9\nIncumbent Republican Minority Leader Patrick Ballantine had represented the 9th district and its predecessors since 1995. Ballantine ran for Governor and resigned his seat on April 20, 2004. Fellow Republican Woody White was appointed to replace him on May 5, 2004. White ran for re-election to a full term, but he lost re-election to Democrat Julia Boseman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 10\nIncumbent Democrat Charles Albertson has represented the 10th district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 11\nIncumbent Democrat A.B. Swindell has represented the 11th district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 12\nIncumbent Republican Fred Smith has represented the 12th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 13\nIncumbent Democrat David Weinstein has represented the 13th district and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 14\nincumbent Democrat Vernon Malone has represented the 14th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 15\nIncumbent Republican John Carrington has represented the 15th district and its predecessors since 1995. Carrington lost re-nomination to fellow Republican Neal Hunt, who won the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 16\nIncumbent Democrat Eric Miller Reeves has represented the 16th district and its predecessors since 1997. Reeves retired and Democrat Janet Cowell won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 17\nIncumbent Republican Richard Stevens has represented the 17th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 18\nIncumbent Democrat Wib Gulley, who had represented the 18th district and its predecessors since 1993, resigned on March 19, 2004. Ralph Alexander Hunt was appointed to finish Hunt's term on April 21, 2004. Hunt didn't seek a full term and Democrat Bob Atwater won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 19\nIncumbent Democratic Majority Leader Tony Rand has represented the 19th district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 20\nIncumbent Democrat Jeanne Lucas has represented the 20th district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 21\nIncumbent Democrat Larry Shaw has represented the 21st district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 22\nIncumbent Republican Harris Blake has represented the 22nd district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 23\nIncumbent Democrat Eleanor Kinnaird has represented the 23rd district and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 24\nIncumbent Republican Hugh Webster has represented the 24th district since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 1-25, District 25\nIncumbent Democrat Bill Purcell has represented the 25th district and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 26\nIncumbent Republican Phil Berger has represented the 26th district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 27\nIncumbent Democrat Kay Hagan has represented the 27th district and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 28\nIncumbent Democrat Katie Dorsett has represented the 28th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 29\nIncumbent Republican Jerry Tillman has represented the 29th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 30\nThe new 30th district includes all of Alleghany, Stokes, Surry, and Yadkin counties and has no incumbent. Republican Don East won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 31\nIncumbent Republican Hamilton Horton Jr. has represented the 31st district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 32\nIncumbent Democrat Linda Garrou has represented the 32nd district and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 33\nIncumbent Republican Stan Bingham has represented the 33rd district and its predecessors since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 34\nIncumbent Republican Andrew Brock has represented the 34th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 35\nIncumbent Republican Fern Shubert has represented the 35th district since 2003. Shubert ran for Governor. Fellow Republican Eddie Goodall won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 36\nIncumbent Republican Fletcher Hartsell Jr. has represented the 36th district and its predecessors since 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 37\nIncumbent Democrat Dan Clodfelter has represented the 37th district and its predecessors since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 38\nIncumbent Democrat Charlie Dannelly has represented the 38th district and its predecessors since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 39\nThe new 39th distirct includes the homes of incumbent Republicans Bob Rucho, who has represented the 39th district and its predecessors since 1997, and Robert Pittenger, who has represented the 40th district since 2003. Rucho retired and Pittenger was elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 40\nThe new 40th district is based in Mecklenburg County and had no incumbent. Democrat Maclom Graham won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 41\nThe new 41st district includes the homes of incumbent Republicans R. B. Sloan Jr., who has represented the 41st district since 2003, and James Forrester, who has represented the 42nd district and its predecessors since 1991. Forrester defeated Sloan in the Republican primary and was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 42\nThe new 42nd district overlaps with much of the former 44th district. Incumbent Republican Austin Allran, who has represented the 44th district and its predecessors since 1987, was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 43\nIncumbent Democrat David Hoyle has represented the 43rd district and its predecessors since 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 44\nThe new 44th district includes all of Burke and Caldwell counties and has no incumbent. Republican Jim Jacumin won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 45\nThe new 45th district includes the homes of Incumbent Republicans Virginia Foxx, who has represented the 45th district and its predecessors since 1995, and John Garwood, who has represented the 30th district and its predecessors since 1997. Foxx ran for the U.S. House and Garwood was re-elected here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 46\nIncumbent Democrat Walter Dalton has represented the 46th district and its predecessors since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 47\nIncumbent Democrat Joe Sam Queen has represented the 47th district since 2003. Queen lost re-election to Republican Keith Presnell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 48\nIncumbent Republican Tom Apodaca has represented the 48th district since 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 49\nIncumbent Democrat Martin Nesbitt has represented the 49th district since his appointment in 2004. Nesbitt was elected to a full term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178358-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Senate election, Detailed Results, Districts 26-50, District 50\nIncumbent Republican Bob Carpenter has represented the 50th district and its predecessors since 1989. Carpenter lost re-election to Democrat John Snow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178359-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina Tar Heels football team\nThe 2004 North Carolina Tar Heels football team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Led by third-year head coach John Bunting, the Tar Heels played their home games at Kenan Memorial Stadium in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. North Carolina finished the season 6\u20136 overall and 5\u20133 in ACC play to tie for third place. They lost to Boston College in the Continental Tire Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178360-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 North Carolina gubernatorial election was held on 2 November 2004. The general election was between the Democratic incumbent Mike Easley and the Republican nominee Patrick J. Ballantine. Easley won by 56% to 43%, winning his second term as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178360-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina gubernatorial election, Primaries, Democratic\nMike Easley was first elected as governor in 2000 and opted to run for a second term. He faced opposition in the Democratic primary from Rickey Kipfer, a former corporate manager from Lee County. Kipfer campaigned on a platform of abolishing North Carolina's personal income tax and exploring potential natural gas resources in the state. He envisioned the state replacing income tax revenue with revenue from natural gas exploration. Kipfer also proposed a system similar to the Alaska Permanent Fund as a means of distributing potential natural gas revenues to citizens in North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178360-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina gubernatorial election, Primaries, Democratic\nEasley's campaign manager stated that they did not consider Kipfer as serious competition. Easley did not campaign against Kipfer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178360-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina gubernatorial election, Primaries, Democratic\nMike Easley won the primary comfortably with over 85% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election\nSeveral judges of the North Carolina Supreme Court and the North Carolina Court of Appeals, the state's two appellate courts, were elected on November 2, 2004. The U.S. Presidential election, 2004, U.S. House election, 2004, U.S. Senate election, 2004, North Carolina Council of State election, 2004 and North Carolina General Assembly election, 2004 were held on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election\nAppellate judges in North Carolina are elected to eight-year terms in statewide judicial elections. In 2004, for the first time, all these elections were non-partisan. If more than two candidates filed for a given seat, a non-partisan primary would be held, and the two highest vote-getters, regardless of party, would advance to the general election. The only 2004 race in which more than two candidates filed for the primary was the Thornburg Court of Appeals seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election, Supreme Court (Parker seat)\nAssociate Justice Sarah Parker, the incumbent, was challenged by Court of Appeals Judge John M. Tyson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election, Supreme Court (Orr seat)\nThe resignation of Associate Justice Robert F. Orr, too late for a primary election to be held, led to a situation in which there was no primary election to eliminate candidates, but rather, the winner was simply determined by plurality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election, Supreme Court (Orr seat)\nEight candidates filed: Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul Newby (who received the endorsement of the state Republican Party), North Carolina Superior Court Judge Howard Manning, Pre-Paid Legal Services attorney and former judicial law clerk Rachel Hunter, Administrative Law Judge Fred Morrison, attorney Ronnie Ansley, former appeals court judge Betsy McCrodden, current appeals court judge Jim Wynn, and attorney Marvin Schiller (who had just lost in the primary for the Thornburg Court of Appeals seat).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election, Court of Appeals (McGee seat)\nIncumbent Judge Linda McGee was challenged by attorney Bill Parker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election, Court of Appeals (Bryant seat)\nIncumbent Judge Wanda G. Bryant had been appointed to the Court by the Governor following her 2002 defeat for a different seat. She was challenged by Wake County District Court Judge Alice Stubbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178361-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina judicial election, Court of Appeals (Thornburg seat)\nIncumbent Judge Alan Thornburg had been appointed to the court by the Governor. Three candidates filed to challenge Thornburg for a full term: Barbara Jackson, who was then general counsel at the N.C. Department of Labor, along with attorneys Marcus W. Williams and Marvin Schiller. Jackson and Thornburg finished first and second, respectively, in the July primary, thereby qualifying them to compete in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178362-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina lieutenant gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 North Carolina lieutenant governor election was held on November 2, 2004, as part of the elections to the Council of State. North Carolina also held a gubernatorial election on the same day, but the offices of Governor and Lieutenant Governor are elected independently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178363-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina's 1st congressional district special election\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives special election in North Carolina's 1st congressional district was held on July 20, 2004 to select the successor to Frank Ballance (D) who resigned due to health concerns and ongoing investigations which would ultimately culminate in criminal convictions on charges of committing money laundering and mail fraud. The election was won by a wide margin by former State Supreme Court Associate Justice G. K. Butterfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178363-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina's 1st congressional district special election\nRepublicans did not seriously contest this election given the strong Democratic tilt of the district, which has not elected a Republican to the United States House of Representatives since Reconstruction nor been represented by a moderate to conservative Representative since 1992 when Walter B. Jones, Sr. (D), the father of former 3rd District Representative Walter B. Jones, Jr. (R) died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178363-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Carolina's 1st congressional district special election, Party primaries\nEach party held a nominating convention to choose their nominee for the special election. Democrats nominated Superior Court Judge and former State Supreme Court Associate Justice G. K. Butterfield, while Republicans chose security consultant Greg Dority. Butterfield overwhelmingly won the election to fill out the rest of Ballance's unexpired term. On the same day, he and Dority both won their respective parties' primaries and would face each other again in the November general election, which Butterfield would win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 82], "content_span": [83, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178364-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 North Dakota Democratic presidential caucuses were held on February 3 along with six other states. Frontrunner John Kerry had earlier won New Mexico, Missouri, Arizona and Delaware by large margins. Army General Wesley Clark had hoped to win some primaries this day but got only second and third place finishes. Howard Dean just months earlier Dean had narrowly been leading in polls over Wesley Clark. The endorsements were former governor George A. Sinner who endorsed Wesley Clark. The results were Kerry with 51% to Wesley 24% and Dean at 12%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178365-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota State Bison football team\nThe 2004 North Dakota State Bison football team represented North Dakota State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. It was the program's first season competing at the NCAA Division I-AA level. The Bison were led by second-year head coach Craig Bohl and played their home games at the Fargodome in Fargo, North Dakota. They finished the season with an overall record of 8\u20133 and tied for third in the Great West Conference with a 2\u20133 mark. North Dakota State was ineligible for the NCAA Division I-AA playoffs per NCAA rules, during their first four seasons at the NCAA Division I-AA/FCS level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178365-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota State Bison football team\nDuring the regular season, the Bison were never ranked in The Sports Network poll, but beat two of the three top-25 teams they played. After the playoffs, the Bison were ranked #24 in the final rankings. During their first four years in Division I-AA (2004\u20132007), NDSU had a North Dakota State of 35\u20139 (.795) and were ranked in the top-25 32 out of 44 weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election took place on 2 November 2004 for the post of Governor of North Dakota. Incumbent Republican Governor John Hoeven was easily re-elected defeating Democratic-NPL former state senator Joe Satrom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election, Republican nomination\nIncumbent Governor John Hoeven was unopposed for the Republican nomination and accepted the nomination by stating that the economy of North Dakota was his priority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election, Democratic-NPL nomination\nFormer state senator Joe Satrom defeated North Dakota House of Representatives minority leader Merle Boucher for the Democratic-NPL nomination. Satrom began campaigning for the nomination almost a year before the North Dakota Democratic-NPL Convention would choose the parties candidate for Governor. Boucher announced his candidacy in December 2003 but struggled to make up ground against Satrom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election, Democratic-NPL nomination\nThe two candidates debated at the University of North Dakota, just before the convention, with education and the future of the state's youth the main topics. The Democratic-NPL Convention voted by 632 to 341 to endorse Satrom as their candidate for Governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nThe two candidates met in three debates during the campaign, during the final debate on 9 October 2004 they clashed over a smoking ban, outmigration and a proposed constitutional amendment to ban same-sex marriage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nSatrom called for North Dakota to introduce a one thousand dollar donation limit, for individuals and political action committees, to avoid any perception of conflict of interest. Hoeven named education, growth and jobs as his priorities but faced anger from some hunting groups over changes to hunt seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178366-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North Dakota gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nOpinion polls gave Hoeven a strong lead over Satrom with one in October 2004 showing Hoeven on 70% as against 22% for Satrom. Hoeven raised far more money than his challenger and even a normally Democratic supporting teachers union, the North Dakota Education Association, endorsed Hoeven for Governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum\nThe North East England devolution referendum was an all postal ballot referendum that took place on 4 November 2004 throughout North East England on whether or not to establish an elected assembly for the region. Devolution referendums in the regions of Northern England were initially proposed under provisions of the Regional Assemblies (Preparations) Act 2003. Initially, three referendums were planned, but only one took place. The votes concerned the question of devolving limited political powers from the UK Parliament to elected regional assemblies in North East England, North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum\nEach were initially planned to be held on 4 November 2004, but on 22 July 2004 the planned referendums in North West England and in Yorkshire and the Humber were postponed, due to concerns raised about the use of postal ballots, but the referendum in North East England was allowed to continue, particularly as it was assumed that the region held the most support for the proposed devolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum\nOn 4 November 2004, voters in the North East rejected the proposal, in an all-postal ballot, by 77.9% to 22.1%, on a turnout of 48%. Every council area in the region had a majority for \"no\". The referendum was held in what was at the time arguably Labour's strongest region within the United Kingdom which included at the time the then Prime Minister Tony Blair's own constituency in Sedgefield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum\nThe defeat marked the end of the Labour Government's policy of devolution for England, and the other proposed referendums for the North West and for Yorkshire and the Humber were dropped indefinitely. This would also be the last major devolution referendum to be held in any part of the United Kingdom under the Labour Government of 1997\u20132010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum\nThe campaign against the proposed Assembly was successfully led by local businessman John Elliott, who argued that the institution would have no real powers and that it would be a \"white elephant\" and too centric to Newcastle upon Tyne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum\nIt was the first major referendum to be held in any part of the United Kingdom which was conducted and overseen by the Electoral Commission after its establishment in 2000 under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Background\nThe Labour government attempted to introduce directly elected English regional assemblies. The London Assembly was the first of these, established following a referendum in 1998, in which public and media attention was focused principally on the post of Mayor of London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Assembly proposals\nVoters were asked whether they wanted an elected regional assembly to be created for their region. The structure and powers of elected regional assemblies was outlined in a Draft Regional Assemblies Bill presented to Parliament by Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott in July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Assembly proposals\nThe draft bill would have given the assemblies the following powers:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Local government reorganisation\nThe creation of regional assemblies was to be tied to abolition of the existing two-tier structure for local government in these regions; and its replacement with a uniform system of unitary authorities. In areas that had two-tier government (Cheshire, County Durham, Cumbria, Lancashire, North Yorkshire, Northumberland), voters were to be asked which pattern of unitary government they would like to see.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Local government reorganisation\nTwo options were proposed by the Boundary Committee for each county in the review area \u2013 generally consisting of a single unitary authority for the entire county, or a break-up into smaller authorities which are larger than the existing districts. It was recommended that ceremonial counties be left untouched in most cases. This recommendation was broadly (with one minor alteration in West Lancashire) accepted by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Local government reorganisation\nVoting was to take place on a per-county council-area basis, except that the Cumbria and Lancashire votes would have been run as one \u2013 since it would be impossible to have option 1 in one and option 2 in another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Local government reorganisation\nAny changes as a result of the North East referendum would probably have come into effect on 1 April 2006 \u2013 to give time for preparation, and taking into account 1 April as the traditional day of local government reform in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Local government reorganisation\nIn Lancashire and Cumbria the proposals for multiple unitary authorities were very similar to those proposed by the Redcliffe-Maud Report in 1969. This proposed authorities for North Cumbria based in Carlisle, and one for Morecambe Bay covering Barrow-in-Furness and Lancaster for the north of the region. In central Lancashire there were to be divided into four authorities based on Blackpool, Preston, Blackburn and Burnley. The area of West Lancashire was to be given to Merseyside and included with Southport in a district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions\nAll voters in the North East England region were asked to vote on the question of whether or not there should be an elected Assembly. Voters in County Durham and Northumberland were asked to vote on an additional second question on proposals for local government reorganisation in the event of a \"yes\" vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Assembly referendum question\nYou can help to decide whether there should be an elected assembly in the North East region. If an elected assembly is to be established, it is intended that:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 97], "content_span": [98, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Assembly referendum question\nShould there be an elected assembly for the North East region?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 97], "content_span": [98, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Assembly referendum question\npermitting a simple YES / NO answer (to be marked with a single (X)).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 97], "content_span": [98, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Local Government reorganisation referendum question\nThe question that appeared on ballot papers in County Durham and Northumberland was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 120], "content_span": [121, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Local Government reorganisation referendum question\nIf an assembly is established in the North East region, it is intended that local government will be reorganised into a single tier in those parts that currently have both county councils and district councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 120], "content_span": [121, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Local Government reorganisation referendum question\nYour part of the region has currently both county councils and district councils. You can help to decide how local authorities in your part of the region will be reorganised into a single tier. There will be no such reorganisation if an elected Assembly is not established.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 120], "content_span": [121, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Referendum questions, Local Government reorganisation referendum question\nwith the responses to the question to be (to be marked with a single (X)):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 120], "content_span": [121, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Results\nOn 4 November 2004, in a turnout of almost 48% in an all postal ballot, voters in the North East decisively rejected the proposed regional assembly. The reasons for this result are varied; however, it is felt that the regional power would have been concentrated in an Assembly situated in Newcastle upon Tyne, which given the strong historic rivalries between urban centres in the North-East may have caused resentment from the people of Sunderland and Middlesbrough. Notwithstanding this, in the Newcastle upon Tyne local council area itself the majority of votes cast were against the proposal. It was also felt that not enough of a case had been put forward for the necessity of the Assembly, and it was feared that it would add another layer of politicians and public servants, thereby increasing taxes for the citizens of the areas affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Results, Assembly question result\nThe referendum result was declared at 00:52 GMT on Friday 5 November 2004 at Crowtree Leisure Centre in Sunderland by the Chief Counting Officer for the North East region Ged Fitzgerald, who was also then Chief Executive of Sunderland City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 80], "content_span": [81, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Results, Local government reorganisation question result\nThe related votes in Northumberland and County Durham on local government changes became moot, though new single merged unitary authorities were later established based on the county council areas (i.e. Option A in each case) as part of the 2009 structural changes to local government in England. The votes had been:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 103], "content_span": [104, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Planned referendums in North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber\nSimilar referendums had been planned in North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber. These were postponed on 22 July due to issues with all-postal ballots \u2013 there were many allegations of fraud and procedural irregularities. Following the rejection of the proposal in the north east of England the Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott at the time, ruled out holding further referendums in other regions for the foreseeable future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 117], "content_span": [118, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Planned referendums in North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber, North West England\nThese were the proposals for local government reorganisation in Northwest England. After the result in North East England the planned referendum for the region was postponed indefinitely and was never put before the electorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 137], "content_span": [138, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178367-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 North East England devolution referendum, Planned referendums in North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber, Yorkshire and the Humber\nThese were the proposals for local government reorganisation in the Yorkshire and the Humber region. After the result in North East England the planned referendum was postponed indefinitely and was also never put before the electorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 143], "content_span": [144, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe 2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season was the first in which tropical cyclones were officially named in the basin. Cyclone Onil, which struck Pakistan, was named in late September. The final storm, Cyclone Agni, was also named, and crossed into the southern hemisphere shortly before dissipation. This storm became notable during its origins and became one of the storms closest to the equator. The season was fairly active, with ten depressions forming from May to November. The India Meteorological Department designated four of these as cyclonic storms, which have maximum sustained winds of at least 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph) averaged over three minutes. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center also issued warnings for five of the storms on an unofficial basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season\nIn early May, two tropical storms formed on opposite sides of India. The first formed on May\u00a05 and meandered while intensifying, dropping 1,840\u00a0mm (72\u00a0in) in Aminidivi in the Lakshadweep group offshore western India, which was the highest daily rainfall total in the basin. A week later, a cyclone \u2013 the strongest of the season \u2013 struck Myanmar, killing 236\u00a0people and leaving 25,000\u00a0people homeless. Depressions also formed on opposite sides of India in June. A depression in September killed 59\u00a0people after dropping torrential rainfall over Bangladesh and adjacent West Bengal. In October, another depression struck the region, killing 273\u00a0people. There was also a short-lived cyclonic storm in the Arabian Sea in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season summary\nThe India Meteorological Department (IMD) was designated a Regional Specialized Meteorological Center by the World Meteorological Organization in July 1988 to monitor and warn on tropical cyclones in the northern Indian Ocean. The basin is defined between 45\u00b0 and 100\u00b0\u00a0E, and north of the equator. The agency also used geostationary satellites and a network of buoys to track the storms, and utilized various tropical cyclone forecast models to predict future tracks. The American-based Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) also issued warnings for storms in the basin on an unofficial basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Season summary\nThe monsoon became active in May as water temperatures became warm. Twin depressions formed during June on opposite sides of India, which helped intensify the monsoon over the country. A notable feature of the season was the Arabian Sea being more active than the Bay of Bengal. The IMD began naming tropical cyclones within the basin in 2004, beginning after the monsoon season. As such, only two cyclonic storms in the latter half of the year were named.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm ARB 01\nToward the end of April, an area of convection persisted in the southern Bay of Bengal. It developed into a distinct low-pressure area on May\u00a01 over the body of water, but soon moved westward into India without developing. On May\u00a04, the system emerged from Kerala into the Arabian Sea, and soon after convection rapidly increased. Early on May\u00a05, the JTWC classified the system as Tropical Cyclone 01A about 370\u00a0km (230\u00a0mi) west-southwest of Kochi, India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm ARB 01\nOn the same day, the IMD began classifying it as a depression, but soon after upgraded it to a deep depression and later cyclonic storm after increased organization. The storm meandered off southwest India for three days due to weak steering currents. During that time, the convection pulsed around the circulation, and the IMD upgraded it to a severe cyclonic storm on May\u00a07 with winds of 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph). By contrast, the JTWC only estimated peak winds of 85\u00a0km/h (55\u00a0mph). Increased wind shear, cooler waters, and dry air rapidly weakened the convection, exposing the center and causing the storm to deteriorate quickly into a depression. On May\u00a010, the system degenerated into a remnant low off Gujarat, without any discernible low-level circulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm ARB 01\nThe precursor to the storm brought heavy rainfall to southern India, reaching 124.8\u00a0mm (4.91\u00a0in) in Thiruvananthapuram over 48\u00a0hours. The remnants also brought upwards of 225\u00a0mm (8.9\u00a0in) of rainfall in Gujarat. While an active tropical cyclone, the storm dropped torrential rainfall to the Lakshadweep group offshore western India. Aminidivi recorded 1,840\u00a0mm (72\u00a0in) over three days, including 1,170\u00a0mm (46\u00a0in) in just 24\u00a0hours. This broke the record for the highest daily rainfall total related to a North Indian Ocean cyclone. The high rains cut communications from the island group to the mainland, and damaged 45\u00a0houses in conjunction with the winds. High waves sank 15\u00a0boats and one cargo ship while also causing erosion in Kerala. The storm killed nine people and caused \u20b9300\u00a0million rupees ($6.7\u00a0million USD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 895]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm BOB 01\nThe second storm of the season formed as a depression on May\u00a016 in the central Bay of Bengal. With low wind shear and a surge in the monsoon trough, the storm intensified while meandering over open waters. The storm eventually began a steady northeastward motion due to a ridge to the north over India. While approaching land, an eye developed in the center of the storm, indicative of a strong cyclone. On May\u00a019, the cyclone made landfall along northwestern Myanmar near Sittwe, with maximum sustained winds estimated at 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph) by the IMD. The storm rapidly weakened over land, although its remnants spread rainfall into northern Thailand and Yunnan province in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 87], "content_span": [88, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm BOB 01\nWinds from the cyclone reached 157\u00a0km/h (98\u00a0mph) in Myanmar, occurring in conjunction with heavy rainfall and a high storm surge. Despite the storm's ferocity, the government did not report about the cyclone for ten days, as they usually under report on landfalling storms. The cyclone caused heavy damage throughout Rakhine State, destroying or heavily damaging 4,035\u00a0homes and leaving 25,000\u00a0people homeless. There was widespread crop damage, resulting in food shortages, and damaged roads disrupted subsequent relief efforts. Damage in Myanmar totaled over K621\u00a0million kyat (US$99.2\u00a0million), making it the worst storm in the country since 1968, and there were 236\u00a0deaths. Although damage was heaviest in Myanmar, the cyclone's effects also spread into neighboring Bangladesh, where strong winds knocked over trees and capsized two ships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 87], "content_span": [88, 930]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Deep Depression ARB 02\nOn June\u00a08, a low-pressure area formed in the eastern Arabian Sea. A nearby buoy recorded winds of 45\u00a0km/h (30\u00a0mph), which organized into a depression on June\u00a010. While remaining nearly stationary, the depression quickly intensified into a deep depression. The system later began a slow westward movement, due to a ridge to the north. On June\u00a011, and again on the following day, the JTWC issued a Tropical Cyclone Formation Alert (TCFA), although the system never strengthened beyond its initial stages. Strong wind shear caused the depression to weaken, and the IMD downgraded it to a remnant low on June\u00a013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Deep Depression BOB 02\nA surge in the monsoon developed an area of convection over the Andaman Sea in early June, spawning a low-pressure area, which later became a depression on June\u00a011. Moving to the northwest along a ridge, it strengthened into a deep depression the next day. Early on June\u00a013, the system struck Odisha near Puri, and initially maintained its intensity over land. However, it eventually weakened, degenerating into a remnant low over Chhattisgarh on June\u00a014. The depression dropped heavy rainfall in eastern India, particularly Odisha. There, the peak 24-hour precipitation total was 320\u00a0mm (13\u00a0in) in Madanpur Rampur. There were no reports of damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Land Depression 01\nFor about ten days in September, a monsoon depression persisted around the northern edge of the Bay of Bengal onto adjacent landmasses, initially associated with an upper-level low. On September\u00a010, a low-pressure area developed within the monsoon trough in the extreme northern Bay of Bengal. Moving northwestward, it organized into a depression after it moved ashore, organizing over West Bengal near Kolkata. The system attained peak winds of 45\u00a0km/h (30\u00a0mph) despite being over land. Located within a col, or weakness between ridges, the depression meandered over eastern India, weakening into a remnant low on September\u00a015. It moved slowly northwestward, reaching Uttar Pradesh by September\u00a022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Land Depression 01\nThe depression dropped heavy rainfall in eastern India, including as a tropical cyclone, a precursor, and its remnant. Notable rainfall totals include 340\u00a0mm (13\u00a0in) in Chepan on September\u00a09, 480\u00a0mm (19\u00a0in) on September\u00a021 at a station in Uttar Pradesh, and 341\u00a0mm (13.4\u00a0in) in Dhaka in neighboring Bangladesh, the heaviest daily total in 50\u00a0years. Flash flooding in the Indian state of Tripura killed four people and isolated about 55,000\u00a0people. Three people died in West Bengal, where floodwaters left about 650,000\u00a0people homeless in hundreds of villages. Flash flooding in Uttar Pradesh killed 33\u00a0people overnight on September\u00a021. In nearby Bangladesh, the depression produced additional flooding after a similar disaster occurred in July, temporarily isolating about 1\u00a0million people, and killing 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Onil\nA depression formed out of an area of convection southwest of India on September\u00a030. The next day, it intensified into Cyclonic Storm Onil. becoming the first tropical cyclone on record to be named in the northern Indian Ocean. Cyclone Onil quickly attained its peak intensity on October\u00a02 with winds of 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph) and a barometric pressure of 990 mbar (hPa; 29.23\u00a0inHg). However, dry air quickly entered the system, causing it to rapidly weaken to a depression just off the coast of Gujarat, India. Over the following several days, the system took a slow, erratic track towards the south-southeast. After turning northeastward, the system made landfall near Porbandar on October\u00a010 and dissipated shortly thereafter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Onil\nThroughout southeastern Pakistan and northwestern India, thousands of residents were evacuated prior to the cyclone's arrival. In these areas, the storm produced moderate to heavy rainfall, peaking at 145\u00a0mm (5.7\u00a0in) in Thatta, Sindh, Pakistan. These rains led to flash flooding in several areas. Nine people died in several incidents related to the storm in Karachi. The drainage system of Hyderabad sustained significant damage, leading to several protests and demonstrations by city residents. Offshore, 300 fishermen are believed to have gone missing during the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 03/04\nA low-pressure area formed in the Bay of Bengal on September\u00a030 and gradually became more organized. It moved northwestward and developed into a depression on October\u00a02. Without intensifying beyond winds of 45\u00a0km/h (30\u00a0mph), the depression moved ashore Andhra Pradesh near Kalingapatnam on October\u00a04. It rapidly weakened into a remnant low and turned to the northeast. On October\u00a07, the system re-intensified into a depression near Bankura despite being over land, aided by moisture from the Bay of Bengal. After crossing into northern Bangladesh, the system again weakened into a remnant low, which gradually elongated and weakened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 03/04\nFor several days in early October, the depression dropped rainfall across southeastern India, which was heaviest after it re-intensified over land. Alipurduar in northeastern West Bengal recorded 310\u00a0mm (12\u00a0in) in a 24-hour period, and Malda reported 430\u00a0mm (17\u00a0in) in two days. In northern Andhra Pradesh, flooding from the depression affected 40\u00a0villages, wrecking 50\u00a0houses. The waters also inundated 50,000 acres (20,000\u00a0ha) of rice paddies and damaged 200\u00a0irrigation water tanks. In West Bengal, the floods killed 3,000 migratory birds and damaged \u20b91.1\u00a0billion rupees (US$23.9\u00a0million) worth of crops; 51\u00a0people also died in the state. In neighboring Odisha, four people were killed, and the floods washed away a bridge and affected several villages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 03/04\nThe third large flood event of the year, the depression caused its most severe impact in northeastern India, where 218\u00a0people were killed, including 112 in the city of Goalpara alone. There, the floods struck in the middle of the night, catching residents off guard and washing away hundreds of houses along two whole blocks. Flash flooding caused landslides in Kamrup, while regional and national roads were damaged or submerged. Over 15,000\u00a0people were forced to evacuate their homes to emergency shelters. Across the region, 98,721\u00a0ha (243,940 acres) of crops were damaged, and 30,000\u00a0homes were damaged or destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Depression BOB 03/04\nRainfall spread into Nepal, where 51.3\u00a0mm (2.02\u00a0in) was recorded at the airport in Kathmandu. The precipitation led to a snowstorm in Tibet, reaching 60\u00a0mm (2.4\u00a0in) in one location; this marked the highest daily snowfall for the station in October, and caused a loss of crops and livestock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Deep Depression ARB 04\nAn area of convection formed west of Sri Lanka on October\u00a031, organizing around a circulation center. Low wind shear allowed slow development, and a low-pressure area developed on November\u00a01 in the southeastern Arabian Sea. The following day, a depression formed off the southwest coast of India. Moving northward, the system's convection continued to organize around the center, and the JTWC classified it as Tropical Cyclone 04A on November\u00a04. The IMD upgraded it to a deep depression on the next day as the storm began moving westward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Deep Depression ARB 04\nDespite good outflow, the convection failed to intensify further and was limited to the eastern portion, and the JTWC did not estimate 1\u00a0minute winds higher than 75\u00a0km/h (45\u00a0mph). The IMD only assessed a peak of 55\u00a0km/h (35\u00a0mph). Drier air from the north caused the thunderstorms to weaken and expose the circulation. The IMD downgraded the system to a remnant low on November\u00a07, and the remnants continued to the west-southwest, passing near Socotra Island. On November\u00a09, the remnant circulation brushed the coast of Somalia after redeveloping some convection, but there was no redevelopment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Agni\nA tropical disturbance was observed on November\u00a019 about 800\u00a0km (500\u00a0mi) southeast of Colombo, Sri Lanka in the Bay of Bengal. The disturbance tracked westward, weakening after passing south of Sri Lanka. It entered the Arabian Sea on November\u00a026, and despite being located unusually close to the equator, the system maintained convection about its circulation, aided by low wind shear. While the system was organizing, the center crossed the equator to reach about 0.5\u00b0\u00a0S, thus becoming an anticyclonic circulation in the southern hemisphere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Agni\nThis was unusual, as the Coriolis effect is nonexistent along the equator\u2014the Coriolis effect refers to planetary vorticity, which provides the spin in a cyclone. On November\u00a028, the JTWC classified it as Tropical Cyclone 05A just 78\u00a0km (48\u00a0mi) from the equator. The IMD classified it as a depression the next day at 1.5\u00b0\u00a0N, noting that \"cyclogenesis\u00a0... at such low latitudes has not occurred in the past.\" It rivaled Tropical Storm Vamei as one of the closest storms to the equator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Agni\nAfter developing, the system moved northwestward due to a ridge over India. The IMD upgraded the depression to Cyclonic Storm Agni late on November\u00a029 and further to a severe cyclonic storm the next day. The JTWC also upgraded Agni to the equivalent of a minimal hurricane, estimating 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph). Wind shear and dry air caused the storm to weaken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178368-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Cyclonic Storm Agni\nAfter Agni turned westward, the IMD downgraded it to a depression and later remnant low on December\u00a02, although the JTWC tracked it for another day, issuing their final advisory while Agni was about 450\u00a0km (275\u00a0mi) south-southeast of Cape Guardafui\u2014the easternmost point of the Horn of Africa. The remnants moved ashore at eastern Somalia, before turning to the south and dissipating on December\u00a05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 75], "content_span": [76, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178369-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Queensland Cowboys season\nThe 2004 North Queensland Cowboys season was the 10th in the club's history. Coached by Graham Murray and captained by Travis Norton, they competed in the NRL's 2004 Telstra Premiership. It was the first time the club had made the finals, finishing the regular season in 7th, falling one game short of the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178370-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Texas Mean Green football team\nThe 2004 North Texas Mean Green football team represented the University of North Texas in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178371-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Tipperary County Council election\nAn election to North Tipperary County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 21 councillors were elected from four electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178372-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 North Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to North Tyneside Metropolitan Council took place on 10 June 2004; the same day as other local council elections in England, along with European elections and London mayoral and Assembly elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178372-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 North Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election\nNorth Tyneside Council is elected \"in thirds\" which means one councillor from each three-member ward is elected each year for the first three years with a fourth year when the mayoral election takes place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178372-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 North Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election\n2004 was the first election after the wards in North Tyneside changed meaning that the whole council was up for election. Holystone, Monkseaton, North Shields and Seatonville were used for the last time in 2003, and replaced by 4 new wards; Killingworth, Monkseaton North, Monkseaton South and Preston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178372-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 North Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Preston\nA further by-election was held on 6 October 2005. Details of this can be found here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178372-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 North Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Weetslade\nA further by-election was held on 23 June 2005. Details of this can be found here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 68], "content_span": [69, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178373-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament began on May 21 and ended on May 23, 2004, at FirstEnergy Park in Lakewood, New Jersey. The league's top four teams competed in the double elimination tournament. Top-seeded Central Connecticut won their third consecutive, and third overall, tournament championship and earned the Northeast Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178373-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top four finishers were seeded one through four based on conference regular-season winning percentage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178373-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Northeast Conference Baseball Tournament, Most Valuable Player\nEvan Scribner of Central Connecticut was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Scribner pitched in four of the five tournament games that Central Connecticut played in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 67], "content_span": [68, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178374-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held in March. The tournament featured the league's top eight seeds. Monmouth won the championship, its third, and received the conferences automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178374-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe NEC Men\u2019s Basketball Tournament will consist of an eight-team playoff format with the quarterfinal and semifinal games played at the Spiro Sports Center in Staten Island, NY. The Championship game was played at the court of the highest remaining seed, Monmouth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178374-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, All-tournament team\nBlake Hamilton, MONMOUTHTamien Trent, FDURon Robinson, CCSUDwayne Byfield, MONMOUTHTyler Azzarelli, MONMOUTH", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178375-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team\nThe 2004 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team was an American football team that represented Northern Arizona University (NAU) as a member of the Big Sky Conference (Big Sky) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their seventh year under head coach Jerome Souers, the Lumberjacks compiled a 4\u20137 record (3\u20134 against conference opponents), were outscored by a total of 314 to 244, and finished fifth out of eight teams in the Big Sky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178375-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Northern Arizona Lumberjacks football team\nThe team played its home games at the J. Lawrence Walkup Skydome, commonly known as the Walkup Skydome, in Flagstaff, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178376-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Northern Illinois Huskies football team\nThe 2004 Northern Illinois Huskies football team during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Northern Illinois competed as a member of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). They were coached by Joe Novak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178377-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Northwestern Wildcats football team\nThe 2004 Northwestern Wildcats football team represented Northwestern University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Ryan Field and participated as members of the Big Ten Conference. They were coached by Randy Walker. Despite finishing the season bowl eligible and fourth in the conference standings, the team was not invited to a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178378-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Norwegian Figure Skating Championships was held in Bergen from January 16 to 18, 2004. Skaters competed in the discipline of single skating. The results were used to choose the teams to the 2004 World Championships, the 2004 European Championships, the 2004 Nordic Championships, and the 2004 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178379-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian First Division\nThe 2004 1. divisjon was a Norwegian second-tier football season. The season kicked off on 12 April 2004, and the final round was played on 31 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178379-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian First Division\nStart were promoted to the 2005 Tippeligaen as First Division winners, along with Aalesund who finished second. Start will be playing in the top division for the first time since 2002. Aalesund, meanwhile, returned to the top flight after being relegated in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178379-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian First Division\nAs in previous seasons, there was a two-legged promotion play-off at the end of the season, between the third-placed team in the 1. divisjon (Kongsvinger) and the twelfth-placed team in the Tippeligaen (Bod\u00f8/Glimt). Bod\u00f8/Glimt kept their spot in the Tippeligaen, beating Kongsvinger 4\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178379-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian First Division, Relegated teams\nThese two teams were relegated from the Tippeligaen in 2003. 12th-place finishers V\u00e5lerenga defeated Sandefjord in the playoff to retain their spot in the highest division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178379-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian First Division, Promoted teams\nThese four teams were promoted from the 2. divisjon in 2003:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178380-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Football Cup\nThe 2004 Norwegian Football Cup was the 99th edition of the Norwegian Football Cup. The tournament was contested by 128 teams, going through 7 rounds before a winner could be declared. The final match was played on 7 November at Ullevaal stadion in Oslo. Brann won their 6th Norwegian Championship title after defeating Lyn in the final with the score 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178380-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Football Cup\nThe clubs from Tippeligaen all made it to round 3 (round of 32). However, six Tippeligaen teams - V\u00e5lerenga, Odd Grenland, Viking, Fredrikstad, Molde and Sogndal - were knocked out in the third round. The fourth round (round of 16) saw two more top tier clubs - Troms\u00f8 and Bod\u00f8/Glimt - being knocked out, leaving six Tippeligaen teams and two 1. divisjon teams the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178380-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Football Cup\nBrann won the cup, beating Lyn 4\u20131 in the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178380-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Football Cup, Third round\nJune 9: Moss - Fredrikstad 1-1 (extra time), 5-3 on penalties", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178380-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Football Cup, Fourth round\nJune 24: Bod\u00f8/Glimt - Brann 3-3 (extra time), 5-6 on penalties", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178381-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwegian Football Cup Final\nThe 2004 Norwegian Football Cup Final was the final match of the 2004 Norwegian Football Cup, the 99th season of the Norwegian Football Cup, the premier Norwegian football cup competition organized by the Football Association of Norway (NFF). The match was played on 7 November 2004 at the Ullevaal Stadion in Oslo, and opposed two Tippeligaen sides Brann and Lyn. Brann defeated Lyn 4\u20131 to claim the Norwegian Cup for a sixth time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178382-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Norwich City Council election\nThe 2004 Norwich City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Norwich City Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. This was the first election to be held under new ward boundaries, which reduced the number of seats from 48 to 39. As a result, all seats were up for election. The Liberal Democrats lost overall control of the council, which fell under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team\nThe 2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team represented the University of Notre Dame in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Tyrone Willingham and played its home games at Notre Dame Stadium in South Bend, Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season summary\nThe 2004 season began with doubts and criticism for the Irish. With Julius Jones graduating as fourth-leading rusher in Notre Dame history, the Irish hoped to replace him with a talented recruiting class. However, Willingham struggled in his second full year of recruiting and the new class was ranked 30th in the nation. Despite signing highly sought after recruit Darius Walker, the 17\u00a0man class only included three\u00a0four-star recruits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season summary\nThe season began poorly for the Irish with a loss at BYU. Despite Brady Quinn improving at the quarterback position, completing over 50\u00a0percent of his passes for 265\u00a0yards, the Irish only managed to gain 11\u00a0yards rushing. They next faced a highly ranked Michigan team at home and Willingham stated that an improved running game would be important if the Irish were to be able to beat the Wolverines. Darius Walker answered Willingham in his first collegiate game, gaining 115\u00a0yards and scoring two late touchdowns to lead the Irish in the upset.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season summary\nWith the win the Irish were rejuvenated, and rallied to move to 3\u20131 on the season with wins over Michigan State and Washington. Some in the media began comparing Willingham to some of Notre Dame's legendary coaches and said the team would win seven or eight games in the season, and be back in national championship contention by 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season summary\nWith renewed expectations, the Irish hoped to continue their streak and beat 15th ranked Purdue, who hadn't won at Notre Dame in 30\u00a0years. The Boilermakers' quarterback, Kyle Orton, torched the Irish defense handing them a 25\u00a0point loss to end the rally. The Irish got back on track and beat Stanford, making Notre Dame the second school to reach 800\u00a0wins, and Navy for the 41st straight time, to move into the rankings for the first time since their 2003 loss to Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season summary\nThe Irish didn't stay ranked for long, as Boston College once again beat the Irish on a late score. The Irish had three games left, and needed one win to become bowl eligible, but looked as if that win wouldn't come in their next game as they faced the 9th ranked Tennessee Volunteers in Knoxville. The Irish defense, however, stepped up, and, after knocking out quarterback Erik Ainge on a sack, returned an interception for a touchdown to upset the Volunteers and become bowl eligible. Once again ranked, the Irish returned home for their final home game against Pittsburgh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Season summary\nLosing on a late score, the team allowed five passing touchdowns by an opponent for the first time ever at home. Visiting USC for the final regular season game, the Irish again lost to the Trojans by 31. The Irish accepted a bowl bid to play in the Insight Bowl, however, in a highly criticized move, two days later fired Willingham. Defensive coordinator, Kent Baer, led the Irish, hoping to \"win one for Ty,\" however, the Oregon State Beavers, led by four touchdown passes from Derek Anderson, beat the Irish in their seventh consecutive bowl loss. The Irish ended 2004 with a 6\u20136 record and in need of a coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, 2004 Insight Bowl\nThe second bowl on December 28, the Insight Bowl held at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix, Arizona, the home of the Arizona Diamondbacks, was the second of the 2004\u201305 bowl season to pit two BCS member teams. The Notre Dame Fighting Irish, the only independent BCS member, took on the Oregon State Beavers from the Pac-10. The Beavers never trailed in the game, and easily defeated the Irish 38\u201321. Beavers quarterback Derek Anderson threw for 359 yards and four touchdown passes, with no interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Aftermath of the Willingham firing\nIn firing Willingham, the Notre Dame athletic department cited a relatively poor record of 21\u201315, a weak recruiting class, and three losses, each by 31\u00a0points, to rival USC. However, the Irish also hoped to entice Urban Meyer, the head coach of Utah, to lead Notre Dame. Meyer had just led the Utes to an undefeated season and he had a clause in his contract that stated he could leave Utah without a penalty to coach for the Irish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178383-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team, Aftermath of the Willingham firing\nWhen Meyer instead took the head coaching position at Florida, the Irish were ridiculed in the media, saying that the Notre Dame coaching position is no longer as prestigious as it was in the past. After over a week without a coach, the Irish hired New England Patriots' offensive coordinator Charlie Weis as head coach. Weis was an alum of Notre Dame, and became the first alum to coach the team since 1963. At least one sports writer stated that Weis was a choice that made sense for the program. Notwithstanding, three years after the fact, Willingham's firing remains highly controversial with many believing he was treated unfairly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 80], "content_span": [81, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178384-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nottingham Open\nThe 2004 Nottingham Open was the 2004 edition of the Nottingham Open men's tennis tournament and played on outdoor grass courts. The tournament was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 15th edition of the tournament and was held from 14 June through 19 June 2004. Paradorn Srichaphan won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178384-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nottingham Open, Finals, Doubles\nPaul Hanley / Todd Woodbridge defeated Rick Leach / Brian MacPhie 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178385-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nottingham Open \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178385-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nottingham Open \u2013 Doubles\nPaul Hanley and Todd Woodbridge won the title, defeating Rick Leach and Brian MacPhie 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178386-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nottingham Open \u2013 Singles\nGreg Rusedski was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178386-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nottingham Open \u2013 Singles\nParadorn Srichaphan won the title, defeating Thomas Johansson 1\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite\nA plebiscite on Sunday shopping was held on October 16, 2004 (to coincide with municipal elections) in Nova Scotia. The vote was 54.90% for the \"no\" side, meaning that a Sunday shopping ban remained in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite\nThe issue pitted the municipality of Halifax against smaller towns and rural municipalities where many older residents favoured the ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite, History\nPrior to the plebiscite, Nova Scotia was the last province to maintain a widespread ban on Sunday shopping. The ban, known as the Retail Business Uniform Closing Day Act, forbade all stores, with the exception of convenience stores, from opening on any Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite, History\nIn December 1993, the Liberal government conducted an experiment in which stores were opened on several weekends prior to Christmas. On April 13, 1994, then-Finance Minister Bernie Boudreau announced that the government decided against continuing the experiment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite, History\nIn 2000, lobby groups pushed to end the ban, including the Halifax Chamber of Commerce, which argued that opening on Sundays could bring an extra $21 million in revenue. The Tourism Industry Association of Nova Scotia argued that shoppers should be able to choose when they shop, not the government. Premier John Hamm stated during the 2000 municipal elections that he would like to keep Sundays free for families. According to a survey by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business taken in the spring of 2000, nearly 63 percent of independent retailers across Nova Scotia were opposed to any changes to Sunday shopping ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite, History\nOn September 26, 2003, Justice Minister Michael Baker introduced legislation that allowed a trial period for Sunday shopping on the six Sunday afternoons leading up to Christmas. The bill further authorized a binding plebiscite on the issue during the 2004 municipal elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite, Issues\nOpponents of the ban said that Sunday shopping should be allowed in order for consumers to have a choice and to keep up with the times. They also argued it would provide a $19 million annual boost to the economy. Supporters of the ban campaigned under the slogan \"Dare to be Different\" and stated that the province's laid-back character was at stake. They argued the province should take a stand against the tide of materialism they see as sweeping North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178387-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Nova Scotia Sunday shopping plebiscite, Later developments\nDespite the result of the plebiscite, the Nova Scotia government began allowing year-round Sunday shopping from October 2006 after grocery chains won a court case against the government over the Sunday shopping regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178388-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nukufetau by-election\nA by-election was held in the Nukufetau constituency in Tuvalu on 7 October 2004. It was triggered by Saufatu Sopoanga resigning as prime minister and member of parliament following the vote on a motion of no confidence on 25 August 2004. A by-election was held on 7 October 2004 and Saufatu Sopoanga regained his seat. Maatia Toafa was elected prime minister on 11 October 2004 with a vote of 8:7; and Saufatu Sopoanga became Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Works Transport and Communication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election\nThe 2004 Nunavut general election was held on February 16, 2004, to elect the 19 members of the 2nd Legislative Assembly of Nunavut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election\nPremier Paul Okalik asked for the five-year-old territory's first parliament to be dissolved on January 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election\nThe territory operates on a consensus government system with no political parties; the premier is subsequently chosen by and from the MLAs. There were 11,285 registered voters at the time of the election call.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election, Results\nElections were held in 18 of the 19 electoral districts. Rankin Inlet North acclaimed its MLA. The following is a list of the districts with their candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election, Results\nIn the main, Nunavummiut decided to stay with their present legislature. The premier, four cabinet ministers, and three other MLAs were re-elected; five incumbents were defeated, including former speaker of the house Kevin O'Brien. Only two women were elected to the 19-seat legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election, Results\nPremier Paul Okalik was given a firm endorsement by the voters in his riding. He faced a strong challenge for the premier's job from Tagak Curley, who was acclaimed to his seat. However, Okalik was returned to the premiership on March 5, 2004, by the new legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election, Miscellaneous\nFor the first time, residents of several tiny, isolated communities were able to vote by satellite phone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178389-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Nunavut general election, Miscellaneous\nVoter turnout was nearly 90%; in 8 of the 18 ridings it was higher than 100% (as high as 134% in Kugluktuk) since there was no door-to-door enumeration and voter registration is permitted at the polling station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178390-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council election\nElections to Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. Half of the council was up for election and the Labour Party retained control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178391-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 O'Byrne Cup\nThe 2004 O'Byrne Cup was a Gaelic football competition played by the teams of Leinster GAA, as well as one college team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178392-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2004 OFC Men's Olympic Football Tournament, the fourth edition of the OFC Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament, offered the winning Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) national under-23 side a place to compete at the quadrennial Summer Olympic Games. Australia won the tournament, and therefore the spot for the Athens Games of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup\nThe 2004 OFC Nations Cup doubled as the qualification tournament to the 2006 FIFA World Cup, except the two-legged final (A separate playoff between Australia and Solomon Islands was held in September 2005, for World Cup Qualifying purposes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup\nThe competition was divided in two Group stages (the first is the Qualifying Stage), with Australia and New Zealand seeded into the second stage (Final Stage). The Oceania champion (Australia) qualified for the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Qualification\nThe 10 teams in the first round were divided into two groups of five teams each. Within each group, every team played every other team once. The top two teams from each group then progressed to the second group stage, where they were joined by the two seeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final tournament\nThe four surviving members (first and second place teams from each group in stage one) of the first stage joined the two seeded teams (Australia and New Zealand) and took part in a tournament where each team played every other once in a tournament held in Adelaide, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final tournament\nAs this doubled as the 2004 Oceania Nations Cup, the top two teams from the second group stage progressed to a two-legged final to determine the winner of the OFC Nations Cup. These two games on home-and-away basis was separate from World Cup qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final tournament\nThe top two teams from this stage also progressed to the final stage of the 2006 Oceania World Cup qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final tournament\nAustralia and the Solomon Islands progressed to the final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final\nThe final of the 2004 Oceania Nations Cup was a two-legged home and away final between the top two teams from the second group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final\nAustralia won 11\u20131 on aggregate and became the 2004 Oceania Nations Cup Champions. They also qualified for the 2005 Confederations Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178393-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup, Final\nAlthough the second round of 2004 OFC Nations Cup doubled the second round of 2006 FIFA World Cup Oceanian qualification, the final play-off for the World Cup was held separately. Australia defeated Solomon Islands again, winning 9\u20131 on aggregate, and advanced to a play-off against the CONMEBOL (South American) nation Uruguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178394-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup Final\nThe 2004 OFC Nations Cup Final was the final match of the 2004 OFC Nations Cup between Solomon Islands and Australia. It was a two-legged final held on 9 and 12 October in Honiara and Sydney respectively. Australia won the first leg 5-1 and the second 6-0 to win the competition 11-1 on aggregate. Australia won the right to play in the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup as the representative from the OFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178395-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup squads\nThe 2004 OFC Nations Cup was an international football tournament that was held in Adelaide, Australia from 29 May to 6 June 2004 (with a two-legged final taking place on 9 and 12 October 2004). The 6 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of players; only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament. An initial four-team qualifying phase took place in Samoa and the Solomon Islands from 10 to 19 May 2004 allowing the top four, Fiji, Solomon Islands, Tahiti and Vanuatu, to move on and join Australia and New Zealand at the main tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178395-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup squads\nPlayers marked (c) were named as captain for their national squad. Players' club teams and players' age are as of 29 May 2004 \u2013 the tournament's opening day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178395-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Nations Cup squads, Player representation, By club nationality\nNations in italics are not represented by their national teams in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178396-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2004 OFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament was an association football tournament used two determine the Oceanian participant to compete at the 2004 Summer Olympics. It was held at Govind Park in Ba, Fiji, from March 2\u20136, 2004. It was the first edition of the OFC Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament (with previous competitions using FIFA Women's World Cup performances for qualification). Three nations participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178397-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament was the second staging of the OFC Women's U-20 Qualifying Tournament. The tournament was hosted by Papua New Guinea, with matches played between 20 and 24 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178397-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament\nAustralia won their second title after defeating the other two competitors (Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands) in a round robin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178397-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament, Venues\nAll matches were played at Lloyd Robson Oval in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178397-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament, Format\nWith three teams participating, the tournament was played as a round robin, with each team playing each other once. The top team qualified for the 2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178397-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament, Squads\nThere was a maximum squad size of 20 players for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178397-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 OFC Women's Under 19 Qualifying Tournament, Matches\nTeams were awarded three points for a win, one point for a draw and no points for a defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178398-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oakland Athletics season\nThe Oakland Athletics' 2004 season involved the A's finishing 2nd in the American League West with a record of 91 wins and 71 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178398-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oakland Athletics season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178399-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oakland Raiders season\nThe 2004 Oakland Raiders season was the 45th of professional football for the Oakland Raiders franchise, their 35th season as members of the National Football League, and their ninth season since returning to Oakland. They were led by head coach Norv Turner in his first season as head coach of the Raiders. They played their home games at Network Associates Coliseum as member of the AFC West. They finished the season 5\u201311, finishing in last place in the AFC West for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178399-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oakland Raiders season\nThough Rich Gannon began the season as the Raiders starting quarterback, he suffered a neck injury in the third game of the season that would eventually lead to his retirement. For the second consecutive season, the Raiders suffered a five-game losing streak in the middle of the season. They only won one game by a touchdown or more, defeating their Super Bowl XXXVII opponent, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178399-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oakland Raiders season\nThe team lost two of their starting receivers from the 2002 team: Tim Brown was released and signed with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Jerry Rice was traded to the Seattle Seahawks midseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178399-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oakland Raiders season, Previous season\nThe Raiders finished the 2003 season 4\u201312 to finish in a tie for last place in the AFC West. Following the season, Raider owner Al Davis fired head coach Bill Callahan after two years as head coach. A month later, the team named Norv Turner head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178400-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oaxaca state election\nThe Mexican state of Oaxaca held an election on Sunday, 1 August 2004. At stake was the office of the Oaxaca State Governor, the unicameral Oaxaca State Congress, and 570 mayors and municipal councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178400-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oaxaca state election, Governor\nAt the time of the election, the sitting governor was Jos\u00e9 Murat Casab of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178401-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 Oceania Athletics Championships were held at the Townsville Sports Reserve in Townsville, Queensland, Australia, between December 16\u201318, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178401-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Athletics Championships\nA total of 38 events were contested, 20 by men and 18 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178401-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Athletics Championships, Medal summary\nMedal winners were published. Results for the athletes from Papua New Guinea can be found on thewebpage of Athletics PNG. Complete results can be found on the website of the Ligue de Nouvelle Cal\u00e9donie Athl\u00e9tisme (LNCA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178401-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Athletics Championships, Participation (unofficial)\nThe participation of athletes from 18 countries could be determined from the published results list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178402-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Oceania Handball Championship was the fourth edition of the Oceania Handball Nations Cup, which took place in Sydney, Australia from 7 to 9 June 2004. Entered nations were Australia, Cook Islands and the New Zealand. Australia won the right to play in the 2005 World Men's Handball Championship in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178403-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Swimming Championships\nThe 2004 Oceania Swimming Championships were held May 15\u201319, 2004 at the National Aquatics Center in Suva, Fiji. This was the fifth edition of the Championships, and featured competitions in: swimming, open water swimming and synchronized swimming (synchro). The synchro competition marked the first time the sport had been swum in Fiji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178403-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Swimming Championships\nAll swimming competition listed below were swum in a 50m (long-course) pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178403-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Swimming Championships, Participating countries\nThe 2004 Oceania Swimming Championships featured 134 swimmers from 11 countries, and the USA State of Hawaii:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178404-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships\nThe 2004 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships were held at the Townsville Sports Reserve in Townsville, Australia, between December 16\u201318, 2004. They were held together with the 2004 Oceania Open Championships. A total of 35 events were contested, 18 by boys and 17 by girls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178404-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships, Medal summary\nMedal winners can be found on the Athletics Weekly website. Complete results can be found on webpages of the World Junior Athletics History, and of the Ligue de Nouvelle Cal\u00e9donie Athl\u00e9tisme (LNCA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 57], "content_span": [58, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178404-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceania Youth Athletics Championships, Participation (unofficial)\nAn unofficial count yields the number of about 135 athletes from 19 countries:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178405-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceanian Futsal Championship\nThe 2004 OFC Futsal Championship was the fourth edition of the main international futsal tournament of the Oceanian region. It took place in Canberra, Australia from July 25 to 29, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178405-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceanian Futsal Championship\nThe tournament also acted as a qualifying tournament for the 2004 FIFA Futsal World Cup in Chinese Taipei. Australia won the tournament and qualified for the World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178405-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oceanian Futsal Championship, Championship\nThe six participating teams played each on a single round-robin format. The top team of the group, Australia, won the championship and got a ticket to 2004 Futsal World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178406-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Offaly County Council election\nAn election to Offaly County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 21 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178407-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ohio Bobcats football team\nThe 2004 Ohio Bobcats football team represented Ohio University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Ohio competed as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). The Bobcats were led by head coach Brian Knorr, who was fired after the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178408-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ohio Issue 1\nSection 15.11 is a provision in the Ohio Constitution that makes it unconstitutional for the state to recognize or perform same-sex marriages or civil unions. Approved as a constitutional amendment in 2004 under the name of \"Issue One\", it received support from 61.7% of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178408-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ohio Issue 1\nOnly a union between one man and one woman may be a marriage valid in or recognized by this state and its political subdivisions. This state and its political subdivisions shall not create or recognize a legal status for relationships of unmarried individuals that intends to approximate the design, qualities, significance or effect of marriage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178408-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ohio Issue 1\nThe LGBT rights organization Equality Ohio was founded in response to the passage of Issue 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178408-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ohio Issue 1\nMany political experts credit the amendment with bolstering turnout in Rural Ohio, leading to many religious supporters of President George W. Bush to turnout to the polls, helping him win the state of Ohio by a narrow 2 point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178409-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ohio State Buckeyes football team\nThe 2004 Ohio State Buckeyes football team represented Ohio State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head football coach was Jim Tressel. The Buckeyes played their home games at Ohio Stadium. The team finished the season with a record of 8\u20134 and a Big Ten Conference record of 4\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178410-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Oklahoma Democratic presidential primary, part of the process of selecting that party's nominee for President of the United States, took place on February 3, one of the seven nominating contests of 2004's \"Mini-Tuesday\". The primary election chose 40 pledged delegates to represent Oklahoma at the 2004 Democratic National Convention. The remainder of Oklahoma's 47 delegates consisted of unpledged superdelegates not bound by the results of the primary. The election was a closed primary, meaning that only registered Democrats could vote in this election. Wesley Clark won the primary by a razor-thin margin over John Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178411-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Question 711\nOklahoma Question 711 of 2004, was an amendment to the Oklahoma Constitution that defined marriage as the union of a man and a woman, thus rendering recognition or performance of same-sex marriages or civil unions null within the state prior to its being ruled unconstitutional. The referendum was approved by 76 percent of the voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178411-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Question 711\nOn January 14, 2014, Judge Terence C. Kern of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma declared Question 711 unconstitutional. The case, Bishop v. United States (formerly Bishop v. Oklahoma), was then stayed pending appeal. On July 18, 2014, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit ruled that Oklahoma's ban was unconstitutional. On October\u00a06, 2014, the Supreme Court of the United States rejected Oklahoma's request for review, overturning all state laws banning same-sex marriage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178411-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Question 711, Contents\n(a.) Marriage in this state shall consist only of the union of one man and one woman. Neither this Constitution nor any other provision of law shall be construed to require that marital status or the legal incidents thereof be conferred upon unmarried couples or groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178411-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Question 711, Contents\n(b.) A marriage between persons of the same gender performed in another state shall not be recognized as valid and binding in this state as of the date of the marriage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178411-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Question 711, Contents\n(c.) Any person knowingly issuing a marriage license in violation of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178412-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary\nThe 2004 Oklahoma Republican presidential primary was held on February 3 in the U.S. state of Oklahoma as one of the Republican Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election. Incumbent President George W. Bush easily won the primary with 90% of the vote against his only opponent on the ballot, Bill Wyatt, who unexpectedly won 10% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178413-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Sooners football team\nThe 2004 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the University of Oklahoma during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season, the 110th season of Sooner football. The team was led by two-time Walter Camp Coach of the Year Award winner, Bob Stoops, in his sixth season as head coach. They played their home games at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman, Oklahoma. They were a charter member of the Big 12 conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178413-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Sooners football team\nConference play began with a win over the Texas Tech Red Raiders in Norman on October 2, and ended with a win over the Colorado Buffaloes in the Big 12 Championship Game on December 4. The Sooners finished the regular season 12\u20130 (9\u20130 in Big 12) while winning their third Big 12 title and their 39th conference title overall. They were invited to the 2005 Orange Bowl, which served as the BCS National Championship Game that year, where they lost to the USC Trojans, 19\u201355. USC was later forced to vacate this win because of the ineligibility of Reggie Bush, but Oklahoma still counts it as a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178413-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Sooners football team\nFollowing the season, Jammal Brown was selected 13th overall and Mark Clayton 22nd in the 2005 NFL Draft, along with Brodney Pool, Mark Bradley and Dan Cody in the 2nd round, Brandon Jones in the 3rd, Antonio Perkins in the 4th, Donte Nicholson, Mike Hawkins and Lance Mitchell in the 5th, and Wes Sims in the 6th. This total number of 11 stands as the most Sooners taken in the NFL Draft in the 16 years of the Stoops era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178413-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Sooners football team, Schedule\nNote: The NCAA forced USC to vacate their Orange Bowl victory due to an eligibility issue, however, Oklahoma still counts it as a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178413-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma Sooners football team, 2005 NFL Draft\nThe 2005 NFL Draft was held on April 23\u201324, 2005, at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York City. The following Oklahoma players were either selected or signed as undrafted free agents following the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178414-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma State Cowboys football team\nThe 2004 Oklahoma State Cowboys football team represented Oklahoma State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They participated as members of the Big 12 Conference in the South Division. They played their home games at Boone Pickens Stadium in Stillwater, Oklahoma. They were coached by head coach Les Miles, who resigned after the end of the season to become the head coach at Louisiana State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178415-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state budget\nThe Oklahoma State Budget for Fiscal Year 2004 was the spending request by Governor Brad Henry to fund government operations for July 1, 2003\u2013June 30, 2004. Governor Henry and legislative leaders approved the budget in May 2003. This was Henry's first budget submitted as governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178415-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state budget\nFigures shown in the spending request do not reflect the actual appropriations for fiscal year 2004, which must be authorized by the Legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178415-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state budget, Overview\nFiscal year 2003 saw a $593 million revenue shortfall. For FY2004, as in most budget years, the top eleven appropriated agencies made up 90% of the total budget. For FY2004, the governor and legislative leaders imposed a 6.3% across-the-board cut to state appropriations from 2003 levels. Education, healthcare, human services and public safety agencies saw only minor cuts or even slight increases. More dramatic budget cuts (ranging from 10% to 20%) were made to the agencies in the remaining 10% of the state budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178415-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state budget, Total revenue\nAll revenue of the fiscal year 2004 was $5.16 billion, down 8.5% from FY2003. The breakdown is as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178415-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state budget, Total spending\nThe Governor's budget for 2004 totaled $5.16 billion in spending. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change compared to 2003. The budget request is broken down by the following expenditures:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178416-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state elections\nThe Oklahoma state elections were held on November 2, 2004. The primary election was held on July 27. The runoff primary election was held August 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178416-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oklahoma state elections, Overview, Primary election\nThe candidates for the parties faced on in the primary election on July 25. If no party received more than 50% of the vote, a runoff election was held on August 22 to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178417-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Oldham Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Labour Party retained overall control of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178418-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ole Miss Rebels football team\nThe 2004 Ole Miss Rebels football team represented the University of Mississippi during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They participated in the Southeastern Conference in the Western Division. The team played their home games at Vaught\u2013Hemingway Stadium in Oxford, Mississippi. They were coached by head coach David Cutcliffe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178419-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ondrej Nepela Memorial\nThe 2004 Ondrej Nepela Memorial was the 12th edition of an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Bratislava, Slovakia. It took place between September 23 and 26, 2004 at the Vladimir Dzurilla Ice Rink. Skaters competed in four disciplines: men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The competition is named for 1972 Olympic gold medalist Ondrej Nepela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178420-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ontario Men's Curling Championship\nThe 2004 Ontario Men's Curling Championship was held February 2-8 at the Harry Lumley Bayshore Community Centre in Owen Sound.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178420-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ontario Men's Curling Championship\n1998 Olympic silver medalist Mike Harris and his team of John Base, Phil Loevenmark and Trevor Wall would go on to win his lone provincial championship of his career. They would go on to represent Ontario at the 2004 Nokia Brier in Saskatoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178420-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ontario Men's Curling Championship\nThis would mark the final provincial championship for 2-time World champion and 56-year-old Ed Werenich who had come out of retirement for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178421-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ontario Scott Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2004 Ontario Scott Tournament of Hearts was held January 27-February 1 at the Copper Cliff Curling Club in Copper Cliff, Ontario. The Sherry Middaugh rink from Coldwater, Ontario won their third Ontario provincial title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178422-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open 13\nThe 2004 Open 13 was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Palais des Sports de Marseille in Marseille in France and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from February 23 through February 29, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178422-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open 13, Finals, Doubles\nMark Knowles / Daniel Nestor defeated Martin Damm / Cyril Suk 7\u20135, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178423-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open 13 \u2013 Doubles\nS\u00e9bastien Grosjean and Fabrice Santoro were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178423-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open 13 \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won in the final 7\u20135, 6\u20133 against Martin Damm and Cyril Suk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178424-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open 13 \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178424-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open 13 \u2013 Singles\nDominik Hrbat\u00fd won in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20134 against Robin S\u00f6derling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178425-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Canada Cup\nThe 2004 Open Canada Cup was the 7th edition of the Canadian Professional Soccer League's open league cup tournament running from late May through early September. Windsor Border Stars defeated Ottawa St. Anthony Italia 4-3 in a penalty shootout in the final played at Cove Road Stadium, London, Ontario. The victory marked Windsor's first piece of silverware and became the second expansion club to win the open tournament in their debut season. Ottawa also recorded a milestone by becoming the first amateur team to reach the finals. The tournament expanded to include a record number of 24 clubs throughout Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178425-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Canada Cup\nThe Ontario amateur clubs began the tournament in the preliminary rounds while the CPSL clubs received an automatic bye to the second round. For the third straight year London City were granted the hosting rights to the finals which granted them a wild card match if they were defeated in the earlier rounds. Toronto Croatia decided for the first time to opt out of the tournament in order to compete in the annual Croatian-North American Soccer Tournament, while the rest of the CPSL clubs competed in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship\nThe 2004 Open Championship was a men's major golf championship and the 133rd Open Championship, held from 15 to 18 July at the Old Course of Royal Troon Golf Club in Troon, Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship\nTodd Hamilton won his only major championship, defeating 2002 champion Ernie Els by a stroke in a four-hole playoff. Phil Mickelson finished third, followed by Lee Westwood in fourth. Hamilton was the sixth consecutive American to win at Royal Troon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, History of The Open Championship at Royal Troon\nRoyal Troon first hosted The Open Championship in 1923 and the 2004 Open was its eighth. Royal Troon's list of champions includes Arthur Havers (1923), 4-time Open winner Bobby Locke (1950), 7-time major winner Arnold Palmer (1962), Tom Weiskopf (1973), 5-time Open champion Tom Watson (1982), Mark Calcavecchia (1989), and Justin Leonard (1997).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 71], "content_span": [72, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Course\nOpens from 1962 through 1989 played the 11th hole as a par-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Field\nThomas Bj\u00f8rn (3,4), Ben Curtis (2,3), Brian Davis (4), Gary Evans, Nick Faldo (2), Sergio Garc\u00eda (3), Retief Goosen (3,4,9,13,17), Freddie Jacobson (3,4), Davis Love III (3,12,13,17), Hennie Otto, Kenny Perry (3,13,17), Phillip Price (4), Vijay Singh (3,10,13,17), Tiger Woods (2,3,9,10,11,13,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Field\nMark Calcavecchia, John Daly, Ernie Els (3,4,13,17), Paul Lawrie, Tom Lehman, Justin Leonard (3,13,17), Sandy Lyle, Greg Norman, Mark O'Meara, Nick Price (3,13,17), Tom Weiskopf", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Field\nRobert Allenby (17), Stephen Ames, Stuart Appleby (13,17), Chad Campbell (13), Paul Casey (4), K. J. Choi (17), Stewart Cink, Darren Clarke (4), Chris DiMarco (13,17), Brad Faxon (13), Steve Flesch, Jim Furyk (9,13,17), Jay Haas (13,17), Todd Hamilton (23), P\u00e1draig Harrington (4), Charles Howell III (13,17), John Huston, Trevor Immelman (4), Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez, Zach Johnson, Jonathan Kaye (13), Jerry Kelly (17), Stephen Leaney (4,17), Peter Lonard (4,17,19), Shigeki Maruyama, Shaun Micheel (11), Phil Mickelson (10,17), Craig Parry, Ian Poulter (4), Chris Riley, Adam Scott (4,12,17), David Toms (11,13,17), Bob Tway (13,21), Scott Verplank (13), Mike Weir (10,13,17)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Field\nMichael Campbell, Alastair Forsyth, Ignacio Garrido (5), David Howell, Rapha\u00ebl Jacquelin, Lee Westwood", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, First round\nPaul Casey and Thomas Levet both carded 66 (\u22125) and held a two stroke lead over a group of nine players. The group at 3-under included amateur Stuart Wilson and Vijay Singh. Defending champ Ben Curtis carded a 75 (+4). In total there were 39 rounds under par, 25 of those being in the 60s. Home favourite Colin Montgomerie started with a 2-under 69.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nSkip Kendall stormed into the lead with a 66 to reach the halfway stage at 135 (\u22127). Casey dropped down the leaderboard with a 77, while Levet shot a 70 to drop down into second. K. J. Choi continued his good start with a 69, keeping him in a tie for third place with Barry Lane. Todd Hamilton finished the round with a 67 to move up into a tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nAmateurs: Stuart Wilson (+1), Campbell (+5), Tiley (+5), Flanagan (+6), McElhinney (+10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nHamilton surged up the leader with a second consecutive 67 to finish the day at 205 (\u22128). Ernie Els, the 2002 champion, moved up to second at 206 with a 68, while one shot behind lay the reigning Masters champion Phil Mickelson, Retief Goosen, and Thomas Levet at 207 (\u22126).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nA see-saw final round led to a two-man playoff between Hamilton and Els. Hamilton, playing in only his eighth major, opened up a two-shot lead after chipping in for birdie from 30 feet (9\u00a0m) on the par-3 14th to get to 10 under. Then he holed a 12-foot (4\u00a0m) birdie on the par-5 16th to keep his cushion. Els had to make birdies to keep up, and he came through with pure putts on the 16th and 17th. Then came the wild 72nd hole, with Hamilton holding a one shot lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nHamilton pushed his iron off the tee and into the rough, then chopped it across the fairway next to a guard railing that restricted his swing. Els hit his approach to within the shadow of the flag, leaving a 12-foot birdie attempt. Hamilton chipped to 20 feet (6\u00a0m) and missed to take bogey. Els suddenly had a putt to win, but left it short. Mickelson carded a final round 68 to finish a shot back at 275 (\u22129). A 67 moved Lee Westwood into sole fourth, matching Davis Love III for low score of the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178426-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Championship, Round summaries, Final round, Playoff\nAfter 72 holes, Hamilton and Els were tied for the lead at 274 (\u221210), requiring a four-hole aggregate playoff, played over the 1st, 2nd, 17th, and 18th holes. (The first use of this format in The Open was fifteen years earlier in 1989, also at Royal Troon.) Both players parred the first two holes, both par fours, and Hamilton managed a par 3 on the 222-yard (203\u00a0m) 17th. Els overshot the green and bogeyed, then parred the last, leaving Hamilton a 3-foot (1 m) par putt to win the Open, which he holed. Els had all four rounds in the 60s for the second time in an Open without winning; the other time was at Royal St. George's in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 61], "content_span": [62, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178427-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France\nThe 2004 Open Gaz de France was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Stade Pierre de Coubertin in Paris in France that was part of Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. The tournament was held from 9 February until 15 February 2004. First-seeded Kim Clijsters won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178427-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France, Finals, Doubles\nBarbara Schett / Patty Schnyder defeated Silvia Farina Elia / Francesca Schiavone 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178428-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France \u2013 Doubles\nBarbara Schett and Patty Schnyder were the defending champions and won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20132 against Silvia Farina Elia and Francesca Schiavone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178428-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178429-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France \u2013 Singles\nSerena Williams was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178429-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20131 against Mary Pierce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178429-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open Gaz de France \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. The top four seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178430-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3\nThe 2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3, also known as the Torneo God\u00f3, was a men's professional tennis tournament that was part of the International Series Gold of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 52nd edition of the Torneo God\u00f3 and took place from 24 April until 2 May 2004 in Barcelona, Spain. Eighth-seeded Tommy Robredo won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178430-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3, Finals, Singles\nTommy Robredo defeated Gast\u00f3n Gaudio 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178430-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3, Finals, Doubles\nMark Knowles / Daniel Nestor defeated Mariano Hood / Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178431-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3 \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178431-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3 \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 against Mariano Hood and Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178431-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3 \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated. All eight seeded teams received byes to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178432-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3 \u2013 Singles\nCarlos Moy\u00e1 was the defending champion but lost in the third round to Gast\u00f3n Gaudio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178432-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3 \u2013 Singles\nTommy Robredo won in the final 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20133 against Gaudio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178432-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open SEAT God\u00f3 \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. The top eight seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178433-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Moselle\nThe 2004 Open de Moselle was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the second edition of the Open de Moselle, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Ar\u00e8nes de Metz in Metz, France from 11 October until 17 October 2004. Unseeded J\u00e9r\u00f4me Haehnel, who entered the main draw as a qualifier, won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178433-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Moselle, Finals, Doubles\nArnaud Cl\u00e9ment / Nicolas Mahut defeated Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107 / Uros Vico 6\u20132, 7\u20136(10\u20138)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178434-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana\nThe 2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Valencia, Spain and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the tenth edition of the tournament and was held from 12 April until 18 April 2004. Fernando Verdasco won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178434-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana, Finals, Doubles\nGast\u00f3n Etlis / Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez defeated Feliciano L\u00f3pez / Marc L\u00f3pez 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178435-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana \u2013 Doubles\nLucas Arnold and Mariano Hood were the defending champions but only Hood competed that year with Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178435-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana \u2013 Doubles\nGast\u00f3n Etlis and Mart\u00edn Rodr\u00edguez won in the final 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20135) against Feliciano L\u00f3pez and Marc L\u00f3pez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178435-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178436-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana \u2013 Singles\nJuan Carlos Ferrero was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to Fernando Verdasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178436-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana \u2013 Singles\nVerdasco won in the final 7\u20136(7\u20135), 6\u20133 against Albert Monta\u00f1\u00e9s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178436-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Open de Tenis Comunidad Valenciana \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 56], "content_span": [57, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl\nThe 2004 FedEx Orange Bowl game was a post-season college football bowl game between the Miami Hurricanes and the Florida State Seminoles on January 1, 2004, at Pro Player Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. Miami defeated FSU 16\u201314 in a stout defensive battle. The game was part of the 2003\u20132004 Bowl Championship Series (BCS) of the 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season and represented the concluding game of the season for both teams. The Orange Bowl was first played in 1935, and the 2004 game represented the 70th edition of the Orange Bowl. The contest was televised in the United States on ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl\nThis bowl rematch was unique because it meant that the teams would play each other three times in less than a year. Miami had already beaten Florida State 22\u201314 earlier in the season. In addition, Miami would open up the following season against Florida State at home, meaning Florida State would have to play Miami in Miami for two straight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nMiami received the ball to begin the game and scored on the first possession off a 32-yard field goal from Jon Peattie. That was the only scoring of the first quarter as both teams' quarterbacks threw interceptions. Sean Taylor intercepted Seminole quarterback Chris Rix while Jerome Carter intercepted Miami quarterback Brock Berlin. Carter's interception set up the Seminoles with the ball on their own 30-yard line. Chris Rix found Chauncey Stovall for a 52-yard gain putting the Seminoles in Miami territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nOn the first play of the second quarter Florida State took the lead off of a direct snap to Lorenzo Booker that he ran into the endzone, giving the Seminoles the lead. Florida State got the ball back after forcing Miami to punt. Greg Jones had a 24-yard run during the Seminoles possession to set up a Chris Rix touchdown pass to Matt Henshaw. Florida State now had a 14-3 lead. On Miami's ensuing possession Jarrett Payton took a handoff on third and two for 47 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nThe Hurricanes would get another five yards off a penalty to put them on the Seminoles 25-yard line. Three plays later Tyrone Moss ran into the endzone on a 3-yard rush. Aided by a five-yard penalty the Hurricanes were able to get the Seminoles to go three and out and got the ball back with three minutes and forty four seconds at their own 24-yard line. After a penalty on the Hurricanes, Brock Berlin found wide receiver Ryan Moore open for a 41-yard gain putting the Hurricanes on the Seminoles 35-yard line. The Hurricanes were able to move to as close as the Seminoles 13-yard line, however two sacks forced the Hurricanes to settle for a field goal and go into halftime down 13-14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nOn the opening kickoff of the second half Antonio Cromartie was only able take the kickoff four yards and the Seminoles got the ball on their own 13-yard line. The Seminoles were unable to do anything and were forced to punt the ball which Miami would return 7 yards to their own 47-yard line. On third and seven Berlin was able to find Kellen Winslow for a 12-yard gain. On third and thirteen Miami completed a 2-yard pass to Jason Geathers coming up 11 yards short of a first down. However Florida State was penalized five yards on the play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nThis was crucial because now the Hurricanes could attempt a 51-yard field goal as opposed to a 56-yard field goal. The Hurricanes did attempt the 51-yard field goal and it was good. Jon Peattie gave the Hurricanes a 16-14 lead. Both teams' offense were stagnant the rest of the game. The Seminoles did not cross the 50-yard line the remainder of the quarter. The Hurricanes had a great opportunity to capitalize when Jonathan Vilma recovered a Seminole fumble at the Hurricane 40-yard line. On the ensuing Hurricane possession Berlin found Geathers on third down for a 25-yard gain to put the Hurricanes in Seminole territory. However Berlin threw an interception on the offense's following third down to Eric Moore. The Seminoles were unable to capitalize on the turnover and went three and out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nRandy Shannon's defense forced the Seminoles to go three and out on their first two drives of the fourth quarter. Following the Seminoles second punt of the quarter the Hurricanes faced a third and one situation on their own 30. Berlin was unable to rush for the first down on third down and the Hurricanes decided to go for it on fourth down. Berlin would end up fumbling the ball on fourth down giving the Seminoles the ball on the Hurricanes 30-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nThe Seminoles offense was unable to take pickup a first down and had to attempt a field goal. Seminole kicker Xavier Beitia lined up to attempt a 39-yard field goal to give the Seminoles the lead. The previous season Beitia had an opportunity to beat the top ranked Hurricanes at the Orange Bowl on a 43-yard attempt, Beitia missed the kick wide left and the Seminoles lost. Beitia's kick went wide right and the Seminoles still trailed, 14-16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178437-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Orange Bowl, Summary\nThe Hurricanes got the ball back and were not able to do anything on their first three downs, and it appeared they would punt on fourth down. However, the Hurricanes faked a punt on a direct snap to D.J. Williams who rushed up the middle for 33 yards. This gave the Hurricanes good field position in Seminole territory. The Hurricanes would run the ball with Payton on two straight play to ice the clock. On third and two the Seminoles defense stopped Payton and the Hurricanes and forced them to attempt a field goal. Jon Peattie would attempt a 45-yard field goal that would be no good. The Seminoles would get one final possession to try and beat the Hurricanes however they were not able to do anything with it and the Hurricanes won by the final score of 16-14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178438-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open\nThe 2004 Ordina Open was a tennis tournament played on grass courts in Rosmalen, 's-Hertogenbosch in the Netherlands that was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier III of the 2004 WTA Tour. The tournament was held from 14 June until 20 June 2004. Micha\u00ebl Llodra and Mary Pierce won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178438-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open, Finals, Men's Doubles\nMartin Damm / Cyril Suk defeated Lars Burgsm\u00fcller / Jan Vacek 6\u20133, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178438-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open, Finals, Women's Doubles\nLisa McShea / Milagros Sequera defeated Jelena Kostani\u0107 / Claudine Schaul 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178439-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMartin Damm and Cyril Suk, the two-time defending champions, successfully defended their title, by defeating Lars Burgsm\u00fcller and Daniel Vacek 6\u20133, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178440-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nSjeng Schalken was the defending champion, but lost in the first round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178440-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nMicha\u00ebl Llodra won the title, beating Guillermo Coria 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178441-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nElena Dementieva and Lina Krasnoroutskaia were the defending champions, but Dementieva chose not to take part in 2004. Krasnoroutskaia paired up with Anca Barna, but lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178441-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLisa McShea and Milagros Sequera won the title in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178442-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but did not compete in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178442-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ordina Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178443-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 30\nBallot Measure 30 of 2004 would have created a surcharge on Oregon's income tax, raised the minimum tax corporations pay in Oregon income taxes, and made other changes to the tax code to increase revenues. Similar to the previous year's defeated Measure 28, it was proposed as a way to avoid state budget cuts caused by a deficit. The measure was defeated in the February 3, 2004 special election, with 418,315 votes in favor, 691,462 votes against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178443-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 30\nThe 2003\u20132004 biennium saw continued economic problems for the state of Oregon, including a continuation of high unemployment rates. The recession brought decreased revenues for state coffers, causing budget shortfalls and threatening budget cuts for education, health care, services to senior citizens, and law enforcement. To prevent these cuts, the Oregon Legislature passed a bill enacting several tax increases, and repealing some tax credits. The main tax increase was a tax surcharge, in which taxpayers would be charged an additional percentage of their income tax liability, based on their tax bracket. However, anti-tax activists, collaborating with the state Republican and Libertarian parties, collected enough signatures to require a referendum to approve the law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178443-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 30\nEspecially surprising to some observers was the margin by which the measure was defeated in Multnomah County. Measure 28 had passed in that county, but Measure 30 was defeated there with 58 percent voting no. Some claimed that this was because county voters had passed their own temporary income tax in the wake of Measure 28's defeat and were not interested in bailing out the rest of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178444-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 31\nBallot Measure 31 of 2004 was an amendment to the Oregon Constitution, referred to a popular vote by the Oregon Legislative Assembly, that permitted the Legislative Assembly to postpone certain elections in the event of the death of a candidate. The measure was on the November 2 general election ballot, and passed with 66% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178444-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 31\nThe measure was placed on the ballot by Senate Joint Resolution 19 during the 2003 legislative session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178444-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 31, Ballot Title\nAmends Constitution: Authorizes Law Permitting Postponement of Election for Particular Public Office When Nominee for Office Dies", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36\nBallot Measure 36 was a 2004 initiative in the U.S. state of Oregon. It amended the Oregon Constitution to define marriage as a union of one man and one woman. The initiative passed with 1,028,546 votes in favor, and 787,556 votes against (57% to 43%) in the November 2, 2004 general election. It is one of a number of U.S. state constitutional amendments banning same-sex unions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36\nOn May 19, 2014, the measure was declared unconstitutional by a U.S. federal district court judge, who ruled that it violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Amendment to Constitution\nMeasure 36 added the following text to Article 15 of the Oregon Constitution, as Section 5a:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Amendment to Constitution\nPolicy regarding marriage. It is the policy of Oregon, and its political subdivisions, that only a marriage between one man and one woman shall be valid or legally recognized as a marriage. [ Created through initiative petition filed March 2, 2004, and adopted by the people Nov. 2, 2004]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Political context\nThe measure was placed on the ballot through an initiative petition brought by the Oregon Defense of Marriage Coalition, a group dedicated to \"preserving marriage as a union only between one man and one woman.\" The group was formed in reaction to same-sex marriages performed in Multnomah County and Benton County after their respective county commissions interpreted the Oregon Constitution and Oregon law as authorizing the issuing of marriage licenses to same-sex couples.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Political context\nSupporters of the measure, in addition to opposing same-sex marriage on principle, were also angry by the controversial means by which the Multnomah County Commission had come to its decision: no public hearings were held before the commission voted to allow the marriages and one of the commissioners, Lonnie Roberts, was not informed of the move until after the other commissioners began issuing licenses. Roberts criticized the \"clandestine way\" that the decision was made and speculated that he had not been included in the discussion because the other commissioners knew that he wouldn't support their decision. Supporters also wanted to prevent the state courts from coming to the same conclusion as the county commissions\u2014that the state constitution and law required the government to license same-sex marriage\u2014before several standing civil rights lawsuits on the issue could be resolved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 944]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Political context\nBasic Rights Oregon led the campaign against Measure 36. Opponents of the measure made several arguments. Many were supporters of same-sex marriage. In addition, some argued that regardless of voters' feelings on same-sex marriage, the state constitution was an inappropriate place to dictate marriage policy, which should have been statutory. Opponents also argued that the measure added discriminatory language to the state constitution, which, they predicted, would later be seen in the same negative light as earlier constitutional language against African Americans. They also feared that the measure could be used as a legal basis for denying benefits to same-sex couples which are automatically granted to heterosexual married couples.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Political context\nAccording to Daniel June in JD Journal, Judge Harry Pregerson effectively undermined the ban by declaring it unconstitutional, when he ruled in favor of Allison Clark that she should receive the same work benefits with her homosexual partner as heterosexual couples would receive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Political context\nOn May 19, 2014, United States District Judge Michael McShane ruled that Oregon's constitutional ban on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional. Since then, same-sex marriage has been legally recognized in Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178445-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 36, Satirical arguments\nMarvin Dennis Moore, a Portland church organist, wrote satirical arguments on several Oregon ballot measures, including Measure 36. Moore's arguments, ostensibly in favor of the measure, were printed in the official voters' pamphlet. For example, reacting to some supporters' claims that the purpose of marriage is for procreation, he argues that \"couples who fail to conceive within two years ought to have their marriage licenses revoked.\" Measure 36 supporters criticized the placement of Moore's arguments in the \"Arguments in Favor\" section of the pamphlet, but the Oregon Secretary of State's Office countered they had no choice under the law but to print his arguments as specified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49\nOregon Ballot Measure 37 is a controversial land-use ballot initiative that passed in the U.S. state of Oregon in 2004 and is now codified as Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS) 195.305. Measure 37 has figured prominently in debates about the rights of property owners versus the public's right to enforce environmental and other land use regulations. Voters passed Measure 49 in 2007, substantially reducing the impact of Measure 37.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Content of the proposal\nThe law enacted by Measure 37 allows property owners whose property value is reduced by environmental or other land use regulations to claim compensation from state or local government. If the government fails to compensate a claimant within two years of the claim, the law allows the claimant to use the property under only the regulations in place at the time he/she purchased the property. Certain types of regulations, however, are exempt from this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 88], "content_span": [89, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\nAdvocates for Measure 37 have described it as a protection against \"regulatory taking,\" a notion with roots in an interpretation of the United States Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\nThe Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution ends as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\n\u2026nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\nThat phrase provides the foundation for the government power of eminent domain, and requires compensation for governmental appropriations of physical property. It has occasionally been used to require compensation for use restrictions that deprive the owner of any economically-viable use of land. See the 1922 United States Supreme Court case Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\nThe advocates of Measure 37 employed a more expansive interpretation of the concept of regulatory taking than required by the Supreme Court, considering any reduction in a piece of property's value - for instance, a reduction resulting from an environmental regulation - to require compensation to the owner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\nMeasure 37 was ruled unconstitutional in a 2005 circuit court decision, but the Oregon Supreme Court reversed that decision, ruling that the law was not unconstitutional, and noting that the Court was not empowered to rule on its efficacy:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legal context\nWhether Measure 37 as a policy choice is wise or foolish, farsighted or blind, is beyond this court's purview.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Political context, Oregon\nIn the early 1970s, Senate Bill 100 and Portland's 1972 Downtown Plan established bold guidelines for the regulation of land use. Oregon became known for its strict land use planning. While some Oregonians take great pride in that, others consider themselves victimized by government oversight. The strong 2004 passage (61%) of Measure 37 is considered a political backlash to that legacy of regulation, and follows several other unsuccessful efforts to restrict land use regulation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 90], "content_span": [91, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Political context, Nationwide\nThe state of Washington's legislature referred Initiative 164 (also known as Referendum 48) to the ballot in 1995. This \"regulatory takings\" bill was similar to Measure 37 in its restriction of local governments' ability to regulate land use. The bill was widely criticized, and was not approved by voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Political context, Nationwide\nIn 2006, voters in six western states considered ballot initiatives similar to Oregon's 2004 Measure 37. All states except Arizona rejected the initiatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Political context, Nationwide\nArizona's initiative combined the land use/regulatory taking issue central to Oregon Ballot Measure 37 with a restriction on eminent domain (similar to Oregon Ballot Measure 39 (2006)). The Arizona initiative's proponents focused their arguments almost exclusively on the less controversial eminent domain portion of the initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Political context, Nationwide\nThe Nevada initiative also combined the two issues. The regulatory taking portions of Nevada's initiative (i.e., those most similar to Oregon's Measure 37) were removed by the state Supreme Court, and voters approved the remaining restrictions on eminent domain. The Nevada initiative will be reviewed in the next election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Political context, Nationwide\nThis surge in related initiatives reflects the rising influence of political activists who coordinate the production and advocacy of state ballot initiatives on a national level. Many of the ballot initiatives in the following table (in numerous states) have been financed by New York libertarian Howie Rich and groups he is involved with, most notably Americans for Limited Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Legislative text\nThe following are the first three sections of the law; for a complete version, see .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 81], "content_span": [82, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Support for Measure 37\nArguments in support supplied by individuals and interest groups for inclusion in the voter's pamphlet for Measure 37 are found .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Support for Measure 37\nSupporters argue that Measure 37 provided protection of the value of property by insuring that new legislation does not decrease property values or limit development possibilities. Timber companies and real estate developers were the most prominent supporters (and the primary funders) of Measure 37, presumably because environmental and other land use regulations would impact them most directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Support for Measure 37\nMeasure 37's sponsor, Oregonians In Action, and various supporters drummed up support during the 2004 election using the case of Dorothy English, a then-92-year-old woman, as a cause c\u00e9l\u00e8bre. Enacted zoning regulations prevented English from dividing her land into pieces that could go to each of her children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Opposition to Measure 37\nArguments in opposition supplied by individuals and interest groups for inclusion in the voter's pamphlet for Measure 37 are found .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 89], "content_span": [90, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact\nAs of March 12, 2007, 7,562 Measure 37 claims for compliance payments or land use waivers had been filed spanning 750,898 acres (3,038.78\u00a0km2) statewide in Oregon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 71], "content_span": [72, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact\nThe claims filed included mobile home parks in sacred native burial grounds, shopping malls in farmland, and gravel pit mines in residential neighborhoods. There are no provisions in the law that public notice must be provided to neighboring property owners when a claim is filed. Because municipalities can not afford the billions in compensation, the laws were waived in every case but one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 71], "content_span": [72, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact\nClaims filed in Portland, Oregon, by December 4, 2006, totalled over $250 million. Many of these claims were filed by major area land developers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 71], "content_span": [72, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact\nOutside of Oregon, some contend that Measure 37 may have decreased support for national anti-urban sprawl legislation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 71], "content_span": [72, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact, Specific cases\nThe owners of Schreiner's Iris Gardens filed a claim in late 2006, demanding either $9.5 million or the right to subdivide their 400 acres (1.6\u00a0km2). They assert that they have no intention of changing the use of the property, but want to keep options open for the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact, Specific cases\nJohn Benton, a Hood River County fruit farmer, filed a Measure 37 claim, demanding either $57 million or the right to build 800 houses on his 210 acres (0.85\u00a0km2) of property. Neighboring farmers objected, due to the significant impact they anticipated such a change would bring to their community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact, Specific cases\nIn the fall of 2006, the Palins, a Prineville couple, filed a Measure 37 claim, demanding either $200,000 or the right to develop their property, which is on a scenic portion of rimrock clearly visible from the city. The city did its own appraisal of the property's potential value, and offered $47,000. This was the first case where the government offered money instead of a waiver of land use restrictions, and highlights the Measure's lack of a clear process for determining the value associated with a claim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact, Specific cases\nIn a January 15, 2007 article, a statewide newspaper highlighted a Measure 37-based claim in Hood River County, in which land owners aim to develop a parcel of rural land eight times the size of the city of Hood River:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Impact, Specific cases\nAs negotiations begin, Hood River is emerging as the perfect case study. No other county's Measure 37 dynamics speak so directly to Oregon's changing economy and lifestyle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nIn 2007, the Oregon legislature placed Measure 49 on the November 6, 2007 special election ballot. It passed with 62% in favor. The measure overturns and modifies many of the provisions of Measure 37. The Legislature stated that it would restrict the damaging effects of Measure 37 by limiting some of the development that measure permitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nThis measure protects farmlands, forestlands and lands with groundwater shortages in two ways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nFirst, subdivisions are not allowed on high-value farmlands, forestlands and groundwater-restricted lands. Claimants may not build more than three homes on such lands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nSecond, claimants may not use this measure to override current zoning laws that prohibit commercial and industrial developments, such as strip malls and mines, on land reserved for homes, farms, forests and other uses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nA record 117 paid arguments on Measure 49 appeared in the voter's pamphlet for that election, most favoring it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nMeasure 49 passed by an even greater margin than Measure 37 had. The impact of the law is as follows. The measure no longer authorizes challenges to restrictions on industrial or commercial uses of property. In addition, claimants must prove their losses by presenting appraisals of the property one year before and one year after the enactment of the regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178446-0034-0001", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 37 and 2007 Oregon Ballot Measure 49, Measure 49\nFor land use restrictions enacted before 2007, the restriction may only be waived to permit the claimant to build one to three homes on their land, or up to 10 homes if the property is not high value agricultural land and they can show that the waiver is necessary to restore the appraised value of the property.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178447-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 38\nBallot Measure 38 of 2004 would have abolished Oregon's State Accident Insurance Fund (commonly known as SAIF Corporation), a nonprofit state-chartered workers' compensation provider. SAIF's assets would have been sold and the revenues from the sale would have been used to fund schools and other state services. Voters defeated the measure in the 2 November 2004 general election, with 670,935 votes in favor, and 1,037,722 votes against. It was placed on the ballot by initiative petition by the political group Oregonians for Accountability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178447-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 38\nSupporters of the measure pointed to a series of scandals at the government agency. They portrayed the agency as out-of-control and lacking proper oversight, and especially decried the agency's hiring of lobbyists to advocate on the agency's behalf. Measure 38 supporters capitalized on the fact that former governor Neil Goldschmidt, who admitted in 2004 to a sexual relationship with a 14-year-old girl in the 1970s, was one of the lobbyists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178447-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 38\nLater in the campaign, supporters ran ads portraying SAIF as a threat to gay rights, quoting a memo written by a former CEO in which she suggests the agency challenge the Oregon Court of Appeals decision in Tanner v. OHSU (157 Or.App. 502), which required public employers to extend domestic partner benefits to same-sex couples. Supporters also argued that abolishing the state-run insurer would lead to more competition and reduce rates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178447-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ballot Measure 38\nCritics of the measure, which included the state's largest business lobby and the state chapters of the National Federation of Independent Business and the AFL-CIO, argued that SAIF is critical to keeping workers' compensation rates low. They also argued that Oregonians for Accountability was actually a front for Liberty Mutual, SAIF's major competitor for workers' compensation policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178448-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Oregon Democratic presidential primary was held on May 18 in the U.S. state of Oregon as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178449-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon Ducks football team\nThe 2004 Oregon Ducks football team represented the University of Oregon during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178450-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oregon State Beavers football team\nThe 2004 Oregon State Beavers football team represented Oregon State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Led by head coach Mike Riley, the Beavers won the 2004 Insight Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178451-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Origins Award winners\nThe following are the winners of the 31st annual Origins Award, held in 2005:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178452-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Orlando Predators season\nThe 2004 Orlando Predators season was the 14th season for the franchise. They went 10-6 and lost in the Quarterfinals to the Chicago Rush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178453-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Orlando mayoral election\nThe 2004 Orlando mayoral election was held on Tuesday, March 9, 2004, to elect the mayor of Orlando, Florida. Incumbent mayor Buddy Dyer was elected to a first full term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178453-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Orlando mayoral election\nMunicipal elections in Orlando and Orange County are non-partisan. Had no candidate received a majority of the votes in the general election, a runoff would have been held between the two candidates that received the greatest number of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video\nOn October 29, 2004, at 21:00 UTC, Al Jazeera broadcast excerpts allegedly from a videotape of Osama bin Laden addressing the people of the United States; in this video, he accepts responsibility for the September 11 attacks, condemns the Bush government's response to those attacks, and presents those attacks as part of a campaign of revenge and deterrence motivated by his witnessing of the destruction in the Lebanese Civil War in 1982. News analysts speculated that the release of the video was timed to influence the 2004 U.S. presidential election, which would take place four days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Content\nThe video is reported to be 18 minutes in length; bin Laden only speaks for 14 minutes 39 seconds. Al-Jazeera released a transcript of the complete tape on November 1, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Content\nBin Laden appears wearing a turban and a white robe partially covered by a golden mantle, standing in front of an almost featureless brown background and reading his comments from papers resting on a podium. He moves both of his arms (dispelling rumors that one of them is limp after having been wounded) and looks healthy as far as can be told, but a bit older and greyer than in his former tapes. His remarks, in Arabic but addressed to citizens of the United States, instruct them that \"the best way to avoid another Manhattan\" (a reference to the September 11, 2001 attacks), is to not threaten the security of Muslim nations, such as Palestine and Lebanon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Content\nHe speaks of his desire to bankrupt the U.S., saying:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Content\n[It is] easy for us to provoke and bait this administration. All that we have to do is to send two mujahidin to the furthest point east to raise a piece of cloth on which is written al-Qaeda, in order to make the generals race there and cause America to suffer human, economic, and political losses. ... This is in addition to our having experience in using guerrilla warfare and the war of attrition to fight tyrannical superpowers, as we, alongside the mujahidin, bled Russia for 10 years, until it went bankrupt and was forced to withdraw in defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Content\nHe dismisses as rhetoric claims by U.S. President George W. Bush that the attacks occurred because Islamic extremists \"hate freedom\", saying: \"If Bush says we hate freedom, let him tell us why we didn't attack Sweden, for example. It is known that freedom-haters don't have defiant spirits like those of the 19\u2014may God have mercy on them\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Content\nBin Laden further accuses U.S. President George W. Bush of misleading the American people during the previous three years\u2014\"Despite entering the fourth year after September 11, Bush is still deceiving you and hiding the truth from you and therefore the reasons are still there to repeat what happened\"\u2014as well as criticizing Bush's actions on the day of the attacks: \"It never occurred to us that the Commander-in-Chief of the country would leave 50,000 citizens in the two towers to face those horrors alone because he thought listening to a child discussing her goats was more important.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Immediate reactions\nLet me make this very clear: Americans will not be intimidated or influenced by an enemy of our country. I'm sure Senator Kerry agrees with this. I also want to say to the American people that we're at war with these terrorists and I am confident that we will prevail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Immediate reactions\nLet me make it clear, crystal clear: as Americans, we are absolutely united in our determination to hunt down and destroy Osama bin Laden and the terrorists. They are barbarians, and I will stop at absolutely nothing to hunt down, capture or kill the terrorists wherever they are, whatever it takes. Period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Intelligence response\nEven though al Jazeera (when broadcasting the footage on its evening newscast) did not disclose the source of the video, sources within the United States intelligence community have confirmed that the speaker, who appears behind a lectern, is indeed bin Laden. By mentioning 2004 U.S. presidential candidate John Kerry by name, the tape seemed to prove that bin Laden was still alive at least midway through 2004, which was not known with certainty at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Intelligence response\nAccording to the Agence France-Presse, U.S. diplomats in Qatar were given a copy of a videotape of Osama before it aired on al Jazeera television; the diplomats unsuccessfully sought to prevent the Arabic language network from broadcasting it. The United States State Department requested that the government of Qatar (where Al Jazeera is located) discourage the station from airing the videotape, according to a senior State Department official.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Intelligence response\nEven though the tape was analyzed by American intelligence to determine if it contains any coded messages to operatives, White House spokesman Scott McClellan commented that there were no plans to raise the U.S. terrorism alert level, as no specific threats were made in the tape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Intelligence response\nAccording to Robert Parry, Ron Suskind noted that the CIA analysis of the video led them to the consensus view that the tape was designed strategically to help President Bush win reelection in 2004. Deputy CIA director John E. McLaughlin noted at one meeting, \"Bin Laden certainly did a nice favor today for the President.\" Suskind quoted Jami Miscik, CIA deputy associate director for intelligence, as saying \"Certainly, he would want Bush to keep doing what he's doing for a few more years.\" The same speculation has been made by Bahukutumbi Raman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178454-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Osama bin Laden video, Public response\nThe 2004 tape boosted the popularity of George W. Bush. President Bush opened up a six-point lead over his opponent Senator John Kerry in the first opinion poll to include sampling taken after the videotape was broadcast. However, Kerry won the category of people who considered the tape \"very important\" 53% to 47% according to CNN's exit poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178455-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ottawa Renegades season\nThe 2004 Ottawa Renegades season was the third season for the team in the Canadian Football League and 3rd overall. The Renegades finished the season with a 5\u201313 record and failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178456-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Outback Bowl\nThe 2004 Outback Bowl featured the Florida Gators and the Iowa Hawkeyes. It was the 18th edition of the Outback Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178456-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Outback Bowl, Summary\nFlorida scored early in the game, with quarterback Chris Leak throwing a 70-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Kelvin Kight to take a 7\u20130 lead. Iowa equalized following a 3-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Nathan Chandler to wide receiver Maurice Brown, knotting the score, 7\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178456-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Outback Bowl, Summary\nEarly in the second quarter, kicker Nate Kaeding made a 47-yard field goal, to give Iowa a 10\u20137 lead. Chandler later rushed 5 yards for a touchdown to extend the Hawkeyes' lead to 17\u20137. Before halftime, Kaeding connected on a 32-yard field goal to increase the lead to 20\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178456-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Outback Bowl, Summary\nEarly in the third quarter, Matt Melloy recovered a blocked punt in the end zone for an Iowa touchdown and a 27\u20137 lead. Florida kicked a 48-yard field goal to pull within 27\u201310. A Fred Russell touchdown run pushed Iowa's lead to 34\u201310. Kaeding later connected on his third field goal, this one from 38 yards, increasing the lead to 37\u201310. Chris Leak's 25-yard touchdown pass to Dallas Baker made the final margin 37\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178457-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Oxford City Council election\nElections to Oxford City Council were held on 10 June 2004. The council is elected by halves, so one seat in each ward was up for election (except in St Clements, where both seats were contested). Labour lost majority control of the council but remained in minority administration. Overall turnout was 37.6%, with the lowest turnout (26.5%) in Carfax ward and the highest (49.5%) in Wolvercote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178457-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Oxford City Council election, Election result\nNote: three Independents stood in 2004, compared with one in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178457-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Oxford City Council election, Election result\nThe total number of seats on the Council after the election was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178457-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Oxford City Council election, Results by ward, St Clement's\nBecause both seats were up for election each voter had two votes (i.e. plurality-at-large). Turnout has been estimated by halving the number of votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 64], "content_span": [65, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference\nThe 2004 PBA Fiesta Conference, or known as the 2004 Gran Matador Brandy-PBA Fiesta Conference for sponsorship reasons, was tournament held by the Philippine Basketball Association and the first ever edition of the PBA Fiesta Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference\nPrior to the formation of the said conference, the league had two import-laced conferences known as the PBA Commissioner's Cup (with an import height-limit of 6\u20138), and the PBA Governor's Cup (with an import height-limit of 6\u20134). However, in 2003, the two conferences were scrapped and was replaced with an Invitational tournament, with an All-Filipino local squad along with foreign teams) and an import-laced Reinforced Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference\nBut, in 2004, the league changed its calendar from a calendar year to a fiscal year. As a preparation for the new format, the tournament was institutionalized in 2004 as a transitional tournament. The first Fiesta Conference was played from February\u2013July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference, 2004 PBA All-Star Game\nThe league held its All-Star Weekend on August 15, 2004 at the jampacked New Cebu City Coliseum, with the revived North vs South All-Stars format. The South All-Stars defeated the Northern selection, 130\u2013128, in a closely fought contest. Asi Taulava and Jimmy Alapag were named co-MVP of the All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference, Quarterfinals, Group B\nTwo guest teams participated in the tournament, the University of British Columbia men's basketball team and the US Pro-Am Selection. Both never won a single game in the quarterfinals of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference, Finals\nThe Barangay Ginebra Kings ended their seven-year title drought with a 3\u20131 series victory over Red Bull Barako in the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178458-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA Fiesta Conference, Awards\nEric Menk of Barangay Ginebra was named the Best Player of the Conference while Red Bull's Victor Thomas is the conference Best Import.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178459-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA draft\nThe 2004 Philippine Basketball Association (PBA) rookie draft was an event at which teams drafted players from the amateur ranks. It was held on January 16, 2004 at the Glorietta Mall at Makati City. This is the last draft to be held within a calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178459-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA draft, Round 3\nRed Bull Thunder, San Miguel Beermen and Sta. Lucia Realtors passed on this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 23], "content_span": [24, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178459-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA draft, Round 4\nPurefoods Tender Juicy Hotdogs, Shell Turbo Chargers, Barangay Ginebra Kings, Red Bull Thunder, Sta. Lucia Realtors and Talk 'N Text Phone Pals passed on this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 23], "content_span": [24, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178459-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 PBA draft, Undrafted players\nDraftee's name followed by college. All undrafted players become rookie free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship\nThe 2004 Ladbrokes.com World Darts Championship was the 10th anniversary of the PDC version of the World Darts Championship. The tournament took place between 27 December 2003 and 4 January 2004 at the Circus Tavern, Purfleet, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship\nAn extra round was added, with the top 16 seeds given a bye to the third round, bringing the total players at the televised stages to 48. Ladbrokes, who sponsored the event initially for one year in 2003, decided to extend their deal and the prize fund was increased to \u00a3256,000. The Dutch television station, RTL 5 and Sky Sports both extended their deals with the PDC by three years. PDC chairman Barry Hearn announced that the tournament would be shown in Malaysia on pay-per-view.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship\nDefending champion and number two seed, John Part suffered a surprise third-round defeat to Mark Dudbridge, his first match of the 2004 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship\nThe final became only the second ever (and first PDC) world final to go to a sudden-death leg. The first time it happened was when Phil Taylor beat Mike Gregory in the 1992 BDO final, Taylor was again involved and came out victorious against Kevin Painter. He came from 4\u20131 down to win his 11th world title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship\nThe two losing semi-finalists came from different ends of darts experience. 56-year-old Bob Anderson, a World Champion 16 years earlier lost to Painter and Wayne Mardle was making his first PDC World Championship semi-final appearance. Mardle lost to Taylor for the second year running, following a third-round defeat as an unseeded player in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship, New format\nTo accommodate the change in the number of entries into the competition to 48, the format of the World Championship was again changed. 16 qualifiers would contest the first round, with the eight winners going through to the second round to meet players ranked between 25 and 32 inclusive in the PDC. These eight winners would go through to join the top 24 in the third round, where the tournament proceeded from the last 32 to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178460-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 PDC World Darts Championship, Representation from different countries\nThis table shows the number of players by country in the World Championship, the total number including round 1&2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 74], "content_span": [75, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178461-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PDL season\nThe 2004 USL Premier Development League season was the 10th PDL season. The season began in April 2004 and ended in August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178461-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PDL season\nCentral Florida Kraze finished the season as national champions, beating Boulder Rapids Reserve 1-0 in the PDL Championship game. Chicago Fire Reserves finished with the best regular season record in the league, winning 17 out of their 18 games, suffering no losses, and finishing with a +66 goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178461-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 PDL season\nEl Paso Patriots striker Julio Frias was the league's top scorer, with 25 goals, while DFW Tornados midfielder Mark Rowland led the league with 11 assists. Chicago Fire Reserves keeper Brad Guzan enjoyed the best goalkeeping statistics, with a goals-against average of 0.39 per game in his 13 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season\nThe 2004 Russian football season, saw CSKA Moscow competed in the Russian Premier League, Russian Cup and the UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Season events\nAt the end of the previous season, Artur Jorge was announced as CSKA's new manager for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Transfers, Winter\nIn:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Transfers, Winter\nOut:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Transfers, Summer\nIn:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Transfers, Summer\nOut:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178462-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 PFC CSKA Moscow season, Competitions, UEFA Champions League, Group stages\nProgressed to the UEFA Cup Round of 32 during the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship\nThe 2004 PGA Championship was the 86th PGA Championship, played August 12\u201315 at the Straits Course of the Whistling Straits complex in Haven, Wisconsin (postal address Kohler). The purse was $6.25 million and the winner's share was $1.125 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship\nVijay Singh, the 1998 champion, earned his third and final major title in a three-hole aggregate playoff, defeating Justin Leonard and Chris DiMarco. At the time Singh, age 41, was third in the world rankings; the win moved him to #2 and he ascended to the top spot three weeks later, displacing Tiger Woods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship\nIt was the first major championship at the expansive Straits Course, designed by Pete Dye and opened in 1998, which allowed high attendance and was highly profitable for the PGA of America. It set records with over 94,400 tickets sold and an overall attendance of 320,000 for the week. The overall economic impact was $76.9 million, shattering the previous record of $50.4 million in 2002, and nearly doubling that of 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship\nThe PGA Championship returned just six years later, in 2010, displacing the more confined Sahalee Country Club near Seattle, which hosted in 1998, Singh's first major win. The admittance at Sahalee in 1998 was capped at 25,000 per day by the PGA of America. In early 2005, its chief executive officer, Jim Awtrey, cited the proximity to the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver as the main reason for the retraction, and that Sahalee was targeted for 2012 to 2015 for another PGA Championship. Whistling Straits was awarded the 2010 event days later. The PGA of America has yet to commit to a return to Sahalee before 2028, but will return to the West in 2020 at San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, History of the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits\nThis was the first major championship held at Whistling Straits, and the Straits Course hosted the PGA Championship again in 2010, which also ended in a playoff, and 2015. It will host the Ryder Cup in 2020. The course also hosted the U.S. Senior Open in 2007, won by Brad Bryant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, History of the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits\nThis was the second PGA Championship (and major) in the state of Wisconsin; 71 years earlier, the 1933 edition was played at Blue Mound in Wauwatosa, just west of Milwaukee. The PGA Tour stopped in the state regularly with the Greater Milwaukee Open (1968\u20132009), preceded by the Milwaukee Open Invitational (1955\u20131961).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 75], "content_span": [76, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, First round\nLed by Darren Clarke, 39 players broke par in Thursday opening round. Clarke birdied the first four holes and finished at 7-under-par 65. It was the lowest score under par in the first round of a major since Chris DiMarco had a 7-under 65 at the 2001 Masters. He was one stroke better than Justin Leonard and Ernie Els.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Second round\nJustin Leonard posted a 3-under 69 and Vijay Singh carded a 4-under 68 to share a one stroke lead at 9 under midway through the 86th PGA Championship. Opening round leader Darren Clarke shot a 1-under 71 and is tied for third with Ernie Els and Briny Baird. Tiger Woods made two straight birdies on 16 and 17 to avoid missing his first cut in 128 events. Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez, who shot the low round of the day of 65, ended in a tie for 13th at 3-under.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Third round\nVijay Singh shot 69 to reach 12 under par as he tried to add a third major title to his 1998 PGA Championship and 2000 Masters. Justin Leonard carded 70 and was at 11 under. Leonard, who had a two-shot lead after making a 6-foot birdie on the 12th, bogeyed Nos. 15 and 18 to keep him one behind. Briny Baird, the leader at one point, pulled his tee shot over the cliff left of the par-3 17th and wound up with a triple bogey to knocked him out of contention. He wound up with a 75 and was seven shots behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nAn exciting final round filled with missed opportunities led to a three-man playoff between Vijay Singh, Chris DiMarco and Justin Leonard. Ernie Els missed the playoff by one stroke, thanks to a bogey at No. 18, and completed a disheartening season of near-misses in the majors. He finished fourth, tied with Chris Riley who also bogeyed No. 18. Els finished second in the Masters, second in the British Open and ninth in the U.S. Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nPhil Mickelson also had a chance to get into the playoff, needing a birdie at the 72nd hole. Mickelson however took bogey and added a sixth-place finish to his memorable run at the majors in 2004. Mickelson won the Masters, took second in the U.S. Open and placed third in the British Open. K.J. Choi also had a chance to get into the playoff with a birdie, but also bogeyed the 72nd hole to finish two strokes behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nTiger Woods bogeyed two of the first four holes and wound up with a 73, his worst finish in the majors this year, and extended his streak to 10 majors without winning, which was the longest drought of his career at that time. He won the next major, his fourth green jacket at the Masters, in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Final round\nLeonard, playing in the final group at the PGA Championship for the third time, took a two-shot lead with five holes to play with an 18-foot (5.5\u00a0m) birdie putt on 13. Leonard missed four putts inside 12 feet (3.7\u00a0m) down the stretch including a 12-foot par putt on No. 18 which would have given him his second major championship. DiMarco, the only player in the final nine groups to break par, had an 18-foot birdie putt to win on the 72nd hole that he left short. He also lost in a playoff in the next major, to Woods at Augusta, and ended his career without a major victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Playoff\nAfter 72 holes, Singh, DiMarco and Leonard were tied on 8 under par, requiring a three-hole aggregate playoff, over the 10th, 17th, and 18th holes. Singh, who had yet to make a birdie during the day, got off to fast start with a birdie at the 10th hole, a short par-4 at 361 yards (330\u00a0m). Singh nearly drove the green and left a simple pitch to 6 feet (1.8\u00a0m), while DiMarco and Leonard both made par.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Round summaries, Playoff\nSingh then laced a 3-iron to within 6 feet on the 236-yard (216\u00a0m) par-3 17th, but missed the putt and all three men made par. Leonard and DiMarco needed to gain a stroke on Singh on the par-4 18th and neither came close \u2014 DiMarco in a bunker, Leonard so far away that he used a wedge to chip on the green. Neither finished the hole, and Singh's par secured his second PGA Championship and third career major. His 76 on Sunday was the highest final-round score ever by a PGA champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Quotes\nIt looked ugly, but it's the prettiest one, I think.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Quotes\nIt was sad to see someone win it the way I did. The putter kind of fell asleep. I got new life when (Leonard) missed the putt on the last hole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Quotes\nThis makes my year. I think this is the biggest accomplishment I've ever had in my whole career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Quotes\nI missed about four putts inside 10 feet on the back nine. It's pretty hard to win a golf tournament, much less a major, when you do that.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Quotes\nI didn't win, and it's very disappointing. It's not like I haven't traveled down this road before. And hopefully, it will be the same result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178463-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Championship, Quotes\nIt's been a great year for me in the majors. I feel like I'm really onto something good, and I'm looking forward to next year. I'm sorry we have such a long way to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178464-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Tour\nThe 2004 PGA Tour season was played from January 8 to November 7. The season consisted of 48 official money events. Vijay Singh won the most tournaments, nine, and there were 10 first-time winners. The tournament results, leaders, and award winners are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178464-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Tour, Tournament results\nThe following table shows all the official money events for the 2004 season. \"Date\" is the ending date of the tournament. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names are the number of wins they had on the tour up to and including that event. Majors are shown in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 33], "content_span": [34, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178465-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates\nThis is a list of the 35 players who earned their 2005 PGA Tour card through Q School in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178465-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Tour Qualifying School graduates, 2005 Results\n*PGA Tour rookie in 2005T = Tied Green background indicates the player retained his PGA Tour card for 2006 (finished inside the top 125). Yellow background indicates the player did not retain his PGA Tour card for 2006, but retained conditional status (finished between 126-150). Red background indicates the player did not retain his PGA Tour card for 2006 (finished outside the top 150).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178466-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Tour of Australasia\nThe 2004 PGA Tour of Australasia was a series of men's professional golf events played mainly in Australia and New Zealand. The main tournaments on the PGA Tour of Australasia are played in the southern summer so they are split between the first and last months of the year. The tour's developmental series, known as the Von Nida Tour was played in the middle of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178466-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 PGA Tour of Australasia, Main tournament results\nThe table below shows the 2004 schedule. It only lists official money events on the main tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178467-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Curling Championships\nThe 2004 Pacific Curling Championships were held at the Euiam Ice Rink in Chuncheon, South Korea from November 20 to 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178467-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Curling Championships\nNew Zealand's Sean Becker won the men's event over Australia's Hugh Millikin. By virtue of reaching the finals, both nations qualified for the 2005 Ford World Men's Curling Championship in Victoria, British Columbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178467-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Curling Championships\nOn the women's side, Japan's Yumie Funayama defeated China's Wang Bingyu in the final. This qualified both Japan and China for the 2005 World Women's Curling Championship in Paisley, Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178468-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Handball Cup\nThe 2004 Men's Pacific Handball Cup was held in Sydney, Australia between June 10 and 13, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178468-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Handball Cup\nThe competition participants host Australia, New Zealand, Tahiti, Cook Islands and New Caledonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178468-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Handball Cup\nHosts Australia were the winners and undefeated all tournament. New Caledonia in the final were runners up followed by Tahiti, New Zealand and Cook Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178469-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Islanders rugby union tour of Australia and New Zealand\nThe 2004 Pacific Islander rugby union tour was a series of matches played by the Pacific Islanders in Australia and New Zealand during June and July 2004. The composite team was selected from the best players from Fiji, Samoa and Tonga, as well as Niue and the Cook Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178469-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Islanders rugby union tour of Australia and New Zealand\nThe Pacific Islanders won the first two tour matches against Queensland and New South Wales, but lost the three Test matches played against Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178469-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Islanders rugby union tour of Australia and New Zealand, The Matches, Australia\nPacific Islanders: 15.Norman Ligairi, 14.Lome Fa'atau, 13.Seilala Mapusua, 12.Seremaia Baikeinuku, 11.Sitiveni Sivivatu, 10.Tanner Vili, 9.Moses Rauluni, 8.Alifereti Doviverata, 7.Sisa Koyamaibole, 6.Sione Lauaki, 5.Ifereimi Rawaqa, 4.Inoke Afeaki (capt), 3.Taufa'ao Filise, 2. ' Aleki Lutui, 1.Soane Tonga'uiha, \u2013 replacements: 17.Tevita Taumoepeau, 18.Leo Lafaiali'i, 19.Semo Sititi, 20.Steve So'oialo, 21.Seru Rabeni, 22.Sireli Bobo \u2013 No entry: 16.Joeli Lotawa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 92], "content_span": [93, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178469-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Islanders rugby union tour of Australia and New Zealand, The Matches, New Zealand\nPacific Islanders: 15.Seru Rabeni, 14.Lome Fa'atau, 13.Brian Lima, 12.Seremaia Baikeinuku, 11.Sitiveni Sivivatu, 10.Tanner Vili, 9.Moses Rauluni, 8.Sisa Koyamaibole, 7.Alifereti Doviverata, 6.Sione Lauaki, 5.Ifereimi Rawaqa, 4.Inoke Afeaki (capt. ), 3.Taufa'ao Filise, 2. ' Aleki Lutui, 1.Soane Tonga'uiha, \u2013 replacements: 17.Tevita Taumoepeau, 18.Filipo Levi, 19.Semo Sititi, 19.Semo Sititi, 21.Tane Tu'ipulotu, 22.Sireli Bobo \u2013 No entry: 16.Joeli Lotawa, 20.Steve So'oialo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 94], "content_span": [95, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178469-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Islanders rugby union tour of Australia and New Zealand, The Matches, South Africa\nPacific Islanders: 15.Norman Ligairi, 14.Sireli Bobo, 13.Seilala Mapusua, 12.Seru Rabeni, 11.Sitiveni Sivivatu, 10.Tanner Vili, 9.Moses Rauluni, 8.Sisa Koyamaibole, 7.Alifereti Doviverata, 6.Sione Lauaki, 5.Ifereimi Rawaqa, 4.Inoke Afeaki (capt. ), 3.Tevita Taumoepeau, 2. ' Aleki Lutui, 1.Soane Tonga'uiha, \u2013 replacements: 16.Joeli Lotawa, 17.Taufa'ao Filise, 18.Filipo Levi, 19.Tu Tamarua, 20.Steve So'oialo, 21.Seremaia Baikeinuku, 22.Brian Lima", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 95], "content_span": [96, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178470-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open\nThe 2004 Pacific Life Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 31st edition of the Indian Wells Masters and was part of the Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour and of Tier I of the 2004 WTA Tour. Both the men's and women's events took place at the Indian Wells Tennis Garden in Indian Wells, California in the United States from March 10 through March 21, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178470-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open, Champions, Men's Doubles\nArnaud Cl\u00e9ment / S\u00e9bastien Grosjean defeated Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178470-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open, Champions, Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva 6\u20131, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178471-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nWayne Ferreira and Yevgeny Kafelnikov were the defending champions but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178471-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nArnaud Cl\u00e9ment and S\u00e9bastien Grosjean won in the final 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 7\u20135 against Wayne Black and Kevin Ullyett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178472-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer defeated Tim Henman in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133, to win the Men's Singles title at the 2004 Indian Wells Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178472-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nLleyton Hewitt was the two-time defending champion, but lost in the third round to Juan Ignacio Chela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178472-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nAll thirty-three seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178473-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLindsay Davenport and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions but they competed with different partners in 2004, Davenport with Corina Morariu and Raymond with Martina Navratilova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178473-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nDavenport and Morariu lost in the semifinals to Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez, while Raymond and Navratilova lost to Anastasia Myskina and Vera Zvonareva in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178473-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nPascual and Su\u00e1rez went on to win in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20132 against Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178473-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178474-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but withdrew before her third round match against Laura Granville due to a wrist injury which would ultimately sideline her for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178474-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nTop seed Justine Henin-Hardenne won the title, defeating Lindsay Davenport in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178474-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific Life Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nAll seeded players received a bye for the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season\nThe 2004 Pacific hurricane season was notable in that no tropical cyclone of at least tropical storm intensity made landfall, an unusual occurrence. The season officially began on May\u00a015 in the eastern Pacific, and on June\u00a01 in the central Pacific; it officially ended in both basins on November\u00a030. These dates conventionally delimit the period during each year when a majority of tropical cyclones form. Activity throughout the year fell slightly below the long-term average, with 12 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes. The season was reflected by an accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) index of 71 units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season\nImpact throughout the season was minimal and no deaths were recorded. In early August, the remnants of Hurricane Darby aided in localized heavy rainfall in Hawaii, causing minor street and stream flooding; coffee and macadamia trees were damaged as well. In early September, Hurricane Howard resulted in significant flooding across Baja California Peninsula that damaged agricultural land and 393 homes. Large swells also resulted in about 1,000 lifeguard rescues in California. In mid-September, Javier caused three fishermen to go missing and helped alleviate a multi-year drought across the Southwest United States. It produced record rainfall in the state of Wyoming. In mid- to late October, Tropical Storm Lester and Tropical Depression Sixteen-E caused localized flooding; the latter may have produced a tornado near Culiac\u00e1n, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nIn January 2004, the Servicio Meteorol\u00f3gico Nacional (SMN) released their first prediction for tropical cyclone activity throughout the Northeast Pacific. Based on a Neutral El Ni\u00f1o Southern Oscillation (ENSO), a total of 15 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes was forecast. These values were slightly altered in May to 14 named storms, 7 hurricanes, and 2 major hurricanes, and again in August to 13 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nOn May\u00a017, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration issued its seasonal forecast for the 2004 central Pacific season, predicting four or five tropical cyclones to form or cross into the basin. Likewise to the SMN, near average activity was expected largely as a result of a Neutral ENSO. The organization issued its experimental eastern Pacific outlook on May\u00a021, highlighting a 45 percent change of below-average activity, 45 percent chance of near-average activity, and only a 10 percent chance of above-average activity in the basin. A total of 13 to 15 named storms, 6 to 8 hurricanes, and 2 to 4 major hurricanes was forecast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe season's first storm, Agatha, developed on May\u00a022. No tropical cyclones developed during June, below the average of 2 named storms and 1 hurricane, and also the first time since 1969 that the month was cyclone-free. Activity remained below average throughout the remainder of the season, with a total of 12 named storms, 6 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes compared to the long-term average of 16 named storms, 9 hurricanes, and 3 major hurricanes. Overall wind energy output was reflected with an ACE index value of 71 units.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nAlthough vertical wind shear was near average and ocean temperatures were slightly warmer than average south of Mexico, anomalously cool waters and drier than average air mass existed in the central portions of the eastern Pacific. Anomalously strong mid-level ridging extending from the Atlantic to northern Mexico steered a majority of the season's cyclones toward this inhospitable region and also acted to steer all the system of tropical storm intensity or stronger away from land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Agatha\nA nearly stationary trough stretched from the eastern Pacific into the eastern Caribbean Sea during mid-May. An ill-defined tropical wave crossed Central America on May\u00a017 and interacted with the trough, eventually leading to the formation of a tropical depression at 00:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a022. The newly formed cyclone moved northwest parallel to the coastline of Mexico while steadily organizing in a low wind shear regime, intensifying into Tropical Storm Agatha by 12:00\u00a0UTC that day and attaining peak winds of 60\u00a0mph (95\u00a0km/h) twelve hours later. Increasingly cool ocean temperatures and a drier air mass caused Agatha to weaken quickly thereafter, and it degenerated into a remnant low by 12:00\u00a0UTC on May\u00a024. The post-tropical cyclone drifted aimlessly before dissipating well south of the Baja California Peninsula on May\u00a026.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Two-E\nA westward-moving tropical wave from Africa crossed Central America into the eastern Pacific in late June, coalescing into a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a02 well southwest of the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula. Steered westward by low-level flow, the depression failed to organize amid wind shear and cooler sea surface temperatures, instead degenerating into a remnant low at 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a04. The post-tropical cyclone dissipated a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression One-C\nAn organized region of convection within the Intertropical Convergence Zone developed into a tropical depression at 03:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a05 while located roughly 700\u00a0mi (1,125\u00a0km) south-southeast of Johnston Atoll, becoming the farthest-south-forming central Pacific tropical cyclone since Tropical Storm Hali (1992). Steered westward, the depression failed to intensify due to its quick forward motion despite a seemingly favorable environment, and it quickly dissipated at 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a06.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Blas\nA tropical wave crossed Central America on July\u00a08, developing into a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a012 while located about 335\u00a0mi (540\u00a0km) southwest of Zihuatanejo, Mexico; six hours later, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Blas. Steered swiftly northwestward around a mid-level ridge over the southwestern United States, the cyclone steadily intensified and reached peak winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h) early on July\u00a013 as a large and robust convective canopy became evident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Blas\nBlas began a steady weakening trend as it tracked over increasingly cool sea surface temperatures, weakening to a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a014 and degenerating into a large remnant low twelve hours later. The post-tropical cyclone decelerated and curved northeastward, dissipating well west of central Baja California early on July\u00a019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Celia\nA vigorous tropical wave entered the East Pacific on July\u00a013, acquiring sufficient organization to be declared a tropical depression at 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a019 while located about 620\u00a0mi (1,000\u00a0km) south-southwest of the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula. Directed west-northwest around a subtropical ridge, the cyclone steadily intensified amongst a favorable environment, becoming Tropical Storm Celia at 12:00\u00a0UTC that same day and further strengthening into a Category\u00a01 hurricane on the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale, the season's first, at 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a022.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Celia\nAfter attaining peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (140\u00a0km/h) six hours later, an increasingly unfavorable environment began to hinder the system. Celia weakened to a tropical storm at 18:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a022 and eventually degenerated into a remnant low at 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a026. The post-tropical cyclone dissipated about 1,740\u00a0mi (2,800\u00a0km) west-southwest of the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula later that morning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Darby\nA tropical depression formed at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a026 while positioned about 760\u00a0mi (1,225\u00a0km) south-southwest of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico from a tropical wave that entered the eastern Pacific nearly a week prior. The system quickly intensified as it curved west-northwest around a subtropical ridge, becoming Tropical Storm Darby at 00:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a027 and strengthening into a Category\u00a01 hurricane early the next day. After attaining its peak as the season's first major hurricane with winds of 120\u00a0mph (195\u00a0km/h), increasing wind shear and cooler sea surface temperatures begin to weaken the cyclone. It weakened to a tropical storm at 12:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a030 and further to a tropical depression a day later as it entered the jurisdiction of the Central Pacific Hurricane Center. At 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a01, Darby dissipated about 850\u00a0mi (1,370\u00a0km) east of the Hawaiian Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 931]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Darby\nAlthough Darby produced no impacts to land as a tropical cyclone, its remnant moisture field combined with an upper-level trough over Hawaii to produce an unstable atmosphere. General rainfall amounts of 2\u20135\u00a0in (51\u2013127\u00a0mm) were recorded across the Big Island and Oahu, with a localized peak of 9.04\u00a0in (230\u00a0mm) in Kaneohe; this led to flooding and several road closures. Minor stream flooding was observed on the southeast flank of Mount Haleakal\u0101. A rainfall total of 3.06\u00a0in (78\u00a0mm) was recorded at the Honolulu International Airport, contributing to the wettest August on record in the city. Some coffee and macadamia nut trees were damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Six-E\nOperationally, an area of disturbed weather was thought to have coalesced into a tropical depression at 09:00\u00a0UTC on July\u00a029 while located well southwest of the Baja California Peninsula. The depression was only expected to intensify slightly before entering cooler waters and interacting with outflow from nearby Hurricane Darby. By late that evening, however, its presentation on satellite imagery more resembled a trough, and the NHC discontinued advisories. In post-season analysis, the organization determined that the depression did not form until 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a01 and lasted but 24\u00a0hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Estelle\nA tropical wave interacted with a disturbance embedded in the ITCZ in mid-August, leading to the designation of a tropical depression at 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a019 while located 1,440\u00a0mi (2,315\u00a0km) east-southeast of Hilo, Hawaii. The cyclone moved west-northwest following formation, steered around a subtropical ridge. It intensified into Tropical Storm Estelle at 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a020 and attained peak winds of 70\u00a0mph (110\u00a0km/h) at 12:00\u00a0UTC the next morning as it crossed into the central Pacific. Thereafter, increasing wind shear caused Estelle to a steady weakening trend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Estelle\nAt 00:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a023, the cyclone decelerated to a tropical depression while turning west-southwest, and at 18:00\u00a0UTC the following day, it further degenerated into a remnant low. The post-tropical cyclone continued on a west-southwest trajectory prior to dissipating south-southeast of the Big Island at 00:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a026.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Frank\nA tropical wave, the remnants of Tropical Storm Earl in the Atlantic, crossed into the eastern Pacific in mid-August and steadily organized to become a tropical depression at 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a023 well south of the coastline of Mexico. The depression intensified into Tropical Storm Frank six hours later as banding features and central convection increased. Steered northwest within a favorable environment, the cyclone rapidly intensified into a Category\u00a01 hurricane by 18:00\u00a0UTC and ultimately attained peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (140\u00a0km/h) twelve hours later. Frank steadily weakened thereafter as it entered cooler ocean temperatures, degenerating into a remnant low at 06:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a026. The remnant low drifted southwest before diffusing into a trough well south of the Baja California Peninsula the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Nine-E\nA tropical wave crossed Central America on August\u00a015, only slowing organizing into a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a023 while located about 920\u00a0mi (1,480\u00a0km) west-southwest of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. Steered north-northwest and eventually west, the cyclone failed to intensify further into a tropical storm amid cool sea surface temperatures and southerly wind shear, and it instead degenerated into a remnant low at 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a026. The post-tropical cyclone turned west-southwest before dissipating about 1,095\u00a0mi (1,760\u00a0km) east of Hilo, Hawaii early on August\u00a028.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Georgette\nA westward-moving tropical wave entered the eastern Pacific in late August, acquiring sufficient organization to be declared a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a026 about 605\u00a0miles (975\u00a0km) south-southeast of the Baja California Peninsula. The depression intensified into Tropical Storm Georgette six hours later as its satellite presentation improved, and it reached peak winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h) at 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a027. Increasingly hostile upper-level winds began to impinge on the west-northwest-moving tropical cyclone shortly thereafter, ultimately causing it to degenerate into a remnant low by 18:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a030. The post-tropical cyclone continued its forward course until dissipating early on September\u00a03.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Howard\nA westward-moving tropical wave from Africa entered the eastern Pacific in late August, organizing into a tropical depression at 12:00\u00a0UTC on August\u00a030 south of the coastline of Mexico. The depression intensified into Tropical Storm Howard twelve hours later and further developed into a hurricane at 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Howard\nOn its northwest track, a favorable environment regime prompted the cyclone to begin a period of rapid intensification, and it attained its peak as a Category\u00a04 hurricane with winds of 140\u00a0mph (220\u00a0km/h) at 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a02. Cooler ocean temperatures led to a steady weakening trend thereafter, and Howard degenerated into a remnant low at 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a05. The low turned southwest before dissipating over open waters on September\u00a010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Howard\nAlthough the storm remained offshore, the outer bands of the storm produced significant flooding across the Baja California peninsula, which damaged agricultural land and at least 393\u00a0homes. Swells reached 18\u00a0ft (5.4\u00a0m) along the Baja California coastline and 12\u00a0ft (3.7\u00a0m) along the California coastline; about 1,000\u00a0lifeguard rescues took place in California due to the waves. Moisture from the storm enhanced rainfall in parts of Arizona, leading to minor accumulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Isis\nA tropical wave, possibly responsible for the formation of Hurricane Frances in the Atlantic, entered the eastern Pacific in early September, gaining sufficient organization to be declared a tropical depression at 06:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a08 about 530\u00a0miles (855\u00a0km) south of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. The system tracked west, intensifying into Tropical Storm Isis twelve hours after being designated, but weakening back to a tropical depression early on September\u00a010, amid persistent wind shear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Isis\nUpper-level winds decreased by September\u00a012, allowing Isis to regain tropical storm intensity by 00:00\u00a0UTC, and eventually peak as a Category\u00a01 hurricane with winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h), at 12:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a015. After conducting a clockwise loop, the hurricane entered cooler waters and began to weaken; it degenerated into a remnant low at 18:00\u00a0UTC on the next day. The low drifted southwest and then west, before dissipating well east of Hawaii on September\u00a021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Javier\nA tropical wave entered the eastern Pacific in early September, organizing into a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a010 south of the Gulf of Tehuantepec. Under light shear, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Javier at 12:00\u00a0UTC the next morning and into a hurricane at 18:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Javier\nThe cyclone soon began a period of rapid intensification as it alternated on a west-northwest to northwest course, ultimately peaking as a Category\u00a04 hurricane with winds of 150\u00a0mph (240\u00a0km/h) at 00:00\u00a0UTC on September\u00a014 as a distinct pinhole eye became evident on satellite imagery. Cooler waters, strong southwesterly shear, and an eyewall replacement cycle all weakened Javier thereafter; it fell to tropical depression intensity early on September\u00a019 before crossing Baja California and degenerated into a remnant low at 18:00\u00a0UTC that day over the Gulf of California. The low crossed the state of Sonora before dissipating over mountainous terrain on September\u00a020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Javier\nAs a tropical cyclone, Javier produce moderate rainfall peaking at 3.14\u00a0in (80\u00a0mm) in Bacanuchi, Mexico. Three fishermen went missing offshore the coastline due to high surf. As a post-tropical cyclone, the storm's remnant moisture overspread the Southwest United States, alleviating a multi-year drought. Accumulations peaked at 7\u00a0in (178\u00a0mm) in Walnut Creek, Arizona, with lighter totals across the Four Corners and upper Midwest. The remnants of Javier produced 2\u00a0in (51\u00a0mm) of rain in Wyoming, cementing its status as the wettest tropical cyclone in the reliable record there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Kay\nAn area of disturbed weather developed within the ITCZ well southwest of mainland Mexico, coalescing into a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a04. The depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Kay twelve hours later, and it attained peak winds of 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h) at 12:00\u00a0UTC the next morning as suggested by satellite intensity estimates. Moderate northerly shear caused core convection to decrease as the system moved west-northwest, resulting in Kay degenerating into a remnant low at 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a06 over open ocean. The low-level swirl curved southwestward and dissipated the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lester\nAn area of disturbed weather south of the Gulf of Tehuantepec organized into a tropical depression at 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a011. Steered northwest to west-northwest by a mid-level ridge to its north and a broad cyclonic circulation to its southwest, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Lester at 18:00\u00a0UTC the next day. The system was initially forecast to become a hurricane amid light shear; however, interaction with the coastline of Mexico and the nearby cyclonic circulation instead caused Lester to weaken. Observations from a reconnaissance aircraft indicated the storm degenerated into a trough at 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lester\nAs the cyclone paralleled the coastline of Mexico, a tropical storm warning was hoisted from Punta Maldonado to L\u00e1zaro C\u00e1rdenas. Rainfall accumulations of 3\u20135\u00a0in (76\u2013127\u00a0mm) were observed across Oaxaca and Guerrero, leading to localized flooding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Sixteen-E\nA tropical wave entered the eastern Pacific in mid-October, interacting with two previous tropical waves that resulted in a large area of disturbed weather. The system organized into a tropical depression at 00:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a025 about 315\u00a0miles (505\u00a0km) south-southeast of the Baja California Peninsula. Initially, the cyclone was characterized by a large area of deep convection enhanced from an upper-level trough. This same trough soon imparted strong wind shear, preventing intensification. The depression moved into Sinaloa early that same day and dissipated over the Sierra Madre Occidental at 18:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a026.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Sixteen-E\nThe depression produced locally heavy rainfall across western Mexico, resulting in some localized flooding. Culiac\u00e1n International Airport recorded a peak wind gust of 80\u00a0mph (129\u00a0km/h), suggesting a tornado may have occurred nearby. The remnant mid-level circulation associated with the cyclone interacted with a frontal system to produce strong thunderstorms across the southern Great Plains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Systems, Other systems\nOn August 14, the Japan Meteorological Agency had briefly stated that Tropical Storm Malakas had exited the West Pacific basin and entered the Central Pacific basin, as a weakening tropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Storm names\nThe following names were used for named storms that formed in East Pacific in 2004. This is the same list used in the 1998 season. No names were retired by the World Meteorological Organization in the spring of 2005, therefore this list was re-used in the 2010 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Storm names\nFor storms that form in the Central Pacific Hurricane Center's area of responsibility, encompassing the area between 140 degrees west and the International Date Line, all names are used in a series of four rotating lists. The next four names that were slated for use in 2004 are shown below, however none of them were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nAlthough Isis did not result in significant damage or casualties (it was not retired during the WMO's annual meeting in 2005), the organization determined in 2015 that it would retire the name, deeming its usage inappropriate in light of the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant (commonly referred to as ISIS). The name was not used in 2010, making the 2004 storm the last incarnation of the name. The name was replaced by Ivette for the 2016 Pacific hurricane season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178475-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific hurricane season, Season effects\nThis is a table of all the storms that have formed in the 2004 Pacific hurricane season. It includes their duration, names, landfall(s), denoted in parentheses, damages, and death totals. Deaths in parentheses are additional and indirect (an example of an indirect death would be a traffic accident), but were still related to that storm. Damage and deaths include totals while the storm was extratropical, a wave, or a low, and all the damage figures are in 2004 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season\nThe 2004 Pacific typhoon season was a extremely active season since 1997, which featured 29 named storms, nineteen typhoons, and six super typhoons. It was an event in the annual cycle of tropical cyclone formation, in which tropical cyclones form in the western Pacific Ocean. The season ran throughout 2004, though most tropical cyclones typically develop between May and October. The season's first named storm and also the first typhoon, Sudal, developed on April 4, later was reached typhoon status two days later, and became the first super typhoon of the year three days later. The season's last named storm, Noru, dissipated on December 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season\nActivity of the season was extremely high, the impacts of the typhoons were damaging and deadly, including four consecutive typhoons that struck them in the Philippines. In August, Typhoon Rananim struck Taiwan and China causing widespread damage, killing 169 people and with an estimated $2.44 billion (USD 2004) in damage. Typhoon Aere also caused heavy damage in China after Rananim killing 107 people there with minimal damage. Typhoon Songda was the costliest typhoon of the season to hit Japan, with damage estimated at $9.3 billion (USD 2004) and 28 people killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season\nIn October, Typhoon Tokage hit Japan as a tropical storm, causing a total of 95 deaths and damage estimated at $2.3 billion (2004 USD). Tropical Depression Winnie struck the Philippines killing a total of 1,593 people, making Winnie the deadliest storm of the season since Tropical Storm Thelma in 1991. The seasonal activity from November onwards is decreasing, including two typhoons, Muifa strikes the Philippines after Winnie, killing 68 people and subsequently bringing heavy rains to Thailand killing 40 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season\nThe fourth and last consecutive typhoon to hit the Philippines was Nanmadol which made landfall as an Category 4 typhoon in that country, killing a total of 77 people. The Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) index of this season amounted to 60% above the normal level for Pacific typhoon seasons, at 480.6. This makes as the third-most active season in recorded history, only after 1997 and 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season\nThe scope of this article is limited to the Pacific Ocean to the north of the equator between 100\u00b0E and 180th meridian. Within the northwestern Pacific Ocean, there are two separate agencies that assign names to tropical cyclones, which can often result in a cyclone having two names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season\nThe Japan Meteorological Agency\u00a0(JMA) names a tropical cyclone should it be judged to have 10-minute sustained wind speeds of at least 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph) anywhere in the basin, whilst the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration\u00a0(PAGASA) assigns names to tropical cyclones which move into or form as a tropical depression in their area of responsibility located between 135\u00b0E and 115\u00b0E and between 5\u00b0N and 25\u00b0N, regardless of whether or not a tropical cyclone has already been given a name by the JMA. Tropical depressions that are monitored by the United States' Joint Typhoon Warning Center\u00a0(JTWC) are given a number with a \"W\" suffix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 01W (Ambo)\nThe first tropical storm of the 2004 Pacific typhoon season developed on February 10 west of Chuuk. It tracked to the west, organizing slowly due to persistent vertical wind shear. On February 13 and 14, the depression executed a clockwise loop. When the storm turned to the southwest, the wind shear overcame it, and the cyclone dissipated on February 19. The remnants of Tropical Depression Ambo dissipated, affecting Luzon by bringing flash floods and heavy rainfall on February 20 until February 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 02W (Butchoy)\nThe near-equatorial trough spawned a tropical disturbance east of the Philippines late on March 13. It rapidly moved northwest as it became a tropical depression in the afternoon hours of the next day. Due to warm waters and moderate convection, it rapidly intensified, with a brief turn to the southwest. On March 17, it reached peak intensity as a tropical storm, with the PAGASA naming it as Butchoy. The system rapidly weakened on March 19, just before the storm was about to hit the Philippines. A weak trough brought it northward, where dry air and vertical shear caused it to dissipate on March 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 71], "content_span": [72, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Sudal (Cosme)\nOn April 5, Tropical Depression 03W began its life between Chuuk and Pohnpei. As it drifted to the northwest, it strengthened into a tropical storm. Sudal turned to the west, and steadily intensified to become a typhoon on April 6. On the April 9, with maximum sustained winds of 115\u00a0kn/130\u00a0mph, Typhoon Sudal hit the island of Yap. After ravaging the island, Sudal reached a peak of 130\u00a0kn/150\u00a0mph winds. The typhoon turned to the northeast and became extratropical early on April 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Sudal (Cosme)\nYap experienced catastrophic damage, with 90% of buildings destroyed, 1,500 left homeless, and no fatality. Sudal is a Korean word meaning otter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nida (Dindo)\nA monsoon trough spawned Tropical Depression 04W east of the Philippines on May 13. The depression quickly strengthened, reaching tropical storm intensity on May 14 and typhoon status just six hours later. On May 15 and 16 while moving northwest towards the Philippine coast, Nida rapidly intensified to a 140\u00a0kn/160\u00a0mph super typhoon, and crossed the eastern Philippines shortly thereafter. Nida weakened slightly over the islands, and began to move to the north and northeast in response to a break in the subtropical ridge. It became extratropical on May 21 east of Japan, after causing 31 deaths and about $1.3\u00a0million in damage. Nida is a Thai female name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nida (Dindo)\nIn the Philippines, evacuation centers were opened to accommodate 2,986\u00a0people. The typhoon approach canceled ferry operations stranding 15,057 passengers. In Taiwan, forecasters at the Central Weather Bureau issued a typhoon warning as forecast models predicted a high probability of the typhoon hitting Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 05W\nA small tropical disturbance rapidly formed, moving southwest on May 12. The small system rapidly built up on May 13. The next day, the JTWC classified it as Tropical Depression 05W. 05W moved west, affecting Vietnam and reached peak intensity as a tropical storm on May 15 and 16. With two other systems in the Western Pacific, Typhoon Nida and Tropical Storm Omais, 05W turned eastwards, weakening on May 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 05W\nDissipating on May 18, and due to the strong pull of the outflow of Typhoon Nida at peak intensity, the remnants of 05W rapidly moved and was located about east of Philippines and was absorbed by a trough on May 20. The circulation fully dissipated on May 25 as it was absorbed by a monsoonal trough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Omais (Enteng)\nA tropical disturbance southwest of Chuuk organized into a tropical depression on May 16, one of 3 active tropical cyclones in the Western Pacific at the time. The depression developed quickly, reaching tropical storm status later that day and reaching a peak of 60\u00a0kn/70\u00a0mph winds three days later on May 19. A weakening ridge brought Omais northward, where it became extratropical on May 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Omais (Enteng)\nOperationally, Omais was classified as a typhoon, but in post-analysis, it was dropped to a tropical storm. Omais is a Palauan word meaning 'wandering around'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Conson (Frank)\nIn the South China Sea, a stationary area of disturbed weather developed into Tropical Depression 07W on June 4. It tracked eastward then northeastward, becoming a tropical storm on June 5 and a typhoon on June 7. Conson passed between Luzon and Taiwan, and peaked with 100\u00a0kn/115\u00a0mph winds on June 9. Conson weakened as it continued northeastward, and became extratropical on June 11 near Japan without causing any reported damage. Conson is an area in Vietnam containing many historical monuments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Chanthu (Gener)\nOriginating from an area of low pressure on June 5, 2004, Chanthu was first declared a tropical depression near southern Leyte Island, in the Philippines, on June 7. Tracking west-northwestward, the depression intensified into a tropical storm over the central Philippines before entering the South China Sea. Once over the warm waters of the sea, the system quickly intensified, attaining its peak 10-minute winds of 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph) and 1-minute winds of 140\u00a0km/h (85\u00a0mph). On June 12, the storm made landfall in Vietnam before quickly weakening over land. By June 13, the system had weakened to a tropical depression and dissipated two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Chanthu (Gener)\nIn Vietnam, Chanthu wrought substantial damage and killed 38 people. Damage from the storm was estimated at 125\u00a0billion\u00a0Vietnam dong (US$7.9\u00a0million), mostly from agricultural losses. The remnants of Chanthu also brought heavy rains to Cambodia, estimated to have exceeded 400\u00a0mm (16\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Dianmu (Helen)\nTropical Depression 09W, which developed from the monsoon trough on June 13, headed north in the open Western Pacific. On the June 15 and 16, Dianmu rapidly intensified from a 70\u00a0kn/80\u00a0mph typhoon to a 155\u00a0kn/180\u00a0mph super typhoon, one of nine typhoons since 1990 to reach that intensity. It lost some organization on June 18, but re-strengthened on June 19 to a super typhoon while south of Okinawa. Some dry air weakened Dianmu as it continued its northward movement, and hit southern Japan as a 55\u00a0kn/65\u00a0mph tropical storm on June 21. Dianmu became extratropical that night after causing 3 deaths. Dianmu is the name of the goddess of thunder and lightning in Chinese folklore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Mindulle (Igme)\nThe monsoon trough spawned a tropical depression on June 23 near Guam. It tracked westward, becoming a tropical storm that night but slowly strengthening as it continued westward due to vertical wind shear. When the shear abated, Mindulle quickly intensified, reaching typhoon strength on June 27 and peaking at 125\u00a0kn/145\u00a0mph winds on June 28. Land interaction with Luzon to its south weakened Mindulle, and the typhoon weakened as it turned northward. On July 1, Mindulle hit eastern Taiwan, and after accelerating to the northeast became extratropical near South Korea on July 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Mindulle (Igme)\nMindulle caused 56 deaths, with $833\u00a0million in damage in its path (2004\u00a0USD). Mindulle is the Korean word for the dandelion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Tingting\nTropical Depression 11W, which developed from the monsoon trough on June 25, steadily strengthened as it tracked to the northwest, and reached tropical storm status on June 26. Tingting passed Saipan on June 27, and reached typhoon status early on June 28. After maximum sustained winds peaked at 80\u00a0kn/90\u00a0mph, the typhoon turned to the northeast, where it became extratropical on July 3 after causing 3 deaths on Saipan. Tingting is a pet name for young girls in Chinese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Kompasu (Julian)\nA non-tropical system formed south of an upper-level vortex on July 3. It moved west until it weakened due to an intensifying high-pressure area north of it on July 8. The next day, it regenerated and strengthened into a tropical disturbance. Late on July 11, it entered in a place of favorable environments until it became a Tropical Depression 12W early on July 12. Area of thunderstorms and convection organized into Tropical Depression 12W on July 13. Under high vertical shear and with a very small circulation, it was not expected to strengthen further.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Kompasu (Julian)\nHowever, as it tracked erratically westward, it intensified, peaking with 40\u00a0kn/50\u00a0mph winds on July 14. Kompasu turned northward, hit the eastern part of Hong Kong directly as a minimal tropical storm, and dissipated on July 16. Kompasu is the Japanese word for compass, and the name of the constellation Circinus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Namtheun\nTropical Storm Namtheun, which formed on July 24, rapidly intensified on July 26 to a 115\u00a0kn/135\u00a0mph typhoon. Dry air approached the system from the south, and it weakened as it tracked northwest towards Japan. On July 31, Namtheun struck southwest Japan as a 55\u00a0kn/65\u00a0mph tropical storm, and became extratropical in the Sea of Japan on August 1. The storm caused no deaths or damage, with only 6 injuries. Namtheun is the name of a river in Laos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Malou\nA low-pressure area formed from the outflow of Typhoon Namtheun on July 29. An area of convection under moderate to high vertical wind shear developed into a tropical depression southeast of Japan on August 4. It became a minimal tropical storm before hitting central Japan on the night of August 4. Malou turned to the northeast and became extratropical in the Sea of Japan on August 5. Malou is the Chinese name for the mineral agate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Meranti\nThe first of nine named storms to develop during August, Meranti formed from an area of low pressure on August 3 and gradually strengthened. On August 5, the storm underwent a brief period of rapid intensification, attaining its peak intensity later day. According to the JMA, the storm attained winds of 140\u00a0km/h (85\u00a0mph) while the JTWC reported that the storm attained winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph). The following day, the typhoon quickly weakened to a tropical storm due to unfavorable conditions. By August 9, the system completed an extratropical transition; the remnants of the storm persisted until August 13, at which time it was absorbed by a large, non-tropical low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Rananim (Karen)\nOn August 5, the JTWC began monitoring a persistent area of convection to the north-northwest of Guam; accompanied by a low-pressure system, the disturbance developed into a tropical depression the following day. Tracking in a general north-northwest direction, the depression struggled to maintain convection over its center due to wind shear. By August 10, the system intensified into a typhoon, as its outflow became better defined. The following day, a ragged eye began to develop, fueling further strengthening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Rananim (Karen)\nRananim reached its peak intensity on August 11 with winds of 150\u00a0km/h (90\u00a0mph); the JTWC estimated the system to be slightly stronger, peaking with winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph). As the storm neared landfall, it began to weaken eventually crossing the Chinese coastline near Wenling, Zhejiang Province with winds of 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph). Rapid weakening ensued as the system moved inland; Rananim eventually dissipated near central China on August 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Rananim (Karen)\nThroughout eastern China, Rananim produced torrential rainfall, peaking at 703.5\u00a0mm (27.70\u00a0in) in Zhejiang, marking a new daily record rainfall in the province. Wind gusts were recorded up to a local record of 211\u00a0km/h (131\u00a0mph). A total of 188 people were killed by the storm, mostly due to collapsed homes and landslides; roughly 1,800 were injured and over 18\u00a0million were affected by Rananim. Economic losses in China amounted to about $2.2\u00a0billion (USD). Due to the severity of damage wrought by the storm, the name Rananim was retired the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Malakas\nA reverse-oriented monsoon trough extended from the Philippine Sea northeastward for hundreds of miles spawned a disturbed area around 22N/150E late on August 8. A weak tropical depression formed out of this area late on August 9. Deep convection was in a cycling mode, and satellite imagery initially indicated that the system was subtropical in nature. The depression was upgraded to Tropical Storm Malakas as it took on a more tropical appearance about 670\u00a0miles west-northwest of Wake Island, and it moved northeastward along the northern periphery of the subtropical ridge. By August 12, satellite imagery indicated that Malakas was becoming extratropical. JMA declared the system extratropical on the August 14, placing the weak 25\u00a0kn/30\u00a0mph low approximately 575\u00a0miles north-northwest of Midway Island. Malakas is a Filipino word meaning 'strong' or 'powerful'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Megi (Lawin)\nTyphoon Megi was the fourth of eight significant tropical cyclones to form during August. Megi was initially spotted 260\u00a0miles west of Guam on August 11, slowly developing into Tropical Depression 18W on the August 14, strengthening into a tropical storm on the August 16, and ultimately into a typhoon on the August 18 to the southwest of Japan. Megi moved northwest through the Ry\u016bky\u016b islands before recurving northeastward towards South Korea and Japan. Megi sped across northern Honsh\u016b before completing its transition into a nontropical low off the east coast of Hokkaid\u014d. The resultant ocean cyclone moved rapidly eastward, reaching a point near 42N/174E late on the August 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Megi (Lawin)\nDespite peaking at only minimal typhoon intensity, Megi had a significant impact on both Japan and South Korea. In Japan, the highest storm total rainfall noted was 610\u00a0mm at Tomisato between August 17 and 21, with 398\u00a0mm falling in a 24\u2011hour period. The highest wind gust was 109\u00a0mph/48.7\u00a0m/s at Izuhara, Nagasaki early on the August 19. The lowest measured pressure was 974.1\u00a0mbar at Izuhara. In South Korea, the heaviest 24\u2011hour rain total was 332.5\u00a0mm at Wando between late on the August 17 and 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Megi (Lawin)\nNews reports indicated that five people were reported dead or missing after Typhoon Megi in South Korea. The number left homeless rose to more than 2400. Typhoon Megi left at least ten dead in Japan. Megi's landfall on northern Japan resulted in large blackouts as 130,000 homes were left in the dark. A group of about 165 primary school students were stranded by a Megi-induced landslide in western Japan, though were successfully rescued by helicopter. Megi is the Korean word for the catfish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Chaba\nChaba formed on August 18 in the open Western Pacific. It moved westward, strengthening into a tropical storm on August 19 and a typhoon on August 20. Chaba turned to the northwest, and rapidly intensified to a 155\u00a0kn/180\u00a0mph super typhoon on the August 22 with an estimated minimum central pressure of 910 mbar, becoming the strongest typhoon of the year. After fluctuating between 100\u00a0kn/115\u00a0mph and super typhoon status for several days, Chaba weakened as it turned to the north, and hit the southwestern Japanese island of Honsh\u016b. It accelerated to the northeast, and became extratropical on August 31. The storm killed seven people and caused a lot of damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Aere (Marce)\nAere is the Marshallese word for 'storm'. A tropical disturbance developed into a tropical depression on the 19th about 400\u00a0miles west of Guam, and moved northwest at 10\u00a0kn/12\u00a0mph along the southwestern periphery of a mid-level steering ridge. The system reached tropical storm status on the 20th, gaining the name Aere. Aere subsequently crossed into the Philippine's area of responsibility and was assigned the name Marce. Aere was upgraded to typhoon intensity on the 21st, and its strength leveled off during the 21st and 22nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Aere (Marce)\nOn the 23rd, Typhoon Aere was downgraded to a tropical storm briefly due to vertical wind shear while located 200\u00a0miles south of Naha, Okinawa. Aere quickly regained typhoon strength and maintained intensity for the rest of the 23rd and developed a 50-mile wide eye. Aere reached its peak intensity of 85\u00a0kn/100\u00a0mph late on the 24th, when the pressure lowered to 955\u00a0mb. As the storm crossed the northern tip of Taiwan it began to weaken. Aere turned southwestward later that day, a trajectory that carried the storm past Xiamen early on the 26th and close to Shantou later that day before weakening into a tropical storm. The remnants of Typhoon Aere remained a tropical depression until the 31st.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Aere (Marce)\nEarly on the 25th, six villages located in Gaoqiao Town, Yinzhou District, Ningbo City, were struck by a tornado triggered by Typhoon Aere. The tornado did cause some economic losses, but no casualties were reported. Preliminary statistics indicated that the typhoon had caused 2.485\u00a0billion yuan of direct economic losses and was responsible for two deaths in Fujian Province. Aere also affected 3,479,900 residents in 421 towns of 48 counties of 6 cities in Fujian, where three cities were flooded, 10,100 houses were toppled, 236 embankments and thousands of water conservancy facilities were damaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0030-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Aere (Marce)\nThirty-four people were killed in Taiwan as a result of the storm, and fifteen died as a mudslide buried a remote mountain village in the north of the island. Agricultural losses were estimated at 7.7\u00a0million New Taiwan dollars ($313,000 USD). Forty-three deaths in the Philippines were caused by heavy rains induced by the typhoon. Eight provinces in northern and central Luzon were most severely affected with 70% of the provinces under water at one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 21W\nAn area of convection with a possible weak low-level circulation center had developed approximately 1,125\u00a0km (700\u00a0mi) east-southeast of Guam on August 24, and was moving slowly towards the west-northwest. It was designated as a tropical depression on August 26 by the JMA. Shortly after, the JTWC designated the system as Tropical Depression 21W. The depression gradually intensified and was upgraded to Tropical Storm 21W by the JTWC early on August 27 when located about 590\u00a0km (365\u00a0mi) east of Guam; however, in post-season analysis, the JTWC declassified 21W as a tropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression 21W\nThe depression reached its peak intensity at 0000\u00a0UTC on August 27 with winds of 55\u00a0km/h (35\u00a0mph) and a minimum pressure of 1000\u00a0hPa (mbar). By later that day, the center had become fully exposed with the deep convection being displaced westward over Guam, due to strong outflow from Typhoon Chaba to its north. The storm was downgraded back to depression status by JTWC around local midnight when centered approximately 395\u00a0km (245\u00a0mi) east-northeast of Guam, though it was never recognized as a tropical storm by the JMA. The weakening system dissipated on the 31st when the weak low was located approximately 1,210\u00a0km (750\u00a0mi) west of Saipan. No damage or casualties are known to have resulted from short-lived tropical cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Songda (Nina)\nOn August 26, a new area low-pressure system developed roughly 390\u00a0km (240\u00a0mi) northeast of Kwajalein. Shortly thereafter, the JMA began monitoring the system as a tropical depression. Light wind shear and favorable diffluence allowed the system to strengthen, prompting the JTWC to issue their first advisory on Tropical Depression 22W the next day. By the morning of August 28, both agencies had upgraded the system to a tropical storm, with the JMA assigning it the name Songda, a branch of the Red River in northern Vietnam. By August 30, the system had intensified into a minimal typhoon. By the following day, the storm had undergone rapid intensification to attain its peak ten-minute sustained and one-minute sustained winds of 175\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph) and 230\u00a0km/h (145\u00a0mph) according to the JMA and JTWC respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Songda (Nina)\nOver the following days, the powerful storm fluctuated in intensity, during which time it passed through the Northern Mariana Islands. On September 3, the storm briefly entered PAGASA's area of responsibility and was given the local name Nina. Early on September 5, Songda brushed the northern coast of Okinawa Island, where a barometric pressure of 925 mbar (hPa; 27.32\u00a0inHg) was recorded. Curving towards the northeast, the storm gradually weakened and made landfall near Nagasaki, Japan as a strong typhoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Songda (Nina)\nAccelerating towards the northeast, the system quickly weakened to a tropical storm by the evening on September 7 before transitioning into an extratropical cyclone shortly thereafter. The remnants of Songda were monitored by the JMA until late on September 10, at which time they crossed the International Date Line near the Aleutian Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Songda (Nina)\nThroughout Songda's track, several islands were affected; Enewetak Atoll recorded tropical storm-force winds with gusts up to 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph) during the storm's passage. In the Mariana Islands, Agrihan sustained widespread damage, with all crops and structures considered a total loss, leaving $500,000 in monetary losses. Throughout Japan, Songda caused catastrophic damage and significant loss of life, mainly due to rain-related events. The heaviest rains fell in Miyazaki Prefecture, where a station measured 905\u00a0mm (35.6\u00a0in) during Songda's passage. Losses from the storm reached $9\u00a0billion, ranking it as the costliest storm to ever strike the country and one of the most destructive in the western Pacific. Forty-one people were killed by the storm, mainly in Ky\u016bsh\u016b.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Sarika\nThe name Sarika is originally from a songbird found in Cambodia. JMA classified a tropical depression early on September 4. By the 5th, a typhoon warning was issued for the island of Agrihan. Moving west-northwest along the southern periphery of the subtropical ridge, Tropical Depression 23W was upgraded to Tropical Storm Sarika that day. An upper-level low located to the southeast was providing an efficient eastern outflow channel in addition to the decent equatorial outflow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Sarika\nRapid intensification ensued for a while with the maximum sustained winds rising to 60\u00a0kn/70\u00a0mph late on the 5th, which was the peak intensity for Sarika. By the 6th, Tropical Storm Sarika passed 220\u00a0miles north of Saipan. Shortly afterward, the system's center made its closest approach to Agrihan, tracking 10\u00a0miles south of that island. Near-typhoon conditions occurred on both Agrihan and Pagan while tropical storm-force winds were experienced on Alamagan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0035-0002", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Sarika\nAt its peak Sarika, possessed a very compact wind field with gales extending no further than 90\u00a0miles from the center while the radius of strongest winds never exceeded 15\u00a0miles. By the 6th, Sarika had turned westward 100\u00a0miles west of Agrihan. Early on the 7th, Sarika began to weaken as it entered a hostile shearing environment associated with Typhoon Songda's outflow. Sarika subsequently turned to the north-northwest at 9\u00a0mph/8\u00a0kn about 820\u00a0miles south of Tokyo, Japan while becoming fully exposed. It slowed as it turned northward late on the 7th. The system remained a tropical storm until the 8th when Sarika weakened back into a depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Haima (Ofel)\nHaima is the Chinese word for the sea horse. Early on September 11, an area of thunderstorms was observed 150\u00a0nmi southwest of Taipei, Taiwan. Later that day, the newly formed tropical depression saw its thunderstorms track across Taiwan, leaving the circulation center behind east of the mountainous isle as it took on a subtropical appearance. The next day, it had strengthened into a tropical storm and was named Haima by the JMA and Ofel by the PAGASA. The JTWC considered the system a tropical depression or subtropical storm, but never a tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0036-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Haima (Ofel)\nThe center track just east of Taiwan on September 12, towards the southeast coast of China. Haima made landfall south of Shanghai on September 13 before turning to the northwest. Haima soon become a completely sheared system due to interaction with the upper-level winds over a frontal zone located to its west, and was declared dissipated the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Haima (Ofel)\nIn China, the lowest reported pressure was 998\u00a0mb in Yongqiang Town on the 13th and the highest 24\u2011hour rainfall recorded was 250.8\u00a0mm in Fuzhou City between September 9 and 10, which set a new September daily rainfall record for the station. In Taiwan, daily rainfall ranged as high as 393\u00a0mm in Taipei county, and 611.5\u00a0mm in Taipei City. The highest wind gust reported was 80\u00a0mph/35.9\u00a0m/s at Lanyu on the 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Haima (Ofel)\nThe storm damaged 78\u00a0square kilometres of farmland in Zhejiang Province, China, where direct economic losses were estimated to have been over 53\u00a0million yuan. Torrential rains (Sep 7\u201310), including those in the monsoonal flow around the pre-Haima depression had caused 54.6\u00a0million yuan of direct economic losses in Pingtan County and Changle City. In Japan, rainfall and winds were relatively light. In South Korea, the highest 24\u2011hour rainfall report noted was 104.5\u00a0mm at Wando between the 11th and 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Haima (Ofel)\nThis is the first storm that JTWC classified it as subtropical, with a designation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression Pablo\nThis system was considered a tropical depression by JMA, PAGASA, the Central Weather Bureau of Taiwan and the Thai Meteorological Department with PAGASA assigning the name Pablo. JTWC released no warnings, but issued a pair of Tropical Cyclone Formation Alerts (TCFA) early on September 17 and 18. Tropical Depression Pablo formed deep in the Philippine Sea east of Mindanao, moved westward across that island, thence turning northwestward and emerging into the South China Sea near the Calamian group. After crossing the Philippine Archipelago, the depression began to slowly weaken but limped across the South China Sea to near the central Vietnamese coastline before dissipating on the 18th where it dropped moderate to heavy rainfall. The maximum winds estimated by any agency were 30\u00a0kn/35\u00a0mph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Meari (Quinta)\nLate on September 18, an area of convection was noted 510\u00a0miles east of Guam. On the 20th, Tropical Depression 25W organized out of this mass and was located just 35\u00a0miles southeast of Guam. 25W turned more westward and began to accelerate as it moved along the southern periphery of a warm-core ridge. On the 21st, the system was upgraded to Tropical Storm Meari. It intensified steadily while moving more northwestward. The system was upgraded to typhoon intensity by late on the 22nd. Typhoon Meari possessed a very asymmetric circulation, elongated somewhat to the north and northeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0040-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Meari (Quinta)\nMeari became a strong 100-kn/115\u00a0mph typhoon by late on the 23rd, and was assigned the name Quinta by PAGASA. After reaching 125\u00a0kn/145\u00a0mph on the 24th, its strength plateaued for the rest of the day. As it passed 70\u00a0miles south of Okinawa early on the 26th, Meari was slowly weakening. The cyclone ceased movement on the 27th about 170\u00a0miles west of Okinawa as it became lodged between two anticyclones. A slow northward drift began later that day and vertical wind shear associated with the subtropical jet stream began to take its toll on Meari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0040-0002", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Meari (Quinta)\nBy the 29th, Meari was beginning its approach to the Japanese island of Ky\u016bsh\u016b. Typhoon Meari made landfall over the southern tip of Ky\u016bsh\u016b around midday local time with maximum sustained winds of 70\u00a0kn/80\u00a0mph. Meari weakened back into a tropical storm late on the 29th. The forward motion began to accelerate as Meari increasingly interacted with the westerlies. The system was followed until the 30th, when it became a nontropical low, which continued tracking eastwards through the north Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Meari (Quinta)\nThe highest wind gust reported was 118\u00a0mph/52.7\u00a0m/s in Kagoshima early on the 29th. The lowest pressure measured during the passage of Meari was 975.5\u00a0mb, also at Kagoshima on the 29th. Three tornadoes were spawned in Japan, with two touching down in Okinawa Prefecture and one in Aichi Prefecture. The heaviest rains in Japan were saved for Osawe, where 904\u00a0mm fell between late on the 24th and the 30th, with 741\u00a0mm falling between late on the 28th and 29th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0041-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Meari (Quinta)\nReports indicate that at least 18\u00a0people died with several more reported missing as a result of Typhoon Meari. The worst affected areas were the prefectures of Mie and Ehime in Japan where torrential rains caused widespread flooding and mudslides destroyed several homes. Train and ferry services were suspended, stranding thousands of people. Damages from the storm amounted to $798\u00a0million (2004 USD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Ma-on (Rolly)\nMa-on formed from a cluster of thunderstorms in the vicinity of Guam on September 29. The small system eventually trekked west-northwesterly. After days of sputtering across the western Pacific, Tropical Depression 26W formed on October 4, and quickly became named Tropical Storm Ma-on. The system became stationary approximately 650\u00a0nmi southeast of Okinawa, Japan. PAGASA named the cyclone Rolly when it passed the 135th meridian. On the 5th, a northward drift ensued while well southeast of Okinawa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0042-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Ma-on (Rolly)\nUpon reaching typhoon intensity late on the 6th, Ma-on turned northwest and ultimately became the sixth super typhoon of the year on the 8th while 250\u00a0miles southeast of Okinawa. The typhoon become the worst storm to hit eastern Japan in over ten years, only a week after Typhoon Meari had made landfall in that nation. Ma-on started to accelerate northeastward and its eye began to shrink in diameter and became more ragged. A slow weakening trend materialized as it entered the early stages of extratropical transition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0042-0002", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Ma-on (Rolly)\nRecurving northeast at a high rate of translation, Ma-on made landfall on the Izu Peninsula, Japan, late on the 9th with maximum sustained winds of 105\u00a0kn/120\u00a0mph as a Category 3 typhoon. Ma-on weakened rapidly and was downgraded to a tropical storm by the 10th, and quickly completed its transformation into a nontropical low. The remnant system moved more east-northeastward away from eastern Japan before slowing its motion 1100\u00a0miles southeast of Hokkaid\u014d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Ma-on (Rolly)\nMa-on was one of the most powerful storms to strike eastern Japan over the last ten years, along with Faxai. The highest wind gust reported was 151\u00a0mph/67.6\u00a0m/s in Ir\u014dzaki late on the 9th. The lowest pressure was also recorded at Ir\u014dzaki; 964\u00a0mb late on the 9th. The typhoon left at least six people dead, and three persons were reported missing. Plane, train and ferry services nationwide were disrupted, stranding thousands of travellers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0043-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Ma-on (Rolly)\nHeavy downpours also disrupted practice and qualifying sessions for Formula One's Japanese Grand Prix in Suzuka, with the event featuring qualifying and the race in a single day as a result. The highest storm total amount was noted at Omaezaki, where a 413\u00a0mm deluge was seen between late on the 6th and 9th, with 360\u00a0mm falling in a 24\u2011hour period. Rescuers on boats plucked dozens of residents from waterlogged homes in Shizuoka Prefecture. Damages from the storm amounted to $603\u00a0million (2004 USD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Tokage (Siony)\nTokage is the Japanese word for lizard. On October 12, an area of convection existed 480\u00a0miles east-southeast of Guam. The system developed into Tropical Depression 27W later that day, moving in a west-northwesterly at 15\u00a0kn about 200\u00a0miles east of Guam. On October 13, the system developed into a tropical storm, and was named Tokage, subsequently moving very close to the islands of Rota and Guam. Typhoon intensity was achieved early on October 14 when centered 970\u00a0miles southeast of Okinawa. Later that day, Tokage briefly turned to the west-southwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0044-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Tokage (Siony)\nThe storm's path curved back to a northwesterly heading by the October 15. The storm curled towards the north as a major shortwave over weakened the subtropical ridge and by October 17, Tokage reached its peak intensity of 125\u00a0kn/145\u00a0mph. Weakening began later that day as the storm turned back to a more northwesterly heading towards Okinawa and Japan. On October 18, Typhoon Tokage was 290\u00a0miles south of Kadena Air Base, Okinawa. Recurvature back to the north-northeast towards Japan ensued while the typhoon slowly weakened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0044-0002", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Tokage (Siony)\nTokage made its closest approach to Okinawa late on October 19 when it was passed just to the south-southeast. The storm turned to the northeast as continued to accelerate as its extratropical transition began. Tokage made landfall over Tosa-Shimizu, near the southern tip of Shikoku, Japan still at typhoon strength. By October 21, the cyclone weakened into a tropical storm 130\u00a0nmi west of Tokyo, and later that day, the system completed the transition to a nontropical low. The extratropical remains of Tokage moved rapidly northeastward, crossing the International Date Line around midday on October 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Tokage (Siony)\nThe highest measured wind gust was 142\u00a0mph/63.7\u00a0m/s at Unzendake, Nagasaki on October 20. The lowest pressure from a land station was 949.4\u00a0mb at Okinoerabu, Kagoshima late on October 19. The highest rainfall amount noted in Japan was 550\u00a0mm at Fukuharaasahi between late on October 17 and 21, with 470\u00a0mm falling within a 24\u2011hour period. Tokage was regarded as the deadliest storm to strike Japan since Typhoon Bess in 1982. A total of 95 deaths were attributed to high winds, flooding and mudslides caused by Tokage, with an additional three people reported missing. A total of 18,000\u00a0people were forced to evacuate their homes. Damages from the storm amounted to $3.23\u00a0billion (2004 USD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nock-ten (Tonyo)\nTyphoon Nock-ten originated from a disturbance that formed amongst the Marshall Islands early on October 13 while 45\u00a0miles west of Kwajalein Atoll. Tropical Depression 28W developed on October 14 about 275\u00a0miles east-northeast of Pohnpei and moving westward along the southern periphery of the subtropical ridge. The system assumed a more west-northwesterly track, becoming a tropical storm by late on October 16, and was named Nock-ten. Early on October 18, the storm turned southwest and slowed its forward motion. The system strengthened into a typhoon by noon local time and curved back towards the west.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0046-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nock-ten (Tonyo)\nNock-ten soon accelerated and moved more northwesterly, partially due to the remains of Typhoon Tokage. Typhoon Nock-ten passed 160\u00a0miles south of Guam on October 20. Nock-ten reached its peak intensity of 110\u00a0kn/125\u00a0mph on October 23 as it tracked 480\u00a0miles south of Okinawa. Turning to a northerly track, Typhoon Nock-ten passed closest to Taipei during the afternoon of October 25, lying just off the northeastern tip of Taiwan by evening. The storm weakened and by local midnight the track became north-northeast. Nock-ten's motion to the east-northeast accelerated to 26\u00a0kn/29\u00a0mph, and the typhoon had become a nontropical low by the evening of October 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nock-ten (Tonyo)\nTyphoon Nock-ten lashed northern Taiwan with powerful winds and driving rain. The highest 24\u2011hour rainfall on the island was 322\u00a0mm in Taipei City between early October 25 and 27. The highest wind gust measured was 122\u00a0mph/54.4\u00a0m/s in Lanyu on October 24. Three fatalities occurred as a result of flash flooding. In Japan, the highest rainfall amount was spotted at Tanegashima which recorded 133.5\u00a0mm between midday October 26 and 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Muifa (Unding)\nThe name Muifa is taken from the ume blossom. The disturbance that was to become Typhoon Muifa was noted early on November 14 when located 215\u00a0nmi north of Palau. It became Tropical Depression 29W later that day and strengthened into a tropical storm by early the 15th when centered 550\u00a0miles east-southeast of Manila, Philippines. PAGASA assigned the name Unding on the 14th as it passed the 135th meridian. On the 16th, the tropical cyclone started drifting north-northeast. Muifa turned back onto a west-northwest heading and intensified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0048-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Muifa (Unding)\nIt reached typhoon intensity on the 17th just prior to beginning a two-day clockwise loop. Late on the 18th, Muifa's intensity peaked at 115\u00a0kn/130\u00a0mph still to the east of the Philippines. Muifa made landfall very late on the 19th near Naga City with maximum winds of 70\u00a0kn/80\u00a0mph. The system ambled across the Philippine Archipelago, dropping down to tropical storm intensity on the afternoon of the 20th. On the 21st, Muifa regained typhoon intensity in the South China Sea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0048-0002", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Muifa (Unding)\nNow moving west-southwest, early on the 22nd Muifa re-strengthened into a 90-kn/105\u00a0mph typhoon 440\u00a0miles east of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Muifa held onto typhoon status until late on the 23rd when its weakened to a tropical storm once more. On the 25th, Tropical Storm Muifa accelerated westward at a 21\u00a0kn/23\u00a0mph clip. By early on the 26th, a weakening Tropical Depression Muifa was located 250\u00a0nmi south of Bangkok, Thailand. Later that day Muifa turned northward into an environment of increased wind shear and dissipated 120\u00a0nmi south-southwest of Bangkok.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Muifa (Unding)\nThe highest 24\u2011hour rainfall amount from the Philippines was 246.4\u00a0mm at Catanduanes between midday the 15th and 16th. The lowest pressure at Naga City was 986.1\u00a0mb early on the 16th. The death toll reported from the Philippines was 68 dead, 160 injured, and 69 unaccounted for. A total of 26,238 houses were destroyed and 76,062 damaged; total damage reached 1.0089\u00a0billion pesos. Typhoon Muifa had a destructive impact on Vietnam. The highest 24-hour rainfall amount reported was 251.5\u00a0mm at Prachuap Khirikhan between the afternoon of the 25th and 26th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0049-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Muifa (Unding)\nFloods and landslides triggered by the typhoon killed about 40\u00a0people, and 40 more people were reported missing. There were also many villages in the mountains which needed urgent relief but which could not be quickly reached. H\u1ed9i An, which is the town of world heritage, was hit by the flood, and more than 80 old houses were in danger of collapse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 60], "content_span": [61, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Merbok (Violeta)\nMerbok is the Malaysian word for the spotted-necked dove. This is the first tropical cyclone recognized by the Japan Meteorological Agency, but not Joint Typhoon Warning Center, since Changmi in 2002. Tropical Storm Merbok emanated from a disturbance located in the Philippine Sea and was first recognized as Tropical Depression Violeta by PAGASA on November 22. Later that day, it developed into a tropical storm. Merbok tracked slowly towards the northwest and made landfall south of Baler on the east coast of Luzon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0050-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Merbok (Violeta)\nThe storm's intensity held steady at 35\u00a0kn/40\u00a0mph (its peak strength) as it ambled its way across the mountains of Luzon, finally emerging off the northwest coast late on the 23rd. By this time, Merbok had lost most or all of its deep convection, the remnants continuing slowly north-westwards before dissipating southwest of Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Merbok (Violeta)\nTropical Storm Merbok added to the misery caused by Typhoon Muifa in the Philippines, killing 31\u00a0people and injuring 187 others. In addition, 17 persons were reported missing. A total of 337 houses were destroyed and 1,286 damaged. Total estimated damage reached 253\u00a0million pesos with agriculture especially hard hit (210\u00a0million pesos.) The heaviest rainfall in the Philippines from this cyclone was 185.2\u00a0mm at Casiguran between midday the 22nd and 23rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression Winnie\nTropical Depression Winnie was a large system which brought torrential rains to Luzon, resulting in deadly flashfloods and landslides. Winnie formed east of the central Philippines on the November 27. JMA and the Central Weather Bureau of Taiwan were the only other agencies classifying Winnie as a tropical depression. The system moved west-northwestward over southeastern Luzon on the 29th. After moving well inland over Luzon, Winnie turned to a more north-northwesterly track up the west side of the island and was last mentioned on the 30th when it was located along the northwestern Luzon coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Depression Winnie\nAccording to news reports in the Philippines, 1,404\u00a0people were killed or left missing during the passage of Tropical Depression Winnie, primarily due to massive flashfloods and landslides in Quezon and Aurora provinces triggered by the attendant heavy rains. The highest rainfall report from this system was 157.8\u00a0mm from Cabanatuan between midday November 29 and 30. Damages from the storm amounted to $15.8\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nanmadol (Yoyong)\nThe name Nanmodol is from a famous ruin found on Pohnpei. Super Typhoon Nanmadol developed from a cluster of thunderstorms that was first noted early on November 28 when it was located 155\u00a0nmi south-southwest of Pohnpei. It developed into Tropical Depression 30W about 690\u00a0miles east-southeast of Yap, and into Tropical Storm Nanmadol by midday November 29 as it moved westward south of the subtropical ridge. Nanmadol continued to strengthen, reaching typhoon intensity late that day after passing south of Satawal. The storm's track curved to the west-northwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0054-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nanmadol (Yoyong)\nLate on November 30, the storm passed just north of Yap, bringing typhoon-force gusts and sustained tropical storm strength winds. The tropical cyclone reached its peak intensity of 130\u00a0kn/150\u00a0mph midday on December 2, then a super typhoon, 220\u00a0miles east of Manila, Philippines. Super Typhoon Nanmadol soon arrived at the Luzon coastline. At this time, the system began to lose strength and was downgraded from super typhoon status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nanmadol (Yoyong)\nTurning northwestward Typhoon Nanmadol took roughly six hours to cross the island of Luzon, and by early on December 3 had re-emerged back over water. The northwesterly turn took Nanmadol into a weakness in the subtropical ridge before being lured away by a major shortwave trough. Nanmadol weakened markedly during December 3 as it gradually veered more towards the north. The cloud pattern became increasingly asymmetrical as Nanmadol moved east-northeastward across southern Taiwan before becoming extratropical during the afternoon of December 4. Nanmadol became the first known December tropical cyclone for 108\u00a0years to make landfall on the island. The remnants of Super Typhoon Nanmadol continued to rapidly move to the east-northeast and northeast and ultimately merged with another low-pressure area, forming a powerful extratropical cyclone which brought strong winds and led to unseasonably warm temperatures to Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 993]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nanmadol (Yoyong)\nBecause Muifa, Merbok, Winnie, and Nanmadol all occurred within a space of two weeks, the exact number of casualties and total cost of damages is difficult to determine. Nanmadol caused at least 70 fatalities and 157 injuries. Nanmadol destroyed 10,457 houses and damaged 57,435. Agriculture also suffered badly as a result of this typhoon with losses amounting to \u20b12.036\u00a0billion in the Philippines. The maximum rain in the Philippines was 228.1\u00a0mm at Daet between midday on December 2 and 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0056-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Typhoon Nanmadol (Yoyong)\nIn Taiwan, as much as 907\u00a0mm fell in Hualien county between early December 3 and 4. Puluowan reported the highest storm total accumulation of 1090\u00a0mm during the 35-hr period ending on the afternoon of December 4. In China, 106.3\u00a0mm fell at Dachen Dao between the morning of December 3 and 4. In Taiwan, 2 deaths were reported, and agricultural losses there were estimated to have been NT$670\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Talas (Zosimo)\nTropical Depression 31W, which formed on December 10 near Kwajalein, became a tropical storm later that day. Talas moved to the west, peaking at 45\u00a0kn/50\u00a0mph before weakening due to lack of outflow. A break in the subtropical ridge allowed Talas to turn northward, where it reached 45\u00a0kn/50\u00a0mph winds before dissipating on December 19. Talas is Filipino for 'acuteness' or 'sharpness'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Talas (Zosimo)\nBetween December 10 and 11, Talas produced light rainfall, peaked at 8.4\u00a0mm (0.33\u00a0in) in Kwajalein with winds reaching 74\u00a0km/h (46\u00a0mph) and gusting to 103\u00a0km/h (64\u00a0mph). After passing Kwajelein, the center of Talas brushed Ebeye, producing gale-force winds on the island. Little impact was recorded on Ujae as the storm passed 90\u00a0km (55\u00a0mi) south of the island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0058-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Talas (Zosimo)\nThe most severe damage was on Kwajalein; the newly constructed sandblast shelter was completely destroyed, metal doors at the local high school were blown off and the roof of the school was damaged, several metal buildings throughout the island sustained wind damage. On Ebeye, several homes had their roofs blown off and numerous coconut trees were uprooted. No damage was recorded on Ujae but crop losses were assumed to have occurred. In all, the storm caused $750,000 in damages, mainly due to the sandblast shelter. Following Talas, local governments quickly repaired damages wrought by the storm, costing $300,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Noru\nThe final storm of the season, Noru, formed on December 17 to the east-southeast of Saipan. After becoming a tropical storm on December 18 Noru moved to the northwest, where it peaked with 55\u00a0kn/65\u00a0mph winds. Noru turned to the northeast, and became extratropical on December 21. Noru is the Korean word for the roe deer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Systems, Tropical Storm Noru\nBetween December 19 and 20, Noru brought high winds and heavy rains to the northern Mariana Islands. Upwards of 182\u00a0mm (7.2\u00a0in) fell on Saipan, resulting in isolated flooding. Winds gusted up to 95 kilometres per hour (59\u00a0mph) but little or no wind damage resulted from the storm. No structural damage occurred due to Noru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names\nWithin the North-western Pacific Ocean, both the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA) and the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration assign names to tropical cyclones that develop in the Western Pacific, which can result in a tropical cyclone having two names. The Japan Meteorological Agency's RSMC Tokyo\u00a0\u2014 Typhoon Center assigns international names to tropical cyclones on behalf of the World Meteorological Organization's Typhoon Committee, should they be judged to have 10-minute sustained windspeeds of 65\u00a0km/h, (40\u00a0mph).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0061-0001", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names\nWhile the Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration assigns names to tropical cyclones which move into or form as a tropical depression in their area of responsibility located between 135\u00b0E and 115\u00b0E and between 5\u00b0N-25\u00b0N even if the cyclone has had an international name assigned to it. The names of significant tropical cyclones are retired, by both PAGASA and the Typhoon Committee. Should the list of names for the Philippine region be exhausted then names will be taken from an auxiliary list of which the first ten are published each season. Unused names are marked in gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, International names\nDuring the season 29 named tropical cyclones developed in the Western Pacific and were named by the Japan Meteorological Agency, when it was determined that they had become tropical storms. These names were contributed to a list of a 140 names submitted by the fourteen members nations and territories of the ESCAP/WMO Typhoon Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, Philippines\nThe Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration uses its own naming scheme for tropical cyclones in their area of responsibility. PAGASA assigns names to tropical depressions that form within their area of responsibility and any tropical cyclone that might move into their area of responsibility. Should the list of names for a given year prove to be insufficient, names are taken from an auxiliary list, the first 10 of which are published each year before the season starts. The names not retired from this list will be used again in the 2008 season. Names that were not assigned are marked in gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Storm names, Retirement\nThe names Sudal, Tingting and Rananim were retired by the ESCAP/WMO Typhoon Committee. The names Mirinae, Lionrock and Fanapi (which was later retired and replaced by Rai) were chosen to replace Sudal, Tingting and Rananim respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178476-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific typhoon season, Season effects\nThis is a table of the storms in 2004 and their landfalls, if any. Damage and deaths include totals while the storm was extratropical or a wave or low. The information below is mainly from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center. Names in parenthesis are those assigned by PAGASA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178477-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Pacific Life Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was played between March 11 and March 13, 2004 at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. The Washington Huskies made their second trip to the final game (and their first since 1987) to play Stanford who was making their third finals appearance. The champion of the tournament was Stanford (who was also the Pac-10 regular season champion), which received the Pac-10's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Most Outstanding Player was Josh Childress of Stanford. The total attendance of 60,126 was the lowest since the tournament had been hosted at the Staples Center from 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178477-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nThe top eight Pacific-10 schools play in the tournament. Teams are seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 61], "content_span": [62, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178478-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pakistani presidential election\nPresidential elections were held by the Electoral College of Pakistan on 1 January 2004. Pervez Musharraf won 658 out of 1,170 votes, and according to Article 41 (8) of the Constitution of Pakistan, was \"deemed to be elected\" to the office of President until October, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178479-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palanca Awards\nThe Carlos Palanca Memorial Awards for Literature winners in the year 2004 (rank, name of author, title of winning entry):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178480-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palau Soccer League\nThe 2004 Palau Soccer League was the first season of association football competition in Palau. The league was won by Daewoo Ngatpang The league consisted of three rounds of matches, a play-off final and was named the Palau Soccer Association Local League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178480-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Palau Soccer League, Teams\nFour teams will compete in this inaugural season of the Palau Soccer League. All matches will played at the PCC Track & Field Stadium in Koror, home stadium to all the teams. This is due to the lack of suitable venues for soccer matches in Palau. The teams for 2004 (listed in alphabetical order) are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178480-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Palau Soccer League, Teams\nThe location of the PCC Track & Field Stadium, where all games will take place:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178480-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Palau Soccer League, League stage, Results\nThe 2004 season was played in two stages: the first stage was a group in which all teams played each other once. The top two teams then qualified for a one legged final to determine the overall champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum\nA six-part referendum was held in Palau on 2 November 2004 alongside the country's general elections. Voters were asked questions on summoning a Constitutional Convention, payment of members of the National Congress, creating a unicameral Congress, term limits for Congress members, election of the President and Vice President and dual citizenship. All proposals were approved except the unicameral Congress, which despite receiving a majority of the public vote, did not meet the quorum of 12 of 16 states required for amendments to the constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Convening of a constitutional convention\nShall there be a Convention to revise or amend the Constitution?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Congressional attendance\nVoters were asked whether they approved of a popular initiative to amend the constitution regarding the payment of members of the National Congress. The proposed amendment of article IX, section 8 would have read:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Congressional attendance\nThe compensation of the members of the Olbiil Era Kelulau shall be uniform fee for each day the member attends an official session of the Olbiil Era Kelulau. The amount of the fee shall be determined by law. No increase in compensation shall apply to the members of the Olbiil Era Kelulau during the term of enactment, nor may an increase in compensation be enacted in the period between the date of a regular general election and the date a new Olbiil Era Kelulau takes office.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Three-term limit for National Congress members\nA popular initiative proposed amending the constitution to limit the number of terms a member of the National Congress could serve to three. The text would read:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 95], "content_span": [96, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Three-term limit for National Congress members\nNo person shall serve as a member of the Olbiil Era Kelulau for more than three terms; provided however, that any person elected as a member of the Olbiil Era Kelulau in the regular general election in which this amendment is adopted shall be entitle to serve the four-year for which he or she was elected regardless of the number of previous terms served.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 95], "content_span": [96, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Joint election of the president and vice president\nA popular initiative proposed amending the constitution to elect the president and vice president together rather than separately. It would amend Article VIII, section 4 of the constitution to read:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Joint election of the president and vice president\nThe President and Vice President shall be elected in a nationwide election for a term of four (4) years. The President and Vice President shall be chosen jointly by the casting by each voter of A single vote applicable to both offices. A person may not serve as President for more than two consecutive terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Dual citizenship\nA popular initiative proposed amending the constitution to allow Palauan citizens to hold dual citizenship, and give citizenship at birth to people with Palauan parents. The proposed wording was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178481-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan constitutional referendum, Results, Dual citizenship\nA person born of parent, one or both of whom are of recognized Palauan ancestry, is a citizenship shall not affect a person's Palauan citizenship, nor shall a person of recognized Palauan ancestry be required to renounce United States citizenship to become a naturalized citizen of Palau. Persons of other foreign nations may retain their Palauan citizenship or become naturalized Palauan citizens as provided by law. Palauan citizen may renounce their Palauan citizenship. Renouncements made prior to the effective date of this amendment are not affected by this amendment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178482-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palauan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Palau on 2 November 2004, alongside several referendums. The presidential election was won comfortably by the incumbent, Tommy Remengesau, who took almost two-thirds of the vote, whilst all House of Delegates and Senate seats were won by non-partisan independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178483-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Beach Gardens Challenger\nThe 2004 Palm Beach Gardens Challenger was a women's professional tennis tournament played on clay courts. It was the 2nd edition of the Palm Beach Gardens Challenger, and was an ITF $50,000 tournament from 2003 to 2005. It took place at the Palm Beach Gardens Tennis Center in Florida from November 29 to Dec 5, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178483-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Beach Gardens Challenger, WTA entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178483-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Beach Gardens Challenger, WTA entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received entry via the Lucky Loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178483-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Beach Gardens Challenger, Champions, Doubles\nL\u012bga Dekmeijere / Nana Miyagi def. Kelly McCain / Kaysie Smashey, 6\u20133, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody\nThe 2004 Palm Island death in custody incident relates to the death of an Aboriginal resident of Palm Island, Cameron Doomadgee (also known as \"Mulrunji\") on Friday, 19 November 2004 in a police cell. The death of Mulrunji led to civic disturbances on the island and a legal, political and media sensation that continued for fourteen years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody\nThe Attorney-General of Queensland, Kerry Shine, indicted an Australian police officer for a criminal trial for the first time since the public prosecutor's office was established. The officer, Sergeant Chris Hurley, who was charged for a death in custody, was acquitted by a jury in June 2007. Hurley medically retired from the Gold Coast station of the Queensland Police in 2017 following a string of charges while serving as a police officer including assault and dangerous driving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody\nPolice raids and behaviour following the community riot were found to have breached the Racial Discrimination Act 1975, with a record class action settlement of A$30 million awarded to victims in May 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody\nTwo legal questions arose from the death; firstly, whether the taking into custody of Mulrunji was lawful, and secondly, whether the injuries that led to his death were illegally caused by the arresting officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody\nPolitically, this event raised questions relating to the federal government's 1987\u20131991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody and whether its recommendations to prevent deaths in custody had been implemented by the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nCameron Doomadgee, an Aboriginal Australian, was aged 36 when he died, at about 11:20am on Palm Island, one hour after being picked up for allegedly causing a public nuisance. Mulrunji was placed in the two-cell lockup which was the back section of the Palm Island Police Station. Fellow Palm Islander Patrick Bramwell was placed in the adjoining cell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nThe arresting officer, Senior Sergeant Chris Hurley, and the Indigenous police liaison officer, Lloyd Bengaroo, were flown off the island the following Monday, after receiving death threats and Hurley's house being burned down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nThis was the 147th death of an Aboriginal person in custody since the handing down of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nAn autopsy report by Coroner Michael Barnes was produced for the family one week after the death. It stated that Mulrunji had suffered four broken ribs, which had ruptured his liver and spleen, it also found that the body's blood alcohol content was 0.29 from a cocktail of alcohol including methylated spirits mixed with sweet cordial. The family of the deceased were informed by the Coroner that the death was the result of \"an intra-abdominal haemorrhage caused by a ruptured liver and portal vein\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nMain points from media reports after interviews with residents and relatives stated:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nHurley is a white Australian who was also aged 36 at the time of the incident. He had spent the morning investigating complaints by sisters Gladys, Andrea and Anna Nugent that Roy Bramwell had assaulted them. One of the sisters needed to be airlifted to Townsville Hospital due to her condition as a result of Bramwell's assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nGladys requested that Hurley accompany her so that she could safely get medication from Bramwell's house. Hurley drove her to the house in the police vehicle. While Gladys retrieved her medication, Patrick Bramwell was outside. He appeared intoxicated and was swearing at the police. His grandmother complained to Hurley, who then arrested him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nMeanwhile Mulrunji taunted Bengaroo with words to the effect of \"why does he help lock up his own people?\". Hurley then reentered the car and talked with Bengaroo briefly. Mulrunji who had walked away, turned and allegedly swore at the police officers. Hurley drove over to Mulrunji and arrested him for creating a public nuisance, after which Mulrunji was taken in the back of the police vehicle for the short trip to the police station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nDoomadgee family spokesman, Brad Foster, claimed that after the men had been put into the cells, fifteen minutes lapsed before a seven-second check was done on the inmates. Forty-two minutes later a second police officer observed that Mulrunji was a strange colour and was cold to the touch. The officer could not find a pulse. When alerted to this, Hurley came into the cell and thought he could detect a pulse. According to statements an ambulance was then called taking fifteen minutes to arrive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nDuring this time no attempts were made to resuscitate the prisoner, although the autopsy found that there would have been no chance of saving him. The videotape footage from the cell shows Hurley checking for breathing and pulse then \"sliding down the wall of the cell until he sat with his face in his hands\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nWhen Mulrunji's sister brought lunch for him to the front section of the police station, she was not informed of events and was told to leave. The family and the state coroner were informed of the death at about 3pm that afternoon. Police began taking statements from witnesses. Procedures for taking of statements from illiterate Aboriginal people were not followed, including the requirement to have a representative present who understands the process (preferably a legal representation).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nThe Doomadgee family later stated that the Queensland Government's response had not been to provide counselling for the family but to send in 18 extra police from Townsville who \"strut around this community, looking intimidating\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, The death of Cameron Doomadgee\nFor the following week public meetings were held on the Island due to anger rising in the community about the death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Autopsy report\nOn Friday 26 November 2004 the results of the autopsy report were read to a public meeting by then Palm Island Council Chairwoman Erykah Kyle. The autopsy report was medical and did not state what caused his death. It did list possible causes which included that the multiple injuries sustained could have been consistent with him falling off a concrete step at the Palm Island watchhouse. The injury may have been caused by Hurley falling on the deceased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Autopsy report\nThe deceased was 181\u00a0cm tall and weighed 74 kilograms. Hurley was 201\u00a0cm tall and weighed 115 kilograms. The Coroner later stated that the autopsy was \"far too sensitive and private\" to be publicly released. Subsequent to the autopsy report reading a succession of angry young Aboriginal men spoke to the crowd and encouraged immediate action be taken against the police. Mulrunji's death was repeatedly branded \"cold-blooded murder\". A riot erupted involving an estimated 400 people, half of them school children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Riot, police raids, and racial discrimination\nA crowd headed initially for the police station. The local courthouse, police station, Hurley's home and the police barracks were burned down. Eighteen local police had to repeatedly retreat; firstly receding from the station to the residential barracks, then when the barracks were also set alight they (and their families) withdrew to the hospital and barricaded themselves in. Cars and machinery were driven onto the runway, blocking all aircraft movement. Even the (Aboriginal) volunteer fire brigade had stones thrown at them while they tried to put out the courthouse and police station fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Riot, police raids, and racial discrimination\nThe volatile situation was attributed to the lack of consultation with the family and community combined with the premature public release of the autopsy report. They appeared to have jumped to a conclusion given their description of the death as \"cold blooded murder\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Riot, police raids, and racial discrimination\nAs the riot occurred during the school lunch break, it was witnessed by many children. As a way of helping them understand and cope with the on-going trauma they had experienced, children were later encouraged to express themselves through art, one of the resulting pieces was titled \"We saw the police station burn. I want people to have love\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Riot, police raids, and racial discrimination\nNumerous police officers were flown into Palm Island following the riot. Police officers in riot gear, wearing balaclavas, with no identification and carrying large guns, marched into the community, conducting early-morning raids. Residents report officers pointing guns at children's heads and being tasered. A resident and his partner were later awarded A$235,000 in compensation for assault, battery and false imprisonment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Riot, police raids, and racial discrimination, Class action\nPolice actions were later found to breach the Racial Discrimination Act 1975, with the raids being \"unnecessary, disproportionate\" and police having \"acted in these ways because they were dealing with an Aboriginal community\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Riot, police raids, and racial discrimination, Class action\nThe raids resulted in a record A$30 million class action settlement and a formal apology to be made by the State Government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 94], "content_span": [95, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act\nLater the same day approximately 80 additional police from Townsville and Cairns were flown to Palm Island to restore order. Part of the flown in police contingent was the tactical response group who wore riot shields, balaclavas and helmets with face-masks, Glock pistol at the hip and a shotgun or semi-automatic rifle in their right hand. They converted the Bwgcolman Community School into a headquarters and sleeping barracks, and the St Michael's school bus was commandeered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act\nDuring the weekend the tactical response group searched many homes. Children witnessed their parents being arrested and taken to Townsville for committing crimes such as public drunkenness and common assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act\nPremier Peter Beattie visited Palm Island on Sunday 28 November, producing a five-point plan to restore order to local leaders. There was much debate over the appropriateness of the police and government response to the riot. Complaints were made that Aboriginal Legal Aid had been denied access to the Island. Queensland Police Union President Denis Fitzpatrick demanded the rioters be charged with attempted murder of 12 police. The police who had been stationed on the island indicated through the Union that they did not wish to return to Island duties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act\nAn emergency situation was declared under the Public Safety Preservation Act 1986 (the Act) on the afternoon of the riot. It was lifted two days later, just before the Premier's arrival. Later the timing of the \"emergency\" was disputed by lawyers for the Palm Island community. The lawyers maintained two key points, firstly that the emergency could only last for as long as the riot itself and secondly the police did not have extended search and detain powers under the Act that they had relied upon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act, Court proceedings\nA total of 28 Indigenous Australians were arrested and charged with offences ranging from arson to riotous behaviour in the weeks following the riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 104], "content_span": [105, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act, Court proceedings\nInitially 13 Palm Islanders were arrested and charged. They appeared before the Townsville Magistrates Court on Monday 29 November 2004, the first business day after the riot. The Palm Islanders faced charges of riot, arson and assault. The Magistrate determined that due to the \"state of emergency\" it would be too dangerous to allow the defendants to return to Palm Island, therefore bail was not considered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 104], "content_span": [105, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act, Court proceedings\nOn 1 December 2004 three more rioters were arrested, all women: a 65-year-old grandmother, her daughter, and the daughter of a Palm Island Councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 104], "content_span": [105, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act, Court proceedings\nBy 6 December 2004, 19 accused were granted bail by the Queensland Chief Magistrate. Conditions were imposed such as not being allowed to return to Palm Island, not even for the funeral of Mulrunji. Another notable condition of bail was that they were not to attend rallies or marches over the death in custody. The circumstances leading up to the riot were taken into consideration when bail was considered. It was reasoned that if they stayed in a different community in Townsville there was a low likelihood of re-offending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 104], "content_span": [105, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act, Court proceedings\nFour people were prosecuted for the riot and were acquitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 104], "content_span": [105, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Emergency response, Public Safety Preservation Act, Court proceedings, Lex Wotton\nLex Wotton was warned by a Brisbane court in 2006 to comply with the original conditions of bail, to discontinue his public appearances at rallies and marches. Wotton initially pleaded guilty to the charge of rioting, and was found guilty at trial. After others were acquitted, he successfully challenged the legal proceedings and withdrew his guilty plea in May 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 116], "content_span": [117, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Investigation\nMulrunji's Family had suspicions about the results of the first autopsy by the Queensland government pathologist. They delayed Mulrunji's funeral and insisted that the Coroner order a second \"independent autopsy\" to be observed by a pathologist on behalf of the Doomadgee family. The family also hired a private investigator to conduct an independent investigation of the death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Overturned coronial inquiry\nOn 8 February 2005 an initial one-day directions hearing for a full coronial inquiry into the death in custody was held. It was decided by Coroner Michael Barnes that the inquiry would take place on the island so that the people of Palm Island would have the opportunity to observe the process; however medical evidence and evidence given by police officers was to be taken in open court in Townsville due to logistical issues and safety concerns of the police. The inquiry would begin on 28 February 2005. Barnes was assisted by two senior counsel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0036-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Overturned coronial inquiry\nThe directions hearing was held in a marquee, because there were no premises on the island large enough for the expected audience. 16 barristers and solicitors appeared representing the Queensland Government, the Doomadgee family, the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission and the Queensland Police Service. During the directions hearing the Doomadgee family requested that the deceased be referred to by his tribal name \"Mulrunji\" in line with Aboriginal custom, which was not opposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Overturned coronial inquiry\nBarnes had previously been the Aboriginal Legal Aid solicitor for two families before the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody. On the first day of the inquiry the Coroner also disclosed that he had headed the complaints section of the Criminal Justice Commission in the early 1990s, when several complaints had been made about Hurley, but he had not handled the investigation and could not remember the complaints. Although he had not been involved in the investigation, Barnes was the officer who made the final determination that the complaints were unsubstantiated. Lawyers for both the Doomadgee family and Hurley asked that the Coroner disqualify himself (although for different reasons).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Overturned coronial inquiry\nThe Coroner subsequently disqualified himself, and Deputy State Coroner Christine Clements flew to Townsville and took over. She decided that the inquest would start afresh on 29 March 2005, with a three-day directions hearing in Brisbane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Overturned coronial inquiry\nIn late September 2006, Clements found that Doomadgee was killed as a result of punches by Hurley. She also accused the police of failing to investigate his death fully. In response to the coroner's findings, Queensland Police Union president Gary Wilkinson was highly critical, saying that the coroner's use of \"unreliable evidence from a drunk\" was \"simply unbelievable\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Overturned coronial inquiry\nThe coroner also said that Mulrunji should not have been arrested, and that local police had not learned from the findings of the Royal Commission. Largely supporting this conclusion was that Hurley had considered it necessary to raise similar concerns only a year prior to Mulrunji's death to the Federal Parliamentary Standing Committee on Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Affairs. In his submissions to the Committee, Hurley pointed out the lack of an alcohol diversionary centre on Palm Island. He complained \"If we attend a job in relation to alcohol where the person has not committed any other offences besides being drunk in public, the only option we have is to take them to the watch-house\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Director of Public Prosecutions decision\nLeanne Clare, the Queensland Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), announced on 14 December 2006 that no charges would be laid as there was no evidence proving that Hurley was responsible for Mulrunji's death. She reportedly received advice from former Supreme Court judge James B. Thomas before making this decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution\nThe incident also resulted in an investigation by the Crime and Misconduct Commission (CMC). Included in the duties of the CMC is investigating allegations of police misconduct. Included in the allegations made against Hurley was that he wrongfully caused the death of Mulrunji. Although Prosecution were concerned with disciplinary proceedings rather than criminal court proceedings, the CMC reached the same conclusion as the DPP in relation to Hurley being criminally responsible for causing the death. They advised that \"The Commission has determined that the evidence would not be capable of proving before any disciplinary tribunal that Senior Sergeant Hurley was responsible for Mulrunji's death\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 59], "content_span": [60, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Review of DPP decision\nAfter several days of media and public pressure, Queensland Attorney-General, Kerry Shine, appointed retired Justice Pat Shanahan to review the DPP's decision not to lay charges against the police officer. Shanahan resigned after it was revealed he had sat on the panel that originally appointed Clare as DPP in 1999. Former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Sir Laurence Street, was selected to review the decision not to charge Hurley over the death of Mulrunji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Review of DPP decision\nThe review resulted in the overturning of the DPP's decision, with Street finding there was sufficient evidence to prosecute Hurley with manslaughter. This was the first time since the public prosecutor's office was established in Queensland that anyone other than the DPP made a decision concerning whether or not to indict an individual.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Trial\nIn June 2007 the Townsville-based trial of Chris Hurley on charges of assault and manslaughter took place. Hurley was found not guilty after medical evidence was given which discredited claims by other witnesses of an assault by Hurley upon Doomadgee. Public funded investigation and prosecution alone cost at least A$7 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, District Court appeal\nIn September 2008, Hurley's lawyers appealed Coroner Clements' findings (September 2006) that he had killed Mulrunji with three fatal punches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, District Court appeal\nOn 17 December 2008 District Court Judge Bob Pack, in Townsville, ruled that Clements' finding \"..was against the weight of the evidence..\", so upholding Hurley's appeal, requiring a new coronial inquiry and outraging local Aboriginal people who feared this would \"..only dig up buried bones..\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 82], "content_span": [83, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nIn May 2009, Mulrunji's family's lawyers commenced proceeding in the Queensland Supreme Court, attempting to have Judge Pack's decision ruled invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nThe Court noted that because Bramwell did not have a clear view of the incident, the Coroner concluded that the punches described by Bramwell hit the abdomen or torso of the deceased rather than the head, and this caused the death. They further noted that the medical evidence before the Coroner allowed for the possibility that punches were one possible explanation for the facial injuries or bruises, but the medical evidence unequivocally rejected punching described by Bramwell as a cause of death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nThey noted that the Coroner did not refer to that evidence in her report. They quoted the Coroner's observations about the cause of death and that the \"consensus of medical opinion was that severe compressive force applied to the upper abdomen, or possibly the lower chest, or both together, was required to have caused this injury\", and that \"medical witnesses were asked to consider whether the application of a knee or an elbow, whilst [the deceased] was on the hard flat surface, either during or separate to the fall could have caused the mechanism of injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0050-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nThis was accepted as a possible means by which the injury could have occurred\". (By comparison, even in 2012 a journalist publicly maintained the view that the medical consensus regarding the possibility the injury could have been caused during the fall was incorrect. Documentary film director Tony Krawitz opined in an interview that \"something really violent happened\" and shortly after stated \"It wasn't treated as a murder investigation which is what was meant to have happened.\")", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nThe Court concluded that the Coroner's finding that Hurley caused the death by punching was not reasonably open on the evidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nThe Court then addressed the Attorney-General and the appellants' argument that only the Coroner's finding that punching caused the fatal injuries should be set aside as a result of the medical evidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nThe Attorney General and appellants submitted that if punching is set aside there should be an inevitable finding that the fatal injuries were due to a deliberate application of force by Chris Hurley after the fall, e.g. a knee drop. The Court did not accept that inevitably follows and pointed out that Bramwell's evidence could be said not to \"leave room for such an occurrence\". (Bramwell was an exclusive witness for only 6 to 10 seconds, and volunteered incriminating evidence at the Coronial hearing that Hurley punched Mulrunji.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0053-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Supreme Court appeal\nHowever, he made no claim that Hurley did a knee drop during that time.) However they emphasised that they were merely addressing the submission, not making findings on fact as that is not their function in hearing the appeal. Instead they ordered that the Coronial Inquiry be reopened to re-examine the facts as the original Coronial Inquiry findings were set aside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 81], "content_span": [82, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Coronial inquiry\nOn 14 May 2010 a new full coronial inquiry into the death in custody concluded. During the course of the coronial enquiry it was revealed that a police witness Senior Sargeant Michael Leafe originally estimated that Hurley was alone with Mulrunji for 10 seconds but changed it to 6 or 7 seconds after reenacting his actions during that time and timing it on the request of Hurley's lawyer. At trial he only gave his revised estimate. Prosecutor Peter Davis suggested that this (the fact of giving a shorter estimate in court not the out of court attempt to get a more accurate estimate) was an attempt to sabotage prosecutors. However, Leafe said he believed Hurley's prosecution was a cynical political exercise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Coronial inquiry\nIn his findings, Coroner Brian Hine disagreed with the Supreme Court of Appeal regarding the knee drop. He believed that the evidence left room for a finding that a knee drop may have occurred. He found that the injuries could have been caused by Hurley accidentally falling on top of Mulrunji, or by the officer \"dropping a knee into his torso\". He said that due to the unreliability of police and Aboriginal witnesses he could not make a definitive finding. However, he found that Hurley punched Mulrunji in the face and abused him while attempting to get him into the station, and found that police colluded to protect Hurley. A CMC report leaked to the media reportedly recommends that 7 officers will face charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 77], "content_span": [78, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Palm Island Select Committee\nIn April 2005, Premier Beattie established the Palm Island Select Committee to investigate issues leading to the riot and other problems. Their report was tabled on 25 August 2005. It detailed 65 recommendations which seek to reduce violence and overcrowding, and improve standards of education and health. In achieving these objectives, issues such as drug and alcohol abuse and unemployment would also be addressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 89], "content_span": [90, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Disciplinary prosecution, Palm Island death surrounding controversy\nPatrick Bramwell, a cell-mate of Mulrunji, repeatedly attempted to set himself on fire after giving evidence before the first coronial inquest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 102], "content_span": [103, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nSoon after the riot, the Queensland Police Union President Denis Fitzpatrick demanded the rioters be charged with attempted murder of 12 police. The police who had been stationed on the island indicated through the Union that they did not wish to return. Former Premier Wayne Goss dismissed as \"cheap politics\" the union's demand for attempted murder charges to be laid, he said their comments since the death in custody had been consistently unhelpful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nAfter the alleged rioters were granted bail Queensland Police Union President Denis Fitzpatrick criticized the magistrate's decision to grant bail saying that the safety of the community had been put last and that the decision amounted to a \"betrayal\" of the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0059-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nHis comment was criticized as hypocritical and systematic of \"one rule for us and one for whites and that's a racist legal system where the cops get their way\" by Burketown Aboriginal activist Murrandoo Yanner and relative of the Doomadgee family was at the centre of controversy over his calls for Aboriginal people to bash all \"racist cops\" and for all police stations to be burnt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0059-0002", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nYanner said that Hurley was no racist, that he was loved by the Indigenous communities he had previously worked in, and that he identified with Hurley in that \"he was a thug and a mug. I am the same\", and that they would both respond with fists when confronted or challenged, portraying a cop who some years ago had confronted and overcome his own inherent racism while working in the Torres Strait. Yanner said his anger was with the legal system in general and particularly the police's role in justice for Indigenous people, saying that Hurley was an exception to these problems, but that he had probably gone too far in giving Mulrunji a hiding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nSen. Sgt. Chris Hurley received a confidential payout of A$100,000 from the Queensland Government in February 2005. In mid-February 2005 Chris Hurley resumed duties after three months on paid leave. He was appointed to a duty officer position at the Broadbeach police station on the Gold Coast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nThe Queensland Government agreed to provide a confidential payout of A$370,000 to Mulrunji's family in May 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nWhen Coroner Barnes disqualified himself from the inquiry the QPU called for him to be sacked immediately from the position of state coroner for the indiscretion of drinking with one of the lawyers during the inquest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nAfter Coroner Clements made her findings but before they were overturned by the District and Supreme Courts as being inconsistent with the evidence QPU President Gary Wilkinson was highly critical. As a result he was charged with contempt of court by the Attorney General. Wilkinson later publicly apologised and pleaded guilty to the contempt. He was ordered to pay costs with no other punishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nAfter the Attorney General's decision to prosecute was made public members of the Union held rallies in every major city in Queensland protesting against the political intervention, and in support of Senior Sergeant Chris Hurley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Police union and Aboriginal activists\nThe Police Union were apparently incensed that a police officer should be the first person in Queensland since the public prosecutor's office was established to be indicted based on a decision of someone other than the DPP and argued that it amounted to political interference in the Justice System. After the trial concluded the Union released advertisements against the Beattie Queensland government, comparing the government to Robert Mugabe and his government. More specifically the ad stated: \"Zimbabwe is a good example of what could happen where politicians override the laws to suit themselves.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 72], "content_span": [73, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Coverage in news media and the arts\nIn 2007 Tony Koch, The Australian's chief reporter in Queensland, won the Graham Perkin Australian Journalist of the Year Award for his coverage of the 2004 Palm Island death in custody and related events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Coverage in news media and the arts\nIn 2007 Brisbane-based band Powderfinger wrote a song Black Tears which mentioned the Palm Island death in custody by the words \"An island watch-house bed, a black man's lying dead\". The song was to be released as part of their 2007 album Dream Days at the Hotel Existence. Fearing that the lyrics of the song might prejudice the case against their client, Chris Hurley's legal team referred the song to Queensland's Attorney-General, Kerry Shine, in an attempt to get the song banned or the lyrics changed. Although band's management claimed that while the lyrics of the song reference the Chris Hurley case, that they were not specific enough to warrant a ban, they changed the lyrics of the song before releasing the album.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Coverage in news media and the arts\nIn 2008 journalist and novelist Chloe Hooper, published the book The Tall Man: Death and Life on Palm Island, which won multiple awards in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Coverage in news media and the arts\nIn 2010, artist Vernon Ah Kee created a four-screen video installation at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney, entitled Tall Man.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Coverage in news media and the arts\nIn 2012 filmmaker Tony Krawitz, won the Walkley Foundation Long-form Journalism: Documentary award for his documentary film based on Hooper's book, titled The Tall Man.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 70], "content_span": [71, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Chris Hurley career\nWithin a month of Doomadgee's death, Hurley was transferred to the Gold Coast where he medically retired in 2017, following a string of charges including assault and dangerous driving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Chris Hurley career\nIn 2010, Hurley was forced to repay $34,980 in insurance payments after allegations of insurance fraud following the 2004 riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Chris Hurley career\nChris Hurley faced disciplinary actions after being transferred to the Gold Coast including for:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Timeline\nA resident and his partner were later awarded $235,000 compensation for assault, battery and false imprisonment. Police actions were later found to breach the Racial Discrimination Act, with the raids being \"unnecessary, disproportionate\" and police having \"acted in these ways because they were dealing with an Aboriginal community.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Timeline\nThe raids, found to be racist, resulted in a record $30 million class action settlement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Memorial\nIn 2020 a memorial plaque to Mulrinji was erected by Palm Island Aboriginal Council outside the police station on Palm Island, reading:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Memorial\nIn memory of Mulrinji / whose life was tragically taken on 19th November 2004. / We also acknowledge all those who lost their lives in custody across Australia. / Now at peace / #blacklivesmatter#", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Memorial\nIn November 2020, the memorial was moved to the garden of his sister, Valmai Aplin, as it was getting vandalised by children in its earlier location, just before the anniversary of Mulrinji's death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nThen Queensland Indigenous Policy Minister Liddy Clark offered for activist Murandoo Yanner and Carpentaria Land Council chief executive Brad Foster to accompany her to Palm Island in the weeks after the riot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nThe Minister and her office told The Australian newspaper the Government paid for the tickets in order to expedite the purchasing of the tickets at such short notice; both Yanner and Foster had agreed to reimburse the Government later for the cost of the tickets. According to Yanner and Foster, Minister Clark's Senior Policy Advisor had asked them to fabricate a story for the public that they had agreed to reimburse the cost of the flights, while assuring them they would not have to pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nBeattie ordered the Minister to pay the A$1,775 herself although he would not go as far as to fire her over the controversy unless there was an adverse criminal or misconduct finding, he said that Yanner had no credibility, the Minister immediately took unscheduled holiday leave. A Crime and Misconduct Commission (CMC) criminal and misconduct investigation was launched into the whole affair, Yanner and Foster refused to cooperate with the investigation. Clark and her Senior Policy Advisor were interviewed at length by the CMC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0081-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nClark maintained that she had never spoken to Yanner or Foster, that she had not directed her Senior Policy Advisor to politically cover for her with the alleged deal and that Yanner and Foster were definitely told that they would have to pay the airfare back. The CMC demanded that the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) hand over the tapes and backup tapes of particular interviews with Yanner and Foster which were central to the investigation, the interviews then had to be deleted from ABC audio and computers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nEven though the Minister had already personally paid the cost of the airfare the Queensland Government ministerial services still pursued Yanner and Foster for the money on behalf of Ms. Clark however they refused to pay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nOn 1 March 2005 the CMC released its draft report, finding that the office of the Minister for Indigenous Affairs had lied over the airfare affair to avoid short-term political embarrassment, sending a deliberately misleading statement to The Australian. The Minister Liddy Clark, who was a former Play School presenter, immediately resigned from the Cabinet to become a backbencher. The Premier accepted responsibility for giving \"a new minister such a tough portfolio\". Liddy Clark and the two ministerial staff denied deliberately misleading the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nThe adverse finding was based on a media statement to The Australian which made the positive statement; \"we agreed to assist with the airline bookings on the understanding that they would pick up the cost\" when it was known at the time by the Minister that the possibility of the airfares being repaid was only mooted after the tickets had been booked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0084-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Air fare affair\nThe CMC noted that it was not improper for the flights to have been paid by taxpayers, nor was it improper to ask for it to be reimbursed, the lying to escape political fallout was the only issue of misconduct. \"The mischief lies in what was an abandonment of the truth to avoid the possibility of short-term political embarrassment.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 83], "content_span": [84, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, ALP branch revolt\nSome months after the riot the 24-member Labor Party (ALP) branch on Palm Island publicly revolted against Queensland Premier Peter Beattie, writing a letter to him through local State Member Mike Reynolds outlining grievances against the State Government Labor Party administration. The letter stated that the branch was active in organising protests against the Premier and his upcoming opening of a new Queensland Police Youth Club facility on Palm Island. The letter even hinted at a desire among members to defect to the Liberal Party, stating that under Labor living conditions have not improved on the island, and life expectancy had fallen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 85], "content_span": [86, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Police youth centre\nIn a general atmosphere where there was high levels of local animosity towards the police in the months following the riot, the Queensland Government coincidentally had completed construction of a new multi-million dollar community centre which would be primarily under the control of the Police Youth Club Association. Premier Peter Beattie was due to open the new facility in February 2005, in the lead-up to the launch (while the Coronial inquiry was just beginning) Mr Beattie was asked not to proceed with the launch by the Doomadgee family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 87], "content_span": [88, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0086-0001", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Police youth centre\nAdditionally the Palm Island Council moved a resolution asking that the Centre not be opened until its use and occupancy could be agreed upon between the State and Local Governments. The resolution specifically asked that the Centre not be in the possession of the Police Citizens Youth Club Association or the Queensland Police Service.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 87], "content_span": [88, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Police youth centre\nThe Government agreed in advance that the Centre would no longer have the word \"Police\" in its title however the opening by the Premier was to proceed as planned. When the Premier opened the centre he was met with a generally hostile reception. The Council boycotted the ceremony and only thirty people attended the ceremony, half of whom were holding placards demanding more money be spent on employment and health services. Beattie said that this reaction was to be expected because of current tensions with the community about police, however facilities like this were a way of building better relations between the community and the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 87], "content_span": [88, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178484-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 Palm Island death in custody, Related political controversies, Police youth centre\nBy April 2007 it was reported that the PCYC Centre had become a great success, a place where young and old participate in numerous sporting, educational and cultural activities in a safe and comfortable environment, and the focal point of re-building positive relations between the police and the community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 87], "content_span": [88, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178485-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palmer Cup\nThe 2004 Palmer Cup was held on 6\u20137 August 2004 at Ballybunion Golf Club in County Kerry, Ireland. Europe won 14\u00bd\u20139\u00bd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178485-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Palmer Cup, Format\nOn Friday, there were four matches of four-ball in the morning, followed by eight singles matches in the afternoon. Four foursomes matches were played on the Saturday morning with a further eight singles in the afternoon. In all, 24 matches were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178485-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Palmer Cup, Format\nEach of the 24 matches was worth one point in the larger team competition. If a match was all square after the 18th hole, each side earned half a point toward their team total. The team that accumulated at least 12\u00bd points won the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178485-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Palmer Cup, Teams\nEight college golfers from Europe and the United States participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178485-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Palmer Cup, Michael Carter award\nThe Michael Carter Award winners were Gareth Maybin and Chris Stroud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178486-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Palopo cafe bombing\nThe 2004 Palopo cafe bombing was a terrorist attack that occurred on January 10, 2004 in Palopo, South Sulawesi, Indonesia. Occurring at 10:30\u00a0p.m. local time (UTC+8), an improvised explosive device beneath table number 11 in the Sampoddo Indah karaoke cafe. The blast killed four people and injured three others. Four men, including Jasmin bin Kasau, were arrested for the bombings. Bin Kasau was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment but later escaped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178486-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Palopo cafe bombing, The attack\nWitnesses reported that two men spent two weekends scouting the Sampoddo Indah Cafe located 4 kilometres (2.5\u00a0mi) from downtown Palopo on the road to Makassar, staying for a short period of time then leaving. On January 10, 2004, they returned and sat at table No. 11, located near the entrance, and ordered drinks, which they left unfinished. A device, thought to have been remotely detonated, exploded at 10:30\u00a0p.m. local time (UTC+8), from underneath that table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178486-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Palopo cafe bombing, The attack\nThe blast killed four people were killed and injured three others. Three of the deceased, later identified as Abdul Rahman, Ambo, and Sumarni, 39, were residents of Palopo, while another, Suratman, was from another city. The explosion was heard up to 2 kilometres (1.2\u00a0mi) away. Most of the cafe's clients escaped through the back door prior to the arrival of the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178486-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Palopo cafe bombing, Investigation\nTwo men were identified by the police after questioning 17 witnesses on the next day, with preliminary sketches. Eighteen days later, police arrested four suspects and charged them with the bombing. Another 10 suspects were sought, and police expressed that the suspects had participated in a Laskar Jihad-run training camp in Poso Regency, Central Sulawesi, together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178486-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Palopo cafe bombing, Investigation\nOn February 1, Jasmin bin Kasau was arrested in Noling village, Luwu regency. He later confessed to the bombing, calling it \"part of a jihad against vice in nightclubs and bars.\" Several pieces of evidence were seized from bin Kasau, including an FN MAG gun, some ammonium nitrate and several pipes. Bin Kasau, along with three accomplices, was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment. However, bin Kasau later escaped from Gunungsari Penitentiary, Makassar, in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178487-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan American Cycling Championships\nThe 2004 Pan American Cycling Championships took place at the El Baquiano Velodrome, Cojedes, Venezuela from 20 to 27 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178488-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan American Individual Event Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 2004 Pan American Individual Event Artistic Gymnastics Championships were held in Maracaibo, Venezuela, December 1\u201305, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178489-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan American Judo Championships\nThe 2004 Pan American Judo Championships in Margarita Island, Venezuela from 19 April to 24 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178490-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan American Men's Handball Championship\nThe 2004 Pan American Men's Handball Championship was the eleventh edition of the tournament, held in Santiago, Chile from 20 to 24 July 2004. It acted as the American qualifying tournament for the 2005 World Championship, where the top three placed team qualied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178491-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan American Trampoline and Tumbling Championships\nThe 2004 Pan American Trampoline and Tumbling Championships were held in Tampa, United States, July 20\u201321, 2004. The event was the inaugural edition of the Pan American Trampoline and Tumbling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178492-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan American Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2004 American Handball Women's Youth Championships took place in S\u00e3o Jos\u00e9 dos Pinhais from September 21 \u2013 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178493-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan Arab Games\nThe 10th Pan Arab Games was an international multi-sport event which took place in Algiers, Algeria, between 24 September and 10 October 2004. It witnessed the participation of all Arab League members for the first time \u2013 22 countries participated in 26 sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178493-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan Arab Games\nThe event was originally scheduled for 2003, but was postponed for a year due to the damage caused by the 2003 Boumerd\u00e8s earthquake.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178493-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan Arab Games, Sports\nThe sports programme incorporated 23 sports for elite athletes and three disability sports. Further to this, cultural and scientific events were included on the schedule for the 2004 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178493-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pan Arab Games, Participation\nA total of 22 countries were represented in the competition \u2013 constituting all the members of the Arab League at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178494-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Panamanian general election\nThe Republic of Panama held a general election on Sunday, 2 May 2004, electing both a new President of the Republic and a new Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178494-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Panamanian general election, Presidential election\nFor the second consecutive election, Mart\u00edn Torrijos, son of former military ruler Omar Torrijos, was named the candidate of the Democratic Revolutionary Party (PRD); in 1999, he had lost to Mireya Moscoso. Torrijos ran on a platform of strengthening democracy and negotiating a free trade agreement with the US, and was supported by popular musician and politician Rub\u00e9n Blades; Torrijos later made Blades the nation's tourism minister. Torrijos' primary rival was Guillermo Endara, who had served as president from 1990 to 1994. Endara ran as the candidate of the Solidarity Party, on a platform of reducing crime and government corruption. Endara and the other candidates also ran a series of negative ads highlighting the PRD's connections with former military ruler Manuel Noriega. Endara finished second in the race, receiving 31% of the vote to Torrijos' 47%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 922]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178494-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Panamanian general election, Presidential election\nTorrijos assumed office on 1 September 2004. Voters also elected his two vice-presidents, who run on party tickets in conjunction with the presidential candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178494-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Panamanian general election, Legislative and local elections\nIn addition to its president and vice presidents, Panama elected a new Legislative Assembly (78 members), 20 deputies to represent the country at the Central American Parliament, and a string of mayors and other municipal officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178494-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Panamanian general election, Legislative and local elections\nThe Panama City mayor race was won also by the PRD. Mayor Juan Carlos Navarro was re-elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament\nThe 2004 Paradise Jam Tournament was a men's and women's preseason college basketball tournament that took place in Saint Thomas at the Sports and Fitness Center. Arkansas won the men's division while NC State won the women's St. Thomas Division championship game and Rutgers won the women's St. John Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament\nSix teams participated in the men's tournament. The teams were arranged into two divisions of three teams each. The three teams in each division played a round-robin over the first three days, with each team having one day off. The teams were seeded, and all six teams played on the final day, with a Championship Game, a game for third place and a game for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, First Round, St. Thomas division\nIn the first round, held November 19, 2004, Winthrop faced Arkansas. The game was close at halftime, with Arkansas holding a three-point margin. In the second half, the Razorbacks out scored Winthrop by 20 to win the game 72\u201349. Arkansas hit 11 of their 17 three point attempt for a shooting percentage of 65%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, First Round, St. John division\nIn the first round, Austin Peay faced Saint Louis. Austin Peay led most of the way, but Saint Louis took a lead in the final two minutes. The Billikens were up by three in the closing seconds, but Austin Peay's Maurice Hampton hit a three-pointer with two seconds left to send the game into overtime. Austin Peay outscored Saint Louis 8\u20131 in the overtime period to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Second round, St. Thomas division\nIn the second round, held November 20, Winthrop faced Troy. Winthrop held a three-point lead at halftime, and extended the lead in the second half to win 89\u201380.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Second round, St. John division\nIn the second round, Austin Peay faced Eastern Michigan. Although the score was close at halftime, with Eastern Michigan holding only a two-point lead, the margin widened in the second half, and Eastern Michigan won by 14 points, 73\u201359.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Third round, St. Thomas division\nIn the third round, held November 21, Arkansas faced Troy. Arkansas pulled out to a seven-point lead in the first half, and outscored Troy by 28 in the second half, to win the game 89\u201354.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Third round, St. John division\nIn the third round, Saint Louis faced Eastern Michigan. Saint Louis led early, with a five-point halftime lead, but Eastern Michigan outscored the Billikens in the second half by eight, and won the game 61\u201358.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Championship round\nIn the game for fifth place, Saint Louis faced Troy. The game was tied at 32 points each at halftime, but the Billikens outscored Troy by eight in the second half to win the game and fifth place position, 63\u201355.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Championship round\nWinthrop played Austin Peay for the third place position. Winthrop built a nine-point lead in the first half, then opened the second half with a 15\u20134 run, and won the game, 52\u201336.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Men's tournament, Championship round\nIn the Championship game, Arkansas squared off against Eastern Michigan. Arkansas built a 17-point lead in the first half. While Eastern Michigan played the Razorbacks almost even in the second half, they were unable to close the gap, and Arkansas won the Paradise Jam Championship 82\u201363. Arkansas' Ronnie Brewer was selected as the Tournament Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament\nIn 2004, eight teams competed in the tournament organized into two divisions. The teams in the St. Thomas division played a traditional playoff option, with a pair of games on the 26th; on the 27th the winners played each other and the losers played each other. The teams in the St. John's division played a round-robin, with one game each on the 25th, 26th and 27 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Thomas division (2 games)\nLouisville faced Hampton in the opening round of the St. Thomas division. Hampton started out strong and led 31\u201323 at halftime. Louisville erased the eight point deficit and added six more to end up with the win 63\u201355.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Thomas division (2 games)\nNC State faced Nebraska in the other game in the division. NC State started by scoring the first eight points the game, but the game was largely even for the rest of the half as the Wolfpack led by seven, 26\u201319 at halftime. The Huskies went on a 9\u20132 run to start the second half and tie the game, and then took the lead but NC State responded and took the lead back. NC State went on a 19\u20134 run over seven minute stretch to help assure the victory. The final score was 55\u201345.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Thomas division (2 games)\nThe next day, Kiera Hardy scored 31 points, a career-high, to help Nebraska defeat Hampton 72\u201354. The victory was Connie Yori's 200th NCAA Division I victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Thomas division (2 games)\nIn the championship game, NC State took on Louisville. NC State scored the game's first six points but after timeout by Louisville the Cardinals responded with six points of their own. The game remained tied for three minutes until NC State's Kendra Bell scored two of the lead back to NC State. Louisville responded and let at the half 26 \u2013 21. In the second half, NC State hit 50% of their shot attempts to take back the lead. Louisville had a three-pointer with less than a minute to go in the game and cut the lead to two points. The team was forced to foul, and the Wolfpack hit free throws to win the game and the championship of the division, 54\u201349.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Thomas division (2 games)\nNC State's Tiffany Stansbury earned the division MVP award. The other members of the All-Star team included Marquetta Dickens (NC State), Jazz Covington (Louisville), Missy Taylor (Louisville), Rachael Butler (Hampton), and Kiera Hardy (Nebraska).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 79], "content_span": [80, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Johns division (3 games)\nOn Thanksgiving Day, Rutgers took on the South Dakota State Jackrabbits. The Scarlet Knights had an early lead but let the Jackrabbits tie up the game late in the first half. Rutgers broke the tie and ended the half with a 29\u201326 lead. Rutgers used their full-court press to create some turnovers and score in transition in the second half, but South Dakota State remained close, only three points behind early in the second half. Rutgers then scored seven consecutive points and gradually grew their lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Johns division (3 games)\nMatee Ajavon hit 13 of her 19 shot attempts for the Scarlet Knights which led to 29 points. The defense held the Jackrabbits to under 30% shooting from the field. Rutgers ended up with the win 68\u201350. Kentucky faced Oregon State in the other Thanksgiving Day match-up. Oregon State was in control early on and led by 14 points at halftime. In the second half, Kentucky's Sarah Potts scored 19 of her 27 points. Her teammate Jennifer Humphrey recorded a double double with 12 points and 11 rebounds in the two of them helped lead the Wildcats to overcome the deficit and pull out a 73\u201370 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Johns division (3 games)\nOn the second day of the event, Rutgers took on Oregon State. The Scarlet Knights had a small six point lead at halftime but open the second half with their \"55\" press which led to a 25\u20134 run, and put the game out of reach. Chelsea Newton made six of her eight field-goal attempts in the first half, scoring a team-high 16 points in the first half. The Scarlet Knights ended up beating the Beavers 77\u201353. In the game between Kentucky and South Dakota State, the Wildcats held a small four-point lead at halftime, but the Jackrabbits responded in the second half and ended up with the two point victory 57\u201355.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Johns division (3 games)\nOn the final day, Oregon State took on South Dakota State. The Oregon State Beavers outscored the Jackrabbits by 13 points in the first half. The Jackrabbits outscored the Beavers in the second half by 10 but that was not enough and Oregon State finished with the win 68\u201365. The championship game featured Kentucky and Rutgers. 18th-ranked Rutgers Scarlet Knights opened up strong, scoring the first 10 points of the game, and ended the first half with a 20 point lead 41\u201321. Although the Wildcats outscored the Scarlet Knights by five points in the second half, the first half margin was too much to overcome and Rutgers ended up winning the game and the championship 75\u201360.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 754]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178495-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Paradise Jam Tournament, Women's tournament, St. Johns division (3 games)\nMichelle Campbell of Rutgers was named the division MVP. The remaining all-stars were Chelsea Newton (Rutgers), Matee Ajavon (Rutgers), Sara Potts (Kentucky), Shannon Howell (Oregon State), and Shannon Schlagel (South Dakota State).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 78], "content_span": [79, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178496-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris Motor Show\nThe 2004 Paris Motor Show (Mondial de l'Automobile) took place from 25 September to 10 October 2004 in Paris expo Porte de Versailles. There was an extra exhibition called L\u2019Automobile et la bande Dessin\u00e9e (\u201cThe Car and the Stripbook\u201d) in Palace 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178497-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Brussels\nThe 2004 Paris\u2013Brussels was the 84th edition of the Paris\u2013Brussels cycling race and was held on 11 September 2004. The race started in Soissons and finished in Anderlecht. The race was won by Nick Nuyens of the Quick-Step-Davitamon team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178497-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Brussels, Race Report\nIn the first 2 hours of racing there were breakaway attempts by Juan Antonio Flecha, Michele Bartoli, Dmitry Fofonov, and Sylvain Chavanel before Beno\u00eet Poilvet and Rudie Kemna successfully got away. The duo stayed together out front, building a lead as large as 13 minutes, until 46km to go, when Kemna distanced Poilvet on the Mont St Roch climb. Meanwhile behind, on the same climb, Paolo Bettini, Tom Boonen, Gerben L\u00f6wik, and Nico Mattan broke away from the peleton. Those four riders ultimately waited for the peloton, while Kemna continued on in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178497-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Brussels, Race Report\nWith 11km to go Bettini attacked again and quickly caught a cramping Kemna, while behind the peleton had reduced to 20 riders. Bettini allowed himself to be caught with 5km remaining, allowing his teammate Nick Nuyens to try a couple of attacks. First getting away with Christophe Mengin and Stefan van Dijk, before getting caught and going away on his with 1.5km to go. Philippe Gilbert and Allan Johansen attempted to follow, but Nuyens was able to stay away to the line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178498-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Nice\nThese are the results for the 2004 edition of the Paris\u2013Nice bicycle race, won by J\u00f6rg Jaksche, who had been fourth in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178499-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Roubaix\nThe 2004 Paris\u2013Roubaix was the 102nd running of the Paris\u2013Roubaix single-day cycling race, often known as the Hell of the North. It was held on 11 April 2004 over a distance of 261 kilometres (162.2 miles). Among the participating favorites were 1996, 2000 and 2002 winner Johan Museeuw and 2003 winner Peter Van Petegem. The race was part of the UCI Road World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178499-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Roubaix\nAfter passing through famous Arenberg Forest sector, 21 riders were ahead of the peloton, including all pre-race favorites. Jaan Kirsipuu was the first one trying to break away with 60 kilometres to go, advancing 30 seconds over the favourites group, followed by an important attack by Johan Museeuw in Auchy-Lez-Orchies sector, forcing the pace and selecting the lead group. Kirsipuu and Museeuw were eventually captured, at which time Frank H\u00f8j and Leon Van Bon also tried to break away, being captured after some kilometers in the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178499-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Roubaix\nWith 30 kilometres to go Christophe Mengin and Fabio Baldato tried to escape without success but leading to an important move by Tom Boonen, Juan Antonio Flecha and George Hincapie, with the late addition of Leif Hoste. While they were being captured, 2003 winner Peter Van Petegem suffered a puncture and effectively saw his chances of a repeat victory annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178499-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Roubaix\nIn the famous cobblestone section Carrefour de l'Arbre (with 15 kilometres to Roubaix) Museeuw made a series of accelerations which selected the leading group to Museeuw himself, Magnus B\u00e4ckstedt, Roger Hammond, Tristan Hoffman, Fabian Cancellara and George Hincapie, who lost contact soon afterwards but who would hang-on to finish 8th. With 6 kilometres to the finish line, Johan Museeuw suffered a puncture and was consigned to 5th. The four riders in front entered the velodrome with Cancellara leading the group, but it was Magnus B\u00e4ckstedt who won the sprint ahead of Hoffman, Hammond and the Swiss. For the first time since 1994, no Belgian rider made it to the final podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178499-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Roubaix\nThis 2004 edition of Paris\u2013Roubaix was the last to be ridden by three-time winner Johan Museeuw, who crossed the finish line hand-in-hand with his compatriot and rival Peter Van Petegem (the previous year's champion). The duo received a roaring ovation from the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178500-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Paris\u2013Tours\nThe 2004 Paris\u2013Tours was the 98th edition of the Paris\u2013Tours cycle race and was held on 10 October 2004. The race started in Saint-Arnoult-en-Yvelines and finished in Tours. The race was won by Erik Dekker of the Rabobank team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178501-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Parramatta Eels season\nThe 2004 Parramatta Eels season was the 58th in the club's history. Coached by Brian Smith and captained by Nathan Cayless, they competed in the National Rugby League's 2004 Telstra Premiership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178501-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Parramatta Eels season, Summary\nSeason 2004 was the worst in some time for the Parramatta Eels. After only managing 9 wins in 24 games, the Eels finished 12th and missed out on the Finals for the second year running. This was a grave cause for concern at the club who had not seen a Premiership victory since 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178502-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Patriot League Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Patriot League Baseball Tournament was a collegiate baseball tournament held on May 8 and 9, 2004 to determine the champion of the Patriot League for baseball for the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The event matched the top three finishers of the six team league in a double-elimination tournament. Top seeded Army won their third championship and claimed the Patriot's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. Justin Long of Army was named Tournament Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178503-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament was played at The Show Place Arena in Upper Marlboro, Maryland and Stabler Arena in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania after the conclusion of the 2003\u201304 regular season. Top seed Lehigh defeated #2 seed American, 59\u201357 in the championship game, to win its first Patriot League Tournament title. The Mountain Hawks earned an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament as one of two #16 seeds in the St. Louis region. Florida A&M defeated Lehigh in an opening round game in Dayton, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178503-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nAll eight league members participated in the tournament, with teams seeded according to regular season conference record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178504-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pavel Roman Memorial\nThe 2004 Pavel Roman Memorial was the 10th edition of an annual international ice dancing competition held in Olomouc, Czech Republic. The event was held between November 19 and 21, 2004. Ice dancers competed in the senior, junior, and novice levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178505-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pays de la Loire regional election\nA regional election took place in the region of Pays de la Loire on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Jacques Auxiette (PS) was elected President of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178506-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Peace and Friendship Cup (Ahvaz)\nThe 2004 Peace and Friendship Cup was a two-day preseason men's football friendly tournament hosted by Persian Gulf Pro League clubs Foolad Khuzestan B and Esteghlal Ahvaz U20. The tournament was played between clubs from the cities of Ahvaz, Iran, and Basra, Iraq; both cities are located on the Shatt al-Arab.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178506-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Peace and Friendship Cup (Ahvaz)\nThe lone edition of the tournament took place on 16 and 18 February 2004 and featured Foolad Khuzestan B, Esteghlal Ahvaz U20, Al-Mina'a, and Naft Al-Junoob.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178506-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Peace and Friendship Cup (Ahvaz)\nThe winners of the tournament were Al-Mina'a, who defeated Foolad Khuzestan B in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178506-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Peace and Friendship Cup (Ahvaz), Competition format\nThe competition has the format of a regular knock-out competition. The winners of each of the two matches on the first day compete against each other for the tournament title, while the two losing sides play in a third-place match. The trophy is contested over two days, with two matches being played on each day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178508-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Peach Bowl (December)\nThe 2004 Peach Bowl featured the Miami Hurricanes and the Florida Gators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178508-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Peach Bowl (December)\nMiami took a 7\u20130 lead when it blocked a Florida field goal attempt, and Devin Hester returned the ball 78 yards for a touchdown. In the second quarter, Matt Leach kicked a 34-yard field goal to make it 10\u20133. Roscoe Parrish scored on a 72-yard punt return giving Miami a 17\u20133 lead at halftime, even though it didn't score an offensive touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178508-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Peach Bowl (December)\nIn the third quarter, Brock Berlin threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Ryan Moore, and the Hurricanes led 24\u20133. Florida's Chris Leak threw a 45-yard touchdown pass to Jemalle Cornelius as the Gators got within 24\u201310. A 32-yard field goal from Miami gave the Hurricanes the 27\u201310 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178509-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Peach Bowl (January)\nThe 2004 Peach Bowl, part of the 2003\u201304 bowl game season, featured the Tennessee Volunteers and the Clemson Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178509-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Peach Bowl (January)\nClemson scored first on an 8-yard touchdown run from Duane Coleman, giving Clemson a 7\u20130 lead. Aaron Hunt kicked a 23-yard field goal, giving Clemson a 10\u20130 lead. Tennessee quarterback Casey Clausen threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Chris Hannon, pulling Tennessee to 10\u20137. In the second quarter, Chad Jasmin scored on a 15-yard touchdown run, giving Clemson a 17\u20137 lead. A 30-yard touchdown pass from Clausen to Mark Jones put Tennessee to within 17\u201314. Kyle Browning scored an 8-yard touchdown run on a variation of the fumblerooski to give Clemson a 24\u201314 halftime lead. In the fourth quarter, Hunt drilled a 28-yard field goal for the final points of the game to give Clemson the 27\u201314 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178510-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pekan Olahraga Nasional\n2004 Pekan Olahraga Nasional or the Pekan Olahraga Nasional XVI were a major multi-sport event in Indonesia which took place in South Sumatra, from 2 September to 14 September 2004. A total of 607 events in 41 sports were competed among more than 5,500 athletes from 30 provinces, with the newly created province of Riau Islands only as observer and did not send any athletes. The games also staged 8 paralympic sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178510-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pekan Olahraga Nasional\nJakarta topped the medal table for the tenth time in the history of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178511-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pembrokeshire County Council election\nElections to Pembrokeshire County Council were held on 10 June 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election. The results were drawn from the Pembrokeshire County Council website but the relevant page has now (2013) been deleted. On the same day there were elections to the other 21 local authorities in Wales (all except Anglesey), and to community council elections in Wales. There were also elections elsewhere in the United Kingdom", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178511-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pembrokeshire County Council election, Overview\nAll 60 council seats were up for election. The previous council was controlled by Independents as had been the case since the authority was formed in 1995. The Independents retained control in 2004 and Labour achieved its worst result of the three elections fought thus far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178511-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pembrokeshire County Council election, Results, Burton\nWildman had been elected as a Conservative in 1999, defeating the sitting Independent councillor, but he subsequently joined the Independents himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178512-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pendle Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Pendle Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Pendle Borough Council in Lancashire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrats gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178512-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pendle Borough Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the Liberal Democrats were the largest party on the council with 24 seats, but without a majority as there were 13 Labour, 11 Conservative and 1 independent councillors. The election had 16 seats being contested by a total of 58 candidates. Both the Labour and Conservative parties contested every seat, while the Liberal Democrats had candidates in 15 seats. The other candidates were 8 from the British National Party, 2 independents and 1 from the United Kingdom Independence Party. 12 sitting councillors defended their seats, with a further 2, Judith Robinson and Fred Hartley, contesting different wards to the ones they held. Several previous councillors also attempted to win back seats on the council including Lord Tony Greaves for the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178512-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pendle Borough Council election, Campaign\nThe election was held under all postal voting and took place at the same time as the 2004 European election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178512-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pendle Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Liberal Democrats win a majority on the council, after gaining 5 seats from Labour and 1 from an independent. The Liberal Democrats took 11 of the 16 seats contested, with gains in Nelson which previously had been a strongly Labour area, to hold 30 of the 49 seats on the council. Labour losses included 3 sitting councillors in the wards of Brierfield, Clover Hill and Whitefield, and the party dropped to fourth place in other wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178512-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pendle Borough Council election, Election result\nMeanwhile, the Conservatives held the seats they had been defending and came within 8 votes of defeating the Liberal Democrat leader of the council Alan Davies. No other group won any seats, but the British National Party, standing in half of the wards, won 10% of the vote and came second in some seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178512-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pendle Borough Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Liberal Democrats took all 10 seats on the council executive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178513-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn Quakers football team\nThe 2004 Penn Quakers football team represented the University of Pennsylvania in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. It was the 128th season of play for the Quakers. They were led by 13th-year head coach Al Bagnoli and played their home games at Franklin Field. They finished the season 8\u20132 overall and 6\u20131 in conference play, placing second in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team\nThe 2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team represented the Pennsylvania State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head coach was Joe Paterno. It played its home games at Beaver Stadium in University Park, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason\nThe spring saw some changes to the coaching staff. Offensive coordinator Fran Ganter was named the new Associate Athletic Director for Football Administration, after 37 years as a player and coach for Penn State. Former Penn State quarterback Galen Hall joined the coaching staff as the new offensive coordinator and running backs coach. Mike McQueary, another former Penn State quarterback, joins the staff as the wide receivers coach and will also serve as the recruiting coordinator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason\nIn addition to the coaching changes, head coach Joe Paterno had his contract extended through the 2008\u00a0football season, despite having had three losing seasons in the past four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason\nLast season's second-leading receiver Maurice Humphrey was expelled from school and convicted of three counts of simple assault. He would not play another down for Penn State. Humphrey's expulsion created a void of experience at the wide receiver position. Senior Gerald Smith was the most experienced receiver, and he had only 15 catches in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason\nPrior to the season, Zack Mills and Derek Wake were elected team co-captains by their teammates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Preseason\nPenn State started the season unranked in both the AP and the Coaches college football preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 54], "content_span": [55, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Schedule\nPenn State did not play Big Ten teams Illinois and Michigan this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Akron\nThe overwhelmed Zips find themselves behind 41\u20133 at halftime against Penn State, who subs in the backups, Penn State scores once in the third to make it 48\u20133, and Akron scores a late, meaningless touchdown against the Lions to bring the score to 48\u201310, with this being Galen Hall's first game as an offensive coordinator. This game gave Penn State fans false hope that their team was on the rebound from their 3\u20139 season last year. ESPN described the offense as \"looking unstoppable\", which led to the Lions being favored over Boston College the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Boston College\nBoston College takes a 14\u20130 halftime lead at home over the Nittany Lions, and then takes a 21\u20137 lead after three for the game's final points. Sloppy play on offense ultimately doomed Penn State as Boston College becomes the first of three teams to score 20 or more points on a defense that didn't allow more than 21 points all year and the only team to score 21 offensive points on the Nittany Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, UCF\nDespite sloppy play and mistakes, the Golden Knights couldn't help but find themselves blown out by a much better Penn State team. After falling behind 3\u20130 in the first quarter, the Nittany Lions make it 21\u20136 at halftime and 30\u20136 after three thanks to a touchdown and a safety. The backups are subbed in for the fourth, both teams score, and it's 37\u201313 as the final score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nIn a defensive game, three of Penn State's quarterbacks were injured. Zack Mills was knocked out for the game, sustained a concussion, and backup Michael Robinson was taken away in an ambulance after sustaining life-threatening injuries from a vicious hit. Third stringer Chris Ganter did little against the Badgers' defense with Penn State only managing a field goal in the third quarter, barely preserving their streak of games without being shut out. Wisconsin only scored 16 points, which was well below their average for the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Minnesota\nAfter the game, Minnesota players had said that they hadn't seen a defense of Penn State's caliber before, but won because of Penn State's offensive weaknesses, still, Penn State's defense kept them in the game for the majority of the game, which would be true for every game this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nPurdue managed only their second Big Ten win in history over Penn State by holding on for a 20\u201313 win at Beaver Stadium. It was a 10\u201310 tie and 17\u201313 after three, but Purdue's final field goal was enough to win it. Purdue's historic losses to Penn State include a loss in 2000 to a 5\u20137 Nittany Lions team while Purdue themselves were Big Ten champions, representing themselves at the Rose Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Purdue\nThis game is also significant in the history of both Beaver Stadium and Penn State football for another reason not pertaining to the game itself. To try and draw extra excitement for the team, in what was a down year for the program, the athletic department asked the students to wear white to the game. Over 20,000 students participated in what would become the first ever White Out in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 67], "content_span": [68, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nThis is a game that by many Penn State fans was considered a low point for the football program because of the inept offenses and the fact that the only Penn State scores were defensive. The Penn State defense effectively shut down the Hawkeyes, forcing two first half field goals, but was unable to get anything going on offense. Penn State took a 2\u20130 lead on a safety early in the game, but the Hawkeyes had a field goal to make it 3\u20132, then another to make it 6\u20132 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nThe Hawkeyes barely gained any ground in the second half, and the Nittany Lions got their final two points from an elective safety in the fourth quarter because Iowa feared that Penn State would block the punt in the end zone, taking the lead on a touchdown, because they had already blocked a few punts that day. The strategy worked, Penn State coughed up the ball on their next drive and Iowa took a knee to kill the clock. While this game was a low point for Penn State, it was a big game for the Hawkeyes because head coach Kirk Ferentz's father died the week before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nWhile technically not an official White Out, students were encouraged to wear white again to this game. Participation was about the same as at the Purdue game and the loss resulted in a brief drop in the popularity of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Ohio State\nOhio State scored a defensive and special teams touchdown, but Penn State's defense mostly kept them out of the end zone in a 21\u201310 loss, one of two times they scored double digits in the Horseshoe as a Big 10 team, the other time being in 2008 where they won 13\u20136 to take control of the Big Ten race. Penn State actually outscored the Buckeyes 10\u20137 offensively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nPenn State held the momentum and controlled the tempo of most of the game, but couldn't quite put the Wildcats away, despite having a few opportunities to, including a missed field goal and a drive that ended at the Northwestern 18, losing another close game 7\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 73], "content_span": [74, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nThis is the game that is said to have turned Penn State's fortunes around. In the same way that the 1999 upset loss to Minnesota was believed to begin a downward spiral called \"The Dark Years\" by Penn State fans, this close game that ended with a four down goal line stand very late in the game, with Penn State clinging to a 22\u201316 lead, is said to have been the game that started Penn State on the winning track again and springboarded the team towards the 2005 Big Ten championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nIndiana managed a 13\u20137 halftime lead, but late in the game found themselves down 22\u201316, only scoring a field goal but leading 16\u201314 until Penn State took the lead on a late touchdown and two-point conversion. Penn State stopped Indiana four straight times at the goal line, eventually conceding a safety on the final play of the game to prevent Indiana from having a chance to win. Penn State's goal line stand at Indiana as a result of the momentum it gave the team is considered one of the best Penn State games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nThe Spartans of Michigan State were 5\u20135, hoping to become bowl eligible, and the only thing standing in their way was a 3\u20137 Penn State team who only had one Big Ten win, but the goal line stand at Indiana that led to the Penn State victory the previous week gave them the momentum to win this game big. After a slow first half where Michigan State led 6\u20133, Penn State rolled off 28 third quarter points to put the game out of reach, going up 31\u20136 on the Spartans thanks to a plethora of interceptions. Penn State would kick two more field goals in the last quarter while the Spartans scored a late touchdown against backups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Game summaries, Michigan State\nAgain, this game also sheds some light on the history of the White Out. After losses against Purdue and Iowa earlier in the season, the athletic department changed strategy with a \"Code Blue\" dress code. This time, it was extended to all fans in the stadium and students went from dorm to dorm to spread the word. Despite winning the game, the tradition did not stick and fans went back to wearing white the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 75], "content_span": [76, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post season\nThe offense did not get going until the third quarter of the final game, but the defense finished the season in the top 10 in four NCAA statistical categories and was the only team in the nation to not allow more than 21 points a game. The Nittany Lion defense ranked fifth in scoring defense (15.3 points per game), ranked tenth in total defense (291.55\u00a0yards per game), ranked sixth in pass defense (162.3 ypg), ranked fourth in pass efficiency defense (99.8 rating), and held all 11 opponents below their total offense average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post season\nDespite the losing record, Penn State ranked among the top four in attendance for the 14th consecutive year, averaging 103,111 in six home games, including attendances of 108,183 against Purdue and 108,062 against Iowa, the ninth and tenth largest crowds in Beaver Stadium history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178514-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Penn State Nittany Lions football team, Post season\nNone of the departing players were drafted in the 2005 NFL Draft, but a number of players signed with NFL teams as free agents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178515-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Attorney General election\nPennsylvania's Attorney General election was held November 2, 2004. Necessary primary elections were held on April 27, 2004. Tom Corbett was elected Attorney General, a position that he had held from 1995-97 after being appointed by Governor Tom Ridge to fill a vacancy. Corbett, who had been a U.S. Attorney, narrowly defeated Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce Castor in the Republican primary, then won by an even tighter margin in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178515-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Attorney General election\nCorbett's Democratic opponent was Jim Eisenhower, the 2002 nominee who had once served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney and had been a close confidant of Governor Ed Rendell. Eisenhower won in a primary that featured three top-tier candidates: his opponents were David Barasch, a former U.S. Attorney, and John Morganelli, the Northampton County District Attorney who was narrowly defeated by Eisenhower in the previous Democratic primary for this position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178515-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Attorney General election, Republican primary\nIn the Republican primary, Bruce Castor was supported by Mike Fisher, Rob Gleason, Frank Bartle and Fred Anton. Tom Corbett was supported by Chris Bravacos, Stan Rapp, Bob Asher, David Girard DiCarlo, and Jeff Piccola. Joe Peters was supported by Paul Evanko, Roger Madigan, Frank Rizzo, and Bill Scranton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178516-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Auditor General election\nPennsylvania's Auditor General election was held November 2, 2004. Necessary primary elections were held on April 27, 2004, with both major party candidates running unopposed. Democrat Jack Wagner, a state senator from Pittsburgh, was elected auditor general; he had previously been the endorsed Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor in 2002, but was upset by Catherine Baker Knoll. The Republican candidate was Joe Peters, a Department of Justice official who was well known for prosecuting Philadelphia mafia boss Nicodemo \"Little Nicky\" Scarfo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178517-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary took place on April 27, 2004. It was open to registered Democrats only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178517-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, Eligibility\nIn order to vote in the primary, one must be:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178517-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, Eligibility\nConvicted felons may not vote from prison and may not register to vote for five years after being released from prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178517-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, Registration\nIndividuals may register to vote at County Voter Registration offices, through the mail, at a Department of Transportation office, or at various other government agency offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178517-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, Registration\nVoters must register 30 days prior to the election in order to be eligible to vote; for the 2008 Democratic primary, this means that March 24 is the last day to register.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178517-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary, Results\nNote: Twenty seven delegates remained uncommitted until they reached the floor of the convention. Kerry eventually received all 178 delegates from Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election\nThe 2004 Elections for the Pennsylvania House of Representatives were held on November 2, 2004, with all districts being contested. Necessary primary elections were held on April 27, 2004. Necessary primary elections were held on May 21, 2002. The term of office for those elected in 2004 ran from January 4, 2005 through November 2006. State Representatives are elected for two-year terms, with the entire House of Representatives up for a vote every two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Special elections\nA special election for the 99th legislative district was held on March 18, 2003 following the December 2002 death of Leroy M. Zimmerman. Republican Gordon Denlinger easily defeated Democrat Bernadette C. Johnson to keep the seat in Republican hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Special elections\nA special election for the 168th legislative district was held on June 17, 2003 following the March 2003 death of Matthew J. Ryan. Republican Tom Killion easily defeated Democrat William A. Thomas to keep the seat in Republican hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Special elections\nA special election for the 44th legislative district was held on June 17, 2003 following the election of John Pippy to the Pennsylvania Senate. Republican Mark Mustio defeated Democrat Frederich Liechti to keep the seat in Republican hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Special elections\nA special election for the 3rd legislative district was held on July 22, 2003 following the May 2003 death of Karl Boyes. Republican Matthew W. Good easily defeated Democrat Brian C. McGrath to take the seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Special elections\nA special election for the 109th legislative district was held on January 27, 2004 following the election of John Gordner to the Pennsylvania Senate. Republican David R. Millard defeated Democrat Paul Reichart to keep the seat in Republican hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Special elections\nA special election for the 152nd legislative district was held on March 9, 2004 following the January 2004 death of Roy Cornell. Republican Susan Cornell easily defeated Democrat Ross Schriftmann to keep the seat in Republican hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 92], "content_span": [93, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Primary election\nIn the primary election held on April 27, 2004, only one incumbent legislator was defeated for their party's nomination. In the 190th legislative district Democrat Michael Horsey was defeated by Thomas W. Blackwell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 91], "content_span": [92, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Retirements\nFive seats left open by Republican retirements were kept by Republicans, with Jeff Pyle succeeding Jeff Coleman, Kathy Rapp succeeding Jim Lynch, Mark Keller succeeding Allan Egolf, Tom Quigley succeeding Mary Ann Dailey, and Glen Grell succeeding Pat Vance. Democrat Susan Laughlin was succeeded by fellow Democrat Sean M. Ramaley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, Retirements\nThe seat vacated by the retirement of Democrat Guy Travaglio was won by Republican Brian L. Ellis. The seat occupied by Jeffrey Coy was filled by Republican Rob Kauffman. Republican Ellen Bard's seat was taken by Democrat Josh Shapiro when she left her seat to run for Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 86], "content_span": [87, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, 4th legislative district\nIn the 4th legislative district, incumbent Democrat Tom Scrimenti was defeated by Republican Curt Sonney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 99], "content_span": [100, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178518-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania House of Representatives election, Make-Up of the House, 148th legislative district\nIn the 148th legislative district, incumbent Republican Melissa Murphy Weber was defeated by Democrat Mike Gerber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 101], "content_span": [102, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178519-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Senate election\nElections for the Pennsylvania State Senate were held on November 2, 2004, with even-numbered districts being contested. State Senators are elected for four-year terms, with half of the Senate seats up for a vote every two years. The term of office for those elected in 2004 will run from January 4, 2005 through November 2008. Necessary primary elections were held on April 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178519-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania Senate election\nBob Regola, a Republican member of the Hempfield Township Board of Supervisors, defeated Democratic senator Allen G. Kukovich in the 39th senatorial district. Republican State Representative Pat Vance succeeded the retiring Republican Senator Harold F. Mowrey, Jr.. Four senators who won special elections prior to the 2004 election, Dominic F. Pileggi, Connie Williams, John R. Gordner, and John Pippy, each won full terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178520-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania State Treasurer election\nPennsylvania's State Treasurer election was held November 2, 2004. Necessary primary elections were held on April 27, 2004. Bob Casey, who was term limited in his position as Auditor General, successfully earned the Democratic nomination for Treasurer (he was unopposed in the primary) and won in the general election for this post by a comfortable margin. Republicans had trouble recruiting a top-tier candidate. Jean Craige Pepper, an Erie financial executive, was the only Republican who filed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178521-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pennsylvania state elections\nPennsylvania's state elections were held November 2, 2004. Necessary primary elections were held on April 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178522-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Penwith District Council election\nElections to Penwith District Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 increasing the number of seats by one. The council stayed under no overall control and overall turnout was 46.9%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178523-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Peoria County Board election\nThe Peoria County Board Election of 2004 determined, along with 9 members not up for re-election, the membership of the Peoria County Board. The Democratic Party retained its majority. Most seats were not contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178524-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pepsi 400\nThe 2004 Pepsi 400 was the 17th race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. It was held on July 3, 2004 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida. Jeff Gordon of Hendrick Motorsports won the race from the pole position and also led the most laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178524-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pepsi 400, Race\nThe race was delayed for two hours due to rain. Former Jacksonville Jaguars quarterback Byron Leftwich was the grand marshal for the race; NBA All-Star Tracy McGrady was originally the grand marshal but was replaced by Leftwich due to scheduling conflicts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 20], "content_span": [21, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178524-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pepsi 400, Race\nTen laps into the race, Michael Waltrip passed pole-sitter, Jeff Gordon, for the lead. On Lap 19, the caution flag was thrown after a multi-car accident. Waltrip continued leading until Lap 55, in which Dale Earnhardt Incorporated teammate Dale Earnhardt, Jr. After Bobby Hamilton, Jr. had an accident on Lap 70, Earnhardt led the race into pit road, but was pushed out by Gordon and Brian Vickers, and fell to fifteenth, giving Mike Wallace the lead entering Lap 74. Shepherd pitted on the following lap, and Morgan Shepherd took the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 20], "content_span": [21, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178524-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Pepsi 400, Race\nHowever, Shepherd would later pit, as Gordon regained the lead. Waltrip then retook the lead from Gordon on Lap 86, though Gordon then took the lead again 13 laps later. Ten laps later, Gordon pitted, and Waltrip was given the lead. On the ensuing lap, Earnhardt took the lead, though he later pitted, and Jimmy Spencer gained the lead. On Lap 113, Spencer lost the lead to Gordon when he pitted, who led the pit stops on Lap 139. Dave Blaney stayed out, and took the lead, though Ryan Newman gained first-place when Blaney went to pit road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 20], "content_span": [21, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178524-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 Pepsi 400, Race\nNewman pitted on Lap 143, giving Tony Stewart the lead. With ten laps left in the race, Hendrick Motorsports teammates Jeff Gordon and Jimmie Johnson followed in third and fourth, respectively, behind Tony Stewart and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Johnson then pushed Gordon past Stewart and Earnhardt, and Gordon subsequently won, his fourth of the season and second consecutive. The victory by Gordon made him the first driver since Cale Yarborough to win the Pepsi 400 from the pole. A version of the race's waning moments was included in the prologue of the video game NASCAR 06: Total Team Control, which involved Johnson pushing Gordon past Earnhardt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 20], "content_span": [21, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178524-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pepsi 400, Race\nNotably, Pepsi's rival Coca-Cola heavily promoted their new brand Coca-Cola C2 throughout the pre-race activities, and sponsored eight cars: the #1 driven by John Andretti, the #16 driven by Greg Biffle, the #20 driven by Tony Stewart, the #21 driven by Ricky Rudd, the #29 driven by Kevin Harvick, the #97 driven by Kurt Busch, the #98 driven by Bill Elliott, and the #99 driven by Jeff Burton. Ironically, despite this act of \"ambush marketing\", the Pepsi-sponsored Gordon won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 20], "content_span": [21, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178525-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Peruvian Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2004 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n Peruana, the second division of Peruvian football (soccer), was played by 12 teams. The tournament winner, Ol\u00edmpico Somos Per\u00fa was promoted to the Copa Per\u00fa. The last place, Alcides Vigo was relegated. The tournament was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178526-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Petit Le Mans\nThe 2004 Petit Le Mans was the eighth race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season and held at Road Atlanta. It took place on September 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178526-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Petit Le Mans, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178527-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Barrage season\nThe Philadelphia Barrage played their fourth season, as a charter member of the MLL (originally known as the Bridgeport Barrage), during the 2004 season of Major League Lacrosse. The Barrage played in Bridgeport, Connecticut from the 2001 to the 2003 season and relocated to the Philadelphia suburb of Villanova for the 2004 season. The Barrage ended up in 2nd place in the American Division with a record of 7-5. They qualified for the MLL Playoffs for the first time in franchise history. In the semi finals, they defeated the Rochester Rattlers 18-17 in OT at Nickerson Field on August 20, 2004. The Barrage won their 1st MLL Championship by defeating the Boston Cannons 13-11 in the MLL Championship Game at Nickerson Field on August 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season\nThe 2004 season was the Philadelphia Eagles' 72nd in the National Football League (NFL). The Eagles had been one of the most successful teams in the league after the Andy Reid and Donovan McNabb era began in 1999, making it to the playoffs for four straight seasons and to the NFC Championship Game in 2001, 2002, and 2003. However, the team could not reach the Super Bowl, despite being favored in the final two NFC title games. In the offseason, this already championship-level team was reinforced on both sides of the ball by the free agent additions of wide receiver Terrell Owens, defensive end Jevon Kearse and middle linebacker Jeremiah Trotter, their third-round draft pick in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season\nPossessing a high-powered offense which featured McNabb, Owens, and Brian Westbrook, as well as a bruising defense led by Pro Bowlers Trotter, Brian Dawkins, Lito Sheppard and Michael Lewis, they won their way to a 13\u20131 start to the season. After resting starters for the final two games, the 13\u20133 Eagles soared past the Minnesota Vikings and the Atlanta Falcons in the playoffs, earning a trip to Super Bowl XXXIX in Jacksonville against the defending champion New England Patriots. The Eagles fell 24\u201321, ending their season. This season was considered the franchise's most successful in the modern era until their Super Bowl LII-winning 2017 season\u2013coincidentally, the Eagles also faced the Falcons, Patriots, and Vikings in the 2017 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season\nThe 2004 Eagles are also the last NFC East squad to repeat as division champions; since this season, neither Dallas, New York, Philadelphia or Washington have been able to defend their respective titles in the subsequent season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Offseason, Acquisitions\nThe Eagles signed defensive end Jevon Kearse, linebacker Dhani Jones and quarterback Jeff Blake in free agency. The Eagles also acquired wide receiver Terrell Owens in a trade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Offseason, Acquisitions\nThe Eagles also brought back defensive end Hugh Douglas and middle linebacker Jeremiah Trotter after they were released by their previous teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Offseason, Departures\nThe Eagles traded guard John Welbourn to the Kansas City Chiefs, quarterback A.J. Feeley to the Miami Dolphins, defensive end Brandon Whiting to the San Francisco 49ers and wide receiver James Thrash to the Washington Redskins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Offseason, Departures\nIn free agency, the Eagles lost linebacker Carlos Emmons, cornerbacks Troy Vincent and Bobby Taylor, running back Duce Staley, defensive end Marco Coleman and guard Bobbie Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Roster\nRookies in italicsRoster updated 2005-02-0653 Active, 11 Inactive, 8 PS", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. New York Giants\nweather= 77\u00a0\u00b0F (Sunny)The highly anticipated Eagles' season began with a convincing rout of the division-rival New York Giants in a game that was not as close as the 31\u201317 score. New York scored the first points when Ron Dayne finished a first quarter drive with a 3-yard touchdown run. Then it was all Eagles for a while. Brian Westbrook's 50-yard run was followed up by a 20-yard touchdown pass from Donovan McNabb to his new weapon \u2013 Terrell Owens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. New York Giants\nMcNabb acrobatically scrambled and threw for Owens in the end zone on the Eagles' next possession, and it was 14\u20137 Philadelphia. In the second quarter, the Eagles added a touchdown reception from tight end L.J. Smith and a 45-yard David Akers field goal to take a commanding 24\u20137 lead. Steve Christie booted a 53-yarder before the half, but in the third quarter, McNabb found Owens surprisingly wide open in the end zone, making it 31\u201310. Tiki Barber ran for a long touchdown late in the game to make the score more respectable for New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. New York Giants\nRookie Giant quarterback Eli Manning was put in the game for New York's last possession, but he was rocked hard by the Eagles' defense as he was christened into the NFL. McNabb threw for 330 yards and four scores, while Owens did not disappoint in his Philadelphia debut, hauling in three touchdowns. The only negative for the Eagles was the loss of rookie starting offensive guard Shawn Andrews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nweather= 63\u00a0\u00b0F (Clear)A Monday Night Football matchup against the Minnesota Vikings was touted as a potential playoff preview. A war of words between outspoken receivers Terrell Owens and Randy Moss dominated the media coverage during the week prior to the game. A 22-yard reception by Moss helped Minnesota take a 3\u20130 early lead. Donovan McNabb marched the Eagles down the field on their first possession and finished the drive with an 11-yard touchdown pass to L.J. Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Vikings drove the ball and had first and goal from the Eagles' 2-yard line, but the defense made a goal-line stand, holding the Vikings to another field goal. David Akers capped the Eagles' next possession with a 37-yard field goal, making it 10\u20136 Philadelphia. Later in the quarter, the Vikings again had first and goal from the Eagles 2-yard line, but linebacker Mark Simoneau met Daunte Culpepper at the goal line and stripped him, with Brian Dawkins recovering the fumble. McNabb bootlegged for a 20-yard touchdown in the third quarter to give the Eagles breathing room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0009-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 2: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nMorten Andersen kicked his third field goal to make it 17\u20139. However, McNabb found Owens deep for a 34-yard touchdown, increasing the Philadelphia lead to 24\u20139. Moss scored a late-touchdown on a short fade route, but the night belonged to the Eagles. McNabb passed for 245 yards and two scores, while running for another, and the defense allowed only one touchdown to the highly regarded Minnesota offense. The 27\u201316 win allowed Philadelphia to seize early control of their division and established them as the team to beat in the NFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 3: at Detroit Lions\nWith two home wins under their belt, the Eagles played their first away game of the year at Ford Field against the lowly Detroit Lions. The Eagles broke through during the first quarter when Donovan McNabb arced a 48-yard bomb to third receiver Freddie Mitchell setting up a first and goal. McNabb finished the drive with a 1-yard quarterback sneak. After recovering a Detroit fumble, McNabb hit Terrell Owens in stride for a 29-yard score. The next touchdown was scored by long-snapper/tight end Mike Bartrum on a 1-yard pass, his first touchdown since 2001, making it 21\u20130 Eagles. Emerging Detroit receiver Roy Williams had two touchdown receptions over the rest of the game, but three second half field goals by David Akers kept the score a lopsided 30\u201313. McNabb had 356 passing yards, with Owens owning 107 of those yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 4: at Chicago Bears\nPlaying in extraordinarily windy conditions at Soldier Field, the Eagles air attack was somewhat hindered in its 19\u20139 win over the Chicago Bears. David Akers, facing his most challenging conditions of the season, connected on a 51-yard field goal in the first quarter. He made another field goal in the second quarter to double Philadelphia's lead to 6\u20130. Capitalizing on a turnover, Donovan McNabb hit his favorite target Terrell Owens for an 11-yard touchdown in the second quarter. With another Akers field goal, the Eagles led 16\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 4: at Chicago Bears\nThe Bears got on the board with a field goal before the half ended, but Akers' fourth field goal made it 19\u20133. Akers missed his next two field goals in the increasingly windy conditions, but the Eagles hung on for the 19\u20139 victory. Brian Westbrook had a career-high 23 rushes for 115 yards and Owens caught his sixth touchdown in just four games. With the victory, the Eagles completed a four-game sweep of their schedule preceding their Week 5 bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 6: vs. Carolina Panthers\nweather= 56\u00a0\u00b0F (Mostly Cloudy)Undefeated and fresh off of an early season bye, the Eagles sought to take revenge against a wounded Carolina Panthers team that had beaten them in the 2003 NFC Championship Game. A long kick return by J.R. Reed set up a 48-yard field goal by David Akers to begin things for the Eagles. A 53-yard catch and run to Terrell Owens led to a 1-yard plunge by veteran running back Dorsey Levens. Another long completion to Owens set the stage for another field goal, and it was 13\u20130 Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 6: vs. Carolina Panthers\nAkers kicked his third field goal in the third quarter before Lito Sheppard's exciting 64-yard interception return for a touchdown. Panthers quarterback Jake Delhomme, who was picked off four times by the Eagles defense, threw a late-touchdown to Muhsin Muhammad. However, Brian Westbrook answered right back with a 42-yard scamper to the end zone, his first touchdown of the year, which made it 30\u20138. Despite failing to catch a touchdown reception for the first time all season, Owens had 123 receiving yards and the Eagles were 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 7: at Cleveland Browns\nAfter five relatively easy wins, the Eagles were drawn into a dogfight against the Cleveland Browns. The Browns were led by quarterback Jeff Garcia, former teammate to Terrell Owens. The Eagles roared to an early lead when Donovan McNabb completed a 65-yard bomb to Todd Pinkston before a 10-yard strike to veteran tight end Chad Lewis. Cleveland answered the Eagles with a touchdown, but McNabb struck quickly again on his next possession by tossing a 39-yard touchdown to Owens, who fired the football at a Cleveland fan's sign accusing him of having body odor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 7: at Cleveland Browns\nAfter a Browns field goal, McNabb found Owens again, this time for 40 yards, and this time with Owens pulling down a sign which implied he was a homosexual. The Eagles were up 21\u201310, but the Browns did not quit, scoring before the half ended on a Lee Suggs touchdown and after the half on a Garcia touchdown pass to Steve Heiden. Suddenly, the Browns were leading 24\u201321, the first time the Eagles had trailed in the second half all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0013-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 7: at Cleveland Browns\nEarly in the fourth, McNabb found L.J. Smith in the end zone to retake the lead and after Cleveland fumbled the kickoff, David Akers booted a 38-yarder to make it 31\u201324. However, the resilient Garcia rushed it into the end zone himself with less than a minute left in regulation, sending the game into overtime. In the overtime, both teams punted before the Eagles, helped by a 28-yard McNabb scramble, got into field goal range. With five minutes left in the overtime, Akers barely cleared the uprights on a 50-yard game-winning kick. McNabb had 376 passing yards and four touchdowns, while Owens and Pinkston each collected over 100 receiving yards. The Eagles went to 6\u20130 and continued to pull away from the rest of the conference. This was the Eagles first 6\u20130 start since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 8: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nweather= 75\u00a0\u00b0F (Sunny)The Eagles put their undefeated record on the line at home against the Baltimore Ravens. In what had become a weekly event, controversial receiver Terrell Owens had a war of words in the days leading up to the game, this time against Ravens superstar linebacker Ray Lewis. The game would prove to be a battle between the dominating Philadelphia and Baltimore defenses. Almost right off the bat, Deion Sanders was hit hard by Eagles defenders as he flipped over one and was hit in midair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 8: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nAfter getting good field position, David Akers put the Eagles up with a short field goal, but the Ravens matched that before the end of the quarter. A Donovan McNabb fumble near the Baltimore goal line erased a possible scoring chance in the second quarter, but he drove the team to a field goal on the Eagles' next possession. The defenses dominated the third quarter, and the score remained a close 6\u20133 as the final quarter began. Akers added a field goal early in the quarter, but the Ravens remained less than a touchdown behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 8: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nRavens running back Chester Taylor fumbled in Eagles territory, with Hollis Thomas making the recovery. The Eagles took advantage, ending the possession in an 11-yard third down touchdown pass to Owens, who broke a tackle on his way to the score. The two-point conversion failed, but it was now 15\u20133 Eagles. The points proved necessary as Kyle Boller completed a touchdown to Daniel Wilcox on Baltimore's next possession. The Philadelphia defense held strong the rest of the game and the Eagles won by a final of 15\u201310. Owens again had over 100 yards, and scored his ninth touchdown of the year. The Eagles, at 7\u20130, were off to their best start ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 9: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nIn a possible Super Bowl preview, the 7\u20130 Eagles travelled across the state to take on the 6\u20131 Pittsburgh Steelers, who had just knocked off the defending champion New England Patriots. However, the Eagles would not have one of their better days in this major test. The Steelers scored early and often, driving two touchdowns on their first three drives. In a rare 21\u20130 hole, the Eagles offense could only muster a field goal before the end of the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 9: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe offense continued to sputter in the second half, and the Steelers fed the Eagles a steady diet of Jerome Bettis rushes. The final score was an embarrassing 27\u20133. The Eagles high-octane offense only mustered 113 yards, while the Pittsburgh ground attack amassed 252 yards. Making matters worse, a frustrated Terrell Owens was caught on camera yelling at quarterback Donovan McNabb. After the game, Eagles defensive coordinator Jim Johnson made Jeremiah Trotter the Eagles' starting middle linebacker in an effort to better defend against the run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 10: at Dallas Cowboys\nIn a Monday Night Football game that is probably more remembered for a controversial pre-game promotion featuring Terrell Owens and Desperate Housewives actress Nicollette Sheridan, the Eagles avenged their loss to the Steelers by throttling the Dallas Cowboys in Texas Stadium 49\u201321. On the first play of their third possession, Donovan McNabb completed a pass over the middle to Owens. The two nearest Cowboy defenders ran into each other, freeing Owens to run for a 59-yard touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 10: at Dallas Cowboys\nA muffed punt put the Eagles in position to score their second touchdown on a 4-yard run by Dorsey Levens in the second quarter. A touchdown reception by Dallas tight end Jason Witten cut the Philadelphia lead to 14\u20137 as the game turned into a shootout. McNabb completed another touchdown to Owens, and then a 59-yarder to Todd Pinkston for Pinkston's first score of the season. Cowboys quarterback Vinny Testaverde found Witten again a few minutes later, making it 28\u201314 Philadelphia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0016-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 10: at Dallas Cowboys\nOn the next Eagles' possession, McNabb, in a famous play, scrambled for a record 14.1 seconds before launching a 60-yard bomb to Freddie Mitchell. The drive ended in a 1-yard Brian Westbrook run, padding the Eagles' lead to 35\u201314. Dallas running back Eddie George scored on the Cowboys' first possession of the third quarter, keeping Dallas in the game. But they would not score again, while McNabb and Owens hooked up for another touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0016-0003", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 10: at Dallas Cowboys\nIn the fourth quarter, Lito Sheppard intercepted Testaverde in the end zone and went the distance, returning the pick 101 yards for a touchdown as he outran Cowboy receiver Keyshawn Johnson. Owens had his biggest game as an Eagle, catching six passes for 134 yards and three touchdowns. McNabb's equally fantastic season continued with 345 passing yards, four touchdowns, and zero interceptions. The Eagles went to 8\u20131, with a division title already in sight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 11: vs. Washington Redskins\nweather= 54\u00a0\u00b0F (Cloudy)In Week 11, the Eagles faced the Washington Redskins for the first time all season. Using a steady rushing attack, the Redskins opened the scoring with a 35-yard Ola Kimrin field goal. The Eagles answered back with a touchdown \u2013 a 2-yard pass to a wide open Chad Lewis in the end zone. The Redskins got another field goal to make it 7\u20136, keeping pace with an Eagles team that had a sluggish first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 11: vs. Washington Redskins\nIn the third quarter, the Eagles put together an impressive drive that ended with Donovan McNabb firing a bullet over the middle to Terrell Owens in the end zone. Brian Westbrook added two short yardage receiving touchdowns in the fourth quarter, breaking the game open and making the final score 28\u20136, prompting the Redskins to accuse the Eagles of running up the score after the game. It was not the Eagles' best offense performance, but McNabb, who fumbled and was intercepted, threw four touchdowns. Overshadowed receiver Todd Pinkston had 106 receiving yards, which led the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 12: at New York Giants\nThe 9\u20131 Eagles travelled up the New Jersey Turnpike to take on the New York Giants on November 28, 2004. Eli Manning's 50-yard bomb to Jamaar Taylor allowed New York to take a first quarter lead after a field goal. Donovan McNabb took it in himself as the Eagles' answered with a touchdown. Steve Christie got another field goal in the second quarter, and it was a 7\u20136 game. McNabb was sacked and fumbled near midfield on the Eagles' next possession. Manning promptly arced another rocket to Taylor, putting the ball on the Philadelphia 3-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 12: at New York Giants\nOn the next play, Manning underthrew a fade to the end zone and rookie Quintin Mikell made a clutch interception. The game was still tight as the second half began, but the Eagles defense would not allow the Giants to score again. Philadelphia used a 24-yard reception by Terrell Owens to set up a 47-yard David Akers field goal. Then, a Brian Dawkins interception of Manning led to another field goal, pushing the Philadelphia lead to 13\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0018-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 12: at New York Giants\nLater in the quarter, Jevon Kearse blocked a New York punt, and the offense was able to capitalize, with Brian Westbrook taking it in from 1-yard out, and putting the Eagles ahead 20\u20136. Early in the fourth quarter, Westbrook took a screen from McNabb and rumbled 34 yards to paydirt, breaking the game open at 27\u20136. Westbrook had 127 combined yards and both a rushing and receiving touchdown. The defense gave up 110 yards to Tiki Barber and two long Manning-Taylor passes, but otherwise kept the Giants muzzled, while making key interceptions. With the victory, the Eagles locked up an NFC East division title earlier than any team had before. They had also won their tenth game quicker than any team in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nThe Eagles turned in perhaps their best performance of the entire season when the 7\u20134 Green Bay Packers, who had won six straight, traveled to Lincoln Financial Field ready for revenge after their heartbreaking playoff loss from the previous season. Instead, the game was never competitive at all. The Eagles offense completely gashed the Packers' defense, and Brett Favre could do nothing with the stubborn Eagles' defense. Donovan McNabb continued his hot streak from the previous week's win against the Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nHaving completed his last 10 pass attempts of that game, and his first 14 attempts against the Packers, McNabb became the sole owner of the record for most consecutive passes complete \u2013 with 24 over two games. In the first quarter, Terrell Owens broke a tackle and raced away for a 41-yard touchdown. In the second quarter, Donovan McNabb fed Brian Westbrook a short pass that Westbrook took in for a score. On the next series, Westbrook lined up in the slot and beat the coverage as he reeled in a 41-yard touchdown reception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0019-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nMcNabb gave L.J. Smith a turn on the next possession, completing a 6-yard touchdown to him. Dexter Wynn made a big punt return later in the quarter, leading to McNabb finding Westbrook over the middle. It was Westbrook's third touchdown of the quarter, and McNabb's fifth of the half \u2013 and the Eagles were leading the Packers 35\u20130 with time left in second quarter. Green Bay got a field goal before halftime. However, long completions by McNabb to Owens and Westbrook led to three third-quarter field goals by David Akers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0019-0003", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nA 45-yard run by Dorsey Levens set up Akers' fourth field goal at the start of the final quarter, which made it 47\u20133. Packers' backup quarterback Craig Nall led Green Bay to two touchdown drives in the fourth quarter, long after the Eagles had called off the dogs. The win was an example of just how good the Eagles were. The Packers won their division that season, but were totally dismantled by Philadelphia. The Eagles offense clicked on all cylinders, with McNabb recording five touchdowns passes and a team-record 464 passing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0019-0004", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nOwens and Westbrook both had over 150 receiving yards. Meanwhile, the Eagles defense registered five sacks and held the Packers' offense to three points while the starters remained in. The win put the Eagles at 11\u20131 and proved conclusively that they were light years ahead of the rest of the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Washington Redskins\nA mere three weeks after pasting the Washington Redskins at home, the Eagles traveled to play them in a Sunday night game at FedExField. The Redskins were fired up all night, and Ladell Betts took the opening kickoff inside the Eagles 10-yard line. Two plays later Clinton Portis rushed it in for an early Washington lead. On a drive highlighted by receiver Todd Pinkston seemingly breaking off a route to shy away from a hit, the Eagles managed to score a game-tying touchdown with L.J. Smith making a 2-yard reception after a long pass interference penalty against Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Washington Redskins\nAt the end of the quarter, McNabb launched his longest pass of the season, an 80-yard bomb to Pinkston, which he caught before stumbling up to the four-yard line. Owens caught the next pass and tried to make a move to score his 15th touchdown of the year, but instead lost the football. Each side would miss a field goal before halftime arrived with the score knotted 7\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0020-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Washington Redskins\nThe Eagles posted a 38-yard field goal by David Akers on the opening drive of the third quarter, then got a short Dorsey Levens touchdown at the end of the quarter, putting Philadelphia ahead 17\u20137. However, the Redskins defense intercepted McNabb near midfield, and Portis finished the drive with his second touchdown, making it a 17\u201314 game. With only a few minutes left, Washington quarterback Patrick Ramsey drove his team to the Eagles' 27-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0020-0003", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Washington Redskins\nHis next pass was to the end zone, and both Brian Dawkins and Lito Sheppard had a play on the ball, but Sheppard prudently allowed Dawkins to make the interception and end the Redskin threat. It was not the Eagles' prettiest game, but they survived a scare and escaped with another victory, improving their overall record to 12\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nweather= 39\u00a0\u00b0F (Light rain)After their scoring fest in Week 10, the Eagles and Dallas Cowboys played a defensive struggle in a Week 15 game that would mean home-field advantage throughout the playoffs if the Eagles were to win. The teams had long drives, but could not get into field goal range in the first quarter. In the second, the Eagles broke through with a drive capped by a 2-yard touchdown pass from Donovan McNabb to Chad Lewis. David Akers missed the extra point, making it a 6\u20130 game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nMcNabb was later sacked and fumbled the ball away to Dallas, with Vinny Testaverde taking advantage by firing a 7-yard touchdown pass to Keyshawn Johnson. The missed extra point now seemed more critical as the Eagles trailed 7\u20136 going into halftime. On the opening drive of the third quarter, McNabb found his favorite target, Terrell Owens for a 20-yard gain, but Dallas safety Roy Williams, made a horse-collar tackle on Owens, breaking his ankle. The play would prompt a new NFL rule the next season, barring horse-collar tackles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0021-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nMcNabb was intercepted two plays later and again later in the quarter as neither offense could score. Cowboys kicker Billy Cundiff missed a 46-yarder in the fourth quarter, giving the Eagles new life. McNabb, going back to one of his old tricks in the absence of Owens, made scrambles of 12 yards and 19 yards, setting up an eventual Dorsey Levens touchdown run from 2 yards out. The two-point conversion failed and it remained 12\u20137 Eagles. However, Lito Sheppard picked off Testaverde on the next series to end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0021-0003", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nProving again that they could win a close game, the Eagles prevailed under adversity and in improving their record to 13\u20131, completed a sweep of their NFC East opponents while locking up home-field advantage throughout the playoffs. Unfortunately, the word after the game was that Owens, the Eagles' sharpest offensive weapon, would be out until at least the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 16: at St. Louis Rams\nWith nothing left to play for until the playoffs and in the wake of the disastrous injury to Terrell Owens, Eagles' head coach Andy Reid decided to only play his starters for one series in a Monday Night Football game against the St. Louis Rams. The Rams ran ten rushing plays, split between Steven Jackson and Marshall Faulk, in the opening drive as they scored a touchdown. The Eagles offense, also playing without Brian Westbrook who was a healthy scratch, efficiently marched down the field, with Freddie Mitchell, who was now a starter, receiving a 7-yard touchdown pass from McNabb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 16: at St. Louis Rams\nAt that point, most of the Eagles' starters left the game. The second-string Philadelphia defense limited a St. Louis team that needed the game to help secure a playoff spot. The Rams offense only scored 20 points, but backup quarterbacks Koy Detmer and Jeff Blake could do little to score on St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Game Summaries, Week 17: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nweather= 45\u00a0\u00b0F (Cloudy)The 7\u20138 Cincinnati Bengals rolled over the Philadelphia reserve players. Donovan McNabb and Brian Westbrook were among the many starters that did not play for the Eagles, who were clearly preparing for a run to the Super Bowl. Koy Detmer and Jeff Blake were again mostly unimpressive while Bengals running back Rudi Johnson torched the Eagles' backup defense for three touchdowns to give Cincinnati a 38\u20133 lead by the middle of the fourth quarter. Blake was able to connect with Freddie Mitchell, who had six catches for 76 yards, for a touchdown late. Meanwhile, Terrell Owens continued to rehab his ankle, guaranteeing that if the Eagles made it to the Super Bowl, he would be ready to play in it. The Eagles, not trying to win their last two games, finished with a franchise best 13\u20133 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Divisional Playoffs: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nweather= 32\u00a0\u00b0F (Sunny)With expectations high, the Eagles' playoff run began with the Minnesota Vikings coming to town. Minnesota had backed into the playoffs with an 8\u20138 record and losses in four of their final five regular season games, but they had upset the Green Bay Packers in the Wild Card round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Divisional Playoffs: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nOn the Eagles' second possession, Brian Westbrook, who had missed the 2003\u20132004 playoffs with an injury, gained 48 total yards, setting up Donovan McNabb's two-yard touchdown pass to Freddie Mitchell. At the end of the quarter, McNabb found third receiver Greg Lewis for a 52-yard completion. Two plays later, Westbrook caught a short pass over the middle and put Philadelphia up 14\u20130. A long completion to Marcus Robinson by Daunte Culpepper led to a quarterback bootleg for a touchdown, keeping Minnesota in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Divisional Playoffs: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nJ.R. Reed returned the kickoff into Viking territory, and a few plays later, McNabb hit L.J. Smith with a pass over the middle and inside the Minnesota ten-yard line. Smith pushed for the score, but was hit hard, popping the ball into air towards the goal line. Freddie Mitchell was in the neighborhood and caught the derelict fumble in the end zone for an amazing touchdown that proved it would be the Eagles' day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Divisional Playoffs: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nThe Vikings got the ball to the Eagles' 4-yard line, but a botched fake field goal attempt left them with nothing to show for the drive and put a dent in their hopes. Interceptions by Ike Reese and Jeremiah Trotter in the third quarter kept Minnesota at bay, while Freddie Mitchell's luck was reversed when he fumbled a near-touchdown out of the end zone, resulting in a touchback. Two David Akers field goals in the fourth quarter put the game at 27\u20137 and out of reach. Culpepper added a 32-yard touchdown pass to Robinson, but the Eagles were going to their fourth straight NFC Championship Game. McNabb had 286 passing yards and two touchdowns, Westbrook had over 100 all-purpose yards, and Mitchell caught five balls and had two touchdowns filling in for Terrell Owens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, NFC Championship: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nweather= 12\u00a0\u00b0F (Clear)The Eagles hoped that the fourth time would be a charm for them against the Atlanta Falcons in the NFC Championship Game after losing the past three title games. The game would be played in post-blizzard, 17-degree weather, with swirling frigid winds nearing 30 MPH. Atlanta had gone 11\u20135 over the year, and were the second best team in the conference, behind Philadelphia. Atlanta's quarterback and star player Michael Vick would basically be the Falcons' main hope of upsetting the Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, NFC Championship: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nHe tried to run twice on the opening drive, but the Eagles' defense, using a mush rush, stopped him both times. Later in the quarter, Brian Westbrook broke a 36-yard run to the right side, followed by a completion to L.J. Smith for 21 yards. Dorsey Levens, with some help from his teammates, pushed his way in for a 4-yard touchdown, giving Philadelphia a 7\u20130 lead. Atlanta took the ball back and began a long drive, which featured many Warrick Dunn and T. J. Duckett rushes, that took them to first and goal from the Eagles' two-yard line. Duckett was stuffed on first down, Vick threw incomplete on second, then looked to have room to run on third, but big Hollis Thomas emerged and leveled Vick at the 3-yard line. The Falcons settled for a field goal, making it 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, NFC Championship: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe Eagles moved towards the end zone again, the big blow coming when Greg Lewis came back and hauled in a 45-yard pass from Donovan McNabb, setting up first and goal from the Falcons' four-yard line. Two plays later, McNabb passed in the corner of the end zone to veteran tight end Chad Lewis, with Lewis catching the pass while making a spectacular effort to stay in bounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, NFC Championship: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nOn Atlanta's next possession, in the middle of the second quarter, Vick went deep over the middle for tight end Alge Crumpler, who made the catch but was absolutely crushed by safety Brian Dawkins on the play. Dunn went in for the 10-yard score on the next play and it was 14\u201310 Eagles. Philadelphia took the kickoff in the third quarter and marched down the field, setting up a 31-yard field goal by David Akers in the wind. Defensive end Derrick Burgess had his first of two sacks on Vick to kill Atlanta's next drive. Later in the quarter, a low pass by Vick was intercepted by Dawkins, leading to another Akers field goal and increasing the Eagles' advantage to 20\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, NFC Championship: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nAs the game moved into the fourth quarter and Atlanta's passing offense could do little against the Philadelphia secondary, a Super Bowl berth looked more and more likely. A six-and-a-half minute drive that ended in another short Chad Lewis touchdown reception kicked off the celebration in Philadelphia. Victorious by a score of 27\u201310, the Eagles were NFC Champions for the first time since 1980. McNabb threw for a modest 180 yards in the windy weather, but had two touchdowns and no interceptions. Westbrook came up with 96 yards on the ground, while Chad Lewis made two critical touchdown receptions. It was later learned that Lewis broke his ankle on the second touchdown catch, and he would be left off the Super Bowl roster. Meanwhile, the defense held Vick to 136 passing yards and 26 rushing yards, and kept Atlanta off the scoreboard in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 80], "content_span": [81, 944]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nIn their first Super Bowl appearance since Super Bowl XV, the Eagles met the New England Patriots on February 6, 2005 at ALLTEL Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida. The Patriots, led by Tom Brady had won two of the past three Super Bowls and a win against the Eagles would likely lead to \"dynasty status\". They had cruised to a 14\u20132 regular season record, and taken down the Indianapolis Colts and 15\u20131 Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC playoffs. Meanwhile, the Eagles, considered heavy underdogs, had star wide receiver Terrell Owens miraculously returning, against doctor's orders, from injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nA third-down sack and subsequent fumble by Donovan McNabb on the Eagles' first possession nearly led to a turnover in Eagles' territory, but Andy Reid challenged the play and the Eagles were able to punt. Both offenses struggled in general until McNabb hit Owens on a 30-yard catch and run to inside the New England 10-yard line. Unfortunately, Patriot safety Rodney Harrison picked off McNabb's pass to the end zone. After a New England punt, the Eagles had good field position, but L. J. Smith was hit and fumbled after a completion, giving the ball back to the Patriots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nNew England's offense continued to struggle and the Eagles took back over, with McNabb finding maligned wide receiver Todd Pinkston for a 17-yard completion then a spectacular leaping 40-yard catch. On third and goal, McNabb hit Smith in the end zone and the Eagles had drawn first blood 7\u20130. Brady led the Patriots to the Eagles' 4-yard line, but he was sacked and fumbled, with Darwin Walker recovering for the Eagles. Things were looking good for Philadelphia, but they went three and out, giving New England the ball back at the Eagles' 37-yard line. Brady did not waste this opportunity, and led the Patriots to a touchdown with 1:21 left in the half, with David Givens catching a 4-yard scoring strike and celebrating by mocking Owens' wing flap celebration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nBrady connected with eventual game MVP Deion Branch four times on the opening drive of the third quarter. Mike Vrabel caught the short touchdown pass and New England had its first lead 14\u20137. In the middle of the third, the Eagles drove to the New England 10-yard line, before McNabb fired a bullet to Brian Westbrook between two Patriot defenders for a game-tying score. The Patriots answered back with a scoring drive capped by a two-yard touchdown rush by Corey Dillon early in the fourth quarter, giving New England the lead back 21\u201314. On their next possession, the Patriots got good field position and ended the drive with a short Adam Vinatieri field goal, pushing the lead to 24\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nTedy Bruschi intercepted McNabb on the next series and it looked like the Eagles might be finished. However, they forced a three-and-out and got the ball back with 5:40 to play. They drove down the field, but there was an alarming lack of urgency and the clock kept ticking. A sudden 30-yard touchdown pass from McNabb to Greg Lewis gave the Eagles new life, but less than two minutes remained. The Eagles failed to get the onside kick, then burned their timeouts on New England's possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nPhiladelphia got the ball back at their 4-yard line with :46 seconds left down 24\u201321, but Rodney Harrison got his second interception of McNabb three plays later and the season was over. McNabb threw for 357 yards and three touchdowns, but his three interceptions were devastating. Owens had nine catches and 122 yards on his partially healed ankle, while Pinkston hauled in 82 receiving yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178528-0033-0002", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Eagles season, Playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: vs. New England Patriots\nThe Eagles had done better than most expected and were in the game until the end, but they had made too many first half mistakes, when the Patriots were playing poorly, and left too many points on the field. Nevertheless, the 2004 Eagles had done better than any Eagles team had done since the 1960 NFL Championship. The Eagles would eventually win Super Bowl LII against New England in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 85], "content_span": [86, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178529-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Phillies season\nThe 2004 Philadelphia Phillies season was the 122nd season in the history of the franchise. The Phillies finished in second-place in the National League East with a record of 86\u201376, ten games behind the Atlanta Braves, and six games behind the NL wild-card champion Houston Astros. The Phillies were managed by their former shortstop Larry Bowa (85\u201375) and Gary Varsho (1\u20131), who replaced Bowa on the penultimate day of the season. The Phillies played their first season of home games at Citizens Bank Park, which opened April 12, with the visiting Cincinnati Reds defeating the Phillies, 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178529-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Phillies season, Regular season\nA season of high expectations due to notable offseason moves was a disappointment, costing manager Larry Bowa his job towards season's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178529-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Phillies season, Regular season, Citizens Bank Park\nCitizens Bank Park is a 43,647-seat baseball-only stadium in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania that opened on April 3, 2004, and hosted its first regular-season baseball game on April 12 of that same year, as the tenants of the facility, the Philadelphia Phillies lost to the Cincinnati Reds, 4\u20131. The ballpark was built to replace the now-demolished Veterans Stadium (a football/baseball multipurpose facility), and features natural grass and dirt playing field and also features a number of Philadelphia style food stands, including several which serve cheesesteaks, hoagies, and other regional specialties. Behind center field is Ashburn Alley, named after Phillies great center fielder and Hall of Famer Richie Ashburn, a walkway featuring restaurants and memorabilia from Phillies history, along with a restaurant/bar and grille called \"Harry The K's\" named after Hall of Fame broadcaster Harry Kalas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 969]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178529-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Phillies season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178529-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Phillies season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178530-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Soul season\nThe 2004 Philadelphia Soul season was the inaugural season of the Philadelphia Soul in the Arena Football League. It was a disappointing season for the Soul, finishing with a record of 5\u201311. They won their first game on February 21 vs. the Columbus Destroyers 56\u201334.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178531-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Wings season\nThe 2004 Philadelphia Wings season marked the team's eighteenth season of operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178531-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philadelphia Wings season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178532-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine House of Representatives elections\nElections for the House of Representatives of the Philippines were held on May 10, 2004. Being held together with presidential election, the party of the incumbent president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats, and by extension the administration-led coalition, the Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (K4), won majority of the seats in the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178532-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine House of Representatives elections\nThe elected representatives served in the 13th Congress from 2004 to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election\nThe 2004 election of members to the Senate of the Philippines was the 28th election to the Senate of the Philippines. It was held on Monday, May 10, 2004, to elect 12 of the 24 seats in the Senate. The major coalitions that participated are the Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (K4; Coalition of Truth and Experience for Tomorrow) composed of parties that support the candidacy of president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, and the Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP; Coalition of United Filipinos), parties that support the candidacy of film actor Fernando Poe Jr. A third coalition, the Alyansa ng Pag-asa (Alliance of Hope) was made up of Aksyon Demokratiko and Reporma-LM. K4 won seven seats, while the KNP won the remaining five contested seats in the Philippine Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election\nThe elections were notable for several reasons. This election first saw the implementation of the Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003 (see Wikisource), which enabled Filipinos in over 70 countries to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions\nThis election has seen strong shifts of alliances and new parties as candidates switched allegiances. The two major coalitions seen in this elections were the K-4 (Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan), of the administration, and the KNP (Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino), the united opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions, Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (K-4)\nThe Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (Coalition of Truth and Experience for Tomorrow) or K-4, is the remnant of the People Power Coalition that was formed following the ascendancy of president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to power. Arroyo is seeking a complete term under this coalition with Sen. Noli de Castro, an independent, yet popular, politician, as her running mate. The leading party in this coalition is the ruling Lakas-CMD, of which Arroyo is a member. Other parties under this coalition are the Liberal Party, the Nacionalista Party, the Nationalist People's Coalition and the People's Reform Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 113], "content_span": [114, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions, Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP)\nThe Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (Coalition of United Filipinos), or KNP, is the coalition of the united opposition. Its standard bearers are Fernando Poe, Jr. for president and Sen. Loren Legarda for vice-president. The leading parties of this coalition is the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP-Angara Wing), the PDP\u2013Laban and the Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino. The LDP split is caused by stubbornness between FPJ and Ping Lacson especially with the support of the former president Joseph Estrada and former first lady Imelda Marcos. The other major party under this coalition is Estrada's Partido ng Masang Pilipino (PMP, Party of the Filipino Masses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions, Alyansa ng Pag-asa\nThe third major coalition running in this election is the Alyansa ng Pag-asa (Alliance of Hope), This coalition fielded Raul Roco for president and Herminio Aquino for vice-president. The three major parties supporting this coalition are Roco's Aksyon Demokratiko (Democratic Action), former Defense Sec. Renato de Villa's Reporma Party, and Lito Osme\u00f1a's Promdi (Probinsya Muna [Provinces First] Development Initiative/Party). The three parties were the ones that bolted out of the People Power Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions, Bangon Pilipinas Movement (BPM)\nThe Bangon Pilipinas (Rise up, Philippines) Movement is the political party of Bro. Eddie Villanueva. It consists mostly of volunteers, a majority of whom came from Villanueva's Jesus Is Lord church (Villanueva resigned from the church before submitting his candidacy, to prevent questions on separation of church and state).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions, Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) (Aquino Wing)\nThis was composed of Panfilo Lacson's supporters in the LDP Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 108], "content_span": [109, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Parties and coalitions, Partido Isang Bansa, Isang Diwa\nThis was Eddie Gil's organization. Gil was deemed a nuisance candidate and was disqualified from the presidential race, however, the party qualified for other positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 88], "content_span": [89, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results\nThe Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (K4) won seven seats, while the Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP) won five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results\nIncumbent KNP senator Aquilino Pimentel Jr. and K4 senator Rodolfo Biazon successfully defended their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results\nK4's Pia Cayetano, Richard J. Gordon, Lito Lapid, Jamby Madrigal, Bong Revilla, Mar Roxas and KNP's Jinggoy Estrada and Alfredo Lim are the neophyte senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results\nReturning are K4's Miriam Defensor Santiago and KNP's Juan Ponce Enrile, who were both defeated in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results\nK4's Robert Barbers and Robert Jaworski both lost their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results\nThe election of Noli de Castro as Vice President of the Philippines in concurrent elections means that his Senate seat will be vacant until June 30, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178533-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine Senate election, Results, Per candidate\nThe official results of the election were released in staggered dates with most winners in local elective positions declared within two weeks from the May 10 election date. The winners in the Senatorial and Party-list Representative elections were declared on May 24, with the exception of the 12th senator which was announced on June 3. The results of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential races were finalized by the Congress on June 20, more than a month after the elections. Out of the 43,536,028 registered voters, about 35.4 million ballots were cast giving a voter turn-out of 81.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election\nPresidential elections, legislative elections and local elections were held in the Philippines on May 10, 2004. In the presidential election, incumbent president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo won a full six-year term as president, with a margin of just over one million votes over her leading opponent, highly popular movie actor Fernando Poe Jr..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election\nThe elections were notable for several reasons. This election first saw the implementation of the Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003 (see Wikisource), which enabled Filipinos in over 70 countries to vote. This is also the first election since the 1986 People Power Revolution where an incumbent president ran in the presidential election. Under the 1987 Constitution, an elected president cannot run for another term. However, Arroyo was not elected president, but instead succeeded ousted President Joseph Estrada, who was earlier impeached with charges of plunder and corruption in 2000 and later convicted on the plunder charge but received conditional pardon from Arroyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election\nMoreover, this was the first time since 1986 that both the winning president and vice president were under the same party/coalition. This election was also held at a period in modern Philippines marked by serious political polarization. This resulted in lesser candidates for the presidential and vice presidential elections compared to the 1992 and 1998 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background\nThe political climate leading up to the 2004 elections was one of the most emotional in the country's history since the 1986 elections that resulted in the exile of Ferdinand Marcos. Philippine society has become polarized between the followers of former president Joseph Estrada who have thrown their support for Estrada's close associate Fernando Poe Jr. and those who support incumbent Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, or at best oppose Estrada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background\nThe several months leading to the May elections saw several presidential scandals, Arroyo reversing her earlier decision not to run for president, the sudden but not unexpected candidacy of Fernando Poe Jr., defection of key political figures from the Arroyo camp to the opposition, the controversial automated elections initiative of the COMELEC, and the split of the dominant opposition party, Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino, between Poe and Panfilo Lacson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's candidacy\nOn a speech given on Rizal Day, December 30, 2002, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo declared that she would not run in the 2004 elections. Arroyo claimed that withdrawing from the race would relieve her of the burden of politics and allow her administration to devote the last year and half to the following:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's candidacy\nFirst, strengthening the economy to create more jobs and to encourage business activities that are unhampered by corruption and red tape in government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's candidacy\nThis was hailed as a welcome development by many people, especially those in the business and economic sectors. Nine months later, on October 4, 2003, Arroyo completely changed her mind. Arroyo stated that her change of heart was for a higher cause and that she cannot ignore the call to further serve the country. Many people, especially those who held on to her commitment, were dismayed by her turnabout, though most were unsurprised since there had been clues months before that she would probably not stand by her earlier decision. Others welcomed this development, saying that she needs more time to implement her projects, and that she would be the strongest contender against a likely candidacy by Fernando Poe Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nMonths before the elections, members of the opposition have been encouraging Fernando Poe Jr., a close friend of former president Joseph Estrada to run for president. Poe was very popular with the masses and it was widely believed that he would be a sure winner if he ran for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nOn November 27, 2003, Poe ended months of speculation by announcing that he will run for president during a press conference held at the Manila Hotel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nHowever, on January 9, 2004, Victorino X. Fornier (a private citizen) filed a case against Poe and the COMELEC, saying that Poe wasn't eligible to run for he is not a natural-born Filipino before the COMELEC. On January 23, the COMELEC dismissed the petition for lack of merit. On February 10, Fornier finally filed the case to the Supreme Court, seeking Poe to be disqualified from the race. His case was later merged with cases filed by Maria Jeanette C. Tecson, and Felix B. Desiderio Jr., and by Zoilo Antonio G. Velez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nOn September 28, 2007, 8:30 p.m, Senior Superintendent Francisco Uyami, Pasig police chief stated that Lawyer Maria Tecson, 40, was found dead (in a state of rigor mortis) inside room 204 at the Richmond Hotel, San Miguel Avenue, Pasig (with her throat slit and with cuts on her wrist). Maria Jeanette Tecson, Zoilo Velez (promoted to Court of Appeals Justice) and Victorino Fornier filed the disqualification case against Fernando Poe Jr. She claimed Poe was born out of wedlock and that while Poe's birth certificate was dated 1939, his parents Allan Poe and American mother Bessie Kelly did not marry until 1940.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nOn March 3, the Supreme Court, said in its decision, that for lack of jurisdiction and prematurity, and ruling that Poe's father, Allan F. Poe would have been a Filipino citizen by virtue of the en masse Filipinization enacted by the Philippine Bill of 1902. Also, even if Poe wasn't a natural-born Filipino citizen, he cannot be held guilty of having made a material misrepresentation in his certificate of candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, Eddie Villanueva's candidacy\nThe Commission on Elections originally affirmed the candidacies of six people for the president. The sixth person running for president was Bro. Eddie Villanueva, spiritual director of Jesus is Lord Church. The party of Eduardo Villanueva filed a petition with the COMELEC seeking to disqualify Eddie Gil on the basis of him being a nuisance candidate, his incapacity to mount a nationwide campaign, and that because he was running with the aim to confuse voters because of their similar names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, The LDP split\nThe Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino party (LDP) would form the core of the main opposition party, the Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP). However, members of the party disagreed on which person to support for president. Panfilo Lacson, a member of the party, advanced his candidacy for president but was not considered by Edgardo Angara, the president of the party. Angara supported Fernando Poe Jr. Together with the party's secretary-general Agapito Aquino, Lacson gathered the support of some members of the party and went ahead with his candidacy. The LDP was subsequently polarized between those supporting Angara and Poe, and those for Lacson and Aquino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, The LDP split\nBy then, Poe and Lacson have both filed their certificates of candidacies. According to the rules of candidacy, every presidential candidate must have a political party to back him or her. With the obvious split within the ranks of the LDP, and with no signs that the two factions would come to an agreement, the COMELEC decided to informally split the party into the Aquino and the Angara wings. Lacson then ran under the LDP \u2013 Aquino Wing, and Poe under the LDP \u2013 Angara Wing, which would later become the KNP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, The LDP split\nDuring the campaign period, there had been numerous unification talks between the two factions. The opposition saw the need to become united under one banner to boost their chances of winning the presidential election against the organized political machinery of Arroyo. The plans of unification did not materialize due to the stubbornness of both Poe and Lacson. Lacson wanted Poe to concede to him and run as his vice-presidential candidate while the supporters of Poe wanted Lacson to back out from his candidacy and instead support Poe, citing his low performance in the surveys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Background, COMELEC's move for an automated elections\nElections in the Philippines have always been a manual process with the results for national positions often being announced more than a month after election day. An attempt to rectify this was done by the Commission on Elections by automating the process of counting the votes. More than 30 billion pesos were spent in acquiring counting machines that were never used in this elections because of numerous controversies and political opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 87], "content_span": [88, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions\nThis election has seen strong shifts of alliances and new parties as candidates switched allegiances. The two major coalitions seen in this elections were the K-4 (Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan), of the administration, and the KNP (Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino), the united opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions, Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (K-4)\nThe Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan (Coalition of Truth and Experience for Tomorrow) or K-4, is the remnant of the People Power Coalition that was formed following the ascendancy of president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to power. Arroyo is seeking a complete term under this coalition with Noli de Castro, an independent, yet popular, broadcaster, as her running mate. The leading party in this coalition is the ruling Lakas-CMD, of which Arroyo is a member. Other parties under this coalition are the Liberal Party, the Nacionalista Party, the Nationalist People's Coalition and the People's Reform Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 114], "content_span": [115, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions, Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP)\nThe Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (Coalition of United Filipinos), or KNP, is the coalition of the united opposition. Its standard bearers are Fernando Poe Jr. for president and Sen. Loren Legarda for vice-president. The leading parties of this coalition is the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP-Angara Wing), the PDP\u2013Laban and the Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino. the LDP split is caused by stubbornness between Fernando Poe Jr. and Ping Lacson. especially with the support of the former president Joseph Estrada and former first lady Imelda Marcos. The other major party under this coalition is Estrada's Partido ng Masang Pilipino (PMP, Party of the Filipino Masses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions, Alyansa ng Pag-asa\nThe third major coalition running in this election is the Alyansa ng Pag-asa (Alliance of Hope), This coalition fielded Raul Roco for president and Hermini\u00f1o Lagunzad for vice-president. The three major parties supporting this coalition are Roco's Aksyon Demokratiko (Democratic Action), former Defense Sec. Renato de Villa's Reporma Party, and Lito Osme\u00f1a's Promdi (Probinsya Muna [Provinces First] Development Party). The three parties were the ones that bolted out of the People Power Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions, Bangon Pilipinas Movement (BPM)\nThe Bangon Pilipinas (Rise up, Philippines) Movement is the political party of Bro. Eddie Villanueva. It consists mostly of volunteers, a majority of whom came from Villanueva's Jesus Is Lord church (Villanueva resigned from the church before submitting his candidacy, to prevent questions on separation of church and state).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions, Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) (Aquino Wing)\nThis was composed of Panfilo Lacson's supporters in the LDP Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 109], "content_span": [110, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Parties and coalitions, Partido Isang Bansa, Isang Diwa\nThis was Eddie Gil's organization. Gil was deemed a nuisance candidate and was disqualified from the presidential race, however, the party qualified for other positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results\nThe official results of the election were released in staggered dates with most winners in local elective positions declared within two weeks from the May 10 election date. The winners in the Senatorial and Party-list Representative elections were declared on May 24, with the exception of the 12th senator which was announced on June 3. The results of the presidential and vice-presidential races were finalized by the Congress on June 20, more than a month after the elections. Out of the 43,536,028 registered voters, about 35.4 million ballots were cast giving a voter turn-out of 81.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results\nShown below are the official tallies of the presidential, vice-presidential, and senatorial races as well as the last tallies of the Quickcount conducted by the National Movement for Free Elections (NAMFREL), the citizens' arm of the COMELEC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Vice President, Legarda vs. De Castro electoral protest\nOn January 18, 2008, in a 21-page resolution, penned by Senior Justice Leonardo Quisumbing, the Supreme Court of the Philippines, acting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), dismissed Sen. Loren Legarda's electoral protest against Noli de Castro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Vice President, Legarda vs. De Castro electoral protest\n3 reasons supported the judgment: first, the PET approved the recommendation of Hearing Commissioner and former Commission on Elections (Comelec) Chair retired SC Justice Bernardo P. Pardo that \u201cthe pilot-tested revision of ballots or re-tabulation of the certificates of canvass would not affect the winning margin of the protestee in the final canvass of the returns, in addition to the ground of abandonment or withdrawal by reason of Protestant\u2019s candidacy for, election and assumption of the office Senator of the Philippines;\u201d second, Legarda's failure to pay the P 3.9 million ($1 = P 40) revision of ballots (in 124,404 precincts) fee despite court extension under Rule 33 of the PET; and third, jurisprudence of Defensor Santiago v. Ramos, teaches that Legarda \"effectively abandoned or withdrawn her protest when she ran in the Senate, which term coincides with the term of the Vice-Presidency 2004\u20132010.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 1014]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Vice President, Legarda vs. De Castro electoral protest\nMeanwhile, Noli De Castro on television stated: \"This is the triumph of truth. The truth that I won fair and square. I thank the Supreme Court for echoing the true voice of the people. From the very beginning I was confident that I received the overwhelming mandate of our people as Vice President.\" Legarda stated that she will file a motion for reconsideration in due course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 98], "content_span": [99, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Congress\nIn the legislative elections, voters elected twelve Senators (half the members of the Senate), who are elected at large with the whole country voting as one constituency, and all 208 members of the House of Representatives, who are elected from single-member districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Congress, Senate\nThe COMELEC sits as the National Board of Canvassers for the 12 senatorial positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Local\nIn the local elections, voters elected governors, vice-governors, and board members of the country's 79 provinces, and the mayor, vice-mayor and councilors of the nation's more than 1,600 cities and municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nDuring and immediately after the elections, exit polls were conducted by various organizations including the Social Weather Stations. According to \"The SWS 2004 Day of Election Survey: Final Exit Poll Scores Excluding Blank Answers\", released by the SWS on May 19, 2004, the national vote percentages are: GMA 45%, FPJ 34%, Lacson 10%, Roco 6%, Villanueva 5% (slightly different numbers from May 11; error margin 2%, n = 4,445).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nThese results are affirmed when compared to the NAMFREL Quick Count as of May 21, as tabulated in \"Comparison of ABS-CBN/SWS Exit Poll 2004 Results (as of May 17, 9 am; excluding No Answer) and NAMFREL Quick Count as of May 21 1:00 p.m. (Report #63)\". The NAMFREL Quick Count shows GMA at 40.4%, FPJ at 36.5%, Lacson at 10.8%, Roco at 6.2%, and Villanueva at 6.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nIt is notable in light of the subsequent Hello Garci scandal how exit polling revealed the candidates' performance in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. To wit, the SWS exit poll shows that GMA won only 44% of ARMM while FPJ won 50% (in short, 44\u201350); the NAMFREL Quick Count showed a score of 34.3\u201356.5. However, the final official COMELEC Canvass showed a result of 62% vs. 31% in favor of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. This highly irregular result constituted prima facie evidence of cheating in the ARMM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nThe SWS also published the number of registered voters per region as of April 28, 2004\u2014or just a week before the elections\u2014for the purpose of comparing their sample sizes with the actual number of voters. The ARMM had 1,057,458 voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nHowever, recall that in the final official COMELEC canvass, FPJ won 31% of ARMM votes. If he had won 100% of ARMM, he could gain only 69% more of the ARMM voters, or 729,646 votes. Given that the final difference between GMA and FPJ was 1,123,576 votes, GMA would still have won the election by a total of 393,930 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nEven if FPJ won 100% of the ARMM, GMA would still have won. So great was GMA's lead, that even if they padded ARMM voter rolls so that it would show 1.5 million voters, 69% of that would only be 1.035 million votes, still not enough to overcome the 1.123-million vote lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Exit polls\nThis result is actually consistent with the trend of the pre-election opinion polls conducted also by the SWS. On April 23, just a little over two weeks before the election, the SWS released a poll, and the headline of the SWS report by itself was historically significant: \"SWS April 10\u201317, 2004 Survey: Roco Depleted, Voters Go To GMA and Undecided\". The report's first line gives away the game: \"Raul Roco's sudden departure for abroad cost him almost half of his voting strength, allowing Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to gain a slim lead ...\" That lead could not be reversed: at the last pre-election SWS opinion poll (conducted from May 1 to 4) released on May 8, 2004, or just two days before the election, \"GMA Leads FPJ By 7%\", 37% to 30%, with 12% undecided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nUnder the constitution, the Congress is mandated to become the National Board of Canvassers for the top two positions, the president and the vice-president. Tallying in the 216,382 precincts nationwide are submitted in Election Returns that are forwarded to the municipal and city board of canvassers. These are then tabulated and forwarded to the provincial board of canvassers which prepare the 176 Certificates of Canvass (CoC). These CoCs were forwarded to the joint session of the Congress at the Batasang Pambansa in Quezon City on May 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nSenators and representatives from the administration and opposition have debated heatedly on the procedure of counting the CoCs. The traditional way of counting the certificates, as used in the 1992 and 1998 elections, was to appoint a joint committee consisting of seven senators and seven representatives. Many opposition legislators, notably, Cong. Didagen Dilangalen of Maguindanao, opposed this traditional method as unconstitutional saying that it should be the whole Congress, not a committee, who should count the votes. Part of the argument was that \"power delegated cannot be further delegated\", referring to the delegation of counting to a committee. The proposal of some legislators was for the whole Congress to sit in a joint session counting each and every single Certificate of Canvass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 876]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThe debates and deliberations for the rules of canvassing were finished by the Congressional joint session on May 28. The rules decided were very similar to the ones used in the 1992 and 1998 elections, which called for a joint committee to act as the National Board of Canvassers. The notable difference is the increase of the number of committee members from 14 to 22, this time consisting of 11 senators and 11 representatives. The composition of the committee was also announced by the senate president, Franklin Drilon, and the Speaker of the House, Jose de Venecia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0040-0001", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThe composition was immediately lambasted by the Opposition; the House portion of the committee consisted of 9 administration representatives and 2 opposition. The Poe camp called for a more equal representation for all the involved political parties in the committee, despite the appointed commission mirroring the current composition of the House: there are 190 administration representatives in a 220-seat House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThe official canvassing by the Congressional Joint Committee started on June 4, a little less than one month after election day. Canvassing was done in a slow pace, averaging about 12 Certificates of Canvass per day, as the Opposition accused Administration politicians of railroading the canvass. The Opposition lawyers wanted to question the validity of 25 CoCs, especially in those areas where Arroyo posted a wide margin over Poe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178534-0041-0001", "contents": "2004 Philippine general election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThey wanted the committee to examine the Statement of Votes at the municipal level and even down to the Election Returns at the precinct level to prove their claim that the Certificates of Canvass have been tampered with in favor of Arroyo. Administration lawyers contend that the committee is not the proper place to lodge complaints of fraud and that the Opposition should go to the Presidential Election Tribunal (the Supreme Court) after the winner has been proclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election\nThe 2004 Philippine presidential and vice presidential elections were held on Monday, May 10, 2004. In the presidential election, incumbent president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo won a full six-year term as President, with a margin of just over one million votes over her leading opponent, highly popular movie actor Fernando Poe, Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election\nThe elections were notable for several reasons. This election first saw the implementation of the Overseas Absentee Voting Act of 2003 (see Wikisource), which enabled Filipinos in over 70 countries to vote. This is also the first election since the 1986 People Power Revolution where an incumbent president ran for re-election. Under the 1987 Constitution, an elected president cannot run for another term. However, Arroyo was not elected president, but instead succeeded ousted President Joseph Estrada, who was impeached with charges of plunder and corruption in 2000 and later convicted of plunder (but received conditional pardon from Arroyo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election\nMoreover, this elections was the first time since 1986 that both the winning president and vice president were under the same party/coalition. As of 2016, it is also the most recent election with this attribute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election\nThis election was also held at a period in modern Philippines marked by serious political polarization. This resulted in lesser candidates for the presidential and vice presidential elections compared to the 1992 and 1998 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background\nThe political climate leading up to the 2004 elections was one of the most emotional in the country's history since the 1986 elections that resulted in the exile of Ferdinand Marcos. Philippine society has become polarized between the followers of former president Joseph Estrada who have thrown their support for Estrada's close associate Fernando Poe, Jr. and those who support incumbent Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, or at best oppose Estrada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background\nThe several months leading to the May elections saw several presidential scandals, Arroyo reversing her earlier decision not to run for president, the sudden but not unexpected candidacy of Fernando Poe, Jr., defection of key political figures from the Arroyo camp to the opposition, the controversial automated elections initiative of the COMELEC, and the split of the dominant opposition party, Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino, between Poe and Panfilo Lacson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's candidacy\nOn a speech given on Rizal Day, December 30, 2002, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo declared that she would not run in the 2004 elections. She said that withdrawing from the race would relieve her of the burden of politics and allow her administration to devote the last year and half tostrengthening the economy healing the deep divisions within Philippine society, and working for clean and honest elections in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 86], "content_span": [87, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's candidacy\nHowever, on October 4, 2003, Arroyo said that she would seek a full-term presidency, saying that her change of heart was for a higher cause, and that she could not ignore the call to further serve the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 86], "content_span": [87, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nMonths before the elections, members of the opposition were encouraging actor Fernando Poe, Jr., a close friend of former president Joseph Estrada to run for president. Poe was very popular with the masses and it was widely believed that he would be a sure winner if he ran for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nOn November 27, 2003, Poe announced during a press conference held at the Manila Hotel that he would run for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nHowever, on January 9, 2004, Victorino X. Fornier (a private citizen) filed a case against Poe and the COMELEC, saying that Poe was not eligible to run as he was not a natural-born Filipino before the COMELEC. On 23 January, the COMELEC dismissed the petition for lack of merit. On February 10, Fornier finally filed the case to the Supreme Court, seeking for Poe to be disqualified from the race. His case was later merged with cases filed by Maria Jeanette C. Tecson, and Felix B. Desiderio, Jr., and by Zoilo Antonio G. Velez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nOn September 28, 2007, 8:30 p.m, Senior Superintendent Francisco Uyami, Pasig police chief stated that lawyer Maria Tecson, 40, had been found dead (in a state of rigor mortis) inside room 204 at the Richmond Hotel, San Miguel Avenue, Pasig (with her throat slit and with cuts on her wrist). Maria Jeanette Tecson, Zoilo Velez (promoted to Court of Appeals Justice) and Victorino Fornier filed the disqualification case against Fernando Poe, Jr. She claimed Poe was born out of wedlock, and that while Poe's birth certificate was dated 1939, his parents Allan Poe and American mother Bessie Kelly did not marry until 1940.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Fernando Poe, Jr.'s candidacy\nOn March 3, the Supreme Court, said in its decision that for lack of jurisdiction and prematurity, and ruling that Poe's father, Allan F. Poe would have been a Filipino citizen by virtue of the en masse Filipinization enacted by the Philippine Bill of 1902. Also, even if Poe had not been a natural-born Filipino citizen, he could not be held guilty of having made a material misrepresentation in his certificate of candidacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Eddie Gil's candidacy\nThe Commission on Elections originally affirmed the candidacies of six people for the president. The sixth person running for president was Eduardo \"Eddie\" Gil, a known Marcos loyalist. The party of Eduardo Villanueva filed a petition with the COMELEC seeking to disqualify Eddie Gil on the basis of him being a nuisance candidate, his incapacity to mount a nationwide campaign, and that because he was running with the aim to confuse voters because of their similar names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, Eddie Gil's candidacy\nEddie Gil claims to be an international banker having a net worth of billions of dollars. His platform for presidency promised to make every Filipino a millionaire within his first 100 days of being elected. He also promised to pay off the Philippines' debt, worth trillions of pesos, from his own pocket. This was widely ridiculed, especially after a recent incident in which a check he had issued to pay his hotel bills during a campaign sortie, bounced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 72], "content_span": [73, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, The LDP split\nThe Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino party (LDP) would form the core of the main opposition party, the Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP). However, members of the party disagreed on which person to support for president. Panfilo Lacson, a member of the party, advanced his candidacy for president but was not considered by Edgardo Angara, the president of the party. Angara supported Fernando Poe, Jr. Together with the party's secretary-general Agapito \"Butz\" Aquino, Lacson gathered the support of some members of the party and went ahead with his candidacy. The LDP was subsequently polarized between those supporting Angara and Poe, and those for Lacson and Aquino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, The LDP split\nBy then, Poe and Lacson have both filed their certificates of candidacies. According to the rules of candidacy, every presidential candidate must have a political party to back him or her. With the obvious split within the ranks of the LDP, and with no signs that the two factions would come to an agreement, the COMELEC decided to informally split the party into the Aquino and the Angara wings. Lacson then ran under the LDP - Aquino Wing, and Poe under the LDP - Angara Wing, which would later become the KNP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, The LDP split\nDuring the campaign period, there had been numerous unification talks between the two factions. The opposition saw the need to become united under one banner to boost their chances of winning the presidential election against the organized political machinery of Arroyo. The plans of unification did not materialize due to the stubbornness of both Poe and Lacson. Lacson wanted Poe to concede to him and run as his vice-presidential candidate while the supporters of Poe wanted Lacson to back out from his candidacy and instead support Poe, citing his low performance in the surveys.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Background, COMELEC's move for an automated elections\nElections in the Philippines have always been a manual process with the results for national positions often being announced more than a month after election day. An attempt to rectify this was done by the Commission on Elections by automating the process of counting the votes. More than 30 billion pesos were spent in acquiring counting machines that were never used in this elections because of numerous controversies and political opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 92], "content_span": [93, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Parties and coalitions\nThis election has seen strong shifts of alliances and new parties as candidates switched allegiances. The two major coalitions seen in this elections were the K-4 (Koalisyon ng Katapatan at Karanasan sa Kinabukasan), of the administration, and the KNP (Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino), the united opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Parties and coalitions, Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (KNP)\nThe Koalisyon ng Nagkakaisang Pilipino (Coalition of United Filipinos), or KNP, is the coalition of the united opposition. Its standard bearers are Fernando Poe, Jr. for president and Sen. Loren Legarda for vice-president. The leading parties of this coalition is the Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP-Angara Wing), the PDP\u2013Laban and the Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino. the LDP split is caused by stubbornness between FPJ and Ping Lacson. especially with the support of the former president Joseph Estrada and former first lady Imelda Marcos. The other major party under this coalition is Estrada's Partido ng Masang Pilipino (PMP, Party of the Filipino Masses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 103], "content_span": [104, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Parties and coalitions, Alyansa ng Pag-asa\nThe third major coalition running in this election is the Alyansa ng Pag-asa (Alliance of Hope), This coalition fielded Raul Roco for president and Herminio Aquino for vice-president. The three major parties supporting this coalition are Roco's Aksyon Demokratiko (Democratic Action), former Defense Sec. Renato de Villa's Reporma Party, and Lito Osme\u00f1a's Promdi (Probinsya Muna [Provinces First] Development Party). The three parties were the ones that bolted out of the People Power Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 81], "content_span": [82, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Parties and coalitions, Bangon Pilipinas Movement (BPM)\nThe Bangon Pilipinas (Rise up, Philippines) Movement is the political party of Bro. Eddie Villanueva. It consists mostly of volunteers, a majority of whom came from Villanueva's Jesus Is Lord church (Villanueva resigned from the church before submitting his candidacy, to prevent questions on separation of church and state).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 94], "content_span": [95, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Parties and coalitions, Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino (LDP) (Aquino Wing)\nThis was composed of Panfilo Lacson's supporters in the LDP Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 114], "content_span": [115, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Parties and coalitions, Partido Isang Bansa, Isang Diwa\nThis was Eddie Gil's organization. Gil was deemed a nuisance candidate and was disqualified from the presidential race, however, the party qualified for other positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 94], "content_span": [95, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results\nThe official results of the election were released in staggered dates with most winners in local elective positions declared within two weeks from the May 10 election date. The winners in the Senatorial and Party-list Representative elections were declared on May 24, with the exception of the 12th senator which was announced on June 3. The results of the presidential and vice-presidential races were finalized by the Congress on June 20, more than a month after the elections. Out of the 43,895,324 registered voters, about 33.5 million ballots were cast giving a voter turn-out of 76.34%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results\nShown below are the official tallies of the Presidential and Vice-Presidential races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, PET Case No. 003, Legarda v. De Castro, January 18, 2008\nOn January 18, 2008, in a 21-page resolution, penned by Senior Justice Leonardo Quisumbing, the Supreme Court of the Philippines, acting as the Presidential Electoral Tribunal (PET), dismissed Sen. Loren Legarda's electoral protest against Noli de Castro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, PET Case No. 003, Legarda v. De Castro, January 18, 2008\n3 reasons supported the judgment: first, the PET approved the recommendation of Hearing Commissioner and former Commission on Elections (Comelec) Chair retired SC Justice Bernardo P. Pardo that \u201cthe pilot-tested revision of ballots or re-tabulation of the certificates of canvass would not affect the winning margin of the protestee in the final canvass of the returns, in addition to the ground of abandonment or withdrawal by reason of Protestant\u2019s candidacy for, election and assumption of the office Senator of the Philippines;\u201d second, Legarda's failure to pay the P 3.9 million ($1 = P 40) revision of ballots (in 124,404 precincts) fee despite court extension under Rule 33 of the PET; and third, jurisprudence of Defensor Santiago v. Ramos, teaches that Legarda \"effectively abandoned or withdrawn her protest when she ran in the Senate, which term coincides with the term of the Vice-Presidency 2004-2010.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 1020]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, PET Case No. 003, Legarda v. De Castro, January 18, 2008\nMeanwhile, Noli De Castro on television stated: \"This is the triumph of truth. The truth that I won fair and square. I thank the Supreme Court for echoing the true voice of the people. From the very beginning I was confident that I received the overwhelming mandate of our people as Vice President.\" Legarda stated that she will file a motion for reconsideration in due course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 104], "content_span": [105, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nDuring and immediately after the elections, exit polls were conducted by various organizations including the Social Weather Stations. According to \"The SWS 2004 Day of Election Survey: Final Exit Poll Scores Excluding Blank Answers\", released by the SWS on 19 May 2004, the national vote percentages are: GMA 45%, FPJ 34%, Lacson 10%, Roco 6%, Villanueva 5% (slightly different numbers from May 11; error margin 2%, n = 4,445).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nThese results are affirmed when compared to the NAMFREL Quick Count as of May 21, as tabulated in \"Comparison of ABS-CBN/SWS Exit Poll 2004 Results (as of May 17, 9 am; excluding No Answer) and NAMFREL Quick Count as of May 21 1:00 p.m. (Report #63)\". The NAMFREL Quick Count shows GMA at 40.4%, FPJ at 36.5%, Lacson at 10.8%, Roco at 6.2%, and Villanueva at 6.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nIt is notable in light of the subsequent Hello Garci scandal how exit polling revealed the candidates' performance in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao. To wit, the SWS exit poll shows that GMA won only 44% of ARMM while FPJ won 50% (in short, 44\u201350); the NAMFREL Quick Count showed a score of 34.3-56.5. However, the final official COMELEC Canvass showed a result of 62% vs. 31% in favor of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nThe SWS also published the number of registered voters per region as of April 28, 2004\u2014or just a week before the elections\u2014for the purpose of comparing their sample sizes with the actual number of voters. The ARMM had 1,057,458 voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nHowever, recall that in the final official COMELEC canvass, FPJ won 31% of ARMM votes. If he had won 100% of ARMM, he could gain only 69% more of the ARMM voters, or 729,646 votes. Given that the final difference between GMA and FPJ was 1,123,576 votes, GMA would still have won the election by a total of 393,930 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nEven if FPJ won 100% of the ARMM, GMA would still have won. So great was GMA's lead, that even if they padded ARMM voter rolls so that it would show 1.5 million voters, 69% of that would only be 1.035 million votes, still not enough to overcome the 1.123-million vote lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Exit polls\nThis result is actually consistent with the trend of the pre-election opinion polls conducted also by the SWS. On April 23, just a little over two weeks before the election, the SWS released a poll, and the headline of the SWS report by itself was historically significant: \"SWS April 10\u201317, 2004 Survey: Roco Depleted, Voters Go To GMA and Undecided\". The report's first line gives away the game: \"Raul Roco's sudden departure for abroad cost him almost half of his voting strength, allowing Gloria Macapagal Arroyo to gain a slim lead ...\" That lead could not be reversed: at the last pre-election SWS opinion poll (conducted from May 1 to 4) released on 8 May 2004, or just two days before the election, \"GMA Leads FPJ By 7%\", 37% to 30%, with 12% undecided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Voter demographics\nSource: Exit polls conducted by Social Weather Stations on May 11, 99% total due to rounding error (margin of error: 2%)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nUnder the constitution, the Congress is mandated to become the National Board of Canvassers for the top two positions, the president and the vice-president. Tallying in the 216,382 precincts nationwide are submitted in Election Returns that are forwarded to the municipal and city board of canvassers. These are then tabulated and forwarded to the provincial board of canvassers which prepare the 176 Certificates of Canvass (CoC). These CoCs were forwarded to the joint session of the Congress at the Batasang Pambansa in Quezon City in May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nSenators and representatives from the administration and opposition have debated heatedly on the procedure of counting the CoCs. The traditional way of counting the certificates, as used in the 1992 and 1998 elections, was to appoint a joint committee consisting of seven senators and seven representatives. Many opposition legislators, notably, Cong. Didagen Dilangalen of Maguindanao, opposed this traditional method as unconstitutional saying that it should be the whole Congress, not a committee, who should count the votes. Part of the argument was that \"power delegated cannot be further delegated\", referring to the delegation of counting to a committee. The proposal of some legislators was for the whole Congress to sit in a joint session counting each and every single Certificate of Canvass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThe debates and deliberations for the rules of canvassing were finished by the Congressional joint session on May 28. The rules decided were very similar to the ones used in the 1992 and 1998 elections, which called for a joint committee to act as the National Board of Canvassers. The notable difference is the increase of the number of committee members from 14 to 22, this time consisting of 11 senators and 11 representatives. The composition of the committee was also announced by the Senate President, Franklin Drilon, and the Speaker of the House, Jose de Venecia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0038-0001", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThe composition was immediately lambasted by the Opposition; the House portion of the committee consisted of 9 administration representatives and 2 opposition. The Poe camp called for a more equal representation for all the involved political parties in the committee, despite the appointed commission mirroring the current composition of the House: there are 190 administration representatives in a 220-seat House.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThe official canvassing by the Congressional Joint Committee started on June 4, a little less than one month after election day. Canvassing was done in a slow pace, averaging about 12 Certificates of Canvass per day, as the Opposition accused Administration politicians of railroading the canvass. The Opposition lawyers wanted to question the validity of 25 CoCs, especially in those areas where Arroyo posted a wide margin over Poe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178535-0039-0001", "contents": "2004 Philippine presidential election, Results, Official Congressional canvass\nThey wanted the committee to examine the Statement of Votes at the municipal level and even down to the Election Returns at the precinct level to prove their claim that the Certificates of Canvass have been tampered with in favor of Arroyo. Administration lawyers contend that the committee is not the proper place to lodge complaints of fraud and that the Opposition should go to the Presidential Election Tribunal (the Supreme Court) after the winner has been proclaimed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178536-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Phoenix Mercury season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the eighth for the Phoenix Mercury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178536-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Phoenix Mercury season, Regular season\nIn her WNBA debut, Taurasi netted 26 points and led the Mercury to an 84-76 victory over the Seattle Storm. For the season, the rookie averaged 17.0 points, 4.4 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game. Although the Mercury did not qualify for the playoffs, the season was a personal success as Taurasi was named to the Western Conference All Star team and won the WNBA Rookie of the Year Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178536-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Phoenix Mercury season, Player stats\nNote: GP= Games played; FG = Field Goals; MIN= Minutes; REB= Rebounds; AST= Assists; STL = Steals; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178537-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Picardy regional election\nA regional election took place in Picardy on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Claude Gewerc (PS) was elected President of the former Council of Picardy (now merged to Regional Council of Hauts-de-France), defeating incumbent Gilles de Robien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178538-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pilot Pen Tennis\nThe 2004 Pilot Pen Tennis was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 22nd edition of the Pilot Pen Tennis and was part of the Tier II Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place at the Cullman-Heyman Tennis Center in New Haven, United States, from August 22 through August 28, 2004. Seventh-seeded Elena Bovina won the singles title and earned $93,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178539-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pilot Pen Tennis \u2013 Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez were the defending champions, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178539-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pilot Pen Tennis \u2013 Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy won the title by defeating Martina Navratilova and Lisa Raymond 6\u20131, 1\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final. It was the 10th doubles title for both players in their respective doubles careers. It was also the 6th title for the pair during the season, after their wins in Miami, Amelia Island, Berlin, Rome and Los Angeles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178540-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pilot Pen Tennis \u2013 Singles\nJennifer Capriati was the defending champion, but lost in quarterfinals to Nathalie Dechy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178540-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pilot Pen Tennis \u2013 Singles\nElena Bovina won the title by defeating Nathalie Dechy 6\u20132, 2\u20136, 7\u20135 in the final. It was the 1st title in the season for Bovina and the 3rd title in her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178540-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pilot Pen Tennis \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial\nIn the Pitcairn sexual assault trial of 2004 seven men living on Pitcairn Island faced 55 charges relating to sexual offences against children and young people. The accused represented a third of the island's male population and included Steve Christian, the mayor. On 24 October, all but one of the defendants were found guilty on at least some of the charges. Another six men living abroad, including Shawn Christian, who later served as mayor of Pitcairn, were tried on 41 charges in a separate trial in Auckland, New Zealand, in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial\nThe trial was repeatedly punctuated by legal challenges from island residents, who denied the island's colonial status, and with it the United Kingdom's judicial authority. Defence lawyers for the seven accused men claimed that British sovereignty over the islands was unconstitutional: HMS Bounty mutineers, from whom almost all of the current island population is descended (together with Polynesians), had effectively renounced their British citizenship by committing a capital offence in the burning of the Bounty in 1790, they said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial\nAccording to the Public Defender of the Pitcairn Islands Paul Dacre (who was appointed in 2003), islanders still celebrated this act annually by burning an effigy of the Bounty in a symbolic rejection of British rule. The defence maintained that the UK never made a formal claim to Pitcairn, and never officially informed the islanders that British legislation, such as the Sexual Offences Act 1956, was applicable to them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial\nIn a judgment delivered on 18 April 2004, the Pitcairn Supreme Court (specially established for the purpose of the trial, consisting of New Zealand judges authorised by the British government) rejected the claim that Pitcairn was not British territory. This decision was upheld in August 2004 by the Pitcairn Court of Appeal, endorsing the claim of Deputy Governor Matthew Forbes that Pitcairn was British territory. A delay of the trial until the United Kingdom's Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (JCPC) decided on an additional appeal was rejected. The trial started on 30 September 2004. Verdicts were delivered on 24 October 2004, with all but one of the defendants convicted on at least some of the charges they were facing. Those found guilty were sentenced on 29 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nThe remoteness of Pitcairn (which lies about halfway between New Zealand and Peru) had shielded the tiny population (47 in 2004) from outside scrutiny. The islanders had for many decades tolerated what others classify as sexual promiscuity, even among the very young, claimed to be in line with traditional values of their Polynesian ancestors. This included a corresponding tacit acceptance of behaviour which in the UK would be considered child sexual abuse. Three cases of imprisonment for sex with underage girls were reported in the 1950s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nIn 1999 Gail Cox, a police officer from Kent, UK serving a temporary assignment on Pitcairn, began uncovering allegations of sexual abuse. When a 15-year-old girl decided to press rape charges in 1999, criminal proceedings (code-named \"Operation Unique\") were set in motion. The charges include 21 counts of rape, 41 of indecent assault, and two of gross indecency with a child under 14. Over the following two years, police officers in Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom interviewed every woman who had lived on Pitcairn in the past 20 years, as well as all of the accused men. Pitcairn Public Prosecutor Simon Moore (an Auckland Crown Solicitor who was the first lawyer appointed to the position by the British government for the purposes of the investigation) held the file.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nAustralian Seventh-day Adventist pastor Neville Tosen, who spent two years on Pitcairn around the turn of the millennium, said that on his arrival, he had been taken aback by the conduct of the children. But he had not immediately realised what was happening. \"I noticed worrying signs such as inexplicable mood swings,\" he said. \"It took me three months to realise they were being abused.\" Tosen tried to bring the matter before the Island Council (the legislative body which doubles as the island's court), but was rebuffed. One Councillor told him, \"Look, the age of consent has always been twelve and it doesn't hurt them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nA study of island records confirmed anecdotal evidence that most girls bore their first child between the ages of 12 and 15. \"I think the girls were conditioned to accept that it was a man's world and once they turned 12, they were eligible,\" Tosen said. Mothers and grandmothers were resigned to the situation, telling him that their own childhood experience had been the same; they regarded it as just a part of life on Pitcairn. One grandmother wondered what all the fuss was about. Tosen was convinced, however, that the early sexual experience was very damaging to the girls. \"They can't settle or form solid relationships. They did suffer, no doubt about it,\" he said emphatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nTosen opined that accounts of the Pitcairners' past transformation by Christianity, once popularised in missionary tracts, told only one side of the story. He noted that 13 of the original settlers were murdered, many in fights over women, before John Adams, the sole surviving mutineer, pacified them with the help of the Bible. \"This is the island that the gospel changed, but the changes were only superficial,\" he said. \"Deep down, they adhered to the mutineers' mentality. They must have known that their lifestyle was unacceptable, but it was too entrenched.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nIn 1999, a New Zealander visiting the island, Ricky Quinn, was sentenced by island magistrate Jay Warren to 100 days in prison for underage sex with a 15-year-old Pitcairn girl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nIn 2002, the Queen-in-Council made the Pitcairn (Amendment) Order 2002, which paved the way for a trial based on Pitcairn law to be held in New Zealand in 2004. However, in 2004 the accused won a legal battle to be tried in Pitcairn. Three judges, several prosecution and defence lawyers, other court staff, and six journalists travelled from New Zealand to the island in late September for the seven-week trial. Their arrival doubled the number of people on the island during their stay. Witnesses living abroad gave evidence remotely by a video satellite link-up. The forty-five islanders were ordered to surrender their twenty or so guns, both in view of the heightened emotions and to avoid hunting accidents \"because the island's population will swell by about 25 during the trial.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Historical background\nAs of April 2006, the cost of the trial amounted to NZ$14.1 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Local reaction\nPitcairn's 47 inhabitants, almost all of whom are interrelated, were bitterly divided by the charges against what constituted most of the adult male population. Many Pitcairn Island men blamed the British police for persuading the women involved to press charges. Some of the women agreed. Sources close to the case said that when several women withdrew their charges it was due to family pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Local reaction\nOn 28 September 2004, Olive Christian, wife of the accused mayor, daughter of Len Brown and mother of Randy Christian, both of whom were also among those accused, called a meeting of thirteen of the island's women, representing three generations at her home, Big Fence, to \"defend\" the island's menfolk. Claiming that underage sex had been accepted as a Polynesian tradition since the settlement of the island in 1790, Olive Christian said of her girlhood, \"We all thought sex was like food on the table.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Local reaction\nCarol Warren's two daughters also said that they had both been sexually active from the age of 12, with one of them claiming that she started having sex at 13, \"and I felt hot shit about it, too.\" They and other women present at the meeting, who endorsed their view that underage sex was normal on Pitcairn, stated emphatically that all of the alleged rape victims had been willing participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Local reaction\nCharlene Warren, who withdrew charges against a Pitcairn man, claimed that detectives had offered her money to testify; when pressed, she clarified that the money referred to statutory \"compensation for victims of crime.\" Some women came up with a conspiracy theory that the trial was part of \"a British plot to jail the [community's] able-bodied men and 'close' the island.\" \"They've picked on all the viable young men, the ones who are the backbone of this place,\" said one, Meralda Warren. Not all women on the island were such defenders. Some present at the Big Fence meeting sat \"silent and appeared ill at ease,\" giving reporters the impression that they did not hold the same views.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Local reaction\nMany of the islanders boycotted the trial. \"It's better for me not to know who's charged with what, so that I can still look them in the face as mates,\" one islander said. \"We still have to work together to keep this place going.\" While many islanders remain fearful that the outcome of the trial could sound the death-knell of the tiny state, others expressed optimism that it could mark a new beginning for Pitcairn as people previously excluded from the power structure would find themselves needed and appreciated for their skills and contributions in a new way. Many Pitcairners felt unfairly treated; for instance, Mike Warren said the whole trial was a \"setup\" from the start. Former Pitcairn resident Reeve Cooze expressed the sentiments of many islanders on Radio New Zealand when he declared, \"The Pitcairn people have been bullied.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nFour days later on 4 October, a former islander, in a written statement read out by police, (name withheld) alleged that Mayor Steve Christian had raped her twice in 1972 when she was 12, once in bushland and once in a boat moored at Bounty Bay. She said that he used adolescent girls as his personal harem. \"Steve seemed to take it upon himself to initiate all the girls, and it was like we were his harem,\" she stated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nShe had not informed her parents or others in the community, she said, because she \"knew nothing would be done about it because of previous experience on the island.\" On the same day, another woman alleged that she had been raped twice as a school girl by Steve Christian. She had been a virgin at the time of the first rape, she said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nPostmaster Dennis Christian was the first defendant to plead guilty at the trial, the following day. He pleaded guilty to two charges of sexual assault against a 12- to 14-year-old girl from 1972 to 1974, when he was 16 to 18, and one charge of indecent assault against another 12-year-old girl in the early 1980s, when he was in his late 20s. Detective Inspector Rob Vinson of Kent Police, who had conducted the investigation, described the confession as a \"significant development.\" Pitcairn public prosecutor Simon Moore expressed relief that the two women had been spared having to testify in public. Crown prosecutors said that they would not offer evidence for a fourth charge against Christian, as the victim wished to withdraw it and it would not affect the sentence. Christian was remanded on bail pending the completion of all seven trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nOn the next day (6 October), the prosecution produced a videotape of a police interview with Steve Christian, conducted at Auckland Central police station in New Zealand in 2000. Christian denied \"breaking in\" four girls in their early teens or younger. (He was later accused by a fifth woman of having raped her in a similar fashion.) Christian agreed that it \"could be the case\" that he had sex with one girl of 13 and another of 15. He said he could not recall the specific incidents but admitted to two other sexual relationships with girls under 16, both of whom, he insisted, had consented. He emphatically denied ever having forced sex on anybody. Christian pleaded not guilty to all charges of rape and indecent assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nThe trial continued on 7 October with the appearance of Jay Warren, 48, the former Magistrate of Pitcairn, and Terry Young, 45. Warren held the office of Magistrate, which had since been renamed mayor, for most of the 1990s. The 48-year-old Warren was accused of indecently assaulting a 12-year-old girl in 1983. The woman (name suppressed), who was 33 at the time of the trial, testified by video link from New Zealand, where she lived, that Warren had accosted her while she was body-surfing with friends in Bounty Bay after school. The woman says she was wearing flippers, and managed to swim away. In reply to a question from Paul Dacre, the public defender, she told the court that she felt unable to tell anybody on the island about what had happened at that time. Warren denied the charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nThe same woman told the court that she had also been abused by Terry Young, who was accused of one rape and seven indecent assaults over a period of almost 20 years. The woman, one of four of Young's alleged victims, told the court that in 1981, when she was 10, Young had groped her as she emerged from the toilet block at the island's school. She had been attending a community event that evening. The court was told that Young had confessed this incident to the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nHe had also confessed to having molested another 10-year-old girl during a tag game at a communal dinner (an incident he told the police had happened \"accidentally\"), and another girl of 13 or 14 while she was a passenger on his quad-bike. His principal victim was a girl he allegedly molested regularly over a number of years, from the time she was 7. His confessions to the police notwithstanding, Young formally denied all charges against him in court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nOn 8 October, Dave Brown, brother-in-law to Mayor Steve Christian, became the second defendant to plead guilty. Brown, a 49-year-old tractor driver, pleaded guilty to two charges of indecently assaulting a 14-year-old girl in the mid-1980s, and to a charge of molesting a 15-year-old girl during a spear-fishing trip in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nThe court listened to an interview recorded on Pitcairn in 2000, in which Brown, when asked if he had been in love, replied to police: \"Yes, I was. We got closer and closer,\" was his view of himself and the 13-year-old girl, with whom he had repeated sexual contact over a long period in the mid-1980s. He was then in his early 30s, and married with children. Their first sexual encounter had taken place in undergrowth behind the general store after he met her in the village square.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nAbout a month later, they had sex again when they met after swimming. According to Brown's account to police, after the second sexual encounter, the girl had said that she enjoyed the sexual encounters and wanted more of it. Seeing each other more than once a month was difficult, however; greater frequency would make it difficult to keep, what Brown characterised as, an \"affair\" secret.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0021-0002", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nDespite being confronted by his wife, Lea, and despite being asked by the island's police officer on behalf of the girl's mother to leave her alone, Brown renewed his sexual contacts with the girl after a six-month interval. \"She didn't want to let go and neither did I,\" Brown said. The sexual contact continued until the girl left the island at the age of 16. At the beginning of the police investigation in 2000, the woman was one of many complainants, but she withdrew her allegations against Brown before the trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nIn the video, Brown told the police that it was \"a normal part of Pitcairn life\" for adult men to have sex with girls of 12 or 13. \"It didn't seem wrong,\" he said. Most islanders, including his parents, had started having sex at a young age, and each generation had followed the one before it, he contended. He said, however, that he had rethought the widespread acceptance of underage sex, and had concluded that it was not appropriate. Of his own conduct with the 13-year-old girl, he said, \"I regret it now. Times are changing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nThings are moving forward, and obviously what we did then was not normal.\" Brown pleaded not guilty to twelve additional charges. These included forcing a five-year-old girl to give him oral sex, and indecently assaulting a girl of six or seven in the Seventh-day Adventist Church, the only church on the island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nAs the trial resumed four days later on 12 October, plaintiffs testified about the alleged misdeeds of Mayor Steve Christian. One of his alleged victims told the court that he went to her house the night his first son was born, and asked her for sex \u2014she refused. Royal Warren, who assisted with the birth, provided Christian with an alibi: he had, she said, been present throughout his wife's labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nIn the separate trial of Terry Young, a former resident of Pitcairn Island accused him of raping her repeatedly in her early teens. The first rape she could remember took place in 1978, when she was 12, but he had begun assaulting her indecently much earlier, she said. The rapes and assaults continued until she was 15, she testified, when she left to go to New Zealand for her education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nIn a video link from New Zealand, the 38-year-old woman broke down in tears as she described an abusive childhood in which she was regularly beaten at home, treated as a slave by her parents, and raped and assaulted by Young and other older men on the island; she felt unable to tell anyone about these acts. Most of the rapes took place in secluded areas where she went to collect firewood (her chore); she could not tell her mother that she did not want to go, for fear of being beaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nThe woman said that at first, she had tried to object to the rapes. After a while, however, she had come to realize that there was nothing she could do about it: Young would simply carry on what he was doing. She concluded it was easier to consent. The woman said she had been too ashamed to tell anyone, even her schoolteacher, who was from New Zealand. In the twenty years between her departure from Pitcairn and her being interviewed by police, she had told nobody about the abuse that had gone on, not even her husband.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nAnother islander told the court that she had caught another of the seven defendants, who was then in his 30s, having an affair with her 13-year-old daughter. She had told him to leave her alone. Once, she had caught him trying to climb in through her daughter's window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nDefence lawyers representing the seven accused presented their final submissions on 21 October. Much of the day was dominated by the defence of Randy Christian, the 30-year-old son of Mayor Steve Christian. The younger Christian was accused of five rapes and seven indecent assaults against four women between 1988 and 1999. He was also alleged to have targeted a five- or seven-year-old girl from 1989 or 1991 onwards and to have abused her continuously over the following decade. He admitted to having sex with an under-age girl of 11 or 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nDefence lawyer Allan Roberts claimed that Christian's relationship with the child had been consensual. The girl, who was 20 at the time of the trial, was the one who sparked off the police inquiry four years previously when she told her mother of the abuse she had suffered. Her mother in turn told Gail Cox, the visiting British police officer. That was the first the outside world knew of the prevalence of sexual abuse on Pitcairn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nRoberts, however, produced love letters written by the girl before Christian left Pitcairn for Norfolk Island, to support his claim that she had been infatuated with Christian. According to Roberts, this infatuation continued after Christian left the island. He said that in her statement to police, she confessed to \"having a crush on Randy even though he is no longer on the island.\" He called her \"a cold and cruel and vengeful liar who would stop at nothing to draw attention back to herself ... a woman scorned,\" whose complaint to the police was nothing other than revenge for his having abandoned her.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nPublic prosecutor Simon Moore rejected this defence, charging that Christian had exploited their ten-year age gap and his superior physical strength for his own advantage. While admitting that for a girl to have a crush on an older man was nothing out of the ordinary, and that there were few unattached young men available, Moore maintained that Christian had taken advantage of the girl's naivety, ignorance, and innocence. \"He flattered her, he played her and he lured her into situations where he could do as he wished,\" Moore said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Timeline of the trial\nHe added that, after reading a leaflet about sexual harassment distributed by Constable Cox, the girl had realized that Christian's treatment of her was unacceptable. The court was told that during the period in question, Christian had two girlfriends of legal age. One was a pest control officer who came to Pitcairn to rid the island of rats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nOn 24 October 2004, the Pitcairn Supreme Court convicted six of the seven accused on 35 of the 55 charges. Only Jay Warren, the former Magistrate (1990\u20131999) was acquitted on all counts. See the \"defendants\" section below for details. Chief Justice Charles Blackie ridiculed Mayor Steve Christian's claim that his relationship with one of his victims had been consensual. \"She was young, naive and vulnerable,\" Blackie said. \"She was secreted into the bushes and there the accused took advantage of her. There had been no affection, kissing or romantic connection. She did not want it to happen.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nThe controversy over the trial continued. On 26 October 2004, prosecutor Simon Moore told Radio New Zealand that the charges and the verdicts were only the tip of the iceberg, accounting for only one-third of the cases police learned about when they began their investigations. He said that more charges were due to be laid involving people now living in Australia and New Zealand, but he declined to provide further details citing \"extensive name suppression orders in place.\" Moore said that some of these victims had indicated an interest in returning to Pitcairn. But, they would have had to be satisfied that justice had been done and that the island was a safe place for their families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nAuckland lawyer Christopher Harder, who represented one of the accused, appealed for mercy in view of the social devastation he said would be caused by the imprisonment of most of the island's able-bodied men. He proposed that the men make a public apology and pay compensation to their victims, instead of facing imprisonment, which, he said, could mean the end of the microstate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nProfessor John Connell of the University of Sydney said that if the men were imprisoned, they would have to be released temporarily whenever needed to man the longboat, without which the island could not connect with the outside world. \"It would be a punishment for the whole community\" if they were not, said the South Pacific scholar. Some islanders expressed fears that without the convicted men, there would not be enough who could handle the longboat. Others, less connected with the case, noted that the defendants had prevented other islanders from becoming more skilled at handling the boats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0033-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nThis was another example of the \"power and control\" problems which existed on the island. Public Defender Paul Dacre called on the court to impose sentences in keeping with the unique circumstances of the island society. \"We are talking about 50 people living on a rock, not 50 million in England,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nPending sentencing on 27 October, lawyers for the six convicted pleaded for clemency, arguing that it was essential for the survival of the dependency. Only two of the six expressed regret. Dennis Christian e-mailed his principal victim to apologize and expressed his \"deep remorse,\" the court was told, and Dave Brown made a statement through his lawyer that he \"regretted any distress caused.\" His father, Len Brown, refused to apologize for his own offences; his lawyer, Allan Roberts, told the court that to do so would be \"fraudulent.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nThe Pitcairn Supreme Court handed down sentences tailored, said Chief Justice Charles Blackie, to the unique conditions of Pitcairn Island, on 29 October. Dennis Christian and Dave Brown were sentenced to community service, apparently in recognition of the remorse they had shown at the trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nMayor Steve Christian, Randy Christian, and Len Brown were all sentenced to prison terms ranging from two to six years. (See the defendants for details.) Elaborating on Chief Justice Blackie's statement, Bryan Nicholson of the British High Commission in New Zealand said, \"The penalties were tailored to Pitcairn and take into account the unique isolation, population of less than 50, and the dependence of manpower.\" None of the sentences were carried out until 2006, pending a rule by the Privy Council on the legal validity of British sovereignty and judicial authority on Pitcairn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nBryan Nicolson, a spokesman for the British High Commission in New Zealand, announced on 30 October that Governor Richard Fell had formally dismissed Steve Christian from the mayoralty, and his son, Randy, from the chairmanship of the powerful Internal Committee. The dismissal followed Christian's refusal to resign when asked to do so by Deputy Governor Matthew Forbes. Christian's conviction and dismissal left the islanders with a power vacuum. On 8 November 2004, the Island Council named Christian's sister, Brenda, interim mayor pending elections scheduled for 15 December 2004. The position was won by Jay Warren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Verdict and aftermath\nBrian Michael John Young was found guilty in January 2007 of rape and indecent assault. In December, he was sentenced to six years and six months in prison. He was ordered to be transported to Pitcairn to serve out his sentence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Appeals\nThe six convicts began their appeal in the Pitcairn Supreme Court, in Papakura, New Zealand, on 18 April 2005. Defence lawyers argued that as Pitcairn's colonial rulers had never enforced British law, the six men convicted of sex crimes could not have known that their acts were illegal, a claim rejected as \"extraordinary\" by public prosecutor Simon Moore. If true, he said, Pitcairn had been \"a zone of criminal immunity\", an enclave where serious crimes could be committed with impunity. The proceedings were relayed live to the Adamstown courthouse, on Pitcairn, by a video linkup. About twenty locals, including the accused, watched the hearing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Appeals\nCrown prosecutors produced numerous old documents to refute the defence that British law had never been enforced on Pitcairn, or that the Pitcairners had never known that they were subject to it. According to the documents, the islanders had, over a period of many years, sought British advice and intervention in cases related to adultery, abortion, kleptomania, attempted murder (including a 1936 case in which a husband and wife tried to kill each other), and the theft of women's underwear. Crown Prosecutor Simon Mount said the charges had been referred to British authorities because they were too serious to be dealt with locally, and proved that Pitcairners were fully aware of British law and of its applicability to them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Appeals\nBetty Christian, the Island Secretary, broke ranks with many of her fellow Pitcairners, testifying at the Pitcairn Supreme Court hearing in Papakura that the islanders were aware that they were British subjects and that British law was applicable to them. She also flatly contradicted the defence that sexual activity at a young age was considered \"normal\" on Pitcairn, saying that Pitcairn's values were no different from those of any other modern society.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Appeals\nOn 24 May 2005, the Auckland court rejected the appeal of the six convicted men. It carried over their bail until their further appeal could be heard by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, in 2006. Former Pitcairn resident Shawn Christian, 29, then living in Australia, announced a legal challenge to the validity of New Zealand lawyers' and judges' participation in a trial in a British colony on 27 November 2005. \"They are saying it should have been English judges and English lawyers doing the trial,\" said New Zealand lawyer Fletcher Pilditch. Christian appeared to have the support of others awaiting trial. Shawn Christian, whose alleged offences (three rapes) are said to have happened between 1994 and 1996, is the younger son of former Mayor Steve Christian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Appeals\nAn additional appeal brought by the Public Defender was heard by the Court of Appeal on 31 January 2006. The basis of the appeal was the validity of the laws applied to the accused, with the defence arguing that British law had not been ratified on Pitcairn. \"We are arguing whether the English legal system applies to these people. That is it in a nutshell,\" defence lawyer Allan Roberts said. The Pitcairn Court of Appeal dismissed this claim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0043-0001", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Appeals\nRandall Christian's appeal against conviction of indecent assault of a girl aged under 13 was upheld, but that decision did not affect his sentence of six years on other charges. The men appealed to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London. The Privy Council terminated the appeal abruptly in July 2006, saying that the argument that Pitcairn has always been self-governing was unrealistic. The final appeals for all six men failed on 30 October 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Defendants\nAnother defendant, Shawn Christian, who was tried and convicted after being extradited to New Zealand, was elected mayor of Pitcairn in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178541-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairn Islands sexual assault trial, Defendants\nAs of March 2009 only one prisoner, Brian Young, was still being held in the island's prison, all the others having been granted home detention status. It was reported on 23 April 2009 that Brian Young had been released on house arrest having served just over two years of his original sentence of six and a half years. It is purported that the now empty prison will be turned into a guest house.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178542-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairnese general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Pitcairn Islands on 15 December 2004. Voters elected a mayor, a council chairman, and four councillors to sit on the island council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178542-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairnese general election, Results, Mayor\nFor the mayoralty, Jay Warren defeated Mike Warren and the incumbent Brenda Christian, who had held the office since 8 November in an interim capacity following Governor Richard Fell's dismissal of her brother, Steve Christian, on 29 October following his five rape convictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178542-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairnese general election, Results, Council chairman\nThe chairmanship of the council was won by Mike Warren, who defeated Brenda Christian, Jay Warren and Pawl Warren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178542-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairnese general election, Results, Island council\nThe four ordinary councillors to be elected were Meralda Warren, Olive Christian, Carol Warren and Lea Brown. Unsuccessful candidates included Brenda Christian, Jay Warren, Mike Warren, Pawl Warren, Tom Christian, Charlene Warren, Darralyn Griffith, Vaine Peu, Daphe Warren and Nola Warren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 58], "content_span": [59, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178542-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitcairnese general election, Reaction\nSpeaking from his British High Commission office in Wellington, New Zealand, Deputy Governor Matthew Forbes told Radio New Zealand that he welcomed Jay Warren's election as mayor. \"We appointed Jay as chairman of the (island's) internal committee in the period after the trials and before this election,\" Forbes said. \"He's very experienced and I'm sure he'll make a very good mayor.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178543-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pitch and Putt World Cup\nThe 2004 Pitch and Putt World Cup was held in Chia, Italy, being the first time for this championship promoted by the Federation of International Pitch and Putt Associations (FIPPA), with 8 national teams in competition. Catalonia won this World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178544-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Panthers football team\nThe 2004 Pittsburgh Panthers football team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Pittsburgh won a share of The Big East Conference championship and were awarded with a BCS berth to the 2005 Fiesta Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178545-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Pirates season\nThe 2004 Pittsburgh Pirates season was the 123rd season of the franchise; the 118th in the National League. This was their fourth season at PNC Park. The Pirates finished fifth in the National League Central with a record of 72\u201389.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe 2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season was the franchise's 72nd season as a professional sports franchise and as a member of the National Football League. It would be the first season the franchise would have under quarterback Ben Roethlisberger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe team looked to come back after a disappointing 6\u201310 season the year before, which saw the team go through the entire season without winning consecutive games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe team finished with a 15\u20131 record, topping the 14\u20132 team record from 1978 and joined the 1984 San Francisco 49ers, the 1985 Chicago Bears, and the 1998 Minnesota Vikings as the only teams in NFL history to that point since the league adopted a 16-game schedule in 1978 to finish with such a record. This also made the Steelers the first AFC team to achieve a 15\u20131 record, a conference-best at the time (the 2007 Patriots would surpass that by going a perfect 16\u20130); they are also the only AFC team to do so. Along the way, the Steelers ended the New England Patriots NFL-record 21-game winning streak in Week 8, then defeated their cross-state rival the Philadelphia Eagles the following week to hand the NFL's last two undefeated teams their first losses in back-to-back weeks, both at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe season was highlighted by the surprising emergence of rookie quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, the team's top pick in that year's draft. Originally intended to sit behind veteran Tommy Maddox the entire season, plans abruptly changed when Maddox was hurt in the team's Week 2 loss to Baltimore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nSurrounded by talent, \"Big Ben\" went an NFL-record 13\u20130 as a rookie starting quarterback before being rested for the final game of the season, shattering the old NFL record (and coincidentally, also the team record) of 6\u20130 to start an NFL career set by Mike Kruczek filling in for an injured Terry Bradshaw in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe Steelers hosted the AFC Championship for the fifth time in eleven years. However, for the fourth time in that same span, the Steelers lost at home one game away from the Super Bowl, and, like in 2001, lost to the Patriots in a rematch from Week 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe 2006 edition of Pro Football Prospectus listed the 2004 Steelers as one of their \"Heartbreak Seasons\", in which teams \"dominated the entire regular season only to falter in the playoffs, unable to close the deal.\" Said Pro Football Prospectus, \"In the playoffs, Roethlisberger hit an inconvenient slump, just like the Pittsburgh quarterbacks who came before him. He threw two killer interceptions against the Jets, but the Steelers were bailed out when Jets kicker Doug Brien missed a game-winning field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season\nThe next week against New England, head coach Bill Cowher was clearly worried about Roethlisberger, letting him throw only once on first or second down in the first quarter. By the time the offense opened up, the Patriots were beating the Steelers by two touchdowns. A Roethlisberger interception was returned 87 yards for a touchdown by Rodney Harrison, and the game was effectively over. For the second time in seven years, a 15\u20131 team had failed to make it to the Super Bowl.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Offseason\nThe Steelers went into the NFL draft with the eleventh overall pick, their highest selection since selecting Plaxico Burress eighth overall in 2000. Although the team was ready to select Miami University quarterback Ben Roethlisberger if he were to still be available, the team was ready to select other players at \"need\" positions. However, with Roethlisberger still available, the team snatched him up, making him the third quarterback selected. Alongside Eli Manning, Philip Rivers, and J. P. Losman, Roethlisberger was part of the \"Class of 2004\" quarterbacks. In addition, \"Big Ben\" became the first quarterback the Steelers selected with their first-round pick since they selected Mark Malone in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Offseason\nFree agent-wise, the Steelers would sign former Philadelphia Eagles running back Duce Staley. Many thought this signing was the team preparing for a future without Jerome Bettis. However, Staley's injury-prone history from Philly would continue with the Steelers. On the undrafted front, the team signed North Carolina running back Willie Parker. Although Parker would play sparingly his rookie season, he would become a major component of the offense in the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Offseason\nThe team also signed veteran punter Chris Gardocki (releasing longtime punter Josh Miller in the process), who up to that point was best remembered by Steelers fans for flipping head coach Bill Cowher the finger twice on live TV after being leveled by Joey Porter while Gardocki was with the Cleveland Browns. (Porter would be penalized for roughing the punter.) Gardocki was fined $5,000 for the incident, and his signing by the team made him the only player to have played for Cowher and give him an expletive in public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Offseason\nThe most notable releases made in the offseason included releasing veteran defensive players Jason Gildon and Dewayne Washington, who both would subsequently sign with the Jacksonville Jaguars and would both play against the Steelers in Week 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Offseason\nIn the personnel department, the Steelers went back to the future with the return of \"Mean Joe\" Greene and Dick LeBeau to the organization. Greene, who along with the entire Arizona Cardinals coaching staff was fired after the dismissal of head coach Dave McGinnis, retired from coaching and returned to the Black & Gold as the \"special assistant of player personnel\" for the team. Meanwhile, LeBeau, who popularized the zone blitz defensive schemes as the team's defensive coordinator in the mid-1990s (referred to as \"Blitzburgh\" by fans), returned to the team in that same capacity after a brief stint with the Buffalo Bills, replacing the fired Tim Lewis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Offseason\nThis would also be the final season for longtime Steelers radio color commentator Myron Cope, who missed several games this year due to poor health. It was one of only two times in 35 years that Cope would miss time broadcasting for the Steelers, the other being the 1994 season after the death of his wife. Though Cope would later recover, he felt that it was best to retire, and did so at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 1: vs. Oakland Raiders\nIt was the 22nd lifetime meeting between the two clubs. The Raiders erased a 21-13 Steelers lead in the fourth quarter but Jeff Reed connected on the winning field goal with seven seconds left. With the win, the Steelers started their season 1\u20130 for the 2nd straight year. Jerome Bettis scored 18 points (3 Touchdowns) on 5 carries, yet gained only 1 yard total for an average of 0.2 yards per carry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 2: at Baltimore Ravens\nWith the loss, the Steelers fell to 1\u20131 for the 2nd straight year. 0\u20131 in division games and 1\u20131 in conference games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Miami Dolphins\nThe game was originally to be played at 1:00\u00a0pm, but was delayed until evening due to Hurricane Jeanne. The game was not broadcast nationally, it was only shown on local stations in the primary and secondary markets of the two teams. With the win, the Steelers improved to 2\u20131. The contest marked Ben Roethlisberger's first NFL start and victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 4: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nWith the win the Steelers improved to 3\u20131. 1\u20131 in division games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 5: vs. Cleveland Browns\nWith their 2nd straight win over the Browns, the Steelers improved to 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 6: at Dallas Cowboys\nIt was the 29th meeting between the two clubs. The Cowboys jumped to a 20-10 lead following a Keyshawn Johnson touchdown catch in the third, but Ben Roethlisberger led two touchdown drives, the last a Jerome Bettis run with thirty seconds to go. The Cowboys raced to the Steelers 30 but a last-second touchdown attempt was swatted away by Russell Stuvaints. With the win, the Steelers went on their bye week 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 8: vs. New England Patriots\nThis was the game that ended New England's NFL-record 21-game winning streak. Following an Adam Vinatieri field goal in the first quarter, the Steelers erupted, as Ben Roethlisberger twice hit Plaxico Burress for touchdowns and a Tom Brady interception was run back by Deshea Townsend for a touchdown and a 21\u20133 Steelers lead after one quarter. Brady was picked off twice and Roethlisberger made no mistakes in throwing for 196 yards and amassing a quarterback rating of 126.4. The Steelers routed the Patriots 34\u201320 and wound up winning the No. 1 seed in the AFC playoffs as a result. With the win, the Steelers improved to 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 9: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Steelers for the 2nd week in a row face an undefeated team, the 7\u20130 Eagles. With the win, the Steelers improved to 7\u20131 while the Eagles dropped to 7\u20131. The game gained wider notoriety in subsequent days following broadcast of footage from the Eagles sideline where Terrell Owens was angrily barking at Donovan McNabb with McNabb striving to ignore him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 96], "content_span": [97, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Cleveland Browns\nWith their 3rd straight win over the Browns, the Steelers improved to 8\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 11: at Cincinnati Bengals\nThe Bengals clawed to a 14-10 lead on two Carson Palmer touchdowns, but Roethlisberger, despite being sacked seven times, tossed a touchdown late in the third quarter to Dan Kreider, then late in the fourth Palmer dropped back to his own endzone and threw an incompletion; it was ruled intentional grounding and the resulting Pittsburgh safety finished off the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 12: vs. Washington Redskins\nWith the win the Steelers improved to 10\u20131 and went 3\u20130 against the NFC East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 13: at Jacksonville Jaguars\nFor the first time Jerome Bettis was not the all-time active rushing leader in the NFL upon kickoff, as he and Curtis Martin dueled throughout the season for the title, Bettis would retake the title by game's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 97], "content_span": [98, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 14: vs. New York Jets\nIn an NFL first, both running backs came into the game ready to break the 13,000 career yards mark, Jerome Bettis having a 6-yard lead over native Curtis Martin. After the game Martin would lead Bettis by 9 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 91], "content_span": [92, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 15: at New York Giants\nThis was the first meeting between rookie quarterbacks Ben Roethlisberger and Eli Manning and was part of a rare NFL Saturday triple-header. The game lead tied or changed seven times as Manning and Roethlisberger combined for 498 passing yards; Antwaan Randle El also got into the act with a ten-yard touchdown throw to Verron Haynes, this atop 149 receiving yards. Jerome Bettis rushed 36 times for 140 yards and the winning touchdown in the final five minutes. With 3:31 to go Eli was intercepted by Willie J. Williams. Giants coach Tom Coughlin challenged the ruling but after review it was upheld, and the Steelers ran out the clock for the 33-30 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nJerome Bettis retook the all-time active rushing record from his season-long duel with native Curtis Martin by a margin of 81 yards, and also pass Eric Dickerson for fourth all-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 16: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nThe win also helped the team improve to 14-1. This would tie the team's franchise record in number of wins in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 94], "content_span": [95, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Regular season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Buffalo Bills\nWith the win, the Steelers finish with a league-best 15\u20131 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 90], "content_span": [91, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Playoffs, Game Summaries, AFC Divisional: vs. New York Jets\nAfter a brilliant 15\u20131 regular season the Steelers pulled one out of the fire in the divisional playoffs against the Jets. Ben Roethlisberger was intercepted at the Jets 14-yard line and Reggie Tongue ran back an 86-yard touchdown in the third quarter. After tying the game at 17 in the fourth the Steelers had to sweat out a Jets drive in the final minutes of regulation. The Jets set up for a Doug Brien 47-yard field goal but the kick missed hitting the crossbar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Playoffs, Game Summaries, AFC Divisional: vs. New York Jets\nOn the ensuing possession, Roethlisberger was intercepted again and another Brien field goal was set up, this one from 43 yards away \u2013 but it again missed sailing wide left. In overtime, the Jets won the kick-off but failed to score on their first possession. The Steelers, then, drove down field and Jeff Reed's 33-yard field goal ended a 20\u201317 Pittsburgh win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 92], "content_span": [93, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Playoffs, Game Summaries, AFC Championship: vs. New England Patriots\nRevenge for their Halloween loss drove the 14\u20132 Patriots back to Heinz Field and the conference championship. The shaky play of the Steelers against the Jets the week before was exploited by New England as Ben Roethlisberger was intercepted almost right away, then on their next possession the Steelers were stopped on downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Playoffs, Game Summaries, AFC Championship: vs. New England Patriots\nThe Patriots raced to a 17\u20133 lead in the second quarter before Roethlisberger drove them down field and threw a back-breaking interception to Rodney Harrison at the Patriots 13-yard line; Harrison ran back the 87-yard touchdown and fans at Heinz began chanting for Tommy Maddox to come in to replace Roethlisberger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0029-0002", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Playoffs, Game Summaries, AFC Championship: vs. New England Patriots\nThe Steelers managed a pair of third-quarter touchdowns (a 5-yard Jerome Bettis run and a 30-yard Roethlisberger pass to Hines Ward) but these only sandwiched another Patriots score (a 25-yard run by ex-Bengal Corey Dillon) and the Steelers simply could not overcome New England's offense as the Patriots finished off Pittsburgh 41\u201327, the third playoff win in four career tries by the Patriots over the Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178546-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Pittsburgh Steelers season, Playoffs, Game Summaries, AFC Championship: vs. New England Patriots\nThe game is also significant as the final game by the team's radio broadcaster, Myron Cope. Cope had served as the color commentator on the team's radio broadcast for 35 years. He would publicly announce his retirement five months later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 101], "content_span": [102, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178547-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 PlaceMakers V8 International\nThe 2004 PlaceMakers V8 International was a motor race for V8 Supercars held on the weekend of 2 - 4 April 2004. The event was held at the Pukekohe Park Raceway in Pukekohe, New Zealand, and consisted of three races culminating in 300 kilometers. It was the third round of thirteen in the 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series and the only international event on the calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178548-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship\nThe 2004 Players Championship was a golf tournament in Florida on the PGA Tour, held March 25\u201328 at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, southeast of Jacksonville. It was the 31st Players Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178548-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship\nAdam Scott, age 23, held on for his second PGA Tour title, one stroke ahead of runner-up P\u00e1draig Harrington, who started the final round five shots behind. With a two-shot lead on the 72nd hole, Scott put his approach shot in the water then sank a 10-foot (3\u00a0m) putt for bogey to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178548-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship\nDefending champion Davis Love III finished twelve strokes back, in a tie for 33rd place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178548-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship\nScott was the youngest champion for thirteen years, until Kim Si-woo won at age 21 in 2017. Previously, it was Fred Couples, age 24 in 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178548-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship, Venue\nThis was the 23rd Players Championship held at the TPC at Sawgrass Stadium Course and it remained at 7,093 yards (6,486\u00a0m).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178548-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship, Field\nStephen Allan, Robert Allenby, Stephen Ames, Billy Andrade, Stuart Appleby, Tommy Armour III, Woody Austin, Aaron Baddeley, Briny Baird, Craig Barlow, Pat Bates, Cameron Beckman, Rich Beem, Notah Begay III, Thomas Bj\u00f8rn, Jeff Brehaut, Mark Brooks, Bob Burns, Jonathan Byrd, Tom Byrum, Mark Calcavecchia, Chad Campbell, Paul Casey, Alex \u010cejka, K. J. Choi, Stewart Cink, Tim Clark, Darren Clarke, Fred Couples, Ben Crane, Ben Curtis, John Daly, Robert Damron, Brian Davis, Glen Day, Chris DiMarco, Luke Donald, Joe Durant, Steve Elkington, Ernie Els, Bob Estes, Nick Faldo, Brad Faxon, Todd Fischer, Steve Flesch, Carlos Franco, Harrison Frazar, David Frost, Fred Funk, Robert Gamez, Sergio Garc\u00eda, Brent Geiberger, Matt Gogel, Retief Goosen, David Gossett, Jay Haas, Todd Hamilton, P\u00e1draig Harrington, J. P. Hayes, J. J. Henry, Tim Herron, Glen Hnatiuk, Scott Hoch, Charles Howell III, John Huston, Trevor Immelman, Peter Jacobsen, Freddie Jacobson, Lee Janzen, Brandt Jobe, Richard S. Johnson, Kent Jones, Jonathan Kaye, Jerry Kelly, Skip Kendall, Cliff Kresge, Matt Kuchar, Hank Kuehne, Neal Lancaster, Bernhard Langer, Paul Lawrie, Stephen Leaney, Tom Lehman, Justin Leonard, J. L. Lewis, Frank Lickliter, Peter Lonard, Davis Love III, Steve Lowery, Jeff Maggert, Shigeki Maruyama, Len Mattiace, Billy Mayfair, Scott McCarron, Spike McRoy, Shaun Micheel, Phil Mickelson, Colin Montgomerie, Greg Norman, Arron Oberholser, Geoff Ogilvy, Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda Olaz\u00e1bal, Rod Pampling, Brenden Pappas, Jesper Parnevik, Craig Parry, Corey Pavin, David Peoples, Pat Perez, Craig Perks, Tom Pernice Jr., Kenny Perry, Tim Petrovic, Carl Pettersson, Ian Poulter, Nick Price, Brett Quigley, John Riegger, Chris Riley, Loren Roberts, John Rollins, Justin Rose, Rory Sabbatini, Gene Sauers, Adam Scott, John Senden, Patrick Sheehan, Joey Sindelar, Vijay Singh, Heath Slocum, Jeff Sluman, Chris Smith, Craig Stadler, Paul Stankowski, Steve Stricker, Kevin Sutherland, Hal Sutton, Hidemichi Tanaka, Esteban Toledo, David Toms, Kirk Triplett, Bob Tway, Scott Verplank, Duffy Waldorf, Mike Weir, Jay Williamson, Dean Wilson, Tiger Woods", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 2143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178549-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship (snooker)\nThe 2004 Daily Record Players Championship was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 3\u201311 April 2004 at the S.E.C.C in Glasgow, Scotland. It was the seventh and penultimate ranking event of the 2003/2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178549-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship (snooker)\nThis tournament was a re-branding of the Scottish Open which had been held under various names since 1981. It was also the last time the tournament was played until 2012, when it became a minor-ranking event as part of the Players Tour Championship. It became a full ranking tournament again in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178549-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Players Championship (snooker)\nTwelve years after his last ranking tournament success, Jimmy White aged 41 won his tenth ranking tournament by defeating Paul Hunter 9\u20137 in the final. This was White's first success in the tournament, having last appeared in the final in 1988 International Open, when he lost 12\u20136 to Steve Davis. It was also Hunter's last appearance in a ranking final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178550-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Players' Championship\nThe 2004 PharmAssist Players' Championship was held March 31 \u2013 April 4 at the Mile One Stadium in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178550-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Players' Championship\nThe total purse for the event was $150,000 with $43,000 going to the winning team, which would be John Morris' Calgary rink. He defeated his cross-provincial counterparts from Edmonton, the Kevin Martin rink, whose team earned $24,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178551-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Plymouth City Council election\nThe 2004 Plymouth City Council election was held on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Plymouth City Council in England. This was on the same day as the other local elections. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour Party remained in control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178552-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Poitou-Charentes regional election\nA regional election took place in Poitou-Charentes on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. S\u00e9gol\u00e8ne Royal (PS) was elected President, defeating incumbent \u00c9lisabeth Morin (UMP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178552-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Poitou-Charentes regional election\nThis French elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178553-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Polish Figure Skating Championships\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by 58.143.166.173 (talk) at 09:57, 22 June 2020 (Undid revision 963880717 by ClueBot NG (talk)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178553-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Polish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Polish Figure Skating Championships (Polish: Mistrzostwa Polski w \u0142y\u017cwiarstwie figurowym 2003/2004) were held in \u0141\u00f3d\u017a between December 12 and 14, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178554-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Polish Film Awards\nThe 2004 Polish Film Awards ran on March 6, 2004 in Warsaw. It was the 6th edition of Polish Film Awards: Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500\nThe 2004 Pop Secret 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on September 5, 2004 at California Speedway in Fontana, California. Contested over 250 laps on the 2-mile (3.23\u00a0km) asphalt D-shaped oval, it was the twenty-fifth race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. Elliott Sadler of Robert Yates Racing won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500\nThe first fall race at California Speedway would be held on Labor Day weekend, bumping the Mountain Dew Southern 500 off as part of the 2004 NASCAR Realignment. Brian Vickers won the pole. Portions of this race were filmed for the 2005 film Herbie: Fully Loaded. Rookie Kasey Kahne got his fifth second-place finish of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n1. Brian Vickers #25 GMAC Financial Services Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 187.417mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n2. Jeremy Mayfield #19 Dodge Dealers/UAW Dodge Evernham Motorsports 186.364mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n5. Kasey Kahne #9 Dodge Dealers/UAW Dodge Evernham Motorsports 185.816mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n6. Casey Mears #41 Target House Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 185.802mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n7. Greg Biffle #16 National Guard Ford Roush Racing 185.773mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n10. Joe Nemechek #01 US Army Chevrolet MB2 Motorsports 185.553mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n12. Dale Earnhardt Jr. #8 Budweiser Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 185.266mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n13. Jeff Green #43 Cheerios/Betty Crocker Dodge Petty Enterprises 185.261mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n14. Ryan Newman #12 ALLTEL/Sony Handycam Dodge Penske Racing 185.180mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n17. Elliott Sadler #38 M&M's Ford Robert Yates Racing 184.431mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n19. Carl Edwards #99 Shop Rat Ford Roush Racing 184.360mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n20. Ricky Rudd #21 Motorcraft/US Air Force Ford Wood Brothers Racing 184.195mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n21. Michael Waltrip #15 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 184.135mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n22. Brendan Gaughan #77 Kodak/Jasper Engines Dodge Penske/Jasper Racing 184.106mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n23. Jamie McMurray #42 Texaco Havoline Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 184.091mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n24. Bobby Hamilton Jr #32 Tide Chevrolet PPI Motorsports 184.073mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n25. Dale Jarrett #88 UPS Ford Robert Yates Racing 183.932mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n26. Rusty Wallace #2 Miller Lite Dodge Penske Racing 183.899mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n27. Kevin Harvick #29 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 183.734mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n28. Kyle Petty #45 Georgia Pacific/Brawny Dodge Petty Enterprises 183.673mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n29. Shane Hmiel #23 Bill Davis Racing Dodge Bill Davis Racing 183.613mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n31. Sterling Marlin #40 Coors Light Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 183.486mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n32. J J Yeley #11 Vigoro/Home Depot Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 183.243mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n33. Tony Stewart #20 Home Depot Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing183.206mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n34. Jeff Burton # 30 America Online Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 182.987mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n35. Robby Gordon #31 Cingular Wireless Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 182.788mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n36. Boris Said #136 Centrix Financial Chevrolet MB2 Motorsports 182.778mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n37. Bobby Labonte #18 Wellbutrin XL Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 182.741mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n38. Scott Wimmer #22 Caterpillar Dodge Bill Davis Racing 182.551mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n39. Ward Burton #0 Netzero HiSpeed ChevroletHaas CNC Racing 182.131mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n40. Ken Schrader #49 Schwan's Home Service Dodge BAM Racing 181.369mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n41. Jimmy Spencer #4 Morgan-McClure Chevrolet Morgan-McClure Racing 182.209mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n42. Jeff Fuller #50 Arnold Development Companies Dodge Arnold Developments 180.991mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n43. Derrike Cope #98 Mach One Inc Ford William Edwards no time (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n44. Morgan Shepherd #89 Racing With Jesus/Red Line Oil Dodge Cindy Shepherd 178.191mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n45. Kirk Shelmerdine #72 Freddie B's Ford Kirk Shelmerdine 176.592mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n46. Hermie Sadler #02 SCORE Motorsports Chevrolet Angela Sadler 179.730mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n47. Kevin Lepage #37 Carter's Royal Dispos-all Dodge John Carter 180.591mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178555-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Pop Secret 500, Qualifying\n48. Mike Wallace #35 Gary Keller Racing Chevrolet Gary Keller Racing 179.368mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178556-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Germany\nThe 2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Deutschland season was the 19th German Porsche Carrera Cup season. It began on 18 April at Hockenheim and finished on 3 October at the same circuit, after nine rounds. It ran as a support championship for the 2004 DTM season. Mike Rockenfeller won the championship by 21 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178557-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain\nThe 2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain was a multi-event, one make motor racing championship held across England, Scotland and Ireland. The championship featured a mix of professional motor racing teams and privately funded drivers, competing in Porsche 911 GT3 cars that conform to the technical regulations for the championship. It forms part of the extensive program of support categories built up around the BTCC centrepiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178557-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain\nThis season was the second Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain. The season began on 10 April at Thruxton Circuit and concluded on 27 September at Donington Park, after 20 races held at ten meetings, all in support of the 2004 British Touring Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178557-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain\nRichard Westbrook became the drivers' champion driving for Redline Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178557-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain, Calendar & Winners\nAll races were held in the United Kingdom (excepting Mondello Park round that held in Ireland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178557-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain, Drivers' Championship\nPoints were awarded on a 20, 18, 16, 14, 12, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 basis to the top 15 finishers in each race, with 1 point for the fastest lap in each race and 1 point for pole position in the first race of each meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178558-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Supercup\nThe 2004 Porsche Michelin Supercup season was the 12th Porsche Supercup season. The races were all supporting races in the 2004 Formula One season. It travelled to ten circuits across Europe and a double-header at Indianapolis, USA. It was the last season that the 996 model was raced. It was replaced with the 997 model in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178558-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Supercup, Championship standings\n\u2020 \u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178559-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Filderstadt Tennis Club in Filderstadt, Germany that was part of Tier II of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and was held from 4 October until 10 October 2004. Second-seeded Lindsay Davenport won the singles title and earned $98,500 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178559-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld / Julia Schruff 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178560-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Doubles\nLisa Raymond and Rennae Stubbs were the defending champions, but competed this year with different partners. Both players faced each other at the first round, in which Stubbs (teaming up with Cara Black) defeated Raymond (teaming up with Mary Pierce) in three sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178560-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Doubles\nStubbs and Black will eventually win the title, by defeating Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld and Julia Schruff 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178561-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters was the two-time defending champion, but did not compete this year due to an injury on her left wrist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178561-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport won the title, as her opponent, World No. 1 Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo retired due to an injury following the end of the first set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178561-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178562-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Portland Grand Prix was the fifth race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season held at Portland International Raceway. It took place on July 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178562-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland Grand Prix, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178563-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland Timbers season\nThe 2004 Portland Timbers season was the 4th season for the Portland Timbers\u2014the 3rd incarnation of a club to bear the Timbers name\u2014of the now-defuntct A-League, the second-tier league of the United States and Canada at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178563-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland Timbers season, Competitions, A-League, Results summary\nSource: Pld = Matches played; Pts = Points; W = Matches won; T = Matches tied; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178563-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland Timbers season, Squad, Final roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178563-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland Timbers season, Squad, Statistics, Appearances and goals\nAll players contracted to the club during the season included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178564-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland, Oregon mayoral election\nThe 2004 Portland mayoral election was held on November 2, 2004, to elect the mayor of Portland, Oregon. Tom Potter was elected, defeating Jim Francesconi. Incumbent mayor Vera Katz did not seek a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178564-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland, Oregon mayoral election\nPortland uses a nonpartisan system for local elections, in which all voters are eligible to participate. All candidates are listed on the ballot without any political party affiliation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178564-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Portland, Oregon mayoral election\nAll candidates meeting the qualifications competed in a blanket primary election on May 18, 2008. As no candidate received an absolute majority, the top two finishers advanced to a runoff in the November 6 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178565-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Portsmouth City Council election\nElections to Portsmouth City Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control. Overall turnout was 34.9%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178566-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix was the eleventh round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 3\u20135 September 2004 at the Aut\u00f3dromo do Estoril.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178566-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round eleven has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178567-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Poso bus bombing\nThe 2004 Poso bus bombing was a terrorist attack that occurred in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, on 13 November 2004. It targeted a bus travelling to the majority Christian village of Silancak. The bomb, an improvised explosive device, exploded at 9:15 a.m. (UTC+7), while the minibus was stopped at a market in Poso. Six people were killed and three injured in the blast. Witnesses later reported that three people were involved in the attack. Two suspects were detained, but later released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178567-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Poso bus bombing, The attack\nAccording to the police report, witnesses saw three people working together to place an unidentified object in a minibus parked near the traditional market (also 50 metres from a police station) in Poso, then left. A male planted the device, while two women served as lookouts. The object, apparently an improvised explosive device, detonated at approximately 9:15 a.m., killing three of the Protestant passengers instantly, with another three dying of their wounds in the hospital; they had been travelling from their predominantly Christian village of Sape to the nearby village of Tentenna. The timing of the attack coincided with a busy period in the market to celebrate the Eid ul-Fitr festival that was to happen the following week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178567-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Poso bus bombing, The attack\nThe motive for the attack is unknown. Chief Security Minister Adi Sucipto described it as an act of terrorism, preceded by numerous others in the year prior to the attack that caused 25 deaths. On 19 November 2004, two male suspects were arrested for the attacks after a search for two men seen leaving the scene by motorcycle. Both were released without charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178568-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Powys County Council election\nThe third election to the Powys County Council following local government reorganisation was held in May 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election. The election resulted once again in a majority of Independent councillors", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178568-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Powys County Council election, Ward Results (Montgomeryshire), Dolforwyn (one seat)\nWynne Jones had won the seat, previously held by a Conservative, at a by-election in January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 88], "content_span": [89, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178568-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Powys County Council election, Ward Results (Montgomeryshire), Welshpool Gungrog (one seat)\nThe Liberal Democrats took the seat from Labour at a by-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 96], "content_span": [97, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178569-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Preakness Stakes\nThe 2004 Preakness Stakes was the 129th running of the Preakness Stakes thoroughbred horse race. The race took place on May 15, 2004, and was televised in the United States on the NBC television network. Smarty Jones, who was jockeyed by Stewart Elliott, won the race by eleven and one half lengths over runner-up Rock Hard Ten. Approximate post time was 6:25\u00a0p.m. Eastern Time. The race was run over a fast track in a final time of 1:55.59. The Maryland Jockey Club reported total attendance of 124,351, this is recorded as second highest on the list of American thoroughbred racing top attended events for North America in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178570-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League Snooker\nThe 2004 Betfair Premier League was a professional non-ranking snooker tournament that was played from 10\u00a0January to 14\u00a0May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178570-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League Snooker\nStephen Hendry won in the final 9\u20136 against John Higgins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178570-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League Snooker, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178570-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League Snooker, League phase\nTop four qualified for the play-offs. If points were level then most frames won determined their positions. If two players had an identical record then the result in their match determined their positions. If that ended 4\u20134 then the player who got to four first was higher. (Breaks above 50 shown between (parentheses); century breaks are indicated with bold.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178570-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League Snooker, Play-offs\n13\u201314 March \u2013 Colwyn Bay Leisure Centre, Colwyn Bay, Wales", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178570-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League Snooker, Play-offs\n*(80)-1, (79)-9, (68)-16, (85) 94\u201327, 0\u201377, 77\u20134, (81) 104\u20130**21\u201365, (83)-0, (89) 90\u20131, (64)-65, (81) 104\u20130, 56\u201314, 17\u201376, (95)-40, 45\u201364, 53\u201352 (50)***60-(62), (134)-0, 33\u201395 (70), 0-(88), (52) 66\u20134, 0\u201387 (86), 0-(80), (74) 78\u20134, 1\u201371 (70), 27\u201356 (55), 80\u20130, 18-(83), (67) 73\u20137, (69)-(59), 24\u201381 (57)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178571-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League speedway season\nThe 2004 Premier League speedway season was the second division of speedway in the United Kingdom and governed by the Speedway Control Board (SCB), in conjunction with the British Speedway Promoters' Association (BSPA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178571-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League speedway season, Season summary\nThe League consisted of 15 teams for the 2004 season after the Swindon Robins and Arena Essex Hammers elected to compete in the Elite League and the closure of the Trelawny Tigers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178571-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League speedway season, Season summary\nThe League was run on a standard format with no play-offs and was won by Hull Vikings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178571-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League speedway season, Premier League Knockout Cup\nThe 2004 Premier League Knockout Cup was the 37th edition of the Knockout Cup for tier two teams. Hull Vikings were the winners of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 64], "content_span": [65, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178571-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Premier League speedway season, Premier League Knockout Cup, Final\nHull were declared Knockout Cup Champions, winning on aggregate 99\u201391.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178572-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Premios Juventud\nThe 1st Annual Premios Juventud (Youth Awards) were broadcast by Univision on September 23, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178572-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Premios Juventud, Winners and nominees\nMarc Anthony and Thal\u00eda was the leading nominees, with 13 nominations each. Jennifer Lopez follows with 12 nominations in various categories. Other artists receiving nominations include Luis Miguel with 11, Paulina Rubio and Ricky Martin with 9 each, and Colombian pop star Shakira with 6 nominations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178572-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Premios Juventud, Winners and nominees\nThe night's biggest winners were Mexican superstar Thal\u00eda and Chayanne, with three statuettes. Other takers included Jennifer Lopez and popular Banda group Liberaci\u00f3n, with two statuettes, baseball shortstop Alex Rodr\u00edguez, and Colombian idols Paulina Rubio and Juanes took home one award each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178572-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Premios Juventud, Winners and nominees, Sports\nLas Aguilas del Am\u00e9rica Vs. Las Chivas Rayadas de Guadalajara", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178573-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 President of the Senate of the Czech Republic election\nElection of the President of the Senate of the Czech Republic was held on 15 December 2004. P\u0159emysl Sobotka defeated Josef Ja\u0159ab and became the new President of the Senate. The incumbent President Petr Pithart didn't run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178573-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 President of the Senate of the Czech Republic election, Background and voting\nAfter 2004 Senate election the Civic Democratic Party became the largest Senate party. It had 35 seats of 81. Petr Pithart who was a member of Christian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party decided to not seek reelection. Civic Democrats nominated P\u0159emysl Sobotka. Caucus for Open Democracy decided to nominate Josef Ja\u0159ab for the position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 82], "content_span": [83, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178573-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 President of the Senate of the Czech Republic election, Background and voting\nThe election was held on 15 December 2004. Sobotka received 55 votes while Ja\u0159ab only 22. Sobotka stated he wants to help the image of Senate as the new President. Ja\u0159ab stated he believes that Sobotka will be a good President of Senate. It is believed Sobotka was supported by 35 Civic Democrats and also by some Social Democrats and Christian Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 82], "content_span": [83, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178574-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Preston City Council election\nThis article shows the results of local elections for Preston City Council, in Lancashire held on 10 June 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178574-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Preston City Council election\nPreston Council is elected \"in thirds\" which means there is an all out election in one year followed by single-member elections in subsequent years in which one councillor from each of the three-member wards and one councillor from selected two-member wards defend their seat. In these elections in 2004 the share of the vote is compared with the 2003 elections, whilst any gain or loss of a seat is compared with the all out 2002 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178574-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Preston City Council election\nThose councillors elected in 2004 will defend their seats in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178574-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Preston City Council election\nIn summary, Labour won 7 wards, with a total of 10,445 votes (28% across the city), the Conservatives 7 wins, with 14,754 votes in total, 39% across the city. The Liberal Democrats won 3 wards, gaining 9,181 (24%) votes across the city, whilst an independent won one seat. Candidates from Respect, and the England First party, failed to win seats in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178574-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Preston City Council election\nIn an Election Commission trial this was an \"all postal\" vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178575-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Prime Minister's Cup\nThe 2004 Prime Minister's Cup was the second national football cup competition in Laos. The competition was won by Vientiane FC, who beat Savannakhet FC 2-1 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178575-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Prime Minister's Cup, Format\nThe competition began with a regional qualifying tournament involving sixteen provincial teams from outside Vientiane. These teams were divided into four groups of four and they played qualifying matches during October and November. The top team in each group qualified for the next stage. At this stage, the top four teams from the 2004 Lao League joined. These eight teams were then split into two groups and a further round robin series of matches was played. The top two teams from each group qualified for the semi final knockout round to determine the two teams that would contest the final. The losers of the semi finals met in a third place playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178575-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Prime Minister's Cup, Qualifying round\nThe following regional teams took part in the qualifying round. Although there are no reported results, Savannakhet, Champassak, Luang Prabang and Bokeo qualified for the next round and apparently either Bokeo or Luang Prabang were moved to Group A following the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178575-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Prime Minister's Cup, Group stage\nThe four qualifiers were drawn alongside the top four teams from the 2004 Lao League: Lao-American College FC, Lao Army FC, Vientiane FC and MCTPC FC (Ministry of Communication, Transportation and Construction). Vientiane FC, who finished fifth replaced National Public Security FC, who finished in fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 38], "content_span": [39, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178576-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Primera B de Chile\nThe 2004 Primera B de Chile was the 54th completed season of the Primera B de Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178577-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile\nThe 2004 Primera Divisi\u00f3n de Chile season was both 75th and 76th season of top-flight football in Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178577-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Torneo Apertura\nThe 2004 Torneo Apertura was the season\u2019s first tournament which Universidad de Chile won its twelfth league title after beating Cobreloa in the final 4\u20132 on penalties with goalkeeper Johnny Herrera scoring the winning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178577-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Torneo Apertura, Playoffs, First round\nDeportes Temuco and Universidad de Chile qualified as best losers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178577-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Primera Divisi\u00f3n of Chile, Torneo Clausura\nThe 2004 Torneo Clausura was the season\u2019s second tournament. Universidad de Chile was the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178578-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Prince Edward Island Scott Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2004 Prince Edward Island Scott Tournament of Hearts was held Jan. 22\u201327 in at the Cornwall Curling Club in Cornwall, Prince Edward Island. The winning team was Team Suzanne Gaudet who represented Prince Edward Island, finished with a 2-9 round-robin record at the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts in Red Deer, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178579-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Princeton Tigers football team\nThe 2004 Princeton Tigers football team was an American football team that represented Princeton University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Tigers tied for fourth in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178579-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Princeton Tigers football team\nIn their fifth year under head coach Roger Hughes, the Tigers compiled a 5\u20135 record, and outscored opponents 211 to 207. Justin Stull and Jon Veach were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178579-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Princeton Tigers football team\nPrinceton's 3\u20134 conference record placed it in a three-way tie for fourth place in the Ivy League standings. The Tigers were outscored 143 to 126 by Ivy opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178579-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Princeton Tigers football team\nThe Tigers played their home games at Princeton Stadium on the university campus in Princeton, New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178580-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe\nThe 2004 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe was a horse race held at Longchamp on Sunday 3 October 2004. It was the 83rd running of the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178580-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe\nThe winner was Bago, a three-year-old colt trained in France by Jonathan Pease. The winning jockey was Thierry Gillet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl\nThe 2004 Pro Bowl was the NFL's all-star game for the 2003 season. The game was played on February 8, 2004, at Aloha Stadium in Honolulu, Hawaii. The final score was NFC 55, AFC 52, the most points scored in a Pro Bowl game. Marc Bulger of the St. Louis Rams was the game's MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl, Game summary\nThe AFC's first play set the tone for what would become a high-scoring affair. Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair faked a handoff to running back Jamal Lewis before throwing to Chad Johnson for a 90-yard touchdown pass, the third-longest scoring play in Pro Bowl history. After the NFC got the ball back, they were forced to punt after a three-and-out. However, the punt by Todd Sauerbrun was blocked, and Ed Reed of the Ravens recovered it and ran it into the end zone, giving the AFC a 14\u20130 lead early on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl, Game summary\nThe NFC responded with a touchdown by Seahawks running back Shaun Alexander, and Jeff Wilkins kicked a field goal to bring the NFC to within four. After Mike Vanderjagt kicked a field goal of his own, the score at the end of the first quarter was 17\u201310 AFC. Peyton Manning came on for the AFC at the second quarter, and hit Colts teammate Marvin Harrison with a 50-yard strike, as well as another touchdown pass to Tony Gonzalez. Wilkins kicked another field goal for the NFC, and the halftime score was 31\u201313 in favor of the AFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl, Game summary\nThe AFC continued to add onto their lead with a Jamal Lewis touchdown, putting the score at 38\u201313. However, Marc Bulger, who had taken over at NFC quarterback from Daunte Culpepper, threw two quick touchdown passes to Torry Holt and Keenan McCardell, to bring the score to 38\u201327 at the end of three. Once again, the AFC struck quickly at the start of a quarter, when Trent Green hit Clinton Portis with a 22-yard touchdown pass. With less than 14 minutes remaining in the game, the score was 45\u201327.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl, Game summary\nBulger quickly threw a scoring pass to tight end Alge Crumpler, and a short time later hit Alexander with another touchdown pass. Although the two-point conversion attempt after Alexander's touchdown failed, the score was still 45\u201340 with just over five minutes to play. Just after that, Dr\u00e9 Bly picked off Manning and returned the interception for a touchdown, giving the NFC the lead for the first time in the game. Counting the successful two-point conversion after Bly's touchdown, the NFC had scored 18 points in 8 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl, Game summary\nAlexander scored another rushing touchdown with three and a half minutes remaining to add to the NFC's lead. Manning, however, responded with a touchdown pass to Hines Ward, and the AFC was down by three. Safety Brock Marion picked off Bulger in the end zone and ran it back to the AFC's 22-yard line. Manning had 1:15 left on the clock and no timeouts. After two passes to his favorite target, Harrison, as well as another to Ward, the AFC found itself on the NFC's 21-yard line. Kris Jenkins sacked Manning to send the AFC back, though, and with six seconds left, Vanderjagt, who hadn't missed a kick (field goal or extra point) all season, was wide right on a 51-yard attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178581-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Pro Bowl, Game summary\nThe game set several records. Ironically, the AFC's total of 31 points in the first half was a Pro Bowl record, but wouldn't last the game, as the NFC responded by putting up 42 points in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 27], "content_span": [28, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election\nOn January 23, 2004, the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leader Ernie Eves announced his intention to step down as leader before the fall of 2004. Eves was elected party leader in the party's 2002 leadership election, and became Premier of Ontario. He led the party to defeat in the 2003 provincial election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election\nUnder the Ontario PC Party Constitution, a leadership election could not be called until Eves submitted a formal request to the Party Executive. He did not do so until June, and a few days later, on June 13, the Party Executive called a leadership election for September 18, 2004. The leadership vote was won by John Tory with approximately 54% of the vote on the second ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Debates\nThe first of three candidates' debates occurred in Ottawa on July 26. The second debate occurred in Sudbury on August 17. The final debate was held in London, Ontario on August 30. While the third debate was a restrained affair the first two were marked by clashes between Flaherty and Tory as Flaherty accused his rival of not being a real conservative and being out of touch and elitist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Debates\nFinal candidate speeches were made at the convention in Toronto on September 17. Flaherty made the unusual decision to deliver his speech in his home town of Whitby and have it broadcast live to the convention. This was criticized as being \"gimmicky\" and reminiscent of the disastrous Magna budget and as demonstrating a hostility to Toronto. The criticisms of Flaherty's decision overshadowed the contents of his speech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Issues\nFlaherty's campaign was strongly critical of outgoing leader Ernie Eves accusing him of abandoning the \"Common Sense Revolution\" and arguing for a return to the policies of Mike Harris. A social conservative, Flaherty was perceived to be in favour of taking the party into a more right wing direction on social issues but said little of this during the actual campaign. John Tory's campaign hearkened back to the party's success under Bill Davis and argued that Ontarians were tired of divisiveness and polarization and that a more moderate direction was needed if the party was to succeed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 74], "content_span": [75, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Issues\nTory, a former candidate for Mayor of Toronto, also emphasised the importance of urban issues and appealing to residents of Ontario's largest city which had shut the Tories out in the 2003 provincial election. He also argued against the privatization of crown corporations such as the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, which had been advocated by his rivals. Klees ran as a grassroots candidate, arguing that the party had been the captive of unelected backroom consultants during the Harris and Eves years and had cut off not only party members but backbench MPPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 74], "content_span": [75, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Issues\nKlees ran as a defender of the Common Sense Revolution but, unlike Flaherty, was not seen as a social conservative. He was the only candidate to argue in favour of \"two tier\" health care and privatization within medicare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 74], "content_span": [75, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Process\nThe Ontario Progressive Conservatives use a system similar to that used by the federal Conservative Party of Canada in its leadership election. Each provincial riding association has up to 100 Electoral Votes that will be allocated among the candidates by proportional representation according to the votes cast by party members within the riding. This is not a pure \"one member one vote\" system since each riding generally has equal weight. (Ridings with fewer than 100 voting party members are allocated one Electoral Vote per voting member; ridings with 100 or more voting party members are allocated 100 Electoral Votes.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Process\nThis system is designed to favour candidates who can win support across the province and win in a majority of ridings. This replicates what is necessary for a party to win a general election - though without the \"first past the post\" feature of elections under the Westminster system. The party will use a preferential ballot on which voters rank their choices. If no candidate wins a majority of Electoral Votes, then the third-place candidate is eliminated, and his votes are redistributed according to second-choice rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Process\nMembers could only vote in person on September 18, or at the September 13 advance poll, or by proxy. Mail-in, phone-in and Internet voting are not permitted. Only party members in good standing as of 6:00\u00a0p.m., EDT, August 7, 2004, were eligible to vote. According to the party, there were 61,104 eligible voters, only 25,323 of whom cast ballots for a turnout of 41.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Process\nParty president Blair McCreadie announced that candidates would be under a spending cap of $1 million, which is less than the $1.5 million permitted in the last leadership contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Process\nThe leadership election was administered by an impartial Leadership Election Committee chaired by McCreadie and co-chaired by MPP Julia Munro. The Chief Election Officer was Tom Barlow. There were four Deputy Chief Election Officers: Janet Carwardine, Barbara Cowieson, Murna Dalton and Allan Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 75], "content_span": [76, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178582-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario leadership election, Result\nVoting took place from 9 am to 2 pm. The first ballot results were announced shortly after 8 pm. The second ballot results were announced shortly after 11:30 pm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 74], "content_span": [75, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178583-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Provence-Alpes-C\u00f4te d'Azur regional election\nA regional election took place in Provence-Alpes-C\u00f4te d'Azur on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Michel Vauzelle (PS) was elected president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178584-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games\nThe 2004 Proximus Diamond Games was a women's professional tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the Sportpaleis in Antwerp, Belgium that was part of the Tier II category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the third edition of the tournament and was held from 16 February until 22 February 2002. First-seeded Kim Clijsters won the singles title and earned $93,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178584-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Els Callens defeated Myriam Casanova / Eleni Daniilidou, 6\u20132, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178585-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games \u2013 Doubles\nKim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, but Sugiyama did not compete this year. Clijsters teamed up with her sister Elke Clijsters and lost in quarterfinals to \u00c9milie Loit and Petra Mandula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178585-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Els Callens won the title by defeating Myriam Casanova and Eleni Daniilidou 6\u20132, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178586-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games \u2013 Singles\nVenus Williams was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178586-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters won the title by defeating Silvia Farina Elia 6\u20133, 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178586-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Proximus Diamond Games \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first five seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election\nThe 2004 Puerto Rican general elections took place on Election Day, Tuesday, November 2, 2004. After a count by the State Commission of Elections, the winner was inaugurated to a four-year term as Governor of Puerto Rico on January 2, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election\nThe post of Governor of Puerto Rico and the entire House of Representatives and the entire Senate, as well as the Mayors of the municipalities of Puerto Rico, and the Resident Commissioner were also elected for four-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election\nFor the first time in Puerto Rican history, citizens unable to mobilize to voting colleges for medical reasons, but capable of practicing their right to vote, were visited in their own homes and hospitals so that they could exercise their vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results\nResults were announced by the State Commission of Elections (CEE-PUR) on November 2\u20133, 2004 after the voting colleges closed on November 2 at 3:00 p.m. AST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results\nOn November 3, after 1,970,759 votes (98.3% of the total votes) were computed, An\u00edbal Acevedo Vil\u00e1 (PPD) was certified preliminarily as winning for Governor of Puerto Rico. On the other hand, Luis Fortu\u00f1o (PNP) was certified as Resident Commissioner, while the Senate and the House of Representatives were also dominated by the New Progressive Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results\nThe preliminary certification was signed by Gerardo Cruz, electoral commissioner of the Popular Democratic Party (PPD), Brunilda Ortiz, alternate electoral commissioner of the New Progressive Party (PNP), and Andr\u00e9s Miranda Rosa, alternate electoral commissioner of the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP). The alternate commissioners were authorized by the electoral commissioners in property of their party, Thomas Rivera Schatz (PNP) and Juan Dalmau (PIP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nAcevedo Vil\u00e1's margin of victory over Pedro Rossell\u00f3 was of 3,566 (0.2%) votes, whereas Luis Fortu\u00f1o had 11,137 (0.49%) votes of advantage against Roberto Prats for Resident Commissioner. Due to the small margin of victory being, the Puerto Rican electoral laws state that a recount must be performed, and that once this recount is finished, the official winner will be certified by the CEE-PUR. The recount started on Monday, November 9 as established by law, and had to finish by December 31 or earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nDuring the period, Rossell\u00f3 filed a civil lawsuit against Acevedo Vil\u00e1 himself over a dispute of certain ballots that were cast during the elections. This led to a protracted controversy involving appeals to the United States federal courts and the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nThe ballots in question were cast by marking the Puerto Rican Independence Party or New Progressive Party (i.e. marking a cross under the emblem of one of these parties) in addition to placing individual candidate marks (crosses) in favor of Acevedo Vil\u00e1 as the candidate for governor of the Popular Democratic Party and Roberto Prats, the Popular Democratic Party's candidate for Resident Commissioner. The mark indicating the selection of a political party selects that party's slate of candidates by default, but the voter can also select individual candidates from other parties to replace candidates from the default slate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nThe controversy reached the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, which ruled 4\u20133 that the ballots in question were valid. In its initial opinion, the Supreme Court majority interpreted the challenged ballots as indicating that voters were voting for the PIP as a party for the purposes of stating party affiliation (and for the PIP's default slate) but had decided to move their votes to individual candidates from other party's slates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nThis type of vote, described as a \"mixed vote\", is permitted in Rule 50 of the State Election Commission's rules, based on the Commonwealth's Electoral Law as amended in 2004, Title 2, Section 2.001, Subsection 3. The practice is therefore considered legal and has been published in the official voter's instructions by the State Election Commission for quite some time. This voting option was also allowed and seen in the 1996 and 2000 elections, and had never been contested before, either at the Legislature or by the NPP's Electoral Commissioner. The individual votes for candidates not from the voter's selected party are then deducted from the votes given to the default candidates of the voter's party. The end result is a single vote per candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 831]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nAt the same time, Rossell\u00f3 challenged the ballots on the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico where District Judge Daniel Dom\u00ednguez ordered the Puerto Rico Election Commission to count the disputed votes but to not adjudicate them to any candidate until he reached a decision on the merits of the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, Recount and shared government\nAcevedo Vil\u00e1 and his team challenged this ruling and the case moved up to the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, where three judges ruled the question of whether or not the ballots were properly cast was not a federal constitutional issue in the case Rossell\u00f3-Gonz\u00e1lez v. Calder\u00f3n-Serra and therefore should be decided by the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico at the Commonwealth level. The Supreme Court affirmed its prior 4\u20133 decision. On December 28, 2004, the recount ended and Acevedo Vil\u00e1 was certified as winner and therefore Governor elected. Once the official winners were announced, they were inaugurated to four-year terms on January 2, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178587-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Puerto Rican general election, Results, PIP loses its franchise\nOn a different note, the Puerto Rican Independence Party was unable to reach 3% of the total votes on the preliminary results, putting in risk their franchise as a principal political party by Puerto Rican electoral laws. Because of this, the party may not receive funds from the government of Puerto Rico (consisting of $5 million USD) nor have a separate column in ballot papers on the following elections. However, Maria de Lourdes Santiago became the first woman from that party to be elected senator in the history of Puerto Rico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178588-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Pulitzer Prize\nThe Pulitzer Prizes for 2004 were announced on April 5, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178588-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Pulitzer Prize\nThe Los Angeles Times won five journalism awards, the most that the newspaper has ever won in a single year and second only to The New York Times in 2002 for the most won in a year by any paper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178589-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Purbeck District Council election\nElections to Purbeck District Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team\nThe 2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team represented Purdue University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Joe Tiller and played its home games at Ross\u2013Ade Stadium. Purdue played twelve games in the 2004 season, finishing with a 7\u20135 record and a loss in the Sun Bowl to Arizona State. The season was Kyle Orton's senior year at Purdue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Syracuse\nOptimism abounded toward the Purdue football program coached by Joe Tiller after a terrific '03 season. Although the Boilermakers had 8 defensive starters to replace in 2004 (6 of whom were NFL draft picks), they returned most of their productive offense - including solid Seniors in QB Kyle Orton and catch-machine WR Taylor Stubblefield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Syracuse\nIn the first-ever Sunday game at Ross Ade Stadium, Purdue played host to the perennially bowl-bound Syracuse Orange from the Big East. However, on a brutally hot day, the Boilermaker offense and defense was on fire, handing the Orange an unexpectedly decisive defeat, 51\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Syracuse\nOrton and the Purdue offense shook off a slow start (and a missed Ben Jones FG) to compile 571 yards of turnover-free offense, highlighted by 4 long Orton TD passes in a 16\u201330; 287 yard performance. Even reserve QB Brandon Kirsch - playing for the first time since 2002 - got in on the rout by engineering 2 4th-quarter TD drives including a 47-yard TD pass to freshman TE Dustin Keller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Syracuse\nOn the flipside, the new-look Purdue defense was terrific in holding first-time starting QB Joe Fields and the Syracuse offense to 197 total yards, 3 turnovers, and most impressively - 0 points. Fields also got no help from his running game, as acclaimed RBs Walter Reyes and Damien Rhodes combined for only 36 yards on 17 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Ball State\nPurdue continued its outstanding start to 2004, improving to 2\u20130 by blasting the MAC's Ball State Cardinals 59\u20137. The Boilermakers did the majority of the damage in an incredible first half that sent them to the locker room with a 45\u20130 advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Ball State\nKyle Orton performed phenomenally \u2013 23-26; 329 yards and 5 TDs \u2013 in guiding the Purdue offense to 599 yards, 34 first downs and no turnovers. WR Taylor Stublefield had 3 TD catches. And the Purdue defense had another superb game, holding the Cardinals' offense to 197 total yards and nearly pitching another shutout until Ball State got on the board midway through the 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nThe Boilermakers began Big Ten play by improving to 3\u20130 with a hard-earned road win over the Fighting Illini, 38\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nPurdue took a lead it wouldn't relinquish early in the 2nd quarter on a short TD run by Orton, 17\u201310. Late in the first half with the score 17\u201313, Orton noticed an oncoming 3rd down Illini blitz and audibled to flip a soft pass over the charging defense to RB Brandon Jones, who had snuck past the blitz. Jones then ran untouched for a 49-yard TD and an 11-point advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nIllinois would get no closer than 4 points down the rest of the game, as the Illini defense couldn't give their offense a chance to tie until less than a minute remained in the game. On the second play of Illinois' last-chance drive, DE Anthony Spencer forced a fumble on a sack of Illini QB Jon Beutjer that Purdue recovered to essentially end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nThe Purdue offense \u2013 especially QB Kyle Orton \u2013 continued to excel by rolling up 515 total yards without committing a turnover. Orton threw for 366 yards and 4 TDs (plus the rushing TD). Two of his TD passes came on 3rd down audibles \u2013 one of them to his top receiving target WR Taylor Stubblefield, who caught 11 passes for 115 yards and three touchdowns which increased his early season total to 8 TD catches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nWhile Purdue played near-perfect on offense, the young defense encountered its first struggles of the season with an Illinois offense that was able to effectively move via the run and pass for 390 yards. In defeat, Illini RBs E. B. Halsey, Pierre Thomas and Jason Davis combined for 208 yards rushing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Illinois\nIt was at this point that Orton began to be mentioned as a top Heisman Trophy candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nWith another outstanding performance from QB Kyle Orton, the Boilermakers improved to 4\u20130 with a surprisingly decisive 41\u201316 victory over 3\u20131 Notre Dame. This was the program's first win in South Bend since 1974 (in 13 tries).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nAfter both teams' first drives ended in field goals, the game began to turn when Purdue kick returner Jerome Brooks returned an Irish kickoff 100 yards for a TD and a 10\u20133 lead. Later in the 2nd quarter with Purdue holding a 13\u20133 lead and the Irish threatening to score, Purdue took control when DE Anthony Spencer forced a fumble from freshman RB Darius Walker that Purdue recovered. Orton then led the Purdue offense 97 yards on a drive that culminated in a short TD toss to DE-turned-TE Rob Ninkovich, for a 20\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nEarly in the 3rd quarter, after a Notre Dame punt pinned Purdue at their 3-yard line, WR Taylor Stubblefield beat tight man coverage to catch a 97-yard TD pass for a backbreaking score and 27\u20133 lead. The teams exchanged touchdowns for the rest of the 3rd quarter before a scoreless 4th quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nIf not points, the Irish certainly rolled up yards (536) on the Purdue defense, as Quinn threw for a then-career-high 432 yards. But some timely stops (including 7 sacks) by the Purdue defense, the untimely Walker fumble, and the defense's inability to stop Orton and the Purdue offense proved too much to overcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nMeanwhile, Orton completed 21 of 31 passes for 385 yards and 4 touchdowns; two of his TD throws were to Stubblefield in a 7 catch, 181 yard performance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nIt was at this point in the season that Kyle Orton was considered a Heisman Trophy front-runner, as he had 17 TD passes and no interceptions. In fact, the Purdue offense still had yet to commit their first turnover of the season!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nPurdue improved to 5\u20130 for the first time since 1945 by overcoming a fired-up Penn State team in a 20\u201313 win, their first ever in Happy Valley in what was the very first \"Penn State Whiteout\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nPurdue gained an early 10\u20130 advantage with a 50-yard FG by Ben Jones followed by a short Brandon Jones TD run. The key play of the TD drive was a 55-yard completion to TE Charles Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nBut Senior QB Zack Mills, who had a fine day, led PSU back to tie the game at the half. First, they answered Purdue's TD drive with a TD of their own \u2013 a 37-yard TD pass to a diving WR Terrell Golden. Then, the Nittany Lions capped their next drive with a FG by K Robbie Gould.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nPurdue took a 17\u201310 lead on their first drive of the 2nd half with a 40-yard TD pass from Kyle Orton to Taylor Stubblefield. The Nittany Lions later drove deep into Purdue territory but had to settle for a short FG and still trailed 17\u201313 after 3 quarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nOn the first play of the 4th quarter, Orton (and Purdue) committed their first turnover of the season with a Calvin Lowry interception. But PSU came up empty when Zack Mills was tackled short of the first down on a fake FG attempt. After a second Orton interception resulted in a missed PSU field goal, Purdue embarked on a gritty, time-consuming drive that ended with a long Ben Jones FG to regain a 7-point lead with less than 3 minutes left. The drive was kept alive with a terrific individual effort by freshman WR Dorien Bryant on a 3rd and long play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nRodney Kinlaw gave the Lions a great opportunity to tie on the ensuing kickoff with a 64-yard return, but Mills and the PSU offense came up empty with 4 incomplete passes. Finally, on the last play, QB Anthony Morelli's desperation pass also fell incomplete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nIn what became the prevailing 2004 theme for PSU, their defense did a commendable job vs. the high-powered Purdue offense by limiting it to 348 yards and sacking Orton 3 times. The young Purdue defense held up well against the run by limiting PSU to 18 yards on 17 carries, and put a good pass-rush on Mills by sacking him 3 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Penn State\nIn addition to catching his 11th TD pass of the season, Taylor Stubblefield set the Big Ten record for catches, surpassing former teammate John Standeford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Wisconsin\nIn a wild game between two ranked opponents in West Lafayette, the Badgers handed #5 Purdue its first loss of the season. In the 4th Quarter Boilermaker QB Kyle Orton fumbled the ball and Badger DB Scott Starks returned the fumble for the go-ahead score. Within Purdue football fandom, this play is sometimes referred to as \"The Fumble\". With the crushing loss, Purdue fell to 5\u20131 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Michigan\nThe 2-point loss to Michigan at home was the 2nd in a row for the Boilermakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 64], "content_span": [65, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Northwestern\nPurdue fell to 5\u20133 on the season with a 3rd consecutive loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Iowa\nWith the loss, their fourth in a row, the Boilermakers fell to 5\u20134 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Ohio State\nPurdue snapped their losing streak to the Buckeyes and their overall 4-game losing streak with a 24\u201317 win in West Lafayette, improving to 6\u20134 on the year. The Purdue win made it impossible for the Buckeyes to finish with a winning conference record in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178590-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Purdue Boilermakers football team, Game summaries, Indiana\nWith the win (in the highest scoring game in series history), the Boilermakers finished 4\u20134 in Big Ten conference play. Purdue extended their home winning streak over the Hoosiers to 4 games (their last loss to the Hoosiers in Ross\u2013Ade Stadium coming in the 1996 season). Joe Tiller and the Boilermakers finished the regular season with a 7\u20134 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 63], "content_span": [64, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots\nThe 2004 Qamishli riots were an uprising by Syrian Kurds in the northeastern city of Qamishli in March 2004. The riots started during a chaotic football match, when some Arab fans of the guest team started raising pictures of Saddam Hussein, an action that angered the Kurdish fans of the host team, because of Hussein's Anfal campaign against Iraqi Kurds. Both groups began throwing stones at each other. The Ba'ath Party local office was burned down by Kurdish demonstrators, leading to the security forces reacting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots\nThe Syrian army responded quickly, deploying troops backed by tanks and helicopters, and launching a crack-down. Events climaxed when Kurds in Qamishli toppled a statue of Hafez al-Assad. At least 30 Kurds were killed as the security services re-asserted control over the city. As a result of the crackdown, thousands of Syrian Kurds fled to Iraqi Kurdistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Background\nQamishli is the largest town in Al-Hasakah Governorate and is located in northeast Syria. It is regarded as the Kurdish and Assyrian community capital. It is also the center of the Syrian Kurdish struggle, especially in the recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Background\nThe Kurds also felt opposition from the Syrian government in 1962, forty years before, when the government took census and left out of it many Kurds. This left them and their children without citizenship and the right to obtain government jobs or to have property. This disregarded minority now consists of hundreds of thousands of Kurds, who carry identification cards as \"foreigner\". Another move the government made which has fueled tensions was resettling Arabs from other parts of the country into along the border in Iran, Iraq and Turkey. They did this in order to build a buffer between Kurdish areas, which has furthered the hatred between the Kurds and Arabs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Background\nThe United States has for a longer period of time recognized Iraqi Kurdistan diplomatically which has led the Americans to invite the current Kurdish leader of Iraqi Kurdistan, Masoud Barzani, to the White House and a meeting in Baghdad when the American president was in town. The visit from United States Vice President, Joe Biden, to the fourth largest city in Iraq, Erbil, also known as the Iraqi Kurdistan capital, helped strengthen their alliance with them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Background\nThe United States started Operation Provide Comfort and Operation Provide Comfort II in an attempt to defend Kurds fleeing their homes in Northern Iraq as a result of the Iraqi Gulf War. Kurdish representation in Iraqi government has increased since the American invasion in 2003. Jalal Talabani, the first Kurdish president of Iraq, was elected in 2005, and Kurds have held the presidential seat since, although the position is somewhat ornamental.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, 2004 events\nOn 12 March 2004, a football match in Qamishli between a local Kurdish team and an Arab team from Deir ez-Zor in Syria's southeast sparked violent clashes between fans of the opposing sides which spilled into the streets of the city. The fans of the Arab team reportedly rode about town in a bus, insulting the Iraqi Kurdish leaders Masoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani, then leaders of Iraqi Kurdistan's two main parties, and brandishing portraits of deposed Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein, whose infamous Al-Anfal Campaign killed an estimated 182,000 Kurdish civilians in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, 2004 events\nIn response, Kurdish fans supposedly proclaimed \"We will sacrifice our lives for Bush\", referring to US President George W. Bush, who invaded Iraq in 2003, deposing Saddam and triggering the Iraq War. Tensions between the groups came to a head, and the Deir ez-Zor Arab fans attacked the Kurdish fans with sticks, stones, and knives. Government security forces brought in to quell the riot, fired into the crowd, killing six people, including three children\u2014all of them were Kurds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, 2004 events\nThe Ba'ath Party local office was burned down by the demonstrators, leading to the security forces responding and killing more than 15 of the rioters and wounding more than 100. Officials in Qamishli alleged that some Kurdish parties were collaborating with \"foreign forces\" to supposedly annex some villages in the area to northern Iraq. Events climaxed when Kurds in Qamishli toppled a statue of Hafez al-Assad. The Syrian army responded quickly, deploying thousands of troops backed by tanks and helicopters. At least 30 Kurds were killed as the security services re-took the city, over 2,000 were arrested at that time or subsequently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, 2004 events, Prosecution of the Kurdish protestors\nAfter the violence, President Bashar al-Assad visited the region aiming to achieve a \"national unity\" and supposedly pardoned 312 Kurds who were prosecuted of participating in the massacre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 71], "content_span": [72, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, Moqebleh (Moquoble) refugee camp\nAfter the 2004 events in Qamishli, thousands of Kurds fled to the Kurdish Region of Iraq. Local authorities there, the UNHCR and other UN agencies established the Moqebleh camp at a former Army base near Dohuk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, Moqebleh (Moquoble) refugee camp\nSeveral years later the KRG moved all refugees, who arrived before 2005, to housing in a second camp, known as Qamishli. The camp consists of a modest housing development with dozens of concrete block houses and a mosque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, Moqebleh (Moquoble) refugee camp\nThe original camp at the former Army citadel now contains about 300 people. Many of the homes are made of cement blocks, covered with plastic tarpaulins. Latrines and showers are in separate buildings down the street. Authorities provide electricity, water trucks and food rations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, Moqebleh (Moquoble) refugee camp\nKurds can leave the camp to work. As supposed refugees they cannot get government jobs, but are able work in the private sector, often as construction workers or drivers. The Kurds seem likely not to return to Syria until political conditions change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, 2005 demonstrations\nIn June 2005, thousands of Kurds demonstrated in Qamishli to protest the assassination of Sheikh Khaznawi, a Kurdish cleric in Syria, resulting in the death of one policeman and injury to four Kurds. In March 2008, according to Human Rights Watch, Syrian security forces opened fire at Kurds who were celebrating the spring festival of Nowruz. The shooting killed three people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 51], "content_span": [52, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, 2008 vigil in memory of the riots\nOn 21 March 2008, the Kurdish New Year (Newroz) a school class held a 5 minute vigil in memory of the 2004 Qamishli riots. The participants were investigated for holding the vigil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, 2011 protests in Qamishli\nWith the eruption of the Syrian Civil War, the city of Qamishli became one of the protest arenas. On 12 March 2011, thousands of Syrian Kurds in Qamishli and al-Hasakah protested on the day of the Kurdish martyr, an annual event since 2004 al-Qamishli protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 57], "content_span": [58, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178591-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Qamishli riots, Aftermath, 2012 rebellion\nIn 2012, armed elements among the Kurds launched Syrian Kurdish rebellion in north and north-western Syria, aiming against Syrian government forces. In the second half of 2012, the rebellion also resulted in clashes between Kurdish soldiers and the militants of the Free Syrian Army, both striving towards control of the region. The AANES would later gain control over most of northern Syria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178592-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Ladies Open\nThe 2004 Qatar Ladies Open (known as the 2004 Qatar Total Open for sponsorship reasons), was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 4th edition of the Qatar Total Open, and was part of the Tier II Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place at the Khalifa International Tennis Complex in Doha, Qatar from 1 March until 7 March 2004. Third-seeded Anastasia Myskina won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178592-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Ladies Open, Finals, Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva defeated Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 / Conchita Mart\u00ednez, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178593-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Ladies Open \u2013 Doubles\nJanet Lee and Wynne Prakusya were the defending champions, but both didn't participate in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178594-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Ladies Open \u2013 Singles\nAnastasia Myskina was the defending champion, and also won the title in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178594-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Ladies Open \u2013 Singles, Main draw, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178595-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Open\nThe 2004 Qatar Open, known as the 2004 Qatar ExxonMobil Open, for sponsorship reasons, was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the Khalifa International Tennis Complex in Doha in Qatar and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from 5 January through 11 January 2004. Nicolas Escud\u00e9 won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178595-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Open, Finals, Doubles\nMartin Damm / Cyril Suk defeated Stefan Koubek / Andy Roddick 6\u20132, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 32], "content_span": [33, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178596-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Open \u2013 Doubles\nMartin Damm and Cyril Suk were the defending champions and won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20134 against Stefan Koubek and Andy Roddick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178597-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Open \u2013 Singles\nStefan Koubek was the defending champion but lost in the second round to Hyung-Taik Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178597-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar Open \u2013 Singles\nNicolas Escud\u00e9 won in the final 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20134) against Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178598-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix was the thirteenth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 30 September-2 October 2004 at the Losail International Circuit. It was the first running of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178598-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix, 125 cc classification\nThe race produced a dead heat for first place between Jorge Lorenzo and Andrea Dovizioso. After a photo finish could not separate the riders, Lorenzo was awarded first place on the basis that he set a faster laptime during the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178598-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round thirteen has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178599-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec municipal referendums\nThe 2004 Quebec municipal referendums were held by the Quebec Liberal Party government of Jean Charest that came to power in the 2003 Quebec election, in fulfillment of a campaign promise to allow voters to have a say regarding the municipal reorganization program that had been undertaken by the preceding Parti Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178599-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec municipal referendums\nFrom late 2000 to 2003, the PQ government had amalgamated (merged) many Quebec cities with their suburbs or neighbouring municipalities. This was imposed through legislation by the Quebec government rather than by the initiative of the municipalities themselves. In Canada, municipal governments are creatures of the provincial governments. However, the amalgamation proved unpopular in some places, with residents wishing to de-merge from the newly expanded cities and reconstitute their former municipalities. The 2004 referendums were organized to provide an opportunity to vote on the matter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178599-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec municipal referendums, Signing of registers\nAs a first step, a minimum threshold of 10% of the population of a former municipality was required to sign a register in order for a referendum to be held. The registers were open from 16 to 20 May 2004. The results are shown below (those in bold were successful):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178599-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec municipal referendums, Referendums\nOn June 20, 2004, referendums were scheduled in the following municipalities. To be unmerged, they had to obtain a more than 50% of the vote for \"yes\", representing at least 35% of the electors. Municipalities that met those conditions are shown in bold. Municipalities obtaining only one of the two requirements are marked with an asterisk. *", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178600-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec provincial by-elections\nThe Quebec by-elections of September 20, 2004 were held in the Quebec provincial electoral districts of Gouin, Laurier-Dorion, Nelligan and Vanier in Canada. They resulted in the election of two PQ, one Liberal and one ADQ Member to the National Assembly of Quebec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178600-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec provincial by-elections\nLiberal Yolande James won an easy victory on the Montreal-based Nelligan district, while PQ candidate Nicolas Girard handily succeeded Andre Boisclair in Gouin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178600-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec provincial by-elections\nElsie Lefebvre of the Parti Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois won a narrow victory in Laurier-Dorion, a traditionally Liberal district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178600-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Quebec provincial by-elections\nBenefiting from anger over the CRTC's decision to revoke CHOI-FM's broadcasting license, Sylvain L\u00e9gar\u00e9 was elected in Vanier, under the ADQ label.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178601-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Queen's Birthday Honours (Australia)\nThe 2004 Queen's Birthday Honours for Australia were announced on Monday 14 June 2004 by the Governor-General, Michael Jeffery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178601-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Queen's Birthday Honours (Australia)\nThe Birthday Honours were appointments by some of the 16 Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The Birthday Honours are awarded as part of the Queen's Official Birthday celebrations during the month of June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup\nThe 2004 Queensland Cup season was the 9th season of Queensland's top-level statewide rugby league competition run by the Queensland Rugby League. The competition featured 12 teams playing a 26-week long season (including finals) from March to September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup\nThe Burleigh Bears defeated the Easts Tigers 22\u201318 in the Grand Final at Suncorp Stadium to claim their second premiership. Burleigh halfback Brent McConnell was named the competition's Player of the Year, winning the Courier Mail Medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup, Teams\nWests Panthers, who participated in the Queensland Cup since the inaugural season in 1996, withdrew from the competition at the end of 2003. They were replaced by Brothers-Valleys, a club formed in 2002 by the merger of Past Brothers, who played in the Queensland Cup from 1996 to 1998, and the Fortitude Valley Diehards, who originally folded in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup, Teams\nThe Brisbane Broncos, Melbourne Storm and North Queensland Cowboys were again affiliated with the Toowoomba Clydesdales, Norths Devils and North Queensland Young Guns respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup, Grand Final\nBurleigh, who finished as minor premiers for the second season in a row, defeated Easts by a point in their major semi final to earn a spot in the Grand Final, their third since 1997. Easts, who came 3rd in the regular season, defeated the 2nd placed Norths in the qualifying final to set up their match with Burleigh. The loss saw them then face Wynnum in the preliminary final, who they defeated 50\u201324 to set up a rematch with the Bears in the Grand Final. During the regular season, Burleigh defeated Easts in both of their encounters (46\u201320 in Round 5 and 36\u201334 in Round 15).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup, Grand Final, First half\nBurleigh opened the first half strongly when five-eighth Adam Hayden stepped through Easts' defensive line to score in the 6th minute. Three minutes later, Hayden put centre Nick Shaw through a hole to score the Bears' second try. The Tigers got back into the contest in the 20th minute, when hooker Trent Young muscled his way over underneath posts. Burleigh regained their 10-point lead when second rower John Flint burst through to score in the 31st minute as the Bears took a 16\u20136 lead into the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup, Grand Final, Second half\nEasts hit back 10 minutes into the second half when former Australian and Queensland representative Steve Renouf spun through a defender to score in the corner. Micheal Pearce converted the try from the sideline to cut the lead to four. A Reggie Cressbrook penalty goal pushed Burleigh's lead to six, setting up a tense final 20 minutes. With just over a minute to play, Burleigh's Kris Flint attempted a field goal that would've sealed the game for the Bears but missed to the right, giving Easts one last chance. With 30 seconds remaining, Tigers' halfback Dane Campbell put in a chip kick for winger Steve Beattie, who burst through two Burleigh defenders to score. Campbell then converted from out wide to send the game into extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178602-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland Cup, Grand Final, Extra time\nEasts had the first opportunity to win the game in the third minute of extra time, when Campbell attempted a field goal then went wide right. Both teams missed multiple field goal attempts before Burleigh prop Shane O'Flanagan barged over to score the premiership-winning try in the 17th minute of extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178603-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland state election\nAn election was held in the Australian state of Queensland on 7 February 2004 to elect the 89 members of the state's Legislative Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178603-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland state election\nThe Labor Party (ALP) government of Premier Peter Beattie won a third term in office, with its large majority almost untouched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178603-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland state election, Results\nThe Nationals regained three seats from Labor \u2014 Burdekin, Burnett and Charters Towers \u2014 as well as Lockyer from One Nation member Bill Flynn, but lost Keppel to Labor, leaving them with a total gain of three seats. The Liberal Party won Currumbin from Minister Merri Rose, as well as taking Rob Borbidge's former seat of Surfers Paradise from independent Lex Bell, who had won it in the 2001 by-election following Borbidge's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178603-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland state election, Results\nQueensland state election, 7 February 2004Legislative Assembly << 2001\u20132006 >>", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178603-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland state election, Subsequent changes\nIn 2005, Deputy Premier Terry Mackenroth and Speaker Ray Hollis resigned from parliament, forcing by-elections in their former seats of Chatsworth and Redcliffe on 20 August 2005. The Liberal Party won both seats, with Michael Caltabiano successful in Chatsworth and Terry Rogers in Redcliffe. ALP member Robert Poole resigned from his seat of Gaven on 28 February 2006. National Party candidate Dr Alex Douglas won the Gaven by-election held on 1 April 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178603-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Queensland state election, Subsequent changes\nThe results of the three by-elections left Labor with 60 seats and lift National and Liberal Party representation to 16 and seven seats respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre\nAbout\u00a0\u00b7 The people\u00a0\u00b7 The land\u00a0\u00b7 Language\u00a0\u00b7 Culture\u00a0\u00b7 Diaspora\u00a0\u00b7 Persecutions\u00a0\u00b7 Tribes\u00a0\u00b7 Cuisine", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre\nPolitics\u00a0\u00b7 Writers\u00a0\u00b7 Poets\u00a0\u00b7 Military\u00a0\u00b7 Religion\u00a0\u00b7 Sports\u00a0\u00b7 Battles", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre\nThe 2004 Quetta Ashura massacre is the sectarian terrorist attack on Tuesday 2 March 2004 during an Ashura procession in the southwestern city of Quetta, in the Balochistan province of Pakistan. At least 42 persons were killed and more than 100 wounded in the attack. The attack took place in Liaqat Bazaar Quetta, almost all of the victims were from the Hazara ethnic minority of Balochistan. The incident occurred just after the incident of the Karbala Ashura bombings in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Background\nThe Shia Muslim's processions are held throughout world to commemorate the martyrdom of Imam Hussain Ibn Ali every year on the Day of Ashura. Like other parts of Pakistan, Quetta city has a notable population of Shia Muslims who mainly belong to Hazara community. In Quetta, the Ashura procession starts from Alamdar Road, where all the Imambargahs gather from around the city mainly from Hazara Town, then the procession moves to Mezan Chowk, where prayers are offered, and Matam was performed then moves to Liaqat Bazaar and ends on Alamdar Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Massacre\nThe Ashura procession was on its traditional route, when it reached the main Bazaar, three terrorist from top a building, threw hand grenades followed by firing with automatic weapons before they blew themselves up, which left around 50 dead and more 100 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Massacre, Perpetrators\nThe police identified the assailants bodies after DNA tests and investigations. They belonged to Lashkar-e-Jhangvi (LeJ), the banned Pakistani terrorist group. The Police arrested a police constable who allegedly allowed the terrorist to use his house to plan the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nUnited Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan condemned the attacks and named it a cowardly act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nThe, Secretary-General of Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC), Abdulwahed Belkeziz said", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nSuch terrorist acts can only be designed to incite sectarian (Sunni-Shia) strife and infighting among Muslims and to shed their blood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nThe Embassy of Japan in Islamabad issued a press release", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nJapan is deeply shocked and angered by the terrorist bombings in Baghdad and Karbala, Iraq, and the attacks in Quetta that occurred on Tuesday, causing many deaths and injuries. Terrorism cannot be justified on any account. Japan reiterates its firm condemnation of brutal terrorist attacks, which victimize the innocent. I extend my heartfelt condolences to the victims and the bereaved and wish the injured will have a speedy recovery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nInterior Minister of Pakistan, Faisal Saleh Hayat condemned the attack and said", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178604-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Quetta Ashura massacre, Response and reactions\nThese misguided extremists want to create chaos in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178605-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 RCA Championships\nThe 2004 RCA Championships was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 17th edition of the event known that year as the RCA Championships, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Indianapolis Tennis Center in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States, from July 19 through July 26, 2004. It was the second event of the 2004 US Open series, after the Mercedes Benz Cup in Los Angeles. Andy Roddick won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178605-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 RCA Championships, Finals, Doubles\nJordan Kerr / Jim Thomas defeated Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett 6\u20137(7\u20139), 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178606-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 RCA Championships \u2013 Doubles\nMario An\u010di\u0107 and Andy Ram were the defending champions, but An\u010di\u0107 did not participate this year. Ram partnered Jonathan Erlich, losing in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178606-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 RCA Championships \u2013 Doubles\nJordan Kerr and Jim Thomas won the title, defeating Wayne Black and Kevin Ullyett 6\u20137(7\u20139), 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178607-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 RCA Championships \u2013 Singles\nAndy Roddick was the defending champion and successfully defended his title, defeating Nicolas Kiefer, 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178608-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 RCSL season\nThe 2004 Rugby Canada Super League season was the seventh season for the RCSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178608-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 RCSL season, Championship Final\nThe Vancouver Island Crimson Tide (Eastern Division champions) defeated the Newfoundland Rock (Western Division Champions) 14-8 in the Championship Final, played in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador on 14 August 2004 to win the MacTier Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178609-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 RLIF Awards\nThe 2004 RLIF Awards were presented on Monday November 22, 2004. The separate Rugby League World Golden Boot Award were incorporated into the proceedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178610-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 RTHK Top 10 Gold Songs Awards\nThe 2004 RTHK Top 10 Gold Songs Awards (Chinese: 2004\u5e74\u5ea6\u5341\u5927\u4e2d\u6587\u91d1\u66f2\u5f97\u734e) was held in 2004 for the 2003 music season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178610-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 RTHK Top 10 Gold Songs Awards, Top 10 song awards\nThe top 10 songs (\u5341\u5927\u4e2d\u6587\u91d1\u66f2) of 2003 are as follows. This year only 9 songs were awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178611-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Race of Champions\nThe 2004 Race of Champions took place on December 4 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis. Unlike previous events at a gravel course in Gran Canaria, the new Stade de France event was all-tarmac, so road racers became more competitive than rally drivers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178611-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Race of Champions\nThe Nations' Cup underwent some significant changes - nations were now represented by only two competitors instead of three, with the motorcyclists axed. In addition, the rules regarding having one rally driver and one circuit driver were relaxed, leading to some all-circuit driver teams. As the host nation, France was permitted to field two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178611-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Race of Champions\nThe individual event was won by a then-relatively unknown Heikki Kovalainen, and the team event by Jean Alesi and S\u00e9bastien Loeb representing France. There was also a special \"World Champions Challenge\" race held between 2004 Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher and 2004 world rally champion S\u00e9bastien Loeb, which Schumacher won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178611-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Race of Champions, Participants\n* - Casey Mears was a last-minute substitute for Jeff Gordon, who was hospitalized with the flu and told not to participate in this event by doctors while at NASCAR's awards banquet in New York City that week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178612-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Racquetball World Championships\nThe 12th Racquetball World Championships were held in Anyang (South Korea) from July 30 to August 7, 2004, with players from 17 different countries. The USA swept the gold medals, winning both singles and doubles in the Men\u2019s and Women\u2019s competitions as well as both Men\u2019s and Women\u2019s team competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178612-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Racquetball World Championships\nJack Huczek of the USA won Men\u2019s Singles for the 2nd time, successfully defending the title he won in 2002. Cheryl Gudinas of the USA won her 3rd straight Women\u2019s Singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178612-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Racquetball World Championships\nIn doubles, the USA\u2019s Jackie Paraiso and Kim Russell successfully defended their Women\u2019s Doubles title. The win was the third consecutive for Russell, who won with Kersten Hallander in 2000. Paraiso\u2019s win was her 6th Women\u2019s Doubles World Championship. Their team-mates, Mike Dennison and Shane Vanderson both won for the first time in Men\u2019s Doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178613-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Radio Disney Music Awards\nThe 2004 Radio Disney Music Awards was an awards show held Radio Disney studios. Hilary Duff, as in 2003, was the biggest winner that year. The award was broadcast on the Radio Disney network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178614-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally Argentina\nThe 2004 Rally Argentina (formally the 24th CTI Movil Rally Argentina) was the eighth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over four days between 15 and 18 July 2004, and was based in Villa Carlos Paz, Argentina. Citroen's Carlos Sainz won the race, his 26th and final win in the World Rally Championship..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178615-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally Australia\nThe 2004 Rally Australia (formally the 17th Telstra Rally Australia) was the sixteenth and final round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over four days between 11 November and 14 November 2004, and was based in Perth, Australia. Citro\u00ebn's S\u00e9bastien Loeb won the race, his 10th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178615-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally Australia, Entry list\n1 Petter Solberg. 2 Mikko Hirvonen. 3 S\u00e9bastian Loeb. 4 Carlos Sainz. 5 Marcus Gr\u00f6nholm. 6 Harri Rovanper\u00e4. 7 Markko Martin. 8 Francois Duval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178616-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally Finland\nThe 2004 Rally Finland (formally the 54th Neste Rally Finland) was the ninth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship season and was held between 6 and 8 August 2004. The rally was based in Jyv\u00e4skyl\u00e4. Peugeot's Marcus Gr\u00f6nholm won the race, his 16th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178617-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally Mexico\nThe 2004 Rally Mexico (formally the 1st Corona Rally Mexico) was the third round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over three days between 12 March and 14 March 2004, and was based in Le\u00f3n, Mexico. Ford's Markko M\u00e4rtin won the race, his 3rd win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178618-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally New Zealand\nThe 2004 Rally New Zealand (formally the 35th Propecia Rally New Zealand) was the fourth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over four days between 15 April and 18 April 2004, and was based in Auckland, New Zealand. Subaru's Petter Solberg won the race, his 6th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178619-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rally of Turkey\nThe 2004 Rally of Turkey (formally the 5th Rally of Turkey) was the seventh round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over four days between 24 June and 27 June 2004, and was based in Antalya, Turkey. Citro\u00ebn's S\u00e9bastien Loeb won the race, his 8th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178620-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rallye Deutschland\nThe 2004 Rallye Deutschland (formally the 23. OMV ADAC Rallye Deutschland) was the tenth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship season. The race was held over three days between 20 August and 22 August 2004, and was based in Trier, Germany. Citro\u00ebn's S\u00e9bastien Loeb won the race, his 9th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178621-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Recopa Sudamericana\nThe 2004 Recopa Sudamericana was the 12th Recopa Sudamericana, an annual football match between the winners of the previous season's Copa Libertadores and Copa Sudamericana competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178621-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Recopa Sudamericana\nThe match was contested by Boca Juniors, winners of the 2003 Copa Libertadores, and Cienciano, winners of the 2003 Copa Sudamericana, on Diciembre 10 , 2004. Cienciano managed to defeat Boca Juniors 2-4 on penalties after a 1-1 tie to win their first Recopa and obtain their second international title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178622-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Red Bull Air Race World Series\nThe 2004 Red Bull Air Race World Series was the second Red Bull Air Race World Series season. It debuted on June 20, 2004 and ended on September 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178622-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Red Bull Air Race World Series\nIn the 2004 season, the number of Air Race venues increased from two to three locations. The leg in Zeltweg Austria was removed and RAF Kemble (now called Cotswold Airport) in the United Kingdom became the season opener. Reno, Nevada in the United States was also added to the calendar. And the race in Budapest moved away from Tokol Airport, to the Danube, creating the first race over water.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178622-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Red Bull Air Race World Series\nIn addition to the previous year's competitors, three pilots from the USA, Mike Mangold, Michael Goulian and David Martin, a Dutch pilot Frank Versteegh and Nicolas Ivanoff of France took part at the Air Races in 2004. American Kirby Chambliss, became champion in 2004 with a total of 17 points winning two of the three races, followed by Hungarian P\u00e9ter Besenyei (12 points), who won the both races in 2003. British pilot Steve Jones and German aviator Klaus Schrodt shared the 3rd place with eight points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178623-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Redditch Borough Council election\nElections to Redditch Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Labour Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots\nThe 2004 Redfern riots took place on the evening of Sunday the 15th February 2004, in the inner Sydney suburb of Redfern, New South Wales, and were sparked by the death of 17 Year old Thomas Hickey, also known as TJ Hickey resulting from a bike accident in Waterloo on the 14th February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nThe circumstances surrounding Thomas \"T.J.\" Hickey's death are disputed. On the morning of Saturday 14 February 2004, the 17-year-old Aboriginal Australian boy was riding his bicycle downhill while a police vehicle was patrolling the nearby area. According to New South Wales Police, he collided with a protruding gutter and was flung into the air and impaled on a 1.2-metre (3\u00a0ft 11\u00a0in) high fence outside a block of units off Phillip Street, Waterloo, causing penetrating injuries of the neck and chest. Police officers at the scene administered first aid until New South Wales Ambulance officers arrived. Hickey died with his family by his side early on 15 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nA large proportion of the inquest centered on whether police were \"pursuing\" Hickey, or \"following\" him. At the conclusion of the coronial inquest, NSW Police Commissioner Ken Moroney was interviewed on ABC Radio and gave this explanation of the distinction: \"I think if you were to ask the person on the street the definition between, and not a Concise Oxford Dictionary definition, but if you were to ask somebody their interpretation of being followed and being pursued I think they are two distinct and clear actions. Being followed, I think, in the ordinary layman's mind, creates a particular picture. Being pursued by police creates a completely different picture and clearly there was no evidence that Mr Hickey was being pursued in the normal definition of that word\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nMoroney supported the driver of the police truck, Senior Constable Michael Hollingsworth, in his refusal to give evidence. Both maintained this was a \"normal civilian right\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nAccording to police, they arrived at the scene quickly with Constables Hollingsworth and Reynolds arriving a few minutes after the first police vehicle. Thomas was hanging by his shirt and was not seen to be impaled but in a serious condition. Police immediately rendered first aid and were unable to save him as \"the injury was probably non-survivable\". At no time was Police Rescue or NSW Ambulance called off from attending. Evidence exists of Hollingsworth making numerous calls for the ETA of ambulance paramedics. When ambulance officers arrived, Hollingsworth and Reynolds Helped move Thomas into the Ambulance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nA female cousin of Hickey made herself known to Hollingsworth and accompanied both Hollingsworth and Reynolds in the police truck when they left the scene, escorting the ambulance to the Children's Hospital at Randwick. Upon arrival at the hospital, Hollingsworth and Reynolds waited at the accident and emergency department. Some time later Hollingsworth and Reynolds, still at the hospital waiting for TJ's family, were ordered away by a hospital social worker, possibly because Hollingsworth was covered in blood and might have upset the family and members of the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nThere was an outstanding arrest warrant in Hickey's name, but police have consistently maintained that the patrol car was searching for a different individual, wanted in connection with a violent bag snatch at Redfern railway station earlier the same day. There was no evidence of a pursuit with Hollingsowrth and Reynolds being the second Police vehicle(caged truck) to attend the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nThe Hickey family and supporters dispute this version of events, claiming that witnesses saw Hickey's bike clipped by the police car, thus propelling him onto the fence. This claim was not supported by the testimony of two Aboriginal Liaison Officers to a NSW Parliamentary Inquiry into the death, though neither of the officers were present at the scene. (One of the officers was later convicted of murder and arson, an act for which he had blamed police.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nDespite calls to re-open the coronial inquest, the New South Wales government has as of 2020 refused to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Thomas Hickey's death\nAn appeal to the United Nations Human rights commission by lawyers acting for the Hickey Family to investigate the death and any racial motivation concluded the death to be an accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Riots\nOn the evening of 15 February, Aboriginal and non-Indigenous youths and adults, most of them from The Block, the Waterloo estate and other inner city housing precincts gathered at Eveleigh Street quickly after the word of the death spread. Persons were seen preparing petrol bombs and stockpiling bricks, resulting in police closing the Eveleigh Street entrance to the station, which turned the crowd violent and they began to throw bottles, bricks, live fireworks and Molotov cocktails. The violence escalated into a full-scale riot around the Block, during which Redfern railway station was briefly alight, suffering superficial damage. The riot continued into the early morning, until police used fire brigade water hoses to disperse the crowd. Total damages included a torched car and 40 injured police officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Post-riot\nA memorial service was held on 19 February 2004 in Redfern, and in Walgett, New South Wales (Hickey's hometown), on 22 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Post-riot\nIn 2005, the University of Technology Sydney's students' association donated a plaque with TJ's portrait, with an inscription that read: \"On the 14th February, 2004, TJ Hickey, aged 17, was impaled upon the metal fence above, arising from a police pursuit. The young man died as a result of his wounds the next day. In our hearts you will stay TJ.\" Local police, the NSW government and the Department of Housing have refused to allow the plaque to be placed on the wall below the fence where Hickey was impaled unless the words \"police pursuit\" were changed to \"tragic accident\", which the family has refused to do.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Post-riot\nIn 2007, the New South Wales Police were fined $100,000 after the NSW Industrial Relations Commission found it had failed to ensure the health, safety and welfare at work of its employees under the Occupational Health and Safety Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178624-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Redfern riots, Legacy\nThe 2013 film Around the Block focuses partly on the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178625-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Reform Party presidential primaries\nThe Reform Party of the United States of America held primary elections for its presidential candidate in May 2004. Ralph Nader was overwhelmingly endorsed as candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178625-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Reform Party presidential primaries\nFor a time, it seemed as though industrialist Ted Weill, among the party's most widely respected members, would become the front-runner for the nomination. When he learned that Ralph Nader would also seek the party's nomination, he dropped out of the race and endorsed Nader's candidacy. He ultimately contributed thousands of dollars to Nader's political campaigns. During his acceptance speech at the 2004 Reform Party National Convention in Irving, Texas, Nader thanked Weill for his support.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178626-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Renault Clio Cup United Kingdom\nThe 2004 Elf Renault Clio Cup United Kingdom season began at Thruxton on 10 April and finished after 20 races over 10 events at Donington Park on 26 September. The Championship was won by Paul Rivett driving for Boulevard Team Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178626-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Renault Clio Cup United Kingdom\nThe season was marred by the death of Kevin Lloyd at the May Thruxton meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178626-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Renault Clio Cup United Kingdom, Drivers' Championship\n\u2020 Kevin Lloyd was fatally injured in an accident during Round 9 at Thruxton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention\nThe 2004 Republican National Convention, the presidential nominating convention of the Republican Party of the United States, took place from August 30 to September 2, 2004 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. The convention is one of a series of historic quadrennial meetings at which the Republican candidates for president and vice president, and party platform are formally adopted. Attendance included 2,509 delegates and 2,344 alternate delegates from the states, territories and the District of Columbia. The convention marked the formal end of the active primary election season. As of 2021, it is the most recent major-party nominating convention to be held in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention\nThe theme of the convention was \"Fulfilling America's Promise by Building a Safer World and a More Hopeful America.\" Defining moments of the 2004 Republican National Convention include a featured keynote address by Zell Miller and the confirmation of the nomination of President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney for reelection. Bush and Cheney faced the Democratic Party's ticket of John Kerry and John Edwards in the 2004 presidential election and won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Platform\nApart from nominating a candidate for president and vice president, the 2004 Republican National Convention was also charged with crafting an official party platform and political agenda for the next four years. At the helm of the Platform Committee was United States Senator and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist of Tennessee, Congresswoman Melissa Hart of Pennsylvania and Colorado Governor Bill Owens. The committee worked with the Bush campaign to develop the draft platform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Platform\nThe platform adopted by the 2004 Republican National Convention was the longest in the party's history compared to the mere 1,000-word platform adopted at the first convention in 1856. At 48,000 words, it was twice the length of the one adopted at the 2004 Democratic National Convention which was only 19,500 words.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Venue\nThe choice of Madison Square Garden on January 31, 2003 by all 165 members of the Republican National Committee as the venue for the 2004 Republican National Convention meant that New York City would host a major Republican nominating convention for the first time in its history. On July 19, control of Madison Square Garden was officially handed over to the Republican Party under the administration of Chief Executive Officer of the Convention, Bill Harris. Mayor Michael Bloomberg thanked the party for their choice, for which he had vigorously lobbied, noting it as a significant display of support for the city and an economic boom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Venue, Security\nLike the 2004 Democratic National Convention in Boston, Massachusetts, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officially declared the 2004 Republican National Convention a National Special Security Event (NSSE). As such, the United States Secret Service was charged with employing and coordinating all federal and local agencies including the various bureaus of DHS, the FBI, and the NYPD to secure the venue from terrorist attacks. Expected security expenditures reached $70\u00a0million, $50\u00a0million of which was funded by the federal government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Venue, Security\nThe city employed an active beat of 10,000 police officers deployed as Hercules teams\u2014uniformed in full riot gear and body armor, and equipped with submachine guns and rifles. Commuter and Amtrak trains entering and exiting Penn Station were scoured by bomb-sniffing dogs as uniformed police officers were attached to buses carrying delegates. All employees of buildings surrounding Madison Square Garden were subjected to thorough screening and background checks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Venue, Security\nThe NYPD infiltrated and compiled dossiers on protest groups (most of whom were doing nothing illegal), leading to over 1,800 arrests and subsequent fingerprinting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Venue, Timing\nThe convention took place in New York City a week before the third anniversary of September 11. The attacks were a primary theme of the convention, from the choice of speakers to repeated invocations of the attacks. At the convention, there was a performance of \"Amazing Grace\" by Daniel Rodriguez, a tribute to those killed on September 11. Relatives of three of the victims spoke and talked about how September 11 brought the country together. Also contributing musically were Brooks & Dunn, Sara Evans, Lee Ann Womack, Darryl Worley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers\nEarly in the summer leading up to the 2004 Republican National Convention, Republican National Committee Chairman Ed Gillespie announced the first slate of convention speakers. He added, \"It is an honor to announce the addition of these outstanding Americans to the 2004 Republican National Convention program. For the past three and a half years, President Bush has led with strength and compassion and these speakers reflect that.\" Chief Executive Officer of the Convention Bill Harris commented, \"These speakers have seen President Bush's strong, steady leadership and each will attest to his character from a unique perspective. Their vast experience and various points of view are a testament to the depth and breadth of the support for the Republican ticket in 2004.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Zell Miller\nConsidered to be one of the most interesting choices for speakers at the convention was a keynote address by Georgia Senator Zell Miller, a conservative Democrat. Miller had consistently voted with Republicans. In an editorial in The Wall Street Journal, Miller cited that the reason for his defection was that, \"I barely recognize my party anymore.\" He continued, \"Today, it's the Democratic Party that has mastered the art of division and diversion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Zell Miller\nTo run for president as a Democrat these days you have to go from interest group to interest group, cap in hand, asking for the support of liberal kingmakers.\" He finished by saying, \"I still believe in hope and opportunity and, when it comes right down to it, Mr. Bush is the man who represents hope and opportunity.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Zell Miller\nHis keynote address was a visceral smite to Democrats and an excoriating attack on John Kerry, blaming him for the divisions in America. Notably, he mocked Kerry's call for strength in the armed forces by noting several important military projects that Kerry had opposed, saying that Kerry wanted \"forces armed with what - spitballs?\" Including Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts, he claimed \"no pair has been more wrong, more loudly, more often, than the two senators from Massachusetts: Ted Kennedy and John Kerry.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Zell Miller\nIn his speech, Miller also heaped his praise for 1940 Republican Presidential nominee Wendell Willkie for supporting President Roosevelt's establishment of a military draft, raising concerns about the intentions of President Bush in this area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Zell Miller\nZell Miller also delivered the keynote address on behalf of Bill Clinton in 1992 at Madison Square Garden. He remained a Democrat in the Senate until leaving in 2005 (he was not running for reelection). However, after this address, his affiliation with the national Democratic Party was unquestionably over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Nancy Reagan's absence\nNancy Reagan's spokesperson announced that the former First Lady fully supported President Bush for the general election. The spokesperson added that while the former First Lady and her children would be absent from the 2004 Republican National Convention, President Reagan's son with Jane Wyman, Michael Reagan, had accepted an invitation to address the delegates. Nancy Reagan appeared in the filmed tribute he introduced. He dedicated the film to everyone who helped make his father president of the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Nancy Reagan's absence\nDuring the convention, delegates paid tribute to Reagan in different ways. Many of the speakers from California and Illinois, including House Speaker Dennis Hastert, mentioned Reagan in their speeches and compared Reagan to Bush. Those from Illinois, including Hastert, compared Bush to both Reagan and Abraham Lincoln, another native son of their state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\n\"[ A] heroic story comes to us from Michigan, where 19-year-old Rita Arnaout was involved in a four-car pileup that nearly killed her in March. While doctors were operating, one of her lungs collapsed. It turns out there was a malignant tumor pressing against her lung and heart. Despite the debilitating effects of cancer treatment, Rita insists on continuing her work as a volunteer for the Bush campaign. Her doctor said he didn't think it was a good idea. Rita started crying and said, 'But President Bush needs my help'. She also says if someone like her can spend time working the phones for President Bush, we all can.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\n\"We should remember, it wasn't so long ago that confidence in New York was in short supply. When I took the oath of office nearly three years ago, we were a city in mourning a city that had, in a few dreadful hours, lost almost 3,000 of our own husbands, wives, sons, and daughters from every part of the nation, and every corner of the globe. There were those who doubted then whether this city could hold onto the gains made during the 90s under Mayor Giuliani.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\nA lot of people were wondering what the future held for New York City, or whether we even had a future. But neither America nor President Bush ever stopped believing in us. Nearly two years ago, with the city's fate still a question mark in many minds, our President decided that this Convention would come to New York. This was a show of faith that required courage and vision one that all New Yorkers will not forget. And today it fills me with enormous pride and gratitude to tell everyone that New York City is back!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\n\"All of us, despite the differences that enliven our politics, are united in the one big idea that freedom is our birthright and its defense is always our first responsibility. All other responsibilities come second. We must not lose sight of that as we debate who among us should bear the greatest responsibility for keeping us safe and free. We must, whatever our disagreements, stick together in this great challenge of our time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\nMy friends in the Democratic Party and I'm fortunate to call many of them my friends assure us they share the conviction that winning the war against terrorism is our government's most important obligation. I don't doubt their sincerity. They emphasize that military action alone won't protect us, that this war has many fronts: in courts, financial institutions, in the shadowy world of intelligence, and in diplomacy. They stress that America needs the help of her friends to combat an evil that threatens us all, that our alliances are as important to victory as are our armies. We agree.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\n\"We are Americans first, Americans last, Americans always. Let us argue our differences. But remember we are not enemies, but comrades in a war against a real enemy, and take courage from the knowledge that our military superiority is matched only by the superiority of our ideals, and our unconquerable love for them. Our adversaries are weaker than us in arms and men, but weaker still in causes. They fight to express a hatred for all that is good in humanity. We fight for love of freedom and justice, a love that is invincible. Keep that faith. Keep your courage. Stick together. Stay strong. Do not yield. Do not flinch. Stand up. Stand up with our President and fight. We're Americans. We're Americans, and we'll never surrender.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Monday, August 30, 2004, Quotations\n\"From the first Republican President, Abraham Lincoln, to President George W. Bush our party's great contribution is to expand freedom in our own land and all over the world. And our party is at its best when it makes certain that we have a powerful national defense in a still very dangerous world. I don't believe we're right about everything and Democrats are wrong about everything. Neither party has a monopoly on virtue. But I do believe that there are times in our history when our ideas are more necessary and important for what we are facing.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 82], "content_span": [83, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\n\"We live in a great country. A nation of good people in pursuit of great ideals defined by our Founders, defended by citizen-soldiers, and delivered to us. We inherited a great nation. So must our children! No nation whatever the size of its armed forces or economy can sustain greatness unless it educates all, not just some, of its citizens. No one understands that better than President Bush. He's always had a compassionate vision for education: Students challenged by high standards; teachers armed with proper resources; parents empowered with information and choices. Young adults with meaningful diplomas in their hands not despair in their hearts.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\n\"My fellow Americans, how do you know if you are a Republican? I'll tell you how. If you believe that government should be accountable to the people, not the people to the government, then you are a Republican! If you believe a person should be treated as an individual, not as a member of an interest group, then you are a Republican! If you believe your family knows how to spend your money better than the government does, then you are a Republican!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0022-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\nIf you believe our educational system should be held accountable for the progress of our children, then you are a Republican! If you believe this country, not the United Nations, is the best hope of democracy in the world, then you are a Republican! And, ladies and gentlemen if you believe we must be fierce and relentless and terminate terrorism, then you are a Republican!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\n\"There is another way you can tell you're a Republican. You have faith in free enterprise, faith in the resourcefulness of the American people ...and faith in the U.S. economy. To those critics who are so pessimistic about our economy, I say: Don't be economic girlie men!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\n\"This time of war has been a time of great hardship for our military families. The President and I want all our men and women in uniform and their wives and husbands, mothers and fathers, sons and daughters to know we appreciate their sacrifice. We know it will mean a more peaceful future for our children and grandchildren. No American President ever wants to go to war. Abraham Lincoln didn't want to go to war, but he knew saving the union required it. Franklin Roosevelt didn't want to go to war\u2014but he knew defeating tyranny demanded it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\nAnd my husband didn't want to go to war, but he knew the safety and security of America and the world depended on it. I remember some very quiet nights at the dinner table. George was weighing grim scenarios and ominous intelligence about potentially even more devastating attacks. I listened many nights as George talked with foreign leaders on the phone, or in our living room, or at our ranch in Crawford. I remember an intense weekend at Camp David. George and Prime Minister Tony Blair were discussing the threat from Saddam Hussein.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0024-0002", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Tuesday, August 31, 2004, Quotations\nAnd I remember sitting in the window of the White House, watching as my husband walked on the lawn below. I knew he was wrestling with these agonizing decisions that would have such profound consequence for so many lives and for the future of our world. And I was there when my husband had to decide. Once again, as in our parents' generation, America had to make the tough choices, the hard decisions, and lead the world toward greater security and freedom.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Wednesday, September 1, 2004, Balloting\nPresident Bush was nominated at the end of a \"rolling roll call\" that had started the day before, when Pennsylvania's delegation cast the deciding votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 86], "content_span": [87, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Wednesday, September 1, 2004, Quotations\nJohn Kerry believes that government can spend our money better than we can. But most Americans don't share this view. That's why John Kerry has to preach the politics of division, of envy and resentment. That's why they talk so much about two Americas. But class warfare is not an economic policy. And the politics of division will not make America stronger, and it will not lead to prosperity.'\" Paul Ryan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 87], "content_span": [88, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Speakers, Thursday, September 2, 2004, Balloting\nVice President Dick Cheney was nominated by voice vote for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 85], "content_span": [86, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Aftermath\nAccording to Rasmussen weekly tracking polls, Bush led Kerry by 0.3% on the poll released August 26. On September 2, Bush's lead had increased to 2.5%. On September 9, the lead had decreased to 1.3%. Bush would maintain his leads throughout the fall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Protests\nProtest activity included marches, rallies, performances, demonstrations, exhibits, and acts of civil disobedience in New York City to protest the 2004 Republican National Convention and the nomination of President George W. Bush for the 2004 U.S. presidential election, as well as a much smaller number of people who marched to support Bush at the convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178627-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention, Protests\nOn May 17, 2006 Amy Goodman, host of Democracy Now! Reported on the FBI launch of a criminal civil rights investigation of NYPD after Desert storm veteran Dennis Kyne went to trial and had all charges dropped due to video evidence showing the police falsified reports and sworn testimony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity\n2004 Republican National Convention protest activity includes the broad range of marches, rallies, performances, demonstrations, exhibits, and acts of civil disobedience in New York City to protest the 2004 Republican National Convention and the nomination of President George W. Bush for the 2004 U.S. presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity\nHundreds of groups organized protests, including United for Peace and Justice, a coalition of more than 800 anti-war and social justice groups, and International ANSWER. Over 1800 individuals were arrested by the authorities, a record for a political convention in the U.S. However 90% of those charges were eventually dropped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Thursday, August 26\nFour young professionals and students, who called themselves Operation Sybil, hung a banner over the front of the Plaza Hotel. Two of them, including Terra Lawson-Remer, rappelled down the front of the hotel, after which they were able to hang the banner more than a dozen stories above the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Thursday, August 26\nThe banner, which measured 60 feet (18\u00a0m) wide and roughly three stories high, said \"Truth,\" with an arrow pointing in one direction (toward Central Park, where the United for Peace March was supposed to take place) and \"Bush,\" with an arrow pointing the other direction (toward Madison Square Garden, the site of the convention). The four climbers were quickly arrested and the banner was removed by the police. One police officer was injured in the process when he stepped on a skylight and it broke. As a result of the officer's injury, the climbers were charged with assault of a police officer along with their other charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Thursday, August 26\nTwelve AIDS activists from the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) staged a naked protest in front of Madison Square Garden, demanding debt cancellation for poor countries. They took their clothes off in the crosswalk, stopping traffic, as they joined hands and began chanting \"Bush, Stop AIDS. Drop the Debt Now!\" \"Drop the Debt\" and \"Stop AIDS\" were stenciled in black paint on their chests and backs. Their intent was to tell \"the naked truth\" about Bush's global AIDS policies \u2013 that they are inadequate, and that debt cancellation must be a top priority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Thursday, August 26\nSeven of the protesters were completely naked, three were semi-clothed, and two others, who stood off to the side, were fully clothed, and held a large banner that read \"W: Drop the Debt. Stop AIDS.\" The two clothed activists climbed on top of a nearby trailer to make the banner more visible. They were later arrested and faced several charges, including endangerment of a police officer, which was a result of the fact that officers had to climb on top of the trailer, which was a generator, in order to arrest them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Thursday, August 26\nAlthough there were several times as many police officers as there were protesters on the scene, it was seventeen minutes before the activists were arrested. They were represented by Ron Kuby, and all of the charges were later dropped. A few protesters who were semi-clothed were not arrested, and faced no charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Thursday, August 26\nThe activists later became one of the subjects in photographer Richard Avedon's last project, published in the New Yorker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Friday, August 27\nBetween 5,000 and 6,000 participants took part in the Critical Mass bicycle ride. The monthly NYC Critical Mass ride promoted by the environmental group Time's Up! occurs on the last Friday of each month and prior to this ride had usually attracted about 1,500 riders. Police eventually blockaded roads and arrested 264 people in relation to that event. Most of them were charged with disorderly conduct and held in custody for up to 72 hours. This was the first time the NYPD had made any significant arrests of Critical Mass participants in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Sunday, August 29\nUnited for Peace and Justice organized the main march of the week, one of the largest protests in U.S. history, in which protesters marched past Madison Square Garden, the site of the convention. The march included hundreds of separate contingents as well as individual marchers. One Thousand Coffins, a nationwide group of citizens, veterans and clergy, held a procession of one thousand full-scale flag-draped coffins commemorating the fallen troops. Several hundred members of Billionaires for Bush held a mock countermarch. Estimates of crowd size ranged from 120,000 (unnamed police spokesman) to over 500,000 (organizers, second unnamed police source). In March, 2007 NYPD Deputy Commissioner Paul Browne stated about the RNC protests: \"You certainly had 800,000 on August 29.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Sunday, August 29\nOrganizers held a pre-march press conference in front of thousands on 7th Avenue. Several people spoke in opposition to the war in Iraq and Bush administration policies including Michael Moore, Jesse Jackson, Congressman Charles Rangel, and a father who had lost his son in Iraq. The whole event lasted six hours, with the lead contingent finishing the march long before thousands of people could even move from the starting point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Sunday, August 29\nThe City government, under Republican Mayor Michael Bloomberg, had earlier denied the protesters a permit to hold a rally in Central Park following the march, citing concern for the park's grass. The West Side Highway was offered instead, but organizers refused, citing exorbitant costs for the extra sound equipment and problems for the location. Organizers encouraged people to go to Central Park following the march's conclusion in Union Square. Disturbances were minor, as New York Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly reported about 200 arrests with 9 felonies, most of them occurring after the march had concluded. Incidentally, this was also the day when the Protest Warrior and Communists for Kerry counter-protest groups held their main counter-demonstrations in support of Bush and the RNC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 865]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Sunday, August 29\nFor the most part, the march proceeded peacefully and without violence. The only major incident during the march occurred when some individuals of unknown affiliations torched a large dragon float between Madison Square Garden and the Fox News building. The float turned into a huge fireball, and the march was halted until firefighters were able to clear the street of debris. Later, there was a minor scuffle as some individuals tried to take some of the Protest Warriors' signs. There were isolated incidents of violent attacks against delegates according to Randal C. Archibold, writer from the New York Times. In his article, \"Protesters' Encounters With Delegates on the Town Turn Ugly,\" he discussed events that occurred in around the theater district, including one incident outside \"The Lion King\" on 42nd Street, in which a delegate is punched in the face by a protester running by.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 964]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Monday, August 30\nStill We Rise, a coalition of 52 NYC-based community organizations for the poor and people of color, marched at noon from Union Square to Madison Square Garden, and held a rally by the Garden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Monday, August 30\nAt 4\u00a0PM, the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign, a national campaign involving over sixty organizations, held a rally by the United Nations on the Dag Hammarskjold Plaza. Along with many homeless and poor people who have been marching with the PPEHRC through New Jersey and living in a \"mobile Bushville\" (which settled in Brooklyn a week before the Convention), thousands thronged the streets despite having been denied a permit and marched down Second Avenue and up Eighth Avenue to Madison Square Garden, the police having decided not to stop the protesters. A few troublemakers apparently acting alone disrupted the march towards the end by tearing open police barricades, with one person attacking a plainclothes police detective who had driven his scooter into the crowd (see note below), knocking him unconscious. Police made several arrests and deployed tear gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Monday, August 30\nThere is considerable dispute involving this incident, as many eyewitnesses said they had no idea this was a policeman, who intentionally rammed his motorcycle straight into a dense crowd, hitting and injuring people, which started the altercation. One source said: \"The divide and arrest tactics used by the police in the march have been seen in the past several days in New York here, and as have the use of undercover officers, mopeds and motorcycles.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Monday, August 30\nAnother source stated: \"Eyewitness reports confirmed that an undercover police officer in a scooter rammed his way into the throngs of protesters, driving as fast as 20\u00a0miles an hour, as the police were splitting the crowd, before being knocked off and beaten by an angry demonstrator. ' What kind of person would ram into dozens of people in a scooter with a line of police behind him?' asked protester Gonzalo Hereda afterwards in disbelief.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Tuesday, August 31\nA group called the A31 Action Coalition called for massive civil disobedience on Tuesday, August 31.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Tuesday, August 31\nMembers of CODEPINK and others gathered in front of Fox News Channel's headquarters in New York City and held a \"Fox News Shut-Up-A-Thon.\" About 1,000 people protested the network, complaining about lack of balance and deriding it as a propaganda arm of the Republican Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Tuesday, August 31\nMost of the protesters from the War Resisters League didn't get very far from the World Trade Center on their 3-mile procession to the RNC convention at Madison Square Garden. They crossed one block and 227 of them were instantly surrounded by police and arrested. The several hundred remaining in the WRL contingent proceeded up a different route and got closer to the convention, and did a \"die-in\" in the street where 54 more were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 72], "content_span": [73, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Protest from within the convention\nThroughout the convention, there were several protesters who were able to sneak into Madison Square Garden and disrupt the speakers at the podium. Some even described it as surprisingly easy. Anti -war activists from CODEPINK disrupted primetime addresses three nights in a row and twice during George W. Bush's acceptance speech. The father of one of the first U.S. servicemen killed in Iraq was ejected after holding up a sign that read \"Bush Lied. My Son Died.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 88], "content_span": [89, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Protest from within the convention\nEleven AIDS activists from ACT UP also infiltrated the convention center during the Republican Youth Convention, chanting anti-Bush slogans and disrupting the event. One female protester holding a sign was subdued by security, and alleged that she was kicked by a member of the Young Republicans while she was on the ground. Video of this event was shot by a local news station, but it proved to be inconclusive, because while it showed the Republican making kicking motions, it didn't show that any contact was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 88], "content_span": [89, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Protest from within the convention\nNews of the alleged attack spread through the blogosphere, leading a website to identify a person who they believed was the alleged attacker. The female protester who was kicked then came forward and said she would consider pressing charges; however, she later decided that it was more worthwhile to expend her energy fighting AIDS. The identity of the alleged attacker has not been conclusively confirmed. The eleven ACT UP protesters were charged with disorderly conduct, 2nd and 3rd degree assault, and inciting a riot (1 violation, 1 misdemeanor, and 2 felonies), although all of the charges were dropped. A twelfth individual, not associated with ACT UP, was also arrested with them for taking pictures of the action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 88], "content_span": [89, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Controversial police tactics\nConcerns have been raised about police tactics in arresting nonviolent protesters with many apparently innocent people being swept up in mass arrests. For instance, a lawyer, along with 1,000 other people, was detained in a facility by the New York City Police Department in such conditions that he said that the city had created its \"own little Guantanamo on the Hudson\", referring to the tortures reported in prisoners camps in Guantanamo Bay. The police closed a street adjoining Union Square where protesters were marching, arresting protesters and bystanders alike. People were required to show identification cards or face arrest; the arrested people were not immediately informed of charges against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Controversial police tactics\nThe facility was the then-recently closed Hudson Pier Depot at Pier 57 on the Hudson River, a three-story, block-long pier that has been converted into a temporary prison, though unfit for detention of prisoners. Arrested protesters have complained about extremely poor conditions describing it as overcrowded, dirty, and contaminated with oil and asbestos. People reported having suffered from smell, bad ventilation, and even chemical burns and rashes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Controversial police tactics\nOn May 17, 2006 Amy Goodman, host of Democracy Now!, reported on the FBI launch of a criminal civil rights investigation of NYPD after Gulf War veteran Dennis Kyne went to trial and had all charges dropped due to video evidence showing the police falsified reports and sworn testimony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Controversial police tactics\nIn 2014, the city settled the lawsuits. $6.4 million was paid to 430 individual plaintiffs. $6.6 million was paid to settle a class-action lawsuit filed by 1,200 additional people. The legal fees were $5 million. The city did not admit any wrongdoing. One of the plaintiffs, artist Constantina Zavistanos, has incorporated her settlement into the art work \"Sweepstakes\" where viewers are given a portion of the settlement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Controversial police tactics\nThe New York Times has also reported on two occasions that the police videotaped and infiltrated protests, as well as acting as agents provocateurs during the protests. In addition, the New York Times reported that prior to the protests, NYPD officers traveled as far away as Europe and spied on people there who planned to protest at the RNC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178628-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican National Convention protest activity, Controversial police tactics\nThe City reportedly refused to release the prisoners until a judge threatened to fine it for every extra hour every prisoner would spend in prison. The victims of the arrests have filed lawsuits against the City of New York. Several cases have since gone to court, and it has come out that the charges of resisting arrest in those cases were completely fabricated. Video evidence was shown of defendants complying peaceably with police demands. Many of the cases have since been summarily dismissed. Some of them, as of 2011, however, remain open and are expected to proceed to trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries\nFrom January 19 to June 8, 2004, voters of the Republican Party chose its nominee for president in the 2004 United States presidential election. Incumbent President George W. Bush was again selected as the nominee through a series of primary elections and caucuses culminating in the 2004 Republican National Convention held from August 30 to September 2, 2004, in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview\nIncumbent President George W. Bush announced in mid-2003 that he would campaign for re-election; he faced no major challengers. He then went on, throughout early 2004, to win every nomination contest, including a sweep of Super Tuesday, beating back the vacuum of challengers and maintaining the recent tradition of an easy primary for incumbent Presidents (the last time an incumbent was seriously challenged in a presidential primary contest was when Senator Ted Kennedy challenged Jimmy Carter for the Democratic nomination in 1980). Bush managed to raise US$130 million in 2003 alone, and expected to set a national primary fund-raising record of $200 million by the time of the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview\nSeveral states and territories canceled their respective Republican primaries altogether, citing Bush being the only candidate to qualify on their respective ballot, including Connecticut, Florida, Mississippi, New York, Puerto Rico, and South Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries, Primary race overview\nSenator Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, an opponent of the war in Iraq, Bush's tax cuts, drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, and much of Bush's social agenda, considered challenging Bush in the New Hampshire primary in the fall of 2003. He decided not to run, after the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003. He would later change his party affiliation to Democratic and run in that party's 2016 presidential primaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries, Candidates, Challengers, On the ballot in one primary\nAll but one of the following were on the ballot only in the state of New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 99], "content_span": [100, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries, Candidates, Challengers, On the ballot in one primary\nRetired engineer Jack Fellure of West Virginia got 14 votes in the North Dakota Caucases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 99], "content_span": [100, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178629-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Republican Party presidential primaries, Results\nThere were 2,509 total delegates to the 2004 Republican National Convention, of which 650 were so-called \"superdelegates\" who were not bound by any particular state's primary or caucus votes and could change their votes at any time. A candidate needs 1,255 delegates to become the nominee. Except for the Northern Mariana Islands and Midway Atoll, all states, territories, and other inhabited areas of the United States offer delegates to the 2004 Republican National Convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178630-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhein Fire season\nThe 2004 Rhein Fire season was the tenth season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Pete Kuharchek in his fourth year, and played its home games at Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. They finished the regular season in fifth place with a record of three wins and seven losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178631-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhode Island Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Rhode Island Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2 in the U.S. state of Rhode Island as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178632-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhode Island Rams football team\nThe 2004 Rhode Island Rams football team was an American football team that represented the University of Rhode Island in the Atlantic 10 Conference during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their fifth season under head coach Tim Stowers, the Rams compiled a 4\u20137 record (2\u20136 against conference opponents) and finished fourth in the North Division of the Atlantic 10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178633-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council election\nThe third election to Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council was held in June 2004. It was preceded by the 1999 election and followed by the 2008 election. On the same day there were elections to the other 21 local authorities in Wales and community councils in Wales and the first elections to the National Assembly for Wales were held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178633-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council election, Overview\nAll 75 council seats were up for election. Labour regained control of the authority from Plaid Cymru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178633-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council election, Ward Results, Cwm Clydach (one seat)\nRoberts had been elected as a Plaid Cymru candidate but subsequently joined the Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 92], "content_span": [93, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178633-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council election, Ward Results, Penygraig (two seats)\nDavies had been elected as a Plaid Cymru candidate in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 91], "content_span": [92, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178633-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council election, Ward Results, Rhigos (one seat)\nThe sitting Plaid Cymru member had been returned unopposed in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 87], "content_span": [88, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178633-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council election, Ward Results, Tonypandy (one seat)\nThe retiring member had defected from Plaid Cymru to the Liberal Democrats since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 90], "content_span": [91, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178634-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes regional election\nA regional election took place in Rh\u00f4ne-Alpes on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Jean-Jack Queyranne (PS) was elected president, defeating the incumbent Anne-Marie Comparini (UDF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178635-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rice Owls football team\nThe 2004 Rice Owls football team represented Rice University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A college football season. The Owls, led by head coach Ken Hatfield, played their home games at Rice Stadium in Houston, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178636-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Richmond Spiders football team\nThe 2004 Richmond Spiders football team represented the University of Richmond during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Richmond competed as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10), and played their home games at the University of Richmond Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178636-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Richmond Spiders football team\nThe Spiders were led by first-year head coach Dave Clawson, who was previously head coach at Fordham University. Richmond finished the regular season with a 3\u20138 overall record and 2\u20136 record in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178637-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rink Hockey Men's B World Championship\nThe 2004 Rink Hockey Men's B World Championship was the 36th edition of the Rink Hockey B World Championship, held from October 16 to 23, in Macau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178637-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rink Hockey Men's B World Championship\nThe champion was Catalonia, that had obtained a FIRS provisional membership few months before the tournament. However, FIRS did not endorse final acceptance of Catalonia for subsequent editions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178637-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rink Hockey Men's B World Championship, Format\nCompetition's schedule included 11 countries, divided in two groups, but North Korea withdrew a few days before the opening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178638-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rio de Janeiro motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Rio de Janeiro motorcycle Grand Prix was the seventh round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 2\u20134 July 2004 at Aut\u00f3dromo Internacional Nelson Piquet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178638-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rio de Janeiro motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round seven has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 89], "content_span": [90, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178639-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Road America 500\nThe 2004 Road America 500 was the seventh race for the 2004 American Le Mans Series season. It took place on August 22, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178639-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Road America 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178639-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Road America 500, Official results\n\u2020 - #30 was disqualified for receiving outside assistance on the race course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado\nOn July 13, 2004, a powerful F4 tornado that formed outside of Roanoke, a small town in central Illinois. It is best known for the numerous videos and pictures taken of it as well as the complete destruction of the Parsons Manufacturing plant. Despite, the damage, there were only three minor injuries and no fatalities. It was one of six tornadoes to touch down on this day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Description\nOn Tuesday, July 13, 2004, at about 2:30\u00a0p.m., a tornado with a maximum reported width of a quarter mile (0.4\u00a0km) struck west of the village of Roanoke, damaging much of the area and cutting power to the main town of Roanoke for three days. Based on the extreme damage, the tornado was classified as a violent F4 on the Fujita scale by the National Weather Service. The tornado started approximately 1.8\u00a0miles (3\u00a0km) north of Metamora, located eight miles (12.8\u00a0km) west of Roanoke, and lifted approximately 2.5\u00a0miles (4\u00a0km) southeast of Roanoke. The tornado moved roughly southeasterly for a distance of 9.6\u00a0miles (15.4\u00a0kilometers) over about 25 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Description, Damage\nThe worst damage occurred at the Parsons Company manufacturing plant, a parts supplier for Caterpillar Inc., which was leveled, losing its roof and outer walls. Although about 140 people were inside the building when the tornado struck, there were no fatalities and only a few minor injuries. This was attributed to preparations made during the construction of the plant and spotter training given to some of the workers. Although no tornado sirens were heard at the plant before the tornado struck, an alarm sounded by one of the spotters allowed all the workers to move to storm shelters and ride out the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Description, Damage\nLarge steel beams from the Parsons plant were blown approximately 3/4-mile (1.2\u00a0km) away, and many of the employees' cars tossed into nearby cornfields. Three neighboring farmsteads were completely swept away, with only debris remaining in the basements. Trees were debarked, and farm machinery was thrown and mangled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Aftermath & Impact\nThe storm was an example of how structural planning, storm spotting, and awareness techniques can be used by companies. The plant owner's decision to include storm shelters in the building's design likely saved the lives of many employees. Just as important, the early notice provided by the company storm-spotters allowed employees to reach the shelters before the storm struck. The Parsons plant reopened in April 2005 with seven tornado shelters, five more than the original plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Aftermath & Impact\nTwo local residents chased the tornado for much of its 23-minute duration. They produced a half-hour-long video that was sold in the Peoria area to help raise funds for employees of the Parsons plant, most of whom had lost their cars and were either underinsured or not insured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Aftermath & Impact\nThe Roanoke tornado was the most significant tornado of a small tornado outbreak which transitioned into a destructive derecho over an extensive area of the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys extending to the Gulf of Mexico. The outbreak produced three other tornadoes, all rated F0. The Roanoke 2004 Tornado was featured on The Weather Channel's Storm Stories and Full Force Nature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178640-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Roanoke tornado, Aftermath & Impact\nThe Parsons plant would come very close to being destroyed again during the Washington, IL Tornado on November 17, 2013, however, that tornado passed just northwest of the plant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178641-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Robert Morris Colonials football team\nThe 2004 Robert Morris Colonials football team represented Robert Morris University as a member of the Northeast Conference (NEC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Colonials were led by 11th-year head coach Joe Walton and played their home games at Moon Stadium on the campus of Moon Area High School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178642-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rochdale Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Rochdale Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178643-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rochford District Council election\nElections to Rochford Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season\nRoger Federer won three Majors in 2004. The first came at the Australian Open over Marat Safin, 7\u20136(3), 6\u20134, 6\u20132. He went on to win his second Wimbledon crown over Andy Roddick, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(3), 6\u20134. In addition, Federer defeated the 2001 US Open Champion Lleyton Hewitt at the US Open for his first US Open title, 6\u20130, 7\u20136(3), 6\u20130. Furthermore, Federer won three ATP Masters 1000 events, one on clay at Hamburg, and two on hard court in Indian Wells and Canada. Federer took the ATP 500 series event at Dubai, and wrapped up the year for the second time over Lleyton Hewitt at the Tennis Masters Cup. Federer was the first player to win three Grand Slams in a single season since Mats Wilander in 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season\nFederer became the first man in the Open Era to win at least three Grand Slams and the Year-End Championships. As of 2021, Federer and Novak Djokovic are the only male tennis players to accomplish this, with Federer repeating the feat in 2006 and 2007 and Djokovic doing so in 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary\nIn 2004, Federer had one of the most dominating and successful years in the open era of modern men's tennis. He won three of the four Grand Slam singles tournaments, did not lose a match to anyone ranked in the top 10, won every final he reached, and was named the ITF Tennis World Champion. His win\u2013loss record for the year was 74\u20136 with 11 titles, which included three of the year's four Grand Slams and three ATP Masters Series titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Early hard court season\nFederer entered the 2004 Australian Open as the second seed behind American Andy Roddick. In the fourth round he rallied to defeat former number one and native son Lleyton Hewitt after dropping the first set. His nemesis David Nalbandian, who had won five of their six previous meetings, awaited him in the quarterfinals. Federer managed to dispatch the Argentine in four tight sets. The semifinals proved easier as Federer crunched world no. 3 Juan Carlos Ferrero and reached his first Australian Open final. His opponent in the final was former world no. 1 and 2000 US Open champion Marat Safin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Early hard court season\nAfter winning the opening set in a tiebreaker Federer secured a 7\u20136, 6\u20134, 6\u20132 championship win. This victory delivered him his first Australian Open and his second career Grand Slam. This win also saw him supplant Roddick as the world no. 1 on 2 February 2004, a ranking he would hold for an all-time record 237 consecutive weeks until 18 August 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Early hard court season\nFederer's momentum was temporarily halted when he was defeated at the Rotterdam Open by Tim Henman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Early hard court season\nFederer quickly rebounded in March, when he won the Dubai Tennis Championships, defeating Marat Safin in the first round and Spanish player Feliciano L\u00f3pez in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Early hard court season\nThe next stop on the calendar was the masters tournament in Indian Wells, California. Federer entered Indian Wells looking to claim his first masters title since 2002 Hamburg Masters. Federer had not dropped a set going into the semifinals where he played American legend Andre Agassi. Agassi won the first set, but Federer rallied to win a spot in the finals for the first time in Indian Wells. He seized the opportunity at the 2004 Pacific Life Open, defeating Tim Henman in straight sets to win the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Early hard court season\n2004 also marked the year where he first met teenager and future arch-rival Rafael Nadal, who defeated Federer in their first encounter in Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Clay court season\nFederer skipped Monte Carlo and decided to begin his clay season at the Rome Masters. He was, however, upset in the second round by 2002 French Open champion Albert Costa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Clay court season\nFederer next played the Hamburg Masters. He defeated former number 1 players Carlos Moy\u00e1 and Lleyton Hewitt in the quarterfinals and semifinals respectively. He then defeated world number 3 Guillermo Coria in the final to claim his second title in Hamburg and end Coria's longest winning streak of 31 consecutive matches on clay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Clay court season\nHe entered the French Open as top seed for the first time ever at a Grand Slam, but was defeated in the third round by former world number 1 and three-time French Open champion Gustavo Kuerten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season\nFederer entered Halle as the defending champion and quickly solidified his status as the premier grass court player of his generation. He did not drop a set for the entire tournament and convincingly defeated American Mardy Fish in the final by the score of 6\u20130, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season\nAfter his victory in the grass tuneup at Halle, Federer entered the Wimbledon Championships as the defending champion. Federer was aiming to be the first man to defend his title at Wimbledon since Pete Sampras (1999\u20132000). The Swiss dropped only one set as he made his way through the tournament and reached the final. He played world number 2 Andy Roddick for the championship in a thrilling four set final. Roddick came out strong with incredible serving and took the first set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Grass court season\nThe second set began with Federer racing out to a 4\u20130 lead, but Roddick rallied to level it at 4\u20134. Federer ultimately broke Roddick in the twelfth game and leveled the match at one set apiece. The pivotal third set was decided by a tiebreaker which was won by the Swiss defending champion. Federer closed out the match in four sets to win his third career Grand Slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer hard court season\nFederer's first tournament after Wimbledon was the Swiss Open at Gstaad. This was a clay court tournament that Federer played because it was a major tournament in his native Switzerland. He had played Gstaad every year between 1998\u20132003 but had never managed to emerge victorious. That changed in 2004 when Federer defeated Igor Andreev to win a tournament in Switzerland for the first time in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer hard court season\nFederer then won the Canada Masters in Toronto where he defeated Andy Roddick in the finals 7\u20135, 6\u20133. This was his fourth Masters championship and his first in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer hard court season\nHis 23 match winning streak ended surprisingly in the first round of the Cincinnati Masters where Federer was upset by Slovakian Dominik Hrbaty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer hard court season\nFederer entered the Athens Olympics as the top-seeded player and was considered the overwhelming favorite, but he was upset in the second round by Czech teenager and future world number 4 Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych. This would be the last loss Federer would suffer for the remainder of his 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Summer hard court season\nFederer entered the 2004 US Open as the top seed looking to win his first US Open championship. Federer cruised through the first four rounds before facing Andre Agassi in the quarterfinals. His match against the two time US Open champion proved to be a thrilling five set epic. After splitting the first two sets the third set went to 5\u20135 before Federer broke and took a two set to one advantage. Agassi would take the fourth but Federer claimed the fifth and decisive set. In the semifinals Federer eased past former nemesis Tim Henman in straight sets. Federer won his first US Open singles title, defeating Lleyton Hewitt, 6\u20130, 7\u20136(3), 6\u20130, in the final. This was one of the most dominant displays in US Open history as Federer was the first player to win two bagel sets in the final since 1884.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Fall hard court season\nFederer began his fall campaign at the Thailand Open. He survived a three set scare against local favorite Paradorn Srichaphan and faced world no. 2 Andy Roddick in the finals. He easily dispatched the American 6\u20134, 6\u20130. This was his twelfth consecutive victory in a tournament final which tied the all-time record of Bj\u00f6rn Borg and John McEnroe. This victory marked Federer's tenth title of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Fall hard court season\nFederer skipped the Madrid Masters in order to focus on winning his hometown tournament of the Swiss Indoors in Basel for the first time. However, just before the start of Basel, Federer suffered a muscle fiber rupture in his left thigh and was forced to withdraw. This injury also kept him out of the Paris Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Fall hard court season\nHe returned after six weeks out of action at the Tennis Masters Cup in Houston. Federer was honored as the top seed by having lunch with former President George H.W. Bush. He was the defending champion at the Year-End Championships and was placed during the round robin stage in the Red Group. The Red Group consisted of former no. 1 players Carlos Moy\u00e1 and Lleyton Hewitt as well as reigning French Open champion Gast\u00f3n Gaudio. He won all three round robin matches, taking six of seven sets, and faced Marat Safin in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Year summary, Fall hard court season\nFederer won the first set, but the second set turned into a historic marathon tiebreaker. The tiebreaker was won by Federer by a score of 20\u201318 and lasted 27 minutes. The 38 points equalled the longest tie-break in tennis history along with Borg-Lall at 1973 Wimbledon and Ivanisevic-Nestor at 1993 US Open. Federer next faced Lleyton Hewitt in the finals for the sixth time that season and won the championship match 6\u20133, 6\u20132. This victory was his thirteenth consecutive victory in a tournament final which broke the record he had shared with Borg and McEnroe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Season accomplishments\nFederer won 11 titles in 2004, which included three Grand Slam titles, three ATP Masters titles, and the Tennis Masters Cup. He was the first player to win three Grand Slam titles in a single year since Mats Wilander in 1988. Federer's win-loss record for the 2004 season was 74\u20136, which was the best winning percentage of any player since Ivan Lendl was 74\u20136 in 1986.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178644-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Roger Federer tennis season, Season accomplishments\nIn 2016, the ATP named this season as the best in Federer's career. During that year, Federer won 91.6% of his service games, also won 34.8% of his first-serve return points and saved 72.6% of break points against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178645-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rogers AT&T Cup \u2013 Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova and Martina Navratilova were the defending champions, but chose not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178645-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rogers AT&T Cup \u2013 Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe and Ai Sugiyama won in the final 6\u20130, 6\u20133, against Liezel Huber and Tamarine Tanasugarn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178645-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rogers AT&T Cup \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178646-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rogers AT&T Cup \u2013 Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but chose not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178646-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rogers AT&T Cup \u2013 Singles\nAm\u00e9lie Mauresmo won in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20130, against Elena Likhovtseva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178646-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rogers AT&T Cup \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178647-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rolex Sports Car Series\nThe 2004 Rolex Sports Car Series season was the fifth season of the Rolex Sports Car Series run by the Grand American Road Racing Association. The season involved three classes, Daytona Prototypes (DP), Grand Touring (GT), and Super Grand Sport (SGS). Twelve races were run from January 31, 2004, to October 31, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178648-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Romanian Figure Skating Championships were the national championships of the 2003\u201304 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles. The results were used to choose the Romanian teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Romania on 28 November 2004, with a second round of the presidential elections on 12 December between Prime Minister Adrian N\u0103stase of the ruling Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSD) and Bucharest Mayor Traian B\u0103sescu of the opposition Justice and Truth Alliance (DA). B\u0103sescu was elected President by a narrow majority of just 51.2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election\nFollowing 2003 amendments to the constitution which lengthened the presidential term to five years, these were the last joint elections to the presidency and Parliament in Romania's political history thus far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Campaign, Parliamentary elections\nThe main contenders were the left-wing alliance made up of the then incumbent Social Democratic Party of Romania (PSD) and the Romanian Humanist Party (PUR), and, on the other hand, the center-right Justice and Truth Alliance (DA; Romanian: Dreptate \u0219i adev\u0103r) comprising the conservative-liberal National Liberal Party (PNL) and the initially social-democratic Democratic Party (PD) which later adopted a center-right Christian democratic ideology.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Campaign, Parliamentary elections\nOther significant contenders were the Greater Romania Party (PRM) (right-wing nationalists), the ethnic Hungarian party Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), and the Union for Romanian Reconstruction (UPRR), a group of right-wing technocrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Conduct\nThe opposition alleged fraudulent use by the PSD of \"supplementary lists\", designed to help Romanians in transit to vote. Traditionally, Romanians voted with a cardboard identity card, which was stamped when they voted. Most Romanians now have laminated plastic IDs, to which a printed stamp is affixed when a person votes. However, the stamps can be easily removed. In spite of this, electoral fraud is nearly impossible to commit, as every citizen is assigned to one local voting station, the only location he/she can vote at.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Conduct\nThe opposition claimed that there were organized \"electoral excursions\" of PSD supporters who were bussed to various towns to vote several times. This was corroborated by several teams of journalists, who followed the buses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Conduct\nThe government attacked the opposition by arguing that 'rumours of fraud' affect Romania's economy and its external credibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Conduct\nIn January 2005, the IMAS institute of statistics released an analysis of the voting results in the 16,824 precincts. In the top 1,000 precincts with the most votes on the supplementary lists, the PSD had 43% to the DA's 23%, while in the precincts with fewest votes on supplementary lists, the PSD had 30% to the DA's 34%. The same trend was true in the precincts with most void votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Results, President\nCorneliu Vadim Tudor (blue) positioned himself against Traian B\u0103sescu, without openly endorsing Adrian N\u0103stase. Marko Bela (green) openly endorsed Adrian N\u0103stase. Gheorghe Ciuhandu (orange) openly endorsed Traian B\u0103sescu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Results, Parliament, Senate\nPNL and PD formed Justice and Truth Alliance (ADA). PUR was initially part of the National Union PSD+PUR but soon after the elections left the alliance and switched sides, becoming an ally of ADA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Results, Parliament, Chamber of Deputies\nPNL and PD formed Justice and Truth Alliance (ADA). PUR was initially part of the National Union PSD+PUR but soon after the elections left the alliance and switched sides, becoming an ally of ADA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178649-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian general election, Aftermath\nOn 13 December, the PUR president Dan Voiculescu hinted that they have more in common with the DA (both have a center-right orientation) and that they might break from the PSD, but one day later said that he would remain with PSD. It has been suggested by the press that this could be result of a blackmail about his communist past. By 25 December both UDMR and PUR signed a protocol of alliance with DA (Justice and Truth), with the designated prime minister being C\u0103lin Popescu-T\u0103riceanu. Thus, the PSD was left in opposition while Justice and Truth Alliance (DA), the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), and the Humanist Party (PC, then Conservative Party) formed the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178650-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian local elections\nLocal elections were held in Romania in late May 2004, and a runoff for mayors in early June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178650-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Romanian local elections\nIn early June elections were held, on a runoff system, for all the mayor positions in which nobody received at least 50% of the votes in late May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178651-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ronde van Nederland\nThese are the results for the 44th edition of the Ronde van Nederland cycling race, which was held from August 24 to August 28, 2004. The race started in Oudenbosch and finished in Sittard-Geleen. It was won by Holland's Erik Dekker. It was the last edition of the event, which was renamed Eneco Tour for the UCI ProTour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178652-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Roscommon County Council election\nAn election to Roscommon County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 26 councillors were elected from six electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl\nThe 2004 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game held on January 1, 2004 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. It was the 90th Rose Bowl Game. The USC Trojans, champions of the Pacific-10 Conference, defeated the Michigan Wolverines, champions of the Big Ten Conference, 28-14. USC quarterback Matt Leinart was named the Rose Bowl Player of the Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl\nThe events leading up to the 2004 Rose Bowl were the subject of controversy. Although USC was ranked #1 in both the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, the Trojans finished #3 in the final BCS standings due to a weaker schedule and one defeat\u00a0\u2013 to unranked California\u00a0\u2013 during the regular season, and thus did not qualify to go the BCS National Championship Game, played in the 2004 Sugar Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl\nMeanwhile, the Oklahoma Sooners played a stronger schedule in their undefeated regular season, but lost on December 5, 2003 in the 2003 Big 12 Championship Game to the #8-ranked Kansas State Wildcats. By virtue of their dominance through the entire regular season, Oklahoma remained #1 in the final BCS rankings issued at the outset of the bowl season. Oklahoma would lose, 21-14, to the LSU Tigers, #2 in both polls and the BCS rankings, in the Sugar Bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Pre-Game Activities\nOn October 21, 2003 \u2013 Tournament of Roses President Michael K. Riffey chose 17-year-old Megan Chinen, a senior at La Salle High School & a resident of Pasadena, California to become the 86th Rose Queen to reign over the 115th Rose Parade and the 90th Rose Bowl Game on New Year's Day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Pre-Game Activities\nThe game was presided over by the 2004 Tournament of Roses Royal Court and the Rose Parade Grand Marshal John Williams. Members of the court were: Princesses Stephanie Barnes, La Canada Flintridge, La Canada High School; Katherine Koch, Pasadena, John Marshall Fundamental High School; Erinne La Brie, Arcadia, Arcadia High School; Natalie Matsumoto, San Marino, San Marino High School; Christina Mills, Pasadena, La Salle High School; and Lauren Stassel, La Canada Flintridge, Flintridge Sacred Heart Academy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 35], "content_span": [36, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Teams, Michigan Wolverines\nMichigan opened at home in 2003 winning big over Central Michigan and Houston. A 38-0 shutout of Notre Dame propelled the Wolverines to a #3 ranking, but they lost the next week at Oregon, 31-27. Michigan bounced back to beat Indiana, but then lost another close road game at Iowa, 30-27. Michigan played next on a Friday evening, October 10, at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in a battle for the Little Brown Jug against Minnesota. Minnesota came into the game ranked #17 and Michigan was ranked #20 in one of the most highly anticipated Michigan-Minnesota matchups in years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Teams, Michigan Wolverines\nDown 21 points at the beginning of the fourth quarter, Michigan put together its greatest comeback in school history to win 38-35. The Wolverines won their next four games over Illinois, #10 Purdue, #9 Michigan State, and Northwestern and rose to #5 in the rankings before their annual showdown with the Ohio State Buckeyes. In front of a record crowd of 112,118 at Michigan Stadium, the Wolverines beat the #4 ranked Buckeyes 35-21 to win the Big Ten championship outright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Teams, USC Trojans\nThe Trojans opened the season winning at #6 Auburn, 23-0. Their only loss of the season was a triple overtime loss at Cal, 34-31 on September 27. Later in the season, USC beat Notre Dame 45-14, scoring the most points allowed by the Irish in since 1960, and routed Arizona 45-0 in the first shutout of the Wildcats in 146 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Game summary\nFormer University of Michigan coach Bo Schembechler was in attendance, and remarked, \"Didn't watch it\", when asked what he thought of the 2003 game and also about the Nebraska-Miami Rose Bowl in 2002. The Trojans wore a \"54\" sticker to commemorate Drean Rucker, an incoming freshman linebacker who drowned in July 2003. Former USC Trojans safety Troy Polamalu also was in attendance and was on the USC sideline. He was also shown embracing coach Pete Carroll at the game's end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 28], "content_span": [29, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178653-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Rose Bowl, Aftermath\nLSU defeated Oklahoma 21-14 in the Sugar Bowl. The Coaches Poll chose the winner of that game, the LSU Tigers, as the BCS National Champions. The AP Poll, however, selected the Rose Bowl champion USC Trojans resulting in the first split national title since the 1997\u201398 season, the year before the creation of the Bowl Championship Series, and the only split title of the BCS era. The BCS ranking formula was immediately reworked and simplified to place greater emphasis on the human polls to avoid a repeat scenario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 25], "content_span": [26, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178654-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rossendale Borough Council election\nElections to Rossendale Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178655-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Royal Bank Cup\nThe 2004 Royal Bank Cup was the 34th Junior \"A\" 2004 ice hockey National Championship for the Canadian Junior A Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178655-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Royal Bank Cup\nThe Royal Bank Cup was competed for by the winners of the Doyle Cup, Anavet Cup, Dudley Hewitt Cup, the Fred Page Cup and a host city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178655-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Royal Bank Cup\nThe tournament was hosted by the Grande Prairie Storm in Grande Prairie, Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178655-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Royal Bank Cup, The Playoffs, Round Robin\nNote: x- denotes teams who have advanced to the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178656-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby Borough Council election\nElections to Rugby Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council seats were up for election and the council stayed under no overall control. The number of councillors for each party after the election were Conservative 21, Labour 14, Liberal Democrat 10 and Independent 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178657-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League National Leagues\nThe 2004 National Leagues ( known as the LHF Healthplan National Leagues due to sponsorship) are the second, third and fourth divisions of rugby league in the UK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178657-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League National Leagues, National League One\nNational League One was won by Leigh Centurions, and won promotion to the Super League after defeating runners-up Whitehaven in the play-off final. Keighley Cougars were relegated to National League Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178657-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League National Leagues, National League Two\nNational League Two was won by Barrow Raiders, and were automatically promoted to National League One. York City Knights reached the play-off final, but lost to Halifax, who retained their National League One status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178657-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League National Leagues, National League Three\nNational League Three expanded to a 14-team league, but there was still no automatic promotion and relegation with National League Two. The league was won by Coventry Bears, who also went on to win the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations\nThe second Rugby League Tri-Nations tournament (known as the Gillette Tri-Nations due to sponsorship) was contested between 16 October and 27 November of 2004. The format of the competition differed from the previous event in that the teams played each other twice, rather than once, prior to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations\nThe tournament final of the tournament was predicted by some to be a close affair, with the British team heralded as slight favourites after finishing at the top of the league table. Instead, it was a one-sided match as Australia produced their best performance of the tournament. The game was effectively over by half-time when Australia led by 38\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Participating teams\nEach team was to play the other three twice during the round robin tournament. The top two finishing teams would then contest the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Officials\nOne referee from each participating nation was appointed to control matches in the Tri-Nations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 40], "content_span": [41, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Venues\nThe games were played at the following venues in New Zealand and England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nNEW ZEALAND1. Brent Webb \u00b7 2. Francis Meli \u00b7 3. Nigel Vagana \u00b7 4. Paul Whatuira \u00b7 5. Matt Utai \u00b7 6. Vinnie Anderson \u00b7 7. Thomas Leuluai \u00b7 8. Jason Cayless \u00b7 9. Louis Anderson \u00b7 10. Ruben Wiki (c) \u00b7 11. Tony Puletua \u00b7 12. Joe Galuvao \u00b7 13. Sonny Bill WilliamsInterchange:14. Motu Tony \u00b7 15. Roy Asotasi \u00b7 16. Nathan Cayless \u00b7 17. David KidwellCoach: Daniel Anderson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nAUSTRALIA1. Anthony Minichiello \u00b7 2. Luke Rooney \u00b7 3. Shaun Berrigan \u00b7 4. Willie Tonga \u00b7 5. Matt Sing \u00b7 6. Darren Lockyer (c) \u00b7 7. Craig Gower \u00b7 8. Shane Webcke \u00b7 9. Danny Buderus \u00b7 10. Jason Ryles \u00b7 11. Willie Mason \u00b7 12. Nathan Hindmarsh \u00b7 13. Tonie CarrollInterchange:14. Craig Wing \u00b7 15. Petero Civoniceva \u00b7 16. Ben Kennedy \u00b7 17. Andrew RyanCoach: Wayne Bennett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nAUSTRALIA1. Anthony Minichiello \u00b7 2. Luke Rooney \u00b7 3. Shaun Berrigan \u00b7 4. Willie Tonga \u00b7 5. Matt Sing \u00b7 6. Darren Lockyer (c) \u00b7 7. Craig Gower \u00b7 8. Shane Webcke \u00b7 9. Danny Buderus \u00b7 10. Jason Ryles \u00b7 11. Craig Fitzgibbon \u00b7 12. Nathan Hindmarsh \u00b7 13. Tonie CarrollInterchange:14. Craig Wing \u00b7 15. Petero Civoniceva \u00b7 16. Willie Mason \u00b7 17. Shaun TimminsCoach: Wayne Bennett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nNEW ZEALAND1. Brent Webb \u00b7 2. Francis Meli \u00b7 3. Nigel Vagana \u00b7 4. Paul Whatuira \u00b7 5. Lesley Vainikolo \u00b7 6. Vinnie Anderson \u00b7 7. Thomas Leuluai \u00b7 8. Jason Cayless \u00b7 9. Louis Anderson \u00b7 10. Nathan Cayless \u00b7 11. Logan Swann \u00b7 12. Ruben Wiki (c) \u00b7 13. Sonny Bill WilliamsInterchange:14. Robbie Paul \u00b7 15. Roy Asotasi \u00b7 16. Paul Rauhihi \u00b7 17. David KidwellCoach: Daniel Anderson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nAUSTRALIA1. Anthony Minichiello \u00b7 2. Luke Rooney \u00b7 3. Shaun Berrigan \u00b7 4. Willie Tonga \u00b7 5. Matt Sing \u00b7 6. Craig Gower \u00b7 7. Brett Kimmorley \u00b7 8. Shane Webcke \u00b7 9. Danny Buderus (c) \u00b7 10. Jason Ryles \u00b7 11. Andrew Ryan \u00b7 12. Nathan Hindmarsh \u00b7 13. Tonie CarrollInterchange:14. Craig Wing \u00b7 15. Petero Civoniceva \u00b7 16. Willie Mason \u00b7 17. Shaun TimminsCoach: Wayne Bennett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nGREAT BRITAIN1. Paul Wellens \u00b7 2. Brian Carney \u00b7 3. Martin Gleeson \u00b7 4. Keith Senior \u00b7 5. Stuart Reardon \u00b7 6. Paul Sculthorpe \u00b7 7. Sean Long \u00b7 8. Stuart Fielden \u00b7 9. Terry Newton \u00b7 10. Adrian Morley \u00b7 11. Jamie Peacock \u00b7 12. Andy Farrell (c) \u00b7 13. Gareth EllisInterchange:14. Chev Walker \u00b7 15. Stephen Wild \u00b7 16. Ryan Bailey \u00b7 17. Danny McGuireCoach: Brian Noble", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nGREAT BRITAIN1. Paul Wellens \u00b7 2. Brian Carney \u00b7 3. Martin Gleeson \u00b7 4. Keith Senior \u00b7 5. Stuart Reardon \u00b7 6. Danny McGuire \u00b7 7. Sean Long \u00b7 8. Stuart Fielden \u00b7 9. Terry Newton \u00b7 10. Adrian Morley \u00b7 11. Jamie Peacock \u00b7 12. Andy Farrell (c) \u00b7 13. Paul SculthorpeInterchange:14. Gareth Ellis \u00b7 15. Ryan Bailey \u00b7 16. Paul Johnson \u00b7 17. Iestyn Harris Coach: Brian Noble", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nNEW ZEALAND1. Brent Webb \u00b7 2. Francis Meli \u00b7 3. Nigel Vagana \u00b7 4. Clinton Toopi \u00b7 5. Shontayne Hape \u00b7 6. Vinnie Anderson \u00b7 7. Thomas Leuluai \u00b7 8. Jason Cayless \u00b7 9. Louis Anderson \u00b7 10. Ruben Wiki (c) \u00b7 11. Logan Swann \u00b7 12. David Kidwell \u00b7 13. Sonny Bill WilliamsInterchange:14. Robbie Paul \u00b7 15. Nathan Cayless \u00b7 16. Paul Rauhihi \u00b7 17. Ali Lauiti'iti Coach: Daniel Anderson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nGREAT BRITAIN1. Paul Wellens \u00b7 2. Brian Carney \u00b7 3. Martin Gleeson \u00b7 4. Keith Senior \u00b7 5. Stuart Reardon \u00b7 6. Danny McGuire \u00b7 7. Sean Long \u00b7 8. Stuart Fielden \u00b7 9. Terry Newton \u00b7 10. Adrian Morley \u00b7 11. Jamie Peacock \u00b7 12. Andy Farrell (c) \u00b7 13. Paul SculthorpeInterchange:14. Gareth Ellis \u00b7 15. Ryan Bailey \u00b7 16. Paul Johnson \u00b7 17. Iestyn Harris Coach: Brian Noble", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nAUSTRALIA1. Anthony Minichiello \u00b7 2. Matt Sing \u00b7 3. Shaun Berrigan \u00b7 4. Willie Tonga \u00b7 5. Luke Rooney \u00b7 6. Scott Hill \u00b7 7. Brett Kimmorley \u00b7 8. Shane Webcke \u00b7 9. Danny Buderus (c) \u00b7 10. Petero Civoniceva \u00b7 11. Craig Fitzgibbon \u00b7 12. Nathan Hindmarsh \u00b7 13. Tonie CarrollInterchange:14. Craig Wing \u00b7 15. Andrew Ryan \u00b7 16. Willie Mason \u00b7 17. Mark O'MeleyCoach: Wayne Bennett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nGREAT BRITAIN1. Paul Wellens \u00b7 2. Brian Carney \u00b7 3. Martin Gleeson \u00b7 4. Keith Senior \u00b7 5. Stuart Reardon \u00b7 6. Iestyn Harris \u00b7 7. Danny McGuire \u00b7 8. Stuart Fielden \u00b7 9. Matt Diskin \u00b7 10. Adrian Morley \u00b7 11. Gareth Ellis \u00b7 12. Andy Farrell (c) \u00b7 13. Sean O'LoughlinInterchange:14. Mickey Higham \u00b7 15. Chev Walker \u00b7 16. Paul Johnson \u00b7 17. Danny Ward Coach: Brian Noble", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Results, Tournament matches\nNEW ZEALAND1. Brent Webb \u00b7 2. Francis Meli \u00b7 3. Nigel Vagana \u00b7 4. Clinton Toopi \u00b7 5. Shontayne Hape \u00b7 6. Vinnie Anderson \u00b7 7. Thomas Leuluai \u00b7 8. Jason Cayless \u00b7 13. Louis Anderson \u00b7 10. Paul Rauhihi (c) \u00b7 11. Logan Swann \u00b7 12. Ali Lauiti'iti \u00b7 17. Wairangi KoopuInterchange:9. Dene Halatau \u00b7 15. Roy Asotasi \u00b7 16. Nathan Cayless \u00b7 19. Alex Chan Coach: Daniel Anderson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Player statistics, Non-series Tests\nDuring the series, Australia and New Zealand both played an additional test match against France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Player statistics, Additional Matches\nA one off match was also played between an ANZAC side made up of touring Australian and New Zealand players and a Cumbria side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178658-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Rugby League Tri-Nations, Player statistics, Additional Matches\nOn their way back to Australia just four days after the Tri-Nations Final, the Kangaroos played a match, known as the Liberty Bell Cup against the USA at the Franklin Field in Philadelphia. Played in quarters instead of halves, and on a synthetic field that was the size of a Grid iron field, the American's shocked the Australians by racing to an 18\u20130 lead nearing half time and actually went into the long break with a 24\u20136 lead. They managed to keep their lead until late in the game when the fitness of the Australians, who had bombed numerous try scoring opportunities through the game, told and the Kangaroos overhauled the home team to win 36\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 68], "content_span": [69, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178659-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Runnymede Borough Council election\nElections to Runnymede Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Rushmoor Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Rushmoor Borough Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election, Campaign\n14 seats were contested in the election\u2013a third of the council\u2013with the Conservatives defending 9, the Liberal Democrats 3 and Labour 2. Apart from candidates from the Conservative, Liberal Democrat, Labour, Green and English Democrat parties which had stood candidates in the 2003 election, there were also 3 members of the British National Party standing in Rushmoor for the first time. They stood in 3 Farnborough wards, Fernhill, Grange and Mayfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election, Campaign\n2 independent candidates also contested the election. Rosemary Possee stood as an independent in Empress ward, where she had previously served as a councillor for the Conservatives before being de-selected, challenging the official Conservative candidate Patricia Hodge. The other independent candidate, taxi driver Roger Watkins, stood in Wellington ward. Watkins was investigated by the police over claims that some signatures on his nomination form had not been made by the voters themselves; however the police concluded there was no problem and Watkins accused his rivals of dirty tricks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election, Campaign\nThe contest in Heronwood ward also caused controversy after a leaflet from the Conservative candidate Eddie Poole accused the Liberal Democrat candidate Peter Sandy of \"bully boy tactics\". Sandy complained to council officials over the leaflet, which he described as a slur, but Poole said he stood by the comment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives remain in control of the council with 24 of the 42 seats, but the Liberal Democrats did gain 2 to hold 12 seats. One of the gains came in Manor Park where Liberal Democrat George Paparesti returned to the council 2 years after losing his seat in the 2002 election. The other gain came in Heron Wood, which had been regarded as the safest Labour seat on the council, but saw Liberal Democrat Peter Sandy win by 88 votes defeating the Labour mayor of the council Frank Rust. This meant Labour was reduced to just 5 seats on the council, with the party's candidates having finished fourth in 4 Farnborough wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election, Election result\nNo other seats changed parties, but there were close results in St Marks where the Conservatives held the seat by 12 votes over the Liberal Democrats and in Cove and Southwood where the Liberal Democrats held on by 38 votes over the Conservatives. Rosemary Possee failed to win re-election in Empress ward as an independent, being beaten into third place with the Conservatives holding the seat. Overall turnout in the election was 36.5% up from the 31% seen in 2003 and boosted by an 80% increase in postal votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178660-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Rushmoor Borough Council election, Election result\nThe result in Heron Wood caused controversy with the defeated Labour candidate Frank Rust blaming Tony Blair's support for the Iraq War for his defeat. Meanwhile, the Conservative Member of Parliament for Aldershot Gerald Howarth criticised the winning Liberal Democrat Peter Sandy for not attending the count and said that \"It\u2019s a pretty poor show. I do not feel he will be an asset to Heronwood\". Peter Sandy, who is disabled, said that he had been unable to attend the count as the battery on his wheelchair was flat and he was defended by his fellow Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178661-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Russian Figure Skating Championships (Russian: \u0427\u0435\u043c\u043f\u0438\u043e\u043d\u0430\u0442 \u0420\u043e\u0441\u0441\u0438\u0438 \u043f\u043e \u0444\u0438\u0433\u0443\u0440\u043d\u043e\u043c\u0443 \u043a\u0430\u0442\u0430\u043d\u0438\u044e \u043d\u0430 \u043a\u043e\u043d\u044c\u043a\u0430\u0445 2004) took place in Saint Petersburg from January 5 through 8th, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The results were one of the criteria used to pick the Russian teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178662-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian First Division\nThe Russian First Division 2004 was the 13th edition of Russian First Division. There were 22 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League\nFollowing are the results of the 2004 Russian Premier League, the top division of Russian association football. Lokomotiv won their second Premier League title, while Krylya Sovetov finished in the top three for the first time, winning bronze. Kuban were relegated after just one season in the Premier League. They were joined by Rotor who played at the top level since the beginning of the Russian league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Teams\nAs in the previous season, 16 teams are playing in the 2004 season. After the 2003 season, Chernomorets Novorossiysk and Uralan Elista were relegated to the 2004 Russian First Division. They were replaced by Amkar Perm and Kuban Krasnodar, the winners and runners up of the 2003 Russian First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nGoalkeepers: Sergei Ovchinnikov (30), Ruslan Nigmatullin (1). Defenders: Vadim Evseev (27 / 4), Dmitri Sennikov (26), Sergei Gurenko (26), Gennadiy Nizhegorodov (23), Malkhaz Asatiani (19 / 1), Oleg Pashinin (13), Jacob Lekgetho (6). Midfielders: Dmitri Loskov (30 / 4), Diniyar Bilyaletdinov (25 / 5), Dmitri Khokhlov (24 / 6), Marat Izmailov (18 / 2), Vladimir Maminov (18 / 1), Francisco Lima (15), Deividas \u010cesnauskis (10), Jorge Wagner (4), Leandro (1). Forwards: Dmitri Sychev (27 / 15), James Obiorah (15 / 1), Ruslan Pimenov (14 / 4), Winston Parks (13 / 1), Mikheil Ashvetia (12), Milan Jovanovi\u0107 (3), Maksim Buznikin (1). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nTransferred out during the season: Maksim Buznikin (on loan to FC Rotor Volgograd).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nGoalkeepers: Igor Akinfeev (26), Veniamin Mandrykin (6). Defenders: Aleksei Berezutski (27), Deividas \u0160emberas (24), Sergei Ignashevich (22 / 1), Chidi Odiah (21), Bohdan Shershun (14), Vasili Berezutski (6). Midfielders: Sergei Semak (30 / 5), Evgeni Aldonin (30), Ji\u0159\u00ed Jaro\u0161\u00edk (29 / 5), Rolan Gusev (28 / 4), Elvir Rahimi\u0107 (26 / 1), Yuri Zhirkov (25 / 6), Osmar Ferreyra (13 / 2), Daniel Carvalho (13 / 1), Milo\u0161 Krasi\u0107 (7), Juris Laiz\u0101ns (4). Forwards: Dmitri Kirichenko (26 / 9), Ivica Oli\u0107 (24 / 9), V\u00e1gner Love (12 / 9), Denis Popov (2), Serghei Dadu (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nOne own goal scored by Luc Zoa (FC Spartak Moscow).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nTransferred out during the season: Denis Popov (to FC Kuban Krasnodar).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nGoalkeepers: Aleksei Poliakov (29), Aleksandr Makarov (1). Defenders: Aleksandr Anyukov (29 / 2), Denis Kolodin (25 / 1), Patrick Ovie (24), Mois\u00e9s (22 / 1), Leilton (14), Omari Tetradze (14), Rafael Schmitz (9), Matthew Booth (8 / 1). Midfielders: Andrei Karyaka (29 / 17), Denis Kovba (29 / 1), Sergei Vinogradov (26 / 4), Ognjen Koroman (26 / 1), Souza (25 / 3), Andrey Tikhonov (23 / 4), Anton Bober (13 / 1), Dmitri Kudryashov (9), Omonigho Temile (5), Laryea Kingston (3). Forwards: Robertas Po\u0161kus (18 / 9), Catanha (11 / 1), Roni (8 / 1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nOne own goal each scored by Aleksei Yepifanov (FC Rotor Volgograd) and Nikolay Shirshov (FC Rostov).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178663-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Premier League, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nTransferred out during the season: Catanha (free agent), Rafael Schmitz (end of loan from Lille).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178664-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian Super Cup\nThe 2004 Russian Super Cup was the 2nd Russian Super Cup match, a football match which was contested between the 2003 Russian Premier League champion, CSKA Moscow and the winner of 2002\u201303 Russian Cup, Spartak Moscow. The match was held on 7 March 2004 at the Lokomotiv Stadium in Moscow, Russia. CSKA Moscow beat Spartak Moscow 3\u20131 in extra time, after the normal time had finished in a 1\u20131 draw, to win their first Russian Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings\nOn the night of 24 August 2004, explosive devices were detonated on board two domestic passenger flights that had taken off from Domodedovo International Airport in Moscow, Russia, causing the destruction of both aircraft and the loss of all 90 people on board them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings\nSubsequent investigations concluded that two Chechen female suicide bombers were responsible for the bombings, which were also later claimed by the leader of the Chechen insurgency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights\nNote: All times quoted below are local times, UTC +4. All events occurred in the same time zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights, Volga-AviaExpress Flight 1353\nThe first to crash was Volga-AviaExpress Flight 1353, a Tu-134 aircraft, registered RA-65080, which had been in service since 1977. The plane was flying from Moscow to Volgograd. It left Domodedovo International Airport at 22:30 on 24 August 2004. Communication with the plane was lost at 22:56 while it was flying over Tula Oblast, 180\u00a0km south-east of Moscow. The remains of the aircraft were found on the ground several hours later. Thirty-four passengers and 9 crew members were on board the plane. All of them died in the crash. The flight recorders were recovered from the crash site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights, Volga-AviaExpress Flight 1353\nThe flight data recorder showed that the plane was cruising uneventfully at 8100 metres, before indicating some type of high energy event likely originating near the right hand side of the aircraft at seat row 19. Both recorders stopped recording within 2\u20133 seconds of this event. This was followed by the separation of the fuselage at that location an undetermined amount of time afterward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights, Siberia Airlines Flight 1047\nJust minutes after the first crash, Siberia Airlines Flight 1047, which had left Domodedovo International Airport at 21:35 on 24 August 2004, disappeared from the radar screens and crashed. The Tu-154 aircraft, registered RA-85556, which had been in service since 1982, was flying from Moscow to Sochi. According to an unnamed government source of the Russian news agency Interfax, the plane had broadcast a hijack warning while flying over Rostov Oblast at 22:59.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights, Siberia Airlines Flight 1047\nHowever, it was later determined that this was the aircraft's Emergency Locator Transmitter (ELT), and that the crew of flight 1047 were not aware of any danger prior to the aircraft disappearing from radar. The plane disappeared from radar screens shortly after that and crashed. 38 passengers and 8 crew members were on board the plane, and there were no survivors after the crash. The debris of the aircraft was found on the morning of 25 August 2004, 9 kilometres (5.6\u00a0mi) from the work settlement of Gluboky in Kamensky District of Rostov Oblast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights, Siberia Airlines Flight 1047\nThe flight recorders were also recovered in this case; the flight data recorder along with wreckage analysis suggested an almost identical high-energy event to the one seen on flight 1353 took place near the right hand side of the aircraft at seat row 25, while the aircraft was cruising at 12100 metres. The blast resulted in a rapid decompression of the cabin, damage to the elevator and rudder controls, a substantial loss of electrical power, and severe damage to the fuselage and tail components.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0004-0003", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Flights, Siberia Airlines Flight 1047\nThe ELT was triggered half a second after the event, either by a crew member or automatically. The data recorder stopped working shortly after the explosion, but the cockpit voice recorder continued recording until impact with the ground, during which most of the crew discussions were about the loss of cabin pressure and electrical systems. The crew were caught completely off guard by the event, and there is no evidence that the crew was aware of the detonation of an explosive device on board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Responsibility\nThe two almost simultaneous crashes caused speculations about terrorism. President Vladimir Putin immediately ordered the Federal Security Service (FSB) to investigate the crashes. On 28 August 2004, the FSB had found traces of the explosive RDX in the remains of both planes. Itar-Tass news agency reported on 30 August 2004, \"without a shadow of a doubt, the FSB security service said that 'both airplanes were blown up as a result of a terrorist attack'\". A little known group called the Islambouli Brigades claimed responsibility; the truth of those claims remains uncertain. The Islambouli Brigades have also claimed that five of their members were on each plane; experts are skeptical about the possibility of (and the need for) so many terrorists on board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Responsibility\nThe subsequent investigation found that the bombs were triggered by two female Chechen suicide bombers, Grozny residents Satsita Dzhebirkhanova (Siberia Airlines Flight 1047) and Amanta Nagayeva (Volga-AviaExpress Flight 1303). Nagayeva's brother had disappeared three years earlier and the family believed he was abducted by Russian forces. Chechen field commander Shamil Basayev took responsibility for the bombings in an open letter published on the Chechen separatists' websites on 17 September 2004. He claimed that the aircraft bombings cost him US$4,000 in total. He has also denied the Islambouli Brigade's claims.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Responsibility\nThe bombings followed the Moscow metro bombing which left 41 people dead in February 2004 and preceded other deadly attacks in Russia soon afterwards: on 31 August 2004 a bomb killed 10 at a Moscow subway station, and then the Beslan hostage crisis began on 1 September 2004 which would leave over 335 people dead, many of them children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Arrests and Trials\nOn 24 August 2004, the bombers were stopped in the airport by the police captain Mikhail Artamonov to be searched for weapons and for identification. They were accompanied by two male Chechens. The four of them arrived in Moscow on a flight from Makhachkala. According to the prosecution, Artamonov did not search them, and subsequently was charged with criminal negligence. On 30 June 2005, he was convicted of negligence and sentenced to seven years of imprisonment. An appeal was made against the sentence, and the court subsequently reduced the term to six years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Arrests and Trials\nAccording to investigators, ticket seller Armen Aratyunyan was bribed approximately \u20ac140 to sell tickets to the two women without obtaining their correct IDs. Aratyunyan also helped Dzhebirkhanova to bribe the ticket-checking clerk, Nikolai Korenkov, with \u20ac25 to get on board without the proper IDs. On 15 April 2005, Aratyunyan and Korenkov were convicted of giving and taking bribes. They were sentenced to 1.5 years in a settlement colony (settlement colony convicts have more rights and privileges than people in standard colonies).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Arrests and Trials\nTwenty-one relatives of the deceased passengers filed a civil suit against the security company responsible for checking the passengers, ZAO East-Line Aviation Security. They demanded 3,000,000 rubles (approximately \u20ac86,600 or US$115,000) in damages per victim. The trial in that case started in Volgograd on 22 February 2007. The security company claimed that it was not liable for damages, but the persons who organized the bombings were. The court handling the civil case sent a request to the prosecutor's office to get an update on the criminal investigation. The investigation was suspended indefinitely on 26 September 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Arrests and Trials\nAccording to the investigator who was handling the case, the people helping the suicide bombers at the airport were killed in Chechnya, the people responsible for planning the bombings were not identified (Shamil Basayev, who claimed responsibility for organizing the bombings, was also killed), and consequently the investigation was suspended due to lack of suspects. That civil case was still in court as of December\u00a02009. Other passengers' relatives also sued the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs, S7 Airlines and two insurance companies, Ingosstrakh and OAO Afes for damages (none of the defendants acknowledge any liability).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178665-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Russian aircraft bombings, Arrests and Trials\nOn 21 October 2007, the court in the latter case found S7 Airlines liable for damages and ruled they should pay the relative of the victim in question 250,000 rubles (approximately \u20ac7,000), which was about 10% of what the plaintiffs asked for. S7's initial appeal was rejected by the court on 27 May 2008. A new S7 appeal was successful in April 2009 and the verdict was rejected. Relatives of the passenger appealed against the decision, but their appeal was dismissed in August 2009. They plan to appeal to a higher court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election\nThe 2004 Russian presidential election was held on 14 March 2004. Incumbent President Vladimir Putin was seeking a second full four-year term. He was re-elected with 71.9% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Candidates, Registered candidates\nCandidates are listed in the order they appear on the ballot paper (alphabetical order in Russian).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, General assessments\nObservers representing the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, cited what they called abuses of government resources, bias in the state media and instances of ballot stuffing on election day. According to the ad hoc Committee by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, \"the elections were generally well administrated and reflected the consistently high public approval rating of the incumbent president but lacked elements of a genuine democratic contest.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, General assessments\n\"While on a technical level the election was organized with professionalism, particularly on the part of the Central Election Commission (CEC), the election process overall did not adequately reflect principles necessary for a healthy democratic election process. The election process failed to meet important commitments concerning treatment of candidates by the State-controlled media on a non-discriminatory basis, equal opportunities for all candidates and secrecy of the ballot,\" reported observers by Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe. \"Localised instances of election-related abuse of official function, whilst met with an appropriately robust response by the electoral authorities in some instances, reflected a lack of democratic culture, accountability and responsibility, particularly in areas distant from the capital.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, General assessments\nObservers representing the Commonwealth of Independent States recognized the election as \"free, democratic and fair\". The head of the mission Yury Yarov assured that violations identified during the mission didn't affect \"free expression of the electors' will and result of the election\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Election campaign\nAccording to report by an ad hoc Committee by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, \"The Presidential Election Law and the Basic Guarantees of Electoral Rights Law provided the legal framework for the presidential elections, laying down conditions for the transparency in the organisation and conduct of the election.\" Criticizing the election campaign, the Committee claimed as \"unreasonable hurdle\" the requirement to collect 2 million signatures for submission to the CEC in support of persons seeking registration as candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Election campaign\nAnother concern was, \"The Russian Constitution stipulates that in a presidential election, if the turnout is less than 50%, a new round has to be held, with candidates registering anew. This clause raised concerns of authorities on voters turnout and a massive campaign encouraging people to participate in elections had been launched by the CEC and local authorities. In some regions, local authorities overused their power to force people to take part in the elections.\" The election campaign in general was \"low-key and all but invisible, which could be explained by the predictability of the results of the election.\" Glazyev's manager reported the use of administrative resources by preventing Glazyev from campaigning in the regions; Khakamada claimed that \"local authorities were instructed to hamper her meetings with voters\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 897]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Election campaign\nPACE reported that despite some irregularities, \"credit should be given to the election administration which ensured security and professional conduct of the voting process\". PACE noted the unusually high turnout in five North Caucasus republics (more than 90%), \"Mr Putin received 98.2\u00a0% of the vote in Ingushetia, 96.5\u00a0% in Kabardino-Balkaria, 94,6\u00a0% in Dagestan, 92.3% in Chechnya and 91.25% in North Ossetia. Taking into account that the general turnout of the election was only 64.39%, the election results in these regions seem to be unusually high and one-sided.\" Considering situation in Chechnya, the Moscow Times quoted election officials in the republic's capital, Grozny, as acknowledging that they had filled in several thousand ballots for Putin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nThe report of PACE said that \"during the presidential election the International Election Observation Mission concluded that state-controlled media had displayed clear bias in favour of the incumbent in news presentation and coverage of the campaign.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nAccording to the report by Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (OSCE) of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nTelevision is the main source of public information in the Russian Federation. Two State-controlled TV channels have countrywide outreach, while the most significant private TV stations are NTV and Ren TV\u2026 The State-controlled media comprehensively failed to meet its legal obligation to provide equal treatment to all candidates, displaying clear favouritism towards Mr. Putin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nWhile the other candidates had access to television and other media, through free airtime and televised debates, their access to the primetime news programmes and current affairs programmes on the State-controlled broadcasters was limited\u2026 In contrast to the coverage by State-funded TV channels, private broadcasters monitored by the EOM provided more balanced coverage, with a greater diversity of views.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nIn the month prior to the election, state-funded Channel One Russia dedicated more than four hours of its news coverage to Putin, with the coverage being overwhelmingly positive. In contrast, the second-most covered candidate on Channel One was Kharitonov, who received a mere 21 minutes of primetime news coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nState-funded TV Russia gave Putin nearly two hours of primetime news devoted more than two hours of its primetime news coverage to Putin, with the tone of the coverage being overwhelmingly positive. In contrast, Glazeyev was given only four minutes of coverage, the tone of which ranged from negative to neutral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nTV Centre, a television station that was controlled by the Moscow City administration, provided an hour and 25 minutes of coverage to Putin, with the tone being overwhelmingly positive. In contrast, TV Centre gave Glazeyev a mere seven minutes of coverage, which ranged in tone from negative to neutral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nPrivate broadcasters were more balanced in their television coverage. REN TV gave 35 minutes of primetime news to Mr. Putin, with 35% ofthis coverage being negative. They gave Khakamada 22 minutes ofcoverage which ranged from neutral to positive in tone. NTV gave more than 31 minutes of coverage to Mr. Putin, ranging in tone from neutral to positive. In its analytical news programs, such as Svoboda Slova andNamedni, NTV gave a relatively balanced picture of the maincontestants and the State leadership. NTV, however, did not air election debates due to Putin\u2019s refusal to take part. Additionally, NTV did not air special broadcasts for campaign programming citing to low public interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nMost local television outlets provided very little coverage of the election. What coverage they did provide generally tended to be favorable of Putin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nMany media outlets ignored key developments in the campaign's of Putin's challengers. For instance, very few media outlets (both television and print) carried news of Khakamada's campaign announcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Media bias\nPrint media displayed a variety of views, with coverage of various outlets being either strongly pro-Putin or strongly anti-Putin in bias.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178666-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Russian presidential election, Conduct, Calls for boycott\nA few groups, notably the Yabloko party and a number of human rights organizations, encouraged voters to boycott the election. Yabloko's leader Grigory Yavlinsky specifically called for boycotts to take place in protest of what he considered to be, \u201cthe slide of the country into authoritarianism.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute\nThe 2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute was a commercial and diplomatic dispute between Russia and Belarus that escalated in January 2004. Close relations between the two countries and willingness for political integration had made it possible for Belarus to purchase gas from Russia at heavily discounted prices. In the late 1990s, Russian foreign policy shifted away from geopolitics and became more pragmatic and economical, especially after the inauguration of President Vladimir Putin. As a result, Gazprom moved to ensure the reliability of gas transits to Europe by attempting to establish control over the Belarusian transit network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute\nBelarus initially agreed to sell 50% of the network, but after disagreements over price, Belarus severed the contract. Gazprom announced price rises, and after Belarus refused, Gazprom ceased to import gas to Belarus on 1 January 2004. Belarus compensated by siphoning from gas meant for transit to Europe, which on 18 February resulted in Gazprom completely shutting off the supply to Belarus. Other companies supplied Belarus on short-term contracts until June 2004, when a new contract with Gazprom was finally signed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, Background, Economic background\nBelarus is an important transit route of Russian gas to Europe, with around 20\u201325% of Gazprom's European exports passing through Belarusian territory. Two major pipelines run through the country: Northern Lights and Yamal-Europe. The former is used to transit Russian gas to Europe as well as for Belarusian domestic use; the latter transits gas solely for export to Europe. The Belarusian economy is heavily gas dependent\u2014gas accounted for 59.9% of the country's energy balance in 2003. In addition, most of the electricity in the country is generated from gas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, Background, Economic background\nIn 2003, Belarusian gas consumption was 16.66\u00a0billion cubic metres (588\u00a0billion cubic feet). Domestic gas production amounted to only 0.25\u00a0billion cubic metres (8.8\u00a0billion cubic feet). The rest was imported from Russia, chiefly from Gazprom. For political reasons, Belarus was able to purchase gas from Russia for Russian domestic prices, which were only a quarter of the international market price. In January, 2003, Belarus paid $34.37 per 1,000\u00a0cubic meters for its imports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, Background, Political background\nAfter the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia and Belarus enjoyed relatively good relations. Both countries strove for political integration, Russia mostly for geopolitical and Belarus chiefly for economic reasons. Russia also saw political integration as a means for eventually gaining full control over the Belarusian transit routes\u2014thus ensuring the reliability of transit. The Belarusian leadership chose to build close relations with Russia, with the ultimate aim of formal unification. Gas price agreements between the two countries were settled politically, with the commercial side being given less attention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, Background, Political background\nThe relations between the two countries began to change as a result of the 1998 Russian financial crisis. Russia no longer saw itself strong enough to sustain its aspirations of superpower status. Consequently, Russia began to attach more significance to geo-economics rather than geo-politics in its relations with CIS neighbours. This development accelerated during Vladimir Putin's presidency, when Russian foreign policy became more pragmatic and economised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, Background, Political background\nBecause of domestic payment collection problems, Belarus accumulated debts for its gas imports. When disagreements over the political integration increased, Gazprom realized that the Belarusian debts would in future undermine the reliability of Belarusian transit routes. Consequently, Gazprom sought to establish a joint venture to own and operate the Belarusian transit network, to ensure uninterrupted transit of gas to Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, 2004 dispute\nIn an intergovernmental agreement signed in April 2002, Belarus promised to sell 50% of Beltransgaz, the company owning the Belarusian transit network, to Gazprom. The agreement also stipulated that gas prices to Belarus would be the same as Russian domestic prices for the next five years. The contract did not specify the value of Beltransgaz. Belarus estimated it as $5\u20136 billion, while Gazprom proposed a price of $500\u2013600 million. The Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko later suggested $2.5 billion as a lower limit, but this was rejected by Gazprom. As the political agreements that had given Belarus the right to purchase gas at Russian domestic prices were now broken, Gazprom, backed by the Russian government, now moved to abolish the price discounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, 2004 dispute\nGazprom stated that if an agreement was not signed until 2004, it would increase gas prices from $30/m to $50 per 1,000\u00a0cubic meters. Belarus refused, and on 1 January 2004, Gazprom stopped shipping gas via the Northern lights pipeline. Belarus was able to compensate by purchasing gas from non-Gazprom exporters such as Itera and TransNafta on short-term contracts. This continued until 18 February, when the companies refused to sign further short-term supply contracts. Since Belarus was dependent on gas for most of its heat and electricity production, the situation in the country during cold winter started to become critical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, 2004 dispute\nAfter deliveries stopped, Belarus started to siphon gas meant for transit to Europe from the Yamal-Europe pipeline, without Gazprom's approval. As a result, at 18:00 Moscow time on 18 February, Gazprom completely cut off supplies to the Belarusian network. Germany experienced only minor shortfalls in deliveries because of extensive storages of gas and due to most of imports coming through Ukraine; however, Poland reported more severe disruption. Supplies to Kaliningrad Oblast were also affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0006-0002", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, 2004 dispute\nBelarus managed to sign a new short-term contract with TransNafta at the price of $46.68 per 1,000\u00a0cubic meters, which resulted in Gazprom resuming supplies before midnight of 19 February. Similar contracts supplied Belarus until June, when Belarus finally agreed a new contract with Gazprom for delivering gas for the rest of 2004 with the price of $46.68 per 1,000\u00a0cubic meters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, 2004 dispute\nIn mid-2004, political relations between Belarus and Russia started to improve, and a new agreement between Belarus and Gazprom was signed. The two sides now agreed to appoint an outside consultancy firm to define an appropriate value for the sale of Beltransgaz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178667-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Russia\u2013Belarus energy dispute, Implications\nAlthough the 2004 dispute further strengthened the perception that Belarus and its economy were heavily dependent on Russian gas and Gazprom, it also became clear that Belarus also possessed some important cards. In 2007, after a later dispute, Gazprom agreed to pay $2.5 billion for Beltransgaz\u2014several times more than it was prepared to pay in 2004. The 2004 dispute also raised concerns about reliability of Gazprom's supplies to Europe, and highlighted the fact that Gazprom had not solved the issue of reliable transit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178668-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team\nThe 2004 Rutgers Scarlet Knights football team represented Rutgers University in the 2004 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Scarlet Knights were led by fourth-year head coach Greg Schiano and played their home games at Rutgers Stadium. They were a member of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 5\u20137, 1\u20135 in Big East play to finish in a tie with Temple for last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup\nThe 35th Ryder Cup Matches were held September 17\u201319, 2004, in the United States at the South Course of Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield Township, Michigan, a suburb northwest of Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup\nThe European team won the competition by a margin of 181\u20442 to 91\u20442 points, The victory margin was the largest by a European team in the history of the event, and the largest by either side since 1981, when Team USA defeated Team Europe by the same score. It was also the largest margin of defeat for the USA since the competition started in 1927.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Television\nIn the United States, live Friday coverage was provided by USA Network. Bill Macatee and Peter Kostis hosted from the 18th tower. NBC Sports presented live coverage of the Saturday and Sunday matches. Dan Hicks and Johnny Miller hosted from the 18th tower, Bob Murphy called holes, while on-course reporters were Gary Koch, Mark Rolfing, Roger Maltbie, and Ed Sneed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 26], "content_span": [27, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Format\nThe Ryder Cup is a match play event, with each match worth one point. The competition format changed slightly from used from that used from 1991 to 2002, with the order of play swapped on the second day:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Format\nWith a total of 28 points, 141\u20442 points were required to win the Cup, and 14 points were required for the defending champion to retain the Cup. All matches were played to a maximum of 18 holes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Teams\nCaptains picks are shown in yellow; the world rankings and records are at the start of the 2004 Ryder Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Teams\nAs vice-captains, United States captain Hal Sutton selected Jack Burke and Steve Jones, to assist him during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Teams\nCaptains picks are shown in yellow; the world rankings and records are at the start of the 2004 Ryder Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Teams\nAs vice-captains, European captain Bernhard Langer selected Joakim Haeggman and Anders Forsbrand to assist him during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Friday's matches, Morning four-ball\nU.S. captain Hal Sutton put his top pairing of Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson in the first match of the Ryder Cup, hoping to come out to a quick lead. The decision backfired on Sutton, as the Woods/Mickelson pairing fell behind almost from the start, eventually losing. Only a 7-foot par putt by Chris Riley on the 18th hole of his match kept Team USA from being shut out by Team Europe. Team USA never had the lead during any of the first day's four-ball matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 51], "content_span": [52, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Friday's matches, Afternoon foursomes\nThe afternoon alternate-shot session was almost as good for Team Europe as the morning session. Mickelson and Woods lost an early lead in their match, leaving Woods winless in the first day of his last three Ryder Cups. Team USA picked up its first full point, but Europe ended the day with a 61\u20442\u201311\u20442 lead, its largest lead after the first day in Ryder Cup history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 53], "content_span": [54, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178669-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Ryder Cup, Individual player records\nEach entry refers to the Win\u2013Loss\u2013Half record of the player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178670-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 R\u00e9unionese Regional Council election\nRegional Council elections were held in R\u00e9union in 2004 as part of the French regional elections. The result was a victory for the Communist Party of R\u00e9union\u2013Free Dom alliance, which won 27 of the 45 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178671-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 S.League\n2004 S.League was the ninth season of Singapore's professional football league. It was won by Tampines Rovers, which was their first league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178671-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 S.League, Foreign players\nEach club is allowed to have up to a maximum of 4 foreign players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178672-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SANFL Grand Final\nThe 2004 South Australian National Football League (SANFL) Grand Final saw the Central District Bulldogs defeat Woodville-West Torrens by 125 points to claim the club's fourth premiership victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178672-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SANFL Grand Final\nThe match was played on Sunday 3 October 2004 at Football Park in front of a crowd of 24,207.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178673-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SANFL season\nThe 2004 South Australian National Football League season was the 125th season of the top-level Australian rules football competition in South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178674-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SASF season\nThe South Australian Soccer Federation 2004 season was the second-last season run by the SASF. The competition consisted of two divisions of twelve teams each, across the state of South Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178674-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SASF season, 2004 SASF Premier League\nThe 2004 South Australian Premier League was the penultimate season of the SASF Premier League, the top-level domestic association football competition in South Australia. It was contested by 12 teams in a single 22-round league format, each team playing each of their opponents twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178674-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 SASF season, 2004 SASF State League\nThe 2004 South Australian State League was the penultimate season of the SASF State League, as the second-highest domestic level association football competition in South Australia. It was contested by 12 teams in a single 22-round league format, each team playing each of their opponents twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season\nThe 2004 SASFA season was the sixth regular season of the Texas Sixman Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season\nThe biggest change for the SFA was new commissioner Frank Rios taking over the league and renaming it to the San Antonio Sixman Football Association because of a sister league to open up in Austin, TX that subsequently fell through. 2004 was the second straight season that the league did not expand with the only change being the Outlawz went back to their original moniker the Longhorns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Teams\nThe Seminoles and Wolf Pack both returned for their sixth consecutive seasons of SFA football. The Mean Machine, Red Raiders and Rhinos continued for their fifth seasons. The Bandits, Bucs, Longhorns(renamed from the Outlawz), Mad Dogs, Rage and Wolverines are all in their fourth year of competition. The Six-Pack entered into their third season of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Teams\nThe Northern Conference consisted of the Bandits, Bucs, Longhorns, Mean Machine, Six-Pack and Wolf Pack. The Southern Conference consisted of the Mad Dogs, Rage, Red Raiders, Rhinos, Seminoles and Wolverines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 24], "content_span": [25, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season\nThe sixth year of the SASFA lasted eleven weeks from January 25, 2004 to April 18, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 1\nJanuary 22, 2004Six-Pack 28 - Seminoles 20Mad Dogs 33 - Rage 22Bandits 32 - Raiders 7Mean Machine 28 - Bucs 20Rhinos 28 - Wolf Pack 27Longhorns 41 - Wolverines 24", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 2\nFebruary 8, 2004Mean Machine 12 - Six Pack 6Bandits 41 - Seminoles 20Rage 44 - Raiders 7Mad Dogs 33 - Rhinos 30Longhorns 39 - Bucs 30Wolverines 33 - Wolf Pack 31", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 3\nFebruary 15, 2003\\4Rage 46 - Seminoles 22Mad Dogs 38 - Wolverines 16Longhorns 44 - Wolf Pack 31Six Pack 39 - Bucs 32Rhinos 12 - Raiders 0Bandits 38 - Mean Machine 7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 4\nFebruary 22, 2004Bucs 46 - Wolf Pack 7Bandits 40 - Six Pack 19Longhorns 52 - Mad Dogs 32Rage 40 - Mean Machine 14Wolverines 24 - Raiders 25Rhinos 48 - Seminoles 21", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 5\nFebruary 29, 2004Mad Dogs 53 - Wolf Pack 19Longhorns 57 - Raiders 14Bandits 53 - Bucs 6Rage 57 - Six Pack 18Wolverines 39 - Seminoles 32Rhinos 35 - Mean Machine 19", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 6\nMarch 7, 2004Longhorns 32 - Seminoles 27Rage 28 - Bandits 14Mean Machine 25 - Wolverines 14Six Pack 16 - Rhinos 8Bucs 27 - Mad Dogs 14Raiders 31 - Wolf Pack 27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 7\nMarch 14, 2004Mad Dogs 52 - Raiders 20Wolf Pack 39 - Seminoles 13Rhinos 2 - Bandits 0Longhorns 32 - Mean Machine 30Six Pack 32 - Wolverines 14Bucs 2 - Rage 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 8\nMarch 21, 2004Wolverines 32 - Bandits 19Longhorns 36 - Six Pack 20Bucs 27 - Raiders 19Rage 46 - Rhinos 38Mean Machine 32 - Wolf Pack 0Mad Dogs 42 - Seminoles 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 9\nMarch 28, 2004Bandits 14 - Longhorns 8Rage 20 - Wolverines 18Mean Machine 18 - Mad Dogs 12Rhinos 36 - Bucs 34Raiders 21 - Seminoles 14Six Pack 12 - Wolf Pack 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 10\nApril 4, 2004Bandits 30 - Wolf Pack 0Mad Dogs 46 - Six Pack 7Rage 58 - Longhorns 28Raiders 31 - Mean Machine 26Bucs 1 - Seminoles 0Rhinos 41 - Wolverines 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular season, Week 11\nApril 18, 2004Raiders 35 - Six Pack 33Rage 42 - Wolf Pack 0Bandits 44 - Mad Dogs 43Wolverines 37 - Bucs 32Longhorns 30 - Rhinos 22Mean Machine 1 - Seminoles 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Playoffs\nThe sixth year of playoffs for the SFA consisted of the top 4 from each conference making the playoffs again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Playoffs, Conference Semi-Finals\nApril 25, 2004Bandits 42 \u2013 Mean Machine 18Longhorns 50 - Six-Pack 18Rage 29 - Raiders 24Mad Dogs 31 - Rhinos 22", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Playoffs, Conference Championships\nMay 2, 2004Bandits 36 \u2013 Longhorns 8Mad Dogs 33 \u2013 Rage 28", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 53], "content_span": [54, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178675-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 SASFA Season, Regular Season Awards\nSFA Regular Season MVP: Stacey Green - #24 RB Mad Dogs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178676-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SCCA ProRally season\nThe 2004 SCCA ProRally Season was the 32nd and last season of the SCCA ProRally and won by Canadian Patrick Richard from British Columbia and his co-driver and sister Nathalie. Nine rounds were held from January 2004 to October 2004. It was the final season of SCCA ProRally as the series became known as Rally America from 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178677-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEABA Under-18 Championship\nThe 2004 SEABA Under-18 Championship was the qualifying tournament for Southeast Asia Basketball Association at the 2004 FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship. The tournament was held in Lucena, Quezon, the Philippines from April 14 to April 17. Quezon Convention Center was the venue of all the games. The hosts won their third overall title by sweeping all of their assignments to earn right to represent SEABA together with the second-placer Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178677-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SEABA Under-18 Championship\nIndonesia was supposed to participate at the tournament but withdrew a few days before the first match was due to be played", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178678-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Cupra Championship\nThe 2004 SEAT Cupra Championship season was the second season of the SEAT Cupra Championship in car racing. It began on 24 April at Brands Hatch, and ended on 28 August at Donington Park, after twelve rounds held in England and Scotland. The championship was won by James Pickford, after he had finished fifth in the championship's inaugural season. He held off a late-season charge from Oli Wilkinson to win the championship by just five points, with ex-British Touring Car Championship driver Tom Boardman coming in third. Pickford's prize for winning the championship was to replace Robert Huff in the SEAT Sport UK team in the BTCC for the 2005 season. Pickford finished eighth in the championship, with a best result of second, three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178678-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Cupra Championship, Teams and drivers\nAll entries ran the Mk1 SEAT Le\u00f3n entered by SEAT themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178679-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open\nThe 2004 SEAT Open was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts in Kockelscheuer, Luxembourg which was part of Tier III of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 14th edition of the tournament and was held from 25 October until 31 October 2004. Second-seeded Alicia Molik won the singles title and earned $35,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178679-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open, Finals, Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Jill Craybas / Marlene Weing\u00e4rtner, 6\u20131, 6\u20137(1\u20137), 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178680-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open \u2013 Doubles\nMaria Sharapova and Tamarine Tanasugarn were the defending champions, but none competed this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178680-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open \u2013 Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez won the title by defeating Jill Craybas and Marlene Weing\u00e4rtner 6\u20131, 6\u20137(1\u20137), 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178681-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but did not compete this year due to an injury on her left wrist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178681-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open \u2013 Singles\nSecond-seeded Alicia Molik won the title by defeating Dinara Safina 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178681-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 SEAT Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178682-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEC Championship Game\nThe 2004 SEC Championship Game was played on December 4, 2004, in the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. The game matched SEC Western Division champion Auburn against SEC Eastern Division champion Tennessee. The game was a 38\u201328 victory for Auburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178683-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament took place on March 11\u201314, 2004 in Atlanta, Georgia at the Georgia Dome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178683-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament\nKentucky won the tournament and received the SEC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament by beating Florida on March 14, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178684-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SEC Softball Tournament\nThe 2004 SEC Softball Tournament was held at the University of Alabama Softball Stadium on the campus of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Alabama from May 13 through May 16, 2004. LSU won the tournament and earned the Southeastern Conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178685-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SLC Twenty20 Tournament\nThe 2004 SLC Twenty20 Tournament is the 1st season of the official Twenty20 domestic cricket competition in Sri Lanka. 15 teams in total, five representing four provinces of Sri Lanka and a Sri Lanka Schools XI team participating in the competition. The competition began on 17 August 2004, when Bloomfield Cricket and Athletic Club played the Police Sports Club at Colts Cricket Club Ground, Colombo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178685-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SLC Twenty20 Tournament\nThis season comprised eight regular matches, four quarter finals, two semi finals and a final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178686-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 SVL season\nThe 2004 Shakey's V-League (SVL) season was the first season of the Shakey's V-League. Founded in 2004 and organized by Sports Vision Management Group, Inc. (Sports Vision). The league began as the Shakey's V-League, a women's collegiate league with teams coming from the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP), the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Cebu Schools Athletic Foundation (CESAFI), and among others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178686-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 SVL season, Second conference\nThe Shakey's V-League 1st season 2nd conference started on November 28, 2004 at the PhilSports Arena, Pasig, Philippines with 7 teams competing in the conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178687-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saarland state election\nThe 2004 Saarland state election was held on 5 September 2004 to elect the members of the Landtag of Saarland. The incumbent Christian Democratic Union (CDU) government led by Minister-President Peter M\u00fcller retained its majority and continued in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178687-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Saarland state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag of Saarland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178688-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sabah state election\nThe 2004 Sabah state election was held on Sunday, 21 March 2004, concurrently with the 2004 Malaysian general election. This election featured 12 new state seats increasing the total seats from 48 to 60. There was also an additional three parliament seats in Sabah following the 2003 delineation of electoral boundaries. The Barisan Nasional (BN) coalition comprehensively won this election after the only major opposition party in Sabah Parti Bersatu Sabah joined the BN coalition in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178688-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sabah state election, Results\nBarisan Nasional won 59 out of 60 state seats. Out of the 59 seats won, 8 seats was won uncontested. One state seat was won by independent candidate Johan Ghani in Kuala Penyu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178688-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sabah state election, Results\nBN also won 24 out of 25 parliamentary seats in Sabah, where 9 seats was won uncontested. One parliamentary seat was won by independent candidate Chong Hon Ming in Sandakan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178689-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saban status referendum\nA status referendum was held on the island of Saba on 5 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178689-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Saban status referendum, Background\nAfter the 1994 referendum came out in favour of maintaining and restructuring the Netherlands Antilles, the government of the Netherlands Antilles tried to restructure the Netherlands Antilles and attempted to forge closer ties between the islands, as is exemplified by the adoption of an anthem of the Netherlands Antilles in 2000. A new referendum on Sint Maarten, which was in favour of a separate status for Sint Maarten as a country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, sparked a new series of referendums across the Netherlands Antilles, however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178689-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Saban status referendum, Background\n86.05% of the population in Saba voted for closer links to the Netherlands; remaining a part of the Netherlands Antilles got 13.18% of the vote. Independence got less than one percent of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178690-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento Monarchs season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the 8th for the Sacramento Monarchs. The Monarchs went to the playoffs, where they upset the Los Angeles Sparks in three games, but fell in the conference finals to eventual champion Seattle Storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178690-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento Monarchs season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Monarchs' 2003 record, they would pick 10th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Monarchs picked Jennifer Butler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178691-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento State Hornets football team\nThe 2004 Sacramento State Hornets football team represented Sacramento State University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178691-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento State Hornets football team\nSacramento State competed in the Big Sky Conference. The Hornets were led by second-year head coach Steve Mooshagian and played home games at Hornet Stadium in Sacramento, California. They finished the season with a record of three wins and eight losses (3\u20138, 2\u20135 Big Sky). Sacramento State was outscored by its opponents 190\u2013415 for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178691-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento State Hornets football team, Team players in the NFL\nNo Sacramento State players were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178691-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento State Hornets football team, Team players in the NFL\nThe following finished their college career in 2004, were not drafted, but played in the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 68], "content_span": [69, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178692-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sacramento mayoral election\nThe 2004 Sacramento mayoral election was held on March 2, 2004 to elect the mayor of Sacramento, California. It saw the reelection of Heather Fargo. Since Fargo won a majority in the first round, no runoff was required.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178693-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saint Francis Cougars football team\nThe 2004 Saint Francis Cougars football team represented the University of Saint Francis, located in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in the 2004 NAIA football season. They were led by head coach Kevin Donley, who served his 7th year as the first and only head coach in the history of Saint Francis football. The Cougars played their home games at Bishop John M. D'Arcy Stadium and were members of the Mid-States Football Association (MSFA) Mideast League (MEL). The Cougars finished in 1st place in the MSFA MEL division, and they received an automatic bid to the 2004 postseason NAIA playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178693-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Saint Francis Cougars football team\nThe 2004 Cougars finished the regular season undefeated. In the postseason playoffs, the Cougars advanced to the national championship game where they lost to the Fighting Saints of Carroll, 15-13 in double overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178693-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Saint Francis Cougars football team, Schedule\n(13-1 overall, 7-0 conference)The 2004 season was the first of three consecutive trips to the NAIA championship game in Savannah, TN. The Cougars finished as runner-up in the nation with its 2-point loss to Carroll (MT). As a tribute to this team's success, Donley was named the NAIA National Coach of the Year for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178694-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saint Francis Red Flash football team\nThe 2004 Saint Francis Red Flash football team represented Saint Francis University as a member of the Northeast Conference (NEC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Red Flash were led by third-year head coach Dave Opfar and played their home games at the Pine Bowl. They finished the season 3\u20138 overall and 1\u20136 in NEC play to place last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178695-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saint Kitts and Nevis general election\nGeneral elections were held in Saint Kitts and Nevis on 24 October 2004. The result was a victory for the Saint Kitts and Nevis Labour Party, which received over 50% of the vote and won seven of the eleven directly-elected seats in the National Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178696-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Salford City Council election\nThe 2004 Salford City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Salford City Council in England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes having taken place since the last election in 2003. The Labour Party kept overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 35.53%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178697-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Salt Lake County mayoral election\nThe 2004 Salt Lake County mayoral election was held to elect the Mayor of Salt Lake County, Utah on November 2, 2004, alongside the presidential, House of Representatives, Senate and gubernatorial elections. This marked the second election to the office since the post was created in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178697-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Salt Lake County mayoral election\nIn 2000, Nancy Workman was elected as the first county mayor. However, in June 2004, she came under investigation for hiring two county-paid employees who had worked for her daughter at the Boys and Girls Clubs of South Valley, resulting in her being placed on paid administrative leave on July 9, replaced with Deputy Mayor Alan Dayton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178697-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Salt Lake County mayoral election\nDemocrat Peter Corroon won the election as one of two Democrats to win the county during the election cycle, alongside gubernatorial candidate Scott Matheson Jr., while the county backed Republicans George W. Bush for President and Bob Bennett for Senator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178697-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Salt Lake County mayoral election, Candidates, Republican Party, Dropped out\nDespite being placed on administrative leave, Workman still remained the Republican candidate and refused to withdraw. However, after revelations that she had paid her daughter's former boyfriend for county computer work that was never done, Salt Lake County GOP voted on October 5 to withdraw support for her, instead supporting Ivory, who until then was running as a write-in candidate. On October 12, Workman filed papers with County Clerk Sherrie Swensen to officially withdraw from the race, including a note from her physician, Philip Roberts, saying she was \"disabled\" and unable to continue. Swensen rejected the county GOP attempt to certify Ivory as their candidate, forcing the party to hold an emergency central committee meeting and succeeding a week before the election, despite lawsuits from Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 81], "content_span": [82, 906]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178698-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Salvadoran presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in El Salvador on 21 March 2004. Antonio Saca of the Nationalist Republican Alliance (ARENA) party won the election with 57% of the vote, avoiding the need for a run-off on 2 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178698-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Salvadoran presidential election, Candidates\nThere were also two additional candidates. However, pre-vote opinion polls consistently placed both of them far behind the two leaders:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178698-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Salvadoran presidential election, Candidates\nThe election was monitored by 270 international observers and El Salvador's own Tribunal Supremo Electoral, an institution created in 1992 to reform and validate the country's electoral system. Some 17,000 police were on security duty during the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178698-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Salvadoran presidential election, Foreign interference\nThe U.S. government under George W. Bush interfered in the elections by threatening a deterioration of the bilateral relations in case of a victory by FMLN's candidate Schafik Handal. Bush's Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs, Otto Reich, stated that the U.S. government was \"concerned about the impact that an FMLN victory could have on the commercial, economic, and migration-related relations of the U.S. with El Salvador.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178698-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Salvadoran presidential election, Results\nThe voter turnout of 67% was the highest in Salvadoran history. The Tribunal Supremo Electoral confirmed Saca as the winner on Monday 22 March. Handal recognized Saca's victory, but chose not to congratulate him. Saca announced his intention to seek reconciliation with the opposition FMLN, in an effort to heal old divisions from the country's violent past. Saca selected Ana Vilma de Escobar to be his vice-president. She was previously the director of the Salvadoran Social Security Institute (ISSS). The new government took office on 1 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178699-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Salzburg state election\nThe 2004 Salzburg state election was held on 7 March 2004 to elect the members of the Landtag of Salzburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178699-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Salzburg state election\nThe result was a historic victory for the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SP\u00d6), which became the largest party for the first time in history. The SP\u00d6 achieved a decisive swing of over thirteen percentage points, winning 45.4% of votes cast. The Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP), which had governed the state uninterrupted since 1945, fell to second place despite only small losses. Incumbent Governor Franz Schausberger did not run for re-election; rather, Wilfried Haslauer Jr. was the \u00d6VP's top candidate. The Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) lost over half its vote share and seats to the SP\u00d6, while The Greens made minor gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178699-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Salzburg state election\nA coalition between the SP\u00d6 and Greens was mathematically possible, but dismissed by the SP\u00d6, who had ruled out such an arrangement prior to the election. They subsequently formed a coalition with the \u00d6VP. Gabi Burgstaller became the first SP\u00d6 governor of Salzburg. She became the second female state governor in Austrian history (after Waltraud Klasnic in 1996), and the first to enter office as the result of an election victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178699-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Salzburg state election, Background\nIn the 1999 election, the \u00d6VP remained the largest party, though the SP\u00d6 increased their vote share by five points. The FP\u00d6 stayed level on just under 20% of votes, and the Greens narrowly retained their presence in the Landtag. The \u00d6VP formed a coalition with the SP\u00d6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178699-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Salzburg state election, Electoral system\nThe 36 seats of the Landtag of Salzburg are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between six multi-member constituencies. For parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 5 percent state-wide electoral threshold. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Hare quota, with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178699-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Salzburg state election, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178700-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sammarinese local elections\nThe 2004 Sammarinese local elections were held on 18 April to elect the mayor and the council of the municipalities of Borgo Maggiore, in San Marino, as the 2003 Sammarinese local elections was declared invalid, as the turnout quorum was not reached. Turnout in this election was 61.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178700-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sammarinese local elections, Electoral system\nVoters elected the mayor (Italian: capitano di castello) and the municipal council (giunta di castello) of Borgo Maggiore. The number of seats of the council was established at 10 by law. Candidates ran on lists led by a mayoral candidate. Voters elected a list and were allowed to give up to two preferential votes. Seats were allocated with the d'Hondt method if the winner had obtained at least 60% of the votes. Otherwise, six seats would have been allocated to the winning party and the rest of the seats would have been allocated using the d'Hondt method to the rest of the parties. The mayoral candidate of the winning list was proclaimed mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178701-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Samoa National League\nThe 2004 Samoa National League, or also known as the Upolo First Division, was the 16th edition of the Samoa National League, the top league of the Football Federation Samoa. Strickland Brothers Lepea won their third consecutive title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178702-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Antonio Silver Stars season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the 8th season for the San Antonio Silver Stars franchise. The team came last in the league with a 9-25 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178702-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Antonio Silver Stars season, Offseason, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Silver Stars' 2003 record, they would pick 3rd in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Silver Stars picked LaToya Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178702-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Antonio Silver Stars season, Player stats\nNote: GP = Games Played; REB = Rebounds; AST = Assists; STL = Steals; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178703-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Chargers season\nThe 2004 San Diego Chargers season was the franchise's 35th season in the National Football League (NFL), its 45th overall and the third under head coach Marty Schottenheimer. The team improved on their 4\u201312 record in 2003 and finished the regular season 12\u20134, made the playoffs for the first time in nine years, and captured their first division title since the 1994 season. In the playoffs they lost in overtime to the New York Jets. At the end of the season Marty Schottenheimer was named NFL Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178703-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Chargers season, Offseason, NFL draft\nEntering the draft, the consensus top pick was Ole Miss quarterback Eli Manning. However, Manning had said prior to the draft that he did not want to play for the Chargers and would not sign with them if he was drafted. The Chargers would strike a deal with the Giants before the draft that would shape the future of both franchises. The Chargers would select Manning first overall, as they had intended to. The Giants would then draft quarterback Philip Rivers of North Carolina State, and then swap him and two 2005 draft picks for Manning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178704-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Attorney election\nThe 2004 San Diego City Attorney election occurred on Tuesday, November 2, 2004. The primary election was held on Tuesday, June 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178704-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Attorney election\nMunicipal elections in California are officially non-partisan, although most members do identify a party preference. A two-round system was used for the election, starting with a primary in June followed by a runoff in November between the top-two candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election\nThe 2004 San Diego City Council election occurred on November 2, 2004. The primary election was held on March 2, 2004. Four of the eight seats of the San Diego City Council were contested. This election used the boundaries created by the 2000 Redistricting Committee for the odd-numbered districts. All four incumbent council members ran for reelection in their respective districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election\nMunicipal elections in California are officially non-partisan, although most candidates do identify a party preference. A two-round system was used for the election, starting with a primary in March followed by a runoff in November between the top-two candidates if no candidate received a majority of the votes in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election, Campaign\nThe 2004 election used the eight district boundaries created by the 2000 Redistricting Commission for the odd numbered districts. Seats in districts 1, 3, 5, and 7 were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election, Results, District 1\nDistrict 1 consisted of the communities of Black Mountain Ranch, Carmel Valley, Del Mar Mesa, La Jolla, Pacific Highlands Ranch, Rancho Pe\u00f1asquitos, Torrey Highlands, Torrey Hills, Torrey Pines, and University City. Incumbent council member Scott Peters stood for reelection. Peters advanced out of the March primary with a plurality of the vote and was reelected with a majority of the vote in the November general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election, Results, District 3\nDistrict 3 consisted of the communities of Balboa Park, City Heights, Golden Hill, Hillcrest, Kensington, Normal Heights, North Park, South Park, Talmadge, and University Heights. Incumbent council member Toni Atkins stood for reelection. Atkins was reelected with a majority of the vote in the March primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election, Results, District 5\nDistrict 5 consisted of the communities of Carmel Mountain Ranch, Mira Mesa, Rancho Bernardo, Sabre Springs, Scripps Ranch, and San Pasqual. Incumbent council member Brian Maienschein ran for reelection uncontested and was therefore elected with 100 percent of the vote in the March primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election, Results, District 7\nDistrict 7 consisted of the communities of Allied Gardens,City Heights, College Area, Del Cerro, El Cerrito, Grantville, MCAS Miramar, Mission Trails Regional Park, Redwood Village \u2013 Oak Park, Rolando, San Carlos, Stonebridge Estates, and Tierrasanta. Incumbent council member Jim Madaffer stood for reelection. Madaffer was reelected with a majority of the vote in the March primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178705-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego City Council election, Deputy Mayor\nThe new city council was sworn in December 2004. Council member Michael Zucchet of district 2 was initially tapped to serve as deputy mayor. Zucchet briefly served as acting mayor of San Diego after the resignation of Dick Murphy. Atkins took over as acting mayor when Zucchet was forced to resign shortly thereafter due to a corruption conviction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season\nThe 2004 San Diego Padres season was the 36th season in franchise history. It saw the club finish with a record of 87-75, the fifth most wins in franchise history. With the 87 wins, the Padres improved their win-loss record by 23 games over the 2003 season (64-98), the single largest improvement from one full season to the next in team history. The Padres also moved into their new home Petco Park, which drew a total of 3,016,752 fans to 81 home games, shattering all previous attendance marks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season, Regular season, Petco Park\nPetco Park is an open-air stadium in downtown San Diego, California. It opened in 2004, replacing Qualcomm Stadium as the home park of Major League Baseball's San Diego Padres. Before then, the Padres shared Qualcomm Stadium with the NFL's San Diego Chargers. The stadium is named after the animal and pet supplies retailer PETCO, which is based in San Diego and paid for the naming rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178706-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Padres season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178707-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego State Aztecs football team\nThe 2004 San Diego State Aztecs football team represented San Diego State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were coached by Tom Craft and played their home games at Qualcomm Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178708-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego Toreros football team\nThe 2004 San Diego Toreros football team represented the University of San Diego during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. In their first year under head coach Jim Harbaugh, the Toreros compiled a 7\u20134 record and outscored their opponents 397 to 266.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election\nThe 2004 San Diego mayoral election was held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004 to elect the mayor for San Diego. Incumbent mayor Dick Murphy stood for reelection for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election\nMunicipal elections in California are officially non-partisan, though some candidates do receive funding and support from various political parties. The non-partisan primary was held Tuesday, June 3, 2004. Murphy and county supervisor Ron Roberts received the most votes and advanced to the November special general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election\nAfter the primary San Diego City Council member Donna Frye entered the race as a write-in candidate for the November general election. Murphy was certified as winner with a narrow plurality of the votes in the general election over runner-up Frye. This result was subject to a recount and litigation before ultimately being upheld by the courts in February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election, Campaign\nIn the March primary Dick Murphy received the most votes but not a majority, denying him the outright majority needed for an outright victory. This was the first time in twenty years that an incumbent mayor was forced to face a runoff election. San Diego County Supervisor Ron Roberts received the second most votes and advanced to the general election alongside Murphy. Roberts had also been the runner-up in the 2000 mayoral election against Murphy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election, Campaign\nAfter the primary elections, San Diego City Council member Donna Frye announced that she would run as a write-in candidate. Frye ran a maverick campaign against Murphy and Roberts, who were both considered establishment candidates by the media. Frye was the only member of the city council to vote against the underfunding of San Diego's pension liabilities that led to the San Diego pension scandal. As mayor, Murphy had voted in favor of the underfunding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election, Recount and litigation\nIn the general election, Dick Murphy was certified as winner of a plurality of votes by a margin of 2,108 votes over runner-up Frye. However, news outlets uncovered 5,547 ballots that were not counted on which voters had written in Frye's name but not filled in the adjacent oval. If these votes had been counted, Frye would have been elected mayor instead of Murphy. Members of the media requested a recount indirectly on Frye's behalf, leading to allegations of bias from Murphy's lawyers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election, Recount and litigation\nAttorney Fred Woocher filed a lawsuit on behalf of three voters contesting Murphy's victory due to the 5,000 uncounted ballots. On February 2, 2005, Judge Michael Brenner ruled that the unfilled ovals did not count as votes under California state law, ending the post-election litigation battle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election, Aftermath\nIn April 2005, only two months after the results of the election were officially upheld by the courts, Murphy announced that he would be resigning as mayor. In the face of a deepening pension scandal that he was personally involved in, Murphy stated that San Diego needed a mayor with the support of the majority of residents and a clear mandate to lead the city out of its crisis. The city held a special election to fill the vacancy at mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178709-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 San Diego mayoral election, Aftermath\nIn response to Donna Frye's nearly successful write-in candidacy, the San Diego City Council amended the municipal code so that write-in candidates could not run in general elections or run-off elections. Write-ins are still permitted in primary elections and recall elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe 2004 season was the San Francisco 49ers' 55th in the National Football League, the 59th overall and their second and final under head coach Dennis Erickson, as he was fired after the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe 49ers attempted to improve on their 7\u20139 output from the previous season, but the 49ers finished the season at 2\u201314, both wins coming against division-rival Arizona Cardinals in overtime. The 49ers earned the #1 overall pick in the 2005 NFL Draft, where they selected quarterback Alex Smith, who would play for the team for eight seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season\nThe season marked changes for the 49ers, who lost three key members of the 2001 team: Quarterback Jeff Garcia was released in the off-season and later signed with the Cleveland Browns, running back Garrison Hearst went to the Denver Broncos, and controversial wide receiver Terrell Owens went to the Philadelphia Eagles, where they lost to the New England Patriots in the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nat San Francisco Stadium at Candlestick Point, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 68\u00a0\u00b0F (Partly Cloudy)Sunday, September 12, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe 49ers opened the season at home against the Falcons. The game was statistically dominated by the 49ers, but they were required to make a fourth quarter comeback. The 49ers had an opportunity to tie the game, but a two-point conversion pass attempt from Tim Rattay fell harmlessly to the ground. The loss had the 49ers open the season at 0\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nATL- Alge Crumpler 15-yard pass from Michael Vick (Jay Feely kick) ATL 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nATL- Warrick Dunn 2-yard rush (Jay Feely kick) ATL 14-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nATL- Warrick Dunn 9-yard rush (Jay Feely kick) ATL 21-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nSF- Cedrick Wilson 8-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Todd Peterson kick) ATL 21-13", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 1: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nSF- Eric Johnson 16-yard pass from Tim Rattay (pass failed) ATL 21-19", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nIn a high-scoring battle, in which both teams scored during all four-quarters, the Saints bested the 49ers by a three-point differential. The 49ers took an early lead with a 30-yard field goal by Todd Peterson, but after the Saints scored, the 49ers played catch-up the rest of the game. With this close loss, the 49ers dropped to 0\u20132 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nNO- Joe Horn 8-yard pass from Aaron Brooks (John Carney kick) NO 7-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nSF- Kevan Barlow 10-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) TIED 10-10", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nNO- Jerome Pathon 37-yard pass from Aaron Brooks (John Carney kick) NO 17-10", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nSF- Kevan Barlow 1-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) NO 20-17", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nSF- Jamal Robertson 1-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) SF 27-23", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 2: at New Orleans Saints\nNO- Dont\u00e9 Stallworth 16-yard pass from Aaron Brooks (John Carney kick) NO 30-27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 3: at Seattle Seahawks\nThe 49ers suffered a 34\u20130 loss to the Seattle Seahawks in week 3. It was the first shutout of a 49ers team since the Atlanta Falcons handed them a 7\u20130 loss in week 4 of the 1977 NFL Season (they were also shut out in week 1 that season by the Pittsburgh Steelers). This remains the longest such streak in the NFL. While the Seahawks scored several field goals and touchdowns, the 49ers could only manage nine first downs and turned the ball over four times (two interceptions and two lost fumbles). With the loss, the 49ers fell to 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 3: at Seattle Seahawks\nSEA \u2013 Shaun Alexander 1-yard rush (Josh Brown kick) SEA 10-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 3: at Seattle Seahawks\nSEA \u2013 Shaun Alexander 3-yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Josh Brown kick) 17-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 3: at Seattle Seahawks\nSEA \u2013 Shaun Alexander 1-yard rush (Josh Brown kick) 24-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 3: at Seattle Seahawks\nSEA \u2013 Itula Mili 1-yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Josh Brown kick) 31-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 4: vs. St. Louis Rams\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 62\u00a0\u00b0F (Partly Cloudy)Sunday, October 3, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 4: vs. St. Louis Rams\nAgain the 49ers struggled, not putting any points on the board until the fourth quarter. Despite Tim Rattay throwing for 299 yards and the team gaining more first downs than the Rams, St. Louis' defense held fast, preventing the 49ers from scoring until the fourth quarter. The loss meant the 49ers started the season at 0\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 4: vs. St. Louis Rams\nSTL- Joey Goodspeed 2-yard rush (Jeff Wilkins kick) STL 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 4: vs. St. Louis Rams\nSTL- Shaun McDonald 6-yard pass from Marc Bulger (Jeff Wilkins kick) STL 14-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 4: vs. St. Louis Rams\nSF- Curtis Conway 9-yard pass from Tim Rattay (pass failed) STL 24-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 4: vs. St. Louis Rams\nSF- Rashaun Woods 18-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Curtis Conway pass from Tim Rattay) STL 24-14", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 74\u00a0\u00b0F (Sunny)Sunday, October 10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nThe 49ers finally won their first game of the season in Week 5 against the Arizona Cardinals. After a scoreless first quarter, the Cardinals took a 16-point lead 28\u201312. In the fourth quarter, the 49ers scored 16 unanswered points (two touchdowns with two accompanying two-point conversions) to tie the game as regulation ended. In the overtime period, the 49ers' kicker Todd Peterson sent a 32-yard kick through the uprights, giving the 49ers their first victory of the season. Now in the win column, the 49ers were 1\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Freddie Jones 16-yard pass from Josh McCown (Neil Rackers kick) AZ 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Troy Hambrick 2-yard pass from Josh McCown (Neil Rackers kick) AZ 14-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Arnaz Battle 71-yard punt return (pass failed) AZ 14-12", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Emmitt Smith 10-yard rush (Neil Rackers kick) AZ 21-12", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Larry Fitzgerald 24-yard pass from Josh McCown (Neil Rackers kick) AZ 28-12", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Eric Johnson 6-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Tim Rattay run)AZ 28-20", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 5: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Brandon Lloyd 23-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Brandon Lloyd pass from Tim Rattay) TIED 28-28", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nIt seemed the 49ers would have their second straight victory when they secured a 14-point lead before halftime. However, the 49ers' defense fell apart after the half and the Jets scored 22 unanswered points and forced two turnovers to secure the win. With the 49ers' loss, they fell to 1\u20135 heading into their bye week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSF- Brandon Lloyd 33-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Todd Peterson kick) SF 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nSF- Kevan Barlow 2-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) SF 14-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 6: at New York Jets\nNYJ- Curtis Martin 9-yard rush (Doug Brien kick) NYJ 22-14", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 8: at Chicago Bears\nComing out of their bye, the 49ers took an early lead, this time 10\u20137, however, they were shut out in the second half. Despite three turnovers, the Bears came away with the victory. Between the two teams, five field goals were scored, including two from longer than 50 yards. The loss dropped the 49ers to 1\u20136 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 8: at Chicago Bears\nCHI- Bernard Berrian 49-yard pass from Craig Krenzel (Paul Edinger kick) CHI 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 8: at Chicago Bears\nSF- Dwaine Carpenter 80-yard fumble return (Todd Peterson kick) TIED 7-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 8: at Chicago Bears\nCHI- Nathan Vasher 71-yard interception return (Paul Edinger kick) CHI 23-13", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 60\u00a0\u00b0F (Partly Cloudy)Sunday, November 7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nIn another high-score affair, the Seahawks clinched a season sweep over the 49ers using their high-powered offense. The game was back-and-forth until the Seahawks a lead at 28\u201324 that they would not relinquish, beating the 49ers in nearly every statistically category. Their third straight loss dropped the 49ers to 1\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSF- Kevan Barlow 3-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) SF 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSEA- Darrell Jackson 33-yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Josh Brown kick) TIED 7-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSF- Curtis Conway 28-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Todd Peterson kick) SF 14-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSEA- Shaun Alexander 1-yard rush (Josh Brown kick) TIED 14-14", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSEA- Shaun Alexander 4-yard rush (Josh Brown kick) SEA 21-14", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSF- Brandon Lloyd 39-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Todd Peterson kick) SF 24-21", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSEA- Koren Robinson 25-yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Josh Brown kick) SEA 28-24", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSEA- Darrell Jackson 39-yard pass from Matt Hasselbeck (Josh Brown kick) SEA 35-24", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 9: vs. Seattle Seahawks\nSEA- Anthony Simmons 23-yard interception return (Josh Brown kick) SEA 42-27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 63\u00a0\u00b0F (Mostly Cloudy)Sunday, November 14, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nIt appeared the 49ers would snap their three-game losing streak when they took at 17\u20130 lead, however, the Panthers were able to slowly creep back into the game. Several field goals and touchdowns later, the game was tied at 27 and the Panthers scored a final field goal to come away with the win, 30\u201327. The loss dropped the 49ers to 1\u20138 and completed their second four-game losing streak of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nSF- Kevan Barlow 1-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) SF 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nSF- Kevan Barlow 3-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) SF 17-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nCAR- Brandon Bennett 1-yard rush (Todd Sauerbrun kick) SF 17-13", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nCAR- Muhsin Muhammad 40-yard pass from Jake Delhomme (Todd Sauerbrun kick) CAR 20-17", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nSF- Brandon Lloyd 30-yard pass from Tim Rattay (Todd Peterson kick) SF 27-20", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nCAR- Muhsin Muhammad 4-yard pass from Jake Delhomme (Todd Sauerbrun kick) TIED 27-27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 10: vs. Carolina Panthers\nCAR- Muhsin Muhammad 26-yard pass from Jake Delhomme (Todd Sauerbrun kick) CAR 37-27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 79], "content_span": [80, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 11: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe 49ers didn't have a chance in this lopsided game, falling to the Buccaneers 35\u20133. With an output of only 197 total yards, the 49ers' lone field goal came off the foot of kicker Todd Peterson from 47 yards out. Their fifth consecutive loss brought the 49ers down to 1\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 11: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nTB- Michael Pittman 14-yard rush (Martin Gramatica kick) TB 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 11: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nTB- Joe Jurevicius 9-yard pass from Brian Griese (Martin Gramatica kick) TB 14-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 11: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nTB- Joe Jurevicius 42-yard pass from Brian Griese (Martin Gramatica kick) TB 21-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 11: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nTB- Torrie Cox 55-yard interception return (Martin Gramatica kick) 35-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 55\u00a0\u00b0F (Sunny)Sunday, November 28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nLooking to snap their five-game losing streak, the 49ers were, statistically, the better team, but three turnovers doomed their chances. The 49ers led at one point, 10\u20137, but the Dolphins regained the lead in the fourth quarter and the 49ers came away with another loss, 24\u201317. This loss was their six straight and tenth of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nMIA- Chris Chambers 25-yard pass from A. J. Feeley (Olindo Mare kick) MIA 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nSF- Derek Smith 46-yard fumble return (Todd Peterson kick) SF 10-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nMIA- Randy McMichael 15-yard pass from A. J. Feeley (Olindo Mare kick) MIA 14-10", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nMIA- Derrick Pope 1-yard fumble return (Olindo Mare kick) MIA 24-10", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 12: vs. Miami Dolphins\nSF- Maurice Hicks 1-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) MIA 24-17", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 13: at St. Louis Rams\nIn a low-scoring contest, the 49ers lost to the division rival Rams by a score of 16\u20136. The 49ers were limited to only nine first downs in the game and could only manage two field goals, one of which was from 51 yards. This game marked the 49ers' seventh consecutive loss as they fell to 1\u201311 and they were swept by the Rams for the first time since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 13: at St. Louis Rams\nSTL- Torry Holt 22-yard pass from Chris Chandler (Jeff Wilkins kick) STL 10-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nIn an overtime game, the 49ers managed to snap their seven-game losing streak by outdueling the Arizona Cardinals, 31\u201328. The 49ers seemingly had this game already wrapped up when they took a twenty-one point lead, but the Cardinals fought back and scored 18 points in the fourth quarter to force overtime. A 31-yard field goal by Todd Peterson sealed the victory for the 49ers. Breaking their seven-game streak, the 49ers improved to 2\u201311. At this point of the season, the 49ers were 2\u20130 against the Cardinals and 0\u201311 against the rest of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Brandon Lloyd 5-yard pass from Ken Dorsey (Todd Peterson kick) SF 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Cedrick Wilson 19-yard pass from Ken Dorsey (Todd Peterson kick) SF 14-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Maurice Hicks 1-yard rush (Todd Peterson kick) SF 21-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nSF- Cedrick Wilson 27-yard pass from Ken Dorsey (Todd Peterson kick) SF 28-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Obafemi Ayanbadejo 4-yard rush (Neil Rackers kick) SF 28-10", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Obafemi Ayanbadejo 1-yard rush (Neil Rackers kick) SF 28-17", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 14: at Arizona Cardinals\nAZ- Emmitt Smith 8-yard rush (Josh McCown run) SF 28-25", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 78], "content_span": [79, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 55\u00a0\u00b0F (12.8\u00a0\u00b0C), sunnySaturday, December 18, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nThe 49ers failed in their attempt to string together two victories, losing this contest 26\u201316 to the Redskins. The 49ers never led, but they did score a rare safety in the second quarter. Statistically, it was a close game, both teams posting similar yardage and first downs, however, four interceptions by 49ers quarterback Ken Dorsey sealed the loss and dropped the team to 2\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0089-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nWAS- Robert Royal 12-yard pass from Patrick Ramsey (Jeff Chandler kick) WAS 7-0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0090-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nSF- Brandon Lloyd 17-yard pass from Ken Dorsey (Todd Peterson kick) TIED 7-7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0091-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nWAS- Antonio Pierce 78-yard interception return (Jeff Chandler kick) WAS 23-9", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0092-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 15: vs. Washington Redskins\nSF- Curtis Conway 11-yard pass from Ken Dorsey (Todd Peterson kick) WAS 26-16", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0093-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 16: vs. Buffalo Bills\nAt Monster Park, San Francisco, CaliforniaWeather 53\u00a0\u00b0F (11.7\u00a0\u00b0C), rainSunday, December 26, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0094-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 16: vs. Buffalo Bills\nIn a blowout, the Bills dominated the 49ers 41\u20137. While the Bills managed to score in the double-digits in three of the four-quarters, the 49ers only managed a single touchdown in the final minutes of the game. This was the second consecutive game in which the 49ers had four turnovers (this time three interceptions and one fumble) and the Bills were able to roll up over twice as many total yards as the 49ers. With the loss, the 49ers fell to 2\u201313 going into the final game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0095-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 16: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBUF- Lee Evans 8-yard pass from Drew Bledsoe (Rian Lindell kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0096-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 16: vs. Buffalo Bills\nBUF- Lee Evans 33-yard pass from Shane Matthews (Rian Lindell kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 75], "content_span": [76, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0097-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 17: at New England Patriots\nHoping to end their miserable season with a win, the 49ers flew to Gillette Stadium to play a Patriots team that was looking for the second seed in the AFC playoffs. In a game in which one touchdown was scored each quarter, the 49ers lost to the New England Patriots 21\u20137. The 49ers struck first, but the Patriots defense held them to that single touchdown. Both teams were riddled with mistakes, both turnovers and penalties; however, the Patriots were able to capitalize on the 49ers' errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0098-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 17: at New England Patriots\nThe 49ers closed their season at 2\u201314 on a three-game losing streak, giving the team the first overall pick in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0099-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 17: at New England Patriots\nSF- Steve Bush 4-yard pass from Ken Dorsey (Todd Peterson kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0100-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 17: at New England Patriots\nNE- Mike Vrabel 1-yard pass from Tom Brady (Adam Vinatieri kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178710-0101-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco 49ers season, Game Summaries, Week 17: at New England Patriots\nNE- Deion Branch 8-yard pass from Tom Brady (Adam Vinatieri kick)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election\nThe 2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors elections occurred on November 2, 2004. Seven of the eleven seats were contested in this election. Six incumbents and one open seat were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election\nMunicipal elections in California are officially non-partisan, though most candidates in San Francisco do receive funding and support from various political parties. This is the first Board of Supervisors election in San Francisco to implement ranked-choice voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 1\nThis district consists of the Richmond District. Incumbent supervisor Jake McGoldrick ran for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 2\nDistrict 2 consists of the Marina, Pacific Heights, the Presidio, part of Russian Hill, and Sea Cliff. Incumbent supervisor Michela Alioto-Pier was seeking her first election after being appointed by Mayor Gavin Newsom in the wake of his election as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 3\nDistrict 3 consists of the northeastern corner of San Francisco, including Chinatown, the Financial District, Fisherman's Wharf, Nob Hill, North Beach, and Telegraph Hill. Incumbent supervisor Aaron Peskin was seeking reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 5\nDistrict 5 consists of the Fillmore, Haight-Ashbury, Hayes Valley, Japantown, UCSF, and the Western Addition. Incumbent supervisor Matt Gonzalez did not seek reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 7\nDistrict 7 consists of City College, Forest Hill, Lake Merced, Mount Davidson, Parkmerced, San Francisco State University, St. Francis Wood, and Twin Peaks. Incumbent supervisor Sean Elsbernd was seeking his first election after he was appointed to the seat in the wake of his predecessor Tony Hall's resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 9\nDistrict 9 consists of Bernal Heights, the Inner Mission, and part of the Portola. Incumbent supervisor Tom Ammiano ran for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178711-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Board of Supervisors election, Results, District 11\nDistrict 11 consists of the Excelsior District, Ingleside, Oceanview, and the Outer Mission. Incumbent supervisor Gerardo Sandoval ran for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178712-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Giants season\nThe 2004 San Francisco Giants season was the Giants' 122nd year in Major League Baseball, their 47th year in San Francisco since their move from New York following the 1957 season, and their fifth at SBC Park. The team finished in second place in the National League West with a 91\u201371 record, 2 games behind the Los Angeles Dodgers. Barry Bonds became the oldest player in the history of the National League to win the MVP Award. It would be the last winning season San Francisco would have until 2009. The Giants hit 314 doubles, the most in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178712-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Giants season, Offseason and spring training\nOn November 14, 2003, A. J. Pierzynski was traded by the Minnesota Twins with cash to the San Francisco Giants for Joe Nathan, Francisco Liriano, and Boof Bonser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178712-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Giants season, Offseason and spring training\nThe Giants finished spring training with a record of 11\u201319, the worst in the Cactus League. This includes split-squad games but excludes any ties or games against non-Major League opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178712-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Francisco Giants season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178713-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Jose Earthquakes season\nThe 2004 San Jose Earthquakes season was the ninth season of the team's existence. It was the first under the guidance of Dominic Kinnear has head coach, after Frank Yallop was announced to be coaching the Canadian national team in December 2003. San Jose Earthquakes selected Ryan Cochrane with the 5th pick in the Major League Soccer Super Draft after acquiring the pick in the Joe Cannon (soccer) Trade. They also selected Steve Cronin, Mike Wilson, Marin Pusek, and Tighe Dombrowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178713-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Jose Earthquakes season, Squad, Current squad\nAs of August 18, 2009. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178714-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Jose State Spartans football team\nThe 2004 San Jose State Spartans football team represented San Jose State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team played their home games at Spartan Stadium in San Jose, California. They participated as members of the Western Athletic Conference. They were coached by head coach Fitz Hill, who resigned after the end of the season to become a \"Visiting Scholar\" position at the University of Central Florida\u2019s DeVos Sports Business Management Program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178714-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Jose State Spartans football team\nThe Spartans' 70-63 win over Rice on October 2 set an NCAA record for overall points scored by both teams in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178714-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Jose State Spartans football team, Attendance issues and possible cancellation of football\nThe San Jose Mercury News reported in March 2004 that budget cuts led some faculty members at San Jose State to advocate removing the SJSU football program from Division IA athletics. Locally there was much speculation that San Jose State would drop football due to poor attendance and student-athlete graduation rates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 99], "content_span": [100, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178714-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Jose State Spartans football team, Attendance issues and possible cancellation of football, Read-2-Lead Classic\nThe \"Read-2-Lead Classic\" was an attempt to help the football team achieve average attendance of 15,000 to retain NCAA Division I-A status. With an emphasis on literacy, the university hosted a series of events in September 2004, including a conversation with comedian Bill Cosby and a concert by Boyz II Men. The game sold just 11,360 tickets. In contrast, the 2003 Read-2-Lead Classic had an official attendance of over 31,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 120], "content_span": [121, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178715-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Juan, Puerto Rico mayoral election\nThe 2004 San Juan, Puerto Rico mayoral election was held on November 2, 2004 to elect the Mayor of San Juan, Puerto Rico. It was held as part of the 2004 Puerto Rican general election. It saw the reelection incumbent mayor Jorge Santini, a member of the New Progressive Party. Santini ran unchallenged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix\nThe 2004 San Marino Grand Prix (officially the Gran Premio Foster's di San Marino 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 25 April 2004 at the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola. It was Race 4 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. The 62-lap race was won by Michael Schumacher driving a Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nThe 2004 San Marino Grand Prix marked the 10th anniversary of Roland Ratzenberger and Ayrton Senna's fatal accidents in 1994. Qualifying gave BAR's Jenson Button his maiden career pole position, ahead of Michael Schumacher, Juan Pablo Montoya, Rubens Barrichello and Ralf Schumacher. Both Giancarlo Fisichella and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen failed to set a time in the session, leaving them at the back of the grid. Rain fell on the Imola circuit overnight, washing away much of the rubber that had been laid down over the weekend, theoretically handing the advantage to teams with Bridgestone tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nOn race day it was warm and sunny, and the circuit was completely dry for the start of the race. As the lights went out, Button got away well, leading the field through the first corners. At the first chicane, David Coulthard locked his brakes and ran into the back of Fernando Alonso, dislodging Coulthard's front wing and sending the Scot into the gravel trap. He rejoined the track, but was already a long way behind and was forced to pit to repair the damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nMeanwhile, Montoya attempted to pass Michael Schumacher around the outside of the Tosa corner, with Schumacher squeezing Montoya onto the grass and forcing the pair to touch wheels as they exited the corner. Later, Schumacher explained that he could not see Montoya beside him. The incident caused Montoya to lose momentum, and fall back towards his teammate Ralf Schumacher. As the German attempted to pass Montoya, the Colombian forced him across the track and onto the slippery grass, where Ralf Schumacher kept his foot on the throttle, but was forced to yield the position, and lost another position to Takuma Sato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nAt the end of the first lap, Button had built a good lead over Michael Schumacher, Montoya, Sato, Ralf Schumacher and Barrichello. Michael Schumacher closed the gap quickly though, putting in consecutive fastest laps to put pressure on Button. The pair pulled away from the field easily, both lapping at nearly 1 second faster than every other driver. On lap 4, Coulthard, still struggling at the back of the field, went off track momentarily to short-cut the chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nCristiano da Matta and Felipe Massa became the first drivers to pit on lap 7, Massa dropping from 11th to 14th, but taking a position from da Matta due to his faster stop. Giorgio Pantano became the first retirement of the race, going off track thanks to a hydraulics failure. Lap 8 saw Montoya become the first front-runner to stop, followed into the pits by Mark Webber. Button showed that his qualifying effort was mainly due to a lighter fuel load, stopping on lap 9 to release Michael Schumacher, who immediately started to lap faster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0003-0002", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nRalf Schumacher, Olivier Panis and Christian Klien also made their first stops on lap 9. Sato and Barrichello pitted on lap 10, but Barrichello's faster stop allowed the Brazilian to get ahead as they exited the pits. Michael Schumacher's stop came on lap 11, but he had built up enough of a lead over Button to emerge well ahead. Jarno Trulli, momentarily in second place, pitted on lap 12, with fast work by the Renault team allowing him to take 4th position from Ralf Schumacher. Nick Heidfeld was the last of the three-stoppers to make his stop on lap 14, leaving Fisichella and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, in 9th and 10th as the only drivers not to make a pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nBarrichello, with a clearly faster car, closed up on Ralf Schumacher, but was unable to pass for several laps as Michael Schumacher built up a 12-second lead at the end of 18 laps. Coulthard, who had been switched to a two-stop strategy due to his first lap collision, made his stop on lap 19, with Fisichella following on lap 20, then R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen on lap 21. Meanwhile, Massa took 11th place from Jaguar's Mark Webber, the Australian suffering a misfire in his Cosworth engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nCristiano da Matta was again the first to pit in the second round of stops, refuelling on lap 23, followed by Webber and Massa the following lap. Minardi's Gianmaria Bruni entered the pits, with the team engineers apparently unprepared for his stop. Soon later he retired from the race, citing a continuously locking rear brake, which made the car difficult to drive. Montoya stopped on lap 25, falling back from 3rd to 7th, followed by Button on lap 26, who was able to retain his 2nd position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nMichael Schumacher pitted from the lead on lap 27, easily retaining his position, with an 18-second lead. Ralf Schumacher, Barrichello and Sato all pitted on the following lap, which saw Schumacher just retain his position ahead of Barrichello, the pair nearly colliding as Schumacher was released from his pit area. Fernando Alonso then pitted on lap 30, rejoining behind Ralf Schumacher and Barrichello, who were still close together on the circuit. Trulli then stopped the following lap, splitting Schumacher and Barrichello to take fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nda Matta was served with a drive-through penalty for ignoring blue flags, but made a mistake and went off track soon after, ending his race. After 35 laps, Button was able to find some pace, but not enough to significantly reduce Schumacher's lead, which stood at 16.4 seconds. Both Sauber drivers, on different strategies, took their final stops on lap 38. Coulthard made his second and final stop for the day on lap 40, leaving him in 14th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, in the other McLaren was also struggling in the midfield, but hopeful to pick up his first point of the year, pitted on lap 41. The final round of pitstops for the frontrunners began on lap 43, with Montoya and Barrichello pitting, followed by Button and Ralf Schumacher on lap 44, then Michael Schumacher and Trulli on lap 46. Trulli kept his position ahead of Barrichello, before Alonso's stop on lap 48 saw the Spaniard move ahead of both Barrichello and Trulli, into 5th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nAlonso began pressuring Ralf Schumacher, and on lap 51, attempted an overtaking move on the inside of Tosa, which saw the pair collide, sending Schumacher into a spin and dropping him down to 7th. The stewards announced the incident would be investigated after the race. Heidfeld retired from the race with a transmission problem, as Alonso moved in on Montoya and Barrichello got closer to Trulli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nSato retired from the race with a spectacular Honda engine failure with 6 laps remaining, possibly causing worry for teammate Button, who was in 2nd position. The retirement moved R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen into 8th, eyeing his first point for the 2004 season. Michael Schumacher cruised to the finish line to win his fourth race of the year, with Button in 2nd, and Montoya holding on to the final podium spot ahead of Alonso. Trulli survived an attack by Barrichello on the final lap to hold on to 5th, with Ralf Schumacher and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen closing out the pointscorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178716-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 San Marino Grand Prix, Report\nThe result continued Michael Schumacher's perfect start to the year, with a maximum 40 points from the first four races. Teammate Barrichello held on to second with 24 points, just ahead of the surprise package Button, on 23. The constructors championship underlined Ferrari's incredible early dominance, with the Italian team on 64, over double the score of second-placed Renault, on 31, followed by both Williams and BAR on 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178717-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council in the West Midlands, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Labour Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178717-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the council was controlled by Labour with 55 seats, compared to 9 for the Conservatives, 6 Liberal Democrats and 2 British National Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178717-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nDuring the campaign the Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown visited Sandwell and called on voters to reject the British National Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178717-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw Labour easily hold on to control of the council after dropping just 3 seats. The leader of the council, Bill Thomas, described the results as \"remarkable\" considering it was a mid term election and called it a \"vote of confidence\". However Labour did lose seats to the Conservatives, including 2 in St Paul's ward, meaning that the Conservatives made a gain of 4 seats. The Liberal Democrats stayed on 6 seats, while the British National Party dropped to just 1 seat. The only successful BNP candidate was in Princes End ward, where James Lloyd was elected, while in the same ward his party colleague John Salvage lost his seat on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178718-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Santos FC season\nThe 2004 season was Santos Futebol Clube's ninety-eighth season in existence and the club's forty-fifth consecutive season in the top flight of Brazilian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178718-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Santos FC season\nSantos won the Campeonato Brasileiro title for the eighth time in history by beating Vasco da Gama 2\u20131 on the final day of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178718-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Santos FC season\nThey were knocked out of the Campeonato Paulista in the semi-finals after losing 3\u20137 on aggregate against S\u00e3o Caetano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178718-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Santos FC season\nSantos also played the Copa Libertadores for the seventh time, losing 1\u20132 in the quarter-finals to the eventual winners Once Caldas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178718-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Santos FC season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election\nThe Sardinian regional election of 2004 took place on 12\u201313 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election\nThe center-left businessman Renato Soru was elected President of the Region defeating Mauro Pili, who won the 1999 election but served as President just for two years between 2001 and 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election, New electoral system\nBecause of the political imbalances created by the previous electoral system, which potentially allowed the election of a candidate to the presidency without giving him a majority in the Regional Council as it happened after the 1999 election, in 2003 Sardinia adopted a new electoral law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election, New electoral system\nThe new electoral system was the national Tatarella Law of 1995, used by most of Italian regions to elect their Council. Sixty-four councillors were elected in provincial constituencies by proportional representation using the largest remainder method with a Droop quota and open lists; remained seats and votes were grouped at regional level where a Hare quota is used, and then distributed to provincial party lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election, New electoral system\nNine councillors were elected at-large using a general ticket: parties were grouped in alliances, and the alliance which received a plurality of votes elected all its candidates, its leader becoming the President of Sardinia. A possible second round election between the two main candidates was abolished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election, Council apportionment\nAccording to the official 2001 Italian census, the 64 Council seats which must be covered by proportional representation were so distributed between Sardinian provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178719-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sardinian regional election, Council apportionment\nIt must be underlined that this allocation is not fixed. Remained seats and votes after proportional distribution, are all grouped at regional level and divided by party lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178720-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saskatchewan Roughriders season\nThe 2004 Saskatchewan Roughriders finished in 3rd place in the West Division with a 9\u20139 record. They defeated the Edmonton Eskimos in the West Semi-Final, but lost the West Final to the BC Lions in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178721-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2004 Saskatchewan Scott Tournament of Hearts women's provincial curling championship, was held January 28 to February 1 at the Meadow Lake Civic Centre in Meadow Lake, Saskatchewan. The winning team of Sherry Anderson, represented Saskatchewan at the 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts in Red Deer, Alberta, where the team finished round robin with a 7-4 record, missing out on the playoffs, after losing a tiebreaker to Manitoba's Lois Fowler.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2004 Crown Prince Cup was the 29th season of the Saudi premier knockout tournament since its establishment in 1957. It started on 26 February 2004 and concluded with the final on 26 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nAl-Hilal were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the semi-finals by Al-Ahli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nAl-Ittihad won their record-extending seventh title following a 1\u20130 win over derby rivals Al-Ahli in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nThe winners of the competition would have earned a place in the group stage of the 2005 AFC Champions League. However, since Al-Ittihad went on to win the 2004 AFC Champions League, they qualified for the 2005 AFC Champions League as the titleholders. Since Al-Ittihad also finished runners-up in the league, Al-Ahli, the cup runners-up, took this Champions League spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 fixtures were played on 26, 27, 28 and 29 February 2004. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals fixtures were played on 4 and 5 March 2004. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Semi-finals\nThe Semi-finals first legs were played on 7 and 8 March 2004 while the second legs were played on 11 and 12 March 2006. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178722-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Final\nThe 2004 Crown Prince Cup Final was played on 26 March 2004 at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh between derby rivals Al-Ahli and Al-Ittihad. This was the fifth Crown Prince Cup final to be held at the stadium. Previously, the two sides met twice in the final, Al-Ahli won in 2002 while Al-Ittihad won in 1958. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178723-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Saxony state election\nThe 2004 Saxony state election was held on 19 September 2004 to elect the members of the 4th Landtag of Saxony. The incumbent Christian Democratic Union (CDU) government led by Minister-President Georg Milbradt lost its majority. The CDU subsequently formed a grand coalition with the Social Democratic Party (SPD), and Milbradt was re-elected as Minister-President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178723-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Saxony state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 3rd Landtag of Saxony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178723-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Saxony state election, Outcome\nThe most striking result of the election was the entrance of the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) into the Landtag with 12 seats. This gained international attention. The party's support was concentrated in the rural areas; commentators attributed its success to alienation stemming from economic depression. The continuing strength of the SED successor party, the Party of Democratic Socialism, which again was the second largest party, was also notable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178723-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Saxony state election, Outcome\nThe CDU remained the largest party with 55 of 124 seats, but lost its majority, forcing it to find coalition partners. The most logical was the classical liberal Free Democratic Party, who entered the Landtag in the election, but a CDU\u2013FDP government would be one seat short of the necessary majority. Cooperation with the PDS or The Greens was ideologically unfeasible. A theoretical alliance between the CDU and NPD would hold a majority, but this was out of the question. The result was a grand coalition CDU and SPD. This government outcome was later mirrored in the 2005 federal election. The CDU's Georg Milbradt remained in office as Minister-President. Notably, the NPD received two more votes on the ballot for Minister-President than it had members in the Landtag. It is presumed that two CDU Landtag members backed the NPD as a protest against the grand coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 911]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178724-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scheldeprijs\nThe 2004 Scheldeprijs was the 91st edition of the Scheldeprijs cycle race and was held on 14 April 2004. The race was won by Tom Boonen of the Quick-Step team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178725-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scotland rugby union tour of Oceania\nThe 2004 Scotland rugby union tour of down under was a series of matches played in May and June 2004 in Australia and New Zealand down under by Scotland national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178725-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Scotland rugby union tour of Oceania\nAll the matches were played in Australia, except for the test with Samoa, that was played in Wellington (New Zealand)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178725-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Scotland rugby union tour of Oceania, Results\nSamoa: 15.Tanner Vili, 14.Lome Fa'atau, 13.Dale Rasmussen, 12.Brian Lima, 11.Sailosi Tagicakibau, 10.Roger Warren, 9.Steve So'oialo, 8.Semo Sititi (capt. ), 7.Ulia Ulia, 6.Siaosi Vaili, 5.Opeta Palepoi, 4.Leo Lafaiali'i, 3.Tamato Leupolu, 2.Jonathan Meredith, 1.Kas Lealamanu'a, \u2013 replacements: 17.Simon Lemalu, 18.Kitiona Viliamu, 19.Michael von Dincklage, 20.John Senio, 20.John Senio, 22.David Lemi \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Loleni Tafunai, 21.Mussolini SchusterScotland: 15.Chris Paterson (capt. ), 14.Sean Lamont, 13.Ben Hinshelwood, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Simon Webster, 10.Gordon Ross, 9.Chris Cusiter, 8.Ally Hogg, 7.Donnie Macfadyen, 6.Jason White, 5.Stuart Grimes, 4.Scott Murray, 3.Bruce Douglas, 2.Gordon Bulloch, 1.Tom Smith, \u2013 replacements: 16.Steve Scott, 17.Craig Smith, 18.Iain Fullarton, 19.Jon Petrie, 20.Mike Blair, 21.Dan Parks, 22.Hugo Southwell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 915]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178725-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Scotland rugby union tour of Oceania, Results\nAustralia: 15.Joe Roff, 14.Wendell Sailor, 13.Clyde Rathbone, 12.Matt Giteau, 11.Lote Tuqiri, 10.Stephen Larkham, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.David Lyons, 7.George Smith, 6.Radike Samo, 5.Nathan Sharpe, 4.Justin Harrison, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Brendan Cannon, 1.Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 16.Jeremy Paul, 17.Matt Dunning, 18.Dan Vickerman, 19.Phil Waugh, 20.Morgan Turinui, 21.Matt Burke, 22.Chris Latham Scotland: 15.Hugo Southwell, 14.Sean Lamont, 13.Ben Hinshelwood, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Simon Webster, 10.Dan Parks, 9.Chris Cusiter, 8.Ally Hogg, 7.Donnie Macfadyen, 6.Jason White, 5.Stuart Grimes, 4.Scott Murray (capt), 3.Bruce Douglas, 2.Gordon Bulloch, 1.Tom Smith, \u2013 replacements: 16.Steve Scott, 17.Craig Smith, 18.Iain Fullarton, 19.Jon Petrie, 20.Mike Blair, 21.Gordon Ross, 22.Graeme Morrison", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178725-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Scotland rugby union tour of Oceania, Results\nAustralia: 15.Joe Roff, 14.Wendell Sailor, 13.Stirling Mortlock, 12.Morgan Turinui, 11.Lote Tuqiri, 10.Stephen Larkham, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.David Lyons, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.Radike Samo, 5.Nathan Sharpe, 4.Justin Harrison, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Brendan Cannon, 1.Bill Young, \u2013 replacements: 16.Jeremy Paul, 17.Matt Dunning, 18.Dan Vickerman, 19.George Smith, 21.Clyde Rathbone, 22.Chris Latham \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 20.Matt HenjakScotland: 15.Hugo Southwell, 14.Sean Lamont, 13.Ben Hinshelwood, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Simon Webster, 10.Dan Parks, 9.Chris Cusiter, 8.Ally Hogg, 7.Donnie Macfadyen, 6.Jason White, 5.Iain Fullarton, 4.Scott Murray (capt), 3.Bruce Douglas, 2.Gordon Bulloch, 1.Tom Smith, \u2013 replacements: 17.Craig Smith, 18.Craig Hamilton, 19.Jon Petrie, 19.Jon Petrie, 21.Gordon Ross, 22.Graeme Morrison \u2013 No entry: 16.Steve Scott, 20.Mike Blair", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 905]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts\nThe 2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts was held at the ENMAX Centrium in Red Deer, Alberta from February 21 to 29 2004. The defending champion, Colleen Jones won the right to represent \"Canada\" and she would go on to win her fourth straight championship. From here, she would go on to the 2004 Ford World Curling Championship where she won gold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Colleen Jones Third: Kim Kelly Second: Mary Anne Arsenault Lead: Nancy Delahunt Alternate: Mary Sue Radford", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Shannon Kleibrink Third: Amy Nixon Second: Glenys Bakker Lead: Stephanie Marchand Alternate: Debby Pendergast", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Georgina Wheatcroft Third: Diane McLean Second: Shellan Reed Lead: Diane Dezura Alternate: Julie Skinner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Lois Fowler Third: Gerri Cooke Second: Maureen Bonar Lead: Lana Hunter Alternate: Allyson Stewart", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Heidi Hanlon Third: Sheri Stewart Second: Jennifer Gogan Lead: Judy BlanchardAlternate: Susan Dobson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Cathy CunninghamThird: Peg GossSecond: Kathy KerrLead: Heather MartinAlternate: Maria Thomas-French", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nFourth: Meredith Doyle Skip: Heather Smith-DaceySecond: Laine PetersLead: Beth IskiwAlternate: Nancy MacDonald", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Sherry MiddaughThird: Kirsten WallSecond: Andrea LawesLead: Sheri Cordina Alternate: Jenn Hanna", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Suzanne GaudetThird: Susan McInnisSecond: Janice MacCallumLead: Tricia AffleckAlternate: Nancy Cameron", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Marie-France Larouche Third: Karo Gagnon Second: Annie Lemay Lead: V\u00e9ronique Gr\u00e9goire Alternate: Nancy B\u00e9langer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Sherry AndersonThird: Kim HodsonSecond: Sandra MulroneyLead: Donna GignacAlternate: Heather Walsh", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178726-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Scott Tournament of Hearts, Teams\nSkip : Stacey StabelThird: Lisa FreemanSecond: Alana FisherLead: Debbie MossAlternate: Wendy Ondrack", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178727-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final\nThe 2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, also known as the Bell's Cup Final for sponsorship reasons, was an association football match between Falkirk and Ross County on 7 November 2004 at McDiarmid Park in Perth. It was the 14th final of the Scottish Challenge Cup since it was first organised in 1990 to celebrate the centenary of the Scottish Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178727-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final\nFalkirk emerged winners after defeating Ross County 2\u20131 with goals from Neil Scally and Darryl Duffy to win the tournament for a third time after winning the 1993 and 1997 finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178727-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final, Falkirk\nThe first round draw paired The Bairns with Ayr United at Somerset Park with the home team emerging 3\u20130 victors. The second round was a home game against neighbours Stirling Albion for Falkirk at Ochilview Park producing a high scoring 5\u20133 win to progress to the quarter-finals. The opponents drawn were Gretna at home in the quarter-finals and Falkirk won with their second 3\u20130 victory of the tournament. The reward for reaching the semi-final was an away game at St. Johnstone with Falkirk edging out the opponents to win 2\u20131 to book a place in the final. Falkirk reached the Scottish Challenge Cup final for the third time, since winning the 1993 final against St Mirren and defeating Queen of the South in the 1997 final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178727-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, Route to the final, Ross County\nRoss County were drawn against St. Mirren at home in the first round and County produced a 2\u20131 victory over the club. The second round draw saw The Staggies drawn against Peterhead away from home with Ross County emerging 2\u20131 winners for the second consecutive game. The quarter-final draw brought with Partick Thistle all the way to Victoria Park which saw Ross County edging out a 5\u20133 win on penalties after a 1\u20131 draw after extra time to progress to the semi-finals. The opposition provided in the semi-final draw was Forfar Athletic and another home game which saw the Dingwall outfit triumph with a 5\u20132 victory to proceed to the Scottish Challenge Cup final for the first time in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 66], "content_span": [67, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178727-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, Pre-match, Analysis\nFalkirk had played two games at their shared home of Ochilview Park and two away in the games preceding the final with Ross County playing a total of three games at Victoria Park and one away from home. In the process Falkirk amassed a total of thirteen goals scored and a mere four goals conceded whilst keeping two clean sheets. Ross County scored ten goals before the final and conceded a total of five, managing to keep no clean sheets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178727-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, Pre-match, Analysis\nFalkirk progressed winners through all four games in 90 minutes of play, whereas it took penalties before Ross County emerged as winners over Partick Thistle in the quarter-final. This was Falkirk's third time competing in the Scottish Challenge Cup final, whilst holding a 100% record after winning both the 1993 and 1997 finals. Ross County were appearing in the final for the first time in the club's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178728-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Claymores season\nThe 2004 Scottish Claymores season was the tenth and final season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Jack Bicknell in his first year, and played its home games at Hampden Park in Glasgow, Scotland. They finished the regular season in sixth place with a record of two wins and eight losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178729-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish Cup Final\nThe 2004 Scottish Cup Final was played on 22 May 2004 at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 118th Scottish Cup. The final was contested by Dunfermline Athletic and Celtic. Celtic came from behind to win the match 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178730-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish League Cup Final\nThe 2004 Scottish League Cup Final was played on 14 March 2004, at Hampden Park in Glasgow and was the final of the 57th Scottish League Cup. The final was contested by Hibernian and Livingston. Livingston won the match 2\u20130, thanks to goals from Derek Lilley and Jamie McAllister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178730-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish League Cup Final\nLivingston entered administration a few weeks before the final, with the players being informed the day before they won their semi-final match against Dundee. Six players left the club immediately, but the first team squad was largely left intact ahead of the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178730-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish League Cup Final\nIt was the first time since Hearts' 2\u20131 win over Rangers in the 1998 Scottish Cup Final that a team other than the Old Firm had won a trophy in Scotland, and the first time the feat had been achieved in the League Cup since 1995 when Aberdeen beat Dundee 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election\nThere was a Scottish National Party leadership election in 2004 following the resignation of John Swinney as National Convener of the Scottish National Party (SNP). The election saw the return of Alex Salmond to the party fore, and a deal between Salmond and Nicola Sturgeon saw Sturgeon drop out of the leadership race and instead run for the Depute leadership on a joint campaign with Salmond. Both Salmond and Sturgeon won their respective positions in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Election, Resignation of Swinney\nElected in 2000, Swinney had presided over a contested leadership, marred by electoral failure, with the party losing both seats and votes in the 2003 parliamentary and local elections. Following a disappointing European election result, which saw the party dropping to less than 20% of the vote, senior figures within the SNP began privately briefing against Swinney. Gil Paterson, a former MSP for Central Scotland was the first to call for Swinney's departure, with Michael Russell, a former potential campaign manager for Swinney calling for a change in approach from the SNP. Members of the SNP shadow cabinet began privately discussing removing Swinney from the leadership, and Alex Salmond advised Swinney to resign in exchange for senior party figures not calling openly for his resignation. Swinney resigned on 22 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Election, Salmond\u2013Sturgeon campaign\nThe fight over who was to succeed Swinney saw the re-emergence of former leader Alex Salmond, who entered the race despite having repeatedly denied any ambitions to run. Most famously, Salmond quipped in June 2004 that \"If nominated I'll decline. If drafted I'll defer. And if elected I'll resign.\" Salmond launched his campaign less than a month later, on 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Election, Salmond\u2013Sturgeon campaign\nAfter Salmond announced his campaign for the leadership, Nicola Sturgeon dropped her bid, and ran instead for the Deputy Leadership. The two ran on a joint campaign. Kenny MacAskill dropped his bid for Deputy, and gave his support to Sturgeon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 85], "content_span": [86, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Election, Neil candidacy\nAlex Neil, a member of the SNP fundamentalist grouping who ran against Swinney for the leadership in 2000 considered running again for party leader, although later pulled out of the race. Neil blamed Alex Salmond for \"vetoing\" his candidacy, and claimed that both Salmond and Ewing had stated they would refuse to work with him were he to have been elected. Neil claimed that this treatment was in line with the treatment of him and his supporters since the 2000 leadership election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Election, Neil candidacy\nNeil's campaign was also undermined by two further issues; the impression amongst the party leadership that Neil allies, such as Campbell Martin, had constantly undermined Swinney's leadership, and the fact that Neil supporters had been fundamentalist SNP party members not to renew their party membership. Rules around the holding of the new leadership election meant that any members who had not renewed their membership found it difficult to register in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 74], "content_span": [75, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Election, Result\nUltimately the Salmond\u2013Sturgeon campaign was successful, and both candidates won in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 66], "content_span": [67, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178731-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Scottish National Party leadership election, Result\nThe election was the first SNP election to use the one-person-one-vote postal voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season\nThe Seattle Mariners 2004 season was their 28th, and they finished last in the American League West at 63\u201399. Ichiro Suzuki set the major league record for hits in a season on October 1, breaking George Sisler's 84-year-old mark with a pair of early singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Regular season\nAt the All-Star Break, the Mariners had lost nine straight and were at 32\u201354 (.372), seventeen games behind the division-leading Texas Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Regular season\nOn October 1, Ichiro Suzuki set the major league record for hits, breaking George Sisler's 84-year-old mark with a pair of early singles. It was his 258th hit of the season. Later in the game, Suzuki got another hit, giving him 259 this season and a major league-leading .373 average. Fireworks exploded after Suzuki's big hit reached the outfield, creating a haze over Safeco Field, and his teammates mobbed him at first base. The crowd of 45,573 was the ninth sellout this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Regular season\nAfter the record breaking hit, Suzuki ran to the first-base seats, bowed respectfully and then shook hands with Sisler's 81-year-old daughter, Frances Sisler Drochelman, and other members of the Hall of Famer's family. Fans in downtown Tokyo watched Suzuki in sports bars and on big-screen monitors. Seattle's hitting coach that season was Paul Molitor. Sisler set the hits record in 1920 with the St. Louis Browns over a 154-game schedule. Suzuki broke it in the Mariners' 160th game. Suzuki's hit came off Ryan Drese, boosting Suzuki to 10-for-20 lifetime against him. Suzuki's sixth-inning infield single came off John Wasdin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Regular season\nAfter Suzuki's 258th hit, he scored his 100th run of the season when the Mariners batted around in the third, taking a 6-2 lead on six hits. Suzuki's first-inning single was his 919th hit in the majors, breaking the record for most hits over a four-year span. Bill Terry of the New York Giants set the previous record of 918 hits from 1929-32. Suzuki has 921 hits in four seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Regular season, Draft\nIn the 2004 Major League Baseball draft, the Mariners selected Matt Tuiasosopo in the third round for their first pick overall. Out of the 48 players selected by the Mariners in 2004, 5 have played in Major League Baseball including Tuiasosopo, Rob Johnson, Mark Lowe, Michael Saunders, and James Russell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178732-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Mariners season, Major League Baseball Draft\nThe following is a list of 2004 Seattle Mariners draft picks. The Mariners took part in the June regular draft, also known as the Rule 4 draft. The Mariners made 48 selections in the 2004 draft, the first being shortstop Matt Tuiasosopo in the third round. In all, the Mariners selected 18 pitchers, 13 outfielders, 6 catchers, 6 shortstops, 3 first basemen, 1 third baseman, and 1 second baseman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season\nThe 2004 Seattle Seahawks season was the franchise's 29th season in the National Football League, The third season in Qwest Field and the 6th under head coach Mike Holmgren. Finishing the season at 9\u20137, the Seahawks were unable to replicate the year they had prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season\nIn the Wild Card round, the Seahawks faced off against divisional rival St. Louis Rams, who swept them 2\u20130 in the regular season. Seattle looked to avenge on their two losses, but it was too late as Matt Hasselbeck's game-tying drive to Bobby Engram was incomplete, leading Hasselbeck to his knees and punch the turf in frustration. The Seahawks would go on to lose 20\u201327. The Rams, despite a mediocre 8\u20138 record, advanced to the Divisional round the following week, only to lose to Michael Vick's Atlanta Falcons in a 47\u201317 blowout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season\nOn October 20, 2004, the Seahawks traded a conditional 2005 7th round pick (condition failed) to the Oakland Raiders in exchange for Jerry Rice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Schedule, Regular season\nDivisional matchups have the NFC West playing the NFC South and the AFC East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 1: at New Orleans Saints\nThe Seahawks won for only the seventh time in their last eighteen road games, holding Aaron Brooks to one touchdown while forcing two New Orleans fumbles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 2: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nThe Seahawks defeated the Buccaneers 10\u20136 despite recording only nine first downs and being shut out in the second half. The Seahawks intercepted Brad Johnson and Chris Simms and limited the Bucs to just 271 total yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 3: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nThe Seahawks home opener was a 34\u20130 shutout of the 49ers where they intercepted Ken Dorsey twice and limited the Niners to just 175 yards. It was San Francisco's first shutout loss since losing to the Atlanta Falcons 0-7 in 1977.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 5: vs. St. Louis Rams\nThe Seahawks suffered their first home loss since 2002. The Rams were bullied in the first half and fell behind 24\u20137, but in the second half Marc Bulger threw two touchdowns as the Rams outscored Seattle 20\u20133; tied 27\u201327 the game went to overtime and Bulger threw three passes \u2013 the last a 52-yard score to Shaun McDonald and the 33\u201327 Rams win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 6: at New England Patriots\nA week after losing to one participant in Super Bowl XXXVI the Seahawks fell to that game's winner as the Patriots reached a league-record 20th consecutive win (regular and postseason) 30\u201320. Matt Hasselbeck, a former Patriots ball boy whose dad Don Hasselbeck played in Foxboro alongside Steve Grogan, threw for 349 yards but was intercepted twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 93], "content_span": [94, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 7: at Arizona Cardinals\nPlaying in Sun Devil Stadium the Seahawks' previous road woes resumed with four interceptions thrown by Matt Hasselbeck and the Seahawks limited to just 257 total yards in a 25\u201317 loss. Seattle erased a 16\u20133 gap (the go-ahead score came when Ken Lucas picked off Josh McCown and ran back a 21-yard score) but gave up a safety, then gave up a 23-yard touchdown by Emmitt Smith in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 8: vs. Carolina Panthers\nAgainst the defending NFC champion Panthers the Seahawks erupted to 237 rushing yards and a 23\u201317 win. Shaun Alexander accounted for 195 rushing yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 9: at San Francisco 49ers\nDespite seven penalties for 55 yards the Seahawks shot down the 49ers at Candlestick Park 42\u201327, rushing for 184 yards and two touchdowns alongside 285 yards and three scores from Matt Hasselbeck. The Seahawks ended the game when they intercepted Tim Rattay and ran back a 23-yard score in the fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 10: at St. Louis Rams\nAt St. Louis the Rams won a battle of field goals 23\u201312, limiting Hasselbeck to just 172 yards. Hasselbeck was knocked out of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 11: vs. Miami Dolphins\nThe Dolphins rallied from down 17\u20137 to tie the game, but in the fourth Michael Boulware picked off A. J. Feeley and ran back a 63-yard touchdown. Trent Dilfer started instead of Matt Hasselbeck and managed a touchdown to Jerry Rice in the 24\u201317 Seahawks win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Buffalo Bills\nThe 6\u20134 Seahawks hosted the 4\u20136 Bills and Willis McGahee exploded to four touchdowns in a 38\u20139 Buffalo rout. Drew Bledsoe was intercepted three times but managed a touchdown to Lee Evans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 88], "content_span": [89, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 13: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nHosting Monday Night Football the Seahawks' roller-coaster of a season continued as they fell to 6\u20136 to the now-5-7 Cowboys. The Hawks led 14\u20133 after one quarter, but in the second and third the Cowboys scored 26 points (botching a two-point attempt after Vinny Testaverde's touchdown to Terrance Copper).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 13: vs. Dallas Cowboys\nIn the fourth Matt Hasselbeck (414 total yards) erupted to three touchdown drives, two of them ending in Shaun Alexander rushes, a 19-yard score to Jerheme Urban, and a two-point conversion to Darrell Jackson, but the Seahawks could not hold on to a 39\u201329 lead; Testaverde found Keyshawn Johnson for a 34-yard touchdown with 1:54 to go; the Cowboys kicked onsides and recovered, then four Julius Jones rushes ended in a 17-yard score with 37 seconds remaining. The Seahawks' final drive petered out and the Cowboys had the stunning 43\u201339 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 89], "content_span": [90, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 14: at Minnesota Vikings\nThe Seahawks rallied to beat the Vikings 27\u201323 on 334 yards and three touchdowns by Hasselbeck and 112 more rushing yards from Shaun Alexander. Darrell Jackson competed despite learning on game morning that his father had died; he caught ten passes for 135 yards and a go-ahead touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 91], "content_span": [92, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 15: at New York Jets\nMatt Hasselbeck managed two touchdowns in the first half but the game collapsed as the NY Jets scored 24 points in the first half then shut out the Seahawks while adding two more Chad Pennington touchdowns, marred by a missed PAT. Curtis Martin rushed for 134 yards and two scores, outpacing the entire Seahawks backfield (88 rushing yards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 16: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nShaun Alexander accounted for 154 yards and all three Seahawks touchdowns as Seattle returned to Qwest Field and edged the five-win Cardinals 24\u201321. Trent Dilfer subbed for Hasselbeck but managed only 128 passing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 92], "content_span": [93, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Regular season, Week 17: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nThe Seahawks clinched the NFC West by erasing a 17\u20137 Falcons lead to win 28\u201326. It was the second time in three seasons the Falcons made the playoffs despite losing the regular-season finale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 90], "content_span": [91, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178733-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Seahawks season, Game Summaries, Postseason\nSeattle entered the postseason as the #4 seed in the NFC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178734-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Storm season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the fifth season for the Seattle Storm. They captured their first title in franchise history, bringing a title back to Seattle for the first time since 1979 when the Seattle SuperSonics, the Storm's former sister team, brought a title to Seattle by beating the Washington Bullets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178734-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Seattle Storm season, Player stats\nNote: GP= Games played; REB= Rebounds; AST= Assists; STL = Steals; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points; AVG = Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178735-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Sefton Metropolitan Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. Overall turnout was 43.9%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178736-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs\nThe 2004 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs (Playoffs de Ascenso or Promoci\u00f3n de Ascenso) were the final playoffs for promotion from 2003\u201304 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B to the 2004\u201305 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. The four first placed teams in each of the four Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B groups played the Playoffs de Ascenso and the four last placed teams in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n were relegated to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178736-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B play-offs\nThe teams play a league of four teams, divided into 4 groups. The champion of each group is promoted to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178737-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Senior League World Series\nThe 2004 Senior League World Series took place from August 15\u201321 in Bangor, Maine, United States. Freehold Township, New Jersey defeated El Rio, California in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections\nLocal elections were held in Serbia (excluding Kosovo) on 19 September and 3 October 2004, concurrently with the 2004 Vojvodina provincial election. This was the only local election cycle held while Serbia was a member of the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections\nThis was the first cycle of local elections held in Serbia since the fall of Slobodan Milo\u0161evi\u0107 in October 2000, and the voting procedure was significantly changed from the previous cycle. Under the prior system, local assembly members were elected by first-past-the-post balloting in single-member constituencies. The 2004 elections were held under a system of proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections\nThis cycle also saw the introduction of direct election for the mayors in most of Serbia's cities and municipalities (though not in the constituent municipalities of the City of Belgrade); the mayors were elected over two rounds, with the second round of voting taking place on 3 October 2004. The direct election of mayors was later abandoned, and in future election cycles the mayors were chosen by the elected members of the local assemblies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections\nOne-third of assembly mandates were assigned to candidates from successful electoral lists in numerical order. The other two-thirds were assigned to other candidates on the same lists at the discretion of the sponsoring parties or coalitions; at least one quarter of the latter mandates were to be assigned to \"members of the less represented sex on the list\" (which, in practical terms, usually meant that these mandates were reserved for female candidates).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections\nThe campaign saw growth in support for both the centre-left Democratic Party and the far-right Serbian Radical Party, both of which were at the time in opposition in the republican parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections\nThe most closely watched election was that for mayor of Belgrade. In the second round of voting, Democratic Party candidate Nenad Bogdanovi\u0107 narrowly defeated Aleksandar Vu\u010di\u0107, who was at the time a member of the Radical Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results\nNote: The first percentage column for assembly results refers to the percentage of valid votes received by each list; the second column refers to the percentage of all votes. Lists were required to receive three per cent of all votes cast to cross the electoral threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, City of Belgrade\nThe Democratic Party won both the mayoral election and a plurality victory in the city assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, City of Belgrade\nBogdanovi\u0107 died on 27 September 2007. He was replaced on an interim basis by Zoran Alimpi\u0107, also of the Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, City of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the City Assembly of Belgrade were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nMunicipal assembly elections were held in sixteen of Belgrade's seventeen constituent municipalities. The exception was Barajevo, where a special off-year election had taken place in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe elections were generally a success for the Democratic Party, which finished first in most municipalities and ultimately attained the mayoralty in eleven. The Radicals won the mayor's offices in Zemun and Sur\u010din, the Democratic Party of Serbia won the mayoralty in Lazarevac, and independents were chosen as mayor in Grocka and Sopot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThere was no election for the Municipal Assembly of Barajevo in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of \u010cukarica were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nDragan Te\u0161i\u0107 of the Democratic Party was chosen as mayor after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Grocka were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nAlthough the Radicals technically won a plurality victory, the election did not even come close to producing a clear winner, and the next four years saw several changes in the local government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nBla\u017eo Stojanovi\u0107, elected at the head of an independent list, was chosen as mayor after the election, in an alliance with the Democratic Party, the Democratic Party of Serbia, the Serbian Renewal Movement, the Strength of Serbia Movement, and the Social Democratic Party. The coalition fell apart in mid-2005, and local Radical Party leader Dragoljub Simonovi\u0107 became mayor at the head of a new governing alliance. In late 2005, Stojanovi\u0107 was able to return as mayor with a coalition including the Socialists, the Democratic Party of Serbia, the Serbian Renewal Movement, the Social Democratic Party, and Vladan Zari\u0107's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe Socialists and the Democratic Party withdrew their support in mid-2007, and Stojanovi\u0107 created a new coalition including the Radicals and Strength of Serbia Movement. One member of Strength of Serbia defected to the opposition in December 2007, leading to a period of confusion in which both the government and opposition claimed to control a majority of seats. This lasted until new local elections took place in May 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Lazarevac were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe election did not produce a clear winner. Branko Bori\u0107 of the Democratic Party of Serbia was subsequently chosen as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Mladenovac were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nIncumbent mayor Zoran Kosti\u0107 of the Democratic Party was confirmed for another term in office after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of New Belgrade were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nIncumbent mayor \u017deljko O\u017eegovi\u0107 of the Democratic Party was confirmed for another term in office after the election, with the support of thirty-eight delegates. Nenad Milenkovi\u0107 was one of the DS candidates elected to the assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Obrenovac were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nAlthough the Radical Party technically won the election, it could not command a majority of seats in the assembly. Neboj\u0161a \u0106eran of the Democratic Party was selected as mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Palilula were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nDanilo Ba\u0161i\u0107 of the Democratic Party was chosen as mayor after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Rakovica were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nBojan Mili\u0107 of the Democratic Party was chosen as mayor after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Savski Venac were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nTomislav \u0110or\u0111evi\u0107 of the Democratic Party was selected as mayor after the election. A member of the Democratic Party of Serbia was chosen as deputy mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Sopot were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nIncumbent mayor \u017divorad Milosavljevi\u0107 of the For the Municipality of Sopot list was confirmed for another term in office after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Stari Grad were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nIncumbent mayor Mirjana Bo\u017eidarevi\u0107 of the Democratic Party was confirmed for another term in office after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Sur\u010din were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nRajko Matovi\u0107 of the Radical Party was chosen as mayor after the election. After a period of political upheaval, Vojislav Jano\u0161evi\u0107 of the Democratic Party became mayor in November 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Vo\u017edovac were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nGoran Luka\u010devi\u0107 of the Democratic Party was chosen as mayor after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Vra\u010dar were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nIncumbent mayor Milena Milo\u0161evi\u0107 of the Democratic Party was confirmed for another term in office after the election. Her deputy mayor was a member of the Democratic Party of Serbia. She was replaced by Branimir Kuzmanovi\u0107 on 13 June 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Zemun were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nGordana Pop Lazi\u0107 of the Radical Party was selected as mayor after the election, with support from the Socialists and the Strength of Serbia Movement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Zvezdara were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Belgrade, Municipalities of Belgrade\nMilan Popovi\u0107 of the Democratic Party was chosen as mayor after the election. Ljubi\u0161a Stojmirovi\u0107 of the Radical Party became mayor on 18 February 2005; Popovi\u0107 returned to office on 28 June of the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 75], "content_span": [76, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nElections were held in the one city (Novi Sad) and all eleven separate municipalities in the South Ba\u010dka District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe City of Novi Sad comprises two municipalities (the City municipality of Novi Sad and Petrovaradin), although their powers are very limited relative to the city government. Unlike Belgrade, Ni\u0161, and Vranje, Novi Sad does not have directly elected municipal assemblies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe Radical Party performed unexpectedly well in South Ba\u010dka, narrowly winning the mayoral contest in Novi Sad and also winning the mayoralties of five other municipalities. The Democratic Party and G17 won two mayoral contests apiece, a candidate of the People's Democratic Party won in Be\u010dej, and independent candidate Branko Gajin won in Srbobran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the City Assembly of Novi Sad were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe Radicals attained a working majority in the assembly with the support of the Socialists and the Democratic Party of Serbia (whose delegates aligned with the Radicals over the objections of the party's leadership). Former mayor Milorad Mir\u010di\u0107, who had been defeated in 2000, was re-elected to the assembly after receiving the seventh position on the Radical Party's list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Ba\u010d were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Ba\u010dka Palanka were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe municipal assembly was not properly constituted after the election, and a new local election was held in December 2005. The Radical Party won fourteen seats in the re-vote, the Democratic Party eight seats, the Socialist Party of Serbia five seats, the Strength of Serbia Movement five seats, the Democratic Party of Serbia four seats, G17 Plus four seats, and the Serbian Renewal Movement two seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Ba\u010dki Petrovac were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe People's Democratic Party merged into the Democratic Party of Serbia in late 2004; Predin did not participate in the merger but instead joined the Strength of Serbia Movement. He was defeated in a recall election in late 2005, and a new mayoral election was held the following year. The latter election was won by Du\u0161an Jovanovi\u0107 of the Democratic Party of Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Be\u010dej were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Beo\u010din were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Srbobran were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Sremski Karlovci were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Temerin were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Titel were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of Vrbas were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178738-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian local elections, Results, Vojvodina, South Ba\u010dka District\nThe results of the election for the Municipal Assembly of \u017dabalj were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 70], "content_span": [71, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178739-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian presidential election\nSerbia held the first round of its 2004 elections for President of Serbia on Sunday, 13 June 2004, and the second round on Sunday, 27 June 2004. Boris Tadi\u0107, the pro-western Democratic Party's candidate, was the eventual victor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178739-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian presidential election, Candidates\nThe surprise of this election was the success shown by one of the wealthiest businessmen in Serbia, Bogoljub Kari\u0107. The Government's candidate, Dragan Mar\u0161i\u0107anin, finished in 4th place, which opened the question of new parliamentary elections in Serbia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178739-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Serbian presidential election, Candidates\nIn the second round, the democratic candidate Boris Tadi\u0107 gained the support of every government party as well as of Bogoljub Kari\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season\nSerena Williams's 2004 tennis season did not begin until Miami, due to a left knee injury which kept her off court since Wimbledon in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, NASDAQ-100 Open\nWilliams missed the first quarter of the season and played her first tournament at the NASDAQ-100 Open in Miami. Williams was seeded first despite the 8-month lay-off with the withdrawal of the top 5. Williams played her first match against Marta Marrero dropping only a game in just 42 minutes. In her next match, she took on Elena Likhovtseva, the pair traded sets to push it to a decider which Williams won in her fifth match point. In the Round of 16, Williams won in straight sets against young Russian Maria Sharapova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, NASDAQ-100 Open\nIn the last 8, Williams dominated compatriot Jill Craybas, dropping only a single game. Williams then faced surprise semifinalist Eleni Daniilidou and won both set in four to advance to her first final in her first tournament since winning Wimbledon. In the final, Williams faced Russian Elena Dementieva. Dementieva took the first game before Williams could win the next 11 games before Dementieva could take another game. Williams then close it out in the next game to win her third Miami title in 50 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay Season and French Open, Bausch & Lomb Championships\nWilliams began her claycourt season at the Bausch & Lomb Championships where she was the second seed. Williams received a bye and then faced Mary Pierce in her first match and defeated the former Amelia Island champion in straight sets. In the third round, Williams took on Karolina \u0160prem and took the first set with a drop of only a game, but \u0160prem took the first 3 games of the second just to see Williams take 7 of the next 9 to win the match. In the last 8, Williams went against 7th seed Nadia Petrova, Williams fell in straight sets after tweaking her knee in the fifth game and making 42 unforced errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay Season and French Open, Family Circle Cup\nWilliams then played at the Family Circle Cup as the second seed. Williams received a bye in the first round to win in straight sets against Kelly McCain dropping only a game. Williams then withdrew from her match against Conchita Mart\u00ednez with a sore left knee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 98], "content_span": [99, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay Season and French Open, Internazionali BNL d'Italia\nAfter missing a month due to knee injury, Williams came back at the Internazionali BNL d'Italia, Williams had a bye in the first round, she then played Mar\u00eda S\u00e1nchez Lorenzo, Williams was a bit rusty losing the first two games in each set, but came through in straight sets. Williams then faced Dally Randriantefy, Williams only dropped four games, despite failing to serve the match at eight game of the second. In the final 8, Williams went against Svetlana Kuznetsova, after scrapping through the first set, Williams ended the match with a bagel to advance. In the semifinals, Williams fell to Jennifer Capriati in straight sets despite saving a match point, winning only four games in each set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 108], "content_span": [109, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay Season and French Open, French Open\nWilliams came into the French Open as the second seed. She opened her campaign against Iveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 and won in straight sets, including a 28-point game in the seventh game of the second set. Williams next opponent was young Russian Maria Kirilenko who was making her French Open debut. The pair traded the first two sets, with Kirilenko leading by a break in the third, Williams then broke back in the eighth game and also broke in the tenth game to take the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 92], "content_span": [93, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Clay Season and French Open, French Open\nWilliams then took on Silvija Talaja, Williams won in straight dropping only 4 games and delivering a bagel in the first set, despite making 9 double faults in the match. In the fourth round, Williams came through with ease against Japan's Shinobu Asagoe. Williams then took on compatriot Jennifer Capriati, the two Americans traded the first two sets, which was halted by rain. The third set, saw Capriati took and early break, and Williams broke back, just to be broken again in the eight game and took initiative and served it out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 92], "content_span": [93, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon\nWilliams came into Wimbledon as the two-time defending champion. Williams defeated Zheng Jie, dropping only four games and saved all ten break points she faced. In the following round, Williams took on St\u00e9phanie Foretz Gacon and made quick work of the first set, taking it in a bagel. Williams then took the next set with a break lead. She then continued her good run again dropping four games, with a bagel in the second against Mag\u00fci Serna. In the round of 16, Williams faced fresh faced 16-year-old Tatiana Golovin and made quick work in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Wimbledon\nIn a much anticipated quarterfinal match-up against Jennifer Capriati, Williams made quick work of her adversary in a double bagel in just 42 minutes. Williams had a semifinal clash against Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo, Williams dropped her first set of the tournament in a tie-break. Williams then came back by breaking the Frenchwoman at the end of the second and third set, to come through to her third Wimbledon final in a row. In the final, Williams took on surprise finalist Maria Sharapova, where Serena lost surprisingly in straight sets, handing her younger Russian foe her first slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, JPMorgan Chase Open\nWilliams began her US Open Series at the JPMorgan Chase Open. She received a bye in the first round as the top seed and then faced Greek Eleni Daniilidou. Williams took the first with ease, but scraped through the second in a tie-break. She then took out Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario in the following round in straight sets, with a bagel in the first. In the final 8, Williams went against Russian Vera Zvonareva, after dropping the first set, Williams was able to go through 3 and 3. She then faced another Russian in Elena Dementieva and beat Dementieva in two close sets. However, in the final Williams was beaten comfortably by compatriot Lindsay Davenport, Williams winning only four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, Acura Classic and Olympics\nWilliams then played at the Acura Classic. She received a bye in the first round and faced Jelena Jankovi\u0107 losing the first set in a tie-break, but taking the next two sets to advance. In the round of 16, she took on Russian Elena Bovina and won in straight sets. However, Williams withdrew prior to her quarterfinal match against Vera Zvonareva because of swelling in her left knee. Williams was bound to play at the Olympics, when she withdrew due to the same injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 94], "content_span": [95, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nWilliams aiming for her third US Open title after missing last year's edition. Williams' opened up against Czech Sandra Kleinov\u00e1, Williams made quick work of Kleinov\u00e1, winning in straight sets in just 53 minutes. In the following round Williams faced compatriot Lindsay Lee-Waters and dropped just seven games to advance. In the third round, Williams took on quick rising 16-year-old Tatiana Golovin. Golovin broke Williams early, however Williams came back and broke in the seventh game and took the set in the twelfth game. Williams then won the second set with a single break lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nIn the round of 16, Williams defeated Patty Schnyder in two comfortable sets to advance to the quarterfinals. In the last 8, Williams took on adversary Jennifer Capriati, Williams dominated the 1st set with two breaks. Capriati then came back to win the second set. Capriati then took the final set to send Williams packing. However, the match was full of intrigue as several bad calls were made in the match against Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0009-0002", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, US Open Series, US Open\nAn overrule was made by chair umpire Mariana Alves in Capriati's favor, even though later video review showed this to be an error (as William's shot was well-inside the court). This was one of several calls that incorrectly went against Williams throughout the match. Williams attempted to argue the call, but was not successful. Capriati won the match, but tournament officials dismissed the umpire from the tournament. The controversy renewed calls for the adoption of technology like the MacCam and Hawk-Eye systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 75], "content_span": [76, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian and indoor season, China Open\nWilliams's next tournament was the inaugural China Open. She received a bye in the first round and faced Dinara Safina and was pushed by her 60th-ranked opponent to a third set, which Williams won in four. In the quarterfinals, she faced Nadia Petrova; however, Petrova retired while Williams was leading by a set and a break. In the final four, Williams took on another Russian, Vera Zvonareva, and won in straight sets. In the final, Williams faced her fourth Russian opponent in US Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova, making Williams take on only Russians in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian and indoor season, China Open\nKuznetsova took the first set, by breaking Williams in the tenth game. Williams then saved a match point in the second and broke her Russian foe in the eleventh game and served it out in the following game. In the third set, Williams raced through the first four game; however, Kuznetsova won four of the next five games. Williams served it out in the tenth game, to end Kuznetsova's 14-match winning streak and win her second title of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 87], "content_span": [88, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian and indoor season, Generali Ladies Linz\nAfter withdrawing from Porsche Tennis Grand Prix and Zurich Open, Williams chose to compete at the Generali Ladies Linz despite being unwell and hampered still by a knee injury. Williams received a bye and faced Russian Alina Jidkova. Williams lost the first set in a tie-break and eventually lost the second set and the match at two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 97], "content_span": [98, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian and indoor season, WTA Tour Championships\nWilliams qualified for the Season Ending Championships and was placed in the Red Group with world no. 1 Lindsay Davenport, Anastasia Myskina, and Elena Dementieva. Williams played her first round robin match against 5th-ranked Dementieva. Williams scraped through in straight sets, winning the first set in a tie-break and the second set in the twelfth game. In her second round robin, Williams took on another Russian and French Open champion, Myskina. Myskina took a set and the first three games of the second set. However, Williams took six games in a row to push it to a third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 99], "content_span": [100, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian and indoor season, WTA Tour Championships\nWilliams then took the third set in the tenth game. In her final round robin, Williams faced Davenport. Williams took the first set; however, Davenport pegged back, winning a tightly contested second set. Davenport then closed out the final set, letting Williams win only a game. Despite the loss, Williams came through to the semifinals, while Davenport was eliminated. In the semifinals, Williams took on Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo, her French opponent won the first set. However, Williams came back and won the second set in a tie-break. Williams then closed out the final set at four to advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 99], "content_span": [100, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178740-0012-0002", "contents": "2004 Serena Williams tennis season, Year in detail, Asian and indoor season, WTA Tour Championships\nIn the championship match, Williams took on Maria Sharapova in a rematch of the Wimbledon final. The pair traded the first two sets. Williams aggravated an already-existing abdominal injury at the end of the second set that limited her service motion. Williams took the first four games; however, Sharapova took the last six games, to earn her second win over the younger Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 99], "content_span": [100, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178741-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Shah Jalal bombing\n2004 Shah Jalal bombing was a terrorist grenade attack on the British High Commissioner to Bangladesh, Anwar Choudhury. The High Commissioner was injured in the attack and two bystanders were killed. The attack was carried out by Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178741-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Shah Jalal bombing, Background\nThe Shah Jalal Shrine is a 700 year old Sufi site located in Sylhet, Bangladesh. Anwar Choudhury, the British high Commissioner went to visit Sylhet which was his ancestral home. He is a Bangladeshi born British Citizen. He visited the shrine on 21 May 2004. He offer prayers at the Shrine and was greeting the people who had come to see him. The shrine was bombed in January of the 2004 which resulted in the death of 5 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178741-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Shah Jalal bombing, Attack\nThe bomb was thrown at the envoy when he was talking with the people present. The bomb hit him on his stomach but did not explode on impact but bounced off and landed near the feet of the District commissioner where it exploded. Three people including a police personnel were killed in the attack. Anwar Chowdhury was injured in the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178741-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Shah Jalal bombing, Trial\nThree men including Mufti Abdul Hannan the leader of Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami Bangladesh were sentenced to death in the case in 2008. The British High Commission welcomed the completion of the trial but opposed the death penalty. The motive for the attack was \"to avenge the deaths of Muslims in Iraq and across the world by America and Britain\" according to the police. The components of the grenades were traced to Pakistan. Mufti Abdul Hannan was hanged on 13 April 2017 for his role in the bombing along with two other, Sharif Shahedul Alam Bipul and Delwar Hossain alias Ripon, involved with the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178742-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Shanghai International Film Festival\nThe 2004 Shanghai International Film Festival (SIFF) was the 7th SIFF to be held and the second festival to be held on an annual basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178743-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sheffield City Council election\nElections to Sheffield City Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes having taken place since the last election in 2003, reducing the number of seats by 3. This election was the first all-postal vote election held, dramatically improving overall turnout by 14.4% on the previous election to 43.9%. The Labour Party kept its overall majority and continued to run the council, albeit on a much slimmer majority. Previous to the boundary changes, sitting Hillsborough councillor Peter MacLoughlin defected from the Liberal Democrats to an Independent, choosing not to contest this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178743-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sheffield City Council election, Election result\nThis result has the following consequences for the total number of seats on the Council after the elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178744-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Shelbourne F.C. season\nIn the 2004 season, Shelbourne were crowned League of Ireland Premier Division champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178744-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Shelbourne F.C. season, Personnel, Managerial and backroom staff\nManager: Pat FenlonAssistant managers: Johnny McDonnell (to May 2004), Eamon Collins (from May 2004)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178744-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Shelbourne F.C. season, Personnel, 2004 squad members\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178744-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Shelbourne F.C. season, Results of league tables, League of Ireland Premier Division, League results summary\nLast updated: November 19, 2004. Source: League of Ireland Premier Division fixtures", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 113], "content_span": [114, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178744-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Shelbourne F.C. season, Results of league tables, UEFA Champions League\nAggregate 2 - 2, Shelbourne won on away goals rule", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 76], "content_span": [77, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178745-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Shimizu S-Pulse season\nThe 2004 S-Pulse season was S-Pulse's thirteenth season in existence and their twelfth season in the J1 League. The club also competed in the Emperor's Cup and the J.League Cup. The team finished the season fourteenth in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship\nThe 2004 FIM Sidecarcross World Championship, the 25th edition of the competition, started on 21 March 2004 and finished after fourteen race weekends on 5 September 2004 with Dani\u00ebl Willemsen and Kaspars Stupelis taking out the title once more. For Willemsen, it was his third world championship while it was the second for Stupelis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship\nThe season saw the cancellation of the Russian GP in Moscow on 15 August because of heavy rainfall, thereby reducing the schedule to thirteen GP's and 26 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship, Overview\nThe 2004 season was the 25th edition of the Sidecarcross World Championship. It resulted in a third world championship for Dani\u00ebl Willemsen, his second in a row with passenger Kaspars Stupelis. Five time world champion Kristers Sergis, with Sven Verbrugge as his passenger, was their main rival early on in the competition. An injury to Sergis meant however, the pair would miss five race weekends and be out of contention for the championship. After this, Willemsen and Stupelis won the championship almost undisputed with second-placed Marko Happich more than 150 points behind in second place. For the following season, 2005, Willemsen and Sergis would exchange passenger, with Sven Verbrugge returning to Willemsen, who he had raced with before, while Sergis and Stupelis would form an all-Latvian team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship, Overview\nThe fourteen GP's of the season were held in eleven countries, Spain, France (2x), Netherlands, Germany (2x), Italy, Estonia, Latvia (2x), Croatia, Bulgaria, Russia and Belgium. It was the first time that a GP was to be held in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nEvery Grand Prix weekend is split into two races, both held on the same day. This means, the 2004 season with its fourteen Grand Prix had originally 28 races. Each race lasts for 30 minutes plus two laps. The two races on a weekend actually get combined to determine an overall winner. While this overall winners receives no extra WC points, they usually are awarded a special trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship, Format\nThe first twenty teams of each race score competition points. The point system for the 2004 season was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship, Retirements\nAt the end of the 2004 season a number of long-term competitors retired from the World Championship, the most successful of those being Estonian Are Kaurit, with a third place in 2004 as his best result and active since 1993, and Dutch Wilfred van Werven, third placed in 2002 and 2003 and active since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178746-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sidecarcross World Championship, Classification, Riders\nOut of 56 teams in the points, the top-twenty of the 2004 season were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178747-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open\nThe 2004 Siebel Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the HP Pavilion at San Jose in San Jose, California in the United States that was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. The tournament ran from February 9 through February 15, 2004. Andy Roddick won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178747-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open, Finals, Doubles\nJames Blake / Mardy Fish defeated Rick Leach / Brian MacPhie 6\u20132, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178748-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Doubles\nHyung-Taik Lee and Vladimir Voltchkov were the defending champions but only Lee competed that year with Brian Vahaly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178748-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Doubles\nLee and Vahaly lost in the quarterfinals to Jeff Coetzee and Chris Haggard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178748-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Doubles\nJames Blake and Mardy Fish won in the final 6\u20132, 7\u20135 against Rick Leach and Brian MacPhie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178748-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178749-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Singles\nAndre Agassi was the defending champion but lost in the semifinals to Mardy Fish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178749-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Singles\nAndy Roddick won in the final 7\u20136(15\u201313), 6\u20134 against Fish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178749-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Siebel Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178750-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sikkim Legislative Assembly election\nThe Sikkim Legislative Assembly election, 2004 took place on 10 May 2004 for 32 members of the Sikkim Legislative Assembly. Counting and result were declared on 13 May 2004. Sikkim Democratic Front, a regional political party, won 31 of the 32 assembly seats in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178751-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic\nThe 2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic was a post-season college football bowl game between the Troy Trojans and the Northern Illinois Huskies on December 30, 2004, at Spartan Stadium in San Jose, California. It was the fifth and final time the Silicon Valley Football Classic was played and the final game of the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season for both teams. Northern Illinois defeated Troy 34-21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178751-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic, Background\nFor the 2004 bowl season the Silicon Valley Classic had contractual tie-ins with the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) and the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10); neither conference had enough bowl-eligible teams. In previous years the SVC had an agreement to take the Pac-10's No. 6 team, but was displaced by the new Emerald Bowl and had to settle for No. 7, if one existed. Organizers obtained permission from the Pac-10 to look elsewhere, and on November 16 announced an agreement with the Mid-American Conference, which had five bowl-eligible teams but as yet only two bowls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178751-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic, Background\nSince the beginning of the bowl in 2000, the Fresno State Bulldogs represented the WAC. Although the SVC invited Fresno State back, the Bulldogs opted for the MPC Computers Bowl, where they would face #18-ranked Virginia from the ACC. Left without a WAC team, organizers turned to the Troy Trojans of the Sun Belt Conference. Troy had never played in a bowl game before, having just moved up to Division I in 2001 and joined the Sun Belt in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178751-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Silicon Valley Football Classic, Game summary\nRain could not stop the Huskies from scoring 34 straight points after trailing 14-0 early in the first quarter. Northern Illinois rushed for 213 yards (as opposed to Troy's 170) while passing for 146 yards to the 122 yards of the Trojans. NIU had the ball for 32:08 of the game. Josh Hadli threw 8-of-24 for 146 yards while rushing for 11 yards on 5 carries. For Troy, DeWhitt Betterson rushed for 150 yards on 25 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings\nThe 2004 Sinai bombings were three bomb attacks targeting tourist hotels in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt, on 7 October 2004. The attacks left 34 people dead and 171 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, The bombings\nThe explosions occurred on the night of 7 October, against the Hilton Taba and campsites used by Israelis in Ras al-Shitan (see in Hebrew). In the Taba attack, a truck drove into the lobby of the Taba Hilton and exploded, killing 31 people and wounding some 159 others. Ten floors of the hotel collapsed following the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, The bombings\nSome 50 kilometers (31\u00a0mi) south, at campsites at Ras al-Shitan, near Nuweiba, two more sites were targeted. A car parked in front of a restaurant at the Moon Island resort exploded, killing two Israelis and a Bedouin. Twelve were wounded. Another blast happened moments later, targeting the Baddiyah tourist camp, but no one was hurt, apparently because the bomber had been scared off by a guard and did not enter the crowded resort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, The bombings\nOf the 34 who were killed, 18 were Egyptians, 12 were from Israel, two from Italy, one from Russia, and one was an Israeli-American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, The investigation\nAccording to the Egyptian government, the bombers were Palestinians who had tried to enter Israel to carry out attacks there but were unsuccessful. They claimed that the mastermind, Iyad Saleh, recruited Egyptians and Bedouins to find explosives to be used in the attacks. Beginning in March 2004, the bombers used washing machine timers, mobile phones and modified gas cylinders to build the bombs. They used TNT and old explosives found in the Sinai (as it was many times a war zone), which were purchased from Bedouins, to complete the bombs. Egypt has said that Saleh and one of his aides, Suleiman Ahmed Saleh Flayfil, died in the Hilton blast, apparently because their bomb timer had run out too fast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, The investigation\nThree Egyptians, Younes Mohammed Mahmoud, Osama al-Nakhlawi, and Mohammed Jaez Sabbah were sentenced to death in November 2006 for their roles in the blast. Egypt arrested up to 2,400 people following the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, The investigation\nThe initial investigations by the Israeli and Egyptian governments centered on al-Qaeda, with Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom saying \"The type, the planning, the scope, the simultaneous attacks in a number of places, all this points to al-Qaeda\". However, Egyptian Presidential Spokesman Majid `Abd al-Fatah later stated that there was no evidence linking the organisation to the attack, instead claiming it was the work of a lone wolf driven by \"injustice, aggression and despair\" over the Israeli-Palestine conflict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, Aftermath\nIsrael had warned in September 2004 that terrorists were planning attacks in the Sinai, but most Israelis did not heed those warnings and went on vacation there instead. Many Israelis left the Sinai after the bombings, along with some foreign tourists, but the effects on the country's tourism were not too severe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178752-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Sinai bombings, Aftermath\nMilitants struck again in Cairo at tourists in April 2005, killing three and wounding several. Similar attacks took place in resorts in Sharm el-Sheikh in July 2005 and in Dahab in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178753-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Singer Sri Lankan Airlines Rugby 7s\nThe 2004 Singer Sri Lankan Airlines Rugby 7s was the sixth year of the Singer Sri Lankan Airlines Rugby 7s tournament. Japan defeated Chinese Taipei 38 - 14 in the final of the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178754-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Six Nations Championship\nThe 2004 Six Nations Championship was the fifth series of the rugby union Six Nations Championship to be held since the competition expanded in 2000 to include Italy. Overall, this was the hundred-and-tenth series of the international championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178754-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Six Nations Championship\nMatch winners received two points, with one for a draw and none for a loss. The first tiebreaker was points difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178754-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Six Nations Championship\nFrance won the competition, also winning the Grand Slam. Ireland won the Triple Crown, sweeping their matches against Wales, England and Scotland. Scotland were whitewashed, earning the wooden spoon as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178755-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Skate America\nThe 2004 Skate America was the first event of six in the 2004\u201305 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Mellon Arena in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on October 21\u201324. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Golden Waltz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178755-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Skate America, Results, Pairs\nThere was an accident during the free skating. Maxim Marinin lost his balance while attempting a difficult lasso lift and his partner Tatiana Totmianina slammed to the ice head first, sustaining a concussion, but was not seriously hurt. A short while later, Julia Obertas fell out of a lasso lift but her partner Sergei Slavnov managed to catch her to prevent her head hitting the ice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178756-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Skate Canada International\nThe 2004 Skate Canada International was the second event of six in the 2004\u201305 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Metro Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia on October 28\u201331. Medals were awarded in disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the rhumba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178757-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Skyrunner World Series\nThe 2004 Skyrunner World Series was the 3rd edition of the global skyrunning competition, Skyrunner World Series, organised by the International Skyrunning Federation from 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178757-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Skyrunner World Series, Results\nThe World Cup has developed in 7 races from May to October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178758-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo County Council election\nAn election to Sligo County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 25 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship\nThis is a round-up of the 2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship. Tourlestrane won the title for the seventh time, defeating St. Mary's after a replay. Castleconnor were relegated, but early in 2005 the club requested that they remain in the Senior grade, which was agreed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Group Stages\nThe Championship was contested by 14 teams, divided into two groups of four, and two of three. The top two sides in each group advanced to the Quarter-Finals, with the remaining sides facing the Relegation playoffs to secure Senior status for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Group Stages, Playoffs\nTwo groups required playoffs. A week after their drawn game, St. Mary's and Bunninadden met again to decide second place in Group A. St. Mary's won out, though only after extra time. In Group C, Ballymote had defeated Easkey, but in the playoff the result was reversed, as Easkey edged through by the minimum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Quarterfinals\nThe quarter finals of the Championship saw the demise of holders Curry, eliminated by St. Mary's. Elsewhere Coolera/Strandhill, Tourlestrane and Easkey won, Tourlestrane beating Shamrock Gaels after a replay. Eastern Harps' defeat to Coolera/Strandhill meant that the East Sligo club did not reach the last four for the first time in a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Semifinals\nBoth semi-final pairings had previously met in the group stages. St. Mary's repeated their victory over Coolera, but Tourlestrane, this time not having to travel to Tireragh, gained revenge over Easkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Sligo Senior Football Championship Final\nTeam:F. KennedyB. KirraneC. NearyD. HenryS. KingD. DurkinD. DunneE. O'Hara (Capt)S. DunneB. EganM. Walsh (0-4)P. BrennanJ. Marren (1-1)G. McGowan (0-3)E. Haran", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 81], "content_span": [82, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Sligo Senior Football Championship Final\nTeam:D. MorrisseyD. CarrollJ. Martyn (Capt)A. ColleryC. CarrollJ. DaveyC. WalshS. Burns (0-1)P. MullenN. SmithG. Heavin (0-1)D. CaffreyA. RooneyM. Breheny (2-3)M. Rooney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 81], "content_span": [82, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Sligo Senior Football Championship Final Replay\nTeam:F. KennedyB. KirraneC. NearyD. HenryS. KingD. Durkin (0-1)D. DunneE. O'Hara (Capt) (1-0)S. Dunne (0- 1)B. EganM. Walsh (0-3)S. LeonardJ. MarrenG. McGowan (0-4)E. Haran", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 88], "content_span": [89, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178759-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Sligo Senior Football Championship, Sligo Senior Football Championship Final Replay\nTeam:D. MorriseyN. MurrayJ. Martyn (Capt)A. ColleryC. CarrollJ. DaveyC. WalshS. BurnsP. MullenA. BoyleG. HeavinD. CaffreyA. RoonyM. Breheny (0-3)M. Rooney (2-1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 88], "content_span": [89, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election\nAn election to Slough Borough Council was held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election. This was the 120th Slough general local authority election, since Slough became a local government unit in 1863, including both whole Council elections and elections by thirds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election\nThe Borough had been re-warded for this election. For the previous three Slough elections, which had each returned a third of the council, see 2001 Slough Council election, 2002 Slough Council election and 2003 Slough Council election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election\nThe 2004 election was to fill forty-one seats. The leading vote winner in each of the fourteen wards was elected for the term 2004\u20132008. The second placed candidates were elected for 2004\u20132007. In all the wards, except Colnbrook with Poyle, the candidate with the third highest number of votes was elected for the term 2004\u20132006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Recent political history of Slough to 2004\nSlough Borough Council, between 1983 and 2004, had been controlled by the Labour Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Recent political history of Slough to 2004\nBetween 2003 and 2004, there were three groups of Councillors. In addition to the Labour Group and the Conservative Group there was the Britwellian, Independent, Liberal and Liberal Democrat Group (BILLD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Recent political history of Slough to 2004\nThe BILLD Group was composed of all the Councillors, who were not Labour or Conservative. It was a coalition of a number of parties and independents. These included a Councillor or Councillors elected in particular wards; Liberal Democrat (Foxborough ward), Liberal (Haymill ward), Independent Britwellian Residents (Britwell ward) and Independent (Wexham Lea ward).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Recent political history of Slough to 2004\nThe existing members of the Group had an electoral pact for the 2004 election, which also extended to the Independent Farnham Residents candidates in Farnham ward and the Independent Langley Residents candidates in Langley St Mary's ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Recent political history of Slough to 2004\nIn 2003\u20132004, the composition of the 41 member council was:-", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Recent political history of Slough to 2004\nIn the 2004 election 105 candidates were nominated for the 41 seats up for election. The list is broken down by Party, with a residual category of an Independent candidate not affiliated to BILLD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Council by Party before and after 2004 Elections\nBefore the elections held on 10 June 2004, the composition of Slough Borough Council was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Council by Party before and after 2004 Elections\nNote: The Others category in this table includes all non-Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat Councillors. Richard Stokes (Liberal-Haymill) is the BILLD Group Leader, which includes the Liberal Democrats and all the Others category Councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 86], "content_span": [87, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election result (overall summary)\nNote: Due to boundary changes and this being a whole Council election, non-comparable to the 2003 election of a third of the Council, no attempt is made to provide numbers to fill the gain, loss and plus/minus columns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 71], "content_span": [72, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nThe Slough local government area came into existence in 1863. It comprised a part of the parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey, roughly corresponding to the modern Central and Upton wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nIn 1894 Slough became a civil parish and then an Urban District.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nIn 1900 the boundaries of the Slough district were expanded for the first time, increasing its size to 1,684 acres (6.81\u00a0km2). The northern boundary was extended up Stoke Road, as far as the Slough branch of the Grand Union Canal. To the south and west, Chalvey and the Salt Hill area, as far as the Montem Mound, were absorbed. To the east, part of Langley joined the district. The Agar's Plough area left Slough, to become part of Eton and provide playing fields for Eton College.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nIn 1930-1931 there was a major extension of the boundaries, increasing the district to 6,202 acres (25.10\u00a0km2). Parts of the parishes of Burnham, Dorney, Farnham Royal, Horton, Langley Marish and Stoke Poges were added to Slough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nSlough was first warded in 1930. The original seven wards were Burnham, Central, Chalvey, Farnham, Langley, Stoke and Upton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nThe town was re-warded in 1950, when four of the previous wards (Burnham, Central, Farnham and Stoke) were split into north and south wards, to make a total of eleven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nBritwell and Wexham Court were added to Slough in 1973 (when these two new wards and the eleven existing wards were allocated between two and nine seats, instead of the three per ward which had existed previously).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nThere was another re-warding in 1983, which created thirteen three-member wards with revised boundaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nColnbrook & Poyle was added to Slough in 1995 and became a fourteenth ward, with one member 1995-1997 and two from 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, History of Slough boundaries and wards\nFor Slough Council election 2004 the Borough was re-warded. There were still fourteen wards, but only Colnbrook with Poyle (formerly Colnbrook & Poyle) and Haymill had unchanged boundaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Baylis & Stoke\nBaylis & Stoke (born 2004) is a three-member ward in the north of the Borough, to the west of Central ward and to the east of Haymill. It broadly combined the former Baylis and Stoke wards. Baylis was named after Baylis House and the estate of Baylis, which from the sixteenth century was a sub-division of the old parish of Stoke Poges (the southern part of which is included in Slough). Stoke was named after the parish. 2003-2004: the six seats in the former wards were all held by Labour. 2004: The Liberal Democrats, building on the Liberal tradition of the marginal former Stoke ward and overcoming the Labour leanings of the former Baylis ward, won all three seats in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Britwell\nBritwell (born 1973) is a three-member ward in the north-west of the Borough. It includes Britwell parish, although since 1983 some unparished territory was added. Before Britwell became a civil parish it was a district of the old parish of Burnham. Britwell elected some Liberal Councillors in the 1980s but was otherwise safely Labour until 2000. Since then Britwellian and Independent Britwellian Residents Councillors have become increasingly successful. In 1997 Labour won all three seats, but by 2003-2004 the Residents held the three seats. 2004: Independent Britwellian Residents retained the three seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Central\nCentral (1930-1950 and 1983-) has had different boundaries during the three of the four Slough redistributions in which it has existed (it was divided between Central North and Central South wards 1950-1983), but it has always been a three-member ward with Wexham to the north, Langley to the east, Upton to the south, Chalvey to the south-west and Baylis & Stoke to the west.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Central\nIt was part of the original parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey, although the hamlet of Slough (a few scattered houses and coaching inns along the Great West Road and Windsor Road) was smaller than the villages of Upton and Chalvey until the Great Western Railway arrived in the 1840s. 2003-2004: Labour held the three seats under the 1983 boundaries. 2004: Labour won one and the Conservatives two of the three seats of the revised ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Chalvey\nChalvey (born 1930), (in the south of the Borough) is a three-member ward. In the nineteenth century it was a village that was part of the ancient parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey. It became an original ward of Slough. The ward has existed in some form continuously since the district was first warded in 1930. Before 1970 Chalvey was Conservative but since then it has been safely Labour. 2003-2004: Three Labour seats. 2004: The Liberal Democrats came within ten votes of winning a seat in the ward in 2004, but Labour retained the three seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Cippenham Green\nCippenham Green (born 2004) is a three-member ward in the south-west of the Borough. Cippenham was a district of the old parish of Burnham. It was one of the two wards based on the old Cippenham ward, which was a Labour/Conservative marginal (six Conservative and eleven Labour wins between 1983 and 2003). This area is the western part of the previous ward, incorporates the Cippenham village area (including the Green which the ward is named after). 2003-2004: The former Cippenham ward was represented by two Labour and one Conservative Councillors. 2004: this ward elected one Conservative and two Labour Councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 85], "content_span": [86, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Cippenham Meadows\nCippenham Meadows (born 2004) is a three-member ward in the south-west of the Borough. It was one of the two wards based on the old Cippenham Ward, which was a Labour/Conservative marginal (six Conservative and eleven Labour wins between 1983 and 2003). This area is the eastern part of the previous ward, incorporates the Windsor Meadows development which caused a large population growth since the 1983 redistribution of wards. Presumably these are the Meadows which the ward is named after. 2003-2004: see Cippenham Green. 2004: The new ward elected three Labour Councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 87], "content_span": [88, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Colnbrook with Poyle\nColnbrook & Poyle (1995\u20132004), Colnbrook with Poyle (born 2004) is a (since 1997) two-member ward in the furthest east part of the Borough between to the M4 motorway and Greater London. Labour elected some Councillors here, in 1995 and 1997 (1 seat), but by 2000 the ward was safely Conservative. 2003-2004: Two Conservative Councillors. 2004: Two Conservative Councillors re-elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Farnham\nFarnham (1930-1950 and 1983-) is a three-member ward in the west of the Borough, to the south of Britwell and west of Haymill. It was named after the old Farnham Royal parish, of which it was the southern part. This was an original Slough ward. There were Farnham North and Farnham South wards 1950\u20131983. A single Farnham ward was re-created in 1983. 2003-2004: Three Labour Councillors. 2004: This was a safe Labour Ward, with three Labour representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Foxborough\nFoxborough (born 1983) is a three-member ward in south-east Langley in the eastern part of the Borough. In the 2004 redistribution the ward lost its extension west along the southern border of Langley. It is named after a 4-acre (16,000\u00a0m2) area mentioned in connection with the inclosure of Langley Marish parish in 1809. This was the ward where the Liberal Democrats won their first election in Slough in 2000. 2003-2004: Two Labour and one Liberal Democrat Councillors. 2004: The Liberal Democrats held all three seats after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Haymill\nHaymill (born 1983) is a three-member ward in the west of the Borough (to the east of Farnham ward), which was left unchanged by the 2004 redistribution. It is a safe Liberal ward having last elected a non-Liberal Councillor in 1984. 2003-2004: Three Liberal Councillors. 2004: Three Liberal holds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Kedermister\nKedermister (born 1983) is a three-member ward in south-west Langley, in the eastern part of the Borough. In 2004 it was extended south a bit. The ward was named after Sir John Kedermister (or Kidderminster), who was Warden of Langley Park and founded some almshouses in Langley in 1617. 2003-2004: three Labour Councillors. 2004: This was a safe Labour Ward, with three Labour representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 81], "content_span": [82, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Langley St Mary's\nLangley St Mary's (born 1983) is a three-member ward in north Langley, in the eastern part of the Borough. St Mary's is named after the church in Langley. This has been a Labour/Conservative marginal ward. 2003-2004: There were two Tory and one Labour Councillors. 2004: The Independent Langley Residents won two seats and tied for the third (which the Conservative candidate won on a roll of dice, so he was credited with an additional vote).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 87], "content_span": [88, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Upton\nUpton (born 1930), part of the old parish of Upton-cum-Chalvey (in the south of the modern Borough), was an original ward which has existed in some form continuously since 1930. In the early nineteenth century Upton was a village about a mile and a half south-east of the hamlet of Slough. It is a three-seat ward. Upton was the most Conservative area of Slough until demographic change made Labour competitive. Labour won the ward for the first time ever in 1990. In 1997 Labour won two seats and the Conservatives one. 2003-2004: 2 Labour and 1 Conservative Councillors. 2004: The Conservatives won all three seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178760-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Slough Borough Council election, Election results by wards 2004, Wexham Lea\nWexham Lea (born 1983) is a three-member ward in the north of the Borough, to the north-east of Baylis & Stoke and the north of Central ward. It combines Wexham Court parish and an area known as Upton Lea. The ward was formerly safely Labour. 2003-2004: 1 Labour and 2 Independent Councillors. 2004: Securely held by Independent Councillors who won all three seats in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178761-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovak Cup Final\nThe 2004 Slovak Cup Final was the final match of the 2003\u201304 Slovak Cup, the 35th season of the top cup competition in Slovak football. The match was played at the DAC Stadion in Dunajsk\u00e1 Streda on 8 May 2004 between FC Artmedia Petr\u017ealka and FC Steel Trans Li\u010dartovce. Artmedia defeated Li\u010dartovce 2-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178762-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovak Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Slovak Figure Skating Championships (Slovak: Majstrovstva Slovenska seniorov a juniorov 2004) were held in Bratislava from 10 to 11 January 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178763-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovak early parliamentary elections referendum\nA referendum on holding early parliamentary elections was held in Slovakia on 3 April 2004. Although approved by 87.9% of those voting, voter turnout was just 35.9% and the referendum was declared invalid due to insufficient turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178764-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovak presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Slovakia on 3 April 2004, with a second round on 17 April. Although former Prime Minister Vladim\u00edr Me\u010diar received the most votes in the first round, he was defeated by Ivan Ga\u0161parovi\u010d in the run-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178764-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovak presidential election\nEduard Kukan, who had led the opinion polling prior to the elections, was surprisingly eliminated in the first round, narrowly beaten into third place by Ga\u0161parovi\u010d. Ga\u0161parovi\u010d later admitted that he had not expect to qualify for the second round, and on first round election night he had gone home to sleep and only found out about his success when he was woken up by phone calls from friends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178764-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovak presidential election\nIncumbent president Rudolf Schuster finished fourth with just 7% of the vote. He subsequently retired from politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178765-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovenian minority rights referendum\nA referendum on minority rights was held in Slovenia on 4 April 2004. Voters were asked whether they approved government proposals to restore basic rights to ethnic minorities who had been erased from the citizen registry in 1992. The proposal was rejected by 96.05% of voters, with a turnout of 31.55%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178765-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovenian minority rights referendum\nThe referendum was backed by oppositional Slovenian Democratic Party, while the government called for a boycott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178766-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovenian parliamentary election\nEU Member State(Eurozone Member State)(Schengen Area Member State)NATO Member StateCouncil of Europe Member StateOECD Member State", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178766-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovenian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Slovenia on Sunday, 3 October 2004 to elect the 90 deputies of the National Assembly. A total of 1,390 male and female candidates ran in the election, organized into 155 lists. The lists were compiled both by official political parties and the groups of voters not registered as political parties. Five candidates applied for the seat of the representative of the Hungarian \"national community\" (as minorities are officially called in Slovenia) and only one candidate applied for the seat of the representative of the Italian national community. In the previous election (2000), fewer than 1000 candidates on 155 lists applied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178766-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovenian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nIn Slovenia, elections in the National Assembly are held in eight voting units, each of which further divides into 11 districts. Different candidates apply in each of the eighty-eight districts. From each of eight units, 11 deputies get elected; however, not necessarily one deputy from each district (from some districts nobody gets elected, from others up to four candidates enter the parliament). Deputy's mandates are distributed at two levels: at the level of the voting unit and at the level of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178766-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Slovenian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nIn practice, at the level of voting units two thirds of mandates get allotted, while one third gets allotted at the level of the state. In this manner, 88 mandates get distributed. The remaining two seats are assigned to the representatives of the Italian and Hungarian minorities, which get elected separately (in the ninth and tenth voting units) by the Borda count. Altogether, 90 deputies are elected in the parliament. The election threshold for a party to enter the parliament is four per cent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178766-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Slovenian parliamentary election, Structure of the National Assembly\nThe structure of parties was modified in April 2007, so the following roster is different from 2004. The list can change further, because some deputies can still be promoted to ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178767-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council in the West Midlands, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178767-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nDuring the lead up to the election the Labour Party suffered 2 defections. Firstly councillor Jim Ryan quit the party to sit as an independent after disagreements over policy. He was then followed in May 2004 by Jeff Potts who defected to join the Conservatives and blamed infighting within the Labour Party for his decision. Both councillors contested the election, Jim Ryan as an independent, and Jeff Potts as a Conservative in Kingshurst and Fordbridge ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178767-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nThe election saw the British National Party (BNP) contest 2 seats in Chelmsley Wood and Olton wards, while the National Front contested Silhill ward. The presence of these candidates led the leaders of each of the Conservative, Liberal Democrat and Labour parties on the council to condemn the policies of both the BNP and National Front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178767-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives stay in control of the council but with their majority cut from 5 to 3 seats. The Conservative dropped by 1 seat, while the Liberal Democrats became the next largest party on the council after gaining 5 seats. Labour dropped by 5 seats, 3 of which could be put down to the boundary changes, while another seat was lost by Labour to the Conservatives in Kingshurst and Fordbridge. The final Labour loss came in Bickenhill where former Labour councillor Jim Ryan was re-elected onto the council as an independent. Overall turnout increased by 10% from 2003 to reach 39%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178767-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nThis result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the council after the elections\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 68], "content_span": [69, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178768-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Solomon Islands National Club Championship\nThe 2004 Solomon Islands National Club Championship was the 2nd season of the National Club Championship in the Solomon Islands. Central Realas FC won the league for the first time . All matches were played at the hillside ground called Lawson Tama Stadium, with an approximate capacity of 20,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178769-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Soul Train Music Awards\nThe 2004 Soul Train Music Awards were held on March 27, 2004 at the International Cultural Center Auditorium in Los Angeles, California. The show was hosted by Alicia Keys and Babyface.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe\nThe 2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe was a series of matches played by the Springboks during November and December 2004 in Great Britain, Ireland, and Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe\nTheir goal of obtaining a Grand Slam failed due to losses against Ireland and England. While the Springboks were in the British Isles, the South Africa A team made a three match tour of Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Wales\nIn the first match, South Africa obtained a narrow victory over Wales thanks to a great performance from their goal kicker Percy Montgomery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 86], "content_span": [87, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Wales\nSouth Africa: 15.Percy Montgomery, 14.Breyton Paulse, 13.Marius Joubert, 12.De Wet Barry, 11.Ashwin Willemse, 10.Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9.Fourie du Preez, 8.Joe van Niekerk, 7.Juan Smith, 6.Schalk Burger , 5.Victor Matfield, 4.Bakkies Botha, 3.Eddie Andrews, 2.John Smit (capt. ), 1.Os du Randt, \u2013 Replacements: 16.Hanyani Shimange, 17.CJ van der Linde, 19.Tim Dlulane, 20.Michael Claassens, 21.Jean de Villiers, 22.Brent Russell \u2013 Not used: 18.Gerrie Britz", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 86], "content_span": [87, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Ireland\nThe dream of obtaining the Grand Slam vanished in the second match. Ronan O' Gara on one side, and Percy Montgomery on the other, were the only scorers for their respective teams. Ireland obtained their first victory against the Springboks in 39 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 88], "content_span": [89, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Ireland\nSouth Africa: 15.Percy Montgomery, 14.Breyton Paulse, 13.Marius Joubert, 12.De Wet Barry, 11.Ashwin Willemse, 10.Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9.Fourie du Preez, 8.Joe van Niekerk, 7.AJ Venter, 6.Schalk Burger , 5.Victor Matfield, 4.Bakkies Botha, 3.Eddie Andrews, 2.John Smit (capt. ), 1.Os du Randt, \u2013 Replacements: 16.Hanyani Shimange, 17.CJ van der Linde, 18.Gerrie Britz, 19.Danie Rossouw, 20.Michael Claassens, 21.Jean de Villiers, 22.Gaffie du Toit", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 88], "content_span": [89, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, England\nEngland, led by fly-half Charlie Hodgson, beat South Africa for a sixth consecutive time, in the match which featured the debut of Brian Habana", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 88], "content_span": [89, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, England\nSouth Africa: 15.Percy Montgomery, 14.Breyton Paulse, 13.Marius Joubert, 12.De Wet Barry, 11.Jean de Villiers, 10.Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9.Fourie du Preez, 8.Joe van Niekerk, 7.AJ Venter, 6.Schalk Burger, 5.Victor Matfield, 4.Bakkies Botha, 3.Eddie Andrews, 2.John Smit (capt. ), 1.Os du Randt, \u2013 Replacements: 16.Hanyani Shimange, 17.CJ van der Linde, 18.Danie Rossouw, 19.Gerrie Britz, 20.Michael Claassens, 21.Jaque Fourie, 22.Bryan Habana", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 88], "content_span": [89, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Scotland\nThe Springboks defeated Scotland easily in the fourth match of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 89], "content_span": [90, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Scotland\nSouth Africa: 15.Percy Montgomery, 14.Jaque Fourie, 13.Marius Joubert, 12.Wayne Julies, 11.Bryan Habana, 10.Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9.Fourie du Preez, 8.Joe van Niekerk, 7.Danie Rossouw, 6.Solly Tyibilika, 5.Victor Matfield , 4.Bakkies Botha , 3.CJ van der Linde, 2.John Smit (capt. ), 1.Gurthro Steenkamp, \u2013 Replacements: 16.Danie Coetzee, 17.Os du Randt, 18.Gerrie Britz, 19.Jacques Cronje, 20.Michael Claassens, 21.Gcobani Bobo, 22.Gaffie du Toit", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 89], "content_span": [90, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, The Springboks tour, Argentina\nThe last match against the \"Pumas\" was won by South Africa, with many of Argentina's best players remaining in Europe to play for their clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 90], "content_span": [91, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, South Africa \"A\" tour\nSouth Africa \"A\" won all three of their tour matches in Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, South Africa \"A\" tour\nSouth Africa \"A\": Conrad Jantjes; Egon Seconds, Adrian Jacobs, Ettiene Botha, Odwa Ndungane; Andre Pretorius, Heini Adams; Pedrie Wanneburg , Wickus Van Heerden (capt. ), Cobus Grobbelaar; Albert van der Berg, Barend Pierterse; Richard Bands, Schalk Bris, Wessel Roux \u2013 Replacements: Norman Jordaan, Willem Waal, Lawrence Sephaka, Lukas van Biljon, Zolani Mofu, Duploy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178770-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe, South Africa \"A\" tour\nSouth Africa \"A\" Tiger Mangweni; Egon Seconds, Adriaan Jacobs, Ettienne Botha, Odwa Ndungane; Andre Pretorius, Norman Jordaan; Pedir\u00e9 Wannenburg, Wikus van Heerden, Kobus Grobelaar; Willem Stoltz, Boela Du Plooy; Richard Bands, Lukas van Biljon y Wessel Roux. ---Replacements Lawrence Sephaka, Schalk Brits, Albert Van Der Berg, Zolani Mofu, Noel Oelshig, Willem De Waal, Jorrie Muller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178771-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South African Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 South African Figure Skating Championships was held in Cape Town. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's and ladies' singles at the senior, novice, and pre-novice levels. There was also a junior and juvenile ladies' competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election\nGeneral elections were held in South Africa on Wednesday, 14 April 2004. The African National Congress (ANC) of President Thabo Mbeki, which came to power after the end of the apartheid system in 1994, was re-elected with an increased majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election\nThese were the third elections held since the end of the apartheid era. The South African National Assembly consists of 400 members, elected by proportional representation. 200 members are elected from national party lists, the other 200 are elected from party lists in each of the nine provinces. The President of South Africa is chosen by the National Assembly after each election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election\nThe ANC, which has been in power since 1994, obtained 69.7% of votes cast on the national ballot, theoretically allowing them to change the constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election\nSome 20.6-million people were registered for the 2004 general elections, which was about 2 million more than in 1999. About 76% of registered voters took part in the election, with the ANC receiving 69.7% of the votes cast. However, only 56% of eligible voters (South African citizens of voting age) took part in the 2004 election, which means that the ANC received votes from only about 38% of all eligible voters. The year 2004 saw an increase in voter abstention and there was at least one high-profile election and registration boycotts campaign, the No Land! No House! No Vote! Campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election\nThe main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, also obtained an increased percentage on the national ballot, most likely from former supporters of the New National Party, possibly losing some support to Patricia de Lille's new Independent Democrats. The New National Party, a descendant of the ruling party of the apartheid era, collapsed and lost most of their support, dropping from 6.9% in 1999 to 1.7% (it was 20.4% in 1994), many of their supporters being unhappy with their alliance with the ANC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 South African general election\nThe Independent Democrats surprised many observers by obtaining more votes than the New National Party, becoming the fifth largest party. The Inkatha Freedom Party lost some support, including the majority in their stronghold province of Kwazulu-Natal, while the United Democratic Movement also lost support, barely hanging on as opposition in their stronghold, the Eastern Cape.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election, National Assembly results, Contested seat\nWhen the official results were released, the ACDP successfully challenged the outcome. As a result, one of the two seats AZAPO won initially was handed over to the ACDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election, Provincial legislature results\nElections for the nine provincial parliaments were held at the same time as for the National Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178772-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 South African general election, Provincial legislature results, NCOP seats\nThe National Council of Provinces (NCOP) consists of 90 members, ten elected by each provincial legislature. The Members of NCOP have to be elected in proportion to the party membership of the provincial legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178773-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South African motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 South African motorcycle Grand Prix was the first round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 16\u201318 April 2004 at the Phakisa Freeway. This was the last South African MotoGP round at Phakisa, because the race was not contracted for 2005 and beyond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178773-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South African motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round one has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 88], "content_span": [89, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178774-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Cross Country Championships\nThe 2004 South American Cross Country Championships took place on February 14\u201315, 2004. The races were held at the Forte Marechal Hermes in Maca\u00e9, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178774-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Cross Country Championships\nComplete results, results for junior and youth competitions, and medal winners were published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178774-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Cross Country Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 89 athletes from 10 countries participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178775-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Race Walking Championships\nThe 2004 South American Race Walking Championships were held in Los \u00c1ngeles, Chile, on April 3\u20134, 2004. The track of the championship runs in the Avenida Ricardo Vicu\u00f1a. For the first time, the men's long race was 50\u00a0km rather than 35\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178775-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Race Walking Championships\nComplete results were published. The junior events are documented on the World Junior Athletics History webpages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178775-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Race Walking Championships, Participation\nThe participation of 83 athletes from 8 countries is reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 61], "content_span": [62, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178776-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"A\"\nThe 2004 South American Rugby Championship was the 26th edition of the competition of the leading national Rugby Union teams in South America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178776-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"A\"\nThe tournament was played in Santiago, Chile with four team participating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178776-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"A\"\nArgentina won the tournament. Venezuela participate for the first time as winner of the (winner of 2003 \"B\" championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178776-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"A\", Standings\nThree point for victory, two for draw, and one for lost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178777-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"B\"\nThe 2004 South American Rugby Championship \"B\" was the fifth edition of the competition of the second level national Rugby Union teams in South America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178777-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"B\"\nThe tournament was played in S\u00e3o Paulo, with four team participating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178777-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Rugby Championship \"B\", Standings\nThree point for victory, two for draw, and one for lost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 53], "content_span": [54, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178778-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Summit\nThe 2004 South American Summit \u2013 the third of its kind, after earlier events in Bras\u00edlia (September 2000) and Guayaquil (July 2002) \u2013 was held in Cuzco and Ayacucho, Peru, on 7 \u20139 December 2004. Officially it constituted the Extraordinary Meeting of the Andean Presidential Council (Reuni\u00f3n Extraordinaria del Consejo Presidencial Andino ) and was also billed as the Third Meeting of Presidents of South America (III Reuni\u00f3n de Presidentes de Am\u00e9rica del Sur).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178778-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Summit\nThe main item on the agenda was the signature, by heads of state and plenipotentiary representatives of 12 South American nations, of the Cuzco Declaration, a two-page document containing a preamble to the deed of foundation of the South American Community of Nations (or \"South American Union\"), uniting the region's two existing free-trade organisations \u2013 Mercosur and the Andean Community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178778-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Summit\nAyacucho was chosen for symbolic reasons: it was there that Antonio Jos\u00e9 de Sucre, fighting under the banner of Sim\u00f3n Bol\u00edvar \"the Liberator\", defeated the last Imperial Spanish troops in South America on 9 December 1824.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178778-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Summit\nWhile the organisation's exact nature and functions \u2013 and even its name \u2013 remain unclear, it aspires to evolve along the lines followed by the continental integration efforts of the European Union, rather than becoming a mere free-trade area. The initiative emerged \u2013 largely at the instigation of Brazil \u2013 in response to the failed negotiations of the Free Trade Area of the Americas. The FTAA process has been stalemated for more than 12 months in the wake of irreconcilable differences, largely along the geopolitical faultlines between Latin America and the Caribbean on the one hand and the United States and Canada on the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178778-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Summit, Participating nations\nMexico (Foreign Minister Luis Ernesto Derbez) and Panama (President Mart\u00edn Torrijos) are also attending the event, with nonparticipating observer status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178779-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Swimming Championships\nThe 2004 South American Swimming Championships were swum March 25-28 in Maldonado, Uruguay. The championships featured competition in 40 long course (50m) events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178779-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Swimming Championships, Participating nations\nAs an event organized by CONSANAT, the confederation that oversees Aquatics in South America, the meet featured its members, including: Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname, Uruguay and Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178780-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American U-19 Women's Championship\nThe 2004 South American Under-19 Women's Football Championship was held in Encarnaci\u00f3n, Paraguay (group A), Caracas, Venezuela (group B), Sucre, Bolivia (group C) and in Angra dos Reis, Brazil (Final round), from 11 to 29 May 2004. It was the first edition of the South American Youth Women's Championship and the only one with an age limit of 19 years. Team Brazil won this tournament and qualified for the 2004 FIFA U-19 Women's World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178780-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American U-19 Women's Championship, Final round\nThree group winners from the first round advanced to the final round. Team Brazil received a bye to this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics\nThe 1st South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics were heldin Barquisimeto, Venezuela, at the Polideportivo M\u00e1ximo Viloria onJune 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics, Participation\nA total of 310 athletes from 13 countries were announced to participate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics, Participation\nArgentina (29), Bolivia (5), Brazil (84), Chile (43), Colombia (36), Ecuador (24),Guyana (4), Panam\u00e1 (2), Paraguay (3), Per\u00fa (5), Surinam (2), Uruguay (6),Venezuela (68). Athletes from the Dominican Republic (4), from the NetherlandsAntilles (4), and from Trinidad and Tobago (11) were invited as guestathletes in accordance with the regulations of CONSUDATLE. In addition, one source also lists results from 4 athletes representing Saint Kitts and Nevis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nMedal winners are published. Detailed results can be found on the CACAC website, and on the Tilastopaja website,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics, Medal summary, Women\n* Keisa Monterola from Venezuela was then only 16 years old and could notofficially participate at the championships. Out of competition, shecleared 3.80m in the first attempt, which would have placed her in thesecond place of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 77], "content_span": [78, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics, Medal summary, Women\n* * Some sources list J\u00e9ssica Quispe from Per\u00fa to finish second in 4:27.68 inthe 1500m women's event. Just as pole vaulter Keisa Monterola, she mighthave started out of competition because of her age (she was then only 17 years old).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 77], "content_span": [78, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178781-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics, Team trophies\nThe final scoring per country for the team trophy was published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 70], "content_span": [71, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThese are the full results of the 2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics which took place between June 26 and June 27, 2004, at Polideportivo M\u00e1ximo Viloria in Barquisimeto, Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Men's results, 100 meters\nHeats \u2013 26 JuneWind: Heat 1: +0.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: 0.0\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 92], "content_span": [93, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Men's results, 200 meters\nHeats \u2013 27 JuneWind: Heat 1: -0.6\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -1.3\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 92], "content_span": [93, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Women's results, 100 meters\nHeats \u2013 26 JuneWind: Heat 1: 0.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: 0.0\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 94], "content_span": [95, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Women's results, 200 meters\nHeats \u2013 27 JuneWind: Heat 1: 0.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: 0.0\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 94], "content_span": [95, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Women's results, 100 meters hurdles\nHeats \u2013 26 JuneWind: Heat 1: +0.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: -1.5\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 102], "content_span": [103, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178782-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Under-23 Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results, Note\nThe names of the Brazilian athletes were completed using the published list of participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 71], "content_span": [72, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178783-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Youth Championships in Athletics\nThe 17th South American Youth Championships in Athletics were held at the Estadio Modelo in Guayaquil, Ecuador from September 25\u201326, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178783-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Youth Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nMedal winners are published for boys and girls. Complete results can be found on the \"World Junior Athletics History\" website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 67], "content_span": [68, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178783-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Youth Championships in Athletics, Trophies, Individual\nThe trophies for the most outstanding performance were awarded to Jonathan Davis (Venezuela) and Franciela Krasucki (Brazil). Jessica Quispe (Peru) gained the trophy for the most improved athlete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178783-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South American Youth Championships in Athletics, Participation (unofficial)\nDetailed result lists can be found on the \"World Junior Athletics History\" website. An unofficial count yields the number of about 259 athletes from about 12 countries:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178784-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Asian Games\nThe 2004 South Asian Games, officially known as the IX South Asian Federation Games, were held in Islamabad, Pakistan in 2004. Originally scheduled for 2001, the games were postponed in the wake of the 9/11 attacks on the United States in which the US later declared Pakistan a Major non-NATO ally. The slogan for the Games was Rising Above. For the first time, Afghanistan was included at the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178784-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Asian Games, Delay\nThe games in Islamabad were originally to be held in 2001, but they were inevitably rescheduled (with the location remaining unchanged) for March 29 through April 6, 2003, due to the invasion of Afghanistan. Afghanistan was invited for the games, however Bhutan and India withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178784-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Asian Games, Delay\nThe entire event was postponed once again due to the war against Iraq. Pakistan retained the organisational authority, despite Sri Lanka being offered to host the games for 2004. Nevertheless, the honour was returned to Sri Lanka as they were given the 10th edition for 2006 instead. The 9th edition was then rescheduled in Pakistan, for 29 March through 7 April 2004. Despite not entering in the previous schedule, Bhutan and India now entered, though the Maldives withdrew from the football tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178785-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Cambridgeshire District Council election\nElections to South Cambridgeshire District Council took place on Thursday 10 June 2004, as part of the 2004 United Kingdom local elections and at the same time as the European Parliament election, 2004. Due to new ward boundaries, all 57 seats on the council were up for election, increasing the number of councillors by two. Seats up for election in 2004 were subsequently contested by thirds at the 2006, 2007 and 2008 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178785-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Cambridgeshire District Council election, Summary\nThe Conservative Party remained the largest party while the Liberal Democrats made gains, but the council remained under no overall control. Labour lost two seats, halving their representation on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 60], "content_span": [61, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178786-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team\nThe 2004 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team represented the University of South Carolina in the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Gamecocks played their home games at Sarge Frye Field. The team was coached by Ray Tanner in his 8th season at South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178786-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Carolina Gamecocks baseball team, Gamecocks in the 2004 MLB Draft\nThe following members of the South Carolina Gamecocks baseball program were drafted in the 2004 Major League Baseball Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 76], "content_span": [77, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178787-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Carolina Gamecocks football team\nThe 2004 South Carolina Gamecocks football team represented the University of South Carolina in the Southeastern Conference (SEC) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Gamecocks were led by Lou Holtz in his sixth and final season as head coach and played their home games in Williams-Brice Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina. Although they were bowl eligible, South Carolina declined to accept a bid due to the team's involvement in the Clemson\u2013South Carolina football brawl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178787-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Carolina Gamecocks football team, Schedule\nThe September 11 game against Georgia played host to ESPN's College Gameday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178788-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Carolina Gamecocks men's soccer team\nThe following contains the names of the members of the 2004 South Carolina Gamecocks men's soccer team and the results of each match. The 2004 season was a successful one for Gamecock soccer that would include a berth in the NCAA Tournament, their 17th all-time. The team finished the season with a 12-7-1 record that included four wins over top-25 opponents. The 2004 roster was a star-studded one that included three future professionals; Brad Guzan, Mike Sambursky, and Josh Alcala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178788-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Carolina Gamecocks men's soccer team, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178789-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 South Dakota Democratic presidential primary was held on June 1 in the U.S. state of South Dakota as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178790-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Dakota's at-large congressional district special election\nThe 2004 South Dakota's at-large congressional district special election was held on July 12, 2004 to select the successor to Republican Representative Bill Janklow who resigned on July 11, 2004, following a conviction of vehicular manslaughter after an accident that had occurred months earlier, creating an open seat and necessitating a special election. Each party held a nominating convention to choose their nominee for the special election. Republicans selected state Senator Larry Diedrich over Barbara Everist, also a member of the South Dakota State Senate, as their nominee while Democrats chose attorney Stephanie Herseth, who had unsuccessfully challenged Janklow in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178790-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Dakota's at-large congressional district special election\nThe special election was closely watched by both parties in an effort to gain momentum going into the 2004 House elections. The Hill committees of both parties spent a combined total of two million dollars on advertising in South Dakota. This election was especially important considering that five months later in addition to this House seat, Democratic Senator and Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle's, who was facing a tough race against former Representative John Thune (R), who had come within 524 votes of defeating South Dakota's other Senator in 2002, U.S. Senate seat would also be up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178790-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Dakota's at-large congressional district special election\nHerseth benefitted from her high name recognition from her previous run as well as her relation to the prominent Herseth family (one notable member of whom includes her grandfather Ralph Herseth, a former Governor of South Dakota). However, Vice President Dick Cheney (R) came to the Mount Rushmore state in March to campaign for Diedrich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178790-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South Dakota's at-large congressional district special election\nHerseth ultimately narrowly prevailed over Diedrich. The both of them won their primaries held on the same day as the special election and would face off against each other in November. Some Democrats claimed this victory, as well as another one in a special election in Kentucky's 6th congressional district months earlier, were harbingers of major Democratic victories in November. However, instead Republicans would achieve a net-gain of three seats in the House and a net-gain of four in the Senate (including a victory in South Dakota).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178791-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Dublin County Council election\nAn election to South Dublin County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 26 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions using the Single transferable vote system for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178792-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Florida Bulls football team\nThe 2004 South Florida Bulls football team represented the University of South Florida (USF) in the 2004 college football season. Their head coach was Jim Leavitt, and the USF Bulls played their home games at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, FL. The 2004 college football season was only the 8th season overall for the Bulls, and their second and final season in Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178793-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Korean legislative election\nLegislative elections were held in the Republic of Korea on April 15, 2004. In the 17th election for the National Assembly, voters elected 299 members of the legislature. The newly formed Uri Party and other parties supporting President Roh Moo-hyun, who was impeached by the outgoing National Assembly, won a majority of seats. This was the first time a centre-left liberal party won a majority in the National Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178793-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Korean legislative election, Parties\nThe newly formed liberal Uri Party (Uri-dang or Our Party) gained support through its opposition to the impeachment of President Roh. It won 32 out of 49 seats in Seoul, 44 out of 62 in Incheon and Gyeonggi, confirming that a majority of voters supported the President Roh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178793-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Korean legislative election, Parties\nThe conservative Grand National Party, which supported the impeachment of President Roh, suffered a loss of support, but won a majority in North Gyeongsang and South Gyeongsang regions and retained the 100 seats necessary to block constitutional changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178793-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South Korean legislative election, Parties\nThe progressive Democratic Labor Party got 13.03% of vote share, but won only 10 out of 299 seats because of FPTP system. But this was considered a great triumph considering that South Koreans are traditionally anti-communist and against left-wing policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178793-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South Korean legislative election, Parties\nThe Millennium Democratic Party, formerly the major liberal party, was the second-largest party prior to the election but sustained the biggest loss in the backlash following its leading role in the impeachment of Roh, as much of its support shifted to the Uri Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178793-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 South Korean legislative election, Parties\nThe United Liberal Democrats, a conservative regional party based on North Chungcheong and South Chungcheong regions, has lost support since its leader, Kim Jong-pil, did not contest the last presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178794-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Lakeland District Council election\nThe 2004 South Lakeland District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of South Lakeland District Council in Cumbria, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178794-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Lakeland District Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the Liberal Democrats had 22 seats, the Conservatives 18, Labour 8 and independents 2, with a further 2 seats being vacant. The 2 vacant seats were in Milnthorpe, after the resignation of the Liberal Democrat councillor Malcolm Alston, and Ulverston East, following the death of Labour councillor Bob Bolton. 18 seats were being contested in the 2004 election, with 6 of them being in Ulverston. Apart from the 2 vacant seats, the Conservatives defended 7 seats, the Liberal Democrats 6, Labour 2 and 1 independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178794-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Lakeland District Council election, Campaign\nIssues for the 3 parties represented on the council included the council tax, improving facilities, attracting more businesses to the area, street cleaning and plans to upgrade the Furness Line and create an A590 bypass. There was controversy at the election over the decision of the Liberal Democrat parliamentary candidate for Westmorland and Lonsdale Tim Farron to stand in the election for Milnthorpe. The Conservatives attacked the decision saying it was an indication the Liberal Democrats would not win the parliamentary seat, but Tim Farron said there would be no problem with him doing both roles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178794-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South Lakeland District Council election, Campaign\nThe election in South Lakeland, along with all of North West England, had a trial of all postal voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178794-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South Lakeland District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw no party win a majority, but the Conservatives made 2 gains. They took Grange-over-Sands from the Liberal Democrats by 1,129 votes to 1,054 and gained Ulverston Central from Labour by 263 votes to 226. Successful candidates included the Conservative leader of the council Colin Hodgson and the Liberal Democrat parliamentary candidate Tim Farron. Overall turnout in the election was 55.88%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178795-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Ossetian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in South Ossetia on 23 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178795-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Ossetian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nAt the time of the election, South Ossetia's parliament had 34 seats. Of these, 15 were filled using the party-list proportional representation, 15 were filled using Single-member district plurality voting, and another 4 were vacant seats, designated for representatives from villages then under Georgian control, where elections were impossible to hold. This election was the last time this system was used, as in the 2009 election, all 34 seats were filled using party-list proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178795-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Ossetian parliamentary election, Results\nAs of 13:00 local time, 52% of registered voters had cast their votes, crossing the electoral threshold of 50% plus one vote. The South Ossetian election commission has thus declared the elections valid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178795-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South Ossetian parliamentary election, Results\nThe election was won by President of South Ossetia Eduard Kokoity's Unity Party, which got 9 of the 15 party-list seats (54.6% of all votes), as well as another 11 constituency seats, giving the party a controlling 20-seat majority. Znaur Gassiyev of the Unity Party was elected speaker, replacing Stanislav Kochiev of the Communist Party of South Ossetia. Gassiyev was one of the leaders of the Republic of South Ossetia in its forming days in the early 1990s, and acted as Head of State in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178796-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Sydney Rabbitohs season\nThe 2004 South Sydney Rabbitohs season was the 95th in the club's history. Coached by Arthur Kitinas and Paul Langmack and captained by Bryan Fletcher and Ashley Harrison, they competed in the National Rugby League's 2004 Telstra Premiership, finishing the regular season 15th out of 15 teams, failing to reach the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178797-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tipperary County Council election\nAn election to South Tipperary County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 26 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178798-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council in Tyne and Wear, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by 6. The Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178798-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election, South Tyneside was seen as one of Labour's safest councils in the north east of England\u00a0\u2013 Labour having 49 of the 60 councillors; they were expected to remain in control of the council. The Boundary Committee for England had made changes in South Tyneside's wards since the 2003 election and these meant there would be 54 councillors elected from 18 wards, instead of the previous 60 councillors from 20 wards. The changes abolished All Saints and Rekendyke wards and new ward names included Biddick and All Saints, Hebburn North and Simonside and Rekendyke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178798-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nLabour was the only party which contested all 54 seats that were up for election, with the other candidates being made up of 23 Conservatives, 22 Liberal Democrats, 13 independents, 12 Progressives, 3 British National Party and 1 each from the Green party and the National Front. The independent candidates included 4 former Labour councillors who had quit the party to stand as independents, Mervyn Owen, Tom Defty, Jim Caine and Allen Branley, as well as Allen Branley's wife Jane Branley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178798-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Campaign\nThe election was held with all postal voting, but delays relating to the printers meant that many voters received their ballot papers almost a week late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178798-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw Labour defend a reduced majority on the council after winning 35 of the 54 seats. The independents and Progressives were jointly the largest opposition groups after the election after winning 6 seats each, with the Progressive leader, Jim Capstick, saying that the boundary changes had helped them to win all of the seats in Harton and West Park wards. The gains for the independents included the former Labour councillors, Tom Defty, who defeated the mayor and wife of the council leader, Linda Waggott, in Bede ward, and Allen Braley in Westoe ward, who was elected along with his wife Jane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178798-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 South Tyneside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nMeanwhile, the Conservatives had 3 councillors after the election, the most for decades, after winning all 3 seats in Cleadon and East Boldon ward at the expense of the Liberal Democrats. Among the Liberal Democrats who failed to be elected in Cleadon and East Boldon was the leader of the party on the council, Jim Selby, but the party did gain one seat in Biddick & All Saints ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 74], "content_span": [75, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178799-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southampton City Council election\nThe 2004 Southampton Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Southampton Unitary Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178799-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Southampton City Council election, Campaign\nSince the last election in 2003 the Liberal Democrats had run the council as a minority administration, after Labour had previously been in charge for 19 years. The record of the Liberal Democrats for the previous year was a major issue in the election, with the Liberal Democrats pointing to investment in road repairs and in addressing anti-social behaviour, while campaigning for council tax to be replaced by a local income tax. However the Labour and Conservative parties attacked the Liberal Democrats for u-turns such as the stopping of plans for fortnightly refuse collection, charges for parking in the town centre and the dropping of schemes to close football pitches and a leisure centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178799-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Southampton City Council election, Campaign\nCrucial wards in the election were seen as being Sholing and Bitterne Park. Meanwhile, as well as the three main parties, there were also candidates from the United Kingdom Independence Party, British National Party and the Green Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178799-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Southampton City Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the council remain with no party having a majority, but the Labour party lost 2 seats and the Conservatives gained 2. The Liberal Democrats remained the largest party with 18 seats after gaining Coxford from Labour, but losing Bitterne Park to the Conservatives. The Conservatives grew to 14 seats after also gaining Freemantle from Labour, who thus dropped to 15 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178799-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Southampton City Council election, Election result\nThe Labour group leader, June Bridle, held her seat in Sholing by 84 votes, with both Labour and the Conservatives saying that the 657 won by the United Kingdom Independence Party had probably enabled Labour to hold on there. Overall turnout in the election increased to 31.6% from 29% in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178799-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Southampton City Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election Liberal Democrat Adrian Vinson remained as leader of the council, after being confirmed by a vote of 18 to 0 at a council meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 55], "content_span": [56, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178800-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Southeastern Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Hoover Metropolitan Stadium in Hoover, AL from May 26 through May 30. South Carolina won the tournament and earned the Southeastern Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178801-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Southend-on-Sea Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Southend-on-Sea Unitary Council in Essex, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178801-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Southend-on-Sea Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives make one gain in the election to hold control of the council with 33 seats. The Conservative gain came in St Lukes ward where they defeated the Labour councillor, Reg Copley, who had been first elected to the council in 1963. They also came within 4 votes of gaining Kursaal, but the only other change was an independent gain from the Liberal Democrats in Westborough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178802-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Park in Charleston, SC from May 26 through May 30. Third seeded The Citadel won the tournament and earned the Southern Conference's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was the Bulldogs seventh SoCon tournament win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178802-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Southern Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe top eight baseball programs in the conference participated in the double-elimination tournament. Furman, Wofford, and Appalachian State were not in the field. College of Charleston claimed its first top seed by winning its first regular season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178803-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 3\u20136, 2004 at the North Charleston Coliseum in North Charleston, South Carolina. The East Tennessee State Buccaneers defeated their in-state rival Chattanooga in the championship game to win their sixth title in school history and receive the automatic berth to the 2004 NCAA Tournament. Tim Smith of ETSU was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178803-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nAll twelve teams were eligible for the tournament. The tournament used a preset bracket consisting of four rounds, the first of which featured four games, with the winners moving on to the quarterfinal round. The top two finishers in each division received first round byes, and the division winners were seeded first and second overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178804-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team\nThe 2004 Southern Miss Golden Eagles football team represented the University of Southern Mississippi in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Golden Eagles were led by head coach Jeff Bower and played their home games at M. M. Roberts Stadium. They were a member of Conference USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178805-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Southland Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2004 Southland Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 26 through May 29, 2004 to determine the champion of the Southland Conference in the sport of college baseball for the 2004 season. The event pitted the top six finishers from the conference's regular season in a double-elimination tournament held at Alumni Field, home field of Southeastern Louisiana in Hammond, Louisiana. Top-seeded Lamar won their second overall championship and claimed the automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178805-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Southland Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe top six finishers from the regular season were seeded one through six. They played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 65], "content_span": [66, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178805-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Southland Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nJordan Foster was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Foster was an outfielder for Lamar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178806-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spa 24 Hours\nThe 2004 Proximus Spa 24 Hours was the 57th running of the Spa 24 Hours and the seventh round the 2004 FIA GT Championship season. This event combined the FIA GT's two classes (GT and N-GT) with cars from national series and one-make series, designated G2 and G3. It took place at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium, from July 31 to August 1, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178806-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Spa 24 Hours, Half-point leaders\nFor the FIA GT Championship, the top eight cars in the GT and N-GT classes are awarded half points for their positions after six hours and twelve hours into the race. Points to the top eight were awarded in the order of 4.0 \u2013 3.0 \u2013 2.5 \u2013 2.0 \u2013 1.5 \u2013 1.0 \u2013 0.5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178806-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Spa 24 Hours, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178807-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Spanish Figure Skating Championships (Spanish: Campeonato De Espa\u00f1a De Patinaje Sobre Hielo 2003-04) took place between 12 and 14 December 2003 in Madrid. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles on the senior, junior, and novice levels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178808-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Formula Three Championship\nThe 2004 Spanish Formula Three Championship was the fourth Spanish Formula Three season. It began on 25 April at Albacete and ended on 14 November at Circuit de Catalunya in Montmel\u00f3 after fourteen races. Borja Garc\u00eda was crowned series champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178808-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Formula Three Championship, Teams and drivers\n\u2020 From the second round, CLM Motorsport retired and were purchased by Meycom Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178808-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Formula Three Championship, Standings, Drivers' standings\n\u2020 \u2014 Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178809-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Spanish Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Gran Premio Marlboro de Espa\u00f1a 2004) was a Formula One motor race held on 9 May 2004 at the Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain. It was Race 5 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship. The 66-lap race was won by Michael Schumacher for the Ferrari team. His teammate Rubens Barrichello finished second with Jarno Trulli third in a Renault car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178809-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Grand Prix, Report, Background\nHeading into the fifth race of the season, Ferrari driver Michael Schumacher was leading the World Drivers' Championship with 40 points; Rubens Barrichello was second on 24 points, 16 points behind Schumacher. Behind Schumacher and Barrichello in the Drivers' Championship, BAR driver Jenson Button was third on 23 points, with Juan Pablo Montoya and Fernando Alonso on 18 and 16 points respectively. In the World Constructors' Championship, Ferrari were leading on 64 points and Renault were second on 31 points, with Williams third on 27 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178809-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178809-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nFour practice sessions were held before the Sunday race\u2014two on Friday, and two on Saturday. The Friday morning and afternoon sessions each lasted an hour. The third and final practice sessions were held on Saturday morning and lasted 45 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178809-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe qualifying session was run as a one-lap session and took place on Friday and Saturday afternoon. The cars were run one at a time; the Friday running order was determined with the Championship leading heading out first. The Saturday running order was determined by times set in Friday afternoon qualifying with the fastest heading out last and the slowest running first. The lap times from the Friday afternoon session did not determine the grid order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178809-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race started at 14:00 local time. During the warm-up lap of the race, a man calling himself Jimmy Jump ran through the starting grid, only to be apprehended soon by the security. While he claimed to have many fans (due to his other performances at football matches), he was criticized for risking the lives of the drivers, even though the cars were still travelling at low speed at this point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election\nThe 2004 Spanish general election was held on Sunday, 14 March 2004, to elect the 8th Cortes Generales of the Kingdom of Spain. All 350 seats in the Congress of Deputies were up for election, as well as 208 of 259 seats in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election\nThe electoral outcome was heavily influenced by the aftermath of the Madrid train bombings on 11 March, as a result of which all parties suspended their electoral campaigns. For two days following the attacks, the People's Party (PP) government kept blaming the terrorist organization ETA for the bombings, even in spite of mounting evidence suggesting the involvement of Islamist groups. The government was accused of misinformation, as an Islamist attack would have been perceived as the direct result of Spain's involvement in the Iraq War, which had been highly unpopular among the public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election\nThe election result was described by some media as an \"unprecedented electoral upset\". The perceived abuse of the PP's absolute majority throughout the legislature, with a focus on Spain's involvement in Iraq, was said to have helped fuel a wave of discontent against the incumbent ruling party, with the government's mismanagement on the bombings serving as the final catalyst for change to happen. At 11 million votes and 42.6%, the opposition Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) increased by 3.1 million its 2000 result, securing 164 seats\u2014a net gain of 39.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election\nIn contrast, the PP, which opinion polls earlier in the year had predicted would secure a diminished but still commanding victory, lost 35 seats and 7 percentage points, resulting in the worst defeat for a sitting government in Spain up to that point since 1982. The 75.7% turnout was among the highest since the Spanish transition to democracy, with no future general election having exceeded such a figure. The number of votes cast, at 26.1 million votes, remained the highest figure in gross terms for any Spanish general election until the April 2019 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election\nThe day after the election, Zapatero announced his will to form a minority PSOE government, supported by other parties in a confidence and supply basis. Two minor left-wing parties, Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) and United Left (IU), immediately announced their intention to support Zapatero's government. On 16 April 2004, Zapatero was elected as new prime minister by an outright majority of the new Congress, with 183 out of 350 members voting for him, being sworn in the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Spanish Cortes Generales were envisaged as an imperfect bicameral system. The Congress of Deputies had greater legislative power than the Senate, having the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a prime minister and to override Senate vetoes by an absolute majority of votes. Nonetheless, the Senate possessed a few exclusive, yet limited in number functions\u2014such as its role in constitutional amendment\u2014which were not subject to the Congress' override. Voting for the Cortes Generales was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen and in full enjoyment of their political rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Electoral system\nFor the Congress of Deputies, 348 seats were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency. Seats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of Spain, with each being allocated an initial minimum of two seats and the remaining 248 being distributed in proportion to their populations. Ceuta and Melilla were allocated the two remaining seats, which were elected using plurality voting. The use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Electoral system\nFor the Senate, 208 seats were elected using an open list partial block voting, with electors voting for individual candidates instead of parties. In constituencies electing four seats, electors could vote for up to three candidates; in those with two or three seats, for up to two candidates; and for one candidate in single-member districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Electoral system\nEach of the 47 peninsular provinces was allocated four seats, whereas for insular provinces, such as the Balearic and Canary Islands, districts were the islands themselves, with the larger\u2014Majorca, Gran Canaria and Tenerife\u2014being allocated three seats each, and the smaller\u2014Menorca, Ibiza\u2013Formentera, Fuerteventura, La Gomera, El Hierro, Lanzarote and La Palma\u2014one each. Ceuta and Melilla elected two seats each. Additionally, autonomous communities could appoint at least one senator each and were entitled to one additional senator per each million inhabitants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of each chamber of the Cortes Generales\u2014the Congress and the Senate\u2014expired four years from the date of their previous election, unless they were dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of the Cortes in the event that the prime minister did not make use of his prerogative of early dissolution. The decree was to be published on the following day in the Official State Gazette (BOE), with election day taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Election date\nThe previous election was held on 12 March 2000, which meant that the legislature's term would expire on 12 March 2004. The election decree was required to be published in the BOE no later than 17 February 2004, with the election taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the Cortes Generales on Sunday, 11 April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Election date\nThe prime minister had the prerogative to dissolve both chambers at any given time\u2014either jointly or separately\u2014and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process, no state of emergency was in force and that dissolution did not occur before one year had elapsed since the previous one. Additionally, both chambers were to be dissolved and a new election called if an investiture process failed to elect a prime minister within a two-month period from the first ballot. Barred this exception, there was no constitutional requirement for simultaneous elections for the Congress and the Senate. Still, as of 2021 there has been no precedent of separate elections taking place under the 1978 Constitution, with governments having long preferred that elections for the two chambers of the Cortes take place simultaneously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 903]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Overview, Election date\nOn 9 January 2004, it was announced that the general election would be held on 14 March, with the Cortes to be dissolved on 20 January. The election date was agreed with Andalusian president Manuel Chaves, to make it being held concurrently with the 2004 Andalusian regional election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Parliamentary composition\nThe Cortes Generales were officially dissolved on 20 January 2004, after the publication of the dissolution decree in the Official State Gazette. The tables below show the composition of the parliamentary groups in both chambers at the time of dissolution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178810-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish general election, Parties and candidates\nThe Socialists' Party of Catalonia (PSC), Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) and Initiative for Catalonia Greens (ICV) agreed to continue with the Catalan Agreement of Progress alliance for the Senate with the inclusion of United and Alternative Left (EUiA). In the Balearic Islands, PSM\u2013Nationalist Agreement (PSM\u2013EN), United Left of the Balearic Islands (EUIB), The Greens of the Balearic Islands (EVIB) and ERC formed the Progressives for the Balearic Islands alliance. A proposal for an all-left electoral alliance for the Senate in the Valencian Community, comprising the PSOE, United Left of the Valencian Country (EUPV) and the Valencian Nationalist Bloc (BNV) was ultimately discarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178811-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix was the second round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 30 April-2 May 2004 at the Circuito Permanente de Jerez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178811-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round two has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178812-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speed World Challenge\nThe 2004 Speed World Challenge season was the fifteenth season of the Sports Car Club of America's World Challenge series. The series' title sponsor was television network Speed Channel, who broadcast all the races. Championships were awarded for grand touring and touring cars. The season began on March 19 and ran for ten rounds. Tommy Archer and Audi won the championships in GT, and Bill Auberlen and BMW won in Touring Car. The season marked the first wins for the Cadillac brand, a step up for General Motors after three of its brands declined in the nineties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178813-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Conference League\nThe 2004 Speedway Conference League was the third-tier division of British speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178813-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Conference League, Conference League Knockout Cup\nThe 2004 Conference League Knockout Cup was the seventh edition of the Knockout Cup for tier three teams. Mildenhall Fen Tigers were the winners for the second successive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178814-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Speedway Grand Prix was the 59th edition of the official World Championship and the tenth season in the Speedway Grand Prix era used to determine the Speedway World Champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178814-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Grand Prix\nAfter finishing second in 2001, 2002 and 2003, Jason Crump broke through to become Australia's first Individual World Champion since Jack Young had won his second straight World title in 1952.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178814-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Grand Prix, Event format\nThe system first used in 1998 continued to be adopted with 24 riders, divided into two classes. The eight best would be directly qualified for the \"Main Event\", while the sixteen others would be knocked out if they finished out of the top two in 4-man heats on two occasions \u2013 while they would go through if they finished inside the top two on two occasions. This resulted in 10 heats, where eight proceeded to the Main Event, where exactly the same system was applied to give eight riders to a semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178814-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Grand Prix, Event format\nThe semi-finals were then two heats of four, where the top two qualified for a final \u2013 there was no consolation final. The 4 finalists scored 25, 20, 18 and 16 points, with 5th and 6th place getting 13, 7th and 8th 11, and after that 8, 8, 7, 7, etc. Places after 8th place were awarded according to the time a rider was knocked out and, secondly, according to position in the last heat he rode in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178814-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway Grand Prix, Qualification for Grand Prix\nThe 2004 season had 22 permanent riders and two wild cards at each event. The permanent riders are highlighted in the results table below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178815-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup\nThe 2004 Speedway World Cup (SWC) was the 4th FIM Speedway World Cup season. The Final took place on 7 August 2004 in Poole, Great Britain. The tournament was won by Sweden (49 pts) and they beat host team Great Britain (48 pts), Denmark (32 pts) and Poland (22 pts) in the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178816-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Event 1\nThe 2004 Speedway World Cup Event 1 was the first race of the 2004 Speedway World Cup season. It took place on August 2, 2004 in the Arlington Stadium in Eastbourne, Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178816-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Event 1, Heat details\nM - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 T - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 X - other exclusion \u2022 E - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 F - fell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178817-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Event 2\nThe 2004 Speedway World Cup Event 2 was the second race of the 2004 Speedway World Cup season. It took place on August 3, 2004 in the Arlington Stadium in Eastbourne, Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178817-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Event 2, Heat details\nM - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 T - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 X - other exclusion \u2022 E - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 F - fell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178818-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Final\nThe 2004 Speedway World Cup Final was the fourth and last race of the 2004 Speedway World Cup season. It took place on August 7, 2004 in the Poole Stadium in Poole, Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178818-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Final, Heat details\nM - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 T - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 X - other exclusion \u2022 E - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 F - fell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178819-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Qualification\nThe 2004 Speedway World Cup Qualification (SWC) was a two events of motorcycle speedway meetings used to determine the two national teams who qualify for the 2004 Speedway World Cup. According to the FIM rules the top six nations (Sweden, Australia, Denmark, Poland, Great Britain and Czech Republic) from the 2003 Speedway World Cup were automatically qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178819-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Qualification, Heat details, Lonigo (1)\nM - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 T - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 X - other exclusion \u2022 E - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 F - fell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178819-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Qualification, Heat details, Gyula (2)\nM - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 T - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 X - other exclusion \u2022 E - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 F - fell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178820-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Race-off\nThe 2004 Speedway World Cup Race-off was the third race of the 2004 Speedway World Cup season. It took place on August 5, 2004 in the Poole Stadium in Poole, Great Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178820-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Speedway World Cup Race-off, Heat details\nM - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 T - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 X - other exclusion \u2022 E - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 F - fell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178821-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Spengler Cup\nThe 2004 Spengler Cup was held in Davos, Switzerland between December 26, 2004 and December 31, 2004. All matches were played at HC Davos's home arena, Eisstadion Davos. The final was won 2-0 by HC Davos over HC Sparta Praha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178822-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sports Network Cup\nThe 2004 Sports Network Cup was a college football postseason NCAA Division I FCS Mid-Major Championship Series. The Monmouth Hawks finished ahead of the Drake Bulldogs 19-5 in first places votes to be named the NCAA Division I FCS Mid-Major Football National Champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178822-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sports Network Cup\nNote: Voting was conducted by a panel of 91 FCS media members and media relations professionals. A first-place vote is worth five points, a second- place vote is worth four points, a third-place vote is worth three points, a fourth-place vote is worth two points, and a fifth-place vote is worth one point. Votes were due by Wednesday, November 26, 2004, following the final week of the regular season. Postseason play has no effect on the outcome of the awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by GreenC bot (talk | contribs) at 21:31, 20 July 2021 (Reformat 1 archive link. Wayback Medic 2.5). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck\nThe 2004 Sri Lanka tsunami-rail disaster is the largest single rail disaster in world history by death toll, with 1,700 fatalities or more. It occurred when a crowded passenger train was destroyed on a coastal railway in Sri Lanka by a tsunami which followed the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake. The tsunami subsequently caused over 30,000 reported deaths and billions of rupees in property damage in the coastal areas of Sri Lanka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Train\nTrain # Matara Express was a regular train operating between the cities of Colombo and Galle. The route runs along the southwestern coast of Sri Lanka, and at Telwatta, only about 200 metres (660\u00a0ft) inland from the sea. On Sunday, 26 December 2004, during both the Buddhist full moon holiday and the Christmas holiday weekend, it left Colombo's Fort Station shortly after 6:50 A.M. with over 1,500 paid passengers and an unknown number of unpaid passengers including the ones with travel passes (called Seasons) and government travel permits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Train\nThe train was pulled by locomotive #591 Manitoba, a Sri Lanka Railways class M2a built in 1956 by General Motors Diesel of Canada as a model G12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Attempts to stop the train\nSri Lanka's seismic monitoring station at Pallekele registered the earthquake within minutes but did not consider it possible for a tsunami to reach the island. When tsunami reports first reached the dispatching office in Maradana, officials were able to halt eight trains running on the Coastal Line, but were unable to reach the Matara Express.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Attempts to stop the train\nEfforts to halt the train at Ambalangoda failed because all station personnel were assisting with the train, and no one was available to answer the phone until after the train had departed. Attempts to reach personnel at stations further south failed as they had fled or been killed by the waves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Tsunami waves strike the crowded train\nAt 9:30 A.M., in the village of Peraliya, near Telwatta, the beach saw the first of the gigantic waves thrown up by the earthquake. The train came to a halt as water surged around it, and an alarm sounded to alert the population about the increase in the water level. Hundreds of locals, believing the train to be secure on the rails, climbed onto the top of the cars to avoid being swept away. Others stood behind the train, hoping it would shield them from the force of the water. The first wave flooded the carriages and caused panic amongst the passengers. Ten minutes later a huge wave picked the train up and smashed it against the trees and houses which lined the track, crushing those seeking shelter behind it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Tsunami waves strike the crowded train\nThe eight carriages were so packed with people that the doors could not be opened while they filled with water, drowning almost everyone inside as the water washed over the wreckage several more times. The passengers on top of the train were thrown clear of the uprooted carriages, and most drowned or were crushed by debris. Locomotive #591 Manitoba was carried 100 metres (328 feet), coming to rest in a swamp. Both engineer Janaka Fernando and assistant Sivaloganathan died at their posts. Estimates based on the state of the shoreline and a high-water mark on a nearby building place the tsunami 7.5 to 9 meters (24 to 29 feet) above sea level and 2 to 3 meters (6 to 9 feet) higher than the top of the train.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 74], "content_span": [75, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Casualties\nDue to the huge scale of the tsunami disaster, the local authorities were unable to cope with the devastation, and emergency services and the military were so overwhelmed that immediate rescue was not possible. In fact, the Sri Lankan authorities had no idea where the train was for several hours, until it was spotted by an army helicopter around 4:00 PM. The local emergency services were destroyed, and it was a long time before help arrived.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Casualties\nDozens of people badly injured in the disaster died in the wreckage during the day, and many bodies were not retrieved for over a week. Some families descended on the area determined to find their relatives themselves. A forensic team from Colombo photographed and fingerprinted the unclaimed bodies at Batapola Hospital so the records could be stored and looked at after the bodies were buried.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Casualties\nAccording to the Sri Lankan authorities, only about 150 people on the train survived. The estimated death toll was at least 1,700 people, and probably over 2,000, although only approximately 900 bodies were recovered, as many were swept out to sea or taken away by relatives. The town of Peraliya was also destroyed, losing hundreds of citizens and all but ten buildings to the waves. Venerable Baddegama Samitha, a Buddhist monk, helped perform funeral rites along with his students. More than 200 of the bodies retrieved were not identified or claimed, and were buried three days later in a Buddhist ceremony near the torn railway line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178823-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lanka tsunami train wreck, Aftermath\nThe first anniversary ceremonies were held among the rebuilt town alongside the repaired railway, which still operates a Colombo-to-Galle service, employing the same guard, W. Karunatilaka, who was on the train and survived the disaster. Locomotive #591 Manitoba and two of the damaged carriages were salvaged and rebuilt. A wave was added to the locomotive's paint job as a memorial. The rebuilt locomotive and carriages returned to Peraliya on 26 December 2008, and every year since, to take part in a religious ceremony and a memorial, held to remember those who lost their lives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Sri Lanka on 2 April 2004. The ruling United National Party of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe was defeated, winning only eighty two seats in the 225-member Sri Lankan parliament. The opposition United People's Freedom Alliance won 105 seats. While this was eight seats short of an absolute majority, the Alliance was able to form a government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election\nOn 6 April President Chandrika Kumaratunga commissioned Mahinda Rajapaksa, a former Labour Minister, as Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Parties\nThe United People's Freedom Alliance was formed as an alliance between President Kumaratunga's party, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), and the leftist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna. Other parties that belong to the People's Alliance, such as the Communist Party of Sri Lanka, the Democratic United National Front, the Lanka Sama Samaja Party, Mahajana Eksath Peramuna and the Sri Lanka Mahajana Pakshaya, later joined UPFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Parties\nIn the 2001 elections, the People's Alliance and Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna had fought separately. Then the JVP won 9.1% of the vote and sixteen seats. At this election it is reported than as many as thirty nine JVP members won seats as UPFA candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Parties\nThe runner-up in the election was the United National Front (UNF), the front led by the United National Party. In addition to the UNP, the UNF also had candidates from minor parties such as Ceylon Workers Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Parties\nOther parties winning seats were the Buddhist, Sinhala nationalist outfit Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), the pro-LTTE alliance Tamil National Alliance (TNA), the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) and the Eelam People's Democratic Party (EPDP). The Democratic Peoples Liberation Front (the political wing of PLOTE) lost their parliamentary representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Campaign\nPrime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe's UNF government had been in limbo since October 2003, when President Kumaratunga declared a state of emergency and took three key cabinet portfolios for her party. During the campaign, she argued that Wickremasinghe had been too soft on the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and promised to take a harder line. The UNF, for its part, stressed the economic gains that had been made with the ceasefire and the need to find a negotiated solution to the civil war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Voting\nPolling booths opened at 07:00 local time and remained open until 16:00 (01:00 to 10:00 UTC). A total of 10,670 polling stations were installed to receive votes from 12.9 million eligible voters. Voter turnout was high, at around 75%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Voting\nThe backdrop to polling day was tense, with continued guerrilla activity by Tamil Tiger separatists and five politically motivated murders in the run-up to the election. However, except for a slightly lower turnout in the Eastern Province, Sri Lanka and allegations of fraud in the North, the election was calm and orderly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Voting\nSri Lanka's Elections Commissioner Dayananda Dissanayake said that despite reported cases of electoral malpractice in certain polling stations in six electoral districts, there would be no fresh elections in these areas and the results issued by the Commission were final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178824-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan parliamentary election, Results\nThe United People's Freedom Alliance vote and seat totals are compared with the combined People's Alliance and JVP vote and seat counts at the 2001 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections\nThe 2004 Sri Lankan provincial council election was held on 24 April 2004 and 10 July 2004 to elect members to seven provincial councils in Sri Lanka. No election was held in the eighth province, North Eastern, which had been governed directly by the national government since March 1990. The United People's Freedom Alliance, which was in power nationally, won all seven provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Background\nIn an attempt to end the Sri Lankan Civil War the Indo-Lanka Accord was signed on 29 July 1987. One of the requirements of the accord was that the Sri Lankan government to devolve powers to the provinces. Accordingly on 14 November 1987 the Sri Lankan Parliament passed the 13th Amendment to the 1978 Constitution of Sri Lanka and the Provincial Councils Act No 42 of 1987. On 3 February 1988 nine provincial councils were created by order. The first elections for provincial councils took place on 28 April 1988 in North Central, North Western, Sabaragamuwa, and Uva provinces. On 2 June 1988 elections were held for provincial councils for Central, Southern and Western provinces. The United National Party (UNP), which was in power nationally, won control of all seven provincial councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Background\nThe Indo-Lanka Accord also required the merger of the Eastern and Northern provinces into one administrative unit. The accord required a referendum to be held by 31 December 1988 in the Eastern Province to decide whether the merger should be permanent. Crucially, the accord allowed the Sri Lankan president to postpone the referendum at his discretion. On September 2 and 8 1988 President Jayewardene issued proclamations enabling the Eastern and Northern provinces to be one administrative unit administered by one elected council, creating the North Eastern Province. Elections in the newly merged North Eastern Province were held on 19 November 1988. The Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front, an Indian backed paramilitary group, won control of the North Eastern provincial council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 852]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Background\nOn 1 March 1990, just as the Indian Peace Keeping Force were preparing to withdraw from Sri Lanka, Annamalai Varatharajah Perumal, Chief Minister of the North Eastern Province, moved a motion in the North Eastern Provincial Council declaring an independent Eelam. President Premadasa reacted to Permual's UDI by dissolving the provincial council and imposing direct rule on the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Background\nThe 2nd Sri Lankan provincial council election was held in 1993 in seven provinces. The UNP retained control of six provincial councils but lost control of the largest provincial council, Western, to the opposition People's Alliance. A special election was held in Southern Province in 1994 after some UNP provincial councillors defected to the opposition. The PA won the election and took control of the Southern Provincial Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Background\nThe 3rd Sri Lankan provincial council election was held in 1999 in seven provinces. The PA, which was now in power nationally, managed to win the majority of seats in two provinces (North Central and North Western). It was also able to form a majority administration in the other five provinces with the support of smaller parties such as the Ceylon Workers' Congress (CWC) . The UNP regained control of the Central Provincial Council in 2002 after the CWC councillors crossed over to the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results\nThe United People's Freedom Alliance, the successor to the PA, won all seven provinces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, Central Province\nResults of the 4th Central provincial council election held on 10 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, North Central Province\nResults of the 4th North Central provincial council election held on 10 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, North Western Province\nResults of the 4th North Western provincial council election held on 24 April 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 77], "content_span": [78, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, Sabaragamuwa Province\nResults of the 4th Sabaragamuwa provincial council election held on 10 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 76], "content_span": [77, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, Southern Province\nResults of the 5th Southern provincial council election held on 10 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, Uva Province\nResults of the 4th Uva provincial council election held on 10 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178825-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Sri Lankan provincial council elections, Results, Western Province\nResults of the 4th Western provincial council election held on 10 July 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178826-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St Albans City and District Council election\nThe 2004 St Albans City and District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of St Albans District Council in Hertfordshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178826-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St Albans City and District Council election, Background\nAfter the last election in 2003 the Liberal Democrats were the largest party on the council with 23 seats, compared to 21 for the Conservatives, 13 for Labour and there was 1 independent. In April 2004 the Liberal Democrats gained a seat from the Conservatives at a by-election in Verulam, which meant they needed to gain 6 seats at the 2004 council election to take a majority on the council. St Albans was reported by national newspapers to be a council that the Liberal Democrats were hoping to win a majority on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178826-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 St Albans City and District Council election, Background\n18 seats were contested at the election with only Colney Heath and Sandridge wards not having elections. Candidates from the 3 main parties stood in all 18 wards apart from in Redbourn, where the Liberal Democrats did not put up a candidate to oppose the independent councillor, Tony Swendell, who was standing for re-election. Two other parties put up some candidates, 3 from the new St Albans Party and 2 from the Green Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178826-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 St Albans City and District Council election, Background\n4 Conservative councillors stood down at the election, Mike Bretherton, Mike Jameson, Martin Treasure and Hazel Ward, as well as 1 from Labour, Andrew Rose and 1 Liberal Democrat, John White.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178826-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 St Albans City and District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Liberal Democrat make 5 gains but come up one seat short of gaining an overall majority. They gained seats in Ashley and St Peters wards from Labour, and in Marshalswick South, Park Street and Wheathampstead from the Conservatives, to have exactly half of the 58 seats on the council. This reduced the Conservatives to 17 seats and Labour to 11 seats, while independent Anthony Swendell was re-elected in Redbourn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178826-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 St Albans City and District Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Liberal Democrats took control of the council with all of the seats on the council cabinet after winning a vote 29 to 24, with 1 abstention, despite opposition from both Labour and the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178827-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council in Merseyside, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by six. The Labour Party lost overall control of the council to no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178827-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council election, Background\nSince the 2003 election boundary changes reduced the number of councillors from 54 to 48, while also reducing the number of wards from 18 to 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 64], "content_span": [65, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178827-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nLabour lost their majority of the council, after losing 9 seats to take exactly half of the seats on the council, with 24 councillors. The Labour leader of the council, Marie Rimmer held her seat in West Park after 3 recounts, while Labour councillors Terry Hanley, Jeff Molyneux and Marlene Quinn were among those to be defeated. Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats gained 3 seats to have 18 councillors and the Conservatives won 6 seats. Overall turnout at the election dropped to 40% from 48% in 2003, despite the election being held with all postal voting as in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178827-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 St Helens Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election Labour continued to run the council with all of the executive being Labour councillors, after an agreement between the Labour and Conservative group leaders. This saw Conservative Betty Lowe becoming the new mayor, but only after agreeing not to use her vote at full council meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178828-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St. George Illawarra Dragons season\nThe 2004 St. George Illawarra Dragons season was the 6th in the joint-venture club's history, and they competed in the 2004 NRL season. Coached by Nathan Brown and captained by Trent Barrett, they finished the 2004 Telstra Premiership 5th (out of 15 teams) at the end of the regular season. The Dragons then reached the first week of the finals when they were knocked out by the Penrith Panthers. This was the result of some major upsets which involved two of the top three ranked teams (Bulldogs and Brisbane Broncos) also losing in the first week of the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season\nThe St. Louis Cardinals 2004 season was the team's 123rd season in St. Louis, Missouri and the 113th season in the National League. The Cardinals went 105-57 during the season, the most wins of any Cardinals team since 1944, and the first Cardinal team to win 100 or more games since 1985, and won the National League Central division by 13 games over the NL Wild-Card Champion Houston Astros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season\nIn the playoffs the Cardinals defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 3 games to 1 in the NLDS and the Astros 4 games to 3 in the NLCS to reach their first World Series since 1987. In the World Series the Cardinals faced the Boston Red Sox and were swept 4 games to 0. It was the final World Series played at Busch Memorial Stadium. Because the American League had home-field advantage as a result of winning the All-Star Game, Busch Memorial Stadium was where the Curse of the Bambino died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season\nCatcher Mike Matheny, third baseman Scott Rolen, and outfielder Jim Edmonds won Gold Gloves this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season\nThe 2004 St. Louis Cardinals were the first team to lose the World Series to a \"Moneyball\" style team roster on the side of the Red Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, Regular season, Summary\nAcquired via trade from the Colorado Rockies on August 6, 2004, Larry Walker, customarily the Rockies' number three hitter, became the Cardinals' number two hitter. The Cardinals already had Edmonds, Pujols and Rolen in the 3 through 5 spots. Walker made his Cardinals debut on August 7, playing the New York Mets, and appeared as a pinch-hitter and struck out in the seventh inning. He drew a walk from Mike Stanton in the ninth inning and scored the game-winning run on a Yadier Molina single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, NLDS\nIn three playoff rounds in 2004, Walker combined to hit .293/.379/.707 with a pair of home runs in each tournament, setting a franchise record for home runs hit by a left-handed batter in one postseason. Walker made his playoff debut with the Cardinals in Game 1 of the NLDS versus the Dodgers, homering twice and scoring four runs in an 8\u22123 Cardinals win. He became the first Cardinal with a multi-home run game in LDS play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, NLCS\nIn Game of the 1 National League Championship Series (NLCS) versus the Houston Astros, Walker was a home run short of hitting for the cycle. The Cardinals proceeded to take a 2\u20130 Series lead before losing three straight in Houston. Returning home for Game 6, the Cardinals took a 4\u20133 lead into the ninth inning, but Houston tied it up. Jim Edmonds hit a walk-off homer in the bottom of the 12th to win the game. The next night, Albert Pujols helped St. Louis win Game 7 to clinch the series with a game tying hit. Scott Rolen brought him home on a two-run home run. Pujols was named the series MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 37], "content_span": [38, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, World Series\nWhen the Cardinals reached the World Series, Tony La Russa became the sixth manager to win pennants in both leagues, following Joe McCarthy, Yogi Berra, Alvin Dark, and the managers in the 1984 World Series, Sparky Anderson and Dick Williams. La Russa had managed the Oakland Athletics to three straight pennants between 1988 and 1990 and winning the 1989 World Series. La Russa would try to join Anderson as the only men to have managed teams to World Series championships in both leagues. La Russa wore number 10 in tribute to Anderson (who wore 10 while manager of the Cincinnati Reds) and to indicate he was trying to win the team's tenth championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, World Series\nThe Cardinals met a what was a potent Red Sox squad fresh off four straight victories over the Yankees following an 0\u20133 deficit in the ALCS. A comeback in this fashion in any North American major sports league had previously occurred only in the NHL. This was the third time the two teams have faced each other in the Fall Classic, with the Cardinals winning the previous two in 1946 and 1967. The Cardinals were again without a key player for the World Series: ace pitcher Chris Carpenter, who, after going 15\u20135, tweaked his shoulder in September and missed the entire post-season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, World Series\nMaking his World Series debut in Game 1, Walker collected four hits in five at bats with a home run and two doubles. His four-hit outing tied a Cardinals World Series record, becoming the seventh overall and first to so since Lou Brock in 1967, also against Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178829-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Cardinals season, World Series\nThe Cardinals were swept by the Red Sox in four games and struggled to hit, never taking a lead at any point in the series. Pujols, Rolen, and Edmonds, the normally fearsome 3-4-5 hitters for the Cardinals, were six-for-45 with one RBI. The club batted .190 with a .562 OPS overall. Walker was one of very few exceptions, batting .357 with a 1.366 OPS. His two home runs accounted for the only two hit by the entire Cardinals team. In the 2004 postseason, Walker scored 21 percent (14 of 68) of Cardinals runs scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178830-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Rams season\nThe 2004 season was the St. Louis Rams' 67th in the National Football League and their 10th in St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178830-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Rams season\nAlthough the Rams\u2019 record was good enough to qualify for the postseason, they did so without posting a winning record. Statistics site Football Outsiders calculates that the 2004 Rams were, play-for-play, the second-worst team to make the playoffs in the site's rating history (behind the 2010 Seattle Seahawks. This was also the last time the Rams made the playoffs until 2017, when the franchise returned to Los Angeles; thus, this was the team\u2019s final playoff appearance in St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178830-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Rams season\nThe season is memorable for the Rams drafting running back Steven Jackson with the 24th pick of the 2004 NFL Draft. During the season, the Rams relied less on Marshall Faulk, who was slowed by age and injuries, forcing Jackson to garner a bulk of the carries. He finished the season with 673 rushing yards despite seeing limited action.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178830-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Rams season\nThe Rams, in the playoffs, defeated their rival Seattle Seahawks in the Wild Card round, but their 10th season in St. Louis ended in a 47\u201317 blowout to the Atlanta Falcons in the Divisional round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178830-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Louis Rams season\nFor the first time this season, the Rams completed a 2\u20130 regular season sweep of the rival Seahawks. They would not accomplish this again until 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178831-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Petersburg Open\nThe 2004 St. Petersburg Open was a tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Petersburg Sports and Concert Complex in Saint Petersburg in Russia and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 10th edition of the tournament wand was held from October 25 through October 31, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178831-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Petersburg Open, Finals, Doubles\nArnaud Cl\u00e9ment / Micha\u00ebl Llodra defeated Dominik Hrbat\u00fd / Jaroslav Levinsk\u00fd 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178832-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Petersburg Open \u2013 Doubles\nJulian Knowle and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178832-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Petersburg Open \u2013 Doubles\nArnaud Cl\u00e9ment and Micha\u00ebl Llodra won the title, defeating Dominik Hrbat\u00fd and Jaroslav Levinsk\u00fd 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178833-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Petersburg Open \u2013 Singles\nGustavo Kuerten was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178833-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 St. Petersburg Open \u2013 Singles\nMikhail Youzhny won the title, beating Karol Beck 6\u20132, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178834-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanford Cardinal football team\nThe 2004 Stanford Cardinal football team represented Stanford University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was led by head coach Buddy Teevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals\nThe 2004 Stanley Cup Finals was the championship series of the National Hockey League's (NHL) 2003\u201304 season, and the culmination of the 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs. The Eastern Conference champion Tampa Bay Lightning defeated the Western Conference champion Calgary Flames in seven games, becoming the southernmost team to win the Stanley Cup. It was Tampa Bay's first-ever appearance in the final. For Calgary, it was the team's third appearance, and first since their championship season of 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals\nLightning owner William Davidson would soon become the first owner in sports history to win two championships in one year as eight days later, the other team that Davidson owned (the Detroit Pistons of the NBA) won the NBA title in five games over the Los Angeles Lakers. This was the last Stanley Cup Final played for two years, as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout began three months after the end of this final, lasting over ten months and leading to the cancellation of the 2005 Final, with the league not returning to play for the Cup until 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Paths to the Finals\nTampa Bay defeated the New York Islanders 4\u20131, the Montreal Canadiens 4\u20130 and the Philadelphia Flyers 4\u20133 to advance to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Paths to the Finals\nCalgary defeated the Western Conference's top three seeded teams, the Vancouver Canucks 4\u20133, the Detroit Red Wings 4\u20132 and the San Jose Sharks 4\u20132, in that order. This brought a Canadian team to the Finals for the first time in 10 years; Vancouver lost to the New York Rangers in the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game one\nThe first game, at St. Pete Times Forum, saw the Flames win 4\u20131. Dave Andreychuk began the game with a record 634 career goals without a Stanley Cup Finals appearance. Calgary only got 19 shots off against the Lightning defense, but more than one-fifth found the net. Martin Gelinas got Calgary on the board early, and they extended the lead to 3\u20130 in the second period on goals by Jarome Iginla, his 11th of the playoffs, and Stephane Yelle. Chris Simon added the fourth and final Calgary goal after Tampa Bay's Martin St. Louis scored the lone Lightning goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game two\nGame two saw the same final score, but this time, it was Tampa Bay winning a clutch game to tie the series, 1\u20131, headed to Calgary. Ruslan Fedotenko's 10th goal of the postseason got the Lightning on the board first, and Tampa Bay used three third-period goals, coming from Brad Richards, Dan Boyle, and St. Louis, respectively, to blast the game open. The lone Calgary goal was scored by Ville Nieminen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game two\nThese Finals would be the last until 2013 to be tied after two games. The team with home ice in games one and two held a 2-0 edge in every Final between 2006 and 2011. In 2012, the Los Angeles Kings won the first two games at New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game three\nThe series shifted to the Pengrowth Saddledome in Calgary, where Flames goalie Miikka Kiprusoff and the Calgary defense completely stonewalled the Tampa Bay attack, which only took 21 shots in a 3\u20130 Flames victory. Simon scored the first Calgary goal in the second period, and Shean Donovan and Iginla added goals to ice the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game four\nWith a chance to take a commanding 3\u20131 series lead, Calgary was shut out by Lightning goalie Nikolai Khabibulin, who recorded his fifth shutout of the postseason, a 29-save shutout, in a 1\u20130 Tampa Bay victory, with the game's lone goal being scored by Brad Richards three minutes into the game on a two-man advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game four\nWith 4:13 left in the game, Ville Nieminen checked Vincent Lecavalier into the boards from behind, drawing a five-minute major penalty for boarding, a game misconduct penalty, and an eventual game five suspension. Meanwhile, fans at the Pengrowth Saddledome angrily booed referees Kerry Fraser and Brad Watson throughout most of the contest. They were originally also scheduled to work game six in Calgary but the league eventually decided to replace them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game five\nThe series returned to Tampa Bay tied, 2\u20132, for a critical game five, and Calgary pulled off a 3\u20132 overtime victory to move within one win from the Stanley Cup. After Gelinas and St. Louis traded goals in the first period, Iginla scored for Calgary late in the second period. However, Fredrik Modin tied the game for the Lightning 37 seconds into the third period. The 2\u20132 score held until after 14:40 had gone by in overtime, when Oleg Saprykin's first goal since the first round won the game for the Flames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game six\nBack to Calgary for game six, each team scored two second-period goals, with Richards scoring two for the Lightning and Chris Clark and Marcus Nilson for the Flames. In the third period, there was a dispute over a Martin Gelinas redirect that appeared to have gone in off of his skate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game six\nA review from one camera angle appeared to show the puck crossing the goal line before Khabibulin's pad dragged it out, though some (including Lightning Tim Taylor) argue that the puck had not only been knocked several inches above the goal line (thus making there appear to be white ice between the puck and the goal line) in front of Khabibulin's pad, but that it was also \"kicked\" by Gelinas. The play was never reviewed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game six\nHowever, the ABC broadcast of Game 7 showed a CGI video analysis of the play, which estimated that the puck did not completely cross the line, and that the call on the ice was correct. The CGI company who did the analysis of the video was based out of Calgary. The game entered overtime with the Flames needing only a single goal to win the Stanley Cup. However, thirty-three seconds into the second overtime, St. Louis put in the game-winner for the Lightning to force a winner-take-all seventh game in Tampa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Game summaries, Game seven\nIn a tense game seven, Fedotenko scored goals for Tampa Bay late in the first period and late in the second period for a 2\u20130 lead. After Conroy scored to narrow the deficit to 2\u20131, Calgary bombarded Khabibulin after taking only seven shots in the first two periods. After the Conroy goal, Khabibulin stopped 16 Calgary shots. The series ended as Flames center Marcus Nilson missed a last-second opportunity to force overtime. Tampa Bay won the game, 2\u20131, and the Stanley Cup. Tampa wouldn't win another championship until 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Team rosters\nYears indicated in boldface under the \"Finals appearance\" column signify that the player won the Stanley Cup in the given year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Stanley Cup engraving\nThe 2004 Stanley Cup was presented to Lightning captain Dave Andreychuk by NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman following the Lightning's 2\u20131 win over the Flames in game seven", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Stanley Cup engraving\nThe following Lightning players and staff had their names engraved on the Stanley Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Stanley Cup engraving, Stanley Cup engraving\nAll 52 members were included with their full first and last names on the presentation Stanley Cup, filling the last spot on it. When the engraver Louise St. Jacques went to engrave the replica Stanley Cup, there was less space available. There was more space between each winning team on the replica Stanley Cup than on the presentation Stanley Cup. Louise decided to keep each member's name in the same order on the same line on the replica Stanley Cup, so all names were engraved with their first initial and full last name. This is another way of telling the presentation Stanley Cup from the replica Stanley Cup. (see 1984 Stanley Cup Finals and 1993 Stanley Cup Finals)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Broadcasting\nIn the United States, this was the last Stanley Cup Finals to air on ABC and the ESPN family of networks until the 2022 Finals. ESPN televised the first two games while ABC broadcast the rest of the series. Due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout, which suspended play for the next season, this marked the end of ESPN\u2019s third run and ABC\u2019s second run as the main NHL broadcasters. NBC and OLN would pick up the rights to broadcast the NHL for the 2005\u201306 season. The Comcast-owned OLN would later be renamed Versus for the 2006\u201307 season, then re-branded as NBCSN on January 2, 2012, following Comcast's 2011 acquisition of NBC, effectively moving to the NHL on NBC banner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178835-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup Finals, Broadcasting\nIn Canada, the CBC's broadcast of game seven of the Finals drew 4.862 million viewers, making it the highest-rated NHL game on the CBC since game seven of the 1994 Final, which drew 4.957 million viewers. However, those numbers include both pre-game and post-game coverage. The game itself drew 5.560 million viewers, up from 5.404 in 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs\nThe 2004 Stanley Cup playoffs for the National Hockey League began on April 7, 2004, following the 2003\u201304 regular season. The playoffs ended with the Tampa Bay Lightning winning the Stanley Cup with a seven-game series win over the Calgary Flames on June 7. It was Tampa Bay's first Stanley Cup victory. It was the Flames' third final appearance, as they came this far in 1986 and 1989, winning the latter. These playoffs ended up being the last playoff tournament until 2006 due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout that resulted in the cancellation of the following season. The 16 qualified teams, eight from each conference, played best-of-seven games for Conference Quarterfinals, Semifinals and Finals. The winner of each conference proceeded to the Stanley Cup Finals. The format was identical to the one introduced for the 1999 playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs\nThese playoffs marked the first time the Nashville Predators qualified, being in their sixth season in the NHL. Tampa Bay saw playoff action for the third time. This would be the last time that all eastern Canadian teams would make the playoffs together until 2013. This was the last time until 2019 that both Southern California teams, the Los Angeles Kings and Anaheim Ducks, missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs\nThe Flames tied the 1987 Philadelphia Flyers for the most games played (26) in one playoff year (later matched by the 2014 Los Angeles Kings, 2015 Tampa Bay Lightning, and 2019 St. Louis Blues). The record was subsequently broken by the Dallas Stars during the 2020 Stanley Cup playoffs, albeit due to a change in the playoff format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (8) New York Islanders\nThe Tampa Bay Lightning entered the playoffs as the Eastern Conference regular season and Southeast Division champions with 106 points. New York qualified as the eighth seed earning 91 points during the regular season. This was the first playoff series between these two teams. The Islanders won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 137], "content_span": [138, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (8) New York Islanders\nTampa Bay defeated the Islanders in five games. Games one and two saw goaltenders Nikolai Khabibulin of the Lightning and Rick DiPietro of the Islanders trade 3\u20130 shutouts, with Tampa Bay winning game one and New York winning game two. In games three and four, Khabibulin shut-out the Islanders winning both games by a score of 3\u20130. In game five, Martin St. Louis scored the game-winner four minutes into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 137], "content_span": [138, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (2) Boston Bruins vs. (7) Montreal Canadiens\nThe Boston Bruins entered the playoffs as the Northeast Division champions, earning the second seed in the Eastern Conference with 104 points. Montreal qualified as the seventh seed, earning 93 points during the regular season. This was the thirtieth playoff series between these two teams, with Montreal winning twenty-two of the twenty-nine previous series. They last met in the 2002 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, where Montreal won in six games. Boston won the season series earning seven of ten points during this year's five game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (2) Boston Bruins vs. (7) Montreal Canadiens\nThe Canadiens overcame a 3\u20131 series deficit to eliminate the Bruins in seven games. In game one, the Bruins won a low scoring game 3\u20130, behind a 31-save shutout from goaltender Andrew Raycroft. In game two, Raycroft allowed one goal and Boston won the game 2\u20131. Montreal won game three, 3\u20132. The Canadiens were pushed to the brink of elimination with a 4\u20133 double-overtime loss in game four. Montreal won game five by a score of 5\u20131, scoring three third period goals to break open a close game. Montreal forced a seventh game with a 5\u20132 victory in game six. Montreal completed the comeback with a 2\u20130 victory in game seven, as goaltender Jose Theodore shut-out the Bruins making 32 saves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (3) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (6) New Jersey Devils\nThe Philadelphia Flyers entered the playoffs as the Atlantic Division champions, earning the third seed in the Eastern Conference with 101 points. New Jersey qualified as the sixth seed earning 100 points during the regular season. This was the fourth playoff meeting between these two teams with New Jersey winning two of the three previous series. They last met in the 2000 Eastern Conference Final where New Jersey won in seven games. Philadelphia won the season series earning seven of twelve points during this year's six game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 136], "content_span": [137, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (3) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (6) New Jersey Devils\nPhiladelphia defeated New Jersey in five games. Keith Primeau scored the game-winning goal in game one as the Flyers hung on to win by a score of 3\u20132. In game two Mark Recchi gave the Flyers the lead on a power-play goal in the first period, the teams traded goals in the final two periods as Philadelphia won again 3\u20132. New Jersey scored three times on the power-play in game three as they won the game 4\u20132. Goaltender Robert Esche stopped 35 shots in game four to earn a 3\u20130 shutout victory for the Flyers. Danny Markov scored the series winning goal at 14:37 of the third period in game five as the Flyers defeated the Devils with a 3\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 136], "content_span": [137, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (4) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (5) Ottawa Senators\nThe Toronto Maple Leafs entered the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Eastern Conference with 103 points. Ottawa qualified as the fifth seed earning 102 points during the regular season. This was the fourth playoff series in five years between these two teams, and the fourth series overall, Toronto won all three previous meetings. They last met in the 2002 Eastern Conference Semifinals where Toronto won in seven games. Toronto won this year's six game regular season series earning nine of twelve points during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 134], "content_span": [135, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (4) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (5) Ottawa Senators\nThe Maple Leafs eliminated the Senators in seven games. In game one Ottawa scored two power-play goals 38 seconds apart in the second period to pull out a 4\u20132 victory. The Maple Leafs came through with 2\u20130 win on the strength of a 31-save shutout by Ed Belfour in game two. Toronto won game three 2\u20130 as Ed Belfour shutout Ottawa again. Ottawa finally scored late in the first period of game four and they would add three more goals to win the game 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 134], "content_span": [135, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, (4) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (5) Ottawa Senators\nTie Domi scored the game-winning goal in game five and Ed Belfour posted his third shutout of the series in yet another 2\u20130 Toronto victory. Ottawa won game six 2\u20131 in double-overtime as Mike Fisher scored at 1:47. In game seven Ottawa goaltender Patrick Lalime gave up two questionable goals by Joe Nieuwendyk before being pulled after the first period and replaced by backup Martin Prusek, as Toronto earned a series-clinching 4\u20131 win. This remains to date the Maple Leafs\u2019 last postseason series win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 134], "content_span": [135, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (8) Nashville Predators\nThe Detroit Red Wings entered the playoffs as the Presidents' Trophy winners, the Western Conference regular season and Central Division champions, with 109 points. Nashville qualified as the eighth seed earning 91 points (losing the tiebreaker to St. Louis by having fewer wins) during the regular season. This was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. The Predators qualified for the playoffs for the first time since entering the league in the 1998\u201399 season. Nashville won the season series earning seven of twelve points during this year's six game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 136], "content_span": [137, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (8) Nashville Predators\nDetroit defeated Nashville in six games. In game one the Red Wings scored three times in the third period and posted a 3\u20131 victory. Mathieu Schneider scored the game-winning goal late in third period on the power-play in game two. Nashville struck twice in the first period of game three and Tomas Vokoun made 41 saves in the Predators first playoff victory in franchise history. Detroit heavily out-shot Nashville in game four as Predators' goaltender Tomas Vokoun posted a 41 save shutout in a 3\u20130 Nashville win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 136], "content_span": [137, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (8) Nashville Predators\nIn game five, Curtis Joseph started in goal for the Red Wings, and Henrik Zetterberg scored a goal and an assist in the first six minutes of the game as the Red Wings dominated the Predators, winning 4\u20131. Detroit scored two goals 30 seconds apart in game six and Curtis Joseph posted a shutout as the Red Wings closed out the series with a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 136], "content_span": [137, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (7) St. Louis Blues\nSan Jose entered the playoffs as the Pacific Division champions, earning the second seed in the Western Conference with 104 points. St. Louis qualified as the seventh seed earning 91 points (winning the tiebreaker over Nashville by having more wins) during the regular season. This was the third playoff series between these two teams; they split the two previous meetings. They last met in the 2001 Western Conference Quarterfinals where St. Louis won in six games. San Jose won this year's four game regular season series earning five of eight points during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 130], "content_span": [131, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (7) St. Louis Blues\nSan Jose defeated the Blues in five games. Game one saw a defensive battle with San Jose winning the game 1\u20130, on the strength of a 26-save shutout from Evgeni Nabokov. Chris Osgood was equally strong in net for the Blues, but allowed a goal to Niko Dimitrakos in the first overtime. Nabokov gave up only one goal in game two, a 3\u20131 Sharks victory highlighted by Patrick Marleau's hat-trick. In game three the Blues used home-ice advantage to post a 4\u20131 victory getting a hat-trick from Mike Sillinger. The next night, in game four, saw a back-and-forth game that ultimately went to San Jose 4\u20133. With a chance to knock out the Blues at home in game five the Sharks did just that, winning 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 130], "content_span": [131, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (7) St. Louis Blues\nShortly after the series, St. Louis left winger Mike Danton, was arrested, charged and convicted in a conspiracy to murder his agent, David Frost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 130], "content_span": [131, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (3) Vancouver Canucks vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nThe Vancouver Canucks entered the playoffs as the Northwest Division champions, earning the third seed in the Western Conference with 101 points. Calgary qualified as the sixth seed earning 94 points during the regular season. This was the sixth playoff meeting between these two teams with Calgary winning three of the five previous series, they last met in the 1994 Western Conference Quarterfinals, with the Canucks winning in seven games. The Flames qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 1996. Vancouver won the season series earning seven of twelve points during this year's six game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (3) Vancouver Canucks vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nThe Flames eliminated the Canucks in seven games and won their first playoff series since winning the Stanley Cup in 1989. Vancouver scored four times on the power-play in game one as they took the opening game 5\u20133. Calgary scored two goals 50 seconds apart in the first period of game two in a 2\u20131 victory. In game three Dan Cloutier was injured in the first period and backup Johan Hedberg replaced him, Matt Cooke scored early in the third period as Vancouver won the game 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (3) Vancouver Canucks vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nCalgary goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff recorded a shutout in game four as the Flames won 4\u20130. In game five Alexander Auld became the third goaltender to play for Vancouver in the series, the Canucks lost the game 2\u20131. Vancouver stormed out to a 4\u20130 lead only to see the Flames come back to tie the game in the third period, Brendan Morrison scored 2:28 into the third overtime period in a 5\u20134 Vancouver victory. Jarome Iginla and Matt Cooke each scored twice in regulation in game seven, Martin Gelinas scored 1:25 into overtime as Calgary won the game 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (4) Colorado Avalanche vs. (5) Dallas Stars\nThe Colorado Avalanche entered the playoffs as the fourth seed in the Western Conference with 100 points. Dallas qualified as the fifth seed earning 97 points during the regular season. This was the third playoff meeting between these two teams, with Dallas having won both previous series. They last met in the 2000 Western Conference Final where Dallas won in seven games. Colorado won three of the four games during this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 130], "content_span": [131, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Quarterfinals, Western Conference Quarterfinals, (4) Colorado Avalanche vs. (5) Dallas Stars\nThe Avalanche defeated Dallas in five games. David Aebischer made 37 saves in a 3\u20131 Colorado victory in game one. The Avalanche scored three times on the power-play in game two winning the game by a score of 5\u20132. Dallas came back from a two-goal deficit in game three and won the game 4\u20133 in overtime on a goal by Steve Ott to climb back into the series. Dallas heavily out-shot the Avalanche in game four, but Marek Svatos won the game for Colorado 5:18 into the second overtime. After allowing the first goal in game five Colorado scored five unanswered goals to eliminate the Stars with a 5\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 130], "content_span": [131, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (7) Montreal Canadiens\nThis was the first playoff meeting between these two teams. The teams split this year's four game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (7) Montreal Canadiens\nThe Lightning swept the Canadiens. Lightning goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin recorded his fourth shutout of the post-season in a 4\u20130 game one victory. Vincent Lecavalier scored twice in game two as Tampa Bay won the game by a score of 3\u20131. Montreal was unable to hang on to a late lead in game three as Vincent Lecavalier tied the game in the final minute of regulation and Brad Richards scored 65 seconds into overtime as the Lightning won 4\u20133. Brad Richards scored his second game-winning goal of the series in the second period of game four as the Lightning closed out the Canadiens with a 3\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 131], "content_span": [132, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (3) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (4) Toronto Maple Leafs\nThis was the sixth playoff meeting between these two teams with Philadelphia winning four of the five previous series. They last met in the previous year's Eastern Conference Quarterfinals where Philadelphia won in seven games. Philadelphia won three of the four games in this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 132], "content_span": [133, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (3) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (4) Toronto Maple Leafs\nThe Flyers defeated Toronto in six games. Marcus Ragnarsson broke the tie in the second period of game one as the Flyers eventually won the game 3\u20131. Philadelphia scored twice with the man advantage in game two as the Flyers held on for a 2\u20131 victory. Toronto used three second period goals to earn a 4\u20131 victory in game three. Maple Leafs captain Mats Sundin scored twice in game four as Toronto won 3\u20131. Keith Primeau recorded a hat trick and added an assist in a dominating 7\u20132 Flyers victory in game five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 132], "content_span": [133, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Eastern Conference Semifinals, (3) Philadelphia Flyers vs. (4) Toronto Maple Leafs\nPhiladelphia goaltender Robert Esche made just one save in the game while earning the victory, he was replaced by Sean Burke at the start of the second period due to injury. Toronto overcame a 2\u20130 third period deficit to force overtime in game six, however the comeback came up short as Jeremy Roenick scored the series-winning goal at 7:39 of the first overtime period. Toronto would not make the playoffs again until 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 132], "content_span": [133, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams with Detroit winning the only previous series. They last met in the 1978 Preliminary Round where Detroit won in two games. Detroit won three of the four games during this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 125], "content_span": [126, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nCalgary upset the Red Wings in six games. Miikka Kiprusoff made 28 saves and Marcus Nilson scored the game-winning goal 2:39 into overtime as the Flames took the opening game of the series 2\u20131. The Red Wings bounced back with a 5\u20132 victory in game two led by Steve Yzerman's two goals in the second period. Jiri Fischer tied the game halfway through the second period of game three, however Flames forward Shean Donovan scored just 40 seconds later and put the Flames up for good as Calgary registered a 3\u20132 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 125], "content_span": [126, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nMathieu Dandenault broke the tie in the third period of game four as Detroit bounced back with a 4\u20132 victory. During the second period of game five a shot by Red Wings defenceman Mathieu Schneider deflected off a stick and struck Red Wings captain Steve Yzerman in the left eye. Yzerman was attended to for several minutes and then helped off the ice holding a towel to his face, Yzerman did not return to the series. Calgary goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff shutout the Red Wings with a 31-save performance in a 1\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 125], "content_span": [126, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0025-0002", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (1) Detroit Red Wings vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nIn game six, Miikka Kiprusoff continued his shutout streak against the Red Wings. With just 47 seconds left in the first overtime Flames forward Martin Gelinas scored on Curtis Joseph and Calgary won their second-straight 1\u20130 game. This was the Flames' second-straight overtime victory to clinch a series in this playoff year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 125], "content_span": [126, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (4) Colorado Avalanche\nThis was the third playoff meeting between these two teams with Colorado winning both previous series. They last met in the 2002 Western Conference Semifinals where Colorado won in seven games. Colorado won the season series earning five of eight points during this year's four game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 127], "content_span": [128, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (4) Colorado Avalanche\nSan Jose defeated Colorado in six games as the Sharks advanced to the Conference Finals for the first time in franchise history. Patrick Marleau scored a hat-trick in a 5\u20132 Sharks victory in game one. Colorado goaltender David Aebischer was pulled in the second period after allowing five goals, he was replaced by Tommy Salo. In game two Patrick Marleau scored late in the second period to put the Sharks up for good as they defeated the Avalanche in a 4\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 127], "content_span": [128, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Semifinals, Western Conference Semifinals, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (4) Colorado Avalanche\nSan Jose goaltender Evgeni Nabokov posted a 33 save shutout in game three and Vincent Damphousse scored the only goal in a 1\u20130 San Jose win. Joe Sakic scored the lone goal of the game 5:15 into the first overtime period in game four as Colorado extended the series with a 1\u20130 victory. For the second consecutive game overtime was required in game five and Joe Sakic scored the game-winning goal 1:54 into the first overtime, giving Colorado a 2\u20131 victory. With his second goal in game five, Joe Sakic equalled Maurice Richard for the most career playoff overtime goals with six. San Jose scored three times in just over ten minutes in the second period of game six to eliminate the Avalanche in a 3\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 127], "content_span": [128, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Final, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (3) Philadelphia Flyers\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams with Philadelphia winning the only previous series. They last met in the 1996 Eastern Conference Quarterfinals where Philadelphia won in six games. Tampa Bay made their first appearance in a Conference Final since entering the league in the 1992\u201393 season, while the Flyers last made it to the Conference Finals in 2000, losing in seven games to the New Jersey Devils. Tampa Bay won all four games in this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 123], "content_span": [124, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Final, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (3) Philadelphia Flyers\nTampa Bay won their first conference championship defeating the Flyers in seven games. Lightning goaltender Nikolai Khabibulin made 19 saves in a 3\u20131 Lightning win in game one. The Flyers scored the first six goals in game two as they won easily 6\u20132. Tampa Bay jumped out to an early two-goal lead in game three and eventually won by a score of 4\u20131. Keith Primeau scored the game-winning goal shorthanded in game four as the Flyers claimed a 3\u20132 victory that tied the series. The Lightning scored three times on the power-play in game five as won the game 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 123], "content_span": [124, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Eastern Conference Final, (1) Tampa Bay Lightning vs. (3) Philadelphia Flyers\nThe Flyers tied the game in the dying minutes of game six on a goal by Keith Primeau that forced overtime. Simon Gagne scored at 18:18 of the first overtime period as the Flyers gained a 5\u20134 victory. Fredrik Modin gave the Lightning a two-goal lead in game seven and they hung on to win the game 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 123], "content_span": [124, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Final, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nThis was the second playoff meeting between these two teams with San Jose winning the only previous series. They last met in the 1995 Western Conference Quarterfinals where San Jose won in seven games. San Jose made their first appearance in a Conference Final since entering the league in the 1991\u201392 season, while the Flames last made it to the Conference Finals in 1989, defeating the Chicago Blackhawks in five games. The teams split this year's four game regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 114], "content_span": [115, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Final, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nThe Flames eliminated the Sharks in six games and they became the first Canadian team to qualify for the Stanley Cup Finals in a decade. Calgary goaltender Miikka Kiprusoff made 49 saves and Steve Montador won game one for the Flames with a goal at 18:43 of the first overtime period, giving them a 4\u20133 victory. In game two Calgary scored two first-period goals and never looked back in a 4\u20131 victory. Sharks goaltender Evgeni Nabokov posted a 34 save shutout and Alex Korolyuk scored two goals late in third period in a 3\u20130 win in game three.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 114], "content_span": [115, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Conference Finals, Western Conference Final, (2) San Jose Sharks vs. (6) Calgary Flames\nThe Sharks exploded for four goals in the second period of game four as they evened the series at two games apiece with a 4\u20132 victory. Miikka Kiprusoff shutout the Sharks in game five as the Flames won 3\u20130. Martin Gelinas scored his third consecutive series-winning goal for the Flames in game six giving Calgary a 3\u20131 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 114], "content_span": [115, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Stanley Cup Finals\nThis was the first playoff series between these two teams. Tampa Bay made their first Finals appearance, in their twelfth season, while Calgary made their third Finals appearance. The Flames won their last appearance in the Finals defeating Montreal in six games in 1989. Tampa Bay won the only game of this year's regular season series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Player statistics, Skaters\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Player statistics, Goaltending\nThese are the top five goaltenders based on either goals against average or save percentage with at least four games played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178836-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Stanley Cup playoffs, Player statistics, Goaltending\nGP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SA = Shots Against; GA = Goals Against; GAA = Goals Against Average; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes:seconds); Sv% = Save Percentage; SO = Shutouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178837-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Star World Championships\nThe 2004 Star World Championship were held in Gaeta, Italy between April 23 and May 1, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178837-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Star World Championships, Results\nLegend: DNC \u2013 Did not come to the starting area; DNF \u2013 Did not finish; DNS \u2013 Did not start; DSQ \u2013 Disqualified; OCS \u2013 On the course side of the starting line; RDG \u2013 Redress given;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series\nThe 2004 State of Origin series was the 23rd time that the annual three-game series between the Queensland and New South Wales representative rugby league football teams was contested entirely under 'state of origin' selection rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series\nA pre-series Blues mobile phone scandal, Brad Fittler's comeback, a Golden point outcome in Game I and an extraordinary Billy Slater try showed that State of Origin's ability to create memorable football moments was as strong as ever after 25 years of the concept. The New South Wales' Game III victory saw a match-up in the respective cumulative tallies at 35 wins apiece, continuing a recurring trend where any push toward dominance by one side is soon countered by the other. The Ron McAuliffe Medal for Queensland player of the series was awarded to Steve Price.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game I\nNew South Wales players Anthony Minichiello and Mark Gasnier were dropped following a drunken incident during the Blues' training camp when it was made public that Gasnier had left a lewd message on a female acquaintance's phone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game I\nGame one featured the first ever Golden point decision in State of Origin football in the very first game where the ruling became available. With scores locked at 8-all and three minutes of extra time played, St George Illawarra Dragons player Shaun Timmins, who had returned to top-class and representative football against unlikely odds after two career-threatening knee injuries and operations, stepped up and kicked a 37-metre left-foot field goal to steal victory for New South Wales. Blues halfback Craig Gower had already missed three earlier field goal attempts, was struggling with a knee injury and was closely marked by Queensland at every kick opportunity so it was left to Timmins to create his own moment of Origin folklore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game II\nGame II had plenty of hype surrounding it after Blues coach Phil Gould coaxed Brad Fittler out of representative retirement to spearhead the Blues campaign. First game hero Timmins was missing through injury as was Gower and next choice half-backs Trent Barrett and Brett Kimmorley. This left Sydney Roosters number seven Brett Finch to make his Origin debut alongside his club captain Fittler at five-eighth. Matt Orford was somewhat controversially not selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game II\nSuncorp Stadium proved to be a graveyard for the Blues thanks to one of the greatest Origin tries ever seen. 20-year-old Billy Slater, a former track work jockey who had burst onto the rugby league scene in 2003, stormed onto a Darren Lockyer grubber kick from halfway before chipping over the top of Blues fullback Anthony Minichiello, chasing, regathering and scoring in the same instant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game III\nGould gambled by making six changes to the side which had played in game II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game III\nIn Game III, the Blues recalled Trent Barrett to the origin squad who along with Brad Fittler led the Blues to a big win over the Maroons. The match was also the swansong for Phil Gould, New South Wales' most successful Origin coach who had commenced his coaching association with Fittler 14 years earlier at the beginning of their respective coaching and playing careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178838-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 State of Origin series, Game III\nGould called on six St George Illawarra players for Game III. Debutant centres Mark Gasnier and Matt Cooper dominated on the fringes for the Blues and the class of Fittler and Barrett led them to an emphatic 36-14 victory. Fittler scored the last try in the match in his last ever match for the Blues to the delight of his team-mates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address\nThe 2004 State of the Union Address was given by the 43rd president of the United States, George W. Bush, on Tuesday, January 20, 2004, at 9 p.m. EST, in the chamber of the United States House of Representatives to the 108th United States Congress. It was Bush's third State of the Union Address and his fourth speech to a joint session of the United States Congress. Presiding over this joint session was the House speaker, Dennis Hastert, accompanied by Dick Cheney, the vice president, in his capacity as the president of the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address\nThe speech was given 28 months after the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, War on Terror\nPresident Bush begins by saying that the greatest responsibility of the government is to protect all Americans from terroristic threats. He also highlighted that several years had passed since the terrorist attacks on September the 11th. While several years had passed \"without an attack on American soil\", it did not mean that all of the danger was in the past. After September 11, attacks continued around the world in Bali, Jerusalem, Baghdad, and other major regions of the world. The President also focuses on how enemies of the United States are constantly plotting attacks of some form or another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, War on Terror\nThe Patriot Act was mentioned as a point of emphasis for giving the United States Department of Homeland Security all of the necessary resources to find criminals and locate possible attack scenarios. One of the recurring themes of the speech was that \"America is on the offensive\" and is constantly on the hunt for members of Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. President Bush then proceeded to discuss how American allies helped to convince several countries to eliminate weapons of mass destruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Troops in the Middle East\nPresident Bush talks about the evolution of the Iraqi people since the American intervention and overthrow of Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein. He talked about how the Iraqis have started down the road of complete independence. They slowly accepted responsibility for organizing their own security once the Americans decide to withdraw, whenever that may be. He also talks about how democracy is slowly taking shape in Iraq thanks to Americans always having a desire to do what is considered \"right\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Troops in the Middle East\nAt one point during the speech, the President gave thanks to the troops and families of troops stationed all across the world and assured that they would have every resource necessary to succeed overseas. He also reaffirmed that as long as the Middle East continued to be a place where American resentment was present, America would have a presence there, working to transform the area into one of peace towards the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Economy\nThe primary emphasis of the President's portion of his speech on the economy was geared towards the accomplishments of the American people. He thanks the American people for giving tax relief to help stimulate the economy. He also continued to use the personal pronoun \"you\" when talking about American successes in areas like cutting taxes for small businesses, phasing out the estate tax, and lowering taxes for all citizens who pay income taxes. He ends the economic talk by stating that the economy is always changing, as is the technology, and how new jobs and skills are needed constantly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Education\nPresident Bush's main focus of the talks on education were the effects of the No Child Left Behind Act. He again used the pronoun \"you\" when talking about the recent successes in education. The President also stated that since 2001, a 36 percent increase in funding for schools took place, as well as an elevation in standards and communication between schools and parents. He followed by saying that the days of shuffling kids along without knowing if they understood what was necessary were over as a result of the No Child Left Behind Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Other topics, Taxes\nThe President's discussion of taxes was centered on the fact that the tax reforms were about to expire, and unless Congress were to do something about it, taxes would jump to a higher level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Other topics, Energy\nThe President's discussion of energy was primarily asking Congress to pass new legislature that would modernize electricity and increase conservation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Other topics, Immigration\nThe President proposed a new immigration reform that consisted of giving American citizens priority in being hired for jobs. If no willing Americans could be found for the job, then they would go to foreign workers to help create an even workforce. He also states his opposition for amnesty because it would encourage more people to illegally immigrate to America and break laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Other topics, Healthcare\nPresident Bush talked about the rapid evolution of medical technology and how costs for healthcare with these new technologies was on the rise. He campaigned for Congress to again work together to help keep the costs of health insurance as low as possible. He stated that his primary goal for healthcare is to give all Americans the opportunity to have affordable private healthcare that tailors to their specific needs. He also focuses on the benefits of computerizing medical records and the adverse effects of a government run healthcare system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Other topics, \"Right choices\"\nPresident Bush focused on the youth of the nation and them making \"right choices\" in life. He talked about the negative impact of children gambling away their lives with drugs and how he wanted Congress to send extra funding to schools to use for drug testing to save lives. He also talked about how large a part of American society sports are, but yet there are a multitude of less than positive influences in professional sports. The President also wanted to increase funding to make sexual contraceptives easier to acquire for younger people. He also refers to the Defense of Marriage Act and how it needs to be adhered to help influence children more positively and for the benefit of every American citizen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Topics, Other topics, Religious institutions\nThe President talked about how religious charities and organizations, no matter what creed, do important charity work in communities across the country. He pointed out the fact that the government denied many of these groups of grants for charity work, but he made available large amounts of money for these groups to continue their charitable work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Democratic Party response\nDemocrats opposed President Bush's foreign policies. They believed that America could only go so far on its own and needed to rely on other countries to \"meet common dangers\". They accused the President of being too radical in going to war with Iraq, as well as dropping the cost of war on the American people by taxing them more than necessary. Democrats also supported removing troops from the Middle East, whereas President Bush wanted to leave them there to have a presence in an area seen as dangerous by the American government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178839-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 State of the Union Address, Democratic Party response\nDemocrats also wanted to increase the inspection rate of cargo going in and out of airports and harbors across the country to increase civil liberties, something which President Bush opposed. The tax cuts that the President had made were heavily opposed by Democrats, as well. They also said that the President did not hold up his end of the deal in the No Child Left Behind Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178840-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stella Artois Championships\nThe 2004 Stella Artois Championships was a men's tennis tournament played on grass courts at the Queen's Club in London in the United Kingdom and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 102nd edition of the tournament and was held from 7 June until13 June 2004. First-seeded Andy Roddick won his second consecutive singles title at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178840-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Stella Artois Championships, Finals, Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Mark Knowles / Daniel Nestor 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178841-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stella Artois Championships \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20134, against Knowles and Nestor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178842-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stella Artois Championships \u2013 Singles\nAndy Roddick was the defending champion and won in the final 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20134 against S\u00e9bastien Grosjean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178842-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Stella Artois Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178843-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stevenage Borough Council election\nElections to Stevenage Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election; the seats which were last contested in 2000. The Labour Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178844-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards\nThe 27th Stinkers Bad Movie Awards were released by the Hastings Bad Cinema Society in 2005 to honour the worst films the film industry had to offer in 2004. Alexander received the most nominations with nine. All nominees and winners, with respective percentages of votes for each category, are listed below. Dishonourable mentions are also featured for Worst Picture (37 total).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178845-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stock Car Brasil season\nThe 2004 Stock Car Brasil was the 27th Stock Car Brasil season. It began on March 1 at the Curitiba and ended on November 28 at Interlagos, after twelve rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178845-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Stock Car Brasil season, Teams and drivers\nAll cars used Chevrolet Astra Stock Car chassis. All drivers were Brazilian-registered, except Gabriel Furl\u00e1n, who raced under Argentine racing license.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178846-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This was on the same day as other local elections. Due to demographic changes in the Borough since its formation in 1973, and in common with most other English Councils in 2004, boundary changes were implemented in time for these elections. Due to these changes, it was necessary for the whole Council to be re-elected for the first time since 1973. The Liberal Democrats held overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178847-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stratford-on-Avon District Council election\nThe 2004 Stratford-on-Avon District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Stratford-on-Avon District Council in Warwickshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178847-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Stratford-on-Avon District Council election, Background\n19 of the 53 seats on the council were contested in the election. The Conservatives were defending 11 of the seats and this was seen as giving the Liberal Democrats a chance at taking over control of the council, which had a one-seat Conservative majority before the election. Meanwhile, Labour had their only remaining council seat up for election in Southam ward, leading to the possibility that they could fail to be represented on the council after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178847-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Stratford-on-Avon District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives strengthen their majority on the council up to 7 seats. They gained 4 seats in Harbury, Southam, Stratford Guild and Hathaway and Wellesbourne wards and only suffered 1 loss to the Liberal Democrats in Studley. While the Liberal Democrats lost ground as a result, the defeat in Southam meant Labour was no longer represented on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178847-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Stratford-on-Avon District Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives said they were pleased with the results, that saw them win almost half of the vote, and which they put down to a strong positive campaign. Overall turnout in the election was higher than the national average at 43.5%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178848-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Stroud District Council election\nThe 2004 Stroud Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Stroud District Council in Gloucestershire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400\nThe 2004 Subway 400 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on February 22, 2004, at North Carolina Speedway in Richmond County, North Carolina. The race was the second of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400\nRyan Newman of Penske Racing won the pole position, while Matt Kenseth of Roush Racing won the race. The race was the final Cup race at the track due to poor attendance, as the race date was later given to Phoenix International Raceway; only 50,000 were in attendance at the 60,113 facility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400\nThe other Cup race at the track, the Pop Secret Microwave Popcorn 400, had been replaced by California Speedway after 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying\nRyan Newman, 2003's pole leader with 11, won the pole at Rockingham with a lap speed of 156.475 miles per hour (251.822\u00a0km/h) and a lap time of 23.398 seconds. Dodges were the top four fastest, with Newman, Jamie McMurray (155.379\u00a0mph (250.058\u00a0km/h)), Kasey Kahne (154.814\u00a0mph (249.149\u00a0km/h)) and Rusty Wallace (154.644\u00a0mph (248.875\u00a0km/h)).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying\nChevrolet driver Jeff Gordon qualified fifth with a lap speed of 154.318\u00a0mph (248.351\u00a0km/h); Jeremy Mayfield (154.195\u00a0mph (248.153\u00a0km/h)), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (154.149\u00a0mph (248.079\u00a0km/h)), Jeff Green (154.117\u00a0mph (248.027\u00a0km/h)), the previous year's race winner Dale Jarrett (154.078\u00a0mph (247.965\u00a0km/h)) and Greg Biffle (154.026\u00a0mph (247.881\u00a0km/h)) rounded out the top ten. Morgan Shepherd and Andy Belmont failed to qualify after the two crashed in practice. Ryan McGlynn and Larry Gunselman also withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying\nThe entry list for the race was short, which led to a group of field-fillers entering the race, including Joe Ruttman, starting in his first Cup race since 1995, Kirk Shelmerdine, who made only two Cup Series starts since 1994, Carl Long, who started twice in 2001, and Andy Hillenburg, who failed to qualify for the 2004 Daytona 500. The four drivers were considerably slower than the 37 full-time teams; in comparison to Newman's qualifying speed, Hillenburg, who started 43rd, had a speed of 146.859\u00a0mph (236.347\u00a0km/h), a 9.616\u00a0mph (15.475\u00a0km/h) differential.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying\nHillenburg, who ran just six laps in the two practice sessions prior to the race, expressed interest in running the full race, stating, \"I don't want to look like we're trying to capitalize on anything, but this is our window of opportunity. We're not here to go two laps and try to get a check. We're here to do the best we can.\" After the race, rumors arose whether NASCAR had requested the field-fillers to appear and complete the 43-car field with the reward of money, possibly to satisfy television contracts, NASCAR vice president Jim Hunter denied the allegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n2.Jamie McMurray No.42 Texaco Havoline Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 155.379mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n7.Dale Earnhardt Jr. No.8 Budweiser Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 154.149mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n11.Bobby Labonte No.18 Interstate Batteries Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 154.020mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n14.Sterling Marlin No.40 Coors Light Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 153.942mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n16.Ward Burton No. 0 Netzero HiSpeed Chevrolet Haas CNC Racing 153,690mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n18.Ken Schrader No.49 Schwan's Home Service Dodge BAM Racing 153.413mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n20.Brian Vickers* No.25 GMAC Financial Services Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 153.169mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n24.Tony Stewart No.20 Home Depot Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 152.875mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n32.Kevin Harvick No.29 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 152.220mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n33.Michael Waltrip No.15 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 152.119mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n34.Robby Gordon No.31 Cingular Wireless Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 152.024mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n36.Johnny Sauter* No. 30 America Online Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 151.283mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n37.Derrike Cope No.50 Arnold Development Companies Dodge Derrike Cope 151.283mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n38.Larry Foyt No.14 AJ Foyt Racing Dodge AJ Foyt Racing 151.221mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n39.John Andretti No.1 Snap-On/Nilla Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 150.481mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n40.Joe Ruttman No.09 Phoenix Racing Dodge Phoenix Racing 145.142mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n42.Carl Long No.146 Glenn Underwater Services Dodge Glenn Racing 148.739mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Qualifying, Qualifying results\n43.Andy Hillenburg No.280 Commercial Truck & Trailer Ford Stanton Hover 146.859mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Race\nAfter one lap was completed, Joe Ruttman, who started 40th and did not make any attempts to practice, was ordered to park by NASCAR for not having a pit crew and collected $54,196. NASCAR eventually admonished Phoenix Racing owner James Finch for the incident. Kirk Shelmerdine was lapped after eight minutes and finished 42nd after not reaching the minimum speeds mandated by NASCAR, and was paid $54,895. Carl Long finished 38th after barrel-rolling on the backstretch. Andy Hillenburg managed to finish the race in 34th and 17 laps down, earning $55,425.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Race\nPole-sitter Ryan Newman led the first two laps before getting passed by Jamie McMurray, who led until the first caution flag was waved for Ken Schrader's crash in turns one and two. Jeff Gordon took the lead, leading until lap 53 when Kyle Petty crashed. McMurray and Robby Gordon exchanged the lead during the caution period, while Newman, Jeff Gordon, and Matt Kenseth swapped the lead changes during the 71-lap green flag period, with Schrader and Jimmie Johnson's accident on lap 131 bringing out another caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Race\nOn lap 134, Kenseth claimed the lead and led for 79 consecutive laps until lap 214, when a debris caution came out. Despite Kevin Harvick briefly taking first, Kenseth regained the lead and led for 87 more laps. During those laps, on lap 265, Long collided with Joe Nemechek, flipped down the backstretch, and landed in the turn 3 apron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178849-0024-0002", "contents": "2004 Subway 400, Race\nWith 42 laps left, Robby Gordon crashed, and McMurray eventually passed Kenseth and Kasey Kahne, but NASCAR ruled that Kenseth and Kahne were finishing their pit stops and were leaving pit road, and as the field was frozen, McMurray's pass was voided. Kenseth battled Kahne for the win, and on the final lap, defeated Kahne by .01 seconds, while McMurray finished third. McMurray's team owner Chip Ganassi confronted the NASCAR haulers about Kenseth and Kahne's wave around; Ganassi stated, \"We just got robbed in front of 100,000 people.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500\nThe 2004 Subway 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on October 24, 2004 at Martinsville Speedway in Martinsville, Virginia. Contested over 500 laps, the race was the 32nd of the 36-race 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season, and the sixth race in the 2004 Chase for the Nextel Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500\nPole position was won by Penske-Jasper Racing's Ryan Newman, while Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports won the race. Chip Ganassi Racing's Jamie McMurray and Newman finished second and third, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Background\nMartinsville Speedway, considered the \"Paperclip\" for its paper clip shape, is the shortest track on the Cup circuit at only 0.526 miles (0.847\u00a0km) long. The track's banking is 12 degrees, while the straightaways were flat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Background\nEntering the race, Kurt Busch led the points standings with 5850 points. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. (5826), Jeff Gordon (5776), Elliott Sadler (5693), and Mark Martin (5664) comprised the top five, while Tony Stewart (5646), Matt Kenseth (5635), Jimmie Johnson (5623), Ryan Newman (5579), and Jeremy Mayfield (5501) rounded out the Chase field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Background, Hendrick Motorsports plane crash\nBefore the race, a Beechcraft Super King Air carrying ten people, seven of whom were Hendrick Motorsports personnel, including John Hendrick, Rick Hendrick's brother, and his two daughters Kimberly and Jennifer; Ricky Hendrick, Rick's son and former driver; Jeff Turner, Hendrick Motorsports' general manager; Randy Dorton, Hendrick's Director of Engine Operations; Joe Jackson, an executive for Jeff Gordon's sponsor DuPont; along with Scott Lathram, a pilot for Tony Stewart, and pilots Richard Tracy and Elizabeth Morrison, crashed into nearby Bull Mountain, killing all on board. The crash occurred 27 minutes before the race began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 61], "content_span": [62, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying\n51 cars entered the race, ten of whom had attempted less than 20 races in 2004: Ryan McGlynn (#00), Greg Sacks (#13), Kevin Lepage (#37), Carl Long (#46), Tony Raines (#51), Klaus Graf (#59), Mike Garvey (#75), Mario Gosselin (#80), Brad Teague (#94), and Chad Chaffin (#98). Travis Kvapil (#06) was later added to the list, while Raines was removed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying\nQualifying was held on October 22, and was postponed by 30 minutes due to rain. Ricky Rudd led the Friday practice with a lap speed of 96.293\u00a0mph (154.969\u00a0km/h), faster than the previous track record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying\nIn qualifying, Ryan Newman won the pole with a lap time of 19.513 seconds and a speed of 97.043\u00a0mph (156.176\u00a0km/h), more than 3/10th's faster than the previous record of 95.371\u00a0mph (153.485\u00a0km/h) set by Tony Stewart in 2000. for his 25th career pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying\nNewman's teammate Rusty Wallace qualified second with a lap speed of 96.234\u00a0mph (154.874\u00a0km/h), followed by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. (96.205\u00a0mph (154.827\u00a0km/h)), Ward Burton (96.107\u00a0mph (154.669\u00a0km/h)), Kvapil (96.102\u00a0mph (154.661\u00a0km/h)), Scott Riggs (96.063\u00a0mph (154.598\u00a0km/h)), Kurt Busch (96.039\u00a0mph (154.560\u00a0km/h)), Jamie McMurray (96.039\u00a0mph (154.560\u00a0km/h)), Rudd (95.772\u00a0mph (154.130\u00a0km/h)), and Jeff Green (95.743\u00a0mph (154.083\u00a0km/h)) rounded out the top ten. The top 17 drivers broke the previous record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying\nJimmy Spencer (92.124\u00a0mph (148.259\u00a0km/h)), Todd Bodine (92.769\u00a0mph (149.297\u00a0km/h)), Kirk Shelmerdine (87.968\u00a0mph (141.571\u00a0km/h)), Gosselin (92.710\u00a0mph (149.202\u00a0km/h)), and Lepage (92.556\u00a0mph (148.954\u00a0km/h)) were forced to use provisionals. Graf (93.687\u00a0mph (150.775\u00a0km/h)), Garvey (93.478\u00a0mph (150.438\u00a0km/h)), Morgan Shepherd (92.159\u00a0mph (148.316\u00a0km/h)), McGlynn (91.624\u00a0mph (147.455\u00a0km/h)), Sacks (91.416\u00a0mph (147.120\u00a0km/h)), and Teague (90.503\u00a0mph (145.650\u00a0km/h)) failed to qualify. Long withdrew from qualifying and did not set a time. Lepage and Shelmerdine were forced to move to the rear of the field for engine changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 27], "content_span": [28, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n2. Rusty Wallace #2 Miller Lite Dodge Penske Racing 96.234mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n3. Dale Earnhardt Jr. #8 Budweiser Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 96.205mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n4. Ward Burton # 0 Netzero HiSpeed Chevrolet Haas CNC Racing 96.107mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n5. Travis Kvapil #06 Mobil 1/Jasper Engines Dodge Penske Racing 96.102mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n6. Scott Riggs * #10 Valvoline Chevrolet MBV Motorsports 96.063mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n8. Jamie McMurray #42 Texaco Havoline Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 96.039mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n9. Ricky Rudd #21 Motorcraft/US Air Force Ford Wood Brothers Racing 95.772mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n10. Jeff Green #43 Cheerios/Betty Crocker Dodge Petty Enterprises 95.743mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n11. Jeremy Mayfield #19 Dodge Dealers/UAW Dodge Evernham Motorsports 95.738mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n12. Jeff Burton # 30 America Online Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 95.670mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n13. Tony Stewart #20 Home Depot Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing95.665mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n14. Brendan Gaughan * #77 Kodak/Jasper Engines Dodge Penske/Jasper Racing 95.656mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n16. Sterling Marlin #40 Coors Light Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 95.622mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n17. Bobby Labonte #18 Interstate Batteries Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 95.549mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n19. Kevin Harvick #29 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 95.218mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n20. Ken Schrader #49 Schwan's Home Service Dodge BAM Racing 95.127mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n21. Greg Biffle #16 National Guard/Subway Ford Roush Racing 95.098mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n22. Carl Edwards #99 Roush Racing Ford Roush Racing 94.912mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n23. Mark Martin # 6 Viagra Ford Roush Racing 94.799mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n24. Scott Wimmer * #22 Caterpillar Dodge Bill Davis Racing 94.784mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n26. Kyle Petty #45 Georgia Pacific/Brawny Dodge Petty Enterprises 94.756mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n28. Casey Mears #41 Target/Breast Cancer Research Foundation Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 94.732mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n29. Joe Nemechek #01 US Army Chevrolet MB2 Motorsports 94.689mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n30. Michael Waltrip #15 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 94.618mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n31. Hermie Sadler #02 SCORE Motorsports Chevrolet Angela Sadler 94.604mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n32. Dale Jarrett #88 UPS Ford Robert Yates Racing 94.534mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n33. Elliott Sadler #38 M&M's Ford Robert Yates Racing 94.444mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n34. Brian Vickers * #25 GMAC Financial Services Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 94.289mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n35. Bobby Hamilton Jr #32 Tide Chevrolet PPI Motorsports 94.040mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n36. Robby Gordon #31 Cingular Wireless Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 93.975mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n37. Chad Chaffin #98 Mach One Inc Ford William Edwards 93.956mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n38. Kasey Kahne *#9 Dodge Dealers/UAW Dodge Evernham Motorsports 93.761mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n39. Jimmy Spencer #4 Lucas Oil Products Chevrolet Morgan-McClure Racing 92.124mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n40. Todd Bodine #50 Arnold Development Companies Dodge Arnold Racing 92.769mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n41. Kirk Shelmerdine #72 Vote for Bush Ford Kirk Shelmerdine 87.968mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n42. Morgan Shepherd #89 Racing With Jesus/Red Line Oil Dodge Cindy Shepherd 92.159mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n43. Kevin Lepage #37 Carter's Royal Dispos-all Dodge John Carter 92.556mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n44. Klaus Graf #59 BAM Racing Dodge BAM Racing 93.687mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n46. Mario Gosselin # Hover Motorsports Ford Hover Motorsports 92.710mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n47. Ryan McGlynn #00 Buyers Choice Auto Warranties Chevrolet Raynard McGlynn 91.624mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n48. Greg Sacks #13 ARC Dehooker/Vita Coco Dodge James Wilsberg 91.416mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n49. Brad Teague #94 WW Motorsports Ford David Watson 90.503mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Qualifying, Full qualifying results\n50. Carl Long #46 RacingMetal.com Dodge Glenn Motorsport no time", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\nRyan Newman led the first nine laps of the race, with Rusty Wallace claiming the lead on lap 10, leading for 33 laps. Terry Labonte then led the next eight laps, with Kasey Kahne leading for 17 laps before Labonte took the lead back. Tony Stewart took the lead on lap 90, losing it on lap 108 to Kurt Busch, who led for only the lap before Sterling Marlin took over, leading until Busch reclaimed it on lap 131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0051-0001", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\nBusch would lead for 54 laps, with Matt Kenseth briefly leading for a lap before Busch led the longest streak with 64 laps. Kevin Harvick, Wallace, and Kenseth would split the lead for the next 45 laps, Harvick leading 43 of them, followed by leading another 61 after taking the lead back from Kenseth on lap 295. After Busch led lap 356, Jamie McMurray took the lead, leading for 20 laps until Jeff Gordon led for six laps from lap 377 to 382 before McMurray reclaimed it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0051-0002", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\nJimmie Johnson then led his first laps of the race on lap 405, relinquishing it on lap 410. McMurray (1) and Marlin (29) led the next 30 laps until Johnson took the lead on lap 440, leading for the remainder of the race. McMurray, Newman, Marlin, and Busch finished in the top five, while the top ten consisted of Jeremy Mayfield, Jeff Green, Harvick, Jeff Gordon, and Rusty Wallace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\n17 cautions occurred during the race. The first was on lap 4, when Joe Nemechek and Todd Bodine crashed in turn 2. On lap 14, Brendan Gaughan, Marlin, and Mayfield were involved in an accident in turn 4, with Jimmy Spencer becoming the beneficiary and gain back a lap. On lap 21, Rudd spun out in turn 2, allowing Shelmerdine to gain back a spot. On lap 66, Robby Gordon crashed in turn 4, allowing Mario Gosselin to be the beneficiary. On lap 77, Rudd and Robby Gordon crashed in turn 4, Shelmerdine gaining another lap back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0052-0001", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\nOn lap 107, Dale Jarrett, Casey Mears, Bobby Hamilton, Jr., and Kirk Shelmerdine crashed in turn 3, allowing Robby Gordon to regain a lap. On lap 184, Kyle Petty spun in turn 2, permitting Nemechek to gain back a lap. On lap 292, Carl Edwards spun in turn 2, with Jeff Gordon being the beneficiary. The first caution for debris was flown on lap 322, with Robby Gordon becoming the beneficiary. Bobby Labonte, Jeff Green, and Ken Schrader crashed in turn 4 on lap 355, Rudd winning a lap back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0052-0002", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\nWard Burton spun in turn 2 on lap 372, though there was no beneficiary. On lap 410, Jarrett spun out in turn 3, with Petty gaining a lap back. The second debris caution flew on lap 418, Travis Kvapil being the beneficiary. On lap 451, Elliott Sadler spun out in turn 4, Burton gaining back a lap. Dale Earnhardt, Jr. and Petty crashed in turn 2 on lap 468, with Sadler getting a lap back. However, on lap 477, Sadler would be involved in a crash in turn 2 with Nemechek, allowing Scott Riggs to gain back a lap. The final caution occurred on lap 490, with Edwards and Robby Gordon crashing in turn 3, with Kvapil being the beneficiary again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178850-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Subway 500, Race\nDue to the Hendrick Motorsports plane crash, victory lane celebrations were not held, and the grandfather clock often given to the race winner was delivered after the season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 21], "content_span": [22, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178851-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sudanese coup d'\u00e9tat attempt\nThe 2004 Sudanese coup attempt was a coup d'\u00e9tat attempt in Sudan in March 2004 against the president Omar al-Bashir and his cabinet, inspired by opposition leaders and Hassan Al-Turabi. It ended with the arrests of army officers over the next few days. A second attempted coup was staged in September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178852-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sugar Bowl\nThe 2004 Nokia Sugar Bowl, the BCS National Championship Game for the 2003 college football season, was played on January 4, 2004 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana. The teams were the Oklahoma Sooners and the LSU Tigers. The Tigers won the BCS National Championship, their second national championship in school history, defeating the Sooners by a score of 21\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178852-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sugar Bowl, Set-up\nBCS #2 ranked LSU came into the national championship title game 12\u20131, with their one loss at home to #17 Florida 19\u20137. Top-ranked Oklahoma (but #3 in the AP poll) was 12\u20131, with the lone defeat coming at a neutral site in the Big 12 Championship Game against Kansas State 35\u20137. There was substantial media and fan controversy as to which teams deserved to play in the National Title game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178852-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Sugar Bowl, Set-up\nUSC was ranked #3 in the BCS standings but #1 by both of the human polls, the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll and the AP poll, which made up a portion of the BCS Standings. Southern Cal owned a record of 11\u20131, with its one loss coming in triple overtime at unranked Cal 34\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178852-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sugar Bowl, Set-up\nOnce the game commenced, LSU's #1 ranked defense held the country's most prolific offense, which had averaged 45.2 points and 461 yards per game, to 154 total yards (32 in the first half) and just one touchdown until midway though the fourth quarter. The Sooners' Heisman Trophy-winning QB Jason White completed only 13 of his 37 passing attempts for just 102 yards. He was also sacked seven times and intercepted twice. LSU's offense was largely supplied by freshman running back and Sugar Bowl MVP Justin Vincent, who rushed for 117 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178852-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sugar Bowl, Set-up\nAs a result, LSU won their second national championship and first since 1958. The majority of the coaches voted LSU National Champions as contractually required by the BCS. There were three dissenting coaches (Ron Turner of Illinois, Mike Bellotti of Oregon and Lou Holtz of South Carolina) who voted USC #1. BCS #3 USC won the Rose Bowl against #4 ranked Michigan and was voted the National Champion in the AP Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games\nThe 2004 Sukma Games, officially known as the 10th Sukma Games was a Malaysian multi-sport event held in Negeri Sembilan from 29 May to 6 June 2004. Sarawakian swimmer Daniel Bego and Perakian swimmer Cindy Ong were announced as Best Sportsman and Best Sportswoman of the event respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Development and preparation\nThe 10th Sukma Games Organising Committee was formed to oversee the staging of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Development and preparation, Venues\nThe 2004 Sukma Games used a mix of new and existing venues. Most venues were existing public-sporting facilities, while others were newly constructed venues. Some retrofitting work were done in venues which are more than a decade old. They will be revert to public use after the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Development and preparation, Venues\nAt the centrepiece of the activities was the upgraded 45,000-seat Tuanku Abdul Rahman Stadium which hosts most of the events. A games village was not built, instead athletes and officials were housed in Universities, apartments and hotels throughout Negeri Sembilan. Besides being physically near to the sport venues, it was hoped that it will add vibe to the city and reduce post-games costs in converting a dedicated games village to other uses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Development and preparation, Venues\nThe 10th Sukma Games had 31 venues for the games. 22 in Seremban, 4 in Port Dickson, 3 in Kuala Pilah and 2 in Rembau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Marketing, Logo\nThe Logo of the 2004 Sukma Games is a geometrically shaped image. 3 geometrical objects resembles the 3 athletes standing together to hold the torch up represents the Unity of Malaysia through sports concurrent to the Sukma Games objective, which is to improve unity and integration of nationality among the various communities in Malaysia . The three athletes also represent the Champion, Runner-up and Second runner-up position, which is the goal of every athlete. The Torch signifies the strength and competitive spirit of the athlete to achieve victory in every event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Marketing, Logo\nThe four colours used in the games logo are Red which represents the Strength and Spirit to achieve victory, Yellow which represents the Sovereign Rights and Harmony in Negeri Sembilan, Blue which represents the Unity and National Integration and Black which represents the Traditional rule of Negeri Sembilan State under the \"adat perpatih\" norm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Marketing, Mascot\nThe Mascot of the 2004 Sukma Games is a nameless deer. It was a 'royalty hunt' in the Glory days of the Malay Sultanate of Malacca and now a symbol of Negeri Sembilan and one of the prevalent species in Malaysia. The mascot's adoption is meant to promote the state's eco-tourism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, The games, Medal table\nA total of 1202 medals comprising 370 Gold medals, 368 Silver medals and 464 Bronze medals were awarded to athletes. The host Negeri Sembilan's performance was their best ever yet and was placed tenth overall among participating states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178853-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Sukma Games, Broadcasting\nRadio Televisyen Malaysia was responsible for live streaming of several events, opening and closing ceremony of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178854-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup\nThe 2004 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup was the 13th edition of field hockey tournament the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178854-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 120 goals scored in 24 matches, for an average of 5 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178855-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup\nThe 2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup was the 32nd edition of the Sultan Qaboos Cup (Arabic: \u0643\u0623\u0633 \u0627\u0644\u0633\u0644\u0637\u0627\u0646 \u0642\u0627\u0628\u0648\u0633\u200e), the premier knockout tournament for football teams in Oman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178855-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup\nThe competition began on 15 September 2004 with the Round of 32 and concluded on 23 November 2004. Ruwi Club were the defending champions, having won their first title in 2003. On Tuesday 23 November 2004, Dhofar S.C.S.C. were crowned the champions of the 2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup when they defeated Muscat Club 1-0, hence winning the title for the sixth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178855-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Teams, Round of 32\n32 teams played a knockout tie. 16 ties were played over one leg. The first match played was between Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. and Yanqul SC on 15 September 2004. 16 teams advanced to the Round of 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178855-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Round of 16\n16 teams played a knockout tie. 8 ties were played over one leg. The first match was played between Al-Seeb Club and Al-Khaboora SC on 30 September 2004. 8 teams advanced to the Quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178855-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Quarterfinals\n8 teams played a knockout tie. 4 ties were played over two legs. The first match was played between Sur SC and Al-Suwaiq Club on 17 October 2004. Sur SC, Dhofar S.C.S.C., Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. and Muscat Club qualified for the Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178855-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan Qaboos Cup, Semifinals\n4 teams played a knockout tie. 2 ties were played over two legs. The first match was played between Muscat Club and Sur SC on 1 November 2004. Dhofar S.C.S.C. and Muscat Club qualified for the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178856-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan of Selangor Cup\nThe 2004 Sultan of Selangor Cup was played on 16 May 2004, at Singapore National Stadium in Kallang, Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178856-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sultan of Selangor Cup, Veterans\nA match between veterans of two teams are also held in the same day before the real match starts as a curtain raiser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics\nThe 2004 Summer Olympics (Greek: \u0398\u03b5\u03c1\u03b9\u03bd\u03bf\u03af \u039f\u03bb\u03c5\u03bc\u03c0\u03b9\u03b1\u03ba\u03bf\u03af \u0391\u03b3\u03ce\u03bd\u03b5\u03c2 2004, Therino\u00ed Olympiako\u00ed Ag\u00f3nes 2004), officially the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad (Greek: \u0391\u03b3\u03ce\u03bd\u03b5\u03c2 \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 28\u03b7\u03c2 \u039f\u03bb\u03c5\u03bc\u03c0\u03b9\u03ac\u03b4\u03b1\u03c2, Ag\u00f3nes tis 28is Olympi\u00e1das) and also known as Athens 2004 (Greek: \u0391\u03b8\u03ae\u03bd\u03b1 2004), were an international multi-sport event held from 13 to 29\u00a0August 2004 in Athens, Greece. The Games saw 10,625 athletes compete, some 600 more than expected, accompanied by 5,501 team officials from 201 countries, with 301 medal events in 28 different sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics\nThe 2004 Games marked the first time since the 1996 Summer Olympics that all countries with a National Olympic Committee were in attendance, and also marked the first time Athens hosted the Games since their first modern incarnation in 1896. Athens became one of only four cities at the time to have hosted the Summer Olympic Games on two occasions (together with Paris, London and Los Angeles). A new medal obverse was introduced at these Games, replacing the design by Giuseppe Cassioli that had been used since 1928. The new design features the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens rectifying the long-running mistake of using a depiction of the Roman Colosseum rather than a Greek venue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics\nThe 2004 Olympic Games were hailed as \"unforgettable dream games\" by then-IOC President Jacques Rogge, and left Athens with a significantly improved infrastructure, including a new airport, ring road and subway system. However, there has been debate regarding the cost of the Games and their possible contribution to the 2010\u201318 Greek government-debt crisis, although there is little or no evidence supporting such a correlation. The 2004 Games were generally deemed to be a success, with the rising standard of competition amongst nations across the world. The final medal tally was led by the United States, followed by China and Russia with host nation Greece at 15th place. Several world and Olympic records were also broken during these Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Host city selection\nAthens was chosen as the host city during the 106th IOC Session held in Lausanne on 5\u00a0September 1997. Athens had lost its bid to organize the 1996 Summer Olympics to Atlanta nearly seven years before, during the 96th IOC Session in Tokyo on 18\u00a0September 1990. Under the direction of Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, the city pursued another bid, this time for the right to host the Summer Olympics in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Host city selection\nThe success of Athens in securing the 2004 Games was based largely on the bid's appeal to Olympic history and the emphasis that it placed on the pivotal role that Greece and Athens could play in promoting Olympism and the Olympic Movement. The 2004 bid was lauded for its humility and earnestness, its focused message, and its detailed bid concept. It addressed concerns and criticisms raised in the unsuccessful 1996 bid \u2013 primarily the city's infrastructural readiness, its air pollution, its budget, and politicization of Games preparations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Host city selection\nAthens' successful organization of the 1997 World Championships in Athletics the month before the Olympic host city election was crucial in allaying lingering fears and concerns among the sporting community and some IOC members about its ability to host international sporting events. Another factor that contributed to the Greek capital's selection was a growing sentiment among some IOC members to restore the values of the Olympics to the Games, a component which they felt was lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Host city selection\nAfter leading all voting rounds, Athens easily defeated Rome in the fifth and final vote. Cape Town, Stockholm, and Buenos Aires, the three other cities that made the IOC shortlist, were eliminated in prior rounds of voting. Six other cities submitted applications, but their bids were dropped by the IOC in 1996. These cities were Istanbul, Lille, Rio de Janeiro, San Juan, Seville, and Saint Petersburg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nThe 2004 Summer Olympic Games cost the Government of Greece \u20ac8.954 billion to stage. According to the cost-benefit evaluation of the impact of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games presented to the Greek Parliament in January 2013 by the Minister of Finance Mr. Giannis Stournaras, the overall net economic benefit for Greece was positive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nThe Athens 2004 Organizing Committee (ATHOC), responsible for the preparation and organisation of the Games, concluded its operations as a company in 2005 with a surplus of \u20ac130.6 million. ATHOC contributed \u20ac123.6 million of the surplus to the Greek State to cover other related expenditures of the Greek State in organizing the Games. As a result, ATHOC reported in its official published accounts a net profit of \u20ac7 million. The State's contribution to the total ATHOC budget was 8% of its expenditure against an originally anticipated 14%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nThe overall revenue of ATHOC, including income from tickets, sponsors, broadcasting rights, merchandise sales etc., totalled \u20ac2,098.4 million. The largest percentage of that income (38%) came from broadcasting rights. The overall expenditure of ATHOC was \u20ac1,967.8 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nOften analysts refer to the \"Cost of the Olympic Games\" by taking into account not only the Organizing Committee's budget (i.e. the organizational cost) directly related to the Olympic Games, but also the cost incurred by the hosting country during preparation, i.e. the large projects required for the upgrade of the country's infrastructure, including sports infrastructure, roads, airports, hospitals, power grid etc. This cost, however, is not directly attributable to the actual organisation of the Games. Such infrastructure projects are considered by all fiscal standards as fixed asset investments that stay with the hosting country for decades after the Games. Also, in many cases these infrastructure upgrades would have taken place regardless of hosting the Olympic Games, although the latter may have acted as a \"catalyst\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 892]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nIt was in this sense that the Greek Ministry of Finance reported in 2013 that the expenses of the Greek state for the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, including both infrastructure and organizational costs, reached the amount of \u20ac8.5 billion. The same report further explains that \u20ac2 billion of this amount was covered by the revenue of the ATHOC (from tickets, sponsors, broadcasting rights, merchandise sales etc.) and that another \u20ac2 billion was directly invested in upgrading hospitals and archaeological sites. Therefore, the net infrastructure costs related to the preparation of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games was \u20ac4.5 billion, substantially lower than the reported estimates, and mainly included long-standing fixed asset investments in numerous municipal and transport infrastructures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nOn the revenue side, the same report estimates that incremental tax revenues of approximately \u20ac3.5 billion arose from the increased activities caused by the Athens 2004 Olympic Games during the period 2000 to 2004. These tax revenues were paid directly to the Greek state specifically in the form of incremental social security contributions, income taxes and VAT tax paid by all the companies, professionals, and service providers that were directly involved with the Olympic Games. Moreover, it is reported that the Athens 2004 Olympic Games have had a great economic growth impact on the tourism sector, one of the pillars of the Greek economy, as well as in many other sectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nThe final verdict on the cost of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, in the words of the Greek Minister of Finance, is that \"as a result from the cost-benefit analysis, we reach the conclusion that there has been a net economic benefit from the Olympic Games\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nThe Oxford Olympics Study 2016 estimates the outturn cost of Athens 2004 at US$2.9 billion in 2015-dollars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nThis figure includes only sports-related costs, that is, (i) operational costs incurred by the organizing committee for the purpose of staging the Games, of which the largest components are technology, transportation, workforce, and administration costs, while other operational costs include security, catering, ceremonies, and medical services, and (ii) direct capital costs incurred by the host city and country or private investors to build the competition venues, the Olympic village, international broadcast center, and media and press center, which are required to host the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0011-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nIndirect capital costs are not included here, such as for road, rail, or airport infrastructure, or for hotel upgrades or other business investment incurred in preparation for the Games but not directly related to staging the Games. Athens 2004 cost of US$2.9 billion compares with costs of US$4.6 billion for Rio 2016, US$40\u201344 billion for Beijing 2008 and US$51 billion for Sochi 2014, the most expensive Olympics in history. Average sports-related cost for the Summer Games since 1960 is US$5.2 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nCost per sporting event for Athens 2004 was US$9.8 million. This compares with US$14.9 million for Rio 2016, US$49.5 million for London 2012, and US$22.5 million for Beijing 2008. Average cost per event for the Summer Games since 1960 is US$19.9 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nCost per athlete for Athens 2004 was US$0.3 million. This compares with US$0.4 million for Rio 2016, US$1.4 million for London 2012, and US$0.6 million for Beijing 2008. Average cost per athlete for the Summer Games since 1960 is US$0.6 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Costs\nCost overrun for Athens 2004 was 49%, measured in real terms from the bid to host the Games. This compares with 51% for Rio 2016 and 76% for London 2012. Average cost overrun for the Summer Games since 1960 is 176%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 56], "content_span": [57, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nBy late March 2004, some Olympic projects were still behind schedule, and Greek authorities announced that a roof it had initially proposed as an optional, non-vital addition to the Aquatics Center would no longer be built. The main Olympic Stadium, the designated facility for the opening and closing ceremonies, was completed only two months before the Games opened. This stadium was completed with a retractable glass roof designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. The same architect also designed the Velodrome and other facilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nInfrastructure, such as the tram line linking venues in southern Athens with the city centre, and numerous venues were considerably behind schedule just two months before the start of the Games. The subsequent pace of preparation, however, made the rush to finish the Athens venues one of the tightest in Olympics history. The Greeks, unperturbed, maintained that they would make it all along. By July/August 2004, all venues were delivered: in August, the Olympic Stadium was officially completed and opened, joined or preceded by the official completion and openings of other venues within the Athens Olympic Sports Complex (OAKA), and the sports complexes in Faliro and Helliniko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nLate July and early August witnessed the Athens Tram become operational, and this system provided additional connections to those already existing between Athens city centre and its waterfront communities along the Saronic Gulf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nThese communities included the port city of Piraeus, Agios Kosmas (site of the sailing venue), Helliniko (the site of the old international airport which now contained the fencing venue, the canoe/kayak slalom course, the 15,000-seat Helliniko Olympic Basketball Arena, and the softball and baseball stadia), and the Faliro Coastal Zone Olympic Complex (site of the taekwondo, handball, indoor volleyball, and beach volleyball venues, as well as the newly reconstructed Karaiskaki Stadium for football).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0017-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nThe upgrades to the Athens Ring Road were also delivered just in time, as were the expressway upgrades connecting central Athens with peripheral areas such as Markopoulo (site of the shooting and equestrian venues), the newly constructed Eleftherios Venizelos International Airport, Schinias (site of the rowing venue), Maroussi (site of the OAKA), Parnitha (site of the Olympic Village), Galatsi (site of the rhythmic gymnastics and table tennis venue), and Vouliagmeni (site of the triathlon venue). The upgrades to the Athens Metro were also completed, and the new lines became operational by mid-summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nEMI released Unity, the official pop album of the Athens Olympics, in the leadup to the Olympics. It features contributions from Sting, Lenny Kravitz, Moby, Destiny's Child, and Avril Lavigne. EMI has pledged to donate US$180,000 from the album to UNICEF's HIV/AIDS program in Sub-Saharan Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nAt least 14 people died during the work on the facilities. Most of these people were not from Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Development and preparation, Construction\nBefore the Games, Greek hotel staff staged a series of one-day strikes over wage disputes. They had been asking for a significant raise for the period covering the event being staged. Paramedics and ambulance drivers also protested. They claimed to have the right to the same Olympic bonuses promised to their security force counterparts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Torch relay\nThe lighting ceremony of the Olympic flame took place on 25 March 2004 in Ancient Olympia. For the first time ever, the flame travelled around the world in a relay to various Olympic cities (past and future) and other large cities, before returning to Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Mascots\nMascots have been a tradition at the Olympic Games since the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. The 2004 Olympics had two official mascots: Athena and Phevos (Greek pronunciation: Athina and Fivos). The sister and brother were named after Athena, the goddess of wisdom, strategy and war, and Phoebus, the god of light and music, respectively. They were inspired by the ancient daidala, which were toy dolls that also had religious connotations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Online coverage\nFor the first time, major broadcasters were allowed to serve video coverage of the Olympics over the Internet, provided that they restricted this service geographically, to protect broadcasting contracts in other areas. The International Olympic Committee forbade Olympic athletes, as well as coaches, support personnel and other officials, from setting up specialized weblogs and/or other websites for covering their personal perspective of the Games. They were not allowed to post audio, video, or photos that they had taken. An exception was made if an athlete already has a personal website that was not set up specifically for the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Online coverage\nNBC launched its own Olympic website, NBCOlympics.com. Focusing on the television coverage of the Games, it did provide video clips, medal standings, live results. Its main purpose, however, was to provide a schedule of what sports were on the many stations of NBC Universal. The Games were shown on television 24 hours a day, on one network or another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Technology\nAs with any enterprise, the Organizing Committee and everyone involved with it relied heavily on technology in order to deliver a successful event. ATHOC maintained two separate data networks, one for the preparation of the Games (known as the Administrative network) and one for the Games themselves (Games Network). The technical infrastructure involved more than 11,000 computers, over 600 servers, 2,000 printers, 23,000 fixed-line telephone devices, 9,000 mobile phones, 12,000 TETRA devices, 16,000 TV and video devices and 17 Video Walls interconnected by more than 6,000\u00a0kilometers of cabling (both optical fiber and twisted pair).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Technology\nThis infrastructure was created and maintained to serve directly more than 150,000 ATHOC Staff, Volunteers, Olympic family members (IOC, NOCs, Federations), Partners & Sponsors and Media. It also kept the information flowing for all spectators, TV viewers, Website visitors and news readers around the world, prior and during the Games. The Media Center was located inside the Zappeion which is a Greek national exhibition center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Technology\nBetween June and August 2004, the technology staff worked in the Technology Operations Center (TOC) from where it could centrally monitor and manage all the devices and flow of information, as well as handle any problems that occurred during the Games. The TOC was organized in teams (e.g. Systems, Telecommunications, Information Security, Data Network, Staffing, etc.) under a TOC Director and corresponding team leaders (Shift Managers). The TOC operated on a 24x7 basis with personnel organized into 12-hour shifts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nThe widely praised Opening Ceremony Directed by avant garde choreographer Dimitris Papaioannou and produced by Jack Morton Worldwide led by Project Director David Zolkwer was held on 13 August 2004. It began with a twenty eight (the number of the Olympiads up to then) second countdown paced by the sounds of an amplified heartbeat. As the countdown was completed, fireworks rumbled and illuminated the skies overhead. After a drum corps and bouzouki players joined in an opening march, the video screen showed images of flight, crossing southwest from Athens over the Greek countryside to ancient Olympia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nThen, a single drummer in the ancient stadium joined in a drum duet with a single drummer in the main stadium in Athens, joining the original ancient Olympic Games with the modern ones in symbolism. At the end of the drum duet, a single flaming arrow was launched from the video screen (symbolically from ancient Olympia) and into the reflecting pool, which resulted in fire erupting in the middle of the stadium creating a burning image of the Olympic rings rising from the pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0027-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nThe Opening Ceremony was a pageant of traditional Greek culture and history hearkening back to its mythological beginnings. The program began as a young Greek boy sailed into the stadium on a 'paper-ship' waving the host nation's flag to aethereal music by Hadjidakis and then a centaur appeared, followed by a gigantic head of a cycladic figurine which eventually broke into many pieces symbolising the Greek islands. Underneath the cycladic head was a Hellenistic representation of the human body, reflecting the concept and belief in perfection reflected in Greek art.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0027-0003", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nA man was seen balancing on a hovering cube symbolising man's eternal 'split' between passion and reason followed by a couple of young lovers playfully chasing each other while the god Eros was hovering above them. There followed a very colourful float parade chronicling Greek history from the ancient Minoan civilization to modern times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nAlthough NBC in the United States presented the entire opening ceremony from start to finish, a topless Minoan priestess was shown only briefly, the breasts having been pixelated digitally in order to avoid controversy (as the \"Nipplegate\" incident was still fresh in viewer's minds at the time) and potential fines by the Federal Communications Commission. Also, lower frontal nudity of men dressed as ancient Greek statues was shown in such a way that the area below the waist was cut off by the bottom of the screen. Overall, NBC's coverage of the Olympics has been praised, and the company was awarded with 6 Emmy Awards for its coverage of the Games and technical production.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nFollowing the artistic performances, a parade of nations entered the stadium with over 10,500 athletes walking under the banners of 201 nations. The nations were arranged according to Greek alphabet making Finland, Fiji, Chile, and Hong Kong the last four to enter the stadium before the Greek delegation. On this occasion, in observance of the tradition that the delegation of Greece opens the parade and the host nation closes it, the Greek flag bearer opened the parade and all the Greek delegation closed it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nBased on audience reaction, the emotional high point of the parade was the entrance of the delegation from Afghanistan which had been absent from the Olympics and had female competitors for the first time. The Iraqi delegation also stirred emotions. Also recognized was the symbolic unified march of athletes from North Korea and South Korea under the Korean Unification Flag. The country of Kiribati made its debut appearance at these Games and East Timor made a debut under its own flag. After the Parade of Nations, during which the Dutch DJ Ti\u00ebsto provided the music, the Icelandic singer Bj\u00f6rk performed the song Oceania, written specially for the event by her and the poet Sj\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Opening ceremony\nThe Opening Ceremony culminated in the lighting of the Olympic Cauldron by 1996 Gold Medalist Windsurfer Nikolaos Kaklamanakis. Many key moments in the ceremony, including the lighting of the Olympic Cauldron, featured music composed and arranged by John Psathas from New Zealand. The gigantic cauldron, which was styled after the Athens 2004 Olympic Torch, pivoted down to be lit by the 35-year-old, before slowly swinging up and lifting the flame high above the stadium. Following this, the stadium found itself at the centre of a rousing fireworks spectacular.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Participating National Olympic Committees\nAll National Olympic Committees (NOCs) except Djibouti participated in the Athens Games. Two new NOCs had been created since 2000 and made their debut at these Games (Kiribati and East Timor). Therefore, with the return of Afghanistan (who had been banned from the 2000 Summer Olympics), the number of participating nations increased from 199 to 201. Also since 2000, Yugoslavia had changed its name to Serbia and Montenegro and its code from YUG to SCG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Participating National Olympic Committees\nIn the table below, the number in parentheses indicates the number of participants contributed by each NOC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 74], "content_span": [75, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Sports\nThe sports featured at the 2004 Summer Olympics are listed below. Officially there were 301 events in 28 sports as swimming, diving, synchronised swimming and water polo are classified by the IOC as disciplines within the sport of aquatics, and wheelchair racing was a demonstration sport. For the first time, the wrestling category featured women's wrestling and in the fencing competition women competed in the sabre. American Kristin Heaston, who led off the qualifying round of women's shot put became the first woman to compete at the ancient site of Olympia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Sports\nThe demonstration sport of wheelchair racing was a joint Olympic/Paralympic event, allowing a Paralympic event to occur within the Olympics, and for the future, opening up the wheelchair race to the able-bodied. The 2004 Summer Paralympics were also held in Athens, from 17 to 28 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Gallery\nRussian Igor Turchin (left) and American Weston Kelsey (right) duel in second round of men's individual \u00e9p\u00e9e", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nThe Games were concluded on 29 August 2004. The closing ceremony was held at the Athens Olympic Stadium, where the Games had been opened 16 days earlier. Around 70,000 people gathered in the stadium to watch the ceremony.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nThe initial part of the ceremony interspersed the performances of various Greek singers, and featured traditional Greek dance performances from various regions of Greece (Crete, Pontos, Thessaly, etc.). The event was meant to highlight the pride of the Greeks in their culture and country for the world to see.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nA significant part of the closing ceremony was the exchange of the Olympic flag of the Athens Games between the mayor of Athens and the mayor of Beijing, host city of the next Olympics. After the flag exchange a presentation from the Beijing delegation presented a glimpse into Chinese culture for the world to see.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0038-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nBeijing University students (who were at first incorrectly cited as the Twelve Girls Band) sang Mo Li Hua (Jasmine Flower) accompanied by a ribbon dancer, then some male dancers did a routine with tai-chi and acrobatics, followed by dancers from the Peking Opera and finally, a little Chinese girl singing a reprise of Mo Li Hua and concluded the presentation by saying \"Welcome to Beijing!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nThe medal ceremony for the last event of the Olympics, the men's marathon, was conducted, with Stefano Baldini from Italy as the winner. The bronze medal winner, Vanderlei Cordeiro de Lima of Brazil, was simultaneously announced as a recipient of the Pierre de Coubertin medal for his bravery in finishing the race despite being attacked by a rogue spectator while leading with 7\u00a0km to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nA flag-bearer from each nation's delegation then entered along the stage, followed by the competitors en masse on the floor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nShort speeches were presented by Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, President of the Organising Committee, and by President Dr. Jacques Rogge of the IOC, in which he described the Athens Olympics as \"unforgettable, dream Games\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nDr. Rogge had previously declared he would be breaking with tradition in his closing speech as President of the IOC and that he would never use the words of his predecessor Juan Antonio Samaranch, who used to always say 'these were the best ever games'. Dr. Rogge had described Salt Lake City 2002 as \"superb games\" and in turn would continue after Athens 2004 and describe Turin 2006 as \"truly magnificent games.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nThe national anthems of Greece and China were played in a handover ceremony as both nations' flags were raised. The Mayor of Athens, Dora Bakoyianni, passed the Olympic Flag to the Mayor of Beijing, Wang Qishan. After a short cultural performance by Chinese actors, dancers, and musicians directed by eminent Chinese director Zhang Yimou, Rogge declared the 2004 Olympic Games closed. The Olympic flag was next raised again on 10 February 2006 during the opening ceremony of the next Winter Olympics in Torino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, The Games, Closing ceremony\nA young Greek girl, 10-year-old Fotini Papaleonidopoulou, lit a symbolic lantern with the Olympic Flame and passed it on to other children before \"extinguishing\" the flame in the cauldron by blowing a puff of air. The ceremony ended with a variety of musical performances by Greek singers, including Dionysis Savvopoulos, George Dalaras, Haris Alexiou, Anna Vissi, Sakis Rouvas, Eleftheria Arvanitaki, Alkistis Protopsalti, Antonis Remos, Michalis Hatzigiannis, Marinella, and Dimitra Galani, as thousands of athletes carried out symbolic displays on the stadium floor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Medal count\nThese are the top ten nations that won medals in the 2004 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy\nTo commemorate the 2004 Olympics, a series of Greek high value euro collectors' coins were minted by the Mint of Greece, in both silver and gold. The pieces depict landmarks in Greece as well as ancient and modern sports on the obverse of the coin. On the reverse, a common motif with the logo of the Games, circled by an olive branch representing the spirit of the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy\nPreparations to stage the Olympics led to a number of positive developments for the city's infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0047-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy\nThese improvements included the establishment of Eleftherios Venizelos International Airport, a modern new international airport serving as Greece's main aviation gateway; expansions to the Athens Metro system; the \"Tram\", a new metropolitan tram (light rail) system system; the \"Proastiakos\", a new suburban railway system linking the airport and suburban towns to the city of Athens; the \"Attiki Odos\", a new toll motorway encircling the city, and the conversion of streets into pedestrianized walkways in the historic center of Athens which link several of the city's main tourist sites, including the Parthenon and the Panathenaic Stadium (the site of the first modern Olympic Games in 1896). All of the above infrastructure is still in use to this day, and there have been continued expansions and proposals to expand Athens' metro, tram, suburban rail and motorway network, the airport, as well as further plans to pedestrianize more thoroughfares in the historic center of Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 1016]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy\nThe Greek Government has created a corporation, Olympic Properties SA, which is overseeing the post-Olympics management, development and conversion of these facilities, some of which will be sold off (or have already been sold off) to the private sector, while some other facilities are still in use, or have been converted for commercial use or modified for other sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy\nAs of 2012 many conversion schemes have stalled owing to the Greek government-debt crisis, though many of these facilities are now under the control of domestic sporting clubs and organizations or the private sector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy\nThe table below delineates the current status of the Athens Olympic facilities:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178857-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics, Legacy, Arguments about possible effects on Greece's debt crisis\nThere have been arguments (mostly in popular media) that the cost of the 2004 Athens Summer Games was a contributor to the Greek government-debt crisis that started in 2010, with a lot of focus on the use of the facilities after the Games. This argument, however, contradicts the fact that Greece's Debt to GDP ratio was essentially not affected until the 2008 world financial crisis, while the cost of the Games, spread over years of preparation, was insignificant compared to Greece's public debt and GDP. Furthermore, the aforementioned arguments do not even take into account the profits (direct and indirect) generated by the Games, which may well have surpassed the above costs. Finally, popular arguments about \"rotting\" of many of the facilities, appear to ignore the actual utilization of most of these structures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 86], "content_span": [87, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony\nThe closing ceremony of the 2004 Summer Olympics was held on 29 August 2004 21:15 EEST (UTC+3) at the Olympic Stadium, in Marousi, Greece, a suburb of Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, Ceremony, Victory Ceremony\nThe final victory ceremony was held to the three Men's marathon medallists\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, Ceremony, Victory Ceremony\nStefano Baldini - Gold Mebrahtom Keflezighi - Silver Vanderlei de Lima* - Bronze", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, Ceremony, Victory Ceremony\n12 years later in 2016, during the opening ceremony, in honour of his brave against Horan's assault, he was awarded as the final torchbearer to lit up the Olympics' cauldron in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, Ceremony, Parade of Nations\nThe flag bearers of 202 National Olympic Committees arrived into the stadium. The flag bearers from each participating country entered the stadium informally in a single file, ordered by order of the Greek alphabet, and behind them marched all the athletes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, Ceremony, Handover of the Olympic flag\nMayor of Athens Dora Bakoyannis handed over the Olympic flag as the representative of Athens 2004 to the IOC President Jacques Rogge and then passed to the Mayor of Beijing Wang Qishan. He represents the committee members of the next host city, Beijing 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 77], "content_span": [78, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178858-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics closing ceremony, Ceremony, Lowering the Olympic flag\nLowering of the Olympic flag and singing of the Olympic Anthem which the Greek choirs sang in Greek. The flag was raised again two years later in Turin, Italy. After 16 days, it lowered again and finally raised at its final destination, Beijing National Stadium for the Beijing 2008 on 8 August 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table\nThe 2004 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XXVIII Olympiad, were a summer multi-sport event held in Athens, the capital city of Greece, from 13 to 29 August 2004. A total of 10,625\u00a0athletes from 201\u00a0countries represented by National Olympic Committees participated in these games, competing in 301\u00a0events in 28\u00a0sports. Kiribati and Timor Leste competed for the first time in these Olympic Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table\nAthletes from 74\u00a0countries won at least one medal. The United States won the most gold medals (36), the most silver medals (40) and the most medals overall (101). China finished second on the International Olympic Committee medal table (though third in terms of total medals), the country's best performance until the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Russia finished third, (second in total medals), and also won the most bronze medals (38). Host nation Greece finished fifteenth, with six gold, six silver, and four bronze medals, in its best total medal haul since 1896.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table\nAustralia became the first nation to improve their gold medal total at the Games immediately after hosting a Summer Olympics. The United Arab Emirates, Paraguay and Eritrea won their first ever Olympic medals. Israel, Chile, Dominican Republic, Georgia, Chinese Taipei and United Arab Emirates won their first Olympic gold medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table, Medal table\nThe medal table is based on information provided by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and is consistent with IOC convention in its published medal tables. By default, the table is ordered by the number of gold medals the athletes from a nation have won (in this context, a nation is an entity represented by a National Olympic Committee). The number of silver medals is taken into consideration next and then the number of bronze medals. If nations are still tied, equal ranking is given and they are listed alphabetically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table, Medal table\nIn boxing and judo, two bronze medals were awarded in each weight class, so the total number of bronze medals is greater than the total number of gold and silver medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table, Changes in medal standings\nDuring the Games the following changes in medal standings occurred:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table, Changes in medal standings\nSince the conclusion of the 2004 Games, doping scandals have resulted in the revocations of medals from numerous athletes, thus affecting the medal standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table, Changes in medal standings\nIn first two cases medals were not reallocated, as the athletes who were supposed to receive them, tested for doping themselves. On 5 March 2013, the International Olympic Committee sent a statement to the Spanish Olympic Committee, taking the decision to reallocate the medals in the men's shot put, due to exclusion of Ukrainian Yuriy Bilonoh, gold medalist at the time, by doping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178859-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics medal table, Changes in medal standings\nBased on this decision, the new owner of the gold medal will be with the second-placed U.S. athlete Adam Nelson, the silver medal will be with the third-placed Danish Joachim Olsen, and bronze medals will be with fourth-placed Spanish Manuel Mart\u00ednez. On 30 May 2013, during the meeting of the IOC Executive Board there were three new decisions of the reallocated medals. In athletics, Executive Board confirmed the reallocation of medals in men's shot put. In athletics, the athlete V\u011bra Posp\u00ed\u0161ilov\u00e1-Cechlov\u00e1 (Czech Republic) will be the new bronze medalist proof of the Women's discus throw. In Weightlifting, the athlete Reyhan Arabac\u0131o\u011flu (Turkey) be the new bronze medalist proof in the Men's 77 kg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers\nDuring the Parade of Nations portion of the 2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, athletes from each country participating in the Olympics paraded in the arena, preceded by their flag. The flag was borne by a sportsperson from that country chosen either by the National Olympic Committee or by the athletes themselves to represent their country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nThe national team of Greece, as the host nation, entered the stadium last, breaking the tradition that the Greek national team enter first in every Olympic opening ceremony as a tribute for being the original host of both the Ancient and the Modern Olympic Games. However, in a nod to tradition, the Greek flag and flag bearer Pyrros Dimas entered at the beginning of the parade ahead of Saint Lucia. Dimas also led the Greek national team when they entered last. Following tradition, other countries entered the stadium in name order in the language of the host country (Greece), which in this case is Modern Greek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nKiribati and Timor-Leste competed for the first time at these Olympic Games, whereas Afghanistan returned from its eight-year absence after the national Olympic committee had been suspended under the Taliban regime since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nAnnouncers in the stadium read off the names of the marching nations in Greek, French, and English (the official languages of the Olympics) with the music, performed and played by Dutch musician Ti\u00ebsto, accompanying the athletes as they marched into the stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nWhilst most countries entered under their short names, a few entered under more formal or alternative names, mostly due to political and naming disputes. The Republic of Macedonia entered as the \"Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia'\" (\"\u03a0\u03c1\u03ce\u03b7\u03bd \u0393\u03b9\u03bf\u03c5\u03b3\u03ba\u03bf\u03c3\u03bb\u03b1\u03b2\u03b9\u03ba\u03ae \u0394\u03b7\u03bc\u03bf\u03ba\u03c1\u03b1\u03c4\u03af\u03b1 \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 \u039c\u03b1\u03ba\u03b5\u03b4\u03bf\u03bd\u03af\u03b1\u03c2\") under \u03a0 because of the naming dispute with Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nThe Republic of China (commonly known as Taiwan) entered with the compromised name and flag of \"Chinese Taipei\" (\"\u039a\u03b9\u03bd\u03b5\u03b6\u03b9\u03ba\u03b7 \u03a4\u03b1\u03ca\u03c0\u03b5\u03ca\") under \u03a4 so that they did not enter together with conflicting People's Republic of China (commonly known as China), which entered as the \"People's Republic of China\" (\"\u039b\u03b1\u03ca\u03ba\u03ae \u0394\u03b7\u03bc\u03bf\u03ba\u03c1\u03b1\u03c4\u03af\u03b1 \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 \u039a\u03af\u03bd\u03b1\u03c2\") under \u039a. The Republic of the Congo entered as just \"Congo\" (\u039a\u03bf\u03bd\u03b3\u03ba\u03cc), while the Democratic Republic of the Congo entered with its full name, \"\u039b\u03b1\u03ca\u03ba\u03ae \u0394\u03b7\u03bc\u03bf\u03ba\u03c1\u03b1\u03c4\u03af\u03b1 \u03c4\u03bf\u03c5 \u039a\u03bf\u03bd\u03b3\u03ba\u03cc\" under \u0394.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nThe British Virgin Islands (\"\u0392\u03c1\u03b5\u03c4\u03b1\u03bd\u03b9\u03ba\u03ad\u03c2 \u03a0\u03b1\u03c1\u03b8\u03ad\u03bd\u03bf\u03b9 \u039d\u03ae\u03c3\u03bf\u03b9\") entered under \u0392 while the United States Virgin Islands entered as simply the \"Virgin Islands\" (\"\u03a0\u03b1\u03c1\u03b8\u03ad\u03bd\u03bf\u03b9 \u039d\u03ae\u03c3\u03bf\u03b9\"), under \u03a0. Additionally, Ivory Coast, the United States, Iran, Laos, Libya, Russia, Syria and Hong Kong all entered under their formal names, respectively \"C\u00f4te d'Ivoire\", the \"United States of America\", \"Islamic Republic of Iran\", \"Lao People's Democratic Republic\", \"Libyan Arab Jamahiriya\", \"Russian Federation\", \"Syrian Arab Republic\" and \"Hong Kong, China\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, Parade order\nNotable flag bearers in the opening ceremony featured the following athletes: Three-time Grand Slam champion and tennis player Roger Federer (Switzerland), NBA basketball player Yao Ming (People's Republic of China), six-time Olympians and Star sailors Colin Beashel (Australia) and Torben Grael (Brazil), triple Olympic weightlifting champion Pyrros Dimas (Greece), show jumper Ludger Beerbaum (Germany), two-time Olympic sprint freestyle champion Alexander Popov (Russia), four-time rowing champion Elisabeta Lip\u0103 (Romania), decathlon champion Erki Nool (Estonia), and rings gymnast Jury Chechi (Italy).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 56], "content_span": [57, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178860-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics national flag bearers, List\nThe following is a list of each country's announced flag bearer. The list is sorted by the order in which each nation appears in the parade of nations. The names are given in their official designations by the IOC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 48], "content_span": [49, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony of the 2004 Summer Olympics was held on August 13, 2004 starting at 20:45 EEST (UTC+3) at the Olympic Stadium in Marousi, Greece, a suburb of Athens. As mandated by the Olympic Charter, the proceedings combined the formal and ceremonial opening of this international sporting event, including welcoming speeches, hoisting of the flags and the parade of athletes, with an artistic spectacle to showcase the host nation's culture and history. 72,000 spectators (with nearly 50 world leaders) attended the event, with approximately 15,000 athletes from 202 countries participating in the ceremony as well. It marked the first-ever international broadcast of high-definition television, undertaken by the U.S. broadcaster NBC and the Japanese broadcaster NHK. The Games were officially opened by President of the Hellenic Republic Konstantinos Stephanopoulos at 23:46 EEST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 937]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Countdown and Welcome\nThe opening ceremony began with a 28-second countdown\u2014one second per Olympics held since Athens last hosted the first modern games, paced by the sounds of an amplified heartbeat. At the end of the countdown, fireworks are then set off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Countdown and Welcome\n400 percussionists perform the zeimbekiko before walking around the stadium ground. A 50-person strong bouzouki band also performs. It is led by two drummers, one inside the stadium, and one projected on the stadium screen from the ancient stadium of Olympia, the locale of the Olympic games of antiquity. A blazing comet, seemingly coming from the ancient stadium of Olympia on the screen, lands on the flooded stadium drawing with its fire the Olympic Rings. The comet symbolizes the fire of the ancients giving life to the modern Olympic movement, thus bridging the past and the present together. According to Dimitris Papaioannou, the event \"was a pageant of traditional Greek culture and history harkening back to its mythological beginnings, and viewed through the progression of Greek art.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 871]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Countdown and Welcome\nNext, a young Greek boy Michalis Patsatzis sailed into the stadium on a giant paper boat waving the host nation's flag, symbolizing Greece's maritime tradition and its close connection to the sea. The Hellenic Naval Band then walks into the stadium. The President of the Athens Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (ATHOC), Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, and President of the International Olympic Committee Jacques Rogge walk onto the stadium floor. The Band then performs the Presidential fanfare, where President of the Hellenic Republic Konstantinos Stephanopoulos then also arrives on the stadium floor. The three presidents meet the young boy, before Hymn to Liberty, the Greek national anthem was performed a cappella with the raising of the Greek Flag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section\nThe segments that followed were divided in two main parts. The first part of the main artistic segment of the opening ceremony was called \"Allegory.\" \"Allegory\" introduced the main conceptual themes and ideals that are going to be omnipresent throughout the entire opening ceremony, such as the confluence of the past and present, love and passion as the progenitors of history, and humanity's attempt to understand itself. The second part, called the \"Clepsydra,\" or \"Hourglass,\" celebrates the themes introduced in the \"Allegory\" section through a portrayal of Greek history from the ancient to the modern times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 68], "content_span": [69, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Allegory\nThe \"Allegory\" segment began with a recitation of a verse from Nobel Prize-winning Greek poet George Seferis' poem \"Mythistorema 3.\" As the verse is being recited on the speakers, the spotlights are focused upon a woman clad in a black gown looking out to the water. Holding a marble sculpture head, the woman seems to be entering into a dream. As she looks into the dark water, a centaur appears whose human and animal parts supposedly symbolize the duality of spirit and body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Allegory\nThe centaur then walks about and then throws a spear of light into the center of the stadium, from which a giant statue that exemplified Cycladic art (and thus one of the first depictions of the human form in Greek art) emerged. This Cycladic head also represents one of the first attempts of humanity to understand itself. With the use of lasers, geometrical shapes and other scientific images (such as a stylistic representation of the solar system) were displayed on the figure's face.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Allegory\nThe statue then broke into pieces that floated away, and from within it emerged a smaller kouros statue from the Archaic Period of Greek sculpture, which in turn broke apart to reveal the depiction of man in a sculpture of the classical period, symbolizing the dawn of individuality and extolling human scale, one of the principal themes of the 2004 Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0005-0003", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Allegory\nAt the end of this sequence, a cube arises from the water, and a man starts slowly balancing himself on the rotating cube while representations of human kind's greatest achievements, contrasted to humanistic representations and images of men, women, and children of various ethnicities and ages, are projected onto the pieces of broken sculpture, which seem to be floating above the water. This last sequence is meant to symbolize the birth of logical thought, higher learning, and humanity finally making sense of the world in which it lives. After this sequence, the pieces of sculpture descend to the water, meant to symbolize the Greek isles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nIn the next sequence, Eros, the Greek god of love, was introduced flying over a pair of lovers frolicking in the pool of water located in the center of the stadium. The young couple along with Eros symbolize the fact that the humanity which create and shape history is born out of love and passion. This segment introduces the next part of the ceremony, the \"Clepsydra,\" which highlights the themes of the opening ceremony through a celebration of Greek history. The lovers then lie down in the water, and both fall into a dream state. Throughout the rest of the scenes from history and mythology, Eros flew over the parade, occasionally touching or stepping on the floats moving beneath him, thus reinforcing the theme of love and passion as the source for all history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nThe pageantry following the statues and the introduction of Eros continued to portray scenes that showed the sequence of Greek civilisation through its art. The scenes started with the Minoan civilisation. The first float featured the iconic image of Minoan civilization: that of the fertility goddess clad in a bodice exposing her breasts and clutching serpents in both hands. The subsequent floats then featured scenes of bull-jumping, dolphins, and other elements that harkened back to the images in the frescoes of Phaestos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nThe scenes then proceeded to the more stark art of the Mycenean civilisation, followed by representations of the Classical period. A chariot carrying an actor portraying Alexander the Great introduced images from the Hellenistic period, which in turn were followed by representations of Byzantine art, the Greek War of Independence, and lastly of 20th century elements of Greek culture, such as the popular shadow-theatre figure Karagiozis, who is said to be a humorous and self-deprecating depiction (and parody) of Greek mentality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nAt the end of the parade, \"Eros\" lowered enough to help a pregnant woman remove her outer garment. This last part represents the ceremony coming into full circle: the \"Clepsydra\" segment began with the image of the Minoan fertility goddess and is now ending with a pregnant woman representing the future of all humanity and history. With belly glowing, the woman moved into the lake of water as the stadium's lights dimmed and lights underneath the pool of water were turned on, thus creating an image of stars in a galaxy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nAccording to Greek myth, the stars of the galaxy were born out of the milk of Hera's fertile breasts. In fact, the name for the Milky Way Galaxy, the home to planet Earth, was born out of this myth. Slowly the stars rose around the woman, and moved to form a rapidly rotating DNA double helix, which is the basis for all life on the planet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0008-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nHumanity's attempt to understand itself, a theme that has been omnipresent throughout the entire ceremony beginning with the Cycladic head, is further reinforced by the representation of the DNA double helix, which symbolizes humanity's latest and most recent attempt to understand itself: the late 20th and early 21st centuries witnessed great advances in the field of genetics with the mapping of the human genome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Artistic Section, Clepsydra\nFinally, all the characters of the parade began to walk inside the pool, around its center, mixing the past and the present in a single marching beat of the drums. The confluence of the past and the present is another main theme of the opening ceremony. The music began a crescendo with choruses, when all of a sudden an olive tree was lifted from the center of the pool\u2014symbolizing goddess Athena's preferred gift by the Greeks\u2014land and food\u2014over Poseidon's gift, the horse\u2014a tool of warfare. At the music's climax, all the characters stopped and raised their arms as if worshipping the Tree, which was high above, surrounded also by the fragments of the deconstructed statues who resembled a mount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 79], "content_span": [80, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nIn order to prepare for the entry of the athletes to the stadium, the giant pool of water that had been constructed on the floor of the stadium had to first be drained. 2,162,000 liters of water were drained from the stadium in a time period of three minutes, providing a dry, hard surface for the athletes to march and gather on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nTypically, Greece leads the Parade of Nations in any Olympics, with the host nation entering the stadium last. However, since Greece was the host nation, they went last, sending only their flag with the weightlifter Pyrros Dimas as the flag bearer into the stadium at the beginning of the parade, and the athletes themselves at the end of it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nThe debut position was given to Saint Lucia (\u0391\u03b3\u03af\u03b1 \u039b\u03bf\u03c5\u03ba\u03af\u03b1 in Greek), who led the Parade of Nations into the stadium. As the nations entered in Greek alphabetical order, Zimbabwe\u2014which has usually been the penultimate nation, followed only by the host country\u2014appeared in the middle of the parade. Countries such as the United States and Switzerland, which are usually at the rear of the pack, were granted earlier entries as well due to their position in the Greek alphabet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nThe entrances of Afghanistan and Iraq were emotional highpoints of the parade. The nation of Kiribati made its debut Olympic appearance at the 2004 Summer Olympics, and East Timor marched under its own flag for the first time. Serbia and Montenegro appeared at the Olympics under the nation's new name for the first and only time since the country was officially renamed in 2003, and prior to the union's dissolution in 2006 (just before the 2008 Summer Olympics); it had previously been known as Yugoslavia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nDue to the unpopularity of the American-led invasion of Iraq among Greeks, it had been expected by the media that audience members would protest against the war during the entrance of the American delegation into the stadium by booing; however, the Americans did receive a warm welcome, much to the pleasant surprise of US news anchors covering the event as well as NBC Sports anchor Bob Costas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nApart from Greece, the Greek crowd reserved some of their loudest cheers for their fellow Greeks from Cyprus, Australia, home to many Greeks and site of the previous Summer Olympics and Mediterranean countries such as France and Italy, as well as for Brazil and Canada. A loud cheer was also given for Djibouti, because it had only one person enter the stadium. The teams from Palestine and Serbia and Montenegro were also very warmly welcomed. Cheers greeted Portugal, the nation that hosted the UEFA Euro 2004, which Greece won beating Portugal in the final match by 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Parade of Nations\nHigh-ranking politicians and royalty from all around the world applauded as the teams from their respective countries paraded by. Important guests like U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair, Italian President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, Crown Prince Haakon of Norway (who lit the Cauldron for the 1994 Winter Olympics), and Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark, (among others) each stood and applauded the teams from their countries. Past world leaders, including U.S. President George H. W. Bush, also attended and applauded their national teams during the parade, in which DJ Ti\u00ebsto played trance music.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Oceania - A Song for the Athletes\nBj\u00f6rk then sang her song Oceania. The song was written at the ocean's point of view, from which the singer believes all life emerged, and details the human's evolution, whilst accompanied by a choir. While she sang, her dress slowly covered the athletes with a white sheet. At the end of the song, a projection of the world was shown on the dress. However, technical complications with the sheet meant that the sheet didn't reach all the athletes. If succeeded by covering all athletes, it would be a call back to the flags covering all athletes in the Olympic opening ceremonies of 1992 and 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Oceania - A Song for the Athletes\nA video from the International Space Station with two astronauts one from Russia and the other from the United States, then played welcoming the athletes and stressing the importance for human collaboration between countries for peace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, 108 Years of Olympic Games\nAfter introducing the founders of the Modern Olympic Games, Pierre de Coubertin and Demetrios Vikelas and the first games in 1896, runner George Sabanis carries a flag with an image of an olive branch symbolizing not only peace but Athens itself, lapped around the stadium, symbolically crossing tape dedicated to the previous 27 Olympiads. The runner symbolically stumbles at the 1916, 1940, and 1944 Games which were canceled due to world wars. The runner ended his run at the very center of the stadium, where the olive tree from the artistic section has appeared, symbolizing the Modern Olympic Games journey around the world, and coming back home to Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, 108 Years of Olympic Games\nWhile not officially part of the Olympic protocol, there has been a recognition of past host cities at some Opening Ceremonies. For the Summer Olympics, a recognition has appeared in the 1992 opening ceremony in Barcelona, 1996 opening ceremony in Atlanta and a reduced version at the 2012 opening ceremony in London. In the Winter Olympics, there has been a recognition in 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, where banners of the previous 18 Winter Olympics entered Rice-Eccles Stadium at the beginning of the ceremony, and the opening ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 78], "content_span": [79, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Opening Addresses\nTwo short speeches were delivered in front of the olive tree, a traditional Greek and Olympic symbol. The first speech came from Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, the President of the Athens Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games (ATHOC), and the first female chief organizer of an Olympic Games. She told the athletes: \"Greece is here tonight. We're ready.\" and \"Welcome home!\" She also stated the people of Greece \"have waited long for this moment,\" alluding to the long time period between the first modern Olympic Games in Greece and the 2004 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Opening Addresses\nAngelopoulos-Daskalaki was followed by the President of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) Jacques Rogge, who delivered a speech encouraging participating athletes to resist the urge to use banned performance-enhancing substances and \"show us that sport unites by overriding national, political, religious, and language barriers\". Rogge then introduced the President of the Hellenic Republic Konstantinos Stephanopoulos, who declared the games officially open in Greek by saying, \"\u039a\u03b7\u03c1\u03cd\u03c3\u03c3\u03c9 \u03c4\u03b7\u03bd \u03ad\u03bd\u03b1\u03c1\u03be\u03b7 \u03c4\u03c9\u03bd \u039f\u03bb\u03c5\u03bc\u03c0\u03b9\u03b1\u03ba\u03ce\u03bd \u0391\u03b3\u03ce\u03bd\u03c9\u03bd \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 \u0391\u03b8\u03ae\u03bd\u03b1\u03c2...\u03ba\u03b1\u03b9 \u03c4\u03bf\u03bd \u03b5\u03bf\u03c1\u03c4\u03b1\u03c3\u03bc\u03cc \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 28\u03b7\u03c2 \u039f\u03bb\u03c5\u03bc\u03c0\u03b9\u03ac\u03b4\u03bf\u03c2 \u03c4\u03b7\u03c2 \u03c3\u03cd\u03b3\u03c7\u03c1\u03bf\u03bd\u03b7\u03c2 \u03b5\u03c0\u03bf\u03c7\u03ae\u03c2.\" - I declare open the Olympic Games of Athens...and the celebration of the 28th Olympiad of the modern era. 5 bells are now ringing of the Olympic rings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, The Olympic Flag and Olympic Anthem\nThen the Olympic flag made its entrance. It was carried by eight Greek athletes Petros Galaktopoulos, Ilias Hatzipavlis, Niki Bakogianni, Angelos Basinas,\u00a0Leonidas Kokkas,\u00a0 Michail Mouroutsos, Valerios Leonidis, and Dimosthenis Tampakos. Then the Olympic flag was raised while the Olympic Hymn was conducted by John Psathas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 87], "content_span": [88, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Olympic Oaths\nGreek freestyle swimmer Zoi Dimoschaki gave the Athletes Oath on behalf of all athletes in Greek. Greek basketball referee Lazaros Voreadis delivered the officials oath in Greek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Torch relay and the lighting of the cauldron\nThe Opening Ceremony culminated at the end of the torch relay, a tradition began when Berlin hosted the games in 1936. This segment preceding the torch's arrival honored the first global torch relay that was begun in Athens. Before the torch came into the stadium, three rings arose from the center of the stadium that simulated a globe. Projections of doves were shown on the globe and on the LED screens as symbol of peace. Then actors, suspended on cables, started rising out of the crowd and ran towards the globe, carrying glowing sticks meant to simulate the Olympic torch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Torch relay and the lighting of the cauldron\nOn the globe, the names of the cities which the torch visited were projected, and this segment ended with all the torchbearers floating mid-air coming together at the globe. After this segment ended, the lights were dimmed, and the sound of the heartbeat accompanied by thunderous cheers and applause met the torch's final arrival to the Olympic Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Torch relay and the lighting of the cauldron\nTorch bearer Nikos Galis, considered to be the greatest Greek basketball player of all time, entered the stadium first. The torch was passed on, in sequential order, to Greek football legend Mimis Domazos, 1992 Hurdles champion Voula Patoulidou, 1996 Olympic weightlifting champion Kakhi Kakhiashvili, and 1996 Olympic gymnastics champion Ioannis Melissanidis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Proceedings, Torch relay and the lighting of the cauldron\nThe torch was finally passed to the 1996 Olympic sailing champion Nikolaos Kaklamanakis, who lit a giant tapered column resembling the Olympic torch \u2014 not, as usual, a cauldron \u2014 to burn during the duration of the 2004 Summer Olympics. As Kaklamanakis ascended the steps to light the cauldron, the cauldron seemed to bow down to him, symbolizing that despite advance of technology, technology is still a creation and tool of humanity and that it was meant to serve humanity's needs. The ceremony concluded with a breathtaking fireworks display.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 96], "content_span": [97, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nDuring the \"Allegory\" segment highlighting the conceptual and themes and ideals of the opening ceremony, the chosen music was Gustav Mahler's Symphony No. 3 in D Minor: 6. Langsam. The music played during the \"Clepsydra\" segment highlighting Greek history and mythology was composed by Konstantinos Bita. The songs played were instrumental in nature and many used traditional Greek instruments. Famous Greek artists such as Stavros Xarhakos (whose song \"Zeimbekiko\" was played), Manos Hadjidakis, Mikis Theodorakis and Konstantinos Bita, were included in the Olympic soundtrack. The whole music project was arranged by composer George Koumendakis, who had worked in the past several times with Papaioannou and was assisted in this project by Maria Metaxaki. The music production team included Marcus Dillistone, Paul Stefanidis, Dick Lewsey and Julian Scott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nNew Zealand composer John Psathas (son of Greek immigrant parents) was chosen to compose and arrange music to accompany parts of the opening ceremonies. The most prestigious engagement of his career to date, he joins the ranks of well-known composers, such as John Williams, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Leonard Bernstein and Mikis Theodorakis who have also written music for the Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nMr Psathas was engaged in 2003 to compose and arrange music for the Games\u2019 opening and closing ceremonies. He has since commuted several times between Wellington and Athens to work on the music and supervise the rehearsal process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nHis music includes a number of specially composed fanfares and processionals to accompany the arrival of the IOC President, the lighting of the Olympic cauldron and to precede the Olympic oaths, and he is responsible for the soundtrack to the entire \u2018flame sequence\u2019 of the ceremony. John Psathas has also arranged the National Anthem of Greece, the Olympic Hymn, and music by Shostakovich, Debussy and the foremost living Greek composer Mikis Theodorakis to accompany other parts of the ceremony. The fireworks at the Games\u2019 closing ceremony on 29 August will also feature music by the composer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nDuring the Parade of Nations, Dutchman DJ Ti\u00ebsto provided the music, becoming the first DJ ever to spin live at the Olympics. During the course of his performance the Dutch athletes started dancing in front of the DJ booth and had to be moved on by officials. Ti\u00ebsto later released a condensed version of the performance on CD titled Parade of the Athletes. In the liner notes, he noted the IOC requested to him that the music not contain any lyrics as they could be inadvertently misinterpreted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nBj\u00f6rk performed \"Oceania\", later included on her album Med\u00falla, immediately after the Parade of Nations ended. While the song was being played, a large piece of fabric (which belonged to Bj\u00f6rk's dress) was pulled over the heads of the athletes, who had gathered on the ground in the center of the stadium following their march around the stadium. At the conclusion of Bj\u00f6rk's performance, a map of the world was projected on the fabric.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Music Performances\nThe entrance of the torch on the stadium was surrounded by the \"Le Roi Lear Fanfarre\", by Claude Debussy; and the cauldron was lighted by the final part of \"Pirogov Suite\", an epic suite by Dmitri Shostakovich. Both songs were adapted by John Psathas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178861-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, Reviews\nThe ceremony was a source of major acclaim amongst international press and featured never before seen technologies used in a stadium, including a giant pool with slip-proof iridescent fiberglass flooring that drained its water in three minutes, beautiful and innovative lighting, and an ingenious staging system utilizing a complex network of automated cables that lifted, maneuvered, and choreographed the floating pieces of sculpture to follow the music and narrative of the opening ceremony. The costumes, which also drew great international praise, were designed by well-known London-based Greek fashion designer Sophia Kokosalaki. Eleftheria Deco was awarded for her lighting design of the opening ceremony with an Emmy award. NBC, an international television broadcaster of the 2004 Athens Olympics, has also been awarded with 6 Emmy Awards for its coverage of the Games and technical production.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 949]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay\nThe 2004 Summer Olympics Torch Relay took the Olympic Flame across every habitable continent, returning to Athens, Greece. Every city which had hosted, will host, or coincidentally elected to host the Summer Olympics, the Winter Olympics and the Youth Olympics was revisited by the torch, as well as several other cities chosen for their international importance. The main reason why the torch relay went around the world was to highlight the fact that the Olympic Games were started in Greece (in ancient times) and in modern times have been held around the world and then took place in Greece in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay\nThe relay was the first time the Olympic flame had travelled to Africa and South America. The flame was transported from country to country aboard a specially-equipped Boeing 747 leased from Atlanta Icelandic (Registration TF-ARO) called Zeus. On board the flame was carried and burned continuously in specially modified miners lamps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, International Route\nThe International Leg of the 2004 Olympic Torch Relay officially began on 4 June 2004, when the flame touched down in Sydney, Australia, host city of the 2000 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, International Route, Route in Oceania\n4 June: Sydney, Australia (host city of the 2000 Summer Olympics)5 June: Melbourne (host city of the 1956 Summer Olympics)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, International Route, Route in Asia\n6 June: Tokyo, Japan (host city of the 1964 Summer Olympics and the 2020 Summer Olympics)7 June: Seoul, South Korea (host city of the 1988 Summer Olympics)8 June: Beijing, China (host city of the 2008 Summer Olympics and the upcoming 2022 Winter Olympics)10 June: Delhi, India", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, International Route, Route in America\n13 June: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (host city of the 2016 Summer Olympics)15 June: Mexico City, Mexico (host city of the 1968 Summer Olympics)16 June: Los Angeles, United States (host city of the 1932, 1984 and upcoming 2028 Summer Olympics)17 June: St. Louis (host city of the 1904 Summer Olympics)18 June: Atlanta (host city of the 1996 Summer Olympics)19 June: New York20 June: Montreal, Canada (host city of the 1976 Summer Olympics)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, International Route, Route in Europe (Excluding Greece)\n21 June: Antwerp, Belgium (host city of the 1920 Summer Olympics)22 June: Brussels23 June: Amsterdam, Netherlands (host city of the 1928 Summer Olympics)24 June: Geneva, SwitzerlandLausanne (headquarters of the International Olympic Committee and host city of the 2020 Winter Youth Olympics)25 June: Paris, France (host city of the 1900, 1924 Summer Olympics and the upcoming 2024 Summer Olympics)26 June: London, United Kingdom (host city of the 1908, 1948 and the 2012 Summer Olympics)27 June: Madrid, SpainBarcelona (host city of the 1992 Summer Olympics)28 June: Rome, Italy (host city of the 1960 Summer Olympics)29 June: Munich, Germany (host city of the 1972 Summer Olympics)30 June: Berlin (host city of the 1936 Summer Olympics)1 July: Stockholm, Sweden (host city of the 1912 Summer Olympics and theequestrian events of the 1956 Summer Olympics)2 July: Helsinki, Finland (host city of the 1952 Summer Olympics)3 July: Moscow, Russia (host city of the 1980 Summer Olympics)5 July: Kyiv, Ukraine6 July: Istanbul, Turkey7 July: Sofia, Bulgaria8 July: Nicosia, Cyprus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 1163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, International Route, Route in Europe (Excluding Greece)\nThe International Leg of the 2004 Olympic Torch Relay officially concluded on July 8, 2004, just over a month after it began its global journey and just over a month before the 2004 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony on 13 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, Route in Greece (second phase)\nAfter visiting Cyprus, the Greek Leg of the Torch Relay resumed on 9 July 2004, with the flame touching down in Crete in the city of Heraklion. During the Greek Leg of the relay, the torch also made a cursory stopover in Albania when the torch was carried through a lake on the Greek-Albanian border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, Aftermath\nThe International Olympic Committee has indicated that, due to the success of the 2004 run, they might sanction a global circumnavigation of the flame before every succeeding Olympics. However, those plans were abandoned in March 2009 due to the protests in the international leg of the torch relay of the 2008 Summer Olympics (with an exception made for the 2010 Youth Olympic Games).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178862-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Olympics torch relay, Aftermath\nThe torch relay proved instrumental in the recognition of the importance of trending on Twitter by Abdur Chowdhury during a train journey, a usage which eventually expanded to other Internet platforms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics\nThe 2004 Summer Paralympics (Greek: \u0398\u03b5\u03c1\u03b9\u03bd\u03bf\u03af \u03a0\u03b1\u03c1\u03b1\u03bf\u03bb\u03c5\u03bc\u03c0\u03b9\u03b1\u03ba\u03bf\u03af \u0391\u03b3\u03ce\u03bd\u03b5\u03c2 2004), the 12th Summer Paralympic Games, were a major international multi-sport event for athletes with disabilities governed by the International Paralympic Committee, held in Athens, Greece from 17 to 28 September 2004. 3,806 athletes from 136 National Paralympic Committees competed. 519 medal events were held in 19 sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics\nFour new events were introduced to the Paralympics in Athens; 5-a-side football for the blind, quads wheelchair tennis, and women's competitions in judo and sitting volleyball. Following a scandal at the 2000 Summer Paralympics, in which the Spanish intellectually-disabled basketball team was stripped of their gold medal after it was found that multiple players had not met the eligibility requirements, ID-class events were suspended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics\nIt was also the last time that the old Paralympic symbol was used, before the new one featured four years later in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Medal count\nA total of 1567 medals were awarded during the Athens games: 519 gold, 516 silver, and 532 bronze. China topped the medal count with more gold medals, more silver medals, and more medals overall than any other nation. In the table below, the ranking sorts by the number of gold medals earned by a nation (in this context a nation is an entity represented by a National Paralympic Committee).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Medal count\nAmong the top individual medal winners was Mayumi Narita of Japan, who took seven golds and one bronze medal in swimming, setting six world records in the process and bringing her overall Paralympic gold medal total to fifteen. Chantal Petitclerc of Canada won five golds and set three world records in wheelchair racing, while Swedish shooter Jonas Jacobsson took four gold medals. France's B\u00e9atrice Hess won her nineteenth and twentieth Paralympic gold medals in swimming. Swimmer Trischa Zorn of the United States won just one medal, a bronze, but it was her 55th ever Paralympic medal. She retained her position as the most successful Paralympian of all times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony for the 2004 Summer Paralympics took place on 17 September 2004. The show started with children passing on knowledge and raising their lights to the sky. This was a reference to Hippocrates, who transferred knowledge to the children. A 26 meters tall olive tree (with more than 195,000 leaves) symbolising life stood in the middle of the arena. The opening ceremony also featured a performance with human drama, with light and with music, in an allegory about obstacles and limits. The Parade of Delegations was accompanied by the music of French composers Yves Stepping and Jean Christophe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Opening ceremony\nThe music told the legend of Hephaestos, god of fire and son of Zeus and Hera. An athlete from Turkmenistan propelled himself around the stadium by doing somersaults. Greece, the home team, received a strong cheer. After that, fireworks erupted at the stadium. There were 150 local support staff involved and 400 volunteers. The children were from ages 8 to 17, coming from Australia, France, Spain, Greece and Germany. The Games were officially declared opened by Greek president Costis Stephanopoulos and Philip Craven, the president of the International Paralympic Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Opening ceremony\nThey were accompanied by the head of the organizing committee Gianna Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, who told the athletes and the audience: \"The Olympic flame illuminates athletes. Many of you will leave Athens with medals, but all of you will leave as champions.\" Phil Craven quoted Democritus in his speech: \"Two thousand years ago, Democritus said 'To win oneself is the first and best of all victories.' This holds true for all athletes, but especially for Paralympians. Recognising and cultivating your unique abilities and mastering challenges \u2013 you set standards and give expression for many people, young and old, around the world.\" The paralympic flame was lit by Georgios Toptsis a pioneer athlete in Greece. Toptsis was won three medals (one silver and two bronze) between the 1988 and 1996 Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Closing ceremony\nThe closing ceremony for the 2004 Summer Paralympics took place on 28 September 2004. The traditional cultural display was removed from the ceremony as a mark of respect for the deaths of seven teenagers from Farkadona, travelling to Athens, whose bus collided with a truck near the town of Kamena Vourla.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Closing ceremony\nFlags were flown at half mast and a minute's silence was observed. In contrast with the formal nature of the opening ceremony, the athletes entered the stadium for the final time as a collective. This was followed by official matters, including the handover to Beijing, hosts of the 2008 Summer Paralympics, and a cultural presentation by the delegation (which included a presentation of the new Paralympic \"agitos\" emblem). A procession of young people then made their way to join the athletes in the centre of the stadium carrying paper lanterns, before the Paralympic flame was extinguished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Media coverage controversy\nAlthough the Paralympic Games were broadcast to around 1.6 billion viewers throughout 49 countries, some controversy was caused when no American television network stayed to broadcast the event. This resulted in some US viewers having to wait almost 2 months until the coverage was broadcast, compared with live feeds in several other countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Sports and impairment groups\nFollowing a scandal at the 2000 Summer Paralympics, in which the Spanish intellectually-disabled basketball team was stripped of their gold medal after it was found that multiple players had not met the eligibility requirements, ID-class events were suspended, in 2001, the IPC decided to remove events for the intellectually disabled and make several changes to other classifications of different events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Sports and impairment groups\nIn addition, the IPC also expanded the number of events for women in various sports, replacing the standing volleyball tournament with the female sitting volleyball another move was realization of women's events in judo.Two new events was also added in the program: 5-a-side football for the blind and the quads events on wheelchair tennis. As a result, 32 fewer finals were held than Sydney, totaling 519 finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Sports and impairment groups\nResults for individual events can be found on the relevant page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Venues\nIn total 15 venues were used at the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178863-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics, Participating nations\nAthletes from 135 nations competed in the Athens Paralympics. Bangladesh, Botswana, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Ghana, Guinea, Nepal, Nicaragua, Niger, Suriname, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan all competed for the first time. Mali participated in the ceremonies as the country sent only nine officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178864-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics medal table\nThe 2004 Summer Paralympics medal table is a list of National Paralympic Committees (NPCs) ranked by the number of gold medals won by their athletes during the 2004 Summer Paralympics, held in Athens, Greece, from September 17 to 28, 2004. Athletes from 75 countries has won at least one medal, leaving 61 countries without a medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178864-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Summer Paralympics medal table, Medal table\nThe ranking in this table is based on information provided by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) and is consistent with IPC convention in its published medal tables. By default, the table is ordered by the number of gold medals the athletes from a nation have won (in this context, a \"nation\" is an entity represented by a National Paralympic Committee). The number of silver medals is taken into consideration next and then the number of bronze medals. If nations are still tied, equal ranking is given and they are listed alphabetically by IPC country code.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178865-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 6\u20139 at E. A. Diddle Arena in Bowling Green, Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178865-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nTop-seed Louisiana\u2013Lafayette defeated #3 seed New Orleans in the championship game, 67\u201358, to win their fourth Sun Belt men's basketball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178865-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Ragin' Cajuns received an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament as the #14 seed in the Phoenix region. No other Sun Belt members earned bids to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178865-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nEight of eleven participating Sun Belt members were seeded based on regular season conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178866-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Belt Conference football season\nThe 2004 Sun Belt Conference football season was an NCAA football season that was played from August 28, 2004, to January 6, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178867-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Bowl\nThe 2004 Sun Bowl featured the Arizona State Sun Devils, and the Purdue Boilermakers. Sponsored by the Vitalis brand of hair tonic made by Bristol-Myers, the game was officially known as the Vitalis Sun Bowl. It was the 71st Sun Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178867-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Bowl\nArizona State's place kicker, Jessie Ainsworth kicked a 22-yard field goal in the first quarter to give the Sun Devils a 3-0 lead. Arizona State's running back, Preston Jones was tackled in the end zone by Purdue's Brandon Villareal, for a safety, putting Purdue on the board 3-2. The defenses held, and that score held up in the locker room.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178867-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Bowl\nIn the third quarter, Purdue's Kyle Orton connected with wide receiver Brian Hare for a long 80-yard touchdown pass to give Purdue a 9-3 lead. Arizona State quarterback, Sam Keller found Derek Hagan in the end zone for a 27-yard touchdown to put Arizona State back on top 10-9. He finished the game with 370 yards passing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178867-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Bowl\nEarly in the fourth quarter, Orton found all-American Taylor Stubblefield for a 5-yard touchdown pass, reclaiming the lead for Purdue, 16-10. Arizona State moved the ball on their ensuing drive, but it stalled, and they had to settle for a field goal. Ainsworth connected on a 34-yard field goal, trimming the margin to 16-13. Keller later threw to Rudy Burgess for a 41-yard touchdown, giving ASU a 20-16 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178867-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sun Bowl\nPurdue reclaimed the lead with a 6-yard touchdown pass from Orton to Charles Davis giving them a 23-20 lead. Sam Keller's final touchdown to Rudy Burgess proved to be the game winner, as ASU held off Purdue by a 27-23 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178868-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sundance Film Festival\nThe 2004 Sundance Film Festival was held in Utah from January 15, 2004 to January 25, 2004. It was the 20th edition of the Sundance Film Festival, a program of the Sundance Institute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178868-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sundance Film Festival, Awards\nThe award show took place on January 24 and was presented by actors Zooey Deschanel and Jake Gyllenhaal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178869-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sunderland City Council election\nThe 2004 Sunderland City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Sunderland City Council Council in Tyne and Wear, England. The whole council was up for election following boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178869-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sunderland City Council election, Campaign\nEvery seat was contested in the election for the first time since 1982. Labour held a big majority before the election with 63 seats, but almost a quarter of Labour's councillors stood down at the election. Labour was the only party to field a full 75 candidates, while the next largest number of candidates was from the Conservative party who fielded 54 candidates. Candidates in the election also included 25 from the British National Party after the party failed to win any seats in the 2003 election but came second in 6 wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178869-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sunderland City Council election, Campaign\nLabour described their record in control of the council as being positive and that they were making progress, but the Conservatives described Labour as being \"arrogant and remote\". The Conservatives targeted wards in the town of Washington as well as Millfield, St Chad's and St Peters, while Barnes ward was seen as being a three-way battle between Labour, Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178869-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Sunderland City Council election, Campaign\nAt the election count anti-Nazi demonstrators had a scuffle with British National Party supporters when the candidates entered the building, with one British National Party candidate being arrested on suspicion of assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178869-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Sunderland City Council election, Election result\nThe results saw Labour hold control of the council with a large majority, but the Conservatives made some gains in Barnes, Fulwell and St Michael's. This meant Labour ended with 61 seats, while the Conservatives were up three on 12 seats. The Liberal Democrats took two seats, while the British National Party failed to win any seats. Overall turnout was 40.26%, down on the 47.47% in 2003 but up on the 22% at the 2002 election before all postal voting was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season\nThe 2004 Super 12 season was the ninth season of the Super 12, contested by teams from Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. The season ran from February to May 2004, with each team playing all the others once. At the end of the regular season, the top four teams entered the playoff semi finals, with the first placed team playing the fourth and the second placed team playing the third. The winner of each semi final qualified for the final, which was contested by the Brumbies and the Crusaders at Canberra Stadium. The Brumbies won 47 \u2013 38 to win their second Super 12 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 1\nCon: Tony Brown (3), Nick Evans Pen: Tony Brown (2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 1\nCon: Joe Roff (4), Matt Giteau Pen: Joe Roff (2), Matt Giteau", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 2\nCon: Elton Flatley (3), Todd Feather Pen: Elton Flatley (2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 2\nCon: Derick Hougaard (4) Pen: Derick Hougaard (3) Drop: Derick Hougaard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 5\nCon: Tim Donnelly (2), Mat Rogers Pen: Tim Donnelly. Mat Rogers", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 6\nCon: David Hill (2) Pen: David Hill (5) Drop: Loki Crichton", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 6\nCon: Gaffie du Toit (2) Pen: Gaffie du Toit (2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 7\nCon: Dan Carter (4), Cameron McIntyre Pen: Dan Carter (4)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 9\nCon: Andre Pretorius (3), Coenraad Johannes Fourie Pen: Coenraad Johannes Fourie (2) Drop: Andre Pretorius", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 38], "content_span": [39, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 11\nCon: Matt Burke (2) Pen: Matt Burke, Shaun Berne (2)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 11\nCon: Andre Pretorius, Coenraad Johannes Fourie Pen: Andre Pretorius (3)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178870-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Super 12 season, Results, Round 12\nCon: Carlos Spencer (4), Ben Atiga (2) Pen: Carlos Spencer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 39], "content_span": [40, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178871-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Super Fours\nThe 2004 Super Fours was the 3rd cricket Super Fours season. It took place in May and June and saw 4 teams compete in a 50 over league and, for the first time, a knockout Twenty20 tournament. V Team were the winners of both tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178871-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Super Fours, Competition format\nIn the one day tournament, teams played each other twice in a round-robin format, with the winners of the group winning the tournament. Matches were played using a one day format with 50 overs per side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178871-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Super Fours, Competition format\nThe group worked on a points system with positions within the divisions being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178871-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Super Fours, Competition format\nA Twenty20 competition was added for the 2004 edition of the Super Fours, which consisted of two semi-finals, with the winners proceeding to the Final and the losers playing in a third place play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178872-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Super League Grand Final\nThe 2004 Super League Grand Final was the 7th official Grand Final and conclusive and championship-deciding game of Super League IX. It was held on Saturday 16 October 2004, at Old Trafford, Manchester, and was played between Leeds Rhinos, who finished top of the league after the 28 weekly rounds, and Bradford Bulls, who finished second after the weekly rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178872-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Super League Grand Final, Background, Route to the Final, Leeds Rhinos\nLeeds finished top of the table to qualify for a home match in the semi-finals. The play-off structure matched them against the team finishing second - Bradford. Bradford won the semi-final meaning Leeds had to win the elimination final against Wigan to qualify for the grand final. In the elimination final they raced past Wigan 40\u201312 to set up a rematch against Bradford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 75], "content_span": [76, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178872-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Super League Grand Final, Background, Route to the Final, Bradford Bulls\nBy finishing second in the table Bradford qualified for the semi-finals but had to play the league leaders, Leeds, away with the winners going straight through to the grand final. In the game at Headingley Bradford won 26\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178872-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Super League Grand Final, Match details\nBradford's Leon Pryce was unable to play due to a shoulder injury, he was replaced by Paul Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178872-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Super League Grand Final, Match details\nAndrew Dunemann was left out of the Leeds side. Danny McGuire was partnered by Kevin Sinfield in the halves. The pre-match entertainment was performed by singer Heather Small", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178873-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Superbike World Championship\nThe 2004 Superbike World Championship was the seventeenth FIM Superbike World Championship season. The season started on 29 February at Valencia and finished on 3 October at Magny-Cours after 11 rounds. The traditional Japanese round at Sugo was replaced with a new Canadian round which was scheduled for 4 July at the Mont-Tremblant, near Quebec. Though no explanation was given for the change, it was seen as some form of revenge after the refusal of the Japanese manufacturers to back the 2004 rules. The Canadian round was eventually canceled after a circuit inspection determined that the amount of work necessary to bring the venue up to WSBK standard could not be carried out in time for the proposed date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178873-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Superbike World Championship\n2004 was the first season all bikes had to use control tyres, provided by Pirelli. Partly because of the control tyre rule, no factory bikes were entered by Japanese manufacturers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178873-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Superbike World Championship\nJames Toseland won the riders' championship and Ducati won the manufacturers' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178874-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a\nThe 2004 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a was a two-legged Spanish football tie played on 21 and 24 August 2004. It was contested by 2003\u201304 Copa del Rey winners Zaragoza and 2003\u201304 La Liga winners Valencia. Zaragoza won the title 3\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178875-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a de Baloncesto\nThe Supercopa de Baloncesto 2004 was disputed in M\u00e1laga, Andalusia and began with the following semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178875-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a de Baloncesto, Final\nReal Madrid 75 - 76 (OT) FC Barcelona : ()", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178876-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Supercoppa Italiana\nThe 2004 Supercoppa Italiana was a match contested by the 2003\u201304 winners Milan and the 2003\u201304 Coppa Italia winners Lazio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178876-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Supercoppa Italiana\nThe match result was a 3\u20130 victory for Milan after a hat-trick by Andriy Shevchenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178877-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Superettan, Overview\nIt was contested by 16 teams, and BK H\u00e4cken won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178878-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Supersport World Championship\nThe 2004 Supersport World Championship was the sixth FIM Supersport World Championship season\u2014the eight taking into account the two held under the name of Supersport World Series. The season started on 29 February at Valencia and finished on 3 October at Magny-Cours after 10 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178878-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Supersport World Championship\nThe riders' championship was won by Karl Muggeridge and the manufacturers' championship was won by Honda. Karl Muggeridge won a total of 7 races, a new record for the class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178879-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Superstars Series\nThe 2005 Superstars Series was the first season of the Campionato Italiano Superstars (Italian Superstars Championship). The championship was won by Francesco Ascani driving for BMW.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira\nThe 2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira was the 26th edition of the Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, the annual Portuguese football season-opening match contested by the winners of the previous season's top league and cup competitions (or cup runner-up in case the league- and cup-winning club is the same). The match was contested between the 2003\u201304 Primeira Liga winners, Porto and the 2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal winners, Benfica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira\nThe match took place at Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra in Coimbra on 20 August 2004. Porto were making their 21st Superta\u00e7a appearance, of which it had previously won 13 and lost 7. Benfica were making their 13th Superta\u00e7a appearance, having previously won 3 and lost 9 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira\nIn Portugal, the final was televised live on RTP1. Porto defeated Benfica 1\u20130 with a goal in the 55th minute from the newly acquired Ricardo Quaresma. Porto collected a second consecutive Superta\u00e7a, raising the club's tally to a record 14 trophies in the competition (53.8% of wins).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Background\nBenfica were appearing in their 13th Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira. Benfica went into the match as three-time winners of the trophy (1980, 1985, 1989). Of their 12 Superta\u00e7a appearances, Benfica had lost on 9 occasions (1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996). Porto were appearing in their 21st Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira. Porto went into the match as 13-time winners (1981, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2003). Of their 20 appearances, Porto had lost on 7 occasions (1979, 1985, 1988, 1992, 1995, 1997, 2000).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Background\nIn Benfica's and Porto's entire history, both sides had met on 202 occasions prior to this encounter. They had met in the Superta\u00e7a on nine occasions, with Porto winning eight SuperCup encounters and Benfica winning once. The last meeting between these two sides in this competition was the 1996 edition of the Superta\u00e7a, where Porto defeated Benfica 6\u20130 on aggregate. The last meeting between these sides in domestic league action saw a draw between both sides at the Est\u00e1dio da Luz. The last meeting between these two sides in the domestic cup competition saw Benfica defeat Porto 2\u20131 in the final of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal thanks to an extra time goal from Sim\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Pre-match, Entry\nPorto qualified for their second consecutive Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira by winning the 2003\u201304 Primeira Liga. Along the season, Porto remained in top spot and managed important victories against its rivals to clinch the Primeira Liga title. Porto dominated the whole season managing twenty-three victories from their first twenty-eight league games. Some notable wins during the season saw Porto defeat rivals Sporting CP, 4\u20131 on matchweek 3, as well as Benfica on matchday 5, 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Pre-match, Entry\nBenfica qualified for the Superta\u00e7a by winning the 2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal. Benfica defeated Estrela da Amadora 3\u20131, Acad\u00e9mica de Coimbra 1\u20130, Nacional 2\u20131 and Belenenses 3\u20131 en route to the final. In the final of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Benfica faced Porto at the Est\u00e1dio Nacional. Benfica defeated Porto 2\u20131. After Derlei and Takis Fyssas had scored for either side, the game ended one all after ninety minutes. In extra-time, Sim\u00e3o scored in the 104th minute to clinch Benfica's 24th cup triumph.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Pre-match, Officials\nThe match officials for the game were confirmed on the 18 August 2004 by the Portuguese Football Federation. Carlos Xistra of Castelo Branco was named as referee. This was Xistra's first Superta\u00e7a match that he had officiated. He had primarily been used as a referee since the 2000\u201301 season where he regularly officiated Primeira Liga games. For the Superta\u00e7a, Xistra was assisted by Jos\u00e9 Ramalho of Porto and Lu\u00eds Tavares of Portalegre, while the fourth official was Paulo Baptista of Portalegre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Pre-match, Ticketing\nThe Portuguese Football Federation distributed 30,000 tickets for the Superta\u00e7a. Tickets went on sale on 18 August. Benfica and Porto received 10,500 tickets each to distribute to their supporters. The remaining tickets were allocated to the Coimbra Football Association, the Lisbon Football Association and the Porto Football Association. The price of the tickets varied between \u20ac20 and \u20ac40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 56], "content_span": [57, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Pre-match, Venue\nInitially, the Portuguese Football Federation announced that the Est\u00e1dio Dr. Magalh\u00e3es Pessoa in Leiria would play host to the Superta\u00e7a. In August 2004, the venue was changed to the Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra in Coimbra. The host venue of the Superta\u00e7a was changed due to the Leiria Football Association expressing their desire to host a 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification game between Portugal and Estonia which would take place a few weeks after the SuperCup game. This would be the first time that the Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra would host a major final of a competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Pre-match, Venue\nThe Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra is the home stadium of Acad\u00e9mica de Coimbra. It holds a seating capacity for 30,210 spectators. Between 2001 and 2003, the stadium underwent renovation as it was selected by the Portuguese Football Federation to be one of the host venues for UEFA Euro 2004. The stadium played host to two group stage matches at the tournament between England and Switzerland, and France and Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Team selection\nBenfica went into the 2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira with some key players missing due to injury as well as some being a doubt for the game. Benfica's Takis Fyssas was a doubt for the match due to sustaining an injury in pre-season training. Benfica were without winger Carlitos; he sustained an injury in pre-season training in which he suffered tendinitis in his right knee. Carlitos would remain out of action for one month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Team selection\nGiovanni Trapattoni's squad selection saw him include Fyssas, who had just recovered from an injury. Trapattoni left out goalkeeper Jos\u00e9 Moreira who had arrived a few days prior to the Superta\u00e7a due to representing Portugal at the 2004 Summer Olympics. Trapattoni would include seven newly acquired players in his squad; Eur\u00edpedes Amoreirinha, Azar Karadas, Everson, Manuel dos Santos, Paulo Almeida, Quim and Yannick Quesnel. Of these seven new players to arrive at Benfica, Quim, Dos Santos and Almeida would start the game. Karadas and Everson would later be used in the game as substitutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Team selection\nPorto went into the 2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira with several players who were doubtful due to injury as well as players missing due to other commitments. Porto were without striker Derlei, who suffered an injury in the weeks building up to the Superta\u00e7a. Derlei contracted a partial rupture of an internal ligament in his right knee and would be out of action for two weeks. Porto's Costinha and H\u00e9lder Postiga were injury doubts but fully recuperated for the match. Jos\u00e9 Bosingwa and Ricardo Costa were also doubts for the game after they had represented the Portuguese Olympic team at the 2004 Summer Olympics a few days prior to the match. Porto's Jorge Costa, Pepe and Maniche were ineligible for the match as they were serving suspensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Team selection\nV\u00edctor Fern\u00e1ndez's squad selection for the match saw him leave out Bruno Moraes. Fern\u00e1ndez would include Bosingwa and Ricardo Costa in the squad despite only returning from representing Portugal in the Olympics. Fern\u00e1ndez's squad selection for the Superta\u00e7a saw him include seven newly acquired players: Adriano Rossato, Diego, Giourkas Seitaridis, H\u00e9lder Postiga, Hugo Leal, Miguel Areias and Ricardo Quaresma. Of those seven, Fern\u00e1ndez would select Diego, Seitaridis, Leal and Quaresma to start the game. C\u00e9sar Peixoto and Postiga would later be used in the game as substitutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Summary\nBenfica took control early in the game, creating several chances in the first ten minutes of the game. The first few chances created by Benfica at the beginning of the game were mainly through interplay between Sim\u00e3o and Zlatko Zahovi\u010d. On 21 minutes, Porto's influential midfield talisman Diego sustained an injury which required him to be replaced by C\u00e9sar Peixoto. The introduction of Peixoto saw Porto possess more of an attacking threat going forward. This led to Porto's first chance of the game on 29 minutes where Peixoto tested Benfica's Quim from distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Summary\nThe most clear cut chance of the first half fell to Benfica's Zahovi\u010d on 30 minutes. Zahovi\u010d combined with Manuel dos Santos, who crossed the ball into the 18-yard box and found an unmarked Zahovi\u010d, who could not capitalize after his shot was blocked by a Porto defender for a corner. Benfica, for the remainder of the half, would apply pressure on Porto's defense but was unable to get a breakthrough and score the opening goal of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178880-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, Match, Summary\nBenfica began the second half dominating possession just like the first half. On 55 minutes, Benfica lost possession of the ball in the middle of the pitch. Carlos Alberto picked up the ball and threaded the ball to an unmarked Ricardo Quaresma on the left wing who beat Benfica defender Argel and then fired the ball past Quim to give Porto the lead. Despite Porto's lead, Benfica began to create more chances and squandered several chances from set pieces from Luis\u00e3o and Tomo \u0160okota. As the game drew to a close, Porto began to get more men behind the ball to protect their lead. Their strategy would pay off as Porto would hold out for the win and consequently capture their 14th Superta\u00e7a.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178881-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Suwon Samsung Bluewings season\nThe 2004 Suwon Samsung Bluewings season was Suwon Samsung Bluewings's ninth season in the K-League in Republic of Korea. Suwon Samsung Bluewings is competing in K-League, League Cup and Korean FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178881-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Suwon Samsung Bluewings season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen\nSvenska Cupen 2004 was the forty-ninth season of the main Swedish football Cup. The competition started on 28 March 2004 and concluded on 6 November 2004 with the Final, held at R\u00e5sunda Stadium, Solna Municipality in Stockholms l\u00e4n. Djurg\u00e5rdens IF won the final 3\u20131 against IFK G\u00f6teborg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, First round\nThere were 34 matches played between 28 March and 12 April 2004. There were 68 teams in the first round from Division 1, Division 2 and Division 3, but also including a few teams from Division 4 and Division 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, Second round\nIn this round the 34 winning teams from the previous round were joined by 30 teams from Allsvenskan and Superettan. The 32 matches were played between 27 April and 6 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, Third round\nThe 16 matches in this round were played between 19 May and 23 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, Fourth round\nThe 8 matches in this round were played between 17 June and 6 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, Quarter-finals\nThe 4 matches in this round were played between 29 July and 14 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, Semi-finals\nThe semi-finals were played on 20 October and 21 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178882-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Svenska Cupen, Final\nThe final was played on 6 November 2004 at the R\u00e5sunda Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178883-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swale Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Swale Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Swale Borough Council in Kent, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178883-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swale Borough Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives increased their majority on the council after gaining two seats, but also losing one seat to Labour. The Conservatives gains came in Abbey, which they took from Labour, and in Iwade & Lower Halstow from the Liberal Democrats, while the Conservative group leader Andrew Bowles was one of the councillors who retained their seats. However the Labour mayoress of Swale, Jackie Constable, won in Queenborough & Halfway to take the seat from the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178884-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Football Division 3\nStatistics of Swedish football Division 3 for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178885-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour\nThe 2004 Swedish Golf Tour, known as the Telia Tour for sponsorship reasons, was the 21st season of the Swedish Golf Tour, a series of professional golf tournaments held in Sweden and Denmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178885-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour\nThe tournaments also featured on the 2004 Nordic Golf League (NGL) or the 2004 Challenge Tour (CHA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178885-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour\nThe tour crowned a Peak Performance Player of the Month, and players competed for the Mercedes-Benz Birdie Prize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178885-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour, Schedule\nThe season consisted of 14 events played between May and September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 32], "content_span": [33, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178886-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour (women)\nThe 2004 Swedish Golf Tour, known as the Telia Tour for sponsorship reasons, was the 19th season of the Swedish Golf Tour, a series of professional golf tournaments for women held in Sweden and Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178886-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour (women)\nLinda Wessberg and Maria Bod\u00e9n both won two events and Emelie Svenningsson won the Order of Merit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178886-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Golf Tour (women), Schedule\nThe season consisted of 12 tournaments played between May and September, where one event was held in Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178887-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Open\nThe 2004 Swedish Open was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 57th edition of the Swedish Open, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the B\u00e5stad tennisstadion in B\u00e5stad, Sweden, from 5 July through 11 July 2004. Eighth-seeded Mariano Zabaleta won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178887-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Open, Finals, Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi / Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman defeated Simon Aspelin / Todd Perry, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 7\u20136(8\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178888-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Open \u2013 Doubles\nSimon Aspelin and Massimo Bertolini were the defending champions and competed with different partners this year, but were both eliminated by Mahesh Bhupathi and Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman. Aspelin (teaming up with Todd Perry) lost in the final, while Bertolini (teaming up with Robbie Koenig) was eliminated at the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178888-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Open \u2013 Doubles\nMahesh Bhupathi and Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman won the title by defeating Simon Aspelin and Todd Perry 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20132), 7\u20136(8\u20136) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178889-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Open \u2013 Singles\nMariano Zabaleta was the defending champion, and defended his title defeating Gast\u00f3n Gaudio 6\u20131, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178890-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Rally\nThe 2004 Swedish Rally (formally the 53rd Uddeholm Swedish Rally) was the second round of the 2004 World Rally Championship. The race was held over three days between 6 February and 8 February 2004, and was based in Hagfors, Sweden. Citro\u00ebn's S\u00e9bastien Loeb won the race, his 6th win in the World Rally Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178891-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish Touring Car Championship\nThe 2004 Swedish Touring Car Championship season was the 9th Swedish Touring Car Championship (STCC) season. In total nine racing weekends at five different circuits were held; each round comprising two races, making an eighteen-round competition in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178892-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swedish football Division 2\nThe following are the statistics of the Swedish football Division 2 for the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178893-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swindon Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Swindon Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Swindon Unitary Council in Wiltshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178894-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swiss Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Swiss Figure Skating Championships (officially named German: Schweizermeisterschaften Elite Kunstlaufen und Eistanzen and French: Championnats Suisses Elite Patinage Artistique et Danse sur Glace) were held in Neuch\u00e2tel from December 18 through 20th, 2003. Medals were awarded in two disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178894-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swiss Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Men\nMichael Ganser of Germany was a guest competitor who finished 5th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178894-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Swiss Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ladies\nKristin Wieczorek of Germany and Anne-Sophie Pichon of France were guest competitors who finished 3rd and 6th respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178895-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swiss referendums\nThirteen referendums were held in Switzerland during 2004. The first three were held on 8 February on a counter proposal to the popular initiative \"for safe and efficient motorways\" (rejected), an amendment to the Obligations (tenancy) law (rejected) and a popular initiative \"life-long custody for non-curable, extremely dangerous sexual and violent criminals\" (approved).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178895-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Swiss referendums\nThe second set of three was held on 16 May on a revision of the federal law on Aged and Bereaved insurance, a federal resolution on financing the Aged and Bereaved insurance, and a federal law that would affect taxation for married couples, families, private housing and stamp duty, all of which were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178895-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swiss referendums\nThe next four were held on 26 September on a federal resolution on naturalisation (rejected), a federal resolution on third-generation foreigners getting Swiss citizenship (rejected), a popular initiative \"postal services for all\" (rejected) and a federal law on compensating members of the armed forces for loss of earnings (approved). The final set of referendums was held on 28 November on a federal resolution on rebalancing the financial duties of the Federation and the Cantons, a federal resolution on the constitutional reordering of the budget and a federal law on stem cell research, all of which were approved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178896-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge\nThe 2004 Swisscom Challenge, also known as the Zurich Open, was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts that was part of the Tier I Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the 21st edition of the tournament and took place at the Schluefweg in Z\u00fcrich, Switzerland, from 17 October until 24 October 2004. Unseeded Alicia Molik won the singles title and earned $189,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178896-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Virginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178897-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nKim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, but none competed this year. Clijsters was injured on her left wrist, while Sugiyama decided to focus on the singles tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178897-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Rennae Stubbs won the title by defeating Virginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178898-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge \u2013 Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178898-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge \u2013 Singles\nAlicia Molik won the title by defeating Maria Sharapova 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178898-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Swisscom Challenge \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178899-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sydney Roosters season\nThe 2004 Sydney Roosters season was the 97th in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2004 Telstra Premiership and finished the regular season 1st, taking out the minor premiership before going on to reach the grand final which they lost to the Bulldogs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178900-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race\nThe 2004 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race, sponsored by Rolex, was the 60th annual running of the \"blue water classic\" Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race. As in past editions of the race, it was hosted by the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia based in Sydney, New South Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178900-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race\nAs with previous Sydney to Hobart Yacht Races, the 2004 edition began on Sydney Harbour, at Noon on Boxing Day (26 December 2004), before heading south for 630 nautical miles (1,170\u00a0km) through the Tasman Sea, past Bass Strait, into Storm Bay and up the River Derwent, to cross the finish line in Hobart, Tasmania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178900-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race\nThe 2004 fleet comprised 116 starters of which 59 completed the race and 57 yachts retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178901-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Sylvania 300\nThe 2004 Sylvania 300 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on September 19, 2004 at New Hampshire International Speedway, in Loudon, New Hampshire. Contested at 300 laps on the1.058-mile (1.703\u00a0km) speedway, it was the 27th race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Kurt Busch of Roush Racing won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178901-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Sylvania 300, Background\nNew Hampshire International Speedway is a 1.058-mile (1.703\u00a0km) oval speedway located in Loudon, New Hampshire which has hosted NASCAR racing annually since the early 1990s, as well as an IndyCar weekend and the oldest motorcycle race in North America, the Loudon Classic. Nicknamed \"The Magic Mile\", the speedway is often converted into a 1.6-mile (2.6\u00a0km) road course, which includes much of the oval. The track was originally the site of Bryar Motorsports Park before being purchased and redeveloped by Bob Bahre. The track is currently one of eight major NASCAR tracks owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178901-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Sylvania 300, Summary\nThe 2004 Sylvania 300 was the first time drivers raced in the Chase for the Nextel Cup format. Rain cancelled qualifying, prompting the grid to be set from owner's points. Jeff Gordon led them down to the green flag. Afterward, Greg Biffle got in the back of Robby Gordon sending Gordon spinning. Later in the race Robby Gordon spun Biffle collecting Chase contenders Tony Stewart and Jeremy Mayfield. Robby Gordon was penalized two laps for aggressive driving. Kurt Busch won the race to start his run toward his first Nextel Cup Series championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178902-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Syracuse Orange football team\nThe 2004 Syracuse Orange football team represented Syracuse University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Orange were coached by Paul Pasqualoni and played their home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178902-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Syracuse Orange football team\nThis was the first season in which Syracuse used the nickname of Orange. Previously, Syracuse had respectively used \"Orangemen\" for men's sports, including football, and \"Orangewomen\" for women's sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178902-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Syracuse Orange football team\nIn 2015, Syracuse vacated the six wins from this season among others from the 2005 and 2006 seasons following an eight-year NCAA investigation, as the NCAA found that some football players who committed academic fraud participated in the wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178903-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 S\u00e3o Paulo FC season\nThe 2004 season was S\u00e3o Paulo's 75th season since club's existence. S\u00e3o Paulo played Campeonato Paulista, State of S\u00e3o Paulo league, being defeated in a single match quarterfinal by S\u00e3o Caetano, 0\u20132, at home field due advantage points in first phase. After 10 years the club return to play the continental tournament, Copa Libertadores, that were champions in 1992, 1993 and runners-up in 1994 the last participation before 2004, reached this time the semifinals where they lost to Once Caldas in away game for 1\u20132 after a 0\u20130 in Morumbi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178903-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 S\u00e3o Paulo FC season\nIn Campeonato Brasileiro ending the 46 rounds with a third position, but the featured unpleasant happened in 38th match against S\u00e3o Caetano on 27 October when the defender of adversary Serginho fell in the field near the small area of S\u00e3o Caetano's defence suffering a fatal cardiac arrest at 60 minutes. With announcement of his death the match was finished and the remainder was played on 3 November. In Copa Sudamericana Tricolor was eliminated by rival Santos in second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178903-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 S\u00e3o Paulo FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178904-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 S\u00e3o Paulo mayoral election\nThe 2004 S\u00e3o Paulo municipal election took place in the city of S\u00e3o Paulo, with the first round taking place on 3 October and the second round taking place on 31 October 2004. Voters voted to elect the Mayor, the Vice Mayor and 55 City Councillors for the administration of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178904-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 S\u00e3o Paulo mayoral election\nThe result was a 2nd round victory for Jos\u00e9 Serra, of the Brazilian Social Democratic Party (PSDB), winning 3,330,179 votes and a share of 54,86% of the popular vote, defeating incumbent mayor Marta Suplicy of the Workers' Party (PT), who took 2,740,152 votes and a share of 45,14% of the popular vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178905-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TAC Cup season\nThe 2004 TAC Cup season was the 13th season of the TAC Cup competition. Calder Cannons have won their third premiership title after defeating the Eastern Ranges in the grand final by 70 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178906-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TC 2000 Championship\nThe 2004 TC 2000 Championship was the 26th Turismo Competicion 2000 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178906-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 TC 2000 Championship, Final standings\nBold\u00a0\u2013 Pole positionItalics\u00a0\u2013 Fastest lap\u2020\u00a0\u2013 Retired, but classified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178907-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TCU Horned Frogs football team\nThe 2004 TCU Horned Frogs football team represented Texas Christian University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. TCU finished with a 5\u20136 (3\u20135 C-USA) record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178907-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 TCU Horned Frogs football team\nThe team was coached by Gary Patterson and played their home games at Amon G. Carter Stadium, which is located on campus in Fort Worth. This was TCU's final year Conference USA before moving to the Mountain West Conference (MWC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178908-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TG10\n2004 TG10, is an eccentric asteroid, classified as near-Earth object and potentially hazardous asteroid of the Apollo group. First observed by the Spacewatch survey on 8 October 2004, it may be a fragment of Comet Encke and is the source of the Northern Taurids meteor shower seen annually in November and the June Beta Taurids. The asteroid may be larger than one kilometer in diameter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178908-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 TG10, Orbit\n2004 TG10 orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.3\u20134.2\u00a0AU once every 3 years and 4 months (1,220 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.86 and an inclination of 4\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178908-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 TG10, Orbit\nIt has a Earth minimum orbital intersection distance of 0.0225\u00a0AU (3,370,000\u00a0km), which corresponds to 8.8 lunar distances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 16], "content_span": [17, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178908-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 TG10, Physical characteristics\nAccording to the survey carried out by the NEOWISE mission of NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, the asteroid measures 1.316 kilometers in diameter and its surface has an exceptionally low albedo of 0.018, while Porubcan estimates an diameter of 350 to 780 meters, based on an albedo of 0.25 to 0.05, which typically covers most S-type and C-type asteroids.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 35], "content_span": [36, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1\n2004 TN1 is a sub-kilometer near-Earth asteroid and potentially hazardous object of the Apollo group, approximately 180 meters (600\u00a0ft) in diameter. It was first observed by the Near-Earth Asteroid Tracking at Palomar Observatory on 5 October 2004. The asteroid has a notably low sub-lunar Earth-MOID of 0.38 LD. As of 2019, it has only been observed in Fall 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [8, 8], "content_span": [9, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Orbit and classification\n2004 TN1 is a member of the Apollo group of asteroids, which are Earth-crossing asteroids. They are the largest group of near-Earth objects with approximately 10 thousand known members. It orbits the Sun at a distance of 0.8\u20134.7\u00a0AU once every 4 years and 7 months (1,664 days; semi-major axis of 2.75\u00a0AU). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.70 and an inclination of 8\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic. Due to its highly eccentric orbit it also crosses the orbit of Mars at 1.66\u00a0AU. The body's observation arc begins with its first observation at Palomar on 5 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Orbit and classification\nHowever, its orbit is poorly determined, with observations taken over a few weeks in 2004, yielding an orbital certainty of 5 and 6, respectively, with 0 being a well-determined orbit and 9 being an extremely poorly determined orbit. More observations are needed to improve the precision of the asteroid's orbital parameters to determine its potentially hazard it may pose to Earth in the distant future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Orbit and classification, Close approaches\nThe asteroid has an Earth minimum orbital intersection distance of 0.00100677\u00a0AU (151,000\u00a0km; 93,600\u00a0mi), which corresponds to 0.38 lunar distances and makes it a potentially hazardous asteroid due to its sufficiently large size. On 24 November 2004, it passed Earth at a nominal distance of 0.0935379\u00a0AU (14,000,000\u00a0km; 8,690,000\u00a0mi). It has the fourth smallest geocentric Minimum Orbital Intersection Distance of any asteroid, after 2008 TC3 which exploded in Earth's atmosphere in 2008, 1994 GV, and 2014 AA which also impacted the Earth in 2014. The asteroid, however, will not make any significant close approaches to Earth in at least the next century, as it is expected to pass close to Earth again on 8 October 2114.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 52], "content_span": [53, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Numbering and naming\nThis minor planet has neither been numbered nor named by the Minor Planet Center, which requires repeated observations on more than one opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 30], "content_span": [31, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Physical characteristics\n2004 TN1 has an unknown spectral type and could be of siliceous (S-type) or carbonaceous (C-type) composition with high or low albedo, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 34], "content_span": [35, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Physical characteristics, Rotation period\nAs of 2019, no rotational lightcurve of this asteroid has been obtained from photometric observations. The body's rotation period, pole and shape remain unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 51], "content_span": [52, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178909-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 TN1, Physical characteristics, Diameter and albedo\nBased on an magnitude-to-diameter conversion and a measured absolute magnitude of 21.8, 2004 TN1 measures between 130 and 240 meters in diameter for an assumed geometric albedo of 0.20 (siliceous) and 0.057 (carbonaceous), respectively. A theoretical impact into porous rock at 45\u00b0, assuming the asteroid to have a density of 2\u00a0g/cm3, would yield a crater between 1.7 and 3.2 kilometers wide, slightly larger than Meteor Crater in Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 8], "section_span": [10, 55], "content_span": [56, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178910-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA America's X Cup Tournament\nThe TNA 2004 America's X Cup Tournament was a tournament that was hosted by Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. It was the forerunner to the TNA 2004 World X Cup Tournament. America's X Cup Tournament consisted of four Teams: Team USA (representing the National Wrestling Alliance/Total Nonstop Action Wrestling), Team Canada, Team Mexico (representing AAA), and Team Britain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178910-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA America's X Cup Tournament, History\nThroughout America's X Cup Tournament, AAA's Team Mexico was extremely successful and dominant. They defeated Team USA, Team UK, and Team Canada. At the end of the tournament, Team AAA was victorious, upsetting the American Team and winning the trophy that Team USA was to defend. After America's X Cup Tournament ended, the World X Cup immediately followed. The World X Cup saw Team USA make a strong comeback. The World X Cup eventually culminated in an Ultimate X match which featured Team USA's Chris Sabin, Team Canada's Petey Williams, and Team Mexico's Hector Garza. Sabin won both the match and the tournament for Team USA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178910-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA America's X Cup Tournament, Americas X Cup I\nAmerica's X Cup I took place on February 11, 2004. The tournament featured Team AAA and Team NWA facing off in the first ever tournament. The teams were captained by Juventud Guerrera representing Team AAA and Jerry Lynn representing Team NWA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178911-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA World X Cup Tournament\nThe TNA 2004 World X Cup Tournament was an X Division tournament that was hosted by Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. It was the successor to America's X Cup Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178911-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA World X Cup Tournament, History\nAmerica's X Cup Tournament was used somewhat as a preview for the World X Cup Tournament. America's X Cup featured four Teams: Team USA (representing the National Wrestling Alliance/Total Nonstop Action Wrestling), Team Canada, Team Mexico (representing AAA), and Team Britain. The concept of America's X Cup was that it was to be defended by Team USA against challengers from around the world. In an upsetting turn of events for Team USA, Team Mexico virtually dominated the international competition and ended up being the eventual winners of America's X Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178911-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA World X Cup Tournament, World X Cup Events\nThe World X Cup Tournament began almost immediately after Team AAA was decisively victorious in America's X Cup Tournament. Team Britain departed from TNA after America's X Cup ended, and Team Japan was brought in to fill the gap. Several Team changes were also made during the World X Cup. Team Mexico's Captain, Juventud Guerrera, was released from TNA after an in-ring accident involving Team USA's Captain, Jerry Lynn. Hector Garza took Guerrera's place as the Team Captain during the end of America's X Cup and the entire duration of the World X Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178911-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 TNA World X Cup Tournament, World X Cup Events\nDespite a strong showing from Team Mexico during America's X Cup events, Team USA enjoyed the majority of the success during the World X Cup. Team Japan was eventually eliminated from the tournament and it came down to the United States vs. Canada vs. Mexico in an Ultimate X match. Representing Team Canada was \"The Canadian Destroyer\" Captain Petey Williams. Representing Team Mexico was Captain Hector Garza. Despite the fact that both Canada and Mexico used their Team Captains for the Ultimate X match, Team USA was represented by Captain Jerry Lynn's hand-picked selection, Chris Sabin. This proved to be a wise decision for Team USA, as Sabin was able to defeat Williams and Garza and win the World X Cup Tournament for Team USA and the NWA/TNA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum\nA nationwide consultative referendum (\u5168\u570b\u6027\u516c\u6c11\u6295\u7968) was held in Taiwan on 20 March 2004 to coincide with the 2004 presidential election. Voters were asked two questions regarding the relationship between Taiwan (ROC) and China (PRC), and how Taiwan should relate to China. The initiation of this referendum by President Chen Shui-bian came under intense criticism from China because it was seen as an exercise for an eventual vote on Taiwanese independence. The Pan-Blue Coalition urged a boycott, citing that the referendum was illegal and unnecessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum\nOver 90% of voters approved the two questions, but the results were invalid due to insufficient voter turnout, which was below 50%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Background\nOn 29 November 2003, President Chen Shui-bian announced that given that the PRC had missiles aimed at Taiwan, he had the power under the defensive referendum clause to order a referendum on sovereignty, although he did not do so under pressure by USA. This statement was very strongly criticized both by Beijing and by the Pan-Blue Coalition. But instead, he proposed a referendum to ask the PRC to remove the hundreds of missiles it has aimed at Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Background\nIn a televised address made on 16 January 2004, President Chen reiterated his \"Four Noes and One Without\" pledge, justified the \"peace referendum,\" and announced its questions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Background\nThe vetting of the referendum bill appeared to alarm Beijing which issued more sharp threats of a strong reaction if a referendum bill passed which would allow a vote on sovereignty issues such as the territory and flag of the ROC. The final bill that was passed by the Legislative Yuan on 27 November 2003 did not contain restrictions on the content of any referendums, but did include very high hurdles for referendums on constitutional issues. These hurdles were largely put in place by the Pan-Blue Coalition majority in the legislature. The bill also contained a provision for a defensive referendum to be called if the sovereignty of the ROC was under threat. In response to the referendum passage, Beijing issued vague statements of unease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Questions, Proposal 1\nThe People of Taiwan demand that the Taiwan Strait issue be resolved through peaceful means. Should the Communist Party of China refuse to withdraw the missiles it has targeted at Taiwan and to openly renounce the use of force against us, would you agree that the Government should acquire more advanced anti-missile weapons to strengthen Taiwan's self-defense capabilities? (\u300c\u53f0\u7063\u4eba\u6c11\u5805\u6301\u53f0\u6d77\u554f\u984c\u61c9\u8a72\u548c\u5e73\u89e3\u6c7a\u3002\u5982\u679c\u4e2d\u5171\u4e0d\u64a4\u9664\u7784\u6e96\u53f0\u7063\u7684\u98db\u5f48\u3001\u4e0d\u653e\u68c4\u5c0d\u53f0\u7063\u4f7f\u7528\u6b66\u529b\uff0c\u60a8\u662f\u5426\u8d0a\u6210\u653f\u5e9c\u589e\u52a0\u8cfc\u7f6e\u53cd\u98db\u5f48\u88dd\u5099\uff0c\u4ee5\u5f37\u5316\u53f0\u7063\u81ea\u6211\u9632\u885b\u80fd\u529b\uff1f\u300d)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Questions, Proposal 2\nWould you agree that our Government should engage in negotiation with the Communist Party of China on the establishment of a \"peace and stability\" framework for cross-strait interactions in order to build consensus and for the welfare of the peoples on both sides? (\u300c\u60a8\u662f\u5426\u540c\u610f\u653f\u5e9c\u8207\u4e2d\u5171\u5c55\u958b\u5354\u5546\uff0c\u63a8\u52d5\u5efa\u7acb\u5169\u5cb8\u548c\u5e73\u7a69\u5b9a\u7684\u4e92\u52d5\u67b6\u69cb\uff0c\u4ee5\u8b00\u6c42\u5169\u5cb8\u7684\u5171\u8b58\u8207\u4eba\u6c11\u7684\u798f\u7949\uff1f\u300d)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Campaign\nA series of ten debates were held over five days (Wednesdays and Sundays) on the referendum (first pair on first question; second on second; pro-government listed before con-)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Campaign\nThe \"no\" campaign was not argued by active political figures in the Pan-Blue Coalition, and the CEC at first found it difficult to find people to take the \"no\" position. The Pan-Blue Coalition made it clear that it was in favour of the proposals, but believed that the referendum process itself was illegal and a prelude to more controversial action. As a consequence, the Pan-Blue Coalition asked its supporters not to vote at all in the referendum, with the intention of having the number of valid votes fall below the 50% voter threshold necessary to have a valid referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178912-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese cross-Strait relations referendum, Campaign\nBecause of this strategy, a major controversy was the format of the referendum, specifically as to whether the referendum questions would be on the same ballots as the Presidency. After much debate, the CEC decided that there would be a U-shaped queue in which people would first cast a ballot for President and then cast a separate ballot for each of the two questions. Voters who chose not to cast a referendum ballot could exit the line at the base of the U. Near the end of the campaign, the CEC issued a number of conflicting and constantly changing directives as to what would constitute a valid ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election\nThe 2004 Taiwanese legislative election was held on 11 December 2004. All 225 seats of the Legislative Yuan were up for election: 168 elected by single non-transferable vote, 41 elected through party-list Proportional representation, eight elected from overseas Chinese constituencies on the basis of the proportion of nationwide votes received by participating political parties, eight elected by popular vote among the aboriginal populations. Members served three-year terms beginning on 1 February 2005, and ending 31 January 2008. The next term served four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election\nThis was the first election following Pan-Blue coalition candidate Lien Chen's narrow defeat in the presidential election in March. With the results of the presidential election still contested, many saw the legislative election as a referendum on Chen Shui-bian's Government and on the Pan-Blue Coalition's electoral viability. With the failure of the Pan-Green Coalition to win a majority, President Chen Shui-bian found it difficult, as in the past, to enact his policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nIn the 5th Legislative Yuan (2002\u20132005), the opposition pan-blue coalition held a narrow majority, resulting in much of government-sponsored bills being deadlocked or heavily amended. The pan-blue coalition strongly argued that having a majority pan-green legislature would lead to a \"super-president\" while the pan-green coalition stated that a majority pan-green legislature was necessary to prevent deadlock and chaos and to finally eliminate the vestiges of the KMT's previous authoritarian government on Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nA major issue of the election was whether to amend or replace the Constitution of the Republic of China. In his second inaugural address in May 2004, President Chen Shui-bian proposed to hold a referendum in 2006 on an entirely new constitution to be adopted in 2008. The Pan-Green Coalition argued that the current constitution, drafted by the Kuomintang in mainland China in 1947, is outdated and unfit for Taiwan as it was originally designed for all of China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nThough President Chen promised not to change the sovereignty status of the Republic of China (which still officially claims all of mainland China and Mongolia), the symbols of the Republic of China, or to declare an independent Taiwan, this proposal drew intense criticism from the People's Republic of China, which saw a new Constitution as a means to further the separation of Taiwan from the mainland. In Taiwan there is a general consensus across party lines that the Constitution needs reworking, but disagreement on the degree and type of reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0003-0002", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nThe Pan-Blue Coalition opposes enacting a new constitution, seeing the act as unnecessary, but supports amending it. In the summer of 2004, the legislature overwhelmingly passed a series of proposed constitutional amendments to halve the size of the legislature and abolish the National Assembly, among other measures. These measures will have to be approved by the National Assembly (elected ad hoc from the results of the 2004 election).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nIn addition, other issues were Chen's accusations of a soft coup after his March 2004 victory, as well as legal efforts (which most consider unlikely to succeed) by the leaders of the pan-blue coalition to overturn the results of the March presidential election. In a related issue, there were concerns that the 3-19 shooting incident was staged; an investigatory committee established by the legislature (only by overriding a cabinet veto) was criticized by the pan-green coalition, which refused to appoint any of its members to the committee as mandated by law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nAnother initiative that was discussed was a US$18 billion arms deal with the United States. President Chen regarded the arms deal as necessary for the defense of Taiwan against China, but the Pan-Blue Coalition has blocked the deal from passing the legislature, arguing the money should be spent on other measures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nPresident Chen also complained that the party emblem of the KMT is too similar to the national emblem of the Republic of China, and if the KMT does not change its emblem, a newly elected pan-green legislature will force it. (In response, the KMT noted that its emblem has existed before the ROC and challenged the government to change the national emblem instead.) Chen announced on December 5 that state-owned enterprises and foreign offices bearing the name \"China\", such as the Chinese Petroleum Corporation, would be renamed to bear the name \"Taiwan\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nThe U.S. government objected to this proposal, saying it would \"unilaterally change Taiwan's status\", but the DPP argued it is meant to avoid confusion and was not politically motivated. Chen reacted to the American concerns by blasting the United States. This appeared to cause a great deal of consternation among American officials with one analyst stating bluntly that President George W. Bush was \"more than a little irritated\" by Chen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign issues\nDuring the campaign, the KMT had been laying off workers and shedding millions of dollars' worth of assets it accumulated when it monopolized power. Analysts say the downsizing was prompted by fear that a DPP-controlled legislature might call for new investigations of the party's finances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign tactics\nThe legislative elections were the last in Taiwan using the single non-transferable vote, as a constitutional amendment was passed in 2005 to convert the election format in the next legislative elections. The new electoral system supported by KMT and DPP, created interesting strategies such as vote allocation, as parties did not want to nominate too many candidates for a district, out of fear that it would divide party votes among too many candidates. In addition, the voting method resulted in complex negotiations between parties with similar ideological beliefs. The need to allocate votes resulted in a system in which political parties took out newspaper ads telling supporters how to vote based on their birthday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign tactics\nThe leaders of the KMT, PFP, and New Party, which all share similar political views, expressed concern over overcrowding. In 2001 elections, the DPP won 40% of the seats even though they only polled 36% of the vote, due in large part to the inability of the KMT, PFP, and New Party to coordinate their electoral strategies. To maintain its majority of the Pan-Blue Coalition, Kuomintang Chairman Lien Chan and People First Party Chairman James Soong proposed in May 2004 to merge their parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign tactics\nIn the election, the New Party ran seven of its eight candidates (the minimum number required to form a legislative caucus) under the KMT banner to avoid splitting the vote though their campaigns were funded and organized by the New Party. However, one candidate\u2014Wu Cheng-tien of Kinmen, whose strongly Chinese reunification-supporting district was considered safe\u2014ran and won as a New Party candidate to signify the party's continued existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign tactics\nSimilarly, negotiations between TSU \"Spiritual Leader\" Lee Teng-hui and Chen Shui-bian occurred, presumably over calls for the TSU and DPP avoid splitting up their votes but not much occurred towards this result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign tactics\nHowever, the dynamics of the election have permitted intra-coalition competition, either from candidates not wanting to be \"sacrificed\" to more popular candidates in another party or from party leaders seeking to increase their proportional representation. For example, the Lee Teng-hui criticized President Chen Shui-bian for equating the \"Republic of China\" with \"Taiwan\" saying \"If we continue to use the \"Republic of China\" as the nation's title, China may view our nation (as a rebellion group)...Taiwan itself is a nation\" while campaigning for a TSU candidate in danger of losing the race to five other DPP candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Campaign tactics\nFaced with defections by independence supporters to the TSU accusing the DPP as being too moderate (President Chen's senior adviser for international affairs, Lai Shin-yuan, resigned from the administration and won a seat as a TSU candidate), President Chen seemed to be moving his party's campaign towards stronger support for Taiwan independence, calling for the renaming of state-owned enterprises. This strategy seemed to have worked in preventing defections to the TSU\u2014the TSU, predicted to increase its presence to as many as 20 seats instead lost its membership by one seat. However, this might have alienated the center of the electorate and contributed to Pan-Green's overall defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Results\nThe pro Republic of China conservative Pan-Blue Coalition (consisting of the Kuomintang, People First Party, and New Party) retained its majority in the legislature, winning 114 seats, compared to 101 seats won by the Taiwan independence-leaning Pan-Green Coalition (consisting of the Democratic Progressive Party and Taiwan Solidarity Union). The remaining ten seats went to independents and other groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Results\nA significant result was that voter participation was only 59% and was markedly lower than in previous elections (80% in the previous presidential election). Many commentators were concerned about this as it seemed to reflect public disillusionment with the tone of politics on Taiwan. The election also appeared to call into question the accuracy of public opinion polls, most of which failed to project a pan-blue victory just as they failed to predict the election of Chen Shui-bian. The DPP itself predicted that the pan-green coalition would capture 113 seats, and the TSU predicted that it would win at least 25 seats. On the other hand, the KMT underestimated itself by predicting that the pan-blue coalition altogether would win 109 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Results\nAmong the notable candidates elected, independent candidate Li Ao won a legislative seat, whereas former DPP chairmen turned pan-blue supporter Shi Ming-teh and Hsu Hsing-liang failed to get elected in their seats. Also of interest is a non-party legislator from Yunlin County who was the sister of a former county magistrate who was captured by the police the day before the election on corruption charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Results\nIn their post-election speeches, all of the party spokesman called for moderation as well as unity and cooperation between the parties. Significantly, the pan-blue coalition consistently referred to the country by its legal name of the Republic of China whereas pan-green referred to the country with the term Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Analysis\nAlthough the party strengths were similar to the election of the 2001 ROC legislative election, but the results were widely seen as a major defeat for President Chen Shui-bian, who had campaigned hoping for an absolute majority for the pan green coalition. Reasons for the result included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178913-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese legislative election, Analysis\nAlthough the pan-green coalition improved both their seat totals and their vote percentage over the last election, the legislative elections were widely interpreted as a major defeat for the pan-green coalition, given their goal of gaining a majority of seats in the Legislative Yuan. In the aftermath of the election, Chen Shui-bian resigned as chairman of the Democratic Progressive Party and was replaced by Su Tseng-Chang.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election\nThe 2004 President and Vice President election was held on 20 March 2004. A consultative referendum took place on the same day regarding relations with the People's Republic of China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election\nPresident Chen Shui-bian and Vice President Annette Lu of the Democratic Progressive Party were narrowly re-elected by a narrow margin of 0.22% of valid votes over a combined opposition ticket of Kuomintang (KMT) Chairman Lien Chan and People First Party Chairman James Soong. Lien and Soong refused to concede and unsuccessfully challenged the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Formation of the tickets, Democratic Progressive Party\nIn the months leading up to December 2003, there was speculation as to whether President Chen would choose Vice President Annette Lu as his running mate. Polls had consistently showed that Chen would do better with another candidate such as Taipei county administrator Su Tseng-chang or Kaohsiung mayor Frank Hsieh and many of the DPP's most popular lawmakers had petitioned Chen to seriously consider another candidate. After several weeks of very public infighting between various factions of the DPP, Chen formally nominated Lu as his running mate on December 11. They were backed by the Pan-Green Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 92], "content_span": [93, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Formation of the tickets, Democratic Progressive Party\nThe existence of only two tickets on the ballot led to several protest movements against both coalitions - most notably the Alliance of One Million Invalid Ballots - asking people to disqualify their ballots on purpose. This was partly responsible for the high number of invalid votes compared to the 2000 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 92], "content_span": [93, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Formation of the tickets, Kuomintang and People First Party\nIn February 2003, the KMT and PFP agreed to run a combined ticket representing the entire Pan-Blue Coalition with Lien Chan for president and James Soong for vice president. The campaign emblem for the Lien-Soong campaign was a two-seat bicycle with a blue figure in the first seat and an orange figure in the second. There were initial doubts to this pairing since it was believed that the two men personally disliked each other - during the 2000 campaigns, Lien accused Soong of positioning his family graves to interfere with Lien's Feng Shui forcing Lien to reposition his graves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Formation of the tickets, Kuomintang and People First Party\nAdditionally, it was thought to be difficult for the two men to agree upon who would run for president and who would run for vice president. Though Soong polled ahead of Lien in 2000 and was thought to be much more charismatic than Lien, he ended up running for vice president. The PFP's poor showing in the 2001 legislative election may have played a role. Initially, it was believed that the Lien-Soong ticket would be a sure win, given that both men garnered a combined 59.9% of the vote in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 97], "content_span": [98, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Issues\nAlthough the political spectrum on Taiwan is defined in terms of Taiwan independence versus Chinese reunification, both campaigns took moderate positions on this issue. Members of the electorate who were influenced greatly by either independence or unification were iron votes for the Pan-Green or Pan-Blue coalitions respectively, so the goal of both campaigns was to capture the moderate middle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Issues\nThe theme of the Pan-Green Coalition was to portray themselves as Taiwanese nationalists and reformers and the opposition as corrupt and lacking in loyalty to Taiwan. The theme of the Pan-Blue Coalition was to question Chen's competence and also to focus in on issues which interested specific interest groups. The Pan-Blue Coalition staunchly defended the existence of the Republic of China and also rejected reunification under one country, two systems. They also abandoned the Under the Roof of One China policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Issues\nThe main issues in the campaign were relations with the People's Republic of China, political reform, and the economy. In addition, although they tend not be noticed by the international press, local issues were important in the campaign, particularly because these issues influence undecided voters. These issues varied from county to county but included funding for irrigation projects, the location of expressways, and location of local administrative boundaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Issues\nAs the election approached, the tone of campaigning became increasingly negative, with charges of tax evasion, draft dodging, illegal financial transactions, and domestic violence on the part of Lien Chan. Most observers attributed the negative nature of the campaign to the fact that each campaign had moderated their positions on the issues to be similar to each other, leaving nothing other than personal attacks to attract the few uncommitted voters in the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Demographic trends and public opinion\nOn the day of the election, each member of the electorate (most adult citizens aged 20 and upwards) stamped one from the two choices of president/vice-president tickets on the ballot. Since Taiwan does not provide absentee ballots, large numbers of Taiwanese expatriates living in North America and Mainland China returned to Taiwan to vote. Typical estimates indicate that about 20,000 people travelled from North America and between 100,000 and 150,000 people travelled from Mainland China. Most analysts believe that the voters from North America would be split evenly between the two candidates, but that those from Mainland China voted overwhelmingly for Pan-Blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Demographic trends and public opinion\nPolls indicated that Taiwan is split with about one-third identifying themselves as Pan-Blue, one-third identifying themselves as Pan-Green, and one-third as centrist. They also show very little cross-party voting with over 90% of people who identify with one party group stating that they will vote for the party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Demographic trends and public opinion\nPan-Blue tends to do well among Mainlanders, Taiwanese aborigines, and Hakka. They also have the support of people from age 30-50, among the very rich, and very poor, and among people from northern and eastern Taiwan. Pan-Green does well among people 20-30 and people from 50-60, among people with formal education like doctors, and among people from southern Taiwan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Demographic trends and public opinion\nThe margin in favor of Pan-Blue narrowed significantly after the 228 Hand-in-Hand Rally, with some polls showing Pan-Green in the lead. Taiwanese law forbids publishing any poll results, either current or historical, less than ten days before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Platforms and strategies\nThe DPP attempted to portray the Lien-Soong ticket as one which would sell out Taiwan to the PRC, and emphasized constitutional reform, proposing a new constitution, and a \"peace referendum\". This has led to fears that Chen intends to use a new constitution and a referendum to declare Taiwan independence. Worries about this have caused the United States at several points to ask for, and receive assurances that Chen has not abandoned the Four Noes and One Without policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Platforms and strategies\nThe Lien-Soong ticket attempted to portray Chen as someone who let politics get in the way of improving the Taiwanese economy. Originally emphasizing Chen's inability to establish the Three Links with Mainland China, the Lien-Soong ticket changed its message, in light of the SARS outbreak in mid-2003, to focus more on what they see as Chen's inability to deal with the recession. Until October 2003, the Lien-Soong strategy appeared to be to avoid doing or saying anything controversial to keep its lead. This strategy was widely seen as counterproductive by the end of October when Pan-Green started to pull ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Platforms and strategies\nChen's rise in the polls in 2003 caused the opposition to change its campaign strategy. To counter Chen's platform for a new constitution by 2008, the opposition campaigned for a major constitutional change by 2004. In addition, the opposition stopped its stalling of a referendum bill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Platforms and strategies\nBy the end of November 2003, the Lien-Soong ticket had appeared to recover some of the losses in polls that had occurred in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Platforms and strategies\nBoth groups, in January 2004, seemed not to be focusing on issues of external policies, but instead on issues of personal finances. The Pan-Green Coalition raised the issue of Lien Chan's personal wealth and the properties which they asserted that the Kuomintang had illegally acquired while it was the ruling party. In response, the Pan-Blue Coalition asked why Chen Shui-bian has become much wealthier after assuming the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Platforms and strategies\nIn March 2004, as the campaign was winding down, a series of posters comparing incumbent Chen to Adolf Hitler, Saddam Hussien, and Osama bin Laden were released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Reaction from the PRC\nMost observers believed that the People's Republic of China (PRC) would have preferred to see Chen Shui-bian replaced by an administration less sympathetic to Taiwan independence and more in favor of Chinese reunification. However, some observers believed that the PRC cared less about who became the President of the ROC, than that this person establish economic linkages which Beijing believes would bind Taiwan irrevocably to the Mainland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Reaction from the PRC\nIn contrast to the elections of 1996 and 2000, the PRC was quiet in this election until early November. Most observers believed that this was because the PRC learned that any comments, especially in the form of threats, were likely to be counterproductive. The PRC broke its silence in mid November 2003 and issued several very sharp threats that it would not stand by if Taiwan declared independence. This widely was seen as in response to two factors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Reaction from the PRC\nIn early November 2003, Chen Shui-bian took an unofficial trip to the United States in which he was much more publicly seen than before. This trip increased his popularity on Taiwan to the point where most polls indicated that he was even or slightly ahead of Lien. The trip in November 2003, also alarmed the PRC in that it appeared to convince them that the United States would do less to constrain Chen Shui-bian than they had earlier believed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0020-0002", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Reaction from the PRC\nIn December 2003, after the United States clarified its position on Taiwan stating support for the one China policy and opposition to any referendum that would tend to move Taiwan toward independence, the PRC became relatively quiet and focused its attention on the proposed referendum rather than on the presidential race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Reaction from the PRC, Incident of the Pan-Blue campaign offices\nIn February 2004, former Justice Minister Liao Cheng-hao, attempted to establish four campaign office branches on mainland China with the purpose of convincing Taiwanese businessmen on the mainland to support Pan-Blue. News of this caused an uproar on Taiwan, especially after Liao was photographed with several fugitives from Taiwan. Lien Chan quickly distanced himself from this action, and Liao wrote an essay stating that his activities were not authorized. Shortly thereafter, the PRC Taiwan Affairs Office spokesman said, \"We did not, do not and will not interfere with elections in Taiwan... We do not care who will be elected. What we care about is the winner's attitude towards cross-Taiwan Strait relations and national reunification,\" and PRC issued instructions to local officials not to allow Taiwanese businessmen to openly campaign on the mainland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 102], "content_span": [103, 966]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Reaction from the PRC, Incident of the Pan-Blue campaign offices\nAt the same time, a number of organizations were operating to help Taiwanese businessmen return to Taiwan in order to vote. Though these organizations were formally politically neutral, most Taiwanese businessmen on the mainland widely favor Pan-Blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 102], "content_span": [103, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Election mechanics\nThe official campaigning period was from 07:00 to 22:00 every day from February 21, 2004 to March 19, 2004, though campaign activities had gone on for over a year. Taiwanese law forbids reports of polls in the last ten days of campaigning and any campaigning on the day of the election. Ballots in Taiwan are counted by hand with results generally available within two hours of the end of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Election mechanics\nBecause of Pan-Blue's strategy of having people cast no ballot in the referendum, one major controversy was the format of the election, specifically as whether the referendum questions would be on the same or different ballots as the Presidency. After much debate the CEC decided that there would be a U shaped line in which people would first cast a ballot for President and then cast a separate ballot for each of the two questions. Voters who choose not to cast a referendum ballot could exit the line at the base of the U. Near the end of the campaign, the CEC issued a number of conflicting and constantly changing directives as to what would constitute a valid ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Official televised debates of the candidates\nTelevised debates between the two major candidates were held on February 14 and February 22. The parties were unable to reach agreement on dates for other presidential debates and for vice-presidential debates, though both candidates provided televised statements on February 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 102], "content_span": [103, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nThe main figures from the Pan-Green Coalition, including Chen Shui-bian and former president Lee Teng-hui, initiated the 228 Hand-in-Hand Rally in which more than two million people joined hands from the very north of Taiwan to south to form an unbroken human chain. As an act of defiance against the P.R.China as well as a promotion of Taiwanese national identity, it occurred on February 28 in remembrance of the February 28 Incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nThis demonstration was inspired by the human chain of two million that was organized in the Baltic states in 1989, where the Soviet Union later invaded to stop the Baltic states from declaring independence. Although billed as non-political, some of the symbolism of the demonstration, particularly the point in the event where participants \"turn away from China,\" veered clearly toward support of Taiwan independence, and hence was not attended by members of the Pan-Blue Coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nIn response, the Pan-Blue Coalition planned a series of events they dubbed \"Heart Connecting to Hearts.\" These events included several rallies on 228, a blood drive, and a run in which a torch was passed from person to person through all 369 townships and cities of Taiwan in the course of two weeks. However, these events were unsuccessful at preventing a shift in support to Pan-Green after the 228 demonstration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nIn response to declining polls numbers, the Pan-Blue coalition quickly organized a program of major rallies near the end of the election. Originally, therallies were to protest black gold or political corruption, but the theme of the rallies were changed to\"Change the President, save Taiwan.\" Critics of Pan-Blue argued that this change in theme was because Pan-Blue could not credibly be seen as anti-corruption. Supporters argued that this change was intended to focus the election on Chen's presumed lack of competence as president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nOn March 13, the Pan-Blue Coalition held 24 rallies across Taiwan. The two million people attending beat gongs and made other noise and shouted \"Change the President, save Taiwan\" at 3:20 PM, in reference to the election date. The theme of the rallies were widely seen as an effort by Pan-Blue to shed the image that they were not really committed to Taiwan and would sell the island out to the PRC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nSoong led the rally in Taichung and knelt to kiss the ground along with his wife. Ten minutes later, Lien after giving a speech in Taipei which heavily talked about the need to love Taiwan and defend it, unexpectedly lay down prone on the ground kissing it with his wife and KMT Secretary-General Lin Fong-cheng.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Popular mobilization\nBecause of the poll blackout, there are no published reports which track the effect of 313 on Taiwanese public opinion, although anecdotal reports suggest that Pan-Blue supporters were deeply moved by Lien's actions while Pan-Green supporters saw them as disgusting and hypocritical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Public endorsements\nBuddhist master Wei Chueh endorsed Lien on March 11 and also urged his followers to boycott the referendum. This led to criticism from some other Buddhist leaders that his blunt condemnation of Chen broke the convention that religious figures remain politically neutral. In addition, Wei Chueh's temple was the object of many protests and had to be shut down until after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Public endorsements\nLee Yuan-tseh, widely credited for Chen's upset victory in 2000, issued a written statement on March 17 endorsing the Pan-Green candidates: \"Four years ago, I endorsed Chen Shui-bian. Four years has elapsed, and I must admit in terms of the ability to run the country, the DPP has a lot of room to improve. But in terms of ideals and momentum to carry out reforms, the DPP is still the better choice.\" In response, Lien Chan, when asked about Lee's endorsement, remarked in English, \"So what?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 77], "content_span": [78, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, The shooting\nOn March 19, 2004, the last day of the election campaign, President Chen Shui-bian and Vice-President Annette Lu were both shot while campaigning in Tainan. They were traveling in an open convertible jeep in the presidential motorcade. One bullet struck Chen's stomach and was later found in his clothes. It resulted in a flesh wound 8\u00a0cm long and 2\u00a0cm deep (four inches long, an inch wide, and an inch deep). Another bullet grazed Lu's knee and was found in the jeep. At first both believed that they had been hit by firecrackers, which are commonly used in Taiwanese political activities; the first sign of something more serious was when Chen noticed that he was bleeding from the stomach, and that there was a bullet hole in the window.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, The shooting\nTheir injuries were not life-threatening, and both Chen and Lu were released from Chi-Mei Hospital on the same day without losing consciousness or having surgery. Nevertheless, the attack provoked shock and unease on Taiwan, where political violence of this kind is unknown in recent times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, The shooting\nChen released a video in which he urged calm and indicated that neither his health nor the security of Taiwan were under threat. Within hours, police announced they were certain that the crime was not politically motivated, and that mainland China was not involved. On Internet chat rooms and talk radio, some Pan-Blue supporters theorized that the incident was faked in order for Chen to gain sympathy votes. These speculations were, however, considered highly offensive by Pan-Green supporters, and were not condoned by the Pan-Blue leadership until after Chen won the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, The shooting\nBoth Chen and Lien's election campaigns were suspended, but the next day's election was not postponed, as Taiwanese law only allows for suspension of election upon the death of a candidate. Lien Chan and Wang Jyng-ping tried to visit Chen on the night of the incident, but were unable to see the president because he was resting. Chen Shui-bian appeared publicly the next day when he voted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nAfter all 13,749 polling places had reported, Lien appeared before his campaign headquarters and demanded a recount calling the vote \"unfair\". He demanded a full inquiry into the assassination attempt on Chen that had happened the day before, characterizing it as surrounded by \"clouds of suspicion,\" seeming to fuel theories that it had been staged to get Chen re-elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nOn the next day, the KMT filed several lawsuits in major cities and Lien led 20,000 supporters in a march to the presidential office and staged an all night sit-in. This first set of lawsuits where thrown out because they were filed before a winner had been officially declared. Sit-ins were held in front of courthouses across Taiwan, with some protests becoming violent. The High Court ordered all ballot boxes be sealed, per Lien's demand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0039-0001", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nProtesters continued to camp on Ketagalan Boulevard outside the presidential office, despite Taipei Mayor Ma Ying-jeou's calls on Sunday night to have people return to work. On Monday morning, hundreds still remained, with numbers swelling to about 10,000 in the evening. The crowds still remained until one week later, demanding a recount and an international investigation into the apparent assassination attempt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nOn March 23, President Chen issued three directives to quell the contested results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nThe Legislature Yuan convened on March 26 to discuss the passage of the law, but the measure was not put to a vote. The Pan-Blue coalition demanded a recount by an executive order, bypassing the legislature; Chen claimed he had no such right, and that doing so would amount to declaring martial law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nChen's controversial victory was officially confirmed by the Central Election Commission on March 26, 2004. Pan-Blue protesters stormed and hurled eggs at the CEC in response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nOn March 27, 500,000 protesters massed in front of the presidential office (where protesters had remained all week). Lien told the crowd that he had counted more than 1,000 election irregularities (though he was not specific), but urged the crowd to disperse, promising more protests in the future if their demands were not met. Chen agreed to set up an independent task force to investigate the shooting and invited Henry Lee to be its leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nAt daybreak on March 28, 1000 riot police moved into Ketagelan Boulevard to forcibly remove the last 200 protesters remaining. Another protest was held on the following Saturday, April 3, in which 15,000 people attended. The protest was deemed illegal and violently broken up by police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nOn March 29, Chen and Lu signed letters promising not to contest the newly re-filed Pan-Blue petition for a recount, bypassing a lengthy judicial inquiry. On April 2, the High Court gave both sides five days to agree on a means to conduct the recount. Meanwhile, the Pan-Blue Coalition dropped its demand for another round of voting by disenfranchised members of the military and the police. By April 7, a procedural agreement for the recount still had not been reached and Pan-Blue held another rally the following Saturday, this time more than 100,000 strong. This protest was peaceful for most of the day, but several hundred demonstrators tried to storm the president's office in the evening. Police fired water cannons to push back the protesters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nA second lawsuit, originally filed on April 5 and refiled on April 7, charged that the Central Election Commission improperly allowed the presidential election to occur concurrently with the referendum and failed to postpone it after the apparent assassination attempt. This lawsuit sought to annul the results of the election. This was rejected by the High Court on November 4, 2004, but the Pan-Blue coalition is appealing to the Supreme Court. The Court also asked Pan-Blue to pay for the cost of the lawsuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nA judicial recount under the jurisdiction of a special panel of the High Court began on May 10 and ended on May 18. It was conducted by about 460 teams situated in 21 courthouses across the Taiwan area. Each team comprised seven members - one judge, two members each from the district court and the local government election authorities, and two witnesses each representing the plaintiff (pan-blue alliance) and the defendant (pan-green alliance). Any disputed votes were sent to High Court in Taipei for verification. After the recount, Chen was confirmed the winner of the election by a smaller margin (25,563 from 29,518).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nThe High Court ruled that the election was legitimate in both lawsuits and also eventually turned down the appeals. The judges declared in the 2nd lawsuit that the voter lists did not need to be considered as evidence despite reports that widespread election fraud was found in the voter lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Other developments, Subsequent events\nIn late 2005, the Central Election Commission ruled that video cameras would no longer be allowed in voting stations and also took measures to remove certain practices such as stamping the back of ID's to prevent repeat voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178914-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Taiwanese presidential election, Results, Results by County and City\nThe leading candidate in each municipality is marked in red.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 73], "content_span": [74, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178915-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tajik League\nTajik League is the top division of the Tajikistan Football Federation, it was created in 1992. These are the statistics of the Tajik League in the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178916-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Tameside Council were held on 10 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178916-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council election\nDue to demographic changes in the Borough since its formation in 1973, and in common with most other English Councils in 2004, substantial boundary changes were implemented in time for these elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178916-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council election\nAfter the election, the composition of the council was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178916-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council election, Results, Stalybridge North ward\nCouncillor Frank Robinson died in 2006. The seat was retained for Labour by George Roberts in a by-election on 29 June 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 84], "content_span": [85, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season\nThe 2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season was the franchise's 29th season in the National Football League, the 7th playing their home games at Raymond James Stadium, and the 3rd under head coach Jon Gruden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season\nThis season began with the team trying to improve on their 7\u20139 record in 2003, but they fell even further to a 5-11 record and missed the playoffs for the second straight season. Brian Griese set a number of franchise records for passing. Michael Clayton set a rookie record for receiving.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season\nThe Bucs acquired Hall of Fame wide receiver Tim Brown, who was well known for his tenure with the Raiders. After his only season in Tampa Bay, Brown decided to hang it up after 17 seasons. They also acquired former Seattle Seahawks and Dallas Cowboys wide receiver Joey Galloway in a trade for Keyshawn Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Summary, Offseason\nBefore the 2004 training camp, personnel issues and the salary cap became primary concerns. Gruden successfully lobbied the Glazers to hire his former general manager from Oakland, Bruce Allen. After Allen's arrival in the Buccaneers' front office, the team announced that it would not re-sign two of their notable defensive players (John Lynch and Warren Sapp). Both of their contracts were expiring, and younger players would fill their positions. Lynch was released after medical exams indicated ongoing injury problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Summary, Offseason\nMany Buccaneers fans were stunned by the move, as Lynch was a very popular player whose aggressive, intelligent play earned him several Pro Bowl appearances. He was also well regarded for his philanthropic work in the Tampa-area. Lynch was quickly signed by the Denver Broncos, where he had consecutive injury-free Pro Bowl seasons. Sapp signed with the Oakland Raiders, where he played in a limited role in 2004, and sat out much of the 2005 season with injuries but returned to form in 2006. Since wide receiver Keenan McCardell refused to play until he was given a better contract or traded, he was sent to the San Diego Chargers for draft compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Summary, Offseason\nTampa Bay's free agent signings in 2004 included a number of expensive and aging players meant to jumpstart Gruden's offense. These players included tackle Todd Steussie, running back Charlie Garner and tackle Derrick Deese. The 32-year-old Charlie Garner signed a reported $20-million contract with a $4-million signing bonus but only played 3 games before going on IR, he would never play again. Todd Steussie was often injured while Derrick Deese only played for the team for one year before retiring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Summary, Preseason\nIn August, Hurricane Charley brought training camp to a screeching halt. The Buccaneers' first preseason game was also postponed (from Saturday to Monday) due to the storm. After returning to Disney's Wide World of Sports Complex, it was determined that the soaked fields and disrupted schedule was too much to overcome. The team broke camp over a week early, and returned to Tampa. A \"rump\" week of camp took place at the team facilities, and at the same time, some players and team officials tended to damaged homes in the wake of the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Summary, Regular season\nThe distracted Buccaneers began the 2004 season with a 1\u20135 record, their worst start since 1996. The fading accuracy of kicker Martin Gramatica did not help matters and he was cut after week 12, as the team lost many close games en route to a 5\u201311 record. The Buccaneers became the first NFL team to follow up a Super Bowl championship with back-to-back losing seasons. The lone highlights of 2004 were the high-quality play of rookie wide receiver Michael Clayton and the return of Doug Williams, who joined the Bucs front office as a personnel executive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Summary, Regular season\nThe Buccaneers finished their year under Jon Gruden with the 22nd ranked offense and the 5th ranked defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nOpening day saw Tampa Bay visit Washington. In the second quarter, Brad Johnson threw deep for an apparent 29-yard touchdown pass to newly acquired wide receiver Joey Galloway. Galloway, was unable to secure the ball, and suffered a groin injury on the play. After a Martin Gramatica field goal, the Buccaneers entered halftime trailing 10\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nRonde Barber tied the score at 10\u201310 after he recovered a Mark Brunell fumble 9 yards for a touchdown. After an interception, Washington, managed two field goals in the fourth period, and held on to win 16\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 2: Seattle Seahawks\nBrad Johnson struggled mightily, completing only 4-of-7 for 34 yards and one interception. Jon Gruden pulled Johnson after the first quarter and replaced him with second year player Chris Simms, to the delight of fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 2: Seattle Seahawks\nSimms drove the Buccaneers to the Seattle 1 yard line. Attempting a quarterback sneak on third-and-goal, Simms fumbled the snap. Tampa Bay settled for a field goal and a 10\u20133 halftime deficit. In the fourth quarter, another field goal narrowed the game to 10\u20136. With just over two minutes left, Simms drove the Buccaneers to the Seattle 26. The game ended, however, after he was intercepted with 1:11 to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 2: Seattle Seahawks\nSimms debut yielded mixed results; 175 yard passing, but no touchdowns, and two costly turnovers. The Buccaneers started the season 0\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Oakland Raiders\nTampa Bay traveled to Oakland, for a rematch of Super Bowl XXXVII on Sunday Night Football. The game saw the Buccaneers face former player Warren Sapp (who signed with Oakland in the offseason) for the first time. This game was being played while central Florida, including Tampa, was being impacted by Hurricane Jeanne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Oakland Raiders\nBrad Johnson was back in place at starting quarterback, but his numbers were again mediocre. He threw two interceptions (one was returned for a touchdown). Trailing 30\u20136, Johnson managed two fourth quarter touchdown passes (Tampa Bay's first offensive touchdowns of the season), but the comeback stalled, and the Buccaneers started the season 0\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 3: at Oakland Raiders\nAlso, Tim Brown, playing his swan song season in Tampa Bay, scored his 100th career touchdown against his old team, the Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 4: Denver Broncos\nTampa Bay's dismal start continued, as they dropped to 0\u20134 on the season. Brad Johnson connected with Michael Clayton for a 51-yard touchdown in the first half, but three Jason Elam field goals proved to be the winning edge for Denver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 5: at New Orleans Saints\nTampa Bay broke a six-game losing streak (dating back to 2003), defeating the Saints 20\u201317. Slumping Brad Johnson was benched for the season, and Chris Simms started at quarterback. Simms' first NFL start was short-lived, however, as he left the game in the first quarter with a sprained shoulder. Brian Griese took over at quarterback, later connecting on a 45-yard touchdown to Ken Dilger, which proved to be the winning margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 6: at St. Louis Rams\nTampa Bay faced St. Louis on Monday Night Football for the fourth time in five seasons. A Michael Pittman fumble was returned 93 yards for a touchdown by Adam Archuleta, and Martin Gramatica missed two field goal attempts, sinking the Buccaneers' chances at victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 6: at St. Louis Rams\nWith a final rating of 7.7, this was the lowest-ever rated MNF game on ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 7: Chicago Bears\nMichael Pittman rushed for 109 yards, and Brian Griese threw a touchdown pass as Tampa Bay prevailed over the visiting Chicago Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 9: Kansas City Chiefs\nThe lone highlight game of Tampa Bay's forgetful 2004 season came against Kansas City in week 9. Brian Griese threw for 296 yards and two touchdowns, while Michael Pittman rushed for 128 yards on the ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 9: Kansas City Chiefs\nLate in the first quarter, Trent Green connected to Eddie Kennison for a 59-yard gain to the Tampa Bay 11 yard line. Dwight Smith forced a fumble, and Brian Kelly returned the fumble 32 yards for the Buccaneers. The turnover led to a touchdown and a 14\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 9: Kansas City Chiefs\nEarly in the third quarter, Pittman broke away for a 78-yard touchdown run, the longest in Buccaneer history. Tampa Bay took the lead 34\u201331 after another Pittman score with 12 minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 9: Kansas City Chiefs\nJermaine Phillips sealed the game for Tampa Bay, intercepting Green with just under six minutes left. Kansas City had one final chance, but the Buccaneer defense forced a turnover on downs with only 1:15 to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 10: at Atlanta Falcons\nMichael Vick rushed for 76 yards, and had 176 yard passing, as Tampa Bay fell to division rival Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 11: San Francisco 49ers\nTampa Bay crushed the lowly 49ers 35\u20133. Brian Griese passed for 210 yards and two touchdown passes, and Michael Pittman rushed for 106 yards and two touchdown runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 11: San Francisco 49ers\nTampa Bay won their fourth game out of the last six, and improved to 4\u20136 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Carolina Panthers\nBrian Griese threw for 347 yards and two touchdowns, but mistakes cost the Buccaneers dearly, and they fell to Carolina 21\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Carolina Panthers\nA Griese interception was returned for a touchdown, and Martin Gramatica's kicking woes continued. He missed two field goal attempts during the game, which brought his season total to 8 misses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 13: Atlanta Falcons\nKicker Martin Gramatica was benched for the season, and journeyman veteran Jay Taylor took his place. Tampa Bay crushed Atlanta 27\u20130, knocking Michael Vick out of the game for a play, forcing two fumbles, and one interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 13: Atlanta Falcons\nAt 5\u20137, Tampa Bay found themselves only one game out of the NFC wild card hunt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 74], "content_span": [75, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 14: at San Diego Chargers\nTampa Bay returned to San Diego for the first time since winning Super Bowl XXXVII, as Brian Griese threw for 392 yards, but four turnovers foiled Tampa Bay's chances for victory against the San Diego Chargers. Tied 21\u201321 with 4 minutes remaining, Griese's pass was intercepted and returned for a game icing touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 15: New Orleans Saints\nFormer Buccaneer Aaron Stecker returned the opening kickoff 98 yards for a touchdown (something he never accomplished playing for Tampa Bay) as New Orleans beat Tampa Bay 21\u201317. Tampa Bay fell to 5\u20139, guaranteed themselves of their second consecutive losing season, and effectively eliminated themselves from playoff contention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 15: New Orleans Saints\nThe Buccaneers led 17\u20137 with just over 3 minutes to go, but late-game miscues on offense and defense sunk the Buccaneers. Aaron Brooks connected on two touchdowns in the final three minutes, lifting the Saints to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 16: Carolina Panthers\nCarolina routed Tampa Bay 37\u201320 in front of an only partially full Raymond James Stadium. Trailing 24\u20137, Brian Griese connected for two touchdown passes, but the comeback was for naught.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Arizona Cardinals\nChris Simms returned from injury to start his second game. A 75-yard touchdown pass to Michael Clayton gave the Buccaneers a 7\u20136 lead. Four turnovers, however, kept the game out of reach, and Tampa Bay lost to the four field goals by Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178917-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Buccaneers season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Arizona Cardinals\nTampa Bay started the season with 4 straight losses, ended the season with 4 straight losses, and finished a hapless 5\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178918-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season\nThe 2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season was their seventh since the franchise was created. This season, they finished fourth in the AL East division, Toronto Blue Jays in last place. They managed to finish the season with a record of 70\u201391, finishing out of last for the first time in their 7-year history. Their manager was Lou Piniella who entered his 2nd season with the Devil Rays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178918-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178918-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178918-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178918-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178918-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tampa Bay Devil Rays season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 73], "content_span": [74, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178919-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tamworth Borough Council election\nElections to Tamworth Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from the Labour Party. Overall turnout was 31.4%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178920-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tandridge District Council election\nThe 2004 Tandridge District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Tandridge District Council in Surrey, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178921-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent Open\nThe 2004 Tashkent Open was a women's tennis tournament played on hard courts at the Tashkent Tennis Center in Tashkent, Uzbekistan that was part of the Tier IV category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the sixth edition of the tournament and was held from 11 October through 17 October 2004. Unseeded Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 won the singles title and earned $22,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178921-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent Open, Finals, Doubles\nAdriana Serra Zanetti / Antonella Serra Zanetti defeated Marion Bartoli / Mara Santangelo, 1\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178922-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent Open \u2013 Doubles\nYuliya Beygelzimer and Tatiana Poutchek were the defending champions, but competed this year with different partners. Poutchek teamed up with Darya Kustova and lost in the first round to Adriana Serra Zanetti and Antonella Serra Zanetti, while Beygelzimer teamed up with Silvija Talaja and lost in semifinals to Marion Bartoli and Mara Santangelo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178922-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent Open \u2013 Doubles\nAdriana Serra Zanetti and Antonella Serra Zanetti won the title by defeating Marion Bartoli and Mara Santangelo 1\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178923-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent Open \u2013 Singles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual was the defending champion, but decided to compete in Moscow at the same week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178923-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent Open \u2013 Singles\nNicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 won the title by defeating Virginie Razzano 5\u20137, 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178924-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent suicide bombings\nOn Friday 30 July 2004, three suicide bombings occurred in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. The bombings targeted the Israeli and American embassies and the office of Uzbekistan's chief prosecutor. Two Uzbek security guards were killed at the Israeli embassy and nine more people were wounded in the bombings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178924-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent suicide bombings\nThe bombings happened nearly simultaneously at around 5 p.m. Two Uzbeks guarding the Israeli embassy were killed when the bomber got near entrance and saw the guards. One of the guards killed was a personal guard for the Israeli ambassador. Seven people were injured in the bombing at the prosecutor's office and two more at U.S. embassy. No Americans or Israelis were injured the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178924-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent suicide bombings\nThe bombings occurred shortly after fifteen suspected al-Qaeda members went to trial for staging a series of attacks earlier in 2004 that killed 47 people (mostly militants), and conspiring to overthrow the Uzbek government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178924-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tashkent suicide bombings\nThe Islamic Jihad Union claimed responsibility for the attacks. Al-Qaeda and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan are also suspected of being involved in the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178925-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Final\nThe 2004 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Final was the final match of the 2003\u201304 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, the 64th season of the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, the premier Portuguese football cup competition organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). The match was played on 16 May 2004 at the Est\u00e1dio Nacional in Oeiras, and opposed two Primeira Liga sides: Benfica and Porto. Benfica defeated Porto 2\u20131, thanks to an extra-time goal from Portuguese winger Sim\u00e3o after the match had ended 1\u20131. Benfica players dedicated the trophy to Mikl\u00f3s Feh\u00e9r.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178925-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Final\nIn Portugal, the final was televised live on TVI and Sport TV. As Benfica claimed their 24th Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, they qualified for the 2004 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira, where they took on the winners of the 2003\u201304 Primeira Liga, Porto, at the Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Coimbra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election\nThe Te Tai Hauauru by-election was a by-election in the New Zealand electorate of Te Tai Hau\u0101uru, one of the M\u0101ori electorates. The date set for the by-election was 10 July 2004. It saw the re-election of Tariana Turia, a former MP for the Labour Party and now co-leader of the M\u0101ori Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election\nTuria had quit both Parliament and the Labour Party in protest over the government's position in the foreshore and seabed controversy. She contested the by-election as a member of the new M\u0101ori Party, which she played a leading role in establishing. None of the major parties contested the by-election, and Turia was always the overwhelming favourite to win. Perhaps due to the apparent inevitability of a win for Turia, only around 32% of Te Tai Hauauru voters cast ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election\nNominations for the by-election closed on 15 June 2004. Candidates were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election\nIf no candidates had been put forward to oppose Turia, she would have been declared the winner without a vote \u2013 this initially appeared possible, and given the cost of a by-election (estimated at almost NZ$500,000), many hoped that a vote could be avoided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election\nThe holding of a by-election was criticised by a number other parties. The Labour Party, of which Turia was originally a member (and which has traditionally dominated the M\u0101ori electorates) has called the by-election \"a waste of time and money\", and a \"sideshow\" although the by-election was required by Labour-supported waka-jumping law in force at the time. Labour nominated Errol Mason to contest the seat at the subsequent 2005 general election, losing to Turia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election, Results\nThe following table shows the final results of the by-election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election, Results\nNotes: Blue background denotes the winner of the by-election. Pink background denotes a candidate elected from their party list prior to the by-election. Yellow background denotes the winner of the by-election, who was a list MP prior to the by-election. A Y or N denotes status of any incumbent, win or lose respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178926-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Te Tai Hauauru by-election, Results\na Includes 37 informal votes but does not include any disallowed special votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178927-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Team Ice Racing World Championship\nThe 2004 Team Ice Racing World Championship was the 26th edition of the Team World Championship. The final was held on\u00a0?, 2004, in Inzell, in Germany. Russia won their tenth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178928-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tecate/Telmex Grand Prix of Monterrey\nThe 2004 Tecate/Telmex Grand Prix of Monterrey was the second round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on May 23, 2004 on the streets of Fundidora Park in Monterrey, Mexico. S\u00e9bastien Bourdais swept pole position and the race win, his first pole and win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178929-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Teen Choice Awards\nThe 2004 Teen Choice Awards ceremony was held on August 8, 2004, at the Universal Amphitheatre, Universal City, California. The event was hosted by Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie with Blink-182, JoJo, Lenny Kravitz, and Ashlee Simpson as performers. Mike Myers received the Ultimate Choice Award, Bethany Hamilton received the Courage Award, Tony Hawk and Mia Hamm received the Male and Female Athlete Awards respectively, Adam Sandler received the Comedian Award, and Ashlee Simpson received the Fresh Face Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178930-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Teli Katha massacre\n2004 Teli Katha massacre was the killing of twelve sleeping Muslim Gujjars by Islamic militants on 26 June 2004 in the village of Teli Katha (also called Tiali Katha by some sources) in Surankote Tehsil in Poonch district of Jammu and Kashmir.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178930-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Teli Katha massacre, Background\nA violent insurgency has been going on in Jammu and Kashmir since 1989. The militants had intermittently massacred villagers who did not support their cause. The state government had supplied arms to the villagers who had formed Village Defence Committees (VDC) so that they could protect themselves from the militants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178930-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Teli Katha massacre, Attack\nThe murdered villagers included women, children, and men who were members of the Village Defense Committee, had been sleeping in their dhok. They were fired upon indiscriminately. The members of VDC returned fire forcing the militants to flee in 10\u201315 minutes and thereby saving many lives. The deceased include seven members of the VDC and their five children. Ten others including four women and three children were injured. The killings were thought to be revenge for the villagers co-operation with the Indian army during operation Sarp Vinash. Anger against the militants ran so high that villagers had previously refused to bury militants killed in this operation by the Indian army, claiming their crimes meant they had renounced Islam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178930-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Teli Katha massacre, Aftermath\nInvestigations by the authorities that Zubair Masih of Lashkar-e-Taiba had led the group of militants who were responsible for the killings. In August 2004 security forces killed three militants suspected of involvement in this massacre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178931-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Telus Cup\nThe 2004 National Midget Championship was Canada's 26th annual national midget 'AAA' hockey championship, played April 18\u201325, 2004 at Kenora, Ontario. The Brandon Wheat Kings defeated the Riverains du Coll\u00e8ge Charles-Lemoyne 2-1 in overtime to win their first and only national title. It also marked the first time that a Manitoba team was the national midget champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178931-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Telus Cup\nThis was the only season that Hockey Canada did not have a sponsor for the national midget championship. From 1979 to 2003, it was known as the Air Canada Cup. Later in 2004, a new sponsor would be found and the midget championship would be renamed the Telus Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178932-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Temple Owls football team\nThe 2004 Temple Owls football team represented Temple University in the college 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Temple competed as a member of the Big East Conference. The team was coached by Bobby Wallace and played their homes game in Lincoln Financial Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178933-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennessee Democratic presidential primary\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Woko Sapien (talk | contribs) at 15:47, 25 June 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178933-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennessee Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Tennessee Democratic presidential primary was held on February 10 in the U.S. state of Tennessee as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178934-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennessee Titans season\nThe 2004 Tennessee Titans season was the franchise's 35th season in the National Football League, the 45th overall and the 8th in the state of Tennessee. The team attempted to improve upon their previous output of 12\u20134, but only ended up with a 5-11 for that year, and missed the playoffs for the first time since 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178934-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennessee Titans season\nThe season is notable when the team lost three starters from the famed 1999 team; lineman Jevon Kearse went to the Philadelphia Eagles, running back Eddie George was released before the season, and he would later sign with the Dallas Cowboys and tight end Frank Wycheck retired after the 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178935-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennessee Volunteers football team\nThe 2004 Tennessee Volunteers (variously \"Tennessee\", \"UT\", or the \"Vols\") represented the University of Tennessee in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Playing as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC) Eastern Division, the team was led by head coach Phillip Fulmer, in his twelfth full year, and played their home games at Neyland Stadium in Knoxville, Tennessee. They finished the season with a record of ten wins and three losses (10\u20133 overall, 7\u20131 in the SEC), as the SEC Eastern Division champions and as champions of the Cotton Bowl Classic after they defeated Texas A&M.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178936-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup\nThe 2004 Tennis Masters Cup was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 35th edition of the year-end singles championships, the 30th edition of the year-end doubles championships, and was part of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Westside Tennis Club in Houston, Texas, United States, from November 13 through November 21, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178936-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup, Points Breakdown, Doubles\n1 Malisse and Rochus qualified due to winning French Open and a top 20 finish according to the rules", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178936-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup, Champions, Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan def. Wayne Black / Kevin Ullyett, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178937-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, and won in the final 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20134, 6\u20132, against Wayne Black and Kevin Ullyett.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178937-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup \u2013 Doubles, Draw, Red Group\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178937-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup \u2013 Doubles, Draw, Blue Group\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178938-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup \u2013 Singles\nDefending champion Roger Federer successfully defended his title, defeating Lleyton Hewitt in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20132 to win the Singles tennis title at the 2004 Tennis Masters Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178938-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup \u2013 Singles, Draw, Red Group\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178938-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tennis Masters Cup \u2013 Singles, Draw, Blue Group\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178939-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n play-offs\nThe 2004 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n play-offs to Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B from Tercera Divisi\u00f3n (Promotion play-offs) were the final playoffs for the promotion from 2003\u201304 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n to 2004\u201305 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B. The first four teams in each group (excluding reserve teams) took part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178939-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n play-offs, Group E\nNavalcarnero, At. Arteixo, Marino, Guijuelo, Huesca, Sestao River, Peralta, Lemona, Badalona, Benidorm, Levante B, Alcoyano, D\u00edter Zafra, Alcal\u00e1 G., Don Benito, Arenas & Castillo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178940-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas A&M Aggies football team\nThe 2004 Texas A&M Aggies football team completed the season with a 7\u20135 record. The Aggies had a regular season Big 12 record of 5\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178941-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Democratic presidential primary\nA presidential primary for the Democratic Party was held in Texas in 2004 as part of the selection process for the Democratic candidate for the presidential elections that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178942-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns baseball team\nThe 2004 Texas Longhorns baseball team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Longhorns played their home games at Disch\u2013Falk Field. The team was coached by Augie Garrido in his 8th season at Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178942-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns baseball team\nThe Longhorns reached the College World Series final, falling in two games to champion Cal State Fullerton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178942-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns baseball team, Schedule\n^ Collegiate Baseball ranks 40 teams in their preseason poll, but only ranks 30 teams weekly during the season. \u2020 NCBWA ranks 35 teams in their preseason poll, but only ranks 30 teams weekly during the season. * New poll was not released for this week so for comparison purposes the previous week's ranking is inserted in this week's slot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team\nThe 2004 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by head football coach Mack Brown and led on the field by quarterback Vince Young. Ranked third in wins in Division I-A college football history, the University of Texas has traditionally been considered a college football powerhouse, but Brown had not managed to lead the Longhorns into a Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game. The 2004 season included some controversy related to the selection of Texas as an at-large team to attend the 2005 Rose Bowl. Brown coached the team to win that game with a thrilling last-second victory. The victory brought the Longhorns to 11 wins and 1 loss for the season (11\u20131) and it earned the Longhorns a top 5 finish in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nIn 2004, the Longhorns began the season with a No. 7 ranking nationally and started out with a 65\u20130 blowout of North Texas, setting several UT school records in the process. This was followed by a narrow 22\u201320 win against unranked Arkansas. They defeated Rice and Baylor 35\u201313 and 44\u201314 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nThis left them ranked fifth coming into the annual matchup with then No. 2 Oklahoma in the Red River Shootout. Oklahoma shut-out the Longhorns 12\u20130. Texas dropped to No. 9, before rebounding with wins over No. 24 Missouri 28\u201320, at No. 24 Texas Tech 51\u201321, and at Colorado 31\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nThen Texas set a record for the largest come from-behind-win in school history, beating No. 19 Oklahoma State 56\u201335 after falling behind 7\u201335. After this performance, Texas again fell behind against Kansas but squeaked out a win 27\u201323. Kansas coach Mark Mangino stirred up controversy by claiming that the officials were biased in favor of Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nThis brought UT back up to No. 5 in the rankings as they welcomed arch-rival Texas A&M to Austin and won 26\u201313. However, Oklahoma stood undefeated, which meant the Sooners would represent the Big 12 South in the Championship game against a much lower ranked team from the North Division. Once again, the loss to Oklahoma had kept Texas out of playing for a National or Conference Title, and had seemingly destined them to a non-Bowl Championship Series bowl as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nHowever, Brown began lobbying the voters in the two polls based on human voters (one on college football coaches, the other on Associated Press (AP) writers) to place the Longhorns high enough in the rankings to ensure they received a Bowl Championship Series (BCS) bowl-bid. The rules of the BCS were such that Texas might get left out of the eight chosen teams even though they ranked fifth nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nThe No. 4 California Golden Bears won their final regular season game 26\u201316 over 24-point underdog Southern Miss. Cal did not try to run-up the score at the end of the game. Several AP voters were besieged by fan emails and phone calls attempting to sway their votes, apparently spurred from Brown's pleas to rank Texas ahead of other \"less deserving teams.\" Nine of the 65 AP voters switched Texas ahead of Cal, and three of them were from Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nIn the coaches poll, four voters moved Cal down to No. 7 and two to No. 8, when the week before none had them lower than No. 6. Meanwhile, two coaches moved Texas up to No. 3 when the team did not play that week. The Los Angeles Times wrote that accusations were raised about coaches manipulated voting, but the individual coaches votes were not released to prove or disprove the allegations. The AP Poll makes its voters' records public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0005-0003", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights\nNo. 6 Texas gained 23 points on No. 4 Cal in the AP poll, and the fifth-ranked Longhorns closed 43 points on the fourth-ranked Bears in the coaches poll. That allowed Texas to earn a BCS berth, finishing .0129 points ahead of Cal in the BCS standings after being .0013 points behind. In part because of the controversy with Texas' and Cal's BCS ranking, the AP poll withdrew from the BCS after the season. This lobbying effort and ensuing result led to criticism of Brown for playing politics to get his team into a top bowl. Thus, he was no longer criticized for failing to get into a top bowl, he was criticized for doing so (and the way he had done it).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights, Rose Bowl\nThe appearance in the \"Grand-daddy\" of all bowl games was the first visit by the Longhorns, due mainly to the fact that the Rose Bowl traditionally pitted the winner of the Pac-10 against the winner of the Big Ten. Texas' opponent was Michigan, whom Texas was playing for the very first time. Texas and Michigan each had over 100 years of football history. The meeting of the two teams set a college football record for the most games played collectively by two opponents before facing each other for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, Season highlights, Rose Bowl\nTexas won the game 38\u201337 on a last second field goal kick by Longhorn Dusty Mangum in what had been called one of the greatest Rose Bowl games of all time. It was the only time in the history of the Rose Bowl that the game has been decided as time expired off the clock. Vince Young set several Rose Bowl records and also won the Rose Bowl MVP award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, After the season\nIn the NFL Draft that followed, three Longhorns were drafted\u00a0\u2013 RB Cedric Benson went 4th overall to Chicago Bears and Derrick Johnson went 15th overall to the Kansas City Chiefs. TE Bo Scaife was picked in the 6th round by the Tennessee Titans and would be later reunited with quarterback Vince Young", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178943-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Longhorns football team, After the season\nWith the exception of these players, most of the team returned to play for the 2005 Texas Longhorns football team, including redshirt sophomore quarterback Vince Young. Therefore, expectations were high coming into the 2005 season. At the trophy presentation in Pasadena, Vince Young had proclaimed, \"We'll be back! \", referencing the fact that the Rose Bowl was the host for the next year's BCS National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178944-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Rangers season\nThe Texas Rangers finished the 2004 season in 3rd place in the West division of the American League. Five Rangers were All Stars, Francisco Cordero, Kenny Rogers, Hank Blalock, Michael Young and All-Star Game MVP Alfonso Soriano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178944-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Rangers season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178944-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Rangers season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178945-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Republican presidential primary\nThe 2004 Texas Republican presidential primary was held on March 9 in the U.S. state of Texas as one of the Republican Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election. Incumbent George W. Bush won the primary in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178946-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team\nThe 2004 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team represented Texas Tech University in the Big 12 Conference (Big 12) during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their fifth season under head coach Mike Leach, the Red Raiders compiled an 8\u20134 record (5\u20133 against Big 12 opponents), finished in a tie for third place in Southern Division of the Big 12, defeated California in the 2004 Holiday Bowl, and outscored opponents by a combined total of 434 to 314. The team played its home games at Jones SBC Stadium in Lubbock, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178947-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thailand National Games\nThe 34th Thailand National Games (Thai:\u0e01\u0e32\u0e23\u0e41\u0e02\u0e48\u0e07\u0e02\u0e31\u0e19\u0e01\u0e35\u0e2c\u0e32\u0e41\u0e2b\u0e48\u0e07\u0e0a\u0e32\u0e15\u0e34 \u0e04\u0e23\u0e31\u0e49\u0e07\u0e17\u0e35\u0e48 34 \u201c\u0e23\u0e32\u0e0a\u0e1a\u0e38\u0e23\u0e35\u0e40\u0e01\u0e21\u0e2a\u0e4c\u201d) also known (2004 National Games, Ratchaburi Games) held in Ratchaburi, Thailand during 18 to 28 December 2004. Representing were 35 sports and 76 disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178948-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thailand Open (tennis)\nThe 2004 Thailand Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 2nd edition of the Thailand Open, and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Impact Arena in Bangkok, Thailand, from 27 September through 3 October 2004. Roger Federer won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178948-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Thailand Open (tennis), Finals, Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob / Graydon Oliver defeated Yves Allegro / Roger Federer, 5\u20137, 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178949-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thailand Open \u2013 Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob and Graydon Oliver won the doubles tennis matches in the final 5\u20137, 6\u20134, 6\u20134, against Yves Allegro and Roger Federer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178950-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thailand Open \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20130 against Andy Roddick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178951-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 The Citadel Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 The Citadel Bulldogs football team represented The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. John Zernhelt served as head coach for the first season. The Bulldogs played as members of the Southern Conference and played home games at Johnson Hagood Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178951-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 The Citadel Bulldogs football team, Schedule\nThe Bulldogs first game of the season, against Charleston Southern was cancelled due to Hurricane Gaston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178952-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thomas & Uber Cup\nThe 2004 Thomas & Uber Cup was held from 7 May to 16 May 2004 in Jakarta, Indonesia. It was the 23rd edition of World Men's Team Badminton Championships, Thomas Cup and 20th edition of World Women's Team Badminton Championships, Uber Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178952-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Thomas & Uber Cup\nAfter a 12-year drought China finally lifted their fifth title of Thomas Cup and also won their ninth title of Uber Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178952-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Thomas & Uber Cup, Host city selection\nIndonesia, Japan, and the United States are the countries to submit a bid for hosting the event. Indonesia was selected as host during IBF council meeting in Birmingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178952-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Thomas & Uber Cup, Teams\nThe following nations from 5 continents, shown by region, qualified for the 2004 Thomas & Uber Cup. Of the 16 nations, defending champions of Uber Cup, China, and host nation as well as defending champion of Thomas Cup, Indonesia and its Uber Cup team qualified automatically and did not play the qualification round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178953-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Three Days of De Panne\nThe 2004 Three Days of De Panne was the 28th edition of the Three Days of De Panne cycle race and was held on 30 March to 1 April 2004. The race started in Middelkerke and finished in De Panne. The race was won by George Hincapie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178954-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Three Rivers District Council election\nElections to Three Rivers Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrat party stayed in overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 42.1%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178955-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thuringian state election\nThe 2004 Thuringian state election was held on 13 June 2004 to elect the members of the 4th Landtag of Thuringia. The incumbent Christian Democratic Union (CDU) government led by Minister-President Dieter Althaus retained its majority and continued in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178955-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Thuringian state election, Parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the 3rd Landtag of Thuringia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178956-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Thurrock Council election\nThe 2004 Thurrock Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Thurrock Council in Essex, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2002. The Conservative party gained overall control of the council from the Labour party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178956-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Thurrock Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives win control of the council, which Labour had run before the election with 33 of the 49 seats. The Conservatives gained 18 seats while Labour lost 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178957-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Time Warner Cable Road Runner 250\nThe 2004 Time Warner Cable Road Runner 250 was the third round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on June 5, 2004 at the Milwaukee Mile in West Allis, Wisconsin. The relatively cold temperatures for the night race limited passing, allowing Ryan Hunter-Reay to lead every lap of the race from the pole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178958-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippeligaen\nThe 2004 Tippeligaen was the 60th completed season of top division football in Norway. The season began on 12 April 2004 and ended on 30 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178958-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippeligaen\nEach team played 26 games with three points given for wins and one point for a draw. Number thirteen and fourteen are relegated, number twelve has to play two qualification matches (home and away) against number three in the first division (where number one and two are directly promoted) for the last spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178958-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippeligaen, Overview, Summary\nRosenborg won their thirteenth consecutive title and 19th top-flight title overall. Stab\u00e6k and Sogndal were relegated. Rosenborg, V\u00e5lerenga, Brann and Troms\u00f8 finished in the top four and qualified for the 2004\u201305 Royal League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178959-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship was the 114th staging of the Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Tipperary County Board in 1887. The knock-out stage of the new-look league-championship began on 5 September 2004 and ended on 10 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178959-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tipperary Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 10 October 2004, Toomevara won the championship after a 4-12 to 2-12 defeat of combination side \u00c9ire \u00d3g-Golden-Kilfeacle in the final at Semple Stadium. It was their 19th championship title overall and their second title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178960-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippmix Budapest Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Tippmix Budapest Grand Prix was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts in Budapest, Hungary that was part of the Tier V category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the tenth edition of the tournament and was held from 26 April until 2 May 2004. Eighth-seeded Jelena Jankovi\u0107 won the singles title and earned $16,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178960-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippmix Budapest Grand Prix, Finals, Doubles\nPetra Mandula / Barbara Schett defeated Vir\u00e1g N\u00e9meth / \u00c1gnes Sz\u00e1vay 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178961-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippmix Budapest Grand Prix \u2013 Doubles\nPetra Mandula and Elena Tatarkova were the defending champions, but Tatarkova didn't play in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178962-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippmix Budapest Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nMag\u00fci Serna was the defending champion from 2003, but chose not to compete in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178962-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tippmix Budapest Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nJelena Jankovi\u0107 won this title, defeating Martina Such\u00e1 in the final in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178963-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tirreno\u2013Adriatico\nThe 2004 Tirreno\u2013Adriatico was the 39th edition of the Tirreno\u2013Adriatico cycle race and was held from 10 March to 16 March 2004. The race started in Sabaudia and finished in San Benedetto del Tronto. The race was won by Paolo Bettini of the Quick-Step team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178964-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toledo Rockets football team\nThe 2004 Toledo Rockets football team represented the University of Toledo during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They competed as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) in the West Division. The Rockets were led by head coach Tom Amstutz. The Rockets offense scored 432 points while the defense allowed 404 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178965-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tommy Murphy Cup\nThe first Tommy Murphy Cup, a Gaelic football tournament, was held in 2004. All those teams that lost in the early rounds of the championship were invited to play, but only four actually competed. Clare were the inaugural champions, Ordan O'Dwyer scoring the crucial goal in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178966-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tonga Major League\nThe 2004 season of the Tonga Major League was the 26th season of top flight association football competition in Tonga. Lotoha\u02bbapai United won the championship for the seventh time, the 7th in a record streak of 11 titles in the Tonga Major League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series\nThe 2004 Top League Challenge Series was the 2004 edition of the Top League Challenge Series, a second-tier rugby union competition in Japan, in which teams from regionalised leagues competed for promotion to the Top League for the 2004\u201305 season. The competition was contested from 10 to 24 January 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series\nIBM Big Blue and Toyota Verblitz won promotion to the 2004\u201305 Top League, while Kyuden Voltex and Toyota Industries Shuttles progressed to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Competition rules and information\nThe top two teams from the regional Top East League, Top West League and Top Ky\u016bsh\u016b League qualified to the Top League Challenge Series. The regional league winners participated in Challenge 1, while the runners-up participated in Challenge 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Competition rules and information\nThe top two teams in Challenge 1 won automatic promotion to the 2004\u201305 Top League, while the third-placed team in Challenge 1 and the Challenge 2 winner qualified to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification\nThe teams qualified to the Challenge 1 and Challenge 2 series through the 2003 regional leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification, Top West League\nThe final standings for the 2003 Top West League were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification, Top East League\nThe final standings for the 2003 Top East League were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Qualification, Top Ky\u016bsh\u016b League\nThe final standings for the 2003 Top Ky\u016bsh\u016b League were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 1, Standings\nThe final standings for the 2004 Top League Challenge 1 were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 1, Matches\nThe following matches were played in the 2004 Top League Challenge 1:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 2, Standings\nThe final standings for the 2004 Top League Challenge 2 were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178967-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Top League Challenge Series, Challenge 2, Matches\nThe following matches were played in the 2004 Top League Challenge 2:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178968-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toppserien\nThe 2004 season of the Toppserien, the highest women's football (soccer) league in Norway, began on 17 April 2004 and ended on 30 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178968-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toppserien\n18 games were played with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws. Number nine and ten were relegated, while the two top teams from the First Division were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178969-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toray Pan Pacific Open\nThe 2004 Toray Pan Pacific Open was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 21st edition of the Toray Pan Pacific Open, and was part of the Tier I Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place at the Tokyo Metropolitan Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan, from January 30 through February 8, 2004. Lindsay Davenport won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178969-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toray Pan Pacific Open, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Elena Likhovtseva / Magdalena Maleeva, 6\u20130, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178970-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toray Pan Pacific Open \u2013 Doubles\nElena Bovina and Rennae Stubbs were the defending champions, but had different outcomes. While Bovina did not compete this year, Stubbs partnered with Cara Black and successfully defended her title, defeating Elena Likhovtseva and Magdalena Maleeva 6\u20130, 6\u20131 in the final. It was the 2nd title in the year for the pair, and the 14th title for Black and 44th title for Stubbs, in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178971-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toray Pan Pacific Open \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport was the defending champion and successfully defended her title, defeating Magdalena Maleeva 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final. It was the 1st title of the year and the 39th of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178971-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toray Pan Pacific Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178972-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Apertura (Chile)\nThe 2004 Campeonato Nacional Apertura Copa Banco del Estado was the 75th Chilean League top flight, in which Universidad de Chile won its twelfth league title after beating Cobreloa in the final, on penalties, with goalkeeper Johnny Herrera scoring the winning penalty kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178972-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Apertura (Chile), Playoffs, First Round\nDeportes Temuco and Universidad de Chile qualified as best losers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178972-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Apertura (Chile), Pre-Copa Sudamericana 2004 Tournament, Final round\nSantiago Wanderers & Universidad de Concepci\u00f3n qualified to 2004 Copa Sudamericana", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178973-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Clausura (Chile)\nThe 2004 Campeonato Nacional Clausura Copa Banco del Estado was the 76th Chilean League top flight, in which Cobreloa won its 8th league title after beating Uni\u00f3n Espa\u00f1ola in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178974-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Descentralizado\nThe 2004 Torneo Descentralizado (known as the Copa Cable M\u00e1gico for sponsorship reasons) was the eighty-eighth season of Peruvian football. A total of 14 teams competed in the tournament, with Alianza Lima as the defending champion. Alianza Lima won its twenty-first Primera Divisi\u00f3n title after beating Sporting Cristal in the final playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178974-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Descentralizado, Changes from 2003, Structural changes\nThe number of teams for the 2004 season grew from 12 to 14. The relegation system was re-introduced but the system was determined by a points per match average. The qualification for the Copa Sudamericana was determined by the aggregate table instead of the Torneo Apertura playoffs. Due to a structure change in the Copa Libertadores, only two teams will qualify directly to the group stage (the half-year champions) and the best-placed non-champion will have to play in the first stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178974-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo Descentralizado, Changes from 2003, Promotion and relegation\nNo teams were relegated from the 2003 season and thus the number of teams grew from 12 to 14. Segunda Divisi\u00f3n champion Sport Coopsol and Copa Per\u00fa 2003 champion U. C\u00e9sar Vallejo were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178975-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo di Viareggio\nThe 2004 winners of the Torneo di Viareggio (in English, the Viareggio Tournament, officially the Viareggio Cup World Football Tournament Coppa Carnevale), the annual youth football tournament held in Viareggio, Tuscany, are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178975-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Torneo di Viareggio, Format\nThe 40 teams are seeded in 10 pools, split up into 5-pool groups. Each team from a pool meets the others in a single tie. The winning club from each pool and three best runners-up from both group A and group B progress to the final knockout stage. All matches in the final rounds are single tie. The Round of 16 envisions penalties and no extra time, while the rest of the final round matches include 30 minutes extra time with Golden goal rule and penalties to be played if the draw between teams still holds. Semifinal losing teams play 3rd-place final with penalties after regular time. The winning sides play the final with extra time, no Golden goal rule and repeat the match if the draw holds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season\nThe 2004 Toronto Argonauts season was the 115th season for the professional Canadian football team since the franchise's inception in 1873. The team finished in second place in the East Division with a 10\u20137\u20131 record and qualified for the playoffs for the third consecutive year. The Argonauts defeated the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the East Semi-Final and then won the Eastern Final against the Montreal Alouettes. Toronto faced the BC Lions in the 92nd Grey Cup and won their 15th Grey Cup championship by a score of 27\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season, Postseason, Grey Cup\nToronto Argonauts (27) \u2013 TDs, Damon Allen (2), Robert Baker; FGs Noel Prefontaine (2); cons., Prefontaine (3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season, Postseason, Grey Cup\nBC Lions (19) \u2013 TDs, Jason Clermont, Dave Dickenson; FGs Duncan O'Mahony (2); cons. O'Mahony (1).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season, Postseason, Grey Cup\nFirst Quarter BC\u2014TD Clermont 12-yard pass from Dickenson (O'Mahony convert) 4:07", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season, Postseason, Grey Cup\nSecond Quarter TOR\u2014FG Prefontaine 27-yard field goal 7:40 TOR\u2014TD Allen 1-yard run (Prefontaine convert) 12:22 BC\u2014FG O'Mahony 42-yard field goal 13:13 TOR\u2014TD Baker 23-yard pass from Allen (Prefontaine convert) 14:37", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season, Postseason, Grey Cup\nThird Quarter TOR\u2014TD Allen 1-yard run (Prefontaine convert) 4:45 BC\u2014FG O'Mahony 36-yard field goal 9:16", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178976-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Argonauts season, Postseason, Grey Cup\nFourth Quarter BC\u2014TD Dickenson 7-yard run (convert failed) 6:06 TOR\u2014FG Prefontaine 16-yard field goal 12:19", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season\nThe 2004 Toronto Blue Jays season was the franchise's 28th season of Major League Baseball. It resulted in the Blue Jays finishing fifth in the American League East with a record of 67 wins and 94 losses, their worst record since 1980. The Blue Jays' radio play-by-play announcer, Tom Cheek, called every Blue Jays game from the team's inaugural contest on April 7, 1977, until June 3, 2004, when he took two games off following the death of his father \u2013 a streak of 4,306 consecutive regular season games and 41 postseason games. It was the team's first season where Ace is the sole mascot, following the removal of Diamond at the end of the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nThe 2004 season was a disappointing year for the Blue Jays right from the beginning. They started the season 0\u20138 at SkyDome and never started a lengthy winning streak. Much of that was due to injuries to All-Stars Carlos Delgado, Vernon Wells and Roy Halladay among others. Although the additions of starting pitchers Ted Lilly and Miguel Batista and reliever Justin Speier were relatively successful, veteran Pat Hentgen faltered throughout the season and retired on July 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nRookies and minor league callups David Bush, Jason Frasor, Josh Towers and others filled the void in the rotation and the bullpen; however, inconsistent performances were evident. Most starting pitchers did not pitch further than the sixth inning; thus, the overused bullpen contributed to the frequent relinquishing of early scoring leads.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nThe offense really sputtered due to the injuries of Wells, Delgado, Catalanotto and others, although in their absence, Josh Phelps emerged as the team's go to guy, hitting 12 homers and driving in 51 runs before being limited to playing against left-handed pitching and was traded to the Cleveland Indians. Five different catchers were used: Greg Myers, Bobby Estalella, Kevin Cash, Gregg Zaun, and rookie Guillermo Quir\u00f3z. Greg Myers was injured running the bases in Minnesota, early in the season, and was lost for the year. Bobby Estalella was called up, but he proved to be brittle as well. Gregg Zaun landed the starting catching job for the rest of the season. Kevin Cash continued to struggle from an offensive standpoint and would be moved in the offseason. The highly touted Guillermo Quir\u00f3z was promoted from the minors near the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nWith the team struggling in last place and mired in a five-game losing streak, manager Carlos Tosca was fired on August 8, 2004, and was replaced by first-base coach John Gibbons through the end of the season. The Jays' trying year would also touch long-time radio announcer Tom Cheek, who had to break his streak of calling all 4,306 regular season games in franchise history, upon the death of his father. Cheek had to take more time off later to remove a brain tumor, and by the end of the season, Cheek only called the home games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nNevertheless, prospects Russ Adams, Gabe Gross, and Alex R\u00edos provided excitement for the fans. Adams hit his first major league home run in his second game, in which Gross also earned his own first major league grand slam. Alex R\u00edos was among the MLB Rookie of the Year Award candidates. However, the award went to Bobby Crosby of the Oakland Athletics. Rookie pitchers David Bush, Gustavo Chac\u00edn and Jason Frasor also showed promise for the club's future. The Blue Jays' lone MLB All-Star Game representative in 2004 was pitcher Ted Lilly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nOn October 2, 2004, the Toronto Blue Jays announced the dismissals of pitching coach Gil Patterson and first-base coach Joe Breeden, effective at the end of the season. One day later, the Blue Jays finished the 2004 campaign with a 3\u20132 loss against the New York Yankees in front of an announced crowd of 49,948. However, the Jays' annus horribilis continued after the game, when it was announced that former pitcher and current TV broadcaster John Cerutti died suddenly of natural causes at the age of only 44.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nMore losses to the Jays family came in the offseason. Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame member Bobby Mattick, the manager from 1980 to 1981 and perhaps the best baseball man in the organization, suffered a stroke and died at the age of 89. Mattick had also served as the Vice President of Baseball Operations for the Blue Jays. A few days before Christmas, the Jays also mourned the loss of former first baseman Doug Ault, who had hit two home runs in the team's inaugural game in 1977; he was only 54 years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nRogers Communications, the owner of the Jays, purchased SkyDome from Sportsco International in November 2004 for approximately $25 million CAD ($21.24 million USD), just a fraction of the construction cost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, Summary\nJust days after superstar Carlos Delgado became a free agent after the club refused arbitration, the Jays announced the signing of Manitoban third baseman Corey Koskie, formerly of the Minnesota Twins. One month after Koskie was inked, the Jays traded pitching prospect Adam Peterson to the Arizona Diamondbacks for corner infielder/DH Shea Hillenbrand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Regular season, 2004 Draft picks\nThe 2004 MLB draft was held on June 7\u20138. The Blue Jays had two compensation picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178977-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Blue Jays season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned Run Average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 70], "content_span": [71, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178978-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto International Film Festival\nThe 29th Toronto International Film Festival ran from September 9 through September 18. The festival screened 328 films of which 253 were features and 75 were shorts (148 of the films screened were in a language other than English).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178978-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto International Film Festival, Awards\nNo first or second runners-up were officially named for the People's Choice Award; however, festival director Piers Handling did provide the media with a list of numerous other films that had been in the running, including Crash, Gunner Palace, I, Claudia, Up and Down, 3-Iron, Ma M\u00e8re, The Holy Girl, Red Dust, Brides, Saving Face and Sideways.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 48], "content_span": [49, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178978-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto International Film Festival, Canada's Top Ten\nThe festival's year-end Canada's Top Ten list was announced in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178978-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto International Film Festival, Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time\nIn 2004 a new Top 10 Canadian Films of All Time list was made, an exercise previously carried out in 1984 and 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178979-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Rock season\nThe Toronto Rock are a lacrosse team based in Toronto playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2004 season was the 7th in franchise history and 6th as the Rock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178979-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Rock season\nThe Rock continued its dynasty on top of the NLL standings, finishing first in its division for the sixth straight year. The Rock lost to the Buffalo Bandits in the division final, failing in their attempt at three consecutive championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178979-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Rock season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 62], "content_span": [63, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178979-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Rock season, Player stats, Runners (Top 10)\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178979-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Toronto Rock season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 51], "content_span": [52, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178980-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Totesport League\nThe 2004 totesport League season was a 45 over English county cricket competition; colloquially known as the Sunday League. Glamorgan Dragons won the League for the third time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under\nThe 2004 Tour Down Under, known as Jacob's Creek Tour Down Under for sponsorship reasons, was the sixth edition of the Tour Down Under stage race. It took place from 20 January to 25 January in and around Adelaide, South Australia and was the first major stage race of the season. The race was won by Patrick Jonker, who rode for Team UniSA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under, Stages, Stage 1\n20 January 2004 \u2013 Adelaide - Adelaide, 50\u00a0km (31\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under, Stages, Stage 2\n21 January 2004 \u2013 Norwood to Kapunda, 157\u00a0km (98\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under, Stages, Stage 3\n22 January 2004 \u2013 Goolwa - Victor Harbor, 150\u00a0km (93\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under, Stages, Stage 4\n23 January 2004 \u2013 Unley - Hahndorf, 141\u00a0km (88\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under, Stages, Stage 5\n24 January 2004 \u2013 Willunga - Willunga, 147\u00a0km (91\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178981-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour Down Under, Stages, Stage 6\n25 January 2004 \u2013 Adelaide - Adelaide, 90\u00a0km (56\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France\nThe 2004 Tour de France was a multiple stage bicycle race held from 3 to 25 July, and the 91st edition of the Tour de France. It has no overall winner\u2014although American cyclist Lance Armstrong originally won the event, the United States Anti- Doping Agency announced in August 2012 that they had disqualified Armstrong from all his results since 1998, including his seven Tour de France wins from 1999 to 2005; the Union Cycliste Internationale confirmed this verdict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France\nThe event consisted of 20 stages over 3,391\u00a0km (2,107\u00a0mi). Armstrong had been favored to win, his competitors seen as being German Jan Ullrich, Spaniards Roberto Heras and Iban Mayo, and fellow Americans Levi Leipheimer and Tyler Hamilton. A major surprise in the Tour was the performance of French newcomer Thomas Voeckler, who unexpectedly won the yellow jersey as leader of the general classification in the fifth stage and held onto it for ten stages before finally losing it to Armstrong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France\nThis Tour saw the mistreatment of Filippo Simeoni by Armstrong on Stage 18. Armstrong also made a \"zip-the-lips\" gesture on camera, apparently referencing Simeoni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France\nThe route of the 2004 Tour was remarkable. With two individual time trials scheduled in the last week, one of them the climb of Alpe d'Huez, the directors were hoping for a close race until the end. For the first time in years, the mountains of the Massif Central made an appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Teams\nThe first 14 teams in the UCI Road World Rankings at 31 January 2004 were automatically invited. Initially the organisers had an option for a 22nd team, which would be Kelme, but after Jes\u00fas Manzano exposed doping use in that team, Kelme was not invited, and the race started with 21 teams of nine cyclists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Route and stages\nThe highest point of elevation in the race was 2,000\u00a0m (6,600\u00a0ft) at the summit of the Col de la Madeleine mountain pass on stage 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Race overview\nDuring this Tour de France the men who were delivering the drugs to riders had names like Alibaba, Asterix, Obelixand Motoman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Race overview, Doping\nThe 18th stage saw mistreatment of Filippo Simeoni by Lance Armstrong, after Simeoni had testified about doping and doctor Michele Ferrari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Race overview, Doping\nThe book L. A. Confidentiel, by David Walsh and Pierre Ballester, came out shortly before the 2004 Tour, accusing Lance Armstrong of doping. Lance Armstrong and his lawyers asked for an emergency hearing in French court to insert a denial into the book. The French judge denied this request. Armstrong also launched defamation suits against the publisher and the authors, as well as magazine L'Express and UK newspaper The Sunday Times which both referenced it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Race overview, Doping\nSubsequent to Armstrong's statement to withdraw his fight against United States Anti- Doping Agency's (USADA) charges, on 24 August 2012, the USADA said it would ban Armstrong for life and stripped him of his record seven Tour de France titles. Later that day it was confirmed in a USADA statement that Armstrong was banned for life and would be disqualified from any and all competitive results obtained on and subsequent to 1 August 1998, including forfeiture of any medals, titles, winnings, finishes, points and prizes. On 22 October 2012, the Union Cycliste Internationale endorsed the USADA sanctions, and decided not to award victories to any other rider or upgrade other placings in any of the affected events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Classification leadership and minor prizes\nThere were four main individual classifications contested in the 2004 Tour de France, as well as a team competition. The most important was the general classification, which was calculated by adding each rider's finishing times on each stage. Time bonuses given at the end of each mass start stage. If a crash had happened within the final 3\u00a0km (1.9\u00a0mi) of a stage, not including time trials and summit finishes, the riders involved would have received the same time as the group they were in when the crash occurred. The rider with the lowest cumulative time was the winner of the general classification and was considered the overall winner of the Tour. The rider leading the classification wore a yellow jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Classification leadership and minor prizes\nThe second classification was the points classification. Riders received points for finishing in the highest positions in a stage finish, or in intermediate sprints during the stage. The points available for each stage finish were determined by the stage's type. The leader was identified by a green jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Classification leadership and minor prizes\nThe third classification was the mountains classification. Most stages of the race included one or more categorised climbs, in which points were awarded to the riders that reached the summit first. The climbs were categorised as fourth-, third-, second- or first-category and hors cat\u00e9gorie, with the more difficult climbs rated lower. The leader wore a white jersey with red polka dots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Classification leadership and minor prizes\nThe final individual classification was the young rider classification. This was calculated the same way as the general classification, but the classification was restricted to riders who were born on or after 1 January 1979. The leader wore a white jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Classification leadership and minor prizes\nThe final classification was a team classification. This was calculated using the finishing times of the best three riders per team on each stage; the leading team was the team with the lowest cumulative time. The number of stage victories and placings per team determined the outcome of a tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178982-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Classification leadership and minor prizes\nIn addition, there was a combativity award given after each mass start stage to the rider considered, by a jury, to have \"made the most effort and who has demonstrated the best sportsmanship\". The winner wore a blue number bib the following stage. At the conclusion of the Tour, Richard Virenque (Quick-Step\u2013Davitamon) was given the overall super-combativity award. The Souvenir Henri Desgrange was given in honour of Tour founder Henri Desgrange to the first rider to pass the summit of the highest climb in the Tour, the Col de la Madeleine on stage 17. This prize was won by Gilberto Simoni.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 63], "content_span": [64, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9\nThe 2004 Tour de France first ten stages began with the Prologue individual time trial in Li\u00e8ge, Belgium and continued through Stage 9 (Saint-L\u00e9onard-de-Noblat to Gu\u00e9ret). The stages were mostly flat and most ended with the main field finishing together. However, Stage 4 was a team time trial with each team riding alone competing against the clock. Also, between Stages 8 and 9 the riders had a rest day where no stage occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9\n188 riders from 21 teams began the Prologue, but 16 dropped out of the race due to varying reasons leaving only 172 riders at the end of Stage 9. Five different riders had the overall lead in the race, including five-time defending champion Lance Armstrong. With a long breakaway in Stage 5, where a group of five riders had a 12 minute advantage over the main competitors, Frenchman Thomas Voeckler of the Brioches La Boulang\u00e8re team took a 9 minute lead over all of the pre-race favorites. He held the lead through the rest of these ten stages and into the next group of stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Jerseys\nThe jerseys in the Tour de France are used to signify the leaders in each category during each stage. The overall leader in the general classification is given the maillot jaune (yellow jersey). Intermediate sprint points are placed throughout each stage with points given to the first set of riders to pass the point as well as points given to stage winners, with the points leader given the Maillot Vert (green jersey).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Jerseys\nAny classified mountain during stages are given a set of points for the first riders to crest the mountain with the leader in mountain points given the Maillot \u00e0 Pois Rouges (polka-dot jersey). Any rider under the age of 26 on 1 January 2004 were eligible to win the young rider competition and the Maillot Blanc (white jersey) as the highest overall young rider in general classification. Additional awards are given for the best placed team and the most combative in each stage which are presented as colored numbers for the back of the riders jerseys. At the end of each stage the leaders/winners of each category for the day are awarded their jerseys/numbers and wear them for the next stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Prologue\n3 July 2004 \u2014 Li\u00e8ge, 6.1\u00a0km (3.8\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Prologue\nThe short time trial covered 6.1\u00a0km (3.8\u00a0mi) of the streets of Li\u00e8ge. The course was almost completely flat, with just a 5 metre peak at 4.3\u00a0km completed. The course was raced in cool, cloudy conditions and despite occasional light rain proved to be very fast, but it caused the fall of several riders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Prologue\nThe winner was Swiss Tour-debutant Fabian Cancellara who completed the course in 6'51\" at an average speed of 53.560\u00a0km/h, the third fastest in the race's history. Cancellara was in his second year with the Fassa Bortolo and was junior and U23 world time trial champion in 1999 and 2000 respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Prologue\nLance Armstrong finished second, just seconds behind Cancellara's time, and impressively ahead of most of his major competitors in the general classification, and all the other expected challengers finished within 20\" of Cancellara, who after the prologue declared that he believed himself to be the world's best rider in such short distances. Cancellara's performance put him at the top of both the general classification and the race for sprinters points, which would give him both the yellow, white and green jerseys. Since one does not wear two jerseys, however, the green jersey is \"loaned\" to the racer in second place in that competition, which, in this case, had the unusual result of putting Lance Armstrong in green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 1\n4 July 2004 \u2014 Li\u00e8ge to Charleroi, 202.5\u00a0km (125.8\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 1\nThe stage covered 202.5\u00a0km (125.8\u00a0mi) from Li\u00e8ge to Charleroi, heading south from Li\u00e8ge before looping back and heading west to the finish. The first third of the route included three cat-4 climbs and there were a cat-3 and a cat-4 climb around the middle of the course. For the Tour the course was almost flat and a mass sprint was expected at the finish. The weather was cool and cloudy at the start, later there was rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 1\nThe race had a lively start with a breakaway barely 15 minutes from the start. With various contributors the small group led by less than 20 seconds over the first two climbs. Their lead extended to 1'10\" on the third climb and after the first hour of racing the five-strong group was almost 2'30\" clear. The main sprinter's teams in the peloton were slow to organise as a number of crashes and other problems delayed their team leaders. The lead peaked at around 3'45\" but after 115\u00a0km in the lead the breakaways were reeled in by the main group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 1\nThe sprint teams held the peloton together until the third intermediate sprint at Eghezee. An attack by Jakob Piil and Marc Wauters raced away and they stretched their advantage to over 1'50\". But with around 25\u00a0km to go riders from Lotto, Fassa Bortolo and other sprinter's teams took to the front of the peloton. The lead of Wauters and Piil was slowly reduced until they were caught with less than 2\u00a0km to the finish. In a mass sprint veteran Jaan Kirsipuu broke early and held off Robbie McEwen to win by the smallest of margins. It was his fourth career Tour win. After the time bonuses from intermediate sprints were counted Cancellara remained in yellow, four seconds clear of Hushovd and ten ahead of Armstrong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 2\n5 July 2004 \u2014 Charleroi to Namur, 197\u00a0km (122.4\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 2\nThe stage was 197\u00a0km. Namur, the Walloon capital, is to the east of Charleroi and only 30\u00a0km away. The route of the race described a rough square to the west, with both cities in the top east corner. Again the route was mostly flat, marked by only two cat-4 climbs, so a mass sprint finish was almost certain. The race started in clouds but ended in sunshine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 2\nThe race began with a number of early attacks and after the first climb at 7\u00a0km a group of six riders slipped away. Their lead grew quickly and by 40\u00a0km raced they were over four minutes clear and were working hard together. The lead peaked at 5', but the sprinter teams Quick-Step and Cr\u00e9dit Agricole finally began to push the pace in the peloton. The lead group held on, their time falling slowly, but as other teams took a turn their advantage fell away and they were caught with 23\u00a0km to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 2\nDespite the remaining distance the peloton was held together by Quickstep and later Fassa Bortolo. The mass sprint ended in a clear victory for Robbie McEwen, second - despite breaking his bike at 20\u00a0km to go - was Thor Hushovd. With the 12\" time bonus for his position the Norwegian National Champion took the maillot jaune, the first Norwegian to ever wear it. There were a number of crashes during the race and Gian Matteo Fagnini broke his collarbone and was forced to withdraw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 3\n6 July 2004 \u2014 Waterloo to Wasquehal, 210\u00a0km (130.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 3\nThis was another fairly flat stage, of 210\u00a0km, tending south before turning west and leading the Tour out of Belgium and into France. The two categorized climbs, a cat-3 and a cat-4, included the well-known Muur of Geraardsbergen of the Tour of Flanders. Part of the stage also included the notorious pav\u00e9 of the Paris\u2013Roubaix Classic for the first time on the Tour since 1983. The two stretches of narrow cobbled streets totaling just 4\u00a0km, but were certainly the most 'ominous' feature of the course. The weather was warm and dry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 3\nAfter another retirement, that of Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric Bessy (Cofidis), 185 riders started. As on the previous two days there was a very early attack, this time by Jens Voigt and Bram de Groot. Again as on the first two stages, the escapers quickly stretched their advantage, leading by 4'30\" at the 25\u00a0km mark. The lead rose to 6'10\" just after the first sprint (Meerbeke at 42\u00a0km). After the Muur de Geraardsbergen the peloton, led by Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, started to push the pace but the leaders held out and even increased their lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 3\nAs the pav\u00e9 at Erre approached (146\u00a0km) and the race leaders held a 5'45\" advantage the 'pushing' for the head of the peloton began. This led to a nasty crash involving Iban Mayo, considered one of Armstrong's major competitors in this Tour, 2\u00a0km before the pav\u00e9. Armstrong used this opportunity to have his team launch an attack, and the peloton broke into two large groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0013-0002", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 3\nThe push at Erre slashed at the lead of Voight and De Groot, it also put Armstrong, Ullrich, Zabel and ninety or so others in a group ahead of the main peloton and the yellow jersey. With 50\u00a0km to go the leading pair had 1' advantage over the nearest chasers, but almost 3' over the main pack. US Postal pushed hard to maximise their advantage and finally, at 163\u00a0km raced, Voight and De Groot were caught, the main group still lagging 1'50\" behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0013-0003", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 3\nThe leading group rattled over the second section of pav\u00e9 with trouble and took their lead over the yellow jersey to 2'30\". There were a series of attacks off the front of the leading group but there were enough sprinter's teams to close them down. In the final race for the line McEwen kicked early but Jean-Patrick Nazon and Erik Zabel slipped by to take first and second. The second group, with Mayo and Thor Hushovd, who wore the yellow jersey coming into the stage, came in 3'53\" behind - enough back to end Mayo's hopes of a victory. With the time bonuses McEwen took over the yellow and green jerseys, the yellow for the first time in his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 4\n7 July 2004 \u2014 Cambrai to Arras, 64.5\u00a0km (40.1\u00a0mi) (TTT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 4\nThis 64.5\u00a0km stage was the team time trial, an event with some vociferous critics. This year, new rules were introduced for this stage to reduce the impact on the lighter-weight climbing teams. Under the new rules, the second place team would not receive a time penalty more than 20 seconds slower than the first place team for the purposes of the general classification. The third place team would not receive more than 30 seconds loss to that of the first, the fourth place 40 seconds, and so on to a maximum time deficit of three minutes. The course for the time trial had numerous gentle slopes, none of which merited a category. The day started dry but heavy rain quickly picked up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 4\nAs expected, despite a slow start (5th after first time check), US Postal won the stage - putting Armstrong in yellow, filling six of the top seven overall places with his colleagues, and, remarkably, giving the top three places in the general classification to Americans (Armstrong, George Hincaple, and Floyd Landis). The results were good news for Armstrong, giving him a 36 second lead on Tyler Hamilton, a 55 second lead on Jan Ullrich, and, of course, giving him a yellow jersey, albeit one he was not expected to try to defend in the short term. Their only stress was dropping Benjamin Noval, who was shaken up from a crash yesterday - the same one that had brought down Mayo. Noval finished within the minimum time, however, and the Postal squad notably broke off their press interviews to congratulate him at the finish line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 4\nHamilton's Phonak team also did extremely well, especially considering that by the time they reached the finish line mechanical problems had whittled them down to five riders - the minimum number to receive a time in the team time trial (although all of their riders eventually did finish). Phonak was also hampered by the unusual decision to have Hamilton slow down and wait for Santos Gonz\u00e1lez when he had some mechanical trouble. Despite this, they finished second, ahead of Illes Balears in third, and Ullrich's T-Mobile team in fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 4\nFasso Bortolo had a tough day, getting penalized two minutes for infractions - one for pacing themselves off of the team cars, and another for pushing each other for speed, adding another insult to what was shaping up to be a disappointing Tour for Alessandro Petacchi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 5\n8 July 2004 \u2014 Amiens to Chartres, 200.5\u00a0km (124.6\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 5\nThe bad storms from stage four continued, with fierce crosswinds, adding the potential for drama to a stage that was otherwise basically a straight, flat ride to Chartres. An early break at 12\u00a0km got 15' ahead, when a crash with around 90\u00a0km to go slowed the peloton as they let the fallen riders catch up. That let the breakaway get to 17'30\" ahead, and it was clear that they weren't going to be caught.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 5\nAnother crash at 30\u00a0km to go took out Robbie McEwen, adding to an already lousy day for the Australian, who was losing a lot of ground to Stuart O'Grady, who was racking up points for the green jersey. The breakaway crossed the line well ahead of the peloton following a brutal series of attacks among the five riders, including Thomas Voeckler, who began the stage three minutes behind Armstrong, and who was thus clearly going to end up in the yellow jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 5\nThe peloton eventually closed the gap to 12'36\". Voeckler, who came in fourth, moved from 59th to 1st in the general classification, taking the yellow jersey from Armstrong with a 9'35\" lead over Armstrong, and a 3 min 13 s lead over second place Stuart O'Grady, though this was not a particularly bad blow for Armstrong, since Voeckler, despite being the French National Champion, would not prove to be a climber until much later in his career. McEwen held onto the green jersey, but Stuart O'Grady managed an impressive 53 sprinters points, more than doubling his total to 81, and putting him in 6th place for the green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 5\nBradley McGee, who wore the yellow jersey for the first three days of the 2003 Tour de France, had a tough day, having never quite recovered from a crash on Stage 1. He got dropped off the back of the peloton and eventually dropped out of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 6\n9 July 2004 \u2014 Bonneval to Angers, 196\u00a0km (121.8\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 6\nWith no hills at all, this was, from the start, clearly going to be a day for the sprinters. The day began with the announcement that both Alessandro Petacchi and Mario Cipollini had dropped out of the race, Petacchi due to injury on Stage 5, Cipollini due to an injury on Stage 3 that had reopened. Neither had won any stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 6\nNear the start of the stage, a number of riders crashed, including Lance Armstrong; however, all involved in this crash were able to rejoin the peloton. An early break got caught late, with the last rider being pulled back to the peloton with 2\u00a0km to go. A massive pileup at the 1\u00a0km mark, however, split the peloton, leaving only a handful of riders with any chance of winning. Young Belgian Tom Boonen took it clearly, with Stuart O'Grady in second. Robbie McEwen was hurt in the crash and limped in towards the finish, getting no sprinters points today. This meant that O'Grady's second place finish, with its associated 30 points, was enough to put him in green. The overall standings remained unchanged, save for O'Grady closing 12 seconds on Voeckler from his time bonus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 7\n10 July 2004 \u2014 Ch\u00e2teaubriant to Saint-Brieuc, 204.5\u00a0km (127.1\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 7\nOn the last day for the sprinters before the mountains get started, the major battle was set to be between McEwen and O'Grady for the green jersey, and it didn't disappoint. The first hour or so of racing consisted of a series of failed breaks as the peloton rocketed along at an average speed of 50\u00a0km/h. After about an hour, a two man break consisting of Erik Dekker, who had already won four Tour stages in previous years, and Thierry Marichal shot off and held on for most of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 7\nThe two riders came to a sort of a compromise, with Marichal taking first in the sprint checkpoints, and Dekker taking first in both of the checkpoints for the King of the Mountains competition. Meanwhile, back in the peloton, Bobby Julich's CSC team attacked with 50\u00a0km to go, splitting the peloton. The main contenders all managed to hold on in the front group, though, and eventually the peloton would reconvene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 7\nThe pair was finally brought in by the CSC-led chase around 31\u00a0km from the finish, and only a few kilometers later CSC led another attack when Jacob Piil broke off the front, joined by three other riders. With 8.5\u00a0km to go, they were brought in only to have another break of seven take off. That one survived to the end, but with 2\u00a0km to go three riders took off from that, and managed to hold it to the end, with the stage win going to Italian Fillippo Pozzato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 7\nBack in the peloton, though, O'Grady managed to sneak in ahead of McEwen, making up for the four points McEwen took on him in the intermediate sprints, and holding onto the green jersey for another day, this time by a razor-thin one point. The overall standings remained unchanged among the major competitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 8\n11 July 2004 \u2014 Lamballe to Quimper, 168\u00a0km (104.4\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 8\nToday was a shorter stage, only 168\u00a0km, with more climbs than the past few days - three category four climbs and a category three. After yesterday's constant attacks, though, the pack took it slower and easier. A three man break took off at 16\u00a0km, containing, predictably, Jacob Piil, as well as Matteo Tosatto and Ronny Scholz. Karsten Kroon joined them, but early on got a flat tire and was swallowed by the peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 8\nThe breakaway was caught with 9\u00a0km to go, and the peloton remained solid through to the finish. As with many of the stages this year, there was a crash towards the end, this time at the back of the peloton, caused by a dog running across the road. It didn't slow things down much, though, and the peloton continued to the line, Thor Hushovd taking the sprint. Robbie McEwen took fourth, ahead of O'Grady's eighth, and claimed the green jersey. The general classification remained unchanged as the riders head into the first of two rest days before starting through the mountains in Stage 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 9\n13 July 2004 \u2014 Saint-L\u00e9onard-de-Noblat to Gu\u00e9ret, 160.5\u00a0km (99.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 9\nThis 160.5\u00a0km stage was another with more hills after a two-day rest, although only two were categorized and a sprinters' finish was expected. This was the last stage before some big climbs so the balance was between 'resting' for the following day and a last chance for sprinters. The weather was, at last, warm with temperatures up to 25\u00a0\u00b0C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 9\nThe race began with a few early escape attempts, with groups of from one and eight riders breaking and being caught within the first 20\u00a0km. The attacks continued but the peloton maintained a high pace with US Postal at the front. Jaan Kirsipuu was dropped from the peloton and abandoned the race. At about 38\u00a0km raced Inigo Landaluze managed to get away, he was chased and caught by Filippo Simeoni and the duo pulled out their lead. A number of riders attempted to join them but none made it across the gap, although Karsten Kroon spent a long time alone between the two groups before giving up the solo chase on thesecond climb, the Cote d'Aubusson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 9\nWith 100\u00a0km to the finish the two leaders were almost 2 min 30 s clear and the peloton slowed a little. The leaders' advantage rapidly increased, rising by over four minutes in the next 25\u00a0km and peaked at 10 min 05 s when the peloton reached the second climb. After the climb the riders of Cr\u00e9dit Agricole, Lotto-Domo and Quickstep came to the front of the peloton and raised the pace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178983-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Prologue to Stage 9, Stage 9\nThe lead fell slowly, with 44\u00a0km to go they were still 6 min 10 s ahead. With 25\u00a0km to the finish they still had a little under four minutes in hand, with 15\u00a0km just two minutes, 10\u00a0km 1 min 25 s, 5\u00a0km just 40 seconds. With just the final kilometre to race Landaluze and Simeoni were swept up, they had started playing tactical games for the final lead out and the sprinters just blew past them. In the sprint for the line Robbie McEwen just edged out Thor Hushovd and Stuart O'Grady. McEwen now had an 18 point lead in the green jersey clash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20\nThe 2004 Tour de France was the 91st edition of Tour de France, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Tour began in Li\u00e8ge, Belgium with a prologue individual time trial on 3 July and Stage 10 occurred on 14 July with a hilly stage from Limoges. The race finished on the Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es in Paris on 25 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\n14 July 2004 \u2014 Limoges to Saint-Flour, 237\u00a0km (147.3\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nThis 237\u00a0km stage was the longest of the 2004 Tour and the first to feature some serious climbs. Cutting through the departments of Haute-Vienne, Correze, and Cantal, and so part of the Massif Central, the big climbs were the cat-1 Col du Pas de Peyrol (Le Puy Mary) and the cat-2's the Col de Neronne and the Col de Prat de Bouc. On Bastille Day the predominantly French crowd was willing a French stage win, a feat achieved thirteen times since 1947, the last being Laurent Jalabert in 2001. The day was calm, warm and sunny. 172 riders started the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nThe race began with small attacks in the first few kilometres but the peloton kept control until around Linards, at 35\u00a0km. A group of four riders, including veteran climber Richard Virenque, managed to pull out a small lead, they were joined by seven other riders just before the first sprint, but their lead was just 20 seconds. After the small lead group swelled to eighteen riders US Postal came to the front of the peloton and all the escapees except Virenque and Axel Merckx (son of Eddy) were soon back in the main group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nThe determined duo slowly pulled away, extending their advantage to 60 seconds by the 50\u00a0km mark. Joly and Kroon tried to join them but fell short and after they returned to the peloton the pace of the main group fell slightly, USP reduced their efforts, and the two leaders pulled further ahead. After the second climb (Col de Lestards, 67\u00a0km raced, cat-3) they were almost four minutes ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nVirenque and Merckx pulled further ahead over the third climb and by the second intermediate sprint were 8'05\" clear. At the summit of the Cote de Chalvignac (126.5\u00a0km raced) they had over nine minutes in hand. Brioches la Boulangere were doing most of the work at the front of the peloton. On the Col de Neronne the lead was 10'40\", Virenque had taken maximum points on every climb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nOn the ascent of the cat-1 Col du Pas de Peyrol, after 135\u00a0km together, Merckx was dropped by Virenque. His lead over the peloton was down to 9'00\" and he had about half-a-minute over Merckx. On the descent there were two nasty crashes out of the peloton by Matthias Kessler and Sebastian Hinault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nOver the eighth summit (Col d'Entremont) Virenque had a minute over Merckx and had maintained his advantage over the peloton. On the final major summit, the Col de Prat de Bouc, with 31.5\u00a0km to the finish, Virenque led Merckx by over four minutes and had 7'45\" over the rest. Merckx was caught by the peloton on the descent and then dropped by the peloton (he finished a minute down on the peloton).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 10\nVirenque held his lead, the peloton did not make a major effort to catch him, and he came in over five minutes ahead. He had been out in front for 202\u00a0km and raced the final 62\u00a0km alone. It was his seventh career Tour stage victory, his maximum points haul was enough to put him in the polka-dot jersey for the first time in 2004 and his win also jumped him 51 places in the classement g\u00e9n\u00e9ral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 11\n15 July 2004 \u2014 Saint-Flour to Figeac, 164\u00a0km (101.9\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 11\nThis 164\u00a0km stage remained in hilly territory but featured no climbs as severe as Stage 10. There were just five categorised climbs, the largest being the cat-2 C\u00f4te de Montsalvy at 99.5\u00a0km. The day was warm, road-side temperatures reached as high as 45\u00a0\u00b0C and there was little wind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 11\nAfter the usual early escape attempts the peloton split on the very first climb at 6.5\u00a0km, although they were soon back together. Very quickly after the regrouping Jens Voigt and Juan Antonio Flecha broke away, they were joined by four others, but never got further than 20 seconds ahead and soon rejoined the US Postal led peloton. Minutes after that group had been swept up seven more riders tried to get away, they were soon caught and again another four riders made an attack. This group grew to seven before being caught on the second climb, the Cote de Therondels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 11\nOn the short descent, after 56\u00a0km raced, David Moncoutie and Egoi Martinez made a break, they were soon joined by Flecha and the trio managed to push their lead above 30 seconds and then further. In the 15\u00a0km to the third climb they established a 1'50\" gap. Their advantage reached 7'50\" at 90\u00a0km raced, fell back over the fourth climb, the Cote de Montsalvy, before rising again to over eight minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 11\nThe leaders took an eight-minute advantage into the final 10\u00a0km and the attacks began from within the trio. Flecha had an attempt and was caught, but then Moncoutie broke away and the remaining pair didn't chase. His lead grew by 60 seconds in the next 4\u00a0km and he cruised over the line for his first Tour victory 2'15\" ahead of his two chasers, who both looked decidedly jaded. Moncouti\u00e9 is a native of the region and the first r\u00e9gionaux winner since 1974. The peloton came in six minutes after Moncouti\u00e9 and there were no changes to the top ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 12\n16 July 2004 \u2014 Castelsarrasin to La Mongie, 197.5\u00a0km (122.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 12\nThis 197.5\u00a0km stage was the first to enter the Pyrenees. The route had no categorised climbs until the 160\u00a0km mark. The two climbs were both cat-1, the Col d'Aspin was included in a stage for the 66th time and the finish was at La Mongie (third inclusion), a ski resort at the top of another cat-1 climb. There were expectations that Armstrong would make a move on this stage, as he had won a previous stage to La Mongie in 2002. It was another sunny, cloudless day at the start but as the riders approached the mountains there was heavy rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 12\nA break by four riders in the first two minutes was allowed to get away. Counter-attacks were swallowed up by the US Postal and Brioches la Boulangere led peloton, but the foursome built their lead over the long approach to the Col d'Aspin to a maximum of just over four minutes. With about 100\u00a0km raced the peloton started to cut into the leaders' advantage and caught them three km from the start of the ascent of the Col d'Aspin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 12\nUS Postal led the peloton up the mountain, setting a pace that dropped many non-climbers. There were several attacks on the ascent and the riders were led over the summit by Mickael Rasmussen, who had a 5\" lead over Christophe Moreau, Virenque was third. Despite the wet road the descent was rapid and broke up the peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 12\nThe rain stopped as the riders approached the final climb. Rasmussen took a 30\" lead into the ascent but he was soon caught by a group of eleven, including Armstrong and Mayo. Having dropped Ullrich, Armstrong was quick to attack himself and the group pulled away from Ullrich. Sastre was still ahead of the group and with 3\u00a0km to the finish he was chased by Armstrong, who was accompanied by Ivan Basso. Armstrong caught and dropped Sastre and led Basso under the 1\u00a0km mark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 12\nIn the final metres Basso put on a spurt, Armstrong did not respond, and Basso won the stage. Mayo came in 1'09\" down, Ullrich 2'30\", and Tyler Hamilton 3'27\". Other riders staggered in over the next 100 minutes. Thomas Voeckler finished 3'59\" behind but stayed in yellow (he has now spent longer in yellow than any Frenchman since 1992), Armstrong rose to second in the classement g\u00e9n\u00e9ral.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\n17 July 2004 \u2014 Lannemezan to Plateau de Beille, 205.5\u00a0km (127.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nThis was the second day in the Pyrenees. The 205.5\u00a0km stage had five major climbs, including the 15.9\u00a0km hors categorie climb to the finish at Plateau-de-Beille, the first such climb on the 2004 Tour. The other main climbs were the Col de Portet d'Aspet, the Col de la Core, the Col de Latrape, and the Col d'Agnes. The Col d'Agnes actually has a steeper gradient than the final climb (average 8.2% to average 7.8%) but is shorter at 9.8\u00a0km. Many mountains on this stage have been included before, notably the Col du Portet d'Aspet, this is its 51st inclusion since 1910 including the tragic occasion in 1995 when Fabio Casartelli crashed on the descent and later died. On another bright and hot day 165 riders started the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 781]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nThe usual early break, this time by fifteen riders, was quickly chased down by the US Postal team. Haimar Zubeldia was dropped early and abandoned the Tour, a short while later Denis Menchov abandoned and before the first climb Gerrit Glomser dropped out. Another smaller group quickly sprang away after the capture of the first break, and held a slim advantage for a few more kilometres before being swept up. Again there was another break, this time by Sylvain Chavanel and Jens Voigt. The pair broke away, and as the peloton slowed, built up a reasonable lead - heading the peloton by 3'06\" over the first climb, with Michael Rasmussen caught in no-man's-land 70\" behind the leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nOn the second climb, the Col du Portet d'Aspet, Rasmussen caught and stayed with the two leaders and the three went over the summit with a lead of 3'50\" over the peloton. A substantial group (a grupetto) were dropped on the ascent by the main peloton. As the riders passed through the feedzone Tyler Hamilton abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nThe trio extended their lead on the flatter part and had a 5'00\" advantage over the Col de Core. On the fourth climb they pulled out a little further and the chasing peloton dropped many riders including Iban Mayo and Thomas Voeckler, Roberto Heras was also finding it tough. On the Col d'Agnes Voigt and Rasmussen dropped Chavanel and in the twenty-strong chasing group the five US Postal riders started to push harder. At the summit the leading pair's advantage over the peloton had fallen to 3'40\", Voeckler was a further minute back, with Mayo a surprising 14'05\" adrift.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nOver the Port de Lers Voigt stopped working and simply followed Rasmussen over the summit, 3'50\" ahead. Behind them the chasers joined up, forming a thirty-strong group including Voeckler, who had fought his way back. At the start of the final climb Voigt and Rasmussen held an insufficient 3'10\" lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nOn the final climb US Postal led the chasers. The group quickly started losing riders, again including Voeckler. By the time the gap had been cut to 1'30\" the chasing group had shrunk to just eleven, notables were Armstrong, Ullrich, Leipheimer, Mancebo and stage 12's winner Basso. By the time Voight was caught, Armstrong's group was just four - himself, teammate Jose Azevedo, Georg Totschnig and Ivan Basso. Rasmussen was quickly caught too, but Armstrong powered on and shed Totschnig and both the previous leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 13\nAzevedo led the other two into the last 8\u00a0km before falling away, by 5\u00a0km to go the two leaders were 45\" ahead of Totschnig (Azevedo was 1'40\" behind). Basso led out the last kilometre but in the final 100 m Armstrong passed him for his first stage win of the 2004 Tour and his 19th career Tour victory. Ullrich came in 2'42\" later, Voeckler was 13th at 4'42\" and kept the yellow jersey by 22\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 14\n18 July 2004 \u2014 Carcassonne to N\u00eemes, 192.5\u00a0km (119.6\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 14\nAfter the Pyrenees comes a 192.5\u00a0km stage without a single categorised climb. The flat stages after mountains often have long breakaway winners as the main competitors recuperate. On a hot and hazy day with a slight breeze 160 riders started the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 14\nThe race started with a flurry of attacks, all were quickly closed down - including a twenty-man break. US Postal and Voeckler's 'Bakery Boys' led the peloton. After 30\u00a0km raced a four strong attack built up a little lead, the group pushed their lead out to 60 seconds over the first sprint but were pulled back to barely 15\" soon afterwards. With the leaders so close there were plenty of riders trying to cross the gap and they were caught at the 65\u00a0km mark by a Rabobank lead peloton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 14\nThere were a number of other attacks, including a twelve-man attempt, but Lotto and Quickstep closed them down, the overall pace was high - over 45\u00a0km/h average in the second hour. However, around 15:00, with 100\u00a0km raced, ten men made it away, coalescing from a number of smaller breaks - they were a sufficient mix of teams (nine!) and low places (the best placed was 43rd) that there was no team wanting to chase. The ten quickly pulled away, gaining a 2'50\" advantage in the next 15 minutes of racing. After an hour in the lead and with 50\u00a0km to go their advantage was 10'50\". The peloton was 'policed' by Brioches la Boulangere and the ten men kept working together into the final 15 kilometres, leading by 13'19\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 14\nAs the finish approached, cooperation among the ten fell apart and a series of attacks and chases split and rejoined the group. With around 5\u00a0km to go Aitor Gonazalez attacked for a second time and tore away into a 15\" lead as the others hesitated, only Nicolas Jalabert and Christophe Mengin chased and they couldn't catch him. Gonzalez won, Jalabert grabbed second and the others drifted in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0029-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 14\nThe peloton came in 14'12\" back, with sprinters points going down to 25th place there was a strongly contested sprint, with McEwen just beating Hushovd for 11th place and one extra point over his green jersey rival. The top ten in the classement g\u00e9n\u00e9ral was completely unchanged. Monday, July 19, is a rest day before a return to mountains - the Alps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 15\n20 July 2004 \u2014 Valr\u00e9as to Villard-de-Lans, 180.5\u00a0km (112.2\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 15\nThis 180.5\u00a0km stage was the first in the Alps, and it was all up or down. There were seven categorised climbs, including four in the final 50\u00a0km with the additional cat-2 rise to the finish. The biggest climbs were the 10.7\u00a0km of the cat-2 Col des Limouches, the 12\u00a0km climb of the cat-1 Col de l'Echarasson and the 10.3\u00a0km up the cat-2 Col de Chalimont. The day was hot and sunny as 158 riders started the stage (Mayo and Piil abandoned, Piil was injured while Mayo was simply disgusted with his form).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 15\nAs on other mountain stages with a flat(ish) start an early break was allowed to get away. Nine riders led over the first two climbs, chasing them down split the peloton - leaving a sixty-strong group lagging a minute behind. After the breakaway was caught another sprang away - a group of, eventually, 15 riders led by over 3'30\" on the third climb. The group included Stuart O'Grady who raced away to win the points of the second intermediate sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 15\nOn the long climb up the Col de l'Echarasson, while the leaders were slowly caught, Ullrich attempted his own break, leading Armstrong by 40\" as he went over the summit. He pulled further away over the Col de Carri but as Jens Voigt dropped back from his break-away group to assist Ivan Basso in defending his 2nd overall spot against Ullrich's attack, Armstrong's group quickly caught Ullrich before the sixth climb. Rasmussen and Virenque were only 50\" ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 15\nArmstrong's group caught everyone, and chased down a break by Leipheimer, on the ascent of the Col de Chalimont. Thomas Voeckler was over seven minutes back. On the final climb to the finish the leading group was still nine strong, with 1\u00a0km to go it was down to Armstrong, Basso, Kl\u00f6den, and Ullrich. In the final sprint Armstrong beat Basso, claiming his 20th stage victory and the yellow jersey. Voeckler came in 9'27\" down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 16\n21 July 2004 \u2014 Bourg d'Oisans to Alpe d'Huez, 15.5\u00a0km (9.6\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 16\nThis 15.5\u00a0km stage was an individual time trial, including the 13.9\u00a0km up the twenty-one hairpin bends of the famous hors categorie L'Alpe d'Huez. The mountain had been included in the Tour on over 20 occasions, first in 1952. The stage was dedicated to Italian cyclist Marco Pantani, who had died earlier in 2004. Pantani had set the ascent time record of 36' 50\" in the 1995 Tour de France, measured from 13.8\u00a0km below the summit. Starting in reverse order of standings, 157 riders raced the stage. It was sunny and warm, with light cloud cover.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 16\nLance Armstrong won, passing Ivan Basso on the road. The huge number of spectators, some estimated over 750,000, seemed to impede the later riders, particularly as the first part of the course was wholly open, and many riders found themselves spat on by their detractors as they struggled to beat their way through the crowd. It would later be revealed that Armstrong had received death threats the day before this stage - something that would have been all too easy to carry out given the open course. Although much looked forward to, the stage was regarded by many as something of a disappointment due to the unmanageability of the crowds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 17\n22 July 2004 \u2014 Bourg d'Oisans to Le Grand-Bornand, 204.5\u00a0km (127.1\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 17\nOn this, the last big mountain stage, the drama started early on the Col de la Madeleine, the highest climb in the Tour, as a group led by Giberto Simoni was caught just before the summit by Richard Virenque, who gave Simoni a tight chase for the mountain points and for the five thousand Euro prize earmarked for the winner of that climb. Simoni managed to edge it out, though, taking the sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 17\nAs the stage wore on, US Postal led the peloton with typical skill, until the final climb, where the lead break consisted of Armstrong, Ullrich, Basso, Kl\u00f6den, and Armstrong's support rider Floyd Landis. At the top of the final climb, Armstrong told Landis to go for the win, and Landis took off, but was successfully ridden down by Ullrich, Basso, and Kl\u00f6den.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0040-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 17\nKl\u00f6den took off for the win pulling out what seemed to be a decisive gap in the last kilometre, but Armstrong, determined to compensate for his teammate Landis's loss of the stage, put in a devastating final sprint and got past him at the line for another stage win, and yet more of an advantage over his rivals in the GC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 18\n23 July 2004 \u2014 Annemasse to Lons-le-Saunier, 166.5\u00a0km (103.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 18\nThis stage was 166.5\u00a0km and the last in the mountains, it featured only one substantial climb, the cat-2 Col de la Faucille. With the time trial of Stage 19 looming this was a perfect chance for some lower placed riders to get away. The weather was hot and humid with a little rain at the start. Just 147 riders started the stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 18\nSome early drama was provided when Italian rider Filippo Simeoni, who has claimed that a doctor with ties to Armstrong had told him how to take performance-enhancing drugs without being caught, tried to join an early (and, as it would turn out, successful) break. Armstrong himself chased him down - unusual for a team leader and yellow jersey, especially since Simeoni was no threat to Armstrong in the overall standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0043-0001", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 18\nArmstrong, taking upon himself the self-styled role of 'boss' or 'le patron' of the peloton in the tradition of others in the past such as Bernard Hinault, forced his will and stayed with the break until they got two minutes ahead, at which point the rest of the break asked Simeoni to leave, which he did, followed by Armstrong. Simeoni harshly criticized Armstrong in the press following the stage, while Armstrong maintained that he was protecting the interests of the peloton, and accused Simeoni of trying to destroy professional cycling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 18\nLeft alone, and with US Postal controlling the peloton, the rest of the break rapidly pulled away. They held a lead of up to 7 minutes until the third climb, after which they moved even further ahead. Their advantage peaked at around 12'00\". Into the final 20\u00a0km the group of six began to split as the attacks came. With 10\u00a0km to the finish Mercado and Garcia-Acosta attacked and made it away, they worked together into the final kilometre, Mercado just winning the sprint - his first ever stage win. The peloton came in 11'29\" down led by Thor Hushovd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 19\n24 July 2004 \u2014 Besan\u00e7on, 55\u00a0km (34.2\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 19\nThe final time trial held less suspense this year than it sometimes does, since Armstrong already had such a commanding lead, but Armstrong came in saying he was racing to win. The biggest questions coming in, however, were whether Jan Ullrich would be able to race fast enough to get himself a podium spot, and whether Thomas Voeckler, who managed to hold the yellow jersey for ten days, despite numerous predictions he'd lose it well before that, would hold onto the lead in the young riders classification, which he held with a 45-second lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 19\nStarting with the last place rider, Jimmy Casper, and ending with Armstrong, the riders ran the loop in and out of Besan\u00e7on. For most of the race, US Postal riders held the fastest time, with Viatceslav Ekimov setting an early fast time, eventually beaten by Bobby Julich. Julich was eventually beaten by Floyd Landis, who held the fastest time until the last few riders came in, with Kloden, Ullrich, and Armstrong all beating him. Armstrong had the fastest time, coming in a full minute over his nearest rider, Ullrich. Ullrich ran an impressive time trial, but wasn't able to pull ahead of Basso, and will almost certainly finish the Tour in 4th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 19\nVoeckler, meanwhile, finally had his luck run out, finishing six minutes behind his nearest rival for the white jersey, Vladimir Karpets, who came in 8th in the time trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 20\n25 July 2004 \u2014 Montereau-Fault-Yonne to Paris, 163\u00a0km (101.3\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 20\nThe largely ceremonial run into Paris held some drama this year due to the closeness of the green jersey competition, which Robbie McEwen led going in by a slim 11 points. With two intermediate sprints and the finish line in Paris, there were plenty of opportunities for Thor Hushovd to take the lead. The two intermediate sprints had no effect on the overall standings, with Hushovd taking one and McEwen taking the other. The final sprint sealed it for McEwen, however, as he finished fourth and Hushovd failed to finish in the top 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 20\nEarly dramatics, however, were provided when Fillipo Simeoni made another attack at 1\u00a0km. He was pulled in by 8\u00a0km by the US Postal led peloton, and Armstrong did not make any personal effort to chase him down this time. He made three subsequent attacks throughout the stage, all unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 20\nShortly after Simeoni's first attack, Jimmy Casper, the lanterne rouge, or last place rider, made an attack, shooting out ahead of Armstrong. Having gotten his lead, he removed a digital camera from the pocket of his jersey and snapped a picture of him leading Armstrong, then dropped back to the peloton. 2004 is the second year that Casper has finished the Tour de France, and the second year he won the lanterne rouge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178984-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de France, Stage 10 to Stage 20, Stage 20\nAs the peloton reached Paris, a ten-man break including Axel Merckx and Thomas Voeckler got away, but was pulled back several laps further down the Champs-\u00c9lys\u00e9es. Eventually, the stage was won with a solid sprint by Tom Boonen. Armstrong sat well back, losing ten seconds to his nearest rival, but staying in the yellow jersey by well over six minutes. This appeared at the time to represent an unprecedented sixth Tour de France win for Armstrong, but he was stripped of the 2004 title with all others following a 2012 doping investigation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178985-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Georgia\nThe 2004 Tour de Georgia was the second annual bicycle road racing event held in the state of Georgia, United States. The six-day, seven stage 1050\u00a0km race was held April 20 through April 25, 2004 with no winner declared for the overall title and yellow jersey, following the disqualification of the first-placed rider for using illegal drugs and practices to win. Canadian Gord Fraser (Health Net Pro Cycling Team Presented by Maxxis) claimed the points jersey for sprinters, while teammate Jason McCartney won the King of the Mountains competition for climbers. Kevin Bouchard-Hall (TIAA-CREF) won the Best Young Rider (blue jersey) competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178986-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Hongrie\nThe 2004 Tour de Hongrie was the 31st edition of the Tour de Hongrie cycle race and was held from 26 July to 1 August 2004. The race started in Veszpr\u00e9m and finished in Budapest. The race was won by Zolt\u00e1n Rem\u00e1k.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178987-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Langkawi\nThe 2004 Tour de Langkawi was the 9th edition of the Tour de Langkawi, a cycling stage race that took place in Malaysia. It began on 6 February in Bayan Baru and ended on 15 February in Merdeka Square, Kuala Lumpur. In fact, this race was rated by the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) as a 2.2 category race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178987-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Langkawi\nFredy Gonz\u00e1lez of Colombia won the race, followed by Ryan Cox of South Africa second and Dave Bruylandts of Belgium third. Gordon Fraser of Australia won the points classification category and Ruber Mar\u00edn of Colombia won the mountains classification category. Barloworld won the team classification category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178987-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Langkawi, Stages\nThe cyclists competed in 12 stages, covering a distance of 1,242.9 kilometres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178987-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Langkawi, List of teams and riders\nA total of 20 teams were invited to participate in the 2004 Tour de Langkawi. Out of the 140 riders, a total of 121 riders made it to the finish in Kuala Lumpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178988-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Pologne\nThe 2004 Tour de Pologne was the 61st edition of the Tour de Pologne cycle race and was held from 6 September to 12 September 2004. The race started in Gda\u0144sk and finished in Karpacz on a route similar to that of the previous edition. The race was won by Ond\u0159ej Sosenka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178989-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Romandie\nThe 2004 Tour de Romandie (58th Edition) cycling road race started on 27 April and finished on 2 May in Switzerland. It was won by Tyler Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse\nThe 2004 Tour de Suisse was the 68th edition of the Tour de Suisse cycle race and was held from 12 June to 20 June 2004. The race started in Sursee and finished in Lugano. The race was won by Jan Ullrich of the T-Mobile team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 1\n12 June 2004 - Sursee to Berom\u00fcnster, 176\u00a0km (109\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 2\n13 June 2004 - D\u00fcrrenroth to Rheinfelden, 169.9\u00a0km (105.6\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 3\n14 June 2004 - Rheinfelden to Juraparc-Vallorbe, 185\u00a0km (115\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 4\n15 June 2004 - Vall\u00e9e de Joux to B\u00e4tterkinden, 211.6\u00a0km (131.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 5\n16 June 2004 - B\u00e4tterkinden to Adelboden, 161.7\u00a0km (100.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 6\n17 June 2004 - Frutigen to Linthal, 185.4\u00a0km (115.2\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 7\n18 June 2004 - Linthal to Malbun, 133\u00a0km (83\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 8\n19 June 2004 - Buchs to Bellinzone, 191.3\u00a0km (118.9\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178990-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de Suisse, Stages, Stage 9\n20 June 2004 - Lugano to Lugano, 25.6\u00a0km (15.9\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178991-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour de la R\u00e9gion Wallonne\nThe 2004 Tour de la R\u00e9gion Wallonne was the 31st edition of the Tour de Wallonie cycle race and was held on 26 July to 30 July 2004. The race started in Aubel and finished in Charleroi. The race was won by Gerben L\u00f6wik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178992-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour du Haut Var\nThe 2004 Tour du Haut Var was the 36th edition of the Tour du Haut Var cycle race and was held on 21 February 2004. The race started and finished in Draguignan. The race was won by Marc Lotz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178993-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Britain\nThe 2004 Tour of Britain was the first edition of the latest version of the Tour of Britain. It took place over five days in early September 2004, organised by SweetSpot in collaboration with British Cycling, and was the first Tour of Britain to be held since 1999. Sponsored by the organisers of London's 2012 Olympics bid, it attracted teams such as T-Mobile Team and U.S. Postal Service. It was designated a 2.3 category race on the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178993-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Britain\nThe tour climaxed with a 45 miles (72\u00a0km) criterium in London, where an estimated 100,000 spectators saw a long break by Bradley Wiggins last until the penultimate lap, before Enrico Degano of Team Barloworld took the sprint on the line. The Colombian Mauricio Ardila, of Chocolade Jacques, won the race overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178994-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Flanders\nThe 88th Tour of Flanders bicycle race in Belgium was held on 4 April 2004. It was the second leg of the UCI Road World Cup. German Steffen Wesemann won the monument classic ahead of Belgians Leif Hoste and Dave Bruylandts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178994-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Flanders, Race Overview\nAmerican George Hincapie tried to spark a winning move on the Leberg. Frustrated, he found nobody to help him, particularly as Van Petegem's Lotto team had two men further up the road. Bruylandts was the next to give it a go, taking Serguei Ivanov with him as Michael Boogerd leapt across to catch the tail end of the move. They were soon caught by the group of favourites, but the attack signaled the coming of the crucial point in the race, with the often decisive climbs of the Tenbosse, the Muur and Bosberg still to come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178994-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Flanders, Race Overview\nVan Petegem tried to go clear on the paved rise of the Tenbosse, but Bettini wouldn't let him go. By this point eight men were still away up front, but their advantage dwindled quickly as the more than 200 kilometres covered seemed to do nothing to blunt the speed of the peloton. The leaders were caught just before Geraardsbergen and the showdown was on the Muur with a big group of heavy-hitters still together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178994-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Flanders, Race Overview\nThe expected attacks by Van Petegem, Vandenbroucke, and Museeuw didn't materialize, leaving Wesemann and Bruylandts to spark the winning escape at the top of the Muur with Hoste in tow. Hoste, who had been away in some fashion all day long, avoided taking any pulls as the trio sped toward Meerbeke. The other two let him sit on, preferring to take their own chances rather than be caught up in a premature tactical battle. Hoste did close the gap when Bruylandts put in a last-kilometre attack, but it only served to set up the powerful Wesemann to take the sprint and claim his first ever World Cup victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178995-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Flanders for Women\nThe first running of the Tour of Flanders for Women, a women's road cycling race in Belgium, was held on 4 April 2004. The race started in Oudenaarde and finished in Meerbeke, taking in nine climbs and covering a total distance of 94 kilometres (58 miles). It was the fourth round of the 2004 UCI Women's Road World Cup. Russian Zulfiya Zabirova won the race after an attack on the Muur van Geraardsbergen, at 16\u00a0km from the finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178995-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of Flanders for Women, Race summary\nWith a total distance of 94\u00a0km, the inaugural women's Tour of Flanders was the shortest in history. The peloton was thinned out in the early stages by repeated attacks by Leontien van Moorsel, Hanka Kupfernagel and Mirjam Melchers. In Geraardsbergen, 16\u00a0km from the finish, Zulfiya Zabirova surged clear on the Muur. Zabirova never held more than 15 seconds over a three-woman group but maintained her solo effort to the finish, two weeks after claiming victory in the Primavera Rosa. At four seconds, German Trixi Worrack won the sprint for second place ahead of van Moorsel and Melchers. Russian Olga Slyusareva won the field sprint for fifth place, 1' 20\" later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178996-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tour of the Basque Country\nThe 2004 Tour of the Basque Country was the 44th edition of the Tour of the Basque Country cycle race and was held from 5 April to 9 April 2004. The race started in Bergara and finished in Lazkao. The race was won by Denis Menchov of the Illes Balears\u2013Banesto team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178997-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach\nThe 2004 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach was the first round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on April 18, 2004 on the streets of Long Beach, California. It was the first event for the new Champ Car World Series which was created when Gerald Forsythe, Kevin Kalkhoven, Paul Gentilozzi and Dan Petit purchased the bankrupt CART series' liquidated assets in an Indianapolis courtroom the previous January. Bruno Junqueira won the first Champ Car-era pole while Paul Tracy took the first win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178997-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach, Qualifying results\n*The time of Oriol Servi\u00e0 from qualification session #1 was disallowed after his car failed post-session technical inspection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178998-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Trafford Council were held on 10 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178998-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council election\nDue to demographic changes in the Borough since its formation in 1973, and in common with most other English Councils in 2004, substantial boundary changes were implemented in time for these elections. The most notable changes were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178998-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council election\nDue to these changes, it was necessary for the whole Council to be re-elected for the first time since 1973. Each ward elected three candidates, with the first-placed candidate serving a four-year term of office, expiring in 2008, the second-placed candidate serving a three-year term of office, expiring in 2007, and the third-placed candidate serving a two-year term of office, expiring in 2006. The Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control. Overall turnout was 46.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178998-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council election\nAfter the election, the composition of the council was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178999-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Transnistrian census\nThe 2004 Transnistrian census was organized in Transnistria at roughly the same time that Moldova held its own census, which Transnistria refused to participate in out of principle and deference to its September 2, 1990 declaration of independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178999-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Transnistrian census, Census results\nTotal population (including Bender): 555,347 (percentages below refer to this first figure)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178999-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Transnistrian census, Census results\nPreliminary data, as shown here, was released forty days after the completion of the census. Final and more detailed results were released with a delay of nearly two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00178999-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Transnistrian census, Census results\nCompared with the 1989 census, the population decreased by 18% due to war, natural decrease and economically motivated emigration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179000-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tranzam Sports Sedan Series\nThe 2004 Tranzam Sports Sedan Series was an Australian motor racing competition open to Sports Sedans and Trans Am type cars. The series was administered by the National Australian Sports Sedan Association and was sanctioned by CAMS as a National Series. Held as the first Tranzam Sports Sedan Series following the discontinuation of the Australian Sports Sedan Championship at the end of 2003, it was won by Darren Hossack driving a Saab 9-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179000-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tranzam Sports Sedan Series, Calendar\nThe series was contested over five rounds with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179000-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tranzam Sports Sedan Series, Eligible cars\nThe following cars were eligible to compete in the series:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179000-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tranzam Sports Sedan Series, Points system\nSeries points were awarded in each race according to the following criteria:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179000-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tranzam Sports Sedan Series, Points system\nIn addition, 2 points were awarded for first place in qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series\nThe 2004 Tri Nations Series, an annual rugby union competition between the national teams of Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, was the ninth in the series. The competition is organised by SANZAR, a consortium of the three countries' rugby union federations. The series was contested in its original double round-robin format, with each team playing the others twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series\nSouth Africa won the first ever Freedom Cup in a one-off home test against New Zealand. New Zealand retained the Bledisloe Cup against Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, Synopsis\nSouth Africa continued to nurture and develop its rich vein of talent during the Tri-Nations, a competition in which South Africa had not been competitive in three years. However, things were to be different this time as the Boks ploughed their way into the opposition, most notably with a herculean backline display that gave South Africa 10 of its glut of 13 tries in four Tri-Nations matches, as opposed to the All Blacks' much vaunted and feared backline's display of 4 in four games. South Africa's improved displays made for the tightest competition so far in the history of the Tri-Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, Synopsis\nThe Boks opener against the All Blacks was a thriller with Boks 'rush' defence rattling the Kiwis 'flat' attack to its core. After 80 minutes the Boks were ahead before a thrilling attack from the All Blacks claimed a last second try to win the game, courtesy of Doug Howlett. However, the Boks could take a lot out of this game and approached the Wallabies with a spring in their step. The Wallabies too caused South Africa heartache as ex South African under 21s captain Clyde Rathbone snatched the winner for the Aussies with minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, Synopsis\nAs the series shifted to South Africa, the Boks needed to beat the All Blacks in order to keep their hopes of a Tri-Nations title, a first since 1998, alive. They did so with vigour as they brushed aside the All Blacks with disdain, providing the authoritative finishing and poise which was lacking to a degree in the first game between the Southern rivals. The only area of the game in which New Zealand competed well was the scoreboard. After going 10\u20130 down early on South Africa went into the second half ahead, again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, Synopsis\nHowever, unlike the first game South Africa provided what they sought out to do with a strong second half display, as they pulled away from the All Blacks, 5 tries to 2. Bok centre Marius Joubert equalled an SA record for the most tries against the All Blacks in the process with a hat trick of tries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, Synopsis\nThis set up a winner-take-all battle against the Wallabies in Durban. The Boks fell behind 7\u20133 in a tightly played first half. In the second, they scored tries from forwards Victor Matfield and Joe van Niekerk. While the Wallabies got more tries (three), the difference proved to be the boot of fullback Percy Montgomery, who converted both Boks tries and kicked three penalties to give the Boks a 23\u201319 win and the Tri-Nations trophy. While the Boks had many heroes in their run through the Tri-Nations, perhaps the greatest was Schalk Burger, who more than lived up to his enormous promise and established himself as arguably the top flanker in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, The aftermath, New Zealand\nThe 2004 Tri-Nations was a disappointing start to the tenures of the new All Blacks coaching staff. Many blamed New Zealand's failure in this tournament to a reliance on the so-called 'flat backline', and as backs coach Wayne Smith drew the brunt of the criticism. The All Black careers of ageing stars Carlos Spencer and Andrew Merhtens were effectively ended by a series of poor performances, and on the end of year tour to Europe Dan Carter emerged as the new #1 All Blacks first-five eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, The aftermath, South Africa\nIn this tournament, the Springboks definitively reemerged as a force in the professional era of rugby union. Going into the Tri Nations, South Africa rugby was in turmoil, best exemplified by the debacle of the 2003 World Cup and the scandal of Kamp Staaldraad. With the emergence of Schalk Burger, Jean de Villiers and Marius Joubert as major stars, the Boks used this momentum to become the 2004 IRB Team of the Year. South Africa would sweep the major IRB awards, as Burger earned IRB Player of the Year honours and coach Jake White was named IRB Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 52], "content_span": [53, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179001-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Tri Nations Series, Competition details\nAs in past competitions, points were earned on the following schedule:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 44], "content_span": [45, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179002-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Triglav Trophy\nThe 2004 Triglav Trophy was held between 14 and 18 April 2004. It was an international figure skating competition held annually in Jesenice, Slovenia. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and pair skating across the levels of senior, junior, and novice, although the pair skating competition was only held on the junior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179003-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tro-Bro L\u00e9on\nThe 2004 Tro-Bro L\u00e9on was the 21st edition of the Tro-Bro L\u00e9on cycle race and was held on 25 April 2004. The race was won by Samuel Dumoulin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179004-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Troph\u00e9e des Champions\nThe 2004 Troph\u00e9e des Champions was a football match held at Stade Pierre de Coubertin, Cannes on 31 July 2004, that saw 2003\u201304 Ligue 1 champions Olympique Lyonnais defeat 2004 Coupe de France winners Paris Saint-Germain 7\u20136 on penalty kicks after a draw of 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179005-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Troph\u00e9e \u00c9ric Bompard\nThe 2004 Troph\u00e9e \u00c9ric Bompard was the fifth event of six in the 2004\u201305 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Palais Omnisports Paris Bercy in Paris on November 18\u201321. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2004\u201305 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Rhumba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179005-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Troph\u00e9e \u00c9ric Bompard\nThe competition was named after the \u00c9ric Bompard company, which became its chief sponsor in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179006-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Troy State Trojans football team\nThe 2004 Troy State Trojans football team represented Troy State University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Trojans played their home games at Movie Gallery Stadium in Troy, Alabama and competed in the Sun Belt Conference. The 2004 season was Troy State's first season as a member of the Sun Belt Conference. Troy State also made their first ever appearance in a Division I-A bowl game during this season since the program transitioned to I-A just three years prior, in 2001. The Trojans lost 34\u201321 to Northern Illinois in the Silicon Valley Football Classic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179007-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tulane Green Wave football team\nThe 2004 Tulane Green Wave football team represented Tulane University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Green Wave played their home games at the Louisiana Superdome. They competed in the West Division of Conference USA. The team was coached by head coach Chris Scelfo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179008-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tulsa Golden Hurricane football team\nThe 2004 Tulsa Golden Hurricane football team represented the University of Tulsa in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head coach was Steve Kragthorpe. They played home games at Skelly Stadium in Tulsa, Oklahoma and competed in their final season as a member of the Western Athletic Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179009-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tunbridge Wells Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Tunbridge Wells Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Tunbridge Wells Borough Council in Kent, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179010-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tunisian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Tunisia on 24 October 2004 to elect a President and Chamber of Deputies. In the presidential election, incumbent Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, was re-elected for a fourth five-year term with 94.49% of the vote. In the Chamber of Deputies elections his Constitutional Democratic Rally party won 152 of the 189 seats. Voter turnout was 91.52% in the presidential election and 86.41% for the Chamber election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179011-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Turkish local elections\nThe Turkish local elections of 2004 were held throughout the eighty-one Provinces of Turkey on 28 March 2004 in order to elect both mayors and councillors to local government positions. All 16 metropolitan and 3,193 district municipalities were up for election, while 3,208 provincial and 34,477 municipal councillors were also elected. More than 50,000 neighbourhood presidents (muhtars) were also elected, though these do not have any political affiliations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179011-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Turkish local elections\nWith almost 42 percent of votes across the country, the ruling AKP increased the 34 percent it won in the 2002 national parliamentary elections by an extra 8 percent. The only opposition party with representation in Parliament, the Kemalist Republican Peoples Party (CHP), received 19 percent of the votes. The traditional parties of the Turkish establishment lost further ground. The Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), despite suffering a loss of 6% in their popular vote share, won above 10% of the votes. This bode well for their 2007 general election prospects, since 10% is the election threshold needed to win seats in Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179011-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Turkish local elections\nIn the event, the CHP was only able to maintain a degree of support in the provincial regions on the Turkish west coast. Among the four major cities the party was only able to win Izmir, with the AKP winning a majority in the cities of Istanbul, Adana and the Turkish capital, Ankara. The AKP also took the tourist centre Antalya, where the head of the CHP, Deniz Baykal, was the party\u2019s candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179011-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Turkish local elections\nThe main political arm of the Kurdish nationalist movement, the Democratic People's Party (DEHAP), entered these elections in a coalition with five small socialist parties, yet together these parties received fewer votes (5 percent) than the DEHAP received alone in the 2002 elections (6.1 percent).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179011-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Turkish local elections, Results by province\nMetropolitan provinces are in bold. AKP denotes provinces won by the Justice & Development Party, CHP denotes provinces won by the Republican People's Party, MHP denotes provinces won by the Nationalist Movement Party, DSP denotes provinces won by the Democratic Left Party, DYP denotes provinces won by the True Path Party and SP denotes provinces won by the Felicity Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 49], "content_span": [50, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179012-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Turkmen parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Turkmenistan on 19 December 2004, with a second round in seven constituencies on 9 January 2005. A total of 131 candidates contested the 50 seats, all of whom were members of the Democratic Party of Turkmenistan, the country's sole legal party. Voter turnout was reported to be 76.88%, although in Ashgabat the low turnout prompted election officials to take the ballot boxes to people's houses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179014-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Tuvalu A-Division\nThe 2004 season of the Tuvalu A-Division was the fourth season of association football competition. The title was won by Lakena United, their first title and the first time the league was won by a team other than FC Niutao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179015-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Twenty20 Cup\nThe 2004 Twenty20 Cup was the second competing of the Twenty20 Cup competition for English and Welsh county clubs. The finals day took place on 7 August at Edgbaston, Birmingham, and was won by the Leicestershire Foxes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179016-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U-18 Junior World Cup\nThe 2004 U-18 Junior World Cup was an under-18 ice hockey tournament held in B\u0159eclav and Hodon\u00edn, Czech Republic and Pie\u0161\u0165any, Slovakia from August 10\u201315, 2004. Canada captured their tenth gold medal of the tournament, defeating the Czech Republic 4\u20131 in the gold medal game, while Sweden defeated the United States to earn the bronze medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179017-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Bank Champ Car Grand Prix of Cleveland\nThe 2004 Champ Car Grand Prix of Cleveland was the fifth round of the 2004 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on July 3, 2004 at Burke Lakefront Airport in Cleveland, Ohio. Paul Tracy took the pole while S\u00e9bastien Bourdais won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179018-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 U.S. Figure Skating Championships took place on January 3\u201311, 2004 at the Philips Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. Medals were awarded in four colors: gold (first), silver (second), bronze (third), and pewter (fourth) in four disciplines \u2013 men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing \u2013 across three levels: senior, junior, and novice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179018-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Figure Skating Championships\nThe event was among the criteria used to select the U.S. teams for the 2004 World Championships, 2004 Four Continents Championships, and the 2004 World Figure Skating Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179019-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships\nThe 2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Westside Tennis Club in Houston, Texas in the United States and was part of the International Series of the 2004 ATP Tour. It was the 36th edition of the tournament and was held from April 12 through April 18, 2004. Tommy Haas won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179019-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships, Finals, Doubles\nJames Blake / Mardy Fish defeated Rick Leach / Brian MacPhie 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179020-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor were the defending champions but lost in the semifinals to James Blake and Mardy Fish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179020-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships \u2013 Doubles\nBlake and Fish won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134 against Rick Leach and Brian MacPhie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179020-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179021-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships \u2013 Singles\nAndre Agassi was the defending champion but did not compete that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179021-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships \u2013 Singles\nTommy Haas won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134 against Andy Roddick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179021-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Men's Clay Court Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 57], "content_span": [58, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179022-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (gymnastics)\nThe 2004 U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Team Trials, referred to just as the 2004 U.S. Olympic Trials, was held from June 24\u201327, 2004, at the Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim (now known as the Honda Center) in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179022-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (gymnastics), Venue\nThe Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim is an indoor arena located in Anaheim, California. The arena is home to the Anaheim Ducks of the National Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179022-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (gymnastics), Participants\nThe top 12 finishers at the 2004 U.S. National Gymnastics Championships automatically qualified to compete at the Olympic Trials:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179022-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (gymnastics), Broadcast\nNBC Sports broadcast all nights of competition at the Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179022-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (gymnastics), Olympic Team selection\nThe top two finishers automatically qualified to the team. For the women this was Courtney Kupets and Courtney McCool. The rest of the team would be determined after a selection camp was held. Invitees to this camp included: Mohini Bhardwaj, Annia Hatch, Terin Humphrey, Allyse Ishino, Carly Janiga, Carly Patterson, Tasha Schwikert, Liz Tricase, Hollie Vise, and Tabitha Yim. Additionally injury petitions from Nicole Harris, Chellsie Memmel, and Marcia Newby were also accepted. At the conclusion of the selection camp Patterson, Bhardwaj, Hatch, and Humphrey were added to the team with Memmel, Schwikert, and Ishino selected as alternates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179022-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Olympic Trials (gymnastics), Olympic Team selection\nFor the men the top two finishers were Paul Hamm and Brett McClure. Additionally Jason Gatson and Morgan Hamm were also named to the men's team immediately following the Olympic Trials conclusion. In July Guard Young and Blaine Wilson were added to the team with Stephen McCain and Raj Bhavsar selected as alternates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf)\nThe 2004 United States Open Championship was the 104th U.S. Open, held June 17\u201320 at Shinnecock Hills Golf Club in Shinnecock Hills, New York. Retief Goosen won his second U.S. Open title, two strokes ahead of runner-up Phil Mickelson, the reigning Masters champion. The purse was $6.25 million with a winner's share of $1.125 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf)\nLate on Sunday in dry and breezy conditions, Goosen birdied the 16th hole and Mickelson double-bogeyed the par-3 17th. Goosen's previous U.S. Open win was in 2001 in a playoff at Southern Hills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), History of U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills\nThis was the fourth U.S. Open hosted by Shinnecock Hills. The former champions were James Foulis (1896), Raymond Floyd (1986), and Corey Pavin (1995). The second U.S. Open was held at Shinnecock in 1896, but ninety years went by before it hosted again. The 1986 edition was held on a completely revamped course. Floyd, age 43, entered the final round three shots behind and shot a 66 in difficult scoring conditions to win his fourth major.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), History of U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills\nThe conditions were similar in 1995, with no one under par. Pavin played the final ten holes in three-under-par on the way to a 68 and the win. He hit a memorable 4-wood to the 72nd green to within 5 feet (1.5\u00a0m) and finished at even par 280.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Field\nErnie Els (4,8,9,10,11,13,16), Jim Furyk (8,9,16), Retief Goosen (9,10,16), Lee Janzen, Corey Pavin, Tiger Woods (3,4,5,9,11,12,16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Field\nJonathan Byrd, Tom Byrum, P\u00e1draig Harrington (10,16), Freddie Jacobson (10,16), Jonathan Kaye (9,12,16), Cliff Kresge, Stephen Leaney (10,16), Billy Mayfair, Kenny Perry (9,12,16), Tim Petrovic, Nick Price (9,16), Eduardo Romero, Justin Rose, Hidemichi Tanaka, Scott Verplank (9,16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Field\nRobert Allenby (16), Stuart Appleby (11,16), Briny Baird, Chad Campbell (11,16), K. J. Choi (16), Chris DiMarco (16), Brad Faxon (16), Steve Flesch (11,12,16), Fred Funk, Jay Haas (16), Tim Herron, Charles Howell III (16), Jerry Kelly (16), Justin Leonard (16), J. L. Lewis, Davis Love III (11,16), Chris Riley (16), Kirk Triplett (16), Bob Tway (16)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Field\nThomas Bj\u00f8rn (16), Michael Campbell, Paul Casey (16), Darren Clarke (13,16), Brian Davis, Trevor Immelman (16), Ian Poulter, Phillip Price, Lee Westwood", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Field\nStephen Ames, \u00c1ngel Cabrera, Fred Couples, Sergio Garc\u00eda, Todd Hamilton, Joakim Haeggman, Scott Hoch, Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez, Zach Johnson, Shigeki Maruyama, Craig Parry", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, First round\nFifty-year-old Jay Haas led after one round, in a bid to become the oldest major champion in history. He was joined at the lead by Shigeki Maruyama and \u00c1ngel Cabrera. Two-time major champion Vijay Singh shot a solid 68, as did current Masters champion Phil Mickelson. Former U.S. Open champions Ernie Els and Retief Goosen shot an even-par 70 after rough starts. World Number 1 Tiger Woods struggled on Shinnecock's fast conditions and settled for a two-over-par 72. David Duval shot an 83, the worst round in the field, but was in high spirits afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Second round\nPhil Mickelson surged into the lead, trying to become the sixth to win the first two majors of the year, with a bogey-free 66. He tied for the lead with Shigeki Maruyama, who bogeyed the 18th hole and shot 68. Ernie Els had four consecutive birdies in a round of 67. Jeff Maggert was in solo third at five-under-par with a 67, while Fred Funk and Retief Goosen both shot 66 to tie for fourth. \u00c1ngel Cabrera had a crazy day after a 66 to shoot a 71. Corey Pavin, the previous champion at Shinnecock in 1995, tied with Vijay Singh at four strokes back. Tiger Woods shot 69 for 141 (+1), tied for 18th. World Number 4 Davis Love III missed the cut, as did David Duval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Second round\nJay Haas (E) and amateur Bill Haas (+5) were the second father and son to make the cut in the same U.S. Open; it was first accomplished 46 years earlier in 1948 by Joe Kirkwood Sr. and Joe Kirkwood Jr.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Third round\nRetief Goosen battled his way into a two-shot lead on Saturday as Shinnecock Hills presented its stiffest test of the week. He held his nerve in challenging conditions to card a one-under 69 for 205 (\u22125), and was one of only three to break par. Second round leader Phil Mickelson bogeyed the last two holes for a share of second place with two-time champion Ernie Els. Fred Funk and Shigeki Maruyama both had crazy days, finishing poorly for a tie for fourth. Jeff Maggert's 74 dropped him into a tie for sixth with Tim Clark, who had 66, the best of the day; Tiger Woods eagled the 18th for 73 and Vijay Singh stumbled with a 77.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Final round\nRetief Goosen held his nerve and won his second U.S. Open, edging out Phil Mickelson by two shots with a closing 71 (+1) on Sunday to finish at four-under 276. Conditions were brutal on the final day when the average final-round score was 78.7 and no one was under par. Mickelson, urged on by raucous New York galleries on a windswept sunny afternoon, completed a matching 71 for his third runner-up spot in the last six U.S. Opens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Final round\nGoosen led by two going into the final day, but was overtaken by Mickelson in the closing stretch, with back-to-back birdies on 15 and 16. But Mickelson, bidding to become the sixth player to win the first two majors of the year, immediately fell back with a double-bogey at the par-three 17th, three-putting from five feet (1.5\u00a0m). In the final pair with compatriot Ernie Els, Goosen restored his two-shot advantage with a twelve-foot (3.7\u00a0m) birdie putt on 16 and parred the final two holes to seal the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Final round\nIn a nearly unprecedented action, the USGA watered a few of the greens during play including the 7th green when players were not able to prevent the ball from rolling off. As a result the leaders faced much easier playing conditions than the rest of the field and the final 5 groups had a scoring average of 75.9, compared to the field's 78.7, including 3 of the 5 lowest rounds of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Final round\nJeff Maggert (72) finished third at one-over 281, while 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir (74) and Shigeki Maruyama (76) were three shots further back at 284 in a tie for fourth. World number two Els, joint second overnight with Mickelson, produced four double-bogeys on his way to an 80 (+10), his worst score in a U.S. Open, and tied for ninth at 287. Top-ranked Tiger Woods, who began nine shots off the lead, battled to a 76 and a share of 17th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179023-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open (golf), Round summaries, Final round\nA mix of five bogeys, a double-bogey and a birdie at the last left him at 290 (+10) as he narrowly avoided his worst round at a U.S. Open. His career high of 77 came as an amateur in 1996, in the third round at Oakland Hills. Robert Allenby had the low round of the day at even-par 70; three birdies and three bogeys lifted him into a tie for seventh with Steve Flesch at six-over 286; Fred Funk (77) was alone in sixth on 285.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179024-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open Cup\nThe 2004 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup ran from June through September, 2004, open to all soccer teams in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179024-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open Cup\nThe Kansas City Wizards won the Open Cup tournament with a 1\u20130 golden-goal victory over the defending-champion Chicago Fire at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. Kansas City missed out on a domestic double when the Wizards lost MLS Cup 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179024-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open Cup\nThe Open Cup tournament was highlighted by A-League side Charleston Battery reaching the semifinals, one of four USL teams to beat Major League Soccer teams. The 2004 tournament was also the final edition contested using golden goal as opposed to more conventional soccer extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179024-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Open Cup, Schedule\nNote: Scorelines use the standard U.S. convention of placing the home team on the right-hand side of box scores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179025-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Women's Open\nThe 2004 U.S. Women's Open was the 59th U.S. Women's Open, held July 1\u20134 at the Orchards Golf Club in South Hadley, Massachusetts, a suburb north of Springfield. The event was televised by ESPN and NBC Sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179025-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Women's Open\nMeg Mallon won her second U.S. Women's Open title, two strokes ahead of runner-up Annika S\u00f6renstam. The 54-hole leader was Jennifer Rosales at 206 (\u22127), with Mallon, S\u00f6renstam, and Kelly Robbins three strokes back at 209 (\u22124).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179025-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 U.S. Women's Open\nIn the final round, Mallon shot 65 (\u22126) to Sorenstam's 67 (\u22124), and Rosales fell down to fourth with a 75 (+4). It was Mallon's fourth and final major title; her first was thirteen years earlier in 1991, also at the U.S. Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179026-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UAB Blazers football team\nThe 2004 UAB Blazers football team represented the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) in the college football season of 2004, and was the fourteenth team fielded by the school. The Blazers' head coach was Watson Brown, who entered his tenth season as UAB's head coach. They played their home games at Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama, and competed as a member of Conference USA. The Blazers finished their ninth season at the I-A level, and sixth affiliated with a conference with a record of 7\u20135 (5\u20133 C-USA). The Blazers also made their first ever bowl appearance at the 2004 Hawaii Bowl where they were defeated 40\u201359 by Hawaii.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400\nThe 2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on March 7, 2004, at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, Nevada. Contested at 267 laps on the 1.5-mile (2.4\u00a0km) speedway, it was the 3rd race of the 2004 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Matt Kenseth of Roush Racing won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Entry list\nLarry Gunselman failed to qualify while John Andretti, Larry Foyt, and Andy Hillenburg all withdrew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n1. Kasey Kahne *#9 Dodge Dealers/UAW Dodge Evernham Motorsports 174.904\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n2. Kurt Busch #97 IRWIN Industrial Tools Ford Roush Racing 174.548\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n3. Brian Vickers * #25 GMAC Financial Services Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 174.537\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n4. Jamie McMurray #42 Texaco Havoline Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 174.436\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n5. Ryan Newman #12 ALLTEL Dodge Penske Racing 174.340\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n6. Jeremy Mayfield #19 Dodge Dealers/UAW Dodge Evernham Motorsports 174.267\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n7. Bobby Labonte #18 Interstate Batteries Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 173.863\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n8. Brendan Gaughan * #77 Kodak Easyshare Dodge Penske/Jasper Racing 173.824\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n9. Greg Biffle #16 National Guard Ford Roush Racing 173.807\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n10. Bill Elliott #91 UAW-National Training Center Dodge Evernham Motorsports 173.768\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n11. Elliott Sadler #38 M&M's Ford Robert Yates Racing 173.740\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n12. Jimmie Johnson #48 Lowe's Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 173.444\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n13. Casey Mears #41 Target DodgeChip Ganassi Racing 173.405\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n14. Michael Waltrip #15 NAPA Auto Parts Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 173.266\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n15. Scott Riggs * #10 Valvoline Chevrolet MBV Motorsports 173.066\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n16. Kevin Harvick #29 GM Goodwrench Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 173.010\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n17. Ricky Craven #32 Tide Chevrolet PPI Motorsports 172.983\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n18. Kyle Busch #84 CARQUEST Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 172.955\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n19. Tony Stewart #20 Home Depot Chevrolet Joe Gibbs Racing 172.728\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n20. Jeff Gordon #24 Dupont Chevrolet Hendrick Motorsports 172.469\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n21. Rusty Wallace #2 Miller Lite Dodge Penske Racing 172.403\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n22. Robby Gordon #31 Cingular Wireless Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 172.150\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n23. Sterling Marlin #40 Coors Light Dodge Chip Ganassi Racing 171.996\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n24. Jeff Green #43 Lucky Charms Dodge Petty Enterprises 171.750\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n25. Matt Kenseth #17 DeWalt Power Tools Ford Roush Racing 171.679\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n26. Dale Earnhardt Jr. #8 Budweiser Chevrolet Dale Earnhardt Incorporated 171.516\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n27. Mark Martin # 6 Viagra Ford Roush Racing 171.505\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n28. Jeff Burton #99 Pennzoil Ford Roush Racing 171.483\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n29. Dale Jarrett #88 UPS Ford Robert Yates Racing 171.423\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n30. Johnny Sauter * # 30 AOL/IMAX NASCAR 3D Chevrolet Richard Childress Racing 171.358\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n31. Ken Schrader #49 Schwan's Home Service Dodge BAM Racing 171.352\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n32. Kyle Petty #45 Georgia Pacific/Brawny Dodge Petty Enterprises 171.146\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n33. Ricky Rudd #21 Motorcraft Ford Wood Brothers Racing 171.130\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n34. Ward Burton # 0 Netzero HiSpeed Chevrolet Haas CNC Racing 170.783\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n35. Kevin Lepage #4 YokeTV.com Chevrolet Morgan-McClure Racing 170.444\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n36. Johnny Benson #09 Miccosukee Gaming & Resorts Dodge Phoenix Racing 170.401\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n38. Joe Nemechek #01 USG Sheetrock Chevrolet MB2 Motorsports 169.977\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n39. Scott Wimmer * #22 Caterpillar Dodge Bill Davis Racing 169.673\u00a0mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n40. Carl Long #02 RacingJUNK.com Pontiac SCORE Motorsports 163.701\u00a0mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n41. Derrike Cope #50 redneckjunk.com Dodge Derrike Cope 169.311\u00a0mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n42. Morgan Shephard #89 Voyles/Carter's Royal Disposall Ford Cindy Shephard 164.986\u00a0mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n43. Kirk Shelmerdine #72 Freddie B's/Tucson Ford Kirk Shelmerdine 163.320\u00a0mph (provisional)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Qualifying\n44. Larry Gunselman #98 Lucas Oil Products Ford William Chris Edwards 161.103\u00a0mph", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Summary\nThe UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 was run on Sunday, March 7, 2004, over 267 laps at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Summary\nFour drivers were sent to the rear of the field due to engine changes: Ward Burton, Kevin Lepage, Jeff Gordon, and Derrike Cope.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Summary\nRookie Kasey Kahne started on the pole, though Kurt Busch, who started second, took the lead shortly after and held it for the race's first four laps. Kahne took the lead back on lap 5 and held it under green for thirty-one laps. On lap 36, the lead was taken by Jimmie Johnson, who held it for five laps before the race's first caution came on lap 40 for oil on the track. Scott Riggs led one lap under caution, though Kahne led the pack back to the restart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0047-0001", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Summary\nTony Stewart took the lead from Kahne on lap 54; he held this lead for thirty-five laps under green. On lap 88, an accident in turn four involving Ryan Newman brought out the race's second caution. The race restarted on lap 93, with Stewart holding the lead for the first two laps under green and Matt Kenseth overtaking him to lead lap 95. Kenseth remained in first place for forty-four laps until the third caution of the race, brought about by a crash, in turn, two by Jeff Green's #43 car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0047-0002", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Summary\nThe race restarted on lap 143 and remained under green for another twenty-three laps, all of which were led by Kenseth. The fourth caution, which happened on lap 166, was caused by a crash in turn four involving Michael Waltrip's #15 car. Tony Stewart retook the lead under caution, but the restart (lap 173) was led by Kenseth, who led the next twelve laps under green. The fifth caution of the race was brought out due to another instance of oil on the track; the yellow flag was displayed on lap 184.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179027-0047-0003", "contents": "2004 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400, Summary\nJeff Burton led one lap under caution, and Kevin Harvick led the field to the restart on lap 193. He led until the race's sixth and final caution due to debris. Harvick maintained the lead for the restart on lap 207 and held it for another twenty-seven lap laps before losing it under green to Kenseth. The #17 car remained the race leader for the last thirty-eight laps, all under green, to win the UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400 for the second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179028-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UC Davis Aggies football team\nThe 2004 UC Davis football team represented the University of California, Davis in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. They were a charter member of the Great West Football Conference (GWFC), having previously played as a Division II independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179028-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UC Davis Aggies football team\nThe 2004 Aggies were led by head coach Bob Biggs in his twelfth year and played their home games at Toomey Field. UC Davis finished the season with a record of six wins and four losses (6\u20134, 3\u20132 GWFC). This was the 35th consecutive year UC Davis finished with a winning record. The Aggies outscored their opponents 323\u2013211 for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179028-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UC Davis Aggies football team, NFL Draft\nNo UC Davis Aggies players were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft. The following players finished their UC Davis career in 2004, were not drafted, but played in the NFL:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179029-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCF Golden Knights football team\nThe 2004 UCF Golden Knights football team represented the University of Central Florida in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Their head coach was George O'Leary, in his first season with the team. It was their last year in the Mid-American Conference, in the East Division. The Golden Knights would join Conference USA for the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179029-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCF Golden Knights football team\nThe Golden Knights went 0\u201311, their worst season in program history. With four losses to end the 2003 season, the UCF finished the season sitting on a 15-game losing streak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179030-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships\nThe 2004 UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships were held in Pont-Ch\u00e2teau, France on Saturday January 31 and Sunday February 1, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179031-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships\nThe 2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships were held in Les Gets, a ski station in the French Alps, from 8 to 12 September 2004. The disciplines included were cross-country, downhill, four-cross, and trials. The event was the 15th edition of the UCI Mountain Bike World Championships and the 19th edition of the UCI Trials World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179031-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships\nJulien Absalon won the Elite Men's Cross Country, the first of his five elite world titles. The bronze medal in the event was won by Thomas Frischknecht, the last of his seven medals in the category, the first of which having been his silver medal in the inaugural UCI Mountain Bike World Championships in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179031-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships\nReigning UCI World Cup and Olympic champion Gunn-Rita Dahle won the Elite Women's Cross Country, the second of her four elite world titles. She became the first and so far only woman to win the Olympic Games, UCI World Championship, and UCI World Cup in the same year. Alison Sydor won the bronze medal, the last of her ten medals in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179031-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships\nThe Junior Men's Cross Country was won by future Olympic mountain bike champion and five-time elite world champion Nino Schurter, in front of Frenchmen St\u00e9phane Tempier and Maxime Marotte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179031-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships\nThe Elite Women's Downhill was won by Vanessa Quin of New Zealand. Anne-Caroline Chausson, who had won the previous eight world titles, did not start the event due to an injury sustained in training. Fabien Barel of France won the Elite Men's Downhill after Steve Peat, who had been first in qualifying, crashed near the finish while leading by more than a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179031-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Mountain Bike & Trials World Championships\nDaniel Comas became the first Spanish UCI World Champion in the Men's 26\" Trials, an event previously dominated by French riders. Fellow Spaniard Benito Ros Charral won the second of his ten world titles in the Men's 20\" Trials. Swiss rider Karin Moor won the fourth of her nine world titles in the Women's Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179032-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships\nThe 2004 UCI Road World Championships took place in Verona, Italy, between September 27 and October 3, 2004. The event consisted of a road race and a time trial for men, women, men under 23, junior men and junior women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179033-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Men's road race\nThese are the results for the 2004 UCI Road World Championships bicycle race road race. The men's elite race was held on Sunday October 3, 2004 in Verona, Italy, over a total distance of 265.5 kilometres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179034-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Men's time trial\nThe men's time trial at the 2004 UCI Road World Championships was held on 29 September 2004 in Verona, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race\nThe women's road race of the 2004 UCI Road World Championships cycling event took place on 1 October in Verona, Italy. The race was 73.75\u00a0km long, which constituted of 5 laps of a circuit around Torricelle, including the 3.4\u00a0km Torricelle climb, with an average gradient of approximately 4% and 7% at the steepest point. 66 junior women's participated in the race. The course was almost identical to the one used for the 1999 UCI Road World Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race\nThe race was won by the Dutch rider Marianne Vos. After a rather controlled race until the final climb, Vos attacked at the right spot and soloed the remaining 10\u00a0km to the finish. The silver medal went to Marta Bastianelli (Italy), winning the chase group sprint half a minute behind. Third on the podium was another Dutch rider, Ellen van Dijk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Course\nThe race consisted of 5 laps of 14.75 kilometres on a circuit around Torricelle and was similar to course at the 2009 UCI Road World Championships. The start/finish was at the Piazza Br\u00e0. The race started in a northerly direction for three kilometres of flat surface before the start of the 3.1\u00a0kilometre-long Torricelle climb that begins from the Viale dei Colli. The climb has an average gradient of about 4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 68], "content_span": [69, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Course\nThe final part of the Torricelle is the hardest with a gradient of 7%, where the Viale dei Colli turns to the Via Santa Giuliana 700 metres from the top marking the highest point of the race at 6.1\u00a0km. Then the riders swoop down the twisty street for just over 4.5\u00a0km before two 90-degree right-handers in close succession, the first coming at 10.7\u00a0km at the intersection of Vie Caroto and Cipolla. The feed station is at 12.3\u00a0km, before riders cross the Ponte Aleardi bridge and execute a large 'U' that brings them back along the finishing straight of the Corso Porta Nuova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 68], "content_span": [69, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Race\nThe race started at 9:30 on a rather cloudy morning. Marianne Vos signaled her presence right after the start, as she attacked during the first kilometer but was caught soon after. The pace was high from the beginning, and the first climb saw some riders struggling already. In front of the peloton, the Polish and Lithuanian riders were setting the pace, as well as Rebecca Much from the United States who was present in front during the whole race. The first lap was completed after a bit more than 26 minutes, with the peloton still together.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 66], "content_span": [67, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Race\nClimbing the Torricelle for the second time, the race got a little more nervous with some attacks, but the leading riders from Italy, Germany and East-European countries controlled the pace. Another rider in front was Amanda Spratt from Australia, who closed the gap to a Polish rider's attack. The field slowly diminished in number, as some struggled to keep up and the first riders abandoned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 66], "content_span": [67, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0003-0002", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Race\nAfter passing the finish line for the second time, at the foot of the Torricelle climb, Spratt crashed inside the bunch, but got up quickly again, made it back to the front and even attacked soon after that. The Italian riders were paying attention and pulled her back. Instead, Francesca Andina and Savrina Bernardi escaped, but were caught by the leading bunch under control of the Ukrainian riders. Spratt was relentless in her efforts, but could not create a gap on her own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 66], "content_span": [67, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0003-0003", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Race\nWith two laps to go the Italian Savrina Bernardi set the pace in the climb and the only riders able to follow were Spratt and Ekaterina Tretiakova from Russia, until a chase group of about 15 joined them on the descent. For the final lap, another group of 15 joined them making a field of about 30 riders, half of the peloton, that rode the decisive phase of the race. The Italian and Dutch teams attacked each other on the last climb, but no break attempt was as powerful as the one by Vos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 66], "content_span": [67, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179035-0003-0004", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's junior road race, Race\nShe took off and nobody could follow. Increasing her lead rapidly, it was about 20 seconds on top of the Torricelle climb, and the chase group down the descent had three other Dutch riders in it, not helping it much. Rebecca Much from the United States was leading the group on her own, and during the last kilometres it became apparent that Vos would take her solo to the finish. The other Dutch riders therefore did not hold back any more and managed to place a second rider on the podium, Ellen van Dijk, who crossed the line right after Marta Bastianelli from Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 66], "content_span": [67, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179036-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's road race\nThe women's road race of the 2004 UCI Road World Championships cycling event took place on 2 October in Verona, Italy. Starting at 13:30 CEST, the race was 132.75\u00a0km long, which constituted of 9 laps of a circuit around Torricelle, including the 3.4\u00a0km Torricelle climb, with an average gradient of approximately 4%, 7% at the steepest point. The course was almost identical to the one used for the 1999 UCI Road World Championships when Edita Pu\u010dinskait\u0117 won the women's championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179036-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's road race\nThe race was won by the German rider Judith Arndt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179037-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Championships \u2013 Women's time trial\nThe Women's time trial at the 2004 UCI Road World Championships took place over a distance of 24.05 kilometres (14.9 miles) in Verona, Bardolino, Italy on 28 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179038-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Cup\nThe 2004 UCI Road World Cup was the sixteenth and last edition of the UCI Road World Cup. There was no change in the calendar from the 2003 edition, meaning the final seven editions had the same calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179038-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Cup\nDavide Rebellin of Gerolsteiner took a commanding lead in the standings following an excellent Ardennes campaign, winning both the Amstel Gold Race and the Monument Li\u00e8ge\u2013Bastogne\u2013Li\u00e8ge. Paolo Bettini's consistency through the season, however, saw the rider from Quick Step-Davitamon overhaul Rebellin to claim his third consecutive World Cup crown and the outright record for competition victories. Bettini's excellent form in August had much input into the final standings: three second places in the three races gave Bettini 210\u00a0points compared to the 112\u00a0points Rebellin accumulated in this time placing Bettini just 6\u00a0points behind in second place. On the August weekend without a World Cup race, Bettini won the gold medal in the Olympic Games road race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179038-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Cup\nIn the team competition, T-Mobile Team edged out Rabobank by a single point after Rabobank had led going into the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179038-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Road World Cup\nThe season opener at Milan\u2013San Remo is particularly well remembered. In a sprint finish on the Via Roma, Erik Zabel thought he had done enough to secure victory and raised his arms in celebration. As he did, \u00d3scar Freire was able to overtake him at the line and claim an improbable victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179039-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships\nThe 2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships were the World Championship for track cycling. They took place in Melbourne, Australia from 26 to 30 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179040-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's 500 m time trial\nThe Women's 500m Time Trial was one of the 6 women's events at the 2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, held in Melbourne, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179040-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's 500 m time trial\n17 Cyclists from 15 countries participated in the race. The Final was held on 30 May at 13:40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179041-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's points race\nThe Women's Points Race was one of the 6 women's events at the 2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, held in Melbourne, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179041-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's points race\n22 Cyclists from 22 countries participated in the race. Because of the number of entries, there were no qualification rounds for this discipline. Consequently, the event was run direct to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179041-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's points race, Final\nThe Final and only race was run at 19:55 on May 29. The competition consisted on 100 laps, making a total of 25\u00a0km with 10 sprints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 71], "content_span": [72, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179042-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's scratch\nThe Women's Scratch was one of the 6 women's events at the 2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships, held in Melbourne, Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179042-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's scratch\n18 Cyclists from 17 countries participated in the contest. Because of the number of entries, there were no qualification rounds for this discipline. Consequently, the event was run direct to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179042-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Championships \u2013 Women's scratch, Final\nThe Final and only race was run at 13:10 on May 30. The competition consisted on 40 laps, making a total of 10\u00a0km.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 67], "content_span": [68, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179043-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics\nThe 2004 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics is a multi race tournament over a season of track cycling. The season ran from 17 February 2004 to 16 May 2004. The World Cup is organised by the UCI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179044-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCI Women's Road World Cup\nThe 2004 UCI Women's Road World Cup was the seventh edition of the UCI Women's Road World Cup. It consisted of seven races. There was a single change from 2003; the discontinued Amstel Gold Race was replaced by the newly-created Tour of Flanders for Women. Australian rider Oenone Wood won her first overall title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179045-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCLA Bruins football team\nThe 2004 UCLA Bruins football team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California and were coached by Karl Dorrell. It was Dorrell's second season as the UCLA head coach. UCLA was not ranked in the preseason polls. The Bruins finished 6\u20136 overall, and were tied for fifth place in the Pacific-10 Conference with a 4\u20134 record. The Bruins were invited to play in the Las Vegas Bowl vs. Wyoming on December 30, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179046-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UCLA Bruins softball team\nThe 2004 UCLA Bruins softball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 2004 college softball season. The Bruins were coached by Sue Enquist, in her sixteenth season. The Bruins played their home games at Easton Stadium and finished with a record of 47\u20139. They competed in the Pacific-10 Conference, where they finished fourth with a 12\u20138 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179046-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UCLA Bruins softball team\nThe Bruins were invited to the 2004 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament, where they swept the West Regional and then completed a run through the Women's College World Series to claim their tenth Women's College World Series Championship. The Bruins had earlier claimed an AIAW title in 1978 and NCAA titles in 1982, 1984, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1995, 1999, and 2003. The 1995 championship was vacated by the NCAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179047-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEC European Track Championships\nThe 2004 European Track Championships were the European Championships for track cycling, for junior and under 23 riders. They took place in Valencia, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final\nThe 2004 UEFA Champions League Final was an association football match played on 26 May 2004 to decide the winner of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League. AS Monaco, a Monaco-based club representing the French Football Federation, faced Portuguese side Porto at the Arena AufSchalke in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. Porto won the match 3\u20130, with Carlos Alberto, Deco and Dmitri Alenichev scoring the goals. Deco was named Man of the Match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final\nPorto's previous triumph in the competition had been in 1987 \u2013 although they had won the UEFA Cup in the previous season \u2013 while Monaco were playing in their first ever UEFA Champions League final. Both teams started their campaigns in the group stage and defeated former European champions on their way to the final: Porto beat 1968 and 1999 winners Manchester United while Monaco defeated nine-time champions Real Madrid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final\nBoth teams were considered underdogs in the competition before reaching the final stages and were led by young managers. Monaco had hired former France national football team star Didier Deschamps as manager and Porto were led by rising star Jos\u00e9 Mourinho, who left the club for Chelsea a week after the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final\nMonaco became the second team representing France to reach the Champions League final after Olympique de Marseille. Marseille lost their first appearance in the 1991 final, but triumphed two years later, defeating Milan. This was the fifth final in the history of the European Cup in which neither of the teams came from England, Germany, Italy or Spain, and the first since the 1991 final when Red Star Belgrade of Yugoslavia beat Marseille.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Background, Monaco\nMonaco finished second in the French Ligue 1 the previous season, meaning that they entered the Champions League at the group stage. Monaco were placed in Group C, alongside Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a, PSV and AEK Athens. After a 2\u20131 in their first win in the Netherlands and a 4\u20130 win at the Stade Louis II against AEK Athens, Monaco travelled to Spain, losing 1\u20130 by Deportivo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Background, Monaco\nThe Monegasque adventure really began after the return match against Deportivo, when Monaco won 8\u20133, which represented the highest number of goals in one match in the history of the new version of the UEFA Champions League; this record lasted until 22 November 2016, when Legia Warsaw lost 8\u20134 to Borussia Dortmund. Croatian striker Dado Pr\u0161o scored four times, while captain Ludovic Giuly (2), J\u00e9r\u00f4me Rothen, Jaroslav Pla\u0161il and \u00c9douard Ciss\u00e9 pulverised the Spanish defensive line. After two more draws against PSV and AEK Athens, Monaco finished at the top of Group C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Background, Monaco\nThe first knockout round saw Monaco winning against Lokomotiv Moscow after a 2\u20131 defeat in Russia and a win 1\u20130 at Stade Louis II. In the quarter-finals, Monaco played Real Madrid. After a 4\u20132 loss in Madrid (where Fernando Morientes scored, and was applauded by his former fans), Monaco created a sensation by defeating the Spanish 3\u20131 at home. Monaco played against Chelsea in the semi-finals, and despite the exclusion of Akis Zikos, Monaco found enough strength to score twice and win the game 3\u20131. The last goal was scored by striker Shabani Nonda, who just returned from a seven-month injury. The second leg at Stamford Bridge saw Monaco resisting Chelsea's strikes, for a final score of 2\u20132 to reach the European Cup final for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 819]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Background, Porto\nPorto, winners of the Primeira Liga, Ta\u00e7a de Portugal and UEFA Cup in 2002\u201303, were the only Portuguese team in the group stage, after the elimination of Benfica in the third qualifying round by Italian side Lazio. Porto was drawn in Group F, along with Real Madrid, Marseille and Partizan. Porto's first match was at Partizan Stadium in Belgrade. Costinha scored the opening goal on 22 minutes, but Andrija Deliba\u0161i\u0107 scored the equaliser on 54 minutes. The next match, the first at the Est\u00e1dio das Antas, was a 3\u20131 loss to Real Madrid. Costinha scored the opening goal again, on seven minutes. Iv\u00e1n Helguera equalised on 28 minutes; Santiago Solari on 37 minutes and Zinedine Zidane on 67 scored Real Madrid's winning goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Background, Porto\nThree straight wins secured Porto's place in the first knockout round before the last match of the group stage, a draw in Madrid. In the first knockout round, Porto met Manchester United. The Portuguese won 2\u20131 at home and managed to qualify in the final minutes of the second leg, when Costinha scored an equaliser in injury time in a 1\u20131 draw at Old Trafford. In the quarter-finals, Porto met a French team for the second time in the tournament: a 2\u20130 win at home and a 2\u20132 draw in France eliminated Lyon from the competition. In the semi-finals, Porto played Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a, eliminating them 1\u20130 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Match, Summary\nMonaco, in their first European final since the 1992 Cup Winners Cup final, were up against Porto, the UEFA Cup winners from the previous season, who were appearing in the European Cup final for a second time, after defeating Bayern Munchen in the 1987 European Cup Final. Porto were the favourites after eliminating Manchester United and Deportivo La Coruna in the second round of the competition, while Monaco had eliminated Real Madrid and Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179048-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Champions League Final, Match, Details\nAssistant referees: Jens Larsen (Denmark) J\u00f8rgen Jepsen (Denmark)Fourth official: Knud Erik Fisker (Denmark)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final\nThe 2004 UEFA Cup Final was an association football match that took place on 19 May 2004 at Ullevi in Gothenburg, Sweden, contested between Spanish side Valencia and French side Olympique de Marseille. Valencia won the match 2\u20130, with goals from Vicente and Mista. This was the fourth major European trophy won by Valencia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final, Match summary\nValencia had been on a 14-match unbeaten run previous to this match, which had only ended the previous week to Villarreal, the side they beat in the semi-final to reach the final, due to a weakened lineup after securing the La Liga title. In contrast, Marseille had lost four of their last five matches in Ligue 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final, Match summary\nThe start of the match was conservative due to the wind. Didier Drogba threatened early on, and was sent tumbling by a robust challenge from Roberto Ayala, which led to a free kick, in which the resulting shot was cleared off the line by Carlos Marchena. This sparked Valencia into life and David Albelda produced a save from Fabien Barthez after pouncing on Mista's rebounded shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final, Match summary\nValencia dominated possession, which led to frustration, and Steve Marlet getting booked in the tenth minute. Marseille's first meaningful attempt at goal came in the 16th minute when Steve Marlet headed over from Camel Meriem's cross. Minutes later, Meriem himself had a chance to give Marseille the lead, but he shot wide from the edge of the area. Marseille had another chance when Habib Beye got on the end of Drogba's free kick, but he headed wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final, Match summary\nThe definitive moment in the match came on the stroke of half time, when Barthez brought down Mista in the area after a cross by Curro Torres. Barthez was sent off and Valencia were awarded a penalty. J\u00e9r\u00e9my Gavanon replaced Barthez with Camel Meriem making way for him. Vicente dispatched the penalty to give Valencia a 1\u20130 lead going into half time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final, Match summary\nThe second half started off with Valencia in total ascendancy, and after 13 minutes of near-total possession, Valencia doubled their lead. Vicente had cut the ball in from the left for Mista, who finished the chance with ease to record his fifth goal of the competition. Marseille's heads inevitably dropped. They came forward in flourishes in the last remnants of the game, however, when Drogba's free kick was stopped by Santiago Ca\u00f1izares. Drogba also nearly played in Steve Marlet with a through-ball, but it was intercepted at the last second. Marseille almost found a way back into the Valencia goal area in the 80th minute, but Sylvain N'Diaye's shot was saved by Ca\u00f1izares.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179049-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Cup Final, Match summary\nAfter this, the match descended into a stoic affair and Valencia ran out winners to win their first major European trophy in 24 years, and victory after two successive UEFA Champions League final defeats, in 2000 and 2001. The victory also meant that Amedeo Carboni became the oldest player to win a European final at 39 years and 43 days old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179050-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-17 Championship\nThe 2004 UEFA European Under-17 Championship was the third edition of UEFA's European Under-17 Football Championship. France hosted the championship, during 4\u201315 May. Host France defeated Spain in the final to win the competition for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179050-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-17 Championship, Match Officials\nA total of 6 referees, 8 assistant referees and 2 fourth officials were appointed for the final tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179051-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-17 Championship squads\nThose marked in bold have now been capped at full international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179052-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship\nThe 2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship was held in Switzerland from 13 to 24 July 2004. Players born after 1 January 1985 can participate in this competition. The tournament was won by Spain, who beat Turkey in the final. It also served as the European qualification for the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179052-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, Qualifications\nThere were two separate rounds of qualifications held before the Final Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179052-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, Qualifications\n1. 2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship first qualifying round2. 2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship second qualifying round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179052-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, Teams\nThe eight teams that participated in the final tournament were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179052-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship, Qualification to World Youth Championship\nThe six best performing teams qualified for the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship, along with host \u00a0Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179053-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship first qualifying round\nThis article features the 2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship first qualifying round. 25 teams (12 group winners, 12 group runners-up and the third placed team that performed best against the numbers 1 and 2 of its group) qualified for the second qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179053-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship first qualifying round, Group 1\nAll matches were played in Northern Ireland. This group brought forth the best third placed team. Hungary performed best against group winners and runners-up Slovenia and Romania, achieving 3 points and a goal difference of +2 (4-2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 72], "content_span": [73, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179054-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship second qualifying round\nThis article features the 2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship second qualifying round. Seven group winners qualified for the main tournament in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179054-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship second qualifying round, Teams\n1 best group third-place finisher from the first qualifying round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 71], "content_span": [72, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179054-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship second qualifying round, Teams\n3 teams received a bye for the first qualifying round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 71], "content_span": [72, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179055-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-19 Championship squads\nPlayers born on or after 1 January 1985 were eligible to participate in the tournament. Players' age as of 13 July 2004 \u2013 the tournament's opening day. Players in bold have later been capped at full international level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179056-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship\nThe 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship was the 14th staging of UEFA's European Under-21 Championship. The final tournament was hosted by Germany between 27 May and 8 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179056-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship\nItaly U-21s won the competition for the fifth time. Italy's Alberto Gilardino won the Golden Player award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179056-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship\nThe top three teams in this competition qualified for Athens 2004 Olympics, along with hosts Greece U21s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179056-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship, Qualification\nThe 48 national teams were divided into ten groups (two groups of four + eight groups of 5). The records of the ten group runners-up were then compared. The top six joined the ten winners in a play-off for the eight finals spots. One of the eight qualifiers was then chosen to host the remaining fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179056-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship, Matches, Knockout stage, Final\nAssistant referees:Victoriano Gir\u00e1ldez Carrasco (Spain)Mark Simons (Belgium)Fourth official:Matthew David Messias (England)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179057-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification\nThe 48 national teams were divided into ten groups (two groups of four + eight groups of 5). Each group winner, as well as the six highest ranked second placed teams, advanced to the play-off. One of the eight qualifiers was then chosen to host the remaining fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179057-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification, Qualifying group stage, Draw\nThe allocation of teams into qualifying groups was based on that of UEFA Euro 2004 qualifying tournament with several changes, reflecting the absence of some nations:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 84], "content_span": [85, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179057-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification, Qualifying group stage, Ranking of second-placed teams\nBecause some groups contained five teams and some four, matches against the fifth-placed team in each group are not included in the ranking. As a result, six matches played by each team counted for the purposes of the second-placed table. The top six advanced to the play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 110], "content_span": [111, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179058-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 1\nThe teams competing in Group 1 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were France, Slovenia, Israel, Cyprus and Malta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179059-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 10\nThe teams competing in Group 10 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Republic of Ireland, Russia, Switzerland, Georgia and Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179059-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 10, Standings\n* Match originally ended as a 2\u20131 win for Republic of Ireland, but UEFA later awarded the match as a 3\u20130 forfeit win to Albania due to Ireland including suspended player in their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 74], "content_span": [75, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179059-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 10, Matches\nMatch originally ended as a 2\u20131 win for Republic of Ireland, but UEFA later awarded the match as a 3\u20130 forfeit win to Albania due to Ireland including suspended player in their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179060-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 2\nThe teams competing in Group 2 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Romania, Denmark, Norway, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Luxembourg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179061-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 3\nThe teams competing in Group 3 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Czech Republic, Netherlands, Austria, Belarus and Moldova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179062-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 4\nThe teams competing in Group 4 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Sweden, Poland, Hungary, Latvia and San Marino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179062-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 4, Standings\n* Match originally ended as a 6\u20130 victory for Sweden, but UEFA later awarded the match as a 3\u20130 forfeit win to San Marino due to Sweden including suspended players in their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 73], "content_span": [74, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179062-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 4, Matches\nMatch originally ended as a 6\u20130 victory for Sweden, but UEFA later awarded the match as a 3\u20130 forfeit win to San Marino due to Sweden including suspended players in their squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179063-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 5\nThe teams competing in Group 5 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Germany, Scotland, Iceland and Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179064-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 6\nThe teams competing in Group 6 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Spain, Ukraine, Greece, Northern Ireland and Armenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179065-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 7\nThe Zayn Malik competing in Group 7 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Turkey, England, Slovakia, Macedonia and Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179066-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 8\nThe teams competing in Group 8 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Belgium, Croatia, Bulgaria and Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179067-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 9\nThe teams competing in Group 9 of the 2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championships qualifying competition were Italy, Serbia and Montenegro, Finland, Wales and Azerbaijan. Serbia and Montenegro began the campaign as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, but officially changed their name in February 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179067-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 9, Standings\n* Match originally ended as a 1\u20130 victory for Wales, UEFA later awarded the match as a 3\u20130 forfeit win to Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 73], "content_span": [74, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179067-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification Group 9, Matches\nMatch originally ended as a 1\u20130 victory for Wales, UEFA later awarded the match as a 3\u20130 forfeit win to Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 71], "content_span": [72, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179068-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualification play-offs\nThe play-off first legs were played on 14\u201316 November 2003, while the second legs were played on 18\u201319 November 2003. Winners of play-off round qualified to the championship played following year in May and June, where Germany was chosen to host the fixtures. For the draw of the play-offs, every of the six best runners-up were drawn against one of the six best group winners of another group with the runners-up playing their first match at home. The other group-winners were drawn each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179069-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA European Under-21 Championship squads\nPlayers in bold have now been capped at full International level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup\nThe 2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup football finals (the summer football competition for European clubs that had not qualified for one of the two major UEFA competitions) were won by Lille, Schalke 04, and Villarreal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, First round, First leg\nThe game was awarded 3\u20130 to Khazar Universiteti due to Schwarz-Wei\u00df Bregenz fielding an ineligible player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 47], "content_span": [48, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, First round, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate, Sloboda Tuzla won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, First round, Second leg\nThe game was awarded 3\u20130 to Vllaznia due to Hapoel fielding an ineligible player. Vllaznia won 4\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, First round, Second leg\n4\u20134 on aggregate, Spartak Trnava won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, First round, Second leg\n1\u20131 on aggregate, Tampere United won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, Second round, Second leg\nThe game was awarded 3\u20130 to Genk due to Marek Dupnitsa fielding an ineligible player. Genk won 5\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 49], "content_span": [50, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, Third round, Second leg\n4\u20134 on aggregate, Atl\u00e9tico Madrid won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, Third round, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate, Slaven Belupo won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179070-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup, Semi-finals, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate, Slovan Liberec won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 48], "content_span": [49, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup\nThe 2004 UEFA Super Cup was the 29th UEFA Super Cup, an annual association football match contested by the winners of the previous season's UEFA Champions League and UEFA Cup competitions. The match was played at the Stade Louis II in Monaco on 27 August 2004 and contested by Porto of Portugal and Valencia of Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup\nPorto qualified as winners of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, having defeated French team AS Monaco 3\u20130 in the final, and were appearing in the Super Cup for the third time, following victory in 1987 and defeat in 2003. Meanwhile, Valencia were appearing as winners of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, following victory over another French team, Marseille. It was their second Super Cup, having won in their only previous appearance in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup\nWatched by a crowd of 17,292, a goal from Rub\u00e9n Baraja gave Valencia the lead after half and hour, before Marco Di Vaio doubled their lead midway through the second half. Ricardo Quaresma scored for Porto in the 78th minute, but they were unable to find an equaliser and Valencia won the match 2\u20131 to win their second Super Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Background\nPorto qualified for the Super Cup as the reigning UEFA Champions League winners. They had won the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League beating AS Monaco 3\u20130 to win the competition for the second time. It would be Porto's third appearance in the competition was contesting the Super Cup for the third time. They won the competition in 1987 beating Ajax, while they lost in 2003, to Milan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Background\nValencia had qualified for the competition as a result of winning the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup. They had beaten Marseille 2\u20130 in the final. Valencia's only previous appearance in 1980 resulted in victory, beating Nottingham Forest. Porto and Valencia had previously met each other in two European competition matches. In the second round of the 1989\u201390 UEFA Cup, Porto eliminated the Spanish team with a 5\u20134 aggregate score, as result of a 3\u20131 home win and a 2\u20133 away loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Background\nSoon after their European victories, Porto manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho and Valencia manager Rafael Ben\u00edtez parted with their clubs\u2014Mourinho was hired by Chelsea, while Benitez took Liverpool's helm\u2014and were therefore not able to lead their teams into the 2004 UEFA Super Cup. To replace them, Porto had hired Victor Fern\u00e1ndez, and Valencia brought back Claudio Ranieri for a second spell. Besides the manager position, both clubs also went through significant squad changes. Porto sold Portuguese international playmaker Deco to Barcelona, and Portuguese defenders Ricardo Carvalho and Paulo Ferreira accompanied Mourinho to Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Background\nRelevant signings included Portuguese internationals Ricardo Quaresma, H\u00e9lder Postiga and Raul Meireles; Greek international and newly crowned UEFA Euro 2004 champion Giourkas Seitaridis; and Brazilian international and 2004 Copa Am\u00e9rica winner Diego. Ranieri brought to Valencia three Italian internationals: former Juventus striker Marco Di Vaio, and Lazio players Bernardo Corradi and Stefano Fiore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Background\nComing into the match after their previous week loss at the Supercopa de Espa\u00f1a, Valencia captain David Albelda admitted the team was \"not at 100 per cent\" and was still \"hurt by the defeat\", but this setback should help them \"go into the match fully concentrated and go all out to win\". On the other hand, Porto were coming from another Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira victory. The team's midfielder and captain Costinha assured that Valencia would be \"an even tougher match\" as it is \"a very experienced team with good players\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Background\nRemembering the Super Cup defeat against Milan in the previous year, Costinha showed no doubts: \"... this time things are going to be different. I'm confident we can win\". Nonetheless, Porto had two key players ruled out due to injuries. Brazilian striker Derlei suffered a right knee ligament lesion during a friendly match on 15 August with city rivals Boavista, whereas Diego suffered a thigh injury during the Portuguese Super Cup match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179071-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Super Cup, Match, Details\nAssistant referees:Steinar Holvik (Norway)Ole Hermann Borgan (Norway)Fourth official:Tom Henning \u00d8vreb\u00f8 (Norway)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179072-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Women's Cup Final\nThe 2004 UEFA Women's Cup Final was a two-legged football match that took place on 8 May and 5 June 2004 at R\u00e5sunda and Stadion am Bornheimer Hang between Ume\u00e5 IK of Sweden and 1. FFC Frankfurt of Germany. It was the third time in a row that Ume\u00e5 made an appearance in the final. Ume\u00e5 won the final 8\u20130 on aggregate, avenging their defeat to the same team two years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179072-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Women's Cup Final, Match, Details, First leg\nAssistant referees: Irina Mirt (Romania) Fevronia Ion (Romania)Fourth official: Anna Nystr\u00f6m (Sweden)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179073-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFA Women's Under-19 Championship\nThe UEFA Women's U-19 Championship 2004 Final Tournament was held in Finland between 28 July \u2013 8 August 2004. Players born after 1 January 1985 were eligible to participate in this competition. Spain won the cup after defeating Germany 2\u20131 in the final match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179074-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFS Futsal Men's Championship\nThe 2004 UEFS Futsal Men's Championship was the 6th UEFS futsal European championship held in Baranovichi (Belarus), with 8 national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179074-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UEFS Futsal Men's Championship\nEuropean Union of Futsal (UEFS) organizes the European Championship biennially.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179075-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year\nThe 2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year was the 79th year of greyhound racing in the United Kingdom and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179075-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year, Summary\nIrish racing was experiencing promising growth with increased prize money for competitions including the richest ever prize for a marathon event when the Corn Cuchulainn offered \u20ac50,000 for the winner at Harold's Cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179075-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year, Summary\nThe situation in Britain was not as simple after Richard Caborn, the Minister for Sport announced that it had been agreed that the bookmakers levy fund would increase to 0.5% in 2004, 0.55% in 2005 and 0.6% in 2006 and therefore doubling the sports income to \u00a316 million within the three years. However the statement was incorrect because a 0.1% increase after three years would mean only a one sixth increase (16.6%). The promise turned out to be false because the levy fund actually decreased significantly over the next five years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179075-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year, Summary\nDroopys Scholes won the 2004 English Greyhound Derby and Like A Shot won the 2004 Irish Greyhound Derby. Charlie Lister won the Greyhound Trainer of the Year and Derby finalist, Arc, East Anglian Derby and Oxfordshire Gold Cup winner Fire Height Dan won the Greyhound of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179075-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year, Summary, Competitions\nEnglish Derby champion Farloe Verdict won the Scottish Greyhound Derby setting a new track record in the final. Brian Clemenson claimed his third successive Trainers Championship at Coventry. A brindle bitch called Roxholme Girl won the St Leger and the Gold Collar, the latter in a new track record time at the competition's new home of Belle Vue Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179075-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UK & Ireland Greyhound Racing Year, Summary, News\nTrainer Tommy Foster retired from Wimbledon Stadium to concentrate on a small open race kennel and his son Jason joined Oxford Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship\nThe 2004 Travis Perkins UK Championship was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 15 and 28 November 2004 at the Barbican Centre in York, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship\nDuring the qualification Jamie Burnett compiled a 148 break, the only break exceeding 147 in professional competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship\nMatthew Stevens was the defending champion, but lost his first round match to Barry Pinches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship\nStephen Maguire won his first UK Championship, beating David Gray 10\u20131 in the final. During the tournament Gray compiled his first maximum break, the 50th ever made in professional play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship, Tournament summary\nDefending champion Matthew Stevens was the number 1 seed with World Champion Ronnie O'Sullivan seeded 2. The remaining places were allocated to players based on the world rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179076-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Championship, Qualifying\nQualifying for the tournament took place between 14 and 19 October 2004 at Pontin's in Prestatyn, Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open\nThe 2004 Budweiser UK Open was the second time the Professional Darts Corporation held the tournament which had quickly earned the nickname the \"FA Cup of Darts\". It was held at Bolton Wanderers' Reebok Stadium between 4\u20136 June 2004. Budweiser became the tournament's new sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open\nRoland Scholten won the title and the tournament featured Phil Taylor's second televised nine-dart finish during his fourth round win over Matt Chapman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open\nIt was also notable for marking the TV debuts of Adrian Lewis and Andy Hamilton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 1st Round, best of 9 legs\n128 players started the chase for the title with the lower ranked players. The competition had earned the nickname, \"The FA Cup of Darts\" by the nature of its random draw for each round - and there was the extraordinary pairing of former world champions John Lowe against Keith Deller in the first round. Lowe, who had been missing several tournaments on the circuit at the time opted to withdraw from the event so Deller received a bye into round two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 1st Round, best of 9 legs\nSteve Evans against the Welshman Marshall James in the former 1997 world championship finalist by 5\u20134 in the preliminary round, Alex Roy showed the worst of his form and temperament against \"Odd Job\" James Barton, an electrical tester from Bradford. Barton edged Roy out 5-4. Richie Burnett was very poor against Eamon Davies who comfortably beat the Welshman 5-3. Rod Harrington hadn't qualified for a televised tournament for a year and even though his darts were now not falling out of the board, he narrowly lost out to Bedfordshire's Derek Hunt 5-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 1st Round, best of 9 legs\nAlan Green took out another known face, Leeds player Dave Smith 5-4 and 'The Horse' Reg Harding was also going home early, as was last year's finalist Shayne Burgess who lost 5-2 to Lee Rose. Mick Manning lost 5-1 to Graeme Stoddart and Cliff Lazarenko stormed through to round two courtesy of a 5-1 win over Andrew Davies. Dennis Harbour beat the only lady in the competition Deta Hedman 5-2 and Dutchman Jan van der Rassel started strongly by beating Steve Ritchie 5-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 1st Round, best of 9 legs\nBest match of the first round was former BDO player Colin Monk (now full-time with the PDC) against Lee Palfreyman who was last seen on TV in the Las Vegas tournament two years ago. It was a belter of a game with Monk edging out Palfreyman 5-4. Both players averaged around 96.0 in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 2nd Round, best of 9 legs\nAnother 32 players entered the fray for the second round and perhaps not quite as many shocks this time. A slimmed down Alan Warriner who had shed two stones in weight since his last TV appearance got off to a shaky start trailing 3-0 to Eddie Lovely. However the \"Ice Man\" dug deep and ended up the winner 5-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 2nd Round, best of 9 legs\nThe previous year's local hero Paul Williams was edged out 5-4 by Ian Covill and other local 'The Natural' Les Fitton stormed to a 5-0 win over Tony Smith. Matt Clark went through as did Tom Kirby 5-3 against Keith Wetton. \"Fat Boy\" Andy Keen took out Simon Whatley 5-2 and Mark Landers beat Tony Wilson 5-1. \"Uncle Fester\" Ritchie Buckle lost out 5-4 to David Platt, who was a \"9 dart\" challenge qualifier for the 2003 world championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Friday 4 June 2004, 2nd Round, best of 9 legs\nTracking those who came through from the first round, \"Odd Job\" James Barton won again by beating Alex MacKay 5-4. Dennis Harbour also won again beating the fancied Welshman Wayne Atwood 5-4. \"Big\" Cliff Lazarenko took out Graeme Stoddart 5-3 and Colin Monk had a slightly easier game this time beating Mark Holyoake 5-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 59], "content_span": [60, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nInto Saturday and enter all those who qualified in the top places during the regional finals. The format was now best of 15 legs, so a bit more time to settle down and play for the seasoned dart players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nDarren Webster went down 5-0 to James Wade and it looked all over. However he amazingly pulled the match back to 5-5 before Wade ultimately squeezed through 8-7. Mark Dudbridge and Roland Scholten were neck and neck at 4-4 with all legs going with the throw, Dudbridge even managing the first six perfect darts of a potential 9 darter. However Scholten took a leg against the throw and then stormed ahead to an 8-5 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nFriday's hero James Barton finally met his match against rising star Mark Walsh who went into round four with an 8-3 win. However Cliff Lazarenko notched up his third win of the tournament edging out Robbie Green 8-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nWayne Mardle appeared to struggle for a while against Vic Hubbard before winning through. He joked with interviewer Helen Chamberlain that his wayward throws into the fives were a tactic. Mardle also commented that he is now a full-time pro having quit his accounts job in the City of London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nDennis Priestley looked to be in good form as he edged out Terry Jenkins 8-7. Priestley commented that while playing on a 'minor' board that the noise and calling from the main stage was off putting. He also said that he was probably the only player brave enough to voice his opinion on this matter!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nLes Fitton again produced a whitewash beating Steve Parsons 8-0. That was 13 legs on the trot to 'The Natural' without a loss! John Part took out Eamon Davies 8-4 and commented that his World no. 1 ranking could be a bit false. He suggested we wait for the official rankings after the World Matchplay to see who really is top of the pile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nPhil Taylor had a difficult match against Steve Maish, a player soaring up the PDC rankings list. Taylor won 8-3 but averaged only around 93.0. A bit of Taylor magic was evident though as he took out a 170 - the highest finish. Maish threw six perfect darts and perhaps thought of a 9-darter. He said to Taylor afterwards that he didn't realise he'd have got nothing for it. Taylor later joked, \"If he'd hit it, I'd have given him a tenner.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 3rd Round, best of 15 legs\nShock of the round was Peter Manley the no.1 qualifier going straight out to Matt Chapman. ' The Sheriff' Erik Clarys got through to the last 32 as did Peter Evison. No such luck for Lionel Sams who was edged out by Henry O'Neill. Form player before the tournament Colin Lloyd really struggled against 57-year-old Tom Kirby before muscling through 8-6 and Dutchman Jan van der Rassel won his third match taking out Mark Landers 8-4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nAndy Jenkins whitewashed Martin Freeman 8-0 for a place in the last 16. John Part had a harder task facing the ever improving Bob Anderson. Anderson led 6-5 and then John Part checked out a beautiful 160 to tie the game. This must have rocked Anderson and Part took the final two legs to make it 8-6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nAlan Warriner raced to a 6-0 lead against Cliff Lazarenko. It was too much for the big man to claw back but he finished with a respectable losing scoreline of 8-4. Ronnie Baxter sailed through to the last 16 as did 62-year-old John Magowan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nColin Lloyd and James Wade was a match that went to the wire. At 7-7 Lloyd had first throw. He threw 40 which tossed the advantage in Wade's direction. Wade then threw only 24 and Lloyd persevered to win the leg and the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nBoth Peter Evison and Jan van der Rassel had done well in the tournament thus far and in another 8-7 game, \"The Fen Tiger\" just eclipsed the impressive Van Der Rassel. Alan Caves beat Dennis Smith 8-3 and 'The Natural' Les Fitton continued with his strong form to almost get the better of world finalist Kevin Painter. After his 8-6 win Painter said, \"Les is either rubbish or he's brilliant. He's a bit of a spaceship!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nMatch of the round had to be Phil Taylor against young Matt Chapman who had taken the scalp of Peter Manley in round three. Taylor won the match 8-2 with an average of 111.0 and made history by taking out his second live televised nine darter, the only player in darts history to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nCommentator John Gwynne's quote of \"He is very-very extraordinary!!\" goes down in darts history along with the nine darter and sums it up. Co -commentator Stuart Pyke noted that Taylor had achieved this without having played a competitive match for six months. The whole of the stadium erupted after the nine darter with the crowd singing for many minutes. Ritchie Buckle was spotted singing along with the crowd and Colin Lloyd stopped his live TV interview to give Taylor a round of applause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Saturday 5 June, 4th Round, best of 15 legs\nTaylor felt this one was easy because there was no special prize for a nine darter in the tournament so as he threw the final three darts he thought \"just do it.\" And he did! It was reported afterwards that tournament sponsors Budweiser were to present Taylor with 501 bottles of beer for his achievement!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, 5th Round - Last 16, best of 15 legs\nDennis Priestley continued at the UK Open with a return to impressive form really first shown at the World Championships at the turn of the year. He went into a 4-0 lead against a lacklustre John Part and Part then picked up his game to make it 4-4. Part took out a 156 checkout to go ahead 5-4 and then Priestley brought the game back level to 6-6. Priestley then set himself up for a possible 9 darter with six perfect darts, but though that wasn't to be he did take the lead 7-6. Then it went to 7-7 after Priestley missed a dart for the match and Part won the deciding leg to win 8-7. Part through but great to see Priestley back and hitting six maxima during the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 65], "content_span": [66, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, 5th Round - Last 16, best of 15 legs\nAndy Jenkins raced off to a 5-0 lead against Colin Monk with an average of over 103.0 but the latter pulled it back to 7-6. Jenkins took the next leg to win 8-6. Alan Warriner also went into the quarter finals beating Alan Caves 8-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 65], "content_span": [66, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, 5th Round - Last 16, best of 15 legs\nDenis Ovens and Roland Scholten was neck and neck all the way until Scholten pulled clear at the end for an 8-6 win. John MaGowan went 6-1 up against Kevin Painter and appeared to have the game won but Painter clawed 7 legs on the trot to win 8-6. Colin Lloyd raced to a 6-2 lead against Ronnie Baxter but the latter pulled the game back to 7-7. Lloyd then won the decider for his place in the quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 65], "content_span": [66, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, 5th Round - Last 16, best of 15 legs\nWayne Mardle went into a 4-2 lead against Phil Taylor but \"The Power\" brought it back to 4-4. At 5-5 Taylor took out a 155 checkout to lead 6-5. The match was neck and neck again going to 7-7. Both players had darts for the match but it was Taylor who hit the double 5 to win. Apparently no love lost between them at the start of the match Phil Taylor seemed to begrudgingly shake Mardle's hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 65], "content_span": [66, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, 5th Round - Last 16, best of 15 legs\nApparently at the world championships Wayne Mardle was annoyed that Phil Taylor had brought in a pop star friend to their post match interview. After this game Mardle said, \"I'm throwing down the gauntlet - I'm going to beat him.\" Throughout their post-match interview the players were turned away from each other, Taylor almost with his back to Mardle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 65], "content_span": [66, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Quarter-finals, best of 15 legs\nSteve Beaton started well against Kevin Painter going 4\u20132 ahead. He maintained this advantage going 7-4 and ultimately 8-5 to win a place in the semi-finals. After the match Beaton said that he'd stopped smoking a few months ago and decided that he wouldn't be practising for the semi-final and that he'd just chill out before the next match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 60], "content_span": [61, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Quarter-finals, best of 15 legs\nAndy Jenkins and Colin Lloyd was a much more tense affair. Jenkins went 3-1 up but Lloyd pulled it back to 3-3. Jenkins then led again at 6-4 but again Lloyd squared the match at 6-6. Jenkins then threw six perfect darts and though the nine darter wasn't on it was enough to lead again at 7-6. He took the match 8-6 and it was an accomplished performance from \"Rocky\" who started four legs with a maximum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 60], "content_span": [61, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Quarter-finals, best of 15 legs\nMatch of the round was undoubtedly Phil Taylor and John Part. The live draw placed them on board two much to Taylor's consternation. Part had played on this board before with all the distractions from the main board, but it was a first for Taylor. Part took an early break of throw to go 3-1 up. Taylor broke back and took it to 3 a piece. Part again went into the lead at 5-3 and Taylor once again squared the match at 5-5, then 6-6. As Part said afterwards he just kept his confidence and self-belief high and this was enough to win this tussle with \"The Power\" 8\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 60], "content_span": [61, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Quarter-finals, best of 15 legs\nRoland Scholten went 3\u20131 up against Alan Warriner who had said that he'd changed his darts three times since the world championships. Warriner took three on the trot to go ahead 4\u20133 before Scholten dug deep to take the next three legs. The match ultimately finished 8\u20136 to Scholten who said afterwards that he was happy with the way he was playing. Asked about the forthcoming semifinal, Scholten said that he would try to play to his ability and see what happened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 60], "content_span": [61, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Semi Finals, best of 15 legs\nJohn Part and Andy Jenkins was another close game. Part was the first to admit he didn't play well in the match. Jenkins took an early 3-2 lead courtesy of a 121 checkout. Part then clawed ahead and kept a one leg advantage up until 6-5 when Jenkins then squared the match again. Ultimately 8-7 to Part who said afterwards that he felt Andy Jenkins had control of the match and that he was \"pretty lucky\" to get through to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Semi Finals, best of 15 legs\nSteve Beaton shot out of the starting blocks against \"The Tripod\" Roland Scholten going 3-0 up. However where in the past the Dutchman had caved in during the closing stages of a tournament, this time it was a different Roland Scholten. Beaton only took one more leg in the match which went 8-4 to Scholten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Final, best of 21 legs\nScholten blasted off to a 6-1 lead in this first to 11 legs race courtesy of some impeccable finishing. Part continued to be somewhat off the boil as Scholten took the match to 8-3. Finally Part seemed to get some rhythm going as he won the next two legs to make it 8-5. Scholten won the next and in the fifteenth leg after a 180 by Scholten, Part threw some really wayward darts. At 10-6, Scholten signalled his intent by throwing back to back 180s and the match and the UK Open title was his, along with the payout cheque of \u00a330,000. Part admitted after the match that Roland deserved to be the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 51], "content_span": [52, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179077-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 UK Open, Sunday 6 June, Final, best of 21 legs\nScholten himself said, \"The competition is so hard. The day really starts at 7:30 and you are on the go until 10:30 at night. It took lots of focusing and concentration. I'm well happy. My form's been doubtful but I took a lot of confidence from the first and second day. When I reached the final I thought that I might as well do it now. I hope it's a turnaround. A brilliant crowd, a long day and thanks very much!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 51], "content_span": [52, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179078-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UMass Minutemen football team\nThe 2004 UMass Minutemen football team represented the University of Massachusetts Amherst in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference. The team was coached by Don Brown and played its home games at Warren McGuirk Alumni Stadium in Hadley, Massachusetts. The Minutemen struggled in their first year under Coach Brown, but finished the season with a three-game winning streak and promise for the future. UMass finished second in the North division of the A-10 with a record of 6\u20135 (4\u20134 A-10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179079-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UNCAF Interclub Cup\nThe 2004 UNCAF Interclub Cup was the 22nd edition of the Central American Club Championship and the 6th edition under its current name, UNCAF Interclub Cup. C.S.D. Municipal from Guatemala, lifted its 4th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179079-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 UNCAF Interclub Cup, Final round, Standings\nMunicipal, Deportivo Saprissa, Olimpia advance to 2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179080-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UNLV Rebels football team\nThe 2004 UNLV Rebels football team represented the University of Nevada, Las Vegas during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. UNLV competed as a member of the Mountain West Conference (MW) and played their home games at Sam Boyd Stadium in Whitney, Nevada. They were coached by John Robinson, who resigned as head coach at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis)\nThe 2004 US Open was held between August 30, 2004 \u2013 September 12, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis)\nBoth Andy Roddick and Justine Henin-Hardenne were unsuccessful in their title defences, Roddick losing in the quarter-finals to Joachim Johansson and Henin-Hardenne falling in the fourth round to Nadia Petrova. On the men's side, Roger Federer won his first US Open, defeating rival and 2001 champion Lleyton Hewitt in a lopsided final. Svetlana Kuznetsova won the women's title defeating Elena Dementieva in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis), Seniors, Men's doubles\nMark Knowles / Daniel Nestor defeated Leander Paes / David Rikl, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis), Seniors, Women's doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva, 6\u20134, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis), Seniors, Mixed doubles\nVera Zvonareva / Bob Bryan defeated Alicia Molik / Todd Woodbridge, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis), Juniors, Boys' doubles\nBrendan Evans / Scott Oudsema defeated Andreas Beck / Sebastian Rieschick, 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179081-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open (tennis), Juniors, Girls' doubles\nMarina Erakovic / Micha\u00eblla Krajicek defeated M\u0103d\u0103lina Gojnea / Monica Niculescu, 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179082-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open Series\nIn tennis, the first edition of the US Open Series was contested in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179083-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nBrendan Evans and Scott Oudsema won in the final 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20132, against Andreas Beck and Sebastian Rieschick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179084-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nJo-Wilfried Tsonga was the defending champion, but turned professional during this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179084-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nGa\u00ebl Monfils would have been the first junior to achieve a calendar Grand Slam since Stefan Edberg in 1983 but lost in the third round to Viktor Troicki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179084-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nAndy Murray won the title by defeating Sergiy Stakhovsky 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final. It was the 1st and only Grand Slam title in his Juniors career. Murray would go on to win the senior title in his maiden Grand Slam title eight years later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179085-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nMarina Erakovic and Micha\u00eblla Krajicek won in the final 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20130, against M\u0103d\u0103lina Gojnea and Monica Niculescu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179086-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nKirsten Flipkens was the defending champion, but did not compete in the juniors that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179086-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nMicha\u00eblla Krajicek won the tournament, defeating Jessica Kirkland in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179087-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge were the defending champions, but lost in the third round to Leander Paes and David Rikl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179087-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won the title, defeating Leander Paes and David Rikl in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179088-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer defeated Lleyton Hewitt, 6\u20130, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20130, in the final to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2004 US Open. It was his first US Open title and his fourth Major title overall. The win made him the tenth man to win three Major tournaments in a calendar year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179088-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nAndy Roddick was the defending champion, but lost in the quarterfinals against Joachim Johansson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179089-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Men's Singles at the 2004 US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179090-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nKatarina Srebotnik and Bob Bryan were the defending champions, but Srebtonik did not compete in the Mixed Doubles tournament at this U.S. Open. Bryan partnered Vera Zvonareva, and successfully defended the title, defeating Alicia Molik and Todd Woodbridge in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179091-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez were defending champions, and won in the final 6\u20134, 7\u20135, against Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179092-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova defeated Elena Dementieva in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135 to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2004 US Open. She lost only one set the tournament (to Lindsay Davenport in the semifinals). She became the third Russian woman, after Anastasia Myskina and Maria Sharapova (who won the French Open and Wimbledon, respectively, earlier in the season), to win a major that year. This was also the second-ever all-Russian major final (the first being at the French Open earlier in the year, where Myskina defeated Dementieva).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179092-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin was the defending champion, but lost to Nadia Petrovain the fourth round. As a result, Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo took over the world No. 1 ranking for the first time following the tournament despite losing to Dementieva in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179092-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was also the first US Open main draw appearance for the 2011 champion Samantha Stosur. She was beaten by Petrova in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179092-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThe quarterfinal match in this tournament between Serena Williams and Jennifer Capriati is often considered the main catalyst for the International Tennis Federation adoption of Hawk-Eye triangulation technology as an official method of reviewing line calls. Hawk-Eye was used by television coverage during the match, with results suggesting several crucial points awarded to Capriati were incorrectly called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179092-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 US Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThe most egregious of these errors was a potential Williams winner at deuce in the first game of the final set that appeared to be well within the left baseline; while the line judge called the ball in, the referee awarded the point to Capriati. Capriati ultimately ended up winning the deuce, the set, and thus the match. Following outcry from spectators and the press, the United States Tennis Association suspended official Mariana Alves for the remainder of the tournament and apologized to Williams. The ITF tested the Hawk-Eye system in an official capacity the next year, ultimately approving it for official use.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179093-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 USA Sevens\nThe 2004 USA Sevens was the first time that the USA Sevens rugby tournament was played. It was held at the Home Depot Center in the Los Angeles suburb of Carson. Argentina defeated New Zealand 21\u201312 in the cup final to win the tournament. It was Argentina's first victory in a World Series tournament since its inception five years before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179093-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 USA Sevens, Format\nThe teams were drawn into four pools of four teams each, with each team playing every other team in their pool once. The top two teams from each pool advanced to the Cup/Plate brackets. The bottom two teams from each group went to the Bowl/Shield brackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179094-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 USA Team Handball College Nationals - Women's Division\nThe 2004 College Nationals was the 9th Women's College Nationals. The College Nationals was a team handball tournament to determined the College National Champion from 2004 from the US.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179094-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 USA Team Handball College Nationals - Women's Division, Venues\nThe championship was played at three venues at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 67], "content_span": [68, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179094-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 USA Team Handball College Nationals - Women's Division, Modus\nThe five teams and one adult teams were split in two groups each team played two round robins. Rock THB was automatically ranked last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179094-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 USA Team Handball College Nationals - Women's Division, Modus\nThe two first teams from each group played the semis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team\nThe 2004 USC Trojans football team represented the University of Southern California in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The 2004 Trojans football team won the 2004 BCS National Championship by winning the 2005 Orange Bowl, that year's BCS National Championship Game. The team also won the AP title for the second year in a row. It was the Trojans' first undisputed national championship since 1972, and the second time a team had gone wire-to-wire, with the Trojans holding the number 1 spot in the polls all season. The team was coached by Pete Carroll in his fourth year with the Trojans, and played their home games in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team\nQuarterback Matt Leinart won the Heisman Trophy as the most outstanding collegiate football player in the U.S. His teammate, running back Reggie Bush, finished fifth in Heisman voting, winning the following year. Both were named co-winners of the Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year. The team captains were Shaun Cody, Matt Grootegoed and Matt Leinart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team\nBecause of the controversy that ended the 2003 NCAA Division I-A football season with a split national title between LSU and USC, the motto for the Trojans' 2004 season became \"Leave No Doubt.\" Ironically, the changes made to the BCS due to the 2003 season did not resolve issues with multiple undefeated teams, as Auburn and Utah finished undefeated, yet they did not get to play USC or any other team for the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team\nOn June 10, 2010, USC was forced to vacate its two final wins from the 2004 season (December 2004 against UCLA and the BCS championship game), as well as all wins from the 2005 season, following an NCAA investigation into possible violations by the Trojans' football and men's basketball programs. Since the vacated games included the Trojans' Orange Bowl win, the Trojans were later stripped of the 2004 BCS title in June 2011. However, the Associated Press still recognizes USC as 2004 AP title winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nUSC and Virginia Tech opened the 2004 college football season with the Black Coaches Association Football Classic at a sold out FedExField in Landover, Maryland. Days before the game, the NCAA declared star Trojans wide receiver Mike Williams ineligible to play after a failed attempt to join the NFL early, creating concern over whether the defending 2003 National Champions were prepared to try for another title. This was the first time the two teams had competed in football; and with the game held only three hours away from Virginia Tech, the crowd was dominated by Hokies fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Virginia Tech\nThe game marked the emergence of running back Reggie Bush, who often lined up at wide receiver, catching five passes for 127 yards and scored three touchdowns in a tight game. Although Virginia Tech was not ranked going into the game, they ended the season ranked 9th, going 10\u20133 (7\u20131 in the ACC), becoming ACC Champions in their first year in the conference and were invited to the 2005 Nokia Sugar Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Colorado State\nColorado State visited USC in the first meeting between the two programs. The Trojans dominated the Rams en route to a 49\u20130 shut out, led by running back LenDale White who ran for 123 yards on 14 carries, scoring three touchdowns. Matt Leinart went 20-of-31 for 231 yards in three quarters before being retired from the game, Dwayne Jarrett caught a touchdown on what was his 18th birthday, and the Trojans handed the Rams their worse loss in eight years and first shut out in 85 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, BYU\nThe Trojans made their first visit to LaVell Edwards Stadium, on the campus of Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. The game marked the return of USC Offensive Coordinator Norm Chow to the program where he spent 27 years as an assistant under former Coach LaVell Edwards. Running backs Reggie Bush and LenDale White both broke 100 yards each en route to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Stanford\nUSC had what would be its closest game of the season against the unheralded Stanford Cardinal at Stanford Stadium in their Pacific-10 Conference opener. Both USC and Stanford had just previously beat BYU in convincing fashion; however, Stanford had the added benefit of a bye week to rest and reorganize between games. By halftime, USC found itself down 11 points after the Cardinal caught them by surprise with an 82-yard run final play while trying to run out the clock to end the half. After an energetic and emotional halftime in the locker room, the Trojan defense shut down the Cardinal while the offense put together the drives that gave the Trojans the lead and the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, California\nESPN's College GameDay program visited the Los Angeles Coliseum for the first time in anticipation of a game between highly ranked and undefeated teams: 7th-ranked California had given USC its only loss in the 2003 season, resulting in the Trojans sharing the 2003 National Championship. It was the first time since 1968 that the teams met when both were ranked and it also was the highest-ranked Cal squad USC had faced since 1952, also the last time the two programs were ranked in the top ten. The Cal Golden Bears, led by Coach Jeff Tedford, were already ranked their highest since 1991 and looking to earn one of the biggest victories in program history. The crowd was USC's largest crowd for a non-UCLA/Notre Dame rivalry game since the 1952 Cal game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, California\nThe game was tightly fought: Cal dominated the statistics, more than doubling USC's first downs (28\u201312) and total yards (424\u2013205) while getting more plays (79\u201350) and possession time (37:11\u201322:49); Cal quarterback Aaron Rodgers had a career performance, tying an NCAA single game record by completing his first 23 passes and guiding the Golden Bears to a first-and-goal at the Trojan 9-yard line with 1:47 to play. However, in the key final series, under heavy crowd noise, the USC defense caused an incomplete pass, a sack by defensive tackle Manuel Wright, and two more incomplete passes to cause a loss of possession and effectively end the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, California\nThe game was highly touted by the media, with both teams earning praise for their performances. Beyond the 2004 season, the game marked a turning point in terms of crowd participation at the Coliseum, which thereafter garnered a reputation as a loud and difficult place to play for opposing teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, California\nThe quality of play met expectations and had major ramifications for both programs that season: It would be the only game the Bears would lose in the regular season, costing them a shot at the national title and their first BCS bowl appearance, including what could've been their first appearance at the Rose Bowl since 1959; and it was the Trojans' toughest game of the season on their way to winning the national championship in the Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Arizona State\nThe 15th-ranked Sun Devils, under Coach Dirk Koetter, were out to prove that they were a part of the national title picture and USC was out to prove it deserved its top-ranking after a series of close games to the Bay Area schools. USC quickly put the game out of reach, scoring 42 points in the first half behind 4 touchdown passes Matt Leinart and school single game record-tying 3 scoring grabs by Dwayne Jarrett. ASU quarterback Andrew Walter was rendered ineffective by the USC defense which achieved eight sacks, the same total ASU allowed in its previous five games. The decisive victory helped USC dispel concerns over its ability to dominate opponents. It was the second time the Trojans played before consecutive sellout crowds in the Coliseum, the first was in 1947 when the UCLA and Notre Dame rivalry games sold out, and the first against non-rival opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 934]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Washington\nThe struggling Washington Huskies visited the Trojans for the 75th meeting in the series, with the Trojans dominating 38\u20130. The shutout was Washington's first since 1981, ending a national-best active streak of consecutive games without being shut out at 271. The victory put USC's winning streak at the Coliseum at 19, tying the school record set from 1931\u201333. The game marked the first career start for Husky quarterback Isaiah Stanback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Washington State\nUSC became the first top-ranked team to visit Pullman, Washington, as the Trojans took on the Cougars at a sold-out Martin Stadium. The Trojans had lost in their previous visit to WSU, a 30\u201327 overtime game in 2002; since then the Trojans had gone 28\u20131. USC took the upper hand early on, taking a 14\u20130 lead before WSU's offense got on the field; by halftime, it was 35\u20130, as the Trojans had 289 yards and 16 first downs to the Cougars 54 and 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Oregon State\nThe Trojans prevailed over the Beavers in a tight game in heavy fog at Reser Stadium in Corvallis, Oregon. After trailing 13\u20130 in second quarter, USC scored the next 28 points with a pivotal 65-yard scoring return by Reggie Bush in the 4th quarter with the game close at 14\u201313. Although the fog was thick enough at times to interfere with pass plays, USC tight end Dominique Byrd caught two touchdowns. It would be USC last win at Oregon State until 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Arizona\nUSC clinched its third consecutive conference championship with a victory over the visiting Arizona Wildcats. LenDale White ran for 118 yards and three touchdowns while Matt Leinart passed for 280 yards and three more scores; the game guaranteed USC a spot in, at worst, the Rose Bowl", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nAfter two weeks off, the Trojans were visited by the rival Fighting Irish, led by Coach Tyrone Willingham, in the inter-sectional rivalry for the Jeweled Shillelagh. The Irish had been inconsistent during the season, coming into the game at 6\u20134 having defeated strong teams and lost to weak teams. ESPN's College GameDay made its second-ever visit to the Coliseum. Matt Leinart passed for a career-high 400 yards and a school record-tying five touchdowns Saturday, leading the top-ranked Trojans to a 41\u201310 victory and adding a highlight performance to his ultimately successful Heisman campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0017-0001", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Notre Dame\nTrailing 10\u20133, USC scored the final 38 points. Irish quarterback Brady Quinn completed 15-of-29 passes for 105 yards and a touchdown. The Trojans set a record for home wins (including pre-Coliseum), with their 21st victory; coincidentally, the previous team to defeat them at home were the Stanford Cardinal then-under Coach Willingham. USC set both a school home attendance (511,373) as well as the Pac-10 home per game average attendance (85,229) records. It was Willingham's third consecutive 31-point loss to USC in three seasons at Notre Dame; the Irish fired him the following Tuesday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nThe top-ranked Trojans visited the Bruins for their annual crosstown rivalry game at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California on the 75th anniversary of the first USC-UCLA game in 1929. The Bruins, having come off a three-week break of consecutive bye weeks, came into the game as serious underdogs in the Victory Bell. Despite low expectations, the Bruins were able to shut down Leinart and give the Trojans a close game that was not decided until the final minutes. Reggie Bush scored on a pair of touchdown runs and totaled a career-best 335 all-purpose yards and placekicker Ryan Killeen kicked a USC and Pac-10 Conference game record 5 field goals. With the victory, USC sealed a bid for the BCS National Championship Game in the Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, UCLA\nThe game against the Bruins was later vacated as a result of NCAA sanctions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nThe undefeated, top-ranked Trojans met the also undefeated, second-ranked Sooners in the 2005 BCS National Championship Game held at the FedEx Orange Bowl at Pro Player Stadium in Miami, Florida. The game was the first time two Heisman Trophy winners had faced each other in a college football game with Sooners quarterback and 2003 winner Jason White facing 2004 winner Matt Leinart. The game also featured four out of five of the 2004 Heisman finalists with Leinart, White, Reggie Bush and Sooner running back Adrian Peterson, the Heisman runner-up. Both USC and Oklahoma started and ended the season ranked No. 1 and No. 2 (wire-to-wire), respectively, in the AP and Coaches polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nThere was some controversy in the final team selections as the Auburn Tigers had also finished the regular season undefeated and won their bowl game, the Sugar Bowl, against the same Virginia Tech team USC defeated in the season opener; Auburn began the season ranked outside the top 15 and perhaps because of this they were unable to secure a spot in the national championship game, although they did tie Oklahoma at No. 2 in the AP poll at one point late in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nThe Sooners scored first, having stopped an opening USC drive. USC scored next 28 points en route to a 38\u201310 halftime lead. The turning point in the game came early in the first quarter, with the game tied 7\u20137, Sooner Mark Bradley made a critical special teams error that resulted in USC gaining possession on the Oklahoma 6-yard-line; after that the game turned into a USC rout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nLeinart, the game's MVP, threw an Orange Bowl record (and at the time a USC record-tying) 5 touchdowns, including 3 to wide receiver Steve Smith, tying both an Orange Bowl and USC record; Ryan Killeen set the USC career scoring record with 329 career points; USC's 55 points tied its most ever in a bowl and were the most ever allowed in a bowl by Oklahoma. White threw for 24-of-36 for 244 yards with three interceptions and two touchdowns; Peterson ran for 82 yards on 25 carries. USC gained 525 total yards, averaging 8.3 yards per play, to the Sooners\u2019 372; OU ran off 13 more plays, 76 to 63, and held the ball for 35:06; however, Oklahoma had 5 turnovers to USC's none.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, Game summaries, Oklahoma\nThe championship game against the Sooners was later vacated as a result of NCAA sanctions and USC was stripped of the 2004 BCS title. The 2004 AP title, however, remains in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, Comments\nAfter the regular season, the University of Mississippi hired USC Assistant Head Coach Ed Orgeron, who also served as Defensive Line Coach and Recruiting Coordinator, to be the new head coach of the Ole Miss Rebels football team; although hired on December 16, 2006, he remained with USC through the Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, Awards\nQuarterback Matt Leinart was awarded the Heisman Trophy as the most outstanding collegiate football player in the United States, with teammate Reggie Bush coming in 5th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, Awards\nA school-record 6 Trojans were awarded All-American first team honors in 2004: Matt Leinart, RB Reggie Bush, DE Shaun Cody, LB Matt Grootegoed, DT Mike Patterson and LB Lofa Tatupu. Wide receiver Dwayne Jarrett, offensive tackle Sam Baker and defensive end Lawrence Jackson were named to the Freshman All-American first team. In addition to winning the Heisman Trophy, Matt Leinart also won the Walter Camp Award and was named the AP Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, Awards\nIn conference, Matt Leinart and Reggie Bush were named 2004 Pac-10 Co-Offensive Players of the Year, while DE-DT Shaun Cody was Pac-10 Co-Defensive Player of the Year; it marked the first time teammates had ever shared the honors on one side of the ball, the third time a school had won both offensive and defensive players of the year, and it was Leinart's second consecutive year being named the Offensive Player of the Year\u2014making him the fourth to do so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, Awards\nDating back to former Trojan QB Carson Palmer's 2002 season, it was the third year in a row that a Trojan was named the Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year. All three players made the All-Pac-10 first team, with Bush making the team as both a running back and punt returner; they were joined by Mike Patterson, Matt Grootegoed, Lofa Tatupu and P Tom Malone. Making the second team where RB LenDale White, OT Sam Baker and S Darnell Bing, and honorable mentions to TE Dominique Byrd, TE Alex Holmes, WR Dwayne Jarrett, S Jason Leach, LB Dallas Sartz, DT Manuel Wright and CB Justin Wyatt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, Awards\nCoach Pete Carroll was named the National Quarterback Club College Coach of the Year, as well as a finalist for the Bear Bryant and Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Awards semifinalist, and was named the ESPN.com Pac-10 Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, NCAA investigation and sanctions\nIn June 2010, the NCAA imposed sanctions on USC as a result of an investigation into the football program. One of the major focuses was improper gifts given to Reggie Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, NCAA investigation and sanctions\nThe NCAA found that Bush had received gifts from sports agents Lloyd Lake and Michael Michaels from at least December 2004 in violation of NCAA rules of amateurism. As a result, USC was placed on four years' probation and forced to vacate its last two wins of the 2004 season as well as all of its wins in the 2005 season. It was also banned from bowl games in 2010 and 2011 and lost 30 scholarships over three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0031-0001", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, NCAA investigation and sanctions\nRunning backs coach Todd McNair was banned from off-campus recruiting for one year after the NCAA determined he'd known about Bush's dealings with the agents. The NCAA also forced USC to permanently disassociate itself from Bush. However, USC lifted the restrictions related to Reggie Bush in 2020, welcoming him back to the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179095-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 USC Trojans football team, After the season, NCAA investigation and sanctions\nThe vacated games included the Trojans' Orange Bowl win. On June 6, 2011, the BCS officially vacated USC's 2004 National Championship. The AP released a statement saying that USC will keep its 2004 AP title. The university filed an appeal of the sanctions which was later denied by the NCAA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 82], "content_span": [83, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179096-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 USL A-League\nThe 2004 USL A-League was an American Division II league run by the United Soccer League during the summer of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179096-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 USL A-League, Eastern Conference, Richmond Kickers vs Syracuse Salty Dogs\nThe Syracuse Salty Dogs advance, 5\u20134, on penalty kicks after the series ended tied 2\u20132 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179096-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 USL A-League, Awards and All A-League Teams\nAll A-League First Team F: Byron Alvarez (Portland Timbers); Alan Gordon (Portland Timbers) (Co-Leading Goalscorer); Dante Washington (Virginia Beach Mariners) (Co-Leading Goalscorer)M: Mauro Biello (Montreal Impact); Sandro Grande (Montreal Impact); Alex Pineda Chac\u00f3n (Atlanta Silverbacks); Johnny Torres (Milwaukee Wave United)D: Gabriel Gervais (Montreal Impact) (Defender of the Year); Dustin Branan (Minnesota Thunder); Peter Luzak (Richmond Kickers)G: Greg Sutton (Montreal Impact) (MVP & Goalkeeper of the Year)Coach: Bobby Howe Portland Timbers) (Coach of the Year)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179096-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 USL A-League, Awards and All A-League Teams\nAll A-League Second TeamF: Mac Cozier (Atlanta Silverbacks); Ali Gerba (Toronto Lynx); Greg Howes (Milwaukee Wave United)M: Hugo Alcaraz-Cuellar Portland Timbers); Justin Evans (Charleston Battery); Alfredo Valente (Vancouver Whitecaps); Richie Williams (Richmond Kickers)D: Craig Demmin (Rochester Raging Rhinos); Nevio Pizzolitto (Montreal Impact); Mark Watson (Charleston Battery)G: Joe Warren (Minnesota Thunder)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 48], "content_span": [49, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179097-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 USL Pro Soccer League\nThe 2004 USL Pro Soccer League was the third tier in American soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179098-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 USL W-League season\nThe 2004 W-League Season was the league's 10th. The Vancouver Whitecaps Women won the W-League title, defeating the New Jersey Wildcats 4-2 in Ottawa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179098-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 USL W-League season, Standings\nOrange indicates bye into W-League semifinals as host. Blue indicates division title clinchedGreen indicates playoff berth clinched", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 35], "content_span": [36, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179098-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 USL W-League season, Playoffs, Format\nSeven teams each from the Eastern Conference, four teams from the Central Conference and two from the Western Conference qualify for the playoffs. The Ottawa Fury Women received a bye into the W-League semifinals as hosts. All matchups are in a one-leg format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179098-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 USL W-League season, Playoffs, Format\nIn the Central Conference, the Division champions play the second-place team from the same division, who will play each other to advance to the W-League Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179098-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 USL W-League season, Playoffs, Format\nIn the Eastern Conference, the top two teams in each division play each other, except for the Division champion with the best record, that receives a bye to the Conference Semifinals, and Ottawa, who has a bye to the W-League Semifinals. The team with the worst record in the Conference Semifinals plays the team with the Divisional Finals bye, and the other two teams play each other. The winners play to advance to the W-League Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179098-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 USL W-League season, Playoffs, Format\nThe two teams in the Western Conference will play each other to advance to the W-League Semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179099-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 UTEP Miners football team\nThe 2004 UTEP Miners football team represented the University of Texas at El Paso in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head coach was Mike Price. The Miners played their home games at the Sun Bowl Stadium in El Paso, Texas. This was the team's final season participating in the Western Athletic Conference. UTEP averaged 41,209 fans per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179100-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uganda Super League\nThe 2004 Ugandan Super League was the 37th season of the official Ugandan football championship, the top-level football league of Uganda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179100-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uganda Super League, Overview\nThe 2004 Uganda Super League was contested by 16 teams and was won by SC Villa, while Tower Of Praise TV, Iganga Town Council FC, Mbale Heroes, Ruhinda FC, Old Timers FC and Moyo Town Council FC were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179100-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Uganda Super League, Leading goalscorer\nThe top goalscorers in the 2004 season were David Kiwanuka (Uganda Revenue Authority SC) and Robert Ssentongo (Simba FC) with 10 goals each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179101-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Amateur Cup\nThe 2004 Ukrainian Amateur Cup was the ninth annual season of Ukraine's football knockout competition for amateur football teams. The competition started on 31 July 2004 and concluded on 2 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179101-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Amateur Cup, Competition schedule, Quarterfinals (1/4)\nThis year Haray Zhovkva, Pivdenstal Yenakieve, and ODEK Orzhiv received a bye to quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179102-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Cup Final\nThe 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.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179102-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Cup Final, Road to Kiev\nAll 16 Ukrainian Premier League clubs do not have to go through qualification to get into the competition; Dnipro and Shakhtar therefore both qualified for the competition automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179103-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 Ukrainian Figure Skating Championships took place between 23 and 25 December 2003 in Kiev. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing on the senior level. The results were used to choose the teams to the 2004 World Championships and the 2004 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179104-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Football Amateur League\nThis season competition consisted of three stages. All of the stages were organized in regional principal and was played in two rounds where each team could play another at its home ground except the last one. The third stage was played in the single round to identify the finalists and the third place contenders. There were six groups in the first stage and four \u2013 in the second. The third part, which was the final consisted of two groups. The winners of groups advance to the finals and runners-up match up in the game for the third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179104-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Final\nThe game took place in Slovyansk, Donetsk Oblast. October 1, 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179104-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Football Amateur League, Final\nThis article about a Ukrainian association football competition is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 45], "content_span": [46, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179105-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Super Cup\nThe 2004 Ukrainian Super Cup became the first edition of Ukrainian Super Cup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Ukrainian Top League and Ukrainian Cup competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179105-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Super Cup\nThe match was played at the Central Stadium \"Chornomorets\", Odessa, on 10 July 2004, and contested by league winner Dynamo Kyiv and cup winner Shakhtar Donetsk. Dynamo won on penalties 6\u20135 after the regular time ended in 1-1 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179105-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Super Cup, Post-match reactions\nIn an interview to the Czech News Agency (CTK) the newly acquired Jan La\u0161t\u016fvka stated that Shakhtar was dictating the game tempo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179105-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian Super Cup, Post-match reactions\nThe penalty kick from goalkeeper Oleksandr Shovkovskyi became the game winner. In an interview he stated that decision on taking the shot was his own initiative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179106-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian child pornography raids\nThe 2004 Ukrainian child pornography raids occurred a few months before the First Orange Revolution, when police in Ukraine raided a softcore child pornography ring operating in the cities of Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Simferopol. The ring had operated since 2001 and used a modeling agency as a front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179106-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian child pornography raids\nThe Crime Investigation Department of the Ministry for the Interior conducted the raids. The deputy head of the department, Vitaly Yarema, said that the bank accounts of the agency, containing hundreds of thousands of dollars, had been frozen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179106-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian child pornography raids\nThe raids were conducted after a joint investigation between Ukrainian police and Interpol. In 2005, the United States Department of State announced that there was further cooperation between Ukrainian police and other law enforcement agencies internationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179106-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian child pornography raids\nThe investigation following the raids was completed by 6 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Ukraine on 31 October, 21 November and 26 December 2004. The election was the fourth presidential election to take place in Ukraine following independence from the Soviet Union. The last stages of the election were contested between the opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko and the incumbent Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych from the Party of Regions. The election was held in a highly charged political atmosphere, with allegations of media bias, voter intimidation and a poisoning of candidate Yushchenko with dioxin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election\nAccording to Ukraine's electoral law, a two-round system is used to elect the President in which a candidate must win a majority (50% or more) of all ballots cast. The first round of voting was held on 31 October. As no candidate had 50% or more of the votes cast a run-off ballot between the two-highest polling candidates, Viktor Yushchenko and Viktor Yanukovych, was held on 21 November. According to official Central Election Commission results announced on 23 November, the run-off election was won by Viktor Yanukovych. The election results were challenged by Viktor Yushchenko and his supporters with many international observers claiming that the election was rigged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election\nThe subsequent events led to a political crisis in Ukraine, with widespread peaceful protesters, dubbed the \"Orange Revolution,\" calling for a re-run second round election. The Ukrainian Supreme Court annulled the official run-off results and ordered a repeat of second round ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election\nThe final re-run ballot was held on 26 December. Viktor Yushchenko was declared the winner with 52 percent of the vote to Yanukovych's 44 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election\nInternational observers reported that the re-run ballot was considered overall fairer than the previous ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Candidates\nAll together 26 candidates had been nominated and participated in presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Candidates\nThe two main contenders in the election were the incumbent Prime Minister and government-supported candidate Viktor Yanukovych and opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko. Viktor Yanukovych, who was the Prime Minister since 2002, was supported by the outgoing President Leonid Kuchma, as well as by the Russian government and then president Vladimir Putin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Candidates\nViktor Yushchenko was portrayed as being more pro-Western and had received support of the European Union states and the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Preliminary vote\nThe preliminary ballot of the 2004 presidential election was held on October 31, 2004. The official results recorded Viktor Yushchenko with 39.87 percent and Victor Yanukovych 39.32 percent of the votes cast. As no candidate had secured 50% or more votes required for outright victory, a run-off election was scheduled for November 21. Although a 75 percent turnout was recorded in the initial vote, observers reported many irregularities, particularly in the regions where Yushchenko's support was seen to be strongest. It was unclear how much of an impact this had on the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Preliminary vote\nA total of 28,035,184 voters participated in the first round of voting. Results of the preliminary vote were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Run-off\nFollowing the November 21 run-off ballot, Ukraine's electoral commission declared Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych with 49.42% of the vote the winner with Viktor Yushchenko receiving 46.69% of the ballots cast. Observers for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said the run-off vote \"did not meet international standards\" and U.S. senior election observer, Senator Richard Lugar, called it a \"concerted and forceful program of election day fraud\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Run-off\nThe geographic distribution of the votes showed a clear east-west division of Ukraine, which is rooted deeply in the country's history. The western and central parts roughly correspond with the former territories of the Polish\u2013Lithuanian Commonwealth in the 17th century. They are considered more pro-Western, with the population mostly Ukrainian-speaking and Ukrainian Greek Catholic (Uniate) in the west or Ukrainian Orthodox in the center, and have voted predominantly for Yushchenko. The heavy-industrialized eastern part, including the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, where the links with Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church are much stronger, and which contains many ethnic Russians, is a Yanukovych stronghold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Run-off\nBetween the two rounds of the election, dramatic increases in turnout were recorded in Yanukovych-supporting regions, while Yushchenko-supporting regions recorded the same turnout or lower than recorded in the first round. This effect was most marked in eastern Ukraine and especially in Yanukovych's stronghold of Donetsk Oblast, where a turnout of 98.5% was reportedly claimed\u2014more than 40% up from the first round. In some districts, turnout was recorded to be more than 100% than the previous ballot, with one district reported by observers to have recorded a 127% turnout. According to election observers and post-election investigations, pro-Yanukovych activists traveled around the country and voted many times as absentees. Some groups dependent on government assistance, such as students, hospital patients and prisoners, were told to vote for the government candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 924]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Run-off\nMany other alleged irregularities were reported, including ballot stuffing, intimidation at voting booths and huge numbers of new voters appearing on the electoral rolls\u2014in Donetsk alone, half a million more voters were registered for the runoff election. Yanukovych won all but one of the regions where significant increases in turnout were noted. It was later determined by the Ukrainian Supreme Court that this was in fact due to widespread falsification of the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction\nMany commentators saw the elections as being influenced by outside powers, notably the United States, the European Union and Russia, with the US and EU backing Yushchenko (Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski and Senator John McCain all visited Kyiv, in official or private capacities), and Russian president Vladimir Putin publicly backing Yanukovych. In the media the two candidates were contrasted, with Yushchenko representing both the pro-Western Kyiv residents as well as the rural Ukrainians, whereas Yanukovych representing the Eastern, pro-Russian industrial laborers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction\nMore specifically it was considered that a Yushchenko victory would represent a halt of Ukraine's integration with the rest of the Commonwealth of Independent States, and possibly a cancellation of the Common Economic Space between Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and Kazakhstan that had already been agreed to by the Ukrainian parliament; he would instead be likely to increase attempts at further integration with Europe and a possible membership in the EU and NATO. Viktor Yanukovych had promised to make Russian an official language for Ukraine, as is also the case in other CIS member states Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 700]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, European Union\nThe European Union made it clear that they would not recognize the results of the election. All 25 member countries of the EU summoned their ambassadors from Ukraine in order to register a sharp protest against what is seen as election fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, European Union\nThe European Union disputed the election process in Ukraine, with European Commission President Jos\u00e9 Manuel Barroso warning of consequences if there is no review of the election. During a meeting between Putin and EU officials in the Hague, the Russian president opposed the EU reaction by saying that he was \"deeply convinced that we have no moral right to push a big European state to any kind of massive disorder.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, European Union\nAmong EU member countries, Ukraine's western neighbors were most concerned. In Poland, Ukraine's largest western neighbor, politicians, the media and ordinary citizens enthusiastically supported Yushchenko and opposed the election fraud. Polish deputies to the European Parliament have called for giving Ukraine the prospect of future EU membership provided the country uniformed to democratic standards. Western EU members are however more reluctant with the idea of Ukrainian membership in the EU, which results in Polish media accusing them of being more interested in the integration process with Turkey and maintaining good relations with Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, European Union\nOn November 25, former Ukrainian foreign minister and a close collaborator of Yushchenko, Borys Tarasyuk delivered a speech before the Polish Sejm, urging Poland not to recognize the election result and help solve the political crisis. On the same day former Polish President Lech Wa\u0142\u0119sa went to Kyiv to publicly express his support for Viktor Yushchenko. He was later followed by a number of Polish MPs from different parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, European Union\nOn November 26 the President of Poland Aleksander Kwa\u015bniewski arrived in Kyiv, followed on the same day by the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Javier Solana and the Lithuanian president Valdas Adamkus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, United States\nThe United States government also decided not to recognize the election, and expressed dissatisfaction with the results; the outgoing US Secretary of State, Colin Powell, quite unequivocally stated that the result announced could not be accepted as legitimate by the United States. President George W. Bush and various members of Congress made statements disclosing their concern over the legitimacy of the polling. Prominent former Cold War hawk Zbigniew Brzezinski cast the election as an opposition to renewed Russian imperialism:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, United States\nRussia is more likely to make a break with its imperial past if the newly independent post-Soviet states are vital and stable. Their vitality will temper any residual Russian imperial temptations. Political and economic support for the new states must be an integral part of a broader strategy for integrating Russia into a cooperative transcontinental system. A sovereign Ukraine is a critically important component of such a policy, as is support for such strategically pivotal states as Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, United States\nU.S. Senators John McCain and Hillary Clinton jointly wrote a letter nominating Victor Yushchenko along with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili for the Nobel Peace Prize. The nomination was unsuccessful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 89], "content_span": [90, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nRussia's President, Vladimir Putin congratulated Viktor Yanukovych, which was followed shortly afterward by Belorussian president Alexander Lukashenko, on his victory before election results were officially declared. CIS election observers praised the second round of the elections as \"legitimate and of a nature that reflected democratic standards\", a view in direct contradiction to other monitoring organizations such as the ENEMO, the Committee of Voters of Ukraine and the IEOM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nProminent hardliners in Russia cast the election as opposition to renewed Western imperialism. Russian Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, for example, blames the West for interfering in the situation in Ukraine in the run-up to the October 31 presidential election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nI have been in Kyiv for a third day and I see for myself that the numerous actions of local opposition bear the earmarks of those groups that at different times tried to destabilize Prague, Budapest and Bucharest \u2014 the earmarks of U.S. special services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nOn November 28, Yury Luzhkov, the Mayor of Moscow, gave a speech denouncing the Ukrainian opposition, calling its members a \"sabbath of witches\" pretending to \"represent the whole of the nation.\" Russian newspapers have printed increasingly shrill warnings, with the Communist party paper Pravda claiming: \"NATO troops in Hungary and Poland are preparing to move, and Romanian and Slovakian military units have been put on alert. Ukrainian towns are in their sights.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nSeveral other CIS countries lined up with Russia in supporting Yanukovych. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko phoned Yanukovych to offer his own congratulations before the results had been officially declared. Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev wrote to Yanukovych that \"Your victory shows that the Ukrainian people have made a choice in favour of the unity of the nation, of democratic development and economic progress.\" The presidents of Kyrgyzstan (Askar Akayev) and of Uzbekistan (Islam Karimov) likewise sent their congratulations. However, later Karimov criticized Russia's involvement in the Ukrainian election, saying that \"Russia's excessive demonstration of its willingness to see a certain outcome in the vote has done more harm than good.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nIn contrast, the Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili indicated his support for the supporters of Yushchenko, saying that \"What is happening in Ukraine today clearly attests to the importance of Georgia's example for the rest of the world.\" This was a reference to the Rose Revolution of late 2003. Indeed, Georgians have been highly visible in the demonstrations in Kyiv and the flag of Georgia has been among those on display in the city's Independence Square, while Yushchenko himself held up a rose in a seeming reference to the Rose Revolution. Moldova's Foreign Ministry issued a statement late November 2004 that stated \"basic democratic principles were distorted\" and expressed regret that the poll \"lacked the objective criteria necessary for their recognition by both the citizens of Ukraine and the international community\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 932]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nArmenia and Azerbaijan kept more cautious positions, supporting neither side but stressing the need for Ukrainian unity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, International influence and reaction, Russia and the CIS\nOn December 2, one day before the Supreme Court ruled in favor of a repeat runoff ballot, President Kuchma visited Moscow to discuss the crisis with Russia's President Vladimir Putin. Putin supported Kuchma's position of desiring wholly new elections, rather than just a repeat of the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Re-run\nThe final results of the rerun ballot recorded Viktor Yushchenko receiving 52.00% of the votes, with Viktor Yanukovych on 44.19% which represented a change in the vote by +5.39% to Yushchenko and -5.27% from Yanukovych.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Re-run\nViktor Yanukovych conceded defeat on December 31, 2004 and subsequently resigned as Ukraine's Prime Minister the same day. Despite Yushchenko's victory in the second round of voting, the regional voting patterns remained largely unchanged between each round, with many southern and eastern provinces supporting Yanukovych, with the west and central regions favoring Yushchenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Re-run\nUkraine's supreme court rejected an appeal lodged by Viktor Yanukovych against the electoral commission's conduct of the election on January 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Re-run\nOn January 10 the Ukrainian Electoral Commission officially declared Viktor Yushchenko the winner and on January 11 published the final election results, clearing the way for Yushchenko to be inaugurated as Ukraine's third President. The official ceremonies took place on Sunday, January 23 at about noon, when Yushchenko undertook the constitutional oath was sworn in as President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Re-run\nIn November 2009 Yanukovych stated that although his victory in the elections was \"taken away\" he gave up this victory in order to avoid bloodshed. \"I didn't want mothers to lose their children and wives their husbands. I didn't want dead bodies from Kyiv to flow down the Dnipro. I didn't want to assume power through bloodshed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Aftermath\nDespite alleged convincing evidence pointing to high-level involvement in the Kuchma administration and the Central Election Commission of Ukraine no criminal election fraud charges have been filed against any top officials. The prosecutor general did arrest several public figures on charges of election fraud in the first half of 2005, but no high-profile case was brought to court. On 23 September 2005 Yushchenko announced a pact with the Party of Regions in which he promised to look into an amnesty for those convicted of vote rigging during the 2004 Ukrainian presidential elections. One of the top election-fraud suspects, former CEC head Serhiy Kivalov, is a Party of Regions deputy who heads the Ukrainian Parliament's Judiciary Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179107-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Ukrainian presidential election, Aftermath\nDuring the 2010 presidential election-campaign Viktor Yanukovych pledged to prevent electoral fraud during those elections: \"We will properly respond to all provocations and attempts to fake election results\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179108-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election\nThe 2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election was triggered by the decision of a group of UUP members to challenge incumbent leader David Trimble over the party's direction following the 2003 Northern Ireland Assembly elections at the party's annual general meeting on 27 March 2004. The UUP has held a leadership election every March since at least the Ulster Unionist Council constitution was altered in 1973, however it is rarely contested. This is one of the few occasions when it has been contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179108-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election\nThe election was decided by delegates to the Ulster Unionist Council. After one round of voting Trimble retained his leadership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179108-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election, Candidates\nHoey declared prior to the election that he was a Stalking horse candidate who would stand aside in favour of others should he win the contest. Oliver insisted that should he win he would serve as leader despite holding no elected office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179108-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election, Candidates\nIt was believed that Trimble would easily win, but would have to stand down should both challengers poll more than 50% of votes cast combined.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179108-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election, Results\nIn addition the party Presidency was subject to re-election. The incumbent, the Rev. Martin Smyth MP, a constant critic of Trimble, lost the post to Lord Rogan by 407 to 329 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179108-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election, Results\nFollowing the election neither defeated candidate immediately left the party. Hoey contested the party selection convention for the nomination to fight the East Londonderry seat in the 2005 UK general election but was defeated by MLA, David McClarty. He also unsuccessfully stood to be a party officer at the 2006 AGM of the UUC. Hoey left the party sometime in 2006, and contested the 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly election for Robert McCartney's UK Unionist Party (UKUP) in South Belfast. Oliver unsuccessfully stood for election to Craigavon Borough Council in 2005 as a UUP candidate, and considered also standing for the 2010 Ulster Unionist Party leadership election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 55], "content_span": [56, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179109-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts\nThe 2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 8th edition of the event then known as the Uncle Tobys Hardcourts, and was a Tier III event on the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place in Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, from 4 January through 10 January 2004. First-seeded Ai Sugiyama won the singles title and earned $27,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179109-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts, Finals, Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova / Elena Likhovtseva defeated Liezel Huber / Magdalena Maleeva, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179110-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts \u2013 Doubles\nThe doubles tournament for the 2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts was won by Russian pair, Svetlana Kuznetsova and Elena Likhovtseva who defeated South African player Liezel Huber and Magdalena Maleeva from Bulgaria 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final. For Kuznetsova, this was her second Gold Coast title after winning with Martina Navratilova in 2003. This was also Likhovtseva second Gold Coast title after winning the tournament in 1998 with Japanese doubles partner Ai Sugiyama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179111-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts \u2013 Singles\nNathalie Dechy was the defending champion, but lost in semifinals to Nadia Petrova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179111-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts \u2013 Singles\nAi Sugiyama won the title by defeating Nadia Petrova 1\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179111-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Uncle Tobys Hardcourts \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179112-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-16 European Promotion Cup for Men\nThe 2004 FIBA U16 European Championship Division C was held in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, from 20 to 24 July 2004. Five teams participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179113-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-16 European Promotion Cup for Women\nThe 2004 Under-16 European Promotion Cup for Women was the third edition of the basketball European Promotion Cup for U16 women's teams, today known as FIBA U16 Women's European Championship Division C. It was played in Andorra la Vella, Andorra, from 20 to 24 July 2004. Luxembourg women's national under-16 basketball team won the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179114-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup\nThe 2004 ICC Under-19 World Cup was an international limited-overs cricket tournament played in Bangladesh from 15 February to 5 March 2004. It was the fifth edition of the Under-19 Cricket World Cup and the first to be held in Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179114-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup\nThe 2004 World Cup was contested by sixteen teams, including one (Uganda) making its tournament debut. After an initial group stage, the top eight teams played off in a super league to decide the tournament champions, with the non-qualifiers playing a separate \"plate\" competition. Pakistan and the West Indies eventually progressed to the final, played at the Bangabandhu National Stadium in Dhaka, where Pakistan won by 25 runs to claim their maiden title. The West Indies had been making their first appearance in the final. Indian batsman Shikhar Dhawan was named player of the tournament and was the leading run-scorer, while Bangladesh's Enamul Haque was the leading wicket-taker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179114-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup, Teams and qualification\nThe ten full members of the International Cricket Council (ICC) qualified automatically:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179114-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup, Plate competition\nThe plate competition was contested by the eight teams that failed to qualify for the Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179115-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup squads\nSixteen members of the International Council (ICC) fielded teams at the 2004 Under-19 Cricket World Cup in Bangladesh. One team, Uganda, was making its debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179116-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Union for a Popular Movement leadership election\nThe 2004 Union for a Popular Movement leadership election was held on November 28, 2004 to elect the leadership of the French Union for a Popular Movement (Union pour un mouvement populaire, UMP). The congress was organized after the UMP's first president, Alain Jupp\u00e9, was forced to resign from the party's presidency following his conviction in a corruption scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179116-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Union for a Popular Movement leadership election\nNicolas Sarkozy, the finance minister and main intraparty rival of incumbent President Jacques Chirac easily won the UMP's presidency and thereafter focused the party machinery on his candidacy in the 2007 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179116-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Union for a Popular Movement leadership election, Presidential candidates\nCandidates seeking to run for the party presidency needed to win the endorsements of at least 3% of party members. Each candidate created a \"ticket\" with two other party members for the offices of vice-president and secretary-general of the UMP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179117-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom budget\nThe 2004 United Kingdom Budget, officially known as Opportunity for all: The strength to take the long-term decisions for Britain was the formal government budget for the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections\nSuper Thursday is significant both in politics and in publishing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Politics\nMany elections in the United Kingdom took place on \"Super Thursday\", 10 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Politics\nThe UK government used this opportunity to trial all-postal voting in both the local and European elections across four regions: North East, North West, East Midlands, and Yorkshire and the Humber. For more details, see here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Politics, Results\nThe ruling Labour Party polled poorly in the local elections, and was beaten into third place, in terms of share of the vote, after the Conservative Party and the Liberal Democrats. They lost control of several large (and traditionally Labour) councils, including Newcastle upon Tyne and Leeds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Politics, Results\nOf the minor parties, Plaid Cymru and the Green Party increased their number of councillors, whilst the United Kingdom Independence Party picked up a handful. The British National Party failed to make predicted gains in Burnley, and lost a seat in Blackburn with Darwen, but took three seats in Epping Forest and four in Bradford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Politics, Results\nThe UKIP made a much stronger showing in the European Parliament elections, where it increased its number of MEPs from 3 to 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Politics, Results\nSee 2004 United Kingdom local elections for the full council results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179118-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom elections, Publishing\nSuper Thursday, in the publishing industry, also refers to an annual industry promotional event held on the second Thursday in October. The Guardian termed it \"the publishing industry\u2019s major assault on the Christmas market,\" and the occasion is associated with activities, advertising, and booklists previewed in the following day's The Bookseller.\" Super Thursday creates a \"buzz\" around books and, according to Waterstone's national press officer Jon Howells (quoted on 1 October 2009): \"In the space of a year Super Thursday has gone from a clever turn of phrase to an essential date in the bookselling calendar. It has alerted everyone \u2013 booksellers, publishers, the media, and ultimately customers, to the incredible array of new titles available, and marks the unofficial start of the Christmas season.\" Sp", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nThe United Kingdom local elections of 2004 were held on 10 June, as part of the 2004 set of elections along with the European elections and the London mayoral and Assembly elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nThe councils of all the metropolitan boroughs in England and all the principal areas of Wales were all up for re-election, along with many other district and unitary authorities throughout England. No local elections were held in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nThey were the first since the election of Michael Howard to the leadership of the Conservative Party. Howard was looking for a good result in the election to confirm that the Conservatives were back on the road to being able to seriously consider winning the next general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nEarly results confirmed that the Labour Party was having a bad time. Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott said that, \"Iraq was a cloud, or indeed a shadow, over these elections. I am not saying we haven't had a kicking. It's not a great day for Labour\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nHowever the Conservatives were not making many of the gains that would have indicated a complete change of electoral fortune. The national equivalent share of the vote in the election was found by academics Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher to be 37% to the Conservatives, 27% to the Liberal Democrats and 26% to Labour. For one of the two major parties to come third in local elections was unheard of in the post-1945 period, let alone for a governing party with such a large majority to come third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nEven in the North, Labour's traditional heartland, Labour did not do too well, losing control of Doncaster, Leeds, Newcastle and St Helens. However, they did pick up several councils, notably Caerphilly and Rhondda Cynon Taff from Plaid Cymru in Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nDespite an increase in their vote and number of councillors, the Liberal Democrats saw a net loss of councils to NOC. The loss to the Conservatives of Eastbourne was in a single-seat by-election. This was partially offset by victories in Newcastle upon Tyne and Pendle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nThe British National Party made a net gain of four seats, and held 14. This left them with a total 21 councillors in the country, including six in Burnley and four in Bradford. In the wards they contested, they averaged 16.1% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179119-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United Kingdom local elections\nIt was to prove a false dawn for the Conservatives; when Britain went to the polls for the following year's general election, Labour was re-elected, although its majority was greatly reduced and the Conservatives did make gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179120-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United Malays National Organisation leadership election\nA leadership election was held by the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO) party on 23 September 2004. It was won by incumbent Prime Minister and acting President of UMNO, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179121-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Climate Change Conference\nThe 2004 United Nations Climate Change Conference took place between December 6 and December 17, 2004 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The conference included the 10th Conference of the Parties (COP10) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179121-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Climate Change Conference\nThe parties discussed the progress made since the first United Nations Climate Change Conference ten years ago and its future challenges, with special emphasis on climate change mitigation and adaptation. To promote developing countries better adapt to climate change, the Buenos Aires Plan of Action was adopted. The parties also began discussing the post-Kyoto mechanism, on how to allocate emission reduction obligation following 2012, when the first commitment period ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179122-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Security Council election\nThe 2004 United Nations Security Council election was held on 15 October 2004 at United Nations Headquarters in New York City during the 59th session of the United Nations General Assembly. The General Assembly elected five non-permanent members of the UN Security Council for two-year terms commencing on 1 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179122-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Security Council election\nThe five candidate nations elected were Argentina, Denmark, Greece, Japan, and Tanzania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179122-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Security Council election, Geographic distribution\nIn accordance with the General Assembly's rules for the geographic distribution of the non-permanent members of the Security Council, and established practice, the members were to be elected as follows: one from Africa, one from Asia, one from Latin American and the Caribbean, and two from Western Europe and Other States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 70], "content_span": [71, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179122-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Security Council election, Candidates\nBefore voting, the representative from Eritrea took the floor to formally withdraw his country's candidacy. The country has never been elected to the UN Security Council. Consequently, to Eritrea's withdrawal, all the available seats would be elected without any serious contest. The five declared candidates therefore easily obtained the required 2/3 majority in the General Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 57], "content_span": [58, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179122-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United Nations Security Council election, Results\nVoting proceeded by secret ballot. For each geographic group, each member state could vote for as many candidates as were to be elected. There were 189 ballots in each of the three elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 54], "content_span": [55, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179123-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit opinions of John Roberts\nJohn Roberts served his first and only full year on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 2004. The following are opinions written by Judge Roberts in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 97], "section_span": [97, 97], "content_span": [98, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix\nThe 2004 United States Grand Prix (officially the 2004 Formula 1 United States Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 20 June 2004 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indianapolis, Indiana. It was Race 9 of 18 in the 2004 FIA Formula One World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix\nRubens Barrichello started from pole position in his Ferrari ahead of teammate Michael Schumacher. However, following a start-line incident between five cars, four of whom retired as a result, Schumacher overtook Barrichello on the safety car restart on lap six, and despite a threat from Barrichello after the final pit stops, Schumacher held on to take his eighth win of the season. Takuma Sato became only the second Japanese driver to achieve a podium finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix\nThe race saw two serious accidents caused by Michelin tire failures in what would be a precedent for the 2005 United States Grand Prix, at which all Michelin-shod cars withdrew over safety concerns. First, Fernando Alonso's Renault crashed into the barriers alongside the end of the pit straight on lap nine. Later, Ralf Schumacher's Williams suffered the same fate, but in the most dangerous part of the track, causing him to hit the wall at a ninety-degree angle rearwards. The impact left Schumacher with spinal fractures and concussion, which prevented him from racing until the 2004 Chinese Grand Prix, three months later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Background\nHeading into round nine, the season had so far belonged to Michael Schumacher, driving for Ferrari, winning all but one race, in Monaco, owing to a crash with Juan Pablo Montoya, and so had 70 points out of a possible 80. However, Rubens Barrichello, Schumacher's teammate at Ferrari, was only 16 points behind him, having taken six podiums and two other points finishes. In the Constructors' Championship, however, Ferrari were dominating, with 124 points: more than double that of second-placed Renault, the only other team to win a Grand Prix that year so far, with Jarno Trulli triumphing in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThird-placed BAR had a quick car, but suffered reliability problems. Lead driver Jenson Button, like his future teammate Barrichello, picking up six podiums and two other points finishes. However, of the eight races so far, Takuma Sato, in the other BAR, had suffered five engine failures, three of which had occurred in the preceding three Grands Prix in Monaco, Europe, and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Background\nWilliams and Toyota had been disqualified from the last event in Canada for illegal brake ducts, even though, in Williams's case, this proved to be a manufacturing error and had not given them any aerodynamic or cooling gain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2003 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nFour practice sessions were held before qualifying - two 60-minute sessions on Friday and two 45-minute sessions on Saturday. All of the teams, with the exception of Ferrari, Williams, McLaren, and Renault, were permitted to run three drivers on Friday. Rubens Barrichello topped the timesheets in practices one, two, and three, with times of 1:11.354, 1:10.365, and 1:10.911 respectively. Jenson Button, driving for BAR, however, prevented Barrichello from a clean sweep in the second Saturday session: his time of 1:10.056 was 0.143 quicker than second-placed Michael Schumacher. Third was Takuma Sato, Button's teammate, whilst Barrichello languished in fourth. However, despite the pace of the Ferraris, their Bridgestone tires had grained in the long runs, meaning that balls of rubber would form on the surface of the tire, reducing mechanical grip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nQualifying was split into two sections. In the first session, dubbed \"pre-qualifying\", each driver took turns to record one lap at a time. The order the cars ran in was the reverse order to the classified results at the 2004 Canadian Grand Prix. For example, Michael Schumacher won the race, so would be the last car to run in pre-qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nThe second qualifying session (dubbed \"qualifying\") repeated this process (with the drivers running in reverse order to the pre-qualifying results), but with the caveat that the drivers would not be allowed to alter their fuel loads between then and the race. The fastest time in the second session would take pole. As in 2003, setups and fuel loads could not be altered between the end of the second qualifying session and the race. Rubens Barrichello started from pole from teammate Michael Schumacher after setting a time of 1:10:223. Michael Schumacher started second, making it an all-Ferrari front row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nBAR locked out the second row, with Takuma Sato lining up ahead of team leader Jenson Button. Williams locked out row three, with Juan Pablo Montoya in fifth, ahead of Ralf Schumacher. A gearbox issue prevented Jarno Trulli in the Renault from setting a lap, meaning he started last. Jean Todt had told the media that Barrichello would be allowed to race Schumacher and would not be forced to concede to him, as in the 2002 Austrian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs the formation lap began, Juan Pablo Montoya's Williams failed to start. Montoya jumped out of the car and ran to the pits to use the spare car; it was set up for him as he was higher up on the grid than his teammate. Montoya started the race from the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nRubens Barrichello led into the first corner from pole position. Michael Schumacher retained second place. Fernando Alonso started in ninth place on the grid, but went around the outside of the similarly fast-starting Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in the McLaren, and then used the inside line at turn two to pass Takuma Sato and move into third place. Jenson Button dropped from fourth to sixth, whilst Ralf Schumacher dropped to seventh. Jarno Trulli moved up to eleventh place, having started last, partially helped by a big crash in turn two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nA gear selection issue for Cristiano da Matta meant that he lost momentum, and an unsighted Christian Klien ploughed into the back of him and speared across the track, hitting Giorgio Pantano's Jordan and Felipe Massa's Sauber. Nick Heidfeld in the other Jordan attempted to avoid the chaos, and squeezed Gianmaria Bruni's Minardi onto the kerb, terminally damaging the suspension of the Minardi. The safety car was deployed, and remained out until the end of lap five.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs the safety car came in, Michael Schumacher overtook Barrichello for the lead of the race. On lap nine, Fernando Alonso, in a Michelin-shod Renault, crashed out from third place at the end of the main straight after his right rear tire deflated under braking. He lost control of the car and it crashed nose-first into the barriers along the track, destroying the front end of the Renault and some polystyrene boards at turn one. Double yellow flags were deployed, meaning the drivers were not allowed to overtake in that zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAt the end of lap ten, the Williams of Ralf Schumacher, also on Michelin tires, suffered a tire failure in turn thirteen, the only banked corner at the time in Formula One, backing the car into the wall at a ninety-degree angle. The car skidded several hundred metres down the race track before coming to rest. Schumacher sat motionless in the car for two minutes, unable to talk to his team over the radio, as the radio had been smashed in the incident. The safety car was deployed, and so many people opted to make an early pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0010-0002", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMichael Schumacher pitted, as did his teammate Barrichello, but Barrichello had to queue behind Schumacher, and also struggled to get going from the stop, costing him track position to Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who also pitted. As he left the pit lane, David Coulthard ran over a piece of debris from Alonso's Renault. Michael Schumacher now led the race from Takuma Sato, Jenson Button, and Juan Pablo Montoya, none of whom had made a pit stop. Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was now fifth, ahead of Barrichello in sixth, Trulli in seventh place, and Olivier Panis in the last points position in eighth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe safety car pulled in at the end of lap nineteen, and as the BARs had not stopped, they were pressuring Michael Schumacher's much heavier Ferrari: the top three were within two seconds of each other for a long period of time. Takuma Sato was very quick through the first and second sectors of the lap, but Michael Schumacher's Ferrari had good traction out of turn eleven, the only overtaking opportunity, and so Sato was unable to pass. On lap 24, Button was the first BAR to make a pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nButton's arrival in his pit box was messy, causing him to lose a couple of seconds whilst his mechanics readjusted their positions. Sato pitted one lap later, and had a clean stop, rejoining in eleventh place, just in front of Button in twelfth. Sato had good traction, however, out of turn seven on his out lap, and overtook Mark Webber's Jaguar to move up to tenth. On the same lap, he overtook David Coulthard through turn thirteen, finishing off the move into turn one on lap twenty seven. Mark Webber ran wide at turn one, gifting a place to Button. However, BAR's reliability problems continued: Button retired at the end of lap twenty seven with a gearbox issue. On lap 29, Sato repeated his move on Webber on Giancarlo Fisichella, and moved into a points position. A few corners later, he passed Nick Heidfeld and moved into seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen made his second stop of the race at the end of lap 29, rejoining in eleventh place, behind Webber. On lap 31, he moved past Webber, and into tenth place, behind David Coulthard. One lap later, the McLarens swapped positions, as R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen moved into ninth. However, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen had to make yet another pit stop at the end of lap thirty four due to an electronics problem on his car. The stop lasted fifteen seconds and he rejoined last. Montoya made his first pit stop at the end of lap 35, rejoining in sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMichael Schumacher now led the race by thirteen seconds from Rubens Barrichello, and continued to pull away. Jarno Trulli, now in third place, drove sharply over the kerb at turn eight and lost a piece of his car on lap 38. Nick Heidfeld pitted at the end of lap 38 and rejoined the race in eleventh. Takuma Sato, meanwhile, had caught Olivier Panis's Toyota, and overtook him on lap 40 for fourth place. Schumacher pitted at the end of lap 42 with a fifteen-second gap to his teammate, and Barrichello assumed the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nSchumacher's 10.3-second stop fuelled him to get to the end of the race. Barrichello then pushed hard, attempting to leapfrog Schumacher. Heidfeld retired on lap 45, and Sato pitted on the same lap for his second and final pit stop. Sato rejoined in sixth place, behind Montoya. Jarno Trulli pitted on lap 46 and rejoined in fifth place, behind Olivier Panis, although that quickly changed when Panis pitted at the end of lap 47. Panis rejoined behind Sato, and Coulthard pitted on the same lap for McLaren, rejoining in ninth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFisichella, on Bridgestone tires, then suffered a left rear puncture on lap 49. He took the opportunity to make his final fuel stop, rejoining near the back of the field. Barrichello had been pushing hard, and so when he finally stopped for fuel on lap 51, the gap between the two Ferraris had been cut to approximately two seconds - Barrichello had cut the gap by approximately thirteen seconds. On lap 52, Barrichello went up the inside of Schumacher in turn four, but Schumacher cut across the front of his teammate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe two cars nearly collided, and Barrichello then, contrary to Todt's earlier statements, was told to remain behind Schumacher. The battle between the two Ferraris meant that Montoya and Trulli were catching them. Sato was, in turn, catching Trulli for fourth place. David Coulthard pitted on lap 55, and, similarly to Button, had a messy arrival. Montoya pitted on lap 56, but as he left the pit lane, he was disqualified from the race due to him changing cars too late on the grid; it was his second consecutive disqualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMark Webber's engine expired on lap 60, and he coasted down the pit straight, pulling off at turn one. Takuma Sato went down the inside of Jarno Trulli on lap 61, and although they both ran on the grass, Sato moved up into third position. In attempting to recover from the excursion, Trulli spun. With eight laps to go, Fisichella retired with a hydraulics problem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMichael Schumacher held off the threat of Barrichello to win the race, his eighth win of 2004. Barrichello finished second, and Takuma Sato became only the second Japanese driver to achieve a podium finish after Aguri Suzuki, a feat not repeated until Kamui Kobayashi in the 2012 Japanese Grand Prix. Jarno Trulli finished fourth, Panis fifth, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen sixth, Coulthard seventh, and Zsolt Baumgartner rounded out the points scorers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Post-race\nChristian Klien did not claim responsibility for the crash on lap one, claiming that he had \"nowhere to go\". Barrichello was disappointed to have conceded the lead on the safety car restart and criticised the Ferrari technicians for indecision regarding his first pit stop, which lost him position to Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179124-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Grand Prix, Report, Post-race\nJuan Pablo Montoya was frustrated to have lost points for the second race running due to a disqualification beyond his control. However, he said that the pace of the car was positive and allowed Williams to push on for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179125-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Alaska\nThe Alaska congressional election of 2004 was held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004. The term of the state's sole Representative to the United States House of Representatives expired on January 3, 2005. The winning candidate would serve a two-year term from January 3, 2005, to January 3, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179126-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in District of Columbia\nThe 2004 congressional election for the Delegate from the District of Columbia was held on November 2, 2004. The winner of the race was incumbent Eleanor Holmes Norton (D).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179126-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in District of Columbia\nThe non-voting delegate to the United States House of Representatives from the District of Columbia is elected for two-year terms. This coincided with the presidential election in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179126-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in District of Columbia, Candidates\nIncumbent Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, a Democrat, sought re-election for an 8th full term to the United States House of Representatives. Norton was opposed in this election by Republican Party challenger Michael Andrew Monroe who received 8.27%, resulting in Norton being re-elected with 91.33% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 88], "content_span": [89, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179127-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Montana\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives election in Montana were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the state of Montana in the United States House of Representatives. Montana has one, at large district in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census, due to its low population. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179128-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in North Dakota\nThe 2004 U.S. House of Representatives election for the state of North Dakota's at-large congressional district was held November 2, 2004. The incumbent, Democratic-NPL Congressman Earl Pomeroy was re-elected to his seventh term, defeating Republican candidate Duane Sand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179128-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in North Dakota\nOnly Pomeroy filed as a Dem-NPLer, and the endorsed Republican candidate was Duane Sand, who had previously faced Democrat Kent Conrad in 2000 for North Dakota's Senate seat (see election). Pomeroy and Sand won the primary elections for their respective parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179128-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in North Dakota\nAlthough Sand ran an aggressive campaign, it was not as aggressive as that of Rick Clayburgh who had faced the congressman in the previous election. On June 26, U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay visited Fargo, North Dakota to campaign for Sand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179129-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Puerto Rico\nThe election for Resident Commissioner to the United States House of Representatives took place on November 2, 2004, the same day as the larger Puerto Rican general election and the United States general elections, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179130-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in South Dakota\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives election in South Dakota took place on Tuesday, November 2, 2004. Voters selected a representative for their single At-Large district, who ran on a statewide ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179130-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in South Dakota\nIn the regularly scheduled election in November 2004, freshman incumbent Stephanie Herseth and state Senator Larry Diedrich, who had run in the July 2004 special election earlier, faced each other in a rematch; Libertarian candidate Terry L. Begay also ran in this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179130-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in South Dakota\nHerseth again prevailed, this time by a wider margin of 53% to 46% despite President George W. Bush's dominant 59.9% to 38.4% over Senator John Kerry in South Dakota in the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179131-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont was held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004, to elect the U.S. Representative from the state's at-large congressional district. The election coincided with the elections of other federal and state offices, including a quadrennial presidential election and an election to the U.S. Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179131-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont\nAs of 2020, this is the last time someone who was not a member of the Democratic or Republican party was elected to the House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179131-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont, General election, Controversy\nOn Friday, October 29, 2004, the Greg Parke campaign aired a radio ad which portrayed Rep. Sanders (I-Vt) as being on friendly terms with pornographers, pedophiles, illegal aliens and terrorists. The ad was pulled the same day that it first aired. Parke was criticized by both the state chairman of the Vermont Republican Party, James Barnett and Vermont Lieutenant Governor Brian Dubie, as well as by other Vermont Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179131-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Vermont, General election, Controversy\nParke had earlier blamed Sanders for the September 11, 2001, World Trade Center attacks based on Sanders prior vote to cut the intelligence budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 94], "content_span": [95, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179132-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives election in Wyoming\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives election in Wyoming were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the state of Wyoming in the United States House of Representatives. Wyoming has one, at large district in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census, due to its low population. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections were held on November 2, 2004 to elect all 435 seats of the chamber. It coincided with the reelection of President George W. Bush as well as many Senate elections and gubernatorial elections. In the 108th Congress, Republicans held 227 seats, Democrats held 205, with two Republican vacancies and one independent. As a result of this election, the 109th Congress began composed of 232 Republicans, 201 Democrats, one independent (who caucuses with the Democrats), and one vacancy (Democrat Bob Matsui won reelection, but died just two days before the beginning of the 109th Congress. ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections\nDemocrats won open seats in Colorado, South Dakota, and New York while ousting incumbents in Georgia and Illinois. Republicans won an open seat in Kentucky and multiple seats in Texas while ousting an incumbent in Indiana. Two seats in Louisiana swapped party control. George W. Bush became the first Republican president to have his party gain seats in consecutive elections for the first time since Teddy Roosevelt in 1902 and 1904.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections\nAs of 2021, this is the last election in which someone who was not from the Democratic or Republican party was elected to the House (Independent Bernie Sanders). As of 2021, this is also the last election where Republicans made consecutive net gains in the House after gaining seats in the 2002 election. This was also the first election that the Republicans made gains in the chamber during a Presidential election year in which their candidate won since 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections, Retirements\nIn the November general elections, thirty incumbents did not seek re-election, either to retire or to seek other positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 66], "content_span": [67, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections, Resignations\nTwo seats opened early due to resignations and were not filled until the November elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections, Newly created seats\nOf the thirty-two seats created in the 2003 Texas redistricting, three had no incumbent representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 74], "content_span": [75, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections, Special elections\nThere were three special elections held in 2004, all of them separate from the November elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections, Louisiana\nOn December 4, 2004, a run-off election was held to determine the winner of the 3rd and 7th congressional districts. In the 3rd district, Charlie Melancon narrowly defeated Billy Tauzin III. In the 7th district, Charles Boustany defeated Willie Mount. Thus, both seats switched to the opposite party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179133-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections, Washington\nAll seven incumbents who ran for re-election, none of whom faced viable challengers, were returned to Congress. None received less than 60% of the vote, and one received over 80%. In addition, the two seats vacated by retiring Republicans were both reclaimed by Republicans despite Democratic hopes to gain at least one seat in the vulnerable 8th district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 65], "content_span": [66, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179134-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Arizona\nThe 2004 congressional elections in Arizona were elections for Arizona's delegation to the United States House of Representatives, which occurred along with congressional elections nationwide on November 2, 2004. Arizona has eight seats, as apportioned during the 2000 United States Census. Republicans held six of the eight seats and Democrats held two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179135-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Arkansas\nThe United States House of Representatives elections of 2004 in Arkansas occurred on November 2, 2004 to elect the members of the State of Arkansas's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Arkansas had four seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179135-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Arkansas\nThese elections were held concurrently with the United States presidential election of 2004, United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Arkansas), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179135-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Arkansas, Overview\n(*Given Representative Mike Ross ran unopposed (earning 100% by default) the Secretary of State of Arkansas's election division recorded no voting data for the Fourth Congressional District election. Thus vote totals for Democratic candidates and all candidates do not account Ross's votes earned)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 75], "content_span": [76, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179136-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in California\nThe United States House of Representatives elections in California, 2004 was an election for California's delegation to the United States House of Representatives, which occurred as part of the general election of the House of Representatives on November 2, 2004. The districts after the 2000 census were gerrymandered to protect incumbents of both parties, so there was no change in the party balance, 33 Democrats and 20 Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179136-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in California, Results\nThe following are the final results from the Secretary of State of California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 76], "content_span": [77, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179137-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado were held on November 2, 2004, with all seven House seats up for election. The winners served from January 3, 2005, to January 6, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179137-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Colorado, Overview\nThis Colorado elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 75], "content_span": [76, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives Elections in Florida were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who would represent the state of Florida in the United States House of Representatives. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; those elected served in the 109th Congress from January 3, 2005 to January 3, 2007. The election coincided with the 2004 U.S. presidential election as well as an election to the United States Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida\nFlorida had twenty-five seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Its delegation to the 108th Congress of 2003-2005 consisted of eighteen Republicans and seven Democrats. In 2004, no districts changed party control, leaving the congressional delegation as an 18-7 split favoring the Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida\nThe following members of Congress went unopposed in the 2004 election and thus their election is not reported below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 1\nIncumbent Republican representative Jeff Miller, who was initially elected in a special election in 2001, ran for re-election in this staunchly conservative district based in the Florida Panhandle. Miller easily defeated Democratic challenger Mark Coutu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 2\nThe incumbent was Democrat Allen Boyd, first elected to this seat in 1997. Other contestants in this race included Republican challenger Bev Kilmer, who had served in the Florida House of Representatives, and write-in candidate T. A. Frederick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 2\nShortly before the election, a company owned by Kilmer's husband sued Boyd for defamation of character. Nonetheless, Boyd was reelected with slightly under 62 percent of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 3\nDemocrat Corrine Brown, the incumbent since 1993, faced no major-party opposition and easily won re-election over write-in candidate Johnny Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 4\nIncumbent Republican Ander Crenshaw faced only marginal opposition from the write-in campaign of perennial candidate Richard Grayson. Crenshaw easily won another term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 5\nIncumbent Republican Ginny Brown-Waite easily won re-election against attorney Robert Whittel in a race that was not viewed as competitive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 6\nEncompassing North Central Florida, this conservative district is represented by incumbent Republican Congressman Cliff Stearns. Stearns, seeking a ninth term, faced off against Democrat Dave Bruderly and won the election by a wide margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 8\nRepublican Congressman Ric Keller, seeking a third term, faced off against libertarian Democrat Stephen Murray. Keller won re-election with over 60% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 9\nRepublican incumbent Congressman Michael Bilirakis ran for a twelfth term. Bilirakis faced no major-party opposition in this Republican-leaning district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 10\nLongtime incumbent Republican Bill Young won re-election over Democrat Bob Derry with almost 70% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 11\nIncumbent Democratic Congressman Jim Davis ran for a fifth term in this liberal district based in Tampa. He faced no Republican challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 12\nIncumbent Republican Adam Putnam won a third term, defeating Democrat Bob Hagenmaier. Putnam, who was the youngest member of the U.S. Congress before this election, received more than 10 times the campaign donations as his opponent and cruised to an easy victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 13\nIncumbent Republican Katherine Harris sought a second term and defeated Democratic challenger Jan Schneider.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 14\nThis seat had been vacant since Porter Goss resigned on September 23 to serve as the director of the CIA. Republican Connie Mack IV won the open seat against Democratic candidate Robert Neeld in this solidly conservative district. Mack, the son of former U.S. Senator Connie Mack III, was aided by name recognition and fundraising connections en route to an easy victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 15\nIncumbent Republican Dave Weldon sought election to a sixth term in Congress. Weldon defeated the Democratic candidate, retired physicist Simon Pristoop, with 65% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 16\nIncumbent Republican Mark Foley ran for a sixth term. He defeated Democrat Jeff Fisher by a wide margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 17\nIncumbent Democrat Kendrick Meek was re-elected to a second term in this heavily Democratic district. He faced no Republican challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 18\nIncumbent Republican Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen sought a ninth term and easily defeated Democratic nominee Sam Sheldon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 20\nDemocratic incumbent Peter Deutsch decided to run for the U.S. Senate instead of seeking re-election. Democrat Debbie Wasserman Schultz won the open seat with over 70% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 21\nIncumbent Republican Lincoln Diaz-Balart ran for a seventh term in this suburban district. Diaz-Balart faced no Democratic challenger and easily won re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179138-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Florida, District 22\nIncumbent Republican Clay Shaw ran for a thirteenth term. Jim Stork was the Democratic nominee, but withdrew from the race before election night, citing health issues. Stork's name remained on the ballot, but votes for Stork were counted for Robin Rorapaugh, a staffer for Congressman Peter Deutsch. Shaw easily won re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia\nThe 2004 House elections in Georgia occurred on November 2, 2004, to elect the members of the State of Georgia's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Georgia has thirteen seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia\nThese elections were held concurrently with the United States presidential election of 2004, United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Georgia), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia\nDespite the dominant performance of Republicans in Georgia during the 2004 Presidential election, U.S. Senate election, and other state elections, which included Republicans gaining control of the Georgia House of Representatives, and thus control of both chambers of the Georgia General Assembly, for the first time since Reconstruction, Democrats however gained a U.S. House seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 1\nIn this conservative, coastal Georgia-based district, incumbent Republican Congressman Jack Kingston ran for re-election to a seventh term in Congress. Kingston was re-elected in the general election without any opposition whatsoever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 2\nIncumbent Democratic Congressman Sanford Bishop did not face a credible threat to his re-election in this liberal-leaning, southwest Georgia district. Opposed by Republican Dave Eversman, a businessman and local chamber of commerce official, Bishop was overwhelmingly re-elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 3\nIn 2002, Jim Marshall was narrowly elected to Congress in this conservative, central Georgia-based district. This year, Congressman Marshall faced a rematch against businessman Calder Clay, who was the Republican nominee for Congress. In a significant improvement over his previous performance, Marshall crushed Clay with over sixty percent of the vote, surprising given the fact that President George W. Bush carried the district comfortably.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 4\nOne-term incumbent Democratic Congresswoman Denise Majette opted to run for Senate, creating an open seat in the House. Cynthia McKinney, the previous representative of this district, ran for her sixth nonconsecutive term in Congress. McKinney faced Republican Party official Catherine Davis in the general election, whom she defeated, but by a smaller margin than expected in this solidly liberal district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 5\nJohn Lewis, the dean of the Georgia congressional delegation, ran for his tenth term in this solidly liberal, Atlanta-based district. Just as with the previous election, Congressman Lewis was unopposed in the general election and coasted to re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 6\nWhen three-term incumbent Republican Congressman Johnny Isakson sought election to the Senate, an open seat emerged. Physician Tom Price became the Republican nominee after surviving a contentious primary that featured many candidates and a run-off election. Seeing as no Democratic candidate filed to run in this district, Price was sent to his first term in Congress without opposition. However, in this conservative district based in the northern suburbs of Atlanta, the Republican primary is tantamount to election, so Price would not have faced a serious challenge in either case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 7\nIn Republican Congressman John Linder\u2019s bid for a seventh term, he faced no opposition in any form and was successful in his re-election in this staunchly conservative district rooted in the northern suburbs of Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 8\nThough Republican Congressman Mac Collins could have easily won a seventh term in this solidly conservative, gerrymandered district based in the southern suburbs of Atlanta and rural north-central Georgia, he instead opted to run for Senate. Lynn Westmoreland, the Republican leader in the Georgia House of Representatives, became the Republican nominee and faced off against Democratic candidate Silvia Delamar. Delamar did not face a fighting chance in this district that has a proclivity for electing Republicans, and on election day, she was crushed by Westmoreland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 9\nThough popular Republican Congressman Charlie Norwood faced a challenge from Democrat Bob Ellis, he might as well have been unopposed in this solidly conservative district based in north Georgia and some of the suburbs of Atlanta and Augusta. Come election day, Congressman Norwood was overwhelmingly re-elected to his sixth term in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 76], "content_span": [77, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 10\nThough he was originally elected as a Democrat, incumbent Congressman Nathan Deal has built a solid profile as a conservative Republican. In this north Georgia district, Deal did not face a Democratic opponent, which meant that he was easily elected to his seventh term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 11\nRepublican Congressman Phil Gingrey has represented this conservative-leaning district since 2002 and ran for his second term this year. The 11th district, which is somewhat moderate only because it is heavily gerrymandered, has a shape that has been described as similar to that of Indonesia. Congressman Gingrey faced a challenge from Rick Crawford, the chairman of the Polk County Democratic Party and a special Assistant Attorney General of Georgia. Gingrey ultimately beat Crawford by a somewhat comfortable margin, undoubtedly helped by the strong performance of President Bush in Georgia that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 12\nThough one-term Republican Congressman Max Burns has managed to win election in 2002 in this Democratic-leaning district, his stroke of luck vanished by 2004. Burns faced a scandal- and controversy-free Democratic opponent in Athens-Clarke County Commissioner John Barrow. In a bitterly fought election, Barrow ousted Burns and won his first term in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179139-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Georgia, District 13\nOriginally elected in 2002 in a gerrymandered district drawn to elect a Democrat, incumbent Congressman David Scott sought election to a second term in Congress. Congressman Scott did not face any sort of challenge in his re-election bid, so he was sent back to Washington unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 77], "content_span": [78, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179140-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Hawaii\nThe 2004 House elections in Hawaii occurred on November 2, 2004 to elect the members of the State of Hawaii's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Hawaii had two seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179140-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Hawaii\nThese elections were held concurrently with the United States presidential election of 2004, United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Hawaii), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana\nThe 2004 congressional elections in Indiana were elections for Indiana's delegation to the United States House of Representatives, which occurred along with congressional elections nationwide on November 2, 2004. Republicans held a majority of Indiana's delegation, 6-3, before the elections. The only incumbent to lose re-election was Democrat Baron Hill, losing to Republican Mike Sodrel in the 9th district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Results\nThe following are the final results from the Secretary of State of Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 73], "content_span": [74, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 1\nThis district includes a small strip of northwest Indiana. The district has been one of the most Democratic in Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 2\nThis district is centered on South Bend, Indiana and the Indiana portion of the Michiana region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 3\nThis district is located in the northeast corner of Indiana and has a large population center in Fort Wayne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 4\nThis district is located in west-central Indiana. Located within the district is the city of West Lafayette and many suburban towns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 5\nThis district located mostly north of Indianapolis, including the largest suburbs of Indianapolis in Hamilton County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 6\nThis district takes in a large portion of eastern Indiana, including the cities of Muncie, Anderson, and Richmond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 7\nThis district is in the heart of Central Indiana and encompasses most of Marion County/Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 8\nPopulation centers of Evansville and Terre Haute are located within its limits along with numerous other small towns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179141-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Indiana, Overview, District 9\nThis district is located in southeast Indiana. The largest city located within the district is Bloomington followed by; Columbus, New Albany, Jeffersonville, and Clarksville.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 86], "content_span": [87, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179142-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kansas were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the state of Kansas in the United States House of Representatives. Kansas has four seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky\nThe 2004 House elections in Kentucky occurred on November 2, 2004 to elect the members of the State of Kentucky's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Kentucky had six seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky\nThese elections occurred simultaneously with the United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Kentucky), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky\nThough Democrats picked up a seat via a special election in the Sixth congressional district in February of that year, but this was later cancelled out by a victory for Republicans in the Fourth district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky, District 1\nIncumbent Republican Congressman Ed Whitfield defeated Democratic challenger Billy Cartwright by a solid margin in this solidly-conservative west Kentucky-based district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky, District 2\nIncumbent Republican Congressman Ron Lewis faced no difficulty seeking a fifth term in his conservative district based in west-central Kentucky, riding the coattails of President Bush's re-election in Kentucky over Democratic nominee Adam Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky, District 3\nIncumbent Republican Congresswoman Anne Northup was used to facing tough elections in this swing district based in Louisville, but this election proved different. Despite the fact that John Kerry, the Democratic nominee for President, won Northup's district, her Democratic opponent, Tony Miller, the Circuit Court Clerk for Jefferson County was unable to defeat Northup and his campaign crumbled in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky, District 4\nWhen incumbent Congressman Ken Lucas, a Democrat, declined to seek re-election as part of a campaign pledge to only serve three terms, an intense battle emerged in this conservative district based in northern Kentucky. Reporter Nick Clooney, the father of renowned actor George Clooney, became the Democratic nominee; Geoff Davis, Lucas's opponent in 2002, became the Republican nominee. In what some dubbed \"Heartland vs. Hollywood,\" Davis rode a Republican tidal wave to victory, defeating Clooney by a fair margin. Michael E. Slider, a High School teacher from Oldham County, also ran in the race as an Independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky, District 5\nIncumbent Republican Congressman Hal Rogers was unopposed for another term in this strongly conservative district based in East Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179143-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Kentucky, District 6\nEmerging from a successful special election earlier in the year, freshman incumbent Congressman Ben Chandler faced off against the Republican nominee, Kentucky State Senator Tom Buford. Chandler won a second term with relative ease in this conservative Central Kentucky district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 77], "content_span": [78, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179144-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Maryland\nThe Maryland Congressional elections of 2004 were held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004. The terms of all eight Representatives to the United States House of Representatives expired on January 3, 2005, and therefore all were put up for contest. The winning candidates served a two-year term from January 3, 2005, to January 3, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts\nThe 2004 congressional elections in Massachusetts was held on November 2, 2004, to determine who would represent the state of Massachusetts in the United States House of Representatives. Massachusetts had ten seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; those elected were served in the 109th Congress from January 3, 2005 until January 3, 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 1\nIncumbent Democratic Congressman John Olver ran for an eighth term in this staunchly Democratic district rooted in western Massachusetts. Facing no opponents in the general election, Olver was overwhelmingly re-elected to another term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 1\nSteven Adam ran as a write-in for the Republican nomination, but did not receive enough votes to make the general election ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 2\nThis south-central Massachusetts-based district has a strong tendency to elect Democratic candidates, and this year proved no different. When incumbent Democratic Congressman Richard Neal ran for a ninth term, he faced no opposition and coasted to re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 3\nThough incumbent Democratic Congressman Jim McGovern faced a challenge from Republican candidate Ronald Crews. This historically liberal district, which stretches from the western suburbs of Boston to the Massachusetts-Rhode Island border, has sent Congressman McGovern back to Congress with overwhelming margins of victory. This year proved to be no different, and McGovern crushed Crews to win a fifth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 4\nCongressman Barney Frank, a Democrat, has represented this strongly liberal district, which extends from Quincy to the South Coast, since he was initially elected in 1980. In 2004, Congressman Frank faced a challenge from independent candidate Chuck Morse, whom he was able to defeat by a wide margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 5\nThis liberal district rooted in the northern and eastern suburbs of Boston has been represented by Congressman Marty Meehan since he was first elected in 1992. This year, Congressman Meehan faced a challenge from Republican Thomas Tierney, but the Congressman won a seventh term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 6\nThis district, which covers some of the northern suburbs of Boston and the far northeastern portion of the commonwealth, has been represented by Democratic Congressman John Tierney for eight years. In his quest for a fifth term, Tierney was opposed by Republican Stephen O'Malley, but he was re-elected in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 7\nDemocratic Congressman Ed Markey, the longest serving member of the Massachusetts House members, has continually been re-elected with large margins in this staunchly liberal district based in the northern and eastern suburbs of Boston. This year, Congressman Markey faced off against Republican Kenneth Chase, whom he crushed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 8\nThis congressional district, based in Boston and some of its southern suburbs, is the smallest district in Massachusetts and has been represented by Democratic Congressman Mike Capuano since 1999. Seeking a fourth term, Capuano faced no opposition and easily won the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 9\nDemocratic Congressman Steven Lynch, a moderate Democrat, has represented this district rooted in south Boston since he was first elected in 2001 in a special election to replace the late Congressman Joe Moakley. With a solidly liberal constituency, Congressman Lynch encountered no opposition in his bid for a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179145-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Massachusetts, District 10\nOpposed by Republican Michael Jones, incumbent Democratic Congressman Bill Delahunt sought a fifth term in this district based in the South Shore, Cape Cod and the Islands. Though more moderate than the other districts in the commonwealth, the 10th district sent Congressman Delahunt back to Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 83], "content_span": [84, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179146-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Michigan\nThe 2004 congressional elections in Michigan was held on November 2, 2004 to determine who would represent the state of Michigan in the United States House of Representatives. Michigan had fifteen seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota\nThe 2004 congressional elections in Minnesota were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who would represent the state of Minnesota in the United States House of Representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota\nMinnesota had eight seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; those elected served in the 109th Congress from January 3, 2005 until January 3, 2007. The election coincided with the 2004 presidential election. All of the incumbents who represented Minnesota in the United States House of Representative in the 108th Congress were re-elected to the 109th Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 1\nIncumbent Republican Gil Gutknecht, who had represented Minnesota's 1st congressional district since 1994, ran against Leigh Pomeroy of the DFL and Gregory Mikkelson of the Independence Party. Gutknecht easily won a fifth term, defeating second-place Pomeroy by a comfortable 24 percent margin, as Mikkelson placed at an even more distant third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 2\nIncumbent Republican John Kline, who was first elected in 2002, ran against Teresa Daly of the DFL and Doug Williams of the Independence Party. Kline won a second term, defeating Daly by a 16 percent margin, as Williams finished a very distant third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 3\nIncumbent Republican Jim Ramstad, who was first elected in 1990, faced a primary challenge from Burton Hanson, but won renomination by a margin of nearly 80 percent in the Republican primary. In the general election, Ramstad defeated DFL challenger Deborah Watts, easily winning election to his eighth term in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 4\nIncumbent DFLer Betty McCollum, who was first elected in 2000, faced off against Patrice Bataglia of the Republican Party of Minnesota and Peter F. Vento of the Independence Party of Minnesota. Defeating Bataglia by a comfortable 24 percent margin, McCollum easily won re-election to her third term in Congress, as Vento finished a distant third", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 5\nIncumbent DFLer Martin Sabo, who was first elected in 1978, was challenged for the nomination by Dick Franson, but Sabo won the primary election by a landslide 82 percent margin. In the general election, Sabo had no difficulty winning his 14th term in Congress, defeating Republican challenger Daniel Mathias by a margin of more than 45 percent, while Green candidate Jay Pond finished a distant third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 6\nIncumbent Republican Mark Kennedy, who was first elected in 2000, encountered little difficulty winning his third term in Congress, although the election in Minnesota's 6th congressional district was by far the closest congressional election in Minnesota in 2004. Kennedy defeated his DFL challenger, child safety advocate Patty Wetterling, by a margin of about 8 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 7\nIncumbent DFLer Collin Peterson, who was first elected in 1990, faced no difficulty winning his eighth term in Congress, defeating Republican challenger David Sturrock by a landslide 32 percent margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179147-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Minnesota, District 8\nIncumbent DFLer Jim Oberstar, who was first elected in 1974, was challenged for the nomination by Michael H. Johnson, but Oberstar won the primary election by a landslide 71 percent margin. In the general election, Oberstar had no difficulty winning his 16th term in Congress, defeating Republican challenger Mark Groettum by a margin of more than 33 percent, while Green candidate Van Presley finished a very distant third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 78], "content_span": [79, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179148-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi were held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004 and elected the four U.S. Representatives from the state of Mississippi. The elections coincided with the elections of other federal and state offices, including a quadrennial presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179148-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi, District 1\nRepublican Roger Wicker, who had represented Mississippi's 1st congressional district since 1994, easily ran for re-election with his only opposition being one third party candidate as the Democrats did not field a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 80], "content_span": [81, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179148-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi, District 2\nDemocrat Bennie Thompson, who had represented Mississippi's 2nd congressional district since 1993, was running for re-election. Thompson faced no opposition in the primary, but would face Clinton LeSueur in the general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 80], "content_span": [81, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179148-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi, District 3\nRepublican Chip Pickering, who had represented Mississippi's 1st congressional district since 1996, easily ran for re-election with his only opposition being two third party candidates as the Democrats did not field a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 80], "content_span": [81, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179148-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Mississippi, District 4\nDemocrat Gene Taylor, who had represented Mississippi's 3rd congressional district since 1989, was running for re-election. Thompson faced no opposition in the primary, but would face State Representative Michael Lott in the general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 80], "content_span": [81, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179149-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Missouri\nThe 2004 House elections in Missouri occurred on November 2, 2004 to elect the members of the State of Missouri's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Missouri had nine seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179149-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Missouri\nThese elections were held concurrently with the United States presidential election of 2004, United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Missouri), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179149-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Missouri\nThe most notable race of the 2004 cycle in Missouri was the contest for the Third District seat held by outgoing Representative and former House Democratic floor leader Dick Gephardt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179150-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Hampshire\nThe 2004 congressional elections in New Hampshire were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the state of New Hampshire in the United States House of Representatives. It coincided with the state's senatorial and gubernatorial elections. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; those elected served in the 109th Congress from January 2005 until January 2007. New Hampshire has two seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the people of New Jersey in the United States House of Representatives. This election coincided with national elections for U.S. President, and the U.S. House and U.S. Senate. There was no concurrent election for Senator or Governor in the state. New Jersey has thirteen seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 1\nIncumbent Democrat Rob Andrews won. This district covers Camden County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 2\nIncumbent Republican Frank A. LoBiondo defeated Democrat Timothy Robb. This district covers the southern part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 3\nIncumbent Republican Jim Saxton defeated Democrat State Assemblyman Herb Conaway. The district covers Burlington and Ocean counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 4\nIncumbent Republican Chris Smith defeated Democrat Amy Vasquez. This district covers 4 counties in the central part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 5\nIncumbent Republican Scott Garrett defeated Democrat Dorothea Anne Wolfe. This district covers the northern border of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 6\nIncumbent Democrat Frank Pallone defeated Republican Sylvester Fernandez. This district covers mostly Monmouth and Middlesex counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 7\nIncumbent Republican Mike Ferguson defeated Democrat Steve Brozak. This district covers 4 counties in the northern part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 8\nIncumbent Democrat Bill Pascrell defeated Republican George Ajjan. This district covers Essex and Possaic counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 9\nIncumbent Democrat Steve Rothman defeated Republican Edward Trawinski. This district covers mostly Bergen county.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 10\nNo Republican challenged incumbent Democrat Donald M. Payne for this seat. Only minor parties also contested the election. This district covers a heavily urbanized area, which includes the city of Newark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 11\nIncumbent Republican Rodney Frelinghuysen defeated Democrat James Buell. This district covers mostly Morris county.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 12\nIncumbent Democrat Rush Holt defeated Republican Bill Spadea. This district covers 5 suburban counties in the central part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179151-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New Jersey, District 13\nIncumbent Democrat Bob Menendez defeated Republican Richard Piatkowski. This heavily urbanized district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 80], "content_span": [81, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179152-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in New York\nIn the 2004 House of Representative elections, New York had one seat change parties; in the 27th district, Democrat Brian Higgins was elected to replace Republican Jack Quinn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179153-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in North Carolina\nThe United States House of Representative elections of 2004 in North Carolina were held on November 3, 2004 as part of the biennial election to the United States House of Representatives. All thirteen seats in North Carolina, and 435 nationwide, were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179153-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in North Carolina\nThe parties' positions were unchanged. The Democrats gained in the popular vote share across the state, thanks predominantly to running candidates in two districts they hadn't contested in 2002. However, no districts changed hands. Two new Republican representatives were elected to replace non-running incumbents: Patrick McHenry and Virginia Foxx. G. K. Butterfield retained the seat that he had won in a special election earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179153-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in North Carolina\nIt is not to be confused with the election to the North Carolina House of Representatives, which was held on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179154-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Ohio\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Ohio were held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004 to elect the 18 U.S. Representatives from the state of Ohio, one from each of the state's 18 congressional districts. The elections coincided with the elections of other federal and state offices, including a presidential election and an election to the U.S. Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179155-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Oklahoma\nThe 2004 House elections in Oklahoma occurred on November 2, 2004 to elect the members of the State of Oklahoma's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Oklahoma had five seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179155-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Oklahoma\nThese elections were held concurrently with the United States presidential election of 2004, United States Senate elections of 2004 (including one in Oklahoma), the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179156-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Oregon\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Oregon were held on November 2, 2004 to select Oregon's representatives to the United States House of Representatives. All five seats were up for election in 2004, as they are every two years. All five incumbents were re-elected, four of them by large margins; only the 5th district was somewhat competitive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179157-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Pennsylvania\nThe 2004 United States House elections in Pennsylvania was an election for Pennsylvania's delegation to the United States House of Representatives, which occurred as part of the general election of the House of Representatives on November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 69], "section_span": [69, 69], "content_span": [70, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina were held on November 2, 2004 to select six Representatives for two-year terms from the state of South Carolina. The primary elections for the Democrats and the Republicans were held on June 8. All five incumbents who ran were re-elected and the open seat in the 4th congressional district was retained by the Republicans. The composition of the state delegation remained four Republicans and two Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, District 1\nSeeking his third term in this conservative, coastal South Carolina-based district, incumbent Republican Congressman Henry E. Brown, Jr. crushed Green Party candidate James Dunn to win another term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 83], "content_span": [84, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, District 2\nCongressman Joe Wilson has represented this strongly conservative district that runs from the southern coast of South Carolina to the suburbs of Columbia since 2001. Running for his third term, Congressman Wilson faced off against Democratic candidate Michael Ellisor and Constitution Party candidate Steve Lefemine, whom he was able to defeat comfortably.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 83], "content_span": [84, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, District 3\nFreshman Republican Congressman J. Gresham Barrett faced no opposition in his bid for a second term in this western South Carolina district, the most conservative one in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 83], "content_span": [84, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, District 4\nWhen incumbent Republican Congressman Jim DeMint decided to run for Senate instead of seeking a fourth term, former Republican Congressman Bob Inglis, who had previously represented this seat, defeated Democrat Brandon Brown and Green Party candidate Faye Walters to return to Congress for his fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 83], "content_span": [84, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, District 5\nIncumbent Democratic Congressman John Spratt has represented this conservative-leaning district for thirty-two years and ran for a twelfth term this year. Though President George W. Bush comfortably won this district in 2004, Spratt was able to handily defeat Republican Albert Spencer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 83], "content_span": [84, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179158-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in South Carolina, District 6\nIn a rematch from the 2002 election, incumbent Democratic Congressman Jim Clyburn, a member of the Democratic House leadership, encountered Republican opponent Gary McLeod, whom he defeated again this year by a similar margin from two years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 83], "content_span": [84, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179159-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas occurred on November 2, 2004, to elect the members of the state of Texas's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Texas had thirty-two seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179159-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas\nThese elections occurred simultaneously with the United States Senate elections of 2004, the United States House elections in other states, and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179159-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Texas\nRepublicans gained five of Texas's House seats due to a midterm redistricting in 2003. However some of the districts created following this election would later be changed. The Twenty-third district would be declared an unconstitutional racially gerrymandered district by the Supreme Court in League of United Latin American Citizens v. Perry in 2006. Thus it and neighboring districts would be redrawn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179160-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Virginia were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States House of Representatives. Virginia has eleven seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington\nThe United States House of Representatives elections in Washington were held on November 2, 2004. Washington has nine members in the House of Representatives, as apportioned during the 2000 Census, and all nine seats were up for re-election. There were two open seats in the 5th and 8th districts when Republicans George Nethercutt and Jennifer Dunn, respectively, retired. No seats changed party this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 1\nIn this liberal-leaning district based in the northern suburbs of Seattle and parts of the Kitsap Peninsula, incumbent Democratic Congressman Jay Inslee did not face a serious challenge from Republican candidate Randy Eastwood and Libertarian Charles Moore. Congressman Inslee was able to crush both candidates in the general election to win his fifth nonconsecutive term in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 2\nIncumbent Congressman Rick Larsen has represented this Western Washington district, which extends from the northern and western suburbs of Seattle to the Canada\u2013US border in the north since he was first elected in 2000. This year, he was challenge by Republican Suzanne Sinclair and Libertarian Bruce Guthrie, but he was easily able to win a third term due to the liberal nature of his constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 3\nThis Western Washington district, which spans from Olympia to the Washington-Oregon border, has a moderate profile and has been represented by Democratic Congressman Brian Baird since 1999. Seeking a fourth term, Baird was opposed by Republican Thomas Crowson, but the Congressman\u2019s popularity allowed him to crush his opponent in a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 4\nIncumbent Republican Congressman Doc Hastings, who won his first term in 1994 by defeating fellow Congressman Jay Inslee, ran for a sixth term in this conservative, central Washington-based district. Hastings faced Democratic nominee Sandy Matheson in the general election, whom he was able to defeat convincingly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 5\nWhen incumbent Republican Congressman George Nethercutt opted to run for Senate instead of seeking a sixth term, an open seat was created. The Minority Leader of the Washington House of Representatives, Cathy McMorris, emerged as the Republican nominee, while Don Barbieri, a well-known developer based in Spokane became the Democratic nominee. McMorris was able to defeat Barbieri by a wide margin to win her first term in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 6\nCongressman Norm Dicks, the dean of the Washington congressional delegation, sought a fifteenth term in this liberal-leaning district based on the Kitsap Peninsula. Dicks faced perennial candidate and conservative activist Doug Cloud in the general election, but he was able to trump Cloud to seal another term in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 7\nIncumbent Democratic Congressman Jim McDermott, who has represented this solidly liberal district based in Seattle since he was first elected in 1988, ran for an eighth term in 2004. Facing Republican candidate Carol Cassady, McDermott was able to easily take victory, winning by the largest margin out of any Congressman that year in his state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 8\nIncumbent Republican Congresswoman Jennifer Dunn declined to seek a seventh term in this increasingly liberal district based in the eastern suburbs of Seattle and encompassing much of King County. King County Sheriff Dave Reichert became the Republican nominee. The Democratic primary attracted national attention with three major candidates: Heidi Behrens-Benedict, the Democratic nominee for the congressional seat in 1998, 2000, and 2002; former RealNetworks attorney Alex Alben; and KIRO radio host Dave Ross. Ross won the primary and ran as the Democratic nominee. Despite a grueling battle and the fact that the Democratic nominee for President, John Kerry, won the district that year, Reichert managed to pull out a thin victory and went to Congress for his first term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179161-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in Washington, District 9\nThis district has been represented by Democratic Congressman Adam Smith since he was first elected in 1996. Covering the densely populated area from the suburbs of Seattle to the northern portion of Olympia, the district has a moderately liberal population with a tendency to support Democratic candidates. Congressman Smith did not face a serious challenge from Republican Paul Lord and Green Party candidate Robert Posey and was re-elected to a fifth term with ease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 79], "content_span": [80, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179162-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in West Virginia\nThe 2004 United States House of Representatives elections in West Virginia were held on November 2, 2004 to determine who will represent the state of West Virginia in the United States House of Representatives. West Virginia has three seats in the House, apportioned according to the 2000 United States Census. Representatives are elected for two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179162-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in West Virginia, District 1\nIncumbent Democrat Alan Mollohan defeated Republican Alan Lee Parks. This district covers the northern part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179162-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in West Virginia, District 2\nIncumbent Republican Shelley Moore Capito defeated Democrat Erik Wells, a State Senator. This district covers the central part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179162-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States House of Representatives elections in West Virginia, District 3\nIncumbent Democrat Nick Rahall defeated Republican Delegate Rick Snuffer. This district covers the southern part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 82], "content_span": [83, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179163-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Olympic Trials (swimming)\nThe 2004 United States Olympic Trials for swimming events was held from July 7\u201314 in Long Beach, California. It was the qualifying meet for American swimmers who hoped to compete at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179163-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Olympic Trials (swimming), Results\nKey:\u00a0Highlighted swimmers achieved the qualification conditions to be included in the Olympic team in that respective event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179164-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Olympic Trials (track and field)\nThe 2004 United States Olympic Trials for track and field were held at Hornet Stadium in Sacramento, California. Organised by USA Track and Field, the ten-day competition lasted from July 9 until July 18 and served as the national championships in track and field for the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179164-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Olympic Trials (track and field)\nThe results of the event determined qualification for the American Olympic team at the 2004 Summer Olympics, held in Athens. Provided they had achieved the Olympic \"A\" standard, the top three athletes gained a place on the Olympic team. In the event that a leading athlete did not hold an \"A\" standard, or an athlete withdrew, the next highest finishing athlete with an \"A\" standard was selected instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179164-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Olympic Trials (track and field)\nThe trials for the men's marathon were held February 7 in Birmingham, Alabama, the women's marathon were held April 23 in St. Louis and the trials for the men's 50\u00a0km race walk were held February 15 in Chula Vista, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179165-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Alabama\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Alabama took place on November 2, 2004, alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Richard Shelby won re-election to a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179165-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Alabama, General election, Campaign\nShelby, who switched parties ten years prior, had over $11 million cash on hand. Shelby was Chairman of the Banking Committee. Wayne Sowell became the first black U.S. Senate nominee of a major party in Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179166-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Alaska\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Alaska took place on November 2, 2004, alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives, various state and local elections, and the presidential election of that year. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski of Anchorage, sought election to her first full term after being appointed to serve out the rest of her father's unexpired term when he resigned in December 2002 to become Governor of Alaska. Her main challenger was Democratic former governor Tony Knowles, her father's predecessor as governor. Murkowski won by a slight margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179166-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Alaska, Background\nAlthough Alaska is heavily Republican, popular opinion had swung against the Murkowski family because of a tax increase passed by Governor Frank Murkowski, Lisa Murkowski's father. In addition, many voters disapproved of apparent nepotism in the appointment of Lisa Murkowski to the Senate. Knowles, who as mentioned above preceded Frank Murkowski as governor, had enlisted extensive out-of-state support for his bid to take over Lisa Murkowski's Senate seat. However, veteran Republican Senator Ted Stevens taped advertisements warning Alaskans that electing a Democrat could result in fewer federal dollars for Alaska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179166-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Alaska, General election, Campaign\nLisa Murkowski had very low approval ratings as senator due to her father, Frank Murkowski, who at the time was the governor of Alaska with extremely low approval ratings himself. Former governor Tony Knowles ran against Murkowski. He ran as a Democrat who supported drilling in ANWR, in contrast to most Democrats. Ted Stevens tried to \"rescue\" her campaign and help her maintain her seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179167-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arizona\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Arizona took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator John McCain won re-election to a fourth term with his largest victory as a U.S. senator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179167-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arizona, General election, Campaign\nSince 1998, McCain had an eventful third term. He challenged Texas Governor George W. Bush in the Presidential primary and despite winning the New Hampshire primary, he lost the nomination. Solidifying his image as a maverick, he voted against the Bush tax cuts. He supported limits on stem cell research. He had a lopsided favorable ratings of 39% to 9% unfavorable in the most recent The New York Times/CBS News poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179167-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arizona, General election, Campaign\nStuart Starky, an eighth-grade teacher in South Phoenix, was widely known as a long-shot challenger. Starky stated that \"I truly believe he's going to run for president again.\" Starky was called by The Arizona Republic a \"sacrificial lamb\" put on ballot because there were no chances to beat McCain. During his campaign, he debated McCain twice, once in Tucson and once in Flagstaff. He was also featured on the cover of Teacher Magazine, dubbed the \"Unsinkable Stu Starky.\" Starky was defeated in a landslide. Despite the relatively low percentage, he gained the highest vote per dollar amount in the country, spending only about $15,000 for his campaign (Starky's campaign may have been aided by John Kerry running for president).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 73], "content_span": [74, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas\nIncumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Blanche Lincoln won re-election to a second term in office, while President George W. Bush carried the state with almost the same margin of victory. As of 2021, this is the last time the Democrats have won the Class 3 Senate seat from Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas, Background\nIncumbent Democrat Blanche Lincoln ran for re-election. Lincoln won re-election over Republican State Senator Jim Holt while President George W. Bush carried the state with almost the same margin of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas, Background\nThe Democratic Party held super-majority status in the Arkansas General Assembly. A majority of local and statewide offices were also held by Democrats. This was rare in the modern South, where a majority of statewide offices are held by Republicans. Arkansas had the distinction in 1992 of being the only state in the country to give the majority of its vote to a single candidate in the presidential election\u2014native son Bill Clinton\u2014while every other state's electoral votes were won by pluralities of the vote among the three candidates. Arkansas has become more reliably Republican in presidential elections in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas, Background\nThe state voted for John McCain in 2008 by a margin of 20 percentage points, making it one of the few states in the country to vote more Republican than it had in 2004, the others being Louisiana, Oklahoma, Tennessee and West Virginia. Obama's relatively poor showing in Arkansas was likely due to a lack of enthusiasm from state Democrats following former Arkansas First Lady Hillary Clinton's failure to win the nomination, and his relatively poor performance among rural white voters (Clinton, however, herself lost the state by an even greater margin as the Democratic nominee in 2016).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas, Background\nDemocrats had an overwhelming majority of registered voters, the Democratic Party of Arkansas is more conservative than the national entity. Two of Arkansas' three Democratic Representatives were members of the Blue Dog Coalition, which tends to be more pro-business, pro-military, and socially conservative than the center-left Democratic mainstream. Reflecting the state's large evangelical population, the state has a strong social conservative bent. Under the Arkansas Constitution Arkansas is a right to work state, its voters passed a ban on same-sex marriage with 74% voting yes, and the state is one of a handful that has legislation on its books banning abortion in the event Roe vs. Wade is ever overturned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179168-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Arkansas, General election, Campaign\nLincoln was a popular incumbent. In March, she had an approval rating of 55%. Lincoln called herself an advocate for rural America, having grown up on a farm herself. Holt was from Northwest Arkansas, and was also living on a farm. Holt was widely known as a long shot. By the end of June, he had raised just $29,000, while Lincoln had over $5 million cash on hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179169-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in California\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in California took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer ran for re-election and defeated Republican former Secretary of State Bill Jones. Boxer's 6.96 million votes set the all-time record for the most votes cast for one candidate in one state in one election, although it was surpassed by Senator Dianne Feinstein's 7.75 million votes in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179169-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in California, General election, Campaign\nBoxer originally had decided to retire in 2004 but changed her mind to \"fight for the right to dissent\" against conservatives like Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Jones was widely considered as the underdog. Jones got a major endorsement form the popular Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The two major candidates had a debate. Pre -election polling had Boxer leading in double digits. But he never released a single TV ad. Boxer portrayed Jones as too conservative for California, citing his votes in the California Assembly (1982 to 1994) against gun control, increased minimum wage, support for offshore drilling, and a loosening of environmental regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 76], "content_span": [77, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179169-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in California, General election, Fundraising\nJones raised about $700,000 more than Boxer during the third quarter, pulling in $2.5 million to Boxer's $1.8 million. But overall, Boxer has raised $16 million to Jones' $6.2 million. And Boxer has spent about $7 million on radio and television ads alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 79], "content_span": [80, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179169-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in California, General election, Results, Overall\nThe election was not close, with Boxer winning by an authoritative 20 point margin. Jones only performed well in rural parts of the state. Boxer on the other hand won almost all major metropolitan areas in the state. The race was called right when the polls closed at 11:00 P.M. EST, and 7:00 P.M. PTZ. Jones conceded defeat to Boxer at 11:12 P.M. EST, and 7:12 PTZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Colorado took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell decided to retire instead of seeking a third term. Democratic nominee Ken Salazar won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, Background\nOn March 3, 2004, incumbent Republican Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell announced that he would not seek reelection due to health concerns, having recently been treated for prostate cancer and heartburn. Before Campbell's retirement, no prominent Democrat had entered the race, with educator Mike Miles and businessman Rutt Bridges pursuing the Democratic nomination. After Campbell's retirement, many expected popular Republican Governor Bill Owens to enter the race, however he declined to run. Campbell's retirement and Owens' decision not to run prompted a number of prominent Democrats to reexamine the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, Democratic primary, Campaign\nOn March 10, the same day Owens announced he would not run, U.S. Congressman Mark Udall entered the race. The next day, state Attorney General Ken Salazar entered the race, leading Udall to immediately withdraw and endorse him. Salazar lost to Mike Miles at the State nominating convention. In spite of this loss, the national Democratic Party backed Salazar with contributions from the DSCC and promotion of Salazar as the only primary candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, Republican primary, Campaign\nThe two candidates got into an ideological battle, as Schaffer attacked Coors because his company had provided benefits to the partners of its gay and lesbian employees, in addition to promoting its beer in gay bars. Coors defended himself by saying that he was opposed to same-sex marriage, and supported a constitutional amendment to ban it, although he noted that he supported civil unions for gay couples. According to the Rocky Mountain News, Coors described his company's pro-LGBT practices as \"good business, separate from politics.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, Republican primary, Results\nCoors defeated Schaffer with 61% of the vote in the primary, with many analysts citing his high name recognition in the state as a primary factor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, General election, Campaign\nPete Coors, Chairman of Coors Brewing Company, ran as a moderate conservative. However, Salazar was also a moderate and a highly popular State Attorney General. Coors is also a great-grandson of Adolph Coors, founder of the brewing company. His father is Joseph Coors, President of the company and founding member of the conservative think tank, the Heritage Foundation. Salazar narrowly won the open seat. It was one of only two Democratic pickups in the 2004 Senate elections (Illinois was the other).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, General election, Finances\nAccording to the non-partisan Center for Responsive Politics (CPS), Coors gave his own campaign $1,213,657 and received individual donations of $60,550 from other Coors family members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179170-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Colorado, General election, Finances\nA state record total of over $11 million was raised during the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179171-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Connecticut\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Connecticut took place on November 2, 2004, alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democrat U.S. Senator Chris Dodd won re-election for a fifth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179171-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Connecticut, General election, Campaign\nIncumbent Chris Dodd was one of the most powerful senators in congress. In the election cycle, Dodd raised over $7 million. His top five contributors were Bear Stearns, Citigroup, National Westminster Bank, Lehman Brothers, and Goldman Sachs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179171-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Connecticut, General election, Campaign\nRepublican nominee, Jack Orchulli, ran as fiscal conservative and social moderate. He broke ranks with his party on gay marriage and abortion. That put him on the same side as most voters in the blue state of Connecticut. He often talked about a \"broken education system.\" He argued that Dodd hasn't done anything in his 30 years in congress to fix such issues as traffic problems in Fairfield County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179171-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Connecticut, General election, Campaign\nOrchulli launched a statewide TV ad campaign in September, as he spent over $1.1 million and pledged to spend \"whatever it takes\" if polls show he is gaining ground on Dodd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 77], "content_span": [78, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179172-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Florida\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Florida took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Bob Graham decided to retire instead of seeking a fourth term. Graham made an unsuccessful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. The primary elections were held on August 31, 2004. Republican Mel Mart\u00ednez won the open seat with 49.4% of the vote to Democratic nominee Betty Castor's 48.3%. With a margin of 1.1%, this election was the closest race of the 2004 Senate election cycle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179173-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Georgia\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Georgia took place on November 2, 2004, alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Zell Miller decided to retire, leaving an open seat. Majette became both the first African American and the first woman to be nominated for the U.S. Senate in Georgia. Republican Johnny Isakson won the open seat, marking the first time in history that Republicans held both of Georgia\u2019s U.S. Senate seats. Isakson would remain in the Senate until his resignation on December 31, 2019.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179173-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Georgia, Campaign\nMajette's announcement that she would seek to replace Miller also caught Democrats by surprise, as she was not on anyone's call list when Democrats began seeking a candidate to replace Miller. Further skepticism among Democrats about the viability of her candidacy surfaced when she announced that \"God\" had told her to run for the Senate. She received important endorsements from U.S. Senators Mary Landrieu of Louisiana and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, along with many others in Washington who campaigned and raised money for Majette. Her Senate campaign slogan was \"I'll be nobody's Senator, but yours.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179173-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Georgia, Campaign\nA number of factors led to Majette's loss. These include her late start, her valuable time and money spent in the runoff, larger conservative turnout from a proposed constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages (which Majette opposed), the popularity of President George W. Bush in Georgia, and her lack of experience (being a one-term congresswoman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179174-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Hawaii\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Hawaii took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democrat U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye won re-election to an eighth term in yet another landslide with over 75% of the vote, despite the state's relatively close single-digit margin of victory for John Kerry in the concurrent presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179174-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Hawaii, General election, Results\nInouye won every county with at least 70% of the vote. His best performance was in Kauai County, where he won with about 80%; also was Cavasso's weakest performance, getting just 16.5% of the vote there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179175-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Idaho\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Idaho took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Mike Crapo ran for re-election and won a second term in office in a landslide after no one filed for the Democratic Party nomination. Democrat Scott McClure conducted a write-in campaign but only received 4,136 votes, or about 1% of those cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179175-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Idaho, General election, Results\nCrapo won every county with over 90% of the vote. His weakest performance by far was in Latah County, where he got 95.6% of the vote to McClure's 4.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 70], "content_span": [71, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Illinois was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Peter Fitzgerald decided to retire after one term. The Democratic and Republican primary elections were held in March, which included a total of 15 candidates who combined to spend a record total of over $60 million seeking the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois\nOn March 16, 2004, State Senator Barack Obama won the Democratic primary, and businessman Jack Ryan won the Republican primary. Three months later, Ryan announced his withdrawal from the race four days after the Chicago Tribune persuaded a California court to release records from Ryan's divorce case, which included allegations that Ryan had pressured his then-wife actress Jeri Ryan to perform sexual acts in public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois\nSix weeks later, the Illinois Republican State Central Committee chose former Diplomat Alan Keyes to replace Ryan as the Republican candidate. The election was the first for the U.S. Senate in which both major-party candidates were African American. Obama won by 43%, the largest margin of victory for a U. S. Senate candidate in Illinois history. He served in the Senate for four years until he was elected President in 2008. He carried 92 of the state's 102 counties, including several where Democrats traditionally do not do well. The inequality in the candidates spending for the fall elections \u2013 $14,244,768 by Obama and $2,545,325 by Keyes \u2013 is also among the largest in history in both absolute and relative terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Election information\nThe primaries and general elections coincided with those for federal offices (president and House), as well as those for state offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Election information, Turnout\nFor the primary elections, turnout was 26.69%, with 1,904,800 votes cast. For the general election, turnout was 68.56%, with 5,141,520 votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Democratic primary, Campaign\nFitzgerald's predecessor, Democrat Carol Moseley Braun, declined to run. Barack Obama, a member of the Illinois Senate since 1997 and an unsuccessful 2000 Democratic primary challenger to four-term incumbent U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush for Rush's U.S House seat, launched a campaign committee at the beginning of July 2002 to run for the U.S. Senate, 21 months before the March 2004 primary,and two months later had David Axelrod lined up to do his campaign media. Obama formally announced his candidacy on January 21, 2003,four days after former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun announced she would not seek a rematch with U.S. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Democratic primary, Campaign\nOn April 15, 2003, with six Democrats already running and three Republicans threatening to run against him,incumbent Fitzgerald announced he would not seek a second term in 2004,and three weeks later popular Republican former Governor Jim Edgar declined to run, leading to wide open Democratic and Republican primary races with 15 candidates, including 7 millionaires(triggering the first application of the Millionaires' Amendment of the 2002 McCain\u2013Feingold Act), in the most expensive Senate primary in U.S. history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Democratic primary, Campaign\nObama touted his legislative experience and early public opposition to the Iraq War to distinguish himself from his Democratic primary rivals. Illinois Comptroller Dan Hynes won the endorsement of the AFL-CIO. Obama succeeded in obtaining the support of three of the state's largest and most active member unions: AFSCME, SEIU, and the Illinois Federation of Teachers. Hynes and multimillionaire former securities trader Blair Hull each won the endorsements of two of the nine Democratic Illinois members of the US House of Representatives. Obama had the endorsements of four: Jesse Jackson, Jr., Danny Davis, Lane Evans, and Jan Schakowsky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Democratic primary, Campaign\nObama surged into the lead after he finally began television advertising in Chicago in the final three weeks of the campaign, which was expanded to downstate Illinois during the last six days of the campaign. The ads included strong endorsements by the five largest newspapers in Illinois\u2014the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, Daily Herald, The Rockford Register Star, and Peoria Journal Star\u2014and a testimonial by Sheila Simon that Obama was \"cut from that same cloth\" as her father, the late former U.S. Senator Paul Simon, who had planned to endorse and campaign for Obama before his unexpected death in December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Democratic primary, Results\nOn March 16, 2004, Obama won the Democratic primary by an unexpected landslide\u2014receiving 53% of the vote, 29% ahead of his nearest Democratic rival, with a vote total that nearly equaled that of all eight Republican candidates combined\u2014which overnight made him a rising star in the national Democratic Party, started speculation about a presidential future, and led to the reissue of his memoir, Dreams from My Father. The Democratic primary election, including seven candidates who combined to spend over $46 million, was the most expensive U.S. Senate primary election in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 75], "content_span": [76, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Republican primary, Campaign\nGOP frontrunner Jack Ryan had divorced actress Jeri Ryan in 1999, and the records of the divorce were sealed at their mutual request. Five years later, when Ryan's Senate campaign began, the Chicago Tribune newspaper and WLS-TV, the local ABC affiliate, sought to have the records released. On March 3, 2004, several of Ryan's GOP primary opponents urged Ryan to release the records. Both Ryan and his wife agreed to make their divorce records public, but not make the child custody records public, claiming that the custody records could be harmful to their son if released. Ryan went on to win the GOP primary on March 16, 2004 defeating his nearest competitor, Jim Oberweis, by twelve percentage points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Republican primary, Campaign\nRyan was a proponent of across-the-board tax cuts and tort reform, an effort to limit payout in medical malpractice lawsuits. He was also a proponent of school choice and supported vouchers for private school students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, Republican primary, Campaign\nOberweis's 2004 campaign was notable for a television commercial where he flew in a helicopter over Chicago's Soldier Field, and claimed enough illegal immigrants came into America in a week (10,000 a day) to fill the stadium's 61,500 seats. Oberweis was also fined $21,000 by the Federal Election Commission for a commercial for his dairy that ran during his 2004 Senate campaign. The FEC ruled that the commercial wrongly benefited his campaign and constituted a corporate contribution, thus violating campaign law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nAs a result of the GOP and Democratic primaries, Democrat Barack Obama was pitted against Republican Jack Ryan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nRyan trailed Obama in early polls, after the media reported that Ryan had assigned Justin Warfel, a Ryan campaign worker, to track Obama's appearances. The tactic backfired when many people, including Ryan's supporters, criticized this activity. Ryan's spokesman apologized, and promised that Warfel would give Obama more space. Obama acknowledged that it is standard practice to film an opponent in public, and Obama said he was satisfied with Ryan's decision to have Warfel back off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nAs the campaign progressed, the lawsuit brought by the Chicago Tribune to open child custody files from Ryan's divorce was still continuing. Barack Obama's backers emailed reporters about the divorce controversy, but refrained from on-the-record commentary. On March 29, 2004, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Robert Schnider ruled that several of the Ryans' divorce records should be opened to the public, and ruled that a court-appointed referee would later decide which custody files should remain sealed to protect the interests of Ryan's young child. A few days later, on April 2, 2004, Barack Obama changed his position about the Ryans' soon-to-be-released divorce records, and called on Democrats to not inject them into the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nOn June 22, 2004, after receiving the report from the court appointed referee, the judge released the files that were deemed consistent with the interests of Ryan's young child. In those files, Jeri Ryan alleged that Jack Ryan had taken her to sex clubs in several cities, intending for them to have sex in public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nThe decision to release the files generated much controversy because it went against both parents' direct request, and because it reversed the earlier decision to seal the papers in the best interest of the child. Jim Oberweis, Ryan's defeated GOP opponent, commented that \"these are allegations made in a divorce hearing, and we all know people tend to say things that aren't necessarily true in divorce proceedings when there is money involved and custody of children involved.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nAlthough their sensational nature made the revelations fodder for tabloid and television programs specializing in such stories, the files were also newsworthy because of questions about whether Ryan had accurately described the documents to GOP party leaders. Prior to release of the documents, Ryan had told leading Republicans that five percent of the divorce file could cause problems for his campaign. But after the documents were released, GOP officials including state GOP Chair Judy Baar Topinka said they felt Ryan had misleadingly indicated the divorce records would not be embarrassing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Ryan\nThat charge of dishonesty led to intensifying calls for Ryan's withdrawal, though Topinka, who was considering running herself, said after the June 25 withdrawal that Ryan's \"decision was a personal one\" and that the state GOP had not pressured Ryan to drop out. Ryan's campaign ended less than a week after the custody records were opened, and Ryan officially filed the documentation to withdraw on July 29, 2004. Obama was left without an opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Keyes\nThe Illinois Republican State Central Committee chose former diplomat Alan Keyes to replace Ryan as the Republican candidate after former governor Jim Edgar, state treasurer Judy Baar Topinka, and former Chicago Bears head coach Mike Ditka declined to run. Keyes, a conservative Republican, faced an uphill battle. First, as a native of Maryland, he had almost no ties to Illinois. Second, he had an unsuccessful electoral track record, losing two races for U.S. Senate in Maryland by landslides and making unsuccessful bids for the Republican presidential nomination in 1996 and 2000. Third, Keyes's lack of electoral momentum enabled Obama to focus on campaigning in more conservative downstate regions, an unusual move for an Illinois Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Keyes\nMedia were angered by what they considered Keyes's parachute candidacy. The Chicago Tribune published a scathing editorial, calling him \"[t]he GOP's rent-a-senator\" and sarcastically listing basic facts about local geography for a candidate they suspected had no familiarity with the area: \"Keyes may have noticed a large body of water as he flew into O'Hare. That is called Lake Michigan. It's large. It's wide. It's deep. And we'll spoil the surprise: You can't even see across it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0021-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Keyes\nIn a similar vein, The New York Times published an editorial decrying \"the rank hypocrisy\", recalling that four years earlier, Keyes had attacked Hillary Clinton for establishing residency in New York for the first time only two months before announcing her U.S. Senate candidacy in that state. Keyes attacked Barack Obama for voting against a bill that would have outlawed a form of late-term abortion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Keyes\nRace became an issue in the contest between the two black candidates when Keyes claimed that he, not Obama, was the true \"African-American\". Indeed there were a handful of black spokesmen who did not consider Obama to be African-American. The black voters of Illinois voted 92% for Obama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Obama vs. Keyes\nObama ran the most successful Senate campaign in 2004, and was so far ahead in polls that he soon began to campaign outside of Illinois in support of other Democratic candidates. He gave large sums of campaign funds to other candidates and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and sent many of his volunteers to work on other races, including that of eventual three-term Congresswoman Melissa Bean who defeated then-Congressman Phil Crane in that year's election. Obama and Keyes differed on many issues including school vouchers and tax cuts, both of which Keyes supported and Obama opposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 81], "content_span": [82, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Results\nThe Obama-Keyes race was one of the first to be called on Election Day, November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Results\nAt the start of Keyes' candidacy in August, Keyes had 24% support in the polls. He received 27% of the vote in the November general election to Obama's 70%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Results\nFollowing the election, Keyes refused to call Obama to congratulate him. Media reports claimed that Keyes also failed to concede the race to Obama. Two days after the election, a radio interviewer asked Keyes whether he had conceded the race. Keyes replied, \"Of course I've conceded the race. I mean, I gave my speech to that effect.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Results\nOn the radio program, Keyes explained that his refusal to congratulate Obama was \"not anything personal,\" but was meant to make a statement against \"extend[ing] false congratulations to the triumph of what we have declared to be across the line.\" He said that Obama's position on moral issues regarding life and the family had crossed that line. \"I'm supposed to make a call that represents the congratulations toward the triumph of that which I believe ultimately stands for... a culture evil enough to destroy the very soul and heart of my country? I can't do this. And I will not make a false gesture,\" Keyes said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179176-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Illinois, General election, Results\nObama would go on to be elected President of the United States in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179177-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Indiana\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Indiana was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Evan Bayh won re-election to a second term. As of 2021, this is the last time the Democrats have won the Class 3 Senate seat from Indiana. Bayh won 86 of the state's 92 counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179177-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Indiana, Campaign\nIn September, Bayh had $6.5 million cash on hand. Scott's strategy of trying to paint Bayh as too liberal failed to gain traction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179177-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Indiana, Campaign\nIn early 2004, Bayh was considered a serious contender for the Vice Presidency as the running mate of Massachusetts Senator John Kerry. Although Bayh was on the final shortlist, North Carolina Senator John Edwards was ultimately chosen instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179177-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Indiana, General election, Results, By county\nBayh won 86 of Indiana's counties compared to 6 for Scott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 83], "content_span": [84, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179178-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Iowa\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Iowa was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican United States Senator Chuck Grassley ran for re-election to a fifth term in the United States Senate. Grassley and former State Senator Arthur A. Small won the Republican and Democratic primaries, respectively, unopposed, and faced each other in the general election. Though this election coincided with the highly competitive presidential election, Grassley was not considered vulnerable and defeated Small in a landslide. As of 2021, this is the last time a Republican Senate candidate won Johnson County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179179-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kansas\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Kansas was held November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Sam Brownback won re-election to a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179179-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kansas, Democratic primary, Results\nThough Robert Conroy won the Democratic nomination, he dropped out of the race shortly after becoming the nominee, noting that he expected Jones to win and was tired of campaigning. The Kansas Democratic Party selected Lee Jones as the replacement candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 73], "content_span": [74, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179179-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kansas, General election, Campaign\nBrownback raised $2.5 million for his re-election campaign, while Jones raised only $90,000. Kansas last elected a Democratic senator in 1932. Brownback was very popular in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179180-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kentucky\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Kentucky took place on November 2, 2004 alongside other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Jim Bunning narrowly won re-election to a second term over Democratic State Senator Daniel Mongiardo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179180-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kentucky, Democratic primary, Background\nFormer Governor Paul E. Patton was considered the initial frontrunner in the Democratic primary, but he opted not to run due to a scandal over an extramarital affair. Eventually, the Democrats settled on Daniel Mongiardo, a relatively unknown doctor and State Senator from Hazard, Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179180-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kentucky, General election, Campaign\nDuring his reelection bid in 2004, controversy erupted when Bunning described Mongiardo as looking \"like one of Saddam Hussein's sons.\" Bunning apologized, then later went on to declare that Mongiardo's \"thugs\" had assaulted his wife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179180-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kentucky, General election, Campaign\nBunning had an estimated $4 million campaign war chest, while Mongiardo had only $600,000. The Democrats began increasing financial support to Mongiardo when it became apparent that Bunning's bizarre behavior was costing him votes, purchasing more than $800,000 worth of additional television airtime on his behalf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179180-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Kentucky, General election, Campaign\nThe November 2 election was one of the closest in Kentucky history. The race turned out to be very close, with Mongiardo leading with as many as 80% of the returns coming in. However, Bunning eventually won by just over one percentage point after the western portion of the state, which is on Central Time, broke heavily for him. Some analysts felt that because of President George W. Bush's 20% margin of victory in the state, Bunning was able to effectively ride the President's coattails to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator John Breaux decided to retire after three terms in office. Republican U.S. Representative David Vitter won the jungle primary with 51% of the vote and avoided a runoff, becoming the first ever Republican to be popularly elected to the U.S. Senate from Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Campaign\nBreaux, considered the most popular politician in Louisiana, endorsed Chris John prior to the jungle primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Campaign\nDuring the campaign, Vitter was accused by a member of the Louisiana Republican State Central Committee of having had a lengthy affair with a prostitute in New Orleans. Vitter responded that the allegation was \"absolutely and completely untrue\" and that it was \"just crass Louisiana politics.\" The allegation later turned out to be true.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Campaign\nVitter won the Louisiana jungle primary with 51% of the vote, avoiding the need for a runoff. John received 29.2% of the vote and Kennedy (no relation to the Massachusetts Kennedys), took 14.9%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Campaign\nVitter won at least a plurality in 56 of Louisiana's 64 parishes. John carried nine parishes, all but two of which (Iberville and Orleans) are part of the House district he represented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Campaign\nKennedy changed parties and unsuccessfully ran as Republican in 2008 against Louisiana's senior Senator, Democrat Mary Landrieu, but he was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2016 upon Vitter's retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Campaign\nVitter was the first Republican in Louisiana to be popularly elected as a U.S. Senator. The previous Republican Senator, William Pitt Kellogg, was chosen by the state legislature in 1876, in accordance with the process used before the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution went into effect in 1914.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 57], "content_span": [58, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179181-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Louisiana, Aftermath\nVitter won reelection in 2010 in spite of allegations surrounding solicitations of prostitutes. He then ran for Governor of Louisiana in 2015, but lost to Democrat John Bel Edwards. After conceding defeat in the gubernatorial election, Vitter announced that he would not run for a third term in 2016. However, the open seat was won by John Neely Kennedy, the second losing Democratic candidate from the 2004 race. In the interim, Kennedy had switched to the Republican Party and unsuccessfully challenged Democratic U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 58], "content_span": [59, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179182-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Maryland\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Maryland was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democrat U.S. Senator Barbara Mikulski won re-election to a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179183-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Missouri\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Missouri was held November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Kit Bond won re-election to a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179184-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Nevada\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Nevada was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Harry Reid, the Senate Minority Whip, won re-election to a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179185-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in New Hampshire\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in New Hampshire was held November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Judd Gregg won re-election to a third term. As of 2021, this is the last time a male candidate won a U.S. Senate election in New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179186-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in New York\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in New York took place on November 2, 2004 along with elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as the presidential election, elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Chuck Schumer won re-election to a second term with 71.2% of the vote, a then-record margin of victory for any statewide candidate in New York's history. Schumer won every county in the state except for 1, namely, Hamilton County. The record was surpassed by Kirsten Gillibrand when she won re-election to a first full term in 2012 with 72% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179186-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in New York, General election, Campaign\nThe Conservative Party of New York opposed Republican nominee Assemblyman Howard Mills due to his support of civil unions and abortion rights. Instead, they supported ophthalmologist Marilyn O'Grady, a failed candidate for New York's 4th congressional district of the United States House of Representatives in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179186-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in New York, General election, Campaign\nPerennial candidate Abraham Hirschfeld, then 84 years old, ran for the office on a minor party line. It was the last campaign of his life, and he would die less than a year later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179186-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in New York, General election, Results\nSchumer's 71.2% of the vote is the second-highest total in New York election history. He won a majority of the vote in every county in the state besides Hamilton County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179187-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in North Carolina\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in North Carolina was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator John Edwards decided to retire from the Senate after one term in order to run unsuccessfully for the 2004 Democratic Party presidential nomination, and become his party's vice presidential nominee. Republican Richard Burr won the open seat, making it the fifth consecutive election in which partisan control of the seat changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179187-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in North Carolina, Primaries, Democratic\nErskine Bowles won the Democratic Party's nomination unopposed. He had been the party's nominee for the state's other Senate seat in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179187-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in North Carolina, General election, Campaign\nBoth major-party candidates engaged in negative campaign tactics, with Bowles' campaign attacking Burr for special interest donations and his positions on trade legislation, and Burr's campaign attacking Bowles for his connections to the Clinton administration. Both attacks had basis in reality: Burr's campaign raised funds from numerous political action committees and at least 72 of the 100 largest Fortune 500 companies, while Bowles departed from the Clinton administration in the midst of the Monica Lewinsky scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179187-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in North Carolina, General election, Campaign\nBurr won the election by 4%. He joined the Senate in January 2005. Bowles went on to become the president of the UNC system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179188-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in North Dakota\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in North Dakota was held on November 2, 2004, along with other elections to the United States Senate in other states as well as elections to the United States House of Representatives and various state and local elections. Incumbent Democratic-NPL U.S. Senator Byron Dorgan won re-election to a third term. As of 2021, this is the last time the Democratic-NPL won the Class 3 Senate seat from North Dakota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179189-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Ohio\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Ohio took place on November 2, 2004. It was concurrent with elections to the United States House of Representatives and the presidential election. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator George Voinovich won re-election to a second term with the highest raw vote total in Ohio history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179189-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Ohio, General election, Campaign\nA popular U.S. Senator, Voinovich was the heavy favorite to win the election. He had over $9 million in the bank, while his opponent barely had $1.5 million. Fingerhut's campaign was overshadowed by the possible campaign of Democrat and former Mayor of Cincinnati Jerry Springer, who eventually declined to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179189-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Ohio, General election, Campaign\nVoinovich is a moderate on some issues. He supports gun control and amnesty for undocumented immigrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179189-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Ohio, General election, Campaign\nSurprisingly, Voinovich's biggest advantage was getting support from the most Democratic-leaning county in the state, Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Kerry carried it with almost 67% of the vote, by far his best performance in the state in 2004. It is the home of Cleveland and it is also most populous county in the state. Voinovich was a former mayor of Cleveland. In addition, he catered to Cleveland's large Jewish population by visiting Israel six times as a first-term U.S. Senator. He also consistently voted for aid to Israel through foreign appropriations bills. He's supported resolutions reaffirming Israel's right to self-defense and condemned Palestinian terrorist attacks. In addition, Fingerhut's home base was in the Cleveland area, and therefore he had to cut in through the incumbent's home base in order to even make the election close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 917]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179189-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Ohio, General election, Campaign\nIn a September University of Cincinnati poll, the incumbent lead 64% to 34%. In an October ABC News poll, Voinovich was winning 60% to 35%. He led across almost all demographic groups Only among Democrats, non-whites, liberals, and those who pick health care as #1 issue favor Fingerhut. The election coincided with the presidential election, where Ohio was a swing state. 27% of Voinovich's supporters preferred U.S. Senator John Kerry for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 70], "content_span": [71, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179189-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Ohio, General election, By congressional district\nVoinovich won 17 of 18 congressional districts, including 6 that have democratic congressman and 5 that voted for John Kerry in the presidential race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 87], "content_span": [88, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma took place on November 2, 2004. The election was concurrent with elections to the United States House of Representatives and the presidential election. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Don Nickles decided to retire instead of seeking a fifth term. Republican nominee Tom Coburn won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, Republican primary, Campaign\nHumphreys, the former Mayor of Oklahoma City, ran for the United States Senate with institutional conservative support, namely from Senators Don Nickles and Jim Inhofe, as well as former Congressman J. C. Watts. However, Coburn received support from the Club for Growth and conservative activists within Oklahoma. Humphreys noted, \"[Coburn is] kind of a cult hero in the conservative portion of our party, not just in Oklahoma. You can't get right of the guy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, Republican primary, Campaign\nMuch of Coburn's celebrity within the Republican Party came from his tenure in Congress, where he battled House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who he argued was moving the party to the center of the political spectrum due to their excessive federal spending. Coburn's maverick nature culminated itself in 2000 when he backed conservative activist Alan Keyes for President rather than George W. Bush or John McCain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, Republican primary, Campaign\nUltimately, Coburn triumphed over Humphreys, Anthony, and Hunt in the primary, winning every county in Oklahoma except for tiny Harmon County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, General election, Campaign\nCarson and Coburn engaged each other head-on in one of the year's most brutal Senate contests. Coburn and the National Republican Senatorial Committee attacked Carson for being too liberal for Oklahoma and for being a vote in lockstep with John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, and Ted Kennedy. To drive the point home, one television advertisement aired by the Coburn campaign accused Carson of being \"dangerously liberal\" and not supporting the War on Terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, General election, Campaign\nCoburn was aided in this effort by the fact that the Kerry campaign did not contest the state of Oklahoma and that incumbent President George W. Bush was expected to win Oklahoma comfortably. This was compounded by the fact that Vice-President Dick Cheney campaigned for Coburn and appeared in several television advertisements for him. Carson countered by emphasizing his Stilwell roots and his moderation, specifically, bringing attention to the fact that he fought for greater governmental oversight of nursing home care for the elderly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179190-0003-0002", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oklahoma, General election, Campaign\nCarson responded to the attacks against him by countering that his opponent had committed Medicaid fraud years prior, in an event that reportedly left a woman sterilized without her consent. Ultimately, however, Carson was not able to overcome Oklahoma's conservative nature and Senator Kerry's abysmal performance in Oklahoma, and he was defeated by Coburn by 11.5%. As of 2019, the result remains the closest the Democrats have come to winning a Senate election in Oklahoma since David Boren won a landslide reelection victory in 1990.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179191-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Oregon\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Oregon was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Ron Wyden won re-election to a second full term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Arlen Specter won re-election to a fifth term. As of 2021, this is the last time a Republican statewide candidate won Montgomery and Delaware Counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, Democratic primary, Campaign\nDemocrats had difficulty recruiting top tier candidates against the popular Specter. Among the Democrats to decline to run for the nomination were Treasurer (and former Republican) Barbara Hafer, Public Utilities Commissioner John Hanger, real estate mogul Howard Hanna, State Representative (and also former Republican) John Lawless, and State Senator (and future Congresswoman) Allyson Schwartz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, Democratic primary, Campaign\nCongressman Hoeffel ended up running unopposed for the Democratic nomination. Software businessman Charlie Crystle was considered a strong possible candidate, but he dropped out before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, Republican primary, Campaign\nSpecter faced a primary challenge from Representative Pat Toomey. Despite the state Republican Party's strong history of embracing a moderate philosophy, the influence of conservatism among rank-and-file members had been steadily growing for decades; because of his liberal social views, Specter was often considered to be a \"Republican in Name Only\" by the right. Although Specter had a huge fundraising advantage, Toomey was aided by $2 million of advertising from the Club for Growth, a conservative political action committee that focuses on fiscal issues and targets moderate Republican incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, Republican primary, Campaign\nToomey criticized Specter as a spendthrift on economic policy and as out of touch with his own party on social issues. Although Toomey had difficulty with name recognition early in the campaign, he built huge momentum over the final weeks preceding the primary, and Specter appeared to have transitioned from having a comfortable lead to being behind his challenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, Republican primary, Campaign\nSpecter received a huge boost from the vocal support of President George W. Bush; most of the state's Republican establishment also closed ranks behind Specter. This included Pennsylvania's other U.S. Senator, Rick Santorum, who was noted for his social conservative views. Many Republicans at the state and national level feared that if Toomey beat Specter, he wouldn't be able to defend the seat against his Democratic opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 80], "content_span": [81, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, General election, Campaign\nFor Democrats, hope of winning the election centered on Toomey's defeat of Specter. However, after the challenge from the right failed, enthusiasm from the party establishment waned and Hoeffel had difficulty matching the name recognition and fundraising power of his opponent Despite contempt from conservatives, Specter enjoyed high levels of support from independent voters and, as in previous elections, a surprisingly large crossover from Democratic voters. Even in the areas in which Toomey performed best in the Republican primary (mainly the state's conservative, rural center), Specter performed well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179192-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Pennsylvania, General election, Campaign\nExcept for his large margin of victory in almost uniformly Democratic Philadelphia, Hoeffel was crushed at the polls; his only other wins came by close margins in three metro Pittsburgh counties; although President Bush proved to be unpopular in the state, voters were not willing to abandon Specter over party affiliation. Incidentally, Toomey was elected to the seat in 2010, after Specter switched to the Democratic Party in 2009 and subsequently lost renomination to U.S. Congressman and former Navy Admiral Joe Sestak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179193-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina was held on November 2, 2004. Longtime incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Fritz Hollings retired, and Republican U.S. Representative Jim DeMint won the open seat. DeMint was the first Republican to hold this Senate seat since Reconstruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179193-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina, Republican primary, Campaign\nThe Senate election two years earlier in 2002 did not have a primary election because the South Carolina Republicans were more preoccupied with the gubernatorial contest, despite having the first open senate seat in 40 years. The retirement of Democratic Senator Fritz Hollings gave the Republicans an opportunity to pick up the seat and with no other interesting positions up for election in 2004, a crowded field developed in the Republican primary. Furthermore, the Republicans were motivated by having President Bush at the top of the ticket enabling them to ride his coattails to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179193-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina, Republican primary, Campaign\nFormer Governor David Beasley, from the Pee Dee, entered the race and quickly emerged as the frontrunner because of his support from the evangelical voters. However, during his term as governor from 1994 to 1998 he had greatly angered the electorate by proposing to remove the Confederate Naval Jack from the dome of the statehouse and by being against the adoption of a state lottery to provide for college scholarships. Both positions led to the loss of his re-election in 1998 and the issues continued to trouble him in the Senate race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179193-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina, Republican primary, Campaign\nThe battle for second place in the primary was between Upstate congressman, Jim DeMint, and Charleston developer Thomas Ravenel. DeMint was able to squeak out a second-place finish because Charlie Condon, a former Attorney General of South Carolina, split the Lowcountry vote with Ravenel thus providing DeMint the margin he needed. In addition, while many voters were attracted to the Ravenel campaign and felt that he had a future in politics, they believed that he should set his sights on a less high-profile office first before trying to become senator. Resigned to defeat, Ravenel endorsed DeMint in the runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179193-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina, Republican primary, Campaign\nIn the runoff election on June 22, 2004, DeMint scored a surprising victory over Beasley. Ravenel's endorsement of DeMint proved crucial as the Lowcountry counties heavily went for the Representative from the Upstate. Also, Beasley had burnt too many bridges while governor and was unable to increase his share of the vote in the runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 82], "content_span": [83, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179193-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Carolina, General election, Campaign\nDeMint entered the general election campaign severely weakened from the primary fight, having spent most of his campaign funds. He stressed to the voters that he would follow conservative principles and provide an important Republican vote in the closely divided Senate. Democrats fared poorly in statewide elections in South Carolina, so Tenenbaum tried to make the race about issues rather than party identification. She attacked DeMint's support of the FairTax proposal because it would increase the sales tax by 23%. The election victory by DeMint merely cemented South Carolina's shift to the Republican column as the best candidate the Democrats could offer was soundly defeated by the typical 10 point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 80], "content_span": [81, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator and Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle ran for re-election to a fourth term, but was narrowly defeated by Republican John Thune.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota\nDaschle was the only incumbent U.S. Senator to lose re-election in the 2004 election cycle. His defeat also marked the first time a Senate party leader lost a bid for reelection since 1952, when Barry Goldwater defeated Ernest McFarland in Arizona. With a margin of 1.2%, this election was the second-closest race of the 2004 Senate election cycle, behind only the election in Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nIn the 2004 congressional elections, Daschle lost his seat to Republican challenger and former U.S. Representative John Thune in a bitterly contested battle. Thune prevailed by a narrow 50.6\u201349.4% margin, of 4,508 votes. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist visited South Dakota to campaign for Thune, breaking an unwritten tradition that one party's leader in the Senate would not campaign directly for the other's defeat. Daschle's loss resulted in the first ousting of a majority or minority leader since 1952 when Arizona Senator Ernest McFarland lost his seat to Barry Goldwater. He was the only incumbent Senator from either party to lose reelection in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nThroughout the campaign, Thune, along with Frist, President George W. Bush, and Vice President Dick Cheney, frequently accused Daschle of being the \"chief obstructionist\" of Bush's agenda and charged him with using filibusters to block confirmation of several of Bush's nominees to the federal judiciary. Thune also used moral values such as issues surrounding same-sex marriage and abortion to convince South Dakota voters that Daschle's positions on such topics were out-of-sync with the state's residents. The Republican candidate also drove home his strong support for the President while blasting Daschle for his vehement opposition to Bush. He attempted to sway voters by remembering that Bush won South Dakota in a landslide in 2000 and had a very high job-approval rating among South Dakotans. His opponent, the Minority Leader, repeatedly argued that he was funneling money into South Dakota for vital federal highway and water pet projects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 1029]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nDaschle responded to Thune's claim that he was a partisan anti-Bush obstructionist by pointing to his action just nine days after the September 11 attacks when he hugged President Bush on the Senate floor following Bush's address to Congress and the nation. He also hit back by alleging that Thune wanted to \"rubber stamp what the administration is doing.\" Daschle's use of the video of his embrace of Bush forced the Republican National Committee to demand that the ad be pulled, claiming that it suggests that Bush endorses Daschle. Shortly following the airing of the ad, in a nationally televised debate on NBC's Meet the Press, Thune accused Daschle of \"emboldening the enemy\" in his skepticism of the Iraq War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nDaschle also noticeably relied very heavily on the power of incumbency to win a fourth term. Some also argued that Stephanie Herseth's election to the state's only House seat hurt Daschle, as voters may not have been comfortable sending an all-Democratic delegation to Congress for the first time in many decades. Accusations that Daschle was possibly considering no longer being an official resident of South Dakota was believed to have offended voters there. Others have analyzed that Daschle's lengthy consideration and eventual rejection of a potential run for the presidency in 2004 took a toll on South Dakotans, who felt betrayed and used by Daschle as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nWhen the race began in early 2004, Daschle led by 7 points in January and February. By May, his lead minimized to just 2 points and into the summer polls showed a varying number of trends: either Daschle held a slim 1- to 2-point lead or Thune held a slim 1- to 2-point lead or the race was tied right down the middle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nThroughout September, Daschle led Thune by margins of 2 to 5 percent while during the entire month of October into the November 2 election, most polls showed that Thune and Daschle were dead even, usually tied 49-49 among likely voters. Some polls showed either Thune or Daschle leading by extremely slim margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nThune was an aide to former Senator James Abdnor, the man Daschle defeated in 1986 to gain his seat in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nDaschle spent a great deal of time and energy campaigning for his fellow Democrat Tim Johnson in 2002, who barely defeated Thune by 524 votes. He argued that by re-electing Johnson, South Dakota would be better off because Johnson would help to keep Daschle Majority Leader. However, in the end, while Johnson won, other states voted for enough Republicans that Daschle was no longer majority leader. Furthermore, Thune's whisker-close defeat in 2002 freed him up to run against Daschle in 2004. Had Daschle not put his considerable weight to re-electing Johnson, it seems very likely that Thune would have beaten Johnson, leaving Daschle without a strong challenger for the upcoming election and making his re-election a certainty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179194-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in South Dakota, General election, Campaign\nDuring Daschle's farewell Address on November 19, 2004, he received a standing ovation from the Senate floor. His term as South Dakota's senator expired on January 3, 2005, with the commencement of the 109th Congress. Harry Reid took over as Minority Leader, and became Majority Leader in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179195-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Utah\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Utah was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Bob Bennett won re-election to a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179196-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Vermont\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Vermont was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy won reelection to a sixth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179197-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Washington\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Washington was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democrat U.S. Senator Patty Murray won re-election to a third term, defeating Republican U.S. Representative George Nethercutt. She became only the fourth Washington senator to win 3 consecutive terms, just after fellow Democrats Warren G. Magnuson and Scoop Jackson. Nethercutt was known for having defeated Tom Foley, the sitting Speaker of the House of Representatives, as part of the 1994 Republican wave.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179197-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Washington\nTerm limits became an issue in the campaign, as Democrats seized on Nethercutt's broken term-limits pledge that he had made when he had unseated Foley in 1994. Geography was also against Nethercutt, who was severely hampered by his lack of name recognition in the more densely populated western part of the state, home to two-thirds of the state's population. Washington has not elected a Senator from east of the Cascades since Clarence Dill in 1928. Other important issues included national security and the war in Iraq. Nethercutt supported the invasion of Iraq, while Murray opposed it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179197-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Washington\nNethercutt was considered a heavy underdog from the start, and his campaign never gained much traction. In November, he lost by 12 points, receiving 43 percent of the vote to Murray's 55 percent. He only carried two counties west of the Cascades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179198-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Wisconsin\nThe 2004 United States Senate election in Wisconsin was held on November 2, 2004. Incumbent Democratic U.S. Senator Russ Feingold won re-election to a third term. As of 2021, this is the last time the Democrats won the Class 3 Senate seat from Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179198-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Wisconsin, General election, Campaign\nMichels insisted he has more real world experience than Feingold, someone he called an \"extreme liberal\" who was out of touch with Wisconsin voters. Feingold attacked back by saying that any Republican would be a rubber stamp for President Bush. The incumbent had $2.2 million in the bank, while Michels had already spent $1 million in the primary and had only about $150,000 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 75], "content_span": [76, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179198-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Wisconsin, General election, Campaign\nWhen the NRSC was convinced in October that Michels had a chance of victory, they pledged $600,000 for him. However, they quickly rescinded this support as a result of negative press garnered by Michels' ads, which were widely viewed as extremely negative and misleading, and due to Feingold's continued large margin over Michels in the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 75], "content_span": [76, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179198-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate election in Wisconsin, General election, Campaign\nOn October 1, a poll showed Feingold leading 52% to 39%. In mid October, another poll showed Feingold winning 48% to 43%. A poll at the end of the month showed him leading 51% to 36%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 75], "content_span": [76, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections\nThe 2004 United States Senate elections were held on November 2, 2004, with all Class 3 Senate seats being contested. They coincided with the re-election of George W. Bush as president and the United States House election, as well as many state and local elections. Senators who were elected in 1998, known as Senate Class 3, were seeking re-election or retiring in 2004. This was the third consecutive election for Senate Class 3 where the Democrats either broke even or lost seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections\nThis also marked the first time since 1980 in which a presidential candidate from either party won with coattails in the Senate. As of 2021, these are the last elections held during a Presidential election year in which the Republicans made a net gain of seats. Furthermore, this was the most recent election in which a Senate party leader lost reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Gains and losses\nRepublicans won six seats but lost two themselves, giving them a net gain of four seats. Five of the six gains came from Southern states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Gains and losses\nConservative Democrat Zell Miller of Georgia, who campaigned for President Bush, chose not to run for re-election and Republican Johnny Isakson won his seat; Democrat Fritz Hollings of South Carolina chose not to run for re-election and was succeeded by Republican Jim DeMint; Democratic vice presidential nominee John Edwards did not run for re-election and Republican Richard Burr won his North Carolina seat; Democrat Bob Graham of Florida chose not to run for re-election, and his seat went to Republican Mel Martinez; Louisiana Democrat John Breaux chose not to run for re-election and Republican David Vitter won his seat, and in South Dakota, Republican John Thune defeated the incumbent Senate minority leader Tom Daschle, the first time since 1952 that a sitting party leader lost re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Gains and losses\nRepublican Senator Peter Fitzgerald of Illinois chose not to run for re-election and Democrat Barack Obama won in a landslide, becoming the Senate's only black member and only the third popularly elected since Reconstruction. Also, Republican Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado chose not to run for re-election and Democrat Ken Salazar won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Political parties\nThe Senate, as of the pre-election 108th Congress, was composed of 51 Republicans, 48 Democrats, and 1 independent. (The independent, Jim Jeffords of Vermont, was allied with the Democratic caucus and had voted with Democrats to give them the majority in the past.) The Democrats, therefore, needed to make a net gain of at least two seats from retiring or incumbent Republicans to gain control of the Senate (one seat if Kerry won the presidency). In the election, incumbent senators won reelection in all races but one (Democratic leader Tom Daschle, in South Dakota, lost to Republican John Thune). The seats of retiring senators were taken by the opposing party in Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, North Carolina, and South Carolina. In fact, the only retiring senator whose seat was taken by a member of his party was Republican Don Nickles of Oklahoma, who was succeeded by Tom Coburn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 962]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Political parties\nRepublicans gained four seats in the 2004 elections, and entered the 109th Congress with a 55\u201344\u20131 lead. While such a majority is formidable, it is still less than the 60 seats needed to override a filibuster and completely control the body's agenda and procedures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Political parties, Major parties\nOne Republican seat, that of retiring Senator Peter Fitzgerald in Illinois, was easily taken by Democrat Barack Obama, who would be elected President of the United States four years later. In Colorado, retiring Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell's seat was narrowly taken by Democrat Ken Salazar. In Alaska, Republican Lisa Murkowski won reelection in a tight race. In Oklahoma, Tom Coburn kept Don Nickles' seat in Republican hands, while in Kentucky, Republican Jim Bunning won a second term by a very narrow margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Political parties, Major parties\nThe Democrats' prospects were weakened by the fact that five of their six incumbent senators in Southern states were retiring (the sixth, Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas, easily won reelection). Retiring Georgia Sen. Zell Miller's seat, contested by Denise Majette, was lost in a landslide, as was that of South Carolina Sen. Ernest Hollings. In North Carolina, Democrat Erskine Bowles lost John Edwards's seat to Republican Richard Burr. Especially close races in Florida, Louisiana, and South Dakota all resulted in turnovers to the Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Political parties, Third and minor parties\nThe Libertarian, Constitution, and Green parties contested many of the seats. No candidate from any of these parties received sufficient support to achieve election, but some may have affected the outcome of the Alaska and Florida races by drawing votes away from the major party candidates. Of the 34 senate seats up for grabs, the Libertarians ran candidates in 20 of the races, the Constitutionalists ran 10 candidates, and the Greens ran 7 candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Political parties, Third and minor parties\nMinor parties in a number of states contested one or more Senate seats. Examples include the America First Party, the Labor Party, the Peace and Freedom Party, and the Socialist Workers Party. None of these parties gained a seat in this election nor received a significant number of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 79], "content_span": [80, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Race summary, Elections leading to the next Congress\nIn these general elections, the winners were elected for the term beginning January 3, 2005; ordered by state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 89], "content_span": [90, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Closest races\nIn seven races the margin of victory was under 10%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Alabama\nIncumbent Republican Richard Shelby won re-election to a fourth term over Democratic perennial candidate Wayne Sowell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Alabama\nShelby, who switched parties ten years prior, had over $11 million cash on hand. Shelby was chairman of the Banking Committee. Wayne Sowell became the first black U.S. Senate nominee of a major party in Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Alaska\nIncumbent Republican Lisa Murkowski of Anchorage, sought election to her first full term after being appointed to serve out the rest of her father's unexpired term when he resigned in December 2002 to become Governor of Alaska. Her main challenger was Democratic former Governor Tony Knowles, her father's predecessor as governor. Murkowski won by a slight margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Alaska\nAlthough Alaska is heavily Republican, popular opinion had swung against the Murkowski family because of a tax increase passed by Governor Frank Murkowski, Lisa Murkowski's father. In addition, many voters disapproved of apparent nepotism in the appointment of Lisa Murkowski to the Senate. Knowles, who as mentioned above preceded Frank Murkowski as governor, had enlisted extensive out-of-state support for his bid to take over Lisa Murkowski's Senate seat. However, veteran Republican Senator Ted Stevens taped advertisements warning Alaskans that electing a Democrat could result in less federal dollars for Alaska.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Alaska\nLisa Murkowski had very low approval ratings as senator due to her father, Frank Murkowski, who at the time was the Governor of Alaska with extremely low approval ratings himself. Former Governor Tony Knowles ran against Murkowski. He ran as a Democrat who supported drilling in ANWR, in contrast to most Democrats. Ted Stevens tried to \"rescue\" her campaign and help her maintain her seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arizona\nIncumbent Republican John McCain won re-election to a fourth term with his largest victory over Democratic teacher Stuart Starky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arizona\nSince 1998, McCain challenged Texas Governor George W. Bush in the Presidential primary and despite winning the New Hampshire primary, he lost the nomination. Solidifying his image as a maverick, he voted against the Bush tax cuts. He supported limits on stem cell research. He had a lopsided favorable ratings of 39% to 9% unfavorable in the most recent The New York Times/CBS News poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arizona\nStuart Starky, an eighth-grade teacher in South Phoenix, was widely known as a long-shot challenger. Starky stated that \"I truly believe he's going to run for president again.\" Starky was called by The Arizona Republic a \"sacrificial lamb\" put on ballot because there were no chances to beat McCain. During his campaign, he debated McCain twice, once in Tucson and once in Flagstaff. He was also featured on the cover of Teacher Magazine, dubbed the \"Unsinkable Stu Starky.\" Starky was defeated in a landslide. But, despite the relatively low percentage, he gained the highest vote per dollar amount in the country, spending only about $15,000 for his campaign (Starky's campaign may have been aided by John Kerry running for president).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arkansas\nIncumbent Democrat Blanche Lincoln ran for re-election. Lincoln won re-election over Republican State Senator Jim Holt while President George W. Bush carried the state with almost the same margin of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arkansas\nThe Democratic Party held super-majority status in the Arkansas General Assembly. A majority of local and statewide offices were also held by Democrats. This was rare even for the time in the South, where a majority of statewide offices were and still are held by Republicans. Arkansas had the distinction in 1992 of being the only state in the country to give the majority of its vote to a single candidate in the presidential election\u2014native son Bill Clinton\u2014while every other state's electoral votes were won by pluralities of the vote among the three candidates. Arkansas had since become more reliably Republican in presidential elections. The state voted for George W. Bush over John Kerry in 2004. Lincoln won by 2% less than she had in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arkansas\nDemocrats at the time had an overwhelming majority of registered voters, and the Democratic Party of Arkansas was more conservative than the national entity. Two of Arkansas' three Democratic Representatives at the time were members of the Blue Dog Coalition, which tends to be more pro-business, pro-military spending, and socially conservative than the Democratic mainstream.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Arkansas\nLincoln was a popular incumbent. In March, she an approval rating of 55%. Lincoln calls herself an advocate for rural America, having grown up on a farm herself. Holt is from Northwest Arkansas, who also lives on a farm. Holt was widely perceived as a long shot. By the end of June, he only raised $29,000, while Lincoln had over $5 million cash on hand. Lincoln won re-election by over 11%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, California\nIncumbent Democrat Barbara Boxer defeated Republican former Secretary of State Bill Jones. Boxer's 6.96 million votes set the record for the most votes cast for one candidate in one state in one election, until it was surpassed by Senator Dianne Feinstein's 7.75 million votes in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, California\nBoxer originally had decided to retire in 2004 but changed her mind to \"fight for the right to dissent\" against conservatives like Majority Leader Tom DeLay. Jones was widely considered as the underdog. Jones got a major endorsement from the popular Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The two major candidates had a debate. Pre -election polling had Boxer leading in double digits. But he never released a single TV ad. Boxer portrayed Jones as too conservative for California, citing his votes in the California Assembly (1982 to 1994) against gun control, increased minimum wage, support for offshore drilling, and a loosening of environmental regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, California\nJones raised about $700,000 more than Boxer during the third quarter, pulling in $2.5 million to Boxer's $1.8 million. But overall, Boxer has raised $16 million to Jones' $6.2 million. And Boxer has spent about $7 million on radio and television ads alone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, California\nThe election was not close, with Boxer winning by an authoritative 20 point margin. Jones only performed well in rural parts of the state. Boxer on the other hand won almost all major metropolitan areas in the state. The race was called right when the polls closed at 11:00 P.M. EST, and 7:00 P.M. PTZ. Jones conceded defeat to Boxer at 11:12 P.M. EST, and 7:12 PTZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nIncumbent Republican Ben Nighthorse Campbell decided to retire instead of seeking a third term. The Democratic Attorney General of Colorado Ken Salazar won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nBefore Campbell's retirement, no prominent Democrat had entered the race, with educator Mike Miles and businessman Rutt Bridges pursuing the Democratic nomination. After Campbell's retirement, many expected popular Republican Governor Bill Owens to enter the race, however he declined to run. Campbell's retirement and Owens' decision not to run prompted a number of prominent Democrats to reexamine the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nOn March 10, the same day Owens announced he would not run, U.S. Congressman Mark Udall entered the race. The next day, state Attorney General Ken Salazar entered the race, leading Udall to immediately withdraw and endorse him. Salazar lost to Mike Miles at the State nominating convention. In spite of this loss, the national Democratic Party backed Salazar with contributions from the DSCC and promotion of Salazar as the only primary candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nThe two candidates got into an ideological battle, as U.S. Representative Bob Schaffer attacked Pete Coors, former CEO and chairman of Coors Brewing Company, because his company had provided benefits to the partners of its gay and lesbian employees, in addition to promoting its beer in gay bars. Coors defended himself by saying that he was opposed to same-sex marriage, and supported a constitutional amendment to ban it, although he noted that he supported civil unions for gay couples. According to the Rocky Mountain News, Coors described his company's pro-LGBT practices as \"good business, separate from politics.\" Coors defeated Schaffer with 61% of the vote in the primary, with many analysts citing his high name recognition in the state as a primary factor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nPete Coors ran as a moderate conservative. However, Salazar was also a moderate and a highly popular State Attorney General. Coors is also a great-grandson of Adolph Coors, founder of the brewing company. His father is Joseph Coors, president of the company and founding member of the conservative think tank, the Heritage Foundation. Salazar narrowly won the open seat. It was one of only two Democratic pickups in the 2004 Senate elections (Illinois was the other).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nAccording to the non-partisan Center for Responsive Politics (CPS), Coors gave his own campaign $1,213,657 and received individual donations of $60,550 from other Coors family members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Colorado\nA state record of over $11 million was raised during the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Connecticut\nIncumbent Democrat Chris Dodd won re-election for a fifth term, beating Republican Jack Orchulli, CEO and co-founder of a Michael Kors's apparel company", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Connecticut\nChris Dodd was one of the most powerful senators in congress. In the election cycle, Dodd raised over $7 million. His top five contributors were Bear Stearns, Citigroup, National Westminster Bank, Lehman Brothers, and Goldman Sachs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Connecticut\nRepublican nominee, Jack Orchulli, ran as fiscal conservative and social moderate. He broke ranks with his party on gay marriage and abortion. That put him on the same side as most voters in the blue state of Connecticut. He often talked about a \"broken education system.\" He argued that Dodd hasn't done anything in his 30 years in congress to fix such issues as traffic problems in Fairfield County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Connecticut\nOrchulli launched a statewide TV ad campaign in September, as he spent over $1.1 million and pledged to spend \"whatever it takes\" if polls show he is gaining ground on Dodd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nIncumbent Democrat Bob Graham retired after three terms. The primary elections were held on August 31, 2004. Republican Mel Mart\u00ednez won the open seat, beating Democrat Betty Castor, former president of the University of South Florida, former Education Commissioner of Florida, and former state senator. Mart\u00ednez, a former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, was supported by the Bush Administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nUntil the spring of 2004, Castor's fundraising was much slower than her Democratic and Republican rivals. In the spring, the campaign hired fundraising staff from the defunct presidential campaigns of Howard Dean and Bob Graham, and subsequently posted much higher fundraising numbers over the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0038-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nOnline grassroots techniques devised for the Dean campaign (Castor became a Dean Dozen candidate in August) were one contributing factor: another was the support of EMILY's List, which named Castor as its highest-rated candidate for the 2004 election cycle, even when her support for banning intact dilation and extraction (D&X) abortions was not in line with the EMILY's List support for woman's issues. The latter was a source of criticism during the August primary heat - a complaint was filed by a Deutsch supporter with the Federal Election Commission accusing inappropriate coordination with EMILY's List. The complaint was dismissed by the Federal Election Commission in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nCastor's handling of Sami Al-Arian became another source of criticism during the campaign. In June, The American Democracy Project, a 527 group founded by Bernie Friedman, began attacking Castor's handling of the incident, alleging that she had sufficient evidence to fire Al-Arian in the mid-1990s. Castor responded by stating that she never had sufficient evidence to fire Al-Arian, who was a tenured professor at the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0039-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nOn June 29, Senator Graham, who had previously remained outside of the Al-Arian controversy, released a statement that \"Betty Castor acted appropriately as President of the University of South Florida to deal with Sami Al-Arian\": later, Graham and Senator Bill Nelson brokered an agreement between the Democratic candidates to refrain from negative campaigning against each other, although this agreement appeared to break down in the final weeks of the race, when Deutsch launched attack ads on television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nDespite these controversies, Castor won the Democratic nomination on August 31. She was defeated, however, by Republican candidate Mel Mart\u00ednez in a close race on November 2, 2004. The overwhelming support for Mart\u00ednez among Latinos effectively counterbalanced Castor's relatively high popularity among swing voters throughout the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Florida\nThere was some speculation that Castor would run for Governor of Florida in 2006 to replace Jeb Bush, who was ineligible for re-election due to term limits, but she announced in 2005 that she would not be a candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Georgia\nIncumbent Democrat Zell Miller retired. Democratic U.S. Representative Denise Majette became both the first African American and the first woman to be nominated for the U.S. Senate in Georgia. Republican U.S. Representative Johnny Isakson won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Georgia\nThe results were almost a complete reversal from the previous election in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Georgia\nMajette's announcement that she would seek to replace Miller also caught Democrats by surprise, as she was not on anyone's call list when Democrats began seeking a candidate to replace Miller. Further skepticism among Democrats about the viability of her candidacy surfaced when she announced that \"God\" had told her to run for the Senate. She received important endorsements from U.S. Senators Mary Landrieu of Louisiana and Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, along with many others in Washington who campaigned and raised money for Majette. Her Senate campaign slogan was \"I'll be nobody's Senator, but yours.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Georgia\nA number of factors led to Majette's loss. These include her late start, her valuable time and money spent in the runoff, larger conservative turnout from a proposed constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages (which Majette opposed), the popularity of President George W. Bush in Georgia, and her lack of experience (being a one-term congresswoman).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Hawaii\nIncumbent Democrat U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye won re-election to an eighth term over Republican, Campbell Cavasso, a former state representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Hawaii\nInouye won every single county with at least 70% of the vote. His best performance was in Kauai County, where he won with an estimated 80%; also was Cavasso's weakest performance, getting just 16.5% of the vote there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Idaho\nIncumbent Republican Mike Crapo won a second term in a landslide after no one filed for the Democratic nomination. Democrat Scott McClure conducted a write-in campaign but only received 4,136 votes, or about 1% of those cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Idaho\nCrapo won every county with over 95% of the vote. His weakest performance by far was in Latah County, where he got 95.6% of the vote to McClure's 4.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nIncumbent Republican Peter Fitzgerald decided to retire after one term. The Democratic and Republican primary elections were held in March, which included a total of 15 candidates who combined to spend a record total of over $60 million seeking the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nState Senator and future President Barack Obama won the Democratic primary and Jack Ryan won the Republican primary. Ryan later withdrew from the race four days after the Chicago Tribune persuaded a California court to release child custody records. The Illinois Republican State Central Committee chose former Diplomat Alan Keyes to replace Ryan as the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nThe election was the first for the U.S. Senate in which both major party candidates were African American. Obama's 43% margin of victory was the largest in the state history of U.S. Senate elections. The inequality in the candidates spending for the fall elections \u2013 $14,244,768 by Obama and $2,545,325 by Keyes \u2013 is also among the largest in history in both absolute and relative terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nFitzgerald's predecessor, Democrat Carol Moseley Braun, declined to run. Barack Obama, a member of the Illinois Senate since 1997 and an unsuccessful 2000 Democratic primary challenger to four-term incumbent U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush for Rush's U.S House seat, launched a campaign committee at the beginning of July 2002 to run for the U.S. Senate, 21 months before the March 2004 primary, and two months later had David Axelrod lined up to do his campaign media. Obama formally announced his candidacy on January 21, 2003, four days after former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley Braun announced she would not seek a rematch with U.S. Sen. Peter Fitzgerald.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nOn April 15, 2003, with six Democrats already running and three Republicans threatening to run against him, incumbent Fitzgerald announced he would not seek a second term in 2004, and three weeks later popular Republican former Governor Jim Edgar declined to run, leading to wide open Democratic and Republican primary races with 15 candidates, including 7 millionaires (triggering the first application of the Millionaires' Amendment of the 2002 McCain\u2013Feingold Act), in the most expensive Senate primary in U.S. history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nObama touted his legislative experience and early public opposition to the Iraq War to distinguish himself from his Democratic primary rivals. Illinois Comptroller Dan Hynes won the endorsement of the AFL-CIO. Obama succeeded in obtaining the support of three of the state's largest and most active member unions: AFSCME, SEIU, and the Illinois Federation of Teachers. Hynes and multimillionaire former securities trader Blair Hull each won the endorsements of two of the nine Democratic Illinois members of the US House of Representatives. Obama had the endorsements of four: Jesse Jackson, Jr., Danny Davis, Lane Evans, and Jan Schakowsky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nObama surged into the lead after he finally began television advertising in Chicago in the final three weeks of the campaign, which was expanded to downstate Illinois during the last six days of the campaign. The ads included strong endorsements by the five largest newspapers in Illinois\u2014the Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, Daily Herald, The Rockford Register Star, and Peoria Journal Star\u2014and a testimonial by Sheila Simon that Obama was \"cut from that same cloth\" as her father, the late former U.S. Senator Paul Simon, who had planned to endorse and campaign for Obama before his unexpected death in December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nOn March 16, 2004, Obama won the Democratic primary by an unexpected landslide\u2014receiving 53% of the vote, 29% ahead of his nearest Democratic rival, with a vote total that nearly equaled that of all eight Republican candidates combined\u2014which overnight made him a rising star in the national Democratic Party, started speculation about a presidential future, and led to the reissue of his memoir, Dreams from My Father. The Democratic primary election, including seven candidates who combined to spend over $46 million, was the most expensive U.S. Senate primary election in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nGOP frontrunner Jack Ryan had divorced actress Jeri Ryan in 1999, and the records of the divorce were sealed at their mutual request. Five years later, when Ryan's Senate campaign began, the Chicago Tribune newspaper and WLS-TV, the local ABC affiliate, sought to have the records released. On March 3, 2004, several of Ryan's GOP primary opponents urged Ryan to release the records. Both Ryan and his wife agreed to make their divorce records public, but not make the child custody records public, claiming that the custody records could be harmful to their son if released. Ryan went on to win the GOP primary on March 16, 2004 defeating his nearest competitor, Jim Oberweis, by twelve percentage points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nRyan was a proponent of across-the-board tax cuts and tort reform, an effort to limit payout in medical malpractice lawsuits. He was also a proponent of school choice and supported vouchers for private school students.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nOberweis's 2004 campaign was notable for a television commercial where he flew in a helicopter over Chicago's Soldier Field, and claimed enough illegal immigrants came into America in a week (10,000 a day) to fill the stadium's 61,500 seats. Oberweis was also fined $21,000 by the Federal Election Commission for a commercial for his dairy that ran during his 2004 Senate campaign. The FEC ruled that the commercial wrongly benefited his campaign and constituted a corporate contribution, thus violating campaign law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nAs a result of the GOP and Democratic primaries, Democrat Barack Obama was pitted against Republican Jack Ryan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nRyan trailed Obama in early polls, after the media reported that Ryan had assigned Justin Warfel, a Ryan campaign worker, to track Obama's appearances. The tactic backfired when many people, including Ryan's supporters, criticized this activity. Ryan's spokesman apologized, and promised that Warfel would give Obama more space. Obama acknowledged that it is standard practice to film an opponent in public, and Obama said he was satisfied with Ryan's decision to have Warfel back off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nAs the campaign progressed, the lawsuit brought by the Chicago Tribune to open child custody files from Ryan's divorce was still continuing. Barack Obama's backers emailed reporters about the divorce controversy, but refrained from on-the-record commentary. On March 29, 2004, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Robert Schnider ruled that several of the Ryans' divorce records should be opened to the public, and ruled that a court-appointed referee would later decide which custody files should remain sealed to protect the interests of Ryan's young child. A few days later, on April 2, 2004, Barack Obama changed his position about the Ryans' soon-to-be-released divorce records, and called on Democrats to not inject them into the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nOn June 22, 2004, after receiving the report from the court appointed referee, the judge released the files that were deemed consistent with the interests of Ryan's young child. In those files, Jeri Ryan alleged that Jack Ryan had taken her to sex clubs in several cities, intending for them to have sex in public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nThe decision to release the files generated much controversy because it went against both parents' direct request, and because it reversed the earlier decision to seal the papers in the best interest of the child. Jim Oberweis, Ryan's defeated GOP opponent, commented that \"these are allegations made in a divorce hearing, and we all know people tend to say things that aren't necessarily true in divorce proceedings when there is money involved and custody of children involved.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nAlthough their sensational nature made the revelations fodder for tabloid and television programs specializing in such stories, the files were also newsworthy because of questions about whether Ryan had accurately described the documents to GOP party leaders. Prior to release of the documents, Ryan had told leading Republicans that five percent of the divorce file could cause problems for his campaign. But after the documents were released, GOP officials including state GOP Chair Judy Baar Topinka said they felt Ryan had misleadingly indicated the divorce records would not be embarrassing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nThat charge of dishonesty led to intensifying calls for Ryan's withdrawal, though Topinka, who was considering running herself, said after the June 25 withdrawal that Ryan's \"decision was a personal one\" and that the state GOP had not pressured Ryan to drop out. Ryan's campaign ended less than a week after the custody records were opened, and Ryan officially filed the documentation to withdraw on July 29, 2004. Obama was left without an opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nThe Illinois Republican State Central Committee chose former diplomat Alan Keyes to replace Ryan as the Republican candidate. Keyes, a conservative Republican from Maryland, faced an uphill battle. First, Keyes had few ties to Illinois political leaders. Second, the lack of an opponent allowed Obama to campaign throughout the more conservative downstate regions to build up name recognition. Third, Keyes was seen as a carpetbagger, only establishing legal residency in Calumet City, Illinois days before running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nThe Chicago Tribune in an editorial, stated that \"Mr. Keyes may have noticed a large body of water as he flew into O'Hare. That is called Lake Michigan.\" In 2000, Keyes attacked Hillary Clinton for running for US Senator from New York even though she had never lived there, calling her a carpetbagger. Keyes attacked Barack Obama for voting against a bill that would have outlawed a form of late-term abortion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nObama ran the most successful Senate campaign in 2004, and was so far ahead in polls that he soon began to campaign outside of Illinois in support of other Democratic candidates. He gave large sums of campaign funds to other candidates and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and sent many of his volunteers to work on other races, including that of eventual three-term Congresswoman Melissa Bean who defeated then-Congressman Phil Crane in that year's election. Obama and Keyes differed on many issues including school vouchers and tax cuts, both of which Keyes supported and Obama opposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nThe Obama-Keyes race was one of the first to be called on Election Day, November 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nAt the start of Keyes's candidacy in August, Keyes had 24% support in the polls. He received 27% of the vote in the November general election to Obama's 70%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nFollowing the election, Keyes refused to call Obama to congratulate him. Media reports claimed that Keyes also failed to concede the race to Obama. Two days after the election, a Two days after the electionradio interviewer asked Keyes whether he had conceded the race. Keyes replied, \"Of course I've conceded the race. I mean, I gave my speech to that effect.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Illinois\nOn the radio program, Keyes explained that his refusal to congratulate Obama was \"not anything personal,\" but was meant to make a statement against \"extend[ing] false congratulations to the triumph of what we have declared to be across the line.\" He said that Obama's position on moral issues regarding life and the family had crossed that line. \"I'm supposed to make a call that represents the congratulations toward the triumph of that which I believe ultimately stands for... a culture evil enough to destroy the very soul and heart of my country? I can't do this. And I will not make a false gesture,\" Keyes said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Indiana\nIncumbent Democrat Evan Bayh won re-election to a second term, beating Republican Marvin Scott, a professor at Butler University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Indiana\nIn September, Bayh had $6.5 million cash on hand. Scott's strategy of trying to paint Bayh as too liberal failed to gain traction. Bayh was viewed early in 2004 as a serious vice presidential candidate for John Kerry. Bayh was on the final shortlist for a Kerry running mate, but North Carolina Senator John Edwards was chosen as Kerry's running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Indiana\nBayh won 86 of Indiana's counties compared to 6 for Scott.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Iowa\nIncumbent Republican Chuck Grassley won a fifth term, beating former Democratic Iowa State Senator Arthur A. Small. Though this election coincided with the highly competitive presidential election in Iowa, Grassley was in little danger of losing his seat and defeated Small handily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kansas\nIncumbent Republican Sam Brownback won re-election to a second term over Democratic railroad engineer Lee Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kansas\nThough Robert Conroy won the Democratic nomination, he dropped out of the race shortly after becoming the nominee, noting that he expected Jones to win and was tired of campaigning. The Kansas Democratic Party selected Lee Jones as the replacement candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kansas\nBrownback raised $2.5 million for his re-election campaign, while Jones raised only $90,000. Kansas last elected a Democratic senator in 1932. Brownback was very popular in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kentucky\nIncumbent Republican Jim Bunning won re-election to a second term. Democratic primary front runner Paul E. Patton, the governor, saw his career implode in a scandal over an extramarital affair. Eventually, the Democrats settled on Daniel Mongiardo, a relatively unknown doctor and state senator from Hazard, Kentucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kentucky\nDuring his re-election bid in 2004, controversy erupted when Bunning described Mongiardo as looking \"like one of Saddam Hussein's sons.\" Bunning apologized, then later went on to declare that Mongiardo's \"thugs\" had assaulted his wife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kentucky\nBunning had an estimated $4 million campaign war chest, while Mongiardo had only $600,000. The Democrats began increasing financial support to Mongiardo when it became apparent that Bunning's bizarre behavior was costing him votes, purchasing more than $800,000 worth of additional television airtime on his behalf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Kentucky\nThe November 2 election was one of the closest in Kentucky history. The race turned out to be very close, with Mongiardo leading with as many as 80% of the returns coming in. However, Bunning eventually won by just over one percentage point. Some analysts felt that because of President George Bush's 20% margin of victory in the state, Bunning was able to effectively ride the President's coattails to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Louisiana\nIncumbent Democrat John Breaux retired. Republican U.S. Representative David Vitter won the jungle primary over Democratic U.S. Representative Chris John with 51% of the vote and avoided a runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Louisiana\nDuring the campaign, Vitter was accused by a member of the Louisiana Republican State Central Committee of having had a lengthy affair with a prostitute in New Orleans. Vitter responded that the allegation was \"absolutely and completely untrue\" and that it was \"just crass Louisiana politics.\" The allegation later turned out to be true.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Louisiana\nVitter won the Louisiana jungle primary with 51% of the vote, avoiding the need for a runoff. John received 29.2% of the vote and Kennedy (no relation to the Massachusetts Kennedys), took 14.9%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0089-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Louisiana\nVitter won at least a plurality in 56 of Louisiana's 64 parishes. John carried nine parishes, all but two of which (Iberville and Orleans) are part of the House district he represented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0090-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Louisiana\nKennedy changed parties and ran as Republican in 2008 against Louisiana's senior senator, Democrat Mary Landrieu. Landrieu was re-elected. Kennedy succeeded Vitter when he won the 2016 election for the seat over Democrat Foster Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0091-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Louisiana\nVitter was the first Republican in Louisiana to be popularly elected as a U.S. Senator. The previous Republican Senator, William Pitt Kellogg, was chosen by the state legislature in 1876, in accordance with the process used before the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution went into effect in 1914.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0092-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Maryland\nIncumbent Democrat Barbara Mikulski won re-election to a fourth term over Republican State Senator E. J. Pipkin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0093-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Missouri\nIncumbent Republican Kit Bond won re-election to a fourth term over Nancy Farmer, State Treasurer of Missouri and former Missouri State Representative", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0094-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Nevada\nIncumbent Democrat Harry Reid, the Senate Minority Whip, won re-election to a fourth term over Republican anti-gay marriage activist Richard Ziser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0095-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, New Hampshire\nIncumbent Republican Judd Gregg won re-election to his third term, easily beating Democratic activist Doris Haddock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0096-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, New York\nIncumbent Democrat Chuck Schumer won re-election to his second term, easily beating Republican Howard Mills.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0097-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, North Carolina\nIncumbent Democrat John Edwards decided to retire from the Senate, ran unsuccessfully for the 2004 Democratic Party presidential nomination, and became his party's vice presidential nominee. Republican Richard Burr won the open seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0098-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, North Carolina\nErskine Bowles won the Democratic Party's nomination unopposed. He had been the party's nominee for the state's other Senate seat in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0099-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, North Carolina\nBoth major-party candidates engaged in negative campaign tactics, with Bowles' campaign attacking Burr for special interest donations and his positions on trade legislation, and Burr's campaign attacking Bowles for his connections to the Clinton administration. Both attacks had basis in reality: Burr's campaign raised funds from numerous political action committees and at least 72 of the 100 largest Fortune 500 companies, while Bowles departed from the Clinton administration in the midst of the Monica Lewinsky scandal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0100-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, North Carolina\nBurr won the election by 4%. He joined the Senate in January 2005. Bowles went on to become the president of the UNC system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0101-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, North Dakota\nIncumbent Dem-NPL-er Byron Dorgan won re-election to a third term over Republican attorney Mike Liffrig", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0102-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Ohio\nIncumbent Republican George Voinovich won re-election to a second term over Democrat Eric Fingerhut, state senator and former U.S. Representative from Ohio's 19th congressional district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0103-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Ohio\nA popular U.S. Senator, Voinovich was the heavy favorite to win the election. He had over $9 million in the bank, while his opponent barely had $1.5 million. Fingerhut's campaign was overshadowed by the possible campaign of Democrat and former mayor of Cincinnati Jerry Springer, who eventually declined to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0104-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Ohio\nVoinovich was considered a moderate on some issues. He supported gun control and amnesty for illegal immigrants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0105-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Ohio\nSurprisingly, Voinovich's biggest advantage was getting support from the most Democratic-leaning county in the state, Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Kerry carried it with almost 67% of the vote, by far his best performance in the state in 2004. It is the home of Cleveland and it is also most populous county in the state. Voinovich was a former mayor of Cleveland. In addition, he catered to Cleveland's large Jewish population by visiting Israel six times as a first-term U.S. Senator. He also consistently voted for aid to Israel through foreign appropriations bills. He's supported resolutions reaffirming Israel's right to self-defense and condemned Palestinian terrorist attacks. In addition, Fingerhut's home base was in the Cleveland area, and therefore he had to cut in through the incumbent's home base in order to even make the election close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 888]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0106-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Ohio\nIn a September University of Cincinnati poll, the incumbent lead 64% to 34%. In an October ABC News poll, Voinovich was winning 60% to 35%. He led across almost all demographic groups Only among Democrats, non-whites, liberals, and those who pick health care as #1 issue favor Fingerhut. It should be noted that the election coincided with the presidential election, where Ohio was a swing state. 27% of Voinovich's supporters preferred U.S. Senator John Kerry for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0107-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nIncumbent Republican Don Nickles decided to retire instead of seeking a fifth term. Republican nominee Tom Coburn won the open seat, beating Brad Carson, a Democratic U.S. Representative", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0108-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nKirk Humphreys, the former mayor of Oklahoma City, ran for the United States Senate with institutional conservative support, namely from Senators Don Nickles and Jim Inhofe, as well as former Congressman J. C. Watts. However, Coburn received support from the Club for Growth and conservative activists within Oklahoma. Humphreys noted, \"[Coburn is] kind of a cult hero in the conservative portion of our party, not just in Oklahoma. You can't get right of the guy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0108-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nMuch of Coburn's celebrity within the Republican Party came from his tenure in Congress, where he battled House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who he argued was moving the party to the center of the political spectrum due to their excessive federal spending. Coburn's maverick nature culminated itself in 2000 when he backed conservative activist Alan Keyes for President rather than George W. Bush or John McCain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0109-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nUltimately, Coburn triumphed over Humphreys, Anthony, and Hunt in the primary, winning every county in Oklahoma except for tiny Harmon County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0110-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nCarson and Coburn engaged each other head-on in one of the year's most brutal Senate contests. Coburn and the National Republican Senatorial Committee attacked Carson for being too liberal for Oklahoma and for being a vote in lockstep with John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, and Ted Kennedy. To drive the point home, one television advertisement aired by the Coburn campaign accused Carson of being \"dangerously liberal\" and not supporting the War on Terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0110-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nCoburn was aided in this effort by the fact that the Kerry campaign did not contest the state of Oklahoma and that incumbent President George W. Bush was expected to win Oklahoma comfortably. This was compounded by the fact that Vice-President Dick Cheney campaigned for Coburn and appeared in several television advertisements for him. Carson countered by emphasizing his Stilwell roots and his moderation, specifically, bringing attention to the fact that he fought for greater governmental oversight of nursing home care for the elderly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0110-0002", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oklahoma\nCarson responded to the attacks against him by countering that his opponent had committed Medicaid fraud years prior, in an event that reportedly left a woman sterilized without her consent. Ultimately, however, Carson was not able to overcome Oklahoma's conservative nature and Senator Kerry's abysmal performance in Oklahoma, and he was defeated by Coburn by 11.5%. As of 2014, the result remains the closest the Democrats have come to winning a Senate election in Oklahoma since Republican Don Nickles was first elected to the Senate by 8.7% in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0111-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Oregon\nIncumbent Democrat Ron Wyden won re-election to a second full term over Republican rancher Al King,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0112-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nIncumbent Republican Arlen Specter won re-election to a fifth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0113-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nDemocrats had difficulty recruiting top tier candidates against the popular Specter. Among the Democrats to decline to run for the nomination were Treasurer (and former Republican) Barbara Hafer, Public Utilities Commissioner John Hanger, real estate mogul Howard Hanna, State Representative (and also former Republican) John Lawless, and State Senator (and future Congresswoman) Allyson Schwartz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0114-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nCongressman Hoeffel ended up running unopposed for the Democratic nomination. Software businessman Charlie Crystle was considered a strong possible candidate, but he dropped out before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0115-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nSpecter faced a primary challenge from U.S. Representative Pat Toomey. Despite the state Republican Party's strong history of embracing a moderate philosophy, the influence of conservatism among rank-and-file members had been steadily growing for decades; because of his liberal social views, Specter was often considered to be a \"Republican in Name Only\" by the right. Although Specter had a huge fundraising advantage, Toomey was aided by $2 million of advertising from the Club for Growth, a conservative political action committee that focuses on fiscal issues and targets moderate Republican incumbents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0115-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nToomey criticized Specter as a spendthrift on economic policy and as out of touch with his own party on social issues. Although Toomey had difficulty with name recognition early in the campaign, he built huge momentum over the final weeks preceding the primary, and Specter appeared to have transitioned from having a comfortable lead to being behind his challenger", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0116-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nSpecter received a huge boost from the vocal support of President George W. Bush; most of the state's Republican establishment also closed ranks behind Specter. This included Pennsylvania's other U.S. Senator, Rick Santorum, who was noted for his social conservative views. Many Republicans at the state and national level feared that if Toomey beat Specter, he wouldn't be able to defend the seat against his Democratic opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0117-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nFor Democrats, hope of winning the election centered on Toomey's defeat of Specter. However, after the challenge from the right failed, enthusiasm from the party establishment waned and Hoeffel had difficulty matching the name recognition and fundraising power of his opponent Despite contempt from conservatives, Specter enjoyed high levels of support from independent voters and, as in previous elections, a surprisingly large crossover from Democratic voters. Even in the areas in which Toomey performed best in the Republican primary (mainly the state's conservative, rural center), Specter performed well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0117-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Pennsylvania\nExcept for his large margin of victory in almost uniformly Democratic Philadelphia, Hoeffel was crushed at the polls; his only other wins came by close margins in three metro Pittsburgh counties; although President Bush proved to be unpopular in the state, voters were not willing to abandon Specter over party affiliation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0118-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Carolina\nIncumbent Democrat Fritz Hollings decided to retire. Jim DeMint, a Republican U.S. Representative won the open seat over Democrat Inez Tenenbaum, the South Carolina Superintendent of Education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0119-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Carolina\nThe Senate election two years earlier in 2002 did not have a primary election because the South Carolina Republicans were more preoccupied with the gubernatorial contest, despite having the first open senate seat in 40 years. The retirement of Democratic Senator Fritz Hollings gave the Republicans an opportunity to pick up the seat and with no other interesting positions up for election in 2004, a crowded field developed in the Republican primary. Furthermore, the Republicans were motivated by having President Bush at the top of the ticket enabling them to ride his coattails to victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0120-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Carolina\nFormer Governor David Beasley, from the Pee Dee, entered the race and quickly emerged as the frontrunner because of his support from the evangelical voters. However, during his term as governor from 1994 to 1998 he had greatly angered the electorate by proposing to remove the Confederate Naval Jack from the dome of the statehouse and by being against the adoption of a state lottery to provide for college scholarships. Both positions led to the loss of his re-election in 1998 and the issues continued to trouble him in the Senate race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0121-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Carolina\nThe battle for second place in the primary was between Upstate congressman, Jim DeMint, and Charleston developer Thomas Ravenel. DeMint was able to squeak out a second-place finish because Charlie Condon, a former Attorney General of South Carolina, split the Lowcountry vote with Ravenel thus providing DeMint the margin he needed. In addition, while many voters were attracted to the Ravenel campaign and felt that he had a future in politics, they believed that he should set his sights on a less high-profile office first before trying to become senator. Resigned to defeat, Ravenel endorsed DeMint in the runoff election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0122-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Carolina\nIn the runoff election on June 22, 2004, DeMint scored a surprising victory over Beasley. Ravenel's endorsement of DeMint proved crucial as the Lowcountry counties heavily went for the Representative from the Upstate. Also, Beasley had burnt too many bridges while governor and was unable to increase his share of the vote in the runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0123-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Carolina\nDeMint entered the general election campaign severely weakened from the primary fight, having spent most of his campaign funds. He stressed to the voters that he would follow conservative principles and provide an important Republican vote in the closely divided Senate. Democrats fared poorly in statewide elections in South Carolina, so Tenenbaum tried to make the race about issues rather than party identification. She attacked DeMint's support of the FairTax proposal because it would increase the sales tax by 23%. The election victory by DeMint merely cemented South Carolina's shift to the Republican column as the best candidate the Democrats could offer was soundly defeated by the typical 10 point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0124-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nIn the 2004 Congressional elections, Daschle lost his seat to Republican challenger and former U.S. Representative John Thune in a bitterly contested battle. Thune prevailed by a narrow 50.6\u201349.4% margin, of 4,508 votes. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist visited South Dakota to campaign for Thune, breaking an unwritten tradition that one party's leader in the Senate would not campaign directly for the other's defeat. Daschle's loss resulted in the first ousting of a majority or minority leader since 1952 when Arizona Senator Ernest McFarland lost his seat to Barry Goldwater. Daschle's Senate term expired on January 3, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0125-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nThroughout the campaign, Thune, along with Frist, President Bush, and Vice President Cheney, frequently accused Daschle of being the \"chief obstructionist\" of Bush's agenda and charged him with using filibusters to block confirmation of several of Bush's nominees to the federal judiciary. Thune also used moral values such as issues surrounding same-sex marriage and abortion to convince South Dakota voters that Daschle's positions on such topics were out-of-sync with the state's residents. The Republican candidate also drove home his strong support for the President while blasting Daschle for his vehement opposition to Bush. He attempted to sway voters by remembering that Bush won South Dakota in a landslide in 2000 and had a very high job-approval rating among South Dakotans. His opponent, the Minority Leader, repeatedly argued that he was funneling money into South Dakota for vital federal highway and water pet projects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 985]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0126-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nDaschle responded to Thune's claim that he was a partisan anti-Bush obstructionist by pointing to his action just nine days after the September 11 attacks when he hugged President Bush on the Senate floor following Bush's address to Congress and the nation. He also hit back by alleging that Thune wanted to \"rubber stamp what the administration is doing.\" Daschle's use of the video of his embrace of Bush forced the Republican National Committee to demand that the ad be pulled, claiming that it suggests that Bush endorses Daschle. Shortly following the airing of the ad, in a nationally televised debate on NBC's Meet the Press, Thune accused Daschle of \"emboldening the enemy\" in his skepticism of the Iraq War.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0127-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nDaschle also noticeably relied very heavily on the power of incumbency to win a fourth term. Some also argued that Stephanie Herseth's election to the state's only House seat hurt Daschle, as voters may not have been comfortable sending an all-Democratic delegation to Congress for the first time in many decades. Accusations that Daschle was possibly considering no longer being an official resident of South Dakota was believed to have offended voters there. Others have analyzed that Daschle's lengthy consideration and eventual rejection of a potential run for the presidency in 2004 took a toll on South Dakotans, who felt betrayed and used by Daschle as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0128-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nWhen the race began in early 2004, Daschle led by 7 points in January and February. By May, his lead minimized to just 2 points and into the summer polls showed a varying number of trends: either Daschle held a slim 1- to 2-point lead or Thune held a slim 1- to 2-point lead or the race was tied right down the middle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0128-0001", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nThroughout September, Daschle led Thune by margins of 2 to 5 percent while during the entire month of October into the November 2 election, most polls showed that Thune and Daschle were dead even, usually tied 49\u201349 among likely voters. Some polls showed either Thune or Daschle leading by extremely slim margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0129-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nThune was an aide to former Senator James Abdnor, the man Daschle defeated in 1986 to gain his seat in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0130-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, South Dakota\nDaschle spent a great deal of time and energy campaigning for his fellow Democrat Tim Johnson in 2002, who barely defeated Thune by 524 votes. He argued that by re-electing Johnson, South Dakota would be better off because Johnson would help to keep Daschle Majority Leader. However, in the end, while Johnson won, other states voted for enough Republicans that Daschle was no longer majority leader. Furthermore, Thune's whisker-close defeat in 2002 freed him up to run against Daschle in 2004. Had Daschle not put his considerable weight to re-electing Johnson, it seems very likely that Thune would have beaten Johnson, leaving Daschle without a strong challenger for the upcoming election and making his re-election a certainty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0131-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Utah\nIncumbent Republican Bob Bennett won re-election to a third term easily beating Democrat Paul Van Dam, former Attorney General of Utah and former Salt Lake County District Attorney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0132-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Vermont\nIncumbent Democrat Patrick Leahy won re-election to a sixth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0133-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Washington\nIncumbent Democrat Patty Murray won re-election. She became only the fourth Washington senator to win 3 consecutive terms, just after fellow Democrats Warren G. Magnuson and Scoop Jackson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0134-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Washington\nTerm limits became an issue in the campaign, as Democrats seized on Nethercutt's broken term-limits pledge that he had made when he unseated Speaker Tom Foley in 1994. Nethercutt was also hampered by his lack of name recognition in the more densely populated western part of the state, home to two-thirds of the state's population. Washington has not elected a senator from east of the Cascades since Miles Poindexter in 1916. Other important issues included national security and the war in Iraq. Nethercutt supported the invasion of Iraq, while Murray opposed it. Nethercutt was a heavy underdog from the start, and his campaign never gained much traction. In November, he lost by 12 points, receiving 43 percent of the vote to Murray's 55 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0135-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Wisconsin\nIncumbent Democrat Russ Feingold won re-election to a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0136-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Wisconsin\nRepublican Tim Michels, businessman and army veteran insisted he has more real world experience than Feingold, someone he called an \"extreme liberal\" who's out of touch with Wisconsin voters. Feingold attacked back by saying that any Republican would be a rubber stamp for President Bush. The incumbent had $2.2 million in the bank, while Michels had already spent $1 million in the primary and had only about $150,000 left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0137-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Wisconsin\nWhen the NRSC was finally convinced in October that Michels had a shot, they pledged $600,000 for him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179199-0138-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Senate elections, Wisconsin\nOn October 1, a poll showed Feingold leading 52% to 39%. In mid October, another poll showed Feingold winning 48% to 43%. A poll at the end of the month showed him leading 51% to 36%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 46], "content_span": [47, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179200-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Shadow Representative election in the District of Columbia\nThe 2004 Shadow Representative election in the District of Columbia took place on November 2, 2004, to elect a shadow member to the United States House of Representatives to represent the District of Columbia. Unlike non-voting delegates, the Shadow Representative is only recognized by the District of Columbia and is not officially sworn or seated. This race was a rematch of 2002 when the same two candidates appeared on the ballot. Like in 2002, incumbent Shadow Representative Ray Browne was reelected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [77, 77], "content_span": [78, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179200-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Shadow Representative election in the District of Columbia, Primary elections, Other primaries\nA Republican primary was held but no candidates filed and only write-in votes were cast. Adam Eidinger was the only Statehood-Green candidate and got 90% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 113], "content_span": [114, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179200-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States Shadow Representative election in the District of Columbia, General election\nThe general election took place on November 2, 2004. It was an exact rematch of the election two years before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 95], "content_span": [96, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies\nDuring the 2004 United States elections, concerns were raised about various aspects of the voting process, including whether voting had been made accessible to all those entitled to vote, whether ineligible voters were registered, whether voters were registered multiple times, and whether the votes cast had been correctly counted. More controversial was the charge that these issues might have affected the reported outcome of the presidential election, in which the incumbent, Republican President George W. Bush, defeated the Democratic challenger, Senator John Kerry. Despite the existing controversies, Kerry conceded the election the following day on November 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies\nThere was generally less attention paid to the Senate and House elections and to various state races, but some of them were also questioned, especially the gubernatorial election in Washington, which was decided by less than 0.01% and involved several recounts and lawsuits. The final recount also reversed the outcome of this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter registration\nIn the months leading up to the 2004 election, both parties made efforts to register new voters. In some cases, Republicans challenged or prepared to challenge the validity of many new registrations, citing instances of fictitious names such as Mary Poppins appearing on the voter rolls. Lawyers for the Kerry campaign accused the Republicans of using this as an excuse for vote suppression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 115], "content_span": [116, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter registration\nThere were also complaints about the rejection of registrations by government agencies. College students encountered difficulties in registering where they attended school. Some officials rejected voter registration forms on grounds that were contested, such as a failure to use paper of a particular weight (in Ohio) or a failure to check a box on the form (Florida).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 115], "content_span": [116, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter registration\nAside from such official actions, there were disputes about other voter registration activities. In Nevada and Oregon, a company hired by the Republican National Committee solicited voter registration forms, but was accused of filing only the Republicans' forms and shredding those completed by Democrats. Individuals tenuously linked to nonprofit organizations, ACORN and the NAACP, were accused of submitting false voter registration forms and of carelessly or deliberately failing to submit some valid ones that they had received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 115], "content_span": [116, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter registration\nAn analysis of Florida voter rolls in December 2004 alleged that over four registered voters had names that also appeared in a Social Security database of death claims, according to the Chicago Tribune. In response, the Brennan Center for Justice found reason to believe that the undisclosed methodology of the source article may have been inaccurate, and further noted that there was no allegation of anyone voting in someone else's name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 115], "content_span": [116, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter registration\nA New York Daily News article alleged 46,000 people were registered to vote in both New York City and Florida. A Cleveland Plain Dealer article identified 27,000 people possibly registered in both Ohio and Florida, with 400 possibly voting in both states consistently in the previous four years. The articles attempted to match voter rolls to each other, which probably did not produce accurate results due to similarity of names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 115], "content_span": [116, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Purges of voter lists\nState efforts to purge voter rolls have led to disputes, notably in Florida. Before the 2000 election, Florida officials purged approximately 100,000 registered voters on the grounds that they were convicted felons (and therefore ineligible to vote under Florida law) or dead. Many of those whose names were purged were \"false positives\" (not actually felons). (See Florida Central Voter File.) A post-election lawsuit brought by the NAACP, the People for the American Way Foundation, and other organizations resulted in a settlement in 2002 in which the state agreed to restore eligible voters to the rolls and take other steps to improve election procedures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 118], "content_span": [119, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Purges of voter lists\nThe issue returned to prominence in 2004 when Florida announced another planned purge, again based on a list of felons. The state government initially attempted to keep the list secret. When a court ordered its release, it was found to contain mostly Democrats and a disproportionate number of people from racial minorities. Faced with media documentation that the list included thousands of errors, the state abandoned the attempt to use it. Some of the voters improperly purged in 2000 had not been restored as of May\u00a02004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 118], "content_span": [119, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter suppression\nRepresentative Dennis Kucinich (Democrat from Ohio) commented on allegations of voter suppression in Ohio during the 2004 election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 114], "content_span": [115, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter suppression\nDirty tricks occurred across the state, including phony letters from Boards of Elections telling people that their registration through some Democratic activist groups were invalid and that Kerry voters were to report on Wednesday because of massive voter turnout. Phone calls to voters giving them erroneous polling information were also common.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 114], "content_span": [115, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter suppression\nJohn Pappageorge, a Republican state legislator in Michigan, said in summer 2004, \"If we do not suppress the Detroit vote, we're going to have a tough time in this election.\" Pappageorge later claimed he was taken out of context saying, \"In the context that we were talking about, I said we've got to get the vote up in Oakland (County) and the vote down in Detroit. You get it down with a good message.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 114], "content_span": [115, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voter suppression\nCourt injunctions were placed by the Franklin County Common Pleas Court against MoveOn for verbally threatening and harassing individuals who identified themselves as Republican. On October 5, a Bush-Cheney campaign volunteer in Orlando had his arm broken when trying to stop union activists from storming the campaign office. The \"storming\" was part of a massive simultaneous campaign against 20 pro-Republican headquarters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 114], "content_span": [115, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Practical impediments\nIn every election, some voters encounter practical impediments to voting, such as long lines at the polling place. In 2004, however, the issue received increased attention. In many places, some voters had to wait several hours to vote. Ohio voters, in particular, were plagued by this issue. A study conducted by the Democratic National Committee in the summer of 2005 found that long lines forced three percent of the state's registered voters to abstain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 118], "content_span": [119, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Practical impediments\nAmong the factors thought to be at work were: the general increase in voter turnout; a particular increase in first-time voters whose processing required more time; and confusion about the providing of provisional ballots, which many states had never used before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 118], "content_span": [119, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Practical impediments\nDistribution of voting machines proved to be a problem in some districts. In Ohio, some precincts had too few machines, causing long waiting times, while others had many machines per registered voters. Officials cited a late rush of registrations after voting machines had already been allocated as one source of long lines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 118], "content_span": [119, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voting machines\nIn the 2000 election, especially in the disputed recounts in Florida, there were issues concerning the ambiguities and uncertainties that arose from punch-card ballots, such as the hanging chads (incompletely punched holes). In 2004, the punch-card ballots were still widely used in some states. For example, most Ohio voters used punch-card ballots, and more than 90,000 ballots cast in Ohio were treated as not including a vote for President; this \"undervote\" could arise because the voter chose not to cast a vote or because of a malfunction of the punch-card system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voting machines\nFor the country as a whole, the voting technology used in the 2004 election breaks down as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voting machines\nBefore 2004, the increasing use of electronic voting machines had raised several issues:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voting machines\nThe state of California ordered that 15,000 of its Diebold voting machines not be used in the 2004 elections due to flaws that the company failed to disclose.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Voting machines\nIn September 2005, the Government Accountability Office released a report noting electronic voting systems hold promise for improving the election process while citing concerns about security and reliability raised by numerous groups, and detailing specific problems that have occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 112], "content_span": [113, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Provisional and absentee ballots\nProvisional ballots are for would-be voters who assert that they are registered but whose names cannot be found in the list available at the polling place. The voter completes a written ballot, which is placed in a sealed envelope. The ballot is opened and counted only if the voter is subsequently found to be registered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 129], "content_span": [130, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Provisional and absentee ballots\nIn 2004, there was contention over the standards for determining whether to count provisional ballots. In Ohio, Secretary of State Ken Blackwell ruled that Ohio would not count provisional ballots, even those from properly registered voters, that were submitted at the wrong precinct. This ruling was ultimately upheld by the United States Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 129], "content_span": [130, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Specific issues concerning the voting process, Provisional and absentee ballots\nAbsentee ballots were also an issue. There were reports of absentee ballots being mailed out too late for some voters to complete and return them in time. In some instances, officials argued that last-minute litigation over Ralph Nader's ballot status or other issues had prevented them from finalizing the absentee ballots as early as they wanted to. In Broward County, Florida, some 58,000 absentee ballots were delivered to the Postal Service to be mailed to voters, according to county election officials, but the Postal Service said it had never received them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 129], "content_span": [130, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nThe 2004 election brought new attention to the issue of exit polls. Discrepancies existed between early exit poll information and the officially reported results. These discrepancies led some, including Tony Blair, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, to conclude that Kerry won the election prematurely. Expert opinion was divided concerning what inferences should be drawn from the cited discrepancies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nMitofsky International, the company responsible for exit polling for the National Election Pool (NEP) and its member news organizations, released a report detailing the 2004 election's exit polling. At issue were the early release of some poll information, issues regarding correcting exit poll data using actual voter totals, and differences between exit polls and official results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nThe NEP report stated that \"the size of the average exit poll error ... was higher in 2004 than in previous years for which we have data\" and that exit polling estimates overstated Kerry's share of the vote in 26 states by more than one standard error and overestimated Bush's share in four states by more than one standard error. It concluded that these discrepancies between the exit polls and the official results were \"most likely due to Kerry voters participating in the exit polls at a higher rate than Bush voters\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nThe NEP report further stated that \"Exit polls do not support the allegations of fraud due to rigging of voting equipment. Our analysis of the difference between the vote count and the exit poll at each polling location in our sample has found no systematic differences for precincts using touch screen and optical scan voting equipment.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nA study performed by the Caltech / MIT Voting Technology Project concluded that \"there is no evidence, based on exit polls, that electronic voting machines were used to steal the 2004 election for President Bush.\" This study was criticized for using data that had been corrected to match the official count, and thus \"essentially analyzing rounding error\". On December 5, 2004 Charles Stewart III of MIT released a revised report which, he said, used pre-corrected data. Two days later, however, Warren Mitofsky, who had overseen the exit polling, stated that the pre-corrected data were proprietary and would not be released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nOne paper (and a follow-up book) concluded that discrepancies in the exit polls were evidence that the election results were off, though others alleged this paper was unscientific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Exit polling\nFollowing the 2004 election, researchers looked at ways in which polling methodologies might be flawed and explored ways to improve polling in the future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 62], "content_span": [63, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Racial discrimination\nSome of the issues described above have created problems for voters generally. Others, however, by accident or (it is charged) by design, have disproportionately affected racial minorities. For example, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights determined that, in Florida in 2000, 54 percent of the ballots discarded as \"spoiled\" were cast by African Americans, who were only 11 percent of the voters. Another paper studied the residual vote rates of the election technology used and the distribution of those technologies among race and found that the percentage of spoiled votes did not disproportionally affect any particular race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Recounts\nRalph Nader requested a recount of 11 wards in New Hampshire where vote totals for Bush were 5\u201315% higher than predicted by exit polls. The Nader campaign reports:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Recounts\nIn the eleven wards recounted, only very minor discrepancies were found between the optical scan machine counts of the ballots and the recount. The discrepancies are similar to those found when hand-counted ballots are recounted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Recounts\nIn Ohio, two minor-party presidential candidates, Michael Badnarik (Libertarian Party) and David Cobb (Green Party) cooperated in requesting a recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Recounts\nAccording to Ohio recount rules, 3% of a county's votes are tallied by hand, and typically one or more whole precincts are selected and combined to get the 3% sample. The 3% must be randomly selected, and all hand counts are to be performed in public (with observers). After the hand count, the sample is fed into the tabulator. If there is no discrepancy, the remaining ballots can be counted by the machine. Otherwise, a hand recount must be done for the whole county.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Recounts\nThe Cobb campaign claimed that the precincts were not randomly selected and the ballots were pre-sorted. They suggested that this indicates that precincts were selected that would match the machine count, in order to prevent a county-wide hand count, i.e. that it was \"staged\". Two poll workers were convicted of preselecting ballots for the recounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Recounts\nAround the country there were also recounts of races for state and local office. Most of them reflected simply the closeness of the official tally, but some also raised issues of election irregularities. These included the elections for:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179201-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 United States election voting controversies, Objection to certification of Ohio's electoral votes\nOn January 6, 2005, Senator Barbara Boxer of California joined Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio in filing a congressional objection to the certification of Ohio's Electoral College votes due to alleged irregularities including disqualification of provisional ballots, alleged misallocation of voting machines, and disproportionally long waits in poor and predominantly African-American communities. The Senate voted the objection down 1\u201374; the House voted the objection down 31\u2013267. It was only the second congressional objection to an entire state's electoral delegation in U.S. history; the first instance was in 1877, when all the electors from Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina, and one from Oregon\u2014twenty in all\u2014were challenged. (An objection to one faithless elector was filed in 1969.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 913]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections\nThe 2004 United States elections were held on November 2. Republican President George W. Bush won re-election and Republicans retained control of Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections\nDemocratic Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts won his party's nomination after defeating Senator John Edwards and several other candidates in the 2004 Democratic presidential primaries. In the general election, Bush won 286 of the 538 electoral votes and 50.7 percent of the popular vote. Foreign policy was the dominant theme throughout the election campaign, particularly Bush's conduct of the War on Terrorism and the 2003 invasion of Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections\nRiding Bush's coattails, the Republicans picked up net gains of four Senate seats and three House seats. In the gubernatorial elections, neither party won a net gain of seats. Bush became the first President since Ronald Reagan in 1980 to see his party gain seats in both Houses of Congress during a Presidential election year and was the first incumbent Republican president to see his party gains seats in Congress in back to back elections since Teddy Roosevelt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections\nAs of 2020, this is the last time the incumbent party retained control over the presidency and Congress after a single term. It is the only election cycle since 1928 in which a Republican trifecta was successfully maintained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, Federal elections, President\nRepublican incumbent President George W. Bush was re-elected, defeating Democratic Senator John Kerry from Massachusetts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, Federal elections, United States Senate\nThe 34 seats in the United States Senate Class 3 were up for election. Republicans had a net gain of 4 seats. Summary of the United States Senate elections, 2004 results", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, Federal elections, United States House of Representatives\nRepublicans gained a couple of seats in the House, mainly due to the 2003 Texas redistricting. Republicans won the national popular vote for the House of Representatives by a margin of 2.6 percentage points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 87], "content_span": [88, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, State elections, Governors\nEleven of the fifty United States governors were up for re-election, as were the governorships of two U.S. territories. The final results were a net change of zero between the political parties. The Democrats picked up the governorships in Montana and New Hampshire, but the Republicans picked up the ones in Indiana and Missouri.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, State elections, Other statewide elections\nIn many states where if the following positions were elective offices, voters cast votes for candidates for state executive branch offices of Lieutenant Governor (though some were voted for on the same ticket as the gubernatorial nominee), Secretary of state, state Treasurer, state Auditor, state Attorney General, state Superintendent of Education, Commissioners of Insurance, Agriculture or, Labor, etc.) and state judicial branch offices (seats on state Supreme Courts and, in some states, state appellate courts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, State elections, State legislative elections\nMany states across the nation held elections for their state legislatures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179202-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States elections, Local elections, Mayoral elections\nSome of the major American cities that held their mayoral elections in 2004 included:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179203-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States federal budget\nThe 2004 United States Federal Budget began as a proposal by President George W. Bush to fund government operations for October 1, 2003 \u2013 September 30, 2004. The requested budget was submitted to the 108th Congress on February 3, 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179204-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States gubernatorial elections\nThe 2004 United States gubernatorial elections were held on November 2, 2004, in 11 states and two territories. There was no net gain in seats for either party, as Democrats picked up an open seat in Montana while defeating incumbent Craig Benson in New Hampshire, while Republicans defeated incumbent Joe Kernan in Indiana and won Missouri after Bob Holden lost in the primary. These elections coincided with the presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179204-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States gubernatorial elections, Notes\nThis American elections-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team\nThe men's national basketball team of the United States competed at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece. The team was led by future Basketball Hall of Fame head coach Larry Brown. Having won gold in the previous three straight Olympic Games, the Americans were favored to win Olympic gold again in 2004. However, the team won bronze, while losing three games against its opponents, the most games ever lost by a U.S. men's Olympic basketball team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team\nThe team lost its opening game to Puerto Rico by 19 points, which stands as the largest margin of defeat for the U.S. in the Olympics. It ended their 24-game Olympic winning streak since 1992, when National Basketball Association (NBA) players were first allowed to compete. The team also lost games in the Olympics to Lithuania and Argentina. In addition, the team lost a friendly preparation game prior to the Olympics, against Italy, by a score of 95\u201378. This was the second time that Team USA won the bronze medal, having also done so at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team, Roster\nThe following is the United States roster in the men's basketball tournament of the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team, Roster\nAfter the United States finished in sixth place in the 2002 FIBA World Championship, the Americans overhauled their roster for the 2003 FIBA Tournament of the Americas in Puerto Rico, where they needed to qualify for the 2004 Summer Olympics. The team cruised to a first-place finish at the Americas Championship, and earned a spot in Athens, Greece, the following summer. However most from the 2003 squad opted not to compete in the Olympics with the exception of Tim Duncan, Allen Iverson, and Richard Jefferson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team, Roster\nNewcomers to the team included young players LeBron James, Carmelo Anthony, Dwyane Wade, and Emeka Okafor. The team featured just one All-NBA selection (Duncan) and two All-Stars (Duncan and Iverson) from the prior NBA season, which are both all-time lows for a U.S. Olympic team since NBA players were first allowed in 1992. Team USA was coached by Larry Brown, who was coming off a championship in the 2004 NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team, Summary\nThe United States struggled with its outside shooting, finishing the tournament ranked last in three point field goals made (5.5 per game) and 11th in percentage (31.4) out of 12 teams. They also struggled defensively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179205-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States men's Olympic basketball team, Summary\nThe team's loss to Puerto Rico was just the third in U.S. Olympic men's basketball history. Their two previous losses were both to the Soviet Union (1972 and 1988), with six having been the largest margin of defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates\nThe United States presidential election debates were held in the 2004 presidential election. Three debates were held between Republican incumbent George W. Bush and Democratic candidate John Kerry, the major candidates, and one debate was held with their vice presidential running mates, incumbent Dick Cheney and John Edwards. All four debates were sponsored by the non-profit Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD), which has organized presidential debates since its establishment in 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates\nThe vice presidential debate was held on October 5 at Case Western Reserve University. The presidential debates were held on September 30 at the University of Miami, October 8 at Washington University in St. Louis, and October 13 at Arizona State University, ahead of the November 2 Election Day. Different moderators and debate formats were used in each debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates\nAn alternative was proposed by the Citizens' Debate Commission, but was not carried out. There were several third-party candidate debates also held independently from the CPD-sponsored debates. The debates were the latest in a series of presidential debates first held during the 1960 presidential election and held every four years since the 1976 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates\nPost-debate polls generally suggested that the 2004 presidential debates were a positive factor for John Kerry's candidacy, as CNN/USA Today/Gallup immediate post-debate polls showed that Kerry clearly won the first and third debates in the eyes of the American television audience, and he tied with Bush in the second. In the follow-up polls taken days after the first two debates, Kerry's perceived positive performance in the debates increased, so that the public then saw Kerry, rather than Bush, as the winner of all three debates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Participant selection\nAccording to the Commission on Presidential Debates, the predetermined criteria for selecting candidates to participate in its 2004 presidential debates are based on evidence of eligibility as defined in Article Two of the United States Constitution), evidence of ballot access, and evidence of electoral support based on national public opinion polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Participant selection\nParticipants must have appeared on enough state ballots to have at least a mathematical chance of securing the Electoral College majority needed to win the election. While several third-party candidates met the eligibility and ballot access criteria, none had the support of at least 15 percent of the national electorate based on the average of five selected national public opinion polling organizations. The criteria also specified that invitations to the CPD's vice-presidential debate would be extended to the running mates of the candidates participating in the first presidential debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Participant selection\nOnly President George W. Bush and U.S. Senator John Kerry met the CPD selection criteria for any of the presidential debates. As a result, only Vice President Dick Cheney and Senator John Edwards met the criteria for the vice presidential debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Participant selection\nOn October 1, 2004, the Arizona Libertarian Party (AZLP) filed suit against the Commission on Presidential Debates and Arizona State University in the Superior Court of Arizona for Maricopa County regarding the staging of the third presidential debate. They contested that the debate, to be held on the grounds of and partially funded by a state university, constituted an illegal in kind campaign donation because it excluded Michael Badnarik, the Libertarian candidate. (Only Bush, Kerry, and Badnarik had ballot access in Arizona.) In the complaint the Arizona Libertarian Party alleged that ASU was \"making a donation to two individual campaigns [Bush and Kerry] through the Commission on Presidential Debates as a conduit, in violation of the Arizona Constitution's prohibition on making gifts or donations to individuals or corporations.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 907]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Participant selection\nSuperior Court Judge F. Pendleton Gaines III issued an order to show cause for the president of ASU and for the director of the CPD to appear in court for a hearing on October 12, a day before the scheduled debate. Gaines denied a restraining order on the grounds of laches and that there was a sufficient public purpose for the debate, but also ruled that the AZLP could continue to pursue damages for any violations to their constitutional rights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Participant selection\nOn October 8, at the second debate at Washington University in St. Louis, Badnarik and another third-party nominee, Green candidate David Cobb, were arrested in a civil disobedience action after crossing a police line outside the debate venue to protest their exclusion from the debate. Badnarik said he was attempting to serve the order to show cause; both candidates were released after being ticketed for trespassing and refusing a reasonable order from a policeman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 62], "content_span": [63, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Presidential debates memorandum of understanding\nA memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the Bush 2004 campaign and the Kerry 2004 campaign, covering in minute detail all aspects of the presidential candidate debates held between the two candidates was created. It was 32 pages long and dated September 20, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Presidential debates memorandum of understanding\nThe Citizens' Debate Commission (CDC) and others were instrumental in getting the campaigns to publish the MOU in advance of the debates. One of the commissioners of the CDC, George Farah, has written about the earlier debate MOUs in the 2004 tome No Debate: How the Republican and Democratic Parties Secretly Control the Presidential Debates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 89], "content_span": [90, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Debate schedule\nOriginally, the CPD specified that the first debate would be focused on domestic policy and the third focused on foreign policy. Those terms were changed in an announcement by the CPD on September 24, after it had reviewed the terms of the MOU. The CPD agreed that foreign affairs and homeland security would be the primary topic for the first debate and domestic and economic policy will be the primary topic of the third debate. More broadly, it also agreed to make a \"good faith effort\" to accommodate the rest of the terms of the MOU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Debate schedule\nThe September 24 announcement, which was released in the format of a copy of a letter sent to the two campaigns, also noted CPD's pleasure at the willingness of the two campaigns to participate in the second, \"town meeting\"-style debate, yet was ambiguous about just what had been agreed to.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Debate schedule\nOriginally, the CPD had announced that questions for the second debate would come from undecided voters selected by the Gallup Organization from the standard metropolitan statistical area surrounding the host city. This had been the policy followed for the 1992, 1996, and 2000 debates. But the September 24 letter to the two candidates did not comment on this; instead, it noted that campaign representatives can discuss participant selection methodology with Dr. Frank Newport of Gallup in order to resolve any open issues. One such issue was that the MOU specified that half the questions be asked by \"soft Kerry supporters\" and half by \"soft Bush supporters,\" though what is meant by those terms was not made clear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, Format\nFor 2004, each debate lasted ninety minutes, included a live audience, had no opening statements, could have included follow-up questions from the moderator and ended with closing statements of two minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami)\nThis debate is the most well known of the three debates, because of the \"You forgot Poland\" incident, and the bulge controversy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 102], "content_span": [103, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami)\nThe debate was held in the Convocation Center of the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 102], "content_span": [103, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami)\nJim Lehrer of PBS' The NewsHour posed nine questions for each candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 102], "content_span": [103, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Post-debate poll\n62.5 million people tuned into the debates, an increase of just over 35 percent from 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 120], "content_span": [121, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, Bush's suit bulge\nA bulge in the back of Bush's suit jacket during this debate triggered rumors that he was \"wired\" with a radio receiver, presumably to receive instructions from his strategists. Contributing to the rumors was the perception that, at one point, Bush stated \"Let me finish\" in response to no apparent interruption and when he still had time on the clock, and some long pauses by Bush before he began answering a question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 136], "content_span": [137, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, Bush's suit bulge\nOthers dismissed these accusations, saying that the \"Let me finish\" was a response to a gesture that Lehrer made, and the pauses were a result of Bush gathering his thoughts before responding. The story gained momentum on the Internet throughout the remaining debates, with some websites devoted exclusively to the issue, often referred to as the \"Bush bulge\" or \"Bush wired\" story. Comedy talk show hosts had fun with \"Bulgegate\" jokes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 136], "content_span": [137, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, Bush's suit bulge\nWhite House officials initially claimed that the bulge was a \"wrinkle in the fabric,\" and that Bush was not wearing a bullet-proof vest, as many conjectured. Bush's tailor later said that the bulge was nothing more than a pucker along the jacket's back seam, according to the Seattle Times. After the election, unidentified sources in the Secret Service told The Hill that Bush had been wearing a bullet-proof vest and that campaign handlers had not admitted it earlier for security reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 136], "content_span": [137, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, Bush's suit bulge\nSome reports suggested that the device was a portable defibrillator Bush supposedly began wearing after a fainting episode in January 2002 that was attributed to choking on a pretzel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 136], "content_span": [137, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, Bush's suit bulge\nA photo imaging scientist at NASA, Dr. Robert M. Nelson, applied photo enhancement techniques to images of Bush at each of the three debates. He concluded that Bush was \"obviously wearing something\u2014probably a receiver of some kind\u2014under his jacket for each debate.\" Nelson sent his evidence to The New York Times, which prepared an investigative report on the matter, but it was killed by editors, one of whom later explained that the story did not make the cut because it was mere \"speculation\"; a reporter on the Times science desk disagreed. The story received some coverage, for example in Salon, Mother Jones and Extra! magazines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 136], "content_span": [137, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, Bush's suit bulge\nIn 2020, NBC News referred to the 2004 microphone earpiece allegations as a \"conspiracy theory\" and likened the allegations to unfounded right-wing claims that Hillary Clinton wore a microphone in a 2016 debate, or that Joe Biden wore an earpiece in a 2020 debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 136], "content_span": [137, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, \"You forgot Poland\"\nDuring the debate John Kerry accused Bush of having failed to gain international support for the 2003 invasion of Iraq, saying \"... when we went in, there were three countries: Great Britain, Australia and the United States. That's not a grand coalition. We can do better.\" Bush, who had used Poland earlier in the debate as an example of the international presence in Iraq, replied by saying \"Well, actually, he forgot Poland. And now there's 30 nations involved, standing side by side with our American troops.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 138], "content_span": [139, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, September 30: First presidential debate (University of Miami), Controversies, \"You forgot Poland\"\nParaphrased as \"You forgot Poland\", the term became a popular catchphrase among Bush detractors, who saw it as a humorously petty rebuttal of Kerry's original point. Though Bush had originally claimed that over 40 nations were supporting the invasion, only four nations (specifically, the four mentioned) had actually contributed over 1,000 troops \u2013 not counting the post-Saddam Iraqi police and security forces, who lost significant numbers in the Iraqi insurgency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 138], "content_span": [139, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 5: Vice presidential debate (Case Western Reserve University), Venue\nThe only Vice Presidential debate between Dick Cheney and John Edwards was held at the Veale Center at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. The debate attracted a large audience, as 43.6 million people tuned in, nearly as many as had watched the presidential debates from 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 117], "content_span": [118, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 5: Vice presidential debate (Case Western Reserve University), Venue\nModerator Gwen Ifill of the Public Broadcasting Service posed a total of 20 questions to the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 117], "content_span": [118, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 5: Vice presidential debate (Case Western Reserve University), Notable exchanges\nThough the debate largely focused on the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Economy and Gay Marriage, media coverage focused on a few key exchanges between the two candidates. Cheney told Edwards, referring to his inexperience, that \"the first time I met you was tonight.\" And Edwards pointedly referred to Cheney's gay daughter, asking whether Cheney was \"...willing to talk about the fact that they have a gay daughter?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 129], "content_span": [130, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 5: Vice presidential debate (Case Western Reserve University), Post-debate poll\nCBS News interviewed a nationally representative sample of 178 uncommitted debate-watchers. The sample was of voters who are either undecided about whom to vote for or who have a weak preference that could be changed. Of the group 41 percent said Edwards won the debate, 28 said Cheney won, and 31 percent thought it was a tie. Both uncommitted men and uncommitted women preferred Edwards. A separate poll of 1000 likely voters found that 43 percent believed Cheney won while 37 percent felt Edwards did better. Moreover, after the debate 47 percent said that Cheney was \"very qualified\" to assume the responsibilities of president (a seven percent rise), while only 25 percent said the same of Edwards (no change).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 128], "content_span": [129, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 8: Second presidential debate (Washington University in St. Louis), Venue\nThe debate was held at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. Charles Gibson mediated the town hall session, which consisted of prospective voters reading questions preselected by Gibson to the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 122], "content_span": [123, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 8: Second presidential debate (Washington University in St. Louis), Analysis\nBush attempted to deflect criticism of what was described as his scowling demeanor during the first debate, joking at one point about one of Kerry's remarks, \"That answer almost made me want to scowl\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 125], "content_span": [126, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 8: Second presidential debate (Washington University in St. Louis), Analysis\nWhen asked about possible appointments to the Supreme Court, Bush replied he would not pick the type of judge who would support the Dred Scott decision. Because that case dealt with slavery, abolished in the United States almost 150 years earlier, commentators such as Timothy Noah thought the President's comment was aimed at anti-abortion voters who see \"Dred Scott\" as code for Roe v. Wade. Noah believed Bush was saying he would appoint Justices who opposed legal abortion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 125], "content_span": [126, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 13: Third presidential debate (Arizona State University), Venue\nThe final debate was held in the Grady Gammage Memorial Auditorium at Arizona State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 112], "content_span": [113, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179206-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential debates, October 13: Third presidential debate (Arizona State University), Venue\nModerator Bob Schieffer of CBS News posed 20 total questions to the candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 112], "content_span": [113, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nThe 2004 United States presidential election was the 55th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 2, 2004. The Republican ticket of incumbent President George W. Bush and his running mate incumbent Vice President Dick Cheney were elected to a second term, defeating the Democratic ticket of John Kerry, a United States Senator from Massachusetts and his running mate John Edwards, a United States Senator from North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nAt the time Bush's popular vote total was the most votes ever received by a presidential candidate, a total that has since been surpassed six times by four different candidates; additionally, Kerry's total was the second most. Bush also became the only incumbent president to win re-election after losing the popular vote in the previous election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nBush and Cheney were renominated by their party with no difficulty. Former Vermont Governor Howard Dean emerged as the early front-runner in the 2004 Democratic primaries, but Kerry won the first set of primaries in January and clinched his party's nomination in March after a series of primary victories. Kerry chose Edwards, who had himself sought the party's 2004 presidential nomination, to be his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nBush's popularity had soared early in his first term after the September 11, 2001 attacks, but it declined between 2001 and 2004. Foreign policy was the dominant theme throughout the election campaign, particularly Bush's conduct of the War on Terrorism and the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Bush presented himself as a decisive leader and attacked Kerry as a \"flip-flopper\", while Kerry criticized Bush's conduct of the Iraq War. Domestic issues were debated as well, including the economy and jobs, health care, abortion, same-sex marriage and embryonic stem cell research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nBush won by a narrow margin of 35 electoral votes and took 50.7% of the popular vote. He swept the South and the Mountain States and took the crucial swing states of Ohio, Iowa, and New Mexico, the latter two being flipped Republican. Although Kerry flipped New Hampshire, Bush's electoral map expanded numerically. Some aspects of the election process were subject to controversy, but not to the degree seen in the 2000 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nBush won Florida by a comfortable five-percent margin, unlike his razor-thin 2000 victory margin in the state that led to a legal challenge in Bush v. Gore. In addition, Republicans increased their majorities in both houses of congress in the concurrent congressional elections, which gave Bush a comfortable congressional majority as he entered his second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nBush was the first, and as of 2021 the only, Republican candidate since his father in the 1988 election to win a majority or plurality of the popular vote. Bush's victory also marked the first and only time that the nominee of a major party won a presidential election without winning any electoral votes from the Northeast while also the last time a candidate won all Southern states. It also marks the final time to date that a Republican presidential nominee has won the states of Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election\nBush served until 2009 and was succeeded by Democrat Barack Obama, whereas Kerry continued to serve in the Senate and later became Secretary of State during Obama's second term. As of 2021, this is the most recent presidential election where an incumbent president increased their electoral vote count from their previous election, and last where the winning candidate won less than 300 electoral votes. It is also the last election to have a Republican win the popular vote and every state of the former Confederacy. Bush is, as of the 2020 presidential election, the only Republican President since Ronald Reagan to win re-election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nGeorge W. Bush won the presidency in 2000 after the Supreme Court's decision in Bush v. Gore remanded the case to the Florida Supreme Court, which declared there was not sufficient time to hold a recount without violating the U.S. Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nJust eight months into his presidency, the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, suddenly transformed Bush into a wartime president. Bush's approval ratings surged to near 90%. Within a month, the forces of a coalition led by the United States entered Afghanistan, which had been sheltering Osama bin Laden, suspected mastermind of the September 11 attacks. By December, the Taliban had been removed, although a long and ongoing reconstruction would follow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nThe Bush administration then turned its attention to Iraq, and argued the need to remove Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq had become urgent. The Iraq issue gave Bush an antagonist to present to the people, rallying support against a common enemy rather than gaining voters through ideas or policy. Among the stated reasons were that Saddam's regime had tried to acquire nuclear material and had not properly accounted for biological and chemical material it was known to have previously possessed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nBoth the possession of these weapons of mass destruction (WMD), and the failure to account for them, would violate the UN sanctions. The assertion about WMD was hotly advanced by the Bush administration from the beginning, but other major powers including China, France, Germany, and Russia remained unconvinced that Iraq was a threat and refused to allow passage of a UN Security Council resolution to authorize the use of force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nIraq permitted UN weapon inspectors in November 2002, who were continuing their work to assess the WMD claim when the Bush administration decided to proceed with war without UN authorization and told the inspectors to leave the country. The United States invaded Iraq on March 20, 2003, along with a \"coalition of the willing\" that consisted of additional troops from the United Kingdom, and to a lesser extent, from Australia and Poland. Within about three weeks, the invasion caused the collapse of both the Iraqi government and its armed forces.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0007-0003", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nHowever, the U.S. and allied forces failed to find any weapon of mass destruction in Iraq. Nevertheless, on May 1, George W. Bush landed on the aircraft carrier USS\u00a0Abraham Lincoln, in a Lockheed S-3 Viking, where he gave a speech announcing the end of \"major combat operations\" in the Iraq War. Bush's approval rating in May was at 66%, according to a CNN\u2013USA Today\u2013Gallup poll. However, Bush's high approval ratings did not last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0007-0004", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Background\nFirst, while the war itself was popular in the U.S., the reconstruction and attempted \"democratization\" of Iraq lost some support as months passed and casualty figures increased, with no decrease in violence nor progress toward stability or reconstruction. Second, as investigators combed through the country, they failed to find the predicted WMD stockpiles, which led to debate over the rationale for the war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Republican nomination\nBush's popularity rose as a wartime president, and he was able to ward off any serious challenge to the Republican nomination. Senator Lincoln Chafee from Rhode Island considered challenging Bush on an anti-war platform in New Hampshire, but decided not to run after the capture of Saddam Hussein in December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Republican nomination\nOn March 10, 2004, Bush officially clinched the number of delegates needed to be nominated at the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City. He accepted the nomination on September 2, 2004, and retained Vice President Dick Cheney as his running mate. During the convention and throughout the campaign, Bush focused on two themes: defending America against terrorism and building an ownership society. Bush used populist ideals in an attempt to rally citizens behind him in a time of international terror. The ownership society included allowing people to invest some of their Social Security in the stock market, increasing home and stock ownership, and encouraging more people to buy their own health insurance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Before the primaries\nBy summer 2003, Howard Dean had become the apparent front-runner for the Democratic nomination, performing strongly in most polls and leading the pack with the largest campaign war chest. His strength as a fund raiser was attributed mainly to his embrace of the Internet for campaigning. The majority of his donations came from individual supporters, who became known as Deanites, or, more commonly, Deaniacs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Before the primaries\nGenerally regarded as a pragmatic centrist during his governorship, Dean emerged during his presidential campaign as a left-wing populist, denouncing the policies of the Bush administration (especially the invasion of Iraq) as well as fellow Democrats, who, in his view, failed to strongly oppose them. Senator Joe Lieberman, a liberal on domestic issues but a hawk on the War on Terror, began his candidacy in early 2003 but failed to gain traction with liberal Democratic primary voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Before the primaries\nIn September 2003, retired four-star general Wesley Clark announced his intention to run for the Democratic nomination. His campaign focused on themes of leadership and patriotism; early campaign advertisements relied heavily on biography. His late start left him with relatively few detailed policy proposals. This weakness was apparent in his first few debates, although he soon presented a range of position papers, including a major tax-relief plan. Nevertheless, the Democrats did not flock to support his campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Before the primaries\nIn sheer numbers, John Kerry had fewer endorsements than Dean, who was far ahead in the superdelegate race going into the Iowa caucuses in January 2004. However, Kerry led the endorsement races in Iowa, New Hampshire, Arizona, South Carolina, New Mexico, and Nevada. His main perceived weakness was in his neighboring state of New Hampshire and nearly all national polls. Most other states did not have updated polling numbers to give an accurate placing for Kerry's campaign before Iowa. Heading into the primaries, Kerry's campaign was largely seen as being in trouble, particularly after he fired campaign manager Jim Jordan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Before the primaries\nThe key factors enabling it to survive were when fellow Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy assigned Mary Beth Cahill to be the new campaign manager, as well as Kerry's mortgaging his home to lend the money to his campaign (while his wife was a billionaire, campaign finance rules prohibited using one's personal fortune). He also brought on the \"magical\" Michael Whouley who would be credited with helping bring home the Iowa victory the same as he did in New Hampshire for Al Gore in 2000 against Bill Bradley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 104], "content_span": [105, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Iowa caucus\nBy the January 2004 Iowa caucuses, the field had dwindled down to nine candidates, as Bob Graham had dropped out of the race. Howard Dean was a strong front-runner. However, the Iowa caucuses yielded unexpectedly strong results for Democratic candidates Kerry, who earned 38% of the state's delegates, and John Edwards, who took 32%. Dean slipped to 18% and into third place, while Richard Gephardt finished fourth (11%). In the days leading up to the Iowa vote, there was much negative campaigning between the Dean and Gephardt candidacies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Iowa caucus\nThe dismal results caused Gephardt to drop out and later endorse Kerry. Carol Moseley Braun also dropped out, endorsing Howard Dean. Besides the impact of coming in third, Dean was further hurt by a speech that he gave while at a post-caucus rally. He was shouting over the cheers of his enthusiastic audience, but the crowd noise was being filtered out by his unidirectional microphone, leaving only his full-throated exhortations audible to the television viewers. To those at home, he seemed to raise his voice out of sheer emotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Iowa caucus\nThe incessant replaying of the \"Dean Scream\" by the press became a debate on whether Dean was victimized by media bias. The scream scene was shown approximately 633 times by cable and broadcast news networks in just four days after the incident, an amount not including talk shows and local news broadcasts. However, those in the actual audience that day have insisted that they didn't know about the infamous \"scream\" until they returned to their hotel rooms and saw it on television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Iowa caucus\nKerry had revived his campaign and began using the slogan \"Comeback Kerry\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 95], "content_span": [96, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, New Hampshire primary\nOn January 27, Kerry triumphed again, winning the New Hampshire primary. Dean finished second, Clark came in third, and Edwards placed fourth. The largest of the debates was held at Saint Anselm College, where both Kerry and Dean had strong performances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 105], "content_span": [106, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, South Carolina primary\nThe following week, Edwards won the South Carolina primary and brought home a strong second-place finish in Oklahoma to Clark. Lieberman dropped out of the campaign the following day. Kerry dominated throughout February and his support quickly snowballed as he won caucuses and primaries, taking in wins in Michigan, Washington, Maine, Tennessee; Washington, D.C.; Nevada, Wisconsin, Utah, Hawaii, and Idaho. Clark and Dean dropped out during this time, leaving Edwards as the only real threat to Kerry. Kucinich and Sharpton continued to run despite poor results at the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 106], "content_span": [107, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Super Tuesday\nIn March's Super Tuesday, Kerry won decisive victories in the California, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, and Rhode Island primaries as well as in the Minnesota caucuses. Despite having withdrawn from the race two weeks earlier, Dean won his home state of Vermont. Edwards finished only slightly behind Kerry in Georgia, but after failing to win a single state other than South Carolina, he chose to withdraw from the presidential race. Sharpton followed suit a couple weeks later. Kucinich did not leave the race officially until July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 97], "content_span": [98, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Democratic National Convention\nOn July 6, Kerry selected Edwards as his running mate, shortly before the 2004 Democratic National Convention was held later that month in Boston. Days before Kerry announced Edwards as his running mate, Kerry gave a short list of three candidates: Sen. John Edwards, Rep. Dick Gephardt, and Gov. Tom Vilsack. Heading into the convention, the Kerry/Edwards ticket unveiled its new slogan: a promise to make America \"stronger at home and more respected in the world.\" Kerry made his Vietnam War experience the convention's prominent theme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 114], "content_span": [115, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Democratic National Convention\nIn accepting the nomination, he began his speech with, \"I'm John Kerry and I'm reporting for duty.\" He later delivered what may have been the speech's most memorable line when he said, \"the future doesn't belong to fear, it belongs to freedom\", a quote that later appeared in a Kerry/Edwards television advertisement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 114], "content_span": [115, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Democratic Party nomination, Democratic National Convention\nThe keynote address at the convention was delivered by Illinois State Senator (and future president) Barack Obama; the speech was well received, and it elevated Obama's status within the Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 114], "content_span": [115, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Nominations, Other nominations\nThere were four other presidential tickets on the ballot in a number of states totaling enough electoral votes to have a theoretical possibility of winning a majority in the Electoral College. They were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Campaign issues\nBush focused his campaign on national security, presenting himself as a decisive leader and contrasted Kerry as a \"flip-flopper.\" This strategy was designed to convey to American voters the idea that Bush could be trusted to be tough on terrorism while Kerry would be \"uncertain in the face of danger.\" Bush (just as his father did with Michael Dukakis in the 1988 election) also sought to portray Kerry as a \"Massachusetts liberal\", who was out of touch with mainstream Americans. One of Kerry's slogans was \"Stronger at home, respected in the world.\" This advanced the suggestion that Kerry would pay more attention to domestic concerns; it also encapsulated Kerry's contention that Bush had alienated American allies by his foreign policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Campaign issues\nAccording to one exit poll, people who voted for Bush cited the issues of terrorism and traditional values as the most important factors in their decision. Kerry supporters cited the war in Iraq, the economy and jobs, and health care.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Campaign issues\nOver the course of Bush's first term in office, his extremely high approval ratings immediately following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks steadily dwindled, rising only during combat operations in Iraq in spring 2003, and again following the capture of Saddam Hussein in December that same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Campaign issues\nBetween August and September 2004, there was an intense focus on events that occurred in the late-1960s and early-1970s. Bush was accused of failing to fulfill his required service in the Texas Air National Guard. However, the focus quickly shifted to the conduct of CBS News after they aired a segment on 60 Minutes Wednesday, introducing what became known as the Killian documents. Serious doubts about the documents' authenticity quickly emerged, leading CBS to appoint a review panel that eventually resulted in the firing of the news producer and other significant staffing changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Campaign issues\nMeanwhile, Kerry was accused by the Swift Vets and POWs for Truth, who averred that \"phony war crimes charges, his exaggerated claims about his own service in Vietnam, and his deliberate misrepresentation of the nature and effectiveness of Swift boat operations compels us to step forward.\" The group challenged the legitimacy of each of the combat medals awarded to Kerry by the U.S. Navy, and the disposition of his discharge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Campaign issues\nIn the beginning of September, the successful Republican National Convention along with the allegations by Kerry's former mates gave Bush his first comfortable margin since Kerry had won the nomination. A post-convention Gallup poll showed the President leading the Senator by 14 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 84], "content_span": [85, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Presidential debates\nThree presidential debates and one vice presidential debate were organized by the Commission on Presidential Debates, and held in the autumn of 2004. As expected, these debates set the agenda for the final leg of the political contest. Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik and Green Party candidate David Cobb were arrested while trying to access the debates. Badnarik was attempting to serve papers to the Commission on Presidential Debates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 89], "content_span": [90, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Osama bin Laden videotape\nOn October 29, four days before the election, excerpts of a video of Osama bin Laden addressing the American people were broadcast on al Jazeera. In his remarks, bin Laden mentions the September 11, 2001 attacks and taunted Bush over his response to them. In the days following the video's release, Bush's lead over Kerry increased by several points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 94], "content_span": [95, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, General election campaign, Notable expressions and phrases\nEvery 17 years, cicadas emerge, morph out of their shell, and change their appearance. Like a cicada, Senator Kerry would like to shed his Senate career and morph into a fiscal conservative, a centrist Democrat opposed to taxes, strong on defense.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 100], "content_span": [101, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results\nPercent of voting age population casting a vote for president: 56.70%", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results\n(a) One faithless elector from Minnesota cast an electoral vote for John Edwards (written as John Ewards) for president. (b) Because Arrin Hawkins, then aged 28, was constitutionally ineligible to serve as vice president, Margaret Trowe replaced her on the ballot in some states. James Harris replaced Calero on certain other states' ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Results by state\nThe following table records the official vote tallies for each state as reported by the . The column labeled \"Margin\" shows Bush's margin of victory over Kerry (the margin is negative for states and districts won by Kerry).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Results by state\nAlthough Guam has no votes in the Electoral College, they have held a straw poll for their presidential preferences since 1980. In 2004, the results were Bush 21,490 (64.1%), Kerry 11,781 (35.1%), Nader 196 (0.58%) and Badnarik 67 (0.2%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Results by state\nMaine and Nebraska each allowed for their electoral votes to be split between candidates. In both states, two electoral votes were awarded to the winner of the statewide race and one electoral vote was awarded to the winner of each congressional district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Close states\nRed font color denotes those won by Republican President George W. Bush; blue denotes states won by Democrat John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Close states\nStates where margin of victory was under 1% (22 electoral votes):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Close states\nStates where margin of victory was more than 1% but less than 5% (93 electoral votes):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Close states\nStates where margin of victory was more than 5% but less than 10% (149 electoral votes):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Notes on results\nBecause of a request by Ralph Nader, New York held a recount. In New York, Bush obtained 2,806,993 votes on the Republican ticket and 155,574 on the Conservative Party ticket. Kerry obtained 4,180,755 votes on the Democratic ticket and 133,525 votes on the Working Families ticket. Nader obtained 84,247 votes on the Independence ticket, and 15,626 votes on the Peace and Justice ticket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Notes on results\nNote also: , with the latest, most final, and complete vote totals available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Faithless elector in Minnesota\nOne elector in Minnesota cast a ballot for president with the name of \"John Ewards\" [sic] written on it. The Electoral College officials certified this ballot as a vote for John Edwards for president. The remaining nine electors cast ballots for John Kerry. All ten electors in the state cast ballots for John Edwards for vice president (John Edwards's name was spelled correctly on all ballots for vice president). This was the first time in U.S. history that an elector had cast a vote for the same person to be both president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Faithless elector in Minnesota\nElectoral balloting in Minnesota was performed by secret ballot, and none of the electors admitted to casting the Edwards vote for president, so it may never be known who the faithless elector was. It is not even known whether the vote for Edwards was deliberate or unintentional; the Republican Secretary of State and several of the Democratic electors have expressed the opinion that this was an accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Results, Electoral vote error in New York\nNew York's initial electoral vote certificate indicated that all of its 31 electoral votes for president were cast for \"John L. Kerry of Massachusetts\" instead of John F. Kerry, who won the popular vote in the state. This was apparently the result of a typographical error, and an amended electoral vote certificate with the correct middle initial was transmitted to the President of the Senate prior to the official electoral vote count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 83], "content_span": [84, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nDuring the campaign and as the results came in on the night of the election there was much focus on Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Florida. These three swing states were seen as evenly divided, and with each casting 20 electoral votes or more, they had the power to decide the election. As the final results came in, Kerry took Pennsylvania and then Bush took Florida, focusing all attention on Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nThe morning after the election, the major candidates were neck and neck. It was clear that the result in Ohio, along with two other states who had still not declared (New Mexico and Iowa), would decide the winner. Bush had established a lead of around 130,000 votes but the Democrats pointed to provisional ballots that had yet to be counted, initially reported to number as high as 200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0046-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nBush had preliminary leads of less than 5% of the vote in only four states, but if Iowa, Nevada and New Mexico had all eventually gone to Kerry, a win for Bush in Ohio would have created a 269\u2013269 tie in the Electoral College. The result of an electoral tie would cause the election to be decided in the House of Representatives with each state casting one vote, regardless of population. Such a scenario would almost certainly have resulted in a victory for Bush, as Republicans controlled more House delegations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0046-0002", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nTherefore, the outcome of the election hinged solely on the result in Ohio, regardless of the final totals elsewhere. In the afternoon of the day after the election, Ohio's Secretary of State, Ken Blackwell, announced that it was statistically impossible for the Democrats to make up enough valid votes in the provisional ballots to win. At the time provisional ballots were reported as numbering 140,000 (and later estimated to be only 135,000). Faced with this announcement, John Kerry conceded defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nThe upper Midwest bloc of Minnesota, Iowa, and Wisconsin is also notable, casting a sum of 27 electoral votes. The following is list of the states considered swing states in the 2004 election by most news organizations and which candidate they eventually went for. The two major parties chose to focus their advertising on these states:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nPresidential electoral votes by state. Red is Republican; blue is Democratic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nPresidential popular votes by county. Note substantially more \"mixing\" of colors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nPresidential popular votes by county as a scale from red/Republican to blue/Democratic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nPresidential popular votes cartogram, in which the sizes of counties have been rescaled according to their population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nResults by county, shaded according to winning candidate's percentage of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Battleground states\nChange in vote margins at the county level from the 2000 election to the 2004 election. While Bush improved nationally overall, making his strongest gains in the South, he suffered a loss of support in parts of New England and the Western United States, which swung in Kerry's favor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 61], "content_span": [62, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Election conspiracy theories\nAfter the election, some sources reported indications of possible data irregularities and systematic flaws during the voting process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Election conspiracy theories\nAlthough the overall result of the election was not challenged by the Kerry campaign, Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb and Libertarian Party presidential candidate Michael Badnarik obtained a recount in Ohio. This recount was completed December 28, 2004, although on January 24, 2007, a jury convicted two Ohio elections officials of selecting precincts to recount where they already knew the hand total would match the machine total, thereby avoiding having to perform a full recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Election conspiracy theories\nAt the official counting of the electoral votes on January 6, an objection was made under the Electoral Count Act (now 3\u00a0U.S.C.\u00a0) to Ohio's electoral votes. Because the motion was supported by at least one member of both the House of Representatives and the Senate, the law required that the two houses separate to debate and vote on the objection. In the House of Representatives, the objection was supported by 31 Democrats. It was opposed by 178 Republicans, 88 Democrats and one independent. Not voting were 52 Republicans and 80 Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0056-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Election conspiracy theories\nFour people elected to the House had not yet taken office, and one seat was vacant. In the Senate, it was supported only by its maker, Barbara Boxer, with 74 Senators opposed and 25 not voting. During the debate, no Senator argued that the outcome of the election should be changed by either court challenge or revote. Boxer claimed that she had made the motion not to challenge the outcome, but \"to cast the light of truth on a flawed system which must be fixed now. \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, Election conspiracy theories\nKerry would later state that \"the widespread irregularities make it impossible to know for certain that the [Ohio] outcome reflected the will of the voters.\" In the same article, Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean said \"I'm not confident that the election in Ohio was fairly decided... We know that there was substantial voter suppression, and the machines were not reliable. It should not be a surprise that the Republicans are willing to do things that are unethical to manipulate elections. That's what we suspect has happened.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 70], "content_span": [71, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, International observers\nAt the invitation of the United States government, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) sent a team of observers to monitor the presidential elections in 2004. It was the first time the OSCE had sent observers to a U.S. presidential election, although they had been invited in the past. In September 2004 the OSCE issued a report on U.S. electoral processes and the election final report. The report reads: \"The November 2, 2004 elections in the United States mostly met the OSCE commitments included in the 1990 Copenhagen Document.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 91], "content_span": [92, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0058-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, International observers\nThey were conducted in an environment that reflects a long-standing democratic tradition, including institutions governed by the rule of law, free and generally professional media, and a civil society intensively engaged in the election process. There was exceptional public interest in the two leading presidential candidates and the issues raised by their respective campaigns, as well as in the election process itself.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 91], "content_span": [92, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, International observers\nEarlier, some 13 U.S. Representatives from the Democratic Party had sent a letter to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan asking for the UN to monitor the elections. The UN responded that such a request could only come from the official national executive. The move was met with opposition from some Republican lawmakers. The OSCE is not affiliated with the United Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 91], "content_span": [92, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, Electronic voting\nFor 2004, some states expedited the implementation of electronic voting systems for the election, raising several issues:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 85], "content_span": [86, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, Campaign law changes\nThe 2004 election was the first to be affected by the campaign finance reforms mandated by the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (also known as the McCain\u2013Feingold Bill for its sponsors in the United States Senate). Because of the Act's restrictions on candidates' and parties' fundraising, a large number of so-called 527 groups emerged. Named for a section of the Internal Revenue Code, these groups were able to raise large amounts of money for various political causes as long as they do not coordinate their activities with political campaigns. Examples of 527s include Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, MoveOn.org, the Media Fund, and America Coming Together. Many such groups were active throughout the campaign season (there was some similar activity, although on a much lesser scale, during the 2000 campaign).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 88], "content_span": [89, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, Campaign law changes\nTo distinguish official campaigning from independent campaigning, political advertisements on television were required to include a verbal disclaimer identifying the organization responsible for the advertisement. Advertisements produced by political campaigns usually included the statement, \"I'm [candidate's name], and I approve this message.\" Advertisements produced by independent organizations usually included the statement, \"[Organization name] is responsible for the content of this advertisement\", and from September 3 (60 days before the general election), such organizations' ads were prohibited from mentioning any candidate by name. Previously, television advertisements only required a written \"paid for by\" disclaimer on the screen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 88], "content_span": [89, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, Campaign law changes\nThis law was not well known or widely publicized at the beginning of the Democratic primary season, which led to some early misperception of Howard Dean, who was the first candidate to buy television advertising in this election cycle. Not realizing that the law required the phrasing, some people viewing the ads reportedly questioned why Dean might say such a thing\u2014such questions were easier to ask because of the maverick nature of Dean's campaign in general.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 88], "content_span": [89, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179207-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election, New during this campaign, Colorado's Amendment 36\nA ballot initiative in Colorado, known as Amendment 36, would have changed the way in which the state apportions its electoral votes. Rather than assigning all 9 of the state's electors to the candidate with a plurality of popular votes, under the amendment Colorado would have assigned presidential electors proportionally to the statewide vote count, which would be a unique system (Nebraska and Maine assign electoral votes based on vote totals within each congressional district). Opponents claimed that this splitting would diminish Colorado's influence in the Electoral College, and the amendment ultimately failed, receiving only 34% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 91], "content_span": [92, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Alabama took place on November 2, 2004. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama\nAlabama was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 25.62% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this was a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. On election day, it trended Republican sharply, by a swing margin of 10.74% from the 2000 election. Bush won with over 60% of the vote, a first since 1984, and carried most of the counties and congressional districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama\nHistorically, Alabama is a very reliable Republican state that a Democratic presidential nominee has not won since 1976, when the governor of the neighboring state, Jimmy Carter of Georgia, ran and swept the Deep South. As of 2021, this was the last time the Republican presidential candidate won Jefferson County, the state's most populated county and home to Birmingham, Alabama's biggest city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each by a double-digit margin of victory. The final three polls averaged Bush leading 58% to 38%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Analysis\nBush easily won every poll taken in the state prior to the election. Kerry won a small section of counties in the middle of the state, including winning Alabama's 7th congressional district. In 2000, the state voted for Bush 56%\u201341% by fifteen points; this year it voted for him by 25 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Analysis\nWith the exception of Oklahoma in 2004, the state was also Bush's best performance in the South, with not even Texas, Bush's home state, voting as red as Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Analysis\nCNN exit polls showed that almost 70% of male voters voted for Bush. Also, 99% of registered Republicans (which made up 48% of the population) voted for Bush. Also, 43% of the state describe themselves as evangelical Christians, and 88% of them voted for Bush. 62% of the state approved of Bush, and 60% approved of the decision to go to war in Iraq. 82% of white men and 79% of white women voted for Bush. Finally, 70% of voters over the age of sixty voted for Bush. Alabama was racially divided: Alabama Whites voted 80%\u201319% for Bush while Blacks voted 91%-9% for Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, Bush is the last Republican to carry Jefferson (home of Birmingham, the state's largest city), and majority-black Marengo counties in a presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nRepublican George W. Bush won every congressional district, except the 7th, which is a Democratic stronghold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Alabama cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Alabama is allocated 9 electors because it has 7 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 9 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 9 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179208-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alabama, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Alaska took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 3 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska\nAlaska was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 25.6% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. It has voted for a Republican presidential nominee in every presidential election since statehood, except for 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Campaign, Polling\nOnly one pre-election poll was conducted in this state. Bush won the poll with 57% to 30%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Analysis\nThe Democratic presidential ticket though did better here in 2004 compared to 2000, narrowing the Republican advantage from around 31 percentage points in 2000 to approximately 25 percentage points in 2004. John Kerry obtained nearly 36 percent of the vote, approximately 8 percentage points (or 32,021 votes) more than Al Gore's showing of around 28 percent in 2000. In comparison, incumbent President George W. Bush only increased his vote in Alaska by around 2 percent (or 23,491 votes) from nearly 59 percent in 2000 to approximately 61 percent in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nDue to the state's low population, only one congressional district is allocated. This district, called the At-Large district because it covers the entire state, is thus equivalent to the statewide election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 96], "content_span": [97, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Alaska cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Alaska is allocated 3 electors because it has 1 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 3 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 3 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179209-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Alaska, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Arizona took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 10 representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona\nArizona was won by incumbent George W. Bush by 10.5%. Prior to the election, 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. Neither major party tickets campaigned here in the fall election. Arizona hosted the third presidential debate on October 13, 2004, in the city of Tempe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time Arizona was won by a double-digit margin of victory. This was the first election in which any candidate won more than a million votes as well as in which Maricopa County cast more than a million ballots. Until 2016, this would be the last time Arizona voted to the left of Georgia or North Carolina. As of 2020, this is the last time Arizona voted to the right of Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Campaign, Polling\nThroughout several polls taken in the state in 2004, just one showed Kerry leading. The final 3 pre-election polls showed that Bush was leading with 51% to Kerry's 43%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Analysis\nThe exit polls showed that Bush was the going to be the clear winner of the state, based on the fact that both Bush won among both genders. A major key factor was how 55% of the people thought the state economy was good, and 70% of those people voted for Bush. Also, 55% of the state approved of Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Analysis\nThe key to Bush's victory was winning the highly populated Maricopa County with almost 57%. However, Kerry did win portions of state such as Arizona's 4th congressional district and Arizona's 7th congressional district and 4 counties. 50% of the voting age population came out to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Arizona cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Arizona is allocated 10 electors because it has 8 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 10 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 10 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179210-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arizona, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from this state. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. State voters chose six representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas\nArkansas was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 9.8% margin of victory. Prior to the election, 11 out of 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a red state. Although there was little advertising and campaigning, polling did show a tight race as Bush won the state in 2000 with just over 50%. This was the last election Arkansas was decided by a single-digit margin, as it would vote for Republicans by double digits in the following elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas\nAs of 2020, this is the last time Arkansas voted to the left of Arizona, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee (though the results aligned closely in 2016) or Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Campaign, Polling\nPre -election polling showed Bush leading throughout most of the general election. Bush frequently reached the 50% threshold, while Kerry never reached 47% in any poll taken prior to the election. The final 3 polls averaged Bush leading at 51% to Kerry at 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited the state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nEarly on, Kerry was seen to have a small but mostly insignificant chance at possibly flipping the state back to the Democratic Column, despite Bush broke many promises he had made during his 2000 presidential campaign. The Kerry Campaign saw Arkansas as a \"Secondary Concern\" focusing on the more important states such as Ohio and Wisconsin that were the key to winning the General Election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nDuring October however Bush began to widen the margin in many polls mostly due to Bush portraying Kerry as a \"Northern Yankee big-city liberal\" and a \"Tax raiser\" in the Presidential debates and after Osama Bin Laden delivered a speech on the Arabic news network Al Jazeera days before the election quoted saying \u201cYour security is in your own hands\u201d Bush was essentially guaranteed to carry the state from then on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nOn election day Bush performed better than what polls showed, outperforming nearly every single poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nThe only areas that went for Democratic opponent John Kerry were a handful of Delta counties; the state capital, Little Rock; Pine Bluff; and only a few counties to the south. Bush performed better in Arkansas than last election against Al Gore, the VP of Bill Clinton, the latter being the home son of Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nAlthough Arkansas is the home of former Democratic Governor and President Bill Clinton, who won his state's electoral vote in both 1992 and 1996, Democratic nominees Al Gore in 2000 and John Kerry in 2004 were both unsuccessful in carrying Arkansas, which went to Republican nominee George W. Bush in both elections. This election represented, arguably, the last time Arkansas was considered competitive on a national political level, as the GOP would gain supporters due to an increased distaste for the social liberalism portrayed in the Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nOver the next 12 years, various Democrats representing Arkansas federally and statewide (including all three Democratic Congressmen in the House and both Democratic Senators at the time) would retire or be defeated in \"wave\" elections, culminating in the state turning sharply against its former first lady, Hillary Clinton, in the 2016 election. As of the 2020 election, no statewide or federally elected position (i.e. Congress) in Arkansas is held by a Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, Kerry remains the last Democratic candidate to win more than 40% of the vote. It is also the last election in which Jackson County, Monroe County, Clark County, Mississippi County, Lawrence County, Clay County, Poinsett County, Lincoln County, Bradley County, Randolph County, Hempstead County and Little River County voted for the Democratic candidate. This is the last time in which the state was decided by a single digit margin of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Arkansas cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Arkansas is allocated 6 electors because it has 4 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 6 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 6 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179211-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Arkansas, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Arkansas. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in California took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 55 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California\nCalifornia was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 9.95% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. Republicans presidential candidates have not taken California's electoral votes since Bush's father George H. W. Bush in his victory over Michael Dukakis in 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time a Republican presidential candidate received more than 40% of the vote in California and where the margin of victory was in single digits, as the state swung hard toward the Democratic Party in the following elections. Bush remains the last Republican candidate to win the following counties in a presidential election: Fresno, Merced, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Joaquin, San Luis Obispo, Stanislaus, and Ventura, and also the last candidate of any party to win Butte County by a majority. This also remains the last presidential election that a Republican won more than a third of the vote in Los Angeles County and also the last time that the gap between the Republican and Democratic candidates was less than two million votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 77], "content_span": [78, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Campaign, Polling\nKerry led every single pre-election poll. The final 3 polls average Kerry leading at 52% to Bush at 43% to Nader at 2%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Campaign, Fundraising\nBush raised $20,296,645, the second most money raised state for him. It accounted for 10.7% of all the money he raised in 2004. Kerry raised $36,378,063, which is by far the most money raised for Kerry by any state. The money raised in California accounted for almost 20% of all money he raised in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 77], "content_span": [78, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither Kerry nor Bush advertised or campaigned in the state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Analysis\nCalifornia was once a Republican stronghold, supporting Republican candidates in every election from 1952 through 1988, except in 1964. However, since the 1990s, California has become a reliably Democratic state with a highly diverse ethnic population (mostly Latino) and liberal bastions such as the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles County. The last time the state was won by a Republican candidate was in 1988 by George H. W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Analysis\nIn 2004, the state did swing slightly Republican by a 1.9% margin from 2000 due to strong swings in heavily populated San Diego, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Kern, Fresno, Stanislaus, and San Joaquin counties, in all of which Bush increased his margin by substantially more than he did nationally, and all of which save San Diego, San Joaquin, and Ventura he won by double digits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0008-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Analysis\nBush also won over a million votes in Los Angeles County, the most populous county in the United States; and he held Kerry to a 0.2% margin in Sacramento County (which Gore had won by 4.0%). Bush also benefited from strong support by Arnold Schwarzenegger, the state's Republican governor. These factors likely contributed to California being closer than expected in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Analysis\nNonetheless, this proved the first time the Democratic Party had won remote Alpine County since 1936 and only the third in that county\u2019s 140-year electoral history, and the first time the Democratic nominee carried neighboring Mono County since 1940, and only the seventh since that county was formed in 1861. Kerry further countered Bush's improved performance in Southern California and the Central Valley with large swings towards the Democratic Party in Northern California and the Central Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Analysis\nHe improved on Al Gore's vote share by over 5% in Alameda, Sonoma, Marin, Santa Barbara, and San Mateo Counties, and in the city of San Francisco; and by over 10% in Santa Cruz County; he also improved on Gore by nearly 5% in San Luis Obispo County, although he didn't succeed in flipping it. In San Francisco, he became the first presidential nominee of any party in at least over a century to crack 80%, as Bush's vote share dipped below not only what he had gotten in 2000, but below Dole's in 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nKerry won 31 congressional districts. Bush won 22 congressional districts, including 2 districts held by Democratic representatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 100], "content_span": [101, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Electors\nTechnically the voters of California cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. California is allocated 55 electors because it has 53 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 53 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 53 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 805]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179212-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in California, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from California. All were pledged to and voted for John Kerry and John Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Colorado took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado\nColorado was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 4.67% margin of victory. Prior to the election, ten of twelve news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a red state, although both campaigns targeted it as the Democratic candidate, John Kerry, was born in Colorado. On election day, Bush did carry Colorado, but by only about half the 8.4% margin he won over Al Gore in 2000. Additionally, Colorado voters decided not to pass a referendum that would have split their electoral vote for this and future presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time the Republican nominee carried Colorado in a presidential election, as well as Arapahoe County, Jefferson County, Larimer County, and Ouray County. This is also the only presidential election that Broomfield County, created in 2001, has voted Republican. It was also the first time any candidate received a million votes in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Campaign, Polling\nAlthough considered a battleground state, Bush won almost every pre-election poll. The final three polls averaged Bush leading with 51% to 44%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nIn the fall election campaign, the Republican ticket visited Colorado 5 times. The Democratic ticket visited 7 times. Bush and Kerry also heavily advertised each week. Bush spent just over $400,000 each week. Kerry spent over $500,000 each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Analysis\nThe key to Bush's victory in the state was winning most of the largely populated counties, such as Jefferson County, Douglas County, El Paso County, Arapahoe County, and Larimer County. Combined with his strength in rural Colorado, this offset Kerry's strength in Denver and Boulder County and in several smaller counties hosting ski resorts, such as Gunnison (Crested Butte), Eagle (Vail), Routt (Steamboat Springs), and La Plata (Purgatory Resort).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Analysis\nNevertheless, Bush's margin in Colorado was reduced substantially with respect to 2000, even as nationally he improved from losing the popular vote by 0.5% to winning it by 2.5%. Kerry flipped seven counties--Gunnison, Eagle, Routt, La Plata, Clear Creek, Conejos, and San Juan, the last of which voted Democratic for the first time since Lyndon Johnson's 1964 landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Analysis\nMost critically, however, Bush's vote share in the city of Denver dipped from 30.9% to 29.3%--a lower vote share than Dole had received in the city in 1996--and his margin of defeat in Denver swelled from 31.0% to 40.3%, as Kerry won the highest vote share in the city of any nominee in over a century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Analysis\nSimilarly, in Boulder County, the other large blue jurisdiction in the state at the time, Bush's vote share dipped from 36.4% to 32.4%--again, below Dole's in 1996--and Kerry expanded Gore's 13.7% margin to 33.9%, as he posted the best showing in the county of any nominee since Eisenhower in 1956. Meanwhile, Bush's margin shrank markedly in Jefferson, Arapahoe, and Larimer Counties, in all of which Kerry gained substantially on Gore. Bush's vote share actually receded slightly in Arapahoe and Larimer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0007-0003", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Analysis\nAll of these trends continued into 2008 and beyond, contributing to making Colorado a lean-Democratic, and, by 2020, a relatively solidly Democratic, state. Despite what at the time was a historically low vote share in Denver, Bush remains, as of 2020, the last Republican to have cracked even a quarter of the vote in Denver.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Analysis\nAt the same time, Bush also had areas of improvement in Colorado. He increased his margin in then-staunchly Republican El Paso County by 1.5%, and cut Kerry's margin in Pueblo County, historically the largest Democratic stronghold in the state, from 11.3% to 6.3%, posting the best showing for a Republican in the county since 1984. He also flipped Huerfano County, becoming the first Republican to carry it since Nixon's 1972 landslide; his win there reflected what was, for a Republican, his strong appeal amongst Hispanic voters, which also helped him narrowly carry New Mexico and boosted his margin in his native Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Results, Results by congressional district\nBush won four of seven congressional districts including one held by a Democratic representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 96], "content_span": [97, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Colorado cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Colorado is allocated 9 electors because it has seven congressional districts and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of nine electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all nine electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179213-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Colorado, Failed election reform\nThere was a Constitutional amendment put on the ballot in the state to alter the way the state's electors would be distributed among presidential candidates, but was rejected by the voters in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 76], "content_span": [77, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose seven representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut\nConnecticut was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a margin of 10.4%. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. In presidential elections, Connecticut is usually expected to fall into the Democrats' electoral vote column, as no Republican has won the state since Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988. Although Connecticut was the birth state of George W. Bush, and the Bush family does have a house in the state, Connecticut was never considered competitive in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut\nAs of 2020, this was the most recent presidential election in which the Republican nominee carried the towns of Bethel, Cheshire, and Madison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every single pre-election poll. The final 3 poll averaged Kerry leading 52% to 42% for Bush and 2% for Nader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 74], "content_span": [75, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign visited or advertised in this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 89], "content_span": [90, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Analysis\nAll counties but Litchfield County and congressional districts went Democratic. Litchfield County is regarded as the most conservative county in the state, along with adjacent Fairfield County to the south, although this county does tend to vote majority Democratic. Hartford County, Middlesex County, New Haven County, and New London County each are regarded as the most loyally democratic counties in Connecticut. The Republican Party's last presidential victory in Connecticut was during the 1988 election of George H. W. Bush. However, Kerry's victory in Connecticut was not as large as Al Gore's lead in 2000, when the then-vice president won the state by 17.47% percent and a majority of all the state's counties. However, in 2000 Gore's running mate was Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Analysis\nGeorge W. Bush lost Connecticut decisively even though he was born in New Haven and is part of a family that has been a political dynasty in Connecticut for much of the 20th century. Despite his family background, as a presidential candidate Bush was considered a Texan and largely perceived as a Southern candidate, and consequently he had little appeal to voters in Northeastern states like Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Results breakdown, By county\nCounties are listed in order of\u00a0% of Kerry vote; the last column shows the county winner in 2000 and the gain of the Democratic party between the two elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 85], "content_span": [86, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Connecticut cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Connecticut is allocated 7 electors because it has 5 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 9 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 7 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179214-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Connecticut, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Connecticut. All were pledged to John Kerry and John Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Delaware took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware\nDelaware was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 7.6% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. The state was once a bellwether state, but has voted Democratic in every presidential election since 1992. Kerry easily won this state, but with a reduced margin compared to Al Gore's margin four years earlier. This is the last election in which Delaware was decided by a single digit margin, and the first time since 1948 when Delaware did not go for the popular vote winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Campaign, Polling\nJust two pre-election polls were taken (specifically in September), and Kerry won both of them with 45% and 50% respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Analysis\nDelaware, a blue state in presidential elections, had not voted for a Republican presidential nominee for 16 years going into 2004. The last Republican to win Delaware was Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988. Since then, the state has consistently delivered to the Democrats at the presidential level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nDue to the state's low population, only one congressional district is allocated. This district, called the At-Large district, because it covers the entire state, and thus is equivalent to the statewide election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 98], "content_span": [99, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Delaware cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Delaware is allocated three electors because it has one congressional district and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of three electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all three electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179215-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Delaware, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Delaware. All were pledged to and voted for John Kerry and John Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Florida took place on November 2, 2004, as part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 27 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida\nFlorida was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 5.01% margin of victory. Unlike the previous election, Bush won the state by a comfortable margin. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered this a swing state. Once again, Florida was under the national spotlight due to its high number of electoral votes and the fresh memory of the controversy surrounding the 2000 Florida vote. Turnout was much higher, going from an estimated 6 million voters in 2000 to over 7.5 million voters showing up to vote in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Campaign, Polling\nThroughout the general election, candidates exchanged narrow leads in the state. The final 3 poll averaged showed Bush leading with 49% to Kerry's 47%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nThis state was heavily targeted as a swing state. Over the course of the election, Bush visited the state 15 times to Kerry's 18 times. Also, both candidates spent heavily on television advertisements, spending an estimated $3 million each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Analysis\nDuring the 2004 U.S. presidential election, numerous allegations of irregularities were made concerning the voting process in Florida. These allegations included missing and uncounted votes, machine malfunction, and a lack of correlation between the vote count and exit polling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Analysis\nIn the prior election, Ralph Nader obtained over 2% of the vote, thus Bush won with less than 50% of the vote, making his approval rating and his brother's approval ratings the deciding factor of the state. Polls throughout the campaign indicated that Florida was too close to call, prompting concerns about a repeat of the 2000 fiasco. However, the high popularity of George W. Bush's brother, Republican Governor Jeb Bush, contributed to a relatively comfortable victory for Bush, by a margin of 5% over his Democratic rival, John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Analysis\nWhile the South Florida metropolitan area mostly voted for Kerry, the other parts of the state mainly supported Bush, being culturally closer to the rest of the southern United States than to Miami, home to large Hispanic and Jewish populations, as well as retirees and transplants from the largely liberal Northeastern United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Analysis\nKey to Bush's victory was increased turnout in Republican areas. Bush's margin of victory in several counties topped 70%, particularly in the Florida Panhandle. Bush also increased his margins of victory in a significant number of heavily populated and fast-growing areas that he had won four years earlier including Jacksonville, the entire Tampa Bay area, Southwest Florida, Orlando, the Space Coast, and Ocala.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Hillsborough County and Osceola County voted for the Republican candidate. This is also the last time that the cities of Orlando, Tampa, and Kissimmee have voted Republican in a presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Florida cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Florida is allocated 27 electors because it has 25 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 27 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 27 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179216-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Florida, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Florida. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Georgia took place on November 2, 2004. Voters chose 15 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia\nGeorgia was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 16.60% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. Bush performed almost five points better than he did in 2000. He also won a wide majority of the counties and congressional districts. The results of the state were similar to other states in the South, such as Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia\nLike those states, the exit polling showed racial polarization as Bush dominated among white voters, which made up almost 70% of the vote, and Kerry dominated among African American voters, which made up 30% of the state's population. Software engineer and talk show host Michael Badnarik (L-TX) would finish third in the popular vote in Georgia, getting 0.56% of the vote, which is one of his best statewide performances in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia\nAs of 2021, Bush is the last candidate in either party to win Georgia by over 10 points in a presidential election. Bush is also the only Republican ever to win Georgia twice. As of 2021, this is the last time Georgia has voted to the right of Arkansas, Louisiana, Tennessee, or West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations that made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll and won each by a double-digit margin of victory and with over 50% of the vote. The final 3 polls averaged Bush leading 56% to 41%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Analysis\nLike other Deep South states during the 2004 election, the political demographics of Georgia was based more around the racial majority in each county, with white Georgians voting more Republican and black Georgians voting more Democratic. Democratic dominance in the state occurred in mostly black-majority counties in the region as well the urban center of the city of Atlanta (located mostly in central Fulton County) along with its core suburban counties of (Clayton and DeKalb).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Analysis\nAthens-Clarke County, home of the University of Georgia, also supported Kerry's bid, largely as a consequence of being a college town with traditionally left-leaning political views. Since just about every other part of Georgia had a majority white population, Republican dominance occurred in just about every other part of the state including suburban Atlanta where a significant portion of the state's population resides. Suburban Atlanta also includes northern Fulton County (the former Milton County area) which despite being part of this heavily urban and majority-minority county, is predominately-White, suburban, and perhaps the most affluent area in the state of Georgia. Despite leaning Democratic now, this area also voted heavily in favor of Republican presidential incumbent George W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 866]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Analysis\nIn other down ballot races, Republicans gained Georgia's Class III U.S. Senate seat which was then held by Zell Miller (D) with Johnny Isakson's (R) victory in the open seat race to succeed him and also gained control of the Georgia House of Representatives, and thus control of both houses of the Georgia General Assembly (having already gained control of the Georgia State Senate in 2002), for the first time since Reconstruction. However, despite these achievements, Democrats gained one of Georgia's U.S. House seats with John Barrow's (D) victory over incumbent Representative Max Burns (R).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which the Metro Atlanta counties of Douglas, Rockdale, and Newton\u2014now Democratic strongholds\u2014voted Republican. This is also the last time the Black Belt counties of Baldwin, Sumter, and Washington voted Republican and the last in which Webster County voted Democratic, as well as the last election in which Georgia was decided by a double-digit margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Georgia cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Georgia is allocated 15 electors because it has 13 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 15 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 15 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179217-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Georgia, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for George W. Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii took place on November 2, 2004. Voters chose four representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii\nHawaii was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by an 8.7% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. The state has voted Republican only twice since statehood (in the 49-state Republican landslides of 1972 and 1984).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii\nAs of the 2020 Presidential Election, this is the last time Hawaii was decided by a single-digit margin, the last time a Democratic candidate for President failed to receive 60% of the vote in Hawaii, and also the last time a Republican received more than 35% of the vote here. Four years later, Hawaii-born Barack Obama would receive 71.85% of the popular vote in Hawaii, with a 36.57% improvement in Democratic margin of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii\nAs of 2020, this is the only time Hawaii has voted against an incumbent president who won reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Campaign, Polling\nOnly 4 pre-election polls were taken in the state in the entire 2004 election. Kerry won the first two, which were taken before October, and Bush won the other 2 which were taken in the final month of October. The final RCP average gave Bush leading with a margin of 0.9%. The final 3 polls averaged Kerry leading 48% to 43%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign spent advertising money during the fall campaign. However, with polls showing the race tightening, Vice President Cheney appeared at a campaign rally for the Republican ticket in Honolulu on October 31, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Analysis\nBush and Cheney did campaign here early on, but not throughout the entire campaign. Hawaii is considered too much of a Democratic stronghold to be a swing state. Hawaii is represented by two Democratic senators and representatives, and there has never been any competition in a senatorial election. Despite Bush's loss in the state, he improved upon his performance in the state from 2000. More importantly, he had the strongest showing for a Republican presidential candidate in the state since Ronald Reagan in 1984, doing a little better than his father did in 1988. This is the last time Hawaii was decided by a single digit margin. This is also the last time a Republican received more than 45% of the vote in Hawaii.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Hawaii cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Hawaii is allocated 4 electors because it has 2 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 4 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 4 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179218-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Hawaii, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Hawaii. All were pledged to and voted for John Kerry and John Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Idaho took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 presidential election. Voters chose four representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho\nIdaho was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 38.1 point margin of victory. Prior to the election, all twelve news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. No Democratic presidential nominee won the state since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964 and even then it was close. In 2004, President George W. Bush easily won the state and every congressional district and county, except the Democratic stronghold of Blaine County. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Latah County voted for a Republican presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho\nWith 68.38 percent of the popular vote, Idaho would prove to be Bush's third strongest state in the 2004 election after neighboring Utah and Wyoming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Campaign, Polling\nOnly one pre-election poll was taken, which gave Bush 59%, Kerry 30%, and Nader 3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign visited or campaigned here during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Analysis\nWith a substantial Mormon population, Idaho is one of the most reliable GOP bastions in the country. Both senators and representatives are Republican. It has not supported a Democratic presidential candidate since Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964. Democrats have not held the state legislature since 1958, though Democrats held the governorship from 1971 to 1995. Voters tend to be extremely conservative on fiscal and social issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Idaho cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Idaho is allocated 4 electors because it has 2 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 4 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 4 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179219-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Idaho, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Idaho. All were pledged to and voted for George Bush and Dick Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Illinois took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 21 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois\nIllinois was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 10.3% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. A reliable blue state that no Republican has won since Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988, Illinois voted for Democratic Senator John Kerry in 2004 with almost 55% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois\nKerry's victory in Illinois was primarily due to carrying seventy percent of the vote in the Chicago area's Cook County, where about 43% of Illinois' population resides. Amongst the remaining 57% of the population, President George W. Bush won 54.6% (1,749,203 votes) to 45.3% (1,452,265 votes). President Bush was victorious in Chicago's collar counties, although the results in those counties were narrower than his victories downstate. As of the 2020 presidential election, this was the last presidential election in which a Democrat failed to carry any of Chicago's collar counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Election information\nThe primaries and general elections coincided with those for Senate and congress, as well as those for state offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 74], "content_span": [75, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Election information, Turnout\nFor the state-run primaries (Democratic and Republican), turnout was 25.23%, with 1,801,090 votes cast. For the general election, turnout was 70.33%, with 5,274,322 votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 83], "content_span": [84, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Democratic\nThe 2004 Illinois Democratic presidential primary was held on March 16 in the U.S. state of Illinois as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Democratic\nBy the time of the Illinois primary, Kerry was seen as having all but formally secured the nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Republican\nThe 2004 Illinois Republican presidential primary was held on March 16, 2004 in the U.S. state of Illinois as one of the Republican Party's state primaries ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Republican\nIncumbent president George W. Bush won the primary. Bush was running for reelection without a major opponents, and with no opponents on the ballot in Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Republican\nIllinois assigned 60 directly-elected delegates (the state had another 13 delegates that were not directly elected by voters). The Illinois primary was a so-called \"Loophole\" primary. This meant that the statewide presidential preference vote was a \"beauty contest\", from which no delegates would be assigned. Instead, the delegates were assigned by separate direct-votes on delegate candidates (whose proclaimed presidential preferences were listed beside their names on the ballot). These delegates were noted voted on at-large by a state vote, but rather by congressional district votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Republican\nThe number of delegates each congressional district would be able to elect had been decided based upon the strength of that district's vote for the Republican nominee (Bush) in the previous 2000 election. This meant that four delegates each were elected from Illinois's 6th, 8th, 10th, 11th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 18th, and 19th congressional districts, three delegates each were elected from Illinois's 12th and 17th congressional districts, and two delegates each were elected from Illinois's 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, and 9th congressional districts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Primaries, Republican\nTen of the remaining delegates not directly elected by congressional district were selected at the Illinois Republican Party Convention, and were unpledged delegates. The other three would be unplugged ex-officio delegates, roles filled by the states National Committeeman, the National Committeewoman, and the chairman of the Illinois's Republican Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every single pre-election poll. Out of the 12 polls taken, Kerry won 9 of them with 52% or higher. The final 3 polls averaged Kerry leading 54% to Bush with 41%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election season because it was expected not to be competitive and Kerry had a solid lead in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Analysis\nIllinois has voted for the Democratic presidential candidate in every election from 1992 on, every time by fairly comfortable margins. Prior to 1992, Illinois had been accounted a swing state with perhaps a slight Republican lean; until 2000, no Republican had won the White House without carrying Illinois, and it voted Republican in every election from 1968 through 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Analysis\nThe blue trend in the \"Land of Lincoln\" in presidential elections can be largely attributed to the dramatic expansion of the Democratic margin in Cook County, which contains the city of Chicago and its inner suburbs and makes up about 41.2% of the state's population. While Democrats routinely won Cook County following the New Deal realignment except in some Republican landslide years (1952, 1956, 1972), until 1996, they did not themselves crack 60% in the county except in their own landslides of 1936 and 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Analysis\nIn 1992, however, Clinton got 58.2% of the vote in Cook County, approaching 60% and a higher vote share than any nominee had received in the county since 1964, despite the election having three major participants. In 1996, Clinton got 66.8% of the vote, blowing past Franklin Roosevelt's and Lyndon Johnson's vote shares in 1936 and 1964, respectively, and Gore only improved on this in 2000. In 2004, John Kerry became the first nominee of any party to crack 70% in Cook County since Warren G. Harding in 1920, and the Democrat has never been below 70% in the county since.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Analysis\nIn addition, the historically Republican \"collar counties\" outside Chicago began trending less strongly Republican in the Clinton years, and this continued into the Bush years. In 1996, Clinton became the first Democrat to crack 40% in the largest collar county, DuPage County, since 1964, and Gore slightly improved on Clinton's vote share in 2000, holding Bush to a 13.3% margin in a county Ford had carried by 40.5% in 1976 and George H. W. Bush, by 39.4% in 1988. In 2004, John Kerry improved on Gore's vote share in DuPage County by 2.9%, holding Bush to a single-digit margin of 9.6%--the smallest Republican margin of victory in the county since 1892 (apart from the 1912 election, when the Republican Party was divided and DuPage County voted for Theodore Roosevelt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Analysis\nOutside the greater Chicago area, Kerry performed well in the traditionally Democratic region of Metro East, as well as in Champaign County, a moderately populated historically Republican county that has voted Democratic in every election from 1992 on. Bush had done well in most of rural Illinois in 2000, and deepened his support there in 2004, becoming the first Republican since 1980 to carry the Little Egypt counties of Franklin and Gallatin Counties and the first since 1984 to carry Henry, LaSalle, Macon, Macoupin, Montgomery, Perry, and Pulaski Counties. However, given the developments in massively-populated Cook and DuPage Counties, this was not enough to materially influence the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which DeKalb County, DuPage County, Kane County, Lake County, Will County, and Winnebago County voted for a Republican presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Illinois cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Illinois is allocated 21 electors because it has 19 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 21 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 21 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179220-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Illinois, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Illinois. All were pledged to and voted for Kerry and Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Indiana took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana\nIndiana was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 20.68% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. The Hoosier State had not voted Democratic in a presidential election since 1964, however in the next election the state bucked this trend and voted for Senator Barack Obama of neighboring Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana\nBush became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Marion County since Benjamin Harrison in 1888. This is also the last time as of 2020 that Indiana voted to the right of Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Tennessee, or West Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each by a double-digit margin of victory and with at least 52% of the vote. The final 3 polls averaged Bush leading 56% to 40%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign visited or advertised in this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Analysis\nIndiana has long been considered to be a Republican stronghold. The Cook Partisan Voting Index (CPVI) rates Indiana as a R+8. Indiana was one of only ten states to support Republican Wendell Willkie in 1940. On 14 occasions has the Republican candidate defeated the Democrat by a double-digit margin in the state, including six times where a Republican won the state by more than 20%. In 2000\u00a0and 2004, George W. Bush won the state by a wide margin while the election was much closer overall. The state has only supported a Democrat for president five times since 1900.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Analysis\nIn 1912, Woodrow Wilson became the first Democrat to win the state in the 20th Century, with 43% of the vote. 20\u00a0years later in 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt won the state with 55% of the vote over incumbent Republican Herbert Hoover. Roosevelt won the state again in 1936. In 1964, 56% of voters supported Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson over Republican Barry Goldwater. Statistically, Indiana is more of a stronghold for Republican presidential candidates than for candidates elected to state government. Whereas only five Democratic presidential nominees have carried Indiana since 1900, 11\u00a0Democrats were elected governor during that time. Before Mitch Daniels became governor in 2005, Democrats had held the office for 16\u00a0consecutive years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Analysis\nHistorically, Republicans have been strongest in the eastern and central portions of the state, while Democrats have been strongest in the northwestern part of the state. Occasionally, certain counties in the southern part of the state will vote Democratic. Marion County, Indiana's most populated county, supported the Republican candidates from 1968 to 2000, before backing the Democrats in the 2004, 2008, and 2012\u00a0 elections. Indiana's second most populated county, Lake County, is a strong supporter of the Democratic party that has not voted for a Republican since 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Analysis\nIn 2005, the Bay Area Center for Voting Research rated the most liberal and conservative cities in the United States on voting statistics in the 2004\u00a0presidential election, based on 237\u00a0cities with populations of more than 100,000. Five Indiana cities were mentioned in the study. On the liberal side, Gary was ranked second and South Bend came in at 83. Regarding conservative cities, Fort Wayne was 44th, Evansville was 60th and Indianapolis was 82nd on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which St. Joseph County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Results breakdown, By county\nKerry won only 4 of Indiana's counties compared to 88 for Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 81], "content_span": [82, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Indiana cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Indiana is allocated 11 electors because it has 9 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 11 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 11 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179221-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Indiana, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from state. All were pledged to and voted for Bush and Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Iowa took place on November 2, 2004, as part of the 2004 United States presidential election in which all 50 states plus the District of Columbia participated. Voters chose seven electors to represent them in the Electoral College via a popular vote pitting incumbent Republican President George W. Bush and his running mate, Vice President Dick Cheney, against Democratic challenger and Senator from Massachusetts John F. Kerry and his running mate, Senator from North Carolina John Edwards. Six third parties were also on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa\nIowa was won by President George W. Bush by a 0.67% margin of victory, or 10,059 votes, despite losing the state to Al Gore four years earlier. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered this a swing state. The Democrats had won Iowa in the previous four presidential elections, though only narrowly in 2000. Gore had won the state by only 0.32 percentage points, or 4,144 votes, a much weaker margin compared to the prior three elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa\nIn 1988, Democrat Michael Dukakis won the state by 10.21% even in an otherwise Republican landslide year, and Bill Clinton carried the state by 6.02% in 1992 and 10.34% in 1996. Iowa was one of just two states, along with New Mexico, to vote for Gore in 2000 but flip to Bush in 2004, although it was won both times by narrow margins. Bush became the first Republican to win Iowa since Ronald Reagan had done so in 1984. This is the last time a Republican won Iowa by only a plurality. Until 2020, this was the last time Iowa did not vote for the same candidate as neighboring Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Campaign, Polling\nPolls showed the state was a pure tossup with neither candidate reaching a consistent lead. The last three polls averaged both candidates at 48%, with the last-second deciders the key to victory. The final RealClearPolitics average gave Bush leading with a margin of 0.3%, with 47.4% to Kerry at 47.1% and Nader at 1.0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nThe Kerry campaign visited the state 11 times to Bush's 10 times. Both campaigns spent between $400,000 to $600,000 each week in television advertising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nKerry's strength in the state lay in the highly-populated counties of Polk (Des Moines), Linn (Cedar Rapids), Scott (Davenport), Johnson (Iowa City), and Black Hawk (Waterloo). Johnson County, home to the University of Iowa, gave Kerry 64.01% of its vote, Kerry's best performance in the state. However, Kerry also did well in a series of rural and small-town counties in northeastern Iowa and along the Mississippi River, many of which had been traditionally Democratic since at least the 1980s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nHe won eight of the ten counties along the Mississippi River, including Dubuque County, which had given Gore his margin in the state in 2000. The 1st and 2nd congressional districts were both carried by Kerry, despite being represented by Republicans in Congress. Dubuque is located within the 1st district while the 2nd district contains Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, and Muscatine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nHowever, Bush performed respectably even in areas of Democratic strength; in only two counties did he obtain less than 40% of the vote. And he was able to offset Kerry's strength in the population centers and in the northeast and Mississippi River counties with landslide margins in a series of rural counties in the west of the state, as well as by dominating the state's south. Bush's best performance in the state was in Sioux County, where he won with 85.87% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nHis raw vote margin in Sioux County of 11,970 votes alone was greater than his raw vote margin over Kerry statewide. Bush won three congressional districts in the state: the 3rd district, home to the Democratic city of Des Moines and its Republican suburbs, gave Bush a razor thin 50-50 margin, despite re-electing Democrat Leonard Boswell to Congress. The 4th district also gave Bush a narrow margin, giving him 51% of the vote. The now obsolete 5th district in the western part of the state was home to the Hawkeye State's most Republican areas, having elected Steve King to Congress in 2002; it gave Bush a landslide 21-point margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nIn terms of counties carried, both candidates flipped counties. Bush flipped four that voted for Gore in 2000, while Kerry flipped five that voted for Bush in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nThis election coincided with the 2004 United States Senate election in Iowa, where Republican Chuck Grassley was effortlessly re-elected with 70.83% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Analysis\nIowa would return to the Democratic column in the next two elections, voting for Barack Obama by 9.54% in 2008 and 5.81% in 2012. However, in 2016, it returned to the Republican column when Donald Trump would win the state by 9.41%, the largest margin of victory for a Republican presidential nominee in the state since Ronald Reagan's in 1980.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nBush won 3 of 5 congressional districts, including one \u2013 the 3rd district \u2013 held by a Democrat. Kerry won two. Interestingly, the two carried by Kerry were held by Republicans in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 94], "content_span": [95, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Electors\nIowa voters cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Iowa has 7 electors because it has 5 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 7 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and their running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 7 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia meet in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179222-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Iowa, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Iowa. All were pledged to and voted for Bush and Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Kansas took place on November 2, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 6 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas\nKansas was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 25.4% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. On election day, it trended Republican from the 2000 election by a swing margin of almost 5%. He won every single congressional district and county, excluding just 2: Wyandotte County and Douglas County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each by a double-digit margin of victory and with at least 56% of the vote. The final 3 polls averaged Bush leading 58% to 37% for Kerry and 3% for Nader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither presidential candidate advertised or visited this state. However, John Edwards visited the city of Lawrence in Douglas County briefly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Analysis\nApart from its flirtation with William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson, Kansas has always been a Republican stronghold at the presidential level, voting for GOP nominees in all but seven elections since statehood. The last Democratic presidential nominee to carry the Sunflower State was Lyndon B. Johnson in his landslide in 1964. A combination of rural counties embedded with deep pockets of evangelical Christianity/social conservatism and moderate, fiscally conservative residents in Johnson County, Kansas nearly always votes Republican.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Kansas cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Kansas is allocated 6 electors because it has 4 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 6 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 6 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179223-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kansas, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 6 were pledged to Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose eight representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky\nKentucky was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 19.86% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. Bush widened his margin of victory since his victory in 2000 against Al Gore, the former Senator of neighboring Tennessee, by 4.73%. He made his biggest progress in the eastern part of the state and at the border with Virginia. This was the last election that Kentucky voted to the left of neighboring Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky\nThis victory coincided with a U.S. Senate election, where controversial Republican incumbent Jim Bunning was narrowly reelected over Daniel Mongiardo, most likely due to Bush's landslide victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each by a double-digit margin of victory and with at least 52% of the vote. The final 3 poll averaged Bush leading 57% to 38%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Results\nPresident George W. Bush easily defeated Massachusetts Senator John F. Kerry in Kentucky, capturing the state's 8 electoral votes. Bush did well throughout the state. Kerry only won a handful of counties. Kerry performed decently in coal country in east Kentucky but Kerry fared poorly in other rural parts of the state. Kerry did win Jefferson County, the most populous county in the state and home of Louisville. However this was not enough to overcome Bush's lead. This race was not close, whereas the concurrent senate race was very tight. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Fayette County voted for the Republican candidate and the last election in which Knott County, Floyd County, Breathitt County, Bath County, Pike County, Carter County, and Magoffin County voted for the Democratic candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 61], "content_span": [62, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Kentucky cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Kentucky is allocated 8 electors because it has 6 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 8 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 8 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179224-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Kentucky, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 8 were pledged to Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose nine representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana\nLouisiana was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 14.5 percent margin. Prior to the election, all twelve news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. Bush's performance constituted a much wider margin than that of his 2000 results, which were 6.8 percent smaller. The state, like other states in the Deep South, is racially polarized when it comes to presidential elections, as a wide majority of the white population votes Republican, and a wide majority of the black population votes Democratic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana\nAs of 2020, this is the last time Louisiana voted to the left of South Carolina, Georgia, Texas, or Mississippi; and the last time Louisiana voted to the right of Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each with at least 48 percent of the vote. The final 3 polls averaged Bush leading 51 to 39 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Analysis\nBush performed better here than he did in 2000. He won four more parishes: Caddo, Bienville, Saint Landry, and West Baton Rouge, but he won each with very slim margins of victory of less than two percent, except for West Baton Rouge which he won with 54 percent of the vote, indicating that parish as trending Republican. In the northern portion of the state, Bush barely lost in Madison and Tensas. The only two parishes in which he got less than forty percent of the vote were East Carroll and Orleans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Analysis\nBush also won six of seven congressional districts in the state, each with at least 58 percent of the vote. The Second District, which covers the parish and city of Orleans, was won by Kerry with seventy percent of the vote; in other words, no congressional district in the state was competitive. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which East Baton Rouge Parish and Caddo Parish voted for a Republican presidential candidate. Conversely, this is the last election in which Assumption Parish and Pointe Coupee Parish voted for a Democratic presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Louisiana cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Louisiana is allocated nine electors because it has seven congressional districts and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of nine electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all nine electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179225-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Louisiana, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All nine were pledged to Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Maine took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Starting which, Maine is one of two states in the U.S. that instead of all of the state's four electors of the Electoral College to vote based upon the statewide results of the voters, two of the individual electors vote based on their congressional district because Maine has two congressional districts. The other two electors vote based upon the statewide results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine\nMaine was considered by some to be a swing state, because of the closeness of some polls. However, the polls were consistently won by Kerry and neither campaign prioritized the state. On election day, Democrat John Kerry won the popular vote with 53.57% over George W. Bush with 44.58%. This is the most recent presidential election in which a losing Democrat won Maine's 2nd congressional district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Campaign, Polling\nOut of 15 pre-election polls, Kerry won thirteen of them. By the end of October, all polls showed Kerry over 50%. The final Real Clear Politics average showed Kerry leading 51% to 41.5% with a margin of 9.5%. In three Survey USA polls taken in October, Kerry's numbers increased each time from 49% to 51% to 52%. Also, the final three polls averaged Kerry with 51% to Bush at 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nSince March 3, 2004 Kerry didn't visit the state once, as Bush visited the state 5 times. A rough total estimate of $400,000 was spent on advertising each week, excluding the last week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Analysis\nOnce a typical Yankee Republican state, Maine has not been carried by a Republican presidential nominee since George H. W. Bush did so in 1988. While the younger Bush did make a play for the state in 2004, John Kerry ultimately won it by a fairly comfortable 9-point margin, including its two Congressional districts. Maine is one of two states, the other being Nebraska, which allocate their electoral votes by Congressional district. A candidate is awarded an electoral vote for each district won, even if the candidate loses statewide, while the statewide winner is awarded two additional electoral votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Analysis\nIn 2016 and 2020, Republican Donald Trump won Maine's 2nd district despite losing the state overall, and thus he received one electoral vote from the state both times. This makes George W. Bush the last Republican, and the last candidate of either party until Joe Biden in 2020, to win a presidential election without carrying Maine's 2nd district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Maine cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Maine is allocated 4 electors because it has 2 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 4 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded just 2 of the electoral votes. The other 2 electoral votes are based upon the congressional district results. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179226-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maine, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. Since Kerry won both congressional districts, all 4 were pledged to Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Maryland took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 10 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland\nMaryland was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 12.98% margin. Prior to the election, all twelve news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. The last Republican to carry the state in a presidential election was Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland\nAs of 2021, this is the last time a Republican presidential candidate won more than 40% of the vote in Maryland or received more than a million votes, and the last time a Democratic presidential nominee has failed to both break 60% of the vote, and won by less than a 15% margin in the Old Line State. Bush's 1,024,703 votes is the most received by a Republican presidential candidate in the state's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every pre-election poll. The final 3 poll average showed Kerry leading 52% to 42%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Campaign, Fundraising\nBush raised $4,174,964. Kerry raised $7,553,542, which was 4% of the total money raised by Kerry in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Analysis\nBush did win most of the counties in Maryland, but he lost the central part of the state (Washington DC suburbs and Baltimore), where most of the population is. The middle section is very urban and includes a large number of African Americans, many of whom are affluent (specifically in the Democratic stronghold of Prince George's County). Bush dominated Western Maryland and the state's Eastern Shore, which are very rural, but he carried only two congressional districts (see below). However, Kerry's margin of victory was slightly less than in 2000, when Gore won by 16.39%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Maryland cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Maryland is allocated 10 electors because it has 8 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 10 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 10 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179227-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Maryland, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 10 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 12 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts\nMassachusetts was won by Democratic nominee and its U.S. Senator John Kerry by a 25.2% margin of victory. Kerry took 61.94% of the vote to Republican George W. Bush's 36.78%. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. Massachusetts had been a Democratic-leaning state since 1928, and a Democratic stronghold since 1960, and has kept up its intense level of the sizable Democratic margins since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts\nNo Republican has won even a single county or congressional district in a presidential election since Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988 and no Republican won statewide since Ronald Reagan's landslide victory in 1984. In the 2004 presidential election it was also the home state of Democratic candidate John Kerry, who at the time represented Massachusetts in the U.S. Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts\nMassachusetts weighed in as about 27% more Democratic than the national average in 2004, making it the most Democratic state in the union, and the only state where Kerry won with more than 60% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 80], "content_span": [81, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every pre-election poll, and each with a double-digit margin and with at least 50% of the vote. The final 3 poll average showed Kerry with a strong lead of 57% to 31%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 76], "content_span": [77, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Campaign, Fundraising\nBush raised $4,060,356. Kerry raised $18,565,872, which was 10% of all the money he raised in 2004, and the third highest amount below only New York and California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 80], "content_span": [81, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Analysis\nMassachusetts was (and is) the bluest state in the nation. The Bay State has voted for the Democratic presidential nominee in every election since 1960 except for Ronald Reagan's landslide victories of 1980 and 1984. In 1972, only Massachusetts and the District of Columbia voted for Democratic U.S. Senator George McGovern as Republican Richard M. Nixon won reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Analysis\nKerry won Massachusetts, with a 25% spread against George W. Bush, which is actually similar to Al Gore's margin in 2000. He won every county and congressional district safely. The 2004 Democratic National Convention took place at the TD Banknorth Garden, then called FleetCenter in Boston, the state capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Results breakdown, By county\nCounties are listed in order of\u00a0% of Kerry vote\u00a0: the last column shows the county winner in 2000 and the gain of the Democratic party between the two elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 87], "content_span": [88, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Massachusetts cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Massachusetts is allocated 12 electors because it has 10 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 12 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 12 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179228-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 12 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Michigan took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 17 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan\nMichigan was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 3.4% margin of victory. Although no Republican carried this state in a presidential election since Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988, early polling showed the race was a toss-up, thus was considered as a possible target for the Republicans. Later polling favored Kerry, leading half of the news organizations to predict that Kerry would win the state, but the other half still considered it a swing state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan\nAlthough Michigan was also not carried by the winner of the 2000 presidential race, 2004 also marked the first time since 1976 in which the state was not carried by the candidate who led in the overall popular vote. As of 2020, this is the most recent election in which Michigan would vote for the losing candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Campaign, Polling\nPre -election polling did show a close race early on, but in the fall election Kerry pulled away and won every poll since the month of September. The last 3 poll average showed Kerry leading 49% to 46%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nIn the fall campaign, Bush visited the state ten times. Kerry visited seven times. Both candidates combined spent over $2 million in advertising each week, but Kerry spent slightly more each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Analysis\nKerry won Michigan with 51.2% and by a margin of 3.4%. While a reduced margin with respect to Gore's in 2000, the state trended Democratic in 2004 relative to the nation. Bush won a majority of the state's counties and congressional districts, holding Kerry to only 15 counties (whereas Gore had carried 24). But he underperformed previous Republicans in two large suburban counties that had recently been Republican strongholds in the state, Oakland and Macomb Counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Analysis\nKerry narrowly held onto Oakland County, which had voted Republican in every election from 1940 through 1992 save 1964, and had voted to re-elect Bill Clinton in 1996 by only 4.3%. Bush did flip Macomb County, which Gore had become the second Democrat to carry after a twenty-year run of voting Republican from 1972 through 1992, but he carried it by only 1.4%, making it still slightly bluer than the nation. Meanwhile, Kerry maintained the traditional Democratic domination of Wayne County, winning about the same 69% vote share in it that Gore had won in 2000. Michigan had voted Republican in every election from 1972 through 1988, in all of which Oakland and Macomb had given the Republican a healthy margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Michigan cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Michigan is allocated 17 electors because it has 15 congressional districts and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 17 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 17 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179229-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Michigan, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 17 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota took place on November 2, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose ten representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota\nMinnesota was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 3.5% margin of victory. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered it as a major swing state in 2004 based on pre-election polling. The state is historically a blue state, as the last Republican to carry the state in a presidential election was Richard Nixon in 1972. However, in 2000 Al Gore carried the state with just 48% of the vote, by a margin of just 2.5%. In 2004, Minnesota was the only state to split its electoral votes, as a faithless elector pledged to Kerry cast a ballot for John Edwards (written as John Ewards), his running mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Campaign, Polling\nMinnesota was considered a swing state based on its tight poll numbers. In early 2004, Kerry was leading in every poll against Bush, sometimes even reaching 50%. However, in the summer, Kerry was still leading in most of the polls but the gap was very small. It wasn't until late October when Bush was leading him. In the last poll by Rasmussen Reports, Kerry won with 48% to 47%, but left a lot of undecided voters. In the last 3 polling average, Kerry lead 49% to 47%, but with Bush winning 2 of 3. The last poll average by Real Clear Politics showed Kerry leading 49% to 45%. Overall polls showed a lot of undecided voters. On election day, Kerry won with 51% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBoth tickets visited the state 7 times. A total of $1 million to $3 million was spent each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Analysis\nMinnesota is the state with the longest streak as a blue state, having last backed the Republican presidential nominee in Richard Nixon's 1972 landslide, and even sticking with the Democrats during Ronald Reagan's two landslides in 1980 and 1984. However, in 2000 and 2004 it was considered a battleground state. Both campaigns invested resources in it, and it ultimately stayed in the Democratic column both times but by relatively narrow margins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Analysis\nIn 2004, the county results were fairly uniform across the state; only a handful of counties had either Bush or Kerry getting over 60% of the vote, and no county had either candidate with over 70% of the vote. Despite winning the state, Kerry won just three of eight congressional districts: Minnesota's 4th congressional district, Minnesota's 5th congressional district, and Minnesota's 8th congressional district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Washington County, Olmsted County, and Dakota County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Minnesota cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Minnesota is allocated 10 electors because it has 8 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 10 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 10 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179230-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Minnesota, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. Nine were pledged for Kerry/Edwards, but one made a mistake and ended up voting for Ewards/Edwards, and thus became a faithless elector. Minnesota's electors cast secret ballots, so unless one of the electors claims responsibility, it is unlikely that the identity of the faithless elector will ever be known. As a result of this incident, Minnesota Statutes were amended to provide for public balloting of the electors' votes and invalidation of a vote cast for someone other than the candidate to whom the elector is pledged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi took place on November 2, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose six representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. It was the first presidential election since the 2000 United States census where Mississippi lost an electoral vote, reducing its elector count from seven to six. Mississippi had the fewest electoral votes since 1848.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi\nMississippi was won by incumbent President George W. Bush of the Republican Party with a 19.69% margin of victory over Democratic nominee John Kerry. Prior to the election, Mississippi was considered a state Bush would win with ease, or a red state. Mississippi has not voted for a Democrat since 1976, when Jimmy Carter carried the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi\nAs of 2021, this is the last election in which Mississippi voted to the right of Arkansas, Tennessee, or Louisiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi, Campaign, Predictions\n12 news organizations made state-by-state predictions of the election. These organizations published their predictions just prior to election day:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 78], "content_span": [79, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign spent or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 89], "content_span": [90, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi, Analysis\nThe last Democratic presidential nominee to win Mississippi was fellow Southerner Jimmy Carter in 1976. Due to its reliably conservative voting pattern, neither of the two major party candidates campaigned in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi, Analysis\nMississippi is one of the most racially polarized states in presidential elections. Black Mississippians almost uniformly vote Democratic, while white Mississippians vote Republican nearly as consistently. In 2004, 14% of white Mississippians voted for John Kerry and 10% of African Americans voted for Bush. Kerry's main support lay in the western counties on the Delta and next to the Mississippi River. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Pike County, Copiah County, Oktibbeha County, and Yazoo County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179231-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Mississippi, Electors\nMississippi was assigned 6 electors to cast votes to the Electoral college. Given that Mississippi voted for Bush, all electors were pledged to cast their ballots for Bush. The electors were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 65], "content_span": [66, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Missouri took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri\nMissouri was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 7.20% margin of victory. Prior to the election, 10 of 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a red state. He also won a wide majority of the counties and congressional districts in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri\nDespite the fact that the state has voted for the eventual winner of the election in a presidential election since 1904, with the exception of the 1956 election, Bush carried this state with a larger margin of victory than his nationwide results, indicating that the state is more conservative than the rest of the country and that it is trending Republican. These factors eventually led the state to lose its bellwether status in the next election, albeit by a narrow margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri\nThis as of 2020 is the last time Missouri voted to the left of Virginia or North Carolina, and the last time it voted significantly to the left of Indiana, as in future elections, the results of both states would align closely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Campaign, Polling\nFrom May 2004, Bush won every single poll from the state. The final 3 polls taken from the state averaged Bush leading with 51% to 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nThis state was considered a major swing state. Both the Republican ticket and Democratic ticket visited the state 7 times in the general election. Kerry focused mostly on the urban areas such as St. Louis and Kansas City, while Bush focused more on rural such as Warrenton and Sedalia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Analysis\nThis was a better result for President Bush than 2000, when he carried the state by only 3%. In 2004, he received 265,789 more votes than in 2000, while Kerry won only 148,033 more votes than Gore in 2000. Bush won by a 7% margin. Kerry won just 4 counties in the state: Jackson County, Ste. Genevieve, St. Louis County, and St. Louis City. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Boone County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Missouri cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Missouri is allocated 11 electors because it has 9 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 11 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 11 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179232-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Missouri, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 11 were pledged for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Montana took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana\nMontana was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 20.5% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. The state typically votes for Democrats at the state level, having a Democratic senator: Max Baucus, as well as a very popular governor Brian Schweitzer. Montana has voted for the Republican presidential nominee in every election since 1964 except in 1992, when the state slightly preferred Democrat Bill Clinton to Republican incumbent George H. W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Campaign, Polling\nOnly a few pre-election polls were taken here. Bush won each one of them with a double-digit margin and with at least 54% of the vote. The final 3 polling average showed him leading 55% to 35%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Analysis\nBush's key to victory was winning the highly populated Yellowstone County with 60% along with the majority of other counties. Kerry only won 5 counties in the state, including swinging Missoula County and his best performance in the Democratic stronghold of Deer Lodge County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nDue to the state's low population, only one congressional district is allocated. This district, called the At-Large district, because it covers the entire state, and thus is equivalent to the statewide election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Montana cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Montana is allocated 3 electors because it has 1 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 3 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 3 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179233-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Montana, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 3 were pledged for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179234-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nebraska\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Nebraska took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 5 electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. However, this state is one of the two states of the U.S. that, starting in the 2004 election, instead of giving all of its electors to the winner based on its statewide results, just two of them vote based on the statewide results, and the others vote based on their individual congressional district results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179234-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nebraska\nNebraska, a rural Great Plains state, is a Republican and conservative stronghold. Voters here gave an overwhelming victory to George W. Bush, who received more than twice the number of votes of his challenger, John F. Kerry. Bush who carried the state in 2000 increased his margin of victory, from 29% (2000) to 33% in 2004. Bush carried every congressional district, and every county except substantially Native American Thurston County which Kerry won by a narrow 2.43 percent margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179234-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nebraska\nWith 65.9% of the popular vote, Nebraska would prove to be Bush's fourth strongest state in the 2004 election after Utah, Wyoming and Idaho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Nevada took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada\nNevada was won by incumbent President George W. Bush with a 2.6% margin of victory. Prior to the election, news organizations who made predictions were split on whether Nevada was a swing state or leaned towards Bush. Kerry won just one county of the state\u2014Clark County, Nevada's most populous county, and home to Las Vegas. Kerry's second-best performance in the state was in Washoe County, Nevada's next-most populated county, which he lost with 47% of the vote. The statewide results were very similar to the nationwide vote, making it the bellwether of the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada\nMoreover, Nevada at the time had voted for the winner of every presidential election since 1912, except for 1976, and later in 2016. Independent and third-party candidates collectively won 1.7% of the vote; among this group, Ralph Nader received the greatest share, garnering 0.58%. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time that Nevada was carried by the Republican nominee, and also the last time Washoe County voted Republican.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Campaign, Polling\nBush trailed in only one pre-election poll throughout the general election. By the fall, Bush pulled away and reached 50%. However, in the last week, some voters changed their preferences against Bush, resulting in his polling margin falling slightly. An average of the final three polls before Election Day showed Bush leading 49% to 47%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBush visited the state 3 times, while Kerry visited Nevada 6 times. Both of them visited the same places: Las Vegas and Reno. Almost every week, the candidates combined spent over $1 million in advertising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nIn 2000, Bush had won Nevada by only 3.54%, despite that it had been Bill Clinton's second-closest win in 1996. He also fell slightly short of an outright majority. Hence, he was thought by many observers to be vulnerable in the state, which had voted Republican for six elections in a row before Bill Clinton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nIn the end, Bush improved his vote share to just over a majority, although his margin narrowed to 2.59%, due to Kerry improving over Gore by a greater amount than Bush improved over his own prior performance. In particular, Bush's vote share actually fell slightly in Washoe County, the state's second-largest county and its largest red county in both 2000 and 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nWashoe County had given the Republican nominee his biggest raw-vote margin in the state in every election from 1944 through 2000 save 1964 (when this distinction went to smaller Douglas County) and the three elections of the 1980s (when it went to larger Clark County). In 2004, the 'Cow County' of Elko County displaced Washoe County as the county giving Bush his biggest raw-vote margin in Nevada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nHowever, Bush performed strongly in Nevada's Cow Counties (its 14 counties apart from Clark, Washoe, and Carson City), winning over 60% of the vote in Douglas and Lyon Counties, over 70% in Churchill County, and over 75% in Elko County (where he received the highest vote share of any nominee since William Jennings Bryan in 1896). He also did well in Nye County, another of the larger Cow Counties, getting 58.5%, an improvement of 1.8% over four years prior. And he managed to keep Clark County from being a blowout, holding Kerry to a 4.9% margin there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nTogether with his limiting his backslide in Washoe, this was enough to give Bush another win in the Silver State. As of 2020, this is the last time that either Washoe County or Nevada has voted Republican, although it was close in both 2016 and 2020, while voting to the right of the nation for the first time that year since 2004 also.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nDespite winning all but one of state's counties, Bush performed less consistently in Nevada's congressional districts, where he won two of the three\u2014one of them by just a single percentage point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Analysis\nDespite Bush winning the state, incumbent Senate Minority Whip Harry Reid won reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Electors\nTechnically speaking, the voters of Nevada cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Nevada is allocated 5 electors because it has 3 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 5 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 5 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead, the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179235-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Nevada, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from Nevada. All 5 were voted for Bush/Cheney, to whom they were unanimously pledged:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose four representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire\nNew Hampshire was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 1.4% margin of victory. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered it as a swing state. Traditionally a more Republican leaning state of the heavily Democratic New England region, it was the only state in all of the Northeast to vote Republican in 2000. The state is considered to be more fiscally conservative than its neighbors in New England. However, like the rest of New England, it is considerably more liberal on social issues, which benefits Democratic candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire\nNew Hampshire was the only state that Bush won in the 2000 presidential election but lost in the 2004 presidential election. This is the first time that a Republican won a presidential election while losing New Hampshire, while Bush became the second consecutive Republican president (after his father) to lose New Hampshire in his second election having won it in his first. This would also be the first time since 1976 that New Hampshire would back the losing candidate in a presidential election, which would be repeated in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Primaries, Democratic primary\nThe 2004 New Hampshire Democratic Primary was held on January 27, 2004. Taking place 8 days after the Iowa caucuses, it marked the second contest to take place during the Democratic party's 2004 primary season, as well as the first actual primary to take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 88], "content_span": [89, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Primaries, Democratic primary, Polling\nPrimary polling taken by American Research Group during the last few days of campaigning (January 23 to January 27, 2004) showed that former New Hampshire poll leader as well as national leader Howard Dean was steadily gaining ground to catch up to now front-runner John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 97], "content_span": [98, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Primaries, Democratic primary, Polling\nTracking polling showed that Dean had been catching up to Kerry in the days before the primary, cutting Kerry's 18 point lead to 10 points in a matter of days. With Dean dropping and Kerry rising, it became apparent that the battle for 1st place in New Hampshire would be close. Also, for third place, Wesley Clark, John Edwards and Joe Lieberman were the only ones fighting for third. With Clark and Edwards both taking hits going into the primary, a Lieberman on the rise, the fight for 1st place and third place, according to polls would be intense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 97], "content_span": [98, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Primaries, Democratic primary, Results\nAs results began to come in during Primary night, it became apparent Kerry had won the primary and was promptly projected the winner by several media outlets. Dean finished in second place. Clark and Edwards were in a dead-lock for third place, with both candidates at 12% during the night. Earlier returns showed Lieberman in a stronger position to tie with Clark and Edwards, allowing him to declare to his supporters that it was \"a three-way split decision for third place.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 97], "content_span": [98, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Primaries, Democratic primary, Results\nAs final results were being tallied, Kerry won the primary with 84,277 votes and 38%, Dean finished second, with 57,761 and 26%, and Clark narrowly defeated Edwards for third place, with 27,314 votes and 12%. Lieberman had fallen back in the count and didn't even reach 10%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 97], "content_span": [98, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Primaries, Democratic primary, Results\nKerry won huge margins of support amongst almost all constituencies, with his only weak point amongst Republicans, who made up 4% of the voting block and was Lieberman's strongest point. Dean repeatedly came distant second or third for almost all categories of voters. Edwards defeated Clark amongst male voters as well as voters under 65, but only by a very tiny margin. Lieberman finished in a distant third in almost all categories except for Republicans, in which he nearly defeated John Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 97], "content_span": [98, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 80], "content_span": [81, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Campaign, Polling\nPre -election polling was back and forth, with no clear indication who would end up winning the state. The final 3 polls averaged Kerry leading 48% to 47%, with the undecided voters, making up just 3%, deciding the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 76], "content_span": [77, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBush visited the state 6 times, while Kerry visited the state 4 times. Each campaign spent between $100,000 to $300,000 each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Analysis\nNew Hampshire, historically considered to be a more conservative state compared to the rest of New England, had by the early 2000s become a swing state in presidential elections, having voted for Democrat Bill Clinton twice in the 1990s but narrowly choosing Republican George W. Bush in 2000. However the state began heavily trending Democratic after 2000. Bush's approval ratings were consistently below 50% in 2004. Also, polling in the state consistently showed Kerry leading, and with between 47% to 50% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Analysis\nOn election day, Kerry won with just over 50% of the vote, with a small margin of victory, as expected from the polls. Major factors include Bush's lower approval ratings and just 1% who voted for third-party candidates, unlike 2000 when over 4% of the people voted for an independent. Kerry won 6 of the 10 counties. Most of the counties were won and lost by small margins. Kerry's key to victory was winning Cheshire County with over 59%. Bush's best performance was in Belknap County, which he won with over 55% and carrying every single town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Analysis\nBush won New Hampshire's 1st congressional district, and Kerry won New Hampshire's 2nd congressional district. This was also the first presidential election since 1968 when Coos County would back the losing candidate, and only the second time since 1892 when that would occur overall. This would later be repeated when Donald Trump won the county over Joe Biden in 2020 despite losing the presidential election that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Electors\nTechnically the voters of NH cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. NH is allocated 4 electors because it has 2 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 4 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 4 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179236-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Hampshire, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 4 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 15 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey\nNew Jersey was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 6.7% margin of victory. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered it as a state Kerry would win, or a blue state. Although due to the impact of the September 11, 2001 attacks and the resignation amidst scandal of Governor James McGreevey, the state was considered an interesting race. Polls showed Senator John F. Kerry with a slim lead throughout the campaign and the Republicans invested some campaign funds in the state. In the end, however, Kerry took New Jersey by a comfortable margin. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which the Democratic margin of victory was in single digits, or that the Republican won Somerset County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 77], "content_span": [78, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won most of the pre-election polls taken in this state, but mostly by small margins. The final 3 polling average showed the Democratic leading 49% to 42%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nPresident George W. Bush visited Marlton, New Jersey, in Burlington County for a rally on October 18th, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Analysis\nGenerally, Kerry was very dominant in the urban centers of the state, particularly in Essex, Hudson, and Camden Counties. However, Bush made inroads in Bergen County, where many wealthy residents reside, and in other South Jersey counties. Bush controlled largely rural parts of the state, such as the Northwest (Hunterdon, Somerset, and Morris are also among the 10 wealthiest counties in America) and Salem County. Monmouth County's wealthy population and Ocean and Cape May Counties' older population also contributed to Bush's relative success in this largely Democratic state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Analysis\nThis would also be the first election in which a Northern Democrat carried New Jersey since 1960 when fellow Massachusetts Democrat John F. Kennedy did so. The previous three Democratic presidential candidates to carry the state were all from the South (Lyndon B. Johnson was from Texas, Bill Clinton from Arkansas, and Al Gore from Tennessee), even though New Jersey is a northern state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Electors\nTechnically the voters of NJ cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. NJ is allocated 15 electors because it has 13 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 15 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 15 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179237-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Jersey, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 15 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico\nNew Mexico was won by incumbent Republican President George W. Bush by a 0.79% margin of victory. Bush took 49.84% of the vote, narrowly defeating Democratic Senator of Massachusetts John Kerry, who took 49.05%. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered it as a swing state. New Mexico is a very diverse state, with 42% of the state Hispanic and another 42% of the electorate non-Hispanic white. Exit polling showed that incumbent George W. Bush performed better among Hispanic Americans in 2004 than in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico\nThis may be one of the reasons why Bush won and swung the state from 2000, when Al Gore had narrowly won the state. New Mexico was one of the only three states which switched sides between 2000 and 2004 (Iowa also flipped from Gore to Bush, while New Hampshire flipped from Bush to Kerry), although Bush only won with a margin of less than 1% of the vote. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last time that the Republican nominee carried New Mexico, as well as Los Alamos County and Sandoval County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 77], "content_span": [78, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Campaign, Polling\nPolls showed Kerry in the lead for most of the general election. However, Bush caught up in the last month. The last 3 polling average showed Bush leading with 48% to 46%, which meant that the undecided voters would decide the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBecause of the closeness of the prior election, New Mexico was largely considered as a swing state. Over the general election, Bush visited the state 5 times and Kerry visited 8 times. Nearly $2 million were spent by both campaigns combined in television advertisements each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 88], "content_span": [89, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Analysis\nAlthough Bill Richardson, the Democratic governor, was very popular, the state, which voted for Al Gore by 300 votes in 2000, chose George W. Bush in 2004, by 6,000 votes. The only county Bush won in 2004 that he didn't win in 2000 was Colfax County. Half of the population in New Mexico is Hispanic, thus Bush was able to appeal to over 40% of the Hispanic vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Analysis\nAs of 2020 this is the last time New Mexico chose a Republican for president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nKerry won 2 of 3 congressional districts including 1 district won by a Republican representative.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 100], "content_span": [101, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Electors\nNew Mexico voters cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. New Mexico has 5 electors because it has 3 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 5 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 5 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia meet in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179238-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New Mexico, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in New York took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 31 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York\nNew York was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry with an 18.3% margin of victory. Kerry took 58.37% of the vote to Bush's 40.08%. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. The last Republican presidential nominee to have carried the state of New York was Ronald Reagan in 1984 and the last one to even be competitive was Bush's father George H. W. Bush in 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York\nDespite being a \"safe blue state\", this was the best showing for a Republican candidate in a presidential election in New York since 1988 and a significant improvement over Bush's performance in 2000; this is often attributed to increased support for President Bush after the 9/11 attacks. However, New York also had Kerry's fourth largest margin of victory after Kerry's home state of Massachusetts, and neighboring Rhode Island and Vermont. New York was one of just seven states that Kerry won by double digits, the others being neighboring Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, Maryland and Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York\nAs of the 2020 United States presidential election, this is the last election in which the Republican candidate both received over 40% of the vote, and lost by less than a 20% margin in New York or Westchester County, and carried Rockland and Dutchess counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every single pre-election poll, and all but one with a double-digit margin and with at least 49%. The final 3-poll average showed Kerry leading 55% to 38%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited the state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Geographic analysis\nThe voters of the five boroughs of New York City were the main force responsible for Kerry's decisive victory in the state. Kerry won New York City by an overwhelming margin, taking 1,828,015 votes to Bush's 587,534, a 74.99% to 24.10% victory. Excluding New York City's votes, John Kerry still would have carried New York State, but by a reduced margin, taking 2,486,265 votes to Bush's 2,375,033 votes, a 51.14% - 48.86% victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Geographic analysis\nThe New York suburbs consist of Long Island, Westchester and Rockland counties. Traditionally Republican, this area went clearly Democratic through the past few decades, with the arrival of people from New York City. However, in this area where many voters commute to Manhattan, Bush did better than expected. Although he clearly lost these counties to Gore in 2000 with 39.55% to 56.42%, or 655,665 votes to 935,456, he only lost them by a close 46.13% to 52.30% to Kerry. While Bush won 167,397 more votes than in 2000, Kerry lost 2,437. This can be mainly explained by the concerns of suburban moderate voters about terrorism, an issue about which they trusted Bush more than Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Geographic analysis\nUpstate New York region, including all of the counties that are not part of New York City or its suburbs, is the least liberal region of the three. Its politics are very similar to those of Ohio or Pennsylvania, both key swing states and sharing conservative rural areas. Despite this characteristic, Senator Kerry still managed a slim victory in Upstate New York, with 1,553,246 votes to 1,551,971 for Bush. This was largely due to a Democratic tidal wave in the region's four largest cities--Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse and Albany. Kerry also ran strongly in college dominated Tompkins County and two counties with an influx of former New York City residents moving to vacation homes, Ulster County and Columbia County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 73], "content_span": [74, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Electors\nNY voters cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. New York has 31 electors because it has 29 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 31 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 31 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia meet in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179239-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in New York, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from New York. All were pledged to and voted for Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 15 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina\nNorth Carolina was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 12.44% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or a red state. North Carolina was also the home state of Democratic Party vice presidential nominee John Edwards, who was then representing the state in the United States Senate. This was not enough for Democrats to break Republican success in this state since Jimmy Carter's victory in 1976. While winning the state comfortably, Bush's margin of 12.44% was 0.39% lower than his 2000 performance, making it the only Southern state to swing more Democratic than 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina\nBush became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Mecklenburg or Guilford County since Calvin Coolidge in 1924.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll. The final 3 poll average showed Bush leading 52% to 44%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 77], "content_span": [78, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited the state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 92], "content_span": [93, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Analysis\nJohn Edwards failed to make his home state competitive in the general election. In 2000, George W. Bush had performed strongly in most of the South, including North Carolina, which he had won by 12.83%. As in most of the rest of the South, he did so once again in North Carolina, notwithstanding Edwards' presence on the Democratic ticket, although his margin of victory did go down slightly, to 12.44%, even as nationally he improved from losing the popular vote by 0.5% to winning it by 2.5%. Bush consistently led in polling leading up to election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Analysis\nBush won a majority of the 100 counties and congressional districts. The only region in the state that Kerry dominated in was the Northeastern black belt, the location of North Carolina's 1st congressional district. However, Kerry did narrowly flip two heavily populated counties, Mecklenburg and Guilford, which have gone on to give Democrats over 55% of the vote in every subsequent election as of 2020. He also cut Bush's margin in another heavily populated county, Wake, from 7.1% to 2.1%. As of 2020, Wake has gone on to give Democrats over 55% of the vote in every subsequent election save 2012. Large Democratic margins in these counties have been instrumental to making North Carolina competitive in every election from 2008 onward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Pitt County, Forsyth County, Wilson County, Wake County, Buncombe County, and Cumberland County voted for a Republican presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Analysis\nAs of 2020, this is the last election in which a presidential candidate won North Carolina by double digits, as well as the last time the state was not seriously contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Electors\nTechnically the voters of North Carolina cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. North Carolina is allocated 15 electors because it has 13 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 15 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 15 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179240-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Carolina, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota\nNorth Dakota was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 27.36% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. The state has voted Republican in all but five presidential elections since statehood. In 2004, George W. Bush defeated John Kerry with 62.86% of the vote. The state's population of about 650,000 is little changed from what it was 80 years ago, as North Dakota is one of seven states with the minimum three electoral votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 79], "content_span": [80, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign visited or advertised in this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 90], "content_span": [91, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota, Analysis\nIn 2000, Al Gore won two counties, compared to Kerry who won four counties in the state, including his best performance in Sioux County, where he won with seventy percent of the vote. Overall, Bush dominated the state, winning a wide majority of the state's counties, and with large margins. In just two counties \u2013 both majority Native American \u2013 did Bush obtain less than 44 percent of the vote. As of 2020, this is the last election in which the Republican nominee won Cass County by majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota, Electors\nTechnically the voters of ND cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. ND is allocated 3 electors because it has 1 congressional district and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 3 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 3 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179241-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in North Dakota, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All were pledged to and voted for Bush and Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Ohio took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 20 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president, the record lowest from Ohio at the time since 1828.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio\nOhio was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 2.10% margin of victory. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered the Buckeye state as a swing state. The state's economic situation gave hope for John Kerry. In the end, the state became the deciding factor of the entire election. Kerry conceded the state, and the entire election, the morning following election night, as Bush won the state and its 20 electoral votes. The close contest was the subject of the documentary film ... So Goes the Nation, the title of which is a reference to Ohio's 2004 status as a crucial swing state. Had Kerry carried the state, he would have won the presidency with 272 electoral votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio\nAs of the 2020 election, this was the last time Ohio voted more Democratic than the nation as a whole, as well as the last time Hamilton County voted Republican. This is also the last time as of 2020 that Ohio voted to the left of Colorado, Nevada or Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations that made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Campaign, Polling\nPre -election polling showed a lot of volatility throughout the general election. In September, Bush was gaining momentum here, reaching over 50% in several polls and even reaching double digit margins in some. But in October, Kerry gained back momentum as he started winning many of the polls, leading with from 48% to as high as 50%. The last 3 polls averaged Kerry leading 49% to 48%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBoth candidates campaigned heavily. Bush visited the state 18 times to Kerry's 23 times. Almost every week, over $10 million was spent on television advertising.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Analysis\nCNN Exit polling showed that Bush barely won the state. Among male voters, he won with 52%. Among female voters, it was tied 50-50. Also, 53% of the voters approved of Bush's job as president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Analysis\nBush dominated in the rural areas, while Kerry dominated and won most of the counties with large populations. Overall, Bush won most of the counties and congressional districts in the state. All the congressional districts Kerry won were in the northern section of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Ohio cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Ohio is allocated 20 electors because it has 18 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 20 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 20 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 20 were pledged for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Objection to certification of Ohio's electoral votes\nOn January 6, 2005, Senator Barbara Boxer joined Representative Stephanie Tubbs Jones of Ohio in filing a Congressional objection to the certification of Ohio's Electoral College votes due to alleged irregularities including disqualification of provisional ballots, alleged misallocation of voting machines, and disproportionately long waits in predominantly African-American communities. The Senate voted the objection down 74\u20131; the House voted the objection down 267\u201331.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179242-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Ohio, Objection to certification of Ohio's electoral votes\nAt the time, it was only the second Congressional objection to an entire State's electoral delegation in U.S. history; the first instance was in 1877, when all the electors from three southern states were challenged, and one from Oregon. The third instance was in 2021, when Republicans objected to the certification of the electors from Arizona and Pennsylvania. An objection to a single faithless elector was also filed in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose seven representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma\nOklahoma was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 31.14% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered a safe red state. Bush won this state, every single county, and congressional district. Giving Bush 65.57% of the vote, it was the most Republican state in the south and Bush's fifth best performance in the country after Utah, Wyoming, Idaho and Nebraska. In addition, he performed nine points better here than he had four years earlier, indicating an increasing Republican trend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma\nOklahoma has been a Republican-leaning state since 1952 and a Republican stronghold since 1980. This was the first of five consecutive elections to date in which every county in the state was won by the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, each with a double-digit margin and with at least 53% of the vote, except for the first poll. Many polls had Bush winning with a 30% margin or even higher. The final 3 poll average had Bush leading 63% to 32%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Analysis\nBush won here in 2000 with just 60% of the vote, and losing several counties in the eastern part of the state. However, the major difference between 2000 and 2004 is that in 2000 the Reform Party and Libertarian Party candidates were on the ballot. Oklahoma now has the toughest laws for a third-party candidate to get ballot access, as no independent has gotten ballot access here since 2000. Bush won every single county in 2004, including winning statewide with over 65% of the vote, which is one of Bush's best performances in the nation. Bush's key to victory was gaining the heavily populated counties of Tulsa County and Oklahoma County with over 64% of the vote in each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Oklahoma cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Oklahoma is allocated 7 electors because it has 5 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 7 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 7 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 7 were pledged for Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179243-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oklahoma, Electors\nThe slate for the Democrats, which was not elected, consisted of George Krumme, Edwynne Krumme, Maxine Horner, Jim Hamilton, Bernice Mitchell, Betty McElderry, Bob Lemon", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Oregon took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose seven representatives, or electors, to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon\nOregon was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 4.2 point margin of victory. Prior to the election, news organizations considered the state a tossup or leaning Kerry. A moderate amount of campaigning took place here, as Kerry won every poll after October 14, and each with between 47% and 53% of the vote. Despite the state having been very competitive and being barely won by Al Gore four years earlier, Oregon is a consistent blue state that no Republican has won in a presidential election since Ronald Reagan in 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon\nKerry won this state with a modest margin, indicating Oregon's Democratic trend. This is the most recent presidential election in which Oregon was considered a swing state. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Clackamas County voted for a Republican presidential candidate as well as the final time the state's margin would be in the single digits, and the last time a Republican received more than 45% of the state's vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 73], "content_span": [74, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won most pre-election polling. The final 3 poll average had Kerry leading 50% to 45% for Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nIn the week of September 28, both tickets combined spent an estimated $546,000 on advertising. However, both tickets spent less and less money each week. Bush visited here 2 times. Kerry visited here 3 times. Both tickets visited the western part of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 84], "content_span": [85, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Analysis\nAfter the 2000 election, which saw a particularly close race, Oregon was largely considered a potential Republican target. However, Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry won 51% of Oregon's vote, narrowly defeating Republican incumbent George W. Bush. The rural and highly conservative eastern interior and Southern Oregon favored Bush, but Kerry's strong support in the more urban Willamette Valley allowed him to win the state. About 68% of the voting age population came out to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Oregon cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Oregon is allocated 7 electors because it has 5 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 7 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 7 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179244-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Oregon, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All seven were pledged for Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 21 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania\nPennsylvania was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 2.50% margin of victory. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered this a toss-up, or swing state. Although the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania voted for the Democratic presidential nominee in six subsequent elections since 1992, the margins of victory had become smaller over the past elections. On election day, Kerry won the state with 50.92% of the vote, but won only 13 of the 67 counties in Pennsylvania. Most of these 13 counties have the highest populations in the commonwealth. The biggest key to Kerry's victory was winning Philadelphia County with 80.44% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania\nBush was the first president elected to two terms without carrying the Keystone State either time since Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and 1916. This to date is the most recent election where Pennsylvania would back the losing candidate who did not win the overall electoral vote, and presidency. This was also the first (and also last) time since 1948 that the Keystone State backed the loser of the popular vote by majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Eligibility\nIn order to vote in the primary, one must have been:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Eligibility\nConvicted felons could not vote from prison and were not allowed to register to vote for five years after being released from prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 80], "content_span": [81, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Registration\nIndividuals could register to vote at County Voter Registration offices, through the mail, at a Department of Transportation office, or at various other government agency offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 81], "content_span": [82, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Registration\nVoters must have been registered 30 days prior to the election in order to be eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 81], "content_span": [82, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Democratic primary election\nThe Democratic primary took place on April 27, 2004. It was open to registered Democrats only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 96], "content_span": [97, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Democratic primary election, Results\nNote: Twenty seven delegates remained uncommitted until they reached the floor of the convention. Kerry eventually received all 178 delegates from Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 105], "content_span": [106, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Primaries, Republican primary election\nThe Republican primary took place on April 27, 2004. It was open to registered Republicans only. Incumbent President George W. Bush ran unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 96], "content_span": [97, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, General election campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 96], "content_span": [97, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, General election campaign, Polling\nAl Gore won here in 2000 with barely 50% of the vote. In late October 2004, the state was split at 47% on whether or not to approve of Bush. But Kerry won the poll 48% to 46% in the last Mason Dixon poll. Throughout the election of 2004, Kerry won most of the polls in the upper 40% to lower 50% range. However, Bush polled within the margin of error, usually in the mid 40% range. In the last Real Clear Politics average Kerry was leading with 48% and by almost a 1% margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 92], "content_span": [93, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, General election campaign, Advertising and visits\nBush campaigned heavily in the state and dropped by here over 20 times in 2004. But it wasn't enough to swing the undecided voters as Kerry won the state's electors with almost 51% of the vote, slightly higher than Gore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 107], "content_span": [108, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Analysis\nThis Kerry victory can be attributed to the overwhelmingly Democratic cities of Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Erie. Although Kerry-held cities which voted for the Senator by narrow margins assisted him in advancing his margin over President Bush, many political analysts underscored the fact that if Philadelphia were excluded, President George W. Bush would have won Pennsylvania by a fairly slim margin, with 2,663,748 versus 2,395,890 for Kerry. Although Pennsylvania is closely divided in most elections, it did not vote Republican in a presidential election from 1992 to 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Analysis\nPhiladelphia and Pittsburgh were the biggest contributors to Kerry's victory in Pennsylvania. However, many independents in suburban Philadelphia counties (Bucks, Delaware, Montgomery, and somewhat in Chester) voted for Kerry, which may well have been the deciding factor. Kerry also had narrow margins of victory around cities like Allentown, Scranton, Erie, and the traditionally Democratic Pittsburgh suburbs; he also garnered many votes in certain rural areas such as parts of the Poconos and the Laurel Highlands, and in cities like Reading, Johnstown, Harrisburg, and State College. Bush's margins were extremely large in Central Pennsylvania and the sparsely populated Northern Tier, with traditional GOP cities such as Lancaster, Lebanon, York, Altoona, Huntingdon, and Williamsport strongly throwing their support behind him. This area, along with rural western Maryland, was clearly the most conservative in the Northeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 999]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last presidential election that the Democratic candidate won any county bordering Allegheny County, namely Washington County, Beaver County and Fayette County. This is also the last election in which Dauphin County, Centre County, and Monroe County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Pennsylvania cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Pa. is allocated 21 electors because it has 19 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 21 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 21 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179245-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Pennsylvania, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 21 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose four representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island\nRhode Island was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 20.8% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Kerry would win, or otherwise considered as a safe blue state. Even though President George W. Bush fared better than he had in four years earlier, he was overwhelmingly defeated in a traditional Democratic stronghold, winning only 39% of the vote to 59% for Kerry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 79], "content_span": [80, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every single pre-election poll, each with a double-digit margin and with at least 49% of the vote. The final 3 poll average showed Kerry leading 55% to 38%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited here in the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 90], "content_span": [91, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Analysis\nFederally, Rhode Island is one of the most reliably Democratic states during presidential elections, regularly giving the Democratic nominees one of their best showings. In 1980, Rhode Island was one of only six states to vote against Ronald Reagan. Reagan did carry Rhode Island in his 49-state victory in 1984, but the state was the second weakest of the states Reagan won. Rhode Island was the Democrats' leading state in 1988 and 2000, and second-best in 1996 and 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Analysis\nHistorically, the state was devoted to Republicans until 1908, but has only strayed from the Democrats seven times in the 24 elections that have followed. In 2004, Rhode Island gave John Kerry more than a 20% margin of victory (the third-highest of any state), with 59.4% of its vote. All but three of Rhode Island's 39 cities and towns voted for the Democratic candidate. The only exceptions were East Greenwich, West Greenwich and Scituate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Analysis\nHaving some of the highest taxes in the nation, Rhode Island is considered to be a liberal bastion. In addition, Rhode Island has abolished capital punishment, making it one of 15 states that have done so. Rhode Island abolished the death penalty very early, just after Michigan (the first state to abolish it), and carried out its last execution in the 1840s. Rhode Island is 1 of 2 states in which prostitution is legal, provided it takes place indoors, though there have been recent efforts to change this.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Rhode Island cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Rhode Island is allocated 4 electors because it has 2 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 4 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 4 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179246-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Rhode Island, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 4 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina took place on November 2, 2004, as part of the 2004 United States presidential election which took place throughout all 50 states and D.C. Voters chose eight representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina\nSouth Carolina was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 17.08% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. No Democrat had won this state since 1976. On election day, Bush won a majority of the counties and congressional districts in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina\nThe results were very similar to the state's results in 2000, and very similar to the results in neighboring Georgia this election, although Democratic Senator John Edwards of the bordering state of North Carolina was chosen as the vice presidential nominee. Bush won Greenville County, the largest county in the state, by a margin of 33.23%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Primaries\nFor both parties in 2004, South Carolina's was the first primary in a Southern state and the first primary in a state in which African Americans make up a sizable percentage of the electorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 69], "content_span": [70, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Primaries\nThe Democratic primary was held on February 3, with 45 delegates at stake. It was held on the same day as six other primaries and caucuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 69], "content_span": [70, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Primaries\nSouth Carolina's 45 delegates to the 2004 Democratic National Convention were awarded proportionally based on the results of the primary. The state also sent ten superdelegates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 69], "content_span": [70, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 81], "content_span": [82, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every pre-election poll, each with a double-digit margin (except for one) and with at least 49% of the vote. The final 3 poll average showed Bush leading 55% to 41%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 77], "content_span": [78, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 92], "content_span": [93, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Analysis\nSouth Carolina, historically part of the Solid South, has become a Republican stronghold in the past few presidential elections. Since Barry Goldwater carried the state in 1964, the only Democratic presidential nominee to win it was Jimmy Carter of neighboring Georgia in 1976. Since then, the Palmetto State has been a safe bet for the Republicans. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Charleston County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nBush won 5 of 6 congressional districts including a district won by a Democratic representative", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 104], "content_span": [105, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Electors\nTechnically the voters of South Carolina cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. South Carolina is allocated 8 electors because it has 6 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 8 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 8 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179247-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Carolina, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 8 were pledged for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 68], "content_span": [69, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota\nSouth Dakota was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 21.5 point margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. Since 1940, the state has voted for the Republican nominee in every presidential election, except 1964.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were twelve news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 79], "content_span": [80, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every pre-election by a double-digit margin. The final three poll average showed Bush with 55% to Kerry at 39 percent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 75], "content_span": [76, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 90], "content_span": [91, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Analysis\nSouth Dakota politics are generally dominated by the Republican Party, and the state has not supported a Democratic presidential candidate since 1964 \u2014 even George McGovern, the Democratic nominee in 1972 and himself a South Dakotan, did not carry the state. Additionally, a Democrat has not won the governorship since 1978. As of 2006, Republicans held a ten percent voter registration advantage over Democrats and hold majorities in both the state House of Representatives and Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Analysis\nDespite the state's general Republican and conservative leanings, Democrats have found success in various statewide elections, most notably in those involving South Dakota's congressional representatives in Washington. Two of the three members of the state's congressional delegation at the time were Democrats, and until his electoral defeat in 2004 Senator Tom Daschle was the Senate minority leader (and briefly its majority leader during Democratic control of the Senate in 2001-02).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Analysis\nOpposition to the Iraq War in this isolationist state did allow Kerry to improve upon Al Gore\u2019s performance in 2000 by two percentage points. Kerry won four counties \u2013 Corson, Day, Roberts and Ziebach \u2013 that Gore had not carried in 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Results, By congressional district\nDue to the state's small population, only one congressional district is allocated. This district, called the At-Large district, because it covers the entire state, and thus is equivalent to the statewide election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 92], "content_span": [93, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Electors\nTechnically the voters of SD cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. SD is allocated 3 electors because it has 1 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 3 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 3 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179248-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in South Dakota, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 3 were pledged for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 66], "content_span": [67, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee\nTennessee was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 14.30% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. In the past 14 presidential elections, the Republican nominee won ten of them. The state trended more Republican by 10.43 points from Bush's performance in 2000. Bush won most of the counties and congressional districts in the state. Third party and independent candidates made up just 0.68% of the vote. As of 2021, this is the last time Tennessee voted to the right of Arkansas, or to the left of Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Primaries\nThe 2004 Tennessee primary took place on February 10, 2004, as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional. the candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received and is open to anyone. A total of 69 (of 85) delegates are awarded proportionally. A 15 percent threshold is required to receive delegates. Frontrunner John Kerry won the primary with Senator John Edwards and former general Wesley Clark both obtaining over 20% and receiving delegates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Primaries\nKerry won most of the counties and all the congressional districts. Although, Kerry didn't do well in the middle of the state, winning the 4th, 5th, and 6th CDs with less than 40% of the vote. Edwards won 4 counties in the state. In Sullivan County, Tennessee Edwards obtained 42% of the vote but lost to Kerry with a small margin. Clark gained over 30% of the vote in just 2 counties, including his best performance in Montgomery County, TN. The largest turnout came from Shelby County and Davidson County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each with at least 49%. The final 3 polls averaged Bush leading 56% to 40%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Analysis\nWhile the Republicans control slightly more than half of the state, Democrats have strong support in the cities of Memphis and Nashville and in parts of Middle Tennessee and in West Tennessee north and east of Memphis The latter area includes a large rural African-American population.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Analysis\nIn the 2000 presidential election, Vice President Al Gore, a former U.S. Senator from Tennessee, couldn't carry his home state. The majority of voters support for Republican George W. Bush increased in 2004, with his margin of victory in the state increasing from 4% in 2000 to 14% in 2004. Southern Democratic nominees (e.g., Lyndon B. Johnson, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton) usually fare better in Tennessee, especially among split-ticket voters outside the metropolitan areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Analysis\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Trousdale County, Humphreys County, Grundy County, Lake County, Benton County, Overton County, Smith County, Lauderdale County, Van Buren County, Stewart County, Perry County, and Clay County voted for the Democratic candidate, as John McCain would outperform Bush in the state four years later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Tennessee cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Tennessee is allocated 11 electors because it has 9 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 11 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 11 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179249-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Tennessee, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 9 were pledged to Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Texas took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. State voters chose 34 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas\nTexas was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 22.87% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered Texas as a safe red state. The Lone Star State is a Republican stronghold and is Bush's home state as well as the state he once served as the governor of. As of the 2020 presidential election, Texas has not voted for a Democratic candidate in a U.S. presidential election since Jimmy Carter's victory in 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas\nAs John Kerry lost Texas, this is the last time, as of the 2020 presidential election, where the Democratic candidate lost the state with less than 40% of the vote or a Republican has broken 60% of the vote in the Lone Star State. Likewise, Bush is the last Republican to win any of the following counties: Bexar, Cameron, Culberson, Dallas, and Harris County. This was the first election a county in Texas cast more than a million votes, the county being Harris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas\nBush, who made historic gains with Latino voters in 2004, drew even with Kerry among Texas Latinos, winning 49% to Kerry's 50%. As of 2021, this election is the closest a Republican has come to carrying the Latino vote in Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas\nThis is the last presidential election in which Texas voted to the right of West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, or Louisiana. This is also the first time since 1984 in which a Republican candidate has gotten over 60% of the vote, and as of 2021, the last time due to the increasing Democratic shift in many counties Bush carried in this election, with many counties swinging hard towards Barack Obama in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll, and won each with at least 55% of the vote and a double-digit margin of victory. The final three polls averaged Bush leading 59% to 37%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 68], "content_span": [69, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 83], "content_span": [84, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Analysis\nTexas, located in the South, has become a consistently Republican state at all levels. Economically and racially diverse, Texas includes a huge swath of the Bible Belt where many voters, especially those in rural Texas, identify as born-again or evangelical Christians and therefore tend to vote Republican due to the party's opposition to abortion. Although once part of the Solid South, the last time Texas voted for a Democratic presidential nominee was Jimmy Carter in 1976. George Bush achieved his party's best result in Texas since Ronald Reagan's second landslide in 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Analysis\nPresident Bush carried 236 of the state's 254 counties, improving on his performance from 2000. East Texas, historically the most Democratic region in the state, also swung more towards the Republican Party. South Texas, while still losing the region heavily to Senator Kerry, swung towards Bush as well. The only regions to swing in Kerry's favor were parts of Metro Houston, the Dallas Fort Worth Metroplex, and the Austin area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Analysis\nOut of the three regions, only Travis County in the Austin area flipped back into the Democratic column due to the city's strong liberal leanings and opposition to the Iraq War. Although Bush carried Dallas County by a narrow margin of 50% to Kerry's 49%, the city of Dallas proper voted heavily for Kerry, winning 57% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Texas cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Texas is allocated 34 electors because it has 32 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 34 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 34 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179250-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Texas, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 34 were pledged to Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Utah took place on November 2, 2004. It was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose five representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah\nUtah was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 45.5% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. It is a strongly Republican state that in 2004 had a state legislature with a \"super-majority\" of Republicans in its make-up (meaning the minority parties are unable to block a veto by its members), both U.S. Senators being Republican as well as two of the three members of the U.S. House of Representatives. With 71.54 percent of the popular vote, Utah was Bush's strongest state in the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah\nThis is one of only four instances in which a candidate gained over 70% of a state's vote since Ronald Reagan's 1984 landslide. The others are Mitt Romney in Utah again in 2012 as well as Barack Obama in Hawaii in 2008 and 2012. Interesting, all four of these elections excluding this one involved the candidate having some close tie to the state: Barack Obama was born in Hawaii, and Mitt Romney would later represent Utah in the United States Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 71], "content_span": [72, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Campaign, Polling\nThe final three polls averaged Bush with 67 percent to Kerry with 25 percent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 67], "content_span": [68, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Analysis\nRepublicans dominate Utah state politics because of the very high Mormon population that accounts for almost seventy percent of the residents throughout the state. Mormons have been known for having very conservative values. While every county voted for Bush, areas such as Summit County (ski resort), Moab (becoming an outpost for environmental activists), Carbon County (largely blue collar), Salt Lake City (urban area with some diversity) and San Juan County (economically distressed and mostly Native American) did give a number of their votes to Kerry. However, other areas were uniformly Republican in voting. Utah County's (home of Provo and Brigham Young University) Republican vote (86%) was by far the largest percentage of any county its size in America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Utah cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Utah is allocated five electors because it has three congressional districts and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of five electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins a plurality of votes in the state is awarded all five electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179251-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Utah, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 5 were pledged to Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Vermont took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nVermont is the home state of United States presidential candidate and anti-war advocate Howard Dean, its former governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nVermont voted overwhelmingly for the Democratic candidate, Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts, over incumbent Republican President George W. Bush of Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nKerry received 58.94% of the vote to Bush's 38.80%, a Democratic victory margin of 20.14%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nKerry also swept 13 of the state's 14 counties, breaking 60% in 6 of them. Kerry's strongest county was Windham County, which he won with 66.43% of the vote to Bush's 31.22%. Only one county voted for Bush, sparsely populated bellwether Essex County in the far northeast of the state, which Bush won with 54.17% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nA state with strong liberal and anti-war tendencies, Vermont registered as the third most Democratic state in the nation in the 2004 election, its results making the state about 23% more Democratic than the nation. It also had the strongest Democratic swing of any state in the nation against Bush compared to the 2000 result. Even as Bush increased his nationwide popular vote support from a 0.52% loss to Al Gore in 2000 to a 2.46% nationwide victory in 2004, Vermont swung 10.20% against Bush, making the state trend 13.18% Democratic relative to the nation. This portended the future trend of the state toward dominance by the Democratic Party, as Democrat Barack Obama would carry the state in a 67-30 landslide four years later in 2008 and again in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179252-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Vermont\nKerry, from neighboring Massachusetts, was the first Northern Democrat ever to carry Vermont. The previous three Democratic presidential candidates to carry the state were all from the South (Lyndon B. Johnson was from Texas, Bill Clinton from Arkansas and Al Gore from Tennessee), even though Vermont is a northern state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Virginia took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 13 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia\nVirginia was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by an 8.20% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise a red state. The state had voted for the Republican candidate in all presidential elections since 1952 except for 1964's Democratic landslide. This pattern continued in 2004, although it would be broken four years later by the Democratic victory in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia\nAs of the 2020 presidential election, the 2004 election is the last time that Virginia has voted Republican. This was also the last time Buchanan County and Dickenson County would vote Democratic for president; and the last time Loudoun County, Prince William County, and Henrico County, and the independent Cities of Winchester, Radford, Staunton, Harrisonburg, Manassas, Suffolk, Hopewell, and Manassas Park, would vote Republican for president. As of 2020, this is the last time Virginia has voted to the right of Missouri, Florida, or Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia\nBush became the first Republican to win the White House without carrying Fairfax County since Calvin Coolidge in 1924.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 75], "content_span": [76, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Campaign, Polling\nBush won every single pre-election poll. The final 3 poll average showed Bush leading 50% to 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 71], "content_span": [72, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 86], "content_span": [87, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Analysis\nIn the last century Virginia has shifted from a largely rural, politically Southern and conservative state to a more urbanized, pluralistic, and politically moderate environment. Up until the 1970s, Virginia was a racially divided one-party state dominated by the Byrd Organization. African Americans were effectively disfranchised until after passage of civil rights legislation in the mid-1960s. Enfranchisement and immigration of other groups, especially Hispanics, have placed growing importance on minority voting. Regional differences play a large part in Virginia politics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Analysis\nRural southern and western areas moved to support the Republican Party in response to its \"southern strategy\", while urban and growing suburban areas, including Northern Virginia, form the Democratic Party base. Democratic support also persists in union-influenced parts of Southwest Virginia, college towns such as Charlottesville and Blacksburg, and the southeastern region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nBush won 9 of 11 congressional districts, including one that elected a Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 98], "content_span": [99, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Virginia cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Virginia is allocated 13 electors because it has 11 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 13 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 13 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179253-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Virginia, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 13 were pledged for Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 62], "content_span": [63, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state)\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Washington took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 11 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state)\nThe State of Washington was considered a competitive swing state in 2004, and on election day, Kerry won the state with a margin of 7.2%. This is the most recent presidential election in which Washington was considered a swing state. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the final time the state's margin would be in the single digits and the last time a Republican received more than 45% of the state's vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 85], "content_span": [86, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Campaign, Polling\nKerry won every single pre-election except one tie. The final 3 poll average had Kerry winning with 50% to 45%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 81], "content_span": [82, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 96], "content_span": [97, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Analysis\nA solidly blue state, Washington has voted for the Democratic presidential nominee in every presidential election since 1988. Neither candidate seriously contested the state as it was viewed as a safe blue state. Like Oregon, the state is divided politically by the urban/rural divide and geographically by the Cascade Mountains. Most of the state's population resides in Western Washington along the Pacific Coast and in highly urbanized areas like Seattle; this part of the state votes overwhelmingly Democratic. The other side of the mountains in Eastern Washington is much more rural and conservative and therefore heavily Republican.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Analysis\nWhile polling showed that voters trusted Bush more than Kerry on the issue of terrorism, the Iraq War and Bush's domestic policies were unpopular in the state. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Clark County, Island County, and Skagit County voted for the Republican candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Electors\nTechnically the voters of Washington cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Washington is allocated 11 electors because it has 9 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 11 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 11 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179254-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Washington (state), Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 11 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 5 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia\nWest Virginia was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 12.86% margin of victory. Prior to the election, 8 of 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a red state, while others considered it as a swing state. Democratic President Bill Clinton easily won this state in 1992 and 1996, but Bush carried the state in 2000 with just 51.92% of the vote. West Virginia is the only state to vote against George H. W. Bush both times and vote for George W. Bush both times. On election day, President Bush won here with a 6.53% better margin than his performance in 2000, signaling that the state was trending Republican at the presidential level. This was despite the fact that over 50% of the state's population were registered Democrats and both senators were Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 879]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia\nThis also marked the last election in which West Virginia voted for the same presidential candidate as neighboring Virginia, and the first election since 1944 in which West Virginia voted to the right of Virginia. Since then, West Virginia would vote for the Republican presidential candidate while neighboring Virginia would vote for the Democratic candidate. As of the 2020 presidential election, this is the last election in which Fayette County, Brooke County, Logan County, and Mingo County voted for the Democratic candidate. Bush was the first Republican president since William McKinley to win re-election nationwide while carrying West Virginia in both elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia\nOverall, this was the last election where West Virginia was considered remotely competitive for the Democratic Party. As of 2020, this is the last election where West Virginia voted to the left of Indiana, Montana, South Dakota, North Dakota, Georgia, South Carolina or Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 80], "content_span": [81, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Campaign, Polling\nEarly on, pre-election polling showed the election as a pure toss up. But after September 14, Bush pulled away and reached 50% or higher in the polls. The final 3 poll average showed Bush leading 50% to 44%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 76], "content_span": [77, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBush visited the state 8 times. Kerry visited the state 6 times. A total of between $100,000 to $550,000 was spent each week. As the election went on, both tickets spent less and less here each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 91], "content_span": [92, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Analysis\nMore than any other state, West Virginia highlighted Kerry's trouble in Appalachian America. It swung heavily to the Democrats during the days of Franklin D. Roosevelt and remained reliably Democratic for most of the next 68 years. It often voted for Democrats (such as Jimmy Carter and Mike Dukakis) who went on to big national defeats. This was largely due to its blue-collar, heavily unionized workers, especially coal miners, who favored Democratic economic policy. Starting with Al Gore, however, the state's voters became more concerned with environmental policies advocated by the Democrats, especially regarding coal, which is a large source of jobs in the state. This made them more receptive to Republicans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Electors\nTechnically the voters of WV cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. WV is allocated 5 electors because it has 3 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 5 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 5 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179255-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in West Virginia, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 5 were pledged for Bush/Cheney:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 67], "content_span": [68, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose 10 representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin\nWisconsin was won by Democratic nominee John Kerry by a 0.38% margin of victory. Prior to the election, most news organizations considered this a toss-up, or swing state. The state had similar demographics and was a showdown state just like its bordering states: Michigan, Minnesota, and Iowa. On election day, Senator Kerry barely carried the state over President George W. Bush. The results in Wisconsin were nearly identical to the results from four years earlier, when Al Gore squeaked by Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin\nAs of the 2020 Presidential Election, this would be the most recent time when Wisconsin did not back the overall winning candidate of the Electoral College. Additionally, this was only the third time since 1960 (the other years occurring four years earlier in 2000, along with 1988) it would vote for the losing candidate. This is also the last time a Republican won the presidency without winning Wisconsin and the last time it voted for a losing candidate. Until 2020, this was the last time Wisconsin did not vote for the same candidate as neighboring Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations that made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 76], "content_span": [77, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Campaign, Polling\nPre -election polling had Bush and Kerry winning polls, with neither candidate grasping a strong lead. The last 3 poll averages showed Bush leading 49% to 46%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 72], "content_span": [73, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nBush visited the state 12 times. Kerry visited the state 14 times. A total of between $1.3 million to $3.6 million was spent each week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 87], "content_span": [88, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Analysis\nWisconsin has voted for the Democratic presidential nominee in the last four elections before the fifth time in 2004. The urban centers of Milwaukee and Madison tend to vote strongly Democratic. The suburbs of those cities are politically diverse, but tend to vote Republican. Counties in the western part of the state tend to be liberal, a tradition passed down from Scandinavian immigrants. The rural areas in the northern and eastern part of the state are the most solidly Republican areas in Wisconsin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Analysis\nThe CNN exit polls showed a dead heat between the two. However, the deciding factor for Kerry's victory was union members who voted for him with 62%, while non-members (83% of the population) voted for Bush with just 52% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Wisconsin cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Wisconsin is allocated 10 electors because it has 8 congressional districts and 2 senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 10 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 10 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179256-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wisconsin, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All 10 were pledged for Kerry/Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming took place on November 2, 2004, and was part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming\nWyoming was won by incumbent President George W. Bush by a 39.8% margin of victory. Prior to the election, all 12 news organizations considered this a state Bush would win, or otherwise considered as a safe red state. This was based on pre-election polling, the fact that the last Democrat to win here was Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, and how Bush carried this state in 2000 with almost 68% of the vote. On election day Bush won every county with over 65% except for Teton County, which Kerry won with 53% and Albany County, which Bush won with 54% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming\nWith 68.86% of the popular vote, Wyoming would prove to be Bush's second strongest state in the 2004 election after neighboring Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Campaign, Predictions\nThere were 12 news organizations who made state-by-state predictions of the election. Here are their last predictions before election day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Campaign, Polling\nOnly one pre-election poll was conducted. It showed Bush leading Kerry 65% to 29%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 70], "content_span": [71, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Campaign, Advertising and visits\nNeither campaign advertised or visited this state during the fall campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 85], "content_span": [86, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Analysis\nWyoming is a Republican bastion. The last Democrat to win a senate election was Gale W. McGee in 1970. The last Democrat to win the at-large seat was Teno Roncalio in 1978. The last time the Democrats controlled the Wyoming House of Representatives was 1966. The last time Democrats controlled the Wyoming Senate was 1938. The state, however, did elect Democratic governors from 1974 to 2010 with only an eight-year interruption of Jim Geringer's tenure from 1995 to 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Analysis\nIn presidential elections, Wyoming is probably the most reliable red state in the country. The last Democrat to carry the state, or even crack the 40% mark, was LBJ in 1964, and before that was Harry Truman in 1948. Since 1968, every Republican carried this state by a double-digit margin of victory, except in 1992. As far as popular vote percentage, the 2004 results were the third best performance by the Republican party since 1964, behind only Richard Nixon (69.0%) in 1972 and Ronald Reagan (70.5%) in 1984. With regards to the margin of victory, the 2004 election (at 39.8%) was also the third best performance, behind only George W. Bush (40.1%) in 2000 and Ronald Reagan (42.3%) in 1984.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Analysis\nCNN exit polls showed 72% of the state approved of Bush, and 69% approved of his decision to go to war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Results breakdown, By congressional district\nDue to the state's low population, only one congressional district is allocated. This district, called the At-Large district, because it covers the entire state, and thus is equivalent to the statewide election results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 97], "content_span": [98, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Electors\nTechnically the voters of Wyoming cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. Wyoming is allocated three electors because it has one congressional districts and two senators. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of three electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all three electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 808]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179257-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in Wyoming, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from the state. All three were pledged for Bush/Cheney.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 61], "content_span": [62, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179258-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia\nThe 2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia took place on November 2, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States presidential election. Voters chose three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for president and vice president. Prior to the election, Washington DC was considered to be a jurisdiction Kerry would win or safely blue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179258-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia\nAs expected, The District of Columbia voted by an extremely large margin in favor of the Democratic candidate John F. Kerry. John F. Kerry won DC by a margin of victory of 79.84% over the incumbent George W. Bush, more than any state. At the time, this was also the largest Democratic margin of victory over a Republican candidate in the history of the district, but has since been surpassed by all presidential elections since. The greatest victory margin of these subsequent years was in 2016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179258-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia\nSuch victory margins may perhaps be attributed to the fact that D.C. only encompasses an urban core area (and those are generally very liberal in nature). A recent San Francisco study based on the 2004 presidential election exit polls, ranked Washington, D.C. as the 4th most liberal city in the country. This information supports the fact that the District of Columbia has never voted for a Republican since the ratification of the 23rd Amendment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179258-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia, Electors\nTechnically the voters of D.C. cast their ballots for electors: representatives to the Electoral College. D.C. is allocated 3 electors. All candidates who appear on the ballot or qualify to receive write-in votes must submit a list of 3 electors, who pledge to vote for their candidate and his or her running mate. Whoever wins the majority of votes in the state is awarded all 3 electoral votes. Their chosen electors then vote for president and vice president. Although electors are pledged to their candidate and running mate, they are not obligated to vote for them. An elector who votes for someone other than his or her candidate is known as a faithless elector.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 78], "content_span": [79, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179258-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia, Electors\nThe electors of each state and the District of Columbia met on December 13, 2004, to cast their votes for president and vice president. The Electoral College itself never meets as one body. Instead the electors from each state and the District of Columbia met in their respective capitols.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 78], "content_span": [79, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179258-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 United States presidential election in the District of Columbia, Electors\nThe following were the members of the Electoral College from D.C. All were pledged to and voted for John Kerry and John Edwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179259-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 United States rugby union tour of Ireland and Italy\nThe 2004 United States rugby union tour was a series of matches played in Ireland and Italy 2004 in by United States national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179259-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 United States rugby union tour of Ireland and Italy, Results\nIreland: 15.Geordan Murphy, 14.Shane Horgan, 13.Brian O'Driscoll (capt. ), 12.Kevin Maggs, 11.Tommy Bowe, 10.David Humphreys, 9.Guy Easterby, 8.Eric Miller, 7.Denis Leamy, 6.Simon Easterby, 5.Paul O'Connell, 4.Donncha O'Callaghan, 3.John Hayes, 2.Frank Sheahan, 1.Marcus Horan, - replacements: 17.Simon Best, 18.Leo Cullen, 19.Anthony Foley, 20.Peter Stringer, 20.Peter Stringer, 22.Girvan Dempsey - No entry\u00a0: 16.Shane Byrne, 21.Ronan O'GaraUnited States: 15.Francois Viljoen, 14.Al Lakomskis, 13.Paul Emerick, 12.Salesi Sika, 11.David Fee, 10.Mike Hercus, 9.Mose Timoteo, 8.Kort Schubert (capt. ), 7.Tony Petruzzella, 6.Brian Surgener, 5.Gerhard Klerck, 4.Alec Parker, 3.Jacob Waasdorp, 2.Matt Wyatt, 1.Mike MacDonald, - replacements: 19.Tasi Mo'unga, 20.David Williams, 22.Albert Tuipulotu - No entry: 16.Mike Hobson, 17.Chris Osentowski, 18.Jurie Gouws, 21.Matt Sherman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179259-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 United States rugby union tour of Ireland and Italy, Results\nItaly: 15.Roland de Marigny, 14.Kaine Robertson, 13.Walter Pozzebon, 12.Cristian Stoica, 11.Ludovico Nitoglia, 10.Luciano Orquera, 9.Paul Griffen, 8.David dal Maso, 7.Silvio Orlando, 6.Enrico Pavanello, 5.Valerio Bernabo, 4.Cristian Bezzi, 3.Salvatore Perugini, 2.Fabio Ongaro (capt. ), 1.Andrea Lo Cicero, - replacements: 17.Salvatore Costanzo, 18.Roberto Mandelli, 19.Antonio Mannato, 21.Andrea Scanavacca, 22.Matteo Barbini - No entry\u00a0: 16.Giorgio Intoppa, 20.Pietro TravagliUnited States: 15.Francois Viljoen, 14.Al Lakomskis, 13.Paul Emerick, 12.Salesi Sika, 11.David Fee, 10.Mike Hercus, 9.Mose Timoteo, 8.Kort Schubert (capt. ), 7.Brian Surgener, 6.Jurie Gouws, 5.Gerhard Klerck, 4.Alec Parker, 3.Jacob Waasdorp, 2.Matt Wyatt, 1.Mike MacDonald, - replacements: 17.Chris Osentowski, 19.Tasi Mo'unga, 20.David Williams, 22.Albert Tuipulotu - No entry: 16.Mike Hobson, 18.Matt Kane, 21.Matt Sherman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 65], "content_span": [66, 981]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures\nThe 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures - (Catalan: F\u00f2rum Universal de les Cultures, Spanish: F\u00f3rum Universal de las Culturas) was a 141-day international event that took place in the Centre de Convencions Internacional de Barcelona (CCIB) and its surrounding venues, Barcelona, Spain from May 9 to September 26, 2004, and was the first edition of the Universal Forum of Cultures. The open space used by the event is now a public park called the Parc del F\u00f2rum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, History\nThe 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures was organized by Barcelona's city council, the regional government (the Generalitat de Catalunya), the Spanish National Government and UNESCO. It was conceived by its prime mover (Pasqual Maragall, then Mayor of Barcelona) as a way of promoting the city's burgeoning tourist industry in the wake of the 1992 Olympic Games, which were also held in Barcelona. The forum was also politically useful, given the mayor's earlier failure to deliver on a 1996 promise to secure an international exposition for the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, History\nThe official aims of the 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures included support for peace, sustainable development, human rights and respect for diversity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, History\nThe forum hosted more than 40 international conventions (participants included Juan Antonio Samaranch, Mikhail Gorbachev, Jos\u00e9 Saramago, Felipe Gonz\u00e1lez, Rigoberta Mench\u00fa, Angelina Jolie, Robert McNamara, Val\u00e9ry Giscard d'Estaing, Lionel Jospin, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, Romano Prodi and Salman Rushdie, among others), performances, markets, games, 423 concerts, 57 street performances, 44 theatre, dance and cabaret companies, 20 circus acts and over 20 exhibitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, History\nJosep Acebillo was named Director for Architecture and Infrastructures of the Forum. The events were held at the eastern end of Avinguda Diagonal, a main cross-city artery. The seaside area was developed to house the event. It covered 30 hectares between the Barcelona Olympic port and Sant Adri\u00e0 de Bes\u00f2s, and culminated the urban regeneration programme started for the 1992 Olympics. The new site comprises a convention center, central plaza, parks, auditoriums, a new port and a Forum Building (designed by architectural firm Herzog & de Meuron).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, History\nIn the framework of this Forum, the 4th Porto Alegre Forum of Local Authorities for Social Inclusion was held, which approved the Agenda 21 for culture on 8 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, Exhibitions\nThe forum showed four thematic exhibitions, intended to achieve a renewal of ideas and attitudes toward the 21st century, by undertaking a careful analysis of cultural diversity, sustainable development and the conditions for peace:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179260-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Universal Forum of Cultures, The place today\nThe central plaza and the open space surrounding forms a public area called Parc del F\u00f2rum, and is now home to several massive events around the year, including the Primavera Sound Festival, Summercase, the Catalonia April Fair and the most popular concerts in La Merc\u00e8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179261-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Upper Normandy regional election\nA regional election took place in Upper Normandy on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Alain Le Vern (PS) was re-elected President of the Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179262-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Overview\nIt was contested by 18 teams, and Danubio won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179262-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Championship Playoff\nNacional and Danubio qualified to the championship playoffs as the Apertura and Clausura winners, respectively", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179262-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan Primera Divisi\u00f3n, Championship Playoff, Second Leg\nDanubio F.C. became champions by winning the qualifier and the annual table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179263-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum on an amendment dealing with public ownership of water supply was held in Uruguay on 31 October 2004 alongside simultaneous general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179263-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan constitutional referendum, Background\nThe proposed amendment to the constitution dealt with the issue of water supply and sanitation, including a statement that access to piped water and sanitation were fundamental human rights, and that", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179263-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan constitutional referendum, Background\nThe amendment was supported by (victorious) presidential candidate Tabar\u00e9 V\u00e1zquez and his Broad Front coalition. Friends of the Earth also supported the move, saying it \"sets a key precedent for the protection of water worldwide, by enshrining these principles into the national constitution of one country by means of direct democracy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179263-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan constitutional referendum, Aftermath\nIn May 2005, the government stated that contracts with private water companies would be honoured until their expiry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179264-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Uruguay on 31 October, alongside a constitutional referendum. The result was a victory for the Broad Front, marking the first time a party other than the Colorado Party or National Party had held power since the two parties were formed in the 1830s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179264-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan general election\nAs a result of the Broad Front receiving more than 50% of the vote, its leader, Tabar\u00e9 V\u00e1zquez, was elected president without the need for a second round. To date, this is the only time that a presidential election has been decided in a single round since the two-round system was introduced in 1999. The Broad Front also won majorities in the Chamber of Deputies and the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179265-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan presidential primaries\nPresidential primary elections were held in Uruguay on 27 June 2004 in order to nominate the presidential candidate for every political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179265-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan presidential primaries, Candidates\nOne of the most important parties in terms of voter preferences, it had already decided to have only one candidate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179265-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Uruguayan presidential primaries, Candidates\nThe main candidate had already been decided between the most important political factions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179266-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Utah Democratic presidential primary was held on February 24 in the U.S. state of Utah as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179267-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah State Aggies football team\nThe 2004 Utah State Aggies football team represented Utah State University as a member of the Sun Belt Conference in 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Aggies were led by fifth-year head coach Mick Dennehy and played their home games in Romney Stadium in Logan, Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179268-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah Utes football team\nThe 2004 Utah Utes football team represented the University of Utah in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. This team was the original 'BCS Buster', meaning, this was the first time that a team from a BCS non-AQ conference was invited to play in one of the BCS bowl games. The team, coached by second-year head football coach Urban Meyer, played its home games in Rice-Eccles Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179268-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah Utes football team\nUtah finished the season 12\u20130, the fourth undefeated and untied season in school history. The Utes were one of three teams in the top-level Division I FBS to finish the season undefeated (the others being the USC Trojans and the Auburn Tigers.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179268-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah Utes football team\nUtah was the highest-ranked BCS non-AQ team in each poll every week of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179268-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah Utes football team, After the season, NFL Draft\nUtah had five players taken in the 2005 NFL Draft:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Utah gubernatorial election took place on November 2, 2004. The incumbent governor was Republican Olene S. Walker, who had become governor following Mike Leavitt's resignation to join the George W. Bush administration. However, Walker placed fourth in the Republican primary, far behind Jon Huntsman Jr. Huntsman won the nomination and went on to win the general election, carrying 25 of the 29 counties and winning 57.7% of the overall vote. This was the last time that a Democratic nominee for any statewide office has received forty percent or more of the popular vote, and the most recent election in which a Democratic nominee carried more than three counties in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, Background\nIn March 2003, Huntsman resigned his post in the Bush administration. In mid-August, three term incumbent Governor Mike Leavitt, whom Huntsman strongly supported, decided not to run for re-election to a fourth term, in order to become the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency under the Bush administration. Shortly thereafter, Huntsman filed papers to run for Governor of Utah. In November 2003, Lieutenant Governor Olene S. Walker became the Utah's first female governor as Leavitt was confirmed to become EPA Administrator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, Democratic nomination\nScott Matheson, Jr. entered the race on March 27, 2004. He won the May Democratic nomination unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, Republican primary, Primary\nHuntsman gained the endorsements from U.S. Senator Jake Garn and former U.S. President George H. W. Bush. Polls showed he was the front-runner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nJon Huntsman Jr., a former advisor for U.S. Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and George W. Bush and son of industrialist Jon Huntsman, Sr.\u2014the founder of Huntsman Chemical Corporation\u2014filed papers to run for governor in September 2003. Jason Chaffetz was his campaign manager. In April 2004, Utah County Commissioner Gary Herbert decided to drop out of the Republican nomination and become Huntsman's running mate. Herbert helped Huntsman with the rural community. Huntsman campaigned on eliminating the sales tax on food and on ethics reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nHe proposed that lawmakers have to disclose all their gifts, they have to report monthly their campaign contributions, and they can't work as lobbyists immediately after leaving state government. Huntsman opposed President Bush's No Child Left Behind Act. He said he would leave a label on the door of the governor's office \"Economic Development Czar\" if he's elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nU.S. Attorney, former Harvard University professor, and dean of the University of Utah law school Scott Matheson, Jr. won the Democratic nomination unopposed. He is the son of former Utah Governor Scott Matheson who was also the last Democrat to be elected governor of the red state of Utah. He made education the number one priority. He explained how better schools would attract new business. In one television ad, he called himself \"Utah's Education Governor.\" He criticized Huntsman for supporting school choice reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, General election, Polling\nIn a March Deseret Morning News/KSL-TV poll, Matheson was leading all the Republicans running for the nomination except for Huntsman and Walker. An early September Jones poll showed Huntsman leading 49%-39%. An October 6 Salt Lake Tribune poll showed Huntsman leading 49%-33%. An October 7 Deseret Morning News/KSL-TV poll showed Huntsman only leading 49%-40%. An October 29 Salt Lake Tribune poll showed Huntsman leading 50%-36%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179269-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Utah gubernatorial election, General election, Fundraising\nHuntsman raised a little over $3.5 million. Nearly $950,000 of the money raised was from his own personal loans and from family donations. He also raised 100,000 from the Republican Governors Association. Matheson raised almost $2.0 million. About one-fourth of Matheson's funds came from political committees, including $325,000 from the Democratic Governors Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179270-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Uzbek League\nThe 2004 Uzbek League season was the 13th edition of top level football in Uzbekistan since independence from the Soviet Union in 1992. Pakhtakor were the defending champions from the 2003 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179270-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Uzbek League, Overview\nThe season began on 4 March 2004 and concluded on 20 November 2004. The League reduced from 16 to 14 teams because Kokand 1912 and Dustlik were excluded from 2004 season for being unable to pay their debts to the UFF from the previous season (2003). Pakhtakor Tashkent won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179271-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 V-League\nV-League 2004 was the 48th season of Vietnam's professional football league. Kinh Do was the league's sponsor, replacing PepsiCo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179271-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 V-League\nHo\u00e0ng Anh Gia Lai won their second title in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 70]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179272-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series\nThe 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series was an Australian racing series for V8 Supercars. It began on 21 March 2004 at the Adelaide Street Circuit and ended on 5 December at Eastern Creek Raceway after 13 rounds. It was the sixth running of the V8 Supercar Championship Series. The series winner was also awarded the 45th Australian Touring Car Championship title by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179272-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series\nThe championship was won by Marcos Ambrose of the Stone Brothers Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179272-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series, Teams and drivers\nThe following drivers and teams competed in the 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series. The series comprised eleven sprint rounds and two endurance rounds (the Sandown 500 and the Bathurst 1000) with each car driven by two drivers in the endurance rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179272-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series, Results and standings, Race calendar\nThe 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series comprised 13 rounds which included 11 sprint rounds and two endurance rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179273-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar season\nThe 2004 V8 Supercar season was the 45th year of touring car racing in Australia since the first runnings of the Australian Touring Car Championship and the fore-runner of the present day Bathurst 1000, the Armstrong 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179273-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar season\nThere were 21 touring car race meetings held during 2004; a thirteen-round series for V8 Supercars, the 2004 V8 Supercar Championship Series (VCS), two of them endurance races; a six-round second tier V8 Supercar series 2004 Konica Minolta V8 Supercar Series (KVS) along with a non-point scoring race supporting the Bathurst 1000 and V8 Supercar support programme event at the 2004 Australian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179273-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar season, Results and standings, Race calendar\nThe 2004 Australian touring car season consisted of 21 events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 61], "content_span": [62, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179273-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar season, Results and standings, Netspace V8Supercars GP 100\nThis meeting was a support event of the 2004 Australian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 75], "content_span": [76, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179273-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 V8 Supercar season, Results and standings, Konica Minolta V8Supercar Challenge\nThis race was a support event of the 2004 Bob Jane T-Marts 1000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 83], "content_span": [84, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179274-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 VCU Rams men's soccer team\nThe 2004 VCU Rams men's soccer team represented Virginia Commonwealth University in all 2004 NCAA Division I men's college soccer competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179274-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 VCU Rams men's soccer team\nThe 2004 season saw the Rams make their deepest-ever run in the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, reaching the quarterfinals of the competition, before losing to eventual national runners-up, UC Santa Barbara. During their quarterfinal run, the Rams knocked off Atlantic 10 Men's Soccer Tournament champions, George Washington, and the number one team in the country, Wake Forest. Outside of NCAA play, the Rams won the Colonial Athletic Association regular season title. It would not be until 2018 the Rams would again win a conference regular season championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179274-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 VCU Rams men's soccer team, Roster\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179275-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 VFL season\nThe 2004 Victorian Football League season was the 123rd season of the Australian rules football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179275-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 VFL season\nThe premiership was won by the Sandringham Football Club, after defeating Port Melbourne by four points in the Grand Final on 19 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179276-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 VMI Keydets football team\nThe 2004 VMI Keydets football team represented the Virginia Military Institute during the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. It was the Keydets' 114th year of football, and their 2nd season in the Big South Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179276-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 VMI Keydets football team\nVMI went 0\u201311 on the year, failing to win a game in a season for only the third time in program history, and the first time since 1997 under Ted Cain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179277-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 VTV International Women's Volleyball Cup\nThe 2004 VTV Cup Championship was the first edition of the tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179278-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vaahteraliiga season\nThe 2004 Vaahteraliiga season was the 25th season of the highest level of American football in Finland. The regular season took place between June 5 and August 23, 2004. The Finnish champion was determined in the playoffs and at the championship game Vaahteramalja XXV the Helsinki Roosters won the Turku Trojans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179279-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Valdosta State Blazers football team\nThe 2004 Valdosta State Blazers football team was an American football team that represented Valdosta State University as a member of the Gulf South Conference (GSC) during the 2004 NCAA Division II football season. In their fifth year under head coach Chris Hatcher, the team compiled a 13\u20131 record (9\u20130 against conference opponents) and won the GSC championship. The team advanced to the NCAA Division II playoffs and defeated Pittsburg State, 36\u201331, in the championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179279-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Valdosta State Blazers football team\nTwo Valdosta player were honored by the Associated Press on its 2004 Little All-America team: kicker Will Rhody (first team) and offensive lineman Torry Howard (third team). Other key players included quarterback Fabian Walker and running back Vincent Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179279-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Valdosta State Blazers football team\nThe Blazers played their home games at Bazemore\u2013Hyder Stadium in Valdosta, Georgia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179280-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vale of Glamorgan Council election\nThe 2004 Vale of Glamorgan Council election took place on Thursday 10 June 2004 to elect members of Vale of Glamorgan Council in Wales. This was the same day as many other local elections in Wales and England. The Conservatives remained the largest party but did not have a majority. The previous full council election was in 1999 and the next full council election was in May 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179280-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vale of Glamorgan Council election, Overview\nCouncil elections in Wales were originally scheduled for May 2003, but were delayed by a year to avoid a conflict with the 2003 Wales Assembly elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179280-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vale of Glamorgan Council election, Overview\nForty-seven seats were up for election in the Vale of Glamorgan. There was an increase in electoral divisions from 22 to 23 following The County Borough of The Vale of Glamorgan (Electoral Changes) Order 2002, which had divided the Alexandra ward into two new wards (and increased the representation in Sully to two councillors). The overall turnout (including spoilt ballots) was 44.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179280-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vale of Glamorgan Council election, Election result\nThe Conservative Party remained the largest party following the election, though did not have a majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179281-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix was the last round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 29\u201331 October 2004 at the Circuit de Valencia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179281-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP classification\nKenny Roberts Jr. was replaced by Gregorio Lavilla after the first practice session due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179281-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round sixteen has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 94], "content_span": [95, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179282-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open\nThe 2004 Vancouver Women's Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts that was part of the Tier V category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the third edition of the tournament and took place in Vancouver, Canada from 9 August until 15 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179282-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open\nNicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 won the singles edition, whilst the American team of Bethanie Mattek and Abigail Spears emerged victorious in the doubles category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179282-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open, Results, Doubles\nBethanie Mattek / Abigail Spears defeated Els Callens / Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179283-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nThis was the first WTA edition of the tournament; the previous editions were ITF events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179283-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nAmanda Augustus and M\u00e9lanie Marois were the defending champions, but did not compete together in 2004. Augustus paired up with Natalie Grandin and lost in the quarterfinals; whilst Marois played with Marie-\u00c8ve Pelletier and lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179283-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nAmericans Bethanie Mattek and Abigail Spears won the title, defeating Europeans Els Callens and Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld in the final in straight sets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179284-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nThis was the first WTA edition of the tournament; the previous editions were ITF events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179284-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nAnna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld was the defending champion from 2003, but lost in the second round to Sessil Karatantcheva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179284-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vancouver Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nNicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 won the title, defeating Laura Granville in the final. At 15 years and 3 months of age, Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 became the 6th youngest woman to win a Pro-level title, and the youngest since 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179285-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vanderbilt Commodores football team\nThe 2004 Vanderbilt Commodores football team represented the Vanderbilt University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Commodores offense scored 212 points while the defense allowed 268 points. Led by head coach Bobby Johnson in his third year as the head coach, the Commodores finished with a 2\u20139 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179286-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vanuatuan general election\nGeneral elections were held in Vanuatu on 6 July 2004. The VP-VNP coalition won the most seats, but failed to gain a majority, which instead was cobbled together by Serge Vohor of the Union of Moderate Parties, who became Prime Minister, subsequently forming a national unity government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179286-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vanuatuan general election\nHowever, after disagreements over establishing relations with Taiwan, he was removed from office by a motion of no confidence and replaced by the Vanuatu National United Party's Ham Lini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179286-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vanuatuan general election\nNine women candidates took part in the election. Two were elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179287-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Veikkausliiga, Overview\nIt was contested by 14 teams, and Haka Valkeakoski won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum\nThe Venezuelan recall referendum of 15 August 2004 was a referendum to determine whether Hugo Ch\u00e1vez, then President of Venezuela, should be recalled from office. The recall referendum was announced on 8 June 2004 by the National Electoral Council (CNE) after the Venezuelan opposition succeeded in collecting the number of signatures required by the 1999 Constitution to effect a recall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum\nThe result of the referendum was not to recall Ch\u00e1vez (59% no), but there have been allegations of fraud. In 2004, a report by election observers rejected the hypothesis of fraud, but statistical evaluations released in 2006 and 2011 disagreed. Former United States president Jimmy Carter and his Carter Center, all groups which had observed the referendum, and other analyses denied fraud, saying the referendum was performed in a free and fair manner. Some individuals have disputed the center's endorsement of the electoral process in the referendum. The Carter Center looked into the allegations and released a paper and statistical analysis reaffirming their original conclusions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition\nThe recall mechanism was introduced into Venezuelan law in 1999 under the new Constitution drafted by the National Constituent Assembly and sanctioned by the electorate in a referendum. Under its provisions, an elected official can be subjected to a recall referendum if a petition gathers signatures from 20% of the corresponding electorate. Thus, to order a presidential recall vote in 2004, 2.4\u00a0million signatures were needed - 20% of the national electorate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, Constitutional basis\nThe recall referendum is provided for in two articles of the 1999 Constitution:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 69], "content_span": [70, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nIn August 2003, about 3.2\u00a0million signatures were presented by S\u00famate, a Venezuelan volunteer civil association, founded in 2002. These signatures were rejected by the National Electoral Council (CNE) on the grounds that they had been collected prematurely; i.e., before the midpoint of the presidential term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nIn September 2003, The Economist reported that the government used a \"rapid reaction\" squad to raid the offices of CNE (the government body overseeing the petition drive), where the petitions were stored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nIn November 2003, the opposition collected a new set of signatures, with 3.6\u00a0million names produced in four days. The CNE rejected the petition, saying that only 1.9\u00a0million were valid, while 1.1\u00a0million were dubious and 460,000 completely invalid. Reaction to the decision to reject the petition (for the second time) resulted in riots that led to nine dead, 339 arrested, and 1,200 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nThe petitioners appealed to the Electoral Chamber of the Venezuelan Supreme Court. The court reinstated over 800,000 of the disputed signatures, bringing the total to 2.7\u00a0million, above the 2.4\u00a0million needed to authorise the referendum. However, about a week later, the Constitutional chamber of the Supreme Court overturned the Electoral chamber's ruling alleging that the latter did not have jurisdiction for that ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nThe list of signatories was subsequently collected by the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nThe names of petition signers were posted publicly online in what became known as the Tasc\u00f3n List. The president of the Venezuelan Workers Confederation was quoted by the Associated Press as claiming that the Ch\u00e1vez government had begun dismissing petition signers from government ministries, the state oil company, the state water company, the Caracas Metro, and public hospitals and municipal governments controlled by Ch\u00e1vez's party. The Associated Press also quoted Venezuela's Health Minister as justifying petition related layoffs by saying \"all those who have signed to activate the recall referendum against President Ch\u00e1vez should be fired from the Health Ministry\". He retracted these remarks several days later by saying that they were his own personal opinions and not a matter of public policy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 887]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nAs a compromise, the CNE set aside five days in May 2004 to allow the owners of disputed signatures to confirm that they did, in fact, back the referendum call: this was known as the reparo process. At the end of that verification effort, the total number of signatures stood at 2,436,830, according to the CNE. Thus, the target had been reached and the referendum could take place. During that time, thousands of forged ID cards and equipment to create forged ID cards were confiscated by the police. Supporters of Ch\u00e1vez believed that the opposition used these to forge signatures. The opposition claimed that the equipment and the ID cards were planted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, The signature collection drive\nThe CNE later admitted that 15,863 signatures of those signatures that were verified in May 2004 belonged to people who had died in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, Timing\nThe date chosen for the recall referendum was significant: had the recall vote been held on 19 August or later, Ch\u00e1vez would have been into the fifth year of his six-year term and had he been voted out, Vice President Jos\u00e9 Vicente Rangel would have taken over and served out the rest of Ch\u00e1vez's presidency (in accordance with Article 233 of the Constitution, above).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, The petition, Timing\nWith the vote called for 15 August, Ch\u00e1vez was not yet into the last two years of his term in office; an unfavourable result would therefore have meant the calling of fresh presidential elections within the following 30 days. Ch\u00e1vez had expressed his clear intention to stand in the election, had he been recalled; the opposition factions, however, maintained that he would have been disqualified from doing so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 55], "content_span": [56, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Campaign\nBetween late May 2004, when the CNE set the referendum date, and 15 August, the date chosen, a contentious campaign took place, with both sides convinced of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Campaign, Polls\nAlthough support for Ch\u00e1vez had been low in 2003 and early 2004, polling data showed a shift as the campaign got under way. Most polls, including those by firms linked to the opposition which had showed low support for Ch\u00e1vez in 2003 and early 2004, predicted a rejection of the recall in the weeks before the referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Campaign, Polls\nNumerous pre-referendum polls, both by opposition and by pro-Ch\u00e1vez groups, during the previous months and weeks predicted the No vote to win by a margin of between 5% and 31%. For example, Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research (GQR) Inc. and DATOS, both commissioned by the opposition, found margins in favour of No by 5% and 12% respectively in June 2004; Datan\u00e1lisis found a margin of 14% in favour of Ch\u00e1vez in June. On 11 August, Robert Jensen wrote that recent polls ranged from 8% to 31% for margins in favour of the No vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Ballot\nFor the recall to be successful, there were three conditions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day\nPolling stations opened at 6\u00a0am Venezuelan time on 15 August 2004. Later in the day, faced with a 70% turnout, lengthy queues of waiting voters, and delays exacerbated by the use of novel electronic voting equipment and fingerprint scanners, the electoral authorities agreed to extend the close of voting twice: a four-hour extension of the deadline that took it to 8\u00a0p.m., followed by an additional four hours announced later in the evening, which took it to midnight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day\nA record number of voters turned out to defeat the recall attempt with a 59% \"no\" vote. Former U.S. president Jimmy Carter, who was in Venezuela to observe the electoral process, said of the patiently waiting Venezuelan electors, \"This is the largest turnout I have ever seen.\" In previous presidential elections, turnout figures were at an average 55%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day\nAll Venezuelans aged 18 and up whose names appear on the electoral roll were eligible to vote, including those residing abroad: polling stations were set up in Venezuelan embassies and consulates abroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day, Parody recording\nAt 3:50pm local time on 15 August, CNE rector Jorge Rodr\u00edguez and CNE president Francisco Carrasquero announced on national television that they had found an audio CD where a faked voice of Carrasquero declared that the opposition has won the referendum with a total of 11,436,086 \"yes\" votes, and that Ch\u00e1vez's mandate was thereby revoked. Since this was several hours before the closing of the polling booths, and since Carrasquero declared the recording to be fake, this appeared to be a case of attempted sabotage of the referendum. The attorney-general was called on to conduct a full inquiry into the incident and to locate and arrest those responsible for the spurious audio recording.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day, Parody recording\nJournalist Fausto Malav\u00e9 told the Venezuelan opposition press that the recording was an evident parody that had been circulating in city streets for at least two months, claiming that it was surprising that it was only brought to public attention then. He also expressed concern at the significance that was attributed to it by the CNE.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 67], "content_span": [68, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day, Exit poll\nCoordinadora Democr\u00e1tica commissioned an exit poll from the American firm of Penn, Schoen & Berland, which showed Ch\u00e1vez losing by a 60\u201340 margin. PSB used volunteers from S\u00famate, a NGO which was the primary organizer of the recall referendum, and involved around 200 polling places out of 8500. With over 20,000 responses the exit poll produced a much larger amount of data than most opinion polls (typically around 1000 responses), leading to an extremely low sampling error.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Referendum day, Exit poll\nPublication or broadcast of exit polls was banned by electoral authorities, but results of the PSB poll went out to media outlets and opposition offices several hours before polls closed. Jimmy Carter said that S\u00famate \"deliberately distributed this erroneous exit poll data in order to build up, not only the expectation of victory, but also to influence the people still standing in line\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Result\nThe preliminary result was announced on 16 August 2004 on national television and radio after 94% of the vote had been counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Result\nAccording to these early-morning results, the first condition (a quorum of 25% of the electorate) had been satisfied. The second condition (more votes against Ch\u00e1vez than he received in 2000) would probably be satisfied. However, the third condition (a simple majority: more people voting \"yes\" than \"no\") had clearly failed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Allegations of electoral fraud\nAfter the preliminary results were broadcast, the opposition Coordinadora Democr\u00e1tica declared that fraud had taken place, stating that its own data (the Penn, Schoen & Berland exit poll, which was performed by volunteers from Sumate, the NGO which had organized the referendum) put the \"Yes\" vote at 59% and the \"No\" vote at 40%. Their exit poll showed the opposite result to the official voting data, predicting that Ch\u00e1vez would lose by 20%, whereas the election results showed him to have won by 20%. A poll company representative, Schoen commented, \"I think it was a massive fraud\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Allegations of electoral fraud\nCoordinadora Democr\u00e1tica also told the press that no opposition representation was present when the votes were counted and that the physical ballots had not yet been taken into account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Allegations of electoral fraud\nElection observers insisted that no fraud had taken place, but scholarly analyses published over the years to come disagreed. A statistical study by Maria M. Febres Cordero and Bernardo M\u00e1rquez was published in 2006 in a peer-reviewed academic statistics journal. The study used cluster analysis to review differences in vote patterns between voting certificates on the basis that voters were randomly assigned to certificates (each voting center had on average 2 or 3 certificates, typically for computerised and manual voting systems). It concluded: \"[ The] Venezuelan opposition has statistical evidence to reject the official results given by the CNE. The irregularities detected were observed consistently in numerous voting centers and the magnitude of the irregularities imply that the official results do not reflect the intention of voters with statistical confidence.\" They estimated that 56.4% had voted yes to recall Chavez, as opposed to the official result of 41%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 1054]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Allegations of electoral fraud\nThe presence of systemic election fraud was also supported by six analyses in a special section in the November 2011 issue of Statistical Science. Raquel Prado and Bruno Sans\u00f3 examined the exit polls; Luis Raul Pericchi and David A Torres examined the no-votes against the Newcomb-Benford law; Isbelia Martin discovered anomalous patterns in telecommunications; Ricardo Hausmann and Roberto I. Rigob\u00f3n analyzed patterns related to exit polls; Ra\u00fal Jim\u00e9nez examined the distribution of valid votes, null votes, and abstentions in each precinct; while Gustavo Delfino and Guillermo Salas reported on the anomalous relation between signatures requesting the recall, and the yes-votes. The section is introduced by an article written by Alicia L. Carriquiry. One of the papers, by Hausmann and Rigob\u00f3n, was a later version of a paper disputed by the Carter Center, and contains a response to that criticism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 979]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Allegations of electoral fraud\nSome individuals have disputed the center's endorsement of the electoral process in the Venezuelan recall referendum of 2004. Fox News' Doug Schoen told Michael Barone at U.S. News and World Report, \"Our internal sourcing tells us that there was fraud in the Venezuelan central commission. There are widespread reports of irregularities and evidence of fraud, many of them ably recorded by Mary Anastasia O'Grady in The Wall Street Journal last week. Carter is untroubled by any of this, and declares that Chavez won 'fair and square.'\" The Carter Center looked into the allegations and released a paper and statistical analysis reaffirming their original conclusions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 75], "content_span": [76, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Process endorsements\nThe day before the polling, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter expressed confidence that the vote would proceed in a calm and orderly fashion. Carter commented that, \"I might project results that will be much more satisfactory than they were in 2000 in Florida\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Process endorsements\nOn the afternoon of 16 August 2004, Carter and OAS Secretary General C\u00e9sar Gaviria gave a joint press conference in which they endorsed the preliminary results announced by the CNE. The monitors' findings \"coincided with the partial returns announced today by the National Elections Council\" said Carter, while Gaviria added that the OAS electoral observation mission's members had \"found no element of fraud in the process\". Directing his remarks at opposition figures who made claims of \"widespread fraud\" in the voting, Carter called on all Venezuelans to \"accept the results and work together for the future\". The Carter Center \"concluded the results were accurate.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Process endorsements\nThe U.S. Department of State accepted that the results of the subsequent audit were \"consistent with the results announced by (Venezuela's) National Electoral Council.\" John Maisto, U.S. Permanent Representative to the Organization of American States, added that the results of the referendum \"speak for themselves\", saying that the quest for Venezuelan democracy \"does not end with a single electoral process or referendum\" and urging the \"democratically elected government of Venezuela to address and recognize the legitimate concerns, rights, and aspirations of all of its citizens\". Regarding the recall effort, in testimony before the U.S. Senate, Maisto also pointed out that Carter had said that \" 'expression of the citizen must be privileged over excessive technicalities' in resolving issues surrounding the tabulation of the signatures\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 914]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Process endorsements\nEuropean Union observers did not oversee the elections, saying too many restrictions were put on their participation by the Ch\u00e1vez administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 65], "content_span": [66, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Analyses\nEconomists Ricardo Hausmann of Harvard University and Roberto Rigob\u00f3n of the MIT Sloan School of Management performed a statistical analysis at S\u00famate's request, analyzing how fraud could have occurred during the referendum. They concluded that the vote samples audited by the government were not a random representation of all precincts, noting that the Ch\u00e1vez-backed CNE had \"refused to use the random number generating program offered by the Carter Center for the 18 August audit and instead used its own program installed in its own computer and initialed with their own seed.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Analyses\nThey also noted that opposition witnesses and international observers were not allowed near the computer hub on election day. According to the Wall Street Journal, a computer-science professor at Johns Hopkins University said, \"The Hausmann/Rigobon study is more credible than many of the other allegations being thrown around.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0035-0002", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Analyses\nThe Carter Center looked into the allegations and released a paper with a statistical analysis in response; this stated that the audit sample data, in particular the statistical correlation between the number of \"Yes\" voters and the number of petition signatories in each audited voting centre, were consistent with nationwide results, and reaffirmed the Carter Center's earlier conclusions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Analyses\nThe Center for Economic and Policy Research drew on the Carter Center analysis and elaborated on the issue, criticising Hausmann and Rigob\u00f3n's statistical model. Furthermore, the CEPR analysis noted that \"although Hausmann and Rigob\u00f3n's analysis does not require this data to be accurate, it does require that its errors be uncorrelated with those of the signatures, something that cannot be assumed without any verifiable knowledge or observation of where the data came from.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179288-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan recall referendum, Disputes, Analyses\nJavier Corrales writes in the Foreign Policy Magazine that the opposition was \"shocked not so much by the results as by the ease with which international observers condoned the Electoral Council's flimsy audit of the results.\" The sample for the audit was selected by the government controlled National Electoral Council, and according to the opposition was not of sufficient size to be statistically reliable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179289-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan regional elections\nThe 2004 regional elections of Venezuela were held on 31 October 2004 to elect 22 governors and 2 metropolitan mayors for a four-year term beginning in 2004 and ending in 2008, when the next regional elections were held. The elections were originally scheduled for 26 September 2004, but faced technical issues and an application for annulment requested by the opposition, and were held under high political pressure after the events of the recall referendum of August 2004. The ongoing political crisis in the country and the proximity of the two electoral processes marked the environment of the elections, which were won by the candidates supported by the president, Hugo Chavez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179289-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan regional elections\nA total 1,577 political organizations participated in the elections; however, abstention levels reached 52%. As a result, the opposition held two of the 22 governments but lost the Caracas and capital district mayorships. Henrique Salas R\u00f6mer, who ran as a presidential candidate in 1998, lost the government of Carabobo to Luis Acosta Carlez. Claudio Fermin, who run for precedency in the elections of 2000, had no success at the metropolitan mayorship of Caracas, losing to Juan Barreto. Opposition candidate and incumbent governor Enrique Mendoza, who was considered as a possible future presidential candidate, lost the elections of the Miranda state to Diosdado Cabello. Manuel Rosales, who would later run for presidency in the elections of 2006, became the governor of the Zulia state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179289-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Venezuelan regional elections, Candidates\nFollowing, the list of three main candidates according to their political affiliation (government, opposition and dissident or independent) ordered by number of votes attained. The political affiliation is determined by the political parties supporting each candidate. For the 2004 elections, government candidates were supported by the Fifth Republic Movement (MVR) party; opposition candidates were supported by either Democratic Action (AD), Justice First Movement (PJ), A New Era (UNT), or the Political Electoral Independent Organization Committee (COPEI) party; and independent candidates were mostly supported by regional parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179290-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Vermont Democratic presidential primary was held on March 2 in the U.S. state of Vermont as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections\nA general election was held in the U.S. state of Vermont on November 2, 2004. All of Vermont's executive officers were up for election as well as Vermont's at-large seat in the U.S. House and Class 3 U.S. Senate seat. The 2004 presidential election was also held at the same time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Lieutenant Governor\nIncumbent Republican Lieutenant Governor Brian E. Dubie (since 2003) ran again for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Lieutenant Governor, Progressive primary\nSteve Hingtgen, member of the Vermont House of Representatives from Chittenden 7-2 (1999-2003) and Chittenden 3-3 (2003-2005), ran unopposed in the Progressive primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 64], "content_span": [65, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Secretary of State\nIncumbent Democratic Secretary of State Deborah Markowitz (since 1999) ran unopposed for a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Secretary of State, Republican primary\nMarkowitz also ran unopposed in the Republican primary as a write-in candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 62], "content_span": [63, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Treasurer\nIncumbent Democratic Treasurer Jeb Spaulding (since 2003) ran unopposed for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Treasurer, Republican primary\nSpaulding also ran unopposed in the Republican primary as a write-in candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Attorney General\nIncumbent Attorney General William H. Sorrell (since 1997) ran again for a fifth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Attorney General, Liberty Union nomination\nAfter losing the Progressive primary, Boots Wardinski ran unopposed for the Liberty Union State Committee's nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Attorney General, Libertarian nomination\nAfter losing the Republican primary, Karen Ann Kerin, Republican candidate for U.S. Representative in 2000 and 2002, ran unopposed for the Libertarian State Committee's nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 64], "content_span": [65, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Attorney General, Grassroots nomination\nJames Mark Leas ran unopposed for the Grassroots State Committee's nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Auditor of Accounts\nIncumbent Democratic Auditor Elizabeth M. Ready (since 2001) ran again for a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179291-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont elections, Auditor of Accounts, Liberty Union nomination\nJerry Levy, Liberty Union nominee for Treasurer in 2002, U.S. Senate in 2000, 1998, 1994, 1992, 1988, 1986, and 1982, Vermont Secretary of State in 1984, and Auditor in 1980, ran unopposed for the Liberty Union State Committee's nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 69], "content_span": [70, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179292-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Vermont gubernatorial election took place November 2, 2004 for the post of Governor of Vermont. Incumbent Republican Governor Jim Douglas was re-elected. Douglas defeated Peter Clavelle, the Progressive Mayor of Burlington who ran as a Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179292-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nClavelle attempted to link Douglas and President George W. Bush with bumper stickers saying \"Jim = George\". Douglas countered this by a willingness to criticize the national Republican Party, such as over the Bush administration's environmental policies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179292-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vermont gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nThe two main candidates faced each other in 18 debates during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179293-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Videocon Cup\nThe Videocon Cup was the name of the One Day International cricket tournament in the Netherlands during August 2004. It was a tri-nation series between Australia, India and Pakistan. All matches took place at the VRA Cricket Ground, Amstelveen. The tournament preceded, and acted as a warm-up for, the 2004 ICC Champions Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179293-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Videocon Cup\nThe tournament was disrupted by rain, with only one of the three group stage matches reaching a conclusion. Australia refused to reschedule their two washed-out group matches, and qualified for the final without completing a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179293-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Videocon Cup\nBy beating India in the opening match, Pakistan also qualified for the Final. Australia beat Pakistan in the Final to win the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179293-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Videocon Cup\nShoaib Malik of Pakistan emerged as the top run-scorer with 104 runs, with an average of 52.00; Matthew Hayden of Australia followed close behind with 88 runs. Lakshmipathy Balaji of India finished the series as top wicket-taker capturing 6 wickets, with Shahid Afridi of Pakistan taking 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179294-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vietnamese National U-18 Football Championship\nThe 2004 Vietnamese National U-18 Football Championship is the first edition of the Vietnamese National U-18 Football Championship, the annual youth football tournament organised by the Vietnam Football Federation (VFF) for male players under-18", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179295-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Villanova Wildcats football team\nThe 2004 Villanova Wildcats football team represented Villanova University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10). The Wildcats were led by 20th-year head coach Andy Talley and played their home games at Villanova Stadium. They finished the season with an overall record of six wins and five losses (6\u20135, 3\u20135 in the A-10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179296-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Cavaliers football team\nThe 2004 Virginia Cavaliers football team represented the University of Virginia in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team's head coach was Al Groh. They played their home games at Scott Stadium in Charlottesville, Virginia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179297-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Virginia Democratic presidential primary took place on February 10, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional. the candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received and is open to anyone. A total of 82 (of 98) delegates are awarded proportionally. A 15 percent threshold is required to receive delegates. Frontrunner John Kerry won the primary with Senator John Edwards obtaining over 20% and receiving delegates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179297-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Democratic presidential primary, Analysis\nKerry won most of the counties and all the congressional districts in the state. His key to victory was winning Fairfax County with almost 56% of the vote. Fairfax had by far the largest turnout in the state. Edwards won several counties in the southern portion of the state, including his best performance in Wythe County, which he won with almost 58%. Clark's best performance was by far in Lynchburg City, which he obtained almost 24% of the vote. Dean's strongest performance was in Albemarle County, where he obtained almost 12% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team\nThe 2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football represented the Virginia Tech in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Virginia Tech won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship in its inaugural year in the conference, running off a streak of eight straight wins to end the regular season after a 2\u20132 start. Tech finished 10th in the final Associated Press poll with a 10\u20133 record. The team's head coach was Frank Beamer, who was named ACC Coach of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team\nVirginia Tech began the season unranked nationally, having suffered a meltdown at the end of the 2003 season. The Hokies faced a daunting schedule, beginning with a nationally televisioned game against the defending national co-champion USC Trojans. That game, known as the BCA Classic, was the first NCAA college football game of the year, and would be followed by a tough conference schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team\nTech lost to eventual BCS National Champion USC at FedExField in Landover, Maryland, 24-13, losing the lead late in the third quarter. After a 63-0 shellacking of Western Michigan, Tech played its first ever ACC game on September 18, against Duke. Tech prevailed 41-17 in Lane Stadium. The Hokies dropped to 2-2 following a 17-16 home loss to N.C. State, in which the Hokies missed a would-be winning field goal as time expired. The team then needed to win five of its next eight games to extend its 11-season streak of playing in a post-season bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team\nAfter reeling off three-straight wins, including a 19-13 squeaker over then #7 West Virginia, the Hokies' fortunes looked bleak in the fourth quarter of their game against Georgia Tech in Atlanta on ESPN Thursday night college football. Tech was down 14-0 at one point and trailed 20-12 with 5:28 left in the fourth quarter. Tech racked up 22 unanswered points to exterminate the Yellow Jackets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team\nTech would go on to win their remaining regular-season games, including a 24-10 win over then #16 Virginia in Lane Stadium and a 16-10 away victory over then #9 Miami, to clinch the ACC Championship. As ACC Champions, Virginia Tech was awarded a bid to the 2005 Sugar Bowl, a Bowl Championship Series game in New Orleans, Louisiana. Virginia Tech faced Auburn, a team that had gone undefeated in the regular season but was denied a bid to the national championship game by virtue of its lower rank in the BCS poll. In a game that was not decided until the final two minutes, Virginia Tech lost to Auburn 16-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team\nTech was led by quarterback Bryan Randall during the season. Randall was named ACC player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179298-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia Tech Hokies football team, Personnel, Roster\nStarters are in bold and players who left the team are struck out Players who sat out during 2004 (\"redshirted\") are indicated with a \"red shirt\" icon", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179299-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia ballot measures\nThe 2004 Virginia State Elections took place on Election Day, November 2, 2004, the same day as the Presidential and the U.S. House elections in the state. The only statewide elections on the ballot were two constitutional referendums to amend the Virginia State Constitution. Because Virginia state elections are held on off-years, no statewide officers or state legislative elections were held. All referendums were referred to the voters by the Virginia General Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179299-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia ballot measures, Question 1\nThe Apportionment Act amendment clarifies provisions concerning the effective date and implementation of decennial redistricting laws, especially when political vacancies occur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179299-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Virginia ballot measures, Question 2\nThe Succession to the Office of Governor Act amendment clarifies who will become the acting Governor of Virginia in the event of a sudden death, resignation, or other emergency circumstance. It adds the acting Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, President pro tempore of the Virginia Senate, and majority leader of the Virginia Senate to the list of officials that would succeed the Governor in such an instance (after the Lieutenant Governor of Virginia, the Attorney General of Virginia, and the Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates, which were already part of the list of succession). The amendment also allows the Virginia General Assembly to temporarily waive certain eligibility requirements in order for the Attorney General, Speaker, or acting Speaker to serve as acting Governor in the event of an emergency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 873]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179300-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vodacom Cup\nThe 2004 Vodacom Cup was the 7th edition of this annual domestic cup competition. The Vodacom Cup is played between provincial rugby union teams in South Africa from the Currie Cup Premier and First Divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179300-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vodacom Cup, Competition\nThere were seven teams participating in the 2004 Vodacom Cup competition and another seven teams participating in the 2004 Vodacom Shield competition. Teams would play all the other teams in their competition once over the course of the season, either at home or away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179300-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vodacom Cup, Competition\nTeams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that score four or more tries in a game, as well as to teams losing a match by seven points or less. Teams were ranked by points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179300-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vodacom Cup, Competition\nThe top two teams in each competition qualified for the semi-finals. In the semi-finals, the teams that finished first in each competition had home advantage against the teams that finished fourth and the teams that finished second in each competition had home advantage against the teams that finished third. The winners of these semi-finals then played each other in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179300-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Vodacom Cup, Competition\nAll the teams in the Vodacom Shield competition rejoined the Vodacom Cup competition for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179300-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Vodacom Cup, Teams, Team Listing\nThe following teams took part in the 2004 Vodacom Cup competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election\nFirst round of the Vojvodina provincial elections was held on September 19, 2004, at the same time when the local elections were held in the whole of Serbia (with the exception of the Autonomous Province of Kosovo).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election\nSecond round of elections was held on October 3, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election, Rules\nThere are 120 MPs in Vojvodina's Parliament. One half (60 MPs) is elected based on a proportional representation one-round system, according to which Vojvodina is one electoral unit. Voters choose between several Parties, Coalitions or Citizen Groups. The other 60 MPs are elected based on majority two-round system, according to which Vojvodina is divided into 60 electoral units in a way that every county gives at least one MP. Some larger electoral units, like the cities of Novi Sad, Subotica, Zrenjanin etc., give more (from 2 up to 7). In this case, voters choose between more candidates. A candidate can win in first round if he/she gets more than 50%+1 votes of those who voted. If none gets enough votes, the two strongest candidates go to the second round, in which the one with more votes wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election, Rules\nThe election threshold for Parties, Coalitions and Citizen's Groups is 5%, except for Parties of minority groups (Hungarians, Croats, etc. ), for whom the threshold is smaller, but not smaller than the number of votes necessary to get one MP. According to the law, on all lists of Parties, Coalitions and Citizen's Groups at least 30% of the proposed MPs must be women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election, Results\n* Have joined the Democratic Party group of deputies in the Assembly", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election, Results\nA governing coalition was formed comprising the Democratic Party, Together for Vojvodina, Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians, and Strength of Serbia Movement, which together hold 66 seats in the Assembly - a majority of 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179301-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Vojvodina provincial election, Results\nDemocratic Party Vice-President Bojan Pajti\u0107 was elected President of the Executive Council and Bojan Kostre\u0161 from the League of Vojvodina Social Democrats was elected President of the Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya\nThe 2004 Volta a Catalunya was the 84th edition of the Volta a Catalunya cycle race and was held from 14 June to 20 June 2004. The race started in Salou and finished in Barcelona. The race was won by Miguel \u00c1ngel Mart\u00edn Perdiguero of the Saunier Duval\u2013Prodir team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Teams\nFifteen teams of up to eight riders started the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 29], "content_span": [30, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 1\n14 June 2004 - Salou to Salou, 18.1\u00a0km (11.2\u00a0mi) (TTT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 2\n15 June 2004 - Salou to Horta de Sant Joan, 145.4\u00a0km (90.3\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 3\n16 June 2004 - Les Borges Blanques to Col de Pal, 200.7\u00a0km (124.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 4\n17 June 2004 - Llorts to Ordino-Arcalis, 12.4\u00a0km (7.7\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 5\n18 June 2004 - Ll\u00edvia to Blanes, 180.8\u00a0km (112.3\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 6\n19 June 2004 - Blanes to Vallirana, 148.1\u00a0km (92.0\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179302-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a Catalunya, Stages, Stage 7\n20 June 2004 - Olesa de Montserrat to Barcelona, 132.8\u00a0km (82.5\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179303-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana\nThe 2004 Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana was the 62nd edition of the Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana road cycling stage race, which was held from 24 to 28 February 2004. The race started in X\u00e0bia and finished in Valencia. The race was won by Alejandro Valverde of the Comunidad Valenciana\u2013Kelme team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179304-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Volvo PGA Championship\nThe 2004 Volvo PGA Championship was the 50th edition of the Volvo PGA Championship, an annual professional golf tournament on the European Tour. It was held 27\u201330 May at the West Course of Wentworth Club in Virginia Water, Surrey, England, a suburb southwest of London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179304-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Volvo PGA Championship\nScott Drummond won by two strokes ahead of \u00c1ngel Cabrera.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election\nThe 2004 Vorarlberg state election was held on 19 September 2004 to elect the members of the Landtag of Vorarlberg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election\nThe Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) regained the absolute majority it had lost in 1999, achieving a strong swing of 9 percentage points. The Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6) lost more than half its vote share and seats, falling to third place behind the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6), which gained four points. The Greens also gained four points and doubled their seat count from two to four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election\nThe repeal of compulsory voting resulted in a huge decline in voter turnout, which fell from 87% to 60%. As a result, only the Greens actually gained votes compared to 1999; the \u00d6VP lost 7,000 votes, the SP\u00d6 200, and the FP\u00d6 33,000. According to voter analysis conducted by the SORA Institute, only 28% of the FP\u00d6's voters from 1999 voted for the party again in 2004, while more than half did not vote at all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election, Background\nIn the 1999 election, the \u00d6VP lost its absolute majority for the first time in history. The FP\u00d6 achieved its best ever result, taking support from the \u00d6VP and SP\u00d6. The \u00d6VP subsequently formed a coalition with the FP\u00d6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election, Electoral system\nThe 36 seats of the Landtag of Vorarlberg are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between four multi-member constituencies, corresponding to the districts of Vorarlberg. For parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 5 percent state-wide electoral threshold. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Hagenbach-Bischoff quota, with any remaining seats allocated at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election, Contesting parties\nThe table below lists parties represented in the previous Landtag.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179305-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Vorarlberg state election, Contesting parties\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, four parties collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179306-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Voyageurs Cup\nThe 2004 Voyageurs Cup was the third Voyageurs Cup tournament which was started by the Canadian supporters group The Voyageurs. The 2004 Edition of the competition featured the expansion Edmonton Aviators as well as the four 2003 teams: Calgary Storm (now Calgary Mustangs), Montreal Impact, Toronto Lynx and Vancouver Whitecaps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179306-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Voyageurs Cup\nSimilar to the 2003 Voyageurs Cup competition Montreal Impact built up an early lead with three wins and a draw in the competition's first four games that the other teams could not overcome even though Montreal Impact only clinched their third Voyageurs Cup in a row in their last match with a 2\u20130 over Edmonton FC on Aug. 25 (the competition's penultimate match).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179306-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Voyageurs Cup, Format\nThe competition was set up on the league principle with each team playing two matches (home and away) against each other team for a total of eight matches per team. The entire competition totaled twenty matches. All matches were part of the 2004 USL A-League regular season with the last home and away matches included when more than two matches were played due to the unbalanced league schedule. In each match, 3 points are awarded for a win, 1 point is awarded for a draw, and 0 points are awarded for a loss. The five teams are ranked according to the total number of points obtained in all matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179306-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Voyageurs Cup, Format\nThe team ranked highest after all matches have been played was the champion awarded the 2004 Voyageurs Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179307-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta Ciclista de Chile\nThe 27th edition of the Vuelta Ciclista de Chile was held from March 11 to March 21, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179308-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Andaluc\u00eda\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Andaluc\u00eda was the 50th edition of the Vuelta a Andaluc\u00eda (Ruta del Sol) cycle race and was held on 15 February to 19 February 2004. The race started in Huelva and finished in Almer\u00eda. The race was won by Juan Carlos Dom\u00ednguez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179309-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Asturias\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Asturias was the 48th edition of the Vuelta a Asturias road cycling stage race, which was held from 12 May to 16 May 2004. The race started and finished in Oviedo. The race was won by Iban Mayo of the Euskaltel\u2013Euskadi team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179310-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Burgos\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Burgos was the 26th edition of the Vuelta a Burgos road cycling stage race, which was held from 2 August to 5 August 2004. The race started and finished in Burgos. The race was won by Alejandro Valverde of the Comunidad Valenciana\u2013Kelme team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179311-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Castilla y Le\u00f3n\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Castilla y Le\u00f3n was the 19th edition of the Vuelta a Castilla y Le\u00f3n cycle race and was held on 28 April to 2 May 2004. The race started in Belorado and finished in Villafranca del Bierzo. The race was won by Koldo Gil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179311-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Castilla y Le\u00f3n, Teams\nThirteen teams of up to eight riders started the race:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179312-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Colombia\nThe 54th edition of the Vuelta a Colombia was held from June 6 to June 20, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179313-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a\nThe 59th Edition of Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a (Tour of Spain), a long-distance bicycle stage race and one of the three grand tours, was held from 4 September to 26 September 2004. It consisted of 21 stages covering a total of 2,925\u00a0km (1,818\u00a0mi), and was won by Roberto Heras of the Liberty Seguros cycling team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179313-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a\nHalfway through the 2004 Vuelta, it appeared it would become an easy win for Heras, but in the last week his fellow countryman Santiago P\u00e9rez won two heavy mountain stages, thus becoming an important rival. Eventually Heras won with only 30 seconds advantage on P\u00e9rez. P\u00e9rez and Phonak hearing systems teammate Tyler Hamilton would later test positive for blood doping from blood samples taken during the race. Francisco Mancebo, also from Spain took third. The first non-Spaniard was Stefano Garzelli from Italy in 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179313-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a\nThe points classification was won by Erik Zabel from Germany, the mountains classification was won by F\u00e9lix C\u00e1rdenas from Colombia and the combination classification was won by Roberto Heras. Kelme was the winner of the team ranking. Alessandro Petacchi, an Italian sprinter won four stages, but he did not finish the Vuelta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a was the 59th edition of the Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Vuelta began in Le\u00f3n, with a team time trial on 4 September, and Stage 11 occurred on 14 September with a stage to Caravaca de la Cruz. The race finished in Madrid on 26 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 1\n4 September 2005 \u2014 Le\u00f3n to Le\u00f3n, 28\u00a0km (17\u00a0mi) (TTT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 2\n5 September 2004 \u2014 Le\u00f3n to Burgos, 207\u00a0km (129\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 3\n6 September 2004 \u2014 Burgos to Soria, 156\u00a0km (97\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 4\n7 September 2004 \u2014 Soria to Zaragoza, 167\u00a0km (104\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 5\n8 September 2004 \u2014 Zaragoza to Morella, 186.5\u00a0km (115.9\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 6\n9 September 2004 \u2014 Benicarl\u00f3 to Castell\u00f3n de la Plana, 157\u00a0km (98\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 7\n10 September 2004 \u2014 Castell\u00f3n de la Plana to Valencia, 170\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 8\n11 September 2004 \u2014 Almussafes to Almussafes, 40.1\u00a0km (24.9\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 9\n12 September 2004 \u2014 X\u00e0tiva to Alto de Aitana, 162\u00a0km (101\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 10\n13 September 2004 \u2014 Alcoy to Xorret de Cat\u00ed, 174.2\u00a0km (108.2\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179314-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 1 to Stage 11, Stage 11\n14 September 2004 \u2014 San Vicente del Raspeig to Caravaca de la Cruz, 165\u00a0km (103\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a was the 59th edition of the Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Vuelta began in Le\u00f3n, with a team time trial on 4 September, and Stage 12 occurred on 16 September with a stage from Almer\u00eda. The race finished in Madrid on 26 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 12\n16 September 2004 \u2014 Almer\u00eda to Calar Alto Observatory, 145\u00a0km (90\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 13\n17 September 2004 \u2014 El Ejido to M\u00e1laga, 172\u00a0km (107\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 14\n18 September 2004 \u2014 M\u00e1laga to Granada, 167\u00a0km (104\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 15\n19 September 2004 \u2014 Granada to Sierra Nevada, 29.6\u00a0km (18.4\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 16\n21 September 2004 \u2014 Olivenza to C\u00e1ceres, 190.1\u00a0km (118.1\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 17\n22 September 2004 \u2014 Plasencia to La Covatilla, 170\u00a0km (110\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 18\n23 September 2004 \u2014 B\u00e9jar to \u00c1vila, 196\u00a0km (122\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 19\n24 September 2004 \u2014 \u00c1vila to Collado Villalba, 142\u00a0km (88\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 20\n25 September 2004 \u2014 Alcobendas to Puerto de Navacerrada, 178\u00a0km (111\u00a0mi)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179315-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Espa\u00f1a, Stage 12 to Stage 21, Stage 21\n26 September 2004 \u2014 Madrid to Madrid, 28\u00a0km (17\u00a0mi) (ITT)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179316-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Murcia\nThe 2004 Vuelta a Murcia was the 20th professional edition of the Vuelta a Murcia cycle race and was held on 3 March to 7 March 2004. The race started and finished in Murcia. The race was won by Alejandro Valverde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179317-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Vuelta a Venezuela\nThe 41st edition of the annual Vuelta a Venezuela was held from August 30 to September 12, 2004. The stage race started in Puerto la Cruz, and ended in Maracaibo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179318-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WABA Champions Cup\nThe WABA Champions Cup 2004 was the 7th staging of the WABA Champions Cup, the basketball club tournament of West Asia Basketball Association. The tournament was held in Damascus, Syria between April 12 and April 16. The top two teams qualify for the 2004 FIBA Asia Champions Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179319-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament was held in the Save Mart Center at Fresno State in Fresno, California. The winners of the tournament were the #1 seeded Nevada Wolf Pack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179320-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFF Championship\nThe 2004 West Asian Football Federation Championship took part in Iranian Capital of Tehran. Iran won the final against Syria 4\u20131. The 6 entrants were Iraq, Iran, Syria, Palestine, Lebanon and Jordan. The finals took place between 17 and 25 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season\nThe 2004 WAFL season was the 120th season of the various incarnations of the West Australian Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season\nSubiaco, after eleven unsuccessful finals campaigns including six in succession, won its first premiership since Haydn Bunton, Jr. took them to the 1988 flag, whilst Swan Districts, largely clear of their severe financial troubles from the 1990s, played finals for the first time in a decade. During late May and June, perennial tailender Perth looked like playing finals for only the fourth time since 1979, but faltered badly in July and August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season\nThe wooden spoon went to East Fremantle for the first time since their debut season of 1898, with three wins being the Sharks\u2019 worst record since that debut year when they won one match of sixteen (though they also lost seventeen matches in 1968 and 1970). The blue and whites suffered from two narrow losses and a botched resignation by coach Rod Lester-Smith which was unannounced but definite before East Fremantle's Round 13 game against Subiaco. 2003 premiers West Perth, suffering a crippling injury toll, fell to seventh, which remains their lowest position since the great revival under Jeff Gieschen in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season\nThe most notable occurrence during the season was Peel Thunder being recognised with a scoreless match for the first time in any major Australian Rules league since Subiaco failed to score against South Fremantle in August 1906, due to having their score of 10.10 wiped when former Fitzroy and Subiaco rover Peter Bird was ruled to have not been cleared for that opening match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 WAFL season\nDespite this setback and losing their first eight matches, the Thunder managed to avoid the wooden spoon with five wins being their third-best record in eight seasons and still their equal fifth-best in the WAFL as of 2014. Peel also won the Colts premiership with a major upset against South Fremantle in the Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season\nThe season was also notable for the Lions moving their home games to the redeveloped Leederville Oval and for the first night games at that ground, both of which were viewed as resounding successes at a time when the WAFL was struggling with its reduced profile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Home-and-away season, Round 6\nSubiaco kick fifteen goals without Peel scoring after the winless and crippled Thunder led 6.4 (40) to 2.5 (17) early in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Home-and-away season, Round 10\nPeel win their first match for 2004 with hard running and strong tackling at the finish after South Fremantle took the lead coming from several goals down throughout most of the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Home-and-away season, Round 11\nPerth, despite lacking a ruckman after Nigel Edwards was injured, climb to third with their win over South Fremantle, who held on until late in the last quarter but were only briefly on top during the third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Home-and-away season, Round 13\nIn a violent match won well by Perth after half-time, Peel allege Daniel Haines was struck twice and that their treatment by WAFL umpires is unfair compared to the older clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Finals, Semi-finals\nIn their first final since 1994 Swan Districts repel conclusively a third-quarter Bulldog challenge with six straight last quarter goals, three of them from Adam Lange. Swans wingman Craig DeCorsey kicks six goals, five in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Finals, Semi-finals\nSubiaco dominate Claremont throughout the first three quarters, and Brad Smith becomes the first WAFL/Westar Rules player to kick 100 goals since Jon Dorotich in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Finals, Grand Final\nSam Larkins provides a perfect antidote to Claremont\u2019s targetting of leading goalkicker Smith, and the Tigers do not take control at any stage, as eight unanswed goals in the second half ensure Subiaco\u2019s first premiership since 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179321-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 WAFL season, Notes\nMother of then-current players Brendon and Adam Logan, and wife of former premiership player Ian Logan. Smith was drafted by West Coast, but knee injuries meant he never played a single AFL match. The \u2018Prestige Loans Award\u2019 was given to the club with the best result between Rounds 15 and 23, during which the nine WAFL clubs played each other once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179322-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 45th conference playoff in league history and 50th season where a WCHA champion was crowned. The 2004 tournament was played between March 12 and March 20, 2004, at five conference arenas and the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul, Minnesota. By winning the tournament, Minnesota was awarded the Broadmoor Trophy and received the Western Collegiate Hockey Association's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179322-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe first round of the postseason tournament featured a best-of-three games format. All ten conference schools participated in the tournament with teams seeded No. 1 through No. 10 according to their final conference standing, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with an identical number of points accumulated. The top five seeded teams each earned home ice and hosted one of the lower seeded teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179322-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe winners of the first round series advanced to the Xcel Energy Center for the WCHA Final Five, the collective name for the quarterfinal, semifinal, and championship rounds. The Final Five uses a single-elimination format. Teams were re-seeded No. 1 through No. 5 according to the final regular season conference standings, with the top three teams automatically advancing to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179322-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Conference Standings\nNote: PTS = Points; GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 67], "content_span": [68, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179323-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WDF Europe Cup\nThe 2004 WDF Europe Cup was the 14th edition of the WDF Europe Cup darts tournament, organised by the World Darts Federation. It was held in Tampere, Finland from 27 Aug-30 Aug.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179324-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship\nThe 2004 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship was a golf tournament that was played from February 25\u201329, 2004 at La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, California. It was the sixth WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship and the first of four World Golf Championships events held in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179324-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship\nTiger Woods won his eighth World Golf Championships event, and his second match play back-to-back, by defeating Davis Love III 3 and 2 in the 36 hole final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179324-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship, Brackets\nThe Championship was a single elimination match play event. The field consisted of the top 64 players available from the Official World Golf Rankings, seeded according to the rankings. Ernie Els (ranked 3) withdrew from the event, electing to stay home because his daughter was to start school in London the next week. Jim Furyk (ranked 5) withdrew because of a wrist injury and Kirk Triplett (ranked 42) also withdrew for personal reasons. They were replaced by Briny Baird (ranked 65), Shingo Katayama (ranked 66) and John Rollins (ranked 67).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179325-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-American Express Championship\nThe 2004 WGC-American Express Championship was a golf tournament that was contested from 30 September to 3 October 2004 at Mount Juliet Golf Course in Thomastown, Kilkenny, Ireland. It was the fifth WGC-American Express Championship tournament and the third of three World Golf Championships events held in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179325-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-American Express Championship\nErnie Els won the tournament for his first of two WGC titles, which lifted him to second in the Official World Golf Ranking. Tiger Woods was the 2-time defending champion but finished in 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179326-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-NEC Invitational\nThe 2004 WGC-NEC Invitational was a golf tournament that was contested from August 19\u201322, 2004 over the South Course at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio. It was the sixth WGC-NEC Invitational tournament, and the second of four World Golf Championships events held in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179326-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-NEC Invitational\nStewart Cink won the tournament to capture his first World Golf Championships title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179327-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-World Cup\nThe 2004 WGC-World Cup took place 18\u201321 November at the Real Club de Golf de Seville in Seville, Spain. It was the 50th World Cup and the fifth as a World Golf Championship event. 24 countries competed and each country sent two players. The prize money totaled $4,000,000 with $1,400,000 going to the winning pair. The English team of Paul Casey and Luke Donald won. They won by one stroke over the home Spanish team of Sergio Garc\u00eda and Miguel \u00c1ngel Jim\u00e9nez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179327-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-World Cup, Qualification and format\n18 teams qualified based on the Official World Golf Ranking and were joined by six teams via qualifiers in South America and Asia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179327-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WGC-World Cup, Qualification and format\nThe tournament was a 72-hole stroke play team event with each team consisting of two players. The first and third days were fourball play and the second and final days were foursomes play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals\nThe 2004 WNBA Finals was the championship series of the 2004 WNBA season, and the conclusion of the season's playoffs. The Seattle Storm, second-seeded champions of the Western Conference, defeated the Connecticut Sun, top-seeded champions of the Eastern Conference, two games to one in a best-of-three series. This was Seattle's first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals\nThe Storm made their first appearance in the Finals in franchise history. The Sun made their first appearance in the Finals in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals\nGoing into the series, neither team had won a WNBA championship. The Houston Comets hold the record with four championships won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals\nThe Storm had a 20\u201314 record (.588), good enough to receive home-court advantage over the Sun (18\u201316).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals\nThe 2004 Finals was the last time two teams had entered the series without having participated in them before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Road to the finals, Regular season series\nThe Sun and the Storm split the regular season series:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 1\nKatie Douglas and the Connecticut Sun took care of business at home to open the WNBA Finals. Douglas overcame an early ankle injury to score 18 points as the Sun held on for a 68\u201364 victory over the Seattle Storm, taking a 1\u20130 lead in the best-of-three championship series. The win was Connecticut's fifth straight after opening the postseason with a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 1\nDouglas, who suffered a minor ankle sprain in the first half, nailed three 3-pointers and hit a pair of free throws in the closing seconds to finish the scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 1\nWendy Palmer had 16 points and Lindsay Whalen chipped in 11 and a franchise playoff-record nine assists for the Sun, who used a 14-7 run to close the first half to grab a 33-29 lead at intermission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 1\nConnecticut built its edge to 63-47 on a bucket by Asjha Jones with 7:20 remaining and survived a late 16\u20135 run by the Storm to get a win in its WNBA Finals debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 1\nBetty Lennox scored 17 points and Lauren Jackson had 16 for Seattle. Lennox nailed a 3-pointer with 17 seconds remaining to pull the Storm to within two points, but they failed to convert their final three shots before the final buzzer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nBetty Lennox won her shootout with Nykesha Sales and extended the WNBA Finals to a decisive game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nLennox scored 27 points as the Seattle Storm survived a record-setting performance by Sales and held on for a 67\u201365 victory over the Connecticut Sun that evened the WNBA Finals at one game each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nLennox made 11-of-16 shots. She scored 16 points in the second half, when the Sun - who never led - erased a 13-point deficit and tied the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nSales, who set a WNBA Finals record with 32 points, sank a jumper that evened it, 57\u201357, with 5:20 to go. Lennox answered with four points in a 6\u20130 burst that gave the Storm the lead for good.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nKatie Douglas made a 3-pointer to halve the deficit before Lennox made a jumper at the 1:41 mark. Sales had a steal and layup, but Lennox's foul line jumper pushed the lead to 67-62 with 51 seconds remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nSales made a 3-pointer before Lennox missed a jumper and Connecticut forced a jump ball. The Sun gained possession with 3.1 seconds left and ran a play for Sales, who hit the side of the backboard with a potential game-winning 3-pointer from the right corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nLauren Jackson had 15 points and 11 rebounds and Sue Bird scored 10 points for the Storm, who improved to 4\u20130 at home in the postseason. They drew 17,072 to KeyArena for this one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 2\nDouglas scored 14 points for the Sun, who had won five straight playoff games but stumbled early in this one. They fell behind, 22\u201310, midway through the first half and trailed, 35\u201330, at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nThe Seattle Storm got to the WNBA Finals behind stars Lauren Jackson and Sue Bird. They won their first title behind a player picked off the scrap heap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nBetty Lennox scored 16 of her 23 points in the second half as the Storm won the WNBA championship with a 74\u201360 triumph over the Connecticut Sun in the decisive third game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nAcquired in the dispersal draft from the defunct Cleveland Rockers, Lennox outshined Jackson, acknowledged as the best player in the world, and Bird, a star point guard. Lennox averaged 22.3 points in the series to earn Most Valuable Player honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nJackson collected 13 points and seven rebounds while Bird added eight - all in the second half - and six assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nPlaying in front of their second straight sellout crowd of 17,072, the Storm improved to a perfect 5-0 at KeyArena in the postseason. They won their last two series after losing the opener on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nAfter Nykesha Sales hit two free throws to cut Seattle's lead to 51\u201346 with 13:05 left, the Storm went on a 13\u20132 run capped by Lennox's driving layup with 6:15 to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nLed by center Kamila Vodichkova, who scored 12 of her 14 points in the opening half, Seattle never trailed, opening a 26\u201314 lead with 10:17 left. Connecticut answered with a 15\u20133 surge over the next seven minutes to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nBut the Sun went cold in the second half, missing 18 of 23 shots. Shooting guard Katie Douglas characterized the team's poor shooting, finishing 0-of-11 from the floor. She scored just six points after averaging 16 in the first two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179328-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Finals, Game summaries, Game 3\nSeattle coach Anne Donovan made history by becoming the first female coach to guide a team to the WNBA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 40], "content_span": [41, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179329-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA Playoffs\nThe 2004 WNBA Playoffs was the postseason for the Women's National Basketball Association's 2004 season which ended with the Western Conference champion Seattle Storm defeating the Eastern Conference champion Connecticut Sun, 2\u20131. Betty Lennox was named the MVP of the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179330-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA draft\nThe 2004 WNBA draft was the eighth draft in the WNBA's history. It took place on April 17, 2004 at the NBA Entertainment Studios in Secaucus, NJ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179330-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA draft\nOn January 6, 2004 a dispersal draft took place. Players were drafted from the roster of the Cleveland Rockers, who folded after the 2003 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179331-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBA season\nThe 2004 WNBA Season was the Women's National Basketball Association's eighth season. The league had one fewer team than in 2003 as the Cleveland Rockers folded after the 2003 season. The season ended with the Seattle Storm winning their first WNBA Championship, as their head coach Anne Donovan became the first female coach to win a WNBA championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179332-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WNBL Finals\nThe 2004 WNBL Finals was the postseason tournament of the WNBL's 2003\u201304 season. The Canberra Capitals were the two-time defending champions, but were defeated in the Semi Finals by Adelaide. The Dandenong Rangers won the Grand Final over the Sydney Uni Flames, 63\u201353, taking home their first ever WNBL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179333-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WPA World Nine-ball Championship\nThe WPA 9-Ball World Championship 2004 was the 15th edition of the WPA World Championship for 9-Ball Pool. It took place from July 10 to 18, 2004 in the Taiwanese capital city Taipei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179333-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WPA World Nine-ball Championship\nCanadian Alex Pagulayan won the championship with a 17\u201313 victory in the final against Taiwanese Chang Pei-Wei . Defending champion Thorsten Hohmann dropped out in the round of 32 against Kang Chin-ching from Chinese Taipei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179333-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WPA World Nine-ball Championship, Format\nThe 128 participating players were divided into 16 groups, in which they competed in round robin mode against each other. The top four players in each group qualified for the final round played in the knockout system, featuring the remaining 64 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179333-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WPA World Nine-ball Championship, Group stage\nThe following players exited the competition in the group stage:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179334-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA German Open \u2013 Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez were the defending champions, but lost in semifinals to Nadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy. The latter pair eventually won the title, by defeating Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 and Conchita Mart\u00ednez 6\u20132, 2\u20136, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179334-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA German Open \u2013 Doubles\nIt was the 7th doubles title for both Petrova and Shaughnessy in their respective careers. It was also the 3rd title for the pair during this season, after their wins in Miami and Amelia Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179334-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA German Open \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179335-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA German Open \u2013 Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but did not compete this year due to a cytomegalovirus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179335-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA German Open \u2013 Singles\nAm\u00e9lie Mauresmo won the title by walkover, as her opponent Venus Williams had to withdrew due to a left ankle strain. It was the 1st title of the year for Mauresmo and the 11th title of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179335-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA German Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179336-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tier I Series\nThe table below shows the 2004 WTA Tier I Series schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour\nThe 2004 WTA Tour was the elite professional tennis circuit organized by the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) for the 2004 season. The 2004 WTA Tour calendar comprised the Grand Slam tournaments (supervised by the International Tennis Federation (ITF)), the WTA Tier I-V Events, the Fed Cup (organized by the ITF), the Summer Olympic Games and the year-end championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour\nIn an open year, Lindsay Davenport finished the season at No. 1 for the third time after 1998 and 2001, despite not reaching a Grand Slam final. Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo put together a consistent season, reaching No. 1 in September and finishing the year ranked No. 2 . The Russian contingent enjoyed an impressive rise into the elite of women's tennis, with Anastasia Myskina, Maria Sharapova and Svetlana Kuznetsova all winning their first Grand Slam titles, and Elena Dementieva twice being a runner-up. The Belgian pair of Kim Clijsters and Justine Henin-Hardenne, who had risen to the top of women's tennis during 2003, both struggled with injuries throughout the season. Likewise, the dominance of the Williams sisters diminished, with both finishing the season outside the top 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 791]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nWorld No. 1 Justine Henin-Hardenne started the season on a high note, taking the title in Sydney and then winning her third Grand Slam title at the Australian Open, defeating Kim Clijsters in the final. Fabiola Zuluaga and Patty Schnyder enjoyed runs to their first ever Grand Slam semifinals in singles. Schnyder took advantage of an open draw which saw Venus Williams dumped out in the third round by Lisa Raymond. Zuluaga advanced after Elena Dementieva and Nadia Petrova were early upset victims in her section of the draw, and then benefitted from a walkover from Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo in the quarterfinals. Defending champion Serena Williams withdrew from the tournament due to her continuing recovery from knee surgery.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nHenin-Hardenne won in Dubai amidst a 16-match win streak, which was snapped by Svetlana Kuznetsova in Doha. Kuznetsova lost to the defending champion Anastasia Myskina in the final. Elsewhere, Lindsay Davenport won her fourth title in Tokyo, tying Martina Hingis for the most wins at the event. Clijsters won the indoor tournaments in Paris and Antwerp, but struggled with injury for the rest of the season. Henin-Hardenne moved straight back to winning ways by taking the title in Indian Wells. Serena Williams would return in March, winning her first tournament back in Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nThe clay court season began with Davenport claiming the title in Amelia Island. Venus Williams then won both Charleston and Warsaw in succession. Amelie Mauresmo won the two biggest warm-up tournaments on red clay at Berlin and Rome, with Williams also reaching the final in Germany. Mauresmo's feat of winning both events was previously matched by Steffi Graf and Monica Seles, both of whom also lifted the French Open that same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nHowever, it proved not to be a good omen for Mauresmo as she lost to Elena Dementieva in the quarterfinals. Clijsters withdrew from the tournament with a wrist injury, whilst her compatriot and defending champion Henin-Hardenne bowed out in the second round with injury against Tathiana Garbin. It was the earliest loss for the No. 1 seed there since 1925. That upset allowed Paola Su\u00e1rez to reach her first Grand Slam semifinal in singles, where she lost to Dementieva. In the bottom half of the draw, Anastasia Myskina came through after wins over Venus Williams and Jennifer Capriati. The first all-Russian Grand Slam final ended quickly, with Myskina routing a nervous Dementieva to become the first Grand Slam singles champion from Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 783]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nRussian dominance continued in the grass court warmups, with Maria Sharapova winning in Birmingham and Svetlana Kuznetsova prevailing in Eastbourne. Mary Pierce also claimed her first tour title since the French Open four years previously, winning in 's-Hertogenbosch. Clijsters and Henin-Hardenne sat out the year's third Grand Slam with the same injuries that put them out of the French Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nThe first week of Wimbledon saw Venus Williams sent home in the second round by Karolina \u0160prem, whilst the two French Open finalists failed to make the successful transition between clay and grass: Dementieva lost to Sandra Kleinov\u00e1, and Myskina to Amy Frazier. The final was to be contested between Serena Williams and Maria Sharapova, who both made impressive comebacks in their semifinals from a set and a break down. In the final, Sharapova upset the two-time defending champion to win her first Grand Slam title, the third youngest winner ever at Wimbledon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nDavenport started the summer hardcourt season on a hot streak, winning events in Stanford, Los Angeles, San Diego and Cincinnati to build an impressive winning run going into the year's final Grand Slam. Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 became one of the youngest tour titlists in history by winning a smaller event in Vancouver. Mauresmo won the Tier I event in Toronto, beating Elena Likhovtseva in the final. Henin-Hardenne returned from her illness to play the Athens Olympics, where she won the gold medal match over Mauresmo. In the bronze medal match, Alicia Molik beat Myskina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nDavenport was the favourite to take her second U.S. Open title, but she was stopped in the semifinals by Svetlana Kuznetsova. It was a half of upsets with Henin-Hardenne falling to Nadia Petrova, and Myskina and Sharapova also departing early. Henin-Hardenne's loss meant that Mauresmo would reach the No. 1 ranking position for the first time. In the bottom half of the draw, Elena Dementieva beat Mauresmo and Capriati\u2014who was coming off a controversial win against Serena Williams in the quarterfinals with several contentious line calls going against Williams\u2014to reach her second Grand Slam final. In another all-Russian final, Kuznetsova became the third player from the country to win her maiden Grand Slam in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179337-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour, Season summary, Singles\nMauresmo's reign at No. 1 turned out to be short-lived, with Davenport, who won the title in Stuttgart during the fall season, displacing her one-month later. Nevertheless, it turned out to be a successful stretch for Mauresmo, who claimed titles in Linz and Philadelphia. Alicia Molik won her biggest career title in Zurich and a smaller event in Luxembourg, while Myskina defended her title in Moscow. Svetlana Kuznetsova won the title in Bali and reached the final in Beijing, losing to Serena Williams. It was Sharapova who ended up winning the season-ending WTA Tour Championships, beating Williams in the final, after picking up smaller titles in Seoul and Tokyo, and reaching the final in Zurich. Nadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy won the doubles event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 38], "content_span": [39, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179338-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships\nThe 2004 WTA Tour Championships was a women's round robin tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, United States. It was the 34th edition of the year-end singles championships, the 29th edition of the year-end doubles championships, and was part of the 2004 WTA Tour. The tournament was held between November 10 and November 15, 2004. First-seeded Maria Sharapova won the singles event, the first, and so far only, Russian to win the tournament, and earned $1,000,000 first-prize money as well as 485 ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179338-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships\nJustine Henin-Hardenne had qualified for the tournament but withdrew due to illness (cytomegalovirus).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179338-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships, Finals, Doubles\nNadia Petrova / Meghann Shaughnessy defeated Cara Black / Rennae Stubbs, 7\u20135, 6\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179339-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships \u2013 Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Cara Black and Rennae Stubbs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179340-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters was the defending champion, but she did not qualify this year following a long-term wrist injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179340-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sharapova, on her WTA Tour Championships debut, defeated Serena Williams in three sets to win the title. This was the final time in which Sharapova defeated Williams, losing the next 20 encounters in succession up until her retirement in February 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179340-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships \u2013 Singles, Draw, Black Group\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179340-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WTA Tour Championships \u2013 Singles, Draw, Red Group\nStandings are determined by: 1) Number of wins; 2) Number of matches; 3) In two-players-ties, head-to-head records; 4) In three-players-ties, percentage of sets won, or of games won; 5) Steering Committee decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179341-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 WWE draft lottery\nThe 2004 World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) draft lottery, the second WWE draft, took place at the Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan on March 22. The draft took place live for two hours on WWE's television program, Raw on Spike TV. Post-draft trades were announced on WWE's official website, WWE.com, until midnight on March 22. There were twelve draft picks, with nineteen wrestlers overall switching between the promotion's two brands: Raw and SmackDown!.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179341-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 WWE draft lottery\nDuring the draft lottery, the General manager of Raw, Eric Bischoff, and the General manager of SmackDown!, Paul Heyman, stood on opposite ends of the stage on the Raw set, where they drafted six wrestlers randomly via two machines. At the conclusion of the draft, the two GMs would then be allowed to trade anyone on the roster until Midnight EST, which was later extended until Tuesday night after Heyman resigned. Every WWE employee was eligible to be drafted, including injured wrestlers, commentators, champions, and general managers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179341-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 WWE draft lottery\nThe main event was a SmackDown! exclusive match, in which Eddie Guerrero defeated Triple H to retain the WWE Championship by disqualification after Christian attacked Guerrero resulting in a brawl between SmackDown! and Raw wrestlers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179341-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 WWE draft lottery, Background\nThe tagline for WrestleMania XX (that year's WrestleMania), was Where it all begins again. To remain with the tagline, on the March 15, 2004 episode of Raw, the chairman of WWE, Vince McMahon, announced that it was time \"for a new WWE\" and that a draft lottery would take place the following week on Raw. Both Raw and SmackDown! wrestlers would be present for the draft lottery, as McMahon announced that every wrestler was eligible to be drafted, including commentators, ring announcers, referees, injured wrestlers, champions and even GM.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179341-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 WWE draft lottery, Aftermath\nAfter Paul Heyman was drafted from the SmackDown! brand to the Raw brand, he kayfabe quit the WWE, thus leaving the SmackDown! brand without a General manager. Shortly after the draft, the WWE Chairman, Vince McMahon announced that a new General manager had been appointed to the SmackDown! brand, and that he would conduct the supplemental trades with Raw General Manager, Eric Bischoff. On the March 25, 2004 episode of SmackDown!, Kurt Angle came down to the ring and announced that he was the new SmackDown! General manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179342-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wagner Seahawks football team\nThe 2004 Wagner Seahawks football team represented Wagner College in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Northeast Conference (NEC). The Seahawks were led by 24th-year head coach Walt Hameline and played their home games at Wagner College Stadium. Wagner finished the season 6\u20135 overall and 3\u20134 in NEC play to place in a three-way tie for fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179343-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team\nThe 2004 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team was an American football team that represented Wake Forest University during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In their fourth season under head coach Jim Grobe, the Demon Deacons compiled a 4\u20137 record and finished in a tie for last place in the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179344-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wakefield Metropolitan District Council election\nThe 2004 Wakefield Metropolitan District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Wakefield Metropolitan District Council in West Yorkshire, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Labour party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179344-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wakefield Metropolitan District Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election Labour held 50 of the 63 seats on the council and this was seen as being an insurmountable majority for the other parties. However the Conservatives stood a full slate of 63 candidates and were hopeful of making gains due to dissatisfaction among Labour supporters. The British National Party stood 12 candidates in the election, a substantial increase on the 2 they had stood in the 2003 election but not the 20 candidates the party had been hoping to stand. Other candidates included 19 Liberal Democrats, 18 independents, 5 Socialist Alternative, 3 from the United Kingdom Independence Party and 1 Green Party. All postal voting in the election was expected to increase turnout, which was seen by analysts as making the results difficult to predict.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 63], "content_span": [64, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179344-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wakefield Metropolitan District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw Labour lose 7 seats but remained firmly in control of the council with 43 of the 63 seats. The Conservatives gained 4 and the independents 3, with the gains for the independents in Featherstone being put down to the closure of a local swimming pool. The Liberal Democrats held their 3 seats in Ossett but neither they nor the British National Party made any gains. Overall voter turnout was 39.6%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179344-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wakefield Metropolitan District Council election, Election result\nLabour saw the results as not being as bad as they could have been given the losses the party was suffering nationally, which was put down to improved services and listening to local people. Meanwhile, the Conservatives were disappointed that they had not made more gains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB\nThe 2004 Wales Rally GB (formally the 60th Wales Rally of Great Britain) was a rallying autosports race held over four days between 16 and 19 September 2004 and operated out of Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom. It was the twelfth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship (WRC) and the 60th running of the event. Contested over 19 stages, the rally was won by Subaru World Rally Team driver Petter Solberg. S\u00e9bastien Loeb finished second for the Citro\u00ebn World Rally Team and Ford driver Markko M\u00e4rtin came in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB, Report, Background\nThe 2004 Wales Rally GB was the twelfth round of the 2004 World Rally Championship (WRC) after taking a two-week break since the previous race of the season in Japan. It was held over four days from Thursday, 16 September to Sunday, 19 September 2004. The rally headquarters was set up in Cardiff but some stages of the rally were altered. One new place the rally went to was Epynt forest with parts of the Rhondda and Resolven combined to form a new stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB, Report, Background\nThe stage in Rheola returned to the event but was revised to make it faster and the rally concluded in Cardiff instead of Margam Country Park the previous year. Before the event, S\u00e9bastien Loeb led the Drivers' Championship with 84 points, ahead of Petter Solberg in second and Markko M\u00e4rtin third. Carlos Sainz was fourth on 50 points, and Marcus Gr\u00f6nholm was three points adrift in fifth. Citro\u00ebn were leading the Manufacturers' Championship with 137 points; Ford stood in second on 102 points, 33 in front of Subaru. Peugeot were fourth on 73 points and Mitsubishi rounded out the top five with 17 points. Citro\u00ebn had so far been the most successful team over the course of the season with Ford claiming one victory with M\u00e4rtin in M\u00e9xico and Subaru had taken three wins apiece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB, Report, Background\nWith pressure from the South Wales Police who initiated a campaign against speeding, the rally was under threat from cancellation as several drivers had been observed exceeding the local speed limit in the 2002 event, and the world governing body of motorsport, the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), announced it would investigate whether the roads were suitable for the large amount of rally traffic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB, Report, Background\nOn 12 December 2003 the Wales Rally GB was granted a provisional slot on the 2004 WRC calendar pending a formal road review by the Motor Sports Association (MSA) after the FIA chose not to downgrade the event which would have made the event illegible to count for championship points. Five towns in England were mooted as alternative bases in the event Wales was deemed unsuitable. The FIA president Max Mosley later held discussions with the chief constable of South Wales Police Barbara Wilding and the Secretary of State for Wales Peter Hain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0002-0002", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB, Report, Background\nAt the FIA World Motor Sport Council meeting in Paris on 24 March, the MSA presented a traffic management report that confirmed the roads the rally used were safer than the national average. The council later confirmed that the rally would be given the go-ahead but would be monitored by FIA observers until its future as a championship round was secure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179345-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales Rally GB, Report, Background\n87 crews registered to compete in the rally. The starting order for Leg 1 was \"Priority 1\" (P1) and P2 WRC drivers in the order of the current classification following the previous race of the 2004 season, followed by all other drivers as decided by the MSA. Solberg, the previous season's champion, set off first, followed by Loeb, then Sainz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa\nThe 2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa was a series of matches played in June 2004. Wales faced Argentina in two test matches on 12 and 19 June 2004, and South Africa on 26 June 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa\nThe Welsh drew the series with Argentina with a score of 1\u20131 and lost the single test against the Springboks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa, Results\nArgentina: 15. Hernan Senillosa, 14. Lucas Borges, 13. Martin Gaitan, 12. Manuel Contepomi, 11. Jose Nunez Piossek, 10. Felipe Contepomi, 9. Matias Albina, 8. Gonzalo Longo (capt), 7. Martin Durand, 6. Lucas Ostiglia, 5. Patricio Albacete, 4. Ignacio Fernadez Lobbe, 3. Omar Hasan, 2. Federico Mendez Azpillaga, 1. Rodrigo Roncero, \u2013 replacements: 16. Eusebio Gui\u00f1az\u00fa, 17. Pablo Cardinali, 18. Pablo Bouza, 19. Martin Schusterman, 20. Lucio Lopez Fleming, 22. Jose Orengo \u2013 Not used: 21. German BustosWales: 15. Rhys Williams, 14. Hal Luscombe, 13. Sonny Parker, 12. Gavin Henson, 11. Shane Williams, 10. Ceri Sweeney, 9. Dwayne Peel, 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa, Results\nMichael Owen, 7. Jason Forster, 6. Colin Charvis (capt.) , 5. Gareth Llewellyn, 4. Brent Cockbain, 3. Adam R. Jones, 2. Mefin Davies, 1. Duncan Jones, \u2013 replacements: 16. Huw Bennett, 17. Gethin Jenkins, 18. Darren Morris, 20. Mike Phillips, 21. Nick Robinson, 22. Tom Shanklin \u2013 Not used: 19. Jonathan Thomas", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa, Results\nArgentina: 15. Hernan Senillosa, 14. Lucas Borges, 13. Jose Orengo, 12. Manuel Contepomi, 11. Jose Nunez Piossek, 10. Felipe Contepomi, 9. Nicolas Fernandez Miranda, 8. Gonzalo Longo (capt), 7. Martin Durand, 6. Lucas Ostiglia, 5. Patricio Albacete, 4. Ignacio Fernadez Lobbe , 3. Omar Hasan, 2. Federico Mendez Azpillaga, 1. Rodrigo Roncero, \u2013 replacements: 16. Mario Ledesma, 17. Eusebio Gui\u00f1az\u00fa, 19. Martin Schusterman, 20. Matias Albina, 21. Juan Fernandez Miranda, 22. Federico Aramburu \u2013 Not used: 18. German BustosWales: 15. Gavin Henson, 14. Hal Luscombe, 13. Sonny Parker, 12. Tom Shanklin, 11. Shane Williams , 10. Nick Robinson, 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0003-0001", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa, Results\nDwayne Peel, 8. Michael Owen, 7. Colin Charvis (capt.) , 6. Dafydd Jones, 5. Gareth Llewellyn, 4. Brent Cockbain, 3. Adam R. Jones, 2. Huw Bennett, 1. Duncan Jones, \u2013 replacements: 16. Mefin Davies, 17. Gethin Jenkins, 18. Darren Morris, 19. Jonathan Thomas, 20. Mike Phillips \u2013 Not used: 21. Ceri Sweeney, 22. Barry Davies", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa, Results\nSouth Africa: 15. Percy Montgomery, 14. Breyton Paulse, 13. Marius Joubert, 12. Wayne Julies, 11. Brent Russell, 10. Jaco van der Westhuyzen, 9. Fourie du Preez, 8. Jacques Cronje, 7. Pedrie Wannenburg, 6. Schalk Burger, 5. Victor Matfield, 4. Quinton Davids, 3. Faan Rautenbach, 2. John Smit (capt. ), 1. Os du Randt, \u2013 replacements: 16. Hanyani Shimange, 17. Eddie Andrews, 18. Geo Cronje, 19. Gerrie Britz, 20. Bolla Conradie, 21. Henno Mentz, 22. Gaffie du Toit Wales: 15. Gavin Henson, 14. Hal Luscombe, 13. Sonny Parker, 12. Tom Shanklin, 11. Shane Williams, 10. Nick Robinson, 9. Dwayne Peel, 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179346-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina and South Africa, Results\nAlix Popham, 7. Colin Charvis (capt. ), 6. Dafydd Jones, 5. Gareth Llewellyn, 4. Deiniol Jones, 3. Adam R. Jones, 2. Mefin Davies, 1. Gethin Jenkins, \u2013 replacements: 16. Huw Bennett, 17. Duncan Jones, 18. Darren Morris, 19. Jonathan Thomas, 21. Ceri Sweeney \u2013 Not used: 20. Mike Phillips, 22. Rhys Williams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [59, 66], "content_span": [67, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179347-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council in the West Midlands, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179347-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council election, Background\nBefore the election the council was run by a coalition between the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties, with Labour holding 27 seats, the Conservatives 24, Liberal Democrats 7 and UK Independence Party 2. 60 seats were contested with the candidates including 7 from the British National Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 62], "content_span": [63, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179347-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives win a majority on the council with 35 of the 60 seats. Labour were reduced to 16 seats, with the chairs of the West Midlands Police Authority and West Midlands Passenger Transport Executive, Mohammed Nazir and Richard Worrell, among those to lose at the election. Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats won 6 seats and there was 1 independent, while the 2 UK Independence Party councillors both lost their seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179347-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Walsall Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nAfter results were declared, a box with 200 ballot papers in it was discovered underneath a table. These were then counted, but the returning officer did not include them in the declarations, as they said it would not have affected the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 67], "content_span": [68, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179348-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Washington Democratic presidential caucuses were held on February 7, 2004. The Caucus is open to registered Democrats and Independents. The delegate allocation is proportional, the candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received. A total of 76 (of 95) delegates are awarded proportionally. A 15 percent threshold is required to receive delegates. No actual convention delegates are awarded at the caucuses, rather each precinct caucus chooses delegates to attend the County Convention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179348-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Democratic presidential caucuses, Analysis\nThis election caucus was immediately following Super Tuesday, where John Kerry dominated and continued his momentum. Kerry won the blue state of Washington with 48% of the vote, winning every county and congressional district except for the 7th district, which Dean carried with just under 40%. Turnout was overall very low in the state. The highest turnout by far was when over 9,500 people showed to vote in King County, Washington, where Kerry won with 44%. Kerry's weakest performance in the state was in Jefferson County, Washington, where he got just 39% of the vote. Howard Dean and Dennis Kucinich also got a share of the delegates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179348-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Democratic presidential caucuses, Sources\nThis Washington-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179349-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Huskies football team\nThe 2004 Washington Huskies football team was an American football team that represented the University of Washington during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. In its second and final season under head coach Keith Gilbertson, the team compiled a 1\u201310 record, winless in the Pacific-10 Conference, and was outscored 334\u00a0to\u00a0154.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179349-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Huskies football team\nThis was Washington's first losing season since 1976. Following lopsided road losses at USC and Oregon, Gilbertson announced on the first of November that he would step down at the end of the season. The Huskies lost the remaining three games; the final loss at Washington State was UW's first Apple Cup defeat in seven years. Washington's most recent one-victory season was in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179349-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Huskies football team, NFL Draft\nTwo Huskies were selected in the 2005 NFL Draft, which lasted seven rounds (255 selections).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872\nInitiative 872 was an Initiative to the People in 2004 that replaced the open Primary being used in Washington state with a top-two nonpartisan blanket primary. It was challenged in court up to the US Supreme Court, which upheld the top-two primary in Washington State Grange v. Washington State Republican Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, Background\nThe blanket primary in Washington State was started by an Initiative to the Legislature filed in 1934 and passed in 1935. The political parties in Washington tried numerous times to have an open or closed primary system implemented, and it even filed a lawsuit that was decided by the Washington State Supreme Court in 1936. The state was represented in that lawsuit by Warren Magnuson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, Background\nThe political parties in Washington State filed another lawsuit against it in 2000 when the blanket primary in California was overturned by California Democratic Party v. Jones and won the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, Background\nThe Washington State Legislature passed a new primary system in 2004, which would have created a new top-two primary system, with an open primary as a backup, giving the Governor the option to choose. Secretary of State Sam Reed advocated for the top-two, but on April 1, 2004, the Governor used the line-item veto to activate the open primary instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, 2004 campaign\nInitiative 872 was filed on January 8, 2004 by Terry Hunt from the Washington Grange. The language of the ballot measure summary was as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, 2004 campaign\nThis measure proposes a new system for conducting primaries for partisan offices. This proposal continues current practice of permitting voters to vote for any candidate for any office in primary and general elections, without limitation based on party. The two \"top\" candidates with the most votes in the primary advance to the general election. Candidates continue to designate their party. It becomes effective only if the court decision invalidating the traditional blanket primary becomes final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, 2004 campaign\nThe political parties in Washington opposed I-872 because they felt it would create an opportunity for someone not directly associated with the party to claim the party name on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, 2004 campaign\nThe measure passed with 1,632,225 yes votes and 1,095,190 no votes in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, More lawsuits\nOn July 15, 2005, the initiative 872 was declared unconstitutional by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, More lawsuits\nOn March 18, 2008, the US Supreme Court reversed the decision and upheld 872.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, Top two primary implementation\nThe decision to uphold 872 changed the implementation of the 2008 primary election, which was held on August 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, Top two primary implementation, 2008 election\nIn 2008, two State Senate races and five House of Representatives elections had either two Democrats or two Republicans get through the primary election, appearing together on the general election ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179350-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Initiative 872, Top two primary implementation, 2008 election\nThe results of a study from Gonzaga University comparing the results in Washington state between the 2004 (closed) and 2008 (top two) primaries, indicate that the top two primary overall reduced the likelihood of running against a same party candidate and it reduced the likelihood that a strong incumbent would face a challenger from his or her own party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 77], "content_span": [78, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179351-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Mystics season\nThe 2004 WNBA season was the seventh for the Washington Mystics. The franchise drafted Alana Beard as the 2nd pick in the 2004 WNBA Draft, who later led the team to the playoffs for the first time in two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179351-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Mystics season\nThe Mystics won a playoff game this season, something they would not again accomplish until 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179351-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Mystics season\nAdditionally, the Mystics won a home playoff game. Washington would not win another home playoff game until 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179351-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Mystics season\nThis would also be Chamique Holdsclaw's last year as a Mystic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179351-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Mystics season, Dispersal Draft\nBased on the Mystics' 2003 record, they would pick 2nd in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Mystics picked Chasity Melvin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179352-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Redskins season\nThe 2004 season was the Washington Redskins' 73rd in the National Football League. Although they improved on their 5\u201311 record from 2003 to 6\u201310, they finished bottom of their division and missed the playoffs for the fifth straight year. The season saw Joe Gibbs come out of retirement to return as head coach. The team acquired running back Clinton Portis in a trade that sent Champ Bailey to the Denver Broncos in the 2004 offseason. Week 8 marked the first time since 1932 that the U.S. presidential election went against the Redskins Rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179352-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington Redskins season, Regular season\nDue to the addition of the Houston Texans in 2002 and a subsequent change to the NFL's scheduling formula, the 2004 season was the first time since 1991 that the Redskins played the Cincinnati Bengals; the Bengals won the game, the first time they had done so at the Redskins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179353-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington State Cougars football team\nThe 2004 Washington State Cougars football team represented Washington State University in 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was led by second-year head coach Bill Doba, and played its home games at Martin Stadium in Pullman, with one in Seattle at Qwest Field. The Cougars were 5\u20136 overall and 3\u20135 in the Pacific-10 Conference, in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179354-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington State Senate election\nThe Washington State Senate elections were held on November 2, 2004. 24 seats were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179355-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington State Supreme Court election\nWashington State's Supreme Court has 9 members elected at large. In 2004, 3 members of the court were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179356-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington elections\nWashington has 9 Executive seats, all elected at large. In 2004, all 9 positions were up for reelection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179356-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington elections, Governor\nAfter a machine and manual recount, Christine Gregoire won the election by 133 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 Washington gubernatorial election was held on November 2, 2004. The race gained national attention for its legal twists and extremely close finish, among the closest political races in United States election history. Republican Dino Rossi was declared the winner in the initial automated count and again in a subsequent automated recount, but after a second recount done by hand, Democrat Christine Gregoire took the lead by a margin of 129 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election\nAlthough Gregoire was sworn in as Governor of Washington on January 12, 2005, Rossi did not formally concede and called for a re-vote over concerns about the integrity of the election. The Republican Party filed a lawsuit in Chelan County Superior Court contesting the election, but the trial judge ruled against it, citing lack of evidence of deliberate electoral sabotage. Rossi chose not to appeal to the Washington State Supreme Court, formally conceding the election on June 6, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections\nThe 2004 election cycle was the first in Washington to use a party-line ballot system of holding primary elections. The state had a long tradition of using blanket primaries, where the candidates of all political parties appear together on the same ballot for all voters. In this system, the leading vote-getter from each party advances to the general election. Washington's voters are not registered by party affiliation and a voter could participate in selecting candidates for more than one party, although the voter could only choose one candidate (of whatever party) for each office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections\nIn February 2004 the United States Supreme Court declined to review a lower court decision striking down the blanket primary as unconstitutional, based on it violating the rights of the parties to freedom of association under the First Amendment. Washington was thus forced to devise a new primary election system. The state legislature passed a bill providing that the top two vote-getters for each office in the primary would advance to the general election, regardless of which political party they belonged to. Voters would still be allowed to vote for any candidate as before. However, this measure was vetoed by Governor Gary Locke in favor of a Montana-style system that requires voters to choose a ballot for one specific party and vote only on that party's candidates in the primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections\nThe primary election in 2004 was held using the new system, but a campaign to replace it was already underway. The Washington State Grange, which had helped institute the blanket primary in 1935, filed Initiative 872 to implement the \"top-two\" primary instead, which would once again allow voters to cross party lines in the primary election but now send the top two vote-getters to the general election. In districts dominated by one party, the top-two system could result in Democrat- or Republican-only general election races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections\nSupporters claimed it would bring back voter choice across party lines and allow independent voters to participate in the primary; opponents said it would exclude third parties and independent candidates from general election ballots, and would in fact reduce general election voter choice. The initiative was put to a public vote in November 2004, and passed with 60% of the vote. The state Republican, Democratic and Libertarian parties sued, however, and a federal district court judge ruled in 2005 that the measure was unconstitutional because it too infringed the parties' First Amendment right to select their own candidates. Washington continued with the party-line primary system while appealing the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections, Democratic primary\nIn July 2003, incumbent governor Gary Locke indicated that he would not seek a third term, opening up the Democratic primary to alternate candidates. Former Washington State Supreme Court justice Phil Talmadge was the first candidate to enter the race for the Democratic primary, challenging Gary Locke before he announced his retirement, but Washington Attorney-General Christine Gregoire quickly became the frontrunner, leading in fundraising and endorsements. King County Executive Ron Sims announced his candidacy, but failed to garner much interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections, Democratic primary\nAccording to a March 2004, Mellman Group poll, Gregoire would beat both Sims and Talmadge 36% to 11% and four percent in an open primary, and would beat Sims 55% to 17% in a closed primary. On April 29, 2004, Talmadge announced he was withdrawing from the race following the discovery of a benign kidney tumor, citing the likely need for surgery and associated recovery time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections, Republican primary\nThe Washington State Republican Party struggled to find a candidate through most of 2003 when presumed candidate Bob Herbold, a former Executive Vice President and COO of Microsoft, declined to run. They finally recruited Dino Rossi, a relatively obscure political figure who left the state Senate to pursue a gubernatorial run due to state elected officials being prohibited from raising money while the legislature is in session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 77], "content_span": [78, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Primary elections, Libertarian primary\nThe Libertarian Party of Washington State race was between Ruth Bennett, former state chair of the party in Washington and Colorado, and Michael Nelson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 78], "content_span": [79, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nBoth Gregoire and Rossi ran as centrists and promised to change the political landscape in Washington, and both made job and economic growth the centerpiece of their campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nThe Rossi campaign presented its own job-growth plan, and stated that 20 years of Democratic governors were to blame for the economic troubles in the state. However, during the general election he was criticized for a strongly conservative voting record that was at odds with his moderate campaign posture. Rossi was also criticized for his long-time professional association with a real estate broker convicted of fraud, and for alleged r\u00e9sum\u00e9 embellishments. Rossi had worked against Roe v. Wade, attacked opponents for supporting gay rights, and proclaimed that creationism should be taught in public schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nRossi campaigned on being anti-abortion and in favor of state and federal Constitutional Amendments that would ban certain benefits for gay couples. He downplayed his long history of conservative comments and claimed to be a \"fiscal moderate with a social conscience.\" Rossi would not publicly state his opinion over stem cell research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nThe Gregoire campaign promised to boost job growth in the state which had slowed greatly after the dot-com bubble burst in 2000, to improve education, and to increase access to health care. It also focused on Gregoire's record of challenging big tobacco and pharmaceutical companies in her tenure as state Attorney-General. Gregoire also proposed a major state-led initiative in life sciences, especially stem cell research, where she proposed investing US$500 million of a tobacco settlement the state hoped to receive in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nHer economic plan for the state focused on improving state infrastructure and improving the quality of education in the state, which she claimed would attract investors. Gregoire also stated that she believed Washington residents should be allowed to buy prescription medicine from Canada, while Rossi said that he needed to be convinced it \"was safe\". Gregoire was criticized for being a part of the state government establishment, but tried to counter Rossi's \"time for a change\" message by saying that she would \"blow past the bureaucracy\" and bring change herself. This language surprised and disappointed many of her colleagues and supporters, who saw it as a failure to give mention or credit to the efforts and achievements of past Democratic governors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nGregoire was also strongly criticized in many attack ads for an incident which occurred in 2000, when Gregoire's office failed to file documents on time to appeal a record $17.8 million personal-injury verdict against Washington. Documents from an independent investigation conducted at the time of the incident show that Gregoire's deputies attempted to influence who was listed as responsible for the missed deadline. A further case Gregoire was strongly criticized for occurred in 2002 during a wrongful death lawsuit when Gregoire's office did not detect an error in jury instructions. The state was forced to pay $22.4 million to the plaintiff. While Gregoire was not directly responsible for these offenses, the Rossi campaign claimed that she had already cost Washington taxpayers millions of dollars and was negligent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nRossi won the endorsement of the Republican Party, the National Rifle Association, The Seattle Times, several business and medical associations, and former governor Dan Evans. Gregoire received the endorsement of the Democratic Party, GLAAD, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, abortion rights organizations, and all the previous Democratic governors of the state. However, the Republican Party decided not to fund ads for Rossi in the state as polls leading up to the election date showed Gregoire with a clear lead. Almost all of Rossi's ads were paid for and created by outside sources, although as Gregoire's lead narrowed closer to the election date, the Republican Party ultimately decided to launch a series of advertisements for Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nRuth Bennett's campaign focused on permitting same-sex marriage in the state and economic liberalization in line with the political philosophy of libertarianism. She also recommended equally dividing the state budget among the counties and allowing the counties to establish tax systems on a county-by-county basis, ultimately leading to a diminished role of Washington's Department of Revenue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nGregoire led in almost all polls conducted leading up to the election, but Rossi was able to close in on her late in the race and won considerable support from Eastern Washington. He also ran much stronger than expected in Snohomish and Pierce Counties. Gregoire received strong support (nearly a three-to-two margin) from the largest county in the state, King County, which includes heavily Democratic Seattle. During the initial ballot count, the lead changed hands several times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 66], "content_span": [67, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Initial results\nWashington is unusual for a U.S. state in that it only requires that an absentee ballot be postmarked by the day of the election to be valid, while most other states require the ballot to have arrived at the election office by that time. Due to this as well as the state's high number of absentee ballots\u2014more than 60% of all King County voters voted absentee\u2014the initial result of the election was not known until November 17, the last day under state law for election results to be certified by each county's election officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Initial results\nThe initial result, as reported by Secretary of State Sam Reed, showed Rossi with a lead of 261 votes, well within the margin for an automatic machine recount pursuant to Washington state law (less than 0.5% and less than 2,000 votes). After a statewide recount completed on November 24, Rossi again came away with the lead, this time by 42 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 73], "content_span": [74, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Manual recount\nAfter Rossi was certified as the victor on November 29, the Washington State Secretary of State said that \"a manual recount was almost a certainty.\" This view was shared by the Gregoire campaign, with campaign spokesman Morton Brilliant saying that \"if all the ballots aren't counted, we will go through the next four years with one candidate's supporters not believing the winner was legitimately elected.\" and that it was \"worth taking three weeks to have four years of legitimacy, and that's what is at stake.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Manual recount\nIn Washington, a candidate may request one hand count or machine count, provided that they pay for the estimated cost of the recount up front. If a manual recount overturns the outcome of an election, the state will then refund the money to the candidate. On December 3, the Washington State Democratic Party gave a $730,000 check to the Secretary of State for the statewide manual recount of nearly 3 million ballots. The Secretary of State issued the order for a recount on Monday, December 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Manual recount\nThe next day, attorneys for the Democratic Party and the Secretary of State argued before the Washington State Supreme Court over terms for the recount. The Democrats argued for a universal standard to be applied to the manual recount, and for the retabulation of votes over simply recanvassing them. Attorneys for the Secretary of State replied saying that any retabulation of votes would be a violation of state election laws and the Washington State Constitution. Two days later, the Supreme Court issued their opinion and rejected universal standards in the statewide recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nKing County Council Chairman Larry Phillips was at a Democratic Party office in Seattle on Sunday December 12, reviewing a list of voters whose absentee votes had been rejected due to signature problems, when to his surprise he found his own name listed. Phillips said he was certain he had filled out and signed his ballot correctly, and asked the county election officials to investigate the discrepancy. They discovered that Phillips' signature had somehow failed to be scanned into the election computer system after he submitted his request for an absentee ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nElection workers claimed that they had received Phillips' absentee ballot in the mail, but they could not find his signature in the computer system to compare to the one on the ballot envelope, so they mistakenly rejected the ballot instead of following the standard procedure of checking it against the signature of Phillips' physical voter registration card that was on file. The discovery prompted King County Director of Elections Dean Logan to order his staff to search the computers to see if any other ballots had been incorrectly rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nLogan announced on December 13 that 561 absentee ballots in the county had been wrongly rejected due to an administrative error. The next day, workers retrieving voting machines from precinct storage found an additional 12 ballots, bringing the total to 572 newly discovered ballots. Logan admitted the lost ballots were an oversight on the part of his department, and insisted that the found ballots be counted. On December 15, the King County Canvassing Board voted 2-1 in favor of counting the discovered ballots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nUpon examination of the discovered ballots, it was further discovered that, with the exception of two ballots, none of the ballots had been cast by voters whose surnames began with the letters A, B, or C. There was a further search for more ballots, and on December 17, county workers discovered a tray in a warehouse with an additional 162 previously uncounted ballots. All together, 723 uncounted or improperly rejected ballots were discovered in King County during the manual hand recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nChairman of the Washington State Republican Party Chris Vance stated that he was \"absolutely convinced that King County is trying to steal this election.\" The National Rifle Association, which had endorsed Rossi, sent a mass e-mail on December 14 to its members asking for volunteers to go to King County in order to sit in on the county elections office and observe the recount.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nThe Washington State Republican Party filed a restraining order in Pierce County District Court, requesting an injunction against King County to block the tabulation of the uncounted ballots. The request was granted on December 17, but Democrats appealed to the Supreme Court. On December 22, the court ruled against the Republican Party and overturned the restraining order, allowing King County to count all ballots. The next day, Sam Reed issued a statement explaining the process for certification of the uncounted ballots and the standards for fair voting practices in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Discovered ballots\nAfter all other counties submitted their recount votes, it was revealed on December 20 that at least five other counties besides King County had included ballots that had been discovered after the initial count. For example, Snohomish County included 224 missed ballots that had been discovered underneath mail trays. The outcome of the State Supreme Court hearing regarding King County's votes could have potentially affected those counties' counts as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 76], "content_span": [77, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Final results\nThe state Democratic party claimed on December 21 that the result of the manual recount, including King County's votes, placed Gregoire ahead by eight votes across the state. Later, on December 22, the preliminary recount results put Gregoire at a ten-vote lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Final results\nWashington state law allows for election officials to evaluate voter intent and correct ballots so that the machines can properly read them. For example, on a Scantron or other optical ballot, an election official might fill in a circle that was not properly marked so that the machine may record the vote. Republicans filed a federal lawsuit to stop the visual examination of ballots, claiming that it is not allowed under federal law (Equal Protection clause of the 14th Amendment).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Final results\nThe Republican Party was contending that the method King County was using was different from that of other counties, therefore treating voters in King County differently from those in others. However, the court ruled that this was not the case, as King County was counting their ballots in a manner similar to that of other counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Final results\nA Pierce County Superior Court judge ruled that ballots should not be counted, but on December 22, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that counties explicitly have the ability to correct ballot consideration errors made during earlier counts. Of those 732 ballots, 566 were accepted as having valid signatures and were added to the existing total on December 23. The final results of the hand count, as of December 23, had Christine Gregoire ahead by 130 votes, which was later revised to 129 when it was discovered that Thurston County had added a vote after certification had been completed. Since the recount results were in favor of the party requesting the recount, the Democrats were reimbursed the recount costs they had advanced to the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Final results\nThe Republicans were already preparing for further legal action before the final tally was announced by canvassing Republican voters whose ballots had been rejected. On December 29, Rossi called for a re-vote, saying that \"this election has been a total mess\" and that a \"revote would be the best solution for the people of our state and would give us a legitimate governorship\". This solution had been rejected by the Democrats and Republican Secretary of State Sam Reed because Washington's election law contains no re-vote provision, which left a lawsuit the only other option. Reed officially certified the results of the manual recount on December 30, declaring Gregoire the governor-elect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 71], "content_span": [72, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nRepublican leaders in Washington claimed there were enough disputed votes to change the outcome of the election and filed a lawsuit in Chelan County Superior Court in order to avoid having the case heard in the more liberal Western Washington counties. King County's election department (the greater Seattle area) was also targeted for how they handled the ballots, including untracked use of a \"ballot-on-demand\" printing machine. Also, ballots in six counties were discovered after the initial count and included in the recounts, the most being from King County. The judge hearing the lawsuit ruled that the Party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible votes, or for whom they were cast, to enable the court to overturn the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nControversy over the election's outcome continued after the certification of the hand recount results. The Washington State Republican Party called into question the discrepancy between the list of voters casting ballots in King County (895,660) and the number of ballots reported in the final hand recount (899,199). They claimed that hundreds of votes, including votes by felons, deceased voters, and double voters, were included in the canvass. As an explanation, election officials claimed that they had yet to finalize the list at the time, and argued that discrepancies in the two numbers are common and do not necessarily indicate fraud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0030-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nAs the election officials had expected, once the two lists were completed on January 5, the two numbers were indeed very close to one another. Also on January 5, 2005, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer published an article investigating votes in King County apparently cast by dead people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0030-0002", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nThe PI uncovered eight cases of votes attributed to dead people; these included one administrative error, two ballots cast by the spouses of recently deceased voters (one who voted against Gregoire), one case of a husband apparently voting his dead wife's ballot instead of his own, and a man who legally voted his absentee ballot and then died before election day. One dead woman was marked as having voted in person at the polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nBy law, the result of the election can be contested by any individual who files suit at any time up to 10 days after any inauguration, thereby making January 22 the latest date to have filed any suit. Two private citizens filed challenges to the election on January 6: Daniel P. Stevens of Fall City and Arthur Coday Jr. of Shoreline. The Republican party filed a suit on January 7 in Chelan County claiming that voters had been deprived of their right to a \"free and fair election\", and demanding a revote by special election. While the evidence focused especially on problems in King County, adjacent Chelan was chosen as the venue because it was more solidly Republican and the GOP questioned the ability of King County judges to rule impartially in such a case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nNeither suit asked for Gregoire's inauguration to be delayed, allowing governor Gary Locke to leave his post as scheduled. Gregoire was inaugurated on January 12. On February 4, Judge John E. Bridges, assigned by Chelan County to preside over the case, ruled that the court did not have the authority to order a re-election. However, in the same ruling, he also rejected the Democrats' argument that only the state legislature, which then had a Democratic majority, and not the court, had the sole authority to decide whether an election was invalid, thereby indicating that he intended to proceed to trial. Both sides declared victory over this early pre-trial ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nThe Republicans presented data showing discrepancies in absentee ballot counts from 11 King County precincts. In some precincts, the county tallied more mail-in ballots than there were voters recorded as having voted by mail. In others, the opposite occurred\u2014the county recorded more voters than ballots. The proof that ballots were fabricated for Democrats, Republican attorneys argued, is that four of the five precincts with the most excess mail-in ballots backed Gregoire. And as proof that ballots were misplaced or destroyed to harm Republicans, they pointed to the fact that four of the six precincts in which the most mail-in votes cannot be accounted for backed Republican Dino Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nAdditionally, the Republicans contended that King County was three days past its federally mandated due date of October 10 to send out its absentee ballots to overseas military personnel, widely considered more likely to vote Republican. The United States Postal Service Bulk Permit #1455 was used to mail 1,605 ballots on October 2, and 28,000 on October 13. The Republicans claimed that the delay may have prevented military service people from voting, thereby skewing the results in King County. On air, local talk radio host Bryan Suits claimed that his vote in particular was not counted while he performed military service in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nOn February 19 Judge Bridges denied the Democratic motion calling for the challengers' burden of proof to include a comprehensive list of disputed ballots cast for each candidate. The Republicans acknowledged that such an exhaustive list would be impossible to complete, but continued to argue that the volume of illegal ballots, and the electoral tendencies of the counties in which they were cast, demonstrated a strong likelihood that the illegal ballots had led to Gregoire's victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0035-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nOn February 26, as a part of the Republican suit, Rossi's legal team produced a list of 1,135 felons, deceased people, or people who allegedly voted twice, whom attorneys claimed influenced the outcome. A substantial number of the felon-voters were convicted as juveniles and were legally permitted to vote. Conservative columnists suggested that felons were more likely to vote for Gregoire. Most of the felon-voters resided in counties won by Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nAs a solution to the problem of the illegal voters, the Republicans proposed a solution of \"proportional reduction\". Republicans claimed that it should be assumed that illegal votes were cast in the same percentages as other votes in the same precinct. For example, in a precinct where Gregoire won 60% of the vote, it would have been assumed that she received 60% of the illegal vote as well, and those votes would be subtracted from her total for the precinct.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0036-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nThe Democrats countered that the Republicans' proposal was statistically invalid, an example of the ecological fallacy, and the best solution would be to call each of the felons into court and ask them to swear under oath which political candidate they voted for, after which time their vote would be removed from the total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nThe trial began on May 23, with both sides presenting their evidence of manipulation. On June 6, 2005, Judge John E. Bridges ruled that the Republican party did not provide enough evidence that the disputed votes were ineligible -or for whom they were cast- to overturn the election. Judge Bridges noted that there was evidence that 1,678 votes had been illegally cast throughout the state, but found that the only evidence submitted to show how those votes had been cast were sworn statements from four felons that they had voted for Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0037-0001", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nHe stated that the judiciary should exercise restraint; \"unless an election is clearly invalid, when the people have spoken, their verdict should not be disturbed by the court.\" Nullifying the election, Bridges said, would be \"the ultimate act of judicial egotism and judicial activism.\" He also concluded that according to his interpretation of the Washington Administrative Code, \"voters who improperly cast provisional ballots should not be disenfranchised.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0037-0002", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nHe also rejected all claims of fraud and the Republican Party's statistical analysis, concluding that the expert testimony of the Republican party was \"not helpful\" and that the proportional reduction theory was not supported under any law in the state. Striking another blow against Rossi's court case, he stated that \"the court is more inclined to believe that Gregoire would have prevailed under statistical analysis theory\", rejecting the Rossi campaign's claim that improperly cast ballots led to Gregoire's victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nBridges did accept the claim that some people voted illegally in the election, but said there was little proof of which candidate benefited from those votes. He ruled that 1,678 illegal votes should be subtracted from the total number of votes cast. Bridges also removed five votes from the final count for two of the candidates: four for Rossi and one for Ruth Bennett. No evidence was brought before the court of any of the illegal votes benefitted Gregoire. The final margin of victory for Gregoire over Rossi was 133 votes. Rossi did not appeal to the state Supreme Court and the Washington State Republican party settled the case after paying $15,000 in court costs to the Democrats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, General election, Further legal challenges\nJudge Bridges' ruling was seen as a comprehensive defeat for Rossi. The judge admitted nearly every piece of evidence the Republican Party offered and then wrote a thorough, tough opinion rejecting the Republicans' claims (while criticizing the administration of the election, particularly in King County); Rossi was left with very little legal ground for a successful appeal. After receiving such a negative verdict, Rossi declined to appeal to the State Supreme Court, claiming that the political makeup of the Court would make it impossible for him to win, thereby ending all legal challenges to the election of Gregoire as the Governor of Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 82], "content_span": [83, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179357-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 Washington gubernatorial election, Aftermath\nThe 2004 election became a focus of media attention again in early 2007 when news broke that eight federal prosecutors including John McKay, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Washington, had been fired. Republicans had hoped that after the election McKay would begin a federal investigation into alleged voter fraud, but he did not; McKay stated afterward that he would not convene a grand jury for purely political reasons and emphasized he had not seen any evidence of voter fraud in the Governor's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179358-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Waterford City Council election\nAn election to Waterford City Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 15 councillors were elected from three electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179359-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Waterford County Council election\nAn election to Waterford County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 23 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179360-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Waterford Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2004 Waterford Senior Hurling Championship was the 104th staging of the Waterford Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Waterford County Board in 1897. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 26 January 2004. The championship began on 2 May 2004 and ended on 4 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179360-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Waterford Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 10 October 2004, Mount Sion won the championship after a 4-14 to 4-07 defeat of Ballygunner in the final at Walsh Park. It was their 34th championship title overall and their third title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179360-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Waterford Senior Hurling Championship\nLismore's Dave Bennett was the championship's top scorer with 4-52.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179361-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Watford Borough Council election\nElections to Watford Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrat party kept overall control of the council. Overall turnout was 39.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179362-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Waveney District Council election\nThe 2004 Waveney Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Waveney District Council in Suffolk, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179363-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Webby Awards\nThe 8th Annual Webby Awards was held on May 12, 2004. Due to cutbacks in the Webby event budget resulting from the 2002 Internet bubble, the decision was made to hold this year's ceremony entirely online (a step further than the 2003 Webbys which had already been partially online). Judging was provided by the 480-person International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179364-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington City mayoral election\nThe 2004 Wellington City mayoral election was part of the 2004 New Zealand local elections. On 9 October 2004, elections were held for the Mayor of Wellington plus other local government roles. Kerry Prendergast was re-elected for a second term as mayor of Wellington. This was the first Wellington mayoral election to be held under the Instant runoff voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179364-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington City mayoral election, Ward results\nCandidates were also elected from wards to the Wellington City Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections\nThe 2004 Wellington local elections were part of the 2004 New Zealand local elections, to elect members to sub-national councils and boards. The Wellington elections cover one regional council (the Greater Wellington Regional Council), eight territorial authority (city and district) councils, three district health boards, and various local boards and licensing trusts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections, Wellington City Council\nThe Wellington City Council consists of a mayor and fourteen councillors elected from five wards (Northern, Onslow-Western, Lambton, Eastern, Southern) using the Single Transferable Vote system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections, Wellington City Council, Eastern ward\nThe Eastern ward returns three councillors to the Wellington City Council. The final iteration of results for the ward were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections, Wellington City Council, Lambton ward\nThe Lambton ward returns three councillors to the Wellington City Council. The final iteration of results for the ward were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 70], "content_span": [71, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections, Wellington City Council, Northern ward\nThe Northern ward returns three councillors to the Wellington City Council. The final iteration of results for the ward were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections, Wellington City Council, Onslow-Western ward\nThe Onslow-Western ward returns three councillors to the Wellington City Council. The final iteration of results for the ward were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 77], "content_span": [78, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179365-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Wellington local elections, Wellington City Council, Southern ward\nThe Southern ward returns two councillors to the Wellington City Council. The final iteration of results for the ward were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179366-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh Open (snooker)\nThe 2004 Welsh Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 15 and 25 January at the Welsh Institute of Sport in Cardiff, Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179366-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh Open (snooker)\nStephen Hendry was the defending champion, but he lost in the quarter-finals 4\u20135 against Marco Fu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179366-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh Open (snooker)\nRonnie O'Sullivan managed to recover from 5\u20138 down to defeat Steve Davis 9\u20138 in the final. This was O'Sullivan's 14th ranking title of his career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179366-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh Open (snooker), Tournament summary\nDefending champion Stephen Hendry was the number 1 seed with World Champion Mark Williams seeded 2. The remaining places were allocated to players based on the world rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179366-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh Open (snooker), Qualifying\nQualifying for the tournament took place at Pontins in Prestatyn, Wales between 9 and 13 December 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179367-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh local elections\nThe 2004 Welsh local elections, were held on 10 June in 22 local authorities, as part of the wider 2004 UK local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179367-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh local elections\nThe elections were originally scheduled for May 2003, but were delayed to avoid a conflict with the 2003 Wales Assembly elections. However, this meant they took place on the same day as the 2004 elections to the European Parliament. 3,135 candidates competed for 1,262 council seats across Wales, in 879 electoral wards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179367-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Welsh local elections, Result\nIn all 22 Welsh councils the whole of the council was up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179368-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Welwyn Hatfield District Council election\nThe 2004 Welwyn Hatfield District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Welwyn Hatfield District Council in Hertfordshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179368-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservative increase their majority on the council after both they and the Liberal Democrats gained seats from Labour. The Conservatives made 4 gains from Labour in Hatfield North, Hatfield West, Howlands and Sherrards wards, with one Conservative councillor describing the results as \"so good absolutely marvellous\". Labour put their defeats down to mid-term unpopularity of the national Labour government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179368-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, Election result\nHowever the Conservatives did lose one seat to the Liberal Democrats in Handside, and this, along with a Liberal Democrat gain from Labour in Hatfield Central, meant that the Liberal Democrats won their first seats on the council for 14 years. The Liberal Democrats said they had been successful after campaigning on local issues such as maintaining Welwyn Garden City and on Stanborough Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179368-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, Election result\nMeanwhile, the one candidate from the United Kingdom Independence Party came second in Northaw ward ahead of both Labour and the Liberal Democrats. Overall turnout in the election was 40.61%, a significant rise on the 2003 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179369-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Coast Conference Baseball Championship Series\nThe 2004 West Coast Conference Baseball Championship Series was held on May 28 and 29, 2004 at Loyola Marymount's home stadium, George C. Page Stadium in Los Angeles, California, and pitted the winners of the conference's two four-team divisions. The event determined the champion of the West Coast Conference for the 2004 NCAA Division I baseball season. Pepperdine won the series two games to none over Loyola Marymount and earned the league's automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179370-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2004 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place on March 5\u20138, 2004. All rounds were held in Santa Clara, California at the Leavey Center. The semifinals were televised by ESPN2. The West Coast Conference Championship Game was televised by ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179370-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Gonzaga Bulldogs earned their sixth WCC Tournament title and an automatic bid to the 2004 NCAA Tournament. Ronny Turiaf of Gonzaga was named Tournament MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179371-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Lancashire District Council election\nThe 2004 West Lancashire District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of West Lancashire District Council in Lancashire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179371-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 West Lancashire District Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the Conservatives held 28 seats compared to 26 for Labour. 18 seats were contested in the election, with 9 seats being defended by each of the 2 parties. As well as candidates from the Conservative and Labour parties, there were also 7 independents, 4 Greens, 1 Liberal Democrat and 1 from the new Ormskirk party. Both the Liberal Democrat and Ormskirk party candidates were standing in Derby ward, which was seen as being one of the critical contests in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179371-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 West Lancashire District Council election, Campaign\nA major issue in the election was privatisation, which the Conservatives supported saying it would improve efficiency, however Labour criticised the Conservatives plans saying investment should be kept in the area. The Conservatives called on voters to back their moves to establish litter free zones, create secure leisure facilities for young people and refurbish parks. However Labour attacked plans to sell council housing and the handing of a local park to a private developer. Other issues included crime, anti-social behaviour, CCTV and plans to move the accident and emergency department of Ormskirk hospital to Southport hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179371-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 West Lancashire District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives hold on to control of the council after making 1 gain from Labour. This meant the Conservatives held 29 seats compared to 25 for Labour and the election was described as a \"vindication of Conservative policies running West Lancs\" by the Conservative leader of the council, Geoff Roberts. Meanwhile, Labour's group leader on the council, Alan Bullen, only narrowly held his own seat on the council in Skelmersdale North. Overall turnout in the election was up by 14% at 42.47%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 63], "content_span": [64, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179372-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Lindsey District Council election\nElections to West Lindsey District Council were held on 10 June 2004. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179373-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Oxfordshire District Council election\nThe 2004 West Oxfordshire District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of West Oxfordshire District Council in Oxfordshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179373-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 West Oxfordshire District Council election, Background\nAfter the last election in 2003 the Conservatives controlled the council with 29 seats, while the Liberal Democrats had 12, there were six Independent councillors and the Labour Party had two seats. A total of 54 candidates stood for the 17 seats up for election in 2004, comprising 16 each for the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, 11 Labour candidates, nine Green Party and two Independents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 59], "content_span": [60, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179373-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 West Oxfordshire District Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives remained in control of the council with 29 councillors, after winning 12 of the 17 seats contested. 13 of the 14 councillors who were standing again were re-elected, with only Conservative councillor James Mills losing his seat in Standlake, Aston and Stanton Harcourt ward to Liberal Democrat Elisabeth Bickley. The Liberal Democrats took four seats and therefore finished with 13 councillors on the council., while all three members of the Conservative council cabinet were re-elected, including the council leader Barry Norton in North Leigh ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179373-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 West Oxfordshire District Council election, Election result\nConservative Andrew Creery also gained one seat in Witney Central from Labour, after the Labour councillor for the previous 30 years, Ted Cooper, stood down at the election. This reduced Labour to its worst ever position on the council with just one councillor. Meanwhile, independent councillor Derrick Millard retained his seat in Stonesfield and Tackley, to mean there remained six independent councillors. Overall turnout at the election was 45.19%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179374-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 West Virginia Democratic presidential primary was held on May 11 in the U.S. state of West Virginia as one of the Democratic Party's statewide nomination contests ahead of the 2004 presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179375-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia Mountaineers football team\nThe 2004 West Virginia Mountaineers football team completed the regular season with an 8\u20134 (4\u20132 conference record) and traveled to the Gator Bowl, where they lost to the Florida State Seminoles 30\u201318. The Mountaineers began the season ranked #10, but ended disappointedly by losing the last three games of the season after starting 8\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179375-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia Mountaineers football team, Roster\nThe 2004 football team featured stars Rasheed Marshall at quarterback, Kay-Jay Harris at running back, Chris Henry at receiver, and a stout defense featuring Pacman Jones (who also played returner), Mike Lorello, Kevin \"Boo\" McLee, Jahmile Addae, Eric Wicks, and Alton McCann. Brandon Myles also played receiver behind Henry to help out the passing game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election\nThe 2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election took place on November 2, 2004 for the post of Governor of West Virginia. Democratic Secretary of State of West Virginia Joe Manchin defeated Republican Monty Warner. Manchin won all but 3 counties. Despite Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry losing the state to George W. Bush by double digits, Manchin won by nearly 30 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Campaign\nDemocratic governor Bob Wise became the first governor of West Virginia not to stand for re-election since the Constitution of West Virginia was amended in 1970 to permit two consecutive terms. In August 2003 he announced that he would not stand again after admitting to an affair with a West Virginia Development Office employee Angela Mascia who was also married. The announcement took place three months after this became public knowledge and over 500 emails exchanged between the two was released to the public through a Freedom of Information Act request.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Campaign\nAngela Mascia's then husband, Phillip Frye, divorced Mascia and then ran for Governor. Frye told The Daily Show in August of 2003 that he was running \u201cto be a sheer nuisance to Bob Wise\u201d and \"I'm not qualified to run our great state, or have any hopes whatsoever of winning an election.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, Democratic primary, Campaign\nWest Virginia Secretary of State Joe Manchin challenged Wise for the Democratic nomination, and after Wise withdrew from the race he became the favorite for the primary. Manchin lined up support from various sources including labour leaders in order to reverse his defeat in the gubernatorial primary in 1996. His main opponent in the primary was former State Senator Lloyd Jackson, who launched his campaign with a plan to reduce insurance costs. In the run up to the primary the two candidates traded negative advertising but Manchin won an easy victory in the primary on May 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, Republican primary, Campaign\nThe Republican primary saw 10 candidates competing for the nomination. Six of the candidates met in a debate in March 2004, in which they agreed on the need to reduce the size of the West Virginia state government. It saw a close race between three main candidates Monty Warner, a retired army colonel and developer, Rob Capehart, a former state tax secretary, and Dan Moore, a former banker and car dealer. A poll conducted during the lead-up to the primary showed the three candidates virtually even. Warner won a narrow victory in the primary over Moore and Capehart.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 71], "content_span": [72, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nEarly in the campaign, Warner called for Manchin, as a centrist Democrat, to endorse President George W. Bush for re-election over his Democratic rival John Kerry. Manchin's campaign spokesperson responded that Manchin backed \"the Democratic nominee\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nThe two main candidates faced each other in three debates and one town hall meeting. Jesse Johnson, the Mountain Party candidate, unsuccessfully attempted to get the West Virginia Supreme Court to cancel the first debate, as he was not asked to take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179376-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 West Virginia gubernatorial election, General election, Campaign\nManchin had an edge in the election with better name recognition and a strong financial advantage over Warner. In the closing weeks of the election campaign, Manchin spent $3.3 million against $880,000 by Warner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179377-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters\nThe 2004 Cincinnati Masters (also known as the Western & Southern Financial Group Masters and Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 103rd edition of the Cincinnati Masters, and was part of the ATP Masters Series of the 2004 ATP Tour, and of the Tier III Series of the 2004 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Lindner Family Tennis Center in Mason, near Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. It was the first Cincinnati event to feature both men and women's draws since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179377-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters, Finals, Men's Doubles\nMark Knowles / Daniel Nestor defeated Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Todd Woodbridge, 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179377-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters, Finals, Women's Doubles\nJill Craybas / Marlene Weing\u00e4rtner defeated Emmanuelle Gagliardi / Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld 7-5, 7-6(7\u20132)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 72], "content_span": [73, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179378-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters \u2013 Doubles\nBob and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, but lost in second round to Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179378-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won the title, defeating Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge 6\u20132, 3\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179379-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters \u2013 Singles\nAndy Roddick was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179379-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Masters \u2013 Singles\nAndre Agassi won the title, defeating Lleyton Hewitt 6\u20133, 3\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179380-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nThis event was not held from 1989 onwards, so not defending champions were declared. Beth Herr and Candy Reynolds were the last champions in the 1988 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179380-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open \u2013 Doubles\nJill Craybas and Marlene Weing\u00e4rtner won the title, defeating Emmanuelle Gagliardi and Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20132) in the final. It was the 2nd title for Craybas and the 1st and only title for Weing\u00e4rtner, in their respective careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179381-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Fyunck(click) (talk | contribs) at 23:52, 18 March 2020 (proper order). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179381-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport defeated Vera Zvonareva 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2004 Cincinnati Open. It was her 6th title of the year and the 44th of her career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179381-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open \u2013 Singles\nThis event was not held from 1989 onwards, so no defending champion was declared. Barbara Potter was the last champion in the 1988 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179381-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Western & Southern Financial Group Women's Open \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 69], "content_span": [70, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179382-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football team\nThe 2004 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football team represented Western Kentucky University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season and were led by second year head coach David Elson. The team contended for Gateway Football Conference championship but finished 2nd. They made the school's fifth straight appearance in the NCAA Division I-AA playoffs; it would end up being WKU's last playoff appearance, as they would initiate transitioning to NCAA Division I-A/FBS in 2006. The Hilltoppers finished the season ranked 11th in final I-AA postseason national poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179382-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers football team\nThis team included future NFL players Curtis Hamilton, Brian Claybourn, Dan Cline, and Greg Ryan. Claybourn and Buster Ashley were named to the AP All American team. The All-Conference team included Ashley, Claybourn, Deont\u00e9 Smith, Charles Thompson, Antonio Thomas, Justin Haddix, Erik Losey, Lerron Moore, and Joe Woolridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179383-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Western Michigan Broncos football team\nThe 2004 Western Michigan Broncos football team represented Western Michigan University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. They competed as members of the Mid-American Conference in the West Division. The team was coached by Gary Darnell, who was fired after the end of the season, and played their home games at Waldo Stadium in Kalamazoo, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179384-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Westmeath County Council election\nAn election to Westmeath County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 23 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179385-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wexford County Council election\nAn election to Wexford County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 21 councillors were elected from four electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179386-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Weymouth and Portland Borough Council election\nElections to Weymouth and Portland Borough Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 increasing the number of seats by 1. The council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179388-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Whitbread Awards\nThe Whitbread Awards (1971\u20132005), called Costa Book Awards since 2006, are literary awards in the United Kingdom, awarded both for high literary merit but also for works considered enjoyable reading. This page gives details of the awards given in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179389-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wicklow County Council election\nAn election to Wicklow County Council took place on 11 June 2004 as part of that year's Irish local elections. 24 councillors were elected from five electoral divisions by PR-STV voting for a five-year term of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179390-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wien Energie Grand Prix\nThe 2004 Wien Energie Grand Prix was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was part of the Tier III series of the 2004 WTA Tour. It took place in Vienna, Austria, in late May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179390-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wien Energie Grand Prix, Finals, Doubles\nMartina Navratilova and Lisa Raymond defeated Cara Black and Rennae Stubbs, 6\u20132, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179391-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wien Energie Grand Prix \u2013 Doubles\nLi Ting and Sun Tiantian were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Martina Navratilova and Lisa Raymond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179392-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wien Energie Grand Prix \u2013 Singles\nPaola Su\u00e1rez was the defending champion, but chose not to compete in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179393-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council election\nElections to Wigan Council were held on 10 June 2004. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 increasing the number of councillors by three. The Labour party kept overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179393-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council election, Election result\nThis result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the Council after the elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179394-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wigan Warriors season\nThis article outlines the 2004 season for the British rugby league club Wigan Warriors. This season saw them compete in the Super League and Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179394-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wigan Warriors season, League Table\nSource: . Classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179395-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wildwater Canoeing World Championships\nThe 2004 Wildwater Canoeing World Championships was the 24th edition of the global wildwater canoeing competition, Wildwater Canoeing World Championships, organised by the International Canoe Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179396-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers season\nThe 2004 Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers season was the team's third season as a member of the AF2. The Pioneers finished with a 13\u20133 record under new head coach Les Moss, their fourth head coach in three seasons. The Pioneers clinched the Northeastern Division and secured their best first playoff appearance. The Pioneers lost in the third week of the postseason, ending their playoff run just short of the ArenaCup. Following the season, Moss signed a contract to remain the head coach for a second season, the first returning coach in team history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team\nThe 2004 William & Mary Tribe football team represented the College of William & Mary in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. William & Mary competed as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference (A-10) under head football coach Jimmye Laycock and played their home games at Zable Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team\nThe 2004 Tribe football team is considered, within the William & Mary community, to be one of the two greatest teams ever assembled at the college (the other being the 2009 team). For the first time William & Mary reached the NCAA Division I-AA Semifinals. They set a single season school record for wins (11) and were A-10 Conference Co-Champions after going 7\u20131 in conference play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team\nMany Tribe players garnered postseason awards and accolades, highlighted by quarterback Lang Campbell's selection as the 2004 Walter Payton Award winner, which is given annually to the most outstanding offensive player in the Division I FCS of college football as chosen by a nationwide panel of media and college sports information directors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team\nWilliam & Mary finished the 2004 season ranked No. 3 nationally in the final Division I-AA polls. No team in school history had ever finished with a ranking that high, nor had any Tribe squad even reached #3 at any point during any season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Preseason\nThe Tribe were not nationally ranked heading into the 2004 season. Coming off of a 5\u20135 record in 2003 in which they had failed to qualify for the playoffs, national media did not predict much more success for them in 2004. They had lost Rich Musinski to graduation\u2014a wide receiver who graduated as one of three players in NCAA history to collect more than 4,000 receiving yards. Though quarterback Campbell was returning for his redshirt senior season, he was not expected to lead the Tribe to the success they would later achieve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ North Carolina\nThe Tribe began their 2004 campaign by traveling to Chapel Hill, North Carolina to take on the UNC Tar Heels of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS). Over 43,500 people went to Kenan Memorial Stadium to see the match-up. Despite holding a 24\u201314 halftime lead, the Tribe could not hold on for the victory, losing 38\u201349.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ #10 New Hampshire\nAfter a bye-week, William & Mary resumed their season on September 18 against #10-ranked New Hampshire in Durham. This contest began conference play. The unranked Tribe only mustered three field goals for the match, but it proved to be enough as they came away with a 9\u20137 win. And, despite the lack of offense, William & Mary held the Wildcats scoreless for the last 50:48 of the game in the come-from-behind victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, Virginia Military Institute\nGame 3 pitted William & Mary against a lesser VMI Keydets team. They led 28\u20136 at halftime, and the lead bulged to 35\u20136 by the end of the third quarter. The Tribe won the non-conference game 42\u20136. William & Mary plays the Virginia Military Institute nearly every season, and consequently a friendly rivalry has spawned from it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 84], "content_span": [85, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, #16 Northeastern\nOn October 2, the #16-ranked Northeastern Huskies traveled to Williamsburg to face the unranked Tribe. The contest was evenly matched as both teams headed into halftime tied at 14. William & Mary trailed by four points going into the fourth quarter, but a field goal by All-American kicker Greg Kuehn and a receiving touchdown by future National Football League player Dominique Thompson, followed by a successful two-point conversion, provided the Tribe with 11 points in the final period. Northeastern had also scored one touchdown, and the game went to overtime knotted at 35 points apiece. William & Mary's ability to convert a field goal attempt, coupled with their defense holding the Huskies from scoring any points in the extra period, gave the Tribe a 38\u201335 win at home. It was the second victory over a ranked opponent by unranked William & Mary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 930]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ Liberty\nWilliam & Mary faced the Liberty Flames in Lynchburg on October 9. The Tribe scored 10 points in each of the first three quarters en route to their second non-conference win of 2004. They scored seven more insurance points in the fourth quarter to finish the game with 37 while Liberty managed only 17 of their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ Liberty\nThe contest marked the first time of the 2004 season that William & Mary entered a game ranked in the Top 25 nationally. Heading into the game, the 3\u20131 Tribe were ranked #18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, Rhode Island\nThe Tribe fell behind 7\u20130 within the first three minutes of the game after the Rams connected on a 52-yard touchdown pass. By the end of the first quarter, however, the Tribe had scored two unanswered touchdowns of their own to take a 14\u20137 lead. After exchanging field goals in the second quarter, the two teams went into halftime by a score of 17\u201310. The Rams scored first during the third quarter when they finished their drive with a five-yard touchdown run to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, Rhode Island\nAfter William & Mary responded with another touchdown of their own, Rhode Island kept chipping away at the defense and would eventually tie the score at 24. Once again, the Tribe responded. With 8:09 left to play, running back Elijah Brooks powered in for a score from two yards out. Neither team would score again, and William & Mary won 31\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ #3 Delaware\nIn a highly anticipated match-up between two ranked teams, the #14 Tribe traveled north to Newark to play #3 Delaware. It only took 2:27 for William & Mary to score first on a 10-yard touchdown pass to Dominique Thompson. The Blue Hens only mustered a three-and-out on their first possession, and, less than one minute after their first touchdown, Lang Campbell once again found Thompson, this time for a 62-yard touchdown pass. At the 6:12 mark of the first quarter, Delaware would finally get on the scoreboard with a touchdown of their own.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ #3 Delaware\nBut as the Blue Hens soon found out, the first quarter belonged to Dominique Thompson, who hauled in his third touchdown reception, which was 87 yards, with 4:26 to play. It looked as though William & Mary would win the match in a runaway. A 17\u20130 shutout of the Tribe in the second quarter quickly squashed that idea, and the teams went into halftime separated by three points. The second half was a much more defensive struggle than the first, as both teams only mustered one touchdown and zero field goals apiece (both in the fourth quarter). A fast William & Mary start would not sustain, and the Blue Hens \"upset\" the lower-ranked Tribe 31\u201328. The high intensity of the game foreshadowed another great match-up to come later in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ Towson\nLike the previous game against Delaware, William & Mary wide receiver Dominique Thompson burned the opposition in the first quarter. Less than two minutes into the game, Lang Campbell connected with Thompson on a 46-yard touchdown throw. Towson would kick a field goal, but that was all the scoring by either team for the first 15 minutes. The middle two quarters belonged to the Tribe as they scored four touchdowns and a field goal to take a 38\u20133 lead into the final frame. With their substitutes playing most of the fourth quarter, William & Mary gave up 13 points to the Tigers and only managed three of their own. It did not matter as they would roll to a 41\u201316 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, #19 Villanova\nOn November 6, #19 Villanova traveled to Williamsburg as the #13 Tribe played their fourth ranked opponent of the season. Things did not start well for William & Mary. Wildcat Martin Gibson returned the opening kickoff 95 yards for a quick touchdown. Several minutes later, however, Tribe running back Jon Smith punched in a 1-yard touchdown run of his own. A Greg Kuehn PAT was good and the two teams were tied at seven. In the second quarter, Villanova would take a 14\u20137 lead at the 12:38 mark on a touchdown pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, #19 Villanova\nWilliam & Mary responded four minutes later to tie the game, but another Villanova touchdown with 3:38 left would make the score 21\u201314 at halftime in favor of the Wildcats. In the second half, the Tribe would go on to score three unanswered touchdowns and force a safety to take a 37\u201321 lead. Villanova would not score again until 32 seconds remained, but by then the game was out of reach and William & Mary had earned their seventh win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 70], "content_span": [71, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ #4 James Madison\nUnlike the University of Richmond football rivalry, which is specific to one sport, the W&M\u2013JMU athletic rivalry spans across the board to all sports. When the #10 Tribe went to Harrisonburg to play #4 James Madison, both teams were intense from the start. The first quarter was a defensive battle as neither team conceded good field position to the other. It was not until 2:49 was left that the first points were scored\u2014a David Rabil 28-yard field goal for JMU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0014-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ #4 James Madison\nWilliam & Mary tied the game with a Kuehn field goal in the second quarter, but the Dukes took a 10\u20133 lead with 3:19 left in the first half on a 17-yard passing touchdown. William & Mary played well in the third quarter, outscoring rival Madison 7\u20130. In the decisive fourth quarter, the Dukes would score first after punching in a 4-yard touchdown run. After two straight passing touchdowns by Campbell, the Tribe had taken the lead, 24\u201317. Madison responded to tie the match with only 45 seconds remaining after a successful 27-yard touchdown pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0014-0002", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, @ #4 James Madison\nOnce William & Mary received the ball on the ensuing kick-off, they drove 43 yards in five plays to set up a potential game-winning field goal. After a timeout, Tribe kicker Greg Kuehn drilled a 45-yard field goal as time expired, giving William & Mary the upset win. The Tribe team and attending fans swarmed the field as they reveled in their defeat of their archrivals in dramatic fashion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, Richmond (I-64 Bowl)\nOn November 20, the Richmond Spiders came to William & Mary for the 114th all-time meeting between the teams. The winner of the annual contest\u2014dubbed the I-64 Bowl\u2014receives the I-64 Trophy. Prior to kick-off, W&M held the series edge 58\u201350\u20135. Regardless of how either team is doing in a particular season, the I-64 Bowl is always a match of pride between schools.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, Richmond (I-64 Bowl)\nThe first quarter was relatively fruitless for both teams. The only points came on a 25-yard pass to Thompson from Campbell to cap a 9-play, 80-yard drive. After a Kuehn kick, the Tribe led 7\u20130. The second quarter was very similar; many plays, few points. Another W&M touchdown and PAT capped the first half scoring. In the third quarter, however, William & Mary blew a quasi-close game wide open. They outscored the Spiders 24\u20130 to take a 38\u20130 lead into the final frame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, Regular season, Richmond (I-64 Bowl)\nDuring the third, Adam Bratton caught two touchdown passes, Joe Nicholas caught one and Greg Kuehn finished off the scoring with a field goal. Richmond would not score their first points until 5:37 left in the game when David Freeman ran in a score from 16 yards out. The Spiders would make the final score look more respectable than it was by scoring another touchdown in garbage time on a seven-yard pass with only five seconds remaining. With the win, William & Mary not only secured their 59th all-time I-64 Trophy, but also a clinch of the Atlantic 10 Conference title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #11 Hampton (first round)\nAs the 6th-ranked team nationally, William & Mary was able to host all of their playoff games (unless a higher-ranked team were to play them). In the opening round, the Tribe hosted the #11 Hampton Pirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 95], "content_span": [96, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #11 Hampton (first round)\nHampton was able to jump on William & Mary early. Running back Ardell Daniels punched in a 1-yard touchdown score 4:01 into the first quarter to cap a four-play, 51-yard scoring drive. Several series by both teams followed, none of which resulted in any points. The Pirates would score their second touchdown with 3:31 left in the first quarter, but the PAT was blocked and the score remained 13\u20130. Both teams were evenly matched in the deeply contested match. The second quarter offered little offense. The only points came from the Tribe's 8-yard touchdown pass to Bratton. William & Mary was losing 13\u20137, in their home stadium, at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 95], "content_span": [96, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #11 Hampton (first round)\nThe second half was a much more offensively-oriented game. The Tribe received the opening kickoff, and less than two minutes later, Campbell found Thompson on a 27-yard touchdown pass. Greg Kuehn made the extra point, and William & Mary was now ahead 14\u201313. Hampton, however, quickly responded. Jerome Mathis returned the ensuing kickoff 93 yards for the Pirates' third score of the day. They completed a two-point conversion to take a 21\u201314 lead. There was one more score of the third quarter \u2013 a 4-yard run by William & Mary's Jon Smith. The teams headed into the final 15 minutes tied at 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 95], "content_span": [96, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #11 Hampton (first round)\nHampton once again scored first. Jerome Mathis caught his second touchdown pass when Pirates quarterback Prince Shepherd connected with him for a 43-yard score. Like Hampton had done to them earlier, the Tribe responded by returning the ensuing kickoff 92 yards for a quick score. The game was now knotted at 28 points with fewer than twelve minutes remaining. William & Mary was able to stop Hampton on the next series for a timely defensive effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 95], "content_span": [96, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0020-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #11 Hampton (first round)\nThe high-scoring Tribe offense then took the field and, like many times before over the course of the season, Lang Campbell found Dominique Thompson for a touchdown pass. This time it came as the first play of scrimmage in a one-play, 45-yard pass that encompassed nine seconds. For the first time all game, William & Mary held a lead of seven points. Hampton was unable to respond. Their next offensive series produced zero points, giving possession back to William & Mary. The Tribe then took advantage of their opportunity. Smith ran in his second touchdown of the contest when he punched in a 4-yard run with only 1:58 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 95], "content_span": [96, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #11 Hampton (first round)\nHampton had no choice but to use a no-huddle, hurry-up offense. They managed to complete an eight-play, 56-yard drive to score on Prince's 7-yard quarterback scurry with 32 seconds remaining. After a successful PAT, the Pirates attempted an onside kick but could not recover it. The Tribe burned the rest of the game clock and walked away with a 42\u201335 opening round victory\u2014their first playoff win since 1996 when they beat Jacksonville State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 95], "content_span": [96, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #10 Delaware (Quarterfinals)\nThe 2004 Division I-AA Quarterfinal match-up against the defending national champion University of Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens was one of the most prolific football games in a long William & Mary history. The Tribe hosted the Blue Hens at Zable Stadium on a cold December 4 afternoon. When the double-overtime game finally ended, the Tribe had accumulated 500 yards of offense while Delaware accounted for 491 of their own. The match was also the largest come-from-behind win in Tribe history after they erased a Blue Hen 21-point fourth-quarter lead to send the game into extra sessions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #10 Delaware (Quarterfinals)\nDelaware opened the contest's scoring with an Omar Cuff 37-yard touchdown run 3:32 into the first quarter. A little over one minute later, Tribe quarterback Lang Campbell (30-of-53, 342 yards, three touchdowns, no interceptions) would find receiver John Pitts for an 11-yard passing score to even the game at seven apiece. Cuff would score during the first quarter once more, however, as the Blue Hens took a 14\u20137 lead. In the second quarter, Delaware added to their lead and seemingly put the game out of reach by halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #10 Delaware (Quarterfinals)\nBlue Hens quarterback Sonny Riccio (24-of-41, 262 yards, three touchdowns, 2 INTs) connected two times for scores with David Boler in addition to a Brad Shushman field goal. William & Mary's only points came from a Greg Kuehn field goal. Delaware outscored William & Mary 17\u20133 during the period and took a 31\u201310 lead into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #10 Delaware (Quarterfinals)\nThe third quarter was a defensive battle as neither team was able to put any points on the board. The score remained a 21-point deficit for the Tribe at the start of the fourth quarter. William & Mary exploded offensively in the quarter, however, and (with a staunch defensive effort) came back to force overtime at 31\u201331 by putting up 21 straight points in the frame.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0024-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #10 Delaware (Quarterfinals)\nStephen Cason ran back an interception 62 yards for a touchdown 10 seconds into the quarter, Jon Smith scored on a two-yard touchdown run, and Campbell threw a 15-yard scoring pass to Joe Nicholas with just under two minutes to play. The miraculous comeback was not complete as the game headed into overtime. Delaware struck first when Justin Long caught a seven-yard touchdown pass from Riccio for a 38\u201331 Delaware advantage. The Tribe countered with a two-yard touchdown pass from Nicholas, which knotted the score at 38 apiece and set the stage for Smith's heroics in the second overtime session. Kuehn missed his first extra point of the season after Smith scored, opening the door for a Delaware victory on the ensuing possession. However, William & Mary stopped the Blue Hens on the next possession to steal the six-point win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 931]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #10 Delaware (Quarterfinals)\nWilliam & Mary fans stormed Zable Stadium and celebrated on the middle of the field after the game concluded. The win also thrust the Tribe into their first-ever national semifinal playoff game, which was to be against their biggest rival, James Madison University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 98], "content_span": [99, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #8 James Madison (Semifinals)\nFor the first time since the 1930s, William & Mary hosted a night-time football game. Using temporary stadium lights to illuminate the field and stands, the sold-out Division I-AA semifinal against James Madison was broadcast live on the ESPN2 television network. The Tribe had a six-game winning streak heading into the contest, and the Dukes had only two losses all season\u2014one early season loss to Division I-A power West Virginia, and the other to William & Mary on a last second field goal. Whereas the Tribe won their first two playoff games at home, James Madison was forced to win both of theirs on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #8 James Madison (Semifinals)\nIn the game's early going, all momentum and big plays were going Madison's way. They trounced William & Mary in the first quarter and went up 21\u20130 by virtue of rushing, passing and interception touchdowns. The game seemed out of reach for the Tribe before a blink of an eye. However, as quickly as the Dukes gained a lead, they gave it right back. In the second quarter, Greg Kuehn got the Tribe's scoring started 1:22 in with a 27-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #8 James Madison (Semifinals)\nAfter a defensive stop forced Madison to punt, William & Mary went on a 68-yard, 4:41 drive to score their first touchdown (a two-yard Lang Campbell run). Another empty possession for the Dukes gave the Tribe new life as they took advantage and scored another touchdown with 2:14 remaining in the half to cut the deficit to four. After forcing a third straight punt, William & Mary capitalized for a fourth time in the second quarter as Kuehn made a 42-yard field goal as time expired in the first half. After being down 21\u20130 after one quarter, William & Mary crawled back to nearly even the score at 21\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #8 James Madison (Semifinals)\nThe Tribe continued their scoring in the third quarter when Campbell found Dominique Thompson for a seven-yard touchdown pass 3:23 into the half. They took their first lead of the game, 27\u201321. Less than one minute later, however, the Dukes responded with a two-play, 63-yard drive capped by a touchdown pass to D. D. Boxley from quarterback Justin Rascati. On William & Mary's next three possessions, they lost two fumbles and were forced to punt, giving the ball back to JMU each time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0028-0001", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #8 James Madison (Semifinals)\nThe Dukes took advantage of two of those possessions by scoring one rushing and one passing touchdown to take a 41\u201326 lead into the final frame. In the fourth quarter, Madison scored an insurance touchdown with 8:01 remaining when Alvin Banks punched in a one-yard run. The Tribe would not score again until a four-yard Campbell hook-up with John Pitts with 1:21 remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179397-0028-0002", "contents": "2004 William & Mary Tribe football team, NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs, #8 James Madison (Semifinals)\nIn a game of runs, James Madison University would prevail to move on to the 2004 Division I-AA National Championship that they would later win, becoming the first time in history to win a national championship by defeating every team on the road. With the loss, William & Mary's record-breaking season ended, but myriad individual and team accolades were still to come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 99], "content_span": [100, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships\nThe 2004 Wimbledon Championships was a tennis tournament played on grass courts at the All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club in Wimbledon, London in the United Kingdom. It was the 118th edition of the Wimbledon Championships and were held from 21 June to 4 July 2004. It was the third Grand Slam tennis event of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships\nRoger Federer was successful in his title defence, defeating Andy Roddick in the final to win his second Wimbledon title. Two-time defending champion Serena Williams was unsuccessful in her title defence, being upset in the final by then little-known 17-year-old Russian Maria Sharapova; Sharapova became the first Russian player, male or female, to win Wimbledon, the second-youngest player to win Wimbledon in the Modern Era and third-youngest overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships\nIn the juniors, Ga\u00ebl Monfils won his third consecutive Grand Slam title in the boys' competition, and Kateryna Bondarenko won the girls' title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Point and prize money distribution, Point distribution\nBelow are the tables with the point distribution for each discipline of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Point and prize money distribution, Prize distribution\nThe total prize money for 2004 championships was \u00a39,707,280. The winner of the men's title earned \u00a3602,500 while the women's singles champion earned \u00a3560,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Champions, Seniors, Men's Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Todd Woodbridge defeated Julian Knowle / Nenad Zimonji\u0107, 6\u20131, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Champions, Seniors, Women's Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Liezel Huber / Ai Sugiyama, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7-5)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Champions, Seniors, Mixed Doubles\nWayne Black / Cara Black defeated Todd Woodbridge / Alicia Molik, 3\u20136, 7\u20136(10-8), 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Champions, Juniors, Boys' Doubles\nBrendan Evans / Scott Oudsema defeated Robin Haase / Viktor Troicki, 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Champions, Juniors, Girls' Doubles\nVictoria Azarenka / Olga Govortsova defeated Marina Erakovic / Monica Niculescu, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Main draw wild card entries\nThe following players received wild cards into the main draw senior events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 57], "content_span": [58, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Qualifier entries, Men's singles\nThe following players received entry into the lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Qualifier entries, Men's doubles\nThe following teams received entry into the lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179398-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships, Qualifier entries, Women's doubles\nThe following teams received entry into the lucky loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 64], "content_span": [65, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179399-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nFlorin Mergea and Horia Tec\u0103u were the defending champions, but they did not compete in the Juniors this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179399-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nBrendan Evans and Scott Oudsema defeated Robin Haase and Viktor Troicki in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134 to win the Boys' Doubles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179400-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Boys' Singles\nFlorin Mergea was the defending champion, but did not complete in the Juniors this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179400-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Boys' Singles\nGa\u00ebl Monfils defeated Miles Kasiri in the final, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(8-6) to win the Boys' Singles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179400-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Boys' Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179401-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nAlisa Kleybanova and Sania Mirza were the defending champions, but Mirza did not compete in the Juniors this year. Kleybanova competed with Irina Kotkina but they lost in the quarterfinals to Marina Erakovic and Monica Niculescu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179401-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nVictoria Azarenka and Olga Govortsova defeated Erakovic and Niculescu in the final, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20134 to win the Girls' Doubles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179402-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Girls' Singles\nKirsten Flipkens was the defending champion but did not complete in the Juniors this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179402-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Girls' Singles\nKateryna Bondarenko defeated Ana Ivanovic in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20132 to win the Girls' Singles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179402-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Girls' Singles\nThis Wimbledon Girls' Singles event featured four future singles world No. 1 players, in Ana Ivanovic, Caroline Wozniacki, Victoria Azarenka and Angelique Kerber. During the tournament, there were two clashes between them, with Azarenka defeating Kerber at an early stage and then losing in the semifinals to Ivanovic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179402-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Girls' Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179403-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge successfully defended their title for a third year, defeating Julian Knowle and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, to win the Gentlemen's Doubles title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships With the title Woodbridge broke Laurence and Reginald Doherty's record of eight Wimbledon men's doubles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179403-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179404-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles Qualifying\nPlayers and pairs who neither have high enough rankings nor receive wild cards may participate in a qualifying tournament held one week before the annual Wimbledon Tennis Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179405-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nDefending champion Roger Federer successfully defended his title, defeating Andy Roddick in the final, 4\u20136, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20134 to win the Gentlemen's Singles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships. It was his second Wimbledon title and his third major title overall. This tournament marked the beginning of Federer's record streak of 23 consecutive major semifinals and 36 consecutive major quarterfinals (in which he made 19 finals and won 14 titles).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179405-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis tournament was the final major appearance for 2001 champion Goran Ivani\u0161evi\u0107, who announced his decision to retire following the tournament. He lost in the third round to 2002 champion Lleyton Hewitt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179405-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179405-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Singles, Seeds\nDavid Nalbandian withdrew due to injury. He was replaced in the draw by the highest-ranked non-seeded player Luis Horna, who became the #33 seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179406-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nPlayers and pairs who neither have high enough rankings nor receive wild cards may participate in a qualifying tournament held one week before the annual Wimbledon Tennis Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179407-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nLeander Paes and Martina Navratilova were the defending champions but lost in the third round to Wayne and Cara Black.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179407-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nThe Blacks defeated Todd Woodbridge and Alicia Molik in the final, 3-6, 7-6(10-8), 6-4 to win the Mixed Doubles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179407-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Mixed Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179408-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nKim Clijsters and Ai Sugiyama were the defending champions, however Clijsters did not compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179408-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nCara Black and Rennae Stubbs defeated Sugiyama and Liezel Huber in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20136(7\u20135) to win the Ladies' Doubles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179408-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez had the chance to hold all four Grand Slam championship titles, but lost to Black and Stubbs in the semifinals, also snapping a streak of nine straight Grand Slam finals reached by Ruano Pascual and Su\u00e1rez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179408-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179409-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles Qualifying\nPlayers and pairs who neither have high enough rankings nor receive wild cards may participate in a qualifying tournament held one week before the annual Wimbledon Tennis Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179410-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Sharapova defeated the two-time defending champion Serena Williams in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134 to win the Ladies' Singles tennis title at the 2004 Wimbledon Championships. It was her first major title. The 17-year-old's victory over the six-time major champion was described by commentators as \"the most stunning upset in memory\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179410-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nWith this win, Sharapova entered the top 10 in rankings for the first time in her career. She also became the third-youngest woman to win Wimbledon (behind Lottie Dod and Martina Hingis) and the second Russian woman (after Anastasia Myskina won the 2004 French Open) to win a major title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179410-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams was attempting to become the first woman to win the singles tournament three consecutive times since Steffi Graf was champion in 1991, 1992 and 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179410-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis was also the last major singles tournament that former world No. 1 Martina Navratilova competed in. Having been awarded a wild card, she won her first round match and became, at age 47, the oldest player in the Open Era to win a main draw match at Wimbledon and the second-lowest ranked player (No. 1,001) to win a main draw match at Wimbledon, (behind Barbara Schwartz, who was unranked in 2001).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179410-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nClick on the seed number of a player to go to their draw section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179411-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wimbledon Championships \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nPlayers and pairs who neither have high enough rankings nor receive wild cards may participate in a qualifying tournament held one week before the annual Wimbledon Tennis Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179412-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Winchester City Council election\nThe 2004 Winchester Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Winchester District Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Liberal Democrats lost overall control of the council to no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179412-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Winchester City Council election, Campaign\n19 seats were contested in the election with the Liberal Democrats defending 14, the Conservatives and Independents 2 each and Labour 1 seat. The Liberal Democrats were expected to be deprived of their majority on the council as they only needed to lose 1 seat for this to happen. The Conservatives were the main challengers, with Labour only in contention in the wards of St John and All Saints and St Luke. With the election being held at the same time as the European elections, the presence of 6 candidates from the United Kingdom Independence Party for the first time was seen as possibly affecting the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179412-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Winchester City Council election, Campaign\nIssues in the election included planning, the status of local neighbourhoods and the council tax.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179412-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Winchester City Council election, Election result\nThe Liberal Democrats lost their majority on the council for the first time since 1995, with the Conservatives gaining 4 seats from them. However the Liberal Democrats did gain one seat from Labour in St John and All Saints ward. Voter turnout in the election was significantly up at 48.8%, compared to 39.76% in the 2003 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179412-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Winchester City Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Liberal Democrats continued to run the council as a minority administration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179413-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Winnipeg Blue Bombers season\nThe 2004 Winnipeg Blue Bombers finished in 4th place in the West Division with a 7\u201311 record and failed to make the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179414-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council in England. This election was held on the same day as other local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179414-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election\nThe whole council was up for election due to boundary changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179415-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wisconsin Badgers football team\nThe 2004 Wisconsin Badgers football team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison during the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. Led by Barry Alvarez, the Badgers completed the season with a 9\u20133 record, including a 6\u20132 mark in the Big Ten Conference, good for a third-place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179416-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary\nThe 2004 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary took place on February 17, 2004 as part of the 2004 Democratic Party presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional. The candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received and is open to registered Democrats only. A total of 72 (of 87) delegates are awarded proportionally. A 15 percent threshold is required to receive delegates. John Kerry won the primary with John Edwards coming in second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179416-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary, Analysis\nAlthough Kerry was gaining momentum, he won Wisconsin with just 39.6% of the vote and won with a margin of slightly over 5%. Edwards did very well in the state, winning several counties and even won Wisconsin's 5th congressional district. Edwards reached 40% in 5 counties, and Kerry did win a majority of the counties in the state. One of Kerry's keys to victory was winning the heavily populated and the county with the highest turnout, Milwaukee County, with 40% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179417-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International\nThe 2004 Wismilak International was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in Bali, Indonesia that was part of the Tier III category of the 2004 WTA Tour. It was the tenth edition of the tournament and was held from 13 September through 19 September 2004. Second-seeded Svetlana Kuznetsova won the singles title and earned $35,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179417-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International, Finals, Doubles\nAnastasia Myskina / Ai Sugiyama defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario, 6\u20133, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179418-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International \u2013 Doubles\nMar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi and Angelique Widjaja were the defending champions, but lost in quarterfinals to Svetlana Kuznetsova and Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179418-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International \u2013 Doubles\nAnastasia Myskina and Ai Sugiyama won the title by defeating Svetlana Kuznetsova and Arantxa S\u00e1nchez Vicario 6\u20133, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179419-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International \u2013 Singles\nElena Dementieva was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179419-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International \u2013 Singles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova won the title by defeating Marlene Weing\u00e4rtner 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179419-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wismilak International \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top two seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179420-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wizard Home Loans Cup\nThe 2004 Wizard Home Loans Cup was the Australian Football League competition played in its entirety before the Australian Football League's 2004 Premiership Season began. The AFL National Cup is also sometimes referred to as the pre-season cup because it is played in its entirety before the Premiership Season begins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179420-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wizard Home Loans Cup, Final placings\n1. St Kilda 2. Geelong 3. Melbourne 4. Essendon 5. Brisbane 6. West Coast 7. Carlton 8. Richmond 9. Fremantle 10. Adelaide 11. North Melbourne 12. Western Bulldogs 13. Port Adelaide 14. Hawthorn 15. Sydney 16. Collingwood", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179421-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Woking Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Woking Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Woking Borough Council in Surrey, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179421-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Woking Borough Council election, Election result\nThe results saw no party win a majority on the council with the Conservatives remaining the largest party on 17 seats. They gained 2 seats in Knaphill and Maybury and Sheerwater wards from an independent and Labour respectively, but also lost 2 seats to the Liberal Democrats in Byfleet and Horsell West. The Liberal Democrats were the most happy after gaining 3 seats to hold 15, which was their best election for the council in nearly 20 years. Labour suffered a collapse in support losing both of the seats which they were defending in Maybury and Sheerwater and Kingfield and Westfield, leaving them with only 4 seats on the council but still holding the balance of power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179421-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Woking Borough Council election, Election result\nOverall 7 sitting councillors were re-elected, 2 were defeated and 6 new people were elected. Turnout in the election was 41%, a rise from the 2003 election with the biggest increase in Maybury and Sheerwater where it nearly doubled to just under 44%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179421-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Woking Borough Council election, Election result\nFollowing the election the Conservatives remained in control of the executive with Jim Armitage continuing as leader of the council. Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats took the leadership of all 3 Overview and Scrutiny Committees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179422-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wokingham District Council election\nThe 2004 Wokingham District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Wokingham Unitary Council in Berkshire, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179422-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wokingham District Council election, Background\nSince 2003 boundary changes meant that almost every ward was changed from the previous election with the only ones that remained the same being Charvil, Norreys and Winnersh. The number of wards was also increased from 24 to 25, but the number of seats on the council remaining the same. The boundary changes meant the whole council was up for election for the first time since the unitary authority was founded in 1997. Before the election the Conservatives had 33 seats and had controlled the council since the 2002 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 52], "content_span": [53, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179422-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wokingham District Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives strengthen their control of the council after gaining 6 seats to hold 39 of the 54 seats. The Liberal Democrats fell back to 15 seats, while Labour lost their only seat on the council. The leader of the Liberal Democrats on the council, Coling Lawley, only survived the election by 4 votes in Coronation ward after 3 recounts. Overall turnout was 40.3% a rise of over 10% from the 2003 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election\nThe Council elections held for Wolverhampton City Council on 10 June 2004 were \"all out\", meaning all 60 seats (3 seats in each of the 20 wards) were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election\nIn each ward, 3 Councillors were elected. The candidate with the most votes was elected to serve a 4-year term, the candidate with the second highest number of votes was elected to serve a 3-year term and the candidate who finished third was elected to serve 2 years as a Councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election\nAs there were no elections with a tied number of votes, all of the results from 10 June 2004 have followed, or will follow, the rule stated above.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election, Election result\nThe candidate with the most votes polled who finished (1st) was elected for a term of 4 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election, Election result\nThe candidate who finished (2nd) was elected for a term of 3 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election, Election result\nThe candidate who finished (3rd) was elected for a term of 2 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179423-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Wolverhampton City Council election, Election result\nAs all 20 wards in Wolverhampton had to elect 3 councillors, this rule applied to all wards without exception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 57], "content_span": [58, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179424-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Asia Cup\nThe 2004 Women's One-Day Internationals Asia Cup is the inaugural edition of the Asian Cricket Council Women's One Day International cricket tournament. The two teams which took part in the tournament were India and Sri Lanka. It was held between 17 April and 29 April 2004, in Sri Lanka. The matches were played at the Sinhalese Sports Club Ground and Kandy Cricket Club. India won the inaugural edition against Sri Lanka with 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179425-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Athens International Hockey Tournament\nThe 2004 Women's Athens International Hockey Tournament was a women's field hockey tournament, consisting of a series of test matches. It was held in Athens, Greece, from 4 to 8 February 2008. The tournament served as a test event for the field hockey tournament at the 2004 Summer Olympics. The tournament featured four of the top nations in women's field hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179425-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Athens International Hockey Tournament\nSouth Africa won the tournament after defeating Spain 1\u20130 in the final. Australia finished in third place after defeating Great Britain 2\u20130 in the third place playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179425-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Athens International Hockey Tournament, Competition format\nThe tournament featured the national teams of Australia, Great Britain, South Africa and Spain, competing in a round-robin format, with each team playing each other once. Three points were awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 71], "content_span": [72, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179425-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Athens International Hockey Tournament, Statistics, Final standings\nAs per statistical convention in field hockey, matches decided in extra time are counted as wins and losses, while matches decided by penalty shoot-outs are counted as draws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 80], "content_span": [81, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179425-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Athens International Hockey Tournament, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 24 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 3 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 76], "content_span": [77, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League\nThe 2004 Women's Australian Hockey League was the 12th edition women's field hockey tournament. The tournament was held in Perth from 2\u201314 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League\nWA Diamonds won the tournament for the second time after defeating Canberra Strikers 2\u20131 in the final. QLD Scorchers finished in third place after defeating NSWIS Arrows 2\u20130 in the third and fourth place playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format\nThe 2004 Women's Australian Hockey League consisted of a single round robin format, followed by classification matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format\nTeams from all 8 states and territories competed against one another throughout the pool stage. At the conclusion of the pool stage, the top four ranked teams progressed to the semi-finals, while the bottom four teams continued to the classification stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 57], "content_span": [58, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format, Point Allocation\nAll matches had an outright result, meaning drawn matches were be decided in either golden goal extra time, or a penalty shoot-out. Match points were be as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 75], "content_span": [76, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League, Competition Format, Point Allocation\n\u00b7 3 points for a win\u00b7 1 points to each team in the event of a draw\u00b7 1 point will be awarded to the winner of the shoot-out\u00b7 0 points to the loser of the match", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 75], "content_span": [76, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179426-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Australian Hockey League, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 128 goals scored in 36 matches, for an average of 3.56 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 62], "content_span": [63, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179427-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Bandy World Championship\nThe Bandy World Championship for women 2004 took place in Lappeenranta, Finland between 18 and 22 February. It was the first World Championship in bandy for women. Five teams took part, and firstly, all teams played in a group series, where all teams played each other once. The four best teams continued to the semi-finals. All matches were 2x30 minutes, apart from the final, which was 2 x 45 minutes. Sweden became world champions, winning their six matches a total of 52-0. In the final-game Sweden defeated Russia, 7-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179428-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Baseball World Cup\nThe 2004 IBAF Women's Baseball World Cup was held from July 30 to August 8, 2004 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada and won by the United States. It was the first Women's Baseball World Cup and was sanctioned by the International Baseball Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179428-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Baseball World Cup\nCompeting teams were Australia, Canada, Chinese Taipei (Taiwan), Japan, USA. India and Bulgaria were scheduled to compete, but withdrew before the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179429-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's British Open\nThe 2004 Women's British Open was held 29 July to 1 August at Sunningdale Golf Club in Berkshire, England. It was the 28th edition of the Women's British Open, and the fourth as a major championship on the LPGA Tour. TNT Sports, ABC Sports and BBC Sport broadcast the event in the United States and the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179429-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's British Open\nKaren Stupples won her only major, five shots ahead of runner-up Rachel Teske.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179430-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's British Open Squash Championship\nThe 2004 Women's Harris British Open Squash Championships was held at the Nottingham Squash Rackets Club with the later stages being held at the Albert Hall in Nottingham from 29 October - 7 November 2004. The event was won for the second consecutive year by Rachael Grinham who defeated Natalie Grainger in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179431-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Churchill Cup\nThe fifth tournament, and the second women's \"Churchill Cup\" was the first tournament to be played across two venues - Calgary and Edmonton. Four countries took part again - New Zealand joining England, the United States, and Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179431-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Churchill Cup\nFor the first time the group stages were dropped and the tournament became a straight knock-out with semi-finals at the Calgary Rugby Park and the finals at Commonwealth Stadium, Edmonton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179432-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's County Championship\nThe 2004 Women's County One-Day Championship was the 8th cricket Women's County Championship season. It ran from May to August and saw 23 county teams plus Wales compete in a series of divisions. Sussex Women won the County Championship as winners of the top division, their second title in two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179432-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's County Championship, Competition format\nTeams played matches within a series of divisions with the winners of the top division being crowned County Champions. Matches were played using a one day format with 50 overs per side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179432-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's County Championship, Competition format\nThe championship works on a points system with positions within the divisions being based on the total points. Points were awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179432-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's County Championship, Competition format\nWin: 12 points. Tie: 6 points. Loss : Bonus points. No Result: 11 points. Abandoned: 11 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179432-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's County Championship, Competition format\nUp to five batting and five bowling points per side were also available.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179432-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's County Championship, Teams\nThe 2004 Championship was divided into two tiers: the County Championship and the County Challenge Cup. The County Championship consisted of two divisions of six teams, whilst the Challenge Cup consisted of three groups of four teams, on equal standing, with the winners proceeding to a play-off round for promotion to the County Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179433-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's European Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 3rd Women's European Amateur Boxing Championships were held in Riccione, Italy from October 3 to 10, 2004. This edition of the recurring competition was organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, EABA. Competitions took place in 13 weight classes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179433-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's European Amateur Boxing Championships\nRussia topped the medals table, as they had done in the two previous editions of these championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179434-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Field Hockey Olympic Qualifier\nThe 2004 Women's Hockey Olympic Qualifier was held in Auckland, New Zealand from 19 to 28 March 2004. The top five teams qualified to the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens, Greece.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179435-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (Alcal\u00e1 la Real)\nThe 2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament was a women's field hockey tournament, consisting of a series of test matches. It was held in Alcal\u00e1 la Real, Spain, from July 30 to August 3, 2004, and featured four of the top nations in women's field hockey. The event was held as a precursor to the upcoming Olympic Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179435-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (Alcal\u00e1 la Real), Competition format\nThe tournament featured the national teams of Argentina, Australia, the Netherlands, and the hosts, Spain, competing in a round-robin format, with each team playing each other once. Three points were awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 80], "content_span": [81, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179435-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (Alcal\u00e1 la Real), Officials\nThe following umpires were appointed by the International Hockey Federation to officiate the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 71], "content_span": [72, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179435-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (Alcal\u00e1 la Real), Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 35 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 4.38 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 85], "content_span": [86, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179436-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (C\u00f3rdoba)\nThe 2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament was a women's field hockey tournament, consisting of a series of test matches. It was held in C\u00f3rdoba, Argentina, from February 11 to 15, 2004, and featured four of the top nations in women's field hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179436-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (C\u00f3rdoba), Competition format\nThe tournament featured the national teams of Germany, the Netherlands, South Korea, and the hosts, Argentina, competing in a round-robin format, with each team playing each other once. Three points were awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 73], "content_span": [74, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179436-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (C\u00f3rdoba), Officials\nThe following umpires were appointed by the International Hockey Federation to officiate the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 64], "content_span": [65, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179436-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Four Nations Hockey Tournament (C\u00f3rdoba), Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 32 goals scored in 8 matches, for an average of 4 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 78], "content_span": [79, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179437-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Asia Cup\nThe 2004 Women's Hockey Asia Cup was the fifth edition of the Women's Hockey Asia Cup. It was held from 1 to 8 February 2004 at the Dhyan Chand National Stadium in New Delhi, India. The winner qualified for the 2006 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179437-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Asia Cup\nIndia won the tournament for the first time by defeating Japan 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179437-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Asia Cup, Officials\nThe following umpires were appointed by the International Hockey Federation to officiate the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179438-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy\nThe 2004 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy was the 12th edition of the Hockey Champions Trophy for women. It was held between 6\u201314 November 2004 in Rosario, Argentina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179438-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy\nThe Netherlands won the tournament for the third time after defeating Germany 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179438-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy, Teams\nThe participating teams were determined by International Hockey Federation (FIH):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179438-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy, Umpires\nBelow are the 8 umpires appointed by the International Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179438-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey Champions Trophy, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 54 goals scored in 18 matches, for an average of 3 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179439-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy\nThe 2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy was the second edition of the women's field hockey tournament. The RaboTrophy was held in Amsterdam from 26 June to 4 July 2004, and featured four of the top nations in women's field hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179439-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy\nThe Netherlands won the tournament for the first time, finishing top of the ladder at the conclusion of the pool stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179439-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy\nThe tournament was held in conjunction with the Men's RaboTrophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179439-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy, Competition format\nThe four teams competed in a pool stage, played in a double round robin format. Standings at the conclusion of the pool stage determined final placings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179439-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy, Officials\nThe following umpires were appointed by the International Hockey Federation to officiate the tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179439-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Hockey RaboTrophy, Statistics, Goalscorers\nThere were 40 goals scored in 12 matches, for an average of 3.33 goals per match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179440-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Junior European Volleyball Championship\nThe 2004 Women's Junior European Volleyball Championship was the 19th edition of the competition, with the main phase (contested between 12 teams) held in Slovakia from 3 to 11 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179441-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's National Invitation Tournament\nThe 2004 Women's National Invitation Tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 32 NCAA Division I teams that were not selected to participate in the 2004 Women's NCAA Tournament. It was the seventh edition of the postseason Women's National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179441-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's National Invitation Tournament\nIn one semifinal of the tournament, Creighton faced Richmond, played at Omaha Civic Auditorium. The other semifinal game featured UNLV against Iowa State. Creighton defeated Richmond 81\u201372 behind Dayna Finch's 24 points and a 16 point, 9 rebound and 8 assist performance by Christy Neneman, flirting with a triple double. Meanwhile, UNLV defeated Iowa State 65\u201359. UNLV was down by double digits 47\u201337 midway through the second half, but overcame the deficit to take a lead with just under a minute remaining, then hitting five of six throws in the final 32 seconds to win the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179441-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's National Invitation Tournament\nThe final pitted Creighton and UNLV against each other in Omaha, Nebraska at the Omaha Civic Auditorium. Creighton dominated the title game from the very beginning, outscoring the Lady Rebels early to take a 17\u20134 lead. UNLV briefly cut the lead to single digits early in the second half but the Blue Jays went on a 10\u20132 run to retake a commanding lead. They later had a 13\u20130 run to put the game out of reach and gave the coach the opportunity to play all the bench players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179442-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Pan American Cup\nThe 2004 Women's Pan American Cup was the 2nd edition of the Women's Pan American Cup. It was held between 21 and 28 April 2004 in Bridgetown, Barbados. The tournament doubled as the qualifier to the 2006 World Cup to be held in Madrid, Spain. The winner would qualify directly while the runner-up would have the chance to obtain one of five berths at the World Cup Qualifier in Rome, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179442-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Pan American Cup\nArgentina won the tournament for the second consecutive time after defeating the United States 3\u20130 in the final, earning an automatic berth at the 2006 World Cup to defend their title obtained in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179442-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Pan American Cup, Umpires\nBelow are the 10 umpires appointed by the Pan American Hockey Federation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179443-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Pan-American Volleyball Cup\nThe 2004 Women's Pan-American Volleyball Cup was the third edition of the annual Women's Volleyball Tournament, played by ten countries from June 17 to June 27, 2004 in Mexicali and Tijuana, Mexico. The intercontinental event served as a qualifier for the 2005 FIVB World Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179444-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Pan-American Volleyball Cup squads\nThis article shows all participating team squads at the 2004 Women's Pan-American Volleyball Cup, held from June 17 to June 27, 2004, in Mexicali and Tijuana, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179445-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's Six Nations Championship\nThe 2004 Women's Six Nations Championship, also known as the 2004 RBS Women's 6 Nations due to the tournament's sponsorship by the Royal Bank of Scotland, was the third series of the rugby union Women's Six Nations Championship and was won by France, who achieved the Grand Slam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179446-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's World Open Squash Championship\nThe 2004 Women's World Open Squash Championship is the women's edition of the 2004 World Open, which serves as the individual world championship for squash players. The event took place in Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia from 7 to 11 December 2004. Vanessa Atkinson won her first World Open trophy, beating Natalie Grinham in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179447-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Women's World Team Squash Championships\nThe 2004 Women's World Team Squash Championships were held in Amsterdam, Netherlands and took place from September 26 until October 2, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179448-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Worcester City Council election\nThe 2004 Worcester City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Worcester District Council in Worcestershire, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003 reducing the number of seats by one. The Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179448-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Worcester City Council election, Campaign\nBefore the election the council was composed of 18 Conservatives, 10 Labour, 4 independents, 2 Liberal Democrats, 1 independent Conservative and 1 vacant seat. Boundary changes saw the number of seats reduced from 36 to 35 for the 2004 election, meaning that the whole council would be up for election for the first time since 1976. This also meant that the number of wards was increased from 12 to 15, with new wards including Cathedral and Rainbow Hill.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179448-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Worcester City Council election, Campaign\nAll parties were hoping to make gains with the Conservatives defending their record in control of the council, which they said included having a balanced budget and keeping the council tax rise down to 2.5%. Other issues raised in the election included recycling, improving public transport, dealing with traffic congestion and keeping the streets clean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179448-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Worcester City Council election, Election result\nThe results saw the Conservatives achieve a majority on the council after winning 18 of the 35 seats. Labour remained on 10 seats while the Liberal Democrats gained 1 to hold 3 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179449-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Allround Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2004 World Allround Speed Skating Championships were held in Vikingskipet in Hamar, Norway, on 7 and 8 February 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179449-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Allround Speed Skating Championships\nDutchwoman Renate Groenewold and American Chad Hedrick became the world champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179449-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Allround Speed Skating Championships, Men's championships, Allround results\nNQ = Not qualified for the 10000 m (only the best 12 are qualified)DQ = disqualifiedNS = Not started", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179449-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Allround Speed Skating Championships, Women's championships, Allround results\nNQ = Not qualified for the 5000 m (only the best 12 are qualified)DQ = disqualified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 88], "content_span": [89, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179449-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Allround Speed Skating Championships, Rules\nAll 24 participating skaters are allowed to skate the first three distances; 12 skaters may take part on the fourth distance. These 12 skaters are determined by taking the standings on the longest of the first three distances, as well as the samalog standings after three distances, and comparing these lists as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 54], "content_span": [55, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179450-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Champions v Asia Stars Challenge\nThe 2004 World Champions v Asia Stars Challenge was an invitational professional non-ranking snooker tournament which ran for one year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179450-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Champions v Asia Stars Challenge\nThis was, in effect, the same event as the Euro-Asia Masters Challenge which ran a season earlier but under a different name. This time, the field consisted of four world champions, Stephen Hendry, John Higgins, Ken Doherty and Mark Williams plus James Wattana, Ding Junhui, Marco Fu and up and coming Thai player, Atthasit Mahitthi. The format was the same with the players split into two round robin groups with the top two from each progressing to the semi finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179451-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering\nThe 2004 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering was the second World Championship of Ski Mountaineering sanctioned by the International Council for Ski Mountaineering Competitions (ISMC), held in the Spanish Aran Valley (Catalonia) from March 1 to March 6, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179451-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering\nCompared to the 2002 World Championship a relay race and a vertical race competition was added.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179451-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering, Results, Vertical race\nList of the best 10 participants by gender (incl. \"Espoirs\" level):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 69], "content_span": [70, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179451-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering, Results, Individual\nList of the best 10 participants by gender (incl. \"Espoirs\" level):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179451-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering, Results, Relay\nList of the best 10 relay teams by gender (some teams included \"Espoirs\" level athletes):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 61], "content_span": [62, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179452-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Club Challenge\nThe 2004 World Club Challenge was held on Friday, 13 February 2004, at the Alfred McAlpine Stadium, Huddersfield, England. The game was contested by Bradford Bulls and the Penrith Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179453-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey\nThe 2004 World Cup of Hockey was an international ice hockey tournament. It was the second installment of the National Hockey League (NHL)-sanctioned competition, eight years after the inaugural 1996 World Cup of Hockey. It was held from August 30 to September 14, 2004, and took place in various venues in North America and Europe. Canada won the championship, defeating Finland in the final, held in Toronto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179453-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey\nThe tournament directly preceded the NHL lockout, as the NHL announced they were locking out players during 2004\u201305 season two days after the tournament final was played, pending the adoption of a new Collective Bargaining Agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179453-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey, Playoff round, Quarter-finals\nAll times are local (UTC+3 / UTC+2 / UTC-5 / UTC-4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179454-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey rosters\nListed below are the rosters for the eight teams participating in the 2004 World Cup of Hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics\nThese are the individual player statistics for the 2004 World Cup of Hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Canada\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Czech Republic\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Germany\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Finland\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Russia\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Slovakia\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Sweden\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, United States\nNote: GP = Games Played, G = Goals, A = Assists, Pts = Points, PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179455-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 World Cup of Hockey statistics, Goalies\nNote: W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GAA = Goals Against Average, SPCT = Save Percentage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179456-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Darts Trophy\nThe 2004 Bavaria World Darts Trophy was the third edition of the World Darts Trophy, a professional darts tournament held at the De Vechtsebanen in Utrecht, the Netherlands, run by the British Darts Organisation and the World Darts Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179456-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Darts Trophy\nThe 2003 winner, Raymond van Barneveld retained the trophy beating Martin Adams in the final of the men's event, 6\u20134 in sets. Andy Fordham. the BDO World Champion, was absent from the field this year in the men's event. In the women's event, the 2003 winner and the BDO World Champion, Trina Gulliver lost at the quarter-final stage to Anastasia Dobromyslova. Dobromyslova was then beaten by Francis Hoenselaar, last year's finalist, 3\u20131 in sets in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179457-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Fencing Championships\nThe 2004 World Fencing Championships were held at the Hunter College in New York City, USA. The event took place on 11 June 2004. It had women's team foil and women's team sabre, both of which were not held at the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179458-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Field Archery Championships\nThe 2004 World Field Archery Championships were held in Plitvice Lakes National Park, Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179459-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 World Figure Skating Championships were held at the Westfalenhalle in Dortmund, Germany from March 22 to 28. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179459-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Figure Skating Championships, Competition notes\nDue to the large number of participants, the men's and ladies' qualifying groups and the ice dancing compulsory dance were split into groups A and B. Ice dancers performed the same compulsory dance in both groups. The compulsory dance was the Midnight Blues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 58], "content_span": [59, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179460-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Grand Prix (darts)\nThe 2004 Sky Bet World Grand Prix was the seventh staging of the World Grand Prix darts tournament, organised by the Professional Darts Corporation. It was held at the Citywest Hotel in Dublin, Ireland, between 18\u201324 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179460-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Grand Prix (darts)\nThe first round saw the finalists for the previous two years, Phil Taylor and John Part, get knocked out, Taylor losing to Andy Callaby and Part to Ronnie Baxter. The final was contested between Colin Lloyd and 2001 champion Alan Warriner, with Lloyd winning 7-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179461-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Indoor Bowls Championship\nThe 2004 Potters Holidays World Indoor Bowls Championship was held at Potters Leisure Resort, Hopton on Sea, Great Yarmouth, England, from 05-25 January 2004. An inaugural event was introduced for mixed pairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179462-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Interuniversity Games\nThe 2004 World Interuniversity Games were the sixth edition of the Games (organised by IFIUS), and were held in Antwerp, Belgium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179463-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Jiu-Jitsu Championship\nThe 2004 World Jiu-Jitsu Championship was held at Tijuca T\u00eanis Clube, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179464-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2004 ICF World Junior Canoe Slalom Championships were the 10th edition of the ICF World Junior Canoe Slalom Championships. The event took place in Lofer, Austria from 3 to 4 July 2004 under the auspices of the International Canoe Federation (ICF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179464-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Canoe Slalom Championships\nNo medals were awarded for the C2 event and the C2 team event due to not meeting the minimum participation criteria according to ICF. The C2 event only had participants from 2 continents (3 were required), while the C2 team event only had 5 teams participating (6 were required).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179465-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics\nThe 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics were held in Grosseto, Italy on July 12\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179465-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count through an unofficial result list, 1261 athletes from 168 countries participated in the event. This is in agreement with the official numbers as published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179466-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179466-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 25 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179467-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres walk\nThe men's 10,000 metres walk event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179467-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres walk, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 31 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179468-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179468-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 65 athletes from 52 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179469-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16, 17 and 18 July. 106.7\u00a0cm (3'6) (senior implement) hurdles were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179469-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 37 athletes from 28 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179470-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179470-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 37 athletes from 25 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179471-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179471-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 46 athletes from 34 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179472-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [77, 77], "content_span": [78, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179472-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 33 athletes from 22 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 77], "section_span": [79, 92], "content_span": [93, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179473-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4x100 metres relay event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 17 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179473-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 77 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179474-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4x400 metres relay event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 17 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179474-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 81 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179475-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13, 14 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179475-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 47 athletes from 39 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179476-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14, 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179476-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 30 athletes from 22 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179477-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179477-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 5000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179478-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13, 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179478-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 31 athletes from 23 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179479-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14 and 15 July. Junior implements (valid until 2005) were used, i.e. 106.7\u00a0cm (3'6) (senior implement) hurdles, as well as 6\u00a0kg shot and 1.75\u00a0kg discus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179479-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's decathlon, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 16 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179480-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 18 July. A 1.75\u00a0kg (junior implement) discus was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179480-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's discus throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 25 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179481-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 15 and 16 July. A 6\u00a0kg (junior implement) hammer was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179481-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's hammer throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 18 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179482-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179482-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's high jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179483-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179483-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's javelin throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 25 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179484-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179484-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's long jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 27 athletes from 22 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179485-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179485-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's pole vault, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179486-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 July. A 6\u00a0kg (junior implement) shot was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179486-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's shot put, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 33 athletes from 25 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179487-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179487-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Men's triple jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 31 athletes from 23 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179488-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres walk\nThe women's 10,000 metres walk event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179488-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres walk, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 29 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179489-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179489-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 43 athletes from 31 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179490-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179490-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 30 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179491-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179491-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 21 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179492-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179492-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 41 athletes from 33 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179493-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nThe women's 3000 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179493-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 3000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 15 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179494-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe women's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 79], "section_span": [79, 79], "content_span": [80, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179494-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 45 athletes from 28 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 79], "section_span": [81, 94], "content_span": [95, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179495-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4x100 metres relay event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 17 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179495-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 75 athletes from 18 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [77, 90], "content_span": [91, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179496-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4x400 metres relay event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 17 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179496-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 67 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [77, 90], "content_span": [91, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179497-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13, 14 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179497-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 29 athletes from 24 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179498-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179498-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 18 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 88], "content_span": [89, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179499-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179499-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 5000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179500-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13, 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179500-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 34 athletes from 24 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179501-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179501-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's discus throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 30 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179502-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 14 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179502-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's hammer throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 29 athletes from 20 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [69, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179503-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179503-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's heptathlon, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179504-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 18 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179504-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's high jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179505-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179505-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's javelin throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 29 athletes from 22 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179506-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179506-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's long jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179507-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179507-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's pole vault, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 29 athletes from 22 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179508-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 16 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179508-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's shot put, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 19 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179509-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump event at the 2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics was held in Grosseto, Italy, at Stadio Olimpico Carlo Zecchini on 13 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179509-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Championships in Athletics \u2013 Women's triple jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 81], "content_span": [82, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179510-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Curling Championships\nThe 2004 World Junior Curling Championships were held in Trois-Rivi\u00e8res, Quebec, Canada from 20 March 2004 to 28 March 2004. The venue was the Colis\u00e9e de Trois-Rivi\u00e8res.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179511-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004 World Junior Figure Skating Championships were held at the De Uithof in The Hague, Netherlands between February 29 and March 7. Junior age eligible figure skaters competed for the title of World Junior Champion in men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179511-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Figure Skating Championships\nDue to the large number of participants, the men's and ladies' qualifying groups were split into groups A and B. The ice dancing qualifying event was split into two groups as well, with both groups doing the same dances in the same order. Group B skated their first and second dances one after the other, then Group A skated their first and second, in the same order. The first compulsory dance was the Quickstep and the second was the Paso Doble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships\nThe 2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships (2004 WJHC) was held between December 26, 2003, and January 5, 2004, in Helsinki and H\u00e4meenlinna, Finland. The United States won its first ever gold medal, defeating Canada 4\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Top Division, Relegation Round\nResults from any games played during the preliminary round were carried forward to the relegation round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Top Division, Relegation Round, January 3\nAustria and Ukraine were relegated to Division I for the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Top Division, Playoff round, Final\nThe victory gave the United States its first WJC gold medal ever, and its first medal since a silver medal in 1997 when it lost 2\u20130 to Canada in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Top Division, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2212 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalties In Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Division I Standings\nThe Division I Championships were played December 14-December 20, 2003 in Berlin, Germany (Group A) and December 13-December 19, 2003 in Brian\u00e7on, France (Group B).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 64], "content_span": [65, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Division I Standings, Group B\nGermany and Belarus advance to the 2005 World Junior Championships, Hungary and Japan are relegated to Division II", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Division II Standings\nThe Division II Championships were played December 28, 2003 \u2013 January 3, 2004 in Sosnowiec, Poland (Group A) and January 5-January 11, 2004 in Kaunas and Elektrenai, Lithuania (Group B)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Division II Standings, Group B\nPoland and the Great Britain advance to the 2005 Division I Championships, Iceland and South Africa are relegated to the 2005 Division III Championships'", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 74], "content_span": [75, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Division III Standings\nThe Division III Championships were held January 5-January 11, 2004 in Sofia, Bulgaria", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179512-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, Division III Standings\nAustralia and the People's Republic of China advance to 2005 Division II Championships", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179513-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships rosters\nBelow are the rosters for teams competing in the 2004 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179514-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Junior Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 World Junior Table Tennis Championships were held in Kobe, Japan, from 28 November to 5 December 2004. It was organised by the Japan Table Tennis Association under the auspices and authority of the International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179515-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Karate Championships\nThe 2004 World Karate Championships are the 17th edition of the World Karate Championships, and were held in Monterrey, Mexico from November 18 to November 21, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179516-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Long Distance Mountain Running Challenge\nThe 2004 World Long Distance Mountain Running Challenge was the 1st edition of the global Mountain running competition, World Long Distance Mountain Running Championships, organised by the World Mountain Running Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179517-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships\nThe inaugural World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships were held in Sindelfingen, Germany, from March 10-14, 2004. The World Masters Athletics Championships serve the division of the sport of athletics for people over 35 years of age, referred to as masters athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179517-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Masters Athletics Indoor Championships\nA full range of indoor track and field events were held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179518-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Masters Non-Stadia Athletics Championships\nThe seventh World Masters Non-Stadia Athletics Championships were held in Manukau, Auckland and Rotorua, New Zealand, from April 18-24, 2004. The World Masters Athletics Championships serve the division of the sport of athletics for people over 35 years of age, referred to as masters athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179519-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Matchplay\nThe 2004 Stan James World Matchplay was held between 25\u201331 July 2004 at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool, and was won for the fifth year in a row by Phil Taylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship\nThe 2004 World Men's Curling Championship (branded as 2004 Ford World Men's Curling Championship for sponsorship reasons) was held at the Gavlerinken in G\u00e4vle, Sweden from April 17\u201325, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship\nThe tournament was held in conjunction with 2004 World Senior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Mark Dacey Third: Bruce Lohnes Second: Robert Harris Lead: Andrew Gibson Alternate: Mathew Harris", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Johnny Frederiksen Third: Lars Vilandt Second: Kenneth Daucke Andersen Lead: Bo Jensen Alternate: Henrik Jakobsen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Thomas Dufour Third: Philippe Caux Second: Lionel Roux Lead: Tony Angiboust Alternate: Julien Charlet", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Sebastian Stock Third: Daniel Herberg Second: Stephan Knoll Lead: Markus Messenzehl Alternate: Patrick Hoffman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Sean Becker Third: Hans Frauenlob Second: Dan Mustapic Lead: Lorne De Pape Alternate: Warren Dobson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : P\u00e5l Trulsen Third: Lars V\u00e5gberg Second: Flemming Davanger Lead: Bent \u00c5nund Ramsfjell Alternate: Torger Nerg\u00e5rd", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Ewan MacDonald Third: Warwick Smith Second: David Hay Lead: Peter Loudon Alternate: Craig Wilson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Peja Lindholm Third: Tomas Nordin Second: Magnus Swartling Lead: Peter Narup Alternate: Anders Kraupp", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Bernhard Werthemann Third: Thomas Lips Second: Daniel Widmer Lead: Thomas Hoch Alternate: Stefan Traub", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179520-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 World Men's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Jason Larway Third: Doug Pottinger Second: Joel Larway Lead: Bill Todhunter Alternate: Doug Kaufmann", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179521-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Modern Pentathlon Championships\nThe 2004 World Modern Pentathlon Championship held in Moscow, Russia from May 29 to June 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch\nThe World Monuments Watch is a flagship advocacy program of the New York-based private non-profit organization World Monuments Fund (WMF) that is dedicated to preserving the historic, artistic, and architectural heritage around the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch, Selection process\nEvery two years, it publishes a select list known as the Watch List of 100 Most Endangered Sites that is in urgent need of preservation funding and protection. It is a call to action on behalf of threatened cultural heritage monuments worldwide. The sites are nominated by governments, conservation professionals, site caretakers, non-government organizations (NGOs), concerned individuals, and others working in the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch, Selection process\nAn independent panel of international experts then select 100 candidates from these entries to be part of the Watch List, based on the significance of the sites, the urgency of the threat, and the viability of both advocacy and conservation solutions. A site\u2019s inclusion on the Watch List attracts international attention, helping to raise funds needed for its rescue and spurring local governments and communities to take an active role in protecting the cultural landmark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch, 2004 Watch List\nThe 2004 World Monuments Watch List of 100 Most Endangered Sites was launched on 24 September 2003 by WMF President Bonnie Burnham and WMF partner American Express. For the first time, a site from Antarctica was included, ensuring that the Watch List geographically covers every continent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch, 2004 Watch List\nBy working to preserve these treasures, WMF and its partners are helping to save for future generations the structures and places that tell us who we are. Be it a palace, a cave painting, an archaeological site, or a town, the sites on the Watch list speak of human aspirations and achievements. To lose any one of them would diminish us all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch, Statistics by country/territory\nThe following countries/territories have multiple sites entered on the 2004 Watch List, listed by the number of sites:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179522-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Monuments Watch, Notes\nA. Numbers list only meant as a guide on this article. No official reference numbers have been designated for the sites on the Watch List. B. Names and spellings used for the sites were based on the official . C. The references to the sites' locations were based on the official . D. Tally includes the transfrontier site of Jesuit Guaran\u00ed Missions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179523-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Mountain Running Trophy\nThe 2004 World Mountain Running Championships was the 20th edition of the global mountain running competition, World Mountain Running Championships, organised by the World Mountain Running Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179524-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Music Awards\nThe 16th Annual World Music Awards was held on September 15, 2004 at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, outside of Monaco for the first time. Awards are given based on worldwide sales figures for that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179524-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Music Awards, Chopard Diamond Award\nThe Diamond Award honors those incredibly successful recording-artists who have sold over 100 million albums during their career. This is the third year that this award was presented; the first was in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179525-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Orienteering Championships\nThe 2004 World Orienteering Championships, the 21st World Orienteering Championships, were held in V\u00e4ster\u00e5s, Sweden, 11 \u201319 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179525-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Orienteering Championships\nThe championships had eight events; sprint for men and women, middle distance for men and women, long distance (formerly called individual or classic distance) for men and women, and relays for men and women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179526-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship was held at the Northfield Bowls Complex in Ayr, Scotland, from 23 July - 7 August 2004. Steve Glasson won the men's singles Gold defeating Alex Marshall in the final. Canada claimed the pairs, Scotland took the triples and Ireland won the fours. The Leonard Trophy was won by Scotland for the fifth time extending their impressive record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179526-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship\nThe women's event was held at Victoria Park, Leamington Spa in England one month later. Originally the championships were going to take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia during 2003 but due to political reasons it was moved to England the following year. Margaret Johnston won her third singles crown setting a new record. New Zealand won the pairs, South Africa the triples and England the fours. The Taylor Trophy was won by England for the fourth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179527-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Fours\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Men's Fours was held at the Northfield Bowls Complex in Ayr, Scotland, from 23 July - 7 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179527-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Fours\nJonathan Ross, Noel Graham, Neil Booth and Jim Baker of Ireland won the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179527-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Fours, Qualifying Round\nFour sections, three teams from each section qualify for Championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179528-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Pairs\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Men's Pairs was held at the Northfield Bowls Complex in Ayr, Scotland, from 23 July - 7 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179528-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Pairs\nKeith Roney and Ryan Bester of Canada won the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179528-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Pairs, Qualifying Round\nFour sections, three teams from each section qualify for Championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 69], "content_span": [70, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179529-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Men's Singles was held at the Northfield Bowls Complex in Ayr, Scotland, from 23 July - 7 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179530-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Triples\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Men's Triples was held at the Northfield Bowls Complex in Ayr, Scotland, from 23 July - 7 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179530-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Triples\nJim McIntyre, Willie Wood and David Peacock of Scotland won the gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179530-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Men's Triples, Qualifying Round\nFour sections, three teams from each section qualify for Championship round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 71], "content_span": [72, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179531-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Fours\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Women's Fours was held at Victoria Park, Leamington Spa in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179531-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Fours\nOriginally the championships were going to take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia during 2003 but due to political reasons it was moved to England the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179531-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Fours\nJayne Christie, Jean Baker, Amy Monkhouse and Ellen Falkner of England won the fours gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179531-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Fours, Section tables\nFirst round 4 sections, top two teams qualify for quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179532-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Pairs\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Pairs was held at Victoria Park, Leamington Spa in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179532-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Pairs\nOriginally the championships were going to take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia during 2003 but due to political reasons it was moved to England the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179532-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Pairs\nJo Edwards and Sharon Sims of New Zealand won the pairs gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179532-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Pairs, Section tables\nFirst round 4 sections, top two teams qualify for quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179533-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Singles\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Women's Singles was held at Victoria Park, Leamington Spa in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179533-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Singles\nOriginally the championships were going to take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia during 2003 but due to political reasons it was moved to England the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179533-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Singles, Section tables\nFirst round 4 sections, top two teams qualify for quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179534-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Triples\nThe 2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship - Women's Triples was held at Victoria Park, Leamington Spa in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179534-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Triples\nOriginally the championships were going to take place in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia during 2003 but due to political reasons it was moved to England the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179534-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Triples\nTrish Steyn, Jill Hackland and Loraine Victor of South Africa won the triples gold medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179534-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Outdoor Bowls Championship \u2013 Women's Triples, Section tables\nFirst round 4 sections, top two teams qualify for quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179535-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Polo Championship\nThe 2004 World Polo Championship was played in Chantilly (France) during September 2004 and was won by Brazil. Brazil got its third World Polo Championship. This event brought together nine teams from around the world in the Polo Club du Domaine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179536-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Rally Championship\nThe 2004 World Rally Championship was the 32nd season of the FIA World Rally Championship. The season consisted of 16 rallies. The drivers' world championship was won by S\u00e9bastien Loeb in a Citro\u00ebn Xsara WRC, ahead of Petter Solberg and Markko M\u00e4rtin. The manufacturers' title was won by Citro\u00ebn, ahead of Ford and Subaru.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179536-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Rally Championship\nThe video game WRC 4: The Official Game of the FIA World Rally Championship was based on this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179536-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Rally Championship, Calendar\nThe 2004 championship was contested over sixteen rounds in Europe, North America, Asia, South America and Oceania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179537-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Rowing Championships\nThe 2004 World Rowing Championships were World Rowing Championships that were held from 27 July to 1 August 2004 in conjunction with the World Junior Rowing Championships on lake Banyoles in Catalonia, Spain. Since 2004 was an Olympic year for rowing, the World Championships did not include Olympic events scheduled for the 2004 Summer Olympics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179537-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Rowing Championships, Medal summary, Adaptive rowing\nThree boat classes competed at the adaptive rowing event: AS men's single sculls (ASM1x), LTA mixed coxed four (LTAMix4+), and TA mixed double sculls (TAMix2x).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179538-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Senior Curling Championships\nThe 2004 World Senior Curling Championships were held from April 17 to 23 at the Gavlerinken arena in G\u00e4vle, Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179538-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Senior Curling Championships\nThe tournament was held in conjunction with 2004 World Men's Curling Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series\nThe 2004 World Series was the championship series of Major League Baseball's (MLB) 2004 season. The 100th edition of the World Series, it was a best-of-seven playoff between the American League (AL) champion Boston Red Sox and the National League (NL) champion St. Louis Cardinals; the Red Sox swept the Cardinals in four games. The series was played from October 23 to 27, 2004, at Fenway Park and Busch Memorial Stadium, broadcast on Fox, and watched by an average of just under 25.5 million viewers. The Red Sox's World Series championship was their first since 1918, ending the Curse of the Bambino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series\nThe Cardinals earned their berth into the playoffs by winning the NL Central division title, and had the best win\u2013loss record in the NL. The Red Sox won the AL wild card to earn theirs. The Cardinals reached the World Series by defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers in the best-of-five NL Division Series and the Houston Astros in the best-of-seven NL Championship Series. The Red Sox defeated the Anaheim Angels in the AL Division Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series\nAfter trailing three games to none to the New York Yankees in the AL Championship Series, the Red Sox came back to win the series, advancing to their first World Series since 1986. The Cardinals made their first appearance in the World Series since 1987. With the New England Patriots winning Super Bowl XXXVIII, the World Series victory made Boston the first city to have Super Bowl and World Series championship teams in the same year (2004) since Pittsburgh in 1979. The Red Sox became the third straight wild card team to win the World Series; the Anaheim Angels won in 2002 and the Florida Marlins won in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series\nThe Red Sox had home-field advantage in the World Series by nature of the AL winning the 2004 All-Star Game. In game one, Mark Bellhorn helped the Red Sox win with a home run, while starter Curt Schilling led the team to a game two victory by pitching six innings and allowing just one run. The Red Sox won the first two games despite committing four errors in each. The Red Sox won game three, aided by seven shutout innings by Pedro Mart\u00ednez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series\nA home run by Johnny Damon in the first inning helped to win game four for the Red Sox to secure the series. The Cardinals did not lead in any of the games in the series. Manny Ram\u00edrez was named the series' Most Valuable Player. The Red Sox and Cardinals faced each other again in the 2013 World Series, which the Red Sox also won, this time 4 games to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nThe Red Sox had lost in the previous season's ALCS against the New York Yankees. The loss was mainly blamed on the decision by then-manager Grady Little to keep starting pitcher Pedro Mart\u00ednez in the game in the 8th inning of Game 7, that resulted the win (and the 2003 American League championship in general) to rival New York via a walk-off home run, then Little was fired two weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nDuring the off-season, the Red Sox hired Terry Francona as their new manager. They also signed Keith Foulke as their closer and traded for Curt Schilling as a starting pitcher. The Red Sox played two particularly notable games against the Yankees during the regular season. A game on July 1, in which they came back from a 3-run deficit to force extra innings, is best remembered for an incident in the 12th inning, when Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter made a catch on the run before hurling himself head-first into the stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nThe Yankees won the game in the next inning to take an 8-game lead in the American League East. In the 3rd inning of a game on July 24, Red Sox pitcher Bronson Arroyo hit Yankees batter Alex Rodriguez with one of his pitches. As Rodriguez walked towards first base, he began shouting profanities at Arroyo. Red Sox catcher Jason Varitek positioned himself between the two players. After a brief argument, Varitek pushed his glove into Rodriguez' face, causing a bench-clearing brawl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0004-0002", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nThe Red Sox eventually won the game thanks to a home run by Bill Mueller in the 9th inning. On July 31, the Red Sox traded shortstop Nomar Garciaparra to the Chicago Cubs after he had spent eight years with the team. They acquired shortstop Orlando Cabrera and first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz in this trade. They won the wild card to earn a place in the post-season for the second year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nIn the divisional round of the playoffs, the Red Sox faced the Anaheim Angels in a best-of-five series. They won Game 1 largely thanks to a 7-run 4th inning, and went on to sweep the series. In the 7th inning of Game 3, with the Red Sox leading by 4, Vladimir Guerrero tied the game for the Angels with a grand slam. However, David Ortiz won the series with a game winning home run in the 10th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nIn the American League Championship Series, the Red Sox lost the first three games against the New York Yankees, including a 19-8 drubbing in Game 3, and were trailing 4-3 in Game 4 when they began the 9th inning. Kevin Millar was walked by Yankees closer Mariano Rivera. Dave Roberts then came into the game to pinch run for Millar and stole second base. Mueller then singled to enable him to tie the game. Another game winning home run by Ortiz won the game 6-4 for the Red Sox in the 12th inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0005-0002", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nOrtiz' single in the 14th inning of Game 5 scored the winning run for the Red Sox, in what was, then, the longest post-season game in baseball history. Despite having a dislocated ankle tendon, Schilling started Game 6 for the Red Sox. He pitched for seven innings, and allowed just one run, during which time his sock became soaked in blood. In the eighth inning, Yankees third baseman Rodriguez slapped a ball out of pitcher Arroyo's hand, allowing the Yankees to score a run. However, after a discussion the umpires called Rodriguez out for interference and canceled the run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0005-0003", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, Boston Red Sox\nFans then threw debris onto the field in protest and the game was stopped for ten minutes. The Red Sox won the game 4-2 and became the first baseball team to ever force a Game 7 after having been down 3 games to none. A 10\u20133 win in Game 7 brought the Red Sox to the World Series for the first time in 18 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 54], "content_span": [55, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, St. Louis Cardinals\nHaving failed to make the playoffs the season before, and with their division rivals (the Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros) expected to be strong, the Cardinals were generally expected to finish 3rd in the National League Central. However, strong offensive seasons from Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen, and Jim Edmonds\u2014during which they each hit more than 30\u00a0home runs and 100\u00a0runs batted in (RBI)\u2014helped them to lead the league in runs scored. They also allowed the fewest runs of any team in the league. Four of their starters recorded at least 15 wins and closer Jason Isringhausen recorded a league-best\u00a047 saves. They added outfielder Larry Walker in August and finished the regular season with the best win\u2013loss record in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, St. Louis Cardinals\nThe Cardinals faced the Los Angeles Dodgers in the divisional round of the playoffs. Five home runs in Game 1 and no runs allowed by the bullpen in Game 2 helped the Cardinals to win the first two games. A complete game by Dodgers pitcher Jos\u00e9 Lima enabled the Dodgers to force a Game 4, during which a home run by Pujols won the series for the Cardinals. In the National League Championship Series, the Cardinals faced the Astros and won the first two games in St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, St. Louis Cardinals\nHowever, the Astros tied the series in the next two games in Houston, before a combined one-hitter by Astros pitchers Brandon Backe and Brad Lidge gave them the series lead. An RBI single by Jeff Bagwell in the 9th inning of Game 6 tied the game and forced extra innings. In the 12th, Edmonds won the game for the Cardinals with a walk-off home run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0007-0002", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, St. Louis Cardinals\nTrailing in the sixth inning of Game 7, a game-tying RBI double by Albert Pujols followed by a Scott Rolen two-run home run and then an RBI single by Larry Walker in the 8th inning helped the Cardinals to a 5\u20132 win and their first World Series berth in 17 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Route to the series, St. Louis Cardinals\nBy reaching the World Series with the Cardinals, Tony La Russa became the sixth manager to win pennants in both leagues. This was after La Russa had managed the Oakland Athletics to three straight pennants between 1988 and 1990 and winning the 1989 World Series. He would attempt to join Sparky Anderson as the only men to have managed teams to World Series championships in both leagues. He wore #10 in tribute to Anderson (who wore 10 while manager of the Cincinnati Reds) and to indicate he was trying to win the team's 10th championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nThe series was heavily discussed and analyzed by the American media prior to it beginning. The Star-News of Wilmington, North Carolina, compared the Red Sox and Cardinals position by position and concluded that the Cardinals were stronger in eight positions, the Red Sox in four and both teams even in one. They predicted that the Cardinals would win the series in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0009-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nAndrew Haskett of E-Sports.com gave high praise to the two teams' starting pitchers but also said that the Cardinals \"took a serious blow\" when Chris Carpenter was forced out of the series due to an injury to his arm. He also pointed out the ability of both teams to hit home runs, especially in the case of the Red Sox's David Ortiz and the Cardinals' Albert Pujols, Scott Rolen and Jim Edmonds. While he praised the Red Sox defense, he called the Cardinals \"one of the best defensive teams to ever walk onto a baseball field\". Ultimately he concluded that the series would be close and that the Red Sox would win it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nJohn Donovan of Sports Illustrated praised both teams for how unexpected their reaching the World Series was, saying that they were \"not supposed to be here\". He also called the series a \"blast from the past\" because both teams were very old franchises and had twice previously met in the World Series. In a breakdown of how the two teams matched up, he concluded that the edge was with the Red Sox in pitching and the Cardinals in defense and batting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0010-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nUltimately he concluded that Schilling and Martinez would be the \"key to [the] Series\" and that the Red Sox would win in six games. Jim Molony of MLB.com, said he expected the series to play out very differently from the last time the two teams met in the World Series in 1967. This was because both team offenses had been some of the best in the league during the season, while pitching had been very dominant in 1967.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nDan Shaughnessy of The Boston Globe said that \"Bally's in Las Vegas set the Red Sox as 8\u20135 favorites to win the Series\" and that there was \"some sentiment in St. Louis that the NL champions have been disrespected\". but also that Red Sox General Manager Theo Epstein \"Did not want to dis[respect] the Cardinals\". Shaughnessy also quoted Schilling as having said: \"There's a lot of good players in that [visitors] clubhouse over there. This isn't the time for us to be thinking about history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0011-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nIf we get three wins and 26 outs into the fourth win, I'm pretty sure it will hit us.\" Before the series began, Shaughnessy wrote a piece saying that although the Red Sox had beaten the Yankees, the series needed to be won, as it was the only way the Curse of the Bambino, which he had publicized based on the book of the same title in 1990, would end, and demeaning chants of \"1918!\" would no longer echo at Yankee Stadium. During the series, he wrote a piece about how much people in New England were thinking about loved ones who had spent their entire lives rooting for the Red Sox, hoping that one day, they would see their Red Sox win a World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Series build up\nBoth teams had lost in their previous World Series appearances in seven games. The Red Sox lost to the New York Mets in 1986, while the Cardinals lost in 1987 to the Minnesota Twins. The Cardinals and Red Sox had not won the World Series since 1982 and 1918 respectively. When the two teams had previously played each other in the 1946 and 1967 World Series, the Cardinals won both series in seven games. Having won the All-Star Game, the AL had been awarded home-field advantage, which meant the Red Sox had the advantage at Fenway Park in four of the seven games in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nLocal band Dropkick Murphys performed \"Tessie\", and a moment of silence was observed to remember local student Victoria Snelgrove, who had been accidentally killed by police two days earlier as Sox fans had celebrated winning the American League pennant. Steven Tyler, the lead singer of Aerosmith, another local band, performed \"The Star-Spangled Banner\" and Red Sox legend Carl Yastrzemski threw the ceremonial first pitch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nDown the right field line, into the corner it is fair! And a three-run home run, Ortiz has done it again!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nJoe Buck of Fox Sports, calling the fifth home run of the postseason by David Ortiz in Game 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nTim Wakefield made his first start of the 2004 postseason for the Red Sox, becoming the first knuckleball pitcher to make a World Series start since 1948, while Woody Williams, who had won his previous two starts in the post-season, was the Cardinals' starting pitcher. In the bottom of the first inning, Williams gave up a lead-off double to Johnny Damon, and then hit Orlando Cabrera in the shoulder with one of his pitches. After Manny Ram\u00edrez flied out, Ortiz hit a three-run home run in his first-ever World Series at bat. Kevin Millar then scored by virtue of a single by Bill Mueller to put the Red Sox up 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nThe Cardinals scored one run in both the second and third innings on a sacrifice fly by Mike Matheny to score Jim Edmonds and a home run to right field by Walker, respectively. However, in the bottom of the third, the Red Sox scored three runs after seven consecutive batters reached base, giving them a five-run lead. Dan Haren came in from the Cardinals' bullpen to replace Williams during the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nIn the top of the fourth inning, Bronson Arroyo was brought in to replace Wakefield after he had walked four batters. Those walks, combined with a throwing error by Millar and a passed ball by Doug Mirabelli, allowed the Cardinals to reduce the lead to two runs. In the sixth inning, So Taguchi reached first on an infield hit and was allowed to advance to second when Arroyo threw the ball into the stands. Doubles by \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda and Walker tied the game at seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0018-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nIn the bottom of the seventh inning, Ram\u00edrez singled with two men on base, and a poor throw by Edmonds allowed Mark Bellhorn to score. Ortiz then hit a line drive that appeared to skip off the lip of the infield and hit Cardinals' second baseman Tony Womack with \"considerable force\". Womack immediately grabbed his clavicle as a second Red Sox run scored. He was attended to once play had ended and replaced by Marlon Anderson. A precautionary X-ray revealed that there was no damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nIn the top of the eighth inning, with one out and two men on base, Red Sox closer Keith Foulke came in to pitch. Renter\u00eda singled towards Ram\u00edrez in left field, who unintentionally kicked the ball away, allowing Jason Marquis to score. Walker also hit the ball towards Ram\u00edrez in the next at bat. Ram\u00edrez slid in an attempt to try to catch the ball, but tripped and deflected the ball for his second error in two plays, and the fourth Red Sox error in the game. Roger Cede\u00f1o scored on the play to tie the game at nine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nIn the bottom of the eighth inning, however, Jason Varitek reached on an error, and Bellhorn then hit a home run off the right field foul pole, also known as Pesky's Pole, for his third home run in as many games to give the Red Sox a two-run lead. In the ninth inning, Foulke struck out Cede\u00f1o to win the game for the Red Sox 11\u20139.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 1\nWith a total of 20\u00a0runs, it was the highest scoring opening game of a World Series ever. With four RBI, Ortiz also tied a franchise record for RBI in a World Series game. Walker, making his World Series debut in Game 1, collected four hits in five at bats with a home run and two doubles. His four-hit outing tied a Cardinals World Series record, becoming the seventh overall and first to do so since Lou Brock in 1967, also against Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 2\nBoston native James Taylor performed \"The Star-Spangled Banner\" before Game 2 and singer Donna Summer, also a Boston native, performed \"God Bless America\" during the seventh-inning stretch. The ceremonial first pitch was thrown by the surviving three members of the famous Red Sox quartet that had faced the Cardinals in 1946: Bobby Doerr, Dom DiMaggio and Johnny Pesky (Ted Williams had died two years earlier).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 2\nDespite having a torn tendon in his right ankle, similar to Game 6 of the ALCS against the Yankees, Schilling started Game 2 for the Red Sox. Schilling had four stitches in the ankle the day before, causing him \"considerable discomfort\". He was not sure on the morning of Game 2 if he would be able to play, but after one of the stitches was removed, he was treated with antibiotics and was able to pitch. Morris started for the Cardinals on three days' rest (one day fewer than is orthodox rest for a starting pitcher).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 2\nIn the first inning, Albert Pujols doubled with two out, and Scott Rolen hit a line drive towards Mueller, who caught it to end the inning. Morris walked Ram\u00edrez and Ortiz in the bottom of the inning. Varitek then tripled to center field to give the Red Sox a 2\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 2\nIn the fourth inning, Pujols doubled again and was able to score on an error by Mueller. The Red Sox also scored in the bottom of the inning when Bellhorn doubled to center with two runners on base, to give them a three-run lead. Cal Eldred came in to relieve Morris in the fifth inning, after he had walked the leadoff hitter, having already given up four runs in the previous four innings. Mueller committed his World Series record-tying third error of the game, in the sixth inning; however, the Cardinals failed to capitalize. In the bottom of the inning, Trot Nixon led off with a single to center, and two more singles by Johnny Damon and Orlando Cabrera enabled two more runs to score to make it 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 2\nAfter six innings of allowing no earned runs \u2013 which gave him a total of 13 innings against the Yankees and Cardinals with only one earned run allowed on a torn ankle tendon \u2013 Schilling made way for Alan Embree, who pitched a scoreless seventh. Mike Timlin replaced Embree in the eighth, in which a sacrifice fly by Scott Rolen reduced the Red Sox lead to four. Keith Foulke then came in to strike out Jim Edmonds to end the inning and also pitched the ninth to end the game. For the second game in a row, the Red Sox won despite committing four fielding errors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 2\nWith the win, Schilling became only the fifth pitcher to ever win a World Series game with a team from both leagues, having previously done it with National League teams, the Philadelphia Phillies in 1993, and the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001. He later donated the bloody sock he wore during the game to the Baseball Hall of Fame museum. Much of the blame for the Cardinals' losses in the first two games was directed at the fact that Rolen, Edmonds and Reggie Sanders, three of the Cardinals' best batters, had combined for one hit in 22\u00a0at-bats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nSeattle Mariners designated hitter Edgar Mart\u00ednez was presented with the 2004 Roberto Clemente Award, having announced his retirement one month before. The ceremonial first pitch was thrown by arguably the Cardinals' best-ever position player, Stan Musial, and caught by arguably their best-ever pitcher, Bob Gibson. \"The Star-Spangled Banner\" and \"God Bless America\" were sung by country music singer Martina McBride and singer\u2013songwriter Amy Grant respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0027-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nDuring the game, a sign for the fast-food restaurant Taco Bell that measured 12 by 12 feet (3.7\u00a0m \u00d7\u00a03.7\u00a0m) and read \"Free Taco Here\", was hung approximately 420 feet (130\u00a0m) from home plate, over the left-center field bullpen. Taco Bell promised that, if the sign was hit by a home run ball, they would give a free \"Crunchy Beef Taco\" to everyone in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nOnce again, the Red Sox took the lead in the first inning when Ram\u00edrez hit a home run off former Red Sox pitcher Jeff Suppan. Pedro Mart\u00ednez was the starting pitcher for the Red Sox, and in the bottom of the first inning, he allowed the Cardinals to load the bases with one out. Edmonds then hit a fly ball towards Ram\u00edrez in left field, who caught it on the run and threw to catcher Jason Varitek at home plate. Varitek tagged out Walker, who was attempting to score from third, ending the inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nIn the bottom of the third inning, the Cardinals had two runners on base with no one out. Walker hit a ground ball towards first base, and Cardinals third base coach Jos\u00e9 Oquendo signalled to Suppan on third to run to home plate. However, halfway towards home, Suppan \"suddenly stopped\". \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda, who had been running from second base towards third, was forced to return to second when he saw Suppan had stopped. After stepping on first base, David Ortiz began moving toward Suppan, who had turned back toward third, Ortiz threw to third baseman Mueller, who tagged Suppan out. After the next batter, Albert Pujols, grounded to Mueller, the inning ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nTrot Nixon extended the Red Sox lead to two in the top of the fourth, hitting a single to right field that scored Mueller, who had started the rally with a two-out double to left-center. Johnny Damon then led off the Red Sox's fifth inning with a double to right. Singles by Orlando Cabrera and Ram\u00edrez, to right and left respectively, scored Damon to make it 3\u20130. With two out, Mueller singled along the first base line, enabling Cabrera to score the Red Sox's fourth run. Suppan was replaced by Al Reyes, which meant none of the Cardinals three starting pitchers had finished five innings during the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nMike Timlin relieved Martinez in the bottom of the eighth inning. He finished with six strikeouts, three hits allowed and retired the last 14\u00a0batters he faced. The Cardinals avoided a shutout when Walker hit a home run to center field off Foulke in the ninth inning, but Foulke retired the other three batters he faced in the inning to secure the win for the Red Sox 4\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 3\nOn the same day the Red Sox won Game 3, The Boston Globe's Dan Shaughnessy wrote that, as this win brought the Red Sox on the verge of winning a World Series, he wondered how many people in New England were thinking about loved ones who had spent their entire lives rooting for the Red Sox and hoping that one day, they would see the Red Sox win a World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nCountry music singer Gretchen Wilson, a life-long Cardinals fan, performed \"The Star-Spangled Banner\". Barry Bonds and Manny Ram\u00edrez received the Hank Aaron Award for the National and American Leagues, respectively. Former Cardinals players Lou Brock and Red Schoendienst threw out ceremonial first pitches along with Rashima Manning, from the Herbert Hoover Boys & Girls Clubs of America. A lunar eclipse was visible during the game \u2013 the first lunar eclipse to take place during a World Series game. The game was also played on the 18th anniversary of Game 7 of the 1986 World Series, which the Red Sox had lost at Shea Stadium to the New York Mets, despite taking a 3\u20130 lead into the sixth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nDamon hit a home run to right field in the first at-bat of the game on a 2-1 count to give the Red Sox the lead in the first inning for the fourth straight game; it proved to be the game-winning run. Ram\u00edrez singled in the third inning to give him a hit in 17\u00a0consecutive postseason games. Doubles to right by David Ortiz and to center by Trot Nixon, who narrowly missed a grand slam after swinging on a 3-0 count, scored two more runs for the Red Sox to give them a three-run lead. Cardinals starter Jason Marquis went six innings and allowed just the three runs. Marquis was the only Cardinal pitcher who went past five innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nBack to Foulke, Red Sox fans have longed to hear it: The Boston Red Sox are World Champions!", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nSwing and a ground ball stabbed by Foulke! He has it, he underhands to first \u2013 and the Boston Red Sox are the World Champions! For the first time in 86 years, the Red Sox have won baseball's world championship! Can you believe it?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nJoe Castiglione calling the final play of Game\u00a04 for WEEI in Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nIn the top of the eighth, Mueller led off with a single to right and Nixon followed with his third double of the game. Jason Isringhausen came in to pitch for the Cardinals with the bases loaded and nobody out, and was able the finish the inning without allowing a run to score. Kevin Millar pinch hit for the Red Sox starting pitcher Derek Lowe during this inning. It was the third straight game in which the Red Sox starting pitcher had not allowed an earned run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nRed Sox closer Foulke came in to pitch the bottom of the ninth. Pujols led off the inning by hitting a single through Foulke's legs and into center field. After Foulke induced Rolen into a fly out and struck out Edmonds, Pujols took second base, but no stolen base due to fielder's indifference. \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda then hit a ground ball that bounced back to Foulke on the mound. Foulke threw it underhand to Doug Mientkiewicz at first base to end the game, and the Red Sox drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nThe series win was the Red Sox's first title in 86\u00a0years. They were also the fourth team to win a World Series without trailing in any of the games in the series, and the seventh to win it having previously been three outs away from elimination. With the win, pitcher Lowe became the first pitcher to ever win three series-clinching games in a single postseason having also won Game 3 of the ALDS against the Angels and Game 7 of the ALCS against the Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0040-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nAlthough the series was won in St. Louis, 3,000\u00a0Red Sox fans were present at the game, and many stayed after the final out to celebrate with the team, including going on the field when the team came back out of their dugout with the World Series trophy. Ram\u00edrez, who was named the Most Valuable Player (MVP) of the series, said afterwards \"I don't believe in curses, I believe you make your own destination. [ sic]\" Kevin Millar said that it was important to finish off the Cardinals in four and not let it go to a fifth game given the team's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Matchups, Game 4\nThe Cardinals offense struggled to find spark in the final three games. Pujols, Rolen, and Edmonds, the normally fearsome 3-4-5 hitters for the Cardinals, were six-for-45 with one RBI. The club batted .190 with a .562 OPS overall. Walker was one of very few exceptions, batting .357 with a 1.366 OPS. His two home runs accounted for the only two home runs hit by the entire Cardinals team. In the 2004 postseason, Walker scored 21 percent (14 of 68) of Cardinal runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 35], "content_span": [36, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Composite line score\n2004 World Series (4\u20130): Boston Red Sox (A.L.) beat St. Louis Cardinals (N.L. ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Broadcasting\nThe series was broadcast by Fox, and the announcers were Joe Buck and Tim McCarver. Jeanne Zelasko covered the pre-game build up to all four games and the presentation of the World Series trophy. An average of 23.1\u00a0million people watched Game 1. This was the highest television ratings for the opening game of a World Series in five years and had the highest average number of viewers since 1996. It was also the highest rated broadcast on any network in the past ten months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0043-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Broadcasting\nThe ratings for the first two games were also the highest average since 1996, and the average for the first three games was the highest since 1999. Game 3 had the highest average number of viewers with 24.4\u00a0million, since 1996 when 28.7\u00a0million watched the Atlanta Braves and New York Yankees. It was also the Fox network's highest rating for a Game 3 of a World Series ever. Game 4 posted an 18.2\u00a0national rating giving the series an overall average of 15.8. This was the highest average in five years, and the average number of viewers of 25.4\u00a0million was the highest since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Broadcasting\nIn terms of local radio, Joe Castiglione and Jerry Trupiano called the series for WEEI in Boston while Mike Shannon and Wayne Hagin announced for KMOX in St. Louis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath\nWith the win coming eight months after the New England Patriots victory in Super Bowl XXXVIII, the event made Boston the first city to have a Super Bowl and World Series winner in the same year since Pittsburgh in 1979. A number of players from both teams won awards for their performances during the season. Manny Ram\u00edrez won the Hank Aaron Award and, along with Albert Pujols, a Silver Slugger Award, while Gold Glove awards were won by Mike Matheny, Scott Rolen and Jim Edmonds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0045-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath\nThe American sports magazine Sports Illustrated honored the Red Sox with their Sportsman of the Year award a month later, making them the first professional team to ever win the award. For pitcher Curt Schilling, it was the second time he had won the award, having shared it with then-Arizona Diamondbacks teammate Randy Johnson in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath\nThis World Series win by the Red Sox continued a history of Boston teams beating St. Louis teams to win championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0046-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath\nPreviously, in Super Bowl XXXVI, the New England Patriots had upset the St. Louis Rams' \"Greatest Show on Turf\" to win their first Super Bowl and herald a dynasty led by Tom Brady and Bill Belichick, the Boston Bruins had swept the St. Louis Blues in the 1970 Stanley Cup Finals (with Game 4 being remembered for Bobby Orr's Cup-winning overtime goal that sent him flying), and the Boston Celtics \u2013 when Bill Russell was still just a rookie \u2013 had beaten the St. Louis Hawks to win their first NBA championship in 1957.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0046-0002", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath\nWith championship showdowns between teams from Boston and St. Louis seen in Major League Baseball, the NFL, NBA and NHL, it is the only showdown between teams from two specific locations, that has been seen in each of these four leagues. St. Louis would finally end Boston's dominance against them when the St. Louis Blues defeated the Boston Bruins in the 2019 Stanley Cup Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe Red Sox's win in the World Series ended the \"Curse of the Bambino\", which supposedly had afflicted the team ever since the Red Sox sold Babe Ruth to the New York Yankees in 1919. Pitcher Derek Lowe and other players said that the team would no longer hear \"1918!\" at Yankee Stadium ever again. Kevin Millar said to all Red Sox fans: \"We wanted to do it so bad for the city of Boston. To win a World Series with this on our chests, it hasn't been done since 1918. So rip up those '1918!' posters right now.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0047-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nMembers of previous Red Sox teams who had fallen short immediately acclaimed the 2004 team, including Pesky \u2013 who had been the shortstop responsible for a fatal checking error that had allowed the Cardinals' Enos Slaughter to complete his \"Mad Dash\" to score the winning run in Game 7 at the old Sportsman's Park in 1946. Pesky watched the game from the visiting clubhouse and was immediately embraced by Millar, Wakefield, Schilling and others as a living representative of those previous teams as he joined the celebrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nIt also added to the recent success of Boston-area teams, following the Patriots wins in Super Bowls XXXVI and XXXVIII. With the Patriots having won Super Bowl XXXVIII the previous February, the Red Sox winning the World Series marked the first time since 1979 that the same city had a Super Bowl and World Series winner in the same year \u2013 the last city to accomplish the feat had been Pittsburgh, when the Steelers and Pirates had won Super Bowl XIII and the World Series respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0048-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe city would go on to record a decade of sports success from 2001 to 2011 with seven championships in the four major North American sports leagues (MLB, the NFL, the NBA and the NHL), including one in each league after the Patriots won two more Super Bowls, the Celtics won the 2008 NBA championship and the Bruins won the Stanley Cup in 2011. Following the Bruins winning the 2011 Stanley Cup Finals, Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaughnessy ranked all seven championships and chose the Red Sox' 2004 World Series win as the greatest Boston sports championship during the ten-year span.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nRed Sox Manager Terry Francona became the third manager in four years to win a World Series in his first year as manager, following Bob Brenly of the 2001 Arizona Diamondbacks and Jack McKeon of the 2003 Florida Marlins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nMassachusetts US Senator, Boston resident and future Secretary of State John Kerry, who had been named Democratic presidential nominee in Boston that summer, wore a Red Sox cap the day after the series ended. He also said that the Red Sox had \"[come] back against all odds and showed America what heart is\". His Republican opponent, incumbent President George W. Bush, made a phone call from the White House to congratulate the team's owner John W. Henry, president Larry Lucchino and manager Terry Francona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0050-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe team also visited Bush at the White House the following March, where he gave a speech honoring their presence, in which he asked \"what took [them] so long?\" A future Presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, at the time Massachusetts Governor, ceremonially helped remove the Reverse Curve road sign on Storrow Drive that had been famously spray-painted to read \"Reverse the Curse\" as a further marking of the end of the Curse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe day after the Red Sox win, the Boston Globe more than doubled its daily press run, from 500,000 to 1.2 million copies, with the headline, \"YES!!!\" right across the front page.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe Red Sox held their World Series victory parade on the following Saturday, October 30. The team was transported around on 17 duck boats equipped with loudspeakers so the players could talk to the spectators. Due to large interest in the parade, it was lengthened by officials the day before to include the Charles River, so that fans could watch from the Boston and Cambridge river banks. The parade did not however, include a staged rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0052-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe parade began at 10\u00a0a.m. local time at Fenway Park, turned east onto Boylston Street, then west onto Tremont Street and Storrow Drive before entering the river. One of the lanes on Massachusetts Avenue had to be closed to accommodate members of the media filming the parade as it passed under the Harvard Bridge. Ram\u00edrez was handed a sign by one of the spectators part of the way through the parade, which read, \"Jeter is playing golf today. This is better!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0052-0002", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nHe held on to this sign for the rest of the parade, in a similar way to what Tug McGraw said after the Philadelphia Phillies won the 1980 World Series. Over three million people were estimated to have attended the parade, making it the largest gathering ever in the city of Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe Red Sox were presented with their World Series rings on April 11, 2005, at a ceremony before the team's first home game of the 2005 season. Former Red Sox players Bobby Doerr, Dom DiMaggio, Johnny Pesky, and Carl Yastrzemski were all present, as were the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Boston Pops Orchestra. During the ceremony, five red pennants were first unfurled at the top of the Green Monster, showing the years of each of the Red Sox' previous World Series wins. A much larger banner was unfurled that covered the entire wall and read \"2004 World Series Champions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0053-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nJames Taylor, himself a Boston native and a Red Sox fan, performed \"America the Beautiful\", and 19 members of the United States Army and Marine Corps who had fought in the Iraq War walked onto the field. Moments of silence were held to honor the deaths of Pope John Paul II, who had died nine days earlier, and former Red Sox relief pitcher, Dick Radatz. The rings were handed out by the team's owner, John W. Henry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0053-0002", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nFormer Red Sox players Lowe and Dave Roberts, who had joined the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres respectively during the off-season, were also present to collect their rings. The ceremony, which lasted around an hour, ended with stars from other Boston sports teams, including the Celtics' Bill Russell, the Bruins' Bobby Orr and the Patriots' Tedy Bruschi and Richard Seymour, throwing ceremonial first pitches. The presence of Bruschi and Seymour made evident the recent success of Boston-area teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0053-0003", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe day after the Red Sox won the Series, Shaughnessy and the rest of the news media said of the Red Sox home opener: \"The team in the third-base dugout? The New York Yankees, Sweet.\" In a sign of respect, the Red Sox rivals came to the top step of the visitors dugout and gave the Red Sox a standing ovation. The Fenway Park crowd burst into cheers when Yankees pitcher Mariano Rivera was introduced, breaking from the tradition of fans booing opposing players, due to him having blown save opportunities in Games 4 and 5 of the 2004 ALCS. Rivera was a good sport about it and laughed while waving his arms in mock appreciation of the fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nAll right...Forget about ending the curse and having 86 years of baggage erased in one fell swoop. If you don't get emotional watching a group of guys celebrating and hugging when you feel like you know them, when you suffered all the same highs and lows, when you spent the last seven months with them...I mean, why even follow sports at all? (Translation: It's getting a little dusty in here.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nBill Simmons' entry in his Game 4 running diary at 8:42 PM Pacific Time, 1 minute after the final out", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nThe following August, Simon & Schuster published Faithful, a book which collected e-mails about the Red Sox between American writers and Red Sox fans Stephen King and Stewart O'Nan during the 2004 season. In March 2005, Houghton Mifflin Company published Reversing the Curse, a book by Shaughnessy, author of the bestselling The Curse of the Bambino, chronicling the 2004 Red Sox season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0056-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nESPN's Bill Simmons published Now I Can Die In Peace, a collection of his columns with updated annotations and notes, including columns for each of the last four games of the ALCS and each World Series game \u2013 with Game 4 being a running diary. The Farrelly Brothers altered the ending of their 2005 film Fever Pitch \u2013 which includes appearances by Damon, Nixon and Varitek \u2013 to coincide with the actual end of the series. They and their crew, plus stars Drew Barrymore and Jimmy Fallon, flew to St. Louis and Barrymore and Fallon attended Game 4 in character, complete with the two of them running onto the field at Busch Stadium and kissing once the final out was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Red Sox\nOn May 28, 2014, the team reunited at Fenway Park as the Red Sox celebrated the 10-year anniversary of the historic championship as they hosted the Atlanta Braves. Ramirez threw out the first pitch to Varitek but was cut off by Damon in a reversal of Ramirez once cutting off Damon's throw from center field during a game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Cardinals\nOn the Cardinals' side, the media expressed disappointment at the team's failure to win a game in the Series after recording the team's best regular season in over 60\u00a0years. Many reporters believed that the Cardinals had not played up to their usual standard, and much of the blame was directed at Rolen, Edmonds and Reggie Sanders, three of the Cardinals' best hitters, who had combined for one hit in 39\u00a0at bats in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, Cardinals\nIt also marked the last time that Busch Memorial Stadium would host a World Series. The Cardinals moved to the new Busch Stadium in their championship season of 2006, which was their first since 1982.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, 2005 season and beyond\nBoth the Red Sox and Cardinals made the playoffs the following season. The Red Sox lost to the eventual champions the Chicago White Sox, in the American League Division Series. The Cardinals, in a repeat meeting of the previous season's National League Championship Series, lost to the Houston Astros.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0060-0001", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, 2005 season and beyond\nHowever, the city of Boston would see more success when the New England Patriots won Super Bowl XXXIX, three months after the Red Sox won the World Series, giving the greater Boston area its third championship in 12 months, making it the first time since 1980 that any city had two Super Bowl winners and a World Series winner in a period of the same length.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, 2005 season and beyond\nBoth teams also won one of the next three World Series in successive years; the Cardinals, as noted above, in 2006, beating the Detroit Tigers in five games, becoming the first team since the New York Yankees in 1923, to win a World Series championship in their first season in a new stadium (which the Yankees themselves would also do in 2009). Tony La Russa would achieve the distinction that he could not achieve in 2004 of managing World Series winners in both leagues. He would continue to wear number 10 to pay tribute to Sparky Anderson afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, 2005 season and beyond\nThe Red Sox won the World Series the following year, sweeping the Colorado Rockies in four games. Tom Werner, chairman of the Red Sox, and team president Larry Lucchino said that the 2004 championship was \"for the parents and grandparents who had suffered through the Curse of the Bambino\", while 2007 was \"for children, grandchildren, and for Red Sox Nation\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, 2005 season and beyond\nBoth teams would meet again in the 2013 World Series, with the Red Sox winning the championship in six games. It was the first time Boston clinched the World Series at its home field, Fenway Park, since 1918. Boston would win an additional title in 2018 when they defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 4 games to 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179539-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series, Aftermath, 2005 season and beyond\nTwelve years after this World Series, the Chicago Cubs would end their own championship drought at 108 years, defeating the Cleveland Indians in seven games. In doing this, Theo Epstein is now credited with helping to end two of the most famous curses in all of professional sports. Coincidentally, the losing manager in that year's World Series was Terry Francona, who had managed the Red Sox to both the 2004 and 2007 championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 52], "content_span": [53, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179540-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series Lights\nThe 2004 World Series Lights season was contested over eight race weekends with 16 races. In this one-make formula all drivers had to use the Dallara chassis (Dallara WSL3) and Nissan engines (Nissan AER). Five different teams and eleven drivers competed with the titles going to Serbian driver Milo\u0161 Pavlovi\u0107 and Italian team Vergani Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179540-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series Lights, Teams and drivers\nAll teams used the Dallara WSL3 chassis and Nissan AER engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179540-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series Lights, Championship standings, Final points standings\nFor every race the points were awarded: 15 points to the winner, 12 for runner-up, 10 for third place, 8 for fourth place, 6 for fifth place, winding down to 1 point for 10th place. Lower placed drivers did not award points. Additional points were awarded to the driver setting the fastest race lap (2 points). The best 12 race results count, but all additional points count. Four drivers had a point deduction, which are given in tooltips.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179540-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series Lights, Championship standings, Final points standings\nOnly in race 1 all points were awarded\u00a0\u2014 in all other races not all points were awarded (not enough competitors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179541-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series by Nissan\nThe 2004 World Series by Nissan was contested over 9 race weekends/18 rounds. In this one-make formula all drivers had to utilize Dallara chassis (Dallara SN01) and Nissan engines (Nissan VQ). 11 different teams and 31 different drivers competed. Heikki Kovalainen claimed the title for Pons Racing, finishing tenth in first race at Circuit Ricardo Tormo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179541-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series by Nissan, Race calendar and results, Driver standings\nFor every race the points were awarded: 15 points to the winner, 12 for runner-up, 10 for third place, 8 for fourth place, 6 for fifth place, winding down to 1 point for 10th place. Lower placed drivers did not award points. Additional points were awarded to the driver setting the fastest race lap (2 points). The best 14 race results count, but all additional points count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179542-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series of Poker\nThe 2004 World Series of Poker (WSOP) was held at Binion's Horseshoe after Harrah's Entertainment purchased the casino and the rights to the tournament in January. Harrah's announced that future WSOP tournaments will be held in a moving circuit of member casinos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179542-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series of Poker, Main Event\nThere were 2,576 entrants to the main event - more than three times the number of the previous year. Each entry paid $10,000 to enter what was the largest poker tournament ever played in a brick and mortar casino at the time. Many entrants, including the overall winner, won their seat in online poker tournaments. 1995 Main Event Champion Dan Harrington made the final table for the second consecutive year. His bid for a second Main Event title came up short once again as he finished in fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179542-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series of Poker, Main Event, Final table\n*Career statistics prior to the beginning of the 2004 Main Event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179542-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Series of Poker, Main Event, Other High Finishes\nNB: This list is restricted to top 30 finishers with an existing Wikipedia entry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179543-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2004 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships took place between March 17 and 19, 2004 in Gothenburg, Sweden. The World Championships are organised by the ISU which also run world cups and championships in speed skating and figure skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179543-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships, Results, Men\n* First place is awarded 34 points, second is awarded 21 points, third is awarded 13 points, fourth is awarded 8 points, fifth is awarded 5 points, sixth is awarded 3 points, seventh is awarded 2 points, and eighth is awarded 1 point in the finals of each individual race to determine the overall world champion. The relays do not count for the overall classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 64], "content_span": [65, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179543-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships, Results, Women\n\u2020 In the final of the Women's 3000 m relay, the Italian team was disqualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179543-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships, Results, Women\n* First place is awarded 34 points, second is awarded 21 points, third is awarded 13 points, fourth is awarded 8 points, fifth is awarded 5 points, sixth is awarded 3 points, seventh is awarded 2 points, and eighth is awarded 1 point in the finals of each individual race to determine the overall world champion. The relays do not count for the overall classification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179544-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Single Distance Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2004 World Single Distance Speed Skating Championships were held between 12 and 14 March 2004 in the Taereung Indoor Ice Rink, Seoul, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship\nThe 2004 World Snooker Championship (also referred to as the 2004 Embassy World Snooker Championship for the purposes of sponsorship) was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place between 17 April and 3 May 2004 at the Crucible Theatre in Sheffield, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship\nMark Williams was the defending champion, but he lost in the second round 11\u201313 against Joe Perry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship\nRonnie O'Sullivan won his second world title by defeating Graeme Dott 18\u20138 in the final, despite having trailed Dott 0\u20135. This was the fourth biggest margin in a World final, subsequently equalled by O'Sullivan against Ali Carter in 2008, and Kyren Wilson in 2020. The tournament was sponsored by cigarette manufacturer Embassy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship, Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship, Main draw\nShown below are the results for each round. The numbers in parentheses beside some of the players are their seeding ranks (each championship has 16 seeds and 16 qualifiers).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship, Qualifying\nThe matches were played at Pontin's, Prestatyn Sands in between 10 and 20 February 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179545-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Snooker Championship, Century breaks\nThere were 55 centuries in this year's championship. The highest break of the tournament was 145 made by Joe Perry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179546-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Sports Acrobatics Championships\n19th World Sports Acrobatics Championships were held in Li\u00e9vin, France from May 21 to May 23, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179547-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Team\nThe 2004 World Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Team (Swaythling Cup) was the 47th edition of the men's team championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179547-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Team\nChina won the gold medal defeating Germany 3-0 in the final. South Korea won the bronze medal. The International Table Tennis Association introduced a new format for the second stage of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179548-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Team\nThe 2004 World Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Team (Corbillon Cup) was the 40th edition of the women's team championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179548-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Table Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Team\nChina won the gold medal defeating Hong Kong in the final 3-0. Japan won the bronze medal. The International Table Tennis Association introduced a new format for the second stage of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179549-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Team Cup\nThe 2004 ARAG World Team Cup was a tennis tournament play on outdoor clay courts. It was the 26th edition of the World Team Cup, and was part of the 2004 ATP Tour. It took place at the Rochusclub in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany, from 16 May through 21 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179549-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Team Cup\nChile were the defending champions, and they won the title again, defeating Australia in the final by two rubbers to one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179550-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Team Table Tennis Championships\nThe 2004 World Team Table Tennis Championships was held at the Qatar International Exhibition Center in Doha, Qatar from March 1 to March 7, 2004. This decision was announced in May 2001. It is the 47th edition to be contested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179551-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings\nThe 2004 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings was the inaugural edition of the World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings. It is an assessment of racehorses which was issued by the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA) in January 2005. It includes horses aged three or older which raced or were trained during 2004 in countries where the flat racing year runs from January 1 to December 31. These countries are generally in the Northern Hemisphere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179551-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings\nThe ratings represent a weight value in pounds, with higher values given to horses which showed greater ability. It is judged that these weights would equalize the abilities of the horses if carried in a theoretical handicap race. The list includes all horses rated 115 or above, and it also shows the surface and the distances at which the rating was achieved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179551-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings\nThe highest rating in the 2004 season was 130, which was given to the performance of Ghostzapper in the Breeders' Cup Classic. In total, 162 horses were included in the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179551-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings, Full rankings for 2004\nCertain horses may have also recorded a lesser rating over a distance different from that listed above. The IFHA publishes this information when the lower rating represents the overall top performance in a particular category. There were seven such additional ratings for this season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179551-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings, Top ranked horses\nThe tables below show the top ranked horses overall, the top fillies and mares, and the top three-year-olds in the 2004 Rankings. They also show the top performers in various subdivisions of each group, which are defined by the distances of races, and the surfaces on which they are run. The IFHA recognizes five distance categories \u2014 Sprint, Mile, Intermediate, Long and Extended \u2014 identified by the acronym \"SMILE\". These are framed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179552-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World U-17 Hockey Challenge\nThe 2004 World U-17 Hockey Challenge was an international ice hockey tournament held in Newfoundland, Canada between . The two main venues were the Mile One Stadium in St. John's and the Glacier Arena in Mount Pearl, while the S. W. Moores Arena in Harbour Grace and the Whitbourne Arena were also used for exhibition games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179552-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World U-17 Hockey Challenge\nTen teams participated, including the United States, Russia, Slovakia, Germany, Finland and five regional teams representing Canada \u2013 Canada Pacific, Canada West, Canada Quebec, Canada Ontario and Canada Atlantic. Team Ontario defeated Team Pacific 5\u20132 to win the gold medal, while Team Quebec defeated the United States 3\u20132 to capture the bronze, marking the first time in the tournament's history that Canada swept all three medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179553-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World University Boxing Championship\nThe 2004 World University Boxing Championships took place in Antalya, Turkey between November 22 and 29 2004. 129 boxers from 27 countries participated at the inaugural tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179554-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World University Sailing Championship\nThe 2004 World University Sailing Championship took place in Izmir, Turkey between July 4 and 8 2004. 25 men and 14 women from 7 countries participated at the third edition tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179554-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World University Sailing Championship, Results\nFor this event, the FISU protocol was somewhat modified, so that the athletes were not given medals but rather they were awarded cups in the tradition of sailing competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship\nThe 2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship was held from January 19 to 24 in Sursee, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group A\nThird: Pavel SavovSecond: Svetozar KirovLead: Neli SabevaAlternate: Rumen PanayotovCoach: Dimitar Dimitrov", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group A\nThird: J\u00f8rn KristensenSecond: Rosita JensenLead: Bjarne JensenAlternate: Pernille PirchertCoach: Per Christensen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group A\nThird: Geir Arne SkogstadSecond: Lene TystadLead: Trine FissumCoach: Gry Roaldseth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group A\nThird: Michael McCreadieSecond: Ken DicksonLead: Angie MaloneAlternate: James SellarCoach: Jane Sanderson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group A\nThird: Manfred BolligerSecond: Cesare CassaniLead: Therese K\u00e4mpferAlternate: Otto ErbCoach: Heinz Sommerhalder", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group A\nThird: Mark TaylorSecond: Sam WoodwardLead: Loren KinneyAlternate: Danelle LibbyCoach: Diane Brown", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group B\nThird: Orazio FagoneSecond: Rita Dal MonteLead: Fabio TripodiAlternate: Pierino GaspardCoach: Mauro Maino", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group B\nThird: Valeriy ChepilkoSecond: Andrey SmirnovLead: Oxana SlesarenkoAlternate: Nikolay MelnikovCoach: Oleg Narinyan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group B\nThird: Kim Myung-jinSecond: Cho Yae-leeLead: Cho Yang-hyunAlternate: Kim Kab-seungCoach: Yang Se-young", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Teams, Group B\nThird: Glenn IkonenSecond: Bernt Sj\u00f6bergLead: Anette WilhelmAlternate: Rolf JohanssonCoach: Thomas Wilhelm", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179555-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 World Wheelchair Curling Championship, Tiebreakers\nBulgaria moves to the ninth place classification game, while Norway moves to the eleventh place classification game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 55], "content_span": [56, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship\nThe 2004 World Women's Curling Championship (branded as 2004 Ford World Women's Curling Championship for sponsorship reasons) was held at the Gavlerinken in G\u00e4vle, Sweden from April 17\u201325, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Colleen Jones Third: Kim Kelly Second: Mary-Anne Arsenault Lead: Nancy Delahunt Alternate: Mary Sue Radford", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Madeleine Dupont Third: Denise Dupont Second: Helle Simonsen Lead: Maria Poulsen Alternate: Lene Nielsen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Kirsi Nyk\u00e4nen* Fourth: Tiina Kautonen Second: Sari Laakkonen Lead: Minna Malinen Alternate: Riikka Louhivuori (*Throws third rocks)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Diana Gaspari Third: Giulia Lacedelli Second: Rosa Pompanin Lead: Violetta Caldart Alternate: Chiara Olivieri", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Shinobu Aota Third: Yukari Okazaki Second: Eriko Minatoya Lead: Kotomi Ishizaki Alternate: Mari Motohashi", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Dordi Nordby Third: Linn Githmark Second: Marianne Haslum Lead: Camilla Holth Alternate: Marianne R\u00f8rvik", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Jackie Lockhart Third: Sheila Swan Second: Katriona Fairweather Lead: Anne Laird Alternate: Kelly Wood", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Anette Norberg Third: Eva Lund Second: Cathrine Norberg Lead: Anna Bergstr\u00f6m Alternate: Ulrika Bergman", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Luzia Ebn\u00f6ther Third: Carmen K\u00fcng Second: Tanya Frei Lead: Nadia R\u00f6thlisberger-Raspe Alternate: Laurence Bidaud", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179556-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 World Women's Curling Championship, Teams\nSkip : Patti Lank Third: Erika Brown Second: Nicole Joraanstad Lead: Natalie Nicholson Alternate: Barb Perrella", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179557-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 World's Strongest Man\nThe 2004 World's Strongest Man was the 27th edition of World's Strongest Man and was won by Vasyl Virastyuk from Ukraine. It was his first title after finishing third the previous year. Zydrunas Savickas from Lithuania finished second for the third year in a row. Originally Mariusz Pudzianowski from Poland finished third, but was later disqualified after testing positive for a banned substance, thus third place was given to Magnus Samuelsson from Sweden. The contest was held in Nassau, Bahamas. The qualifying heats saw a major format change, going from the traditional 5-6 man heats with the top 2 going to the finals. This year's format was a 12-man round-robin competition taking place over 5 days, with the top six going onto the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179557-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 World's Strongest Man, Qualifying heats\nEvents: Deadlift with Barrels Machine, Squat Lift with Barrels Machine, Safe Lift for reps, Truck Pull, Super Yoke, Giant Farmer's Walk, Carry & Drag (Carry an Anchor & Drag Chain & Anchor), Fingal's Fingers, Wrestling, Stone Circle, Atlas Stones", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179557-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 World's Strongest Man, Final results\nEvents: Carry Race (Carry an Anchor & Giant Farmer's Walk), Fridge Carry (Super Yoke), Squat Lift with Barrels Machine, Car Deadlift for reps, Safe Lift for reps, Truck Pull, Wheelbarrow Race, Atlas Stones", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179558-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Worthing Borough Council election\nThe 2004 Worthing Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Worthing Borough Council in West Sussex, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election 2003 increasing the number of seats by 1. The Conservative Party gained overall control of the council from no overall control. Overall turnout was 38.23%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179558-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Worthing Borough Council election\nThe campaign saw a debate between the two main parties on the council over development in Worthing and the fate of the local swimming pool Aquarina. The results saw the Conservatives make significant gains from the Liberal Democrats to take power in Worthing. The top Liberal Democrat to lose in the election was the leader of the council, Sheila Player, who came fourth in Selden ward and failed to be elected as a result. The defeat for the Liberal Democrats was put down to anger over a warning that they might have to close the local museum, art gallery and swimming pool to save money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179559-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Cowboys football team\nThe 2004 Wyoming Cowboys football team represented the University of Wyoming in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Cowboys offense scored 318 points while the defense allowed 297 points. Led by head coach Joe Glenn, the Cowboys competed in the Las Vegas Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179559-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Cowboys football team, Pre-Season\nDuring the off season, War Memorial Stadium was upgraded with new railings installed in certain areas as well as more handicap accessible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179559-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Cowboys football team, Pre-Season\nThe big concern coming into Spring Training was the lack of depth on defense, a young and inexperienced offensive line and a poor running game. 13 Starters and 38 lettermen returned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179559-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Cowboys football team, Pre-Season\nFall practice began on August 11, 2004. The Cowboys participated in two inter squad scrimmages. The first one was held August 21 and the second one was 5 days later on the 26th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179559-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Cowboys football team, Players, Quarterbacks\nCorey Bramlet replaced his older brother, Casey, who graduate the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179560-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Democratic presidential caucuses\nThe 2004 Wyoming Democratic presidential caucuses took place on February 3, 2004 as part of the 2004 United States Democratic presidential primaries. The delegate allocation is Proportional, the candidates are awarded delegates in proportion to the percentage of votes received.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179560-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyoming Democratic presidential caucuses\nBecause Kerry had already won the nomination, and the small number of people in the state that are registered Democrats, the turnout was extremely low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election\nThe 2004 Wyre Forest District Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Wyre Forest District Council in Worcestershire, England. The whole council was up for election with boundary changes since the last election in 2003. The council stayed under no overall control, but with the Conservatives taking over as the largest party on the council from the Health Concern party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election, Background\nIn total 113 candidates stood in the election with all 42 seats being contested for the first time since 1979 after boundary changes had taken place. The boundary changes meant that Bewdley ward had gained an extra councillor and become Bewdley and Arley, while Blakedown and Chaddesley had been combined into one ward. The Conservatives put up a full slate of 42 candidates with Health Concern having the next most with 27. Other candidates included 24 Labour, 9 Liberal, 7 Liberal Democrats and 3 independents. A noted feature of the candidates was that there were ten married couples standing in the election with two of them being existing councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election, Background\nBefore the election Health Concern had 16 seats on the council as compared to 11 for the Conservatives. This was a drop for Health Concern from 2003 after 3 councillors had defected to the Conservatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election, Election result\nThe results had the Conservatives gain 8 seats to become the largest party on the council. This was mainly at the expense of Health Concern whose losses included the leader of the council, Howard Martin. For other parties the election saw the Liberals gain one seat to hold 8, while both Labour and the Liberal Democrats stayed on the same number of seats. The results meant that 14 councillors, a third of the council, would be new. Voter turnout was up at 38.83% after seeing less than 31% in 2003, with the highest turnout being 54.36% in Wolverley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election, Election result\nThe Conservatives success was put down to a strong campaign and they were expected to form the next administration. This would be the first time in 15 years that the Conservatives would have control of Wyre Forest council, with the other parties saying they would not attempt to form a rival coalition leaving the way clear for the Conservatives. The Conservatives were expected to attempt to implement their manifesto pledges including bringing a cinema to Kidderminster, changing car parking in Kidderminster and reviewing the fortnightly refuse collection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election, Election result\nConservative control was confirmed at a council meeting on 30 June with Stephen Clee becoming leader of the council. Meanwhile, Health Concern councillors chose Ken Stokes to become the new leader of their group on the council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179561-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Wyre Forest District Council election, By-elections between 2004 and 2006\nA by-election was held in Aggborough and Spennells after the death of Conservative councillor Maureen Aston. Candidates at the election included the former leader of the council Howard Martin for Health Concern, a former councillor for the ward, Adrian Sewell for Labour, and the first Green party candidate for an election to Wyre Forest District Council, Kate Spohrer. The seat was held by Conservative John Aston, husband of the former councillor, with a majority of 63 votes over Liberal Democrat Samantha Walker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179562-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 XP14\n2004 XP14 is a sub-kilometer asteroid, classified as a near-Earth object and potentially hazardous asteroid of the Apollo group. It was first observed by the LINEAR project on 10 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [9, 9], "content_span": [10, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179562-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 XP14, Description\nAlthough initially there were concerns that it might possibly impact Earth later in the 21st century and thus merit special monitoring, further analysis of its orbit has since ruled out any such collision, at least in the foreseeable future.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179562-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 XP14, Description\nThe size of 2004 XP14 is not precisely known. Based on optical measurements, the object is between 300 and 800 meters in diameter. Radar observations place a lower bound of about 260 meters (850\u00a0ft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179562-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 XP14, Description\n2004 XP14's closest pass by Earth was above the west coast of North America at 04:25 UTC on 3 July 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179562-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 XP14, Description\nThe asteroid's distance from Earth's center of mass at that moment was 0.0028906\u00a0AU (432,430\u00a0km; 268,700\u00a0mi), or just 1.1 times the Moon's average distance from Earth. It was observed immediately after this close approach by radar from three locations, from Goldstone in the Mojave Desert in the US, from Sicily, and from Yevpatoria RT-70 radio telescope, Ukraine, as well as optically from other observatories and amateurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179562-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 XP14, Description\nIt was removed from the Sentry Risk Table on 17 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 9], "section_span": [11, 22], "content_span": [23, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190\n2004 XR190, nicknamed Buffy, is a trans-Neptunian object, classified as both a scattered disc object and a detached object, located in the outermost region of the Solar System. It was first observed on 11 December 2004, by astronomers with the Canada\u2013France Ecliptic Plane Survey at the Mauna Kea Observatories, Hawaii, United States. The highly inclined dwarf planet candidate measures approximately 560 kilometers (350 miles) in diameter. With its perihelion of 51\u00a0AU, it belongs to a small and poorly understood group of very distant objects with moderate eccentricities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Discovery and naming\nBuffy was discovered on 11 December 2004. It was discovered by astronomers led by (Rhiannon) Lynne Allen of the University of British Columbia as part of the Canada\u2013France Ecliptic Plane Survey (CFEPS) using the Canada\u2013France\u2013Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) near the ecliptic. The team included Brett Gladman, John Kavelaars, Jean-Marc Petit, Joel Parker and Phil Nicholson. In 2015, six precovery images from 2002 and 2003 were found in Sloan Digital Sky Survey data.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 32], "content_span": [33, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Discovery and naming\nThe object was nicknamed \"Buffy\" by the discovery team, after the fictional vampire slayer Buffy Summers, and proposed several Inuit-based official names to the International Astronomical Union.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 32], "content_span": [33, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Orbit and classification\nBuffy orbits the Sun at a distance of 51.1\u201363.4\u00a0AU once every 433 years and 3 months (158,242 days; semi-major axis of 57.26\u00a0AU). Its orbit has a moderate eccentricity of 0.11 and a high inclination of 47\u00b0 with respect to the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Orbit and classification\nIt belongs to the same group as 2014 FC72, 2014 FZ71, 2015 FJ345 and 2015 KQ174 (also see diagram), that are poorly understood for their large perihelia combined with moderate eccentricities. Considered a scattered and detached object, Buffy is particularly unusual as it has an unusually circular orbit for a scattered-disc object (SDO).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 XR190, Orbit and classification\nAlthough it is thought that traditional scattered-disc objects have been ejected into their current orbits by gravitational interactions with Neptune, the low eccentricity of its orbit and the distance of its perihelion (SDOs generally have highly eccentric orbits and perihelia less than 38\u00a0AU) seems hard to reconcile with such celestial mechanics. This has led to some uncertainty as to the current theoretical understanding of the outer Solar System. The theories include close stellar passages, unseen planet/rogue planets/planetary embryos in the early Kuiper belt, and resonance interaction with an outward-migrating Neptune. The Kozai mechanism is capable of transferring orbital eccentricity to a higher inclination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Orbit and classification\nThe object is also the largest possible dwarf planet that has an inclination larger than 45\u00b0, traveling further \"up and down\" than \"left to right\" around the Sun when viewed edge-on along the ecliptic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Orbit and classification, Most distant objects\nBuffy came to aphelion around 1901. Other than long-period comets, it is currently about the thirteenth-most-distant known large body (57.5\u00a0AU) in the Solar System with a well-known orbit, after Eris and Dysnomia (96.3\u00a0AU), Gonggong (87.4\u00a0AU), Sedna (85.9\u00a0AU), 2014 FC69 (84.0\u00a0AU), 2006 QH181 (83.3\u00a0AU), 2012 VP113 (83.3\u00a0AU), 2013 FY27 (80.3\u00a0AU), 2010 GB174 (70.5\u00a0AU), 2000 CR105 (60.3\u00a0AU), 2003 QX113 (59.8\u00a0AU), and 2008 ST291 (59.6\u00a0AU).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 58], "content_span": [59, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Physical characteristics\nWith assumed albedos between 0.04 and 0.25, and absolute magnitudes from 4.3 to 4.6, Buffy has an estimated diameter of 335 to 850 kilometers; the mean arrived at by considering the two single-figure estimates plus the centre points of the three ranges is 562\u00a0km, approximately a quarter the diameter of Pluto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Physical characteristics\nOn his website, American astronomer Michael Brown lists Buffy as a \"likely\" dwarf planet (500\u2013600\u00a0km), which is the category with the 3rd highest certainty in his 5-class taxonomic system. As of 2018, no well-documented spectral type and color indices, nor a rotational lightcurve have been obtained from spectroscopic and photometric observations; however, the Johnston's Archive lists a \"taxonomic type\" of \"BR\", and a \"B-R magnitude\" of 1.24. The rotation period, pole and shape officially remain unknown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 36], "content_span": [37, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179563-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 XR190, Gallery\nOrbital diagram of Buffy (Earth's orbit in the center is for scale)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [12, 19], "content_span": [20, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179564-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 XXXX FIBA International Christmas Tournament\nThe 2004 XXXX FIBA International Christmas Tournament \"Trofeo Raimundo Saporta-Memorial Fernando Mart\u00edn\" was the 40th edition of the FIBA International Christmas Tournament. It took place at Palacio Vistalegre, Madrid, Spain, on 25 December 2004 with the participations of Real Madrid and Telemar Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179565-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Yale Bulldogs football team\nThe 2004 Yale Bulldogs football team represented Yale University in the 2004 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Bulldogs were led by eighth-year head coach Jack Siedlecki, played their home games at the Yale Bowl and finished tied for fourth in the Ivy League with a 3\u20134 record, 5\u20135 overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179566-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Yanbu attack\nThe 2004 Yanbu attack was an attack by gunmen against Westerners on May 1, 2004, in Yanbu' al Bahr, Saudi Arabia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179566-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Yanbu attack\nAt least four militants used security passes to access a local petrochemical plant. Once on the grounds of the facility, they stormed the offices of the Texas-based ABB Lummus and killed seven people. Two were Americans, two were British, one was Australian and one was a Saudi National Guard member. A Canadian worker died on May 15 of his wounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179566-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Yanbu attack\nThe attackers were believed to be linked to Al Qaeda, though Crown Prince Abdullah, then de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia, disputed these claims at the time. From 2003 to 2004, militants carried out attacks against the Saudi government and foreigners living there in an effort to topple the monarchy. Less than a month after these attacks, gunmen staged a similar attack in Al-Khobar, killing 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179567-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Ykk\u00f6nen\nLeague tables for teams participating in Ykk\u00f6nen, the second tier of the Finnish Soccer League system, in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179567-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Ykk\u00f6nen, League table, Promotion Play-Offs\nJazz Pori as 13th placed team in the 2004 Veikkausliiga and MIFK Mariehamn as runners-up of the 2004 Ykk\u00f6nen competed in a two-legged play-off for a place in the Veikkausliiga. MIFK won the play-offs 3-2 on aggregate and were promoted to the Veikkausliiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 47], "content_span": [48, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179567-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Ykk\u00f6nen, League table, Promotion Play-Offs\nMIFK Mariehamn - Jazz Pori 1-0Jazz Pori - MIFK Mariehamn 2-2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 47], "content_span": [48, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179567-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Ykk\u00f6nen, League table, Relegation Play-Offs\nOLS Oulu - VG-62 Naantali 0-1VG-62 Naantali - OLS Oulu 3-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179567-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Ykk\u00f6nen, League table, Relegation Play-Offs\nKPV Kokkola - Kraft N\u00e4rpes 1-1Kraft N\u00e4rpes - KPV Kokkola 1-1 aet., 1-4 pen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179567-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Ykk\u00f6nen, League table, Relegation Play-Offs\nKPV Kokkola (formerly also KPV-J Kokkola) were promoted to the Ykk\u00f6nen and Kraft N\u00e4rpes relegated to the Kakkonen. KPV Kokkola won 4-1 on penalties. VG-62 Naantali remained in the Ykk\u00f6nen after beating OLS Oulu 4-1 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 48], "content_span": [49, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179568-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Zacatecas state election\nThe Mexican state of Zacatecas held an election on Sunday, 4 July 2004. At stake was the office of the Zacatecas State Governor, all 30 members of the unicameral Zacatecas State Congress, and 57 mayors and municipal councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179568-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Zacatecas state election\nTurnout was in excess of 50% of the 935,548 zacatecanos eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179568-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Zacatecas state election, Governor\nAt the time of the election, the sitting governor was Ricardo Monreal \u00c1vila of the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179568-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Zacatecas state election, Governor\nAt 22h30, with results from 46% of the polling stations counted, the victory of Amalia Garc\u00eda, with a 35,000 vote lead, seemed inevitable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections\nLocal elections were held in Zamboanga City on May 10, 2004, within the Philippine general election. The voters elected for the elective local posts in the city: the mayor, vice mayor, 12 councilors and one representative from its lone district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral elections\nMayor Maria Clara Lobregat died of complications on January 2004, paving the mayoralty race for the ruling Laban ng Demokratikong Pilipino wide open since she was the presumptive nominee running for a third term. Vice-Mayor Erbie Fabian took her place as acting mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Mayoral and vice mayoral elections\nLobregat's son, incumbent Congressman Celso Lobregat became the standard-bearer of the LDP, and incumbent Mayor Fabian will run for the post left by Celso. Celso picked Councilor Beng Climaco as his running-mate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Results\nThe candidate for district representative, mayor, and vice mayor with the highest number of votes wins the seat; they are voted separately; therefore, they may be of different parties when elected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Results, House of Representatives election, Lone District\nIncumbent Vice-Mayor Erbie Fabian is running for the post against former Mayor Manuel Dalipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 94], "content_span": [95, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Results, Mayoral elections\nIncumbent Congressman Celso Lobregat is running for mayor against prominent businessman Lepeng Wee and Councilor Charlie Mariano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Results, Vice-mayoral elections\nThe vice-mayorship is vacant since Vice-Mayor Erbie Fabian took office upon Mayor Lobregat's death. Incumbent Councilor Beng Climaco runs against veteran politician Jaime Cabato.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179569-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 Zamboanga City local elections, Results, City council elections\nZamboanga City elects twelve councilors to the city council. The twelve candidates with the highest number of votes wins the seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179570-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 Z\u00fcri-Metzgete\nThe 2004 Z\u00fcri-Metzgete was the 89th edition of the Z\u00fcri-Metzgete road cycling one day race. It was held on 22 August 2004 as part of the 2004 UCI Road World Cup. The race was won by Juan Antonio Flecha of Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179571-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 aluminium alloy\n2004 Aluminium is aluminium alloy in 2xxx series, which has Copper as main alloying element and some impurity elements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong\nThe incident of the 10-Truck Arms and Ammunition Haul took place in Chattogram, Bangladesh, on the night of 1 April 2004, when police and Coast Guard interrupted the loading of ten trucks and seized extensive illegal arms and ammunition at a jetty of Chittagong Urea Fertilizer Limited (CUFL) on the Karnaphuli River. This is believed to be the largest arms smuggling incident in the history of Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong\nInvestigators believed that delivery was intended for the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), a militant group seeking the independence of Assam from India and considered responsible for causing thousands of deaths since 1979. Its military wing chief, Paresh Baruah, then living in Dhaka, was among the 50 persons ultimately charged in the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong\nThis incident occurred during the administration of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party and its Four-Party alliance, which led the government from 2001 to late October 2006. Media analysts said that, given the scale of the operation and existing problems with corruption, high government officials and intelligence officers were believed to be involved in the smuggling plans. In 2004, arms smuggling charges were filed against a total of 45 individuals under the Armed Forces (Special Powers) Act and arms charges against 43 persons under the Arms Act. In March 2009, one of the accused submitted a ten-page statement about the case, saying he had told police of high-level government involvement as early as 2005. He said his confessions were not recorded and officials warned him against repeating his statements, upon the threat of death.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong\nIn early 2007 the caretaker government filed corruption charges against more than 160 politicians, civil servants and businessmen; it continued to develop this case. Prosecution of this smuggling case has continued under the Awami League government, formed after winning the general elections in December 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Seizure\nThe police and Coast Guard interrupted the loading of materials in the smuggling incident. They seized ten truckloads of material: a total of 4,930 different types of sophisticated firearms; 27,020 grenades; 840 rocket launchers, 300 rockets, 2,000 grenade launching tubes; 6,392 magazines; and 1,140,520 bullets, which were being loaded on ten trucks from two-engine boats at the jetty of CUFL at Chittagong harbour. The illegal arms were believed to be intended for ULFA, the militant organisation working for independence of Assam from India, with many members based in Bangladesh. It is classified as a terrorist group by India and considered responsible for thousands of deaths since its founding in 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Seizure\nAhadur Rahman, then officer-in-charge of Karnaphuli police station, filed a case related to the incident on 3 April 2004. He was appointed as Investigation Officer (IO) of the cases. After 22 days, the cases were transferred to the national CID, where ASP AKM Kabir Uddin was appointed IO. He submitted the first charge sheet to the court on 11 June 2004. In 2004, arms smuggling charges were filed against a total of 45 individuals under the Special Powers Act and arms charges against 43 persons under the Arms Act.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Seizure\nThe Bangladesh National Party, which led the government at the time of the smuggling incident, resigned at end of term in October 2006 and a caretaker government took charge for the 90-day period until elections. On 11 January 2007, Chief Advisor and President Iajuddin Ahmed announced he would be resigning from the CA position and appointing a replacement; the military had intervened to support a neutral government following the withdrawal of the Awami League from elections scheduled for 22 January. The prominent banker, Fakhruddin Ahmed, who had been with the World Bank, was appointed as Chief Advisor. At the time, the government relieved Major General Haider Chowdhury, then Director General for National Security Intelligence, of his duties and put him under investigation. He was later charged in this smuggling case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 882]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nSince 2007, prosecution has been emphasised for the arms smuggling and illegal arms charges in this smuggling case. Those charged in this case have included the following politicians and military officers who had held senior positions in the BNP-led government, which resigned at its end of term in late October 2006:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nIn addition, the following prominent company officials were charged in this case: Mohshin Talukder, managing director of Chittagong Urea Fertiliser Limited, and its general manager, AKM Enamul Haque.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nThe military wing chief of ULFA, Paresh Baruah, was also charged. Since 1979, ULFA has been implicated in violence resulting in the deaths of thousands in its struggle for independence of Assam from India. \"The Indian authorities have long complained that Bangladesh has become a safe haven for insurgent groups active in north-eastern Indian states.\" Since 2008, the government of Bangladesh has been working with India against such terrorist groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nNurul Amin and Paresh Baruah fled the country before being arrested. Many of the other suspects were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nOn 26 June 2011, the current Investigation Officer in the smuggling case submitted a supplementary charge sheet before the court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, Paresh Chandra Sharma, that implicated eleven more people. Including overlap, the total number of suspects charged were 50 in the smuggling case and 52 in the arms case. New people charged included Motiur Rahman Nizami, former Industries Minister under the BNP government; and Lutfozzaman Babar, former State Minister for Home Affairs. Four suspects have died since original charges were filed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nMd Hafizur Rahman and Din Mohammad, charged in the smuggling case, submitted statements to the Metropolitan Magistrate Md Osman Gani on 2 March 2009, saying that the massive amount of arms and ammunition was being smuggled under the direct supervision of Ulfa leader Paresh Barua, who was residing in Dhaka at that time. In addition, they said that numerous men associated with the BNP-led government and Jatiya Party, including members of parliament, government officials, leaders of the National Security Intelligence (NSI) and Directorate General of Forces Intelligence (DGFI),were very much aware of the operation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nHafizur had a ten-page statement, reiterating what he said was information earlier provided to police after he surrendered on 25 October 2005. But, he said his earlier confessions were never recorded, and officials warned him against making such statements. He said in his 2009 statement that they had threatened him with death. He discussed first being contacted in 2001 about accepting a shipment at Chittagong. It was not until February 2004 that he learned the true identity of a man he knew originally as Zaman; the man admitted to being Paresh Baruah, military wing chief of ULFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Trial\nThe trials began in 2012 in Chittagong. On 28 November 2012, tight security accompanied ten of eleven charge-sheeted accused persons who were presented in court. That day, the prosecution witness Mobin Hossain Khan, former assistant security officer of Chittagong Urea Fertilizer Limited (CUFL), testified that former Industries Secretary Nurul Amin was informed of the smuggling operation in advance. The next sessions were scheduled for 7 January 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 50], "content_span": [51, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179572-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 arms and ammunition haul in Chittagong, Verdict\nOn 30 January 2014, a special court in Chittagong commuted death sentence to Paresh Barua and 13 others, including Jamaat chief and then industries minister Motiur Rahman Nizami and then state minister for home Lutfozzaman Babar, for smuggling in ten truckloads of firearms in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179573-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 attack on Istanbul restaurant\nOn March 9, 2004, an attack on a restaurant in the Kartal district of Istanbul, Turkey killed H\u00fcseyin Kurug\u00f6l, a waiter in the restaurant, and injured five others. The two Islamic militants who carried out the attack, Engin Vural and Nihat Do\u011fruel, were holding automatic weapons and had ten homemade pipe bombs strapped to their flak jackets when they entered the restaurant frequented by freemasons. Shooting the guard in his feet, they entered the dining hall and began firing at the forty people in the room. Then they detonated bombs at the entrance, killing Kurug\u00f6l. One of the militants died in the attack, the other was seriously injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179573-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 attack on Istanbul restaurant\nThis attack occurred 911 days after the September 11 attacks. On March 11, the newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi received a statement which claimed that an al-Qaeda affiliated group, Jund al-Quds, ('Soldiers of Jerusalem'), had carried out the attack. The statement's primary purpose was to claim responsibility for the March 11, 2004 Madrid attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179573-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 attack on Istanbul restaurant\nIn August 2004, the trial of the suspects began. While Turkish authorities said there was likely an al-Qaeda link, the surviving bomber, Engin Vural, claimed it was an independent act he planned along with the dead bomber, Nihat Do\u011fruel. The prosecution charged that a man named Adem \u00c7etinkaya, who was also charged, organized the attack and was also planning to bomb a private television station.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin\nBeginning in October 2004, an attempt was made to re-establish a revived Sanhedrin, a national rabbinical court of Jewish law in Israel. The organization heading this attempt refers to itself as the nascent Sanhedrin or developing Sanhedrin, and regards itself as a provisional body awaiting integration into the Israeli government as both a supreme court and an upper house of the Knesset. The Israeli secular press regards it as an illegitimate fundamentalist organization of rabbis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0000-0001", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin\nThe organization, which is composed of over 70 rabbis (similar to the composition of the original Sanhedrin), claims to enjoy recognition and support from the entire religious Jewish community in Israel. However, it is totally ignored by the Haredi community, and has stirred debate in both religious and secularist circles. There has not been a \"full meeting\" of the Sanhedrin since 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Precedents\nThe 12th century scholar, Maimonides, discussed the seeming incompatibility of the essential requirement of Jewish Law for a Sanhedrin, and the inability to form one due to the loss of semikhah. In his magnum opus, the Mishneh Torah, he proposed a procedure to re-establish a Sanhedrin. This later became the subject of legal rulings by Rabbi Jacob Berab, Rabbi Yosef Karo and others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Precedents\nThere have been several attempts to implement Maimonides' recommendations. The current attempt is the sixth in recent history. It is modeled after the attempt by Rabbi Jacob Berab in 1538, and follows attempts by Rabbi Yisroel of Shklov in 1830, Rabbi Aharon Mendel haCohen in 1901, Rabbi Zvi Kovsker in 1940 and Rabbi Yehuda Leib Maimon in 1949.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nMaimonides and other medieval commentators suggested that, although the line of semikhah (Biblical ordination) from Moses had been broken in 425 CE, if the sages in the land of Israel agree upon a single candidate being worthy of semikhah, that individual would have semikhah, and could then grant it to others, thus enabling the re-establishment of the Sanhedrin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nAccording to the new Sanhedrin's website, the process of election was explained by Rabbi Dov Levanoni, a member of the new Sanhedrin. He said the most recent attempt to renew the institution of semikhah in 2004 was made through a consensus of hundreds of the most influential and scholarly rabbis living in Israel. While Rabbi Yaakov Beirav and Rabbi Yosef Karo laid an excellent halachic (Jewish law) foundation for understanding this teaching of Maimonides, the current attempt to re-establish the Jewish Sanhedrin has tried to learn from previous attempts and avoid some of the pitfalls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0004-0001", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nFor example, to avoid claims that not all the rabbis of Israel were aware of the latest attempt to set up the Sanhedrin, an initial enormous expenditure was spent on a publicity campaign of the upcoming semikhah process, 50,000 copies of a detailed flier were distributed among 4,500 Jewish centers in Israel, outlining that a vote of a first samuch was going to be held, along with contact information of the Va'ad ha-Mechonen la-Sanhedrin. Not long afterwards, seven hundred leading Rabbonim were contacted either in person or by written letter. R' Levanoni explained that Rabbi Moshe Halberstam, a senior Rabbi on Jerusalem's Edah HaChareidis, became the first samuch after receiving approval by Israel's leading rabbis \u2013 those followed by most of Israel's religious Jews \u2013 and there were no objections from the hundreds of rabbis consulted via written letters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 955]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nThe website also claims that leading sages have supported the semikhah directly or indirectly or abstained, and specifically mentions these names, though with no proof: Rabbi Yosef Shalom Eliashiv, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, Rabbi Zalman Nechemia Goldberg and many others gave their blessing but did not join the Sanhedrin. The son of Rabbi Mordecai Eliyahu is one of the rabbis ordained. Former Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi and Rosh Yeshiva of Merkaz HaRav Kook Rabbi Avraham Shapira chose to abstain on the issue but also refused to discourage it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nRabbi Halberstam (April 1, 1932 \u2013 April 26, 2006), who was selected to receive Semikhah by consensus, was a relatively well known figure and widely respected. Rabbi Halberstam was the son of Grand Rabbi Yaakov Halberstam of Tshokava (a scion of the Sanz dynasty) and of the daughter of Rabbi Sholom of Shotz of London. He was the rosh yeshiva of the Tshokava Yeshiva in Jerusalem and one of the most prominent members of the Edah Charedis Rabbinical court of Jerusalem. He was known as a tremendous Torah scholar and a decisor of halachic law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0006-0001", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nHe wrote approbations to many works of Torah literature. Rabbi Halberstam served at the President of Hatzolah Israel. He was also the Rabbi of the Shaarei Tzedek Hospital in Jerusalem. He was known for his tolerance towards other streams of thought in Orthodox Judaism. Despite his own Chareidi anti-Zionist background, he also maintained contacts with Modern Orthodox, religious Zionist leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nThe website does not claim that these figures supported the creation of a Sanhedrin, only that they supported the reinstitution of Semikhah. Rabbi Dov Shtein, the secretary for the Sanhedrin project, claimed that Rabbi Halberstam understood where his actions would lead. Rabbi Dov Shtein said \"Without Rabbi Halberstam's efforts toward renewing semikhah, it would not have happened the way it did. ...", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0007-0001", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The election process and selection of Rav Halberstam\nBy agreeing to be the first to be ordained, he took a serious risk of being rejected and condemned by his community for taking part in such a project, which set the ball rolling for the foundation of a Jewish legal body that seeks to eventually supersede the Badatz. But despite the serious pressures put on him following his agreement and granting of semikhah to others, he never went back on it or even tempered his agreement with the act of renewing semikhah.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The formation of a placeholder Sanhedrin\nThe Sanhedrin website explains \"To avoid disagreements over who was worthy to sit on the Sanhedrin, a Beis din of 71 was immediately formed. It was formed with the best scholars available, with the public announcement every one of them has agreed to step aside the moment a more deserving candidate should step forward. Lastly, the Nasi has indicated that the Beis din would wait until the best scholars of Eretz Yisroel were represented on the Beis din before beginning to fully function halachically as the Sanhedrin of old.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The formation of a placeholder Sanhedrin\nIn October 2004, a group of over few hundred rabbis representing varied communities in Israel undertook a ceremony in Tiberias, where the original Sanhedrin was disbanded, with about one hundred of them at the time having proper Semikhah. This was one year after the re-establishment of Semikhah. A Beth Din of 71 was formed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The formation of a placeholder Sanhedrin\nRabbi Tzvi Eidan, the author of Asot Mishpat (on the laws of reestablishing the Sanhedrin) was appointed as first interim Nasi. Rabbi Adin Steinzaltz, a noted Talmudic scholar and a well-known Jewish philosopher is the currently elected Nasi. The Sanhedrin's spokesmen said that due to concerns that external pressure would be brought to bear upon individuals not to take part in the establishment of a Sanhedrin, the names of most participants would not be made public.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nOn the other hand, apparently few Sanhedrin members see the nascent Sanhedrin with such an extreme messianism. The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz was marked with an apparent change in direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nThe newspaper Haaretz reported that in his speech accepting the position of Nasi, Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz said that the task of building the Sanhedrin will take some time. He spoke about gradually building up the ancient institution, which would take several generations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nIn order to move forward and no longer be defined as \"an aborted fetus\", to become serious so we can say, \"a child was born to us\", we need a lot of time. The mere mention of the name Sanhedrin is not a given. It is no longer a matter of a religious council\u00a0... It's something that has historical meaning. A basic change, not of one small system, but of fundamental systems. It's no wonder that these things frighten people. There are people who are concerned about what is emerging here. And where is it headed?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0013-0001", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nAfter we have made it through this year with no catastrophes occurring, even though there were some foolish comments and chuckling, we will intensify and strengthen our activities. We will do things with an eye toward future generations, not with a stopwatch and an annual calendar. The Jewish calendar is a calendar of thousands of years. A lot of patience and a lot of work are needed. I'd be happy if in another few years these chairs are filled by scholars who are greater than us and we can say: \"I kept the chairs warm for you.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nSteinsaltz said that the Sanhedrin would not get involved in politics: \"I'm not afraid of the Supreme Court, the police or the attorney general. A rabbi is also permitted to engage in public issues, but to do so he has to have all the appropriate material before him, whether he is dealing with the kosher status of a chicken or the disengagement.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nUnder the influence of Rabbi Steinsaltz, the Sanhedrin project shifted away from idealistic projects of its first year and tried to move toward broadening participation. Steinsaltz requested that the new Sanhedrin not be referred to as \"the Sanhedrin\", but requested modest references to the current institution as the nascent Sanhedrin, the developing Sanhedrin, the Sanhedrin project, or simply the Rabbinical Court of 71 judges (Beis din shel 71). Steinsaltz was reportedly changing the direction of the new Sanhedrin, widening the scope and acceptance of the Court with the intention of moving towards becoming the full Sanhedrin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The acceptance of office of Nasi by Rabbi Steinsaltz\nAccording to their website, the strategy to gain wider acceptance and \"provide a smooth transition from current halachic leadership to a full Sanhedrin\", is to follow these guidelines: absolute adherence to traditional Rabbinic authorities and procedure; caution and conservatism; independence from any other organization; scholarship; and an open dialog with the Torah sages and current halachic leadership (with the eventual goal of their participation). On their forum it was put this way, \"the [new] Sanhedrin should hold no surprises. It should be as comfortable as opening a Gemara [Talmud] or as familiar as reading the Shulchan Arukh. It should be the embodiment of Judaism as we know it today.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 90], "content_span": [91, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current Sanhedrin's view of government\nThe new Sanhedrin's website portrays the Sanhedrin as a form of Rabbinic Parliament, part of a bicameral system that they claim reflects traditional Jewish government. They claim that this model has influenced the organizational structure of many Western European legislatures. They describe the roles of an upper and lower house:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current Sanhedrin's view of government\nThe Sanhedrin would function as an equal legislative body to a democratically elected body, but it would also function as a supreme judicial body with regard to interpreting basic law, or what they call a \"Torah Constitution\". It appears that this structure in the Sanhedrin context implies a democracy functioning within a Torah Constitution. From an Israeli point of view this implies adding a second house to the Legislature, changing the Knesset electoral system from nationwide Proportional Representation to First-past-the-Post voting, and declaring a Basic Law requiring Israeli civil law to function within Jewish law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 80], "content_span": [81, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current Sanhedrin's view of government, Torah constitution\nThis agenda requires a focus on efforts to institute a theocratic or critocratic system of government in which \"the authority of government depends on Jewish law\", so that secular government institutions and laws would be subordinate to, and function within, Jewish law as determined by the Sanhedrin. The Sanhedrin has declared itself to have authority to veto democratically enacted laws which it determines are contrary to the laws of Torah. It has made this very clear in, among other pronouncements, its \"Decision of the Sanhedrin concerning the State Elections\". The Sanhedrin announced that it is seeking a state in which any matters contrary to what Jewish law defines are \"issues that cannot be decided by vote\":", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 822]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current Sanhedrin's view of government, Torah constitution\nTorah \"Basic Law\": Laws which are contrary to the laws of the Torah are not laws of the Jewish people, and therefore they are invalid. Any law which is contrary to the laws of Torah, legislated by the \"Knesset\" (including legislated amendments) or interpreted as such by judicial sources is a disqualified law. The authority to decide in these matters has been unconditionally expropriated by the central religious court based on the Torah (Bible) [ the Sanhedrin].", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current Sanhedrin's view of government, Torah constitution\nIn an exercise of its claim to authority over \"matters concerning the Land of Israel\", the Sanhendrin has issued a series of decisions declaring the Israeli pullout from Gaza invalid. In a statement, the Sanhedrin prohibited Jews from cooperating with the Government, saying: \"The Prime Minister's program of uprooting stands in direct contradiction to the Torah of Israel\", \"the decision of this government\u00a0... is null and void\", \"No Jew is permitted to cooperate\" and \"Any Jew \u2013 including a soldier or policeman \u2013 who supports the uprooting\u00a0... transgresses a large number of Torah commandments.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current Sanhedrin's view of government, Torah constitution\nCommenting on the war against Hizbollah in August 2006, the new Sanhedrin also claimed that it is the only authorized national institution to deal with the legal aspects of warfare and to give policy directives to the State concerning warfare. It claims that enacting legislation concerning warfare always has been a distinguishing feature of the historical Sanhedrin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 100], "content_span": [101, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current attempted Sanhedrin's actions\nA great deal of discussion on the Sanhedrin forum appears to indicate that the new Sanhedrin is currently taken up with philosophical discussions about the theory of Jewish Law. The point is repeatedly made that the Sanhedrin \"must solve many complex halakhic issues\" before it can begin to make any statement or decision in terms of Jewish law. It claims its projects are \"coordinated in complete consultation with the Gedolei Hador (leading halachic authorities of the generation) as well as with the Israeli Government Authorities, academics and professionals....", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0023-0001", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, The current attempted Sanhedrin's actions\nThe Sanhedrin Initiative seeks to empower Jews to perform national mitzvot that thanks to technological advances and/or sociological developments are currently or imminently in the realm of the possible. The Initiative is staffed by accomplished scholars and academics striving to promote dignified Jewish freedom of religious expression which is consistent with the values of Western democracy. The Sanhedrin Initiative adheres to the criteria of halakha (Jewish law), expertise, amenity and peace in... all its... projects.\" The Hebrew version adds that it \"has no connection with extremist groups, right wing political parties, or those who disregard Jewish law.\" Events as portrayed by the media, however, have not always fit this picture:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 823]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy\nAccording to their website, they explain that they do not seek controversy. Their spokesman said, \"The rebirth of the Sanhedrin is a slow, ongoing process. Although it makes headlines and many like to highlight its controversy, it is in truth a humble project by rabbis from all sides of the Torah world joining together simply to fulfill a Torah commandment. Rather than a source of religious division, G-d forbid, it is a vehicle to bring about Jewish unity and civil justice, to help repair some of the deepest rifts in our society, and to provide an active, exemplary and unified Torah leadership so lacking in our times.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy\nWhile not actually creating division among the different Jewish groups, the new Sanhedrin has generated a great deal of debate about its purpose and potential. While most Jews see the new Sanhedrin as an attempt by a fringe group to re-establish the Temple, some have seen it as a potential vehicle to champion a specific cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 49], "content_span": [50, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the National Religious camp\nThe National Religious camp took great interest in the new Sanhedrin with the hope that it may be useful in preventing the disengagement from Gaza. The Arutz-7 news service ran approximately 30 articles covering the actions of the new Sanhedrin in a positive light. The new Sanhedrin came out with several strongly worded, yet muted, rulings against \"disengagement\". They strongly disagreed with the government action, advocated non-violent protests, but fell short of condoning any form of stronger protest to prevent expulsion from Gaza or Hebron as had been hoped for by some members of the National Religious camp. Coverage of the new Sanhedrin since \"disengagement\" by the Arutz-7 news service has been almost non-existent since that event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 850]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the National Religious camp\nDuring the 2006 Israeli elections, the new Sanhedrin was widely expected by the National Religious to fully endorse the political party of Baruch Marzel. Instead the Sanhedrin released a general statement, echoing statements by most of the Hareidi parties, that \"one is obligated to vote, and one must vote for a religious party\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the National Religious camp\nIn 2006, representative leadership of the new Sanhedrin issued a statement against the permissibility of conscientious objection to participation in the war in Lebanon with mixed reactions from the National Religious camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Haredi camp, Haredi Leadership\nWhen Rabbi Yehudah Leib Maimon in 1949 tried to form a Sanhedrin out of the Israeli Chief Rabbinate, leading rabbis of the Haredi world repeatedly voiced their strong opposition in a number of declarations. The Brisker Rav, the Chazon Ish and others were some of the more vocal opponents of that initiative. Rabbi Avraham Yeshayah Karelitz, (the Chazon Ish) quotes the Radvaz that no one is fit to renew the Sanhedrin. He concluded that any discussion of the topic in this \"orphaned generation\" is ludicrous.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 111], "content_span": [112, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Haredi camp, Haredi Leadership\nHowever, although there is clear Haredi opposition to the new 'Sanhedrin', unlike the case of Rabbi Yehudah Leib Maimon's attempt, there has been no official response by any Haredi leader or Jewish Court (Beit Din) to this 'Sanhedrin'. The 'Sanhedrin' itself claims that the current attempt is very different from the previous attempt and that leading sages like Rabbi Yosef Sholom Eliashiv, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, Rabbi Moshe Halberstam, and Rabbi Zalman Nechemia Goldberg, have expressed support for, and consented to, the renewal of Semikhah. To date, none of these Rabbis have commented on these claims. It has been met, in public at least, by silence. The new Sanhedrin itself and its supporters claim that it proves there is quiet support. The Haredi community however interprets this to mean that the new Sanhedrin is simply another fringe group not worthy of comment, or even a fabrication.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 111], "content_span": [112, 1007]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Haredi camp, Haredi community and media\nThe lack of response by the leadership has given pause, but has generally reinforced the feeling in the Haredi world that the 'Sanhedrin' is a complete non-issue, and it is generally ignored by the Haredi press. It is considered a fringe group and is considered unrelated to the Haredi community.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 120], "content_span": [121, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Haredi camp, Haredi community and media\nThe members of the new Sanhedrin are not considered as belonging to the Haredi community. The Lithuanian Haredi Yated newspaper, which expresses the official opinion of the Lithuanian Haredi rabbinical establishment, has run several articles condemning Rabbi Yisrael Ariel and his 'Temple Institute' using the expression \"poisonous opinions\". It appears, however, that this opinion is not shared by all the Haredi communities. The Yated has also run articles condemning Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, referring to strongly worded comments made by Rabbi Elazar Shach in 1989. It is clear that Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz' untraditional and 'university oriented' approach is at odds with the Haredi approach. While not all have generated such controversy, and some members like Rabbi Yoel Schwartz are generally recognized as scholars within the Haredi community, they are generally unknown figures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 120], "content_span": [121, 1005]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Haredi camp, Haredi community and media\nIn addition, the new Sanhedrin is seen as identifying with the extreme-right factions of the National Religious movement because some of its members ascended to a portion of the Temple Mount. While there is disagreement between various orthodox groups on this point, and Maimonides and the Radbaz ascended to the Temple Mount, modern Haredi legal opinions as well as many National-Religious authorities, including the Israeli Chief Rabbinate, do not allow this. As Yated Neeman writes, \"all halachic authorities categorically forbid it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 120], "content_span": [121, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Haredi camp, Conclusion\nAlthough the new Sanhedrin claims that it is in touch and even coordinating with some Haredi leaders, no basis to support these claims can be found. The overriding response to the new Sanhedrin by the Haredi community has been driven by the fact that leadership of the new Sanhedrin is unknown or controversial, and the decisions of the new Sanhedrin are perceived as identifying with the extreme wings of the National Religious community. The Haredi community tends to simply ignore the new Sanhedrin or ridicule it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 104], "content_span": [105, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, Yemenite opinion\nRabbi Yosef Qafih, former Chief Rabbi of Yemen, wrote in his commentary to the Mishnah tractate Sanhedrin that it would be a very good thing to reinstate the Sanhedrin in our days. However, he held, according to the position of the Rambam, that this could only be done by assembling all leading Torah scholars physically together at one time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Kahanist camp\nRabbi Nachman Kahane is a leading member of the new Sanhedrin. His brother Rabbi Meir Kahane was widely known for his outspoken political views. Rabbi Nachman Kahane, a graduate of Yeshivat Mir, is not known for his political views and is generally acknowledged to be an accomplished Torah scholar by the Mizrachi (Religious Zionism) and Haredi communities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the Kahanist camp\nThe new Sanhedrin is often mentioned on political websites run by movements associated with the late Rabbi Meir Kahane, and in general it seems that they support both the concept of the new Sanhedrin, and the possibility of religious government of the State of Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 94], "content_span": [95, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the \"Temple Mount Faithful\" camp\nIn the first year of operation, the new Sanhedrin was involved with discussions about the Temple Mount. It formed a committee to collect opinions as to its exact location. Some of its members ascended to a portion of the Temple mount that was added by Herod and considered by rabbis associated with the Temple Mount Faithful movement to be permitted to Jews. This visit culminated in a declaration that the \"Jewish people should begin collecting supplies for the rebuilding of the Temple\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 109], "content_span": [110, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the \"Temple Mount Faithful\" camp\nSince the acceptance of the position of Nasi by Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, discussion of issues concerning the Temple Mount has greatly diminished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 109], "content_span": [110, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred within the \"Temple Mount Faithful\" camp\nThese early actions by the new Sanhedrin were announced and followed closely by websites associated with the Temple Mount Faithful movement. However, for at least a year since the new Sanhedrin's \"Temple supplies\" declaration, it appears that no additional material or discussions concerning the new Sanhedrin have been added to these websites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 109], "content_span": [110, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred among non-Jews, especially Evangelical Protestants\nSome Christians, like evangelist Hal Lindsey see the reinstated Sanhedrin as good news, believing that the Sanhedrin would be responsible for the rebuilding of the Temple, which would eventually be desecrated by the false Messiah during the end times and inhabited by the true Messiah during the period of Christian eschatology referred to as the Millennial Reign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 120], "content_span": [121, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred among non-Jews, especially Evangelical Protestants\nThe Sanhedrin has also selected a group of non-Jewish advisors, scholars and teachers from the Noahide movement - including Vendyl Jones, to form a High Council of Noahides responsible for outreach education from within the non-Jewish world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 120], "content_span": [121, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179574-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 attempt to revive the Sanhedrin, Controversy, The debate stirred among non-Jews, especially Evangelical Protestants\nChristian apocalyptic and eschatalogical claims about the End Times, the Last Judgment, and the End of the World, have inspired a wide a range of conspiracy theories. Many of these deal with the Antichrist, the foremost figure of worldly evil from the Book of Revelation. This Antichrist is supposed to be a leader who will create a world empire and oppress Christians. The new Sanhedrin and its connection with the Noachide movement have become the subject of speculation by numerous apocalyptic conspiracy theories on the Internet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 120], "content_span": [121, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179575-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 elections in India, Legislative Assembly elections\nElections to the State Legislative Assemblies were held in six Indian states during 2004. Four (Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Orissa and Sikkim) had assembly election simultaneous with the Lok Sabha elections in April\u2013May. In Maharashtra and Arunachal Pradesh elections were held September\u2013October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179575-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 elections in India, Legislative Assembly elections, Andhra Pradesh\nThe elected independents include one member of the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) New Democracy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179576-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 electoral calendar\nThis electoral calendar 2004 lists the national/federal direct elections held in 2004 in the de jure and de facto sovereign states and their dependent territories. Referendums are included, although they are not elections. By-elections are not included.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179577-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 end-of-year rugby union internationals\nThe 2004 end of year tests, also known as the 2004 Autumn Internationals, international rugby union matches that takes place during November/December period between touring teams from the southern hemisphere. These consist of Australia, Argentina, New Zealand, and South Africa and one or more teams from the Six Nations Championship: England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales. South Pacific team also toured the northern hemisphere as well as Tier 2 European sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179577-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 end-of-year rugby union internationals\nMany trophies were contested in this year's series, the main one being the Cook Cup between England and Australia. Australia won the Cook Cup match 21-19 and so won the cup for the first time since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179577-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 end-of-year rugby union internationals\nSouth Africa attempted a grand slam tour but lost to England and Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union\nThe largest expansion of the European Union (EU), in terms of territory, number of states, and population took place on 1 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union\nThe simultaneous accessions concerned the following countries (sometimes referred to as the \"A10\" countries): Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia. Seven of these were part of the former Eastern Bloc (of which three were from the former Soviet Union and four were and still are members of the Central European alliance Visegr\u00e1d Group). Slovenia was a non-aligned country prior to the independence, and it was one of the former republics of Yugoslavia (together sometimes referred to as the \"A8\" countries), and the remaining two were Mediterranean islands and two Members of Commonwealth of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union\nPart of the same wave of enlargement was the accession of Bulgaria and Romania in 2007, who were unable to join in 2004, but, according to the Commission, constitute part of the fifth enlargement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Background\nWith the end of the Second World War in May 1945, Europe found itself divided between a capitalist Western Bloc and a communist Eastern Bloc, as well as Third World neutral countries. The European Economic Community (EEC) was created in 1957 between six countries within the Western Bloc and later expanded to twelve countries across Europe. European communist countries had a looser economic grouping with the USSR known as Comecon. To the south there was a non-aligned communist federated country \u2013 Yugoslavia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Background\nBetween 1989 and 1991, the Cold War between the two superpowers was coming to an end, with the USSR's influence over communist Europe collapsing. As the communist states began their transition to free market democracies, aligning to Euro-Atlantic integration, the question of enlargement into the continent was thrust onto the EEC's agenda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Negotiations\nThe Phare strategy was launched soon after to adapt more the structure of the Central and Eastern European countries (Pays d'Europe Centrale et Orientale (PECO)) to the European Economic Community. One of the major tools of this strategy was the Regional Quality Assurance Program (Programme R\u00e9gional d'Assurance Qualit\u00e9 (PRAQ)) which started in 1993 to help the PECO States implement the New Approach in their economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Negotiations\nThe Acquis Communautaire contained 3,000 directives and some 100,000 pages in the Official Journal of the European Union to be transposed. It demanded a lot of administrative work and immense economic change, and raised major cultural problems\u00a0\u2013 e.g. new legal concepts and language consistency problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 61], "content_span": [62, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Accession\nMalta held a non-binding referendum on 8 March 2003; the narrow Yes-vote prompted a snap election on 12 April 2003 fought on the same question and after which the pro-EU Nationalist Party retained its majority and declared a mandate for accession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Accession\nPoland held a referendum on 7 and 8 June 2003:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Accession\nThe Treaty of Accession 2003 was signed on 16 April 2003, at the Stoa of Attalus in Athens, Greece, between the then-EU members and the ten acceding countries. The text also amended the main EU treaties, including the Qualified Majority Voting of the Council of the European Union. The treaty was ratified on time and entered into force on 1 May 2004 amid ceremonies around Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Accession\nEuropean leaders met in Dublin for fireworks and a flag-raising ceremony at \u00c1ras an Uachtar\u00e1in, the Irish presidential residence. At the same time, citizens across Ireland enjoyed a nationwide celebration styled as the Day of Welcomes. President Romano Prodi took part in celebrations on the Italian-Slovenian border at the divided town of Gorizia/Nova Gorica, at the German-Polish border, the EU flag was raised and Ode to Joy was sung and there was a laser show in Malta among the various other celebrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Accession\nLimerick, Ireland's third largest City, hosted Slovenia as one of ten Cities and Towns to individually welcome the ten accession countries. The then Slovenian Prime Minister Anton Rop was Guest Speaker at a business luncheon hosted by Limerick Chamber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 58], "content_span": [59, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Progress\n1 EU Association Agreement type: Europe Agreement for the states of the Fifth Enlargement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, History, Progress\ns\u00a0\u2013 screening of the chapterfs\u00a0\u2013 finished screeningf\u00a0\u2013 frozen chaptero\u00a0\u2013 open chapterx\u00a0\u2013 closed chapter", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Free movement issues\nAs of May 2011, there are no longer any special restrictions on the free movement of citizens of these new member states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Free movement issues\nWith their original accession to the EU, free movement of people between all 25 states would naturally have applied. However, due to concerns of mass migration from the new members to the old EU-15, some transitional restrictions were put in place. Mobility within the EU-15 (plus Cyprus) and within the new states (minus Cyprus) functioned as normal (although the new states had the right to impose restrictions on travel between them).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0015-0001", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Free movement issues\nBetween the old and new states, transitional restrictions up to 1 May 2011 could be put in place, and EU workers still had a preferential right over non-EU workers in looking for jobs even if restrictions were placed upon their country. No restrictions were placed on Cyprus or Malta. The following restrictions were put in place by each country;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Free movement issues\nDespite the fears, migration within the EU concerns less than 2% of the population. However, the migration did cause controversy in those countries which saw a noticeable influx, creating the image of a \"Polish Plumber\" in the EU, caricaturing the cheap manual labour from A8 countries making an imprint on the rest of the EU. The extent to which E8 immigration generated a lasting public backlash has been debated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Free movement issues\nTen years after the enlargement, a study showed that increases in E8 migrants in Western Europe over the last ten years had been accompanied by a more widespread acknowledgement of the economic benefits of immigration. Following the 2007 enlargement, most countries placed restrictions on the new states, including the most open in 2004 (Ireland and the United Kingdom) with only Sweden, Finland and the 2004 members (minus Malta and Hungary). But by April 2008, these restrictions on the eight members had been dropped by all members except Germany and Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 60], "content_span": [61, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Remaining areas of inclusion\nCyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, and Slovenia became members on 1 May 2004, but some areas of cooperation in the European Union will apply to some of the EU member states at a later date. These are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 68], "content_span": [69, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Cyprus\nSince 1974 Cyprus has been divided between the Greek south (the Republic of Cyprus) and the northern areas under Turkish military occupation (the self-proclaimed Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus). The Republic of Cyprus is recognised as the sole legitimate government by every UN (and EU) member state except Turkey, while the northern occupied area is recognised only by Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Cyprus\nCyprus began talks to join the EU, which provided impetus to solve the dispute. With the agreement of the Annan Plan for Cyprus, it was hoped that the two communities would join the EU together as a single United Cyprus Republic. Turkish Cypriots supported the plan. However, in a referendum on 24 April 2004 the Greek Cypriots rejected the plan. Thus, a week later, the Republic of Cyprus joined the EU with political issues unresolved. Legally, as the northern republic is not recognised by the EU, the entire island is a member of the EU as part of the Republic of Cyprus, though the de facto situation is that the Government is unable to extend its controls into the occupied areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Poland\nAccession of Poland to the European Union took place in May 2004. Poland had been negotiating with the EU since 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Poland\nWith the fall of communism in 1989/1990 in Poland, Poland embarked on a series of reforms and changes in foreign policy, intending to join the EU and NATO. On 19 September 1989 Poland signed the agreement for trade and trade co-operation with the (then) European Community (EC). Polish intention to join the EU was expressed by Polish Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki in his speech in the European Parliament in February 1990 and in June 1991 by Polish Minister of Foreign Affairs Krzysztof Skubiszewski in Sejm (Polish Parliament).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Poland\nOn 19 May 1990 Poland started a procedure to begin negotiations for an association agreement and the negotiations officially began in December 1990. About a year later, on 16 December 1991 the European Union Association Agreement was signed by Poland. The Agreement came into force on 1 February 1994 (its III part on the mutual trade relations came into force earlier on 1 March 1992).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Poland\nAs a result of diplomatic interventions by the central European states of the Visegr\u00e1d group, the European Council decided at its Copenhagen summit in June 1993 that: \"the associate member states from Central and Eastern Europe, if they so wish, will become members of the EU. To achieve this, however, they must fulfil the appropriate conditions.\" Those conditions (known as the Copenhagen criteria, or simply, membership criteria) were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, New member states, Poland\nAt the Luxembourg summit in 1997, the EU accepted the Commission's opinion to invite Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia, Estonia and Cyprus to start talks on their accession to the EU. The negotiation process started on 31 March 1998. Poland finished the accession negotiations in December 2002. Then, the Accession Treaty was signed in Athens on 16 April 2003 (Treaty of Accession 2003). After the ratification of that Treaty in the 2003 Polish European Union membership referendum, Poland and other 9 countries became the members of EU on 1 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 65], "content_span": [66, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Impact\n12 years after the enlargement, the EU is still \"digesting\" the change. The influx of new members has effectively put an end to the Franco-German engine behind the EU, as its relatively newer members, Poland and Sweden, set the policy agenda, for example Eastern Partnership. Despite fears of paralysis, the decision making process has not been hampered by the new membership and if anything the legislative output of the institutions has increased, however justice and home affairs (which operates by unanimity) has suffered. In 2009 the Commission sees the enlargement as a success, however until the enlargement is fully accepted by the public future enlargements may be slow in coming. In 2012 data published by the Guardian shows that that process is complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Impact\nThe internal impact has also been relevant. The arrival of additional members has put an additional stress on the governance of the Institutions, and increased significantly overheads (for example, through the multiplication of official languages). Furthermore, there is a division of staff, since the very same day of the enlargement was chosen to enact an in-depth reform of the Staff Regulation, which was intended to bring significant savings in administrative costs. As a result, employment conditions (career & retirement perspectives) worsened for officials recruited after that date. Since by definition officials of the \"new\" Member States were recruited after the enlargement, these new conditions affected all of them (although they also affect nationals of the former 15 Member States who have been recruited after 1 May 2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 886]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Impact\nBefore the 2004 enlargement, the EU had twelve treaty languages: Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Irish, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and Swedish. However, due to the 2004 enlargement, nine new official languages were added: Polish, Czech, Slovak, Slovene, Hungarian, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian and Maltese.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179578-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 enlargement of the European Union, Impact\nA 2007 study in the journal Post-Soviet Affairs argued that the 2004 enlargement of the EU contributed to the consolidation of democracy in the new member states. In 2009, Freie Universit\u00e4t Berlin political scientist Thomas Risse wrote, \"there is a consensus in the literature on Eastern Europe that the EU membership perspective had a huge anchoring effects for the new democracies.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot\nThe 2004 financial buildings plot was a plan led by Dhiren Barot to attack a number of targets in the U.S. and the United Kingdom which is believed to have been approved by al-Qaeda. The evidence against the plotters consisted of home videos, written notes, and files on computers. At the time of the arrests the group had no funding, vehicles, or access to bomb-making equipment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot\nAll eight suspects pleaded guilty in a British court, Barot was sentenced to 40 years in jail. The trials of seven co-defendants began in April 2007 and in June 2007 these seven were sentenced to a total of 136 years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence\nThe plots which were uncovered were in the form of proposals found on a laptop seized in Pakistan, notebooks and videos found in the possession of the suspects after their arrests, and in deleted files on a hard disk. Although Barot had been under surveillance since 15 June 2004, a counter-terrorism source admitted that there was little or no admissible evidence against him at the time of his arrest on 3 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, Plan to blow up financial buildings in the U.S.\nThe plan was formulated by Barot while he was in New York posing as a student in 2000 and 2001 prior to the 11 September attacks, of which he apparently had no foreknowledge. Barot's targets were the International Monetary Fund and World Bank buildings in Washington, D.C.; the New York Stock Exchange and Citigroup buildings in New York City; and the Prudential headquarters in Newark, New Jersey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 97], "content_span": [98, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, Plan to blow up financial buildings in the U.S.\nHe wrote a series of detailed reports describing the importance of the targets, the outlines of the buildings, and the logistics of mounting an explosive attack. He also visited and filmed them from the street in a series of short clips that were discovered in the middle of a copy of the movie Die Hard. The images of this evidence have been posted on the web.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 97], "content_span": [98, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, Plan to blow up financial buildings in the U.S.\nThe plans appeared to have been shelved after the successful al-Qaeda attacks on those cities on 11 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 97], "content_span": [98, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, Plan to blow up financial buildings in the U.S.\nThere is strong skepticism in several quarters regarding whether any of these plots could have gone ahead without arousing suspicion, or were even superficially viable. For instance, no terrorist bombmakers have succeeded in using commercial gas cylinders to collapse a building.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 97], "content_span": [98, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, \"Gas limos\" project\nThe most detailed plan was to pack three stretch limousines with commercially available gas canisters and park them in an underground carpark (where a truck bomb wouldn't have fit) for the purpose of inflicting \"mass damage and chaos\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, \"Gas limos\" project\nNo targets were given, but there were indications that hotels and mainline train stations were being considered.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, \"Dirty bomb using smoke detectors\" project\nBarot's proposals for his dirty bomb project were inspired by a road accident in France involving a truck carrying 900 smoke detectors, which caused concern over possible exposure to the radio-active material contained in them. Barot formulated a plan involving 10,000 smoke detectors either set on fire or placed on top of an explosive device, and worked out a budget requiring \u00a350,000 for material (\u00a35 for each smoke detector) and \u00a320,000 for storage. Calculations suggest that this would have the volume of four telephone boxes and contain only trace quantities of radioactivity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Plot and evidence, \"Dirty bomb using smoke detectors\" project\nAccording to expert evidence supplied by the prosecution during his trial, it could have contaminated as many as 500 people but was unlikely to have caused any deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 92], "content_span": [93, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Arrests\nA group of fourteen men, called the \"Luton cell\", were arrested in the UK in the Luton area on 3 August 2004. Barot was arrested while having his hair cut in a barber shop in north London. It is believed that the timing of the arrests was driven by the leaking of the identity of Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, an alleged Al Qaeda double agent and computer expert, to The New York Times the previous day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Trial\nOn 17 August 2004, two weeks after the arrests, eight men: Barot, Mohammed Naveed Bhatti, Abdul Aziz Jalil, Omar Abdul Rehman, Junade Feroze, Zia-ul-Haq, Qaisar Shaffi, and Nadeem Tarmohammed, were charged variously with conspiracy to murder; conspiracy to commit a public nuisance by the use of radioactive materials, toxic gases, chemicals and or explosives; and possessing a document or record of information of a kind likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0012-0001", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Trial\nBarot was seen as the leader of the group, identified as the individual called \"Britani\" who \"Osama bin Laden had sent to the United States 'to case potential economic and Jewish targets in New York City' for possible attack.\" Five of the men were released without charge. Matthew Monks was charged with possession of a prohibited weapon, thought to be a Brocock air pistol, and released on bail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Trial\nThe group had no funding, vehicles or bomb-making equipment, however the incriminating documents included reconnaissance plans of the buildings in the U.S., two notebooks containing information on explosives, poisons, chemicals and related matters, and an extract of the Terrorist's Handbook, all classed as \"information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing an act of terrorism\" under the Terrorism Act 2000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Trial, Sentencing\nOn 12 October 2006, Barot pleaded guilty in a UK court to \"conspiring to murder people in terrorist campaigns in Britain and the US\",and on 7 November 2006, he was sentenced to life in prison and told he must serve at least 40 years. The sentence was reduced to 30 years in 2007 on appeal. In 2006, he was reported as being locked-down for 19 hours a day in Belmarsh Prison", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, Trial, Sentencing\nOn 15 June 2007, Jalil, from Luton, was jailed for 26 years, Feroze, from Blackburn, for 22 years. Bhatti, from Harrow and Tarmohamed from Willesden, both in north-west London, were sentenced to 20 years each. Ul Haq, from Paddington, west London, was given 18 years, while Rehman, from Bushey Hertfordshire, and Shaffi, from Willesden, were given 15 years each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 48], "content_span": [49, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, US charges\nOn 12 April 2005, the U.S. authorities brought charges against three of the men, Dhiren Barot (also known as Esa al-Hindi), Nadeem Tarmohamed, and Qaisar Shaffi. The indictment accused Barot of being at a jihad training camp in Afghanistan in 1998 and of doing surveillance of targets in the U.S. between 2000 and 2001 while posing as a student. It accused all three men of conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction to damage and destroy buildings used in interstate and foreign commerce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179579-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 financial buildings plot, US charges\nWhen pressed by reporters on the lack of any allegations of a connection to al Qaeda in the indictment in spite of earlier reports that tied Barot directly to the 11 September 2001 attacks, Deputy Attorney General James Comey said, \"I didn't say there is no connection to al Qaeda. I said we have not alleged a connection to al Qaeda in this indictment.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nThursday, January 1 \u2013 Close to half of the loya jirga boycotted a vote on five disputed articles concerning the Proposed Afghan Constitution, promoting Chairman Subghatullah Mujadidi to call for a two-day adjournment to for negotiations. Advisors from the United Nations (UN) and the United States were present to help mediate between the two sides. The primary controversy concerned whether to have a strong president or a strong parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nFriday, January 2 \u2013 In Kabul, Afghan leaders met privately with U.S. and UN officials, including UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi and U.S. ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, to try to end the impasse over the Proposed Afghan Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSaturday, January 3 \u2013 A rocket exploded in Kabul. There were no casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSunday, January 4 \u2013 The loya jirga adopted the proposed Afghan Constitution by way of consensus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nMonday, January 5 \u2013 North of Qalat, Zabul Province, men kidnapped an Afghan aid worker who was part of a caravan for Shelter For Life. Two local people were shot and injured when they tried to stop the militants. Taliban spokesman Mullah Abdul Hakim Latifi claimed responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nTuesday, January 6 \u2013 In Kandahar, at least sixteen people were killed (six of which were children) and 58 people were wounded when a time bomb hidden in an apple cart exploded 100 yards (91\u00a0m) away from an Afghan military base. The crowd had gathered to investigate another bomb that had gone off 15 minutes earlier and injured a small child. A suspect was caught trying to hide in a nearby home. The blasts occurred moments before a motorcade was about to pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nThursday, January 8 \u2013 In Kandahar, two Afghan National Army soldiers were wounded (one losing a leg) by a bomb that exploded on the roof of a building less than an eighth of a mile from the January 6 incident that killed over a dozen people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nFriday, January 9 \u2013 A rocket hit an army camp in Wana (Pakistan), South Waziristan, Pakistan, killing four Pakistani soldiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSaturday, January 10 \u2013 Interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai announced that he would be a candidate for the election to be held in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSunday, January 11 \u2013 Five Afghan National Army soldiers died and three others were injured when they came under attack in Kandahar Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nMonday, January 12 \u2013 The Afghan National Field Hockey Team arrived in Peshawar, Pakistan to play six matches over ten days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nTuesday, January 13 \u2013 Afghanistan released 100 Pakistani prisoners to reciprocate a similar gesture by Pakistan only days earlier. The prisoners had been suspected of fighting for the Taliban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nWednesday, January 14 \u2013 About a dozen rockets were fired at the U.S. base near the Khost airport in Afghanistan. There were no casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nThursday, January 15 \u2013 Outgoing U.N. envoy to Afghanistan, Lakhdar Brahimi, told the United Nations Security Council that elections scheduled for June were unrealistic because factions and extremists continued to threaten the peace process. Brahimi also criticized the Bonn Agreements on the grounds that the Taliban had not been present there. He also criticized western feminists protesting the burqa. He said women would go further in Afghanistan through education, not changes in dress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nFriday, January 16 \u2013 At the request of the United Nations, Chinese police officer Zhang Ming was sent to Afghanistan to help fight drug trafficking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSaturday, January 17 \u2013 Forty rebels ambushed an Afghan convoy in Kandahar Province, provoking a gun fight that left three rebels and two Afghan National Army soldiers dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nMonday, January 19 \u2013 In a raid on a compound in Kabul, Canadian soldiers arrested 16 men and seized drugs, cash and weapons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nTuesday, January 20- Pakistan announced there no longer any bans on goods exported to Afghanistan, with the exception of ghee and cooking oil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nThursday, January 22 \u2013 100 Canadian soldiers arrived in Kabul to start a six-month tour of duty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nFriday, January 23 \u2013 Iran announced that it would place a dozen jailed al-Qaeda suspects on trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSaturday, January 24 \u2013 In Nangarhar Province, at least four children were wounded by a landmine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSunday, January 25 \u2013 Responding to rocket attacks on its air base in the region, U.S. planes bombed several areas in the Narang district, Kunar Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nMonday, January 26 \u2013 With assistance from UNICEF and the World Health Organization, the Afghan Ministry of Health began a three-day vaccination program intended to reach about five million children aged five and under in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nTuesday, January 27 \u2013 A Canadian soldier, Jamie Brendan Murphy, and one Afghan civilian were killed by a suicide bomber in Kabul. Three others soldiers and nine bystanders were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nWednesday, January 28 \u2013 A British soldier was killed and another four were wounded by a car bomb in Kabul. Mullah Hakim Latifi of the Taliban claimed responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nThursday, January 29 \u2013 Eight U.S. soldiers were killed and at least three were wounded when an explosion occurred at a weapons storage area near Ghazni. The explosion may have been caused by a booby-trap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, January\nSaturday, January 31 \u2013 In Deh Rawood, a remote-controlled bomb destroyed a vehicle, killing Mayor Khalif Sadaht and seven of his relatives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSunday, February 1 \u2013 Afghan families began celebrating Eid al-Adha. In Kabul, former king Mohammad Zaher Shah and interim president Hamid Karzai joined for prayers at the downtown palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nMonday, February 2 \u2013 U.S. president George W. Bush submitted a 2005 budget proposal to the U.S. Congress which contained US$1.2 billion in assistance for Afghanistan focusing on education, health, infrastructure and assistance to the Afghan National Army. The budget did not contain funding estimates for U.S. military operations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nTuesday, February 3 \u2013 Interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai appointed Mohammad Yusuf as governor of Farah Province, and Azizullah Afzali as governor of Baghdis province. Karzai also named new police chiefs in five northern and central provinces. Gul Nabi Ahmadzai was appointed chief of training for the Afghan National Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nWednesday, February 4 \u2013 Interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai fired Mohammad Aref Sarwari, the head of national security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nThursday, February 5 \u2013 Police arrested the owner of a taxi used in a suicide bombing that killed a British soldier in Kabul on January 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nFriday, February 6 \u2013 The Indian company Mahindra Defence Systems announced that it would provide 80 SUVs and 40 jeeps to the Afghan National Army over the next six months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSaturday, February 7 \u2013 The Afghan Disarmament, Demobilisation and Re-Integration Program, headed by Milos Krsmanovic, launched a disarmament program in northern Afghanistan aimed at disarming some 2,000 militiamen under the command of generals Abdul Rashid Dostam and Atta Muhammad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSunday, February 8 \u2013 Over 200 Afghan delegates gathered in Kabul for the International Conference on Counter-Narcotics in Afghanistan to discuss law enforcement and alternative livelihoods for poppy farmers and demand reduction. Keynote speakers included executive director of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime Antonio Maria Costa, interim president Hamid Karzai and the United Kingdom's foreign office minister Bill Rammell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0036-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nMonday, February 9 \u2013 Under tight security, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer visited Kabul and met with Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0037-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nTuesday, February 10 \u2013 In Afghanistan, the Kabul Primary Court sentenced to death two former Taliban officials, Zia Ahmad and Abdul Nab, for the murder of aid-worker Bettina Goislard November 16, 2003. The trial took three hours and the judgment took twenty minutes. No witnesses to the crime were present at the trial. The men planned to appeal the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0038-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nWednesday, February 11 \u2013 In Khost, Major Mohammed Isa Khan, the deputy intelligence director of Khost Province, was assassinated in his car by gunman Hafez Elal. Elal tried to escape but was chased down by bodyguards. To avoid capture, he detonated explosives strapped to his body. Taliban spokesman Mohammed Saiful Adel claimed responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0039-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nThursday, February 12 \u2013 Addressing the National Defence College in Islamabad, Pakistan, president Pervez Musharraf admitted that some anti-government activity in Afghanistan was coming from within the Pakistan border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0040-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nFriday, February 13 \u2013 One civilian and old soldier were killed and six people were wounded in an explosion at an Afghan National Army military post near Khost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0041-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSaturday, February 14 \u2013 Near Bala Buluk in Farah Province, four Afghans working for the United Nations de-mining agency were fatally shot in an ambush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0042-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSunday, February 15 \u2013 A Canadian soldier was shot in the face when his rifle went off in his sleeping quarters at Camp Julien in Kabul. He survived and was placed in critical condition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0043-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nMonday, February 16 \u2013 After being open for one day, a driving school in Herat was shut down by local authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0044-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nTuesday, February 17 \u2013 In Kandahar Province, men loyal to two senior government officials exchanged gunfire in a bazaar wounding four people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0045-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nWednesday, February 18 \u2013 Taliban leader Mullah Dadullah warned Afghans not to vote in the election scheduled for June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0046-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nThursday, February 19 \u2013 former Afghan king Mohammed Zahir Shah was released from a hospital in New Delhi, India after two weeks of receiving medical treatment for an intestinal problem. He remained in New Delhi, however, for further observation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0047-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSunday, February 22 \u2013 Before takeoff, a Louis Berger Group helicopter was attacked by gunfire in Thaloqan village in Kandahar Province, killing the Australian pilot and seriously injuring a U.S. woman. Taliban spokesmen took responsibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0048-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nMonday, February 23 \u2013 In Thaloqan village in Kandahar Province, U.S. forces from the 10th Mountain Division assisted hundreds of local police in a search for the gunman who killed an Australian pilot the previous day. Thirty suspected Taliban members were rounded up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0049-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nWednesday, February 25 \u2013 Five Afghan employees of Serai Development Foundation were killed and two injured in an ambush northeast of Kabul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0050-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nThursday, February 26 \u2013 United States Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld spoke in front of a graduating class of 48 Afghan policemen in Kandahar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0051-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nFriday, February 27 \u2013 Two hundred five South Korean medics and military engineers left Seoul for Afghanistan to replace existing troops, and to help with reconstruction projects for six months.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0052-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, February\nSaturday, February 28 \u2013 The United States and Pakistan denied an Iranian radio report that Osama bin Laden had been captured \"a long time ago\" in Pakistan's border region with Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0053-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nMonday, March 1 \u2013 During public ceremonies in Kabul, of Shia Muslims commemorating the slaying of their leader Imam al-Husayn, an Afghan National Army cadet shouted abusive language and spat at a banner, prompting the Shia Muslims to throw stones at the soldiers. The cadets then fired into the crowd, killing one and injuring sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0054-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nTuesday, March 2 \u2013 A voluntary repatriation program for Afghan refugees run by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees resumed after a four-month hiatus following the murder of a staff member in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0055-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nWednesday, March 3 \u2013 At a ceremony held in the Chinese embassy in Kabul, Chinese ambassador to Afghanistan Sun Yuxi and Afghan Irrigation, Water Resources and Environment Minister Mohammad Yusuf Nooristani signed a contract detailing China's assistance in a major irrigation re-build project near the capital. The project was supposed to be finished in early 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0056-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nThursday, March 4 \u2013 Rebels attacked a border post in Maruf district in Kandahar Province, killing seven members of the Afghan National Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0057-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nFriday, March 5 \u2013 U.S.-led forces killed nine rebels in a gun battle in near Orgun, near the border with Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0058-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSaturday, March 6 \u2013 Near Qalat, Zabul Province, Mohammad Isah, a director of the Afghan Red Crescent Society, was murdered by men who stopped his car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0059-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSunday, March 7 \u2013 Afghan government officials announced that Afghan Planning Minister Haji Muhammad Mohaqiq resigned from the cabinet. Mohaqiq said he was fired after announcing his intention to run against interim president Hamid Karzai in the June 2004 elections. Mohaqiq was replaced by Ramazan Bashardoost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0060-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nMonday, March 8 \u2013 Human Rights Watch published Enduring Freedom - Abuses by US Forces in Afghanistan, which criticizes the United States' actions in Afghanistan. The report cites excessive force, arbitrary detentions and the mistreating people in custody as prominent abuses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0061-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nTuesday, March 9 \u2013 In Ankara, Turkey, Afghan Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Mohammad Fahim Khan met with Turkish National Defense Minister Vecdi G\u00f6n\u00fcl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0062-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nWednesday, March 10 \u2013 Three rockets were fired at the U.S. base at the airport near Kandahar. There were no casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0063-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nFriday, March 12 \u2013 Dodsal, a Dubai-based construction company, signed a US$230 million contract to set up a modern petroleum infrastructure in Afghanistan. The deal entails the construction of 700 retail outlets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0064-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSaturday, March 13 \u2013 In Kandahar Province, rebels attacked a government office. In the battle, three rebels and one Afghan National Army soldier were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0065-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSunday, March 14 \u2013 Three rockets landed in Jalalabad. There were no injuries, but windows shattered and some walls crumbled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0066-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nMonday, March 15 \u2013 The United States initiated Operation Mountain Storm, which intended to drive from inside Afghanistan into a region of rebel sanctuaries and meet the Pakistani military driving from the opposite direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0067-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nTuesday, March 16 \u2013 In an iris verification center in Quetta, Pakistan, 174 Afghan refugees were processed. Each refugee older than six years underwent a computerized iris scan to determine if they had previously been checked and received a repatriation package. The refugees then entered Afghanistan through the Chaman border.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0068-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nWednesday, March 17 \u2013 In Kabul, United States Secretary of State Colin Powell met with Afghan interim President Hamid Karzai to discuss security and preparations for the June elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0069-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nThursday, March 18 \u2013 Pakistani forces re-engaged an operation against suspected Al-Qaeda rebels in the villages of Azam Warsak, Shin Warsak and Kaloosha in the mountainous region of South Waziristan, close to the border of Afghanistan. Each side utilized heavy weaponry. 24 rebels and 16 Afghan troops were killed there during a sweep March 15. The U.S. deployed 13,500 soldiers on the Afghan side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0070-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nFriday, March 19 \u2013 A U.S. airstrike on a village in the Charcheno district of Afghanistan killed six civilians and injured seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0071-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSaturday, March 20 \u2013 Taliban forces threatened to kill a Turkish highway engineer kidnapped three weeks earlier, demanding that Afghan authorities release two Taliban militia members who were sentenced to death for the November 16 murder of Bettina Goislard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0072-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSunday, March 21 \u2013 Afghan Civil Aviation Minister Mirwais Sadiq (son of governor Ismail Khan) was killed by a rocket propelled grenade during a gun battle in Herat. Two police officers also died in the attack. Herat military commander Zaher Naib Zada claimed responsibility for the assassination. Zada had earlier been fired by Sadiq's father. Factional fighting between supporters of Zahir Nayebzada and of Ismail Khan involving tanks and guns ensued in the region, leaving more than 100 people dead. Days later, president Hamid Karzai would say Sadiq's death was caused by a \"small accident.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0073-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nMonday, March 22 \u2013 Afghan defense minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim and interior minister Ali Ahmad Jalali arrived in Herat to assess tensions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0074-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nTuesday, March 23 \u2013 In Herat, a public burial took place for Mirwais Sadiq. The body was taken by tank to its resting place on a hill overlooking the city. Thousands were in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0075-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nFriday, March 26 \u2013 The United Nations Security Council unanimously passed Resolution 1536 which extended the mandate of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan for another full year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0076-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSaturday, March 27 \u2013 In Afghanistan, three hand grenades were thrown at homes of Afghan National Army soldiers. No one was injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0077-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nSunday, March 28 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai announced that the national elections scheduled for June would be delayed until September to give the U.N. more time to prepare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0078-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nMonday, March 29 \u2013 In Kandahar, militia corps commander Khan Mohammed oversaw hundreds of his fighters giving up their assault rifles, machine guns, and rockets to the Afghan National Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0079-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nTuesday, March 30 \u2013 In a raid in southern Afghanistan, U.S. troops detained six suspected Taliban members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0080-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, March\nWednesday, March 31 \u2013 In Berlin, Germany, a two-day international conference on reconstruction assistance to Afghanistan began. The conference was attended by 65 countries. Alastair McKechnie, the World Bank country director for Afghanistan, hoped to accumulate during the conference donations of US$27.5 billion (to be granted over seven years). Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai and United States Secretary of State Colin Powell announced that the United States had, on top of the US$1.2 billion already promised, pledged an additional US$1 billion in aid for 2004. Japan promised US$525 million more over the next two years. German Chancellor Gerhard Schr\u00f6der pledged (in addition to US$391 million promised at a conference in Tokyo in 2002) US$391 million over the next four years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0081-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nThursday, April 1 \u2013 Up to fifty New Zealand Special Air Service troops flew to Afghanistan for \"long-range reconnaissance and direct action missions\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0082-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nMonday, April 5 \u2013 In Badakhshan Province, anti-narcotics police destroyed four heroin laboratories and seized 10 tons of opium poppy. There were several arrests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0083-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nWednesday, April 7 \u2013 A three-hour gun battle occurred during a joint Afghan\u2013U.S. operation near Gereshk in Helmand Province, killing one rebel and one Afghan soldier, while wounding one U.S. soldier and one Afghan soldier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0084-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nThursday, April 8 \u2013 Troops under the command of Abdul Rashid Dostum overran Maymana, the capital of Faryab Province. Some reports claim Dostum forces fired into a crowd, killing four. Gov. Enayatullah Enayat was rushed to an airport and evacuated. Afghan National Army troops were flown from Kabul to Faryab province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0085-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nSaturday, April 10 \u2013 In Kod-i-Barq, Balkh Province, an armed encounter took place between forces loyal to Abdul Rashid Dostum and a local Tajik leader Atta Mohammad. The incident took place in the Mazar fertilizer factory residential area and resulted in a few injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0086-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nMonday, April 12 \u2013 In Verona, Italy, nine members of the Afghanistan national football team disappeared during the team's tour of Europe. Italian border police were alerted. They later surfaced in Germany and the Netherlands to claim asylum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0087-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nTuesday, April 13 \u2013 Afghan national security officers, local police and more than 100 Canadian soldiers raided a compound in the Charar Asiab district outside Kabul, arresting six suspects of Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0088-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nWednesday, April 14 \u2013 Taliban members ambushed and shot dead the deputy chief of Mezana District and several of his colleagues in Zabul Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0089-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nThursday, April 15 \u2013 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers began a four-day visit to Afghanistan. He was supposed to visit the Zahre Dasht camp for internally displaced persons (near Kandahar); however, his security could not be insured, and the visit was canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0090-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nFriday, April 16 \u2013 The government of Nangarhar Province banned women from performing or reporting news on television and radio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0091-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nSaturday, April 17 \u2013 United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Ruud Lubbers visited with interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai and other senior Afghan officials in Kabul. Lubbers also visited Istalif and the Bagaram district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0092-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nSunday, April 18 \u2013 The Economic Cooperation Organization opened a two-day conference in Kabul bringing together representatives from ten regional countries. The agenda included ways to improve development and promote trade, and investment opportunities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0093-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nMonday, April 19 \u2013 In a raid on a compound in central Kabul, local police and ISAF forces arrested eight militants with suspected links to Hezb-i-Islami and al-Qaeda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0094-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nTuesday, April 20 \u2013 At the opening in Kabul of a three-day gathering of representatives of international donor countries, interim president Hamid Karzai announced a reduction in the size of his 30-person cabinet and a clarification of the responsibilities of each ministry. However, the plan needed the approved of the current cabinet before taking effect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0095-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nWednesday, April 21 \u2013 In Kabul, local police and ISAF soldiers arrested four suspects, three near Kabul Stadium and one in front of the Finance Ministry. Three detonators were found in the vest of the last suspect. Over a dozen other suspects were taken into custody in a raid on a home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0096-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nThursday, April 22 \u2013 In the Ghazi Abad District of Kunar Province, a bomb exploded on a truck carrying fuel for a U.S. military base, wounding three Afghan men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0097-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nFriday, April 23 \u2013 In a Panjwai District village of Kandahar Province, a group of 50 armed men attacked aid workers of the Central Asia Development Group, setting fire to eight vehicles. No casualties were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0098-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nSaturday, April 24 \u2013 Near the village of Dailanor, in Kandahar Province, rebels ambushed a U.S. military convoy on a road, detonating an explosion that wounded three U.S. Marines, one seriously. The Marines were part of a contingent of 2,000 Marines who arrived in Afghanistan in recent weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0099-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nSunday, April 25 \u2013 Interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai visited Kandahar for the first time since there was an attempt on his life there on September 5, 2002. A man with a grenade near the travel route was apprehended by local police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0100-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nMonday, April 26 \u2013 Top diplomats of NATO's North Atlantic Council visited Kabul for the first time since it took over command of ISAF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0101-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nWednesday, April 28 \u2013 North of Kabul, local police arrested 16 men suspected of plotting to smuggle weapons into the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0102-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nThursday, April 29 \u2013 Afghan Interior Minister Ali Ahmed Jalali announced that Kabul police rescued that week more than 17 children from child kidnappers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0103-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, April\nFriday, April 30 \u2013 At least five Afghan National Army soldiers were killed in an attack by rebels in Panjwai District, Kandahar Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0104-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSunday, May 2 \u2013 About 60 U.S. troops in Afghanistan strayed into Pakistan and searched the village of Alwara Mandi in a night time operation. The incursion was accidental and lasted only 25 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0105-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nMonday, May 3 \u2013 Ten Afghan National Army soldiers were found dead in southern Afghanistan after being abducted in two rebel raids. Five soldiers were found dead on a mountainside in Niamashien district of Kandahar Province; five soldiers were found dead in the Sur Ghogan area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0106-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nWednesday, May 5 \u2013 The U.S. sent 2,000 Marines from the 22nd MEU (SOC) to the area around Tirin Kot, 250 miles southwest of Kabul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0107-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nFriday, May 7 \u2013 Six Afghan National Army soldiers were wounded and two were killed in an attack by Taliban forces on a district building in Shah Wali Kot, just north of Kandahar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0108-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSaturday, May 8 \u2013 Four Afghan election staff workers survived the explosion of their Jeep near Grabawa, Nangarhar Province. Their driver was slightly injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0109-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSunday, May 9 \u2013 Two foreigners (about 30 years old and wearing Afghan clothes) were found dead in a park in west Kabul. One had been beaten with bricks or stones; the other had been strangled. One of the foreigners was carrying a Swiss passport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0110-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nMonday, May 10 \u2013 Interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai visited Herat to negotiated with Ismail Khan regarding disarmament. Karzai traveled via a U.S. C-130 military transport plane and was guarded by U.S. bodyguards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0111-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nTuesday, May 11 \u2013 In Kabul, an ISAF peacekeeper was slightly injured by a rocket fired into the ISAF main base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0112-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nWednesday, May 12 \u2013 In Kabul, a 17-year-old Afghan man was killed and another injured when their motorcycle with three people aboard struck a trailer towed by a Canadian army truck. The motorcycle attempted to pass a convoy of Canadian military vehicles headed for the airport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0113-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSaturday, May 15 \u2013 Near Girishk in Helmand Province, rebels attacked a U.S.-led coalition combat patrol, killing one U.S. soldier (Chief Warrant Officer Bruce E. Price) and wounding two others. Two men were detained; they were allegedly brothers of Mullah Abdul Ghafoor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0114-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nMonday, May 17 \u2013 In Islamabad, Pakistan, finance ministers of Pakistan and Afghanistan and the deputy secretary of the United States Department of Treasury John B. Taylor met to review economic developments in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0115-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nTuesday, May 18 \u2013 In Doha, Qatar, an international two-day forum opened to discuss financial, technical and personnel-related aid to Afghan police. Representatives of governmental organizations from over 20 countries were in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0116-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nWednesday, May 19 \u2013 Between Shindand and Farah, rebels ambushed a police car, and killed two officers returning home from escorting U.N. staff members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0117-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nThursday, May 20 \u2013 A remote-controlled bomb destroyed a vehicle carrying election workers through the Jaji Maydan District of Khost Province, Afghanistan, injuring at least four people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0118-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nFriday, May 21 \u2013 In Tani village, Khost Province, Afghanistan, three civilians were killed and two wounded in a pre-dawn attack by U.S. helicopter gunships. U.S. forces claimed they had been fired on; villagers at the scene said no U.S. patrol had been fired on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0119-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSaturday, May 22 \u2013 The U.S. military named Brig. Gen. Charles Jacoby, deputy operational commander at the Bagram Air Base, to carry out a review of U.S. secretive Afghan. Jacoby was to carry out a top-to-bottom review and deliver a report by mid-June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0120-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSunday, May 23 \u2013 In Kabul, a rocket-propelled grenade killed a Norwegian ISAF peacekeeper and injured another as a four-vehicle convoy was driving back from patrol.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0121-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nTuesday, May 25 \u2013 Pakistani and U.S. military officials met to discuss mechanism to stop recent military incursions from Afghanistan by U.S. forces hunting suspected al-Qaeda and Taliban fugitives in the border region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0122-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nWednesday, May 26 \u2013 Interim Afghan president Hamid Karzai enacted an election law that requires both presidential and parliamentary elections to be held through free, general, secret and direct voting. To win the race, a presidential candidate needs at least 50 percent of the vote. A presidential candidate is required to gather 10,000 voters backing the bid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0123-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nFriday, May 28 \u2013 A remote-controlled explosive wounded five Afghan soldiers on a road in the Sozyan area of Uruzgan Province. Three suspects were later detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0124-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, May\nSaturday, May 29 \u2013 Four U.S.Special Operations Soldiers were killed when their Humvee hit a landmine in the Sorie district of Zabul Province. Three U.S. soldiers were wounded in the blast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 24], "content_span": [25, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0125-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nTuesday, June 1 \u2013 Haji Ajab Shah, the chief of police Jalalabad, was killed and three of his staff injured after a bomb exploded underneath his chair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0126-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nWednesday, June 2 \u2013 Afghans Fasil Ahmad and Besmillah, Belgian Helene de Beir, Norwegian Egil Tynaes, and Dutchman Willem Kwint, all workers for Doctors Without Borders killed in an ambush near Khair Khana in Badghis Province. They were the first ever fatalities for the group. Mullah Abdul Hakim Latifi, a spokesman for the Taliban, took responsibility for the attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0127-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nThursday, June 3 \u2013 Doctors Without Borders suspended its work in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0128-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nFriday, June 4 \u2013 North of Spin Boldak, Afghanistan, militants exchanged fire with U.S.-led forces. There were no reports of injuries, but five militants were detained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0129-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nSaturday, June 5 \u2013 In Paktia Province, a convoy of Afghan and foreign staff preparing for the elections was ambushed. There were no injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0130-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nSunday, June 6 \u2013 U.S. warplanes pounded dozens of insurgents hiding in caves near Tirin Kot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0131-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nMonday, June 7 \u2013 A U.S. soldier was killed and two others wounded after their vehicle hit a landmine in southeastern Afghanistan. They were taken to Kandahar airfield hospital where the one soldier died.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0132-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nTuesday, June 8 \u2013 U.S.-led coalition and Afghan forces completed a week-long operation in the Daychopan District of Zabul Province. Through the course of the operation, 73 rebel fighters were killed and 13 captured. Six Afghan government forces and four coalition soldiers were wounded, and none killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0133-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nWednesday, June 9 \u2013 Eleven Chinese aid workers from Jiangxi province were killed in their compound by a score of armed men in Kunduz, and another six were wounded. Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi stated the Taliban were not involved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0134-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nThursday, June 10 \u2013 In Kunduz Province, police chief Mutaleb Beg announced that two suspects were detained in connection with the previous day's massacre of Chinese aid workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0135-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nFriday, June 11 \u2013 In southeast Afghanistan, eleven rockets were fired at a U.N. convoy carrying government officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0136-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nSaturday, June 12 \u2013 In Shorabak, Kandahar Province, sixty rebels clashed with fifty Afghan National Army troops for over three hours. The rebels seized the outpost building and set it on fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0137-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nSunday, June 13 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai appeared on NBC's Meet the Press and on CNN's Late Edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0138-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nMonday, June 14 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai held a press conferences with U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld beside a 9\u201311 memorial plaque on a section of The Pentagon's western wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0139-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nTuesday, June 15 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai addressed the U.S. Congress in the House Chamber. Karzai also met with U.S. President George W. Bush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0140-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nWednesday, June 16 \u2013 In Kunduz Province, a NATO convey was bombed, killing a driver and three bystanders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0141-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nThursday, June 17 \u2013 Four suspects linked to the previous day's NATO convoy bombing were detained in Kunduz Province by Afghan officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0142-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nFriday, June 18 \u2013 In central Afghanistan, an Afghan interpreter was killed by militant gunfire, while two U.S. soldiers and two New Zealand soldiers were wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0143-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nSunday, June 20 \u2013 Three rocket-propelled grenades were fired at an electoral office near Kabul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0144-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nMonday, June 21 \u2013 In the Surkh Sang area of Arghandab District of Zabul Province, rebels kidnapped and beheaded an Afghan interpreter, prompting U.S.-led coalition forces and Afghan National Army soldiers to clash with the rebels, killing four of them. Naimatullah Khan, corps commander of southeastern Zabul province, initially stated that the Afghan soldiers avenged the interpreter's murder by beheaded the four rebels, but later retracted the statement. Three rebels were arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0145-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nTuesday, June 22 \u2013 Seven rocket-propelled grenades were fired at a U.S. military base in Khost, slightly wounding two soldiers and three Afghan interpreters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0146-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nWednesday, June 23 \u2013 Near Spin Boldak, five members of the Afghan National Army were killed and two others were seriously wounded when their vehicle hit a landmine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0147-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nThursday, June 24 \u2013 In Kunar Province, two U.S. Marines were killed and another was wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0148-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nFriday, June 25 \u2013 In Uruzgan Province rebels kidnapped sixteen passengers of a bus and then killed them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0149-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nSaturday, June 26 \u2013 In Afghanistan, a bomb planted in a minibus carrying workers to voter registration sites from Jalalabad to the Shinwar District exploded, killing two Afghan U.N. election workers, and injuring three. Taliban spokesman Abdul Latif Hakimi claimed responsibility. The driver left the vehicle just before the explosion. He was caught by police shortly thereafter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0150-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nTuesday, June 29 \u2013 Afghan National Army troops in Char Cheno District, Uruzgan Province, killed three rebel fighters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0151-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, June\nWednesday, June 30 \u2013 Bombs hidden in fruit carts exploded at two separate security checkpoints in Jalalabad, killing four and injuring 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0152-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nThursday, July 1 \u2013 Carmela Baranowska, an Australian journalist reported missing in Helmand Province, called her employer to say she was not being held hostage. She had not been seen nor heard from since June 28. At the time she was filming her documentary Taliban Country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0153-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nSaturday, July 3 \u2013 Police in Mazari Sharif made a large drug seizure and then accused regional military commander Mohammad Atta of being involved in the illegal trade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0154-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nSunday, July 4, 2004 \u2013 In a ceremony in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai accepted the Philadelphia Liberty Medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0155-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nMonday, July 5 \u2013 In the Karteh Parwan district of Kabul, local security forces arrested three Americans, including Jonathan Idema, and four Afghans after police raided an illegal jail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0156-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nTuesday, July 6 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai and members of a U.N.-sponsored electoral commission met in Kabul, but failed to finalize on a date for the national and parliamentary elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0157-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nThursday, July 8 \u2013 In Khogyani District, Nangarhar Province, a landmine blast killed a female election worker and wounded at least two other people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0158-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nFriday, July 9 \u2013 The Afghan Joint Electoral Management Body announced that Afghanistan's presidential elections would take place on October 9, 2004, and parliamentary would take place elections in the Spring of 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0159-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nSunday, July 11 \u2013 A bomb exploded in Herat, killing six and injuring 34.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0160-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nWednesday, July 14 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai signed a decree to get full cooperation from militia commanders with the Afghan Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Program (DDR). The decree stated that those who participate in activities against the DDR process will be considered disloyal and rebellious and will face severe punishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0161-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nThursday, July 15 \u2013 The United Nations removed its 17-person staff via helicopter from Ghor Province after its election office there was attacked by protesters. The mob had been protesting a checkpoint conflict that took place in Chaghcharan in which government troops killed two local militiamen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0162-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nFriday, July 16 \u2013 In the Spin Aghbarqa area in Zabul Province, rebels attacked a convoy of U.S. and Afghan National Armysoldiers on patrol along the Kandahar-Kabul highway, triggering a shootout that killed an Afghan Army soldier and an insurgent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0163-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nSaturday, July 17 \u2013 U.S. troops captured Taliban leader Ghulam Mohammed Hotak in Wardak Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0164-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nSunday, July 18 \u2013 An estimate 700 people spent nine hours demonstrating in front of government offices in Maydan Shahr, chanting for the release of Taliban leader Ghulam Mohammed Hotak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0165-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nMonday, July 19 \u2013 In a village in Nawbahar District, Zabul Province, five suspected Taliban were caught by U.S. and Afghan National Army soldiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0166-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nTuesday, July 20 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai promoted three powerful warlords: General Atta Mohammad was made governor of Balkh province; General Khan Mohammad was made police chief of Kandahar Province; General Hazrat Ali was made police chief of Nangarhar Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0167-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nWednesday, July 21 \u2013 Eleven Afghan security personnel were killed in an ambush on their vehicle in Helmand Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0168-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nThursday, July 22 \u2013 Rebels killed a local security chief and 10 of his followers in an ambush in Helmand Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0169-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nFriday, July 23 \u2013 In Kandahar, a remote-controlled bomb exploded a U.S. military convoy passed, wounding between one and four soldier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0170-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nMonday, July 26 \u2013 A bomb exploded near a U.S. military vehicle 35 miles east of Qalat, Zabul Province, injuring three American soldiers traveling in an armored Humvee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0171-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nTuesday, July 27 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai formally declared his candidacy for the October 9 presidential elections. He dropped from his ticket Defense Minister Mohammed Fahim and replaced him with Ahmad Zia Massood. Karzai named Karim Khalili his choice for second vice president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0172-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nWednesday, July 28 \u2013 At a mosque being used as a voter registration site in Ghazni Province, a bomb killed six, including two United Nations staff workers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0173-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nThursday, July 29 \u2013 In Brussels, the European Commission approved an extra \u20ac9 million to help fund the October 7 presidential elections in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0174-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, July\nSaturday, July 31 \u2013 The United States government warned its citizens that the security situation in Afghanistan remained critical and that there was a general threat to all Americans visiting the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0175-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nSunday, August 1 \u2013 A three-day battle began between Afghan National Army and U.S. troops and militants near Zhawara, Khost Province. Coalition ground forces were assisted by U.S. B-1 Lancer, A-10 Thunderbolt II and helicopter gunships. Between 10 and 70 rebels were killed; at least one Afghan soldier was killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0176-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nWednesday, August 4 \u2013 Two Afghans, a field officer and his driver, working for Malteser Germany, a Catholic relief agency, were killed by gunmen in Zormat. As a result of the attack, Malteser suspended its operations in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0177-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nThursday, August 5 \u2013 As part of the Combatant Status Review Tribunals at Guant\u00e1namo Bay, Cuba, with hands bound and feet chained to a metal ring in the floor, an Afghan detainee pleaded for his freedom before the first U.S. military review tribunal partially opened to observers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0178-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nFriday, August 6 \u2013 A convoy of ten U.S. vehicles east of Daychopan, Zabul Province, was ambushed by about ten rebels who fired rocket propelled grenades. One Humvee was struck, injuring five soldiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0179-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nSaturday, August 7 \u2013 Two U.S. soldiers and their Afghan interpreter were killed when their Humvee struck a landmine positioned along their route in Ghazni Province. A third soldier was wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0180-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nTuesday, August 10 \u2013 Afghan election officials released the list of approved presidential candidates for the October 7 election; the list of seventeen included Hamid Karzai, Yunus Qanooni, Mohammed Fahim and Abdullah Abdullah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0181-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nWednesday, August 11 \u2013 Mullah Janan, a Taliban military commander, was killed while leading an ambush on a U.S.-Afghan military convoy in Laghman Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0182-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nThursday, August 12 \u2013 A U.S. UH-60 Black Hawk crashed in Khost Province, killing at least one soldier and injuring fourteen. Four personnel were seriously injured and evacuated to the hospital at Bargam Air Base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0183-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nTuesday, August 17 \u2013 U.S. warplanes bombed the forces of Amanullah near Herat. Khan's forces were engaged in fighting the militia backing Herat Province governor Ismail Khan. Amanullah agreed to a cease-fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0184-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nWednesday, August 18 \u2013 18-year-old Friba Razayee became the first woman ever to compete for Afghanistan at the Olympic Games. She competed in judo against Spain's Cecila Blanco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0185-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nThursday, August 19 \u2013 A bomb exploded in a U.N.-run voter registration building in Farah. Several security personnel were injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0186-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nSaturday, August 21 \u2013 Three people were killed and two others critically wounded when their pickup truck tried to run a checkpoint in Ghazni Province. An infant in the vehicle was unhurt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0187-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nMonday, August 23 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai began a two-day visit in Pakistan, meeting first with Pakistan president Pervez Musharraf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0188-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nFriday, August 27 \u2013 Pashtun warlord Amanullah was brought by Afghan authorities from Herat to Kabul and held under arrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0189-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nSaturday, August 28 \u2013 In Zabul Province, U.S. and Afghan National Army soldiers captured 22 Taliban suspects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0190-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nSunday, August 29 \u2013 Georgia's 16th mountain battalion, commanded by Captain Shavleg Tabatadze, traveled to Germany for a two-week training before they embark on a 100-day mission in Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0191-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nMonday, August 30 \u2013 NATO troops detained a man on the grounds of Kabul Airport and found traces of explosives on his hands. They then turned him over to local authorities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0192-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, August\nTuesday, August 31 \u2013 In Nangahar Province, security forces arrested two men, Afghan Hesmatullah and Pakistani Shahzada Gul, distributing Taliban leaflets calling for a holy war against U.S.-led coalition forces and the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0193-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nWednesday, September 1 \u2013 The Asian Development Bank pledged US$600 million to Afghanistan over the next three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0194-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nThursday, September 2 \u2013 Afghan Foreign Minister Abdullah visited India and met with Natwar Singh and prime minister Manmohan Singh to discuss a US$400 million Indian aid package for Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0195-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nFriday, September 3 \u2013 A jeep packed with explosives detonated at a roadside in the Jaikhoja area of Kandahar, killing one person and seriously injuring two others in a passing taxi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0196-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nTuesday, September 7 \u2013 In northern Afghanistan, ten humanitarian workers were injured in an attack by demonstrators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0197-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nThursday, September 9 \u2013 In Uruzgan Province, rebels attacked a U.S. patrol vehicle with rocket-propelled grenades, machine guns and small arms fire, wounding one soldier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0198-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nSaturday, September 11 \u2013 In Herat, dozens of supporters of Ismail Khan gathered outside his home after he was replaced as provincial governor, and began chanting slogans against the United States and Afghan president Hamid Karzai. Shots were fired by U.S. and Afghan security forces after their convoy was pelted with stones. Two people were killed, four injured and four arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0199-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nSunday, September 12 \u2013 In Herat, hundreds of demonstrators, protesting the previous day's dismissal of Ismail Khan, ransacked and set fires at United Nations offices. At least seven people died and dozens more wounded. All US Special Forces fled the city. All violence was suppressed by 3rd and later 2d Brigade of the Central Corps (ANA) led by New Hampshire Army National Guard advisors (later reprimanded for their success by the U.S. Army). Follow on forces were able to enlarge the central defensive bubble in the city that disrupted the \"riots\". Many of these riots were led by external national forces. Later in the day, Khan appeared on television and called for his supporters to exercise restraint. Interim president Hamid Karzai chose Mohammed Khair Khuwa to replace Kahn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 814]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0200-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nMonday, September 13 \u2013 The United Nations withdrew dozens of its staff members from Herat, Afghanistan a day after mobs ransacked its offices.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0201-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nTuesday, September 14 \u2013 In Herat, Afghanistan, two men in a four-wheel-drive vehicle shot and killed a militiaman loyal to his ousted predecessor, Ismail Khan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0202-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nWednesday, September 15 \u2013 In Kabul, an Afghan court sentenced Jonathan Idema and Brent Bennett to 10-year prison terms and Edward Caraballo to an 8-year term for participating in torture, kidnapping and running a private jail. Their four Afghan accomplices were sentenced to between one and five years in prison.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0203-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nThursday, September 16 \u2013 A rocket fired on but missed a helicopter carrying Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai as it prepared for landing in Gardez, where Karzai planned to open a school. The helicopter returned to Kabul without touching down in Gardez. Police later captured three suspects who confessed to firing the rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0204-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nFriday, September 17 \u2013 Afghan National Army forces searching for three missing elders kidnapped from the Maruf district in Kandahar Province, found two of them dead and the third wounded. All had multiple gunshot wounds. The survivor had injuries to the throat and stomach and was taken to the U.S. military base in Kandahar. The elders had been working to register voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0205-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nSaturday, September 18 \u2013 In Helmand Province, four gunmen riding two motorcycles ambushed the car of a militia commander, killing him and wounding two of his guards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0206-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nSunday, September 19 \u2013 Afghanistan held an auction of capital notes to allow its banks to determine a market-driven interest rate. The two winning banks were Millie Bank and Pashtany Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0207-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nMonday, September 20 \u2013 Afghan interim vice-president Nehmatullah Shahrani survived an assassination attempt when a remote controlled roadside bomb exploded next to his convoy in Kunduz Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0208-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nTuesday, September 21 \u2013 In New York, Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai attended the opening of the United Nations General Assembly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0209-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nWednesday, September 22 \u2013 About 130 paratroopers the U.S. 82nd Airborne Division left from Fort Bragg, North Carolina to Afghanistan to help provide security for the October elections there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0210-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nFriday, September 24 \u2013 The Asian Development Bank approved a loan to Afghanistan of US$5 million and a guarantee of US$10 million to provide political risk guarantees to eligible investors and financiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0211-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nSaturday, September 25 \u2013 former Camp X-Ray prisoner and Taliban leader Maulvi Abdul Ghaffar was among three rebel fighters killed during a raid in Char Cheno District, Uruzgan Province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0212-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nSunday, September 26 \u2013 Iran announced that since March 20, more than 30,000 Afghan refugees had left the city of Isfahan to return to their country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0213-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nTuesday, September 28 \u2013 Afghan General Abdul Rashid Dostum held a rally in Shiberghan for his presidential campaign bid and outlined his campaign issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0214-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nWednesday, September 29 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai inaugurated the Afghan National Museum in Kabul.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0215-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, September\nThursday, September 30 \u2013 In Orgun, two Afghan National Army soldiers were killed and seven wounded in a land mine attack on their convoy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0216-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nFriday, October 1 \u2013 In Pakistan, hundreds of Afghan refugees, including women, lined up at special voting registration centers near Quetta and Peshawar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0217-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nSaturday, October 2 \u2013 Afghan presidential candidate Yunus Qanuni held a rally in Kandahar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0218-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nSunday, October 3 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai visited Germany, where he met Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer and accepted a prize from the private organization Werkstatt Deutschland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0219-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nTuesday, October 5 \u2013 Afghan interim president Hamid Karzai flew to Ghazni to speak to a crowd of about 5,000. While airborne, his helicopter was escorted by a U.S. AH-64 Apache and an A-10 Thunderbolt II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0220-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nWednesday, October 6 \u2013 In Badakhshan Province, an assassination attempt on vice-presidential candidate Ahmed Zia Massood killed one person and injured five others, including the former provincial governor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0221-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nThursday, October 7 \u2013 In Moscow, Russia, Russia and France signed an agreement on military transits to Afghanistan via Russia. Signing for Russia was Sergei Lavrov, Minister of Foreign Affairs, and for France, Jean Cadet, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0222-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nFriday, October 8 \u2013 In London, England, the trial began for former Afghan warlord Zardad Khan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0223-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nSaturday, October 9 \u2013 In Afghanistan's first-ever direct presidential election, Hamid Karzai was elected President of Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0224-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nMonday, October 11 \u2013 The Czech Republic voted to donate surplus weaponry (including submachine gun ammunition, hand grenades and signal rockets) to the Afghan National Army.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179580-0225-0000", "contents": "2004 in Afghanistan, October\nTuesday, October 12 \u2013 In Vienna, Austria, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime hosted a meeting of United Nations officials and international policy-makers to address the heroin problem arising from Afghanistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 28], "content_span": [29, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179581-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Albania\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Republic of Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179582-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in American soccer\nThe 2004 season was the 92nd year of competitive soccer in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179582-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in American soccer, National team\nThe home team or the team that is designated as the home team is listed in the left column; the away team is in the right column.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 38], "content_span": [39, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179583-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in American television\nThe following is a list of events affecting American television during 2004. Events listed include television series debuts, finales, cancellations, and new channel initiations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179585-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Australia\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179585-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Australia, Events, June\nDefence Minister Robert Hill admits that his office knew of allegations of abuse of Iraqi prisoners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179586-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Australian literature\nThis article presents a list of the historical events and publications of Australian literature during 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179586-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Australian literature, Awards and honours\nNote: these awards were presented in the year in question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179587-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Australian television, Programming Changes, Changes to network affiliation\nThis is a list of programs which made their premiere on an Australian television network that had previously premiered on another Australian television network. The networks involved in the switch of allegiances are predominantly both free-to-air networks or both subscription television networks. Programs that have their free-to-air/subscription television premiere, after previously premiering on the opposite platform (free-to air to subscription/subscription to free-to air) are not included. In some cases, programs may still air on the original television network. This occurs predominantly with programs shared between subscription television networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179587-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Australian television, Programming Changes, Subscription premieres\nThis is a list of programs which made their premiere on Australian subscription television that had previously premiered on Australian free-to-air television. Programs may still air on the original free-to-air television network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179588-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Bangladesh\n2004 (MMIV) was a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2004th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 4th year of the 3rd\u00a0millennium, the 4th year of the 21st\u00a0century, and the 5th year of the 2000s decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179588-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Bangladesh\nThe year 2004 was the 33rd year after the independence of Bangladesh. It was the fourth year of the third term of the government of Khaleda Zia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179588-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Bangladesh, Climate, Flood\nFollowing early flooding in the northwest districts of Bangladesh in April, monsoon flood intensified in early July leading to the destruction of the rice crop in that region just before it was harvested. Water persisted in these regions for 3 to 4 weeks whilst gradually draining southwards, severely flooding most of Central Bangladesh. The high water level and widest extent of the flood was reached on 24 July. In total 39 out of 64 districts and 36\u00a0million people were affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179588-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 in Bangladesh, Climate, Flood\nThe water had receded in most places by mid-August, but in mid-September, a localised depression caused continuous torrential rain and high winds over a six-day period, bringing renewed flooding to many parts of Central Bangladesh, but also flooding areas never normally flooded by the rivers, including Dhaka and other urban areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179588-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Bangladesh, Economy\nNote: For the year 2004 average official exchange rate for BDT was 59.51 per US$.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179589-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Belgian television\nThis is a list of Belgian television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179590-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Belgium\nThis article details events occurring in the year 2004 in Belgium. Major events include a gas explosion in Ghislenghien, which killed 24 people, and the restructuring of the Vlaams Blok political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179591-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2004 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 103rd season of competitive football in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Relegation\nThe four worst placed teams, which are Crici\u00fama, Guarani, Vit\u00f3ria and Gr\u00eamio, were relegated to the following year's second level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B, Promotion\nThe two best placed teams in the final stage of the competition, which are Brasiliense and Fortaleza, were promoted to the following year's first level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B, Relegation\nThe six worst placed teams, which are Am\u00e9rica-RN, Remo, Am\u00e9rica-MG, Joinville, Mogi Mirim and Londrina, were relegated to the following year's third level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nUni\u00e3o Barbarense declared as the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C, Promotion\nThe two best placed teams in the final stage of the competition, which are Uni\u00e3o Barbarense and Gama, were promoted to the following year's second level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Copa do Brasil\nThe Copa do Brasil final was played between Santo Andr\u00e9 and Flamengo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Copa do Brasil\nSanto Andr\u00e9 declared as the cup champions by aggregate score of 4-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Brazil national team\nThe following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 48], "content_span": [49, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Women's football, Brazil women's national football team\nThe following table lists all the games played by the Brazil women's national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179593-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian football, Women's football, Brazil women's national football team\nThe Brazil women's national football team competed in the following competitions in 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 83], "content_span": [84, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179594-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Brazilian television\nThis is a list of Brazilian television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music\nThis article gives details on 2004 in music in the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Summary\nMichelle McManus, the winner of the second British series of Pop Idol, enjoyed success with her first single release, which topped the charts. Second and third place contestants Mark Rhodes and Sam Nixon formed a duo, whose debut single was a cover of \"With a Little Help from My Friends\", which also reached No.1. On 9 March Westlife became a four-piece after Brian McFadden decided to leave the band.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Summary\nNumerous acts released greatest hits albums, with Robbie Williams' being most successful, selling over one million copies in eight weeks. Popular artists from the 1980s made successful returns, including Duran Duran, The Cure, Depeche Mode and Morrissey, all of whom released top ten singles. After appearing in the reality television show I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here!, Peter Andre re-released his 1996 hit single Mysterious Girl, this time getting to the top spot. Twenty years after the original, the Band Aid single Do They Know It's Christmas? was re-recorded and was the best-selling single of the year, holding the Christmas number 1 spot. The song sold over a million copies in a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Summary\nThe most successful British pop acts of 2004 were McFly whose first two debut singles entered at number one, and Natasha Bedingfield, who topped the singles, album and download charts. The 2004 Children in Need single was \"I'll Stand by You\". Former S Club star Rachel Stevens continued with her solo career, reaching the top 3 with the Sport Relief track \"Some Girls\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Summary\nIn the classical world, Karl Jenkins continued success as a composer was rewarded by a 10-year recording deal with EMI. His choral work, In These Stones Horizons Sing, was commissioned for the opening of the Wales Millennium Centre in November 2004. Newly appointed Master of the Queen's Music Sir Peter Maxwell Davies continued his series of Naxos Quartets with nos. 4 and 5. Veteran composer Harrison Birtwistle produced a new opera, The Io Passion, which had its premi\u00e8re in June at Snape Maltings as part of the Aldeburgh Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Music awards, Mercury Music Prize\nThe 2004 Mercury Music Prize was awarded to Franz Ferdinand \u2013 Franz Ferdinand", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Music awards, Popjustice \u00a320 Music Prize\nThe 2004 Popjustice \u00a320 Music Prize was awarded to Rachel Stevens for her song Some Girls from the album Funky Dory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 63], "content_span": [64, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179595-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music, Music awards, The Record of the Year\nThe Record of the Year was awarded to \"Thunderbirds\" by Busted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 59], "content_span": [60, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts\nThis article gives details of the official charts from 2004. The year was special for many successful artists, including Eminem, Britney Spears, Scissor Sisters, Usher, Natasha Bedingfield, Jamelia, Franz Ferdinand, Green Day and The Streets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nThe year started with the 2003 Christmas number one single topping the first chart of the year. This was followed by Michelle McManus, the winner of the second British series of Pop Idol with her first single release it topped the charts for 3 weeks. Second and third place contestants Mark Rhodes and Sam Nixon formed a duo, whose debut single was a cover of the Beatles song, \"With a Little Help from My Friends\", which also reached the No.1 spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nOn 9 March Westlife became a four piece after Brian McFadden decided to leave the band. His final single with the band was \"Obvious\" which peaked at No.3 in February; the remaining members Shane Filan, Mark Feehily, Nicky Byrne, and Kian Egan, went on to further success without McFadden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nIn April, Eamon achieved the number one spot with a song with more profanities than any other hit single; it stayed at number one for 4 weeks. In another first the answer song by Frankee replaced the original single at the top of the charts and stayed there for 3 weeks despite selling less than half as many copies as Eamon. Both artists released follow-up songs but neither performed well, relegating the pair to one-hit wonder status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nA new version of \"Alltogethernow\" by The Farm was released to mark the Euro 2004 football tournament \u2013 it reached number five on 13 June with Come On England, a remake of Come On Eileen (Dexys Midnight Runners) by 4-4-2, reaching number two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nThe UK Official Download Chart began at the start of September, the first number 1 being Flying Without Wings by Westlife. U2 released their single Vertigo on music download services weeks before it came out on CD. It stayed at number one for 8 non-consecutive weeks on the download chart. While illegal sharing of music over the Internet had been popular for a number of years the music industry started creating new, pay-per-download services, which were very well received. Charting companies soon took notice and various download charts appeared on radio and television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0005-0001", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nThe use and increased popularity of iPods also helped to promote download services, and Apple's online iTunes Music Store launched in the UK in June, selling over 450,000 songs in the first week. Downloads began to be introduced into the main singles chart in 2005, although not fully until the beginning of 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nAlbums by Dido, Katie Melua and Norah Jones dominated the first three months of the year. In May and June, Keane twice returned to the top of the charts with their album Hopes and Fears. The Scissor Sisters, The Streets and Maroon 5 also enjoyed great success with their albums. Numerous acts released greatest hits albums with Robbie Williams' being most successful, selling over one million copies in eight weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nPopular artists from the 1980s made successful returns with Duran Duran, The Cure, Depeche Mode and Morrissey releasing top ten singles. After appearing in the reality television show I'm a Celebrity, Get Me Out of Here!, Peter Andre re-released his 1996 hit single Mysterious Girl, this time getting to the top spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nIn September and October Eric Prydz \"Call on me\" stayed at number one for five non-consecutive weeks and staying in the chart for a further 14 weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nIn October the music industry mourned the loss of John Peel, the Radio 1 DJ famous for championing new bands and musical styles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\n20 years after the original, the Band Aid single Do They Know It's Christmas? was re-recorded and became a massive success, easily selling the most singles of the year, and holding the Christmas number 1 spot. The second week of release saw the song sell almost as many as the first, pushing it to half a million in less than 14 days. This was all additional to the number of legal downloads as the song topped that chart as well. The song had sold over a million copies in a month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nArtists who narrowly missed out on number ones were Kelis whose Milkshake peaked at number two for 4 weeks in January and February and \"Trick Me\" in June. Other acts were Anastacia with Left Outside Alone who peaked at number three but was the seventh best selling of the year staying on the chart for 18 weeks. Also the long-awaited return of Destiny's Child came in November when they peaked at number two for 4 weeks with Lose My Breath the first single released of their album \"Destiny Fulfilled\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nOn the issue date of 7 November, the top five consisted of all American performers/acts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nThis broke a record in UK chart history. The No. 6 was also held by an American act, Ja Rule featuring. Ashanti & R. Kelly with Wonderful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179596-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 in British music charts, Summary of UK chart activity\nThe most successful acts of 2004 were McFly whose first two debut singles entered at number one and they had two other top five hits later in the year. Natasha Bedingfield topped the singles, album and download charts. Britney Spears and Usher returned to the charts and had two number ones each (Toxic and Yeah! respectively) and another top five hits each. Girls Aloud also had big hits with songs including \"The Show\", \"Love Machine\" which both peaked at No. 2, and the 2004 Children in Need No. 1 single \"I'll Stand by You\". Former S Club star Rachel Stevens continued on with her solo career in this year too, reaching the top 3 once again with Sport Relief track \"Some Girls\" and a cover of Andrea True Connection's \"More, More, More\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179597-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in British radio\nThis is a list of events in British radio during 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179598-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in British television\nThis is a list of British television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179601-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Rage Championships\nThe year 2004 is the 3rd year in the history of the Cage Rage Championships, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United Kingdom. In 2004 Cage Rage Championships held 5 events, Cage Rage 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179601-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Rage Championships, Cage Rage 5\nCage Rage 5 was an event held on February 15, 2004 at Caesar's Nightclub in Streatham, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179601-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Rage Championships, Cage Rage 6\nCage Rage 6 was an event held on May 23, 2004 at Caesar's Nightclub in Streatham, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179601-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Rage Championships, Cage Rage 7\nCage Rage 7 was an event held on July 10, 2004 at Wembley Conference Centre in London, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179601-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Rage Championships, Cage Rage 8\nCage Rage 8 was an event held on September 11, 2004 at Wembley Conference Centre in London, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179601-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Rage Championships, Cage Rage 9\nCage Rage 9 was an event held on November 27, 2004 at Wembley Conference Centre in London, United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179602-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Warriors\nThe year 2004 is the third year in the history of Cage Warriors, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United Kingdom. In 2004 Cage Rage Championships held 4 events beginning with, Cage Warriors 6: Elimination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179602-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Warriors, Cage Warriors 6: Elimination\nCage Warriors 6: Elimination was an event held on March 7, 2004 in Barnsley, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179602-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Warriors, Cage Warriors 7: Showdown\nCage Warriors 7: Showdown was an event held on May 9, 2004 in Barnsley, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 48], "content_span": [49, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179602-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Warriors, Cage Warriors 8: Brutal Force\nCage Warriors 8: Brutal Force was an event held on September 18, 2004 in Sheffield, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 52], "content_span": [53, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179602-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cage Warriors, Cage Warriors 9: Xtreme Xmas\nCage Warriors 9: Xtreme Xmas was an event held on December 18, 2004 in Sheffield, England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179604-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Canadian television\nThis article highlights notable events occurring in Canadian television in 2004. In 2004, the Fine Living Channel (2004-2009) was introduced in Canada, and Tommy Douglas was named \"The Greatest Canadian\" by CBC, through public voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179605-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Cape Verde\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Cape Verde.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179606-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Chile\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Chile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179608-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Croatian television\nThis is a list of Croatian television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179610-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Danish television\nThis is a list of Danish television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep\nThe year 2004 is the fourth year in the history of Deep, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2004 Deep held 9 events beginning with, Deep: 13th Impact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: 13th Impact\nDeep: 13th Impact was an event held on January 22, 2004 in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 31], "content_span": [32, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: clubDeep Fukuoka: Team Roken Festival\nDeep: clubDeep Fukuoka: Team Roken Festival was an event held on March 20, 2004 at The TNC Broadcast Paveria Hall in Fukuoka, Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: 14th Impact\nDeep: 14th Impact was an event held on April 18, 2004 at The Umeda Stella Hall in Osaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: 15th Impact\nDeep: 15th Impact was an event held on July 3, 2004 at Differ Ariake in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 31], "content_span": [32, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: Chonan Festival\nDeep: Chonan Festival was an event held on October 3, 2004 at Mikawa Town Gymnasium in Mikawa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 35], "content_span": [36, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: clubDeep Toyama: Barbarian Festival 1\nDeep: clubDeep Toyama: Barbarian Festival 1 was an event held on October 24, 2004 at Toyama Event Plaza in Toyama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 57], "content_span": [58, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: 16th Impact\nDeep: 16th Impact was an event held on October 30, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: clubDeep Osaka\nDeep: clubDeep Osaka was an event held on November 28, 2004 at Delfin Arena in Osaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 34], "content_span": [35, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179611-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Deep, Deep: 17th Impact\nDeep: 17th Impact was an event held on December 18, 2004 at Differ Ariake in Tokyo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 31], "content_span": [32, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179613-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Dutch television\nThis is a list of Dutch television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179614-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ecuadorian football\nThe 2004 season is the 82nd season of competitive football in Ecuador.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179614-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ecuadorian football, National teams, Senior team, 2006 FIFA World Cup qualifiers\nEcuador continued their 2006 FIFA World Cup qualifying in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 88], "content_span": [89, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179614-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ecuadorian football, National teams, Senior team, Copa Am\u00e9rica\nEcuador was drawn into Group B with Argentina, Mexico, and Uruguay. They finished 4th in the group and were eliminated from the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179616-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Estonia\nThis article lists events that occurred during 2004 in Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179617-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Estonian television\nThis is a list of Estonian television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179618-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Europe\nThis is a list of 2004 events that occurred in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 69]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179619-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Fighting Network Rings\nThe year 2004 is the tenth year in the history of Fighting Network Rings, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2004 Fighting Network Rings held 4 events beginning with, Rings Holland: World's Greatest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179619-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Fighting Network Rings, Rings Holland: World's Greatest\nRings Holland: World's Greatest was an event held on April 4, 2004 at the Alytus Sports Hall in Alytus, Alytus County, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179619-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Fighting Network Rings, Rings Holland: Two Heroes, One Winner\nRings Holland: Two Heroes, One Winner was an event held on October 3, 2004 at the Alytus Sports Hall in Alytus, Alytus County, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179619-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Fighting Network Rings, Rings Holland: Local Heroes 2\nRings Holland: Local Heroes 2 was an event held on October 30, 2004 at the Alytus Sports Hall in Alytus, Alytus County, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179619-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Fighting Network Rings, Rings Holland: Born Invincible\nRings Holland: Born Invincible was an event held on December 12, 2004 at the Alytus Sports Hall in Alytus, Alytus County, Lithuania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179621-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in French television\nThis is a list of French television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179623-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in German television\nThis is a list of German television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179625-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ghana\n2004 in Ghana details events of note that happened in Ghana in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179625-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ghana, Events, September\nSeptember 2 - Women's Manifesto for Ghana issued in Accra", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 32], "content_span": [33, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179625-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ghana, National holidays\nHolidays in italics are \"special days\", while those in regular type are \"regular holidays\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179625-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ghana, National holidays\nIn addition, several other places observe local holidays, such as the foundation of their town. These are also \"special days.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 32], "content_span": [33, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179627-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Haiti\nThis article is a list of events in the year 2004 in Haiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 73]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179629-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Iceland\nThe following lists events that happened in 2004 in Iceland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179630-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in India\nEvents in the year 2004 in the Republic of India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 63]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179630-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in India, Observances\nThe following events which are observed according to the Hindu calendar were observed on the following dates in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179632-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Iran\nEvents in the year 2004 in the Islamic Republic of Iran.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 69]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179633-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Iraq, Events, August\nAugust 5 \u2013 Marines from 1st Battalion 4th Marines begin battle in Najaf, Iraq. Is created a new flag of country", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 28], "content_span": [29, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179634-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ireland, Sport, Association football\nShelbourne defeated KR Reykjav\u00edk in the first qualifying round on away goals. In the second qualifying round, Shelbourne lost the first leg 3\u20132 away to Hajduk Split, but two late goals in the home leg at Tolka Park meant they became the first Irish team to make it to the third qualifying round. After a 0\u20130 draw with Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a in front of 25,000 fans at Lansdowne Road, the Irish team lost 3\u20130 in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179634-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Ireland, Sport, Association football\nBohemians and Longford Town suffered disappointing first qualifying round defeats to FC Levadia Tallinn and FC Vaduz respectively. Shelbourne entered the first round proper after their Champions League third qualifying round exit, but missed out on a place in the UEFA Cup group stages. After a 2\u20132 draw at Lansdowne Road, Shelbourne lost 0\u20132 in the return leg against French side Lille.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179635-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Irish music\nThis is a summary of the year 2004 in the Irish music industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179635-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Irish music, Music awards, 2004 Meteor Awards\nThe 2004 Meteor Awards were held on\u00a0?? ?, 2004. Below are the winners:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179636-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Irish television\nThe following is a list of events relating to television in Ireland from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179637-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Israel, Events, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent events related to the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict which occurred during 2004 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 52], "content_span": [53, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179637-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Israel, Events, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict, Notable Palestinian militant operations against Israeli targets\nThe most prominent Palestinian militant acts and operations committed against Israeli targets during 2004 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 117], "content_span": [118, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179637-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Israel, Events, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict, Notable Palestinian militant operations against Israeli targets\nThe most prominent Israeli military counter-terrorism operations (military campaigns and military operations) carried out against Palestinian militants during 2004 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 117], "content_span": [118, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179638-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Italian television\nThis is a list of Italian television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179640-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Japan\n2004 was the population \"peak\" of Japan\u2014the last year in which the national population increased.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179642-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Jungle Fight\nThe year 2004 is the second year in the history of Jungle Fight, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Brazil. In 2004 Jungle Fight held 2 events beginning with, Jungle Fight 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179642-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Jungle Fight, Jungle Fight 2\nJungle Fight 2 was an event held on May 15, 2004 at The Tropical Hotel in Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179642-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Jungle Fight, Jungle Fight 3\nJungle Fight 3 was an event held on October 23, 2004 at The Tropical Hotel in Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage\nThe year 2004 is the sixth year in the history of King of the Cage, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United States. In 2004 King of the Cage held 14 events, KOTC 32: Bringing Heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 32: Bringing Heat\nKOTC 32: Bringing Heat was an event held on January 24, 2004 in Miami, Florida, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 33: After Shock\nKOTC 33: After Shock was an event held on February 20, 2004 at the Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 34: Ohio\nKOTC 34: Ohio was an event held on February 28, 2004 at the Canton Memorial Civic Center in Canton, Ohio, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 35: Acoma\nKOTC 35: Acoma was an event held on February 28, 2004 at the Sky City Casino in Acoma, New Mexico, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 36: Albuquerque\nKOTC 36: Albuquerque was an event held on May 15, 2004 at the Sky City Casino in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 37: Unfinished Business\nKOTC 37: Unfinished Business was an event held on June 12, 2004 at the Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 39: Hitmaster\nKOTC 39: Hitmaster was an event held on August 6, 2004 at the Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC: New Mexico\nKOTC: New Mexico was an event held on August 28, 2004 at the Sky City Casino in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 41: Relentless\nKOTC 41: Relentless was an event held on September 29, 2004 at the Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 42: Buckeye Nuts\nKOTC 42: Buckeye Nuts was an event held on October 23, 2004 at the Hara Arena in Dayton, Ohio, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC: Sunland Park\nKOTC: Sunland Park was an event held on October 29, 2004 at the Sunland Park Racetrack & Casino in Sunland Park, New Mexico, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 44: Revenge\nKOTC 44: Revenge was an event held on November 14, 2004 at the Soboba Casino in San Jacinto, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC 45: King of the Cage 45\nKOTC 45: King of the Cage 45 was an event held on November 20, 2004 at the Belterra Casino Resort & Spa in Belterra, Indiana, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 54], "content_span": [55, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179643-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 in King of the Cage, KOTC: Hostile Takeover\nKOTC: Hostile Takeover was an event held on December 4, 2004 at the Sky City Casino in Acoma, New Mexico, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179644-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki\nThe year 2004 is the first year in the history of the Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Poland. In 2004 Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki held 2 events beginning with, KSW I: Konfrontacja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179644-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki, KSW I: Konfrontacja\n'KSW I: Konfrontacja' was a mixed martial arts event held on February 27, 2004 at the Hotel Marriott in Warsaw, Poland .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179644-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Konfrontacja Sztuk Walki, KSW II: Konfrontacja\nKSW II: Konfrontacja was a mixed martial arts event held on October 7, 2004 at the Hotel Marriott in Warsaw, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179646-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in LGBT rights\nThis is a list of notable events in the history of LGBT rights that took place in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179647-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Laos\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Laos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 74]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179648-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Latin music\nThis is a list of notable events in Latin music (i.e. Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking music from Latin America, Europe, and the United States) that took place in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179648-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Latin music, Best-selling records, Best-selling albums\nThe following is a list of the top 10 best-selling Latin albums in the United States in 2004, according to Billboard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 62], "content_span": [63, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179648-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Latin music, Best-selling records, Best-performing songs\nThe following is a list of the top 10 best-performing Latin songs in the United States in 2004, according to Billboard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 64], "content_span": [65, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179649-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Libya\nThe following lists events that happened in 2004 in Libya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 72]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179650-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Luxembourg\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global\nThe year 2004 is the eighth year in the history of M-1 Global, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Russia. In 2004 M-1 Global held 7 events beginning with, M-1 MFC: Mix-fight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 Northwest Open Cup\nM-1 Northwest Open Cup was an event held on February 21, 2004 in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 International Fight Night 1\nM-1 International Fight Night 1 was an event held on April 10, 2004 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 International Fight Night 2\nInternational Fight Night 2 was an event held on May 21, 2004 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 Middleweight Russia Cup\nM-1 Middleweight Russia Cup was an event held on August 27, 2004 at Conti Hall in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 Middleweight Grand Prix\nM-1 Middleweight Grand Prix was an event held on October 9, 2004 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 Heavyweight Russia Cup\nM-1 Heavyweight Russia Cup was an event held on November 6, 2004 at Gigant Hall in Saint Petersburg, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179651-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in M-1 Global, M-1 Heavyweight Grand Prix\nM-1 Heavyweight Grand Prix was an event held on December 4, 2004 at the Lujniki Sports Complex in Moscow, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179653-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Malaysia\nThis article lists important figures and events in Malaysian public affairs during the year 2004, together with births and deaths of notable Malaysians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179654-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Mexican television\nThis is a list of Mexican television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179655-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Mexico\nThis is a list of events that happened in 2004 in Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 72]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179656-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Monaco\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Monaco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179660-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in New Zealand\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179660-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in New Zealand, Incumbents, Government\nThe 47th New Zealand Parliament continued. Government was a coalition betweenLabour and the small Progressive party withUnited Future supporting confidence and supply votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179660-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in New Zealand, Arts and literature, Music, New Zealand Music Awards\nNew categories introduced were 'Best Rock Album', 'People's Choice Award' and 'Airplay Record of the Year'. ' New Zealand Radio Programmer of the Year' was retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 73], "content_span": [74, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179661-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in New Zealand television\nThis is a list of New Zealand television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179661-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in New Zealand television, Changes to network affiliation\nThis is a list of programs which made their premiere on a New Zealand television network that had previously premiered on another New Zealand television network. The networks involved in the switch of allegiances are predominantly both free-to-air networks or both subscription television networks. Programs that have their free-to-air/subscription television premiere, after previously premiering on the opposite platform (free-to air to subscription/subscription to free-to air) are not included. In some cases, programs may still air on the original television network. This occurs predominantly with programs shared between subscription television networks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 724]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179661-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in New Zealand television, Deaths\nThis New Zealand television\u2013related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179665-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Norwegian football\nThe 2004 season was the 99th season of competitive football in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179666-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Norwegian music\nThe following is a list of notable events and releases of the year 2004 in Norwegian music.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179667-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Norwegian television\nThis is a list of Norwegian television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179668-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pakistan\nPakistan experienced unprecedented economic growth during FY 2004. Its large-scale manufacturing sector grew at a rate of over 18%. Hard-currency reserves, having grown phenomenally in recent years, reached record levels. GDP growth reached 8.4% in the twelve months ending June 30, 2004. Pakistan's stock market has been one of the best-performing stock markets this century, as of 2005. The government's credit rating was upgraded by Moody's and Standard & Poor's. Pakistan announced that it no longer needed International Monetary Fund (IMF) assistance. The government's economic reforms were praised highly by supranational institutions such as the World Bank, IMF and the Asian Development Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase\nThe year 2004 is the 12th year in the history of Pancrase, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2004 Pancrase held 16 events beginning with Pancrase: Brave 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 1\nPancrase: Brave 1 was an event held on February 6, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 2\nPancrase: Brave 2 was an event held on February 15, 2004 at Umeda Stella Hall in Osaka, Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 3\nPancrase: Brave 3 was an event held on March 29, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 4\nPancrase: Brave 4 was an event held on April 23, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: 2004 Neo-Blood Tournament Eliminations\nPancrase: 2004 Neo-Blood Tournament Eliminations was an event held on May 2, 2004 at Gold's Gym South Tokyo Annex in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 66], "content_span": [67, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 5\nPancrase: Brave 5 was an event held on May 28, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 6\nPancrase: Brave 6 was an event held on June 22, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: 2004 Neo-Blood Tournament Semifinals\nPancrase: 2004 Neo-Blood Tournament Semifinals was an event held on July 25, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: 2004 Neo-Blood Tournament Final\nPancrase: 2004 Neo-Blood Tournament Final was an event held on July 25, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 59], "content_span": [60, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 7\nPancrase: Brave 7 was an event held on August 22, 2004 at Umeda Stella Hall in Osaka, Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 8\nPancrase: Brave 8 was an event held on September 24, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 9\nPancrase: Brave 9 was an event held on October 12, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 10\nPancrase: Brave 10 was an event held on November 7, 2004 at Tokyo Bay NK Hall in Urayasu, Chiba, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Hybrid Fight 2004\nPancrase: Hybrid Fight 2004 was an event held on November 7, 2004 at the Hybrid Wrestling Kagoshima Gym in Izumi, Kagoshima, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 11\nPancrase: Brave 11 was an event held on November 26, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179669-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pancrase, Pancrase: Brave 12\nPancrase: Brave 12 was an event held on December 21, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 36], "content_span": [37, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179670-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Paraguayan football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2004 football (soccer) season in Paraguay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179670-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Paraguayan football, First division results\nThe first division tournament was divided in two sections: the Apertura and the Clausura and had 10 teams participating in a two round all-play-all system. The team with the most points at the end of the two rounds was crowned as the champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179670-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Paraguayan football, First division results, Championship game playoff\nSince Cerro Porte\u00f1o won both the Apertura and Clausura tournaments they were declared as the national champions and there was no playoff game as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179670-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Paraguayan football, Paraguay national team\nThe following table lists all the games played by the Paraguay national football team in official competitions during 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179671-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Philippine television\nThe following is a list of events affecting Philippine television in 2004. Events listed include television show debuts, finales, cancellations, and channel launches, closures and rebrandings, as well as information about controversies and carriage disputes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179672-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Polish television\nThis is a list of Polish television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179674-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Portuguese television\nThis is a list of Portuguese television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC\nThe year 2004 is the 8th year in the history of the Pride Fighting Championships, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. 2004 had 10 events beginning with, Pride 27 - Inferno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Debut Pride FC fighters\nThe following fighters fought their first Pride FC fight in 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride 27: Inferno\nPride 27: Inferno was an event held on February 1, 2004 at Osaka-jo Hall in Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Bushido 2\nPride FC: Bushido 2 was an event held on February 15, 2004 at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Total Elimination 2004\nPride FC: Total Elimination 2004 was an event held on April 25, 2004 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. This event consisted of the first round of the 2004 Heavyweight Grand Prix. It took place on April 25, 2004, at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan. The Grand Prix tournament continued with Pride: Critical Countdown 2004 and concluded with Pride: Final Conflict 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Bushido 3\nPride FC: Bushido 3 was an event held on May 23, 2004 at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Critical Countdown 2004\nPride FC: Critical Countdown 2004 was an event held on June 20, 2004 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Bushido 4\nPride FC: Bushido 4 was an event held on July 19, 2004 at the Nagoya Rainbow Hall in Nagoya, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Final Conflict 2004\nPride FC: Final Conflict 2004 was an event held on August 15, 2004 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Final Conflict 2004, Pride 2004 Heavyweight Grand Prix bracket\n1 The tournament finals initially occurred at Final Conflict, but ended in a no-contest doctor's stoppage and were rescheduled for Pride: Shockwave 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 90], "content_span": [91, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Bushido 5\nPride FC: Bushido 5 was an event held on October 14, 2004 at the Osaka Castle Hall in Osaka, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 37], "content_span": [38, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride 28: High Octane\nPride 28: High Octane was an event held on October 31, 2004 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179675-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in Pride FC, Pride FC: Shockwave 2004\nPride FC: Shockwave 2004 was an event held on December 31, 2004 at the Saitama Super Arena in Saitama, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 42], "content_span": [43, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football\n2004 in Russian football was marked with Lokomotiv's second championship, Terek's cup victory, and national team playing at Euro 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, National team\nRussia national football team participated in the final tournament of Euro 2004, where they finished last in group A. Later they started qualification for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. As of 2006, Russia's 1\u20137 defeat from Portugal in a qualifier is their worst result in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, Leagues, First Division\nTerek Grozny and Tom Tomsk were promoted to the Premier League for the first time. Terek set a new record, scoring 100 points in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, Leagues, First Division\nAndrey Fedkov of Terek became the top goalscorer with 38 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, Leagues, Second Division\nThe following clubs have earned promotion by winning tournaments in their respective Second Division zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, Leagues, Second Division\nPrior to start of the 2005 season three clubs (Rotor Volgograd, Torpedo Vladimir, and Arsenal Tula) refused participation in the First Division, and two more clubs (Dynamo Stavropol and Chernomorets Novorossiysk) were denied licences. This made way for the runners-up of all five zones:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, Cups\nThe Russian Super Cup match between CSKA Moscow and Spartak Moscow was won by CSKA 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, Cups\nThe Russian Cup was won by Terek Grozny, who beat Krylya Sovetov Samara in the final 1\u20130, with Andrey Fedkov scoring the only goal in the injury time. This was the first time the Cup was won by a team from the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League\nLokomotiv Moscow qualified for the round of 16 of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Champions League, where they met AS Monaco. Lokomotiv won the home match 2\u20131, but lost on away goals after Monaco won the second leg 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup\nSpartak Moscow qualified for the third round of the 2003\u201304 UEFA Cup, where they lost 3\u20131 on aggregate to RCD Mallorca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup\nSpartak Moscow started in the first round of the UEFA Intertoto Cup 2004 and defeated FK Atlantas and NK Kamen Ingrad. Shinnik Yaroslavl started in the second round and defeated FK Teplice. Both Spartak and Shinnik were knocked out in the third round by Villarreal CF and UD Leiria, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 73], "content_span": [74, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League\nCSKA Moscow were the only Russian club to play in the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League. They started in the second qualifying round and reached the group stage by beating PFC Neftchi and Rangers F.C. In Group H, they finished third behind Chelsea F.C. and Futebol Clube do Porto but ahead of Paris Saint-Germain F.C. The third position allowed CSKA to qualify for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, a competition they eventually won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 79], "content_span": [80, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179678-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in Russian football, UEFA club competitions, 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup\nTerek Grozny (as the Russian Cup winners), Zenit Saint Petersburg and Rubin Kazan started in the second qualifying round of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup. Terek and Zenit qualified for the first round by defeating Lech Pozna\u0144 and SV Pasching, respectively, while Rubin were knocked out by SK Rapid Wien. In the first round, Terek lost to FC Basel, and Zenit beat Red Star Belgrade and reached the group stage. In the group with Lille OSC, Sevilla FC, Alemannia Aachen, and AEK Athens FC, Zenit finished fourth and were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179679-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Rwanda\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Rwanda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179681-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Scottish television\nThis is a list of events in Scottish television from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179682-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Senegal\nThis article is a list of events in the year 2004 in Senegal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto\nThe year 2004 is the 16th year in the history of Shooto, a mixed martial arts promotion based in Japan. In 2004 Shooto held 17 events beginning with, Shooto 2004: 1/24 in Korakuen Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto 2004: 1/24 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto 2004: 1/24 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on January 24, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: 3/4 in Kitazawa Town Hall\nShooto: 3/4 in Kitazawa Town Hall was an event held on March 4, 2004 at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 49], "content_span": [50, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: 3/22 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 3/22 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on March 22, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: Gig Central 5\nShooto: Gig Central 5 was an event held on March 28, 2004 at Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto 2004: 4/11 in Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium\nShooto 2004: 4/11 in Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium was an event held on April 11, 2004 at Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium in Osaka, Kansai, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 64], "content_span": [65, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto 2004: 4/16 in Kitazawa Town Hall\nShooto 2004: 4/16 in Kitazawa Town Hall was an event held on April 16, 2004 at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 55], "content_span": [56, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto 2004: 5/3 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto 2004: 5/3 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on May 3, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 49], "content_span": [50, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: Shooto Junkie Is Back!\nShooto: Shooto Junkie Is Back! was an event held on June 27, 2004 at Chiba Blue Field in Chiba, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto 2004: 7/4 in Kitazawa Town Hall\nShooto 2004: 7/4 in Kitazawa Town Hall was an event held on July 4, 2004 at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 54], "content_span": [55, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: 7/16 in Korakuen Hall\nShooto: 7/16 in Korakuen Hall was an event held on July 16, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 45], "content_span": [46, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: Gig Central 6\nShooto: Gig Central 6 was an event held on September 12, 2004 at Nagoya Civic Assembly Hall in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: 9/26 in Kourakuen Hall\nShooto: 9/26 in Kourakuen Hall was an event held on September 26, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 46], "content_span": [47, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto 2004: 10/17 in Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium\nShooto 2004: 10/17 in Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium was an event held on October 17, 2004 at Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium in Osaka, Kansai, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 65], "content_span": [66, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: Wanna Shooto 2004\nShooto: Wanna Shooto 2004 was an event held on November 12, 2004 at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: Rookie Tournament 2004 Final\nShooto: Rookie Tournament 2004 Final was an event held on November 25, 2004 at Kitazawa Town Hall in Setagaya, Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, G-Shooto: G-Shooto 01\nG-Shooto: G-Shooto 01 was an event held on November 26, 2004 at Zepp Tokyo in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179683-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 in Shooto, Shooto: Year End Show 2004\nShooto: Year End Show 2004 was an event held on December 14, 2004 at Yoyogi National Gymnasium in Tokyo, Japan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179684-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Singapore\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Singapore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179685-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Somalia\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Somalia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179686-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in South Africa\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179686-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in South Africa, Incumbents, Cabinet\nThe Cabinet, together with the President and the Deputy President, forms part of the Executive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179688-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in South Korean music\nThe following is a list of notable events and releases that happened in 2004 in music in South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179689-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Spain\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179690-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Spanish television\nThis is a list of Spanish television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179692-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Swedish football\nThe 2004 season in Swedish football, starting January 2004 and ending December 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179693-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Swedish television\nThis is a list of Swedish television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179694-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in S\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in the Democratic Republic of S\u00e3o Tom\u00e9 and Pr\u00edncipe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179695-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Taiwan\nEvents from the year 2004 in Taiwan, Republic of China. This year is numbered Minguo 93 according to the official Republic of China calendar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179696-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Thailand\nThe year 2004 was the 223rd year of the Rattanakosin Kingdom of Thailand. It was the 59th year in the reign of King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX), and is reckoned as year 2547 in the Buddhist Era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179698-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Turkish television\nThis is a list of Turkish television related events from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179699-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in UFC\nThe year 2004 is the 12th year in the history of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United States. In 2004 the UFC held 5 events beginning with, UFC 46: Supernatural.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179699-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in UFC, Debut UFC fighters\nThe following fighters fought their first UFC fight in 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 31], "content_span": [32, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179700-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Universal Reality Combat Championship\nThe year 2004 is the 3rd year in the history of the Universal Reality Combat Championship, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the Philippines. In 2004 the URCC held 2 events beginning with, URCC 4: Return to the Dungeon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179700-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in Universal Reality Combat Championship, URCC 4: Return to the Dungeon\nURCC 4: Return to the Dungeon was an event held on April 24, 2004 at Casino Filipino in Para\u00f1aque, Metro Manila, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 76], "content_span": [77, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179700-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in Universal Reality Combat Championship, URCC 5: Beyond Fear\nURCC 5: Beyond Fear was an event held on October 23, 2004 at Casino Filipino in Para\u00f1aque, Metro Manila, Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179701-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Uzbekistan\nThis article is a list of events in the year 2004 in Uzbekistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179702-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in WEC\nThe year 2004 is the 4th year in the history of World Extreme Cagefighting, a mixed martial arts promotion based in the United States. In 2004 WEC held 4 events beginning with, WEC 9: Cold Blooded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179702-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in WEC, WEC 9: Cold Blooded\nWEC 9: Cold Blooded was an event held on January 16, 2004 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 32], "content_span": [33, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179702-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in WEC, WEC 10: Bragging Rights\nWEC 10: Bragging Rights was an event held on May 21, 2004 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 36], "content_span": [37, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179702-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in WEC, WEC 11: Evolution\nWEC 11: Evolution was an event held on August 20, 2004 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179702-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in WEC, WEC 12: Halloween Fury 3\nWEC 12: Halloween Fury 3 was an event held on October 21, 2004 at the Tachi Palace in Lemoore, California, United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [13, 37], "content_span": [38, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179703-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in Wales\nThis article is about the particular significance of the year 2004 to Wales and its people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179704-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in anime, Accolades\nAt the Mainichi Film Awards, The Place Promised in Our Early Days won the Animation Film Award and Mind Game won the \u014cfuji Nobur\u014d Award. Internationally, Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence was nominated for the Annie Award for Best Animated Feature, the fourth consecutive year an anime was nominated for the award. Howl's Moving Castle was in competition for the Golden Lion at the 61st Venice International Film Festival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 24], "content_span": [25, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179704-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in anime, Releases\nThis list contains numerous notable entries of anime which debuted in 2004. It is not a complete list and represents popular works that debuted as TV, OVA and Movie releases. Web content, DVD specials, TV specials are not on this list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 23], "content_span": [24, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179705-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in archaeology\nThe year 2004 in archaeology included many events, some of which are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179706-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in architecture\nThe year 2004 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179707-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in art\nThe year 2004 in art involved some significant events and new art works.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179708-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in association football\nThe following are the association football events of the year 2004 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179710-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in baseball\nThe following are the baseball events of the year 2004 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179710-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in baseball, Champions, Major League Baseball\nClick on any series score to link to that series' page. Higher seed has home field advantage during Division Series and League Championship Series. American League has home field advantage during World Series as a result of American League victory in 2004 All-Star Game. American/National League is seeded 1-3/2-4 as a result of A/NL regular season champion (New York Yankees)/(St. Louis Cardinals) and A/NL wild card (Boston Red Sox)(Houston Astros) coming from the same division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179711-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in basketball\nThe following are the basketball events of the year 2004 throughout the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179713-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in comics\nNotable events of 2004 in comics. See also List of years in comics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179714-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in country music\nThis is a list of notable events in country music that took place in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179714-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in country music, Top hits of the year\nThe following songs placed within the Top 20 on the Hot Country Songs charts in 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179714-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in country music, Top new album releases\nThe following albums placed within the Top 50 on the Top Country Albums charts in 2004:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179715-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in cricket\nThe following is a list of important cricket related events which occurred in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in film\n2004 in film is an overview of events, including the highest-grossing films, award ceremonies, festivals, a list of country-specific lists of films released, notable deaths and film debuts. Shrek 2 was the year's top-grossing film, and Million Dollar Baby won the Academy Award for Best Picture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in film, Evaluation of the year\nRenowned American film critic and professor Emanuel Levy described 2004 as \"a banner year for actors, particularly men.\" He went on to emphasize, \"I can't think of another year in which there were so many good performances, in every genre. It was a year in which we saw the entire spectrum of demographics displayed on the big screen, from vet actors such as Clint Eastwood and Morgan Freeman, to seniors such as Pacino, De Niro, and Hoffman, to newcomers such as Topher Grace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 in film, Evaluation of the year\nAs always, though, the center of the male acting pyramid is occupied by actors in their forties and fifties, such as Sean Penn, Johnny Depp, Liam Neeson, Kevin Kline, Don Cheadle, Jim Carrey. In terms of film genres, Levy stated, \"The year's most prominent genre was the biopicture, a genre that in the past has suffered from lack of prestige and abundance of clichs. There were a dozen worthy biopictures, including Alexander, The Aviator, Beyond the Sea, Finding Neverland, Hotel Rwanda, Kinsey, Motorcycle Diaries, and Ray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0001-0002", "contents": "2004 in film, Evaluation of the year\nCelebrating entrepreneurs, playwrights, singers, sex researchers, composers, and politicians, they continued to show one alarming bias: They were all about men. You don't have to be a feminist critic or a sociologist to deduct that, as far as real or reel heroes are concerned, women matter less in Hollywood and American society at large. Can't anyone come up with a strong part for a femme-driven bio a la British film Vera Drake, without relegating women to showbiz personae.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0001-0003", "contents": "2004 in film, Evaluation of the year\nLevy also stated, \"Classic Hollywood cinema, which reached its height during the golden age of studio system and has been in decline, is kept alive by one major force: Clint Eastwood. The \"Man With No Name\" has become the \"Man With the Best Name\", a director who's experiencing an unparallel artistic height with \u201cMillion Dollar Baby,\u201d a follow-up to the equally sublime Mystic River.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in film, Highest-grossing films\nThe top 10 films released in 2004 by worldwide gross are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in film, Highest-grossing films\nShrek 2 set a new record for total gross by an animated film making it the highest-grossing animated film of all time. The record was later surpassed by Toy Story 3 in 2010. On July 7, Spider-Man 2 reached a $200 million domestic gross in a record time of eight days. On July 18, after 19 days in release, Spider-Man 2 reached $300 million domestically in another record time. Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban has the highest international revenue of $546 million compared to Shrek 2's $487.5 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in film, Highest-grossing films\nThe Passion of the Christ, directed by Mel Gibson, became the first blockbuster motion picture of 2004 and also the highest grossing R-rated film domestically. Meet the Fockers beat 2003's Bruce Almighty record for the highest-grossing comedy film; both released by Universal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 36], "content_span": [37, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179716-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in film, 2004 films\nThe list of films released in 2004, arranged by country, are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 24], "content_span": [25, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179717-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in games\nThis page lists board and card games, wargames, miniature games, and tabletop role-playing games published in 2004. For video games, see 2004 in video gaming.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179718-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in golf\nThis article summarizes the highlights of professional and amateur golf in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179719-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in hammer throw\nThis page lists the World Best Year Performance in the year 2004 in both the men's and the women's hammer throw. The main event during this season were the Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, where the final of the men's competition was held on Sunday August 22, 2004. The women had their first ever Olympic final five days later, on August 25, 2004 in the Olympic Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179720-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in heavy metal music\nThis is a timeline documenting the events of heavy metal in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179721-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in hip hop music\nThis article summarizes the events, album releases, and album release dates in hip hop music for the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179722-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in home video\nThe following events occurred in the year 2004 in home video.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 80]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179722-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in home video, Movie releases\nThe following movies were released on video on the following dates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179722-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in home video, TV show releases\nThe following television shows were released on video on the following dates:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179723-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in jazz\nThis is a timeline documenting events of jazz in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 76]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179724-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in literature\nThis article contains information about the literary events and publications of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179725-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in machinima\nThe following is a list of notable machinima-related events in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179726-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in men's road cycling\n2004 in men's road cycling is about the 2004 men's bicycle races governed by the UCI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179726-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in men's road cycling, 2.HC Category Races\nThe prefix 2 indicates that these events are stage races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179726-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in men's road cycling, 1.HC Category Races\nThe prefix 1 indicates that these events are one-day races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179726-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in men's road cycling, 2.1 Category Races\nThe prefix 2 indicates that these events are stage races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179726-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in men's road cycling, 1.1 Category Races\nThe prefix 1 indicates that these events are one-day races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179727-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in modern pentathlon\nThis article lists the main modern pentathlon events and their results for 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring\nThis article 2004 in motoring deals with developments in the automotive industry that occurred throughout the year 2004 by various automobile manufacturers, grouped by country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, United Kingdom\nFord launched its new Focus, including 1.4 and 1.6 four-cylinder petrol units, a 1.6, 1.8 and 2.0 Turbo Diesel. While in the US the first generation model carried on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, United Kingdom\nVauxhall reintroduced the Tigra nameplate with an all new model based on the Corsa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, Germany\nBMW has launched the 1 Series range, a five-door and three-door hatchback which replaces the BMW 3 Series (E46) Compact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, Germany\nMercedes-Benz CLS-Class was introduced. An all new model in the form of a coupe four-door (fastback) and was based on the W211 E-Class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, France\nCitroen released the new C4 available in a hatchback coup\u00e9 or five-door at the 2004 Geneva Motor Show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, France\nPeugeot launched the 407 a large family car available sedan, coup\u00e9 and wagon to replace the 406.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, France\nThe M\u00e9gane Renault Sport was introduced to the fresh hot hatch market and includes a 2.0L turbo engine rated at 225 PS (165 kW; 222 bhp) at 5500 rpm and 300 N\u00b7m (220 lb\u00b7ft) at 3000 rpm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, France\nRenault also introduced the Modus at the 2004 Geneva Motor Show, a mini MPV based on the Clio which completes Renault's MPV segment being the smallest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179728-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in motoring, Australia\nThe Holden VZ Commodore is introduced as a facelift of the VY Commodore with minor exterior changes and a new Alloytec V6 engines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 27], "content_span": [28, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179729-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in motorsport\nThe following is an overview of the events of 2004 in motorsport including the major racing events, motorsport venues that were opened and closed during a year, championships and non-championship events that were established and disestablished in a year, and births and deaths of racing drivers and other motorsport people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179729-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in motorsport, Annual events\nThe calendar includes only annual major non-championship events or annual events that had significance separate from the championship. For the dates of the championship events see related season articles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179730-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in music\nThis is a list of notable events in music that took place in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179730-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in music, Awards\nThe following artists were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Jackson Browne, The Dells, George Harrison, Prince, Bob Seger, Traffic, Z Z Top", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 21], "content_span": [22, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology\nPaleontology or palaeontology is the study of prehistoric life forms on Earth through the examination of plant and animal fossils. This includes the study of body fossils, tracks (ichnites), burrows, cast-off parts, fossilised feces (coprolites), palynomorphs and chemical residues. Because humans have encountered fossils for millennia, paleontology has a long history both before and after becoming formalized as a science. This article records significant discoveries and events related to paleontology that occurred or were published in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Protozoa, New taxa\nOldest record of the protozoan family Trypanosomatidae, Type species P. proterus", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nAn acanthodian belonging to the group Ischnacanthiformes and the family Ischnacanthidae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nAn acanthodian belonging to the group Climatiiformes and the family Climatiidae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nAn acanthodian belonging to the group Climatiiformes and the family Climatiidae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nA member of Pteraspidiformes belonging to the group Psammosteida and the family Obrucheviidae. The type species is P. pulla", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nAn acanthodian belonging to the group Ischnacanthiformes and the family Poracanthidae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nAn acanthodian belonging to the group Ischnacanthiformes and the family Poracanthidae.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nA thelodont, possibly a member of the group Phlebolepidiformes. The type species is T. rimae", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named fishes\nA member of Anaspida belonging to the group Birkeniida, possibly a member of the family Septentrioniidae. The type species is T. juncta; genus also includes T. concatenata.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Newly named amphibians\nA basal member of Tetrapoda. The type species is J. livnensis", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nAn Anseranatidae, the type species of Anserpica Mourer-Chauvir\u00e9, Berthet & Hugueney, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Psittacidae, the type species of Bavaripsitta Mayr & G\u00f6hlich, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Phalacrocoracidae, the type species of Borvocarbo Mourer-Chauvir\u00e9, Berthet & Hugueney, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Gaviidae, not certain a species of Colymboides Milne-Edwards, 1868.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nAn Enantiornithes, Euenantiornithes, the type species of Longirostravis Hou, Chiappe, Zhang et Chuong, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Corvidae, the type species of Miopica Kurochkin & Sobolev, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Scolopacidae, not certain to belong in Mirolia Ballmann, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Sulidae, the type species of Ramphastosula Stucchi & Urbina, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nAn Enentiornithes Walker, 1981, this is the type species of the new genus, most probably a junior synonym of Hebeiornis fengningensis Yan, 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179731-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 in paleontology, Archosauromorphs, Newly named birds\nA Cathartidae, the type species of Wingegyps Alvarenga & Olson, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179732-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in poetry\nThis article presents lists of historical events related to the writing of poetry during 2004. The historical context of events related to the writing of poetry in 2004 are addressed in articles such as History of Poetry Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179732-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in poetry, Works published\nListed by nation where the work was first published and again by the poet's native land, if different; substantially revised works listed separately:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 31], "content_span": [32, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179732-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in poetry, Works published, New Zealand, Poets in Best New Zealand Poems\nPoems from these 25 poets were selected by Robin Dudding for Best New Zealand Poems 2003, published online this year:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 77], "content_span": [78, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179732-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in poetry, Works published, United States, Anthologies in the United States\nThe 75 poets included in The Best American Poetry 2004, edited by David Lehman, co-edited this year by Lyn Hejinian:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 80], "content_span": [81, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179732-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in poetry, Works published in other languages, India\nIn each section, listed in alphabetical order by first name:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 57], "content_span": [58, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179732-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in poetry, Deaths\nBirth years link to the corresponding \"[year] in poetry\" article:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 22], "content_span": [23, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179733-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in politics\nYears in politics: 2002\u20132003\u20132004-2005\u20132006 \u2013 list of years in politics", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179734-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in professional wrestling\n2004 in professional wrestling describes the year's events in the world of professional wrestling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179734-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in professional wrestling, Title changes, WWE\nRaw and SmackDown each had a world championship, a secondary championship, and a tag team championship for male wrestlers. SmackDown also had a title for their cruiserweight wrestlers. There was only one women's championship and it was exclusive to Raw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179735-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in radio\nThe year 2004 saw a number of significant events in radio broadcasting history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179736-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in rail transport\nThis article lists events related to rail transport that occurred in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179737-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in rugby league\nThe year 2004 in rugby league football centered on Australasia's 2004 NRL season and Super League IX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179738-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in science\nThe year 2004 in science and technology involved some significant events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179739-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in spaceflight\nThis article outlines notable events occurring in 2004 in spaceflight, including major launches and EVAs. 2004 saw the flight of the first privately funded crewed spaceflight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179740-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in sports\n2004 in sports describes the year's events in world sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 73]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179740-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in sports, Mixed martial arts\nThe following is a list of major noteworthy MMA events during 2004 in chronological order.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179740-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in sports, Mixed martial arts\nThe final between, Fedor Emelianenko and Ant\u00f4nio Rodrigo Nogueira ended in a no contest. A rematch for the final was rescheduled for Pride Shockwave 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179741-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in sumo\nThe following are the events in professional sumo during 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 75]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis\nThis page covers all the important events in the sport of tennis in 2004. Primarily, it provides the results of notable tournaments throughout the year on both the ATP and WTA Tours, the Davis Cup, and the Fed Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile\nHeld from August 15 to August 22 in Athens, Greece, it consisted of four events; men's singles, women's singles, men's doubles, and women's doubles. The standard 5th event, mixed doubles, was not part of these games. There were 170 participants (87 men and 83 women) from 52 countries. The events were held at the Athens Olympic Tennis Centre at the Athens Olympic Sports Complex. The surface was hardcourt, specifically DecoTurf, the same surface as used at the US Open in Flushing Meadow, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile\nThe Centre had 16 courts built specifically for the 2004 Olympics, with construction finished just before the opening of the Athens Olympics. There was a main court seating 6,000 fans for the Olympics, two show courts with seating for 3,200 seats during the Olympics, and 16 side courts with limited seating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile\nChile won the most medals (three), two of which were gold, led by Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa, who won the men's singles, and partnered by Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez, also helped Chile take gold in the doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile, Russian breakthrough\nThe year 2004 was well known for the breakthrough of Russian players into the WTA Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile, Russian breakthrough\nAt the French Open, Anastasia Myskina became the first woman from Russia to win a Grand Slam singles title, by defeating compatriot Elena Dementieva in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20132. A mere four weeks later, at Wimbledon, 17\u2013year-old Maria Sharapova became the nation's second female Grand Slam winner, defeating two-time champion Serena Williams in the final, 6\u20131, 6\u20134, and becoming the third-youngest woman (after Lottie Dod and Martina Hingis) to win Wimbledon. Finally, at the US Open, Svetlana Kuznetsova became the nation's third consecutive winner of a Grand Slam singles title, defeating Dementieva in the final, 6\u20133, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile, Russian breakthrough\nOther Russian players also made an impact on the WTA Tour that year. Nadia Petrova cracked the WTA's Top 10 for the first time, and also achieved her biggest result that year, defeating defending US Open champion Justine Henin-Hardenne in the fourth round, before losing to Kuznetsova in the quarter-finals. Vera Zvonareva also continued to improve on the Tour before injuries briefly derailed her career the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179742-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 in tennis, Olympics and Chile, Russian breakthrough\nThe conclusion of the season culminated in Sharapova winning the 2004 WTA Tour Championships by repeating her Wimbledon victory over Serena Williams in the final, 4\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20134, after coming from 0\u20134 down in the final set.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 56], "content_span": [57, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179743-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179743-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Events\nThe 2004 Money Laundering Act made money laundering and financing terror illegal and mandated a financial intelligence unit and cooperation with African and European law enforcement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179743-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Events, September\nState-owned G\u00e9camines signs an agreement with Global Enterprises Corporate (GEC), a company formed by the merger of Dan Gertler International (DGI) with Beny Steinmetz Global, to rehabilitate and operate the Kananga and Tilwezembe copper mines. The deal was ratified by presidential decree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179745-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Netherlands\nThis article lists some of the events that took place in the Netherlands in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179746-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Palestinian territories, Incumbents, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent events related to the Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict which occurred during 2004 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179746-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Palestinian territories, Incumbents, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent Palestinian militant acts and operations committed against Israeli targets during 2004 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179746-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Palestinian territories, Incumbents, Israeli\u2013Palestinian conflict\nThe most prominent Israeli military counter-terrorism operations (military campaigns and military operations) carried out against Palestinian militants during 2004 include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179747-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the Philippines\n2004 in the Philippines details events of note that happened in the Philippines in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179748-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the United Arab Emirates\nThe following lists events that happened during 2004 in the United Arab Emirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179751-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the decathlon\nThis page lists the World Best Year Performance in the year 2004 in the men's decathlon. The main event during this season were the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, where the competition started on August 23, 2004 and ended on August 24, 2004 in the Athens Olympic Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179752-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the environment\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Moreau1 (talk | contribs) at 03:31, 22 June 2020 (\u2192\u200eEvents: + section headings). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179752-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in the environment\nThis is a list of notable events relating to the environment in 2004. They relate to environmental law, conservation, environmentalism and environmental issues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179753-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in the sport of athletics\nThis article contains an overview of the sport of athletics, including track and field, cross country and road running, in the year 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179753-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in the sport of athletics\nThe major competition of the year was the 2004 Summer Olympics. At the event, Yelena Isinbayeva cleared a world record 4.91\u00a0m in the pole vault. Liu Xiang won the men's 110 metres hurdles with a world record-equalling time of 12.91\u00a0seconds, defying traditional beliefs about the physical calibre of Chinese (and Asian) sprint athletes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179753-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 in the sport of athletics\nHicham El Guerrouj capped off his prominent international career with two gold medals in the 1500\u00a0m and 5000\u00a0m. The Olympic competition in Athens was marred by an incident involving Greek Olympic medallists Konstantinos Kenteris and Ekaterini Thanou, who were alleged to have staged a motorcycle crash in order to avoid doping tests. Both athletes missed the competition and were later banned for missing three doping tests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179754-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 in video games\n2004 saw many sequels and prequels in video games. New intellectual properties included Fable, Far Cry, FlatOut, Killzone, Katamari Damacy, Monster Hunter, Ninja Gaiden, N, Red Dead Revolver, SingStar, Sacred, and World of Warcraft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179754-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 in video games, Trends\nIn 2004, the total U.S. sales of video game hardware, software and accessories was $9.9 billion compared with $10 billion in 2003. Total software sales rose 8 percent over the previous year to $6.2 billion. Additionally, sales of portable software titles exceeded $1 billion for the first time. Hardware sales were down 27 percent for the year due in part to shortages during the holiday season and price reductions from all systems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179754-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 in video games, Trends, Handheld game systems\nAdditionally, Nokia released an updated version of their original N-Gage, called the N-Gage QD. Nintendo released the Nintendo DS on November 21 in the United States. In Japan Sony released the PlayStation Portable on December 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179754-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 in video games, Critically acclaimed titles\nMetacritic (MC) and GameRankings (GR) are aggregators of video game journalism reviews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179756-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Avtury\nThe raid on Avtury took place on 12\u201313 July 2004, when a large group of Chechen militants assaulted the Chechen village of Avtury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179756-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Avtury, Attack\nAfter entering the village, separatist guerillas first blocked all entrances to the village and then attacked and seized the buildings of the security forces, inflicting heavy casualties on the defenders. A dozen members of pro-Moscow Chechen police and militia forces who had run out of ammunition were captured at dawn in their base. A car was also ambushed on the road to Avtury and all its passengers were killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179756-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Avtury, Attack\nAs the rebels retreated and the government reinforcements arrived, the fighting reportedly continued in the forest outside the village later on the second day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179756-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Avtury, Attack\nAccording to the government sources, at least 18 pro-Moscow fighters and 15 rebels died in the village (20 according to Ramzan Kadyrov). Initially it was claimed eight rebels were killed, and only one body was found at the site according to Memorial. The government declined to disclose the republican and federal losses during the fighting outside of Avtury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179756-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Avtury, Attack\nThe separatists said they lost five men killed and two missing, while the Russian losses were estimated as at least 45 to 50 killed (including 15-20 commandos during a fight in the forest near Avtury) and dozens wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179757-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Grozny\n2004 raid on Grozny was a series of overnight attacks in central Grozny, capital of Chechnya. It was carried out by Chechen insurgents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179757-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Grozny\nThe assassination of the Chechnyan president Akhmad Kadyrov on May 9, 2004 is seen as the beginning of the offensive and was followed by a major attack carried out a month after rebels captured arms depot in the capital of the Ingushetia region, leaving with 200,000 weapons and a trove of ammunition. According to estimates of the investigation group, 250-400 fighters entered Grozny on August 21, established their own roadblocks, and simultaneously attacked a number of polling places and other targets. According to law enforcement sources, this attack killed 58 members of the police and pro-Moscow militia and five federal soldiers. More than a dozen civilians were also killed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179757-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 raid on Grozny\nThe Grozny raid was also part of the series of attacks that also included targets in Russia. After the major offensive at Grozny, Chechen women suicide bombers successfully blew two passenger airliners, killing 90 passengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179758-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 reasons of the Supreme Court of Canada\nThe table below lists the reasons delivered from the bench by the Supreme Court of Canada during 2004. The table illustrates what reasons were filed by each justice in each case, and which justices joined each reason. This list, however, does not include decisions on motions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179758-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 reasons of the Supreme Court of Canada\nOf the 80 reasons released in 2004, 8 were oral reasons, 55 were unanimous, and 2 motions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal\n2004 saw a scandal in the sport of rugby league involving Great Britain international players Sean Long and Martin Gleeson. Both players were playing for St. Helens at the time; the match in question was between Bradford Bulls and St Helens on Easter Monday, April 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal, History\nSt Helens were scheduled to face Huddersfield Giants in the 2004 Challenge Cup Semi-Final. They had been given a demanding draw in the competition and had already knocked out top teams Bradford, Leeds Rhinos and Hull F.C. in previous rounds. In addition, the Semi-Final was to be played the weekend after the tough Easter period, in which Super League teams are required to play 3 games in a week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0001-0001", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal, History\nAs a result, the St Helens squad, having already competed in three more high-intensity matches than all the other Super League teams, were struggling to cope and coach Ian Millward was worried about his players becoming fatigued and losing form heading into the semi-final. To counter this, he rested eleven first choice players for the clash with defending Super League champions Bradford, effectively playing his reserves and accepting certain defeat in that game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal, History\nKnowing that St Helens were set to field a weakened side, Long and Gleeson placed bets on Bradford to win. Gleeson bet \u00a31,000 that Bradford would win by a margin greater than eight points, whilst Long placed a bet of similar value on the Bulls' victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal, History\nBradford won 54\u20138. Long was one of the players left out of the squad but Gleeson was selected by Millward, and indeed scored the first try.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal, History\nBoth players admitted their guilt and apologised for their actions. An RFL investigation chaired by a panel comprising Judge Peter Charlesworth, Deryck Fox, and David Poulter accepted that there was no evidence to suggest Gleeson had attempted to play badly to influence the result, but both players were declared guilty of breaching an RFL by law prohibiting players betting on matches in which their club was involved, regardless of whether or not they were involved in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179759-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 rugby league betting scandal, History\nThey were each fined \u00a37,500 and ordered to pay \u00a32,205 costs. Long was handed a three-month and Gleeson a four-month suspension. A few weeks after receiving the suspension, Gleeson signed for Warrington Wolves for a fee reported at \u00a3200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179760-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nThe 2004 term of the Supreme Court of the United States began October 4, 2004, and concluded October 3, 2005. The table illustrates which opinion was filed by each justice in each case and which justices joined each opinion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179760-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 term opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, 2004 term membership and statistics\nThis was the nineteenth and final term of Chief Justice Rehnquist's tenure, as he died on September 3, 2005. It was the eleventh consecutive term in which the Court's membership had not changed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 97], "content_span": [98, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nThe Supreme Court of the United States handed down six per curiam opinions during its 2004 term, which began October 4, 2004 and concluded October 3, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States\nBecause per curiam decisions are issued from the Court as an institution, these opinions all lack the attribution of authorship or joining votes to specific justices. All justices on the Court at the time the decision was handed down are assumed to have participated and concurred unless otherwise noted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [71, 71], "content_span": [72, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Court membership\nAssociate Justices: John Paul Stevens, Sandra Day O'Connor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, David Souter, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 89], "content_span": [90, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Smith v. Texas\n543 U.S. 37 Decided November 15, 2004. Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 87], "content_span": [88, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Smith v. Texas\nThe state court upheld a death sentence over the defendant's argument that the jury instructions prevented the full consideration of his mitigation evidence. The court found the instructions, which permitted the jury to consider mitigation only if it nullified two questions regarding the defendant's deliberateness in the crime, to be either irrelevant, because the defendant's mitigation evidence was constitutionally insufficient, or sufficiently distinguishable from instructions the Court had previously found unconstitutional. The Supreme Court reversed, ruling that the defendant had presented evidence relevant to mitigation, which the state court found insufficient by applying an incorrect and unduly strict test. The Court also ruled that the nullification instructions were constitutionally inadequate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 87], "content_span": [88, 902]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Smith v. Texas\nScalia dissented, joined by Thomas, stating without elaboration that he would affirm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 87], "content_span": [88, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, San Diego v. Roe\n543 U.S. 77 Decided December 6, 2004. Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 89], "content_span": [90, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, San Diego v. Roe\nThe Court of Appeals ruled that a police officer's First Amendment rights were violated when he was fired for selling online a sexually explicit video of himself in a generic police uniform. The court found that his conduct fell under the protected speech category of commentary on matters of public concern, because it did not relate to an internal workplace grievance, took place while he was off-duty and away from his employer's premises, and was unrelated to his employment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 89], "content_span": [90, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, San Diego v. Roe\nThe Supreme Court reversed, ruling that the video implicated legitimate concerns of the city police department. Though his specific department was not identified, the officer still deliberately linked the video to his profession, bringing the department into disrepute. The video's expression did not qualify as a matter of public concern under any view of the test, or based on any Court precedent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 89], "content_span": [90, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Brosseau v. Haugen\n543 U.S. 194 Decided December 14, 2004. Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Brosseau v. Haugen\nThe Court of Appeals ruled that an officer who had shot an individual fleeing in an automobile was not entitled to qualified immunity from the individual's section 1983 claim for violating his Fourth Amendment rights. The Supreme Court reversed, ruling that the officer was entitled to qualified immunity because Court precedent did not clearly establish that his conduct was in violation of the Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Brosseau v. Haugen\nBreyer filed a concurrence, joined by Scalia and Ginsburg, urging the Court to reconsider the rigid rule which directs courts to decide the constitutional question prior to deciding the issue of immunity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Brosseau v. Haugen\nStevens filed a dissent, arguing that the officer's conduct was objectively unreasonable because deadly force should not have been used to prevent the suspect's escape. He also believed that the immunity issue should have been decided by a jury, and that the Court should have held full briefing and argument on the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Howell v. Mississippi\n543 U.S. 440 Argued November 29, 2004.Decided January 24, 2005. The Court dismissed the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 94], "content_span": [95, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Howell v. Mississippi\nThe petitioner argued that the Mississippi courts violated his Eighth Amendment rights by refusing to require a jury instruction about a lesser included offense in his capital case. However, he failed to raise this claim before the Mississippi Supreme Court, leaving no decision on that issue for the Supreme Court to review. The writ of certiorari was accordingly dismissed as improvidently granted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 94], "content_span": [95, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Bell v. Cone\n543 U.S. 447 Decided January 24, 2005. Sixth Circuit reversed and remanded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 85], "content_span": [86, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Bell v. Cone\nThe Supreme Court had previously addressed the case in Bell v. Cone, 535 U.S. 685 (2002) on the issue of the habeas petitioner's ineffective assistance of counsel claim. On remand, the Court of Appeals now ruled that the aggravator language applied to the petitioner's capital sentencing was too vague to prevent the death penalty from being imposed arbitrarily, and that the Tennessee Supreme Court had failed to cure that defect on review by applying a narrowing construction to the language.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 85], "content_span": [86, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0016-0001", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Bell v. Cone\nThe Supreme Court reversed, ruling that the Court of Appeals did not grant the proper deference to the state court's decision, and had also erroneously assumed that it had failed to apply Tennessee law. The state court's failure to cite to federal law or explicitly use a narrowing construction did not establish that federal constitutional standards were disregarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 85], "content_span": [86, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Bell v. Cone\nGinsburg filed a concurrence, joined by Souter and Breyer, which sought to clarify the Court's assumption that the state court had adjudicated all of the petitioner's arguments. Ginsburg urged that, had the state court failed to address an argument, that there would be no grounds for assuming that it had nevertheless sub silentio decided that issue on the merits instead of merely overlooking it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 85], "content_span": [86, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Medell\u00edn v. Dretke\n544 U.S. 660 Argued March 28, 2005.Decided May 23, 2005. The Court dismissed the writ of certiorari as improvidently granted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Medell\u00edn v. Dretke\nThe Court of Appeals had ruled that a Mexican national could not base a habeas petition on denial of the right to consular access under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, because that Convention was not enforceable in U.S. courts, and in any event that argument was forfeited because of procedural default.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0019-0001", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Medell\u00edn v. Dretke\nHowever, after the International Court of Justice ruled in Mexico v. United States, 2004 I.C.J. No. 128, that the Convention did create enforceable individual rights, President George W. Bush issued a memorandum declaring that the United States would discharge its obligations under the ICJ decision by having state courts give effect to it in accordance with principles of comity. The petitioner subsequently filed a new petition in state court on this basis, and the Supreme Court dismissed certiorari as improvidently granted, ruling that it should not dispose of issues that the state proceedings could resolve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179761-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 term per curiam opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States, Medell\u00edn v. Dretke\nGinsburg filed a concurrence, joined by Scalia as to Part II. O'Connor filed a dissent, joined by Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, arguing that the Court's dismissal was based on speculation as to what the state court might do. O'Connor preferred to remand the case with instructions to consider whether the decision of the ICJ was binding on American courts, and to what extent the Convention created enforceable rights that could not be forfeited through procedural default. Souter filed a dissent. Breyer filed a dissent, joined by Stevens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 71], "section_span": [73, 91], "content_span": [92, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus\nThe second most recent transit of Venus observed from Earth took place on 8 June 2004. The event received significant attention, since it was the first Venus transit after the invention of broadcast media. No human alive at the time had witnessed a previous Venus transit since that transit occurred on 6 December 1882 in the 19th century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus\nEuropean Southern Observatory (ESO) and the European Association for Astronomy Education (EAAE) launched the VT-2004 project, together with the Institut de M\u00e9canique C\u00e9leste et de Calcul des \u00c9ph\u00e9m\u00e9rides (IMCCE) and the Observatoire de Paris in France, as well as the Astronomical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. This project had 2,763 participants all over the world, including nearly 1,000 school classes. The participants made a measurement of the astronomical unit (AU) of 149 608 708\u00a0km \u00b1 11 835\u00a0km which had only a 0.007% difference to the accepted value.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Visibility\nThe entire transit was visible from Europe, most of Asia, and almost all of Africa. The beginning was visible before sunset from easternmost Asia and Australia. The end was visible after sunrise from the westernmost fringe of Africa, eastern North America, and much of South America. The transit was not visible at all from western North America, southern South America, Hawaii, or New Zealand. The regions from which the transit were visible are shown on the map to the right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Timing\nThe following table and image give times for various events (respectively, first contact, second contact, the midpoint, third contact and fourth contact) during the transit on 8 June 2004 for a hypothetical observer at the center of the Earth. Due to parallax, times observed at different points on Earth may differ from the following by as much as \u00b17 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Media\nA projection of the 2004 Transit of Venus as seen from Mumbai, India at 14:57:50 IST (09:27:50 UTC) clicked using a Sony Digital Mavica MVC-FD73 camera by Dhaval Mahidharia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Media\n2004 transit as seen from Bangalore at 07:41 UTC, about two hours into the transit. The image is inverted compared to the diagram above, so Venus is seen near the top of the Sun's disc", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Media\nThird contact (compare to III in the diagram above) of the 2004 Venus transit as seen from the central part of the United States", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Media\nAnimation depicting the transit of Venus from the perspective of Earth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179762-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 transit of Venus, Media\nClose-up video of the 2004 Venus transit, recorded in the ultraviolet part of the spectrum", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo\nThe 2004 unrest in Kosovo is the worst ethnic violence case in Kosovo since the end of the 1998\u201399 conflict. The violence erupted in the partitioned town of Mitrovica, leaving hundreds wounded and at least 14 people dead. The unrest was precipitated by misleading reports in the Kosovo Albanian media which falsely claimed that three Kosovo Albanian boys had drowned after being chased into the Ibar River by a group of Kosovo Serbs. UN peacekeepers and NATO troops scrambled to contain a raging gun battle between Serbs and Albanians. In Serbia, the events were also called the March Pogrom (Serbian: \u041c\u0430\u0440\u0442\u043e\u0432\u0441\u043a\u0438 \u043f\u043e\u0433\u0440\u043e\u043c, romanized:\u00a0Martovski pogrom), while in Kosovo they are called the March Unrest (Albanian: Trazirat e marsit).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo\nInternational courts in Pristina have prosecuted several people who attacked several Serbian Orthodox churches, handing down jail sentences ranging from 21 months to 16 years. A part of the destroyed churches have since been rebuilt by the Government of Kosovo in cooperation with the Serbian Orthodox Church and the UN mission in Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0002-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Background\nThe Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) was an ethnic-Albanian paramilitary organisation which had as its founding goal unification of Albanian inhabited lands in the Balkans, stressing Albanian culture, ethnicity and nation. Conflict escalated from 1997 onward due to the Yugoslavian army retaliating with a crackdown in the region resulting in violence and population displacements. The bloodshed, ethnic cleansing of thousands of Albanians driving them into neighbouring countries and the potential of it to destabilize the region provoked intervention by international organizations and agencies, such as the United Nations, NATO and INGOs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0002-0001", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Background\nSome people from non-Albanian communities such as the Serbs and Romani fled Kosovo fearing revenge attacks by armed people and returning refugees while others were pressured by the KLA and armed gangs to leave. Post conflict Kosovo was placed under an international United Nations framework with the UN Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) overseeing administrative affairs and the NATO Kosovo Force (KFOR) dealing with defence. Within post-conflict Kosovo Albanian society, calls for retaliation for previous violence done by Serb forces during the war circulated through public culture. In 2004, prolonged negotiations over Kosovo's future status, sociopolitical problems and nationalist sentiments resulted in the Kosovo unrest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0003-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Prelude, Shooting of Serbian teen\nOn 15 March 2004 an 18-year-old Serb, Jovica Ivi\u0107, was shot and wounded in a drive-by shooting in the village of \u010caglavica in the central region of Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0004-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Prelude, 16 March pro-KLA protests\nOn 16 March, three KLA war veterans associations organized widespread demonstrations in ethnic Albanian cities and towns, protesting the arrests of former KLA leaders on war crime charges, including the February arrests of four commanders. The pro-KLA, anti-UNMIK protests, with 18,000 protesters, lay the basis for the following demonstrations sparked by the sensational reports of drowning of three Albanian children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0005-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Prelude, Drowning of Albanian children\nOn 16 March, three Albanian children drowned in the Ibar River in the village of \u010cabar, near the Serb community of Zubin Potok. A fourth boy survived. It was speculated that he and his friends had been chased into the river by Serbs in revenge for the shooting of Ivi\u0107 the previous day, but this claim has not been proven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0006-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Prelude, Drowning of Albanian children\nUN police spokesman Neeraj Singh said the surviving boy had been under intense pressure from ethnic Albanian journalists who had suggested what he should say. His version of events differed from that of two other children who had also been in the river, Singh told a news conference in Pristina. The spokesperson said there were \"very significant\" inconsistencies in the accounts given by the child during two separate interviews, and a lack of corroboration of his story. \"In fact, it is logically at odds in several respects with other evidence,\" Mr. Singh said. The UN found no evidence that Serbs were responsible for drowning the three Albanian children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 61], "content_span": [62, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0007-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence\nOn 17 and 18 March 2004, a wave of violent riots swept through Kosovo, triggered by two incidents perceived as ethnically-motivated acts. Demonstrations, although seemingly spontaneous at the outset, quickly focused on Serbs throughout Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0008-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence\nThousands of Albanians gathered at the south end of the bridge across the Ibar at Kosovska Mitrovica, which divides the Serb and Albanian districts of the town. A large crowd of Serbs gathered at the north end to prevent the Albanians from crossing. Peacekeepers from the NATO-led Kosovo Force (KFOR) blockaded the bridge, using tear gas, rubber bullets and stun grenades to keep the crowds apart. However, gunmen on both sides opened fire with sub-machine guns and grenades, killing at least eight people (two Albanians and six Serbs) and wounding over 300. Eleven peacekeepers were also injured, of which two seriously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0009-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence\nThe violence quickly spread to other parts of Kosovo, with Kosovo Serb communities and Serbian cultural heritage (churches and monasteries) attacked by crowds of Albanians. Serb returnees were attacked. Some of the locations were ostensibly under the protection of KFOR at the time. During the riots and violence, at least 35 churches were damaged, including 18 monuments of culture, which were demolished, burnt or severely damaged. According to Human Rights Watch, the violence resulted in the deaths of nineteen people; 8 Kosovo Serbs and 11 Kosovo Albanians. More than a thousand were wounded including more than 120 KFOR personnel. More than 4,000 Serbs were driven out of their homes and more than 900 houses belonging to non-Albanians were burned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0010-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence\nBy one estimate, more than 50,000 people participated in the riots. The Legal System Monitoring Section of the OSCE Mission in Kosovo (\u201cthe OSCE\u201d) has closely monitored the investigations and trials from March 2004 until present. With its monitoring of 73 cases (Municipal, District and Minor Offences Courts) pending between December 2005 and March 2008, the OSCE now follows up on a first report of December 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0011-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, \u010caglavica\nIn \u010caglavica, 12,000 Kosovo Albanian rioters tried to storm the Serb-populated areas. KFOR peacekeepers from Sweden, Norway and Finland led by Swedish Lieutenant Colonel Hans H\u00e5kansson created a blockade by using tear gas, rubber bullets, and stun grenades, in order to keep the two groups apart. A truck was driven by a Kosovo Albanian at full speed towards the barricade in an attempt to penetrate the line. After firing warning shots at the truck, the peacekeepers had to use deadly force to avoid friendly casualties, and shot the driver. 16 peacekeepers were injured, and 13 had to be evacuated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0012-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, \u010caglavica\nAnother KFOR unit consisting of mostly Swedish soldiers also participated in defending \u010caglavica that day, supported by people from the barracks who normally worked with non-military tasks. Lieutenant Colonel Hans H\u00e5kansson, who commanded 700 people during the unrest, reported that the fighting went on for 11 hours, and that many collapsed due to dehydration and injuries while struggling to fend off waves of rioters. In total, 35 people were injured while defending the town. Hans H\u00e5kansson was awarded with a medal for his actions by the Royal Swedish Academy of War Sciences in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0013-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, Pristina\nFollowing the attacks in \u010caglavica, the mob of Albanians turned their attention on the few remaining Serbs living in Pristina in the YU Program apartments. The apartments came under attack after the mob of Albanians blocked all of the entrances and set fire to the ground floors. Serbs who tried to flee the apartments were shot at by firearms or stabbed by members of the crowd. The mob began to loot apartments and were chanting pro Kosovo Liberation Army chants and calling for the killing of Serbs. It took KFOR and UNMIK police over 6 hours to evacuate the Serbs who were under constant fire from armed Albanians. Following the evacuation the crowd began to converge on the Church of the Christ Savour burning and damaging the facade and inside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 793]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0014-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, Pej\u00eb\nAlbanians rioted in the city of Pej\u00eb, attacking UN offices. One Albanian was killed by UN police. Serb returnees were attacked at Belo Polje.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0015-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, Lipjan\nAlbanians and KFOR were engaged in gunfights in the town of Lipjan. Four Serbs were murdered, while Serbs taking refuge in the local Orthodox church were attacked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0016-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, Vushtri\nAll Serb houses in the Serb-inhabited village of Svinjare in Vushtri, near Mitrovica, were burnt down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0017-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, Prizren\nOn 17 March, ethnic Albanians started attacking the Serb settlement in Prizren, including the Seminary, and reportedly there was no UNMIK, Kosovo Police and KFOR present there at the time. The mob set the Seminary on fire, with people inside, and beat several elder people, with one man dying in the burning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0018-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Violence, Prizren\nThe German KFOR's refusal to mobilize to protect the local Serbs are one of the main security failures of the 2004 unrest. UNMIK in Prizren said that the terror, 56 Serb houses and 5 historical churches that were burnt down, could have been prevented by KFOR .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0019-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Destroyed churches\nIn an urgent appeal, issued on 18 March by the extraordinary session of the Expanded Convocation of the Holy Synod of Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC), it was reported that a number of Serbian churches and shrines in Kosovo had been damaged or destroyed by rioters. At least 30 sites were completely destroyed, more or less destroyed, or further destroyed (sites that had been previously damaged). Apart from the churches and monasteries, tens of support buildings (such as parish buildings, economical buildings and residences) were destroyed, bringing the number close to 100 buildings of the SPC destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0020-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Destroyed churches\nAll churches and objects of the SPC in Prizren were destroyed. The list includes several UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Among those destroyed and damaged were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0021-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Destroyed churches\nHRW lists 27 Orthodox churches and monasteries burned and looted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 41], "content_span": [42, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0022-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Kosovo\nKosovo Albanian politicians such as President Ibrahim Rugova and Prime Minister Bajram Rexhepi joined UN governor Harri Holkeri, NATO southern commander Gregory Johnson, and other KFOR officials in condemning the violence and appealing for peace in Kosovo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0023-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Kosovo\nHashim Tha\u00e7i, the former Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) leader, \"rejected ethnic division of Kosovo and said independence is a pre-condition for stability in the region.\" He has also said, \"Kosovo, NATO and the West have not fought for Kosovo only for Albanians, nor for a Kosovo ruled by violence. Violence is not the way to solve problems, violence only creates problems.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0024-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Kosovo\nKosovo Police established a special investigation team to handle cases related to the 2004 unrest and according to Kosovo Judicial Council by the end of 2006 the 326 charges filed by municipal and district prosecutors for criminal offenses in connection with the unrest had resulted in 200 indictments: convictions in 134 cases, and courts acquitted eight and dismissed 28; 30 cases were pending. International prosecutors and judges handled the most sensitive cases. By March 2010, 143 Kosovars of Albanian ethnicity were convicted, of which 67 received prison terms of over a year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0025-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nThe events in Kosovo brought an immediate angry reaction on the streets of Serbia. On the evening of 17 March, crowds gathered in Belgrade, Novi Sad and Ni\u0161 to demonstrate against the treatment of the Kosovo Serbs. Despite appeals for calm by Metropolitan Amfilohije, the 17th-century Bajrakli Mosque was set on fire. Islam Aga mosque in the southern city of Ni\u0161 was also set on fire, while demonstrators chanted \"Kill, kill Albanians!\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0025-0001", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nWhen police arrived the mosque was already burning and some media reported that the police didn't move the crowd, so they blocked the fire fighters access to the mosque, leaving them unable to extinguish the fire. Both buildings were extensively damaged but were saved from complete destruction by the intervention of police and firefighters. Also properties of Muslim minorities, such as Goranis, Turks or Albanians were vandalized in Novi Sad and other cities throughout Serbia. Human Rights Watch has concluded that the Serbian state failed to prosecute violence in Novi Sad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0026-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nThe Serbian government publicly denounced the violence in Kosovo. Prime Minister Vojislav Ko\u0161tunica strongly criticized the failure of NATO and the UN to prevent the violence, and called for a state of emergency to be imposed on Kosovo. He gave a speech blaming organized Albanian separatists: \"The events in northern Kosovo-Metohija reveal the true nature of Albanian separatism, its violent and terrorist nature ... [The government will] do all it can to stop the terror in Kosovo\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0026-0001", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nThe Minister of Minority Rights of Serbia and Montenegro, Rasim Ljaji\u0107, himself a Muslim, said \"What is now happening in Kosovo confirms two things: that this is a collapse of the international mission, and a total defeat of the international community.\" Nebojsa \u010covi\u0107, the Serbian government's chief negotiator on matters relating to Kosovo, was sent to Kosovska Mitrovica on March 18 in a bid to calm the situation there. Serbian security forces also guarded the border between Serbia and Kosovo in a bid to prevent demonstrators and paramilitaries from entering the province to foment further unrest. The events were compared by Prime Minister Ko\u0161tunica to ethnic cleansing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0027-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nThe Serbs, represented by the \"Union of Serbs in Kosovo and Metohija\", described the ordeal as \"genocide\" in a letter sent to the Serbian and Russian patriarchs, to Russian President Vladimir Putin and the Serbian government, where, besides that, they quote the burning of seven villages during the World War II-German occupation to the \"several hundreds\" burnt \"under the rule of the troops of Christian Europe and America\" and according to which the \"occupation of Kosovo surpasses all we had to sustain under fascism.\" The spared Serb villages are compared to \"concentration camps\" because of the missing freedom of movement, electricity and heating. According to the letter, after 1999 there were 8,500 homicides or disappearances of non-Albanian people with no single accomplice tried.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0028-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nIn 2011, seven years after the incident, Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremi\u0107 spoke at the Wheaton College in Chicago:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0029-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nIn less than 72 hours, 35 churches and monasteries were set on fire, many of which date back to the 14th century or even further away in history, which represents an irretrievable loss for the mankind. Dozens of people were killed. Several thousand were wounded. Thousands of houses and shops were leveled to the ground. More than 4,000 Kosovo Serbs were expelled from their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0030-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, Reactions in Serbia\nIn Serbia the events were also called the March Pogrom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 42], "content_span": [43, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0031-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, International reaction\nThe international community was taken by surprise by the sudden upsurge in violence. Kosovo had been fairly quiet since the end of 1999, although there had been occasional small-scale ethnic clashes throughout the past five years and an ongoing tension between Serbs and Albanians. This had, however, largely gone unnoticed by the Western media since 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0032-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, International reaction\nKFOR troops closed Kosovo's borders with the remainder of Serbia and Montenegro and the UN suspended flights in and out of the province. NATO announced on 18 March that it would send another 1,000 troops \u2013 750 of them from the United Kingdom \u2013 to reinforce the 18,500 troops already there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0033-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, International reaction\nThe UN and European Union both appealed for calm, calling on local leaders to restrain their supporters. UN Secretary General Kofi Annan urged both sides to cooperate with the peacekeeping forces but pointedly reminded the Kosovo Albanians that they had a responsibility \"to protect and promote the rights of all people within Kosovo, particularly its minorities\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0034-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, International reaction\nAn Austrian OSCE official called the events an orchestrated plan to drive out the remaining Serbs, while one anonymous UNMIK official reportedly referred to the event as Kosovo's Kristallnacht. The commander of NATO's South Flank, Admiral Gregory G. Johnson, said on 19 March that the violence verged on ethnic cleansing of Serbs by Albanians. On 20 March, Kosovo's UN administrator, Harri Holkeri, told journalists that \"Maybe the very beginning was spontaneous but after the beginning certain extremist groups had an opportunity to orchestrate the situation and that is why we urgently are working to get those perpetrators into justice.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179763-0035-0000", "contents": "2004 unrest in Kosovo, International reaction\nAccording to Amnesty International, at least 19 people died\u201411 Albanians and eight Serbs\u2014and over 1,000 were injured while some 730 houses belonging to minorities, mostly Kosovo Serbs, as well as 36 Orthodox churches, monasteries and other religious and cultural sites were damaged or destroyed. In less than 48 hours, 4,100 minority community members were newly displaced (more than the total of 3,664 that had returned throughout 2003), of whom 82% were Serbs and the remaining 18% included Romani (and Ashkali) as well as an estimated 350 Albanians from the Serb-majority areas of Kosovska Mitrovica and Leposavi\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179764-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 \u00cele-de-France regional election\nA regional election took place in \u00cele-de-France on March 21 and March 28, 2004, along with all other regions. Jean-Paul Huchon (PS) was re-elected President for a six years term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179765-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 \u00darvalsdeild\nThe 2004 season of \u00darvalsdeild was the 93rd season of league football in Iceland. FH won their first title. KA and recently promoted V\u00edkingur were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179765-0001-0000", "contents": "2004 \u00darvalsdeild, Results\nEach team played every opponent once home and away for a total of 18 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179766-0000-0000", "contents": "2004 \u00ddokary Liga\nThe 2004 Turkmenistan Higher League (\u00ddokary Liga) season was the twelfth season of Turkmenistan's professional football league. Ten teams competed in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0000-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version\n2004: The Stupid Version is a satirical documentary written by Armando Iannucci, broadcast in two parts on BBC Three on New Year's Eve 2004. The one off programme is a parody of review programmes, which are typically broadcast at New Year. It features edited footage from news and television series, as well as satires on the politics and fads of a year in which \"only Andrew Marr kept his dignity\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0001-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version\nThe documentary was shown again on BBC Two on 29 January 2005, but has not been repeated since or released on DVD, although clips are available on the internet. Iannucci's other series Time Trumpet (2006) follows a similar format to The Stupid Version, reviewing events satirically from a future perspective.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0002-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version, Format\nIannucci himself narrated the content, but only appears on screen once to assess the aftermath of The Room Show, a spoof of the reality television shows prevalent at the time, in which Ian McCaskill, Eddie 'the Eagle' Edwards and a number of other minor celebrities were locked in an (unfilmed) container for ten hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0003-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version, Format\nIn particular, the show focuses on stories that made the headlines from 2004, for example the US Presidential Election, featuring edited footage showing George W. Bush singing \u201cNew York, New York\u201d during a presidential head to head, and an montage of election speeches emphasising the buzz words used by Bush's campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0004-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version, Format\nIn addition, the programme satirised politics in the United Kingdom, for example, edits of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown apparently contradicting one another, the favourite swear words of politicians in the Conservative Party, and the controversial documentary by Panorama, \"Where the Tits were Saddam's WMD?\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0005-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version, Format\nThe programme also features a series of banal interviews interspersed with the clips, with the interviewees either misunderstanding or misinterpreting their content; \"The Olympics \u2013 what was all that about?\u201d In reality, these were actors Richard Ayoade, Matthew Holness, Adam Buxton and Stewart Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179767-0006-0000", "contents": "2004: The Stupid Version, Format\nTelevision programmes by the BBC which were spoofed included Johnny & Denise: Passport to Paradise, Hard Spell, The Weakest Link and Alan Titchmarsh's British Isles: A Natural History. Other scenes included a world where every object was in the style of an iPod, a dubbed News 24 interview with the editor of Al Jazeera and a parody of the song by The Streets, \u201cDry Your Eyes\u201d (featuring Buxton as the protagonist).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179768-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FC Kaiserslautern season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 German football season, 1. FC Kaiserslautern competed in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179768-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FC Kaiserslautern season, Season summary\nKaiserslautern rose to 12th in the final table. The highlight of the season was undoubtedly the team's 15\u20130 victory at fifth-tier FC Sch\u00f6nberg 95, which saw striker Carsten Jancker break the German record for the most goals scored in a DFB-Pokal match. However, manager Kurt Jara quit before the end of the season, citing irreconcilable differences with the club management. After a brief caretaker spell under 1. FC Kaiserslautern Amateure manager Hans-Werner Moser, the club turned to Michael Henke, former assistant coach of Bayern Munich, as his permanent successor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179768-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FC Kaiserslautern season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179768-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FC Kaiserslautern season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179769-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season\nThe 2004\u201305 1. FC N\u00fcrnberg season was the 105th year of existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179770-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FSV Mainz 05 season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 German football season, 1. FSV Mainz 05 competed in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179770-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, Season summary\nA solid first-ever season in Germany's top flight saw Mainz comfortably qualify for the next season's Bundesliga with an 11th-placed finish. Furthermore, the team were awarded Germany's fair play award - because Germany were awarded an extra spot in the UEFA Cup through the Fair Play draw, Mainz qualified for the UEFA Cup's first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179770-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179770-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 1. FSV Mainz 05 season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179771-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 2. Bundesliga\nThe 2004\u201305 2. Bundesliga was the 31st season of the 2. Bundesliga, the second tier of the German football league system. 1. FC K\u00f6ln, MSV Duisburg and Eintracht Frankfurt were promoted to the Bundesliga while Eintracht Trier, Rot-Wei\u00df Oberhausen, Rot-Weiss Essen and Rot-Wei\u00df Erfurt were relegated to the Regionalliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179771-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 2. Bundesliga, League table\nFor the 2004\u201305 season Rot-Wei\u00df Erfurt, 1. FC Saarbr\u00fccken, Rot-Weiss Essen and Dynamo Dresden were newly promoted to the 2. Bundesliga from the Regionalliga while Eintracht Frankfurt, TSV 1860 Munich and 1. FC K\u00f6ln had been relegated to the league from the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179772-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 2. Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe 2nd Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga (women) 2004\u201305 was the 1st season of the 2. Fu\u00dfball-Bundesliga (women), Germany's second football league. It began on 5 September 2004 and ended on 22 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179772-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 2. Frauen-Bundesliga, Group North, Final standings\nPld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179772-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 2. Frauen-Bundesliga, Group South, Final standings\nPld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179773-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 2. Liga (Slovakia)\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the Slovak Second Football League (also known as 2. liga) was the twelfth season of the league since its establishment. It began on 24 July 2004 and ended on 14 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179774-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A Group\nStatistics of Bulgarian A Football Group in the 2004\u20132005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179774-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A Group, Overview\nIt was contested by 16 teams, and CSKA Sofia won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179774-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A Group, Teams, Promotion and Relegation\nThe league was contested by 16 teams, 13 returning from the previous season, as well as three teams promoted from the B Group. The promoted teams are Beroe Stara Zagora, Pirin Blagoevgrad, and Nesebar. Beroe return after a two-year absence, while Nesebar made their debut in the top level of Bulgarian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 48], "content_span": [49, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179775-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. ChievoVerona season\nA.C. ChievoVerona played its fourth consecutive season in Serie A, and nearly equaled 7th place from the 2002-03 Serie A season. After a quite good start, the club finished 15th in Serie A, escaping relegation for just one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season\nAssociazione Calcio Milan began the 2004\u201305 season auspiciously by winning the 2004 Supercoppa Italiana, with a comfortable 3\u20130 victory over Lazio (the winners of the previous season's Coppa Italia), thanks to a hat-trick by Andriy Shevchenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season\nThe Serie A began with a 2\u20132 draw against Livorno. For most of the season, Milan were second to Juventus, in a close points race. However, after matchweeks 25 through 30, and again matchweeks 33 through 34, Milan were in first place. On 8 May 2005, Milan faced Juventus at home; by matchweek 35, the two had almost identical statistics of 76 points, 23 wins, 7 draws, and 4 defeats, with Milan's marginally superior goal difference of +36 against Juventus' +35 keeping them on top. Having lost the potential title deciding game 1\u20130 to a goal by David Trezeguet, Milan drew three more times afterwards and finished in the second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season\nIn the Champions League, Milan were successful and sure-footed, comfortably topping their group (which included Barcelona, Celtic and Shakhtar Donetsk) and then knocking out Manchester United, cross-city rivals Inter and PSV Eindhoven, thus reaching their second Champions League final in three years. The final was against Liverpool. In the first half Ancelotti's men scored three goals, one from Paolo Maldini, the club captain, and two from Hern\u00e1n Crespo. However, in the second half, the English opponents managed to do the same in just 6 minutes, meaning the match went to extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season\nMilan were not able to find a fourth goal and had to face a penalty shoot-out. Unlike in 2003, Milan players went first and missed the first and second penalty kicks (taken by Serginho and Pirlo). Shevchenko, who scored the deciding penalty two years earlier, had to score from the fifth penalty to keep Milan in the game, but failed to beat Dudek, and Liverpool won the Champions League, in one of the most famous come-backs in European football history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season\nThroughout the season, Ancelotti mostly used the 4\u20134\u20132 diamond (or 4\u20131\u20132\u20131\u20132) formation, which he had previously employed with much success, especially in 2002\u201303; the fact that four top-quality strikers were available (Shevchenko, Crespo, Inzaghi and Tomasson) made it almost imperative that two of them would have to be used as regular starters. On rare occasions, however, formations with three centrebacks and two wingbacks (usually Cafu and Serginho), such as 3\u20135\u20132 or 3\u20134\u20131\u20132, were used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179776-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.C. Milan season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179777-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.O. Kerkyra season\nThe 2004\u20132005 season was Kerkyra's 1st straight season on the Greek first tier, as newly promoted from the 2003-04 Beta Ethniki. Kerkyra ended last in the league and was relegated back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179778-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Livorno Calcio season\nManager Franco Colomba was sacked in January, with former manager Roberto Donadoni returning for a second spell in charge. Livorno ultimately finished 9th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179778-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Livorno Calcio season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179778-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Livorno Calcio season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179779-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Roma season\nAssociazione Sportiva Roma endured possibly its most troubled season ever, in which the club almost went from a genuine title threat to relegation. Despite its eight place, the 18th placed Bologna was only a few points behind in the close table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179779-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Roma season\nThe problems started before the season began, with coach Fabio Capello signing for Juventus, and key players Emerson and Walter Samuel departing. That Samuel departed to Real Madrid was greeted with disappointment, but the move was thought to be necessary given the financial struggles of Roma. The moves for Capello and Emerson in contrast, were controversial, with Rome's mayor Walter Veltroni even having to step in to calm feelings down, when Capello had decided to buy Emerson to the Turin club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179779-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Roma season\nControversy resumed when Roma signed French defender Philippe Mex\u00e8s from Auxerre, despite a rolling contract. Auxerre took Roma to UEFA court, and in July 2005, Roma was suspended from the transfer market for a full calendar year. In the midst of chaos, new coach Cesare Prandelli decided to resign when finding out his wife was seriously ill (she would survive another two years before dying), and Prandelli returned to football with Fiorentina one year later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179779-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Roma season\nRudi V\u00f6ller, formerly a striker at the club, and the man in charge when Germany reached the final of the 2002 FIFA World Cup, took over, but the German did not last long, complaining of a lack of organisation. Former Chievo coach Luigi Delneri, who had been sacked from European champions Porto in pre-season, due to spending too much time in his native Italy, took charge, but the squad lacked confidence, and the scandals and internal fighting caused Roma to slip into the relegation fight. Former club midfielder Bruno Conti saved the club from relegation, owing much to striking duo Vincenzo Montella and Francesco Totti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179779-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 A.S. Roma season\nA notable incident during the season was referee Anders Frisk being hit by a coin in a Champions League fixture against Dynamo Kyiv, as Roma crashed out of the tournament in its initial phase. Another intrigue was the tug of war between captain Francesco Totti and young pretender Antonio Cassano, a battle Cassano lost. Due to Roma's transfer ban, the club could not get rid of Cassano until January 2006, when Real Madrid bought him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179780-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ABA Goodyear League\nAdriatic League expanded from 14 to 16 teams before the 2004\u201305 season. It was the second time since the inaugural 2001-02 that the competition expanded its number of teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179780-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ABA Goodyear League\n16 teams from Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro participated in Goodyear League in its fourth season: Union Olimpija, Helios, Pivovarna La\u0161ko, Geoplin Slovan, Cibona VIP, Zadar, Zagreb, Split Croatia Osiguranje, \u0160ibenka Dalmare, \u0160iroki Hercegtisak, Bosna ASA BH TELECOM, Crvena zvezda, Partizan Pivara MB, Hemofarm, Reflex, Budu\u0107nost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179780-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ABA Goodyear League\nIn this season the league also decided to change the play-off system. The Final Tournament was expanded and renamed into the Final Eight Tournament. There were 30 rounds played in the regular part of the season, best eight teams qualified for the Final Eight Tournament which was played in Belgrade from April 28 until May 1, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179780-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ABA Goodyear League\nThroughout the season, the issue of Partizan's forward Milan Gurovi\u0107 not being allowed to enter Croatia due to having a tattoo of Dra\u017ea Mihailovi\u0107 on his left shoulder received much attention in the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179780-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ABA Goodyear League, Regular season\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179781-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ABA season\nThe 2004\u201305 ABA season was the fourth season of the American Basketball Association. The regular season started in November 2004 and the year ended with the championship game in March 2005 featuring the Arkansas RimRockers and Bellevue Blackhawks. Arkansas defeated Bellevue, 118-103 in the championship game to win their first ABA title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179782-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ACB season\nThe 2004\u201305 ACB season was the 22nd season of the Liga ACB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 78]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179783-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ACF Fiorentina season\nACF Fiorentina returned to Serie A, following a two-year absence after the bankruptcy of the previous incarnation of the club. Fiorentina returned only due to the expansion in terms of the number of top-league teams, and therefore had to significantly strengthen the squad in pre-season. Dario Dainelli, Giorgio Chiellini, Hidetoshi Nakata, Fabrizio Miccoli, Martin J\u00f8rgensen, goalkeeper Cristiano Lupatelli, Enzo Maresca, Tom\u00e1\u0161 Ujfalu\u0161i and Javier Portillo were among the highly rated players to sign up for Fiorentina, either permanently or on loan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179783-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 ACF Fiorentina season\nWith this squad, Fiorentina was expected to challenge for a place on the top half of the table, but slipped into the relegation battle that affected more than half of the Serie A clubs during the dramatic season. In the end, a strong finish to the season under incoming coach Dino Zoff saved La Viola from relegation, with an emotional 3\u20130 victory against Brescia confirming their survival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179784-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AEK Athens F.C. season\nAEK Athens F.C. competed for the 46th consecutive season in the Greek top flight and 81st year in existence as a football club. They competed in the Alpha Ethniki, the Greek Cup and the UEFA Cup. The season begun at 11 September 2004 and finished at 25 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179784-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AEK Athens F.C. season, Players, Squad statistics\nNOTE: The players are the ones that have been announced by the AEK Athens' press release. No edits should be made unless a player arrival or exit is announced. Updated 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179784-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AEK Athens F.C. season, Manager stats\nOnly competitive matches are counted. Wins, losses and draws are results at the final whistle; the results of penalty shootouts are not counted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179785-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AFC Ajax season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season AFC Ajax participated in the Eredivisie, the KNVB Cup, the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179785-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AFC Ajax season, Pre-season\nThe first training session for the 2004\u201305 season was held on July 7, 2004. In preparation for the new season Ajax organized a training camp in De Lutte, Netherlands at the De Thij Sportpark. During the pre-season, the squad played friendly matches against FC Omniworld, DOS '19, Excelsior '31, HSV de Zuidvogels, Queens Park Rangers and Luton Town. They then returned to Amsterdam to play Panathinaikos and Arsenal in the annual Amsterdam Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179785-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AFC Ajax season, Transfers, Summer\nFor a list of all Dutch football transfers in the summer window (1 July 2004 to 1 September 2004) please see List of Dutch football transfers summer 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179785-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AFC Ajax season, Transfers, Winter\nFor a list of all Dutch football transfers in the winter window (1 January 2005 to 1 February 2005) please see List of Dutch football transfers winter 2004\u201305.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 AHL season was the 69th season of the American Hockey League. Twenty-eight teams played 80 games each in the schedule. The Rochester Americans finished first overall in the regular season. The Philadelphia Phantoms won the Calder Cup, defeating the Chicago Wolves in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season\nThis season featured a wealth of talent in the AHL, as the National Hockey League was in the midst of a lockout which would cause that league's 2004\u201305 season to be canceled on February 16, 2005. Many players who otherwise may have been called up to be members of NHL teams for the season spent the full season in the AHL instead. The lockout also provided opportunity for several NHL arenas \u2014 including those in Anaheim, Buffalo, Nashville, San Jose and Tampa \u2014 to host AHL games during the season. The Edmonton Road Runners, meanwhile, played the entire season in Rexall Place, normally the home of the NHL's Edmonton Oilers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season\nIn addition, the shootout (previously used in the 1986\u201387 season) was reintroduced to the league, to decide a winner in games which remained tied following the overtime period. The team winning a shootout was credited with a win, and the losing team with an overtime loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season\nThe AHL also announced a series of experimental rule changes, most notably a restricted area for goaltenders. Playing the puck outside the restricted area results in an automatic two-minute delay of game penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime losses; SL = Shootout losses; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = Points;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season, Leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; Mins = Minutes Played; W = Wins; L = Losses: OTL = Overtime Losses; SL = Shootout Losses; GA = Goals Allowed; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179786-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AHL season, All Star Classic\nThe 18th AHL All-Star Classic was played on February 14, 2005, at the Verizon Wireless Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire. Team PlanetUSA defeated team Canada 5-4 in a shootout win. In the skills competition held the night before, team PlanetUSA defeated team Canada 17-13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179787-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AJ Auxerre season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 99th season in the existence of AJ Auxerre and the club's 25th consecutive season in the top-flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Auxerre participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue and UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179787-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AJ Auxerre season, Season summary\nAuxerre fell to 8th in the final table, but won the Coupe de France. Manager Guy Roux retired at the end of the season, after 36 years managing the club. He was replaced by Jacques Santini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179787-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AJ Auxerre season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179787-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AJ Auxerre season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179788-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AS Monaco FC season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was AS Monaco FC's 48th season in Ligue 1. They again finished third in Ligue 1, whilst getting knocked out of the Coupe de la Ligue and Coupe de France at the Semifinal stage by Caen and Sedan respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179788-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AS Monaco FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 34], "content_span": [35, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179788-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AS Monaco FC season, Squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179788-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AS Monaco FC season, Transfers\nIn:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179788-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AS Monaco FC season, Transfers\nOut:Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 38], "content_span": [39, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179789-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AS Saint-\u00c9tienne season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 72nd season in the existence of AS Saint-\u00c9tienne and the club's first season back in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Saint-\u00c9tienne participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179790-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AZ Alkmaar season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 Dutch football season, AZ Alkmaar competed in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179790-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AZ Alkmaar season, Season summary\nAZ reached the UEFA Cup semi-finals, the farthest they had progressed in Europe since winning the UEFA Cup in 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179790-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AZ Alkmaar season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179790-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 AZ Alkmaar season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179791-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aberdeen F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Aberdeen's 92nd season in the top flight of Scottish football and their 94th season overall. Aberdeen competed in the Scottish Premier League, Scottish League Cup, Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179791-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aberdeen F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179792-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Airdrie United F.C. season\nSeason 2004\u201305 was Airdrie United's third competitive season. They competed in the First Division, Challenge Cup, League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179792-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Airdrie United F.C. season, Summary\nAirdrie United finished fifth in the First Division. They reached the third round of the Scottish Cup, the second round of the League Cup and were eliminated in the first round of the Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179793-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team (variously \"Alabama\", \"UA\", \"Bama\" or \"The Tide\") represented the University of Alabama in the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. The head coach was Mark Gottfried, who was in his seventh season at Alabama. The team played its home games at Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Alabama and was a member of the Southeastern Conference. This was the 92nd season of basketball in the school's history. The Crimson Tide finished the season 24\u20138, 12\u20134 in SEC play, lost in the semifinals of the 2005 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament. They were invited to the NCAA Tournament and lost in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179794-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers men's ice hockey season\nThe 2004\u201305 Alabama\u2013Huntsville Chargers ice hockey team represented the University of Alabama in Huntsville in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season. The Chargers were coached by Doug Ross who was in his twenty-third season as head coach. The Chargers played their home games in the Von Braun Center and were members of the College Hockey America conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179795-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alaska Aces season\nThe 2004\u20132005 Alaska Aces season was the 19th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179796-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 64th season in Albacete Balompi\u00e9's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179796-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albacete Balompi\u00e9 season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179797-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albanian Cup\n2004\u201305 Albanian Cup (Albanian: Kupa e Shqip\u00ebris\u00eb) was the fifty-third season of Albania's annual cup competition. It began on 28 August 2004 with the First Preliminary Round and ended on 11 May 2005 with the Final match. The winners of the competition qualified for the 2005-06 first qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League. KF Partizani were the defending champions, having won their fifteenth Albanian Cup last season. The cup was won by KS Teuta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179797-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albanian Cup\nThe rounds were played in a two-legged format similar to those of European competitions. If the aggregated score was tied after both games, the team with the higher number of away goals advanced. If the number of away goals was equal in both games, the match was decided by extra time and a penalty shootout, if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179797-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albanian Cup, First round\nGames were played on 28 August \u2013 1 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179797-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albanian Cup, Third round\nAll fourteen teams of the 2003\u201304 Superliga and First Division entered in this round, along with Second Round winners. First legs were played on 20 October 2004 and the second legs were played on 27 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179797-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albanian Cup, Quarter finals\nIn this round entered the 8 winners from the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179797-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Albanian Cup, Semi-finals\nIn this round entered the four winners from the previous round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179798-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alemannia Aachen season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 German football season, Alemannia Aachen competed in the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179798-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alemannia Aachen season, Season summary\nAlemannia Aachen failed to gain promotion to the Bundesliga or even repeat their cup run of the previous season, but still enjoyed a decent run in the UEFA Cup, making it through the group stages before being knocked out in the round of 32 by eventual semi-finalists AZ.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179798-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alemannia Aachen season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179798-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alemannia Aachen season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179799-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Algerian Championnat National\nThe 2004\u201305 Algerian Championnat National was the 43rd season of the Algerian Championnat National since its establishment in 1962. A total of 16 teams contested the league, with JS Kabylie as the defending champions, The Championnat started on August 20, 2004. and ended on June 13, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179800-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Algerian Championnat National 2\nThe Algerian Championnat National 2 season 2004\u201305 is the thirteenth season of the league under its current title and fifteenth season under its current league division format. It started on 16 August 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179800-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Algerian Championnat National 2, League table\nA total of 18 teams contested the division, including 12 sides remaining in the division from the previous season and three relegated from the Algerian Championnat National, and another three promoted from the Inter-R\u00e9gions Ligue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179801-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Algerian Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Algerian Cup was the 41st edition of the Algerian Cup. ASO Chlef won the Cup by defeating USM S\u00e9tif 1-0 in the final with a goal from Mohamed Messaoud in the 95th minute. It was ASO Chlef's first Algerian Cup in the club's history, as well as its first national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179802-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship was the inaugural staging of the All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179802-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Intermediate Club Hurling Championship\nOn 28 March 2005, Kildangan won the championship following a 2\u201313 to 1\u201313 defeat of Carrickshock in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179803-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship was the second staging of the All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179803-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Junior Club Hurling Championship\nOn 28 March 2005, Galmoy won the championship following a 2\u201318 to 0\u20139 defeat of Oran in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179804-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship was the 35th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1970-71. The championship began on 23 October 2004 and ended on 17 March 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179804-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nCaltra were the defending champions, however, they failed to qualify after being beaten by Salthill-Knocknacarra in the quarter-final of the 2004 Galway County Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179804-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nOn 17 March 2005, Ballina Stephenites won the championship following a 1-12 to 2-08 defeat of Portlaoise in the All-Ireland final at Croke Park. It remains their only championship title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179804-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship\nOis\u00edn McConville of Crossmaglen Rangers was the championship's top scorer with 3-20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179805-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship was the 35th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, an inter-county knockout competition for Ireland's top championship clubs representing each county. The championship was won by James Stephens of Kilkenny, who beat Athenry of Galway by 0\u201319 to 0\u201314 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179806-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Allsvenskan (ice hockey) season\nThe 2004\u201305 Allsvenskan season was the sixth season of the Allsvenskan, the second level of ice hockey in Sweden. 23 teams participated in the league, and Leksands IF, Skellefte\u00e5 AIK, IK Nyk\u00f6ping, and IK Oskarshamn qualified for the Kvalserien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179807-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Alpha Ethniki\nThe 2004\u201305 Alpha Ethniki was the 69th season of the highest football league of Greece. The season began on 18 September 2004 and ended on 25 May 2005. Olympiacos won their 33rd Greek title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179808-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Angola Basketball Cup, Men's Tournament\nThe 2005 Men's Basketball Cup was contested by eight teams and won by Primeiro de Agosto. The final was played on May 6, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179808-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Angola Basketball Cup, Women's Tournament\nThe 2005 Women's Basketball Cup was won by Primeiro de Agosto A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179809-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Angola Basketball Super Cup\nThe 2005 Angola Basketball Super Cup (12th edition) was contested by Primeiro de Agosto, as the 2004 league champion and Petro Atl\u00e9tico, the 2004 cup winner. Primeiro de Agosto was the winner, making its 5th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179809-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Angola Basketball Super Cup\nThe 2005 Women's Super Cup (10th edition) was contested by Primeiro de Agosto, as the 2004 women's league champion and Interclube, the 2004 cup runner-up. Primeiro de Agosto was the winner, making it is's 2nd title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179810-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arab Champions League\nThe 2004\u201305 Arab Champions League is the second edition of a new format called Arab Champions League replacing the former Arab Unified Club Championship. The teams represented Arab nations from Africa and Asia. Al-Ittihad Jeddah of Saudi Arabia won the final against CS Sfaxien of Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179810-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arab Champions League\nThe competition's sponsor ART invited Iraq's Al-Talaba to compete. The Iraqi FA then nominated two other clubs (Erbil SC and Najaf FC, leaders of the Northern and Southern groups when the domestic championship was abandoned in spring 2004) to participate alongside Al-Talaba, but UAFA only allowed Al-Talaba to compete. The Iraqi FA then withdrew Al-Talaba from the tournament and were subsequently suspended from UAFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179810-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arab Champions League, Knock-out stage, Quarterfinals\nAl-Ittihad 1\u20131 MC Alger on aggregate. Al-Ittihad won 5\u20134 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179811-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2004\u201305 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n was the 114th season of top-flight football in Argentina. The season ran from August 15, 2004 to July 3, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179811-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nFour teams promoted from Primera B Nacional, Instituto (C) (champion), Almagro (runner-up), Argentinos Juniors and Hurac\u00e1n (TA) (won promotion/relegation playoff the previous year)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179811-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n\nNewell's Old Boys won the Apertura (5th league title) and V\u00e9lez S\u00e1rsfield the Clausura (6th title) championships, while Hurac\u00e1n de Tres Arroyos and Almagro were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179812-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team represented the University of Arizona during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Hall-of-Famer Lute Olson led the team in his 22nd year as Arizona's head coach. The team played their home games at McKale Center in Tucson, Arizona as members of the Pacific-10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179812-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe Wildcats recorded 30 or more wins for the third time in program history with a record of 30\u20137 overall. A 15\u20133 record in conference play earned Olson and Arizona an 11th Pacific-10 Conference championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179812-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arizona Wildcats men's basketball team\nArizona was invited to the NCAA Tournament for the 21st-straight season, receiving a 3-seed in the Midwest Region. The team advanced to the Elite Eight by defeating (14-seed) Utah State, (11) UAB, and (2) Oklahoma State before falling 90-89 in overtime to top-seeded Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179813-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team represented the University of Arkansas in the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. The head coach was Stan Heath, serving for his third year. The team played its home games in Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179814-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Armenian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Armenian Hockey League season was the fourth season of the Armenian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Armenia. Four teams participated in the league, and Dinamo Yerevan won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 107th season of competitive football played by Arsenal. The club ended the campaign as FA Cup winners, but failed to retain their Premier League title as they finished second to Chelsea. In the UEFA Champions League, Arsenal made an exit in the knockout stages to Bayern Munich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season\nIn the transfer window Arsenal purchased goalkeeper Manuel Almunia, who initially served a backup to Jens Lehmann, and midfielder Mathieu Flamini. The club kept hold of its captain Patrick Vieira after much transfer speculation over his expected move to Real Madrid. Several players left Arsenal before the campaign got under way; defender Martin Keown left to play for Leicester City, Ray Parlour joined Middlesbrough while Sylvain Wiltord signed for Lyon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season\nArsenal began the season in good form and equalled Nottingham Forest's unbeaten league run of 42 matches against Middlesbrough. The team set a new English division record and went a further seven games unbeaten before losing to Manchester United in controversial circumstances. Arsenal's form suffered as a result and defensive shortcomings became more apparent; two draws and a defeat in November reinforced Chelsea's position at the top of the table, where they remained for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season\nAt home to Crystal Palace in February 2005, Wenger named an Arsenal squad with no English players \u2013 a first in the club's history which attracted criticism from the media. The team ended the season strongly, with a run of eight wins from nine games ensuring a second-place finish. 32 different players represented the club in five competitions and there were 15 different goalscorers. Arsenal's top goalscorer was Thierry Henry, who scored 30 goals in 42 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nArsenal ended the previous season as league champions, becoming the first side since Preston North End 115 years earlier to do so undefeated. They completed their historic league campaign with 26 wins, 12 draws and 90 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Background\nBy the end of January 2004, Arsenal were still in the hunt for all four trophies, but suffered setbacks in each of the cup competitions; they were unable to retain the FA Cup, losing out to eventual winners Manchester United in the semi-finals and days later were knocked out of the UEFA Champions League by Chelsea in the quarter-finals. They exited the League Cup after a defeat to Middlesbrough in early February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Community Shield\nThe 2004 edition of the FA Community Shield, was contested between Manchester United and Arsenal at the Millennium Stadium on 8 August. Cesc F\u00e0bregas started alongside Gilberto Silva in midfield for Arsenal as Vieira was absent, while Thierry Henry partnered Dennis Bergkamp up front. After a goalless first half, Arsenal took the lead when Gilberto scored in the 50th minute. Manchester United equalised through Alan Smith five minutes after, but Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes restored Arsenal's advantage two minutes before the hour mark. Mika\u00ebl Silvestre scored an own goal 11 minutes before the end to give Arsenal a 3\u20131 victory. Wenger praised F\u00e0bregas's performance after the match, describing the midfielder as a \"complete player\" and reiterated his desire to keep Vieira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League\nA total of 20 teams competed in the Premier League in the 2004\u201305 season. Each team played 38 matches; two against every other team and one match at each club's stadium. Three points were awarded for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats. At the end of the season the top two teams qualified for the group stages of the UEFA Champions League; teams in third and fourth needed to play a qualifier. The provisional fixture list was released on 24 June 2004, but was subject to change in the event of clashes with other competitions, international football, inclement weather, or matches being selected for television coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nArsenal began their defence of the league title against Everton on 15 August 2004. F\u00e0bregas was named in the first eleven; at 17 years 103 days he became the club's youngest ever Premier League player. It was Bergkamp on his 500th league appearance who opened the scoring for Arsenal and Reyes made it 2\u20130, heading the ball in from Freddie Ljungberg's cross. Ljungberg added a third goal in the second half and in spite of the team conceding moments after, Robert Pires scored Arsenal's fourth in the 83rd minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nShortly before the kick-off at home to Middlesbrough the following weekend, the club was presented a golden replica of the Premier League trophy, to commemorate their unbeaten season. In the match, Henry gave Arsenal the lead, which was cancelled out before half time by Joseph-D\u00e9sir\u00e9 Job's goal-bound effort. Four minutes after the interval, Franck Queudrue exploited an error from defender Pascal Cygan and in turn passed the ball to Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink, who \"finish[ed] with perfect brutality\". Queudrue scored to put Middlesbrough 3\u20131 up in the 53rd minute, but Bergkamp replied with a goal for Arsenal a minute later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0007-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nThe home team completed the comeback with further goals by Reyes, Pires and Henry. Wenger afterwards admitted Arsenal's defending was poor, but said their attacking threat made up for their deficiencies. The 5\u20133 win meant Arsenal equalled Nottingham Forest's record of 42 league matches undefeated. Three days later, the team beat Blackburn Rovers 3\u20130 to set a new record. Arsenal at the end of the month travelled to Norwich City, where three first half goals set the team on the way to a 4\u20131 victory. The win ended Norwich's eight-month undefeated record at Carrow Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nDue to international fixtures, Arsenal did not play another game for two weeks. On the resumption of club football, they travelled across London to face Fulham. Vieira made his return to the first team in place of F\u00e0bregas. Fulham was awarded a penalty in the first half, after Ashley Cole brought down striker Andy Cole in the penalty area. Referee Mark Halsey however changed his mind after protests from the Arsenal players and a consultation with his assistant; the game was restarted with a dropped-ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nArsenal scored three times in the second half and ended the weekend of 6 September 2004 top of the league table, two points clear of second place Chelsea. The league champions dropped their first points of the season at home to Bolton Wanderers. At the City of Manchester Stadium on 25 September 2004, a goal by Cole earned Arsenal a 1\u20130 win against Manchester City. Journalist Russell Thomas, writing for The Guardian, commented on Arsenal's fatigue during the second half and opined that the team needed to keep their focus against sterner opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nArsenal beat Charlton Athletic in early October to extend their unbeaten run to 48 league matches. Charlton manager Alan Curbishley said of his opponents: \"The gulf between Arsenal and the rest of the Premier League means that the rest have got it all to do to try and stop them, and I'm including the big three or four.\" Two goals from Pires and one from Henry ensured a 3\u20131 win against Aston Villa, who had led the game early on. Attention soon turned to Arsenal's trip to face Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0009-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nThe champions were looking to go half a century of league games unbeaten, whereas the home team \u2013 in transition, attempted to push on for a title challenge. The game saw many late aggressive tackles made by United players go unpunished and later in the match, an attempted challenge by Sol Campbell on Wayne Rooney earned Manchester United a controversial penalty, converted by Ruud van Nistelrooy in the 73rd minute. Rooney then scored United's second goal of the match to end Arsenal's unbeaten run on 49 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0009-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nTempers boiled over in the players' tunnel, where pizza was thrown at Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson. When speaking to the media, a distraught Wenger told reporters that Rooney dived to win the penalty and criticised the refereeing performance of Mike Riley. He was later found guilty of insinuating that Van Nistelrooy was a cheat, and fined \u00a315,000 by the FA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, August\u2013October\nThe final match of October was against Southampton at Highbury. Henry who missed a penalty early on, scored to put Arsenal in front in the 67th minute. Southampton replied with two goals from Rory Delap, but Van Persie in stoppage time equalised for the home team with a curling shot. The draw meant Arsenal stood in first position and had accumulated 26 points. The team were level on points with Chelsea, with a marginally better goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nFor the second league game in succession, Arsenal dropped two points. The team drew 1\u20131 at Crystal Palace on 6 November 2004, which meant Chelsea overtook them in first position. Wenger rued Arsenal's inability to hold onto leads in matches and admitted the fluency had disappeared in their football, possibly because of the manner in which they lost the unbeaten record. A week later Arsenal faced Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane. It was Tottenham who began the match the better of the two teams and took the lead after 36 minutes when Noureddine Naybet scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0011-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nHenry equalised for Arsenal moments before half-time, and the champions went in front after Lauren converted a penalty. Vieira scored on the hour mark to make it 3\u20131, before Jermain Defoe replied for Tottenham instantly with a \"wonderful, dipping finish into the top corner\". F\u00e0bregas created Arsenal\u2019s fourth goal, scored by Ljungberg. In the final 16 minutes Tottenham scored twice and Arsenal once; the final score was 5\u20134, making it the highest scoring North London derby. Arsenal's defending was ridiculed by Chelsea manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho, who told reporters, \"Five-four is a hockey score, not a football score.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\n\"I do not think there is too much wrong but when you lose the errors are highlighted. I won't be making any major changes.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nArs\u00e8ne Wenger after Arsenal's defeat to Liverpool, 28 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nArsenal only managed a draw against West Bromwich Albion on 20 November 2004; Robert Earnshaw's goal with 11 minutes remaining of normal time cancelled out Pires' opener. Arsenal lost their final match of November, away to Liverpool at Anfield. Vieira finished off a one-touch move to equalise for Arsenal \u2013 who were behind in the first half \u2013 but Neil Mellor scored the winning goal of the game, shooting from long range.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0014-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nFootball pundit Alan Hansen in his analysis on Match of the Day criticised the temperament of Arsenal\u2019s players and questioned their desire: \"When you have success, sometimes it isn't there and you have to dig in with great determination and hard work, and at the moment they are not doing that. When you look at their two big players, Henry and Vieira, [you think they] must do better in future.\" Arsenal ended the month in second, five points behind leaders Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nHenry scored two late goals in Arsenal\u2019s victory over Birmingham City on 4 December 2004. Wenger replaced Lehmann in goal with Almunia, who made his league debut. Arsenal then faced league leaders Chelsea at Highbury; the match was billed as \"Judgement Day\" by Sky Sports. With Vieira suspended and Gilberto and Edu injured, Wenger picked Flamini to partner Fabregas in midfield. The first chance of the match went to Henry, who scored inside 75 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0015-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nJohn Terry levelled the score, but Henry restored Arsenal\u2019s lead from a contentious free-kick \u2013 Graham Poll allowed the striker to take it quickly without warning the Chelsea players. Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen equalised early in the second half for Chelsea, and late on Henry missed a chance to score a hat-trick. There were no further goals and the match ended 2\u20132, meaning Chelsea remained five points clear of Arsenal. Wenger said he was disappointed in the manner his team conceded to Chelsea \u2013 from two set pieces, but added, \"I thought we did really well, and it was important for us to come back to the level we want to be at.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, November\u2013December\nArsenal won their remaining games in December and conceded no goals. They beat Portsmouth courtesy of a Campbell goal in the second half, and on Boxing Day defeated Fulham by two goals. Vieira scored the winning goal against Newcastle United, a volley that deflected over goalkeeper Shay Given. After 20 games, Arsenal accumulated 44 points and lay second in the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nOn New Year's Day, Ljungberg scored two goals in Arsenal\u2019s 3\u20131 win against Charlton Athletic. The team four days later drew at home to Manchester City. Arsenal lost further ground to Chelsea after defeat to Bolton Wanderers at the Reebok Stadium. Wenger conceded that Chelsea were favourites to win the league because of their point advantage, but added: \"We will keep going and fight until the last minute of the championship.\" Arsenal ended January with a 1\u20130 home win against Newcastle United. Wenger made four changes from the Bolton defeat, with Bergkamp the match scorer coming in place of Van Persie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nThe first night of February saw Arsenal host Manchester United at Highbury. In the tunnel before the match Roy Keane was seen confronting Vieira; the United captain accused him of intimidating his teammate Gary Neville. Vieira scored after eight minutes, but Giggs equalised for Manchester United 10 minutes later. Bergkamp restored Arsenal\u2019s advantage nine minutes before half time, but two goals by Cristiano Ronaldo and one by John O'Shea in the second half gave United a 4\u20132 win. It was Arsenal's fourth league defeat of the season and moved them down to third spot, overtaken by their opponents. Wenger ruled his team out of the title race and refused to blame Almunia for his error in Ronaldo's first goal. The goalkeeper was dropped in Arsenal's next game, away to Aston Villa. Three first half goals by Ljungberg, Henry and Cole gave Arsenal a comfortable win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 930]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nFor the match against Crystal Palace on 14 February 2005, Wenger named an Arsenal squad that did not feature a single British player \u2013 a first in the club\u2019s history. The team did not get off to the best of starts with Lehmann miskicking a back pass and Vieira losing possession routinely, but grew as the game went on and scored three goals in seven minutes. On his 200th league appearance, Henry scored in either half, with the result 5\u20131 to Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0019-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nThe result was somewhat overshadowed by the foreign makeup of the team; former player Paul Merson called it a \"joke\" and PFA chairman Gordon Taylor noted it was a \"worrying pattern for English football\". When asked about his team selections, Wenger said: \"I don't look at the passport of people, I look at their quality and their attitude.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, January\u2013February\nArsenal only earned a point at Southampton, where Van Persie was sent off for a late challenge on Graeme Le Saux. The team remained in third at the end of February, four points behind Manchester United and 10 behind leaders Chelsea, who played a game less than both challengers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nArsenal\u2019s form improved as the season drew to a close. At home to Portsmouth on 5 March 2005, the team earned three points courtesy of Henry\u2019s hat-trick. Van Persie scored the only goal in Arsenal\u2019s match against Blackburn Rovers and the team moved back to second position with a home win against Norwich City \u2013 Henry scored another hat-trick. A week later Pires' goal was enough for Arsenal to beat Middlesbrough at the Riverside Stadium and win their fourth consecutive match. The team then played out a goalless draw against Chelsea, who were on course to become champions; Wenger congratulated his opponents on their season and felt Arsenal needed to score first so that they could \"force them to come out from the back.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nArsenal defeated Tottenham 1\u20130 on 25 April 2005, which meant Chelsea needed to wait on Saturday in order to mathematically win the title. Second position was the best Arsenal could aim for by the time they faced West Bromwich Albion on 2 May 2005. Goals from Van Persie and Edu earned a 2\u20130 win for the team and Arsenal beat Champions League finalists Liverpool at Highbury to all-but secure second spot. Arsenal recorded the biggest win of the league season, against Everton at Highbury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0022-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Premier League, March\u2013May\nAn inspired performance by Bergkamp helped the team win 7\u20130; he created the opening two goals and scored in the second half. Arsenal lost their final game of the campaign, away to Birmingham City. It was a lacklustre performance by the visitors, who equalised through Bergkamp after going a goal behind, but conceded in the 90th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nArsenal entered the competition in the third round, by virtue of their Premier League status. Their opening match was a home tie against Stoke City. The visitors took the lead just before the break, but goals from Reyes and Van Persie in the second half meant Arsenal won 2\u20131. They then faced Wolverhampton Wanderers at home in the next round; a goal apiece from Vieira and Ljungberg secured a comfortable 2\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nArsenal's opponent in the fifth round was Sheffield United. After 35 minutes Bergkamp was sent off for his apparent push on Cullip. With eleven minutes of normal time remaining, Robert Pires scored for Arsenal, but the team conceded a late penalty which Andy Gray converted. The equaliser for Sheffield United meant the match was replayed at Bramall Lane on 1 March 2005. Both teams played out a goalless draw after full-time and throughout extra-time, so the tie was decided by a penalty shootout. Almunia saved two penalties, which ensured progress into the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nBolton Wanderers hosted Arsenal at the Reebok Stadium in the sixth round of the competition. Ljungberg scored the only goal of the tie after just three minutes; he had an opportunity to extend Arsenal's lead in stoppage time, but hit the ball over from six yards. Arsenal faced Blackburn Rovers in the semi-final which was played at the Millennium Stadium. Two goals from Van Persie and one from Pires gave Arsenal a 3\u20130 win, in a match marred by Blackburn's aggressive tactics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, FA Cup\nThis set up a showdown with Manchester United in the final on 21 May 2005. United were on top for long periods of the game but Arsenal resisted their pressure and the match ended 0\u20130 after 120 minutes, albeit Arsenal were a man lighter after Reyes' dismissal with a minute remaining for two bookable offences. The match went to penalties with all the penalty takers converting barring Paul Scholes, whose effort was denied by Lehmann. Vieira converted the final and winning spot-kick to seal a tenth FA Cup crown for Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nThe Football League Cup is a cup competition open to clubs in the Premier League and Football League. Like the FA Cup it is played on a knockout basis, with the exception of the second round and semi-finals, which are contested over a two-legged tie. Together with the other clubs playing in European competitions, Arsenal entered the Football League Cup in the third round. The team were drawn to face Manchester City, on the week of 25 October 2004. Wenger fielded a relatively young team for the tie, which took the lead in the second half when Van Persie scored. Danny Karbassiyoon extended the visitor's lead in the 90th minute, just before Manchester City striker Robbie Fowler scored from a free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 757]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Football League Cup\nIn the fourth round, Arsenal faced Everton at Highbury. The team went behind after eight minutes of play, but Quincy Owusu-Abeyie levelled the scoreline and in the second half Arturo Lupoli scored twice. Wenger was pleased with how his team responded to the setback and added: \"They played intelligently, technically well and with the spirit we like to play the game.\" Arsenal bowed out of the competition away to Manchester United; the only goal of the match came inside 19 seconds when David Bellion profited from an error by goalkeeper Almunia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nArsenal were drawn in Group E, along with Dutch champions PSV, Greek club Panathinaikos and Norwegian side Rosenborg. An Alex own goal was enough for Arsenal to claim three points against PSV on the first matchday. The team drew away to Rosenborg and earnt a point at Panathinaikos, despite twice having taken the lead at the Apostolos Nikolaidis Stadium. In the reverse fixture, Cygan scored an own goal to cancel out Henry's first-half opener; the result left Arsenal in second position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0029-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nTheir next match was against PSV at the Philips Stadion, where after eight minutes the home side took the lead. Henry equalised for Arsenal, having created the chance following a one-two with Ljungberg. In the second half Lauren and Vieira were both sent off, for two bookable offences. Wenger accepted referee Herbert Fandel's decision, but added his surprise that Mark van Bommel was not cautioned: \"If you look at the number of fouls he made without being punished it is very surprising because he made some deliberate fouls. Some people might criticise Patrick when we were down to 10 men but he felt he had to fight harder to win the ball.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe draw against PSV meant Arsenal had to beat against Rosenborg to qualify for the last 16. A 5\u20131 win at home, with five different goalscorers on the scoresheet, put Arsenal top of the group given PSV lost to Panathinaikos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Knockout phase, Round of 16\nArsenal were drawn against Bayern Munich in the knockout stages. In the first leg a mistake from Tour\u00e9 presented Claudio Pizarro to score inside four minutes. The striker then scored his second of the match in the 58th minute, getting past his marker Tour\u00e9, and Hasan Salihamid\u017ei\u0107 added a third for Bayern seven minutes later. Tour\u00e9 scored an away goal late on for Arsenal, which gave them a slender chance of progressing into the quarter-finals. Arsenal beat Bayern in the second leg, but a solitary goal \u2013 scored by Henry in the 66th minute, meant the club was eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 79], "content_span": [80, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Player statistics\nArsenal used a total of 32 players during the 2004\u201305 season and there were 18 different goalscorers. There were also three squad members who did not make a first-team appearance in the campaign. The team played in a 4\u20134\u20132 formation throughout the season, but Wenger deployed a 4\u20135\u20131 formation for the cup final. Tour\u00e9 featured in 49 matches \u2013 the most of any Arsenal player in the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Player statistics\nThe team scored a total of 117 goals in all competitions. The highest scorer was Henry, with 30 goals, followed by Pires who scored 17 goals. Five Arsenal players were sent off during the season: Vieira, Reyes, Bergkamp, Van Persie and Lauren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179815-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Arsenal F.C. season, Player statistics\nNumbers in parentheses denote appearances as substitute. Players with number struck through and marked left the club during the playing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179816-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Asia League Ice Hockey season\nThe 2004\u201305 Asia League Ice Hockey season was the second season of Asia League Ice Hockey. Eight teams participated in the league, and Kokudo Ice Hockey Club won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season in English football was Aston Villa F.C. 's 13th consecutive season in the FA Premier League, and their second season under the management of David O'Leary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season\nVilla went into the season with high hopes after finishing sixth during the 2003\u201304 FA Premier League season, despite an inconsistent start Villa soon begun to string wins together and threaten the top six but in the run up to Christmas Villas form dropped alarmingly and they fell away quickly, occasional wins put any relegation worry's astray as they underachieved and eventually secured a tenth place finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 83], "content_span": [84, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, Youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179817-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Aston Villa F.C. season, Players, Other players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179818-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atalanta B.C. season\nAtalanta B.C. failed to prolong its Serie A stint by more than one season, due to a poor start to the season. Delio Rossi took over at the helm, and helped by the breakthroughs of striker Stephen Makinwa and playmaker Riccardo Montolivo, Atalanta was able to catch up with the teams above the relegation zone, but went down due to a 1-0 defeat to Roma in the penultimate round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179819-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Athletic Bilbao season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 104th season in Athletic Bilbao's history and their 74th consecutive season in La Liga, the top division of Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179819-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nIn the previous season, new manager Ernesto Valverde guided Athletic Bilbao to 5th place in La Liga, their highest placing in six seasons. This also allowed them their first European participation since 1998, qualifying for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179819-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nValverde's second season in charge was less successful in the league, as Athletic suffered three more losses than the year before and slipped to 9th. They enjoyed more success in the Copa del Rey, reaching the semifinals before being knocked out on penalties by eventual champions Real Betis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179819-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nTheir European adventure began in the UEFA Cup first round, where they were drawn against Trabzonspor of Turkey. Despite losing the away first leg 3\u20132, they qualified for the group stage by winning 2\u20130 at home. They were drawn in Group B, and suffered another defeat in Turkey, this time against Be\u015fikta\u015f. However, they won their other three games - against Parma of Italy, Steaua Bucure\u0219ti of Romania, and a crushing 7\u20131 victory over Standard Li\u00e8ge of Belgium - to progress as group winners. Their opponents in the next round were Austria Wien, and despite a creditable 0\u20130 draw in the away leg, Bilbao were eliminated after a 2\u20131 defeat at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179819-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Athletic Bilbao season, Season summary\nValverde left his post at the end of the season, and was replaced by Jos\u00e9 Luis Mendilibar. Mendilibar lasted only until the following October, while Valverde would return to the club for a second spell as head coach in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179820-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Hawks season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Hawks' 56th season in the National Basketball Association, and 37th season in Atlanta. In the 2004 NBA draft, the Hawks selected Josh Childress from Stanford with the sixth pick, and high school star Josh Smith with the seventeenth pick. During the off-season, the team hired Mike Woodson as head coach and acquired All-Star forward Antoine Walker, and Tony Delk from the Dallas Mavericks, Al Harrington from the Indiana Pacers, and Predrag Drobnjak from the expansion Charlotte Bobcats. The team also signed free agents Kenny Anderson, re-signed Jon Barry and former Hawks forward Kevin Willis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179820-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Hawks season\nThe Hawks were not expected to be any good heading into the season posting an awful 2\u201312 record in November. In December, the team traded Barry to the Houston Rockets for Tyronn Lue. At midseason, Walker was eventually traded back to his former team, the Boston Celtics for All-Star guard Gary Payton, Tom Gugliotta and Michael Stewart, while Anderson was released to free agency and signed with the Los Angeles Clippers. However, Payton never played for the Hawks, and was released and then re-signed with the Celtics for the rest of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179820-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Hawks season\nMeanwhile, the Hawks went from bad to worse losing 32 of their final 35 games, posting 13 and 14-game losing streaks respectively on their way to finishing with a league worst record at 13\u201369 (.159), which was their worst winning percentage in franchise history. Harrington led the team with 17.5 points and 7.0 rebounds per game. Despite their awful season, Smith won the Slam Dunk Contest during the All-Star Weekend in Denver, as he and Childress both made the NBA All-Rookie Second Team. Following the season, second-year guard Boris Diaw was traded to the Phoenix Suns for Joe Johnson, Willis and Gugliotta both retired, but Willis would come back for one more season with the Dallas Mavericks before retiring again, and Drobnjak and Stewart were both released to free agency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179820-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Hawks season\nFor the season, the Hawks added new yellow alternate road uniforms with black side panels, which would last until 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179821-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Thrashers season\nThe 2004\u201305 Atlanta Thrashers season was the sixth season for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on June 25, 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179821-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Thrashers season\nNo games were played during the 2004\u201305 NHL season due to the lock-out of the NHL players by the league, however teams business did occur, including the Thrashers' participation in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft that was held on June 26 in Raleigh, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179821-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Thrashers season, Transactions\nThe Thrashers were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179821-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atlanta Thrashers season, Draft picks\nAtlanta's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179822-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Atl\u00e9tico Madrid season\nAtl\u00e9tico de Madrid had a largely disappointing season, where the club stalled in its progress towards the internationally qualifying positions. Despite Fernando Torres continuing to score more than a dozen goals per season, consolidating his status as Spain's top young striker, Atl\u00e9tico were only able to score 40 league goals. That rendered the successful defence of Luis Perea and Pablo Ib\u00e1\u00f1ez vital just to keep the club in mid-table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179823-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Auburn Tigers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Auburn Tigers men's basketball team represented Auburn University in the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. The team's head coach was Jeff Lebo, who was in his first season at Auburn. The team played their home games at Beard\u2013Eaves\u2013Memorial Coliseum in Auburn, Alabama. They finished the season 14\u201317, 4\u201312 in SEC play. They defeated Vanderbilt to advance to the quarterfinals of the SEC Tournament where they lost to LSU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179824-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian Athletics Championships\nThe 2004\u201305 Australian Athletics Championships was the 83th edition of the national championship in outdoor track and field for Australia. It was held from 4\u20136 March 2005 at the Sydney Olympic Park Athletic Centre in Sydney. It served as a selection meeting for Australia at the 2005 World Championships in Athletics. The 10,000 metres event took place separately at the Zatopek 10K on 4 December 2004 at Lakeside Stadium in Melbourne. Relay events were contested in Canberra on 6 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179825-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004\u201305 Australian Figure Skating Championships was held in Sydney from 21 through 28 August 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing across many levels, including senior, junior, novice, adult, and the pre-novice disciplines of primary and intermediate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season\nThe 2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season was a slightly below average tropical cyclone season. It began on 1 November 2004 and ended on 30 April 2005. The regional tropical cyclone operational plan also defines a tropical cyclone year separately from a tropical cyclone season, which runs from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season\nTropical cyclones in this area are monitored by four Tropical Cyclone Warning Centres (TCWCs): the Australian Bureau of Meteorology in Perth, Darwin, and Brisbane; and TCWC Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Phoebe\nOn 30 August, an area of low pressure developed near the edge of M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's area of responsibility within an unseasonably active monsoonal band which coincided with the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation. Tracking towards the southeast, the low experience strong deep-level wind shear which kept most of the convection displaced from the center of circulation. On 31 August, convection managed to develop around the west and southwestern portions of the low before and was designated as Tropical Depression 01. The depression reached its peak intensity at this time with winds of 55\u00a0km/h (35\u00a0mph 10-minute winds) and a minimum pressure of 999\u00a0hPa (mbar). The system moved southeast and entered the Perth Tropical Cyclone Warning Centre's area of responsibility on 1 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 846]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Phoebe\nThe system was upgraded to Tropical Cyclone Phoebe early on 2 September when it was about 800\u00a0km west-northwest of the Cocos Islands. Phoebe quickly reached its peak strength that day, with winds of 85\u00a0km/h, as it continued to move to the southeast. The cyclone weakened as it moved over cooler water and dissipated about 550\u00a0km from the Cocos Islands. Phoebe posed no threat to any land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low\nA tropical low developed in the Perth AOR on 2 December near the coast of Java. According to Perth, the storm had a maximum sustained winds of 30 knots (56\u00a0km/h), while the JTWC assigned the storm peak sustained winds of 35 knots (65\u00a0km/h) and classifying it as a tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Raymond\nA tropical low developed from an area of convection of the Western Australia coast on 30 December. The system drifted southeast, then turned to the northeast over the following days without significant development. The low began to drift to the southeast again on 1 January and the convection began to increase, with it becoming Tropical Cyclone Raymond on 2 January, when it was 460\u00a0km north-northeast of Broome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Raymond\nThe cyclone peaked with 85\u00a0km/h winds as it moved east, and made landfall as a Category\u00a01 cyclone just west of Kalumburu the same day. The cyclone weakened over land, and the remnant low continued east over the Northern Territory, entering the Gulf of Carpentaria on 5 January. The low reversed direction and dissipated by 10 January. Cyclone Raymond caused no damage, but brought the first heavy rain of the season to northern Kimberley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Sally\nA area of convection began to develop 930\u00a0km west-southwest of Jakarta on 6 January, becoming a tropical low the next day. The low intensified as it drifted south and was named Sally 370\u00a0km east-southeast of the Cocos Islands on 8 January. Cyclone Sally slowly moved to the southwest, under the influence of a mid-level ridge to the southeast, reaching its peak with 95\u00a0km/h winds on 9 January. The storm then rapidly weakened as a result of the presence of dry air and increased wind shear, before dissipating early on 10 January 460\u00a0km west-southwest of the Cocos Islands. Cyclone Sally had no effects on land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 73], "content_span": [74, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Kerry\nTropical Cyclone Kerry developed from Tropical Depression 5F on 5 January in RSMC Nadi's Area of Responsibility, 585\u00a0km (364\u00a0mi) northeast of Port Vila, Vanuatu. Kerry moved to the southwest with 75\u00a0km/h (45\u00a0mph) winds as it moved over Vanuatu. Once past the island, Kerry moved on a west-southwest course and it began to intensify after turning to the west. The storm reached a peak intensity of 160\u00a0km/h (100\u00a0mph) before turning towards the south-southeast. The storm began to weaken under vertical shear and was downgraded to a depression on 13 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low (10S)\nOn 12 January the Perth Meteorlogical Center issued a TCF and the JTWC followed suit and they named the Low 10S.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Tim\nA tropical low located about 930\u00a0km north of Learmonth, Western Australia began to develop a deeper convection on 23 January, despite being beneath the subtropical ridge. The low became Tropical Cyclone Tim the next day, when it was 700\u00a0km southeast of Christmas Island. Tim moved slowly to the southwest, as a result of steering from an anticyclone to the southeast. The storm reached briefly reached a peak with wind of 85\u00a0km/h late on 23 January. Tim lost tropical cyclone status on 25 January to 470\u00a0km south-west of Christmas Island and the remnant continued west before dissipating. There was no damage as a result of Cyclone Tim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Harvey\nThe Bureau of Meteorology began monitoring a tropical low off Groote Eylandt in the Gulf of Carpentaria on 3 February 2005. The low intensified and was named Harvey three days later. The storm made landfall near the Queensland/Northern Territory border on 7 February as a Category\u00a03 (Australian scale) system. Minor structural damage was reported along the Robinson River and Mornington Island was battered by high winds and heavy rain, however no casualties were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low Vivienne\nA tropical low developed within the monsoon trough about 550\u00a0km northwest of Broome, Western Australia on 4 February. The low gradually became more organized as it drifted slowly to the southwest, but did not intensify until it became Tropical Cyclone Vivienne on 8 February. The cyclone peaked with 65\u00a0km/h winds and remained near stationary, before dissipating later that day. Oil and gas production in the Timor Sea was disrupted by Cyclone Vivienne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Ingrid\nCyclone Ingrid was an intense cyclone, impacting Queensland, Northern Territory and Western Australia as a Category\u00a04 or 5 cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 81], "content_span": [82, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Willy\nA tropical low began to develop on 8 March 830\u00a0km north of Port Hedland, Western Australia. The low did not move as it developed and became Tropical Cyclone Willy in the same area. Willy moved slowly west-southwest, roughly parallel to the Australian coast, strengthening steadily in the favourable environment. It reached its peak with 140\u00a0km/h winds on 11 March when it was 550\u00a0km northwest of Onslow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Willy\nCyclone Willy then turned to the southwest and maintained its strength for a day before it began to weaken. The storm turned to the west and weakened into a remnant low on 14 March. The remnant continued to drift west away from Australia before dissipating a few days later. Oil production in the Timor Sea was disrupted by Cyclone Willy, but there were no effects on land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 80], "content_span": [81, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Adeline-Juliet\nA tropical low formed roughly 710\u00a0km east-northeast of the Cocos Islands on 1 April. The system developed moved southwest towards the Cocos Islands and became Tropical Cyclone Juliet on 3 April, when it was 45\u00a0km east of the islands. The system steadily intensified as it moved west, becoming a severe tropical cyclone on 4 April. Cyclone Adeline crossed into R\u00e9union's area of responsibility on 5 April, by which time it had 140\u00a0km/h winds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 89], "content_span": [90, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Adeline-Juliet\nM\u00e9t\u00e9o-France renamed the storm Juliet when they assumed responsibility for the cyclone, as it passed west of 90\u00b0E. Cyclone Adeline triggered gale warnings on the Cocos Islands, where 160\u00a0mm of rain fell in one day. The storm caused minor damage and uprooted trees on the islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 89], "content_span": [90, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179826-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Australian region cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Low 11U\nDuring 12 April a tropical low developed within the northern Arafura Sea. Over the next couple of days the system moved eastwards, with deep atmospheric convection developing over the western quadrants by 15 April. By this time the system was located about 100\u00a0km (60\u00a0mi) to the southwest of Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea and was producing gales and rough seas around Papua New Guinea. The system subsequently approached and interacted with south-eastern Papua New Guinea, before it moved into an area of increasing vertical wind shear and started weakening. The system was last formally noted during that day before it dissipated a few days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179827-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Cup\nThe Austrian Cup 2004\u201305 (German: \u00d6FB-Cup) was the seventy-first season of Austria's nationwide football cup competition. It started on September 14, 2004 with the first game of the First Round. The final was held at the Ernst-Happel-Stadion, Vienna on 1 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179827-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Cup\nThe competition was won by Austria Vienna after beating Rapid Wien 3\u20131. Austria Vienna qualified for the second qualifying round of the UEFA Cup 2005-06 as cup winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179827-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Cup, Second round\nThe Bundesliga clubs entered at the Second round, except Rapid Wien, Grazer AK and Pasching who were involved in European competition and given a bye to Round 3. The games were played on September 28 to October 5, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179827-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Cup, Second round\nThe match featuring Rapid Wien Am. and SV Mattersburg had to be abandoned at half time due to floodlight failure. It was replayed in full on December 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179828-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and SK Rapid Wien won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179828-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Football Bundesliga, Results\nTeams played each other four times in the league. In the first half of the season each team played every other team twice (home and away), and then did the same in the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179829-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Football First League\nThe 2004\u201305 Austrian Football First League season was the 31st season of second level league football in Austria. It was the third season that it used the name Red Zac First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179830-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Austrian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Austrian Hockey League season was the 75th season of the Austrian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Austria. Seven teams participated in the league, and the Vienna Capitals won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179831-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azadegan League\nThe following are the standings of the 2004\u201305 Azadegan League football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179832-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azerbaijan Cup\nThe Azerbaijan Cup 2004\u201305 was the 13th season of the annual cup competition in Azerbaijan with the final taking place on 28 May 2005. Sixteen teams competed in this year's competition. Neftchi Baku were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179832-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azerbaijan Cup, First round\nThe first legs were played on October 20, 2004 and the second legs on October 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179832-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azerbaijan Cup, Round of 16\nThe first legs were played on November 24, 2004 and the second legs on December 1, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179832-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azerbaijan Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on March 7, 2005 and the second legs on March 15, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179832-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azerbaijan Cup, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on April 16, 2005 and the second legs on April 29, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179833-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Azerbaijan Top League\nThe 2004-05 Azerbaijan Top League was the thirteenth season of the Top League since its establishment in 1992. The season began on 7 August 2004 and finished on 24 May 2005. Neftchi Baku were the defending champions, having won the previous season, and they retained the title after defeating Khazar Lankaran in a playoff after both teams finished level on points and goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179834-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 B Group\nThe 2004\u201305 B Group was the 50th season of the Bulgarian B Football Group, the second tier of the Bulgarian football league system. A total of 16 teams contested the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179835-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bahraini Premier League, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and Bahrain Riffa Club won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179836-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bangladeshi cricket season\nThe 2004\u201305 Bangladeshi cricket season featured the inaugural Test series in Bangladesh between Bangladesh and New Zealand. The season also featured tours by India and Zimbabwe. The Bangladesh teams claimed their first test series victory in this season against Zimbabwe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179836-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bangladeshi cricket season, International tours, New Zealand Cricket team in Bangladesh\nNew Zealand played 2 Test matches and 3 one day internationals (ODI) against Bangladesh in October 2004. New Zealand won both the Test matches and won all three ODIs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 95], "content_span": [96, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179836-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bangladeshi cricket season, International tours, Indian Cricket team in Bangladesh\nIndia played 2 Test matches and 3 one day internationals (ODI) against Bangladesh in December 2004. India won both the Test matches and won all ODI series 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 90], "content_span": [91, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179836-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bangladeshi cricket season, International tours, Zimbabwe Cricket team in Bangladesh\nZimbabwe played 2 Test matches and 5 one day internationals (ODI) against Bangladesh in January 2005. Bangladesh won both the Test series 1\u20130 and also won all ODI series 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 92], "content_span": [93, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179837-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Barangay Ginebra Kings season\nThe 2004\u201305 Barangay Ginebra Kings season was the 26th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179837-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Barangay Ginebra Kings season, Occurrences\nCoach Allan Caidic was promoted as team manager and was replaced by assistant coach Bethune Tanquingcen after five games into the 2004 Fiesta Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 50], "content_span": [51, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179837-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Barangay Ginebra Kings season, Championships\nThe Barangay Ginebra Kings won the PBA's transition tournament called Fiesta Conference over Red Bull Barako, 3 games to 1, in the best-of-five title series for their first championship after seven long years, as the team celebrates its fifth overall title on July 7, 2004, defeating Red Bull, 103-86 in Game 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179837-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Barangay Ginebra Kings season, Championships\nAs the PBA entered its 30th season with the regular two-conference format, the Barangay Ginebra Kings repeated as champions, the first time in its franchise history, by winning the 2004-2005 Grand Matador Philippine Cup title over the Talk 'N Text Phone Pals, 4 games to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179837-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Barangay Ginebra Kings season, Awards\nEric Menk became the first Ginebra player to win the Most Valuable Player (MVP) honors for the season. Menk also won the finals MVP and Best Player of the Conference Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179838-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Barys Astana season\nThe 2004\u201305 Barys Astana season was the 6th season in the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship and the 1st season in the First League of the Russian Ice Hockey Championship, in parallel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179839-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season\nBayer 04 Leverkusen played the UEFA Champions League after finishing in 3rd place in the Bundesliga in 2003-04 and advanced to the Round of 16 in a tough group with Real Madrid, AS Roma and Dynamo Kyiv. The best results were a 5-1 win against Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga and a 3-0 win against Real Madrid in the Champions League. Dimitar Berbatov was the season top scorer with 26 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179839-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179839-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bayer 04 Leverkusen season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179840-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup\n2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup was the 14th edition of the football knock-out competition in Belarus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179840-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup, First round\nAll 13 teams from the Second League, 15 teams from the First League (out of 16, excluding Dinamo Minsk youth reserve team Dinamo-Juni Minsk) and 2 amateur clubs started in this round. The games were played on 14 July 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179840-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup, Round of 32\n15 winners of previous round were joined by 16 clubs from Premier League. Slavia Mozyr from Premier League advanced to the Round of 16 by drawing of lots. The games were played on 14 and 15 August 2004. Match involving Dinamo Minsk was rescheduled to 25 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179840-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup, Round of 16\nThe games were played on 12 October, 11 and 14 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179840-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe first legs were played on 3 April 2005. The second legs were played on 7 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179840-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Cup, Semifinals\nThe first legs were played on 12 April 2005. The second legs were played on 4 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179841-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belarusian Extraliga season\nThe 2004\u201305 Belarusian Extraliga season was the 13th season of the Belarusian Extraliga, the top level of ice hockey in Belarus. 12 teams participated in the league, and HK Yunost Minsk won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division\nThe 2004-05 season of the Belgian First Division began on August 6, 2004 and ended on May 23, 2005. Club Brugge became champions on May 15, 2005 after a decisive game against long-time rivals Anderlecht. The season was full of suspense as the champions and the relegated teams were only known on the 33rd (on 34) matchday. Furthermore, the 3rd place (qualifying for UEFA Cup) had to be decided on a test-match, a fact that had not occurred recently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, Promoted teams\nThese teams were promoted from the second division at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, Relegated teams\nThese teams were relegated to the second division at the end of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, Battle for the 1st place\nAs usual, the two giants (Sporting Anderlecht and Club Brugge) were occupying the first two places after 5 matches. Brugge was already 1st and actually stayed on top until the end. The Brussels side has indeed failed to show consistency under the management of Hugo Broos who was fired after a 0-0 draw at Gent. Under new coach (Franky Vercauteren), Anderlecht had a run of good form (after the initial 0-1 defeat against Oostende). Linked to the poor results of rivals Brugge, this situation led to a 6-point difference between the two clubs after 32 matches. The Brugge-Anderlecht game (33rd matchday) was thus decisive for both clubs. It ended with a 2-2 draw that was sufficient for the West Flemish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, Battle for the 1st place\nBrugge title is due to its exceptional regularity against smaller teams as is shown on the following table (showing points gained by a top 4 team against the other top 4 teams)\u00a0:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, Battle for Europe\nAs Anderlecht and Brugge rapidly ran away with the first two places, the battle for Europe was mainly consisted in the battle for UEFA Cup spots (or battle for the third place). Four teams were serious candidates: Standard, Genk, Charleroi and Gent. The latter two were soon dismissed. Before the last matchday, Standard was two points ahead of Genk but they lost their advantage after a 1-1 draw at Ostend while Genk earned a 3-1 win at Cercle Brugge. As both teams now had the same number of points and wins, a test-match had to be played (in two legs). Standard won the first match 3-1 but lost the away match 0-3 and lost the European ticket for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, The relegation dog fight\nAfter their poor early results, five teams were predicted to fight against relegation: Sint-Truiden, Mouscron and especially newcomers FC Brussels and Oostende along with Mons. Beveren joined the list after a very poor final run. Before the 33rd matchday, the table read:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179842-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian First Division, The relegation dog fight\nLierse and Sint-Truiden were already saved. Mons and Oostende had to win or draw to maintain suspense but they finally both lost (2-0 respectively against Mouscron and at La Louvi\u00e8re).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179843-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Belgian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Belgian Hockey League season was the 85th season of the Belgian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Belgium. Four teams participated in the league, and the Chiefs Leuven won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179845-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Biathlon World Cup\nThe 2004\u221205 Biathlon World Cup was a multi-race tournament over a season of biathlon, organised by the International Biathlon Union. The Biathlon World Championships 2005 were part of the Biathlon World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179845-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Biathlon World Cup\nThe men's overall World Cup was won by Norway's Ole Einar Bj\u00f8rndalen, while Sandrine Bailly of France claimed the women's overall World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179845-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Biathlon World Cup, Calendar\nBelow is the World Cup calendar for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179845-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Biathlon World Cup, Retirements\nFollowing notable biathletes retired during or after the 2004\u201305 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Birmingham City Football Club's 102nd season in the English football league system, their third season in the Premier League and their 53rd in the top tier of English football. It ran from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005. Under the management of former Birmingham City player Steve Bruce, the team finished in 12th place, two places lower than the season before. They reached the fourth round of the FA Cup and the third round of the League Cup. The top scorer for the season was England forward Emile Heskey with eleven goals in all competitions, of which ten were scored in the League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, August\nSteve Bruce named four debutants, Mario Melchiot, Muzzy Izzet, Jesper Gr\u00f8nkj\u00e6r and club-record signing Emile Heskey, in the starting eleven for the opening-day visit to Portsmouth, with another, Julian Gray, on the bench. Robbie Savage's free kick gave Birmingham an early lead, equalised from the penalty spot five minutes later. Both goalkeepers excelled in the 1\u20131 draw. Birmingham's midfield dominated at home to Chelsea, but neither team's strikers were on form; the only goal came from substitute Joe Cole's second-half shot deflected past Maik Taylor off Martin Taylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, August\nHeskey's first goal for his new club, an \"unstoppable header\" from Stan Lazaridis' cross, was enough to beat Manchester City and ended a run of 11 winless Premier League games, but he had an \"awful day in front of goal\" and was booked for diving against Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane, where Jermain Defoe's solo goal was the difference between the sides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 74], "content_span": [75, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, September\nEven with new signing Dwight Yorke on the left wing, Heskey and Mikael Forssell up front, and two penalty appeals, Birmingham only managed one goal to Mark Viduka's two for Middlesbrough. Maik Taylor's error allowed Charlton Athletic to take a lead, and after Damien Johnson was sent off for two yellow cards, Bruce brought on Yorke and David Dunn, making his first appearance of the season after injury. Dunn was instrumental in the play that led to Izzet's corner from which Yorke headed an equaliser, and Birmingham were the better side thereafter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, September\nWithout Forssell, whose loan was ended early after exploratory surgery found a serious issue with his knee, Bruce selected a five-man midfield with Heskey as lone striker away to fourth-placed Bolton Wanderers. They duly fell behind, Izzet equalised just after half-time, and the game ended 1\u20131 after Henrik Pedersen's goal for Bolton was incorrectly disallowed for offside and Heskey's last-seconds header \"was going in until it diverted past the far post.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, October\nNicky Butt scored an equaliser when Newcastle United came to St Andrew's. Goals from Yorke and Upson had given Birmingham a 2\u20131 lead, but Butt pounced on 67 minutes to rescue the Magpies a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, October\nBirmingham held Manchester United to a goalless draw at St Andrew's two weeks later and also played out a 0\u20130 draw at St Mary's Stadium against Southampton after that.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, October\nBut they were disappointing in a 1\u20130 loss at home to Crystal Palace on 24 October. Former Birmingham striker Andrew Johnson scored the goal for Palace, who were coming into form. Johnson ran clear of the Birmingham backline after a quick Palace counterattack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, November\nFollowing a run of eight games without a win, Birmingham beat Liverpool 1\u20130 at Anfield. Veteran Darren Anderton scored the goal on 77 minutes. He turned home from one yard out after Upson had headed a corner across goal. It was Birmingham's first away win in the league all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, November\nBut Birmingham fell to a 1\u20130 defeat at home to Everton the following week. Thomas Gravesen scored a 69th-minute penalty after Izzet handled a shot on the goalline. Referee Rob Styles sent Izzet off and awarded Everton the spot-kick. Heskey was denied a leveller by a great last-ditch block by Tony Hibbert and Yorke wasted a late chance from ten yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, November\nBirmingham wasted a two-goal lead at Ewood Park against Blackburn Rovers. Matt Jansen gave the hosts an early lead with an incisive finish but Anderton equalised 12 minutes later. Robbie Savage put Birmingham ahead on 38 minutes after Melchiot's marauding run down the right. Moments before half-time Dunn netted against his old side to give Birmingham a commanding 3\u20131 lead at the interval. But Steven Reid and Paul Gallagher's goals in the second period rescued Rovers an unlikely point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, November\nClinton Morrison gave Birmingham an early lead against Norwich at St Andrew's with his first goal of the campaign, but Darren Huckerby's stunning second-half strike denied the Blues their third league win of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nArsenal thumped Birmingham 3\u20130 in early December. Robert Pires gave the Gunners the advantage before Thierry Henry netted twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nBirmingham bounced back by beating arch-rivals Aston Villa 2\u20131 on 12 December at Villa Park. Clinton Morrison scored the opener after Villa goalkeeper Thomas S\u00f8rensen let the ball slip through his hands. Shortly afterwards, David Dunn doubled Birmingham's lead after a swift counterattack. He converted Damien Johnson's cross to silence Villa Park. Gareth Barry scored a late consolation for the hosts but they were unable to prevent another defeat to their city rivals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nCity recorded back-to-back league wins for the first time that season when they beat West Bromwich Albion 4\u20130 at St Andrew's. Former Birmingham defender Darren Purse conceded a penalty by holding Morrison and Savage was able to net his third goal of the season. Morrison, who impressed throughout, scored his side's second on 23 minutes after a quick free-kick and, minutes afterwards, Heskey angled home Birmingham's third. Anderton heaped more misery on the struggling visitors by scoring a late free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nAnd Birmingham moved up to 12th for the visit of Middlesbrough on Boxing Day. Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink had an early goal disallowed for offside before Morrison netted his third goal in as many matches. Heskey confirmed Birmingham's dominance when he headed in from six yards moments before half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, December\nBirmingham's impressive December form continued at Fulham on 28 December. Heskey lashed his side ahead with a stunning drive on 25 minutes but Sylvain Legwinski equalised against the run of play. Darren Carter turned home a Heskey header to restore Birmingham's advantage four minutes before half-time. Savage sealed the win with a spectacular second-half volley. Tomasz Radzinski found the net late on for a consolation goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, January\nFollowing a successful December, Birmingham slumped to four-straight losses in January and, by the end of the month, fell to 15th in the table. By the time Emile Heskey scored at St James' Park, Birmingham were already 2\u20130 down to Newcastle. Shola Ameobi and Lee Bowyer had scored. Kevin Nolan scored a last-minute winner as Bolton Wanderers won for the first time in the Premiership since October by beating Birmingham 2\u20131 at St Andrew's. Birmingham's dreadful run continued as they lost 3\u20131 at The Valley to Charlton Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, January\nSteve Bruce's side didn't manage to record a single point during January. Fulham won at St Andrew's on 22 January. An own goal by Moritz Volz gave Birmingham the lead on 51 minutes. Lu\u00eds Boa Morte was soon booked for diving under pressure by Birmingham goalkeeper Maik Taylor but, minutes later, Fulham were awarded a spot-kick. Boa Morte went to ground again under Damien Johnson's challenge but contact appeared to be outside the penalty box. Referee Phil Dowd awarded the penalty and Andy Cole converted. Fulham won it after Papa Bouba Diop scored a late header.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nBirmingham signed striker Walter Pandiani and winger Jermaine Pennant on loans in January after slipping towards the relegation zone. The duo combined in their next game at St Andrew's against struggling Southampton. Pandiani headed home a Pennant cross on 12 minutes. Fellow new signing Robbie Blake scored from the penalty spot on 41 minutes after Melchiot was fouled. Southampton debutant Henri Camara netted a spectacular consolation in the second period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nThree days later, on 5 February, Birmingham lost 2\u20130 at Old Trafford to Manchester United. Wayne Rooney scored the pick of the goals against an injury-ravaged City team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nBut resilient Birmingham bounced back to beat Liverpool 2\u20130 on 12 February. Sami Hyypi\u00e4 fouled ex-Liverpool striker Heskey in the box and Pandiani duly delivered from the spot on 38 minutes. Birmingham doubled their advantage moments before half-time. Pennant crossed for Julian Gray to head in his first goal of the campaign. Birmingham completed the double over Liverpool that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, February\nThe win was followed by a 2\u20130 loss at Crystal Palace, who celebrated the double over Birmingham. Upson conceded two penalties, both scored by Andrew Johnson. The referee was Phil Dowd, whom Bruce publicly criticised after the match as he had now given three penalties against Birmingham in the past two games he refereed them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 76], "content_span": [77, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, March\nBirmingham began March poorly, with a 2\u20130 defeat at West Brom. The Baggies were fighting to stay in the division and easily saw off a lethargic Birmingham team. Neil Clement and Kevin Campbell scored the second-half goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, March\nFollowing an international break, Birmingham rallied to beat rivals Aston Villa and celebrated another double over their neighbours. Heskey put his side ahead on 52 minutes after another goalkeeping error by S\u00f8rensen. Gray sealed the victory late on with his second goal in four games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nThe win over Aston Villa saw Bruce's squad climb up to 13th in the table. They faced Tottenham Hotspur at St Andrew's on 2 April. Stephen Kelly, who would later go on to become a Birmingham player, netted Spurs' opener on 59 minutes but Darren Carter levelled for the hosts on 66 minutes with his second goal of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nBirmingham were denied a win against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge after a late Didier Drogba goal cancelled out another Pandiani strike. The Uruguayan was becoming a favourite with the fans, who were calling for him to be signed permanently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nBirmingham drew for a third time in a row on 16 April 16 when Portsmouth travelled to St Andrew's. Chances were at a premium in a dull 0\u20130 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nManchester City thumped Birmingham City 3\u20130 on 20 April. Clinton Morrison thought he had given his side the lead early on but the goal was ruled out for offside. The hosts scored all their goals in the second-half, including an unfortunate own goal by Maik Taylor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, April\nBirmingham scored an early goal at Goodison Park to take the lead against Everton. Heskey powered home from 20 yards but Birmingham were denied all three points late on. Experienced forward Duncan Ferguson scored after a goalmouth scramble to rescue Everton a draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, May\nHeskey continued his impressive form in Birmingham's next game, against Blackburn Rovers. Birmingham fell behind at St Andrew's to an early Jon Stead goal but, in the second half, Blake netted his second goal for Blues. Heskey won it on 80 minutes after rifling home a long-range strike with his weaker left foot for his 10th goal of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, May\nBut Birmingham were unable to cement back-to-back victories. They travelled to a Norwich City side fighting to stay in the league. The Canaries won the match 1\u20130, courtesy of a Dean Ashton penalty in the first half. Birmingham played most of the match with ten men after Damien Johnson punched an opponent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, Premier League, Season review, May\nArsenal visited St Andrew's to complete the season. Pandiani gave Birmingham the lead on 79 minutes with his fourth goal for the club after a goalmouth scramble but veteran Dennis Bergkamp equalised on 88 minutes. An error by Philippe Senderos allowed Heskey in to crash home a winner in injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179846-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Birmingham City F.C. season, League Cup\nBirmingham lost in the third round of the 2004\u201305 League Cup to Premier League club Fulham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Blackburn Rovers competed in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Season summary\nThe authoritative methods of manager Graeme Souness had caused Blackburn to struggle the previous season and alienated several key players, including the strike partnership of Andy Cole and Dwight Yorke, who left Blackburn during the summer for Fulham and Birmingham City respectively. Eventually Souness departed Blackburn to become manager at Newcastle United, with Blackburn struggling in the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Season summary\nWales manager and former Rovers player Mark Hughes came in as his replacement; Hughes' lack of experience in club management showed and the club were bottom of the Premiership after 14 games played, but he soon rallied the team to finish comfortably clear of relegation in 15th \u2013 as close to a relegation spot as they were to a UEFA Cup place, in terms of points. The club also enjoyed a good run in the FA Cup, reaching the semi-finals before losing to eventual cup winners Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Season summary\nDuring the close season, Hughes signed striker Craig Bellamy, who had played for Hughes with Wales, from Newcastle, in the hope that the Tyneside club's out-of-favour striker could fire Rovers to a higher place next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179847-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackburn Rovers F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179848-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackpool F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Blackpool F.C. 's 97th season (94th consecutive) in the Football League. It was also their fourth consecutive season in the third tier of English football. They finished in sixteenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179848-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Blackpool F.C. season\nScott Taylor was the club's top scorer for the second consecutive season, with fourteen goals (twelve in the league, one in the FA Cup and one in the League Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179849-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 127th season in Bolton Wanderers F.C. 's existence, and was their fourth consecutive year in the top-flight. This article covers the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179849-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Season summary\nBolton finished in sixth place in the final Premiership table - tied on points but one place behind that season's European champions Liverpool, and three points off qualification for the Champions League. As it was, sixth place was enough to grant Bolton their first ever excursion into European competition, in the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179849-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179849-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179849-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179849-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bolton Wanderers F.C. season, Statistics, Appearances\nBolton used a total of 26 players during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179850-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Borussia Dortmund season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 German football season, Borussia Dortmund competed in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179850-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Borussia Dortmund season, Season summary\nNew boss Bert van Marwijk failed to turn Dortmund's fortunes around and they finished 7th, a place lower than last season, despite earning the same number of points. However, this season they were only four points off Champions League qualification, giving hope that next season they could qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179850-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Borussia Dortmund season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179850-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Borussia Dortmund season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179851-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup\n2004\u201305 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup was the eleventh season of the Bosnia and Herzegovina's annual football cup, and a fifth season of the unified competition. The competition started on 22 September 2004 with the First Round and concluded on 17 May 2005 with the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179851-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, First round\nThirty-two teams entered in the First Round. The matches were played on 22 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 56], "content_span": [57, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179851-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Second round\nThe 16 winners from the prior round enter this round. The first legs were played on 13 October and the second legs were played on 20 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179851-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe eight winners from the prior round enter this round. The first legs were played on 27 October and the second legs were played on 10 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179851-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bosnia and Herzegovina Football Cup, Semifinals\nThe four winners from the prior round enter this round. The first legs will be played on 6 April and the second legs were played on 13 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179852-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Bruins season\nThe 2004\u201305 Boston Bruins season was the Bruins' 81st National Hockey League season, its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179852-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Bruins season, Off-season\nThe Bruins selected David Krejci as their first pick in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, 63rd overall in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179852-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Bruins season, Transactions\nThe Bruins were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179852-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Bruins season, Draft picks\nBoston's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179853-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Celtics season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 59th season for the Boston Celtics in the National Basketball Association. The team hired Doc Rivers to be their head coach for the upcoming season. During the offseason, the Celtics acquired All-Star guard Gary Payton, and former Celtics forward Rick Fox from the Los Angeles Lakers, but Fox would retire before the season. The Celtics struggled playing under .500 for the first half of the season. At midseason, Payton was traded to the Atlanta Hawks for former Celtic All-Star forward Antoine Walker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179853-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Celtics season\nHowever, Payton would never suit up for the Hawks and was released shortly after. He then re-signed with the Celtics afterwards for the remainder of the season. The team went on a 7-game winning streak in March, finishing first place in the Atlantic Division with a 45\u201337 record. Paul Pierce was selected for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179853-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston Celtics season\nDespite their mediocre record, the Celtics earned the #3 seed in the Eastern Conference. In the playoffs, they lost to the 6th-seeded Indiana Pacers in a seven-game first round series. Boston did not return to the playoffs until 2008 en route to the championship. Following the season, Walker was traded to the Miami Heat, while Payton went along with him signing as a free agent with the Heat will go to win the championship the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season\nAfter their success in Division Three the previous year, Boston were billed as promotion favourites, as they had bolstered their squad for the 2004\u201305 Football League Two, Boston's third consecutive season in the Football League, after promotion in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season\nHectic pre-season matches in a packed schedule saw Boston play a selection of local and national teams, including Rotherham United, Sheffield United, Stamford A.F.C. and local rivals Boston Town. Boston played a very lucrative friendly against a Newcastle United XI at York Street, bringing in a crowd of 3349. The Pilgrims comfortably won 4\u20130, with Martin Carruthers scoring a hat-trick. The game saw a number of Newcastle's future players at the game, including Michael Chopra, Matty Pattison and goalkeeper Tony Caig.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season\nA notable addition to the Pilgrims' squad was former England international Paul Gascoigne, who joined the club on a short-term basis, as a player-coach. Assigned his famous number 19 shirt for the forthcoming season, Gascoigne was presented in front of the media against his former club Newcastle, a game which he started. Gascoigne went on to make 10 appearances for Boston before leaving in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season\nThis season for Boston was also notable for their progression in the Carling Cup. Playing Champtionship side Luton Town was at first a daunting task for United, but they were in form following two consecutive league wins against Chester and Cambridge. The Pilgrims overcame Luton, winning 4\u20133, setting up a tie with Premier League club Fulham. 5373 people attended the second round tie at York Street, but Boston lost 4\u20131 at the hands of Chris Coleman's men. Playing for Fulham were many international players, such as Luis Boa Morte, Steed Malbranque, Brian McBride and Tomasz Radzinski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season\nIt was a season of mixed results, with the team only winning 14 of a possible 46 league games. This saw Boston finish in a comfortable 16th position, but this was disappointing to the fans, considering what many had predicted in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season, End Of Season Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179854-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Boston United F.C. season, Left the club\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179855-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Botola\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the GNF 1 first division of Moroccan football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Brentford competed in Football League One. In his first full season as manager, Martin Allen's \"two bob team\" reached the 2005 Football League play-off semi-finals and the fifth round of the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter pulling off \"The Great Escape\" from relegation at the end of the 2003\u201304 season, Brentford manager Martin Allen signed a three-year contract and assembled a \"two bob\" squad of veterans, youngsters and non-league footballers on free transfers. The club was \u00a37 million in debt and facing annual interest payments on its overdraft of \u00a3300,000. The season was punctuated by bizarre motivational challenges set by Allen, which stretched from ordering the players to prepare their own lunch to swimming in rivers before cup ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nBrentford opened the season with three wins and three losses and though the Bees exited the League Cup and the Football League Trophy at the first attempts, a run of five wins in eight matches through to mid-October had the club rooted in the automatic promotion places in League One. Though Brentford won just four matches in all competitions during the final two months of 2004, the club managed to remain in the top 10 in League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nVictory over Walsall in the first match at Griffin Park of 2005 began a spell in which the Bees lost just three of the following 21 matches, with one of the defeats coming in an FA Cup fifth round replay at home to Southampton, which ended a memorable run that earned the club over \u00a3500,000 in match revenues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nPostponements due to the cup run gave Brentford up to three games in hand from February through March and the club broke back into the playoff positions on 12 April after a 1\u20130 win over Tranmere Rovers, still with a game in hand. Consecutive defeats to Bradford City, Huddersfield Town and Luton Town in April dropped the Bees outside the playoff places, but a late 2\u20131 comeback victory away to Wrexham in the penultimate match (the final game in hand) confirmed a place in the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0002-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nMartin Allen selected a predominantly youth and reserve lineup for the final match of the league season versus already-promoted Hull City and the experimental team secured a 2\u20131 victory and a 4th-place finish in League One. Despite finishing 4th, the 9 goals conceded during the three defeats in April saw Brentford finish the season with a goal difference of \u22123.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179856-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brentford F.C. season, Season summary\nBrentford met 5th-place Sheffield Wednesday in the 2005 League One playoffs, but a 1\u20130 defeat in the first leg at Hillsborough left the Bees with a mountain to climb and despite an improved performance in the second leg at Griffin Park, the team crumbled and conceded twice to effectively end the tie, before Andy Frampton grabbed a late consolation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179857-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brescia Calcio season, Kit\nItalian company Kappa became Brescia's kit manufacturers. Banca Lombarda remained sponsors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 34], "content_span": [35, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179857-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brescia Calcio season, Players\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179857-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brescia Calcio season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179858-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. competed in the Football League Championship, after promotion from the second division the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179858-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, Season summary\nBrighton finished 20th out of 24 clubs, narrowly avoiding the drop by a single point, but achieving their highest league position for 14 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179858-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179858-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179859-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 British Basketball League season\nThe 2004\u20132005 season was the 18th campaign in the history of the British Basketball League, which commenced on 2 October 2004, and ended with Newcastle Eagles' win in the Play-off Final on 1 May 2005. Eagles won their first piece of silverware in 13\u00a0years with victories in the Play-offs and the BBL Trophy, against Brighton Bears on their home court at The Brighton Centre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179859-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 British Basketball League season\nThe League saw the addition of a new franchise for the first time in eight years \u2013 when Edinburgh Rocks joined in 1998 \u2013 with Plymouth Raiders stepping up from the English Basketball League Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179860-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 British Collegiate American Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 BCAFL was the 20th full season of the British Collegiate American Football League, organised by the British Students American Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179860-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 British Collegiate American Football League, Changes from last season\nThis increased the number of teams in BCAFL to 36.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 77], "content_span": [78, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179861-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 British National League season\nThe 2004\u201305 British National League season was the ninth and final season of the British National League, the second level of ice hockey in Great Britain. Seven teams participated in the league, and the Dundee Stars won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179862-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Buffalo Sabres season\nThe 2004\u201305 Buffalo Sabres season was to be the 35th for the National Hockey League franchise that was established on May 22, 1970. The season was cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time to save the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179862-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Buffalo Sabres season, Draft picks\nBuffalo's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft in Columbus, Ohio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179862-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Buffalo Sabres season, Farm teams\nThe Sabres AHL affiliate Rochester Americans played with a roster that included many future Sabres. Thomas Vanek, Derek Roy, Ryan Miller and Jason Pominville among others, played the season in Rochester. HSBC Arena (now the KeyBank Center) hosted a pair of Rochester games experimenting with blue ice to see if blue would make the television appearance better than white. The blue ice experiment was ultimately not accepted in post-lockout rule changes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179863-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bulgarian Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Bulgarian Cup was the 65th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating CSKA Sofia 2\u20131 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179863-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bulgarian Cup, First round\nIn this round entered winners from the preliminary rounds together with the teams from B Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179863-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bulgarian Cup, Second round\nThis round featured winners from the First Round and all teams from A Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 35], "content_span": [36, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179864-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bulgarian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Bulgarian Hockey League season was the 53rd season of the Bulgarian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Bulgaria. Three teams participated in the league, and HK Slavia Sofia won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179865-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bundesliga\nThe 2004\u201305 Bundesliga was the 42nd season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 6 August 2004 and concluded on 21 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179865-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bundesliga, Champion squad\nGoalkeepers: Oliver Kahn (32); Michael Rensing (4). Defenders: L\u00facio (32 / 3); Willy Sagnol (22 / 1); Robert Kova\u010d (22); Bixente Lizarazu (13); Thomas Linke (11); Samuel Kuffour (7); Andreas G\u00f6rlitz (7); Tobias Rau (5). Midfielders: Torsten Frings (29 / 3); Hasan Salihamid\u017ei\u0107 (29 / 2); Michael Ballack (27 / 13); Owen Hargreaves (27 / 1); Bastian Schweinsteiger (26 / 3); Sebastian Deisler (23 / 4); Mart\u00edn Demichelis (23); Z\u00e9 Roberto (22 / 1); Mehmet Scholl (20 / 3); Jens Jeremies (7). Forwards: Roy Makaay (33 / 22); Claudio Pizarro (23 / 11); Jos\u00e9 Paolo Guerrero (13 / 6); Vahid Hashemian (9); Roque Santa Cruz (4); Alexander Zickler (1). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179865-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bundesliga, Champion squad\nOn the roster but have not played in a league game: Jan Schl\u00f6sser, Piotr Trochowski.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179865-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Bundesliga, Champion squad\nTransferred out during the season: Piotr Trochowski (to Hamburger SV).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179866-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Burkinab\u00e9 Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Burkinab\u00e9 Premier League is the 43rd edition of top flight football in Burkina Faso. A total of fourteen teams competed in the season beginning on 11 December 2004 and ending on 9 July 2005. Rail Club du Kadiogo were champions and Sanmantenga FC finished last and were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179867-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Burnley F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Burnley's 5th season in the second tier of English football. They were managed by Steve Cotterill in his first full season since he replaced Stan Ternent at the beginning of the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179868-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Butler Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Butler University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Their head coach was Todd Lickliter, serving his 4th year. The Bulldogs played their home games at Hinkle Fieldhouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179869-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season\nThe 2004\u201305 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season in the Honduran football league was divided into two halves, Apertura and Clausura. Marath\u00f3n was capable to win one tournament, having achieved the fifth championship in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179869-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season, Apertura, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179869-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C.D. Marath\u00f3n season, Clausura, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179870-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C.D. Motagua season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was F.C. Motagua's 54th season in existence and the club's 39th consecutive season in the top flight of Honduran football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179870-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C.D. Motagua season, Overview\nF.C. Motagua started the Apertura tournament under the management of Uruguayan coach Carlos Jurado. Jurado was sacked after nine rounds due to poor results. Former defender Herna\u00edn Arz\u00fa was named as the replacement, who stayed until the end of the season. However, he was unable to right the ship, finishing in the 9th position for the first time since 1966.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179870-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C.D. Motagua season, Overview\nFor the Clausura tournament, the club hired manager Edwin Pav\u00f3n and kept Herna\u00edn Arz\u00fa as his assistant. For the fourth time in a row, Motagua was unable to enter the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179871-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CD Numancia season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 69th season in the existence of CD Numancia and the club's first season back in the top flight of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Numancia participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179872-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CD Tenerife season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 92nd season in the existence of CD Tenerife and the club's third consecutive season in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Tenerife participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179873-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CERH European League\nThe 2004\u201305 CERH European League was the 40th edition of the CERH European League organized by CERH. Its Final Four was held on 14 and 15 May 2007 at the Pavell\u00f3 d'Esports, in Reus, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179873-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CERH European League, Preliminary round\nThe eliminated teams joined the CERS Cup. Uttigen received a wildcard after the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179873-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CERH European League, Group stage\nIn each group, teams played against each other home-and-away in a home-and-away round-robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179873-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CERH European League, Group stage\nThe two first qualified teams advanced to the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179873-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CERH European League, Final four\nThe Final Four was played at Pavell\u00f3 Ol\u00edmpic, in Reus, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 40], "content_span": [41, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179874-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CERS Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 CERS Cup was the 25th season of the CERS Cup, Europe's second club roller hockey competition organized by CERH. 22 teams from five national associations qualified for the competition as a result of their respective national league placing in the previous season. Following a preliminary phase and four knockout rounds, Follonica won its first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179876-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CHL season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Straykat99 (talk | contribs) at 13:28, 22 February 2020 (\u2192\u200eDivision standings). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179876-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 CHL season was the 13th season of the Central Hockey League (CHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179876-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CHL season, Regular season, Division standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SOL = Shootout loss; Pts = Points; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179876-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 CHL season, Regular season, Division standings\ny - clinched league title; x - clinched playoff spot; e - eliminated from playoff contention", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179877-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cagliari Calcio season\nCagliari Calcio had a successful return to Serie A, finishing in 12th place and reaching the semi finals of the Coppa Italia. This was much thanks to a trio of attacking players consisting of Mauro Esposito, David Suazo and Gianfranco Zola, with Esposito scoring 16 league goals, a personal record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season\nThe 2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season was the 25th National Hockey League season in Calgary, its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time. As a result, the Flames were unable to raise their Western Conference Championship banner until the start of 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nFlames owner, and NHL Chairman of the Board, Harley Hotchkiss was a key figure in the resolution of the labour dispute. Initially taking a low key role, Hotchkiss was thrust into the spotlight when he was invited by NHLPA president Trevor Linden to last-ditch meeting in January 2005 to save the season. While that meeting was unsuccessful in resolving the dispute, the two would continue to meet until an agreement was finally hammered out on July 13, 2005. Hotchkiss' role in the negotiations was prominently mentioned when he was voted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nDefenceman Mike Commodore created a stir early on in the lockout when he stated during a radio interview for The Fan 960 in Calgary that he would accept a salary cap if it meant resolving the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nI'll risk the slap on the wrist. I don't want to spend however long my career lasts playing here in the American Hockey League, so I think whatever it takes. It's got to be give and take on both sides, not one side can be making all the money. But if (a salary cap is) what it takes -- the sport has to go on -- so I'm going to say, yeah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nCommodore was also critical of the leadership of the NHLPA:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nI don't think it's being handled well at all. The thing is, you look at the PA and who's in charge ... it's all the guys that have made $30 million playing this game. If there's never another game of hockey ... and they don't make another cent playing in the NHL, they're gonna be all right.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nUnlike other players who made similar statements, Commodore never retracted his comments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, NHL lockout\nDuring the lockout, the Flames heavily promoted their Western Hockey League team, the Calgary Hitmen. The result was that the Hitmen obliterated the WHL record for attendance by over 40,000 with a season mark of 362,227. The mark would also set a CHL record. The Hitmen's average of 10,062 was the highest average of any junior or professional hockey team in North America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, Transactions\nThe Flames were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, Draft picks\nCalgary's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft held at Raleigh, North Carolina. The Flames had the 24th overall pick in the draft, the first time they picked outside of the top 20 since 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, Farm teams, Lowell Lockmonsters\nThe Flames American Hockey League affiliate for the second year was the Lowell Lockmonsters, whom they shared with the Carolina Hurricanes. The Lockmonsters finished with a franchise best record of 47\u201327\u20135\u20131, good for third in the Atlantic Division. The Lockmonsters would be bounced from the playoffs in the second round, however.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, Farm teams, Lowell Lockmonsters\nChuck Kobasew led Lowell with a franchise record 38 goals, while Brent Krahn recorded six shutouts in only 35 games as he played backup to Carolina's top goaltending prospect, Cam Ward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179878-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Calgary Flames season, Farm teams, Las Vegas Wranglers\nThe Las Vegas Wranglers were the Flames ECHL affiliate for the second year in 2004\u201305. The second year club finished with a 31\u201333\u20138 record, missing the playoffs after finishing 7th in the West Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179879-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cambridge United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 93rd season in the history of Cambridge United F.C., and the club's final season in the Football League after a 35-year stay since their initial election in 1970. As well as relegation to the Football Conference for the first time in the club's history, the club was in disarray off the pitch, entering administration and selling their Abbey Stadium home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179879-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cambridge United F.C. season, Background\nCambridge United were founded in 1912 as Abbey United, named after the Abbey district of Cambridge. For many years they played amateur football until their election to the Football League in 1970. The early 1990s was Cambridge's most successful period; managed by John Beck the club won the first ever play-off final at Wembley Stadium and gained promotion from the Fourth Division before reaching two successive FA Cup quarter finals in 1990 and 1991 and winning the Third Division in 1991. The club reached the play-offs in 1992 but failed in their bid to become founder members of the Premier League. This was the club's highest final league placing to date and since then it has been in almost constant decline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179879-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cambridge United F.C. season, Background\nThe following season the club sacked Beck and were relegated from the First Division. Further relegation followed two seasons later. United returned briefly to Division Two but were relegated in 2002. After struggling in League Two, the best Cambridge fans were hoping for during the season was to avoid relegation and the financial trouble that would bring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179880-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio\nThe 2004\u201305 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio season was the 20th season since its establishment. It was contested by 15 teams, and F.C. Domagnano won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179880-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Campionato Sammarinese di Calcio, Regular season, Results\nAll teams play twice against the teams within their own group and once against the teams from the other group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179881-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Canadian network television schedule\nThe 2004\u201305 Canadian network television schedule indicates the fall prime time schedules for Canada's major English broadcast networks. For schedule changes after the fall launch, please consult each network's individual article.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179881-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Canadian network television schedule\nNote: No NHL hockey aired on CBC for the whole television season because of the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179882-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cardiff City F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season Cardiff City played in the Football League Championship. It was the team's second year in the Championship since being promoted from League One. The season was also the last that manager Lennie Lawrence spent at the club before being replaced by Dave Jones at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179882-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cardiff City F.C. season, Team kit and sponsorship\nCardiff's kits continued to be designed by Puma. Their main shirt sponsor continues as Welsh housing company Redrow homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179883-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Carolina Hurricanes season\nThe 2004\u201305 Carolina Hurricanes season was cancelled due to the lockout of the players of the National Hockey League (NHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179883-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Carolina Hurricanes season, Transactions\nThe Hurricanes were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179883-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Carolina Hurricanes season, Draft picks\nCarolina's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was hosted by the Hurricanes at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179884-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celta de Vigo season\nThe 2004\u201305 Celta de Vigo season was the club's 81st season in its history and its 27th participating in the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, the second tier of Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179884-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celta de Vigo season\nHeading into the 2004\u201305 season, the C\u00e9lticos were looking to return to La Liga after being relegated in the previous season. On the 18 June 2005, the C\u00e9lticos gained promotion back to La Liga following a 2\u20130 victory over UE Lleida. Celta narrowly missed out on claiming the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n title on goal difference to C\u00e1diz CF.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179884-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celta de Vigo season\nAside from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Celta were involved in the Copa del Rey where they were eliminated in the round of 64 by CD Tenerife.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179884-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celta de Vigo season, Squad, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179884-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celta de Vigo season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179885-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic F.C. season\nCeltic started season 2004\u201305 looking to win the Scottish Premier League trophy and retain the Scottish Cup. They also competed in the Scottish League Cup, and entered the Champions League at the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179885-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic F.C. season\nIn the race for the SPL title, Celtic recorded a win over city rivals Rangers. However, as the season drew to a close, with Rangers closely following, the club extended their lead at the top of the SPL table to two points as they lined up for the final game of the season. A win at Motherwell was required to seal the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179885-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic F.C. season\nWith two minutes remaining on the clock, Celtic were leading 1\u20130; a result which would have handed them the league. However, Motherwell's Scott McDonald (who later signed for Celtic) netted two last-minute goals. Rangers defeated Hibernian 1\u20130 at Easter Road, thereby winning the league championship title and leaving Celtic in second position. Celtic ended the season one week later with a 1\u20130 win over Dundee United in the Scottish Cup Final, which was marked by fans as Martin O'Neill's final match as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179885-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic F.C. season\nOn 25 May 2005, O'Neill announced he would resign as manager of Celtic at the end of 2004\u201305 season along with first team coach Steve Walford and assistant manager John Robertson. It was widely reported that O'Neill decided to take time out of football in order to care for his ailing wife, who was ill with lymphoma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179885-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179885-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic F.C. season, Player statistics, Appearances and goals\nList of squad players, including number of appearances by competition", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 68], "content_span": [69, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179886-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic League\nThe 2004\u201305 Celtic League was the fourth Celtic League season, and the second following the introduction of regional rugby in Wales. It involved Irish, Scottish and Welsh rugby union clubs. The restructured Celtic League saw the Welsh regional side the Neath-Swansea Ospreys finish top of the table to take the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179886-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic League, Table\nUnder the standard bonus point system, points are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179886-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Celtic League, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under IRB eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not yet earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-IRB nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179887-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chamois Niortais F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Chamois Niortais' 13th consecutive season in Ligue 2, the second tier of French football. The team finished second-bottom of the division with 38 points from as many matches, and were subsequently relegated to the Championnat National for the 2005\u201306 campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy was the first edition of Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, a three-match ODI series between Australia and New Zealand. It was played from 5 to 10 December 2004 as part of New Zealand tour of Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary\nChappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy 2004\u201305. One-Day International series result: Series tied 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, First match\nThe first match at Telstra Dome in Melbourne on 5 December was won by New Zealand and was considered a thrillingly close affair. After a decidedly unsuccessful Test series against Australia, a New Zealand victory was considered unlikely, with bookmakers odds heavily favouring the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, First match\nAustralia began proceedings with opening partners Adam Gilchrist and Matthew Hayden reaching 50 runs before the end of the seventh over. This partnership was ended in spectacular fashion, with Hayden attempting a strong pull shot which looked to be heading straight for the boundary. However, Mathew Sinclair, at full sprint and diving to his left, pulled off a marvellous wrong-handed catch which has been heralded as one of the best of the decade (competing with Australian Glenn McGrath's catch in the 2002\u201303 Ashes against England).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0003-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, First match\nGilchrist put in a typical performance, making a quick 68 runs off only 54 balls, before being dispatched by an impressive Chris Cairns delivery which bowled him (a feat Cairns was later to repeat twice more, taking both Michael Clarke's and Brett Lee's wicket in the same manner). Cairns' insertion into the bowling attack sparked a collapse in the Australian middle order, which in the space of 18 balls lost 4 wickets for just 10 runs. The bowling of Cairns and Daniel Vettori wreaked havoc with the Australian batsmen, with personal figures of 3/39 and 3/31 respectively. Darren Lehmann second top-scored with 50 runs and he, together with the struggling efforts of the lower order batsmen, brought Australia to a respectable 9/246 after 50 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, First match\nNew Zealand began the run chase in a tenuous fashion, losing the wicket of captain Stephen Fleming LBW for a duck after less than one minute. However, the 1/0 figure was in the next two hours to become 1/128, with opening batsman Nathan Astle and Mathew Sinclair's partnership proving to be formidable. Sinclair was then run out by Andrew Symonds, and Astle's wicket fell in the following over for 70 runs, which included a magnificent six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0004-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, First match\nThe breakthrough was consolidated with the loss of Scott Styris' wicket soon after for just 5 runs, but Hamish Marshall put up a performance of 50 not-out from 52 balls, and together with quick scores of 24 runs off 22 balls from Jacob Oram, 14 runs off 11 balls from Chris Cairns, and 20 not out off 13 balls from Brendon McCullum, helped New Zealand reach the target of 247 with just two balls left to be bowled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, First match\nHamish Marshall's impressive and innovative innings of 50 not-out earned him man of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nThe second match at Sydney Cricket Ground on 8 December was won by Australia, and was similar to the first in that Australia set a competitive total and New Zealand put up a very good chase, making for another close finish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nAdam Gilchrist opened in his usual quick-hitting style, making 60 runs from 48 balls, including nine fours and one six. At one stage, in the course of three overs, Gilchrist piled on 41 runs. His partner Hayden contributed one run during this time. Chris Cairns was brought into the attack to attempt to slow the run rate, but it took the bowling of Scott Styris to remove Gilchrist from the batting crease, caught by Nathan Astle. The new batsman Ricky Ponting with Hayden put together a useful partnership to be 1/140, before Ponting was dismissed after making 32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nIt was in Ponting's innings that New Zealand's veteran bowler Chris Harris, in saving four runs, dove to his left, landed awkwardly on his shoulder and tore his rotator cuff, in his 250th ODI. Ponting's dismissal proved to be the precursor to another middle order collapse for Australia, for Hayden was dismissed just a few minutes later for 43, and in even shorter order Damien Martyn was dismissed for 5 and Andrew Symonds for his second consecutive duck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0007-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nAustralia had lost four wickets for eight runs and looked to be in some bother, which was exacerbated five overs later with the loss of Michael Clarke for just six runs. At six wickets down though, Darren Lehmann and Brad Hogg steadied and put on a partnership of 74 runs before Darren Lehmann was run out with two overs remaining at 7/235. The incoming batsman Brett Lee put on 10 quick runs and Brad Hogg a further 16 to have Australia at 7/261 after 50 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nThe New Zealand run chase was every bit as exciting as it had been in the first match. Nathan Astle followed up his 70 runs in the first match with just 11, beaten by the bowling of Australian speedster Brett Lee. Sinclair was the next to go, scoring 17 runs before edging a Jason Gillespie ball to Hayden in the slips.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nThis was the beginning of a New Zealand collapse, with Scott Styris the next to depart with 5 runs, and then Stephen Fleming who had successfully taken on Lee, scoring 34 runs from 44 balls, falling to Brad Hogg's first delivery, given out LBW. Jacob Oram then fell for two runs, followed by Hamish Marshall for just 9, the latter falling victim to a quick ball from Lee which took his off stump.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nNew Zealand had lost five wickets for 23 runs, but a remarkable revival was to come, which perhaps would have won the match were it not for a dubious decision going against them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nChris Cairns and Brendon McCullum found themselves in the precarious position of being at 6/86 after 22 overs, needing 262 for victory. Cairns hit fast and hard, knocking 50 runs from 40 balls, before falling victim to Gillespie's bowling, attempting another boundary. Three overs later, McCullum was the recipient of a ball from Brad Hogg which he attempted to block, getting a thick edge of his bat to the ball before it struck his pads. Upon appeal however, umpire Peter Parker gave McCullum out, a clearly incorrect decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nTwo bowlers, Kyle Mills and Daniel Vettori, were then the batsmen for New Zealand, and had the task of getting nearly 100 runs in less than 13 overs, with only the shoulder sling-sporting Chris Harris left to bat if either of them was dismissed. They took to this task with an amazing showcase of batting prowess, the likes of which would have been impressive for opening batsmen, let alone bottom-order batsmen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nInitially, Vettori took control with competent batting and got to 27 runs at the beginning of the 42nd over, with Mills having taken a more passive role at 7 runs. This role was soon to be reversed. Mills hit four sixes in four consecutive balls, over the space of two overs, in a display considered to be worthy of any current top batsman. In the following over, now needing only a run per ball bowled, Vettori was run out by a direct throw from Ricky Ponting, to have New Zealand 9/236.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Second match\nChris Harris bravely took to the batting crease with a runner, Hamish Marshall. Looking ungainly and in considerable discomfort due to his previously incurred injury, he managed 4 runs from 6 balls before being beaten by a McGrath yorker which took his middle stump, leaving Mills at 44 not-out from 26 balls, and New Zealand all out for 244.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Third match\nThe third match at Brisbane Cricket Ground on 10 December, which was meant to be the series decider, was rained off, and the Trophy shared after a 1\u20131 series tie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179888-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chappell\u2013Hadlee Trophy, Summary, Third match\nDaniel Vettori was named Man of the Series after two impressive performances, with both the bat and the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179889-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlotte Bobcats season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the first season for the Charlotte Bobcats in the National Basketball Association. This season marked the return of NBA basketball to Charlotte after a two-year hiatus. The original Hornets had moved to New Orleans after the 2001\u201302 season to become the New Orleans Hornets, now the New Orleans Pelicans. The Bobcats had the second overall pick in the 2004 NBA draft, which they used to select Emeka Okafor out of the University of Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179889-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlotte Bobcats season\nThe team hired Bernie Bickerstaff as head coach during the offseason, and added veteran players like Gerald Wallace, Primo\u017e Brezec, Brevin Knight, Jason Hart, Jason Kapono, Melvin Ely and Steve Smith to their roster. The Bobcats played their first game at the Charlotte Coliseum on November 4, which was a 103\u201396 loss to the Washington Wizards. They would win their first game defeating the Orlando Magic 111\u2013100 at home on November 6. However, the expansion team struggled losing ten straight games in January and March, finishing fourth in the Southeast Division with an 18\u201364 record. Okafor averaged 15.1 points, 10.9 rebounds, 1.7 blocks per game and was named Rookie of The Year, and selected to the NBA All-Rookie First Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179889-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlotte Bobcats season\nAt the time, this was reckoned as the inaugural season of the Bobcats. However, after the 2013-14 season, the Bobcats reclaimed the Hornets name and pre-2002 history after the original Hornets team changed its name to the Pelicans. As a result, this is now considered the 15th season of the Hornets/Bobcats franchise, the team having returned after suspending operations from 2002 to 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Charlton Athletic competed in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nA season after just finishing outside the European qualification spots, Charlton suffered a slight decline to finish in mid-table in a nonetheless respectable eleventh place. Charlton never looked like a team that had nearly qualified for the Champions League the previous season, but with nine games to go Charlton were still placed seventh and looked likely to replicate their seventh-place finish the previous season. Unfortunately, the usual end-of-season decline hit Charlton and they picked up only three points from those nine games, dragging the Addicks down to 11th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nCharlton's goal-shy attack was what let the team down during the season. Manager Alan Curbishley sought to solve this by signing prolific young striker Darren Bent from Championship side Ipswich Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Kit\nCharlton retained the previous season's kit, manufactured by Spanish apparel manufacturer Joma and sponsored by all:sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 42], "content_span": [43, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nCharlton started their Premiership campaign at Bolton. Both teams were hoping to improve on last season's respectful positions, with Bolton finishing eighth and Charlton seventh the previous season, and to also show their European credentials, but it just looked like one team would be on today's showing. Kevin Davies was denied by Dean Kiely after just 30 seconds to show the tough day the Addicks would have.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nShaun Bartlett fouled Kevin Davies and Jay-Jay Okocha, who had gone the previous season without scoring, scored an early contender for goal of the season with a rasping 30-yard free kick which left Kiely clutching thin air. It was two shortly afterwards when Okocha turned from scorer to provider as his precise through ball found Henrik Pedersen, who held off Luke Young and slotted past Kiely. Kevin Lisbie then missed a glorious chance for the visitors when from six yards out, his shot was blocked by Jussi J\u00e4\u00e4skel\u00e4inen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0006-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nCharlton improved in the second half but couldn't take their chances, with Shaun Bartlett and debutant Danny Murphy missing good opportunities, and that allowed Bolton to seal the game when Okocha scored an incredible second when he teased the Charlton defenders before unleashing a powerful drive past the helpless Dean Kiely. Bartlett then cleared an Okocha free kick off the line to prevent the Nigerian an amazing hat-trick of long range strikes. Eventually, Charlton got on the score sheet when a Danny Murphy free kick was headed home by Lisbie. But it was too late for a comeback and in the end Pedersen scored his second of the day when Gary Speed played him through and the Danish striker did the rest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nCharlton bounced back from the defeat at Bolton by beating Portsmouth at home. Charlton started the brightest when, from an early corner, Jonathan Fortune headed towards goal via a deflection, forcing a good save from Shaka Hislop. Then it was Portsmouth's turn when Yakubu crossed in to the Charlton box. Dean Kiely dropped the cross to Eyal Berkovic, who took too long to get a shot out. There was a quiet period in the game until Danny Murphy got a cross in which Kevin Lisbie managed to head onto the bar. Then Lisbie turned supplier, leading to Charlton's first goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nLisbie crossed in and Portsmouth failed to clear, allowing Jason Euell to stab the ball past Hislop. Portsmouth then almost equalised soon afterwards with another cross. This one was from Yakubu, who crossed in for Patrik Berger. He took a shot which was blocked into the path of David Unsworth who in turn shot into the side netting. Kiely preserved Charlton's lead, denying Yakubu and Berger as Charlton went in 1\u20130 at half time. Charlton threatened at the start of the second half with efforts from Dennis Rommedahl and Shaun Bartlett but then Portsmouth got an unbelievable equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0007-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nA short free kick was given to Patrik Berger, who flicked up and volleyed incredibly from approximately 35 yards out, seeing the ball fly into the top corner. Charlton were looking good after that goal and were looking to get a late goal. Rommedahl and Bartlett were both denied by Shaka Hislop, who was having a good game until the 87th minute when Jonathan Fortune swung in a free kick which glanced off David Unsworth's head. Hislop failed to gather the ball as Charlton grabbed a late winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nCharlton then faced Aston Villa at home. Villa started the brightest. Gareth Barry, carrying on from where he left off against West Brom, delivered a dangerous cross which went to Darius Vassell, who crashed his shot against the crossbar. Charlton then had a penalty appeal turned down after Nolberto Solano clipped Dennis Rommedahl's heel, but Charlton did not need a penalty soon afterwards as a cross from Hermann Hrei\u00f0arsson found Francis Jeffers, who leapt up and headed in his first goal for his new club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179890-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Charlton Athletic F.C. season, Match summaries, Premier League\nJeffers scored his second after a long ball from Radostin Kishishev wasn't dealt with by Olof Mellberg, pouncing on the ball before guiding past Thomas Sorensen. Just before half time, Sorensen dived out at Kevin Lisbie's feet, getting injured in the process; Stefan Postma came on. In a quiet second half, the only real action was a third goal for Charlton and a first Charlton goal for Luke Young. Rommedahl produced a chipped through ball which deflected off Thomas Hitzlsperger into the path of Young, who confidently finished past the on-rushing Postma.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Chelsea F.C. 's 91st competitive season, 13th consecutive season in the Premier League and 99th year as a club. Managed by Jos\u00e9 Mourinho during his first season at the club, Chelsea won the Premier League title (their first league title in 50 years) and the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season\nThe season was historic for the vast number of records set during the season. The list of achievements include; most away wins in a season (15), most clean sheets kept in a season (25), fewest goals conceded away in a season (9), most wins in a season (29), fewest goals conceded in a season (15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season\nAfter missing out on the league title to the unbeaten Arsenal in the previous season, Chelsea continued spending large sums of money in order to build a squad capable of challenging for honours. They were in their second season under the ownership of Roman Abramovich, enabling them to sign five players for more than \u00a310\u00a0million each, including Ivorian striker Didier Drogba from Marseille and defender Ricardo Carvalho from Mourinho's former club, Porto. Portuguese defender Paulo Ferreira also followed Mourinho to Chelsea from Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season\nIn the Champions League, Chelsea aimed to improve upon their semi-final placing the previous year, but in the end only matched their achievement. They also exited the FA Cup in the fifth round to eventual semi-finalists Newcastle United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Kits\nThe team kit was produced by Umbro. The shirt sponsor was Emirates Airline; the kit bore the \"Fly Emirates\" logo. Chelsea's home kit, all blue with a white collar, was retained from the previous season. Their new away kit was black with grey shorts and accents. Chelsea retained last season's away kit (all white with black and blue stripes down the center) as the third kit for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Players, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Players, Under-18s\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League\nA total of 20 teams competed in the Premier League in the 2004\u201305 season. Each team played 38 matches; two against every other team and one match at each club's stadium. Three points were awarded for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats. At the end of the season the top two teams qualified for the group stages of the UEFA Champions League; teams in third and fourth needed to play a qualifier. [ 16]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League\nThe provisional fixture list was released on 24 June 2004, but was subject to change in the event of clashes with other competitions, international football, inclement weather, or matches being selected for television coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, August \u2013 October\nChelsea opened their Premier League campaign at home against a depleted Manchester United side on 15 August 2004. Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen's 14th-minute goal was enough to separate the two sides, 1\u20130. The result was followed by another 1\u20130 win a weekend later, this time away at Birmingham City thanks to a strike by substitute Joe Cole. A few days later, Chelsea journeyed across London to Selhurst Park to face newly promoted Crystal Palace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0011-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, August \u2013 October\nA Didier Drogba debut goal for his new club (a header from a Celestine Babayaro cross) and a controlled, outside-the-box effort by Tiago were enough to ensure a 0\u20132 win and maintain Chelsea's 100 percent start. Chelsea concluded August with a 2\u20131 home win over Southampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0011-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, August \u2013 October\nJames Beattie gave the visitors a shock lead after 12 seconds (the fastest Premier League goal of the season and Chelsea's first conceded); Beattie subsequently scored an own goal at the other end following a Chelsea corner, and a Frank Lampard penalty four minutes short of half-time set Chelsea on their way to all three points, leaving them in second place (behind fellow 100 percenters Arsenal on goal difference).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, August \u2013 October\nDue to the international fixtures, Chelsea did not play again until 11 September, dropping their first points of the season in a 0\u20130 draw at Aston Villa, but both sides were not without their chances to break the deadlock, Drogba having a penalty claim turned down and being booked for diving in the process. A second successive 0\u20130 draw, at home to Tottenham Hotspur, meant they lost ground on defending champions and leaders Arsenal, falling two points behind. Chelsea later claimed their first win of the month courtesy of a free-kick routine finished by Drogba nine minutes from time away at Middlesbrough one week later to give them a vital 0\u20131 win. At the end of September 2004, Chelsea were still occupying second place, two points behind Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, August \u2013 October\nChelsea began October with yet another 1\u20130 win, this time against Liverpool, a Joe Cole flick from an inswinging Lampard free kick maintained their unbeaten league start. The run, however, ended after they suffered their first and only defeat of the season away at Manchester City, with Nicolas Anelka stroking home a penalty in the 11th minute that he won himself after being felled in the box by Paulo Ferreira. The result cast Chelsea further behind pace-setters Arsenal, the margin now at five points. Manager Jose Mourinho maintained his optimism regarding his side's performances despite the media bemoaning Chelsea's lack of goals and style of play, particularly in contrast to the verve of unbeaten league leaders Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, August \u2013 October\nNonetheless, Chelsea recorded one of their most emphatic victories of the season a week later, winning 4\u20130 at home against Blackburn Rovers, an Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen hat-trick set them on their way to the win. The result was significant in that it closed the gap to two points, as Arsenal lost their unbeaten record in controversial fashion a day later at Old Trafford, losing 2\u20130 to Manchester United. Another irrefutable result, a 1\u20134 win away at West Bromwich Albion, pulled Chelsea level with Arsenal (but behind on goal difference) at the end of October, as the reigning champions were showing signs of faltering, narrowly earning a 2\u20132 draw that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, November \u2013 December\nA 1\u20130 home win against Everton at Stamford Bridge coupled with another draw for Arsenal allowed Chelsea to top the table for the first time in the season. A week later, they retained their two-point lead at the top thanks to a thumping 4\u20131 away triumph at Fulham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0015-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, November \u2013 December\nDespite a 2\u20132 home draw to Bolton, they maintained their table-topping lead after Arsenal could only manage a 1\u20131 draw themselves to West Brom at home on the same day; Chelsea rounded off November 2004 with a 4\u20130 thumping of Charlton Athletic at The Valley with Duff, Terry twice and Gudjohnsen all on the scoresheet to see Chelsea move 5 points clear at the top as Arsenal suffered their second defeat of the season at Liverpool the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, November \u2013 December\nChelsea began the new month as they ended the last, with a 4\u20130 victory, this time at home against Newcastle. In their next outing, they visited rivals Arsenal and despite going behind twice, equalised twice to earn a 2\u20132 draw at Highbury and preserve their lead at the top of the Premier League. Chelsea won the rest of their December fixtures without conceding: 4\u20130 vs Norwich, 1\u20130 vs Aston Villa, and 2\u20130 away to Portsmouth - to end 2004 sitting atop the Premier League, five points clear of champions Arsenal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 64], "content_span": [65, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, January - February\n2005 began with a trip to Anfield on New Year's Day, Joe Cole once again proved the difference between the two sides, finding the back of the net five minutes after coming on as a substitute to earn a now-routine 1\u20130 victory for the visitors. They went on to win all their remaining games in January to nil (2\u20130 vs Middlesbrough, 2\u20130 away at Tottenham Hotspur and 3\u20130 against Portsmouth), extending their commanding lead to 10 points, as rivals Arsenal continued to flounder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, January - February\nAs February dawned, Arsenal lost 4\u20132 against Manchester United at Highbury, the latter leapfrogging Wenger's Arsenal into second and prompting the Frenchman to rule his side (now 13 points behind leaders Chelsea) out of the title race with Manchester United showing signs of a mid-season surge; nevertheless, Chelsea continued their relentless form, earning a 1\u20130 win at Blackburn Rovers on 2 February; in doing so, Petr Cech (who saved a penalty late on in the game to ensure Chelsea's victory) set a new record of minutes gone without conceding (781), breaking Peter Schmeichel's record of 695 with Manchester United. The eighth straight win saw the Blues move 11 points clear as their quest for a first Premier League title remained on track.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 809]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, January - February\nThey later dropped their first points of 2005, a 0\u20130 stalemate at home to Manchester City, but soon returned to winning ways with a 1\u20130 away victory at Everton on 12 February, closing the month with a 9-point advantage over second-placed Manchester United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, March - April\nChelsea conceded their first goal in 2005, during a 3\u20131 win at Norwich on 5 March, to end Petr Cech's Premier League record of minutes without conceding at 1,028 (later broken by Edwin van der Sar of Manchester United in 2009). The Blues went on to register a 1\u20130 win over West Bromwich Albion at home and completed March with a 4\u20131 victory against Crystal Palace at Stamford Bridge as they closed in on their first league title for 50 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, March - April\nThe penultimate month of the season opened for Chelsea with a 3\u20131 away win over Southampton, a well-worked team goal finished off by Eidur Gudjohnsen rounding off the result with seven minutes to spare. A week later on 9 April, Dider Drogba rescued a point for the West Londoners after Walter Pandiani had given Birmingham City a shock lead with half an hour to go at Stamford Bridge; however, their form and results elsewhere conspired to leave Chelsea needing just six points from their last six fixtures of the campaign to be assured of their first-ever Premier League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, March - April\nOn 20 April, Chelsea played out a goalless draw at home against nearest rivals Arsenal with both sides (particularly the hosts) missing a myriad of opportunities to break the deadlock. But the Blues swiftly rediscovered their touch at Stamford Bridge days later against neighbours Fulham, putting them to the sword with a 3\u20131 result, Frank Lampard scored the pick of the goals, a crisp low drive inside the area from Arjen Robben's cut-back on the left to restore Chelsea's lead after Collins John had equalised Joe Cole's earlier opener.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, March - April\nThe result meant Chelsea could win the title provided closest challengers Arsenal (whose form has picked up considerably towards the season's end) dropped points against Tottenham Hotspur in the North London Derby at Highbury a couple of days later, but the Gunners picked up all three points in a 1\u20130 win. Later that day Archie Mckibben was born", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, March - April\nChelsea travelled to Bolton's Reebok Stadium on 30 April 2005 with the knowledge a win and all three points would crown them Champions of England for the first time in half a century, and despite a tense and goalless first-half, the second half saw Lampard win a battle against a defender for a high, bouncing ball just outside the penalty area before making space for a fierce right-foot drive to give Chelsea the lead after an hour gone; it was a lead Chelsea doubled as they countered from a Bolton corner fifteen minutes later, Lampard picking up Claude Mak\u00e9l\u00e9l\u00e9's through ball and rounding goalkeeper Jussi J\u00e4\u00e4skel\u00e4inen, slotting into an empty net for his second goal of the game to seal a conclusive 2\u20130 win and the league title for the Blues - Mourinho's first in English football - as the Blues sat top of the league with a now-unassailable 11-point lead after 35 games at the end of April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 962]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, May\nThe final month of the season saw the new champions step on to the Stamford Bridge pitch against Charlton on 7 May, and were made to wait until just moments from time to record a 1\u20130 victory as Frank Lampard won a penalty in the closing stages, Mak\u00e9l\u00e9l\u00e9 (who had never scored previously for the club) was given the honours but scored on the rebound following the save of his initial effort by Charlton goalkeeper Dean Kiely. The game marked Chelsea's final home match of the season, therefore the trophy presentation and post-match celebrations were held afterwards in front of a capacity home crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, May\nThree days later, Chelsea travelled to Old Trafford for the penultimate game of the season against third-placed Manchester United, receiving another pre-match guard of honour (customary for their remaining games since clinching the title against Bolton); and in spite of Ruud van Nistelrooy's opening goal, the Blues hit back, notching three times through Tiago, Gudjohnsen and Joe Cole late on to complete a Premier League double over United and claim a record 29th victory of the league season, moving onto 94 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, May\nTheir final league game on 15 May 2005 ended in a 1\u20131 draw, away to Newcastle United in an inconsequential yet unusually ill-disciplined end-of-season fixture that saw eight yellow cards brandished; the club's top-scorer Frank Lampard scoring from the penalty spot to equalise an own goal by Geremi at the other end minutes earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179891-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chelsea F.C. season, Premier League, May\nChelsea completed their historic campaign with notably new Premier League records of 95 points (12 clear of second-placed Arsenal), 29 wins (14 of them at home - a record in itself), 1,025 consecutive minutes without conceding and just 15 goals conceded - suffering only one defeat all season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179892-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Blackhawks season\nThe 2004\u201305 Chicago Blackhawks season was the 79th National Hockey League season, its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179892-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Blackhawks season, Transactions\nThe Blackhawks were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179892-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Blackhawks season, Draft picks\nChicago's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Bulls' 39th season in the National Basketball Association. After the retirement of Scottie Pippen, the Bulls stumbled out of the gate as they lost their first nine games on their way to an awful 3\u201314 start. However, they would win 13 of their 16 games in January including a 7-game winning streak, then win nine straight games between March and April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season\nThe Bulls finished second in the Central Division with a record of 47\u201335, and qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 1998, when they last made the NBA Finals, as well as when they won their last NBA championship. Second-year star Kirk Hinrich averaged 15.7 points, 6.4 assists and 1.6 steals per game. Top draft pick Ben Gordon became the first rookie to win the Sixth Man of The Year Award, as he and Luol Deng were both selected to the All-Rookie First Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season\nHowever, injuries were an issue as Deng was out for April and the postseason with a wrist injury, and Eddy Curry was sidelined due to a heart ailment. In the first round of the playoffs, the Bulls took a 2\u20130 lead over the Washington Wizards, but would lose the final four games of the series. Following the season, Curry and Antonio Davis were both traded to the New York Knicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season\nThis was the Bulls' first winning season and first playoff run since 1998, during the Michael Jordan era, when they won their sixth and most recent NBA championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season, Offseason\nThe Bulls drafted Ben Gordon, Chris Duhon, and getting Luol Deng from a trade with the Phoenix Suns, with Gordon coming from Connecticut and Deng and Duhon coming from Duke. They also signed Argentinian forward Andr\u00e9s Nocioni, who had played on several successful international teams. These acquisitions reflected John Paxson's strategy of building around players who had already been on successful teams, a departure from what Jerry Krause had done as General Manager, drafting Eddy Curry and Tyson Chandler in the same season, players who both showed tremendous potential, but were both coming to the NBA directly from high school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season, Offseason\nJamal Crawford and Jerome Williams were traded to the New York Knicks for Dikembe Mutombo and Cezary Trybanski. However, Mutombo was traded again to the Houston Rockets for Eric Piatkowski and Adrian Griffin without ever playing in a game for the Bulls and Trybanksi was waived by the team in October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season, Playoffs\nThe Bulls' record of 47-35 was good enough for the #4 seed in the Eastern conference. In the first round of the playoffs the Bulls met another young team on the upswing, the Washington Wizards. The Bulls would lose the series 4-2, staying competitive throughout most of the series, but ultimately unable to find an answer for Wizards star Gilbert Arenas. The Bulls also entered the series nursing injuries. Most notably, Eddy Curry was injured in late March, and the Bulls signed veteran Lawrence Funderburke just days before the beginning of the postseason in an attempt to add more depth to their front-court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179893-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chicago Bulls season, Awards and records\nBen Gordon lost out to Emeka Okafor for Rookie of the Year honors, but did win Sixth Man of the Year honors, averaging 15.1 points per game despite making only three starts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season\nThe season ran from November 14, 2004 to April 14, 2005. Beijing Olympians was disqualified for this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season\nPromotion and relegation were both abolished since the end of the previous season. The Second Division was renamed NBL. Top finishing teams from the NBL may choose to join the CBA as long as a team meets all items of the criteria set by the CBA Board. As a result, Yunnan Bulls, Fujian Xunxing and Henan Dragons joined the league in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season\nFor this season, the league was divided into a North Division (\u5317\u533a) and a South Division (\u5357\u533a), and a new playoff system was also introduced. The regular season consisted of 266 matches, with each team playing 38 matches (four against each of six other teams within its division and two against each of seven teams in the other division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season\nThe all-star game was played on March 6, 2005 in Nanjing, after the end of the regular season and before the beginning of the playoffs: the North Division defeated the South Division 103-99, and Mengke Bateer was the MVP. Also, all-star games were played against the KBL, on January 28, 2005 in Korea and January 30, 2005 in Harbin, China. Korea won the first game 85-82; China won the second game 93-77.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season, Divisional Championships\nIn the Divisional Championships (\u5206\u533a\u51a0\u519b\u8d5b), top 4 teams played with others from the same division in a knock-out bracket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season, Divisional Championships\nWinners became the Divisional Champions. No teams were eliminated, the result of the Divisional Championships were used to re-seed teams in the Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season, Divisional Championships\nAs it turned out, the only change of seeding was that Jiangsu and Guangdong switched places (S1 and S2).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season, Playoffs\nIn the Final series, Guangdong Southern Tigers defeated Jiangsu Dragons (3-2). Bayi failed to make the finals for the first time ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179894-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Chinese Basketball Association season, Playoffs\nTeams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in Divisional Championships, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. Home court advantage belongs to the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179895-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 35th season of the National Basketball Association in Cleveland, Ohio. During the offseason, the Cavaliers acquired Drew Gooden from the Orlando Magic, and Eric Snow from the Philadelphia 76ers. In his second season, expectations were high for LeBron James as the Cavaliers hoped for a playoff berth. Through the first half of the season, the Cavs held a 30\u201321 record at the All-Star Break as James was selected to his first All-Star selection in the 2005 NBA All-Star Game along with Zydrunas Ilgauskas. However, as March began, the Cavaliers were unable to upgrade at the trading deadline as the team went on a six-game losing streak. Head coach Paul Silas was fired and replaced by interim Brendan Malone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179895-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cleveland Cavaliers season\nThe Cavaliers finished the season with a 42\u201340 record, a fourth-place finish in the Central Division, and barely missed out of the playoffs, losing a tiebreaker for the #8 seed in the Eastern Conference to the New Jersey Nets. This was the seventh straight year that the Cavs missed the playoffs. Despite their collapse, James had an outstanding sophomore season averaging 27.2 points, 7.4 rebounds and 7.2 assists per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179895-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cleveland Cavaliers season, Awards and records, All-Star\nLeBron James voted as a starter for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game. He was appeared for the first time in the All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179896-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Clyde F.C. season\nIn the 2004\u201305 season, Clyde competed in their fifth consecutive season in the Scottish First Division. Billy Reid, who was assistant manager the previous season, was given the manager's job, following the departure of Alan Kernaghan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179896-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Clyde F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179897-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Coca-Cola Tigers season\nThe 2004\u20132005 Coca-Cola Tigers season was the 3rd season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179897-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Coca-Cola Tigers season, Occurrences\nCoach Eric Altamirano became the new head coach of Coca-Cola starting the 2005 PBA Fiesta Conference, taking over from Chot Reyes, who was assigned to coach the national team, Altamirano handled the Purefoods Tender Juicy Hotdogs in 2002 before he was called to serve the national team in the Busan Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Colchester United's 63rd season in their history and their seventh successive season in the third tier of English football, the newly renamed League One. Alongside competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, the League Cup and the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season\nAfter reaching the area final of the Football League Trophy, Colchester were eliminated by the team that they played in the final, Southend United, in the first round of the competition. However, they fared better in the League Cup, defeating Premier League West Bromwich Albion in the second round but were defeated by Southampton in the third. They also reached the fourth round of the FA Cup, where the U's further Premier League opposition in Blackburn Rovers but were beaten 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season\nIn the league, Colchester had a poor mid-season run, eventually ending the season 15th in the League One table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview\nPhil Parkinson rung the changes for the new season, with numerous new signings and multiple outgoings. After a strong start to the season, topping the table after three games, a bad spell of mid-season form saw Colchester drop down the League One rankings. Just four wins in 25 games was the catalyst to a 15th-placed finish, while fans were left frustrated at Parkinson's 4-5-1 formation at home. One positive was that no team managed to score more than two goals against the U's in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview\nOn 21 September 2004, West Bromwich Albion became the last top-flight club to visit Layer Road for their League Cup fixture. Colchester won 2\u20131, earning a trip to another Premier League side in Southampton. They pushed their hosts close, but were eventually defeated 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season, Season overview\nIn the FA Cup, Colchester needed a replay to beat Mansfield Town, while also winning on their travels at Rushden & Diamonds and Hull City. In the fourth round, they were drawn against Premier League Blackburn Rovers where they lost 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179898-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colchester United F.C. season, Squad statistics, Player debuts\nPlayers making their first-team Colchester United debut in a fully competitive match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 70], "content_span": [71, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179899-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colorado Avalanche season\nThe 2004\u201305 Colorado Avalanche season was cancelled due to the lock-out of the players of the National Hockey League. It would have been the 10th playing season since the franchise relocated from Quebec prior to the start of the 1995\u201396 NHL season. As well as the franchise's 26th season in the National Hockey League and 33rd season overall. The Avalanche would commemorate their 10th anniversary in the 2005-06 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179899-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Colorado Avalanche season, Draft picks\nColorado's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179900-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Columbus Blue Jackets season\nThe 2004\u201305 Columbus Blue Jackets season was the Blue Jackets' fifth season in the National Hockey League (NHL). The 2004\u201305 NHL lockout, however, cancelled the entirety of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179900-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Syracuse Crunch\nA number of players from the Blue Jackets played the year with the team's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Syracuse Crunch. The Crunch finished the season in fifth place in the seven-team North Division with a 36\u201333\u20134\u20137 record, earning 83 points. However, they failed to qualify for the 2005 Calder Cup playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179900-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Europe\nWhile some Blue Jackets joined the Crunch during the lockout, others crossed the Atlantic and played hockey in Europe. Reigning joint-Maurice \"Rocket\" Richard Trophy winner Rick Nash played for HC Davos in the National League A (NLA) in Switzerland, while David Vyborny returned to his native Czech Republic to play with Sparta Prague. Meanwhile, Nikolai Zherdev returned to Russia to play for former club CSKA Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179900-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Columbus Blue Jackets season, Transactions\nThe Blue Jackets were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 50], "content_span": [51, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179901-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Combined Counties Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Combined Counties Football League season was the 27th in the history of the Combined Counties Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179901-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Combined Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured two new teams in a league of 24 teams after the promotion of AFC Wimbledon to the Isthmian League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179901-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Combined Counties Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured two new teams in a league of 18 teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 55], "content_span": [56, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, known as the Carthium Cup and later the GLS Cup for sponsorship reasons, was a football tournament for clubs competing in that season's Football Conference. It was the first time the Conference League Cup had been held since the 2000\u201301 season. The competition was won by Woking, who defeated Stalybridge Celtic in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Preliminary Round\nNorth :Ashton United 6, Altrincham 2; Moor Green 1, Redditch United 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Preliminary Round\nSouth :Redbridge 0, Grays Athletic 3; Basingstoke Town 2, Lewes 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 1\nNorth :Droylsden 1, Ashton United 0; Worcester City 2, Stafford Rangers 1; Hucknall Town 1, Gainsborough Trinity 4; Nuneaton Borough 4, Redditch United 3; Barrow 4, Southport 1; Kettering Town 4, Hinckley United 2; Alfreton Town 0, Worksop Town 1; Harrogate Town 0, Bradford Park Avenue 1; Stalybridge Celtic 4, Lancaster City 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 1\nSouth :Bishop's Stortford 5, Cambridge City 0; Bognor Regis Town 2, Eastbourne Borough 1; Hayes 1, Maidenhead United 2; Hornchurch 1, Thurrock 2; St Albans City 2, Grays Athletic 6; Welling United 0, Margate 2; Dorchester Town 2, Weston-super-Mare 1; Sutton United 3, Carshalton Athletic 2; Weymouth 0, Newport County 2; Havant & Waterlooville 2, Basingstoke Town 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 2\nNorth Droylsden 1, Worcester City 2 Kettering Town 4, Nuneaton Borough 2 Barrow 0, Runcorn FC Halton 1 Worksop Town 4, Gainsborough Trinity 1 Stalybridge Celtic 1, Bradford Park Avenue 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 2\nSouth Thurrock 1, Margate 2 Dorchester Town 0, Newport County 1 Grays Athletic H, Bishops Stortford W Maidenhead United 2, Sutton United 4 Havant & Waterlooville 5, Bognor Regis Town 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 3\nNorth Burton Albion 2, Hereford United 4\u00a0;Kettering Town 1, Worksop Town 2\u00a0;Tamworth 3, Worcester City 1\u00a0;Morecambe 2, Scarborough 1\u00a0;Northwich Victoria 1, Leigh RMI 0\u00a0;Runcorn FC Halton 2, Carlisle United 6\u00a0;Accrington Stanley 2, York City 1\u00a0;Stalybridge Celtic 7, Halifax Town 3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 3\nSouthBarnet 0, Grays Athletic 3; Forest Green Rovers 4, Newport County 3 (a.e.t); Margate 2, Dagenham & Redbridge 1; Gravesend & Northfleet 0 Stevenage Borough 1; Sutton United 0 Woking 3; Havant & Waterlooville 2 Farnborough Town 0;Aldershot Town 1 Exeter City 0; Canvey Island 0, Crawley Town 0 (6-4 Canvey on pens)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 4\nNorth Accrington Stanley 6, Tamworth 0 Morecambe 1, Carlisle United 1 (3-1 Morecambe on pens) Hereford United 0, Northwich Victoria 1 Worksop Town 0, Stalybridge Celtic 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 4\nSouth Stevenage Borough 1, Grays Athletic 1 (Stevenage 3-1 on pens) Forest Green Rovers 5, Aldershot Town 1 Woking 2, Havant & Waterlooville 2 (Woking 4-3 on pens) Crawley Town 2, Margate 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 5\nNorthAccrington Stanley 4, Northwich Victoria 3 Morecambe 1, Stalybridge Celtic 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Round 5\nSouth Stevenage Borough 2, Crawley Town 1 Woking 3, Forest Green Rovers 1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Semi-Finals\nNorth Stalybridge Celtic 0, Accrington Stanley 0 (5-4 Stalybridge on pens)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179902-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Conference League Cup, Results, Final\nStalybridge Celtic 0, Woking 1 (Stalybridge won toss for choice of ground)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179903-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut in the 2004\u201305 collegiate men's basketball season. The Huskies completed the season with a 23\u20138 overall record. The Huskies were members of the Big East Conference where they finished with a 13\u20133 record and were the regular season co-champions. They made it to the Second Round in the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Huskies played their home games at Harry A. Gampel Pavilion in Storrs, Connecticut and the Hartford Civic Center in Hartford, Connecticut, and they were led by nineteenth-year head coach Jim Calhoun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179903-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team, Roster\nListed are the student athletes who were members of the 2004\u20132005 team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179904-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a 2004\u201305 was the 12th staging of the Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a, a knockout competition for Spanish football clubs in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B and Tercera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179904-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Copa Federaci\u00f3n de Espa\u00f1a\nThe competition began on August 2005 with the Regional stages and ended with the finals on 13 and 27 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179905-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Copa del Rey\nThe 2004\u201305 Copa del Rey was the 103rd staging of the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179905-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Copa del Rey\nThe competition started on 1 September 2004 and concluded on 1 June 2005 with the Final, held at the Estadio Vicente Calder\u00f3n in Madrid, in which Real Betis lifted the trophy for the first time since 1977 with a 2\u20131 victory over CA Osasuna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179906-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Coppa Italia\nThe 2004\u201305 Coppa Italia was the 58th edition of the Italian football tournament. Roma and Internazionale were the finalists. Inter won the tournament by a score of 3\u20130 aggregate in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179907-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Coupe de France\nThe Coupe de France 2004\u20132005 was its 88th edition. It was won by AJ Auxerre.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179908-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Coupe de la Ligue\nThe 2004\u201305 Coupe de la Ligue, a knockout cup competition in French football organised by the Ligue de Football Professionnel, began on 5 October 2004. The final was held on 30 April 2005 at the Stade de France. RC Strasbourg defeated SM Caen 2-1 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179909-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Coventry City F.C. season\nThis article describes Coventry City Football Club's progress in the 2004\u201305 season, during which the Sky Blues competed in the Football League Championship, the FA Cup (entering in the Third Round) and the League Cup (entering from the First Round). The 2004\u201305 season was the last season in which the club played their home games at Highfield Road before their move to the Ricoh Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179910-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Crewe Alexandra F.C. competed in the Football League Championship, their 82nd in the English Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179910-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Season summary\nAt the start of the 2004\u201305 season, Crewe were rated one of the likeliest teams to be relegated. In the event, they put in a good showing in the first half of the season; comfortably in the top half of the table, but after selling Dean Ashton to Norwich City for a record \u00a33 million in the January 2005 transfer window, Crewe failed to win any more games until the final match of the season, when they defeated Coventry City 2\u20131 and narrowly escaped relegation on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179910-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179910-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crewe Alexandra F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179911-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian First Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Croatian First Football League (officially known as the Prva HNL O\u017eujsko for sponsorship reasons) was the fourteenth season of the Croatian First Football League, the national championship for men's association football teams in Croatia, since its establishment in 1992. The season started on 23 July 2004 and ended on 28 May 2005. Hajduk Split were the defending champions, having won their seventeenth championship title the previous season, and they defended the title again, after a win against Varteks on 28 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179912-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian First League\n2004-05 Croatian First League was the 14th season of the Croatian handball league since its independence and the fourth season of the First League format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179912-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian First League, League table, First phase\nIn the first part of the season, 16 teams played single-circuit league (15 matches). After 15 rounds the first six teams qualified for the Championship play-offs - playing for the Championship title and the remaining 10 in the Relegation play-offs - playing to stay in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179912-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian First League, League table, Championship play-offs\nIntermediate matches from the first part of the championship were transferred, and the clubs played three more times (15 matches).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 67], "content_span": [68, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179912-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian First League, League table, Relegation play-offs\nRelegation play-offs determined the placement of clubs that were between 7th and 16th place in the first phase of the championship. 18 matches were played (double league system).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179913-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Football Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Croatian Football Cup was the fourteenth season of Croatia's football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179913-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Football Cup, First round\nFirst round was held on 21 and 22 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179913-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Football Cup, Second round\nSecond round was held between 12 and 27 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179913-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nFirst legs were held between 8 and 15 March and second legs between 15 and 31 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179914-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Ice Hockey League season\nThe Croatian Hockey League Season for 2004-2005 ended in a similar manner to the previous one, with KHL Medve\u0161\u010dak winning the title for the ninth time in a row. The team went undefeated in both the regular season and the playoffs. In the finals their opponent was KHL Mladost, as opposed to their old rivals KHL Zagreb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179914-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Ice Hockey League season, Regular season\nThe season officially started with six teams, but due to mostly financial reasons, HK INA Sisak didn't participate. For the same reasons, HASK Zagreb played only two games in the first part of the regular season so the season continued, and finished, with only four teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179914-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Ice Hockey League season, Playoffs\nThe first semi-final offered a matchup between Zagreb and Mladost, two teams that developed a rivalry during the season. The tensions were high, but somewhat surprisingly, young players from Mladost showed more composure and won the penalty-filled best-of-three series 2-0, thus advancing to their first final series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179914-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Ice Hockey League season, Playoffs\nThe other semi-final was pretty much a one-sided affair as Medvescak advanced to the finals with two lopsided wins against their farm team, Medve\u0161\u010dak II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179914-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Ice Hockey League season, Playoffs\nMedvescak dominated the final, sweeping the series 3-0 against a young team that looked like they were pleased just to reach this stage and failed to show flair and desire that was expected of them. Nevertheless, Mladost should seriously challenge for the title in the coming years, once their young players grow up (there were several fifteen-, sixteen- and seventeen-year-olds on that team) and gain some valuable experience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179914-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Ice Hockey League season, Playoffs\nZagreb won the third-place by winning all 3 games against Medve\u0161\u010dak II.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179915-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Second Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Druga HNL (also known as 2. HNL) season was the 14th season of Croatia's second level football since its establishment in 1992. The league was contested in two regional groups (North Division and South Division), with 12 clubs each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179915-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Second Football League, Promotion play-off\nCibalia and Novalja, winners of the North and South Division, qualified for a two-legged promotion play-off, which took place on 24 and 28 May 2005. Cibalia won the tie 5\u20131 on aggregate score, thereby earning promotion to the Prva HNL for the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179915-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Croatian Second Football League, Promotion play-off\nHowever, Novalja had another chance for promotion, as the losing team from the promotion play-off played another two-legged tie against the 11th placed team of Prva HNL, Me\u0111imurje. Me\u0111imurje won 3\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 59], "content_span": [60, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Crystal Palace competed in the FA Premier League, following promotion from the First Division (renamed the Championship) the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Season summary\nDespite the 21 league goals of striker Andy Johnson, and being just ahead of the relegation zone for most of the season, Palace were unable to remain in the top flight and were relegated on the last day of the season, following a 2\u20132 draw with South London rivals Charlton Athletic combined with West Bromwich Albion's 2\u20130 win over Portsmouth. With relegation, speculation reigned over Johnson's future; Johnson even handed in a transfer request, but ultimately the striker would sign a five-year contract with the club with an improved wage, pledging to help the club regain top-flight status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Season summary\nYoung winger Wayne Routledge also impressed with 10 assists in the Premier League, making him more productive than the likes of Arjen Robben and Steven Gerrard in terms of creativity, but he was snapped up by Tottenham Hotspur following Palace's relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Kit\nItalian company Diadora became Palace's new kit manufacturers, and introduced a new home kit for the season. The home kit featured red shorts and socks (dispensing with the navy attire of the previous two seasons) and predominantly red shirts with blue stripes. The away kit featured white shirts with blue arms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 39], "content_span": [40, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Kit\nChurchill Insurance remained kit sponsors for the fifth consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 39], "content_span": [40, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179916-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Crystal Palace F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179917-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cuban National Series\nThe 44th Cuban National Series was won by Santiago de Cuba over Havana. Industriales, who had the best regular season record, were eliminated in the first round by Sancti Sp\u00edritus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179918-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nThe 2004\u201305 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 67th season of the annual Romanian football knockout tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179918-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei\nThe winners of the competition qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179918-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Quarter-finals\nThis phase was programmed on a two leg system. The games took place on 10 November and 1 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179918-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei, Semi-finals\nThis phase was programmed on a two leg system. The games took place on 16 March and 13 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179919-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei (women's football)\nThe 2004-05 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei was the 2nd annual Romanian women's football knockout tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179920-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cymru Alliance\nThe 2004\u201305 Cymru Alliance was the fifteenth season of the Cymru Alliance after its establishment in 1990. The league was won by Buckley Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup was the 63rd edition of the Cypriot Cup. A total of 54 clubs entered the competition. It began on 11 September 2004 with the first round and concluded on 22 May 2005 with the final which was held at GSP Stadium. Omonia won their 12th Cypriot Cup trophy after beating Digenis 2\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nIn the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, participated all the teams of the Cypriot First Division, the Cypriot Second Division, the Cypriot Third Division and 12 of the 14 teams of the Cypriot Fourth Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe competition consisted of seven rounds. In the first and in the second round each tie was played as a single leg and was held at the home ground of the one of the two teams, according to the draw results. Each tie winner was qualifying to the next round. If a match was drawn, extra time was following. If extra time was drawn, there was a replay at the ground of the team who were away for the first game. If the rematch was also drawn, then extra time was following and if the match remained drawn after extra time the winner was decided by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe third round was played in a two-legged format, each team playing a home and an away match against their opponent. The team which scored more goals on aggregate, was qualifying to the next round. If the two teams scored the same number of goals on aggregate, then the team which scored more goals away from home was advancing to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nIf both teams had scored the same number of home and away goals, then extra time was following after the end of the second leg match. If during the extra thirty minutes both teams had managed to score, but they had scored the same number of goals, then the team who scored the away goals was advancing to the next round (i.e. the team which was playing away). If there weren't scored any goals during extra time, the qualifying team was determined by penalty shoot-out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nIn the next round, the teams were drawn into four groups of four. The teams of each group played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The group winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe quarter-finals and semi-finals were played over two legs and the same format as in the third round was applied. The final was a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Format\nThe cup winner secured a place in the 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 83]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, First round\nIn the first round participated all the teams of the Cypriot Second Division and the Cypriot Third Division and 12 of the 14 teams of the Cypriot Fourth Division. The two fourth division teams which were promoted from the 2004 amateur divisions promotion play-offs to the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division after finishing to the second and third place (Digenis Oroklinis and Th.O.I. Avgorou FC) did not participate in the Cypriot Cup. Atromitos Yeroskipou which finished first in the 2004 STOK promotion play-offs, participated in the Cypriot Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, First round\n1Apollon Lympion did not appear in the stadium. Match was awarded 2\u20130 to Achyronas Liopetriou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Second round\nIn the second round participated the winners of the first round ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Third round\nIn the third round participated the winners of the second round ties and six teams of the Cypriot First Division (the teams which finished 9th, 10th, 11th in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division and the three teams which promoted from the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division). The first eight teams of the 2003-04 Cypriot First Division did not participate in this round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Group stage\nIn the group stage participated the eight winners of the third round ties and the eight teams of the 2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division which did not participated in the third round, that were the teams which finished in the first eight places in the 2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division. The first four teams of the 2003\u201304 Cypriot First Division (APOEL, Omonia, Apollon, AEL) were set heads of each group and the 5th\u20138th placed teams (Anorthosis, Ethnikos Achna, AEP and Enosis Neon Paralimni) were drawn one per group. The eight teams which advanced from the third round were drawn without limitations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Group stage\nThe teams of each group played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The group winners and runners-up of each group advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179921-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Cup, Quarter-finals\nIn the quarter-finals participated all the teams which qualified from the group stage. The group winners were drawn against the runners-up, with the group winners hosting the second leg. Teams from the same group could not be drawn against each other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179922-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division was the 66th season of the Cypriot top-level football league. Anorthosis won their 12th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179922-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The last three teams were relegated to the 2005\u201306 Cypriot Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179922-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division, Format\nThe champions ensured their participation in the 2005\u201306 UEFA Champions League and the runners-up in the 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179922-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division, Format\nThe teams had to declare their interest to participate in the 2005 UEFA Intertoto Cup before the end of the championship. At the end of the championship, the higher placed team among the interested ones participated in the Intertoto Cup (if they had not secured their participation in any other UEFA competition).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179922-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179922-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot First Division, Changes from previous season\nAnagennisi Deryneia, Onisilos Sotira and Doxa Katokopias were relegated from previous season and played in the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division. They were replaced by the first three teams of the 2003\u201304 Cypriot Second Division, Nea Salamina, Aris Limassol and Alki Larnaca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179923-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division was the 20th season of the Cypriot fourth-level football league. Frenaros FC won their 1st title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179923-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to the 2005\u201306 Cypriot Third Division and the last three teams were relegated to regional leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179923-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Fourth Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 53], "content_span": [54, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179924-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division was the 50th season of the Cypriot second-level football league. APOP Kinyras won their 1st title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179924-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Second Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to 2005\u201306 Cypriot First Division and the last three teams were relegated to the 2005\u201306 Cypriot Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179925-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division was the 34th season of the Cypriot third-level football league. SEK Agiou Athanasiou won their 2nd title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179925-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division, Format\nFourteen teams participated in the 2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their home and once away. The team with the most points at the end of the season crowned champions. The first three teams were promoted to the 2005\u201306 Cypriot Second Division and the last three teams were relegated to the 2005\u201306 Cypriot Fourth Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179925-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Cypriot Third Division, Format, Point system\nTeams received three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179926-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech 1. Liga season\nThe 2004\u201305 \u0421zech 1.liga season was the 12th season of the Czech 1.liga, the second level of ice hockey in the Czech Republic. Fourteen teams participated in the league, and HC Ceske Budejovice won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179927-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech 2. Liga\nThe 2004\u201305 Czech 2. Liga was the 12th season of the 2. \u010desk\u00e1 fotbalov\u00e1 liga, the second tier of the Czech football league. In February 2005, Bohemians lost their license to play in the league and thus their results were expunged and the second half of the season was played with only 15 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179928-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Czech Cup was the twelfth season of the annual football knock-out tournament of the Czech Republic. The competition offered a place in the first round of the 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup for the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179928-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe quarterfinals were played between 20 and 26 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 32], "content_span": [33, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179928-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech Cup, Semifinals\nThe semifinals were played on 11 and 12 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 79]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179929-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech Extraliga season\nThe 2004\u201305 Czech Extraliga season was the 12th season of the Czech Extraliga since its creation after the breakup of Czechoslovakia and the Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League in 1993.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179930-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Czech First League\nThe 2004\u201305 Czech First League, known as the Gambrinus liga for sponsorship reasons, was the twelfth season of top-tier football in the Czech Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179931-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 C\u00e1diz CF season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 94th season in the existence of C\u00e1diz CF and the club's second consecutive season in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, C\u00e1diz participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179932-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DEL season\nThe 2004\u201305 Deutsche Eishockey Liga season was the 11th season since the founding of the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (English: German Ice Hockey League). The Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin (English: Polar Bears Berlin) became first time German Champion, a feat they will repeat a number of times in the next seasons. The Kassel Huskies was allowed to stay in the league, despite losing the play-down, as Grizzly Adams Wolfsburg lost its DEL license.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179932-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DEL season\nThe season was significant, due to the NHL lockout. 22 NHL players came to play the season in the DEL, with the Iserlohn Roosters making the first move by signing up Mike York. Several German national team players came as well -- Marco Sturm, Jochen Hecht and Olaf K\u00f6lzig. Other significant signings included St\u00e9phane Robidas and Doug Weight midseason signups for the previous season champion the Frankfurt Lions. Erik Cole, who would have been playing with the Carolina Hurricanes, was named MVP of the playoffs with the Eisb\u00e4ren Berlin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179932-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DEL season, Regular season\nThe regular season was played from September 17, 2004 to March 13, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179932-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DEL season, Playdowns\nThe two last placed, Grizzly Adams Wolfsburg and Kassel Huskies played a \"playdown\" in a Best-of-seven series starting March 18, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179932-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DEL season, Playdowns\nThe Kassel Huskies were set to be relegated to the 2. Bundesliga, but due to the Grizzly Adams losing their DEL license, they were allowed to stay. The Grizzly Adams lost the license as their new Arena was not finished in time, and the old one did not conform to the DEL rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179933-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal\nThe 2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal was the 62nd season of the annual German football cup competition. 64 teams competed in the tournament of six rounds which began on 20 August 2004 and ended on 28 May 2005. In the final FC Bayern Munich defeated FC Schalke 04 2\u20131, thereby claiming their twelfth title and completing the double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179933-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal, Matches, First round\n* Match awarded 2\u20130 to 1. FC K\u00f6ln II as VfL Wolfsburg fielded an ineligible player", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179933-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal, Top scorers\nThe following were the top scorers of the 2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179934-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal Frauen\nThe Frauen DFB-Pokal 2004\u201305 was the 25th season of the cup competition, Germany's second-most important title in women's football. It was the last time the cup was held over five rounds and also the last time, that clubs were allowed to have more than one side in the tournament. The first round of the competition was held on 28\u201329 August 2004. In the final which was held in Berlin on 29 April 2006 Turbine Potsdam faced FFC Frankfurt as in the previous year and again Turbine won 3\u20130, thus claiming their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179935-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Mavericks season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Mavericks' 25th season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Mavericks acquired Jason Terry from the Atlanta Hawks, and Jerry Stackhouse along with rookie Devin Harris from the Washington Wizards. The Mavericks got off to a fast start winning seven of their first eight games, holding a 35\u201316 record before the All-Star break. At midseason, the team acquired Keith Van Horn from the Milwaukee Bucks. However, on March 19, head coach Don Nelson stepped down and former Maverick Avery Johnson took over Nelson's duties for the remainder of the season. Under Johnson, the Mavericks won their final nine games of the season, finishing second in the Southwest Division with a 58\u201324 record, good for fourth place in the Western Conference. Dirk Nowitzki was selected for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 883]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179935-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Mavericks season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Mavericks lost the first two games against their in-state rival, the Houston Rockets, but managed to defeat them in seven games. The semifinals against the top-seeded Phoenix Suns pitted Nowitzki against former teammate Steve Nash, who was named league MVP following the season. The Mavs would eventually lose the series in six games. Following the season, Michael Finley signed as a free agent with the San Antonio Spurs and Shawn Bradley retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179935-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Mavericks season\nFor the season, the Mavs added an alternate green uniform, similar to the 1980s road uniform. They were designed by rapper Sean \"P. Diddy\" Combs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179936-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Stars season\nThe 2004\u201305 Dallas Stars season was their 38th National Hockey League season, and their 12th season in Dallas, however its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179936-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Stars season, Off-season\nThe Stars chose Mark Fistric with their first-round pick, 28th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179936-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Stars season, Transactions\nThe Stars were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 41], "content_span": [42, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179936-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dallas Stars season, Draft picks\nDallas' picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179937-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish 1st Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Danish 1st Division season was the 60th season of the Danish 1st Division league championship and the 19th consecutive as a second tier competition governed by the Danish Football Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179937-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish 1st Division\nThe division-champion and runner-up promoted to the 2005\u201306 Danish Superliga. The teams in the 14th, 15th and 16th places relegated between the 2nd Division east and west, based on location.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Danish Cup was the 51st version of the Danish Cup. First round was played on about July 28 and the final was played on May 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup\nBr\u00f8ndby IF ended as cup winner, but as they also won the Danish Superliga, the UEFA Cup-spot went to the cup runner-up FC Midtjylland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results\nThe team listed to the left, is the home team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 74]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results, 1st round\nIn first round competed 48 teams from the \"series\" (Denmark's series and lower 2003) and 16 teams from Danish 2nd Division 2003-04.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results, 2nd round\nIn second round competed 32 winning teams from 1st round and 8 teams from Danish 1st Division 2003-04 (no. 9 to 16).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results, 3rd round\nIn third round competed 20 winning teams from 2nd round, 6 teams from Danish 1st Division 2003-04 (no. 3 to 8) and 2 teams from Danish Superliga 2003-04 (no. 11 and 12).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results, 4th round\nIn fourth round competed 14 winning teams from 3rd round, 2 teams from Danish 1st Division 2003-04 (no. 1 and 2) and 4 teams from Danish Superliga 2003-04 (no. 7 to 10).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results, 5th round\nIn fifth round competed 10 winning teams from 4th round and 6 teams from Danish Superliga 2003-04 (no. 1 to 6).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179938-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Cup, Results, Semi finals\nThe semi finals are played on home and away basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179939-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Superliga\nThe 2004\u201305 Danish Superliga season was the 15th season of the Danish Superliga league championship, governed by the Danish Football Association. It took place from 24 July 2004 to 19 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179939-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Danish Superliga\nThe Danish champions qualified for 2005\u201306 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds and the 2005\u201306 Royal League. The runners-up qualified for 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup qualifying rounds and Royal League, while the 3rd and 4th placed teams qualified for Royal League. The 11th and 12th-placed teams were relegated to the 1st Division. The 1st Division champions and runners-up were promoted to the Superliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179940-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey season\nThese are the highlights of the 2004-2005 Dartmouth Big Green women's ice hockey season. They qualified for the NCAA Regional Hockey Tournament and participated in the Frozen Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179941-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team represented the University of Dayton during the 2003\u201304 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Flyers, led by second year head coach Brian Gregory, played their home games at the University of Dayton Arena and were members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 18\u201311, 10\u20136 in A-10 play, finishing second in the A-10's West division. The Flyers advanced to the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Tournament where their season was ended by Temple. Dayton was not selected to play in a postseason tournament, ending a streak of 5 consecutive postseason appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179941-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dayton Flyers men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2003-04 Dayton Flyers finished the season with an overall record of 24\u20139, with a record of 12\u20134 in the Atlantic 10 regular season. The Flyers fell to Xavier in the Atlantic 10 Tournament championship game. They received a bid to play in the NCAA Tournament where they fell to DePaul in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 60], "content_span": [61, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179942-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Denver Nuggets season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 29th season for the Denver Nuggets in the National Basketball Association, and their 38th season as a franchise. During the offseason, the Nuggets acquired Kenyon Martin from the New Jersey Nets. Coming off their first playoff appearance in nine years, the Nuggets got off to a shaky start at 13\u201315. Head coach Jeff Bzdelik was fired and replaced with Michael Cooper as the team lost 10 of their next 14 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179942-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Denver Nuggets season\nCooper was then replaced with George Karl, who then led the Nuggets with a 32\u20138 record for the remainder of the season, including a ten-game winning streak in April. The Nuggets finished second in the Northwest Division with a 49\u201333 record. Second-year star Carmelo Anthony led them in scoring with 20.8 points per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179942-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Denver Nuggets season\nEntering the playoffs as the #7 seed in the Western Conference, the Nuggets won Game 1 over the 2nd-seeded San Antonio Spurs, but would lose the series in five games. The Spurs then defeated the Detroit Pistons in seven games in the NBA Finals, winning their third championship in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179943-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 Spanish football season, Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a competed in La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179943-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Season summary\nDeportivo suffered a slump and finished eighth. The club also suffered poor form in the Champions League, finishing bottom of their group with only two points and no goals scored. This was a stark contrast to the form the club had shown in Europe the previous season when they reached the Champions League semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179943-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Kit\nDeportivo's kit was manufactured by Joma and sponsored by Fadesa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179943-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179943-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Deportivo de La Coru\u00f1a season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Derby County F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nWith little money to spend, Burley played the markets and made two key free signings in I\u00f1igo Idiakez and Grzegorz Rasiak. Idiakez was voted the club's Player of the Season and Rasiak finished top scorer (with 17 goals) as Derby confounded their form of the last 5 years to grab a fourth-placed finish in the newly rebranded Football League Championship and entrance into the 2004\u201305 play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nWith a more settled side than he was previously allowed \u2013 Burley only used 24 players, 7 of whom were involved in 10 or less games \u2013 and a strong mix of academy graduates (Lee Grant, Pablo Mills, Tom Huddlestone, Marcus Tudgay) and inspired purchases (Rasiak, Idiakez, Tommy Smith) Derby enjoyed a splendid second half to the season, recording just 6 defeats in their final 24 fixtures, including a run of 1 defeat in 14, and equalled the club record for away wins in a season and setting a club record of 6 consecutive away victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0001-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nHowever, the club entered the play-offs without the presence of key duo Rasiak and Idiakez \u2013 both unavailable through injury \u2013 and a 2\u20130 defeat in the first leg away to Preston North End proved impossible to overturn in the second leg at Pride Park, which finished 0\u20130 in front of a crowd of over 31,000. Behind the scenes, circumstances were deteriorating, and Burley left his position, citing interference from football agent turned Director of Football Murdo Mackay, and the sale of Huddlestone, to Tottenham Hotspur, against his wishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0001-0003", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season, Season summary\nFinancial circumstances were worsening as the debt spiralled to over \u00a330m, despite Burley building success on the pitch without any transfer funds. A refinancing scheme was put in place which saw Pride Park sold to the \"mysterious\" Panama-based ABC Corporation and the club paying rent of \u00a31m a year to play there, which local journalist Gerald Mortimer described as \"an affront . . . to those who put everything into building (the ground).\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179944-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Derby County F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179945-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Detroit Pistons season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 64th season for the Pistons, the 57th in the National Basketball Association, and the 48th in the Detroit area. During the offseason, the Pistons signed free agent Antonio McDyess. Coming off their upset victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals, the Pistons began the season playing around .500. However, things would get worse on November 19 in a game against the Indiana Pacers, when a brawl erupted between Pacers players and Pistons fans after Ben Wallace and Ron Artest got into a shoving match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179945-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Detroit Pistons season\nAs the season progressed, the Pistons would post an 11-game winning streak near the end of the season, and would eventually finish first overall in the Central Division, and second overall in the Eastern Conference with a 54\u201328 record. Ben Wallace was named Defensive Player of the Year for the third time, and was selected for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179945-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Detroit Pistons season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Pistons defeated the Philadelphia 76ers in five games, then defeated the 6th-seeded Pacers in six games in the second round. The Pistons would then defeat the top-seeded Miami Heat in a full seven game series after trailing 3\u20132 to advance to the Finals for the second straight year. However, they narrowly missed out on repeating as NBA champions, losing to the San Antonio Spurs in the 2005 NBA Finals in seven games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179945-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Detroit Pistons season\nAfter the Finals defeat, Larry Brown and the Pistons parted ways after spending two seasons as head coach. He would later be the head coach of his hometown New York Knicks, but after winning only 23 games in his only season in New York, Brown was fired again before returning to coaching with the Charlotte Bobcats. It was later announced in the off-season that Flip Saunders, who was fired as head coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves at midseason, would be the Pistons head coach for next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179946-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Detroit Red Wings season\nThe 2004\u201305 Detroit Red Wings season would have been their 79th National Hockey League season; however, it was cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time to save the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179946-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Detroit Red Wings season, Draft picks\nDetroit's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179947-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey)\n2004\u201305 was the sixth season that Division 1 functioned as the third-level of ice hockey in Sweden, below the second-level Allsvenskan and the top-level Elitserien (now the SHL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179947-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey), Format\nThe league was divided into four regional groups. In each region, the top teams qualified for the Kvalserien till Allsvenskan, for the opportunity to be promoted to the Allsvenskan. The bottom teams in each group were forced to play in a relegation round against the top teams from Division 2 in order to retain their spot in Division 1 for the following season. These were also conducted within each region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 54], "content_span": [55, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179948-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Futsal\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Futsal is the 16th season of top-tier futsal in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179948-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divisi\u00f3n de Honor de Futsal, Playoffs, Championship playoffs\nThe Finals were broadcast in Spain on TVE2 and Teledeporte.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179949-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A\nThe 2004\u201305 Divizia A was the eighty-seventh season of Divizia A, the top-level football league of Romania. Season began in July 2004 and ended in June 2005. Steaua Bucure\u0219ti became champions on 11 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179949-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A, Team changes, Relegated\nThe teams that were relegated to the Divizia B at the end of the previous season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179949-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A, Team changes, Promoted\nThe teams that were promoted from the Divizia B at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179949-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A, Attendances\nUpdated to games played on 16 August 2019Source: Notes:1: Played last season in Divizia B.2: Steaua Bucure\u0219ti played 1 match out of their stadium.3: O\u021belul Gala\u021bi played 1 match out of their stadium.4: Universitatea Craiova played 1 match out of their stadium.5: Steaua Bucure\u0219ti played 1 game behind closed doors.6: Rapid Bucure\u0219ti played 1 game behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179949-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A, Champion squad\nGoalkeepers: Vasil Khamutowski (12 / 0); Martin Tudor (21 / 0). Defenders: Eugen Baciu (17 / 1); Daniel B\u0103lan (1 / 0); Sorin Ghionea (26 / 0); Dorin Goian (4 / 0); Petre Marin (25 / 0); Mihai Ne\u0219u (7 / 1); George Og\u0103raru (28 / 2); Valeriu R\u0103chit\u0103 (1 / 1); Mirel R\u0103doi (20 / 1); Pompiliu Stoica (1 / 0).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179949-0004-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A, Champion squad\nMidfielders: Marian Aliu\u021b\u0103 (2 / 0); Gabriel Bo\u0219tin\u0103 (26 / 5); Nicolae Dic\u0103 (29 / 11); Florentin Dumitru (20 / 0); Boris Keca (1 / 0); Florin Lovin (11 / 1); Dorinel Munteanu (28 / 1); Nana Falemi (5 / 0); B\u0103nel Nicoli\u021b\u0103 (14 / 2); Sorin Paraschiv (26 / 2); Adrian Pitu (4 / 0). Forwards: Cristian Ciocoiu (4 / 0); Andrei Cristea (28 / 7); Lauren\u021biu Dini\u021b\u0103 (19 / 2); Alin Li\u021bu (5 / 0); Adrian Neaga (15 / 6); Daniel Opri\u021ba (12 / 5); Valentin Simion (3 / 0). (league appearances and goals listed in brackets)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179950-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia A (women's football)\nThe 2004-05 season of the Divizia A Feminin was the 15th season of Romania's premier women's football league. Top four places qualified in the Championship play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179951-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia B\nThe 2004\u201305 Divizia B was the 65th season of the second tier of the Romanian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179951-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia B\nThe format has been maintained to three series, each of them consisting of 16 teams. At the end of the season, the winners of the series promoted to Divizia A and the last three places from all the series relegated to Divizia C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179951-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia B, Team changes, Note (**)\nCSM Medgidia sold its Divizia B place to Liberty Salonta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179951-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia B, Team changes, Note (**)\nMetalul Plopeni sold its Divizia B place to Dinamo II Bucure\u0219ti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179951-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Divizia B, Team changes, Renamed teams\nFC Craiova was moved from Craiova to Caracal and renamed as FC Caracal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179952-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Drexel Dragons men's basketball team represented Drexel University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Dragons, led by 4th year head coach Bruiser Flint, played their home games at the Daskalakis Athletic Center and were members of the Colonial Athletic Association.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179953-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Duke Blue Devils men's basketball team represented Duke University during the 2004-05 men's college basketball season. Mike Krzyzewski had turned down a $40 million offer in the offseason to become the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers to return for his 25th season and rebuild a team that lost Chris Duhon to graduation, Luol Deng to the pros and recruit Shaun Livingston altogether for the NBA Draft. For the first time in five years, Duke was not picked to win the ACC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179954-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Duleep Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 Duleep Trophy was the 44th season of the Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament contested by five zonal teams of India: Central Zone, East Zone, North Zone, South Zone and West Zone. In addition to these five teams, a guest team (Bangladesh Cricket Board XI) also featured in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179954-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Duleep Trophy\nCentral Zone won the title, defeating North Zone in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179955-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dumbarton F.C. season\nSeason 2004\u201305 was the 121st football season in which Dumbarton competed at a Scottish national level, entering the Scottish Football League for the 99th time, the Scottish Cup for the 110th time, the Scottish League Cup for the 58th time and the Scottish Challenge Cup for the 14th time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179955-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nThe near miss in gaining promotion the previous season had ensured that there was considerable confidence in the team going into season 2004-05 to make that further step. However, despite a successful opening spell, results were not as good as anticipated, and in December Brian Fairlie would make way for Paul Martin in the manager's seat. There was to be no great resurgence in results and in the end a disappointing 7th place was achieved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179955-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nIn the Scottish Cup, after defeating Cowdenbeath in the first round, it would be Berwick Rangers that would advance from the second round tie, after a drawn match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179955-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nIn the League Cup, Ross County would prove to be too strong in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179955-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nFinally, in the Scottish Challenge Cup, it was another first round exit, this time to Stirling Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179955-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dumbarton F.C. season, Overview\nLocally, in the Stirlingshire Cup, Dumbarton won one and lost one of their opening group ties, and would take no further part in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179956-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee F.C. season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Josvebot (talk | contribs) at 16:07, 24 June 2020 (v2.02b - WP:WCW project (DEFAULTSORT with special characters)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179956-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Dundee compete in the Scottish Premier League where they finished in 12th position with 33 points and were relegated to the Scottish First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 96th year of football played by Dundee United, and covers the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005. United finished in ninth place which meant the previous season's top-six finish was the only one in the five seasons since the split was introduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season\nUnited finished the 2004\u201305 SPL season in 9th place with 36 points, in which an eventful final day could have relegated themselves, Livingston or Dunfermline, before eventually consigning Dundee to the drop. United managed only eight wins, with twelve draws and eighteen defeats. Between March and early-April, United lost five consecutive games, although most were to teams who would finish in the top half of the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season\nThe cup campaigns brought contrasting fortunes. a 7\u20131 defeat to Rangers in the League Cup semi-final was remedied by a fighting display against Celtic in the Scottish Cup final, where United lost 1\u20130. Despite having fewer chances, United had more possession and it took a deflected free-kick to give Celtic the win. Defender Alan Archibald struck the bar in the final minute as United pushed for an equaliser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season\nA strong league finish secured United's top-flight status, with four wins from the final seven games, including victories against Rangers, Hearts and rivals Dundee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nUnited began pre-season with James Grady as the only pre-season signing, the striker arriving on a Bosman transfer from relegated Partick Thistle. First-team regulars Paul Gallacher and Charlie Miller left by the same method during the summer, with Scotland keeper Gallacher heading for Norwich City and Miller joining Norwegian side SK Brann. Veteran Owen Coyle also cut short his second Tannadice stay to return to Airdrie Utd. During August, Paul Ritchie and goalkeeper Lars Hirschfeld arrived on six-month deals following releases from Walsall and Tottenham respectively. Surprisingly, Grant Brebner was also allowed to sign for free from fellow SPL side Hibernian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nA home defeat to derby rivals Dundee just two games in was not the ideal way to start the season and United managed only one win in August, with a 2\u20131 home victory over Inverness CT. During August, youngsters Aaron Conway and Karim Kerkar arrived from Clyde in early-September but the month brought little to cheer about, with a CIS Insurance Cup win over Clyde providing the only win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nInto October and the winless streak continued, although a last-minute draw at Rangers brought some optimism. Another derby defeat in early November was tempered firstly by a CIS Cup quarter-final win over Hibs, then a home league success over Livingston but more defeats followed and only one more win arrived before Christmas, courtesy of a 3\u20130 triumph at home to Kilmarnock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nUnited entered New Year with no away wins but finally won on the road, thanks to a 4\u20133 thriller at Gretna in the Scottish Cup. The third derby match was drawn 2\u20132 with Steve Lovell's late leveller denying United three points, in a game where Nick Colgan \u2013 signed 24 hours previously \u2013 was given a debut. February started in dismal fashion, with Colgan's second (and final) match resulting in a 7\u20131 defeat against Rangers in the CIS Cup semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nIn a match screened live on BBC Scotland, United rallied from 2\u20130 down with Jason Scotland scoring, and had Jim McIntyre's long-range strike not hit both posts and ran along the line at 2\u20131 down, the game might have been different. United did recover by winning three of the remaining four matches that month, albeit two in the Scottish Cup. Queen of the South were beaten first, followed by a first away league win at Livingston and then a 4\u20131 home rout of Aberdeen in the quarter-final. With the match shown live on Sky Sports, it was a chance for United to gain television revenge for the Hampden horror show just three weeks previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nAberdeen were back at Tannadice three days later for a league match and won 2\u20131, starting a run of four straight defeats in March. After Kilmarnock's 3\u20130 victory, United lay bottom and Ian McCall was sacked, with Assistant Gordon Chisholm handed temporary control. Chisholm's first match was a live television affair at home to Celtic and only a Craig Bellamy hat-trick denied United a point, who equalised twice only to lose 3\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nUnited went into April with a league/cup double-header against Hibs and lost the league match 3\u20132 at Easter Road to another late goal. The cup semi-final brought cheer, as Jason Scotland's winner ensured a final appearance in May, along with European football. The buzz from the win carried on, with successive impressive league victories at Rangers and at home to Hearts. A home draw to Livingston brought a blip but a 2\u20131 derby win at Dens Park closed the month in style, with caretaker-manager Gordon Chisholm winning the Manager of the Month award in his first full month in charge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nInto May and a lack of wins scared United fans, with only a home draw against Kilmarnock and a last-minute defeat to Dunfermline. This left United going into final game at Inverness as one of four clubs who could be relegated, along with Livingston, Dunfermline and Dundee. Dundee's early goal against Livingston moved them out of bottom spot, only for ex-United player Craig Easton to equalise. With no further goals and Barry Robson's penalty winner in Inverness, United survived, finishing in 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Season review\nThe Cup Final was a tense occasion, with Martin O'Neill's last match in charge bringing an edge to the 50,635 crowd. Alan Thompson's 9th-minute deflected free-kick ultimately won it for Celtic, with Chris Sutton missing a late penalty before Alan Archibald's injury-time drive nearly securing extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Match results\nDundee United played a total of 47 competitive matches during the 2004\u201305 season, as well as six pre-season friendlies, making a total of over fifty games played. The team finished ninth in the Scottish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Match results\nIn the cup competitions, United were runners-up in the Tennent's Scottish Cup, losing 1\u20130 to Celtic, qualifying for the UEFA Cup in the process. The club lost heavily in the CIS Insurance Cup semi-finals, losing 7\u20131 to Rangers as Nick Colgan \u2013 playing only his second match in his loan spell \u2013 played his last game for the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Player details\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, United used 26 different players comprising five nationalities, with a further six named as unused substitutes. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Player details, Goalscorers\nUnited had 13 players score with the team scoring 41 goals in total. The top goalscorer was Jim McIntyre, who finished the season with fifteen goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 62], "content_span": [63, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Player details, Discipline\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, three United players were sent off, and 17 players received at least one yellow card. In total, the team received three dismissals and 78 cautions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 61], "content_span": [62, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Transfers, In\nThe club signed four players during the season, as well as loaning one for the latter part. Only one player \u2013 Stevie Crawford \u2013 was signed for a fee (\u00a380k).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Transfers, Out\nSeven players were released by the club during the season. Four players were also loaned with Andy McLaren going on loan twice to different clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179957-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dundee United F.C. season, Playing kit\nThe jerseys were sponsored by Morning, Noon and Night for a second season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179958-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dunfermline Athletic F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Dunfermline Athletic compete in the Scottish Premier League where they finished in 11th position with 34 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179959-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dynamo Dresden season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Dynamo Dresden's first in the 2. Bundesliga, a return to fully professional national football after a nine-year absence. They were in relegation contention for much of the first half of the season, but finished strongly to finish in eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179959-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Dynamo Dresden season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 ECHL season was the 17th season of the ECHL. The Brabham Cup regular season champions were the Pensacola Ice Pilots and the Kelly Cup playoff champions were the Trenton Titans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season\nDuring this season, the National Hockey League cancelled its season due to the player lockout. This led to many players who would normally be in the American Hockey League pushed out of roster spots by the younger NHL players back into the ECHL. Some NHL players also found work in the ECHL, some as a way to return to their hometowns (or their wives'), and others to give back to the league which gave them a start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season\nScott Gomez chose to return home to his Anchorage roots and played for the Alaska Aces. Curtis Brown played for his wife's hometown in San Diego. Jeremy Stevenson, who played his first professional season with Greensboro ten years before, returned to the Carolinas with the South Carolina Stingrays. Stevenson's NHL teammate Shane Hnidy, who played 21 games with the former Baton Rouge Kingfish as a rookie, returned to the South playing for the Florida Everblades. Hnidy and Stevenson would find themselves playing against each other in the first round of the Kelly Cup Playoffs. Bates Battaglia joined his younger brother Anthony on the Mississippi Sea Wolves of the ECHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, League changes\nAfter the 2003\u201304 season, the Columbus Cottonmouths, Greensboro Generals, and Roanoke Express franchises all ceased operations as their franchises were revoked. The Columbus organization joined the Southern Professional Hockey League for 2004\u201305 as one of its inaugural members. Their ECHL franchise had planned to be in Bradenton, Florida, as the Gulf Coast Swords but eventually had its franchise revoked in the September 2006 ECHL Board of Governors meeting after several issues led to them never completing their arena. The Cincinnati Cyclones requested a voluntary suspension of franchise, which was lifted for the 2006\u201307 season, when the Cyclones ownership failed to secure an American Hockey League franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, League changes\nThe league added one team for the season, their first Canadian franchise, the Victoria Salmon Kings. The Salmon Kings purchased the defunct Baton Rouge Kingfish franchise and relocated its home territory to Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, League changes, Realignment\nThe league also adopted a \"Mason-Dixon\" format, as the conferences were split on the Mason\u2013Dixon line, with the National Conference teams being north of the line and American Conference teams south of the line creating a \"North vs South\" format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, League changes, All-Star Game\nThe ECHL All-Star Game was held at the Sovereign Center in Reading, Pennsylvania, and was hosted by the Reading Royals. The National Conference All-Stars defeated the American Conference All-Stars 6\u20132, with Idaho's Frank Doyle named Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 50], "content_span": [51, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L= Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SOL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; Pts = PointsGreen shade = Clinched playoff spot; Blue shade = Clinched division; (z) = Clinched home-ice advantage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179960-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ECHL season, Regular season, Leading goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games played; Mins = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals allowed; SO = Shutouts; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 56], "content_span": [57, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179961-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EHF Champions League\nThe 2004\u201305 EHF Champions League was the 45th edition of Europe's premier club handball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179962-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup was the twenty-ninth edition of EHF's competition for women's handball national cup champions. It ran from October 8, 2004 to May 21, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179962-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EHF Women's Cup Winners' Cup\n1996 EHF Cup runner-up Larvik HK defeated 1996 Champions League champion Podravka Koprivnica to win its first European trophy. It was the third Cup Winners' Cup that went to Norway, after B\u00e6kkelagets SK's two titles in the late 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179963-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EIHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 Elite Ice Hockey League season was the second season of the British Elite Ice Hockey League (EIHL). Manchester Phoenix did not ice due as they could not agree a deal with the Manchester Evening News Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179963-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EIHL season\nThe second season of the EIHL saw a series of games between the EIHL clubs and the members of the British National League (BNL). In addition to three home games and three away games against their Elite opponents, each club also played one home game and one away game against the BNL clubs in crossover matchups. Results in these crossover games would count towards a team's points tally. The NHL lockout also saw a number of National Hockey League (NHL) players join British clubs. Coventry Blaze won a Grand Slam of all three titles, winning the Championship with an overtime victory over the Nottingham Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179963-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EIHL season\nThe crossover games with the BNL clubs were seen by many to be the first stage towards the amalgamation of the two organisations into one league. However, early in the season it was revealed that teams including Edinburgh Capitals and Newcastle Vipers were seeking to resign from the BNL and join the Elite League. A withdrawal of these clubs would leave the BNL with only a small number of participating teams. This situation led to the resigning teams temporarily withdrawing their Elite League applications and entering into collective discussions on the entire BNL joining the EIHL instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179963-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 EIHL season\nThe Elite League offered the BNL clubs invitations to join the EIHL structure, which were declined due to unfavourable terms. Subsequently Edinburgh and Newcastle resubmitted individual applications to the Elite League, both of which were accepted. A combination of this and Bracknell Bees owner John Nike's announcement that he was withdrawing funding from the BNL team prompted the collapse of the BNL at the end of the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179963-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EIHL season, Challenge Cup\nDuring the early part of the season, the results from league games also counted towards a separate Challenge Cup table. However, in a change to the previous season, there were two groups of teams, Group A with three teams and Group B with four teams. After each team had played each team in their group once at home and once away, the top two teams of each group qualified for the semi finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179963-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EIHL season, Elte League Play Offs\nThe top six teams qualified for the playoffs. Group A consisted of Coventry, Nottingham and London while Group B consisted of Belfast, Cardiff and Sheffield. Each team played the other teams in its group twice at home and twice away. The top two of each group then qualified for the playoff weekend at the National Ice Centre in Nottingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179964-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EWWL Trocal League\nEWWL Trocal League for the season 2004\u201305 was the fourth season of the WABA League. Attended by nine teams from four countries, a champion for the first time in history, became the team \u0160ibenik Jolly. In this season participating clubs from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia, Macedonia and from Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179964-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EWWL Trocal League, Regular season\nThe League of the season was played with 9 teams and play a dual circuit system, each with each one game at home and away. The four best teams at the end of the regular season were placed in the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179964-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 EWWL Trocal League, Final four\nFinal Four to be played 15 and 16 February 2005 in the Dvorana Baldekin in \u0160ibenik, Croatia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179965-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eastern Counties Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Eastern Counties Football League season was the 63rd in the history of Eastern Counties Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179965-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eastern Counties Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 19 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 58], "content_span": [59, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179965-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eastern Counties Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 54], "content_span": [55, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179966-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Eastern Michigan Eagles men's basketball team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Eagles, led by fifth year head coach Jim Boone, who was fired at the end of the season. The Eagles played their home games at the Eastern Michigan University Convocation Center and were members of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference. They finished the season 12\u201318, 5\u201313 in MAC play. They finished sixth in the MAC West. They were knocked out in the first round of the MAC Tournament by Akron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179967-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Edmonton Oilers season\nThe 2004\u201305 Edmonton Oilers season was the Oilers' 26th season in the NHL, however, the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout, which began a day after the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, cancelled the playing of any games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179967-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Edmonton Oilers season, Edmonton Roadrunners\nWith the NHL season wiped out, the Oilers would move their AHL team, the Toronto Roadrunners, to Edmonton, rename the club the Edmonton Roadrunners, and they played out of Rexall Place. The Roadrunners would finish with the 3rd highest attendance figure in the league, averaging 8854 fans per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179968-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eerste Divisie\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the Eerste Divisie began in August 2004 and ended in April 2005. The title was won by Heracles Almelo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179968-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eerste Divisie, Promoted teams\nThe following teams were promoted to the Eredivisie at the end of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179968-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eerste Divisie, New teams\nThese teams were relegated from the Eredivisie at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 33], "content_span": [34, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179969-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eerste Klasse\n2004\u201305 Eerste Klasse was a Dutch association football season of the Eerste Klasse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179970-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Egyptian Premier League\nIn the 2004\u201305 Egyptian Premier League, 14 teams participated. The first-placed team was the champion, and qualified to the CAF Champions League 2006 along with the team finishing in second place. The third-placed team qualified to the CAF Confederation Cup. Finally, the bottom three in the league are relegated to play the next season in the second division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179970-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Egyptian Premier League\nEach team played 26 matches from September 2004 to April 2005. Al Ahly were crowned champions by a 31-point margin and did not lose a game during the campaign (only dropping four points via two draws), a feat they repeated the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179971-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Egyptian Super Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Egyptian Super Cup was the 4th Egyptian Super Cup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Egyptian Premier League and Egypt Cup competitions, Al Mokawloon Al Arab won the game 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179972-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eintracht Frankfurt season\nEintracht Frankfurt competed in the 2nd Bundesliga and in the DFB Pokal in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179972-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179972-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179972-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eintracht Frankfurt season, Players, Eintracht Frankfurt II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179973-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ekstraklasa\nThe 2004\u201305 Ekstraklasa is the 79th season of the Polish Football Championship and the 71st season of the Ekstraklasa, the top Polish professional league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1927.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179973-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ekstraklasa, Overview\n14 teams competed in the 2004-05 season. Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179973-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ekstraklasa, Relegation playoffs\n13th placed Odra Wodzis\u0142aw retained their position in the Ekstraklasa by defeating second division Widzew \u0141\u00f3d\u017a 4:1 on aggregate in two matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 40], "content_span": [41, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179974-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elche CF season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 82nd season in the existence of Elche CF and the club's sixth consecutive season in the second division of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Elche participated in this season's edition of the Copa del Rey. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179975-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien (men's handball)\nThe 2004\u201305 Elitserien was the 71st season of the top division of Swedish handball. 14 teams competed in the league. The eight highest placed teams qualified for the playoffs, whereas teams 11\u201312 had to play relegation playoffs against teams from the second division, and teams 13\u201314 were relegated automatically. IFK Sk\u00f6vde won the regular season, but IK S\u00e4vehof won the playoffs and claimed their second Swedish title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season\nThe 2004\u201305 Elitserien season was the 30th season of Elitserien. It started on September 20, 2004, with the regular season ending March 1, 2005. The playoffs of the 81st Swedish Championship ended on April 11, with Fr\u00f6lunda HC taking the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Regular season, Final standings\nGP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTW = Overtime Wins, OTL = Overtime Losses, GF = Goals For, GA = Goals Against, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Regular season, Final standings\nx - clinched playoff spot, y - clinched regular season league title, e - eliminated from playoff contention, r - play in relegation series", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Regular season, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 62], "content_span": [63, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Playoffs\nAfter the regular season, the standard of 8 teams qualified for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket\nIn the first round, the highest remaining seed chose which of the four lowest remaining seeds to be matched against. In each round the higher-seeded team was awarded home ice advantage. Each best-of-seven series followed a 1\u20131\u20131\u20132\u20131\u20131 format: the higher-seeded team played at home for games 2 and 4 (plus 5 and 7 if necessary), and the lower-seeded team was at home for game 1, 3 and 6 (if necessary).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket, Playoff scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, Playoffs, Playoff bracket, Playoff leading goaltenders\nGP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179976-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Elitserien season, NHL lockout players\nDue to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout that ultimately cancelled the entirety of the 2004\u201305 NHL season, the following then-NHL players represented these Elitserien teams during the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179977-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 England Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 English Hockey League season took place from September 2004 until May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179977-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 England Hockey League season\nThe men's title was won by Cannock for the third consecutive year. The women's title went to Leicester who were known as Fyffes Leicester for sponsorship purposes. There were no play offs to determine champions after the regular season but there was a competition for the top four clubs called the Super Cup which was held at Guildford Hockey Club from 30 April - 2 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179977-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 England Hockey League season\nThe Men's Cup was won by Cannock and the Women's Cup was won by Leicester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179978-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eredivisie\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the Eredivisie started on August 13, 2004 and ended on May 22, 2005. The title was won by PSV. FC Den Bosch and De Graafschap were relegated to the Eerste Divisie at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179979-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eredivisie (basketball)\nThe 2004\u201305 Eredivisie season was the 45th season of the Eredivisie in basketball, the highest professional basketball league in the Netherlands. Demon Astronauts from Amsterdam won their 5th national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179980-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Eredivisie (ice hockey) season\nThe 2004\u201305 Eredivisie season was the 45th season of the Eredivisie, the top level of ice hockey in the Netherlands. Six teams participated in the league, and the Amsterdam Bulldogs won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179981-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ergotelis F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Ergotelis' 75th season in existence and the club's first season ever in the Greek Alpha Ethniki, later renamed the Superleague Greece. Ergotelis also participated in the Greek cup, entering the competition in the First Round. The content of this article covers club activities from 1 July 2004 until 31 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179981-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ergotelis F.C. season\nDespite achieving notable victories over traditional Greek giants Olympiacos and PAOK, the team was relegated in the end of the season, finishing in the 15th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179981-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ergotelis F.C. season, Players, The following players have departed in mid-season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players and Managers may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 89], "content_span": [90, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179982-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Essex Senior Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Essex Senior Football League season was the 34th in the history of Essex Senior Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179982-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Essex Senior Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 15 clubs which competed in the league last season, no new clubs joined the league this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179982-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Essex Senior Football League, Clubs\nAdditionally, Bowers United merged with Pitsea, renaming to Bowers & Pitsea, whilst Brentwood renamed to Brentwood Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179983-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Esteghlal F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season are the Esteghlal Football Club's 4th season in the Iran Pro League, and their 11th consecutive season in the top division of Iranian football. They are also competing in the Hazfi Cup and 60th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179983-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Esteghlal F.C. season, Player\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179984-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euro Hockey Tour\nThe 2004-05 Euro Hockey Tour was the ninth season of the Euro Hockey Tour. The season consisted of three tournaments, the Karjala Tournament, Rosno Cup, and the LG Hockey Games. The top two teams met in the final, and the third and fourth place teams met for the third place game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague\nThe 2004\u201305 Euroleague was the fifth season of the professional basketball competition for elite clubs throughout Europe, organised by Euroleague Basketball Company, and it was the 48th season of the premier competition for European men's clubs overall. The 2004\u201305 season featured 24 competing teams, from 13 different countries. The final of the competition was held in Olimpiisky Arena, Moscow, Russia, with the defending champions, Maccabi Tel Aviv, defeating Tau Cer\u00e1mica by a score of 90-78.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Regular season\nThe first phase was a regular season, in which the competing teams were drawn into three groups, each containing eight teams. Each team played every other team in its group at home and away, resulting in 14 games for each team in the first stage. The top 5 teams in each group and the best sixth-placed team advanced to the next round. The complete list of tiebreakers was provided in the lead-in to the Regular Season results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Regular season\nIf one or more clubs were level on won-lost record, tiebreakers were applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Top 16\nThe surviving teams were divided into four groups of four teams each, and again a round robin system was adopted, resulting in 6 games each, with the two top teams advancing to the quarterfinals. Tiebreakers were identical to those used in the Regular Season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 1: The three group winners, plus the top-ranked second-place team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 2: The remaining second-place teams, plus the top two third-place teams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 3: The remaining third-place team, plus the three fourth-place teams", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Top 16\nLevel 4: The fifth-place teams, plus the top ranked sixth-place team", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Top 16\nEach Top 16 group included one team from each pool. The draw was conducted under the following restrictions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179985-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Euroleague, Quarterfinals\nEach quarterfinal was a best-of-three series between a first-place team in the Top 16 and a second-place team from a different group, with the first-place team receiving home advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179986-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Badminton Circuit season\nThe 2004\u201305 European Badminton Circuit season started in September 2004 and ended in April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179986-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Badminton Circuit season, Results, Performance by countries\nTabulated below are the Circuit performances based on countries. Only countries who have won a title are listed:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 76], "content_span": [77, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179987-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup (known as the Parker Pen Challenge Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 9th season of the European Challenge Cup, Europe's second tier club rugby union competition below the Heineken Cup. A total of 28 teams participated, representing seven countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179987-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup\nThe competition began with a series of matches on 23 October 2004 and culminated in the final at the Kassam Stadium in Oxford on 21 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179987-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup\nAs in the previous two seasons, the competition was organised in a knockout format. Teams played each other on a home and away basis, with the aggregate points winner proceeding to the next round. The final was a single leg. This was the final season with a pure knockout format; in subsequent seasons the competition reverted to a pool stage followed by a knockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179987-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup\nFor the third and final time, a third tier tournament was held - the European Shield. This was contested between the first round losers from the European Challenge Cup. As there were only 28 teams involved, the 2 \"best\" 1st Round losers were reprieved and proceeded to the 2nd Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179987-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup\nThe defending champions, England's NEC Harlequins, did not have a chance to defend their crown because they qualified to play in the Heineken Cup. Sale Sharks claimed a comfortable victory over Pau in the final and picked up their second piece of European Club silverware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179988-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Shield\nThe 2004\u201305 European Shield (known as the Parker Pen Shield for sponsorship reasons) was the 3rd, and final, season of the European Shield, Europe's third-tier club rugby union competition below the Heineken Cup and European Challenge Cup. A total of 15 teams participated, representing six countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179988-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Shield\nThis competition was intended to be contested between 12 first round losers from the 2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup plus 4 other Clubs entering directly into the 1st Round. The structure of the competition was a purely knockout format; teams played each other on a home and away basis, with the aggregate points winner proceeding to the next round. The final was a single leg.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179988-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Shield\nThe competition began on 4 December 2004 and culminated in the final at Kassam Stadium in Oxford on 21 May 2005. Auch secured a victory over Worcester Warriors in the final and picked up their first piece of European Club silverware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179988-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Shield\nAfter this season, the European Challenge Cup reverted to its previous \"pool and knockout\" format and the European Shield was discontinued.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179988-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 European Shield, Teams\nThis competition was intended to be contested between 12 first round losers from the 2004\u201305 European Challenge Cup, plus 4 other Clubs that joined directly at the 1st Round of the Shield. AA Coimbra subsequently declined to play in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Everton competed in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Season summary\nMany pundits had tipped Everton for relegation that season: having escaped relegation from the Premier League by six points the previous season, Everton's task to stay in English football's top flight only seemed harder after the multimillion-pound transfer of teenage striker Wayne Rooney to Manchester United after setting the summer's European Championships alight. However, the season turned out to be Everton's most successful in Premier League history as they placed fourth in the league with 61pts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Season summary\nEverton kept pace with the likes of Chelsea (95pts) and Arsenal (83pts) at the Premier League summit for the first half of the season, finishing 2004 only a few points adrift of leaders Chelsea. Although Everton's title challenge eventually fizzled out following the sale of out-of-contract midfielder Thomas Gravesen to Spanish giants Real Madrid, they were able to see off competition from arch-rivals Liverpool (58pts) and fellow northwesterners Bolton Wanderers (58pts) to finish in fourth place, three points ahead of both teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0001-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Season summary\nThis secured the Toffees qualification to the 2005\u201306 Champions League, in which they would enter the tournament in the third qualifying round. In the summer, manager David Moyes splashed the cash on the likes of Netherlands and Inter Milan winger Andy van der Meyde in a bid to keep Everton in a position to make a serious challenge for European qualification the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Season summary\nDespite their high league finish, Everton had the unwanted distinction of finishing with a negative goal difference, as a result of an embarrassing 7\u20130 humbling at Arsenal in the penultimate game of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179989-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Everton F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179990-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 F.C. Copenhagen season\nFCK ended second in the Danish Superliga in the season 2004-05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179990-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 F.C. Copenhagen season\nThey won on May 26 the Royal League again, after an exciting final against IFK G\u00f6teborg, which were decided in a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179990-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 F.C. Copenhagen season\nFCK were knocked out of the UEFA Champions League by ND Gorica on August 4 after an embarrassing defeat on 5-0 home after FCK won 2-1 away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179990-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 F.C. Copenhagen season, Squad\nThe following squads, are lists with all the players, who have played in F.C. Copenhagen in the 2004-05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179990-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 F.C. Copenhagen season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Cup was the 124th season of the world's oldest football competition, the FA Cup. The competition began on 28 August 2004, with the lowest-ranked of the entrants competing in the Extra Preliminary Round. For England's top 44 clubs, from the 2004\u201305 Premier League and 2004\u201305 Football League Championship, the FA Cup began at the third round in January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup\nTies were all single-legged and took place at the stadium of the club drawn first. If scores were level at the end of a match, the match was replayed at the away club's stadium, usually in the middle of the following week. If the scores are still level, extra-time and penalties (if necessary) are used to determine a winner. From the semi-finals onwards, the ties take place at a neutral stadium, and there are no replays. That is to say, extra-time and penalties are played if necessary to determine a winner in a single match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup\nThe new Wembley Stadium was still at least a year away from being ready for use, so the final was staged at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff on 21 May 2005. The final was won by Arsenal on penalties after a goalless draw with holders Manchester United, the first time that the FA Cup Final had been decided on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, First round proper\nThis round is the first in which Football League teams from League One and League Two compete with non-league teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Third round proper\nThis round marks the first time Championship and Premier League (top-flight) teams play. Matches were played on the weekend of Saturday, 8 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Third round proper\nOne of the surprise results of this round came at Old Trafford where holders Manchester United were held to a 0-0 home draw against Conference National side Exeter City, although United won the replay 2-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Third round proper\nUnited's neighbours City suffered humiliation at the hands of League One strugglers Oldham Athletic, who defeated them 1-0 at Boundary Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Fifth round proper\nMatches played weekend of 19 February 2005 - replays played week commencing 28 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Fifth round proper\nThe only non-Premiership side to win in this round were Leicester City, who triumphed 2-1 at Premier League side Charlton Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Sixth round proper\nMatches played on the weekend of Saturday, 12 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Sixth round proper\nLeicester City, the only remaining non-Premiership side in the competition, lost 1\u20130 to Blackburn Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Final\nThe 2005 FA Cup Final was contested between Manchester United and Arsenal at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff. Manchester United dominated the game but failed to take any of their opportunities and ultimately they went on to lose in the first FA Cup Final penalty shoot-out. Paul Scholes had his kick saved by Jens Lehmann, leaving Patrick Vieira with the opportunity to win the Cup for the Gunners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 21], "content_span": [22, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Media coverage\nIn the United Kingdom, the BBC were the free to air broadcasters for the fourth consecutive season while Sky Sports were the subscription broadcasters for the seventeenth consecutive season.. In this new contract period of television rights, the BBC's coverage increased further to three live matches from rounds 3 to 6, plus one live replay in the same rounds where applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179991-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup, Media coverage\nThe matches shown live on the BBC were Thurrock 0\u20131 Oldham Athletic (R1); Hinckley United 0\u20130 Brentford (R2); Sheffield United 3\u20131 Aston Villa, Plymouth Argyle 1\u20133 Everton and Yeading 0\u20132 Newcastle United (R3); Exeter City 0\u20132 Manchester United (R3 replay); Southampton 2\u20131 Portsmouth, Manchester United 3\u20130 Middlesbrough and Oldham Athletic 0\u20131 Bolton Wanderers; Tottenham Hotspur 3\u20131 West Bromwich Albion (R4 replay); Arsenal 1\u20131 Sheffield United, Everton 0\u20132 Manchester United and Burnley 0\u20130 Blackburn Rovers (R5); Sheffield United 0\u20130 Arsenal (R5 replay); Bolton Wanderers 0\u20131 Arsenal, Southampton 0\u20134 Manchester United and Blackburn Rovers 1\u20130 Leicester City (QF); Newcastle United 1\u20134 Manchester United (SF); and Arsenal 0\u20130 Manchester United (Final).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179992-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Cup Qualifying Rounds opened the 124th season of competition in England for 'The Football Association Challenge Cup' (FA Cup), the world's oldest association football single knockout competition. A total of 661 clubs were accepted for the competition, unchanged from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179992-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup qualifying rounds\nThe large number of clubs entering the tournament from lower down (Levels 5 through 10) in the English football pyramid meant that the competition started with six rounds of preliminary (2) and qualifying (4) knockouts for these non-League teams. The 32 winning teams from Fourth Round Qualifying progressed to the First Round Proper, where League teams tiered at Levels 3 and 4 entered the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179992-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Cup qualifying rounds, 2004\u201305 FA Cup\nSee 2004-05 FA Cup for details of the rounds from the First Round Proper onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179993-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier Academy League\nThe 2004\u201305 Premier Academy League Under\u201318 season was the 8th edition since the establishment of The Premier Academy League, and the 1st under the current make-up. The first match of the season was played in August 2004, and the season ended in May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Premier League (known as the FA Barclays Premiership for sponsorship reasons) began on 14 August 2004 and ended on 15 May 2005. Arsenal were the defending champions after going unbeaten the previous season. Chelsea won the title with a then record 95 points, which was previously set by Manchester United in the 1993\u201394 season, and later surpassed by Manchester City in the 2017\u201318 season (100), securing the title with a 2\u20130 win at the Reebok Stadium against Bolton Wanderers. Chelsea also broke a number of other records during their campaign, most notably breaking the record of most games won in a single Premier League campaign, securing 29 wins in the league in home and away matches, which was later surpassed by themselves in the 2016\u201317 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 794]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nArsenal were the favourites to defend their title after finishing the previous season unbeaten, but they also faced competition in the form of regular challengers Manchester United and Chelsea, the latter under the new management of Portuguese Jos\u00e9 Mourinho, who had just won the UEFA Champions League with Porto. Liverpool also had a new manager in Spaniard Rafael Ben\u00edtez, who had just won La Liga and the UEFA Cup with Valencia and were expected to challenge for the title too. Another managerial change at a club aiming for the top was at Tottenham Hotspur, who appointed Jacques Santini, who had just led France to the quarter-finals of the 2004 European Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nAt the other end of the table, amongst those tipped for relegation were Norwich City, Crystal Palace and West Bromwich Albion, having all just been promoted from the First Division (which was rebranded this season as the Championship). Everton, Manchester City, Blackburn Rovers and Portsmouth were also tipped to struggle, the first three finishing just outside the relegation places the previous season and Portsmouth being in their second season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nArsenal's record-breaking unbeaten streak of 49 games was ended on 24 October 2004, when Manchester United beat them 2\u20130 at Old Trafford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nFor the first time since the advent of the Premier League in 1992, no team was mathematically relegated before the final day of the season. In each of the last three weekends of the season, the team that was bottom of the table at the start of the weekend finished it outside the drop zone. The final round of the season started on 15 May with West Bromwich Albion at the bottom, Southampton and Crystal Palace one point ahead and Norwich City a further point ahead, in the last safe spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nWest Brom, who had been bottom of the table and eight points from safety on Christmas Day, did their part by defeating Portsmouth at home 2\u20130. Norwich, the only side to have their fate completely in their own hands, lost 6\u20130 at Fulham and went down. Southampton lost 2\u20131 at home to Manchester United and were relegated after 27 years in the top flight and never returned to the top flight until 7 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nPalace, away to Charlton Athletic, were leading 2\u20131 after 71 minutes, but with eight minutes to go, Charlton's Jonathan Fortune equalised to relegate Palace and did not returned until 8 years when they finally avoiding relegation for the first time in Premier League era. Thus, West Brom stayed up, becoming the first club in Premier League history to avoid relegation after being bottom of the table at Christmas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Season summary\nAt the end of the 90 minutes in all four matches, cameras focused on West Brom's home ground, The Hawthorns, as confirmation of other results began to filter through. Once the realisation dawned on the players and fans that survival had been achieved, a mass pitch invasion was sparked, with huge celebrations. The Portsmouth fans joined in the celebrations as, through losing, they had \"helped\" relegate arch-rivals Southampton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Teams\nTwenty teams competed in the league\u00a0\u2013 the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the First Division. The promoted teams were Norwich City, West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace, returning to the top flight after an absence of nine, one and six years respectively. They replaced Leicester City, Leeds United and Wolverhampton Wanderers, who had been relegated to the Championship. Leicester City and Wolverhampton Wanderers were relegated after a season's presence while Leeds United ended their top flight spell of fourteen years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Players' Player of the Year\nThe PFA Player's Player of the year award was won by Chelsea captain John Terry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 81], "content_span": [82, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Young Player of the Year\nManchester United striker Wayne Rooney was the recipient for this award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Fans' Player of the Year\nChelsea midfielder Frank Lampard won this award for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 78], "content_span": [79, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, PFA Team of the year\nGoalkeeper \u2013 Petr \u010cech Defenders \u2013 Gary Neville, John Terry, Rio Ferdinand, Ashley Cole Midfielders \u2013 Shaun Wright-Phillips, Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard, Arjen Robben Strikers \u2013 Thierry Henry, Andy Johnson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Player of the Season\nChelsea's midfielder Frank Lampard won the Premier League Player of the Season award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 85], "content_span": [86, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Golden Boot\nArsenal and French striker Thierry Henry won the Premier League Golden Boot award for the third time in his career with an impressive 25 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 76], "content_span": [77, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Golden Glove\nChelsea goalkeeper Petr \u010cech won the Premier League Golden Glove, for 25 clean sheets, in his debut season as he set a remarkable record of 10 consecutive clean sheets, as Chelsea won the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Manager of the Season\nJos\u00e9 Mourinho was awarded the Premier League Manager of the Season award after he led Chelsea to their first Premier League title, second Top division title in their history. During his first season at the club, Chelsea won the Premier League title (their first league title in 50 years) and the League Cup. The season was also notable for the number of records set during the season: Fewest goals against in a Premier League season (15), most clean sheets kept in a season (25), most wins in a season (29), most consecutive away wins (9) and the most points in a season (95).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 86], "content_span": [87, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179994-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier League, Awards, Annual awards, Premier League Fair Play Award\nThe Premier League Fair Play Award is merit given to the team who has been the most sporting and best behaved team. Arsenal won the award for the second year in a row, ahead of Tottenham. The least sporting side for 2004\u201305 was Blackburn Rovers, who achieved a significantly lower fair play score than any other side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179995-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier Reserve League\nThe 2004-05 Premier Reserve League season was the sixth since its establishment and featured 15 teams in the Northern League - won by Manchester United Reserves - and 15 teams in the Southern League - won by Charlton Athletic Reserves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179995-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Premier Reserve League, League table\nPld = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179996-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Trophy was the thirty-fifth season of the FA Trophy, the Football Association's cup competition for teams at levels 5\u20138 of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup was the 35th edition of the FA Women's Cup, a knockout cup competition for women's football teams in England. It was sponsored by Nationwide, and known as The FA Women's Cup in partnership with Nationwide for sponsorship purposes. 210 clubs were accepted into the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup\nNational Division side Arsenal were the defending champions, but they were eliminated by Everton in the semi-finals. Charlton Athletic won their first FA Women's Cup title after a 1\u20130 win over Everton in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Qualifying rounds, First Round Qualifying\nThe matches were played on Sunday 5 September 2004, the only exception being Luton Town Belles v Brentford, which took place on Monday 6 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 65], "content_span": [66, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, First Round Proper\nThe draw took place on Monday 27 September 2004. The matches were scheduled to be played on Sunday 24 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0003-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, First Round Proper\nFourteen matches (Bath City v Swindon Town, Bolton Wanderers v Doncaster Parklands Rovers, Buxton v Ilkeston Town, Cardiff City Bluebirds v AFC Bournemouth, CEFI v Reading, Crewe Alexandra v Scunthorpe United, Garswood Saints v Bradford City, Lewes v Brentford, Plymouth Argyle v Ashdown Rovers, Preston North End v Bury, Redhill v Chesham United, Shrewsbury Town v Leicester City Ladies, Wembley v Thatcham Town and Wigan Athletic v Blackpool Wren Rovers) were postponed and rescheduled for the following Sunday (31 October 2004). One match (Newton Abbot v Forest Green Rovers) was played on Monday 8 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Second Round Proper\nThe matches were played on Sunday 14 November 2004, the only exception being Norwich City v Colchester United, which took place on Sunday 21 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Third Round Proper\nThe draw was held on Monday 15 November 2004. All matches were played on Sunday 5 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Third Round Proper\nWatford won 5\u20132 against Cardiff City. However, Watford played an ineligible player and the match was awarded to Cardiff City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Fourth Round Proper\nThe draw was held on Monday 6 December 2004. All matches were played on Sunday 9 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Fifth Round Proper\nThe draw was held on Monday 10 January 2005. All matches were played on Sunday 30 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179997-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe draw was held on Monday 31 January 2005. The matches were played on Sunday 13 February 2005, the only exception being Birmingham City v Arsenal, which took place on Sunday 20 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179998-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League season was the 14th season of the FA Women's Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179998-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League, National Division\nThe season started on 15 August 2004 and ended on 7 May 2005. Arsenal were the defending champions, while Liverpool and Bristol City entered as the promoted teams from the 2003\u201304 Northern and Southern Divisions. Arsenal won their second consecutive league title, and seventh overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179998-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League, Northern Division\nThe season began on 15 August 2004 and ended on 2 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179998-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League, Southern Division\nThe season began on 15 August 2004 and ended on 24 April 2005. Cardiff City qualified for the European Cup by winning the Welsh Women's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179999-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League Cup was the 14th edition of the FA Women's Premier League's league cup competition, which began in 1991. It was sponsored by Nationwide and was officially known as the FA Nationwide Women's Premier League Cup. The competition was contested by all 34 teams of the three divisions of the FA Women's Premier League (National Division, Northern Division and Southern Division). Arsenal won their eight title after a 3\u20130 win over Charlton Athletic in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00179999-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FA Women's Premier League Cup, Results\nAll results listed are published by The Football Association (FA). The division each team play in is indicated in brackets after their name: (NA)=National Division; (NO)=Northern Division; (S)=Southern Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 46], "content_span": [47, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180000-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FAW Premier Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 FAW Premier Cup was the eighth season of the tournament since its founding in 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180001-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Barcelona season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Futbol Club Barcelona end their six-year wait for the La Liga title, having not won the league or, indeed, any trophy since the 1998\u201399 season and thus La Liga trophy returned to Barcelona's trophy room. Having finished second in La Liga the previous season, Barcelona once again competed in the UEFA Champions League as well as the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180001-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Barcelona season\nThe squad was restructured significantly following the retirement of key players Luis Enrique and Marc Overmars, as well as the return of Edgar Davids to Juventus and first team regulars Patrick Kluivert and Phillip Cocu moving onto new clubs. Ronaldinho's and new signing Samuel Eto'o's performances won them places in FIFPro's XI of 2004\u201305. Ronaldinho was later named FIFA World Player of the Year for 2005 for the second time in succession and with the highest points total ever; Eto'o came third. This season was also notable for the debut of Lionel Messi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180001-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Barcelona season, Players, Squad\nCorrect as of 30 September 2009. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Fussball Club Basel 1893's 112th in existence and the club's 11th consecutive season in the top flight of Swiss football. FC Basel started the season of with various warm-up matches. These included teams from the Swiss lower league as well as teams from Liechtenstein, France and Germany. The FC Basel aims for the 2004\u201305 season were to defend their league title, to win the cup and as well as to qualify for the UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, Overview\nAs reigning champions Basel were favourites to retain their title and as Swiss champions, they entered the UEFA Champions League in third qualifying round. Basel's biggest signing in advance of the 2004\u201305 season was Kl\u00e9ber from Hannover 96. But in the other direction the Cameroonian international Timoth\u00e9e Atouba and Swiss international Mario Cantaluppi left the club. During the winter break they signed Patrick M\u00fcller from Mallorca.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nThe Swiss Football Association (ASF-SFV) had changed the format of the domestic league the previous season and this format called Swiss Super League remains unaltered this season. There were ten teams competing in the top tier 2004\u201305 Swiss Super League. The teams played a double round-robin in the first half of the season and then another double round-robin in the second half. There were three points for a victory and one each for a draw. The champions and runners-up would enter the qualifying rounds of the [2005\u201306 Champions League, the third placed team would enter the UEFA Cup second qualifying round. The bottom placed team would be relegated, the second last team would play a play-off against relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nBasel's priority aim for the season was to win the championship for the second time in a row. The season started somewhat difficult, of the first four home matches only two were won. Nevertheless, Basel moved to the top of the league table. During September the team lost two away games in a row, but despite this they led the league table by seven points by the winter break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nThe league was originally contested by ten teams. On 4 February 2005 the parent company of Servette FC was declared bankrupt. As a consequence of the bankruptcy Servette FC had their license revoked. The eighteen results from the team's first half of the season remained in the league table. The club's second half matches were cancelled entirely and so the second half of the season was competed with only nine clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nBasel completed all the season's seventeen home ties undefeated, winning thirteen and drawing four. The highest home attendance being 31,383 in the 4\u20131 win against their title rivals Thun on 7 May 2005. Just four days later Basel secured the championship in their third last round of the season. At the end of the season they completed their championship aim, winning the title ten points clear of Thun, who were their closest rivals. Servette were subsequently demoted to the Second Tier. Schaffhausen played the play-off against relegation and were able to remain in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic League\nOne of the season's highlights for the team, was the 8\u20131 home win on 12 September against Grasshoppers in which Gim\u00e9nez scored four goals. Mat\u00edas Delgado, Mladen Petri\u0107, Djamel Mesbah and C\u00e9sar Carignano each netted once. On 20 April Gim\u00e9nez also scored for goals in the away game against Aarau as Basel won 5\u20130. He also managed at hat-trick on 4 May as Basel won 5\u20130 in the away game against Xamax. Gim\u00e9nez was the teams and the leagues top goal scorer with 27 goals. Mat\u00edas Delgado was the teams second top scorer with 11 league goals. C\u00e9sar Carignano scored seven and Julio Hern\u00e1n Rossi scored six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 54], "content_span": [55, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Domestic Cup\nBasel's clear aim for the Swiss Cup was to win it. In the first two rounds of the 2004\u201305 Swiss Cup Basel were drawn away games against lower league teams. In the third round they were drawn away against Thun, but lost 5\u20134 after penalties. Thus Basel missed their aim. The Cup final was played on 16 May 2005 and Z\u00fcrich beat Luzern to win the trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nBecause Basel entered the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League in the third qualifying round their aim was to reach the group stage. However, they were drawn against Internazionale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nThe first leg was played in St. Jakob-Park and was arbitrated by English referee Graham Poll. Pushed on by the sold-out 30,000 spectator crowd the Swiss champions Basel took the early initiative and it was their Argentinian attacking duo Christian Gim\u00e9nez and Julio Hern\u00e1n Rossi dictating the flow of the game from the very beginning. Inter defended well in the early stage and after they had withstood the early storm, they started to get their game together, stringing their passes together and it was the away side who made the first strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0009-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nIn the 19th minutes, Adriano powered past two Basel defenders and placed his shot low beyond the onrushing goalkeeper Pascal Zuberb\u00fchler. Basel were not shocked by this early strike against them, and countered this just six minutes later. Mario Cantaluppi surprised the Inter defence by lobbing a free-kick high to the near post, here it was controlled by Rossi who then, with a smart overhead kick, played it into the danger area. Benjamin Huggel was ready and headed in from close range. Inter reacted immediately, but Dejan Stankovi\u0107's powerful long-range shot rebounded off the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0009-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nThen the game opened and Basel could have scored again as Huggel's right-footed volley from about 12 yards narrowly flashed wide. However, it was Inter who had the best opportunity before the break. Again, it was Adriano rushing towards goal, Zuberb\u00fchler rushed out against him but could only parry the ball straight into the path of Z\u00e9 Maria, but his shot from close range hit the bar. Basel started into the second period as they had started in the first, pushing forwards with tempo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0009-0003", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nFrancesco Toldo made to good saves, first parrying a long-range lob from Mat\u00edas Delgado and then a hard hit shot from Rossi. The Italian championship had not yet started and the Swiss season had already been going for a month, therefore the Inter players were tired towards the end, however Basel failed to take advantage of this, Huggel coming closest in the 78th minute as he hit a low drive from the edge of the penalty area, but the visitors were saved by the post. The game ended with a 1\u20131 draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nIn the second leg it was Inter who were quickly into play, with \u00c1lvaro Recoba forcing Basel goalkeeper Pascal Zuberb\u00fchler into a good save a few seconds after kick-off. Only a few seconds later the home crowd were able to celebrate as Adriano put Inter ahead with a low shot precise inside the far post after a pass from Dejan Stankovi\u0107. Inter controled the game in the early stages and scored their second goal after just 13 minutes. A superb shot from Stankovic, following a neat combination with Adriano gave the home team a two goal advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nDespite the two-goal lead, the home side refused to sit back and Zuberb\u00fchler had to make another good save after a long distance left-foot shot by Recoba. After 26 minutes, Inter goalie Francesco Toldo deflected a powerful free-kick from Basel captain Murat Yakin wide. Inter went close to scoring a third goal just minutes later as Stankovic shot wide from a good position after a combination between Z\u00e9 Maria and Adriano on the right wing. Basel had another dangerous free-kick shortly before half-time, Mario Cantaluppi's kick was slighty wide. Basel faught themselves back into the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0010-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nJust four minutes into the second half as Austrainlien midfielder Mile Sterjovski, just inside the penalty area, controlled a cross from his left to dribble past Stankovic and score with an exact right-foot shot. However, the home team restored their two-goal lead only four minutes later as Adriano took on a ball from Stankovic outside the penalty area. He took a few paces forward and fired low, left footed, beyong keeper Zuberb\u00fchler. The home team secured their victory a few minutes later, this time Recoba's left footed shot dropped into the net. The Uruguayan forward controlled a long pass from Juan Sebasti\u00e1n Ver\u00f3n, he turned towards the Basel goal and shot from about 18 metres and the game ended for Basel with an undeserved high 1\u20134 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, Champions League\nBasel lost 5\u20132 on aggregate and subsequently dropped into the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 63], "content_span": [64, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, The Campaign, Europe, UEFA Cup\nIn the First Round of the UEFA Cup Basel defeated the Russian side FC Terek Grozny 3\u20131 on aggregate. In the Group Stage they faced considerably tougher opponents, being drawn in Group E with Feyenoord Rotterdam, FC Schalke 04, Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC and Heart of Midlothian. They drew 1\u20131 away to Schalke, but were defeated 2\u20131 at home by Hearts. In the away tie at the Stadium Pusk\u00e1s Ferenc they beat Ferencv\u00e1ros 2\u20131 and finally winning 1\u20130 at home against Feyenoord. They finished third in the group on seven points and qualified for the Round of 32 where they were defeated 2\u20130 on aggregate by Lille OSC. Despite this defeat, the aim for this campaign could be considered as achieved. CSKA Moscow won the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 55], "content_span": [56, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, Players, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, Friendlies, Sempione Cup\nThe Sempione Cup was a club football tournament played in summer at Sportanlage Moos, Balsthal, during the years 1987 to 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, Friendlies, Uhrencup\nThe Uhrencup is a club football tournament, held annually in Grenchen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 67], "content_span": [68, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, Swiss Super League, First half of season\nThe Swiss Super League season was originally contested by ten teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 87], "content_span": [88, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180002-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Basel season, Results and fixtures, Swiss Super League, Second half of season\nOn 4 February 2005 the parent company of Servette FC was declared bankrupt. It had run debts of over 10 million Swiss francs, having not paid the players since the previous November, and consequently the club suffered an exodus of players looking for paying clubs. As a consequence of the bankruptcy Servette FC had their license revoked, the club's second half matches were entirely cancelled. The second half of the season was therefore competed with only nine clubs. These each played another double round-robin schedule. Each of the nine clubs had played 34 matches at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 88], "content_span": [89, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180003-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Bayern Munich season\nFC Bayern Munich won the German double for the second time in three seasons, ensuring the first season for Felix Magath as manager was a successful one. With several German clubs suffering from financial difficulties at the time, the title race was a casual stroll for Bayern's star-filled squad, winning by 14 points, since sole rival Schalke 04 fell apart in the last month of the season. Among the key players in the success were Roy Makaay and playmaker Michael Ballack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180003-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Bayern Munich season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180003-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Bayern Munich season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180004-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Bihor Oradea season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Bihor Oradea's 46th season in the Romanian football league system, and their 26th season in the Divizia B. At the end of the season the team finished on 3rd place, far away from the promotion place, which was the goal of the team at the start of the season. The season was a tumultuous one for the management, technical staff and players, the club's management being vehemently criticized for defective management and being dismissed with 5 rounds before the end of the season. Also 3 head coaches were changed during this season. This was the last season when FC Bihor was known as FC Oradea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180004-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Bihor Oradea season, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti's 56th season in Liga I. For the 2004\u201305 season Dinamo's ambitions grew, but still many players left the club. Dinamo played a thrilling game vs. Manchester United in Bucharest in the third qualification round of the UEFA Champions League, but lost 1\u20132. This game was significant because it showed considerable progress from the last attempts to qualify for the group phase of the Champions League. The second leg was lost at Old Trafford 3\u20130. In the UEFA Cup 2004\u201305 season Dinamo was eliminated by Partizan Belgrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nThis time Dinamo had a better evolution during the season after the title victory. However, Dinamo lost the title to Steaua Bucharest on a costly error by Lucian Goian in the last seconds of the game with Rapid Bucharest close to the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season\nDinamo won the Romanian Cup for the 12th time in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Squad\nGoalkeepers: Vladimir Gaev (12/0), Cristian Munteanu (6/0), Bogdan Stelea (13/0).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Squad\nDefenders: Angelo Alistar (18/0), Ionu\u0163 B\u0103lan (14/1), Ovidiu Burc\u0103 (14/0), Liviu Ciobotariu (8/0), George Galamaz (22/0), Lucian Goian (6/0), Alin Ilin (2/0), Adrian Iordache (14/1), Cristian Irimia (11/0), Cristian Pulhac (11/2), \u015etefan Radu (2/0), Dorin Semeghin (16/0), Gabriel Tama\u0219 (13/0).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Squad\nMidfielders: Ionu\u021b Badea (18/0), Adrian Cristea (10/0), \u015etefan Grigorie (25/10), Andrei M\u0103rg\u0103ritescu (29/2), Vlad Munteanu (4/0), Leonard Naidin (1/0), Alexandru P\u0103curar (14/1), Florentin Petre (24/2), Dennis \u015eerban (3/0), Iulian Tame\u015f (11/0).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Squad\nForwards: Alexandru B\u0103l\u0163oi (18/3), Ionel D\u0103nciulescu (15/11), Claudiu Dr\u0103gan (2/0), Adrian Mihalcea (17/1), Tibor Moldovan (5/1), Claudiu Niculescu (28/21), Ianis Zicu (13/3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Transfers\nNew players: Summer break - Matache (Metalul Plopeni), Galamaz (Rapid Bucure\u0219ti), Irimia (Rapid Bucure\u0219ti), Ciobotariu (Royal Antwerp), Onu\u021b, B\u0103lan and B\u0103l\u021boi (Farul Constan\u021ba), Goian (Ceahl\u0103ul Piatra-Neam\u021b), M\u0103rg\u0103ritescu (Unirea Foc\u0219ani), P\u0103curar (Universitatea Cluj-Napoca), D.\u0218erban (Petrolul Ploie\u0219ti)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Transfers\nWinter break - Tama\u0219 (Spartak Moskva), Ad.Cristea (Politehnica Ia\u0219i), T.Moldovan (Apulum Alba-Iulia), Zicu (AC Parma)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Transfers\nLeft team: Summer break - \u0218t. Preda (FC Arge\u0219 Pite\u0219ti), Alexa (Beijing Guan), B\u0103rc\u0103uan (Shakhtar Donetsk), Onu\u021b (Politehnica Ia\u0219i), Cr.Ciubotariu (Politehnica Ia\u0219i), Perenyi (Politehnica Ia\u0219i)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180005-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti season, Transfers\nWinter break - Cr.Munteanu (FC Na\u021bional Bucure\u0219ti), Cr.Irimia (Dinamo Kyiv), Naidin (Poli Timi\u0219oara), D.\u0218erban (Larissa), Vl.Munteanu (FC Na\u021bional Bucure\u0219ti), Tame\u0219 (Alania Vladikavkaz), Cl.Dr\u0103gan (Universitatea Craiova), D\u0103nciulescu (Shandong Luneng Taishan), Cigan (Liberty Salonta)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180006-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Energie Cottbus season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 German football season, FC Energie Cottbus competed in the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180006-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Energie Cottbus season, Season summary\nEnergie escaped relegation to the 3. Bundesliga by the slimmest of margins, with their goal difference only 1 goal greater than 15th-placed Eintracht Trier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180006-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Energie Cottbus season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180006-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Energie Cottbus season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180007-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Girondins de Bordeaux season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 124th season in the existence of FC Girondins de Bordeaux and the club's 14th consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Bordeaux participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180008-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Istres season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 85th season in the existence of FC Istres and the club's first season back in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Istres participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180008-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Istres season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180008-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Istres season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180009-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Metz season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 73rd season in the existence of FC Metz and the club's second consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Metz participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180010-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Nantes season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 63rd season in the existence of FC Nantes and the club's 43rd consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Nantes participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180011-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season\nIn December 2004, with 2 months left on his contract, Sorin C\u00e2r\u0163u and president Nicu Boghici agreed for a departure. January 2005 came with rumors which said that Mittal Steel would take over the team, for which they already were shirt sponsors. Soon after, Viorel Anghelinei, former player of O\u021belul and referee, was appointed as the new president of the club. The new manager of O\u021belul, Mihai Stoichi\u0163\u0103 was announced on the 23rd of January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180011-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC O\u021belul Gala\u021bi season, Transfers, Out\nEU = if holds or not a European Union passport; Country: when 2 flags, 1st flag = country that plays for internationally, 2nd flag = country of birth; N = number on jersey; P = Position (for position name, pause mouse pointer on abbreviation); Name = Name on jersey (for more extensive name, pause mouse pointer on name); Age = age on the day of the signing; Moving from = only indicate the club the player was playing before start playing for this club in this season, for the type of the moving see Status column; Moving to = only indicates the club the player is going to play next, for the type of the moving see Status column; Ends = when the player's current contract ends; n/a = Not applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180012-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Porto season\nFC Porto followed up its UEFA Champions League victory with a chaotic season, following the departure of coach Jos\u00e9 Mourinho and several key players. Initial coach Luigi Delneri was sacked even before the season started, due to too little presence in his new town in pre-season. New signings Ricardo Quaresma, Pepe, Giourkas Seitaridis, Lu\u00eds Fabiano, Raul Meireles and Diego looked spectacular on paper, but in reality, Porto had a miserable offensive performance, culminating in just 39 league goals and a loss of the league title to arch rivals Benfica. As a consolation, it won the Intercontinental Cup title with a victory against Once Caldas on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180013-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Schalke 04 season\nFC Schalke 04 had a surprise title tilt at Bundesliga, in spite of a poor start to the season and the resultant dismissal of manager Jupp Heynckes. With largely unproven Ralf Rangnick taking over, Schalke went about level with title rivals Bayern Munich after a 1\u20130 win thanks to a goal from Lincoln. From there on, Bayern dominated, leaving Schalke a full 14 points behind, albeit good enough for runners-up, qualifying the team for the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180013-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Schalke 04 season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180013-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Schalke 04 season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180014-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season\nThe 2004\u201305 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season was the club's 77th season in existence and the club's fourth consecutive season in the first division of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Sochaux participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue and the UEFA Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180014-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season, Season summary\nSochaux dropped five places in the table to finish 10th, their lowest finish since promotion in 2001. Manager Guy Lacombe left at the end of the season to manage Paris Saint-Germain. He was replaced by former Ajaccio manager Dominique Bijotat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180014-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180014-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Sochaux-Montb\u00e9liard season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 80], "content_span": [81, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180015-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Steaua Bucure\u0219ti season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 57th season in the existence of FC Steaua Bucure\u0219ti and the club's 57th consecutive season in the top flight of Romanian football. In addition to the domestic league, Steaua Bucure\u0219ti participated in this season's edition of the Cupa Rom\u00e2niei and the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180015-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Steaua Bucure\u0219ti season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180016-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Thun season\nThis article covers the results and statistics of FC Thun during the 2004\u201305 season. During the season Thun competed in the Swiss Super League and the Swiss Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180016-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Thun season, Swiss cup, Round 1\nTeams from Super League and Challenge League were seeded in this round. In a match, the home advantage was granted to the team from the lower league, if applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 42], "content_span": [43, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180017-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Vaslui season\nThe 2004\u201305 season is FC Vaslui's 3rd season of its existence, and its 2nd in a row, in Divizia B. After failing in the previous season to promote, the team's objective this season, was the same. From the beginning of the championship, FC Vaslui started very well, and finished 1st, with 10 points in front of the 2nd team. And so, FC Vaslui promoted in Divizia A, for the first time in its history, this being the most important achievement in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180017-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FC Vaslui season, Squad\nAs of 11 June 2005Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180018-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIBA Europe Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 FIBA Europe Cup was the third season of the FIBA Europe Cup, Europe's fourth level professional club basketball tournament. The season started on 2 November 2004, and ended on 11 April 2005. A total number of 32 teams participated in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180018-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIBA Europe Cup, Pan-European playoffs\nIn the pan-European play-offs, teams played in two-legged series in the quarterfinals. The Final Four was held in Ploie\u0219ti from 9 until 10 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180019-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIBA Europe League\nThe 2004\u201305 FIBA Europe League was the second season of the third tier in European basketball. A total of 32 teams participated in the regular season. BC Dynamo Saint Petersburg won its first FIBA Europe League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180019-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIBA Europe League, Teams\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180020-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FINA Swimming World Cup\nThe 2004\u20132005 FINA Swimming World Cup was a series of eight short-course (25m) meets, held in 8 different cities from November 2004 through February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180020-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FINA Swimming World Cup\nSouth Africa's Ryk Neethling (male) and Sweden's Anna-Karin Kammerling (female) were named the top swimmers of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180020-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FINA Swimming World Cup, Event Winners\nNote: Time listed in the heading are the series records at the start of the 2004-05 World Cup. Bettered records are marked with a \"WC\" following the time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThe 39th World Cup season began in October 2004 in S\u00f6lden, Austria, and concluded in March 2005 at the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland. The overall winners were Bode Miller of the U.S. and Anja P\u00e4rson of Sweden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup\nThe break in the schedule was for the 2005 World Championships, held in Bormio, Italy, between 28 January and 13 February 2005. The women's competition was held in the neighboring skiing area of Santa Caterina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men\nAt the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 37], "content_span": [38, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Downhill\nIn Men's Downhill World Cup 2004/05 the all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Super G\nIn Men's Super G World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Giant Slalom\nIn Men's Giant Slalom World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Men, Super combined\nIn Men's Combined World Cup 2004/05 only one competition was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Ladies\nAt the World Cup finals in Lenzerheide only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 40], "content_span": [41, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Ladies, Downhill\nIn Women's Downhill World Cup 2004/05 all results count. Renate G\u00f6tschl won her fourth Downhill World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Ladies, Super G\nIn Women's Super G World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Ladies, Giant Slalom\nIn Women's Giant Slalom World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180021-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Alpine Ski World Cup, Ladies, Women's Super combined\nIn Women's Combined World Cup 2004/05 only one competition was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180022-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Cross-Country World Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 FIS Cross-Country World Cup was the 24th official World Cup season in cross-country skiing for men and ladies. The season began in D\u00fcsseldorf, Germany on 23 October 2004 and was concluded in Falun, Sweden on 20 March 2005. The overall winners were Marit Bj\u00f8rgen and Axel Teichmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180023-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup\nThe 2004/05 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup was the twenty sixth World Cup season in freestyle skiing organised by International Ski Federation. The season started on 4 September 2004 and ended on 11 March 2005. This season included three disciplines: aerials, moguls and ski cross. Halfpipe was also on schedule but all events were cancelled and so crystal globes were not awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180023-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Freestyle Skiing World Cup\nThere were no dual mogul events on world cup calendar this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180024-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup\nThe 2004/05 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup was the 22nd world cup season, a combination of ski jumping and cross-country skiing organized by FIS. It started on 27 Nov 2004 in Kuusamo, Finland and ended on 13 March 2005 in Oslo, Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180024-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Nordic Combined World Cup, Calendar, Men\n*=planned team event replaced with individual; **=planned individual event replaced with sprint", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180025-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nThe 2004/05 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup was the 14th in a row (12th official) Continental Cup winter season and the 3rd summer season in ski jumping for men. This was also the 1st winter season for ladies and for the first time ladies team event was organized this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180025-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup\nOther competitive circuits this season included the World Cup and Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180025-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup, Europa Cup vs. Continental Cup\nThis was originally last Europa Cup season and is also recognized as the first Continental Cup season by International Ski Federation although under this name began its first official season in 1993/94.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180026-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nThe 2004/05 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup was the 26th World Cup season. It begun in Kuusamo, Finland on 27 November 2004 and finished in Planica, Slovenia on 20 March 2005. The individual World Cup was won by Janne Ahonen, Finland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180026-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FIS Ski Jumping World Cup\nLower competitive circuits this season included the Grand Prix and Continental Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180027-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Austria Wien season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 Austrian football season, Austria Wien competed in the Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180027-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Austria Wien season, Season summary\nAustria Wien finished in third and reached the UEFA Cup quarter-finals. They also won the Austrian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180027-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Austria Wien season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180027-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Austria Wien season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180027-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Austria Wien season, Matches, UEFA Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was held on 5 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180028-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Partizan season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 59th season in FK Partizan's existence. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club played during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180028-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FK Partizan season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180029-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FedEx Express season\nThe 2004-2005 FedEx Express season was the third season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180029-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 FedEx Express season, Occurrences\nApril 4, 2004: The Philippine team 20-and-under mentor Joe Lipa became the new head coach of FedEx, replacing Bonnie Garcia, PBA Commissioner Noli Eala set conditions that the veteran coach must severe his ties with the national team after the SEABA championships in September, or if coincides with the PBA, coach Joe Lipa must file a leave of absence from the FedEx ballclub.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 41], "content_span": [42, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180030-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Fencing World Cup\nThe 34th FIE Fencing World Cup began on October 2004 and concluded on October 2005 at the 2005 World Fencing Championships in Leipzig, Germany.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180031-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Feyenoord season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 Dutch football season, Feyenoord competed in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180031-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Feyenoord season, Season summary\nFeyenoord were the Eredivisie's top scorers but they did not improve on last's seasons results and finished 4th, way off challenging for the title. The club made it to the semi-finals in the domestic KNVB cup, losing to the winner of the KNVB Cup PSV Eindhoven after penalties. In the UEFA cup they made it to the 3rd round (last 32 clubs) losing to the later finalist Sporting CP from Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180031-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Feyenoord season, Kits\nFeyenoord's kits were manufactured by Italian company Kappa and sponsored by Belgian financial company Fortis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 30], "content_span": [31, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180031-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Feyenoord season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180031-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Feyenoord season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180031-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Feyenoord season, Squad, Left club at the end of previous season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180032-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nThe 2004-05 First Division season was the 27th of the amateur competition of the first-tier football in Guinea-Bissau. The tournament was organized by the Football Federation of Guinea-Bissau. The season began on 27 November 2004 and finished on 21 May 2005, this was their next in two years. SC de Bissau won their twelfth title and finished with 42 points and to financial reasons did not qualified and competed in the 2006 CAF Champions League the following season. As SC Bissau won the 2005 Guinea-Bissau Cup, the second placed club did not participate in the 2006 CAF Confederation Cup the following season also to financial concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180032-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nOriginally a 22 match season and would be 232, three later matches were cancelled and reduced its number to 228.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180032-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First Division (Guinea-Bissau)\nSC de Bissau was the defending team of the title. SC Bissau finished with 45 points and also scored the most goals and numbered 40. 5", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180032-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First Division (Guinea-Bissau), Overview\nThe league was contested by 12 teams with SC de Bissau winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro\nThe 2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro (officially known as the Meridian PrvaLiga for sponsorship reasons) was the third season of the Serbia and Montenegro's top-level football league since its establishment. It was contested by 16 teams, and FK Partizan won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Teams\nBudu\u0107nost Banatski Dvor, Napredak Kru\u0161evac and Radni\u010dki Obrenovac were relegated to the 2004\u201305 Serbian First League while Kom was relegated to the 2004\u201305 Montenegrin First League after the last season for finishing last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Teams\nThe relegated teams were replaced by 2003\u201304 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro east, west, south and north champions Radni\u010dki Beograd, Hajduk Beograd, Budu\u0107nost Podgorica and \u010cukari\u010dki Stankom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 52], "content_span": [53, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Winning squad\n12 Nemanja Jov\u0161i\u0107 (1/0) 25 Ivica Kralj (24/0) 27 \u0110or\u0111e Panti\u0107 (7/0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Winning squad\n02 Milivoje \u0106irkovi\u0107 (9/0) 04 Zoran Mirkovi\u0107 (23/2) 05 Branimir Baji\u0107 (4/0) 13 Kim Chi-Woo (8/0) 14 Nenad \u0110or\u0111evi\u0107 (27/2) 16 Ifeanyi Emeghara (24/0) 20 Milovan Milovi\u0107 (15/1) 24 Nemanja Rni\u0107 (17/2) 03 Dragoljub Jeremi\u0107 (2/0)*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Winning squad\n01 Simon Vuk\u010devi\u0107 (26/10) 07 Nenad Brnovi\u0107 (25/6) 10 Dragan \u0106iri\u0107 (13/3) 11 Miroslav Radovi\u0107 (19/3) 18 Branimir Petrovi\u0107 (18/1) 21 Ivan Tomi\u0107 (24/0) 22 Sa\u0161a Ili\u0107 (22/16) 28 Albert Na\u0111 (20/2) 43 Milan Sre\u0107o (1/0) 44 Stefan Babovi\u0107 (9/1) 47 Milan Smiljani\u0107 (2/0) 17 Branislav Atanackovi\u0107 (2/0)*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Winning squad\n08 Pierre Boya (22/3) 09 Sr\u0111an Radonji\u0107 (17/10) 15 Obiora Odita (12/6) 34 Nikola Grubje\u0161i\u0107 (23/11) 23 Bojan Brnovi\u0107 (1/0)* 50 Nenad Marinkovi\u0107 (1/0)*", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180033-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, Winning squad\nNote: * Played only in the first part of the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180034-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nThe 2004\u201305 First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina season was the fifth since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180035-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 First League of the Republika Srpska\nThe First League of the Republika Srpska 2004-05 was the 10th since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180036-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Florida Gators men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Florida Gators men's basketball team represented the University of Florida in the sport of basketball during the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. The Gators competed in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the Eastern Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). They were led by head coach Billy Donovan, and played their home games in the O'Connell Center on the university's Gainesville, Florida campus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180036-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Florida Gators men's basketball team\nThe Gators finished the regular season with a 20\u20137 record and entered the SEC Tournament. They swept through the SEC Tournament, beating Kentucky in the final. They then entered NCAA Tournament. They beat Ohio University in the first round 67\u201362. The Gators then played Villanova University in the second round and lost 65\u201376.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180037-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Florida Panthers season\nThe 2004\u201305 Florida Panthers season was cancelled due to the lock-out of the players of the National Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180037-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Florida Panthers season, Transactions\nThe Panthers were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180037-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Florida Panthers season, Draft picks\nFlorida's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 26th season of the Football Conference, and the 1st season following its expansion from one division to three divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Overview\nThis season saw the Conference expanded to three divisions with the addition of the Conference North and Conference South added to the existing (and renamed) Conference National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Overview\nThe North and South Divisions were filled by teams finishing 1st\u201313th in the Northern Premier League Premier Division and 2nd\u201313th in the Isthmian League Premier Division and Southern League Premier Division the previous season (the champions were all promoted to the Conference National), together with winners of play-offs between the 14\u201318th placed clubs in the Southern League Premier, 14th\u201320th in the Isthmian and Northern Premier League Premier, as well as the top clubs from the divisions immediately below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Overview\nThe Conference National was joined by Carlisle United and York City, who had been relegated from the Football League. Carlisle became the first club to compete in all top five tiers of English football, having reached the old First Division in 1974\u201375.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Overview\nIn addition to the winners and the teams that qualified for the play-offs, Exeter City fought gallantly in the FA Cup against Manchester United, holding them to a goalless draw in the third round on Old Trafford and finally going down 0\u20132 on home turf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Conference National\nA total of 22 teams contest the division, including 18 sides from last season, two relegated from the Football League Two, one promoted from the Southern Football League and one promoted from the Isthmian League. Winners and runners-up of Northern Premier League were unable to qualify in Conference National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Conference North\nFirst Conference North/South season saw competition of best 44 teams by the results of previous season from Northern Premier League, Southern Football League and Isthmian League, except Crawley Town and Canvey Island, promoted directly to Conference National. Teams were divided by geographical criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Conference South\nFirst Conference North/South season saw competition of best 44 teams by the results of previous season from Northern Premier League, Southern Football League and Isthmian League, except Crawley Town and Canvey Island, promoted directly to Conference National. Teams were divided by geographical criteria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180038-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football Conference, Conference South, Promotion\nAt the start of the season Ford United was given new name Redbridge F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180039-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Football League (known as the Coca-Cola Football League for sponsorship reasons) was the 106th completed season of The Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180039-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League\n2004\u201305 was the first season of the rebranded Football League, with the First, Second and Third Divisions becoming the Football League Championship, Football League One and Football League Two respectively. Coca-Cola replaced the Nationwide Building Society as title sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180039-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League\nWigan Athletic were promoted to the Premier League as Championship runners-up. They had only been elected to the Football League in 1978, had been the league's fourth-lowest placed club in the 1993\u201394 season, and before 2003 had never reached the second tier of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180039-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League\nNottingham Forest were relegated from the Championship to League One, becoming the first former European Cup winners to be relegated to the third tier of their domestic league \u2013 having won two straight European Cups a quarter of a century earlier. Only ten seasons previously, in 1994\u201395, they had finished third in the Premier League, and had reached the quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180039-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League, Final league tables and results\nThe tables below are reproduced here in the exact form that they can be found at website, with home and away statistics separated. Play-off results are from the same website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180040-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 Football League Championship (known as the Coca-Cola Championship for sponsorship reasons) was the thirteenth season under its current league division format. It began in August 2004 and concluded in May 2005, with the promotion play-off finals. This was the first season to feature the rebranded Football League. The First Division, Second Division and Third Division were renamed the Football League Championship, Football League One and Football League Two respectively. Coca-Cola replaced the Nationwide Building Society as title sponsor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180040-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Championship\nThe winners of the Championship in 2005 are Sunderland. Wigan Athletic reached the Premiership as Championship runners-up and became the first club to make a debut in the top tier of English football since Barnsley's promotion after the 1996\u201397 season. They had been elected to the Football League only 27 years earlier, had been the league's fourth lowest club eleven years earlier and had never played in the upper half of The Football League until two years before reaching the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180040-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Championship\nNottingham Forest were relegated from the Championship to League One, becoming the first former European Cup winners to slide into the third tier of their domestic league \u2013 having won two straight European Cups a quarter of a century earlier. Just ten years ago they had finished third in the Premiership and reached the following season's UEFA Cup quarter finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180041-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Football League Cup (known as the Carling Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 45th staging of the Football League Cup, a knockout competition for England's top 92 football clubs. The competition name reflects a sponsorship deal with lager brand Carling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180041-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Cup\nThe competition began in August 2004 and ended with the final on 25 February 2005. The Millennium Stadium in Cardiff hosted the final match, as it had done since 2001, with the new Wembley Stadium still not complete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180041-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Cup\nThe winners were Chelsea, beating Liverpool in the final 3\u20132 thanks to an own goal from Steven Gerrard, and goals in extra-time from Didier Drogba and Mateja Ke\u017eman in extra-time after the match finished 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180042-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League One\nThe 2004\u201305 Football League One was the first season of the renamed Football League Second Division, the third tier of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180042-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League One, Play-offs, Semi-finals\nTranmere Rovers 2\u20132 Hartlepool United on aggregate. Hartlepool United won 6\u20135 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180043-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 Football League Trophy, known as the LDV Vans Trophy for sponsorship reasons, was the 22nd season in the history of the competition. A straight knockout competition for English football clubs in the third and fourth tiers of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180043-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Trophy\nIn all, 60 clubs entered the competition. It was split into two sections, Northern and Southern, with the winners of each section contesting the final at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff. The competition began on 28 September 2004 and concluded on 10 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180043-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Trophy, First round\nThe First Round ties took place on 28 and 29 September 2004. Four clubs received a bye into the Second Round. Oldham Athletic and Tranmere Rovers in the Northern section, and Northampton Town and Swindon Town in the Southern section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180043-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Trophy, Second round\nThe Second Round ties took place on 2 and 3 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180043-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Trophy, Quarter finals\nThe Quarter final ties took place on 30 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180043-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Trophy, Semi finals\nThe Semi final ties took place on 25 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180044-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Football League Two\nThe 2004\u201305 Football League Two season was the first season since the Football League Third Division was renamed League Two, following a sponsorship deal with Coca-Cola. The league was made up of eighteen teams from the Third Division who were neither promoted nor relegated, the four relegated teams from the Second Division, and the two promoted from the Football Conference (all from the 2003\u201304 season).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament\nThe 53rd edition of the annual Four Hills Tournament was held in the traditional venues: Oberstorf and Garmisch-Partenkirchen in Germany, and Innsbruck and Bischofshofen in Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament\nThe Four Hills tournament counts as part of the World Cup season. Before the competition in Oberstorf, eight out of twenty-eight events were already held. Janne Ahonen had won seven of them, and placed second in the only one he did not. This early-season dominance of the Finnish athlete, who had already won the Four Hills tournament twice before, made him the favourite for the title, and Ahonen did not disappoint. He won the first three events, though he failed to become the second ski jumper after Sven Hannawald to win all four events of the tournament when runners-up Martin H\u00f6llwarth snatched the victory at the final event in Bischofshofen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Format\nAt each of the four events, a qualification round would be held. The 50 best jumpers would qualify for the competition. The fifteen athletes leading the World Cup at the time would qualify automatically. In case of an omitted qualification or a result that would normally result in elimination, they would instead qualify as 50th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Format\nUnlike the procedure at normal World Cup events, the 50 qualified athletes would be paired up for the first round of the final event, with the winner qualifying for the second round. The rounds start with the duel between #26 and #25 from the qualification round, followed by #27 vs #24, up to #50 vs #1. The five best duel losers, so-called 'Lucky Losers' also qualify for the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Format\nFor the tournament ranking, the total points earned from each jump are added together. The World Cup points collected during the four events are disregarded in this ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, World Cup Standings\nThe standings at the time of the tournament, after seven out of twenty-two events, were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Participating nations and athletes\nThe number of athletes a nation was allowed to nominate was dependent on previous results. In addition, a \"national group\" from the host nation is added to each event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Participating nations and athletes\nThe defending champion was Sigurd Pettersen. Six other competitors had also previously won the Four Hills tournament: Andreas Goldberger in 1992-93 and 1994-95, Janne Ahonen in 1998-99 and 2002-03, Primo\u017e Peterka in 1996-97, Kazuyoshi Funaki in 1997-98, Andreas Widh\u00f6lzl in 1999-00 and Adam Ma\u0142ysz in 2000-01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Results, Oberstorf\nDefending champion Sigurd Pettersen was not among the fifteen pre-qualified jumpers, and only placed 63rd in the qualification round. Thus, he failed to qualify.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Results, Oberstorf\nIn the final event, Roar Lj\u00f8kels\u00f8y's jump over 140.0 meters catapulted him from 18th place after the first round onto 2nd place overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180045-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Four Hills Tournament, Final Ranking\nAfter failing to qualify in Oberstorf, the defending Four Hills champion, Sigurd Pettersen, ultimately ranked 22nd overall (678.1 points).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180046-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Frauen-Bundesliga\nThe Frauen-Bundesliga 2004\u201305 was the 15th season of the Frauen-Bundesliga, Germany's premier football league. It began on 5 September 2004 and ended on 10 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180047-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Fulham F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Fulham F.C. 's fourth consecutive season in the top flight of English football, the Premier League. They were managed by former player, Chris Coleman, who managed to guide them into a mid-table position of 13th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180047-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Fulham F.C. season\nDespite not being involved in a relegation dogfight at the end of the season, they still had a big say in deciding who went down as they beat Norwich City 6\u20130 on the last day to relegate the East Anglians and save West Bromwich Albion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180047-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Fulham F.C. season\nIn other competitions, they reached the quarter finals of the League Cup, where they lost to Chelsea, and also reached the fifth round of the FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180047-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Fulham F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180047-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Fulham F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180048-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Galatasaray S.K. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Galatasaray's 101st in existence and the 47th consecutive season in the S\u00fcper Lig. This article shows statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club have played in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180049-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gamma Ethniki\nThe 2004\u201305 Gamma Ethniki was the 22nd season since the official establishment of the third tier of Greek football in 1983. Thrasyvoulos and Veria were crowned champions in South and North Group respectively, thus winning promotion to Beta Ethniki. Haidari also won promotion as a best runner-up of the both groups.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180049-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gamma Ethniki\nPamisos Messini, PANO Malia, Irodotos, Athinaida Kypselis, Marko, Pavlos Melas, Pandramaikos, Apollon Larissa and ILTEX Lykoi were relegated to Delta Ethniki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180050-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 George Mason Patriots men's basketball team began their 39th season of collegiate play on November 11, 2004 versus Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne at the Coaches vs. Cancer Classic tournament in Memphis, TN. The Patriots won that game, and finished the season with a record of 16 wins and 13 losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I college basketball season. The Hoyas were coached by John Thompson III \u2013 his first year at Georgetown \u2013 and played their home games at the MCI Center in Washington, DC. The Hoyas are members of the Big East Conference. They finished the season 19\u201313, 8\u20138 in Big East play. They advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2005 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament before losing to Connecticut They played in the 2005 National Invitation Tournament and advanced to the quarterfinals before losing to South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nJohn Thompson III, the son of legendary Georgetown head coach John Thompson, Jr., arrived from Princeton, where he had served as head coach for four seasons, as only the second person with prior head coaching experience to take over the Georgetown's men's basketball program. He made a decisive change in Georgetown's style of basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nJohn Thompson, Jr., and his successor Craig Esherick had emphasized fast, running, very physical play over their combined 32 years as head coach at Georgetown, but, upon taking over the program from Esherick, John Thompson III introduced the \"Princeton offense\" he had learned as a player and assistant coach under Pete Carril at Princeton and had himself employed at Princeton during his four years as head coach there. The Princeton offense emphasizes ball movement, dribbling, passing, and backdoor cuts to set up more deliberate, and often more slowly developing, scoring opportunities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nJunior forward and team co-captain Brandon Bowman started all 32 games \u2013 as he would all 127 games of his collegiate career. The Princeton offense suited him, and his scoring improved from his first two years with the team. Over the first four games of the season, he averaged 22 points, and he went on to lead the team in scoring in 15 games and in rebounding 13 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nHe scored on a layup with eight seconds remaining in the game to give the Hoyas an upset win over 16th-ranked Pittsburgh on January 5, 2005, their only win over a ranked opponent during the season. Against seventh-ranked Syracuse 13 days later, he scored to tie the game and force overtime, narrowly missing winning the game with the shot when officials determined that his foot had been on the three-point line when he launched it and ruled it a two-pointer. In a game against Seton Hall on February 2, 2005, he scored 28 points and shot 14-for-15 (93.3%) from the free-throw line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe change in the team's offensive philosophy also played to the strengths of junior guard and team co-captain Ashanti Cook, who started all 32 games, the second straight season he had started every game. He averaged 32 minutes a game and emerged as a leader on the floor, displaying expertise on defense and impressive shooting accuracy. He had his best offensive season as a Hoya, averaging 10.8 points a game and scoring in double figures 19 times. He shot 4-for-4 from three-point range and scored a career-high 23 points at Pittsburgh on January 5, 2005, and he again scored 23 points in the game against Seton Hall on February 2, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nSenior forward Darrel Owens started the first 12 games of the year, but then moved to the bench to make room for freshman center Roy Hibbert on the starting roster. Owens started only three more games during his collegiate career, and at first struggled in his new reserve role; during a nine-game stretch at midseason after coming out of the starting lineup, he shot only 28 percent from the field and averaged only one field goal per game. For his part, Hibbert started 17 games during the season, averaging 15.8 minutes, 5.1 points, and 3.5 rebounds per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0004-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nHe had two double-doubles during the year and finished the season second on the team in blocked shots with 40. Against Notre Dame at the MCI Center on January 23, 2005, he scored on a game-winning slam-dunk to give the Hoyas a 55\u201354 win, and he went on to achieve what were then various career highs for him, including a 15-point game at Notre Dame, a 14-rebound game at Syracuse, a five-assist game against San Jose State, a three-steal game against West Virginia, and three blocked shots in four different games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nFreshman guard Jonathan Wallace was another addition to the team. He started all 32 games and averaged 30.4 minutes, 6.5 points, 2.2 assists, 2.1 rebounds, and 1.2 steals per game. He had a season-high 20 points at Davidson, twice had six assists, had four steals against St. John's, and over the course of the year shot 78.8 percent in free throws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nFreshman forward Jeff Green quickly emerged as a star of the team. He started all 32 games and averaged 33.8 minutes per game. In December 2004 he was selected to the Rainbow Classic All-Tournament Team. Over the course of the season he shot 50.2 percent from the field and had five double-doubles. He finished the year as the team's second-leading scorer, averaging 13.1 points per game overall and 13.4 in Big East play, and as its leader in rebounding with 6.6 per game, assists with 2.9 per game, and blocked shots with 1.6 per game. His season highs were 22 points against Connecticut on January 8, 2005, 12 rebounds at Villanova a week later, seven assists at Boston College on January 29, 2005, six blocked shots against Penn State, and four steals against Long Beach State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe team lost its first game of the season, extending Georgetown's losing streak to 10 games dating back to the previous season, but then began to win, and it completed the non-conference portion of its schedule at 8\u20133. It then began Big East play, pushing its record to 16\u20136 overall and 8\u20133 in the conference before dropping its final five games to finish the regular season with a 16\u201311 overall record and 8\u20138 in the conference, good for a tie for seventh place in the Big East standings. The Hoyas beat Seton Hall in the first round of the 2005 Big East Tournament with Darrel Owens emerging from his midseason slump to score 14 points against the Pirates, but lost to 12th-ranked Connecticut in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nWith a 17\u201312 record after the loss to Connecticut, Georgetown missed the NCAA Tournament for the fourth straight year and seventh time in the previous eight years. However, the Hoyas returned to post-season tournament play for the first time since the 2002-03 season when they were invited to the 2005 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), their third invitation to and second appearance in the NIT in four years and sixth invitation to and fifth appearance in the NIT in eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nGeorgetown easily defeated Boston University at the MCI Center in the first round and had a 17-point win over Cal State Fullerton at McDonough Gymnasium in the second round in a game in which Ashanti Cook tied his career high with 10 rebounds. In the quarterfinals, Darrel Owens scored a career-high 26 points to push his per-game scoring average over the three NIT games to 18 points, but the Hoyas lost in a close game at eventual tournament champion South Carolina to finish the season with a record of 19\u201315.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nAfter the season, senior forward/guard Darrell Owens graduated and freshman forward Cornelio Guibunda left the team to transfer to American.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Season recap\nThe 2004\u20132005 season saw the end of the annual series between Georgetown and Boston College that had begun in the 1958\u20131959 season. The longtime rivalry between the schools came to end with the departure of Boston College from the Big East at the end of the season to join the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180051-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team, Rankings\nThe team was not ranked in the Top 25 in either the AP Poll or the Coaches' Poll at any time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180052-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgian Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Georgian Cup (also known as the David Kipiani Cup) was the sixty-first season overall and fifteenth since independence of the Georgian annual football tournament. The competition began on 25 August 2004 and ended with the Final held on 26 May 2005. The defending champions are Dinamo Tbilisi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180052-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgian Cup, Round of 32\nThe first legs were played on 25 August and the second legs were played on 3 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180052-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgian Cup, Round of 16\nIn this round entered winners from the previous round as well as three teams that finished at the top four in last year's Umaglesi Liga: WIT Georgia, Dinamo Tbilisi, FC Tbilisi and Dila Gori. The first legs were played on 20 October and the second legs were played on 3 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180052-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgian Cup, Quarterfinals\nThe matches were played on 1 December (first legs) and 9 December 2004 (second legs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180052-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Georgian Cup, Semifinals\nThe matches were played on 6 April (first legs) and 4 May 2005 (second legs).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180053-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gillingham F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Gillingham F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180053-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gillingham F.C. season, Season summary\nJohn Gorman was appointed to help Hessenthaler as the side started the 2004\u201305 season poorly, but as the team continued to struggle at the wrong end of the table Hessenthaler resigned as manager in late November. Somewhat unusually he continued to be employed as a player. Gorman succeeded Hessenthaler in a caretaker capacity but left the club to take the manager's job at Wycombe Wanderers. Gillingham then appointed former Burnley boss Stan Ternent as manager, but despite a late run of positive results, he couldn't prevent the Gills' relegation to League One on the last day of the season. In a reversal of the previous season's fortunes, Crewe Alexandra, the team immediately above Gillingham in the table, survived by just one goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180053-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gillingham F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180053-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gillingham F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season\nThe 2004-05 season is the ninth in the history of the Glasgow Warriors as a professional side. During this season the young professional side competed as Glasgow Rugby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season\nThe 2004-05 season saw Glasgow Rugby compete in the competitions:- the Celtic League; and the European Champions Cup, the Heineken Cup for sponsorship reasons; and the second and final season of the Celtic Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nLoose Forwards Paul Dearlove Donnie Macfadyen Cameron Mather Alex Mockford Jon Petrie Andrew Wilson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nHalf Backs Graeme Beveridge Alasdhair McFarlane Richard McKnight Sam Pinder", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nCentres Scott Barrow Alan Bulloch Andy Craig Andrew Henderson Graeme Morrison", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Team, Squad\nBack Three Rory Kerr Rory Lamont Sean Lamont Kenny Logan Gareth Maclure Dave Millard", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Player statistics\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, Glasgow have used 39 different players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and points scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Player movements, Player transfers, In\nAndy Craig from Orrell Kevin Tkachuk from Birmingham & Solihull Kenny Logan from Wasps Dan Turner from Canterbury John Barclay from Dollar Academy Johnnie Beattie from Aberdeen GSFP RFC Steven Duffy from Glasgow Hawks James Eddie from Glasgow Hutchesons Aloysians Colin Gregor from Watsonians RFC Fergus Thomson from Glasgow Hawks Scott Barrow from Rotherham Rory Lamont from Glasgow Hawks", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Player movements, Player transfers, Out\nRory McKay to Manly RUFC Glenn Metcalfe to Castres Olympique Jon Steel to Border Reivers Stuart Moffat to Border Reivers Joe Naufahu to Glasgow Hutchesons Aloysians Alan Bulloch to Glasgow Hutchesons Aloysians Kenny Sinclair to Glasgow Hawks Simon Gunn released Roland Reid to London Irish Mark McMillan to Yorkshire Carnegie Matt Proudfoot released", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 72], "content_span": [73, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 1\nGlasgow Warriors:G Beveridge, A Bulloch, C Gregor, A Henderson, C Howarth, R Lamont, S Lamont, K Logan, R McKnight, D Millard, C Shaw, J Beardshaw,J Beattie, G Bulloch, P Dearlove, A Hall, L Harrison, A Kelly, S Lawson, E Milligan, J Petrie, S Renwick, N Ross, S Swindall, K Tkachuk, D Turner. Replacements:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 2\nGlasgow Warriors:Kevin Tkachuk, Scott Lawson, Lee Harrison, Nathan Ross, Andy Hall, Paul Dearlove, Jon Petrie (captain), Shawn Renwick,Graeme Beveridge, Calvin Howarth, Kenny Logan, Andrew Henderson, Graeme Morrison, Rory Kerr, Rory LamontReplacements: used: Scott Barrow, Alex Mockford, Alasdhair McFarlane, Dan Turner, Colin Gregor, Dave Millard, Sean Lamont, Johnnie Beattie; not used: Fergus Thomson, Gordon Bulloch, Andy Kelly, Donnie Macfadyen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 2\nSale Sharks:Chris Mayor; Mark Cueto, Jos Baxendell (captain), Robert Todd, Steve Hanley; Mike Hercus, Bryan Redpath; Trevor Woodman, Sebastien Bruno, Andrew Sheridan, Dean Schofield, Christian Day, Jason White, Sebastian Chabel, John CarterReplacements: Stuart Turner, Andrew Titterell, Barry Stewart, Pierre Caillet, Hugh Perrett, Sililo Martens, Charlie Hodgson, Mike Bartlett, Chris Jones, James Moore, Richard Wigglesworth", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 3\nSale Sharks:Jason Robinson (captain); Mark Cueto, Jos Baxendell, Robert Todd, Steve Hanley; Charlie Hodgson, Sililo MartensTrevor Woodman, Andy Titterrell, Barry Stewart, Dean Schofield, Chris Day, Jason White, Sebastien Chabal, Magnus LundReplacements: Chris Mayor, Chris Rhys Jones, Mike Hercus, Bryan Redpath, Andrew Sheridan, Stuart Turner, Pierre Caillet, Sebastien Bruno, John Carter, Hugh Perrett", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 3\nGlasgow Warriors:Kevin Tkachuk, Scott Lawson, Lee Harrison, Nathan Ross, Dan Turner, Andy Hall, Donnie Macfadyen, Paul Dearlove,Sam Pinder, Colin Gregor, Kenny Logan (captain), Scott Barrow, Graeme Morrison, Sean Lamont, Rory KerrReplacements: used: Joe Beardshaw, Andy Kelly, Calvin Howarth, Steve Swindall, Graeme Beveridge, Andrew Henderson, Andy HallDave Millard; not used: Gordon Bulloch", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 4\nGlasgow Warriors:Rory Lamont; Steven Manning, Andy Craig, Ally Maclay, David Millard; Calvin Howarth, Graeme Beveridge; Elliot McLaren,Ferguson Thomson, Fraser Mackinnon, James Eddie, Sandy Warnock, John Beattie, Shawn Renwick, Neil McKenzie. Replacements: Colin Shaw, Colin Gregor, Alasdhair McFarlane, Andrew Kelly, Stuart Fenwick, Donald Malcolm, Andrew Wilson, Alan Kelly, Stevie Swindall (all used)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 4\nNewcastle Falcons: Ed Burrill; Amarveer Ladhar, Adam Dehaty, Mark Laycock, Stephen Jones; Toby Flood, Lee Dickson; Jonny Williams, Rob Vickers, Ed Kalman, Andy Buist, Goeff Parling, Eni Gesinde, Greg Irwin, Ed WilliamsonReplacements: Danny Brown, Rupert Neville, Mark Darlington, Gareth Kerr, Jason Smithson, Jack Harrison, Jamie Rennie, Stuart Walker", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 5\nSale Sharks: Alex Davies; Matt Riley, Adam Robson, Jason Duffy, Olly Viney; David Blair, Ben Foden; Danny Greenhalgh, Neil Dowridge, Martin Halsall, Steve Burns, Ben Lloyd, Stuart Coackley, Mike Hills, Adam Newton. Replacements: Chris Leck, Mark Simpson-Daniel, Chris Briers, Tom Mantell, Aled Davies, Matt Sheen, Dan Hall, Daniel Fernandez-Arias.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Pre-season and friendlies, Match 5\nGlasgow Warriors: Andy Kelly (Glasgow), Fergus Thomson (Apprentice & Glasgow Hawks), Donald Malcolm (Academy & GHA), Elliot McLaren (Biggar), Stuart Fenwick (Ayr), Euan Murray (Glasgow), Jonathan van der Schyff (Currie), Steve Swindall (Glasgow Hawks), Andy Wilson (Glasgow), John Beattie (Apprentice & GHA), Shawn Renwick (Stirling County), Andy Dunlop (Biggar), Graeme Beveridge (Glasgow), Alasdhair McFarlane (Hillhead/Jordanhill), Calvin Howarth (Glasgow), Colin Gregor (Apprentice & Watsonians), Andy Craig (Glasgow), Rory Lamont (Glasgow), Dave Millard (Glasgow), Colin Shaw (Hawks), Steven Manning (Ayr)Replacements: all used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 81], "content_span": [82, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Magners Celtic League, League Table\nUnder the standard bonus point system, points are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 82], "content_span": [83, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Celtic Cup\nOnly 8 sides contested this year's Celtic Cup so the competition effectively began at the Quarter Final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitions, Celtic Cup\nThe match pairings were decided by the finishes in the previous year's Celtic League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nA player's nationality shown is taken from the nationality at the highest honour for the national side obtained; or if never capped internationally their place of birth. Senior caps take precedence over junior caps or place of birth; junior caps take precedence over place of birth. A player's nationality at debut may be different from the nationality shown. Combination sides like the British and Irish Lions or Pacific Islanders are not national sides, or nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nPlayers in BOLD font have been capped by their senior international XV side as nationality shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nPlayers in Italic font have capped either by their international 7s side; or by the international XV 'A' side as nationality shown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nPlayers in normal font have not been capped at senior level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180054-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Glasgow Warriors season, Competitive debuts this season\nA position in parentheses indicates that the player debuted as a substitute. A player may have made a prior debut for Glasgow Warriors in a non-competitive match, 'A' match or 7s match; these matches are not listed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180055-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Golden State Warriors season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Warriors' 59th season in the National Basketball Association, and 43rd season in the San Francisco Bay Area. During the offseason, the Warriors signed free agent Derek Fisher. Under new head coach Mike Montgomery, the Warriors stumbled out of the gate losing their first six games on their way to an awful 3\u201312 start. Their struggles continued posting a nine-game losing streak in January, losing 14 of their 15 games during the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180055-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Golden State Warriors season\nAt midseason, the team traded Speedy Claxton to the New Orleans Hornets for All-Star guard Baron Davis, and dealt Clifford Robinson to the New Jersey Nets. The deal to acquire Davis would have an immediate impact as suddenly the Warriors became competitive, winning eight straight games between March and April, finishing tied in last place in the Pacific Division with a 34\u201348 record. Jason Richardson led the team in scoring with 21.7 points per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180056-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team represented Gonzaga University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180057-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe 2004\u201305 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final was an elite figure skating competition held at the Capital Gymnasium in Beijing, China from December 16 to 19, 2004. Medals were awarded in men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180057-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final\nThe Grand Prix Final was the culminating event of the ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating series, which consisted of Skate America, Skate Canada International, Cup of China, Troph\u00e9e \u00c9ric Bompard, Cup of Russia, and NHK Trophy competitions. The top six skaters from each discipline competed in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180057-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final, Results, Pairs\nShen Xue / Zhao Hongbo from China set a new world record under the ISU Judging System for the short program (70.52), for the free skating (136.02), and for the combined total (206.54).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180058-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grazer AK season\nThe 2004\u201305 Grazer AK season was the 56th season of competitive football played by Grazer AK. AK Grazer finished second in the Austrian Football Bundesliga, one point behind champions Rapid Wien.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180058-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grazer AK season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180058-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grazer AK season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180058-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grazer AK season, Matches, UEFA Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was held on 5 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180059-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Greek Basket League\nThe 2004\u201305 Greek Basket League season was the 65th season of the Greek Basket League, the highest tier professional basketball league in Greece. It was also the 13th season of Greek Basket League that was regulated by HEBA (ESAKE). The winner of the league was Panathinaikos, which beat AEK Athens in the league's playoff's finals series. The clubs MENT and Ionikos Nea Filadelfeia were relegated to the Greek A2 League. The top scorer of the league was Nikos Oikonomou, a player of Panionios.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180060-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Greek Football Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Greek Football Cup was the 63rd edition of the Greek Football Cup. The competition started on 10 September 2004 and concluded on 21 May 2005 with the Greek Cup Final, held at the Pampeloponnisiako Stadium. Olympiacos earned the trophy with a 3\u20130 victory over Aris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180060-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Greek Football Cup, Quarter-finals, Matches, Second leg\nApollon Kalamaria Aris 1\u20131 on aggregate. Aris won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180061-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Gretna F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, the Scottish football club Gretna F.C. became champions of the Scottish Third Division. The team reached the quarterfinal round of the Scottish Challenge Cup, and the third round of the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180062-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Grimsby Town F.C. season, Squad overview\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180063-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Guildford Flames season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, the Guildford Flames participated in the British National League. It was the 13th year of Ice Hockey played by the Guildford Flames.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180063-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Guildford Flames season\nThe majority of the team from the previous season returned to the Flames including: Paul Dixon, Neil Liddiard, Peter Michnac, Marian Smerciak, Milos Melicherik, Rastislav Palov, Jozef Kohut, Nick Cross and Peter Konder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180063-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Guildford Flames season\nStevie Lyle left Guildford to join the Bracknell Bees and was replaced by Miroslav Bielik. Other departures included Ryan Vince, Scott Levins, Tony Redmond and Mark Galazzi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180063-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Guildford Flames season\nSome new arrivals included Neil Adams and Adam Walker, who spent the previous season with the Fife Flyers. Jason Baird also joined from the Central Hockey League's Indianapolis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180063-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Guildford Flames season, Results, Play-offs\nThe top four teams from the playoff group stage meet in the semi-finals, which are a best of 3 series. The finals are a best of 5 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 51], "content_span": [52, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180064-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 HNK Hajduk Split season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 94th season in Hajduk Split\u2019s history and their fourteenth in the Prva HNL. Their 1st place finish in the 2003\u201304 season meant it was their 14th successive season playing in the Prva HNL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180064-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 HNK Hajduk Split season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180064-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 HNK Hajduk Split season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180065-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 HNK Rijeka season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 59th season in Rijeka's history. It was their 14th season in the Prva HNL and 31st successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180065-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 HNK Rijeka season, Matches, Squad statistics\nCompetitive matches only. Appearances in brackets indicate numbers of times the player came on as a substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180066-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hamburger SV season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 85th season in the existence of Hamburger SV and the club's 42nd consecutive season in the top flight of German football. In addition to the domestic league, Hamburger SV participated in this season's edition of the DFB-Pokal and the Intertoto Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180066-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hamburger SV season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180066-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hamburger SV season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180066-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hamburger SV season, Players, Hamburger SV Amateure\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180067-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hartlepool United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Hartlepool United's 96th year in existence and their second consecutive season in League One. Along with competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, League Cup and League Trophy. The season covers the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180067-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hartlepool United F.C. season, Players, Current squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180068-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey season\nThe 2004-05 Harvard Crimson women\u2019s ice hockey team played in the NCAA championship game for the third consecutive season. In addition, the Crimson won their seventh straight Beanpot and third league tournament title. Harvard was ranked No. 2 in the nation for the third consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180068-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey season, Postseason, NCAA Frozen Four\nIn the NCAA quarterfinal. the Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey program had the lead versus Harvard. Nicole Corriero would score four goals, including the game-tying goal to force overtime. The Crimson would eliminate the Lakers in triple-overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 79], "content_span": [80, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180068-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Harvard Crimson women's ice hockey season, Postseason, NCAA Frozen Four\nIn the NCAA Championship game, the Crimson were facing a 4-3 deficit. With four seconds remaining, Nicole Corriero shot the puck in hopes of tying the game. The shot was blocked by Minnesota defenseman Lyndsay Wall as the Golden Gophers won the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 79], "content_span": [80, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180069-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hazfi Cup\nThe Hazfi Cup 2004-05 is the 18th staging of Iran's football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180070-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 108th season of competitive football by Heart of Midlothian, and their 22nd consecutive season in the top level of Scottish football, competing in the Scottish Premier League. Hearts also competed in the UEFA Cup, Scottish Cup, League Cup and the Festival Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180070-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Managers\nOver the course of the season Hearts had 4 Management teams. They started the season under Craig Levein who left the club on 29 October to join Leicester City. His assistant Peter Houston took charge as care taker manager for 1 game before John Robertson took on the role for 7 months before a fall out with Romanov who dismissed him after he refused to accept a demotion to assistant head coach created a vacancy once again. Steven Pressley and John McGlynn jointly took the role of care taker managers for the final two games of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180070-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, Stadium\nHearts used two stadiums over the course of the season Tynecastle Stadium for domestic fixtures and Murrayfield Stadium for international fixtures. This was due to Tynecastle not meeting Uefa requirements for holding international fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180070-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180070-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heart of Midlothian F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 82], "content_span": [83, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180071-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heineken Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Heineken Cup was the tenth edition of the Heineken Cup. Competing teams, from England, France, Ireland, Italy, Scotland and Wales, were divided into six pools of four, in which teams played home and away matches against each other. The winners of the pools, together with the two best runners-up, qualified for the knock-out stage. The French club Toulouse won a nail-biting final over fellow French side Stade Fran\u00e7ais by 18-12 after extra time. Toulouse became the first club to win the event three times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180071-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Heineken Cup, Format\nThe teams that qualified for the knockout stage are indicated in bold type on a green background. Their seeds in the knockout stage are indicated next to the team name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 28], "content_span": [29, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180073-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hellenic Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Hellenic Football League season was the 52nd in the history of the Hellenic Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180073-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hellenic Football League, Premier Division\nPremier Division featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180073-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hellenic Football League, Division One East\nDivision One East featured 14 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180073-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hellenic Football League, Division One West\nDivision One West featured 15 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180074-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hertha BSC season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 113th season in the existence of Hertha BSC and the club's eighth consecutive season in the top flight of German football. In addition to the domestic league, Hertha BSC participated in this season's edition of the DFB-Pokal. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season\nSeason 2004\u201305 was a relative success for Hibernian, as the team performed well in the league, finishing third and qualifying for the UEFA Cup in Tony Mowbray's first season as manager. Hibs lost to league strugglers Dundee United in both cup competitions; 2\u20131 in a Scottish Cup semi-final, and 2\u20131 after extra time in the League Cup quarter-final. The season also saw the development of a number of promising young players, particularly strikers Derek Riordan and Garry O'Connor. This relative success came after the club had been disappointingly beaten by FK Vetra in the UEFA Intertoto Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, League season\nHibs enjoyed a successful first season under new manager Tony Mowbray, as the club finished 3rd in the league and qualified for the next season's UEFA Cup competition. Hibs were pushed for third place by Aberdeen and only clinched the position on the final day of the season. The final day match was against Rangers, who needed to win to have a chance of winning the championship, while Hibs needed to avoid a heavy defeat to prevent Aberdeen overtaking them on goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, League season\nRangers took a 1\u20130 lead after 59 minutes, and the later stages of the game were played out without either team chasing a goal as it suited their needs. Highlights of the season included wins at Tynecastle and Celtic Park, which were big steps towards finishing in such a high position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, Intertoto Cup\nDespite having finished in the bottom half of the Scottish Premier League table in the previous season, Hibs volunteered to enter the Intertoto Cup. They were drawn against Lithuanian A Lyga side FK Vetra, with Hibs due to play at home first. New manager Tony Mowbray was faced with only having 12 players available for the first training session of the season, just 12 days before the first match with Vetra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, Intertoto Cup\nThe first match, which was played in \"farcical conditions after a thunderstorm flooded the Easter Road pitch\", ended in a 1\u20131 draw. In the return match, Vetra sat back and allowed Hibs the majority of ball possession, but they were unable to create more than a few goalscoring chances from this. A goal resulting from an error by young goalkeeper Alistair Brown condemned Hibs to defeat. The Edinburgh Evening News described Hibs' participation as \"a gamble\" that had \"backfired\"; former Hibs player Stuart Lovell questioned the motives of the Hibs board, and the point of giving short term contracts to players just to play in the matches against Vetra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish League Cup\nAs one of the SPL clubs who had not automatically qualified for European competition, Hibs entered at the last 32 stage (second round) of the competition, in which they defeated Alloa Athletic 4\u20130 at Easter Road. Hibs were then given a favourable draw against Albion Rovers in the last 16. Despite the underdogs taking a shock lead, Hibs ran out 3\u20131 winners in a game that was played on a neutral venue (Hamilton). In the quarter-final, Hibs were drawn to play Dundee United at Tannadice. Hibs took the lead through a Derek Riordan goal in the first half and held it for most of the game, but Jim McIntyre scored a late equaliser in normal time, and then scored the winner in extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nHibs reached the semi-final of the Scottish Cup, where they met Dundee United. Hibs went into the match as favourites due to the contrasting league form of the two sides; indeed, Hibs had beaten United 3\u20132 in the league at Easter Road the previous week. Hibs took the lead in the cup match thanks to a Derek Riordan penalty, but then collapsed to a 2\u20131 defeat, with the winner scored by Jason Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, Scottish Cup\nA curious postscript to the defeat was that Jason Scotland was denied a renewal of a UK work permit the following summer by an expert panel, which included former Hibs players Murdo MacLeod, Tony Higgins, Pat Stanton, Peter Cormack and Tommy McIntyre. The panel was hearing an appeal against a decision to reject the application to renew Scotland's work permit, which had been made automatically because Scotland had only played in two of Trinidad and Tobago's international matches in the preceding two years. The decision forced Scotland to leave United; he signed later that summer for Scottish First Division club St Johnstone, and has subsequently played in the Premier League for Wigan Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180075-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hibernian F.C. season, Player stats\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, Hibs used 32 different players in competitive games. The table below shows the number of appearances and goals scored by each player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180076-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Highland Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Highland Football League was won by Huntly. Brora Rangers finished bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180077-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Honduran Liga Nacional\nThe 2004\u201305 Honduran Liga Nacional was the 40th season in the Honduran football top division; it determined the 46th and 47th national champions in the league's history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180077-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Honduran Liga Nacional, Relegation table\nRelegation was determined by the aggregate table of both Apertura and Clausura tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180078-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso\nThe 2004\u201305 Honduran Liga Nacional de Ascenso was the 38th season of the Second level in Honduran football and the third one under the name Liga Nacional de Ascenso. Under the management of Carlos Mart\u00ednez, Hispano won the tournament after defeating Deportes Savio in the promotion series and obtained promotion to the 2005\u201306 Honduran Liga Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180079-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong FA Cup\n2004\u201305 Hong Kong FA Cup was the 31st staging of the Hong Kong FA Cup. The cup was won by Sun Hei, who won 2-1 against Happy Valley in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180079-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe competition started on 28 April 2005 with 9 Hong Kong First Division clubs. Although most of the matches were held in Mongkok Stadium, the final was held in Hong Kong Stadium on 22 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180079-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong FA Cup\nThe competition was officially known as Xiangxue Pharmaceutical FA Cup 2004/2005 due to sponsorship from Xiangxue Pharmaceutical Factory Co Ltd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180079-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong FA Cup, Fixtures and results, Bracket\nNote *: Fukien beat Xiangxue Pharmaceutical by 1-0 in the Preliminary Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180080-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong First Division League\nThe 2004\u201305 Hong Kong First Division League season was the 93rd since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180081-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong League Cup\nHong Kong League Cup 2004\u201305 is the 5th staging of the Hong Kong League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180081-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong League Cup\nSun Hei captured the champion for 3 consecutive times after beating Happy Valley by 1-0 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180082-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\nThe Hong Kong Senior Shield 2004\u201305, also known as the Sunray Cave Senior Shield 2004/2005, is the 103rd staging of the Hong Kong's oldest football knockout competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180082-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\nThe competition started on 9 April 2005 with 9 Hong Kong First Division League clubs and concluded on 13 April 2005 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180082-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield\nSun Hei captured their 1st title of the competition after beating Happy Valley by 4-2 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180082-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hong Kong Senior Challenge Shield, Fixtures and results, Bracket\nNote *: Buler Rangers beat Fukien by 1-0 in the Preliminary Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180083-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Houston Rockets season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Rockets' 38th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 34th season in the city of Houston. During the offseason, the Rockets acquired All-Star forward Tracy McGrady and Juwan Howard from the Orlando Magic, acquired All-Star center Dikembe Mutombo from the Chicago Bulls, who acquired him from the New York Knicks, and signed free agent Bob Sura. The Rockets struggled with a 6\u201311 start to the season, then played around .500 as they traded Jim Jackson to the New Orleans Hornets for David Wesley in late December. The Rockets would later on win eight straight games in February, as McGrady and Yao Ming were both selected to play in the 2005 NBA All-Star Game at Denver. At midseason, the team traded Maurice Taylor to the New York Knicks, and acquired Mike James from the Milwaukee Bucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 867]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180083-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Houston Rockets season\nThe Rockets won their final seven games finishing third in the Southwest Division with a 51\u201331 record, which was their first 50-win season since 1997. However, in the first round of the playoffs, they lost to their in-state rival, the Dallas Mavericks in seven games after taking a 2\u20130 series lead. Following the season, Sura retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180083-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Houston Rockets season, Regular season, Tracy McGrady: 13 points in 35 seconds\nOne notable game during the season was the Rockets' December 9 matchup against the San Antonio Spurs. In the fourth quarter, at 44 seconds left, the score was 76-68 and the Spurs had the lead. With 35 seconds remaining, Tracy McGrady made a three-pointer. Four seconds later, Devin Brown was fouled and made both of his free throws. With 24 seconds remaining, McGrady made another three-pointer. He was fouled by Tim Duncan when he shot the ball. He went to the free throw line and made a free throw, converting a four-point play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180083-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Houston Rockets season, Regular season, Tracy McGrady: 13 points in 35 seconds\nWith 16 seconds remaining, Scott Padgett intentionally fouled Tim Duncan, and, because the Rockets were over the foul limit, Duncan went to the free throw line and made both of his free throws. Five seconds later, McGrady made yet another three-pointer, this time over Bruce Bowen. This left the Rockets in a two-point deficit. San Antonio took a timeout. At 7.9 seconds remaining, Brent Barry inbounded the ball to Devin Brown. McGrady stole the ball from Brown and ran to the three-point line, where he made another three-pointer, which would be the game-winning shot. The performance is considered by some to be one of McGrady's career highlights and become a Hall of Famer in 2017.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 86], "content_span": [87, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season\nHuddersfield Town's 2004\u201305 campaign was their first competitive campaign in the restructured Coca-Cola League One. They finished 9th with 70 points, just one point less than Hartlepool United in 6th, the lowest playoff position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Squad at the start of the season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nTown beat Stockport County on the opening day, but then failed to score in their next 4 games, including a 1\u20130 defeat to Leeds United in the first round of the League Cup at Elland Road. The season included victories away at eventual champions Luton Town and at home over runners-up Hull City but also included two derby defeats against Bradford City. However, a disastrous mid-season spell of form (including seven successive away league defeats and having Efe Sodje stripped of the captaincy after his red card against Blackpool in the Football League Trophy) saw the side slump and in real danger of a relegation battle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nJon Worthington was made captain after the Blackpool game, but then Huddersfield gained a recovery in form with the loan signing of Luke Beckett from Sheffield United, but he was then recalled by Sheffield in mid-February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nThe team were in deep trouble in mid-March, with relegation being a big possibility, but the play-offs were still possible, although Town had to win all their final 10 games to have a realistic chance of reaching the play-offs and all was going well, until Town played Colchester United at the Galpharm Stadium. With 1 minute to go, Town were leading 2\u20131, but then a goalkeeping error by Paul Rachubka (signed earlier in the season from Charlton Athletic) let Colchester equalise the game. That proved to be fatal, Town did win all the other 9 games and they missed out on the play-offs by one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Review\nDuring the season, many graduates from Town's own academy started to cement first-team places, such as Andy Holdsworth, David Mirfin, Nathan Clarke, Tom Clarke, Adnan Ahmed and Michael Collins. Beckett departed to join local rivals Oldham Athletic before the transfer deadline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180084-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Huddersfield Town A.F.C. season, Squad at the end of the season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180085-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hull City A.F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Hull City compete in Football League One where they finished in 2nd position with 86 points, gaining automatic promotion to the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season is Hyderabad cricket team's 71st competitive season. The Hyderabad cricket team is senior men's domestic cricket team based in the city of Hyderabad, India, run by the Hyderabad Cricket Association. They represent the region of Telangana in the state of Andhra Pradesh in domestic competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nRayudu got selected to the Rest of India squad for the 2004 Irani Cup, a first-class cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nLaxman, Arjun and Vishnuvardhan got selected to the South Zone squad for the 2004-05 Deodhar Trophy, a List-A cricket competition in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nLaxman and Rayudu got picked to the India B squad for the 2004-05 NKP Salve Challenger Trophy, a List-A cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Squads\nLaxman got selected to the South Zone squad for the 2004-05 Duleep Trophy, a first-class cricket tournament in India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji Trophy\nThe Hyderabad team, led by Venkatapathy Raju, began their campaign in the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India, with a loss against Tamil Nadu at Chennai on 7 November 2004. The Hyderabad captain, Raju announced his retirement from the first-class cricket during the third day of the match against the Uttar Pradesh. V. V. S. Laxman replaced Raju as the captain of the Hyderabad for the remaining two matches. They finished inside top-2 in Group B of the Elite League to advance to the Elite semi-final with four wins and two losses. They were eliminated in the semi-final where the Railways defeated the Hyderabad by 7 wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nThe Hyderabad team, led by Arjun Yadav, began their campaign in the Subbaiah Pillai Trophy as part of the South Zone Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy, a List-A cricket tournament in India, with a loss against the Karnataka at Margao on 9 January 2005. The Hyderabad troubled the Karnataka top-order with three quick wickets but the middle-order helped the Karnataka to recover to 244 while the tight-bowling by the Karnataka bowlers ensured them a 15-run win despite the half-centuries from Daniel Manohar, Arjun and Ambati Rayudu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nIn a 42-over reduced rain-hit match, the top-order and lower-order collapse despite the half-centuries from Rayudu and Anirudh Singh restricted the Hyderabad to 166 while an unbeaten half-century from Sreekumar Nair helped the Kerala chase the target with five-wickets to spare. In the third match, the century from Abhinav Kumar along with an unbeaten half-century from Anirudh helped the Hyderabad post 288 but an unbeaten half-century from Sridharan Sharath and the half-century from Subramaniam Badrinath helped the Tamil Nadu chase the target with six-wickets to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0006-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nIn the fourth match, the Hyderabad top-order failed once again but the half-century from Rayudu and collective effort from the others helped them recover to 254 while the three-wicket haul from Inder Shekar Reddy along with the two-wicket hauls from Sankinani Vishnuvardhan and Pagadala Niranjan helped the Hyderabad win their first match of the tournament against the Goa by 78 runs despite the half-century from Mandar Phadke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180086-0006-0003", "contents": "2004\u201305 Hyderabad C.A. season, Ranji One\u2013Day Trophy\nIn the final zonal match, Yalaka Venugopal Rao's five wicket haul helped the Andhra bowl the Hyderabad out for 144 while an unbeaten half-century from M. S. K. Prasad helped the Andhra chase the target with four-wickets to spare despite two-wicket hauls and tight bowling from Inder Shekar and Shivaji. This loss resulted the Hyderabad finish at fourth in the South Zone and failed to advance to the knockout stage with a win and four losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180087-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe Continental Cup 2004\u201305 was the eighth edition of the IIHF Continental Cup. The season started on September 24, 2004, and finished on January 9, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180087-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 IIHF Continental Cup\nThe tournament was won by HKm Zvolen, who led the final group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180088-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU Junior Grand Prix\nThe 2004\u201305 ISU Junior Grand Prix was the eighth season of the ISU Junior Grand Prix, a series of international junior level competitions organized by the International Skating Union. It was the junior-level complement to the Grand Prix of Figure Skating, which was for senior-level skaters. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dance. The top skaters from the series met at the Junior Grand Prix Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180088-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Competitions\nThe locations of the JGP events change yearly. In the 2004\u201305 season, the series was composed of the following events:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180088-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualifiers\nThe following skaters qualified for the 2004\u201305 Junior Grand Prix Final, in order of qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180088-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU Junior Grand Prix, Junior Grand Prix Final qualifiers\nKiira Korpi, who missed the third alternate position by one spot, was given the host wildcard spot to the Junior Grand Prix Final. She placed 4th at the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180089-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU World Standings\nThe 2004\u201305 ISU World Standings, are the World Standings published by the International Skating Union (ISU) during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180089-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU World Standings\nThe 2004\u201305 ISU World Standings for single & pair skating and ice dance, are taking into account results of the 2002\u201303, 2003\u201304 and 2004\u201305 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180089-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ISU World Standings, World Standings for single & pair skating and ice dance, Season-end standings\nThe remainder of this section is a list, by discipline, published by the ISU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 106], "content_span": [107, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180090-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Icelandic Hockey League season\nThe 2004-05 Icelandic Hockey League season was the 14th season of the Icelandic Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Iceland. Four teams participated in the league, and Skautafelag Akureyrar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180091-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team represented the University of Idaho during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Members of the Big West Conference, the Vandals were led by fourth-year head coach Leonard Perry and played their home games on campus at Cowan Spectrum in Moscow, Idaho.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180091-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThe Vandals were 8\u201321 overall in the regular season and 6\u201312 in conference play, eighth in the standings. They met fifth seed UC Irvine in the first round of the conference tournament in Anaheim and lost to the Anteaters by thirteen points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180091-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Idaho Vandals men's basketball team\nThis was Idaho's ninth and final season in the Big West and their overall record in the conference tourney was 1\u20137; they moved to the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) over the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, the 100th season of men's basketball at the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign, enjoyed one of the most successful seasons in recent college history. After starting the regular season with a record of 29\u20130 and winning the Big Ten Conference regular season title outright at 15\u20131, the Illini were Big Ten Tournament champions. They advanced in the NCAA Tournament to the national championship, but lost to North Carolina, 75\u201370, and ended the season at 37\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team\nNine years later in 2014, Sports Illustrated voted the 2005 Illinois team as the best ever not to win a national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Overview\nIllinois celebrated its 100th season of varsity basketball in 2004-05. In his second season as head coach at Illinois, Bruce Weber\u2019s Illini put together the most successful season in U of I history. The Illini tied the all-time NCAA record for victories in a season with 37 wins en route to its 37\u20132 record (since surpassed by 2011\u201312 Kentucky with a 38\u20132 record and 2014\u201315 Kentucky with a 38\u20131 record). Illinois made its fifth all-time NCAA Final Four appearance and first since 1989. The Illini defeated Louisville in the national semifinal to advance to the championship game for the first time in school history. Illinois finished as the national runner-up, falling by five points to North Carolina in the title game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 72], "content_span": [73, 795]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Overview\nAbove all else, the team was noted for its impeccable ball movement on offense, and led the nation in assists. A constant flow of passes allowed for open looks from the three-point line on every play. Led by a three-guard starting lineup, the team did not rely upon sheer size and height like many other teams in order to dominate, but rather skill and teamwork. Illinois relied upon three-point shooting for its offensive firepower. Illinois' effective offense was largely attributable to the team chemistry that had developed amongst the starting five, which had gone unchanged over the two previous seasons. Defensively, the team was one of the best at guarding against the three-point shot. Illinois averaged 77.0 points per game, while allowing 61.1 points per game, for an average point differential of nearly 16 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 72], "content_span": [73, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Overview\nIn blowout home games, 7\u00a0ft 2\u00a0in (2.18\u00a0m) senior Nick Smith, the tallest player in University of Illinois basketball history, would take three-point shots from the top of the key. He made 4 of 11 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 72], "content_span": [73, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Regular season\nThe Illini started the season by setting a school record with 29 straight wins, the third best start in Big Ten history and tying the 12th best start in NCAA annals. Illinois won its second-ever game over a No. 1-ranked opponent, crushing Wake Forest 91-73 at the Assembly Hall on December 1. After the win, the Illini took over the number 1 overall spot in the national polls and held it for the remainder of the regular season, a run of 15 straight weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Regular season\nOn January 25, 2005, Illinois defeated Wisconsin 75-65 at the Kohl Center, snapping the Badgers' nation-leading 38-game home court winning streak. In the process, Illinois handed the Badgers their first home court loss since a defeat to, coincidentally, Wake Forest, on December 4, 2002, and also assumed the nation's longest home court winning streak themselves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Regular season\nIllinois was ranked No. 1 in the final Associated Press poll of 2005, another first for the program. The Illini then went on to win to its second straight outright Big Ten Championship with a 15-1 record, as Weber became the first coach in 100 years of Big Ten basketball to win consecutive outright league championships in his first two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 78], "content_span": [79, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Post-Season\nThe Illini won the Big Ten Tournament, becoming just the second team to win both an outright Big Ten regular season title and the Big Ten Tournament in the same season. In the NCAA tournament, the overall number 1 seeded Illini won their first three games by double digits.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Post-Season\nIn an Elite Eight matchup, Illinois fell behind early to the University of Arizona due to poor shooting behind the three-point line and sensational play by Arizona's leaders Salim Stoudamire and Channing Frye. The game featured a 15-point comeback from the Illini, triggered by several steals and Deron Williams' clutch three-point shooting, including several NBA range threes, in the last 3 minutes and 30 seconds of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Post-Season\nThe Illini then defeated The University of Louisville 72-57, the team's largest margin of victory in the tournament, to move on to the 2005 National Championship Game against North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Post-Season\nIn the national championship game, Illinois was defeated by North Carolina 70-75. North Carolina relied upon stellar post play from Sean May, who managed to get James Augustine and Jack Ingram into foul trouble, while Illinois struggled offensively with what had succeeded the rest of the season, converting only 12 of a championship game record 40 three-point field goal attempts. James Augustine played 9 minutes due to foul trouble, forcing Jack Ingram to play a huge role in the second half comeback the Illini made. For almost the entire season, Illinois was ranked #1 and North Carolina was ranked #2, respectively, in all polls, and both teams were the favorites to meet in the national championship game. The North Carolina squad would go on to field six players in the NBA draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 75], "content_span": [76, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Season, Accolades\nBruce Weber was named National Coach of the Year by nine organizations. Dee Brown, \"The One Man Fast Break\", was named The Sporting News National Player of the Year and swept the conference honors as well, being named both Big Ten Player of the Year and Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. The Illini had three players earn consensus All-America honors in the same season for the first time ever. In addition to Brown earning consensus first-team All-America honors, Deron Williams and Luther Head were named consensus second-team All-Americans. Following the season, both Williams and Head were chosen in the first round of the NBA Draft, with Head being drafted No. 24 overall by the Houston Rockets while Williams became the highest Illinois player ever drafted when he was chosen No. 3 overall by the Utah Jazz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 73], "content_span": [74, 891]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180092-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois Fighting Illini men's basketball team, Team, Injuries\nFreshman Brian Randle took a medical redshirt after punching a wall in frustration and breaking his hand during preseason practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 70], "content_span": [71, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180093-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team represented Illinois State University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Redbirds, led by second year head coach Porter Moser, played their home games at Redbird Arena and competed as a member of the Missouri Valley Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180093-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Illinois State Redbirds men's basketball team\nThey finished the season 17\u201313, 8\u201310 in conference play to finish in sixth place. They were the number six seed for the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament. They were defeated by Creighton University in their quarterfinal game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180094-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team represented Indiana University in the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. Their head coach was Mike Davis, who was in his fifth season. The team played its home games at Assembly Hall in Bloomington, Indiana, and was a member of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180094-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Hoosiers men's basketball team\nIndiana finished the season with an overall record of 15\u201314 and a conference record of 10\u20136, finishing 4th place in the Big Ten Conference. After missing out on the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive year, Indiana was invited to play in the NIT. However, IU lost in the first round, which ended their season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Pacers' 29th season in the National Basketball Association, and 38th season as a franchise. The Pacers finished third in the Central Division with a 44\u201338 record. This season also marked the final season for All-Star guard Reggie Miller. (See 2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season#Regular season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Offseason, Summary\nBefore the regular season began, the Indiana Pacers were considered a favorite in the Eastern Conference to possibly reach the NBA Finals, due to a very deep, talented roster including established names such as Reggie Miller, Jermaine O'Neal, Ron Artest, Stephen Jackson, Jamaal Tinsley, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Offseason, Summary\nAl Harrington, a combination forward who had established himself as one of the best sixth-men in the NBA in the past two years, was dealt in the offseason to the Atlanta Hawks in return for swingman Stephen Jackson, after Harrington allegedly demanded that the Pacers start him or trade him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Malice at the Palace\nThe Pacers started off the 2004-05 season in extremely strong fashion\u2013 until the infamous events of November 19, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Malice at the Palace\nTowards the end of a blowout over the Detroit Pistons (who had eliminated the Pacers in the previous year's Eastern Conference Finals) at The Palace of Auburn Hills, the Pacers' Ron Artest committed a hard foul against Ben Wallace. Wallace retaliated by pushing Artest, and Artest ran over to the scorer's table and laid atop it in order to prevent himself from being provoked into an altercation with Wallace. Pistons fan John Green threw a cup of beer at Artest, causing Artest to charge into the stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0004-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Malice at the Palace\nThe situation escalated to a full-scale brawl, with fans and several Pacers taking part. Stephen Jackson followed Artest into the stands while Jermaine O'Neal struck a fan who came onto the court. Jamaal Tinsley picked up a long-handled dustpan in order to use as a weapon, although he was never forced to use it. The game was called a Pacers victory with 45.9 seconds left on the clock and the score 97-82, and the Pacers left the floor amid a shower of beer and other beverages that rained down from the stands. Artest was suspended for the rest of the season without pay for his role in the 'basketbrawl.'", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Malice at the Palace\nSeveral of the involved players were suspended by NBA Commissioner David Stern, but the hardest hit were Artest (suspended for the remainder of the regular season and playoffs), Jackson (suspended for 30 games), O'Neal (25 games), Wallace (6 games) and the Pacers' Anthony Johnson (5 games) (O'Neal's suspension was later reduced to 15 games by arbitrator Roger Kaplan, a decision that was upheld by U.S. District Judge George B. Daniels). O'Neal was charged with two counts of assault and battery, while Artest, Jackson, Johnson and David Harrison were charged with one count each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Malice at the Palace\nArtest's suspension was the longest in NBA history for any suspension unrelated to substance abuse issues, keeping Artest out of a record 73 regular season games and 13 playoff games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nAfter the brawl and the consequences that followed, the Pacers fell downward in the Central Division. They went from a legitimate title contender with a record of 7-2, to a team that hovered around .500 in winning percentage, while the Detroit Pistons eventually became the Central Division champions with a 54-28 record. In addition to all the players rendered unavailable due to suspensions, the Pacers also struggled with several injuries to key players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nIn one game, the Pacers were forced to activate and dress an injured Jeff Foster even though the coaching staff had no intention of letting him play, just so that they could meet the NBA's requirement that each team has at least eight active players at the start of the game; if they did not activate an eighth player, they would have been forced to forfeit the game. Meanwhile, Fred Jones played 40 or more minutes in six consecutive games, simply because the Pacers did not have any shooting guards in reserve due to an injury to Reggie Miller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0007-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nDespite the difficulties with the suspensions and injuries, the Pacers earned a sixth seed in the playoffs with a record of 44-38, due to strong play by many talented members of the Pacers' deep bench, including Jones, Anthony Johnson, and Austin Croshere, and a resurgence by Miller, whose career had been dwindling in recent years. Despite Miller's resurgence, he announced in February 2005 through his sister Cheryl Miller that he would be retiring from basketball at the conclusion of the 2004-05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nThroughout the season, the Pacers signed several different players to replace the bench players who had been promoted to starters, including Michael Curry, Marcus Haislip, and others. In a blowout win over the Milwaukee Bucks on January 4, 2005, Jermaine O'Neal scored a career high in points, with 55. During the fourth quarter, however, he asked to be removed from the game out of respect for Reggie Miller, because he did not wish to break Miller's franchise record of 57 points, which was set during the 1992\u201393 NBA season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nAn important reason for their strong finish was the re-acquisition of Dale Davis in March, who had been released by the New Orleans Hornets after being traded there by the Golden State Warriors. He played the final 25 games of the regular season and every playoff game, contributing a strong presence at center. However, Davis' signing coincided with an injury to Jermaine O'Neal that would knock him out for virtually the remainder of the regular season\u2014indeed, O'Neal's first missed game due to his injury was Davis' first game back with the Pacers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nSo despite the adversity they had gone through, the Pacers made the playoffs for the 13th time in 14 years. In the first round, Indiana defeated the Atlantic Division champion Boston Celtics in seven games, winning Game 7 in Boston by the decisive margin of 97-70.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The Aftermath\nThe Pacers then advanced to the second-round against the Detroit Pistons, in a rematch of the previous year's Eastern Conference Finals. The series featured games back at The Palace of Auburn Hills, the scene of the brawl that many assumed at the time had effectively ended the Pacers' season. After losing game 1, the Pacers won the next two games to take a 2-1 lead. However, the Pacers could not repeat their victories against the Pistons and lost the next 3 games, losing the series 4-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The End of An Era\nThe Pacers' last game of the playoffs was on May 19, 2005, at home; Reggie Miller, in his final NBA game, scored 27 points and received a huge standing ovation from the crowd. Despite Miller's effort, the Pacers lost, sending Miller into retirement without an NBA Championship in his 18-year career, all with the Pacers. Next season, Miller was honored by the Pacers during halftime of a game against the Phoenix Suns on March 30, 2006, when his #31 jersey was retired and he was presented with a Bentley Continental GT.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The End of An Era\nAfter the 2004-05 season, the Pacers completed a major overhaul of their roster, including moving Ron Artest, Anthony Johnson, Fred Jones, Austin Croshere, James Jones, and others over the next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180095-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Indiana Pacers season, Regular season, The End of An Era\nIndeed, the Indiana Pacers' 2004\u201305 campaign, with the retirement of Reggie Miller and the Pacers' last winning season record until 2012, marked the end of an era in Pacers basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 64], "content_span": [65, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180096-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Inter Milan season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Football Club Internazionale Milano's 96th in existence and 89th consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180096-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nThe summer of 2004 saw Inter choose a new coach, Roberto Mancini coming from Lazio. Inter started the season qualifying for the Champions League group phase, but also collected many draws in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180096-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Inter Milan season, Season overview\nInter, achieved better results in cups, made a known comeback (3\u20132) in a match against Sampdoria, scoring all goals in the last six minutes. The derby with Milan was lost 1\u20130 which broke a positive streak, in May 2004. the rivals also knocked Inter out of the Champions League, tournament in which \u2013 during the previous two-legs \u2013 Mancini's squad had been beaten by reigning champions Porto. Inter achieved a third-place finish in the league. The win of the Coppa Italia final against Roma, 3\u20130 on aggregate, closed the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180096-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Inter Milan season, Players, Squad information, From youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180097-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Interliga season\nThe 2004\u201305 Interliga season was the sixth season of the multi-national ice hockey league. Six teams participated in the league, and Jesenice from Slovenia have won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180098-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Inverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. season\nInverness Caledonian Thistle F.C. in their 11th season in Scottish football competed in the Scottish Premier League, Scottish League Cup and the Scottish Cup in season 2004\u201305.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180099-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Iowa Hawkeyes men's basketball team represented the University of Iowa as members of the Big Ten Conference during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by sixth-year head coach Steve Alford and played their home games at Carver\u2013Hawkeye Arena. They finished the season 21\u201312 overall and 7\u20139 in Big Ten play. The Hawkeyes received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as #10 seed in the Austin Regional. The season ended with an opening round loss to #7 seed Cincinnati, 76\u201364.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180100-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team represents Iowa State University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Cyclones were coached by Wayne Morgan, who was in his 2nd season. They played their home games at Hilton Coliseum in Ames, Iowa, and competed in the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180100-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iowa State Cyclones men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Cyclones finished 20\u201313, 7\u20139 in Big 12 play to finish 8th the regular season conference standings. They lost to Oklahoma State in the quarterfinals of the Big 12 Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NIT Tournament where they defeated Georgia, Florida State, Marquette and lost to Rutgers in the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180101-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ipswich Town F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Ipswich Town competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180101-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Season summary\nIpswich missed automatic promotion in the 2004\u201305 season, finishing third, only two points behind second-placed Wigan Athletic. Again, they lost to West Ham United in the play off semi-finals, this time by a 4\u20132 aggregate score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180101-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180101-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180101-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ipswich Town F.C. season, First-team squad, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180101-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ipswich Town F.C. season, Pre-season\nIpswich traveled to Denmark for a pre-season tour in July 2004. Ipswich also played a friendly match against Newcastle United on 28 July, a testimonial match which was played in honour of former assistant manager and player Dale Roberts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180102-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iran 2nd Division\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, League 2, which is in fact the third tier of the Iranian football league system, was organised in two groups each of ten teams. At the end of the season Shahrdari Langarud and Pegah Khozestan as group winners were promoted to the Azadegan League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180102-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iran 2nd Division, Promotion play off\nNassaji Mazandaran in Group 1 and Ararat in Group 2 as 2nd-placed team faced play-off 11th-placed team of Azadegan League 2004/05, Niroye Zamini in Group 1 and Ekbatan in Group 2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180102-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iran 2nd Division, Relegation play off\nFajr Sepah Tehran in Group 1 and Chooka Talesh in Group 2 as 9th-placed team faced play-off winners of 2004\u201305 Iran Football's 3rd Division, Zob Ahan Ardabil in Group 1 and Sepahan Novin in Group 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180103-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iran Futsal's 1st Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Iranian Futsal 1st Division will be divided into two phases.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180103-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iran Futsal's 1st Division\nThe league will also be composed of 16 teams divided into two divisions of 8 teams each, whose teams will be divided geographically. Teams will play only other teams in their own division, once at home and once away for a total of 14 matches each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180104-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iran Pro League\nThe 2004\u201305 Iran Pro League was the 22nd season of Iran's Football League and fourth as Iran Pro League since its establishment in 2001. PAS Tehran were the defending champions. The season featured 14 teams from the 2003\u201304 Iran Pro League and two new teams promoted from the 2003\u201304 Azadegan League: Saba Battery as champions and Malavan as runner-up. The league started on 13 September 2004 and ended on 20 June 2005. Foolad won the Pro League title for the first time in their history (total first Iranian title).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180105-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iranian Basketball Super League\nThe following is the final results of the Iran Super League 2004/05 basketball season. After passing a season of hard work for all participating teams, the 2004-05 Iranian Super League came to its end, crowning Sanam as the Champions of Iran. Sanam thrashed its arch-rival, Saba Battery, 94-79 in the final match. This difference seemed to give a real shock to Saba, which came to this game, almost as an unbeatable team during the whole season. Even Andre Pitts and Lorenzo Hall could not help Saba to survive from the quagmire made by Sanam. In the first game, Saba beat Sanam 79-75.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180106-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iranian Futsal Super League\nThe 2004\u201305 Iranian Futsal Super League will be the 2nd season of the Futsal Super League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180107-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iranian Volleyball Super League\nThe following is the final results of the Iranian Volleyball Super League (Velayat Cup) 2004/05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180108-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iraqi Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Iraqi Premier League kicked off on October 20, 2004. The 36 teams were split into four groups. At the end of the group stage, the top three teams from each group (a total of 12 teams) advanced to the Elite Stage, while the bottom three in each group were demoted to the lower division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180108-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Iraqi Premier League\nIn the Elite Stage, the 12 teams were split into four groups of three, with teams playing home and away against each team in their group respectively. The top team in each of the four groups moved on to the two-legged semi-finals which determined who played for the championship game; a single match held in Baghdad. Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya won their fifth Premier League title with a 2\u20130 victory over Al-Minaa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180109-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Irish Cup was the 125th edition of Northern Ireland's premier football knock-out cup competition. It concluded on 7 May 2005 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180109-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Cup\nGlentoran were the defending champions, winning their 20th Irish Cup last season after a 1\u20130 win over Coleraine in the 2004 final. This season the Glens reached the semi-final stage, but were defeated by Portadown, who then went on to lift the cup for the third time with a 5\u20131 victory over Larne in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180109-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Cup\nIt was the highest scoring final in 36 years, since the 1969 final replay when Ards defeated Distillery 4\u20132. It was also the first time in 43 years that the final had been won by a four-goal margin, when Linfield defeated Portadown 4\u20130 in 1962. This was Larne's fifth appearance in the final without ever winning; a record in the competition that still stands. They had previously been runners-up in the 1928, 1935, 1987 and 1989 finals. Derry Celtic (1898 and 1904) and Limavady (1885 and 1886) are the only other clubs to have reached the final more than once, but never won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180109-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Cup, Fifth round\n1Newry City were disqualified for fielding an ineligible player. Bangor were reinstated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180110-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish League Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Irish League Cup (known as the CIS Insurance Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 19th edition of Northern Ireland's secondary football knock-out cup competition. It concluded on 9 November 2004 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180110-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish League Cup\nCliftonville were the defending champions after their first ever League Cup win the previous season; a penalty shootout victory over Larne in the previous final. This season Cliftonville reached the semi-finals but were defeated by Linfield, who were then defeated 2\u20131 in the final by cup winners Glentoran. This was the eighth final in nine years that had featured either Linfield or Glentoran, and the third time in four years that both clubs had faced each other in the final. It was also Glentoran's second cup win in three years, taking their tally to five League Cups overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180110-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish League Cup\nThe 16 clubs taking part were divided into four groups of four clubs. The clubs in each group played each other at home and away. The top two clubs from each group then advanced to the quarter-finals where they played a single knock-out tie against another quarter-finalist. The semi-finals were played in the same format with the two winners of the ties advancing to the single match final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180111-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Premier League\nThe Irish Premier League in season 2004\u201305 comprised 16 teams, and Glentoran won the championship. Omagh Town were relegated after finishing bottom of the table and subsequently dissolved on 7 June 2005 owing to financial problems. Crusaders were relegated after a 3-1 defeat on aggregate to Glenavon in the promotion play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180111-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Premier League\nBefore the start of the season Newry Town changed name to Newry City following the change in official status of Newry in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180111-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Premier League, Results\nEach team played every other team twice (home and away) for a total of 30 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180111-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Premier League, Promotion/relegation play-off\nCrusaders, the club that finished in the relegation play-off place, faced Glenavon, the runners-up of the 2004-05 Intermediate League First Division in a two-legged tie for a place in next season's Irish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180111-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Irish Premier League, Promotion/relegation play-off\nGlenavon won 3\u20132 on aggregate and were promoted, Crusaders were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180112-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isle of Man League\nThe final league standings of the two Isle of Man Football League tables; as well as the results in of the domestic cup competitions for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180113-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israel State Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Israel State Cup was the 66th season of Israel's nationwide football cup competition and the 51st after the Israeli Declaration of Independence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180113-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israel State Cup\nThe competition was won by Maccabi Tel Aviv, who had beaten Maccabi Herzliya on penalties after 2\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180113-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israel State Cup\nBy winning, Maccabi Tel Aviv qualified to the second round of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180113-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israel State Cup, Results, Eighth Round\nThe draw for the Eighth Round was held on 27 January 2005. Most matches were played on 8 February 2005, except for the match between Hapoel Marmorek and Maccabi Tirat HaCarmel, which was played on 22 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180113-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israel State Cup, Results, Ninth Round\nMost matches were played between 1 March 2005 and 9 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180114-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Israeli Hockey League season was the 14th season of Israel's hockey league. Five teams participated in the league, and HC Maccabi Amos Lod won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180115-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Noar Leumit League\nThe 2004\u201305 Israeli Noar Leumit League was the 11th season since its introduction in 1994 as the top-tier football in Israel for teenagers between the ages 18\u201320.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180115-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Noar Leumit League\nMaccabi Tel Aviv won the title, whilst Hapoel Acre and F.C. Neve Yosef were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180116-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League season saw Maccabi Haifa win their second consecutive title and ninth overall. It took place from the first match on 21 August 2004 to the final match on 28 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180116-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League\nTwo teams from Liga Leumit were promoted at the end of the previous season: Hapoel Haifa and Hapoel Nazareth Illit. The two teams relegated were Maccabi Netanya and Maccabi Ahi Nazareth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180116-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nTwelve teams took part in the 2004-05 Israeli Premier League season, including ten teams from the 2003-04 season, as well as two teams which were promoted from the 2003-04 Liga Leumit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180116-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nHapoel Haifa were promoted as champions of the 2003-04 Liga Leumit. Hapoel Nazareth Illit were promoted as runners up. Hapoel Haifa returned to the top flight after an absence of two seasons, while Hapoel Nazareth Illit made their debut in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180116-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nMaccabi Netanya and Maccabi Ahi Nazareth were relegated after finishing in the bottom two places in the 2003-04 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180116-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Premier League, Teams and Locations\nThe club played their home games at a neutral venue because their own ground did not meet Premier League requirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 51], "content_span": [52, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180117-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Israeli Women's Cup (Hebrew: \u05d2\u05d1\u05d9\u05e2 \u05d4\u05de\u05d3\u05d9\u05e0\u05d4 \u05e0\u05e9\u05d9\u05dd\u200e, Gvia HaMedina Nashim) was the 7th season of Israel's women's nationwide football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180117-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Israeli Women's Cup\nThe competition was won, for the third consecutive time, by Maccabi Holon, who had beaten ASA Tel Aviv University 2\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 90th in the history of the Isthmian League, which is an English football competition featuring semi-professional and amateur clubs from London, East and South East England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League\nAlso, it was the first season after the creation of the Conference North and South, one step above the Isthmian League. Therefore, it was the inaugural season for the league at the seventh, eighth and ninth tiers in the English league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nAfter the creation of the Conference North and South, placed above the Isthmian League before the start of the season most of the Premier Division clubs were transferred to the newly created divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured seven clubs from the previous season and 15 new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Premier Division\nYeading won the division and were promoted to the Conference South along with play-off winners Eastleigh. Tonbridge Angels, Dover Athletic and Kingstonian finished bottom of the table and were relegated to Division One, while 19th-placed Cheshunt were reprieved as the club with a better record than the equivalent Northern Premier League and Southern League clubs after Conference South side Hornchurch folded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 41], "content_span": [42, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Division One\nAfter the creation of the Conference North and South one step above the Isthmian League, most of the Premier Division clubs were transferred to the newly created divisions. Consequently, the best Division One clubs took up the empty spots in higher divisions. Remaining Division One North clubs were transferred to the Southern Football League. Two Isthmian League Division One sections were merged into single Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Division One\nDivision One consisted of 13 clubs transferred from Division One South and nine new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Division One\nAFC Wimbledon won the division to earn a second promotion in a row along with runners-up Walton & Hersham and play-off winners Bromley. Dorking returned to Division Two along with Croydon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Division Two\nDivision Two consisted of 16 clubs, including 12 clubs from the previous season, and four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, Division Two\nIlford won the division and were promoted to Southern League Eastern Division along with runners-up Enfield. There was no relegation from Division Two, though Abingdon Town resigned from the league at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, League Cup\nThe Isthmian League Cup 2004\u201305 was the 31st season of the Isthmian League Cup, the league cup competition of the Isthmian League. Sixty clubs took part. The competition commenced on 26 October 2004 and finished on 28 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, League Cup, Fixtures and results\nFixtures are listed in alphabetical order, not that which they were drawn in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 57], "content_span": [58, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, League Cup, Fixtures and results, First round\nIn the First round, the thirty-six lowest ranked clubs in the Isthmian League played each other for a place in the Second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, League Cup, Fixtures and results, Second round\nThe eighteen clubs to have made it through the First round were entered into the Second round draw with Fleet Town and Whyteleafe, making twenty teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 71], "content_span": [72, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, League Cup, Fixtures and results, Third round\nThe ten clubs to have made it through the Second round were entered into the Third round draw with the twenty-two Premier Division clubs, making thirty-two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 70], "content_span": [71, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180118-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Isthmian League, League Cup, Fixtures and results, Final\nThe only red card of the match came for Hampton & Richmond Borough's Dean Wells. There was also a yellow card for Slough Town's Josias Carbon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 64], "content_span": [65, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180119-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ivy League men's basketball season\nThe 2004\u201305 Ivy League men's basketball season was the Ivy League's 51st season of basketball. The team with the best record (Penn Quakers) progressed to play in the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. It would be their 23rd NCAA tournament appearance. Tim Begley, a senior shooting guard, won the Ivy League Men's Basketball Player of the Year. He was the eleventh player from the Penn Quakers to win the award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180120-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 JS Kabylie season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was JS Kabylie's 40th season in the Algerian top flight. They competed in National 1, the Algerian Cup and the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180120-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 JS Kabylie season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 25 September 2005.Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180120-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 JS Kabylie season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180121-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Japan Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004\u201305 Japan Figure Skating Championships was the 73rd edition of the event. They were held from December 24 through 26, 2004 at the Shinyokohama Stake Center in Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture. Skaters competed on the senior level in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The competition was used to decide Japan's entries to the 2005 World Championships and the 2005 Four Continents Championships. The entries to the 2005 World Junior Championships were decided at the Japanese Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180121-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Japan Figure Skating Championships, Japan Junior Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004\u201305 Japan Junior Figure Skating Championships took place between November 20 and 21, 2004 at the Osaka Pool arena in Osaka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 85], "content_span": [86, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180121-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Japan Figure Skating Championships, International team selections, World Championships\nFollowing the national championships, Honda, Arakawa, and Ando were assigned to the World team. All other places were filled following the 2005 Four Continents Championships, with the highest placing Japanese skater earning the available Worlds spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 94], "content_span": [95, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180122-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Jordan League\nThe 2004\u201305 Jordan League was the 53rd season of Jordan Premier League, the top-flight league for Jordanian association football clubs. The championship was won by Al-Wehdat, while Al-Ahli and That Ras were relegated. A total of 10 teams participated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180123-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Juventus F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Juventus Football Club's 107th in existence and 103rd consecutive season in the top flight of Italian football. Juventus won the league title for the 28th time in this season, however, the following year's Calciopoli stripped Juventus of this title and sent them to Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180123-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Juventus F.C. season, Season summary\nJuventus Football Club returned to domestic glory in the first season under Fabio Capello's reign. The former Juventus midfielder had a positive influence on the Juventus squad, and it seemed as though he had led the club to its 28th league title. However, that was all to change a year afterwards when Calciopoli sent Juventus to Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180123-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Juventus F.C. season, Season summary\nOn the pitch in 2004\u201305, Swedish signing Zlatan Ibrahimovi\u0107 was the biggest positive surprise. Not known as an outright goalscorer at previous club Ajax, Ibrahimovi\u0107 hit the back of the net 16 times in his debut Serie A season. Another signing, Fabio Cannavaro, gave the team the stability it had lacked in the 2003\u201304 season, and helped the defense to be rock-solid. Juventus conceded just 27 goals throughout the league season and this, combined with the 67 goals scored, gave the club both the best defence and best attack of 2004\u201305 in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180123-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Juventus F.C. season, Season summary\nThe lowest point of the season was not being able to get past Liverpool in the quarter-finals Champions League. Sami Hyypi\u00e4 and Luis Garc\u00eda scored early goals at Anfield, from which Juventus could not recover, despite a second half goal by Fabio Cannavaro that meant they could go through to a semi-final showdown with Chelsea if they won the return leg in Turin just 1\u20130. In this second leg, Ibrahimovi\u0107 missed a golden chance when all he had to do was turn in a Gianluca Zambrotta cross. After that, Juventus failed to pose any threat to the well-organized English side. Liverpool would go on to win the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180123-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Juventus F.C. season, Players, Squad information\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180123-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Juventus F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180124-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KBL season\nThe 2004\u201305 Anycall Professional Basketball season was the ninth season of the Korean Basketball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180125-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KF La\u00e7i season\nThe 2004\u201305 was KF La\u00e7i's fourth season competing in the Kategoria Superiore. It covered a period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005. They were relegated back down to Albanian First Division after just one season in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180125-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KF La\u00e7i season, Season overview\nLa\u00e7i set very negative records during its one-season stay at top flight. They did not win any games, and were able to gain only 2 points from 2 draws. They also set the record for the most consecutive losses, 31, and the record most consecutive matches without taking points, also 31. La\u00e7i also changed management four times, starting with Ritvan Kulli, Hysen Dedja, Luan Metani and Sinan Bardhi. They all failed to make an impact. La\u00e7i also become the first team to concede more than 100 goals in one season and the first with less goals in one season, netting only 13. Seven hat-tricks were scored against La\u00e7i during this season, a record in Albanian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180126-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KF Tirana season\nThe 2004\u201305 season is Klubi i Futbollit Tirana's 66th competitive season, 66th consecutive season in the Kategoria Superiore and 84th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup\nThe 87th edition of the KNVB Cup (at the time called Amstel Cup) started on 7 August 2004. The final was played on 29 May 2005. PSV beat Willem II 4\u20130, winning the trophy for the eighth time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup, Participants\nA total of 85 clubs participated in this year's edition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup, First round\nThe matches of the first round were played on August 7 and 10, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup, Second round\nThe matches of the second round were played on September 21, and 22, 2005. NEC Nijmegen received a bye for the first round and entered the tournament here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup, Third round\nThe matches of the third round were played on November 9, and 10, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup, Round of 16\nThe matches were played on January 25, 26 and 27, 2005. Six Eredivisie clubs entered the tournament here, because they had been playing in the Champions League and UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180127-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 KNVB Cup, Final\nPSV also won the Dutch Eredivisie championship, thereby taking the double. They would participate in the Champions League, so finalists Willem II could play in the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180128-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team represented the University of Kansas Jayhawks for the NCAA Division I men's 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by Bill Self in his second season as head coach. The team played its home games at Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kansas. The Jayhawks finished the season with a record of 23\u20137, 12\u20134 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for first place in conference. The season marked the first of an NCAA record-setting 14 consecutive conference championships for Kansas. They lost to Oklahoma State in the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 3 seed in the Syracuse Region. The Jayhawks were upset in the First Round by Bucknell on a last second shot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180128-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Jayhawks finished the 2003\u201304 season with a record of 24\u20139, 12\u20134 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for second place in conference. They lost to Texas in the semifinals of the Big 12 Tournament and received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Jayhawks advanced to the Elite Eight, losing to Georgia Tech.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180129-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Karnataka State Film Awards\nThe 2004\u201305 Karnataka State Film Awards, presented by Government of Karnataka, to felicitate the best of Kannada Cinema released in the year 2004. The awards were announced on 21 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180129-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Karnataka State Film Awards, Jury\nA committee headed by Kodalli Shivaram was appointed to evaluate the feature films awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 41], "content_span": [42, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180130-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kategoria Superiore\nThe 2004\u201305 Kategoria Superiore was the 69th season of top-tier football in Albania and the seventh season under the name Kategoria Superiore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180130-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kategoria Superiore, Results\nEach team plays every opponent four times, twice at home and twice away, for a total of 36 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180131-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kategoria e Par\u00eb\nThe 2004\u201305 Kategoria e Par\u00eb was the 58th season of a second-tier association football league in Albania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180132-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kazakhstan Hockey Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 Kazakhstan Hockey Championship was the 13th season of the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship, the top level of ice hockey in Kazakhstan. Eight teams participated in the league, and Kazzinc-Torpedo won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180133-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kent Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Kent Football League season was the 39th in the history of Kent Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180133-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kent Football League, Clubs\nThe league featured 16 clubs which competed in the previous season, no new clubs joined the league this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180134-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball team represented University of Kentucky. The head coach was Tubby Smith. The team was a member of the Southeast Conference and played their home games at Rupp Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180135-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kilmarnock F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Kilmarnock's sixth consecutive season in the Scottish Premier League, having competed in it since its inauguration in 1998\u201399. Kilmarnock also competed in the Scottish Cup and the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180135-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kilmarnock F.C. season, Summary, Season\nKilmarnock finished seventh in the Scottish Premier League with 49 points. They reached the third round of the League Cup, losing to Hearts and the fourth round of the Scottish Cup, also losing to Hearts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180136-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Kuwaiti Premier League\n14 teams took part in the 2004\u201305 season of the Kuwaiti Premier League with Al Qadisiya Kuwait winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180137-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEB 2 season\nThe 2004\u201305 LEB 2 season was the 5th season of the LEB Plata, second league of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto and third division in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180137-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEB 2 season, Competition format\n16 teams play the regular season. This is a round robin, where each team will play twice against every rival. After the regular season, the eight first qualified teams played a playoff, were the two finalists promoted to LEB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180137-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEB 2 season, Competition format\nThe last qualified team was relegated to Liga EBA, with the loser of the relegation playoffs, played by the 14th and the 15th qualified teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180137-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEB 2 season, Competition format\nIf two or more teams have got the same number of winning games, the criteria of tie-breaking are these:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180138-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEB season\nThe 2004\u20132005 LEB season was the 9th season of the Liga Espa\u00f1ola de Baloncesto, second tier of the Spanish basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180138-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEB season, LEB Oro Playoffs\nThe two winners of the semifinals are promoted to Liga ACB.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180139-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEN Euroleague\nThe 2004\u201305 LEN Euroleague was the 42nd edition of LEN's premier competition for men's water polo clubs. It ran from 29 September 2004 to 21 May 2005, and it was contested by thirty five teams from fifteen countries. CN Posillipo defeated defending champion Budapest Honv\u00e9d in the final to win its third title, while Pro Recco was third and Jug Dubrovnik fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180139-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LEN Euroleague, Knockout stage, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 30 March, and the second legs were played on 20 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 54], "content_span": [55, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180140-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 LNAH season\nThe 2004\u201305 LNAH season was the ninth season of the Ligue Nord-Am\u00e9ricaine de Hockey (before 2004 the Quebec Semi-Pro Hockey League), a minor professional league in the Canadian province of Quebec. 10 teams participated in the regular season, and Radio X de Quebec won the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180141-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 La Liga\nThe 2004\u201305 La Liga season, the 74th since its establishment, started on 28 August 2004 and finished on 29 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180141-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 La Liga, Teams\nTwenty teams competed in the league\u00a0\u2013 the top seventeen teams from the previous season and the three teams promoted from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n. The promoted teams were Levante (playing top flight football for the first time in thirty nine years), Getafe (playing in the top flight for the first time ever) and Numancia (returning after a three-year absence). They replaced Valladolid, Celta de Vigo and Murcia after spending time in the top flight for eleven, twelve and one years respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180141-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 La Liga, Awards, Pichichi Trophy\nThe Pichichi Trophy is awarded to the player who scores the most goals in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180141-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 La Liga, Awards, Zamora Trophy\nThe Zamora Trophy is awarded to the goalkeeper with least goals to games ratio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180141-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 La Liga, Awards, Fair Play award\nThis season, the award was not published neither given to any club due to an administrative affair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180142-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Latvian Hockey League season\nThe 2004-05 Latvian Hockey League season was the 14th season of the Latvian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Latvia. Eight teams participated in the league, and HK Riga 2000 won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180143-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lebanese Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the Lebanese Premier League was the 44th season of Top-Flight Professional League Football (soccer) in Lebanon. This season featured 11 clubs once more from across the nation. Two of the competing teams were eligible for qualifying for international competitions(AFC Cup for 1st Position and FA Cup Winners while 2nd and 3rd enter the Arab Champions League) while the bottom 3 would be relegated to make way for 2 teams from the 2004\u201305 Second Division for 2005\u201306 season. This Due to the league being reduced to 10 teams for the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Leeds United competed in the Football League Championship, having been relegated from the Premier League at the end of the previous season after 14 years in the top flight. With debts of over \u00a3100 million, Leeds were not expected to make a push for an automatic return to the Premiership, with preventing a second successive relegation the priority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Season summary\nIn 2004\u201305 season, Leeds began signing players prepared to accept lower wages. The club were eventually forced to sell both their training ground, for \u00a34.2m, and their Elland Road stadium in the autumn of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Season summary\nOn 21 January 2005, Krasner announced the sale of a 50% stake to Ken Bates for \u00a310m and Bates became the club's new chairman, replacing Krasner. This investment effectively saved Leeds United from going into administration. Bates had previously headed three other league football clubs, most famously Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Season summary\nBlackwell was forced to sell most of the remaining players, including Aaron Lennon; somehow he managed to build a team using loan players and experienced professionals nearing the end of their careers. Despite a promising opening day win against Derby County, Leeds's form at the start of the 2004\u201305 Coca-Cola Championship was little better than in the previous season, and they spent the first half of the campaign looking in serious danger of a second successive relegation. Their form gradually picked up after the club was taken over by Bates and Leeds finished in a relatively safe 14th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180144-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leeds United A.F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A\nThe 2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A season, known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons, was the 83rd season of the Lega Basket Serie A, the highest professional basketball league in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A\nThe regular season ran from October 3, 2004 to May 2005, 18 teams played 34 games each. The top 8 teams made the play-offs whilst the lowest ranked team, Sicc Cucine Jesi and the bankrupt club Scavolini Pesaro, were relegated to the Legadue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A\nClimamio Bologna won their second title by winning the playoff finals series against Armani Jeans Milano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A, Regular Season 2004/05\nGuido Saibene (next 1 game, 0-1) Svetislav Pe\u0161i\u0107 (last 16 games, 9-7)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A, Regular Season 2004/05\nMaurizio Bartocci (next 1 game, 0-1) Attilio Caja (next 11 games, 5-6) Maurizio Bartocci (last 15 games, 8-7)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A, Regular Season 2004/05\nGianni Molina (next 1 game, 0-1) Ruben Magnano (last 25 games, 10-15)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180145-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lega Basket Serie A, Regular Season 2004/05\nTeams marked in green qualified for the playoffs. Teams marked in red were relegated to Serie A2. Scavolini Pesaro has gone bankrupt after the season and moved to Serie B, sparing Reggio Calabria relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180146-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leicester City F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Leicester City F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180146-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leicester City F.C. season, Season summary\nLeicester City were hoping to make an immediate return to the FA Premier League following relegation the previous season, but got off to a poor to indifferent start to the season, seeing them drawing too many games and prompting Micky Adams to resign in October despite claims by the club that they wanted him to continue. He was replaced by Hearts' Craig Levein, but he couldn't inspire Leicester to improve and the club finished the season in a disappointing 15th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180146-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leicester City F.C. season, Kit\nLeicester retained the previous season's kit, manufactured by French company Le Coq Sportif and sponsored by Narborough-based bank Alliance & Leicester.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 39], "content_span": [40, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180146-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leicester City F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180146-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Leicester City F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180147-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Libyan Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Libyan Premier League was the 37th edition of the Libyan Premier League, the top tier of Libyan football organised by the Libyan Football Federation. The season started on September 10, 2004, culminating on July 12, 2005. Al Ittihad secured their 11th league title, with newly promoted Urouba finishing as runners-up and champions Al Olomby only managing to finish 3rd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180147-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Libyan Premier League, Competition\nThe season contained 14 sides, who each played each other twice. However, after Nasr and Ahly Tripoli's expulsion from the league on May 9, 2005, all matches that were played against these two clubs were cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180147-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Libyan Premier League, Relegation play-offs\nThe Promotion/Relegation Play-off took place between the 10th placed team Rafik Sorman and the 3rd placed team in the 2004-05 Libyan Second Division Playoffs, Al Wahda. A one-off match took place at the 9 July Stadium. The winner, Rafeeq, retained their top flight place for the next season, and Al Wahda remained in the Libyan Second Division for the 2005-06 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180148-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liechtenstein Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Liechtenstein Cup was the sixteenth season of Liechtenstein's annual cup competition. Seven clubs competed with a total of sixteen teams for one spot in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Cup. Defending champions were FC Vaduz, who have won the cup continuously since 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180149-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Alef\nThe 2004\u20132005 Liga Alef season saw Maccabi Tzur Shalom (champions of the North Division) and Hapoel Bnei Lod (champions of the South Division) winning the title and promotion to 2005\u201306.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180149-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Alef\nAt the bottom, Hapoel Tuba, Maccabi Tur'an (from North division), Hapoel Qalansawe and Hapoel Jaljulia (from South division) were all automatically relegated to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180149-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Alef, Relegation play-offs, North play-off\nThe 12th placed club in Liga Alef North, Maccabi Shefa-'Amr, faced Liga Bet North A and North B runners-up, Hapoel Karmiel and Hapoel Umm al-Fahm. The teams played each other in a round-robin tournament, with all matches held at a neutral venue, Nahariya Municipal Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180149-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Alef, Relegation play-offs, North play-off\nHapoel Umm al-Fahm won the play-offs and was promoted to Liga Alef. Maccabi Shefa-'Amr remained in Liga Alef after Hapoel Majd al-Krum (which relegated from Liga Artzit to Liga Alef) folded during the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180149-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Alef, Relegation play-offs, South play-off\nThe 12th placed club in Liga Alef South, Beitar Giv'at Ze'ev, faced Liga Bet South A and Liga Bet South B runners-up, Hapoel Azor and Ironi Nes Tziona. The teams played each other in a round-robin tournament, with all matches held at a neutral venue, Bat Yam Municipal Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180149-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Alef, Relegation play-offs, South play-off\nIroni Nes Tziona won the play-offs and was promoted to Liga Alef. Beitar Giv'at Ze'ev remained in Liga Alef after a vacancy was created in the South division, following the merger of Liga Artzit club, Maccabi Ramat Amidar, with Hakoah Ramat Gan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 55], "content_span": [56, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180150-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Artzit\nThe 2004\u201305 Liga Artzit season saw Hapoel Ashkelon win the title and promotion to Liga Leumit alongside runners-up Maccabi Be'er Sheva. Hapoel Majd al-Krum were relegated to Liga Alef, whilst Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata, who finished second from bottom, were reprieved after Maccabi Ramat Amidar left the league and merged with Hakoah Ramat Gan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet\nThe 2004\u201305 Liga Bet season saw Maccabi Sektzia Ma'alot (champions of the North A division), Hapoel Bnei Tamra (champions of the North B division), Maccabi Ironi Bat Yam (champions of the South A division) and Hapoel Arad (champions of the South B division) win their regional divisions and promoted to Liga Alef.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet\nThe runners-up in each division entered a promotion/relegation play-offs with the clubs ranked 12th in Liga Alef. In the north section, Hapoel Umm al-Fahm (from North B division) won the play-offs and was promoted. In the south section, Ironi Nes Tziona (from South B division) won the play-offs and was promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet\nAt the bottom, Beitar Acre (from North A division) and Maccabi Bnei Tira (from South A division) were relegated to Liga Gimel, whilst Maccabi Majd al-Krum (from North A division) and Beitar Kiryat Ono (from South A division) folded during the season. However, Maccabi Daliyat al-Karmel, Hapoel Kafr Misr/Nein (from North B division) (from North B division), Moadon Tzeirei Rahat and Maccabi Yehud (from South B division), which finished in the relegation zone, were all reprieved from relegation, after several vacancies were created in Liga Bet for the 2005\u201306 season, mostly due to withdrawals of clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet, North A Division\nDuring the season, Maccabi Majd al-Krum (after 11 matches) folded and its results were annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet, South A Division\nDuring the season, Beitar Kiryat Ono (after 13 matches) folded and its results were annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet, Promotion play-offs, North play-off\nLiga Bet North A and North B runners-up, Hapoel Karmiel and Hapoel Umm al-Fahm faced the 12th placed club in Liga Alef North, Maccabi Shefa-'Amr. The teams played each other in a round-robin tournament, with all matches held at a neutral venue, Nahariya Municipal Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet, Promotion play-offs, North play-off\nHapoel Umm al-Fahm won the play-offs and was promoted to Liga Alef. Maccabi Shefa-'Amr remained in Liga Alef after Hapoel Majd al-Krum (which relegated from Liga Artzit to Liga Alef) folded during the summer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet, Promotion play-offs, South play-off\nLiga Bet South A and Liga Bet South B runners-up, Hapoel Azor and Ironi Nes Tziona faced the 12th placed club in Liga Alef South, Beitar Giv'at Ze'ev. The teams played each other in a round-robin tournament, with all matches held at a neutral venue, Bat Yam Municipal Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180151-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Bet, Promotion play-offs, South play-off\nIroni Nes Tziona won the play-offs and was promoted to Liga Alef. Beitar Giv'at Ze'ev remained in Liga Alef after a vacancy was created in the South division, following the merger of Liga Artzit club, Maccabi Ramat Amidar, with Hakoah Ramat Gan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 53], "content_span": [54, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180152-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Gimel\nThe 2004\u201305 Liga Gimel season saw 99 clubs competing in 8 regional divisions for promotion to Liga Bet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180153-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Leumit\nThe 2004\u201305 Liga Leumit season saw Hapoel Kfar Saba win the title and promotion to the Premier League. Runners-up Maccabi Netanya were also promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180153-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Leumit\nMaccabi Ahi Nazareth (who had been relegated from the Premier League the previous season) and Tzafririm Holon were relegated to Liga Artzit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180154-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liga Nacional de Hockey Hielo season\nThe 2004\u201305 Superliga Espanola de Hockey Hielo season was the 31st season of the Superliga Espanola de Hockey Hielo, the top level of ice hockey in Spain. Seven teams participated in the league, and CH Jaca won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180155-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligat Nashim\nThe 2004\u201305 Ligat Nashim is the seventh season of women's league football under the Israeli Football Association. The league began on 26 January 2005, following a Supreme Court ruling which ordered Minister of Education, Culture and Sport, Limor Livnat to introduce measures to equal funding for women football clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180155-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligat Nashim\nThe league was won by Maccabi Holon, its second title. By winning, Maccabi Holon qualified to 2005\u201306 UEFA Women's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180155-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligat Nashim, League format\nWith a record number of 19 teams registered to play, the league was split into two divisions, Northern and Southern. Following a single round of play, the top four teams in each division progressed to the Championship Group, which was played as double round-robin tournament, while the rest of the teams were placed in the bottom group, which was played as a single round-robin tournament. For the second phase, all points gathered by the teams in the first phase was erased and both groups started with a clean slate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180155-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligat Nashim, Regular season results, Northern Division\nWith 9 teams in the division, teams played 8 matches in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180155-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligat Nashim, Regular season results, Southern Division\nWith 10 teams in the division, teams played 9 matches in the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 63], "content_span": [64, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180156-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligue 1\nThe 2004\u201305 season of Ligue 1 was a very close-run battle. Separating fourth placed Rennes, who enter the UEFA Cup and 18th placed Caen, who get relegated to Ligue 2, were 13 mere points. Lyon were long time leaders and had won the league back in April 2005. On the last day, 4 teams could have got the 4th place guaranteeing a place in the UEFA Cup and any 2 from 6 teams could have been relegated before the final games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180157-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligue 2\nThe Ligue 2 season 2004/2005, organised by the LFP was won by AS Nancy and saw the promotions of AS Nancy, Le Mans UC72 and Troyes AC, whereas Angers SCO and SC Bastia were relegated to National.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180158-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligue Magnus season\nThe 2004\u201305 Ligue Magnus season was the 84th regular season of the ice hockey elite league in France and the first to take the name of Ligue Magnus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180158-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligue Magnus season, Results, Relegation matches\nClermont-Ferrand faces Caen, vice champion of Division 1 in two matches the 23 and 26 April 2005. After a tie in the first leg match 4-4, Caen won the serie in the second leg matches with a victory 8 to 2. Caen is promoted in Ligue Magnus at the expense of Clermont-Ferrand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180158-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ligue Magnus season, Season Champion\nClermont is relegated in Division 1, but due to financial difficulties, the club filed for bankruptcy. For similar reasons, Tours and Mulhouse were not allowed by the federation to rejoin ligue Magnus the next season. Tours is relegated to Division 2, Mulhouse filed for bankruptcy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180159-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lille OSC season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 60th season in the existence of Lille OSC and the club's fifth consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Lille participated in this season's editions of the Coupe de France, Coupe de la Ligue, the UEFA Intertoto Cup and UEFA Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180159-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lille OSC season, Competitions, UEFA Cup, Group stage\nThe group stage draw was held on 5 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180160-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Lithuanian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Lithuanian Hockey League season was the 14th season of the Lithuanian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Lithuania. Four teams participated in the league, and SC Energija won the championship. SC Energija received a bye until the finals, as they played in the Latvian Hockey League. Sturm Kaliningrad from Russia participated in the league, but were ineligible for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 113th season of competitive football played by Liverpool. It began on 1 July 2004 and concluded on 30 June 2005, with competitive matches played between August and May. Liverpool finished fourth in the previous Premier League season. However, they were unable to improve on this position finishing in fifth place, 37 points behind eventual winners Chelsea with a record of 17 wins, 7 draws and 14 defeats. Liverpool fared better in cup competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season\nAlthough they were eliminated by Burnley in the third round of the FA Cup, they reached the final of the League Cup, which they lost 3\u20132 to Chelsea. Despite their lack of success domestically, Liverpool were successful in the UEFA Champions League. They won the competition for the fifth time, defeating Italian team Milan in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season\nLiverpool acquired eight players in the transfer market, including Djibril Ciss\u00e9, Xabi Alonso and Luis Garc\u00eda. They were supplemented by the arrival of Mauricio Pellegrino, Fernando Morientes and Scott Carson during the January transfer window. A total of four players departed including Markus Babbel, Danny Murphy, Michael Owen and St\u00e9phane Henchoz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season\nThirty-two different players represented the club in four competitions, and there were 17 different goalscorers. Liverpool's top goalscorer were Milan Baro\u0161, Steven Gerrard and Garc\u00eda with 13 goals each. Defender John Arne Riise made the most appearances during the season with 57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, Premier League\nA total of 20 teams competed in the Premier League in the 2004\u201305 season. Each team played 38 matches; two against every other team and one match at each club's stadium. Three points were awarded for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats. At the end of the season the top two teams qualified for the group stages of the UEFA Champions League; teams in third and fourth needed to play a qualifier. The provisional fixture list was released on 24 June 2004, but was subject to change in the event of clashes with other competitions, international football, inclement weather, or matches being selected for television coverage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, FA Cup\nLiverpool entered the competition in the third round, as a result of their Premier League status. Their opponents in the third round were Burnley. The match was played at Burnley's home ground, Turf Moor, with Liverpool resting several regular first-team players and opting to field \"a collection of reserve and youth team players\" according to The Guardian. The decision was unsuccessful. Burnley won the match 1\u20130 due to an own goal by defender Djimi Traor\u00e9 in the second half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, League Cup\nLiverpool entered the League Cup in the third round due to them qualifying for European competition, their opponents were Millwall. A \"second-string Liverpool\", according to BBC Sport, won 3\u20130 courtesy of a goal from Salif Diao in the first half and two from Milan Baro\u0161 in the second. They were drawn against fellow Premier League team Middlesbrough in the fourth round. Two goals from Neil Mellor secured a 2\u20130 win for Liverpool to progress to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, League Cup\nBen\u00edtez opted to field a reserve side again against Tottenham Hotspur, in a match which went to extra time after a goalless first 90 minutes. Tottenham opened the scoring in the 108th minute when Jermain Defoe scored from a Frederic Kanoute cross. Three minutes before the end, Liverpool were awarded a penalty kick after Kanoute handled the ball in the Tottenham penalty area. Florent Sinama-Pongolle scored from the penalty spot to level the match at 1\u20131 and set up a penalty shoot-out, which Liverpool won 4\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, League Cup\nLiverpool were drawn against Championship side Watford in the semi-finals. Played over two-legs, Liverpool won the first leg at Anfield 1\u20130 after Gerrard scored in the 56th minute. The second leg at Watford's home ground, Vicarage Road, was \"a game of few chances\" according to BBC Sport. A goal from Gerrard in the 77th minute secured a 1\u20130 victory, and a 2\u20130 win on aggregate to secure Liverpool's place in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, League Cup\nLiverpool faced Chelsea in the final, which Ben\u00edtez felt would favour Liverpool: \"There will be more pressure on them, they have spent a lot of money and are the best team in the league, because they are in first position, but they've lost their last two important games. That means they will be under pressure. People will see them as the favourites, I'm sure, so the pressure is on them and not us.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, League Cup\nLiverpool took the lead within a minute of the kick-off. A cross from Fernando Morientes was met by John Arne Riise, who volleyed the ball past Petr \u010cech in the Chelsea goal. It was the fastest goal scored in a League Cup final. The score remained 1\u20130 until the 79th minute when Gerrard scored an own goal, after he headed a Chelsea free-kick into his own goal. The match finished 1\u20131 after 90minutes and wen to extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, League Cup\nChelsea took the lead in the 197th minute when Didier Drogba scored and they extended their lead further six minutes later following a Mateja Ke\u017eman goal. Liverpool scored through Antonio N\u00fa\u00f1ez a minute later, but they were unable to score another goal and Chelsea won the match 3\u20132 to win the League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nAs Liverpool had finished fourth in the league the previous season, they needed to play a qualifying round against Grazer AK to ensure progression into the group stages. Liverpool won the first leg 2\u20130 courtesy of two goals from Gerrard. They lost the second leg 1\u20130 at Anfield, a Mario Toki\u0107 goal securing victory for Grazer, but they progressed 2\u20131 on aggregate. Liverpool were drawn in Group A along with Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a, Monaco and Olympiacos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nLiverpool won their first match against Monaco at Anfield 2\u20130, courtesy of goals from Ciss\u00e9 and Baro\u0161. A 1\u20130 loss against Olympiacos at the Karaiskakis Stadium was the first time Liverpool had lost to Greek opposition. Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a were the opposition in Liverpool's third group game at Anfield. The match ended 0\u20130 with Liverpool dominating the game and lacking a 'cutting edge' according to BBC Sport. Liverpool won the reverse fixture at the Estadio Riazor 1\u20130 thanks to an own goal by Deportivo defender Jorge Andrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0009-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nA 1\u20130 defeat to Monaco at the Stade Louis II meant Liverpool needed to win their final match against Olympiacos at Anfield by two clear goals to progress to the knockout stages. Liverpool started the game well but went behind to a free-kick from Rivaldo. This meant they needed to score three goals to ensure they progressed to the next round. Sinama-Pongolle levelled the scores in the 47th minute after coming on as a substitute at half-time. Mellor scored a second in the 81st minute to put Liverpool ahead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0009-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nIn the 86th minute, Gerrard's \"stunning half-volley, speared majestically from the edge of the area,\" according to The Guardian secured a 3\u20131 victory and Liverpool's place in the round of 16. Gerrard was delighted with the result after it looked like Liverpool might exit the competition after falling a goal behind in the first half: \"I'd be a liar if I didn't say I thought we were down and out at the break. They were spoiling the game and were strong defensively, so there was a mountain to climb at half-time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nLiverpool were drawn against Bayer Leverkusen of Germany in the round of 16. Liverpool took the lead in the first leg at Anfield when Garc\u00eda scored in the 15th minute. Riise scored from a free-kick in the 35th minute to make it 2\u20130 and Hamman added a third in the second half. An error in the last minute by goalkeeper Jerzy Dudek saw Fran\u00e7a score for Leverkusen to make the score 3\u20131 at full-time. The second leg at Leverkusen's home ground, the BayArena finished with the same scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nTwo goals in quick succession in the first half by Garc\u00eda, was followed by a goal from Baro\u0161 in the second half. Jacek Krzyn\u00f3wek scored late in the match, but Liverpool's 3\u20131 victory meant they won 6\u20132 on aggregate to progress to the quarter-finals. Liverpool were drawn against Juventus. This was the first time the clubs had met since the Heysel Stadium disaster at the 1985 European Cup Final, where 39 people, many of them Juventus supporters, lost their lives.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0010-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nLiverpool took the lead in the first leg at Anfield in the tenth minute when Sami Hyypi\u00e4 scored and Garc\u00eda added a second fifteen minutes later. Juventus replied in the second half, when Liverpool goalkeeper Scott Carson allowed a Fabio Cannavaro header to slip through his fingers. But they were unable to score a second goal and the match finished 2\u20131. Liverpool captain Gerrard was pleased with the result and optimistic about their prospects in the second leg: \"I was delighted with the first half, unfortunately the first half and second half were very different.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0010-0003", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nThey pressed us back after the break and made it difficult for us to keep the ball. The blow was conceding a goal in the second half,\" added the captain Steven Gerrard. \"I'm sure Scott will be disappointed with it but to be fair to him he stopped one in the first half and it was one of the best saves I've seen all season. It means we've got to keep a clean sheet over there, but we won't play for a 0-0 in the second leg. We've got the ability to nick a goal so that will be our game plan and if we keep a clean sheet we're into the last four.\" Liverpool progressed to the semi-finals after a 0\u20130 draw in a game of few chances at Juventus' home ground, the Stadio Delle Alpi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nLiverpool faced Chelsea in the semi-finals, who were the favourites as they had already beaten Liverpool three times during the season. The match was a close match with both sides close to scoring in the early stages. Riise and Baros missed chances for Liverpool, while Didier Drogba and Frank Lampard had chances to put Chelsea in the lead too. The second half was a 'sterile affair' according to BBC Sport with neither side able to score the match finished 0\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0011-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nDespite failing to score an away goal, Ben\u00edtez was confident Liverpool would progress following the second leg at Anfield: \"It is a good situation. We have very good supporters, they will be with us at Anfield and we need to win, we always have confidence and we need to believe in ourselves. We played a good game. The team worked hard and controlled the game, they had chances but a draw is a good result.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0011-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nLiverpool took the lead within the first four minutes at Anfield, when Baros beat Chelsea goalkeeper Petr Cech to the ball and Garc\u00eda tapped the ball into Chelsea goal, despite the protestations of Chelsea players who claimed the ball hadn't gone over the line. For the remainder of the match, Liverpool withstood Chelsea's attacks, whose best chance came in the final minute when Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen's volley went just wide of the Liverpool goal. A 1\u20130 victory meant Liverpool progressed to their first European Cup final since 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0011-0003", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nChelsea manager was critical of the officials following over the Liverpool goal: \"The linesman scored the goal. No one knows if that shot went over the line and you must be 100%, but they are in the final and from my heart I hope they win it. The night belongs to them and I don't want to criticise them.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0011-0004", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, UEFA Champions League\nGoalscorer Garc\u00eda was adamant the ball was over the line when he scored and was delighted to have reached a final in his first season at the club: \"I hooked the ball towards the goal, I felt it went in and I am very happy now. When I arrived here last summer I was intent on winning some trophies, but I do not expect to get to the Champions League final in my first season in England. For us to get to the final is beyond all our dreams, and for me to score the goal is a special moment too.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, Squad statistics\nLiverpool used a total of 32 players during the season, with 17 different goalscorers. There were also five squad members who did not make an appearance during the season. Riise featured in 57 matches, the most of any Liverpool player during the campaign. Carragher was the only player to appear in every Premier League match. Baro\u0161, Gerrard and Garc\u00eda were topscorers with 13 goals each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180161-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Liverpool F.C. season, Squad statistics\nNumbers in parentheses denote appearances as substitute. Players with number struck through and marked left the club during the playing season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180162-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Livingston F.C. season\nSeason 2004-05 saw Livingston compete in the Scottish Premier League. They also competed in the League Cup and the Scottish Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180162-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Livingston F.C. season, Summary\nLivingston finished third bottom of the SPL in 10th place and reached the Quarter Finals of both the Scottish Cup and Co-operative Insurance Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180162-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Livingston F.C. season, Summary, Managers\nLivingston started the season under Allan Preston who was sacked by the club on 5 November 2004 with Richard Gough being appointed as his replacement on 30 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180163-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Logan Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Logan Cup was a first-class cricket competition held in Zimbabwe from 26 October 2004 \u2013 29 April 2005. It was won by Mashonaland, who won five of their six matches to top the table with 97 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180164-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Clippers season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Clippers' 35th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 21st season in Los Angeles. With a young team with some promising talent led by Elton Brand and Corey Maggette, the Clippers got off to a solid start with an 11\u20137 record, but then lost five straight as they played around .500 for the first half of the season. However, after holding a 23\u201323 record as of February 3, the team struggled and lost eight straight games, losing nine of their twelve games during the month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180164-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Clippers season\nThe Clippers continued to struggled as they finished third in the Pacific Division with a 37\u201345 record, which was three more wins than their crosstown rival, the Los Angeles Lakers. However, the Clippers missed the playoffs for eight straight seasons. Bobby Simmons was named Most Improved Player of The Year averaging 16.4 points per game. Following the season, he left to sign as a free agent with the Milwaukee Bucks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180164-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Clippers season, Transactions\nThe Clippers were involved in the following transactions during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 49], "content_span": [50, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180165-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Kings season\nThe 2004\u201305 Los Angeles Kings season would have been the King's 38th season in the National Hockey League (NHL). However, the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout cancelled all of the scheduled games for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180165-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Kings season, Transactions\nThe Kings were involved in the following transactions during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180166-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Lakers season\nThe 2004\u201305 Los Angeles Lakers season was the franchise's 57th season in the National Basketball Association, and 45th in the city of Los Angeles. The previous season had ended with a crushing defeat in five games to the Detroit Pistons in the 2004 NBA Finals, despite the Lakers being heavily favored. The 2004\u201305 season is best remembered as a tough one for the Lakers, winning only 34 games and missing the playoffs for the first time in 11 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180166-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Lakers season\nIt was also the Lakers first season since 1995-96 without either center Shaquille O'Neal, who was traded to the Miami Heat for Lamar Odom, Caron Butler, Brian Grant, and future draft picks or point guard Derek Fisher, both of whom had been instrumental in the Lakers' previous three championship victories, on the roster. The Lakers had the worst team defensive rating in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180166-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Los Angeles Lakers season\nPhil Jackson was also fired in the offseason and replaced by former Houston Rockets head coach Rudy Tomjanovich. However, in February of 2005, Tomjanovich's struggle with cancer forced him to resign and be replaced by Jackson's assistant coach Frank Hamblen for the rest of the season. Following the season, Butler was traded to the Washington Wizards, and Vlade Divac retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180167-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team represented the University of Louisville during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Louisville's 91st season of intercollegiate competition. The Cardinals competed in Conference USA and were coached by Rick Pitino, who was in his fourth season. The team played home games at Freedom Hall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180167-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball team\nThe Cardinals won the Conference USA Tournament Championship (their 2nd), defeating Memphis 75-74. Louisville defeated West Virginia 93-85 (OT) to win the NCAA Tournament Albuquerque Regional and advance to the Final Four (their 8th) where they fell to eventual runner-up Illinois 72-57. The Cardinals finished with a 33-5 (14-2) record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 119th season in the history of Luton Town Football Club, and club's 84th consecutive year in the Football League. Luton ended the season as champions of the rebranded League One competition, formerly known as the Second Division, with 98 points, achieving promotion to the Championship; the club's first elevation to that level since the 1981\u201382 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season\nThe club spent very little money bringing in new players to win the title, instead relying on existing players, use of the loan system and the robust youth set-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season\nMuch of the success was built on a strong defence, headed by youth graduate Curtis Davies, which let in the fewest goals of any team; the leadership of combative midfielder and captain Kevin Nicholls, who unlike in previous years remained uninjured for the whole season; and the team's ability to score late goals \u2013 of the 87 goals the team scored in the league, almost a fifth came in the last ten minutes of matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season\nThis article covers the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nWith Luton Town losing up to \u00a3500,000 per month and the very real threat of its history and heritage being destroyed by controversial owner John Gurney, supporters' trust Trust in Luton deliberately placed the club into administrative receivership in July 2003 after taking a controlling interest in the club's major creditor. Gurney was successfully forced out as a result, but administration meant that the club was unable to sign players without special dispensation from the authorities during the 2003\u201304 season and, therefore, a finish of tenth place in the league was viewed by many to be a success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Background\nOn 12 May 2004, four days after the last game of the campaign, businessman Bill Tomlins completed his takeover of the club, securing its immediate future. Manager Mike Newell began the process of keeping key players, committing defenders Chris Coyne and Russell Perrett, midfielders Paul Hughes, Michael Leary and Steve Robinson, and youth players Curtis Davies, Rob Beckwith and Stephen O'Leary to two-year contracts, as well as rejecting an offer from Sheffield Wednesday for leading scorer Steve Howard. Popular striker Adrian Forbes left the club and dropped down to the league below, signing for Swansea City on a free transfer in late June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nExperienced goalkeeper Marlon Beresford returned to Luton, where he had spent three months during the previous season, on a free transfer on 1 July from Barnsley. The same day, midfielder Matthew Spring, who had started his career at Luton and made nearly 300 appearances for the team, joined Championship club Leeds United on a Bosman free transfer. On 12 July 2003\u201304 Player of the Year Emmerson Boyce, another who had graduated through the youth system, turned down the offer of a new contract and joined Premier League club Crystal Palace on a free transfer. The club signed Slovenian goalkeeper Dino Seremet on a two-year contract on 23 July from NK Maribor, the player arriving on a free transfer following a successful trial period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 784]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nAfter five friendly victories against local sides, Luton were brought back to earth with a 4\u20130 home loss to Dutch champions and former European Cup winners Ajax on 23 July. Striker Matthew Blinkhorn joined Luton on a three-month loan from Blackpool a week later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, July\nA 1\u20131 draw with Premier League club Charlton Athletic on 31 July rounded off pre-season, with the first league game of the campaign beginning a week later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nA day before the first game with Oldham Athletic, Luton signed Portsmouth's 21-year-old striker Rowan Vine on a three-month loan, with a view to extending this for the whole season. Vine started in the team that beat Oldham 2\u20131 on 7 August, with goals from Steve Howard and Paul Underwood resulting in a Luton victory in an otherwise even game. Narrow, albeit high-scoring, victories away to Swindon Town and Barnsley pushed Luton into second place in the table, and marked the first time since the 1981\u201382 season that the club had won their first three games of a campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nThe team kept their first clean sheet with a 1\u20130 win over Torquay United on 21 August that pushed them into first place. A week later, Luton won 3\u20131 away to Blackpool in a game they dominated, scoring three goals in the second half to win their third away game \u2013 the same number of away wins achieved in the entirety of the previous season. Howard scored again to make it five goals in five League One games and, including the previous season, ten goals in ten consecutive games. A 1\u20130 home win against AFC Bournemouth two days later, captain Kevin Nicholls scoring the winning goal late on with a 25-yard curling shot, gave Luton a six-point lead at the top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, August\nThese six wins in a row saw Mike Newell presented with the Manager of the Month award, and Steve Howard awarded the Player of the Month trophy for his five goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nYouth player Keith Keane, who had played a number of games in August in place of the injured Kevin Foley, was rewarded for his performances with a two-year professional contract on 3 September. Soon after, on-loan striker Rowan Vine extended his loan until the end of the season following a strong start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nLuton's 100% record came to an end on 4 September when they drew 0\u20130 at Sheffield Wednesday. Three days later, the club was knocked out of the League Cup after a 4\u20133 extra time loss to League Two club Boston United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nLuton clearly did not dwell on either of these setbacks, winning their next three league games to extend the gap to second-placed Tranmere Rovers to nine points. In this period, the club signed striker Gary McSheffrey on a one-month loan, a player who had proved a success in a three-month loan spell the previous season. First-choice goalkeeper Marlon Beresford was injured in a 2\u20131 home win against Peterborough United, meaning back-up Dino Seremet made his debut as a substitute. Seremet's first start did not go so well, as Luton were knocked out of the Football League Trophy, again by lower league opposition, in a 2\u20130 loss to Swansea City on 28 September. Youth players Calvin Andrew and Leon Barnett both signed three-year professional contracts the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, September\nA Luton player won the League One Player of the Month award for the second month in a row, Rowan Vine picking up the award after scoring three goals in four league games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nA 1\u20131 draw away to closest rivals Tranmere Rovers on 2 October was described as \"the toughest test for [the team] yet\" by Mike Newell. Following a 3\u20130 win against Hartlepool United six days later, the club had gone over a quarter of the league season unbeaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nThis record quickly evaporated with three defeats in a row, to Huddersfield Town, Walsall, and a heavy 3\u20130 loss against Hull City, who had now overtaken Tranmere as Luton's nearest rivals. Newell refused to be flustered despite dropping nine points, stating that \"there isn't a lot wrong\" and that bad luck had played a part in the defeats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, October\nThe injury to Marlon Beresford and poor goalkeeping performances from Dino Seremet led Luton to sign Simon Royce on a one-month loan from Charlton Athletic on 29 October. A 4\u20130 home win against Bradford City came one day later, with Ahmet Brkovi\u0107 opening the scoring with a \"sensational\" bicycle kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nDirector of Football Mick Harford left the club on 5 November to take up the post of assistant manager at Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nThe club remained unbeaten throughout November, winning convincingly against Wrexham and Milton Keynes Dons, drawing against Doncaster Rovers, and claiming an FA Cup first round victory over Southend United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nLuton rejected a bid for Steve Howard during November from Championship club Nottingham Forest, managed by former Luton boss Joe Kinnear. Leon Barnett, who had graduated through the youth team, signed for non-League Aylesbury United on loan for a month on 19 November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, November\nCentral defender Curtis Davies became the third Luton player in four months to win the League One Player of the Month award for his performances in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nLuton secured a place in the FA Cup third round following a 3\u20130 win away to Wycombe Wanderers on 4 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nSteve Howard was sent off early in Luton's game at Brentford on 7 December, with the club losing 2\u20130 in their fourth league defeat of the season and reducing their lead at the top of the table to just one point. However, wins against Port Vale, Bristol City, and Chesterfield allowed Luton to pull out a lead once again. The performances of squad players such as Russell Perrett and Enoch Showunmi, filling in for injuries and suspensions, were cited by Mike Newell as key to these three victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\nOn 16 December, defenders David Bayliss and Ian Hillier both joined League Two club Chester City on one-month loans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, December\n2004 ended in a 2\u20132 home draw with Colchester United, Rowan Vine scoring twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nTwo draws in the league saw Luton usurped as league leaders by Hull City, marking the first time during the season that they had been in a place other than top since 28 August. Luton were then knocked out of the FA Cup with a 2\u20130 home defeat to Brentford on 8 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe loans of David Bayliss and Ian Hillier at Chester City were both extended for a further month on 14 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, January\nThe club returned to the top of the table with their first win in four games, beating bottom-of-the-table Stockport County 3\u20130 on 15 January. Further draws with Colchester United and Tranmere Rovers still left Luton as leaders, as Hull began to drop points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nLeft-back Sol Davis signed a one-year contract extension on 3 February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nOn 5 February, Luton drew for the third time in a row, this time with Huddersfield Town, conceding in the fourth minute of added time. A draw for Hull left them one point behind Luton in the table, with the next match taking place between the two sides at Kenilworth Road one week later. A close match was eventually won by Luton, Ahmet Brkovi\u0107 scoring in the last minute of the game to pull out a four-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, February\nThree further wins in quick succession over Hartlepool United, Bradford City and Walsall saw this four-point gap increase to nine, and even a loss to Port Vale in late February, described by Newell as their \"worst performance of the season\", that ended a 14-game unbeaten league run kept Luton comfortably in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nLuton put the defeat to Port Vale behind them with a 5\u20130 thrashing of Bristol City and then a 3\u20131 win over Swindon Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nInfluential midfielders Kevin Nicholls and Ahmet Brkovi\u0107 both signed one-year contract extensions on 3 March. On 10 March, manager Mike Newell signed a two-year contract extension alongside his assistant manager Brian Stein. Young goalkeeper Dean Brill signed a one-year contract extension on 14 March. Two days later, Wycombe Wanderers rejected a \u00a3100,000 bid from Luton for their top scorer Nathan Tyson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nThe club drew 2\u20132 with Oldham Athletic on 19 March, with a last-minute Steve Howard goal earning a point that saw Hull City close the gap to the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0035-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, March\nNorthern Ireland international striker Warren Feeney signed for Luton on 24 March for a \u00a3150,000 fee from Stockport County, where he had scored 17 goals. A 3\u20131 defeat the next day to Barnsley, coupled with a draw for Hull, meant Luton conceded top place in the table again, though both clubs were still safely above the play-off places. A 4\u20131 win over Torquay United on 28 March, along with Hull losing, lifted Luton back into first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0036-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April\nLuton went the entirety of April without losing or drawing, with consecutive victories against Blackpool, Bournemouth, Milton Keynes Dons, Wrexham and Brentford securing promotion to the Championship and first place in the table; the club's first promotion to the second tier of English football since the 1981\u201382 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0037-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, April\nChris Coyne was awarded the Player of the Month trophy for April, making him the fourth Luton player in nine months to win the accolade, while Mike Newell won the Manager of the Month award for the second time during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0038-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nLuton ended the season with an incident-packed 3\u20133 draw with Doncaster Rovers on 7 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0039-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nThe club had six players named in the League One Team of the Year \u2013 goalkeeper Marlon Beresford; centre-backs Curtis Davies and Chris Coyne; midfielders Kevin Nicholls and Ahmet Brkovi\u0107; and top scorer Steve Howard. Curtis Davies was also named as the overall League One Player of the Year, a notable achievement considering this was the 20-year-old's first full season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180168-0040-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luton Town F.C. season, Review, May and June\nOn 17 May, it was announced that Wrexham's Trinidadian international winger Carlos Edwards would join Luton on a free transfer on 1 July 2005, signing a three-year contract. Lee Mansell, who had played only three times during the season, joined Oxford United on a free transfer on 7 June. Steve Howard, who had been the subject of bids from Sheffield Wednesday, Nottingham Forest and Burnley throughout the season, committed himself to Luton on 16 June by signing a new two-year contract. Midfielder Peter Holmes also agreed a one-year extension to his contract. On 30 June, defender David Bayliss left Luton to join Wrexham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division was the 91st season of top level association football in Luxembourg. The competition ran from 7 August 2004 to 29 May 2005 with F91 Dudelange winning the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Teams\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw the National Division's roster of twelve clubs include:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nThe twelve teams completed the round-robin by playing each other twice (once home and once away) by 24 April. Then, the league divided into three. The top four teams were separated from the rest and formed the 'Title group' . The bottom eight teams were then subdivided into two groups of four, titled 'Relegation group A' and 'Relegation group B' . In the event, the top four were F91 Dudelange, FC Etzella Ettelbruck, Jeunesse Esch, and FC Victoria Rosport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nIn each of the three mini-leagues, each team played each of the three other teams in the mini-league twice (once home and once away). To these results were added the 22 results of the first stage. The overall points totals (and goal difference, etc.) were used to determine each club's position in its respective mini-league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nAfter calculating the final results after 28 games, F91 Dudelange, the top team in the title group, was declared the league champion. The fourth-placed team in each of the relegation groups (Union Luxembourg and CA Spora Luxembourg in groups A and B respectively) was relegated to the Division of Honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Format\nThis format is no longer used; the current season, 2006\u201307 uses a straightforward round-robin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, European qualification\nLuxembourg was assigned one spot in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, for the league champions; it was also assigned two spots in the first qualifying round of the UEFA Cup, for the runners-up and the winners of the Luxembourg Cup. As league champions, F91 Dudelange qualified for the Champions League. Etzella Ettelbruck qualified for the UEFA Cup as runners-up. CS P\u00e9tange qualified for the UEFA Cup by the Luxembourg Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Team changes for 2005\u201306 season\nThe champions and runners-up of the Division of Honour, UN K\u00e4erjeng 97 and US Rumelange, were promoted automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180169-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Luxembourg National Division, Team changes for 2005\u201306 season\nAfter the 2004\u201305 season ended, the two relegated clubs, Spora Luxembourg and Union Luxembourg, went ahead with the pre-arranged amalgamation with CS Alliance 01, another National Division club based in Luxembourg City. The new club, Racing FC Union Luxembourg, took Alliance 01's place in the National Division, leaving no teams to be relegated to the Division of Honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 69], "content_span": [70, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180170-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian First Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Macedonian First League was the 13th season of the Macedonian First Football League, the highest football league of Macedonia. The first matches of the season were played on 8 August 2004 and the last on 29 May 2005. Pobeda were the defending champions, having won their second title. The 2004-05 champions were Rabotnichki who had won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180170-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian First Football League, Results\nEvery team will play three times against each other team for a total of 33 matches. The first 22 matchdays will consist of a regular double round-robin schedule. The league standings at this point will then be used to determine the games for the last 11 matchdays.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180171-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian Football Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Macedonian Football Cup was the 13th season of Macedonia's football knockout competition. FK Sloga Jugomagnat were the defending champions, having won their third title. The 2004\u201305 champions were FK Bashkimi who won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180171-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian Football Cup, Second round\nThe first legs were played on 22 September and second were played on 27 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180171-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian Football Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 1 December 2004 and second were played on 22 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180171-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian Football Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 6 April and the second on 4 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180172-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Macedonian Second Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Macedonian Second Football League was the thirteenth season since its establishment. It began on 7 August 2004 and ended on 28 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180173-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Magyar Kupa\nThe 2004\u201305 Magyar Kupa (English: Hungarian Cup) is the 65th season of Hungary's annual knock-out cup football competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180174-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese First Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Maltese First Division (known as the MIA First Division for sponsorship reasons) started on 5 September 2004 and finished on 15 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180174-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese First Division\n\u0126amrun Spartans were promoted back to the Premier League after just one season away, following their relegation alongside Balzan Youths in the 2003\u201304 Premier League season. Mosta joined \u0126amrun in securing place in the Premier League. Balzan suffered a consecutive relegation, and alongside Gozo were relegated to the 2005\u201306 Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180175-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese Premier League\nThe 2003\u201304 Maltese Premier League (known as the MIA Premier League for sponsorship reasons) was the 25th season of the Maltese Premier League, and the 90th season of top-tier football in Malta. The league started on 7 September 2004 and finished on 8 May 2005. Sliema Wanderers successfully defended last season's league triumph, surpassing Floriana's league title record of 25 championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180175-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nThe following teams were promoted from the First Division at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180175-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese Premier League, Teams\nFrom the previous Premier League season, the following teams were relegated to the First Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180175-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese Premier League, Second round, Championship Pool\nThe teams placed in the first six positions in the league table qualified for the Championship Pool, and the points obtained during the first round were halved (and rounded up) before the start of second round. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the second round: Sliema Wanderers 21 points, Valletta 18, Hibernians 18, Birkirkara 17, Marsaxlokk 15 and Floriana 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 63], "content_span": [64, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180175-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese Premier League, Second round, Relegation Pool\nThe teams which finished in the last four league positions were placed in the Relegation Pool and at the end of the round the two lowest-placed teams were relegated to the First Division. The points obtained during the first round were halved (and rounded up) before the start of second round. As a result, the teams started with the following points before the second round: Piet\u00e0 Hotspurs 10 points, Msida Saint-Joseph 8, St. Patrick 5, Lija Athletic 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180176-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Maltese Second Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Maltese Second Division started on 25 September 2004 and ended on 9 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Manchester City Football Club's third consecutive season playing in the Premier League, the top division of English football, and its eighth season since the Premier League was first created with Manchester City as one of its original 22 founding member clubs. Overall, it was the team's 113th season playing in a division of English football, most of which have been spent in the top flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Team kit\nThe team kit was produced by Reebok and the shirt sponsor was Thomas Cook.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Historical league performance\nPrior to this season, the history of Manchester City's performance in the English football league hierarchy since the creation of the Premier League in 1992 is summarised by the following timeline chart \u2013 which commences with the last season (1991\u201392) of the old Football League First Division (from which the Premier League was formed).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Pre-season, Premier League, Results summary\nLast updated: 15 May 2005 (end of season). Source: Premier League results 2004\u201305", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Pre-season, Premier League, Points breakdown\nPoints against \"Big Four\" teams: 9Points against promoted teams: 11", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 81], "content_span": [82, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Pre-season, Premier League, Biggest & smallest\nBiggest home wins: 4\u20130 vs. Charlton Athletic, 28 August 2004Biggest home defeat: 0\u20132 vs. Manchester United, 13 February 2005 Biggest away win: 1\u20133 vs. Portsmouth, 20 November 2004 Biggest away defeat: 2\u20130 vs. West Bromwich Albion, 22 January 2005 Biggest home attendance: 47,221 vs. Middlesbrough, 15 May 2005 Smallest home attendance: 42,453 vs. Birmingham City, 20 April 2005 Biggest away attendance: 67,863 vs. Manchester United, 7 November 2004 Smallest away attendance: 20,101 vs. Portsmouth, 20 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 83], "content_span": [84, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Playing statistics\nInformation current as of 15 May 2005 (end of season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Playing statistics\nLast updated: 26 February 2011. Source: (for appearances, goals and discipline stats.) All match Reports in Competitive games section above", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 55], "content_span": [56, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180177-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester City F.C. season, Playing statistics, Goalscorers, League Cup and FA Cup\nInformation current as of 15 May 2005 (end of season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 91], "content_span": [92, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Manchester United's 13th season in the Premier League, and their 30th consecutive season in the top division of English football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season\nThe season finished trophyless (only their fourth trophyless season in 17 seasons) for United, who finished third in the Premier League with 77 points. The title went to Chelsea, who finished the season with a record 95 points and lost just one game all season, with the previous season's champions Arsenal finishing runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season\nTheir Champions League campaign ended in the first knockout round at Milan, while they were eliminated from the League Cup by Chelsea in the semi-finals. The last chance of silverware was blown by a Paul Scholes penalty miss against Arsenal in a shoot-out after a goalless draw in the 2005 FA Cup Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season\nOn a more positive note for the club, newly signed 19-year-old striker and leading club goalscorer Wayne Rooney was voted PFA Young Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season\nUnited also ended Arsenal's record-breaking 49-game unbeaten league run with a 2\u20130 home win in late October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nManchester United played their first pre-season fixture of the 2004\u201305 season away to Cobh Ramblers. United won 2\u20131, through goals from Mads Timm and Kenny Cooper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nThe Reds then set off to North America for their pre-season tour, taking part in the ChampionsWorld Series. Their first match, played at the Soldier Field in Chicago, United States against Bayern Munich. After a 0\u20130 draw, the match went to penalties, with Bayern prevailing 4\u20132 in the shoot-out. United's next game of their pre-season tour was against Celtic at the Lincoln Financial Field. Chris Sutton gave Celtic an early lead with a penalty after Jonathan Spector fouled Stiliyan Petrov. Alan Smith equalised for United with a header from a corner kick, but Craig Beattie scored the winner for Celtic after Roy Keane lost possession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nAfter the 2\u20131 loss against Celtic, United played their final game of the tour against Milan in New York City. Like the Bayern game, the game against Milan ended in a draw, after Andriy Shevchenko cancelled out Paul Scholes' early goal. Penalties were required, with United losing again, this time 9\u20138. The result meant that Manchester United ended their pre-season tour of the United States without a win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nAfter returning to England, United played in the Vodafone Cup at Old Trafford, a four-team tournament featuring PSV, Boca Juniors and Urawa Red Diamonds. United played against PSV on 3 August 2004, a Mika\u00ebl Silvestre goal giving them a 1\u20130 win. Two days later, United were scheduled to play their final game, against Urawa Red Diamonds, but it was indefinitely postponed due to an electrical storm. Boca Juniors \u2013 who were beating PSV 1\u20130 on the day, before the abandonment of their match \u2013 won the tournament on a points system that awarded an extra point for each goal scored, bolstered by their 5\u20132 win against Urawa Red Diamonds a few days prior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Pre-season and friendlies\nTwo days after the league campaign started, United played their final friendly, a trip to Lancashire rivals Burnley for Stan Ternent's testimonial. Goals from Paul Scholes, Phil Neville, and Chris Eagles secured a 3\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Community Shield\nAs winners of the 2003\u201304 FA Cup, Manchester United played in the 2004 FA Community Shield against Arsenal. United lost 3\u20131. Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes set up Gilberto Silva to tap home the opening goal for the Gunners. Alan Smith lashed in United's equaliser, but within three minutes Reyes drove home a fierce left-foot shot to restore Arsenal's lead. Ashley Cole's cross deflected in off Mika\u00ebl Silvestre for Arsenal's winning third goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 58], "content_span": [59, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nManchester United opened their Premier League campaign with an away game against Chelsea on 15 August 2004. United lost 1\u20130 through an Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen goal in the 14th minute. The Icelandic striker took advantage of a weak challenge by United goalkeeper Tim Howard to scramble home the winner after 14 minutes. It was harsh on Alex Ferguson's depleted side, who enjoyed the majority of possession but could not cash in. Summer signing Alan Smith headed wide from a good chance and Ryan Giggs missed a similar opportunity with 10 minutes left as Chelsea hung on. This result left United hanging just above the relegation zone in 17th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited got their first win of the season with a 2\u20131 win against Norwich City at Old Trafford. Alan Smith scored the winner in the 49th minute on his home debut for the Red Devils with a volley that added to David Bellion's close-range finish in the 32nd minute that was set up by Smith. Norwich substitute Paul McVeigh pulled a goal back late on when he shot home from 18 yards out but United held on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nAfter a 1\u20131 draw against Blackburn Rovers, which saw Smith score a last-minute equaliser, United's next game was a home game against Everton. United hit the post three times in the match. Cristiano Ronaldo hit the upright with a fizzing drive, as did Smith with a similar effort, and Paul Scholes also saw a shot come back off the post. But United were lucky not to concede a penalty when Mika\u00ebl Silvestre blatantly used his arm to clear the ball from a lurking Duncan Ferguson. In the first half, Louis Saha missed a great chance when he headed wide. It was the only clear-cut opportunity of the opening 45 minutes, with United lacking the cohesion to break down an Everton side content to sit deep and defend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nA third successive draw occurred for United, as they drew 2\u20132 with Bolton Wanderers at the Reebok Stadium. United got an equaliser in injury time through David Bellion, with the ball appearing to come off his arm. Before Bellion's dramatic equaliser, United seemed set to lose after a mix-up between Tim Howard and Mika\u00ebl Silvestre allowed Les Ferdinand to net. Ferdinand's goal came after Kevin Nolan had equalised for Bolton, heading home after his initial shot was blocked. Gabriel Heinze gave United a first-half lead on his debut, but it was not the perfect start he may have expected. This result left United in 11th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nOn 20 September, United moved up three places in the FA Premier League table to 8th after a 2\u20131 home win against their rivals, Liverpool. After Cristiano Ronaldo hit the post early on, Mika\u00ebl Silvestre gave United the lead, ghosting in at the far post to head home Ryan Giggs' free kick. Liverpool drew level soon after the break when Steve Finnan's header was inadvertently turned in by fellow Irishman John O'Shea. But another header from Silvestre secured three points for United, as the Frenchman powered a header past Jerzy Dudek to complete his brace and give United the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFive days later, United travelled to White Hart Lane to face Tottenham Hotspur. Ruud van Nistelrooy's penalty three minutes before the interval ensured the Red Devils won consecutive FA Premier League matches for the first time in the 2004\u201305 season, went up to fifth in the table, and ended Spurs' unbeaten run. Van Nistelrooy, who had a goal ruled out for offside, converted after Erik Edman had fouled John O'Shea. Robbie Keane made a superb block to deny Mika\u00ebl Silvestre, and Paul Robinson saved a David Bellion header as United pushed for a second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nAfter a 1\u20131 home draw with Middlesbrough, United went up to fourth place in the Premier League table, the first time they had been in the top four in the 2004\u201305 season. But United went down two places to 6th after a 0\u20130 draw away to Birmingham City. It was a well-deserved point for Birmingham. Steve Bruce's side had chances to win, with United goalkeeper Roy Carroll denying Emile Heskey with his legs either side of the interval. United, with Wayne Rooney on the bench, rarely troubled Birmingham, but Van Nistelrooy missed the game's best opportunity after 36 minutes. He side-footed straight at goalkeeper Maik Taylor from only six yards as he raced on to Quinton Fortune's cross.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited's next game was a home game against Arsenal. United won 2\u20130. The match, played on 24 October 2004, is known as the Battle of the Buffet, and it ended Arsenal 49-match unbeaten run. Van Nistelrooy got the opener when he stroked in a contentious penalty after Sol Campbell's challenge on Wayne Rooney. Dennis Bergkamp and Thierry Henry had Arsenal's best chances but they were denied by good saves from United keeper Roy Carroll. Rooney slotted in from six yards to complete victory on his 19th birthday. The win helped United reduce the gap on Premier League leaders Arsenal to eight points. It also helped Van Nistelrooy avenge the taunts from Arsenal players after he missed a last-minute spot-kick in the corresponding fixture last season. United went up to 5th with this win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited travelled to Fratton Park to face Portsmouth in their next game. It was a shock 2\u20130 win for Pompey. United paid the price for failing to convert any of their many chances. United had laid siege to the home side's goal early on but Pompey survived and hit back after the break. David Unsworth put them ahead from the spot after Rio Ferdinand tugged back Ricardo Fuller in the area. Cristiano Ronaldo hit the post with a header as United piled on the pressure but Yakubu finished them off when his shot deflected in off Mika\u00ebl Silvestre. It was Pompey's second successive Premier League victory over United at Fratton Park - but it looked unlikely in the early stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nManchester United played at home to their rivals Manchester City on 7 November 2004. The game ended 0\u20130. United were shut out for the second successive Premier League game by a resolute and determined City side, who offered little of an attacking threat. City survived some erratic handling from David James, while Louis Saha scorned United's best chance, heading wide from six yards. United's Alan Smith was sent off for a second bookable offence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited travelled to St James' Park to face Newcastle United in their next FA Premier League game. Alan Shearer and Patrick Kluivert went close for Newcastle before Wayne Rooney volleyed home Darren Fletcher's cross. Shearer eventually levelled the scores with a superb individual goal after dispossessing Wes Brown. But Van Nistelrooy scored from the spot after Shay Given fouled Paul Scholes and then Rooney slotted home from close range to seal victory. The result left United in seventh place, nine points behind Arsenal and eleven behind Chelsea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFollowing a 2\u20130 win over Charlton Athletic, in which veterans Giggs and Scholes scored, United travelled to The Hawthorns to face West Bromwich Albion on 27 November. The Baggies began confidently, but were rocked by first-half injuries to Darren Moore and Cosmin Contra, forcing Bryan Robson into a double change. United broke through on 53 minutes when Scholes latched onto Giggs' back-heel and lashed home a fierce shot. Van Nistelrooy's close-range header made it 2-0, before Scholes nodded in a third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nA week after the win at The Hawthorns, United welcomed Southampton to Old Trafford. United laboured to break down a stubborn Southampton defence in a goalless first half. But Paul Scholes ended the resistance by heading home from close range early in the second half. Wayne Rooney then finished emphatically from Ryan Giggs' pass before Cristiano Ronaldo volleyed the third. With the win over the Saints, United got a fourth consecutive victory in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nAfter a 1\u20131 draw against Fulham, next up against United were Crystal Palace, who travelled to Old Trafford to face United on 18 December 2004. Wayne Rooney missed a penalty for United but Paul Scholes fired in an angled shot to put them ahead. Danny Granville poked in an effort to equalise before United's Alan Smith and rival Joonas Kolkka traded headers to leave the match poised at 2-2. But Emmerson Boyce's own goal, a skilful Scholes strike and John O'Shea's shot rounded off the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited faced Bolton Wanderers at home in their next game, played on Boxing Day. United won 2\u20130. Ryan Giggs scored after just 10 minutes showing exemplary technique to steer the ball into the corner of the net. United struggled to build on the platform of their early goal, Paul Scholes making the game safe with a low shot. If Bolton were able to disrupt United's attacking rhythm for long periods, they proved less successful in troubling Roy Carroll, who had to make just one save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nManchester United ended 2004 with a 1\u20130 away win over Aston Villa on 28 December. Ryan Giggs' left-foot strike in the 41st minute was enough to separate the teams after an entertaining encounter. Giggs had already forced a great save from Thomas S\u00f8rensen before his goal, although at the other end, Lee Hendrie and Liam Ridgewell saw shots saved. Villa pressed after the break and Gareth Barry came close, but Alan Smith hit the bar in the final minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited opened 2005 with a 2\u20130 away win over Middlesbrough on New Year's Day. Darren Fletcher slid the ball in after nine minutes when Mark Schwarzer was only able to parry a cross from Ryan Giggs. Before the goal, Cristiano Ronaldo had drawn an instinctive save from the Boro keeper as well as hitting the woodwork. Late on Giggs wrapped up the points when he pounced on Eric Djemba-Djemba's pass, got in front of Gareth Southgate, before poking the ball past Schwarzer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nOn 4 January, United hosted Tottenham Hotspur in a goalless draw. Minutes before the final whistle, Spurs should have taken the lead after Pedro Mendes' effort from the halfway line was spilled into the goal by an out-of-position Roy Carroll. He pushed the ball out, but only after it had crossed the line; however, the officials were unable to tell whether a goal had been scored and allowed play to continue. United then almost won in the dying seconds as a Gabriel Heinze free-kick was brilliantly saved by Paul Robinson. Earlier, Spurs' No\u00e9 Pamarot almost gifted United a goal, sending an attempted clearance against the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nEleven days after the match with Spurs, Manchester United travelled to Anfield to face their rivals Liverpool. United won 1\u20130, thanks to Wayne Rooney's 21st-minute goal. Jerzy Dudek allowed Rooney's tame 25-yard shot to slide in to gift the former Everton striker a goal in front of The Kop. United deserved their victory, despite having Wes Brown sent off for two bookable offences after 64 minutes. Roy Keane hit the bar, while Fernando Morientes had a quiet debut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nAfter a 3\u20131 win over Aston Villa at Old Trafford, United travelled to Highbury to face Arsenal on 1 February. United won 4\u20132. Patrick Vieira headed Arsenal ahead from a corner before Ryan Giggs levelled with a deflected shot. Dennis Bergkamp restored Arsenal's lead before two goals from Cristiano Ronaldo and a John O'Shea chip ended the Gunners' long unbeaten home record. Mika\u00ebl Silvestre was sent off in a fiery game - with Vieira and Roy Keane pulled apart beforehand in the tunnel. The win pushed United up to 2nd in the FA Premier League table, their highest position in the 2004\u201305 season so far.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nManchester United stayed second in the Premier League table with a 2\u20130 home win over Birmingham City. United began promisingly, with Cristiano Ronaldo's free-kick saved by Maik Taylor and Ryan Giggs firing wide. Walter Pandiani struck the bar with a ferocious volley as the visitors threatened, while Ronaldo's mis-hit cross also came back off the upright. United captain Roy Keane took advantage of poor defending to put United ahead (his 50th goal for the Red Devils), before Wayne Rooney coolly chipped in to seal the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFor their next game, United travelled crosstown to face rivals Manchester City on 13 February. Wayne Rooney met Gary Neville's cross to the near post with a low shot, which went in via a deflection off Richard Dunne, to put United ahead. Seven minutes later, the unfortunate Dunne hooked a volley over David James' head and into his own net. Steve McManaman wasted City's best chance when he shot wide from three yards in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFollowing a 2\u20131 home win over Portsmouth, with Wayne Rooney scoring a brace, United travelled to Selhurst Park to face Crystal Palace in the next game, played on 5 March. The 10-man Eagles held the Red Devils to a goalless draw. Vassilis Lakis was sent off for two bookable offences after 63 minutes, but a lacklustre United failed to carve out a winner at Selhurst Park. Palace keeper G\u00e1bor Kir\u00e1ly saved well from Van Nistelrooy either side of the interval, and the Dutchman also wasted two great chances late on. Substitute Rooney was also denied by Kir\u00e1ly as Palace somehow held on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nAfter a 1\u20130 home victory over Fulham, with Cristiano Ronaldo scoring the only goal in the 21st minute, Manchester United hosted Blackburn Rovers on 2 April. The game ended as a 0\u20130 draw, with United's hopes of catching Premier League leaders Chelsea virtually disappearing in a frustrating stalemate. Wayne Rooney and Roy Keane hit the post in the first half as United dominated. Rooney and Mika\u00ebl Silvestre, who had a header cleared off the line by Morten Gamst Pedersen, also brought fine saves from Blackburn keeper Brad Friedel. Paul Scholes also missed a glorious chance for United, while Blackburn rarely threatened, with Pedersen heading their best chance wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0035-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nOn 9 April, Manchester United travelled to Carrow Road to face Norwich City. The game ended as a 2\u20130 win for the Canaries. The game almost certainly ended United's slim title hopes, and kept Norwich's Premier League survival hopes alive. Dean Ashton headed Norwich ahead from David Bentley's free-kick and crossed for Leon McKenzie to volley home. Craig Fleming and Jason Shackell were outstanding in a Canaries defence that thwarted United's subdued strikeforce. The closest the Red Devils came was when Wayne Rooney saw his injury-time shot tipped over by Norwich keeper Robert Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0036-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nOn 20 April, United travelled to Goodison Park to face Everton. United lost 1\u20130. Duncan Ferguson, who scored Everton's winner in their last league victory over United in 1995, headed home after 54 minutes to sink United. Alex Ferguson's men ended the game in shame as Gary Neville and Paul Scholes were sent off after the break. Neville saw red for kicking the ball at a spectator and Scholes for two fouls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0037-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFour days after the loss at Everton, Manchester United hosted Newcastle United. The Red Devils won 2\u20131. Newcastle took a surprise first-half lead when Darren Ambrose pounced on Tim Howard's poor clearance. Wayne Rooney equalised in the 57th minute with a superb volley hit with the outside of his right foot, drawing gasps from the Old Trafford crowd. With time running out, Wes Brown's winner provided another surprise - it was his first goal in 117 league games. The win allowed Manchester United to close the gap on Arsenal to a point, though Ars\u00e8ne Wenger's side had a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0038-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFor their next game, Manchester United travelled to The Valley to face Charlton Athletic. United won 4\u20130. Debutant keeper Stephan Andersen made a wonder save to deny Alan Smith, but the Dane then spilled a Wayne Rooney shot, allowing Paul Scholes to fire home. Scholes set up the second, passing to Darren Fletcher who side-footed home. Talal El Karkouri's mistake allowed Smith to add a third, with a Rooney flick sealing a fine win, while late on Charlton's Chris Perry was sent off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0039-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nUnited hosted West Bromwich Albion in their next game, played on 7 May 2005. The game ended 1\u20131. Ryan Giggs put United ahead with a free-kick after 20 minutes, fired past injured keeper Russell Hoult. Hoult, who suffered a groin injury, was replaced by Tomasz Kuszczak, who made a string of outstanding saves. The Baggies levelled after 61 minutes from Robert Earnshaw's penalty after John O'Shea fouled Geoff Horsfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0040-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nFor their next game, United hosted Chelsea. The game was played on 10 May 2005, and United lost 3\u20131. Van Nistelrooy's superb finish from close-range gave United an early lead, though thereafter the home side struggled to break down Chelsea. Tiago produced a wonderful equaliser, surprising Roy Carroll with an arcing shot, while his pass set up Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen, who dinked in the second. Joe Cole added to United's misery, converting a Frank Lampard cross. The win put Chelsea on 94 points with one match to go of their 38-game season, surpassing Manchester United's record total of 92 in 1993\u201394, which was a 42-game campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0041-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Premier League\nOn 15 May 2005, United travelled to the South Coast to face Southampton for their final 2004\u201305 FA Premier League game. United won 2\u20131, ending Southampton's 27-year stay in the top-flight. Saints had started so well, a Graeme Le Saux corner bundled in via the thigh of Manchester United defender John O'Shea. But United responded quickly and O'Shea crossed for Darren Fletcher to head in. Van Nistelrooy pounced to nod home an Alan Smith cross to put United ahead and results elsewhere ensured the Saints finished bottom of the division. The game also meant United finished in third for the second season running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 56], "content_span": [57, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0042-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nThe draw for the FA Cup third round took place on 9 December 2005, and Manchester United were given a home tie with Conference National side Exeter City. The game, played on 8 January 2005, ended 0\u20130, with Exeter producing a magnificent rearguard action to earn a deserved draw. United fielded a weakened side, but Conference Exeter matched the FA Cup holders to set up a lucrative replay. Exeter's former United apprentice Andy Taylor tested goalkeeper Tim Howard and fired a free-kick narrowly off target. United threatened after the break, with substitute Paul Scholes firing only inches wide deep into injury time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0043-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nFor the replay, played on 19 January, United travelled to the south coast to face Exeter in the replay. United won 2\u20130 to spare their blushes, end brave Exeter's resistance, and set up a home tie against Middlesbrough in the Fourth Round. Cristiano Ronaldo scored the opener, slipping the ball between Paul Jones' legs after just nine minutes. United wasted a host of chances to make it safe as Jones made some great saves, but Wayne Rooney put the tie beyond doubt late on with a cool finish. Exeter had chances of their own, Sean Devine twice volleying wide and Andy Taylor forcing Tim Howard to save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0044-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nManchester United marched into the fifth round with a 3\u20130 win against Middlesbrough at Old Trafford on 29 January. John O'Shea put the defending champions in front after 10 minutes from close range. Wayne Rooney then brilliantly lobbed Mark Schwarzer from fully 40 yards after 67 minutes to double United's lead, before firing home a stunning volley with nine minutes left. Boro's best chance came after 31 minutes, but Roy Carroll dived to save well at the feet of Boudewijn Zenden from only eight yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0045-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nIn the fifth round, Manchester United were paired with fellow FA Premier League side Everton. The game, played on 19 February 2005 at Goodison Park, ended as a 2\u20130 win for the Red Devils. The game saw Wayne Rooney start for United against his boyhood club. Rooney received a hostile reception, but goals in each half from Quinton Fortune and Cristiano Ronaldo silenced the jeers at Goodison Park. Fortune headed home after 23 minutes before Ronaldo scored when Nigel Martyn parried Paul Scholes' free-kick. Marcus Bent missed Everton's best chance when Roy Carroll, who was later struck by a missile, saved at his feet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0046-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nUnited advanced to the semi-finals of the FA Cup with a 4\u20130 away win against Southampton. Roy Keane put holders United on course for victory over Southampton after two minutes, scoring what turned out to be his final goal for the club, before goals either side of the interval confirmed their supremacy. Cristiano Ronaldo took advantage of good work by Wayne Rooney to score the second in first-half injury time, and Paul Scholes added a third from 12 yards in the 47th minute, then headed home four minutes from time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0047-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nManchester United booked a place in the FA Cup Final for the second season running with a 4\u20131 semi-final win against fellow FA Premier League side Newcastle United at the Millennium Stadium. Ruud van Nistelrooy's flicked finish put Alex Ferguson's side ahead. A near-post Paul Scholes header doubled the lead just before half-time and Van Nistelrooy's side-foot shot confirmed the Red Devils' dominance. Shola Ameobi steered in an effort for Newcastle but Cristiano Ronaldo's shot ended their faint hopes of a comeback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0048-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, FA Cup\nIn the final, played on 21 May 2005 at the Millennium Stadium, Manchester United faced Arsenal. The game ended 0\u20130. Arsenal won the first ever penalty shoot-out in an FA Cup Final 5\u20134 after United's Paul Scholes saw his spot-kick saved by Arsenal 'keeper Jens Lehmann. United controlled almost the entire match, but were left empty-handed after Wayne Rooney hit the post and Freddie Ljungberg deflected Van Nistelrooy's header on to the bar. Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes was sent off before Patrick Vieira's deciding penalty. Scholes' penalty miss meant that Arsenal lifted the FA Cup, and also meant that United finished the 2004\u201305 season trophyless, the first time they had done so since 2001\u201302.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0049-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nAs a Premier League club who was competing in European competition for the 2004\u201305 season, Manchester United entered the League Cup in the third round, where they were given an away tie with Championship side Crewe Alexandra. The game took place on 26 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0050-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nUnited won 3\u20130. Alex Ferguson made wholesale changes from the side that beat Arsenal on 24 October and Alan Smith took just ten minutes to coolly slot the visitors in front. Crewe had chances of their own, with Dean Ashton and Steve Jones testing United goalkeeper Tim Howard. But Liam Miller converted David Bellion's pass, Stephen Foster put the ball into his own net and United easily held on to ease into the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0051-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nThe draw for the fourth round gave United a home tie with fellow FA Premier League club Crystal Palace. The game took place on 10 November 2004, and United won 2\u20130. Louis Saha opened the scoring in the 22nd minute, his first goal in the 2004\u201305 season. Saha took two Palace defenders out of the game when he chested down Quinton Fortune's cross before drilling home a low near-post drive. Kieran Richardson netted his second senior goal to double United's lead seven minutes before the interval. However Richardson enjoyed an element of luck, Palace keeper Juli\u00e1n Speroni letting the shot bounce under his body.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0052-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nUnited played a home tie with fellow FA Premier League club and rivals Arsenal in the fifth round. The game took place on 1 December 2004. United won 1\u20130, thanks to David Bellion's very early strike. A terrible blunder by Gunners keeper Manuel Almunia saw Bellion's weak shot squirm in after a Johan Djourou slip had gifted possession to Bellion. The home side's greater experience was crucial and Kieran Richardson and Chris Eagles went close in the first half. Arsenal's best chance saw Tim Howard beat out Jermaine Pennant's free-kick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0053-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nIn the semi-finals, United were drawn against another Premier League side Chelsea. The first leg took place at Stamford Bridge on 12 January 2005, while the second leg at Old Trafford was played two weeks later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0054-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nThe first leg ended as a dull goalless draw. Blues midfielder Frank Lampard twice came close, seeing a header flash wide and having a shot cleared off the line by United's Gabriel Heinze. But the Red Devils will feel aggrieved they were not given a first-half penalty after Louis Saha went tumbling. After the break, Tim Howard saved from Ji\u0159\u00ed Jaro\u0161\u00edk, while Carlo Cudicini pushed away Wayne Rooney's header. The Chelsea fashioned the better chances, but were unable to break down an excellent visitors' defence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0055-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, League Cup\nThe second leg ended as a 2\u20131 defeat for United, knocking the Reds out of the League Cup. Frank Lampard gave Chelsea the lead with a powerful angled shot before United's Quinton Fortune had a penalty appeal turned down. Ryan Giggs superbly chipped in to give the Red Devils hope, but Damien Duff's 50-yard free-kick, intended as a cross, broke United's hearts and sent Chelsea through to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0056-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Third qualifying round\nAs they had finished 3rd in the FA Premier League the previous season, Manchester United entered the Champions League in the third qualifying round. They were paired with Romanian side Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti. The first leg in Romania took place on 11 August 2004, with the second leg at Old Trafford being played a fortnight later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0057-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Third qualifying round\nIn the first leg, United overcame an early scare to win 2\u20131. United fell behind in the 10th minute through a Quinton Fortune own goal. Just before the interval United drew level after Ryan Giggs rounded Uladzimir Haew and slid the ball into the net. United were more cohesive after the break, Alan Smith hitting the post before Angelo Alistar scored an own goal after Liam Miller had crossed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0058-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Third qualifying round\nThe second leg was a more emphatic win for United, winning 3\u20130. Alan Smith put United ahead from close range after 47 minutes. He struck another fine finish three minutes later. Substitute David Bellion took advantage of slack defending to seal a multi-million cash jackpot for United. The result sealed a 5\u20131 aggregate win for United, and earned them a place in the UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 84], "content_span": [85, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0059-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nIn the draw for the UEFA Champions League group stage, United were placed in Pot 1. This meant that they would avoid facing teams such as the holders Porto. However, they could still face the likes of Lyon and Internazionale. In the end, United were drawn with Lyon, Sparta Prague and Fenerbah\u00e7e.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0060-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nUnited's first group game was away to Lyon, played on 15 September. The game ended 2\u20132. Lyon were in command at half-time, with United goalkeeper Tim Howard gifting them the lead after 34 minutes by dropping Juninho's free-kick for Cris to score. Pierre-Alain Frau fired a second after a flowing move 10 minutes later. Ruud van Nistelrooy broke Denis Law's record of 29 European goals for United with a flying header before levelling from close range on the hour. This left United in third place in the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0061-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nUnited played their first home game in the group on 28 September, against Fenerbah\u00e7e. United won 6\u20132, with 18-year-old striker Wayne Rooney scoring a hat-trick on his debut. Ryan Giggs headed the hosts ahead before Rooney grabbed centre stage, firing in his first goal from Van Nistelrooy's precision pass. He rifled in a second from 20 yards out and scored a second-half free-kick. Marcio Nobre and Tuncay twice reduced the deficit for the Turkish side, but late goals from Van Nistelrooy and David Bellion made sure of the result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0062-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nUnited's next game was away to Sparta Prague, on 19 October. The game ended 0\u20130. The home side were inspired by former United winger Karel Poborsk\u00fd, who twice brought smart saves out of Roy Carroll. Luk\u00e1\u0161 Zelenka also shot just wide for Sparta, while a Ji\u0159\u00ed Homola header was kept out by the frame of the goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0063-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nThe return game against Sparta came two weeks later at Old Trafford. Van Nistelrooy scored twice in the first half, including one from the penalty spot, but Zelenka pulled one back for the Czech side just after half-time. However, another two goals for Van Nistelrooy secured the victory as he equalled a club record for the most goals in a European match jointly held by Denis Law and Dennis Viollet. Meanwhile, Poborsk\u00fd was sent off late in the game for picking up two yellow cards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0064-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nIn Sir Alex Ferguson's 1,000th match in charge of the club, United hosted Lyon on matchday 5, with Gary Neville opening the scoring with his second career goal in Europe inside 20 minutes. Mahamadou Diarra equalised for the visitors shortly before the break, but an eighth goal of the group stage for Van Nistelrooy secured victory and qualification for the knockout phase. Van Nistelrooy's tally equalled a Champions League group stage record set two years earlier by Hern\u00e1n Crespo and Filippo Inzaghi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0065-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nUnited were top of the group going into their final match at Fenerbah\u00e7e, but with qualification assured, Ferguson chose to play a second-string team, with centre-back Gerard Piqu\u00e9 making his European debut off the bench in the second half. A hat-trick from Tuncay gave United their first defeat of the Champions League season, and combined with Lyon's 5\u20130 win over Sparta Prague, it meant United finished in second place in the group, to be paired with a group winner in the draw for the first knockout round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 73], "content_span": [74, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0066-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Transfers\nUnited's first departure of the 2004\u201305 season was Mark Lynch, who signed for Sunderland on 14 July. Almost a fortnight later, Nicky Butt left United for Newcastle United after twelve years. Luke Chadwick was released six days later, while Diego Forl\u00e1n left United for Villarreal after two unhappy years at Old Trafford. Manchester United signed Alan Smith from Leeds United and Gabriel Heinze from psg at the end of 2003-04- season for the 2004-05 seasonComing in were Spanish defender Gerard Piqu\u00e9, Italian striker Giuseppe Rossi, and English forward Wayne Rooney. Smith, Heinze, Piqu\u00e9, Rossi and Rooney were United's only arrivals in the whole of the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180178-0067-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Manchester United F.C. season, Transfers\nDeparting during the winter transfer window were midfielders Bojan Djordjic and Eric Djemba-Djemba who left for Rangers and Aston Villa respectively. On 30 June, United released Northern Irish goalkeeper Roy Carroll, Welsh forward Daniel Nardiello, Spanish goalkeeper Ricardo, Republic of Ireland defender Paul Tierney and Gambian striker Arthur G\u00f3mez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180179-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mansfield Town F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Mansfield Town Football Club competed in Football League Two where they finished in 13th position with 60 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180180-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Meistriliiga (ice hockey) season\nThe 2004\u201305 Meistriliiga season was the 15th season of the Meistriliiga, the top level of ice hockey in Estonia. Five teams participated in the league, and HK Stars Tallinn won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180181-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Memphis Grizzlies season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Grizzlies' tenth season in the National Basketball Association, and their fourth season in Memphis. Coming off their first playoff appearance in franchise history, the Grizzlies had a new look and moved into their new arena, the FedExForum. However, the team struggled with a 5\u20137 start as 71-year old Hubie Brown retired from coaching due to \"unexpected health problems\". The Grizzlies would lose their next four games under Lionel Hollins before replacing him with TNT analyst Mike Fratello. Under Fratello, the Grizzlies would win 12 of their 15 games in January climbing back into playoff contention. Despite losing five of their last six games, the Grizzlies finished fourth in the Southwest Division with a 45\u201337 record, making their second consecutive trip to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 843]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180181-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Memphis Grizzlies season\nHowever, in the first round of the playoffs, they were swept by the top-seeded Phoenix Suns in four straight games. Following the season, Bonzi Wells was traded to the Sacramento Kings, Jason Williams and James Posey were both dealt to the Miami Heat, and Stromile Swift signed as a free agent with the Houston Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180181-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Memphis Grizzlies season\nThe Grizzlies new logo and uniforms still remain in use as of 2017, although the jerseys were slightly changed in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180182-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season\nThese are the highlights of the 2004-05 Mercyhurst Lakers women's ice hockey season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (also Mersin \u0130dman Yurdu, Mersin \u0130Y, or M\u0130Y) Sports Club; located in Mersin, east Mediterranean coast of Turkey in 2004\u201305. The team participated in Second League Category A for 3rd time in the league's 4th season. Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu football team has finished 2004\u201305 season in 7th place in Turkish Second League Category A. Mersin idmanyurdu participated in 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup, and eliminated at second stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season\nHasan Ahi was the president of the club. M\u0130Y's formerplayer Levent Ar\u0131kdo\u011fan coached the team during the season. \u00d6nal Ar\u0131ca and Selim \u00d6zer were the mostly appeared players in the team rosters with 33 appearances each. Season and league top goal scorer was Sedat Debreli (10); and Kerem Zengin, loaned player from Fenerbah\u00e7e followed him (9).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu participated in 2004\u201305 Second League Category A (the league has been played under the name of \"Second League Category A\" between 2001\u201302 and 2005\u201306; \"TFF League A\" in 2006\u201307; and \"TFF First League\" since 2007\u201308. Also sponsor names have been included in various seasons.). 18 teams attended in the league. Winners, runners-up and second runners-up were directly promoted to 2005\u201306 S\u00fcper Lig. Bottom three teams were relegated to 2005\u201306 TFF Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu participated in 2004\u201305 Second League Category A and finished 7th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation, Results summary\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2004\u201305 Second League Category A season league summary:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 89], "content_span": [90, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation, League table\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2003\u201304 Second League Category A season place in league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation, Results by round\nResults of games M\u0130Y played in 2004\u201305 Second League Category A by rounds:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 90], "content_span": [91, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation, First half\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2004\u201305 Second League Category A season first half game reports is shown in the following table. Kick off times are in EET and EEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 84], "content_span": [85, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 TFF First League participation, Second half\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2004\u201305 Second League Category A season second half game reports is shown in the following table. Kick off times are in EET and EEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 85], "content_span": [86, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup participation\n2003\u201304 Turkish Cup was played for 43rd time as Fortis T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131 for sponsorship purposes. This season Cup was played by 48 teams in one-leg elimination system in 3 elimination rounds prior to quarter-finals. Galatasaray won the cup for the 14th time. Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu participated in the cup at first elimination round and was eliminated in second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup participation, Cup track\nThe drawings and results Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) followed in 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup are shown in the following table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup participation, Game details\nMersin \u0130dmanyurdu (M\u0130Y) 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup game reports is shown in the following table. Kick off times are in EET and EEST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 81], "content_span": [82, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, Management, Club management\nHasan Ahi, a lawyer from an established family native to Mersin was elected the president of the club in the congress held on 24 May 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, Management, Coaching team\nLevent Ar\u0131kdo\u011fan former player of Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu was the head coach during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180183-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mersin \u0130dmanyurdu season, 2004\u201305 squad\nAppearances, goals and cards count for 2004\u201305 Second League Category A and 2004\u201305 Turkish Cup games. 18 players appeared in each game roster, three to be replaced. Only the players who appeared in game rosters were included and listed in order of appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180184-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mestis season\nThe 2004\u201305 Mestis season was the fifth season of the Mestis, the second level of ice hockey in Finland. 12 teams participated in the league, and KalPa won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180184-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mestis season, Qualification\nNo teams were relegated as FPS and Jokipojat retained their places in Mestis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180185-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Miami Heat season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 17th season for the Miami Heat in the National Basketball Association. The Heat entered the season with high expectations following the acquisition of All-Star center Shaquille O'Neal from the Los Angeles Lakers, plus signing free agents Christian Laettner, three-point specialist Damon Jones, and Shandon Anderson. O'Neal was traded away from the Lakers following recurrence of bad blood with former teammate Kobe Bryant. Despite their numerous conflicts during their 8 years as teammates, the duo led the Lakers to 3-straight championship titles from 2000 to 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180185-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Miami Heat season\nThe team played solid basketball posting a 14-game winning streak between December and January winning 25 of their first 32 games, then winning twelve straight between February and March. At midseason, the team re-signed free agent All-Star center Alonzo Mourning, and re-acquired former Heat guard Steve Smith from the expansion Charlotte Bobcats. The Heat finished in first place in both their division and conference with a 59\u201323 record, which was the franchise's best since 1996\u201397.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180185-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Miami Heat season\nSecond-year star Dwyane Wade led the Heat in scoring averaging 24.1 points per game, while O'Neal finished second on the team in scoring with 22.9 points per game. Both players were selected to play in the 2005 NBA All-Star Game at Denver, which marked Wade's first All-Star appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180185-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Miami Heat season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Heat swept the New Jersey Nets in four straight games, then swept the Washington Wizards in four straight in the semi-finals. However, the Heat were eventually eliminated in seven games during the Eastern Conference Finals by the 2nd-seeded, and defending NBA champion Detroit Pistons. The Wade and Shaq-led Heat were expected by many to face the Spurs in the Finals (They would eventually meet 8 years later). Following the season, Eddie Jones was traded to the Memphis Grizzlies, Damon Jones signed as a free agent with the Cleveland Cavaliers, and Laettner and Smith both retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team represented Michigan State University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Spartans, led by 10th-year head coach Tom Izzo, played their home games at the Breslin Center in East Lansing, Michigan and were members of the Big Ten Conference. MSU finished the season 25\u20137, 13\u20133 to finish in second place in the Big Ten. They received a bid to the NCAA Tournament for the eighth consecutive year and advanced to the Final Four before losing to eventual National Champion North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe Spartans finished the 2003\u201304 season 18\u201312, 12\u20134 in Big Ten play to finish in third place. They lost in the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament to Wisconsin. They received a No. 7 seed in the NCAA Tournament, their seventh straight trip to the Tournament, and lost in the First Round to Nevada", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 70], "content_span": [71, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Spartans were led by senior Alan Anderson (13.2 points and 5.6 rebounds per game), juniors Maurice Ager (14.1 points per game) and Paul Davis (12.3 points and 8.0 rebounds per game), and sophomore Shannon Brown (10.9 points per game).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThey began the season ranked No. 13 in the country. The Spartans struggled early in the non-conference schedule, beginning 3\u20132 with losses to No. 10 Duke in the ACC-Big Ten Challenge and George Washington in the BB&T Classic. MSU won their remaining non-conference games to finish the non-conference schedule with a record of 8\u20132 and ranked No. 20 in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe Spartans cruised through the Big Ten, only losing three games, including a loss to No. 1 Illinois and finished second in conference to Illinois. MSU finished the regular season with a 13\u20133 conference record and 22\u20135 overall while being ranked No. 13 in the country. The Spartans lost in the quarterfinals in the Big Ten Tournament to Iowa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nMichigan State received an at-large bid as a No. 5 seed in the Austin Regional of the NCAA Tournament, their eighth straight appearance in the Tournament under Tom Izzo. After having exited in the First Round the prior year, the Spartans faced Old Dominion in the First Round in the dreaded 5 vs. 12 seed matchup. The Spartans trailed by five at half time, 42\u201337, but rallied to pull out the victory, 89\u201381. In the Second Round, MSU faced No. 13 seed Vermont. Led by Maurice Ager's 19 points, the Spartans won 72\u201361 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen for the sixth time in eight years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nIn the Sweet Sixteen, the Spartans beat No. 3-ranked and No. 1-seeded Duke, which MSU had not defeated since 1958. After a first half which saw the score tied at 32, MSU pulled out a rugged victory to advance to the Elite Eight, winning 78\u201368 behind Paul Davis' 20 points and 12 rebounds. The win marked Izzo's first and only win over Duke's until the Elite Eight victory over th #1 seeded Duke in 2019.Mike Krzyzewski (as of 2017).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nIn the Elite Eight, MSU faced No. 7-ranked and No. 2-seeded Kentucky on Easter Sunday. The Spartans trailed 37\u201333 after the first half, but rallied to take the lead by eight with over five minutes remaining in regulation. However, Kentucky rallied to within three with seconds remaining. After missing two attempts to tie the game, Patrick Sparks got a desperation shot off with less than second remaining. After bouncing four times on the rim, the ball went through the hoop for a basket, but officials had to review the replay to determine if his foot was on the three-point line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nAfter a five-minute review, Kentucky was given credit for the three to move the game to overtime. Both teams only managed six points in the overtime period, scoring none in the final minute to force double overtime. On the strength of free throw shooting in the second overtime, the Spartans pulled out the win, 94\u201388.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nThe win meant the Spartans advanced to their fourth Final Four in seven years. With Illinois also advancing to the Final Four to face Louisville, the Big Ten had two teams in the Final Four for the first time since 2000 when Michigan State defeated Wisconsin on the way to the National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180186-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan State Spartans men's basketball team, Season summary\nNo. 2-ranked and No. 1-seeded North Carolina loomed as the opponent for MSU in the Final Four. MSU took the halftime lead at 38\u201333, but North Carolina's Sean May scored 22 points and Spartans were outscored by 19 in the second half, losing 87\u201371.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180187-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe 2004-05 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team represented the University of Michigan in intercollegiate college basketball during the 2004-05 season. The team played its home games in the Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and was a member of the Big Ten Conference. Under the direction of head coach Tommy Amaker, the team finished tied for seventh in the Big Ten Conference. The team earned a ninth seed and was defeated in the first round of the 2005 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180187-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nThe team failed to earn an invitation to either the 2005 National Invitation Tournament or the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The team was unranked for all eighteen weeks of Associated Press Top Twenty-Five Poll, and it also ended the season unranked in the final USA Today/CNN Poll. The team had a 2\u20137 record against ranked opponents, with its victories coming against #20 Notre Dame 61\u201360 on December 4, 2004 at Crisler Arena and #14 Iowa 65\u201353 on January 5 at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180187-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nLester Abram, Graham Brown, and Sherrod Harrell served as team co-captains, and Dion Harris earned team MVP honors. The team's leading scorers were Dion Harris (444 points), Courtney Sims (305 points) and Ron Coleman (233 points). The leading rebounders were Courtney Sims (160), Brent Petway (158) and Graham Brown (115).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180187-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team\nIn the 2005 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament at the United Center from March 10\u201313, Michigan was seeded ninth. In the first round, they lost to number 8 Northwestern 58\u201356.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, Middlesbrough participated in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Kit\nDuring this season, Middlesbrough had a new sponsor, 888.com. The team's kit was produced by Errea. The home shirt included a white band on it for the first time since the 2000\u201301 season. The away strip was mainly white with maroon sleeves, navy blue shorts and white socks. Away to Southampton, white shorts and navy socks were worn with the away shirt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 38], "content_span": [39, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nAfter the triumph in the League Cup final the previous season and a solid 11th-place finish in the league, Boro fans were optimistic that this season would be a success. Steve McClaren signed Boudewijn Zenden and Doriva on permanent deals following their loan spells, as well as adding high-profile signings Ray Parlour, Mark Viduka, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and Michael Reiziger to the squad. With these new additions, the supporters felt that, come the end of the season, Boro would be pushing for a league place good enough to qualify for Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nThe season started well and Middlesbrough found themselves in fourth position following only one loss in the first 5 games. Despite a slight drop in their form, Boro kept in and around the top four until mid-November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nHowever, the UEFA Cup took its toll on the small Boro squad and their form stuttered towards Christmas. The team seemed to consist of more and more young players who were deputising for more senior players such as Gaizka Mendieta and Malcolm Christie who were ruled out for the season with injuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nFollowing a 2\u20130 win at home to Norwich City on 28 December, Boro were in fifth place. However, not helped by an injury to George Boateng, after only one win in the next ten games the team found themselves in ninth and seemed to have undone their good work at the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nThings did finally pick up and, following only three losses in the final 12 games of the season, they found themselves up against Manchester City in the final game of the season. Both teams were in direct contest for the seventh place that Boro occupied, and a win for either side would mean qualification for the UEFA Cup. A last-minute penalty save by Mark Schwarzer gave Boro a 1\u20131 draw and the all important seventh-placed finish. For the first time in their history, Middlesbrough had qualified for Europe through the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nThe season was full of highs and lows for the Boro fans. The disappointment of losing their early strong position due to the injury crisis was offset against the emergence of several promising youngsters such as Stewart Downing, James Morrison and Anthony McMahon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nBoth domestic cups were disappointing for the Boro team and the draws weren't favourable towards them. They only lasted two rounds in each competition, going out in the fourth round of both cups, to Manchester United in the FA Cup and to a young Liverpool side in the League Cup. The UEFA Cup run - Middlesbrough's first foray into Europe, having won the first major trophy of their history, the League Cup, the previous season - held greater joy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nThe first round was a two-legged knockout match against Ban\u00edk Ostrava - Boro's first ever European match, with the first leg was at home. With a fantastic atmosphere at the Riverside, Middlesbrough cruised through the first leg 3\u20130; with a comfortable 1\u20131 draw in the away leg, they had qualified for the group stages and were guaranteed another 4 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nMiddlesbrough were drawn in Group D, along with Villarreal, Lazio, Egaleo and Partizan Belgrade. The fans were confident that the team could earn at least a third-place finish in the group and therefore qualify for the knockout stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nBoro went on to exceed all expectations, beating Egalio and Partizan Belgrade as expected and also achieving a fantastic 2\u20130 victory over Lazio - the only blot being a 2\u20130 away loss to Villarreal. This was enough to earn them a second-place finish and qualification for the next round, where Middlesbrough were drawn against Grazer AK. Middlesbrough managed a 2\u20132 draw against the then Austrian champions in the first leg, away. The team duly built on this in the return leg and progressed to the next round following a 2\u20131 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nThe round of 16 saw Boro face Sporting Lisbon for a place in the quarter finals. However, luck wasn't with Middlesbrough and they found themselves in the middle of an injury crisis. The first leg was at home and remained goalless at half time. Sporting then proceed to show their class and scored 3 in a thirty-minute spell after the break. Boro looked like they were to exit the competition, but a spectacular overhead scissor kick from Joseph Desire-Job and a late Chris Riggott goal gave a weakened Boro team a fairly respectable 3\u20132 loss. The second leg didn't go to plan though; despite fantastic support from 3,000 travelling fans, Middlesbrough went down 1\u20130, losing 4\u20132 on aggregate. The Boro fans took the defeat in good heart, however, and partied late into the night in Lisbon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Season review\nMiddlesbrough's UEFA Cup run was seen as a huge success by the fans, and expectations were high for the following year's campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 48], "content_span": [49, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, First-team squad\nThe following are all the players who were involved the Middlesbrough F.C. first team at some point during the 2004-05 season. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Results, Premier League, Results per matchday\nNote: Results are given with Middlesbrough score listed first. Man of the Match is according to .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180188-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Middlesbrough F.C. season, Player statistics, Appearances and discipline\nAppearance and disciplinary records for 2004-05 league and cup matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 80], "content_span": [81, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180189-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Midland Football Alliance\nThe 2004\u201305 Midland Football Alliance season was the eleventh in the history of Midland Football Alliance, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180189-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Midland Football Alliance, Clubs\nThe league featured 19 clubs from the previous season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180190-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Midland Football Combination\nThe 2004\u201305 Midland Football Combination season was the 68th in the history of Midland Football Combination, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180190-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Midland Football Combination, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 19 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season\nThe 2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season would have been the Mighty Ducks' 12th season of play in the NHL, however, the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout cancelled all of the games for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Off-season\nAlong with the rest of the National Hockey League, the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim entered the 2004 offseason with many questions. While most of the NHL was concerned with a possible lockout due to negotiations concerning a new Collective Bargaining Agreement, the Mighty Ducks had even more issues concerning the future ownership of the franchise and the future of the franchise in Orange County. The owners of the Ducks at the time, the Walt Disney Company was looking to sell the team and people in the community were not all too confident that the team would remain in Anaheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Off-season\nOn September 10, just a month before the 2004\u201305 season was scheduled to start, it was reported in the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Register, and the Associated Press that former Hartford Whalers and Pittsburgh Penguins owner Howard Baldwin was interested in purchasing the Mighty Ducks and moving them to Kansas City, Missouri to play in the then-under construction arena now known as Sprint Center. The lockout, however, began just six days later and extended well into what would have been the regular season and eventually causing the cancellation of the season entirely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0001-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Off-season\nWith the Kansas City rumors circulating and the lockout already harming business at the Arrowhead Pond, Henry Samueli (the owner of Anaheim Arena Management, the operator of the Pond) got into negotiations to purchase the team so the arena would not lose its primary tenant. Samueli eventually bought the team in 2005 and took over day-to-day operations of the club in June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Regular season\nThe season for the Mighty Ducks were scheduled to begin Wednesday, October 13 with a home game against Calgary. Their first road game was to be on Sunday, October 17 against cross-town rival Los Angeles. Their longest homestand was supposed to be from March 2-March 13 (6 home games), and their longest road trip was to be from January 29\u2013February 10 (7 road games). Their final game of the regular season was scheduled on Sunday, April 10 against Columbus at the Arrowhead Pond.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Schedule\nWhile the lockout led to the cancellation of the entire season, the Mighty Ducks had a schedule drawn up in case the season resumed at any time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Transactions\nThe Mighty Ducks have were involved in the following transactions during the 2004 offseason. No transactions were made during the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 52], "content_span": [53, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180191-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mighty Ducks of Anaheim season, Draft picks\nThe Ducks picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft in Raleigh, North Carolina:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180192-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Millwall F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Millwall competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180192-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Millwall F.C. season, Season summary\nIn the UEFA Cup, Millwall lost 4\u20132 on aggregate in the first round proper, to Hungarian Champions Ferencv\u00e1ros, with Wise scoring both Millwall goals. Millwall put up a brave fight in both games, but the Hungarian champions were too strong. Surprisingly, whilst Millwall were seeded, Ferencvaros were not. Millwall could have had an easier draw, against Chechnyan minnows Terek Grozny. If Millwall had beaten them, then they would have made it into the group stage of the competition, where they would have faced some of Europe's elite, including teams such as Lazio and Schalke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180192-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Millwall F.C. season, Season summary\nIn 2005, Theo Paphitis announced that he was stepping down as chairman of the club with Jeff Burnige to replace him from May 2005. At the end of the 2004\u201305 season, manager Dennis Wise announced that he was leaving as he was unable to form a working relationship with the new chairman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180192-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Millwall F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180192-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Millwall F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180192-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Millwall F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180193-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Milton Keynes Dons' inaugural season as a new club following the team's change of name from Wimbledon FC on 21 June 2004. This change of name followed the controversial relocation of Wimbledon FC during the previous 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180193-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nFollowing Wimbledon FC's relegation from the 2003\u201304 Football League First Division, Milton Keynes Dons played their first season in the newly re-branded Football League One (formerly known as the Second Division).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180193-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nAs well as competing in League One, the club also participated in the FA Cup, League Cup and League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180193-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milton Keynes Dons F.C. season\nThe season covers the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180194-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milwaukee Bucks season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Bucks' 37th season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Bucks signed free agents Mike James and second-year guard Mo Williams, while acquiring Zaza Pachulia from the expansion Charlotte Bobcats. Injuries hampered the Bucks from the start as a second-year guard T.J. Ford was lost for the entire season due to a neck injury. The Bucks would get off to a sluggish start losing 16 of their first 22 games. At midseason, the team traded Keith Van Horn to the Dallas Mavericks, and dealt James to the Houston Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180194-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milwaukee Bucks season\nThey lost 15 of their final 18 games including an 8-game losing streak, finishing in last place in the Central Division with a 30\u201352 record. The only bright spot came from Michael Redd, who averaged a team-high of 23.0 points per game. Following the season, head coach Terry Porter was fired, and Pachulia signed as a free agent with the Atlanta Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180195-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Wisconsin\u2013Milwaukee during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Panthers, led by head coach Bruce Pearl, played their home games at the U.S. Cellular Arena and Klotsche Center and were members of the Horizon League. They finished the season 26\u20136, 14\u20132 in Horizon League play to finish in first place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180195-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team\nThey were champions of the Horizon League Tournament to earn an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament where they received a #12 seed and defeated #5 seed Alabama and #4 seed Boston College to reach their 1st Sweet 16 in school history. Their season ended after losing to the eventual National Runner-Up #1 seed Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180195-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Milwaukee Panthers men's basketball team, 2005 Horizon League Tournament\nFirst round games at campus sites of higher seedsSecond round and semifinals hosted by the top seed. Championship hosted by best remaining seed", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 80], "content_span": [81, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180196-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs women's ice hockey season, Player stats, Skaters\nNote: GP= Games played; G= Goals; A= Assists; PTS = Points; GW = Game Winning Goals; PPL = Power Play Goals; SHG = Short Handed Goals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 82], "content_span": [83, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180197-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season\nIn 2004\u201305, the Gophers had an overall record of 36\u20132\u20132. Its mark in the WCHA was 25\u20131\u20132. Both totals established the most wins in a season and in conference action since the start of the Gophers program in 1997\u201398. From the beginning of the season to the end, the Gophers were ranked No. 1. In addition, the Gophers were ranked in the top five in every statistical category, including winning percentage, power-play and offensive scoring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180197-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Golden Gophers women's ice hockey season, Postseason\nThe Gophers then went on to win their second straight WCHA Championship with a 3\u20132 overtime win over Wisconsin. In the NCAA playoffs, the Gophers defeated the Providence Friars by a 6\u20131 score. With the win, the Gophers advanced to its fourth-straight NCAA Frozen Four appearance. The Gophers defeated the Dartmouth Big Green by a 7\u20132 score in the semifinal game. In the first period, the Gophers scored five goals in the first period. On March 27, the Gophers defeated the Harvard Crimson by a 4\u20133 mark to win their consecutive national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 70], "content_span": [71, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180198-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Minnesota Timberwolves\u2019 16th season competing in the National Basketball Association. After appearing in the Conference Finals the previous season, the Timberwolves played at around .500 for the first half of the season. However, the team began to struggle further into the season, losing six straight games between January and February and slipping below .500. After a 25\u201326 start, longtime head coach Flip Saunders was fired and replaced with General Manager Kevin McHale for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180198-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Timberwolves season\nThe Timberwolves improved under McHale\u2019s management, but finished the season in third position in the Northwest Division. With a 44\u201338 regular season record, they missed the playoffs for the first time since 1996. Kevin Garnett led the team in scoring, rebounding and assists, as he was selected for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game. Following the season, Latrell Sprewell retired after turning down a contract extension, Sam Cassell was traded to the Los Angeles Clippers, and McHale was fired as coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180199-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Wild season\nThe 2004\u201305 Minnesota Wild season was the team's fifth season in the National Hockey League (NHL). Its games were cancelled due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180199-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Minnesota Wild season, Draft picks\nMinnesota's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina, on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180200-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Moldovan \"A\" Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Moldovan \"A\" Division season is the 14th since its establishment. A total of 16 teams are contesting the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180201-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Moldovan National Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Moldovan National Division (Romanian: Divizia Na\u021bional\u0103) was the 14th season of top-tier football in Moldova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180201-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Moldovan National Division, Overview\nIt was contested by 8 teams and Sheriff Tiraspol won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180202-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Mongolia Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Mongolia Hockey League season was the 14th season of the Mongolia Hockey League. Baganuur won the championship by defeating Otgon Od Ulaanbaatar in the playoff final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180203-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Montenegrin First League\nSecond League Montenegro 2004-05 was one of the two groups of the Second League of Serbia and Montenegro (Budu\u0107nost Podgorica, Sutjeska Nik\u0161i\u0107 and Zeta Golubovci competed in the First League).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180203-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Montenegrin First League, Relegation play-offs\nThe 9th placed team were played against the 2nd placed team of the Montenegrin Second League in two-legged relegation play-offs after the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180203-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Montenegrin First League, Relegation play-offs, Second leg\nMornar remained a member of First League, while Gusinje remained a member of Second League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180204-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Montreal Canadiens season\nThe 2004\u201305 Montreal Canadiens season was the team's 96th season, 88th in the National Hockey League. However, its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time. The other 29 teams did not play either due to the labour dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180204-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Montreal Canadiens season, Transactions\nThe Canadiens were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180204-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Montreal Canadiens season, Draft picks\nThe 2004 NHL Entry Draft was held on June 26 at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina. It was the last NHL event to take place before the beginning of the lockout which cancelled all the games scheduled for the 2004\u201305 NHL season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180205-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Motherwell F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Motherwell's 7th season in the Scottish Premier League, and their 20th consecutive season in the top division of Scottish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180205-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Motherwell F.C. season, Squad\nUpdated 6 August 2011Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180206-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Munster Rugby season\nThe 2004\u201305 Munster Rugby season was Munster's fourth season competing in the Celtic League, alongside which they also competed in the Heineken Cup. It was Alan Gaffney's second and final season as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180206-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Munster Rugby season, 2004\u201305 squad\nNote: Flags indicate national union as has been defined under WR eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-WR nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 43], "content_span": [44, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180206-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Munster Rugby season, 2004\u201305 Celtic League\nUnder the standard bonus point system, points are awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180207-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBA season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 59th season of the National Basketball Association (NBA). It began on November 2, 2004 and ended June 23, 2005. The season ended with the San Antonio Spurs defeating the defending-champion Detroit Pistons, 4\u20133, in the NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180207-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBA season, Playoffs\nTeams in bold advanced to the next round. The numbers to the left of each team indicate the team's seeding in its conference, and the numbers to the right indicate the number of games the team won in that round. The division champions are marked by an asterisk. Home court advantage does not necessarily belong to the higher-seeded team, but instead the team with the better regular season record; teams enjoying the home advantage are shown in italics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180207-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBA season, Awards, Players of the month\nThe following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180207-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBA season, Awards, Rookies of the month\nThe following players were named the Eastern and Western Conference Rookies of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180207-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBA season, Awards, Coaches of the month\nThe following coaches were named the Eastern and Western Conference Coaches of the Month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180208-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL All-Star Game\nThe 2004/05 NBL All-Star Game was held at the Townsville Entertainment Centre in Townsville, Queensland on 19 January 2005. The attendance for this All-Star game was 5078 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180208-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL All-Star Game\nThe Aussie All-Stars defeated the World All-Stars 156-140. Rookie Brad Newley from the Townsville Crocodiles won the All-Star MVP award, contributing 35 points to the Aussie All-Stars total. Other leading scorers for the Aussie All-Stars included John Rillie with 23 points and Jason Smith with 22 points. For the World All-Stars Robert Brown top scored with 31 points, followed by Brian Wethers with 28 and Willie Farley with 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180208-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL All-Star Game, Dunk Competition\nThe Dunk Competition was won by Robert Brown of the Townsville Crocodiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180209-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBL season was the 27th season of competition since its establishment in 1979. A total of 11 teams contested the league, the Victoria Giants has been folded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180209-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL season, Regular Season\nThe 2004-05 Regular Season took place over 21 Rounds between 29 September 2004 and 20 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180209-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL season, Ladder\nThe NBL tie-breaker system as outlined in the NBL Rules and Regulations states that in the case of an identical win-loss record, the results in games played between the teams will determine order of seeding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180209-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NBL season, Ladder\n23-way Head-to-Head between Brisbane Bullets (4-2), Melbourne Tigers (3-3) and Perth Wildcats (2-4).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180210-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team represented North Carolina State University as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference during the 2004\u201305 men's college basketball season. It was Herb Sendek's ninth season as head coach. The Wolfpack earned a bid to the NCAA Tournament, reached the Sweet Sixteen, and finished with a record of 21\u201314 (7\u20139 ACC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180211-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings\nThe 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings was made up of two human polls, the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various other preseason polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season\nThe 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 10, 2004, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on April 4, 2005 at the Edward Jones Dome in Saint Louis, Missouri. The North Carolina Tar Heels won their fourth NCAA national championship with a 75\u201370 victory over the Illinois Fighting Illini.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Season outlook, Pre-season polls\nThe top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls November 11, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Conference winners and tournaments\n30 conference seasons conclude with a single-elimination tournament. Traditionally, all conference schools are eligible, regardless of record. However, some conferences, most notably the Big East, do not invite the teams with the worst records. The conference tournament winner receives an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. A school that wins the conference regular season title is guaranteed an NIT bid; however, it may receive an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. The Ivy League is the only Division I conference that does not hold a conference tournament, instead sending their regular-season champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 99], "content_span": [100, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Regular season, Statistical leaders\n* Coleman and Funn tied for the national assists lead. Each player had 224 assists in 28 games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 84], "content_span": [85, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Post-Season Tournaments, NCAA Tournament\nThe NCAA Tournament tipped off on March 15, 2005 with the opening round game in Dayton, Ohio, and concluded on April 4 at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, MO. A total of 65 teams entered the tournament. Thirty of the teams earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. The automatic bid of the Ivy League, which does not conduct a post-season tournament, went to its regular season champion. The remaining 34 teams were granted \"at-large\" bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The Big East Conference led the way with eight bids. North Carolina won their fourth NCAA title, beating Illinois 75\u201370 in the final. North Carolina forward Sean May was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Post-Season Tournaments, National Invitation Tournament\nAfter the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the National Invitation Tournament invited 32 teams to participate, reducing the field's size from 40. Eight teams were given automatic bids for winning their conference regular seasons, and 24\u00a0other teams were also invited. Dave Odom's South Carolina Gamecocks won the title, defeating the Saint Joseph's Hawks 60\u201357 in the championship game. The Gamecocks' Carlos Powell was named tournament MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 104], "content_span": [105, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180212-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Coaching changes\nA number of teams changed coaches throughout the season and after the season ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180213-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings\nTwo human polls made up the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey rankings, the USCHO.com Division I Men's Poll and the USA TODAY/American Hockey Magazine Poll. As the 2004\u201305 season progressed, rankings were updated weekly. There were a total of 34 voters in the USA Today poll and 40 voters in the USCHO.com poll. Each first place vote in either poll is worth 15 points in the rankings with every subsequent vote worth 1 fewer point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180214-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season\nThe 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season began on October 3, 2004 and concluded with the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament's championship game on April 9, 2005 at the Value City Arena in Columbus, Ohio. This was the 58th season in which an NCAA ice hockey championship was held and is the 110th year overall where an NCAA school fielded a team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180214-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Pre-season polls\nThe top 15 from USCHO.com/CBS College Sports and the top 15 from USA Today/USA Hockey Magazine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180214-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points at the conclusion of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180214-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180214-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average at the end of the regular season while playing at least 33% of their team's total minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180214-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey season, Player stats, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180215-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings\nTwo human polls comprise the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I women's basketball rankings, the AP Poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. The AP poll is currently a poll of sportswriters, while the USA Today Coaches' Poll is a poll of college coaches. The AP conducts polls weekly through the end of the regular season and conference play, while the Coaches poll conducts a final, post-NCAA tournament poll as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180216-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season\nThe 2004\u201305 NCAA Division III men's ice hockey season began on October 15, 2004 and concluded on March 19 of the following year. This was the 32nd season of Division III college ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games\nThe 2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games were a series of 32 post-season games (including the Bowl Championship Series) played in December 2004 and January 2005 for Division I-A football teams and their all-stars. The post-season began with the New Orleans Bowl on December 14, 2004, and concluded on January 29, 2005, with the season-ending Senior Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games\nA total of 28 team-competitive games, and five all-star games, were played. For the first time in three years, the 56 available bowl slots were filled by teams with winning records, as no teams with non-winning seasons (6\u20136, or .500) were invited to participate in bowl games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls\nOf the 59 Division I-A football teams with winning records, 56 were invited to the various bowl games. This season, bowl officials had more difficulty than usual filling their slots. Because the regular season was only 11 games, teams had to finish at least 6\u20135 to qualify. Teams that were allowed under NCAA rules to play a 12th regular-season game in return for playing at Hawaii had to finish at least 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls\nFour conferences \u2013 the Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-10, and SEC \u2013 all failed to produce enough bowl-eligible teams to fill their contracted bowl slots. In addition, a massive brawl between Clemson and South Carolina players during their November 20 game, less than 24 hours following the Pacers\u2013Pistons brawl during a National Basketball Association game, led both schools to announce that they would not go to any bowl game as a self-imposed punishment. Both schools were otherwise bowl-eligible, thus forcing bowl organizers to scramble even more to fill their slots. In addition, Utah's unexpected entry into the BCS caused further shuffling of normal bowl tie-ins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls\nThe main beneficiary of this unexpected chaos was the Mid-American Conference, which received five bowl bids instead of its contracted two. The only bowl-eligible team willing to accept an invitation that was left out of this season's bowl games was another MAC school, Akron. The Zips would make their first bowl appearance the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls\nThree schools made their first-ever bowl appearance this season: UAB (Hawaii Bowl), UConn (2004 Motor City Bowl), and Troy State (Silicon Valley Football Classic). Of these three, only UConn won its game. For the first time since the 1968\u20131969 bowl season Nebraska did not go to a bowl game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 47], "content_span": [48, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, New Orleans Bowl\nThe bowl season kicked off on December 14 with the fourth annual New Orleans Bowl, one of two bowl games played at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans. Dustin Almond passed for 249 yards and a touchdown, and rushed for a touchdown as well, as Southern Miss Golden Eagles (Conference USA) defeated the North Texas Mean Green (Sun Belt Conference) 31\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Champs Sports Bowl\nThe first of two bowl games at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida was the Champs Sports Bowl, held on December 21. It featured the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (ACC) and the Syracuse Orange (Big East). Georgia Tech quarterback Reggie Ball passed for two touchdowns and ran for another, while the Yellow Jackets defense recorded a touchdown off of an interception and a safety. Georgia Tech romped, 51\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, GMAC Bowl\nThe Bowling Green Falcons (MAC) met the Memphis Tigers (C-USA) on December 22 in Mobile, Alabama in the GMAC Bowl. In a meeting of high-powered offenses, Memphis's Danny Wimprime threw for 324 yards and 4 touchdowns, but was outdone by his counterpart Omar Jacobs, who had 365 yards and 5 touchdowns. Bowling Green won, 52\u201335.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Fort Worth Bowl\nThe Fort Worth Bowl, held on December 23 at Amon G. Carter Stadium in the titular city, matched a departing C-USA team with a future member of that conference. The Cincinnati Bearcats, which left C-USA for the Big East Conference after the 2004\u201305 season, played the Marshall Thundering Herd, which joined C-USA from the MAC for 2005\u201306. Cincinnati quarterback Gino Guidugli returned from a broken hand to throw for two touchdowns, and the Bearcats defense held Marshall to 134 yards of total offense in a 32\u201314 win. The loss broke the Thundering Herd's streaks of 20 consecutive winning seasons and five winning bowl appearances (in nonconsecutive years).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Las Vegas Bowl\nThe first matchup of the bowl season that pitted a team from a BCS AQ conference against a BCS non-AQ conference team was the Las Vegas Bowl, held at Sam Boyd Stadium in Whitney, Nevada on December 23. The UCLA Bruins (Pac-10) played the Wyoming Cowboys (Mountain West Conference), with UCLA the heavy favorite. The underdog Cowboys took an early 10\u20130 lead, but the Bruins stormed back to take a 21\u201310 lead going into the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Las Vegas Bowl\nThe Cowboys scored a touchdown early in the fourth quarter on a trick play, and capped off the first major upset of the bowl season with a touchdown pass from Corey Bramlet to John Wadkowski with 57 seconds left. The 24\u201321 Wyoming win was the Cowboys' first bowl victory since 1968.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Hawaii Bowl\nOn December 24, the Hawaii Warriors (WAC) played the Hawaii Bowl on their home field, Aloha Stadium in Honolulu for the third time in the bowl's three-year existence. The Warriors faced a first-time bowl participant in the UAB Blazers (C-USA). In an offensive shootout that saw both quarterbacks (Hawaii's Timmy Chang and UAB's Darrell Hackney) throw for over 400 yards, the homestanding Warriors won 59\u201340. The Warriors' Chad Owens caught two of Chang's four touchdown passes and returned a punt for a TD. Chang finished his career as the first Division I-A quarterback to throw for over 17,000 yards in his career, and also finished with career records for pass attempts, completions, and total offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 60], "content_span": [61, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, MPC Computers Bowl\nOn December 27, the second matchup between BCS AQ and BCS non-AQ conference teams took place in the MPC Computers Bowl in Boise, Idaho. The Fresno State Bulldogs (WAC) played the Virginia Cavaliers (ACC). UVa went out to a 21\u20137 second-quarter lead, but the Bulldogs stormed back to tie the game at 24 early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0012-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, MPC Computers Bowl\nThe Cavaliers retook the lead early in the fourth quarter on a rushing touchdown by Wali Lundy, but Bulldogs quarterback Paul Pinegar threw a 3-yard TD pass to Jason Fairman with 19 seconds left; the ensuing extra point tied the game at 31, leading to the first overtime of the 2004\u201305 bowl season. In the overtime, the Cavaliers had the ball first and kicked a field goal. On the Bulldogs' first play in overtime, Pinegar threw his fifth TD pass of the day, connecting with Stephen Spach to give the Bulldogs a 37\u201334 upset win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 67], "content_span": [68, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Motor City Bowl\nThe other bowl on December 27, the Motor City Bowl held at Ford Field in Detroit, was also a BCS AQ conference vs. BCS non-AQ conference matchup. The UConn Huskies made their first-ever bowl appearance in their second year in Division I-A and first as a member of the Big East. They faced the MAC champion Toledo Rockets, which were playing little more than an hour's drive from their campus. Rockets quarterback Bruce Gradowski, affected by a broken hand suffered in the MAC championship game, was ineffective before being benched at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0013-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Motor City Bowl\nHowever, the Huskies were effective enough that a healthy Gradowski may not have made a difference; UConn quarterback Dan Orlovsky threw for two TDs with no interceptions, and return specialist Larry Taylor had 157 return yards, including a punt return for a TD. UConn won 39\u201310, giving BCS AQ conferences their first win in three tries against BCS non-AQ conference teams this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Independence Bowl\nOn December 28 in Shreveport, Louisiana, another BCS AQ/non-AQ matchup took place in the Independence Bowl between the Iowa State Cyclones (Big 12) and the Miami (Ohio) RedHawks (MAC). Iowa State went out to a 10\u20130 lead in the second quarter, but Miami scored a touchdown late in that quarter to reduce the Cyclones' halftime lead to 10\u20137. The RedHawks scored a TD to take a 13\u201310 lead in the third quarter, but missed the extra point. The Cyclones' Ryan Kock scored the winning TD early in the fourth quarter, and the Cyclones defense held on for the 17\u201313 win. Two Cyclones, quarterback Bret Meyer and running back Stevie Hicks, rushed for over 100 yards each. RedHawks receiver Michael Larkin extended his NCAA record of consecutive games with a reception to 50. This was the last game for RedHawks head coach Terry Hoeppner, who took the head job at Indiana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Insight Bowl\nThe second bowl on December 28, the Insight Bowl held at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix, Arizona, the home of the Arizona Diamondbacks, was the second of the 2004\u201305 bowl season to pit two BCS AQ member teams. The Notre Dame Fighting Irish, the only independent with BCS automatic qualifying privileges, took on the Oregon State Beavers from the Pac-10. The Beavers never trailed in the game, and easily defeated the Irish 38\u201321. Beavers quarterback Derek Anderson threw for 359 yards and four touchdown passes, with no interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Insight Bowl\nThe game was a rematch of the 2001 Fiesta Bowl, played at the nearby Sun Devil Stadium, with a similar result (Oregon State blowout victory).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Houston Bowl\nOn December 29, the Colorado Buffaloes (Big 12) took on the UTEP Miners (WAC) in the Houston Bowl at Reliant Stadium in the host city. The Miners led for most of the game, but Buffaloes quarterback Joel Klatt threw two TD passes in the fourth quarter to lead CU to a 33\u201328 win. Klatt finished 24-for-33 for 333 yards. Miners QB Jordan Palmer, younger brother of 2002 Heisman Trophy winner Carson Palmer, threw for 328 yards and two TDs, but only completed two of his last 12 passes, finishing 22-for-42 with two interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Alamo Bowl\nIn the other game on December 29, the Alamo Bowl held at the Alamodome in San Antonio, the Ohio State Buckeyes (Big Ten) took on the Oklahoma State Cowboys (Big 12), in a game which matched two schools whose initials spell \"OSU\". This was also Ohio State's first December bowl since the 1993 Holiday Bowl. The Buckeyes defense set the tone for the game early, intercepting Cowboys quarterback Donovan Woods during the game's first possession. Justin Zwick, starting at quarterback in place of the suspended Troy Smith, threw a touchdown pass to Anthony Gonzalez three plays later, giving the Buckeyes a lead that they never relinquished. The Buckeyes won 33\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Continental Tire Bowl\nIn the first of four games on December 30, the Boston College Eagles, which left the Big East in July 2005 to join the ACC, played one of its future conference rivals, the North Carolina Tar Heels, in the Continental Tire Bowl at Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina. Eagles quarterback Paul Peterson earned MVP honors by going 24-for-33 for 236 yards and two TDs before breaking his leg in the fourth quarter. Andre Callender added 174 rushing yards for the Eagles. The game was close for the first three quarters, and tied three times, but the Eagles pulled away to win their fifth consecutive bowl game and final game as a Big East member 37\u201324.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 70], "content_span": [71, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Emerald Bowl\nThe second game on December 30, the Emerald Bowl held at SBC Park in San Francisco, pitted the Navy Midshipmen (independent) against the New Mexico Lobos (MWC). After the Lobos jumped to an early 7\u20130 lead, Navy QB Aaron Polanco took over the game, rushing for three touchdowns and throwing for a fourth. The Midshipmen defense performed well in the clutch, forcing two turnovers in the first half that led to TDs and making a successful goal-line stand in the third quarter. After the stand, the Midshipmen offense then went on a 26-play drive that lasted nearly 15 minutes, ending with a field goal, that sealed Navy's 34\u201319 win. The Midshipmen finished the season 10\u20132, their first 10-win season since 1905. The Emerald Bowl is now known as the Fight Hunger Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Holiday Bowl\nIn the third game on December 30 (also the second of three in California), the Holiday Bowl was held at Qualcomm Stadium in San Diego, pitting the Pac-10's California Golden Bears and the Big 12's Texas Tech Red Raiders. Cal, edged out for a BCS bowl berth by Texas in the last week of the regular season, was out to prove that it deserved a BCS bowl berth. The Bears played well at first, finishing the first quarter with a 14\u20137 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0021-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Holiday Bowl\nHowever, the second and third quarters belonged to the Red Raiders, who outscored the Bears 31\u20133 in those periods, going on to score the biggest upset of the bowl season with a 45\u201331 win. Raiders QB Sonny Cumbie torched the Bears defense for 520 passing yards, going 40-for-60 with three TDs and no interceptions. The brightest spot for Cal was running back J.J. Arrington, who ran for 173 yards and a touchdown, making him only the third Pac-10 runner to reach 2,000 yards rushing in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Silicon Valley Football Classic\nThe last game of December 30 was the Silicon Valley Football Classic at Spartan Stadium in San Jos\u00e9. The Northern Illinois Huskies (MAC), playing in their first bowl game in 21 years, faced the Troy State Trojans from the Sun Belt, a school that joined NCAA Division I-A in 2001 and were playing in their first bowl game ever. The Trojans opened strong, scoring two touchdowns, a pass and a run by D.T. McDowell, in the first quarter to build a 14\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0022-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Silicon Valley Football Classic\nThe Huskies came back, tying the score by the end of the first quarter with rushing touchdowns by Garrett Wolfe and Josh Haldi, then building a 34\u201314 lead in the fourth quarter. The Trojans attempted a comeback, with McDowell running in another touchdown, but failed on their next possession on fourth and goal, and the Huskies were able to run out the clock to complete a 34\u201321 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0022-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Silicon Valley Football Classic\nThis would be the last game ever for this bowl, as poor attendance due to a driving rainstorm, a rarity of December in the Bay Area, along with bad publicity as neither the Pac-10 or WAC had teams with the necessary winning records and other negative press led the NCAA to strip the Silicon Valley Football Classic of its certification on April 20, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Music City Bowl\nThe first game on December 31, the Music City Bowl held at The Coliseum in Nashville, matched the Alabama Crimson Tide (SEC) and Minnesota Golden Gophers (Big Ten). The first quarter was one of the sloppiest in recent years, with the two teams turning the ball over five times (Minnesota three times, Alabama twice). On the first play of the second quarter, the Gophers took a 14\u20137 lead on a touchdown run by Marion Barber III and never trailed again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0023-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Music City Bowl\nLate in the fourth quarter, the Gophers, then leading 20\u201314, took a deliberate safety on a punt from their own end zone. On the ensuing possession, the Tide drove to the Gophers' 15-yard-line, but their threat ended with an incomplete pass on fourth down. The Gophers then ran out the clock for the 20\u201316 win. Barber ran for 187 yards, and fellow Gophers running back Laurence Maroney ran for 105. Alabama, which was second in the nation in total defense going into the game, had not given up a 100-yard game to an opposing rusher this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 64], "content_span": [65, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Sun Bowl\nThe next game on New Year's Eve, the Sun Bowl, held at the stadium of the same name in El Paso, Texas, pitted the Arizona State Sun Devils against the Purdue Boilermakers in what would be the sole Big Ten/Pac-10 matchup on the bowl schedule. The first half of the game was a defensive struggle, with the Sun Devils taking a 3\u20132 lead into the locker room. The offensive fireworks began on the first play from scrimmage of the second half, with Boilermakers QB Kyle Orton connecting with Brian Hare on an 80-yard TD pass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0024-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Sun Bowl\nThe Sun Devils answered with a Sam Keller TD pass to Derek Hagan to retake the lead. This set the stage for a wild fourth quarter that featured four lead changes, two of them in the last two minutes of the game. Purdue got the ball with 1:55 remaining and trailing 20-16; Orton took the Boilermakers down the field in four plays and 33 seconds, completing the drive with a 6-yard TD pass to Charles Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0024-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Sun Bowl\nThe Sun Devils then took only four plays to move the ball 80 yards, ending in a 19-yard Keller TD pass to Rudy Burgess with 43 seconds left. The ensuing extra point gave the Devils a 27\u201323 lead. Purdue was unable to move the ball in the remaining seconds, sealing the Devils' win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 57], "content_span": [58, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Liberty Bowl\nThe third game on December 31, and the last of the bowl season to feature two BCS non-AQ conference schools, was the Liberty Bowl, held in the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium in Memphis. One of the most intriguing matchups of the bowl season pitted the two top-ranked offenses in NCAA Division I-A. The Louisville Cardinals (C-USA) led the nation in scoring and total yardage per game; their opponents, WAC champion the Boise State Broncos, were second in both categories. The Broncos also took their undefeated regular season record and Division I-A's then-longest winning streak of 22 games into the contest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0025-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Liberty Bowl\nIn a wild game that saw five lead changes, the Cardinals won 44\u201340, ending the Broncos' streak, despite a season-high four turnovers. The Cardinals racked up 564 yards of total offense, surpassing the 500-yard mark for the ninth time this season. Starting Louisville QB Stefan LeFors threw for two touchdowns, ran for a third, and made the key block allowing a fourth touchdown to score, but also had an interception run back for a TD. The Broncos went into the game averaging 511 yards per game on offense, but could only manage 281. This was the last game for Louisville in C-USA; in July 2005, they joined a BCS AQ conference as a new member of the Big East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Peach Bowl\nThe final game on December 31 was the Peach Bowl, held at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta. It matched the Florida Gators of the SEC with one of their two bitter in-state rivals, the Miami Hurricanes from the ACC. The Hurricanes did most of their damage on special teams and defense, returning a blocked field goal and a punt for touchdowns, and intercepting Gators QB Chris Leak twice. Miami won 27\u201310, extending their winning streak against Florida to six games and giving 'Canes senior QB Brock Berlin (a former Florida player) a 5-0 record as a starter against Miami's two major in-state rivals (Florida and Florida State).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Cotton Bowl Classic\nThe Cotton Bowl Classic, held in the stadium of the same name in Dallas on January 1, matched the Tennessee Volunteers (SEC) and the Texas A&M Aggies (Big 12). On the game's seventh play from scrimmage, Vols QB Rick Clausen, a third-stringer for most of the season, completed a short pass to C.J. Fayton, who promptly turned the reception into a 57-yard touchdown to give the Vols an early lead. Clausen passed for two more TDs with no interceptions, Vols running back Gerald Riggs racked up 102 yards and a touchdown on the ground, and the Vols defense pressured the Aggies into five turnovers. Tennessee ended with a 38\u20137 win, their most one-sided bowl win ever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Outback Bowl\nAlso on New Year's Day, the Outback Bowl was held at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida. The game matched the Georgia Bulldogs and the Wisconsin Badgers in the first of two Big Ten-SEC New Year's Day contests. The first 20 minutes of the game were mostly a defensive battle, with the Badgers taking a 6\u20133 lead. Georgia QB David Greene threw a TD pass in the second quarter to give the Bulldogs a lead they never relinquished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0028-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Outback Bowl\nHe added a second TD pass in the third quarter, but had an interception run back for a Badgers TD in the fourth. Thomas Brown added 111 rushing yards and a TD for the Bulldogs, and Lombardi Award winner David Pollack forced a key Badgers fumble with one of his three sacks. The Bulldogs held on for a 24\u201321 win, extending Greene's NCAA record for wins by a starting quarterback to 42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Gator Bowl\nThe third bowl game on January 1 was the Gator Bowl, held at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida. It matched the Florida State Seminoles (ACC) and the West Virginia Mountaineers (Big East). Longtime Seminoles coach Bobby Bowden was facing his former school for the first time since the two met in this game in 1982. The 'Noles went out to an early lead when Leon Washington ran 69 yards for a TD; he finished with 195 yards rushing on only 12 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0029-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Gator Bowl\nHowever, inconsistent Seminoles QB Chris Rix helped keep the Mountaineers in the game, throwing two interceptions and fumbling three times, losing one, in the first half. Rix eventually settled down, leading the Seminoles on two touchdown drives in the second half. Lorenzo Booker added 101 yards rushing for the Seminoles. The Mountaineers ran for 238 yards against the nation's top rushing defense, led by 134 yards and two TDs by Kay-Jay Harris. However, special teams miscues hurt the Mountaineers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0029-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Gator Bowl\nIn the first half alone, a return man fumbled away a kickoff, two different kickers missed extra points, a kickoff was booted out of bounds, and the Mountaineers faked a field goal but failed to convert the first-down run. Even more tellingly, the Mountaineers were unsuccessful in the red zone; they advanced the ball past the Seminoles 20 five times, but could only score a TD and a field goal. The Seminoles pulled away to a 30\u201318 win, saving them from a third straight bowl loss and giving Bowden his 18th bowl victory, one shy of Joe Paterno's record of 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Capital One Bowl\nThe fourth bowl game on January 1, the second of the bowl season held at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, and the other Big Ten vs. SEC contest on New Year's Day was the Capital One Bowl, featuring the Iowa Hawkeyes and the LSU Tigers. The Hawkeyes scored on their first possession, with QB Drew Tate burning an LSU blitz by completing a pass to Clinton Solomon that turned into a 57-yard touchdown play. This gave Iowa a lead that it did not give up until the game's last minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0030-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Capital One Bowl\nThe Hawkeyes defense largely bottled up the Tigers' running game, except for a 74-yard TD run by Alley Broussard in the second quarter, and Iowa had a 24\u201312 lead early in the fourth. Freshman QB JaMarcus Russell came off the bench for LSU and connected with Skyler Green for two fourth-quarter TD passes, the last of which gave LSU a 25\u201324 lead with 46 seconds left. After a failed 2-point conversion, Iowa got the ball back, and Tate completed two passes, but a penalty pushed the Hawkeyes back to their own 44 with 14 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0030-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Non-BCS bowls, Capital One Bowl\nTate threw long to Warren Holloway, who was open because of an LSU coverage breakdown, and Holloway scored the winning touchdown with no time remaining. No extra point was attempted, and Iowa won 30\u201325. The result spoiled Nick Saban's last game as LSU head coach; he left to become head coach of the Miami Dolphins. With the loss, Saban's record fell to 30\u20131 when leading at the half with LSU, who also became the first defending BCS national champion to lose a non-BCS bowl the following year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 65], "content_span": [66, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Rose Bowl\nThe Rose Bowl, held on January 1 in the stadium of the same name in Pasadena, California, pitted the Big Ten champions, the Michigan Wolverines, and the Texas Longhorns from the Big 12. Utah's unexpected entry into the BCS games, combined with Texas leapfrogging Cal in the final BCS rankings, plus the fact that Pac-10 champion Southern California was playing in the Orange Bowl for the National Championship made it impossible for the Rose Bowl to maintain its traditional Big Ten\u2013Pac-10 match-up for only the third time since 1947.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Rose Bowl\nNonetheless, the match-up promised to be highly entertaining, as well as historic for being the first ever game between Michigan and Texas, the winningest and third-winningest college football programs, respectively, of all time. The 2,271 games played by the two teams mark the most games ever played by two teams before they met for the first time. It was also the Longhorns' first trip ever to the Rose Bowl, and the game itself proved to be a record-setting performance as well\u201416 Rose Bowl individual or team records were set or tied during the game, as well as numerous team and conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Rose Bowl\nThe game proved to be an offensive showcase. Longhorns QB Vince Young had 372 yards of total offense, rushing for 192 yards and four TDs and passing for 180 yards and a fifth TD, setting new Rose Bowl record for most total touchdowns. He became the first Texas quarterback to throw for over 1,000 yards and rush for over 1,000 yards in a single season. Together with Doak Walker Award-winning running back Cedric Benson, the two became the first Texas duo to each run for 1,000 yards in the same season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Rose Bowl\nWolverines freshman QB Chad Henne threw for four TDs, tying both the Michigan and Rose Bowl single-game record. Three of Henne's TDs went to All-American receiver and Fred Biletnikoff Award winner Braylon Edwards. Edwards set a Rose Bowl record for touchdown passes caught in a game, and also set Michigan and Big Ten records for career touchdown receptions (39). Another Wolverines receiver, Steve Breaston, amassed 310 all-purpose yards, breaking a Rose Bowl record set by O. J. Simpson in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0035-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Rose Bowl\nBy midway through the third quarter, the teams had been tied at 7, 14, and 21, but the Wolverines took a 31\u201321 lead going into the fourth quarter. In that quarter, Young ran for TDs before and after a Michigan field goal, giving the Longhorns a 35\u201334 lead. The Wolverines retook the lead with 3:04 remaining on Garrett Rivas' third field goal of the day. On the ensuing possession, Young led the 'Horns into position for a 37-yard field goal with 2 seconds left. Michigan took both of its remaining timeouts in an attempt to \"ice\" Texas kicker Dusty Mangum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0035-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Rose Bowl\nHe finally put a wobbly kick through the uprights as time expired, giving the Longhorns a 38\u201337 win. The thrilling come-from-behind fourth quarter victory marked their sixth such victory of the year. The game was won on the final play for the first time in Rose Bowl history, and only the third time in Longhorns history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0036-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Fiesta Bowl\nThe final game on January 1 was the Fiesta Bowl, held at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona (suburban Phoenix). It matched the Pittsburgh Panthers, the Big East champions and the Mountain West champion Utah Utes. This was another historic matchup, as Utah became the first BCS non-AQ conference member to appear in a BCS bowl game. It was also the swan song for Utes head coach Urban Meyer, who left after the game to take the head coaching job at Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0037-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Fiesta Bowl\nThe matchup was fairly controversial, though not because of the Utes' presence; in their 11\u20130 regular season, they had defeated three schools from BCS AQ conferences, two of which participated in bowl games, by an average of 22 points. No opponent came within two touchdowns of the Utes. The controversy surrounded the presence of Pittsburgh, or more to the point, the Big East, in the BCS AQ pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0037-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Fiesta Bowl\nThe Panthers finished 8-3 in a conference that had just lost its two strongest programs (Miami-Florida and Virginia Tech) to the ACC \u2014 a tiebreaker among four teams granted Pittsburgh the Big East championship. However, the BCS was still contractually obligated to place the Big East champion in one of its bowls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0038-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Fiesta Bowl\nUtah's vaunted offense started the game slowly, but the Utes nonetheless went into halftime leading 14\u20130. The tone for the game was initially set by the Utes defense, which mercilessly pressured Panthers QB Tyler Palko, and special teams, which blocked a Pittsburgh field goal attempt and nearly blocked a punt. In the third quarter, the Utah offense came alive, with QB Alex Smith, a Heisman Trophy finalist who became the top overall pick in the 2005 NFL Draft, throwing two TD passes and connecting on a hook and lateral that ended in a Paris Warren TD. By the end of that quarter, the Utes led by their final margin of 35\u20137. The win capped off a fairy-tale 12-0 season, Utah's first perfect season since 1930, and sent Meyer off to his new job in Gainesville with a historic win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0039-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Fiesta Bowl\nSmith went 29-for-37 passing for 328 yards and three TDs with no interceptions, and also led the Utes in rushing with 68 yards. Warren caught 15 passes for 180 yards and a TD, as well as scoring on the pass-and-lateral play. The Utes defense sacked Palko nine times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0040-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Sugar Bowl\nIn the second game of the bowl season held at the Superdome in New Orleans, the SEC champion Auburn Tigers took on the Virginia Tech Hokies, the ACC champions in the Sugar Bowl on January 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0041-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Sugar Bowl\nDespite finishing the regular season 12\u20130 and winning the SEC, Auburn was not able to crack the top two in the BCS rankings, shutting the Tigers out of the BCS title game. Their main hope for a split national championship (as happened the season before with LSU and Southern California) was to score a resounding win over the Hokies and hope that Oklahoma unimpressively defeated Southern California in the Orange Bowl the following evening. Auburn would then have to hope that enough voters in the AP media poll switch their votes from Oklahoma to give the Tigers the AP title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0042-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Sugar Bowl\nThe Tigers had a chance to blow the game open in the first half, but were unable to score a touchdown in three trips inside the Hokies' 10-yard line, settling for three field goals from John Vaughn. Auburn's defense was more than up to the challenge from the Hokies, shutting them out in the first half. Tech did not help itself, as Jesse Allen dropped an easy touchdown reception on fourth-and-goal at the Auburn 1 in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0043-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Sugar Bowl\nAuburn finally drove for a TD on the first possession of the second half, and kept their 16\u20130 lead into the fourth quarter. However, two second-half turnovers kept the Hokies in the game, and their offense finally awakened in the fourth quarter. Tech QB Bryan Randall threw two TD passes to Josh Howard, the last an 80-yard bomb, in the fourth quarter, cutting the Auburn lead to 16-13. The Hokies then attempted an onside kick, but the Tigers recovered and chose to run out the clock to instead of trying to score again. This preserved the Tigers' perfect 13\u20130 season; however, it effectively ended Auburn's faint hopes for a split national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0044-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Sugar Bowl\nTigers QB Jason Campbell was the game's MVP, completing 11 of his 16 pass attempts for 189 yards and a touchdown. However, he was intercepted once. For the Hokies, Randall went 21-for-38 passing for 299 yards and two TDs, but was intercepted twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0045-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Orange Bowl\nIn the final major bowl game of the BCS, the Orange Bowl, played on January 4, 2005, the top two 12\u20130 teams met for the likely National Championship (see Sugar Bowl, above). The top-ranked Southern California Trojans, the Pac-10 Champions, were able to obtain the National Championship title with a huge 55\u201319 victory over the second-ranked and Big 12 champion Oklahoma Sooners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0046-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Orange Bowl\nAn Orange Bowl record five touchdown passes were thrown by Heisman Trophy winner Matt Leinart, and 38 points were scored by the Trojans in the first 20 minutes of the first half alone to effectively seal the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0047-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Orange Bowl\nThe game was billed as the Game of the Century by many. It was the first time that two teams went wire-to-wire ranked #1 and #2. It featured the winner (Leinart) and the runner-up (Oklahoma's Adrian Peterson) in that year's Heisman Trophy voting. USC came into the game as a slight underdog after opening as a 3-point favorite. Most of the \"experts\" predicted an Oklahoma win, calling the Trojans thin at all positions except for all-purpose threat Reggie Bush. The Sooners looked to prove the experts correct by driving the field on their first possession for a 7\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0047-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Orange Bowl\nThe Trojans tied the score 7\u20137 on a spectacular diving catch by tight end Dominique Byrd. It looked like it would be a classic back-and-forth battle until a key turnover turned the tide to USC for good. USC had just punted to Oklahoma and got a good roll inside Oklahoma's 10-yard line. Inexplicably, Senior Mark Bradley tried to pick up the ball and promptly fumbled it away. LenDale White scored on the next play and USC never looked back. From that point on, Matt Leinart was on fire as was his primary target, Sophomore WR Steve Smith.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0047-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Orange Bowl\nSmith caught 3 TD passes on the night, also an Orange Bowl record. Oklahoma continued turning the ball over as the Trojan defense proved too tough all night. Freshman RB sensation Adrian Peterson was held to well under 100 yards, despite having been the first freshman to finish second in the Heisman balloting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0048-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, Orange Bowl\nMany fans left after the third quarter at which point the score was 48\u201310, USC. After the Trojans took a 55\u201310 lead, Oklahoma got a safety on USC QB Matt Leinart. The Sooners followed it up with a short drive for the final points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 77], "content_span": [78, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0049-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Bowl Championship Series games, USC Sanctions\nOn June 10, 2010, the NCAA placed the University of Southern California (USC) on a probation period of four years, with two years without any bowl game appearances, and forfeiture of all games in which Reggie Bush (an ineligible player because of accepting payments from an agent) participated in beginning in December 2004, and therefore, includes the Orange Bowl BCS National Championship game. On June 6, 2011, the NCAA officially vacated USC's Orange Bowl BCS National Championship game win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 79], "content_span": [80, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0050-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, All-Star Games, Gridiron Classic\nIn the Gridiron Classic, the first of the four post-BCS bowl games played January 15, 2005, at The Villages retirement center in Lady Lake, Florida, Marcus Randall (quarterback for LSU) ran seven out of eleven passes for 88 yards as he led the South squad to a win over the North by the score of 24\u201321. Randall was also declared the game's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0051-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, All-Star Games, East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe 80th East\u2013West Shrine Game, played January 15, 2005, (just after the Gridiron Classic) at SBC Park in San Francisco, saw two Louisville teammates, Stefan LeFors and J. R. Russell, propel the East squad to a 45\u201327 win over the West team. The two teams combined for 1,013 yards of offense in the highest-scoring Shrine Game since 1979.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0052-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, All-Star Games, East\u2013West Shrine Game\nLeFors was named the MVP for the offense, while Alex Green of Duke won the MVP for the defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 71], "content_span": [72, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0053-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, All-Star Games, Las Vegas All-American Classic\nThe 4th edition of the Las Vegas All-American Classic was played January 22, 2005, in Las Vegas, Nevada. The West won the game by a score of 21\u201316 over the East.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 80], "content_span": [81, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0054-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, All-Star Games, Hula Bowl\nA total 92 of the best seniors in college football were represented in the January 22, 2005, version of the Hula Bowl game played in Wailuku, Hawaii. Michigan State's Ronald Stanley scored with two defensive touchdowns to help win the game for the East over the West by the score of 20\u201313. For his efforts, Stanley won Most Valuable Player. This was the first time since 1996 that the Hula Bowl used the East and West squads format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0055-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, All-Star Games, Senior Bowl\nIn the Senior Bowl, the final game of the 2004\u201305 college football season, Kansas State's Darren Sproles, Akron's Charlie Frye, and Ohio State's Mike Nugent led the North to a 23\u201313 victory over the South in the annual bowl game played January 29, 2005, in Mobile, Alabama. Frye won the Most Valuable Player honors for his completion of 10 to 12 passes and making possible a 22-yard touchdown at the game's conclusion to seal the victory for the North. Nugent scored three field goals from 25, 36, and 41 yards, respectively, while Sproles earned the North's defensive player of the game for five carries gaining 55 yards. Leroy Hill of Clemson earned the defensive player honors for the South team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180217-0056-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NCAA football bowl games, Conference standings\nIn the following table of teams that played in bowl games, winners are marked in bold and losers are marked in italics. The table is sorted by winning percentage, then by number of competing teams, and finally alphabetically by conference name.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs\nThe National Football League playoffs for the 2004 season began on January 8, 2005. The postseason tournament concluded with the New England Patriots defeating the Philadelphia Eagles in Super Bowl XXXIX, 24\u201321, on February 6, at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs\nThe Minnesota Vikings and St. Louis Rams became the first teams to win a playoff game despite finishing the regular season with a record of .500 or worse, as both posted an 8\u20138 record in the regular season. Minnesota defeated the Green Bay Packers and St. Louis defeated the Seattle Seahawks in the Wild Card Round. Four other teams have since won a playoff game despite a regular season record at or below .500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Participants\nWithin each conference, the four division winners and the two wild card teams (the top two non-division winners with the best overall regular season records) qualified for the playoffs. The four division winners are seeded 1 through 4 based on their overall won-lost-tied record, and the wild card teams are seeded 5 and 6. The NFL does not use a fixed bracket playoff system, and there are no restrictions regarding teams from the same division matching up in any round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Participants\nIn the first round, dubbed the wild-card playoffs or wild-card weekend, the third-seeded division winner hosts the sixth seed wild card, and the fourth seed hosts the fifth. The 1 and 2 seeds from each conference then receive a bye in the first round. In the second round, the divisional playoffs, the number 1 seed hosts the worst surviving seed from the first round (seed 4, 5, or 6), while the number 2 seed will play the other team (seed 3, 4, or 5).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0002-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Participants\nThe two surviving teams from each conference's divisional playoff games then meet in the respective AFC and NFC Conference Championship games, hosted by the higher seed. Although the Super Bowl, the fourth and final round of the playoffs, is played at a neutral site, the designated home team is based on an annual rotation by conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Schedule\nIn the United States, ABC broadcast the first two Wild Card playoff games, then CBS broadcast the rest of the AFC playoff games. Fox televised the rest of the NFC games and Super Bowl XXXIX.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nAlthough the Rams barely made the playoffs with an 8\u20138 record, two of their regular season wins were against Seattle. And they proved they were up to the task again, beating the Seahawks in a back and forth game by scoring a touchdown with 2:11 left to go and then forcing a turnover on their own 5-yard line. With the win, the Rams became the first team in NFL history to win a playoff game after going 8\u20138 in the regular season. St. Louis' defense held Seahawks running back Shaun Alexander, the NFL's second leading rusher during the season, to only 40 yards on 15 carries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nShortly after the opening kickoff, Rams quarterback Marc Bulger completed a 52-yard pass to Torry Holt at the Seahawks 11-yard line. Three plays later, he threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Holt to give the Rams an early 7\u20130 lead. Then on Seattle's first play of the game, defensive back Travis Fisher intercepted a pass from Matt Hasselbeck at the Seahawks 44-yard line. Bulger once again tried to go deep, but the Seahawks were ready and Ken Hamlin picked off his pass at the 4. After an exchange of punts, Seattle drove 46 yards in 9 plays and scored with Josh Brown's 47-yard field goal, cutting their deficit to 7\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nEarly in the second quarter, Bulger's 52-yard completion to Kevin Curtis set up a 1-yard touchdown run by Marshall Faulk. But Seattle responded by driving 84 yards in 9 plays. On the eighth play of the drive, Hasselbeck's pass was intercepted, but a 15-yard penalty on Trev Faulk nullified the play and gave Seattle the ball at the Rams 19-yard line. Taking advantage of his second chance, Hasselbeck threw a 19-yard touchdown completion to Bobby Engram on the next play, making the score 14\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nOn the opening drive of the third quarter, the Seahawks moved the ball 64 yards in 14 plays and scored with Brown's 30-yard field goal, cutting their deficit to 1 point. The Rams responded with a field goal from Jeff Wilkins to retake their 4-point lead, but Hasselbeck stormed back, completing five consecutive passes for 75 yards on Seattle's ensuing drive and finishing it off with a 23-yard touchdown pass to Darrell Jackson, giving his team their first lead of the game 1:17 into the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nBut the Rams struck back with an 11-play, 60-yard drive to tie the game with a second field goal from Wilkins. Then after forcing a punt, St. Louis drove 76 yards in seven plays, featuring two key receptions by players who had not caught a pass yet in the game. The first was a 31-yard completion from Bulger to Shaun McDonald on third down and 2. Then three plays later, Bulger threw a 17-yard touchdown pass to Cam Cleeland with 2:11 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nHasselbeck started out the ensuing drive with three of four completions for 54 yards, moving the ball to the Rams 11-yard line. But over the next two plays, he threw an incompleted pass and was sacked for a 6-yard loss by St. Louis lineman Jimmy Kennedy. After that, he completed a 12-yard pass to Engram, bringing up fourth down and four on the Rams 5-yard line. With 27 seconds left, Hasselbeck tried to connect with Engram in the end zone, but the pass zipped through his hands and the Seahawks turned the ball over on downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nBulger finished the game with 313 passing yards and 2 touchdowns, with 1 interception. Holt caught 6 passes for 108 yards and a touchdown, while Curtis added 4 receptions for 107 yards. Hasselbeck completed 27 of 43 passes for 341 yards and two touchdowns, with 1 interception, and rushed for 26 yards. Jackson caught 12 passes for 128 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nThe game, notably, was also the last of wide receiver Jerry Rice's legendary career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nThis was the Rams' last playoff win as the St. Louis Rams as they would relocate to Los Angeles in 2016. They would not win a playoff game until 2018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nAfter this loss, the Seahawks went on to win 10 consecutive home playoff games, a streak which lasted through the 2020 NFC Wild Card playoffs in which Seattle was once again defeated by the Rams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, NFC: St. Louis Rams 27, Seattle Seahawks 20\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Rams and Seahawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nNew York entered the game after losing their last two regular season games, but managed to defeat the Chargers with a Doug Brien field goal in overtime. This game proved to be as close and competitive as the earlier playoff game in Seattle, featuring numerous key plays in the fourth quarter and in overtime that kept it going until 14:55 had elapsed in the extra period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nNew York took the opening kickoff and drove to the Chargers 11-yard line. But San Diego's defense kept them out of the end zone and Brien missed a 31-yard field goal attempt. In the second quarter, San Diego drove 88 yards and scored with Drew Brees' 26-yard touchdown pass to Keenan McCardell, which was initially ruled an incompletion, but overturned to a touchdown after a replay challenge. Later in the quarter, a 15-yard unsportsmanlike penalty against the Chargers on a punt gave New York the ball on the San Diego 37-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0015-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nFive plays later, quarterback Chad Pennington completed a 13-yard touchdown pass to Anthony Becht, tying the game at 7. On their ensuing drive, the Chargers mounted a scoring threat by moving the ball to the Jets 37-yard line, but Reggie Tongue intercepted a pass from Brees and the score remained tied at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nAfter forcing a punt on the opening second half drive, Pennington completed three consecutive passes for 68 yards, the last one a 47-yard touchdown pass to Santana Moss. Then after forcing a punt, New York drove 42 yards in eight plays, featuring two receptions by Curtis Martin for 33 yards and scored with a 42-yard field goal from Brien, giving them a 17\u20137 lead going into the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nIn the final period, the Chargers managed to rally back. First they drove 54 yards in 12 plays and scored with a 35-yard field goal by Nate Kaeding. The Jets responded with a drive to San Diego's 33-yard line, Pennington threw an incomplete pass on third down and they decided to punt rather than risk a 51-yard field goal. The Chargers subsequently moved the ball 80 yards in 10 plays to tie the game on a thrilling drive in which they nearly turned the ball over twice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0017-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nOn the first play, Brees fumbled the ball while being sacked by linebacker Jonathan Vilma, but he recovered it himself. Then he completed a 21-yard pass to tight end Antonio Gates to pick up the first down. One play later, he completed a 44-yard pass to Gates at the Jets 22-yard line. Two runs by LaDainian Tomlinson for 13 yards and a 7-yard run by Brees brought up third down on the Jets 2-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0017-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nAfter Tomlinson was tackled for a 1-yard loss, A fourth-down pass Brees with under 20 seconds left fell incomplete into the end zone, but Jets linebacker Eric Barton was penalized for roughing the passer, giving the Chargers a first down from the one-yard line. Brees threw a touchdown pass to Gates on the following play, sending the game into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nAfter an exchange of punts in overtime, the Chargers drove to the Jets 22-yard line, but Kaeding missed a 40-yard field goal attempt late in the extra period, allowing the Jets to come back down the field. Two Pennington completions for 29 yards and a 19-yard run by LaMont Jordan then set up a 28-yard field goal from Brien with five seconds remaining in overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nPennington completed 23 of 33 passes for 272 yards and 2 touchdowns. Moss finished the game with 4 receptions for 100 yards and a touchdown. Brees completed 31 of 42 passes for 319 yards and 2 touchdowns, with 1 interception. Tomlinson rushed for 80 yards and caught 9 passes for 53 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Saturday, January 8, 2005, AFC: New York Jets 20, San Diego Chargers 17 (OT)\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Jets and Chargers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nThe Colts followed up their wild-card blowout of the Broncos in the previous year's Wild Card Round, and also made up for a loss in Denver's INVESCO Field at Mile High a week earlier with another thrashing. Indianapolis scored a franchise playoff record seven touchdowns and led 35\u20133 at the half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0021-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nColt quarterback Peyton Manning, who threw a record 49 touchdown passes in the 2004 regular season, completed 27 of 33 passes for 457 yards (the second highest total ever in a playoff game) and four touchdowns, including two to receiver Reggie Wayne (who had 10 receptions for 221 yards receiving on the day), and one each to tight end Dallas Clark (who caught 6 passes for 113 yards) and running back James Mungro. Manning and running backs Edgerrin James and Dominic Rhodes scored rushing touchdowns. For Denver, quarterback Jake Plummer threw for 284 yards and 2 touchdowns, with 1 interception, while receiver Rod Smith caught 7 passes for 99 yards and a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nManning dominated the Broncos in the first quarter, completing 11 of 14 passes for 156 yards. On the Colts second drive of the game, he completed two passes to Wayne for 41 yards and a 25-yard pass to tight end Marcus Pollard before throwing a 2-yard touchdown pass to Mungro. Then after a Denver punt, Manning completed three passes to Clark for 63 yards on an 87-yard drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown run by James, giving Indianapolis a 14\u20130 lead with 38 seconds left in the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nOn Denver's opening drive of the second quarter, safety Mike Doss intercepted a pass Plummer on the Colts 41-yard line. One play later, Manning threw a 49-yard completion to Wayne at the Denver 9. Rookie defensive back Kelly Herndon ended the drive by intercepting a pass from Manning in the end zone, but it did not matter. Denver was forced to punt after three plays and Troy Walters returned the ball 9 yards to the Colts 48-yard line. Manning then completed three consecutive passes for 48 yards, the last one a 19-yard touchdown throw to Clark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0023-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nThis time the Broncos managed to respond. Smith caught 2 passes for 41 yards on a 51-yard drive that ended with a 33-yard field goal by Jason Elam, cutting the score to 21\u20133. Then the Broncos tried to fool the Colts with a surprise onside kick, but it did not work. Indianapolis' Nick Rogers recovered the ball on the Denver 40-yard line, and one play later, Manning threw a 35-yard touchdown pass to Wayne. Before the end of the half, the Colts put together another touchdown drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0023-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nThis time Manning went to Marvin Harrison, who had been dominated all game, completing two passes to him for 41 yards before a 20-yard catch by Wayne moved the ball to the Broncos 1-yard line. Manning finished the drive with a 1-yard touchdown run with 6 seconds left in the half, increasing the Colts lead to 35\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nThe Broncos scored on the opening drive of the second half, moving the ball 75 yards and scoring with Plummer's 9-yard touchdown pass to Smith. Then after forcing a punt, they drove 85 yards and scored with Plummer's 35-yard touchdown pass to Jeb Putzier, cutting the score to 35\u201317. But on the Colts ensuing drive, Wayne caught a screen pass from Manning and took it 43 yards for a touchdown, giving Indianapolis a 42\u201317 lead early in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0024-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nDenver receiver Triandos Luke returned the ensuing kickoff 41 yards to the 43-yard line, setting up a 57-yard scoring drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown run by Tatum Bell. But Harrison recovered Elam's onside kick attempt and the Colts subsequently closed out the scoring with a 2-yard touchdown run by Rhodes. This was the last NFL game played on the first-generation AstroTurf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, AFC: Indianapolis Colts 49, Denver Broncos 24\nThis was the second consecutive postseason meeting between the Broncos and Colts. Indianapolis won the only previous meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 112], "content_span": [113, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nThe Vikings, like the Rams, went 8\u20138 during the regular season. Furthermore, they had stumbled into the post-season losing 7 of their last 10 games, the worst performance in NFL history by a playoff team in a final 10-game span. Two of their losses, by identical 34\u201331 scores, came in last-second games to the Packers. This time, however, there was no denying the Vikings as they avenged their regular-season sweep, coming out with a stellar performance on both sides of the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0026-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nQuarterback Daunte Culpepper threw for 284 yards and four touchdowns and rushed for 54 yards, while the Vikings defense, who only intercepted 11 passes all season, picked off Green Bay counterpart Brett Favre four times. Wide receiver Randy Moss caught two touchdowns for Minnesota, but drew controversy for his celebration after his second, which decided the outcome of the contest. Moss pretended to \"moon\" Packer fans by pretending to pull down his pants, mocking a move done by Packer fans to the losing team's bus as they left Green Bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0026-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nFox play-by-play announcer Joe Buck was visibly upset by Moss's celebratory move, calling it \"a disgusting act\". The NFL was also not amused and fined Moss $10,000 for his actions a few days later. When asked by a fan how he would the pay the fine, Moss replied, \"straight cash homie\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nOn the Vikings' opening drive, Culpepper narrowly avoided a sack with a short completion to running back Moe Williams, who then dodged a tackle attempt from safety Darren Sharper and took off for a 68-yard touchdown reception. The Packers were forced to punt after Favre was sacked for a 10-yard loss on third down by Chris Claiborne, and Nate Burleson returned the ball 7 yards to the 45-yard line. Three plays later, Culpepper threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Moss, giving Minnesota a 14\u20130 lead after just 5:05 had elapsed in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0027-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nA 30-yard kickoff return by Najeh Davenport gave the Packers good field position on their 42-yard line, but two plays later, defensive back Antoine Winfield intercepted a pass from Favre and returned it 3 yards to the Vikings 43. After that, Culpepper completed two passes for 19 yards and rushed for 23, setting up a 35-yard field goal by Morten Andersen and increasing the lead to 17\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nAfter being completely dominated up to this point, the Packers managed to rally back. First Davenport returned the ensuing kickoff 20 yards to the 38-yard line. Then a 21-yard completion from Favre to Javon Walker set up a 43-yard field goal by Ryan Longwell. The Vikings were forced to punt after Culpepper was sacked on third down by Michael Hawthorne, and Green Bay subsequently drove 54 yards in 12 plays and scored on Favre's 4-yard touchdown pass to tight end Bubba Franks, cutting their deficit to 17\u201310 with 10:24 left in the second quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0028-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nBut on the Vikings' next drive, a 29-yard reception by Burleson and a 23-yard run by Culpepper helped move the ball to the Packers 9-yard line. Green Bay seemed to catch a break when Anderson slipped on a field goal attempt, resulting in a block. But on the next play, safety Brian Russell intercepted a pass from Favre and returned it 14 yards to the Packers 28-yard line. One play later, Culpepper threw a 19-yard touchdown pass to Burleson, putting the Vikings up 24\u201310. The Packers subsequently drove to Minnesota's 8-yard line, but while scrambling around looking for an open receiver, Favre threw an illegal forward pass when he could have run for a first down. On the next play, Longwell missed a 28-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nAfter a scoreless third quarter, Green Bay drove 78 yards in 9 plays to score on Davenport's 1-yard touchdown run, cutting their deficit to 24\u201317. But the Vikings responded by driving 66 yards and scoring with a 34-yard touchdown completion for Culpepper to Moss. Then after forcing a punt, Minnesota put the game away with an 8-minute drive that ran the clock down to 23 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Wild Card playoffs, Sunday, January 9, 2005, NFC: Minnesota Vikings 31, Green Bay Packers 17\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Vikings and Packers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 114], "content_span": [115, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, AFC: Pittsburgh Steelers 20, New York Jets 17 (OT)\nThe Jets came out on the losing end of this overtime game when placekicker Doug Brien missed two consecutive field goals at the end of regulation, setting an NFL record of 3 missed game winning field goals in a single post-season. Despite a subpar performance by Steelers' rookie quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, the Steelers managed to win after Jeff Reed made a game-winning 33-yard field goal 11:04 into the extra period. Steelers running back Jerome Bettis finished the game with 101 rushing yards and a touchdown, along with a 21-yard reception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, AFC: Pittsburgh Steelers 20, New York Jets 17 (OT)\nThe Steelers opened up the scoring with a 43-yard field goal by Reed. Then after the ensuing kickoff, Steelers safety Troy Polamalu intercepted a pass from Chad Pennington and returned it 15 yards to the Jets 25-yard line, setting up a 3-yard touchdown run by Bettis. New York Responded with a 42-yard field goal from Brien on their next drive to cut their deficit to 10\u20133. Later in the second quarter, Jets receiver Santana Moss returned a punt 75 yards for a touchdown to tie the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, AFC: Pittsburgh Steelers 20, New York Jets 17 (OT)\nMidway through third quarter, Jets defensive back Reggie Tongue intercepted a pass from Roethlisberger and returned it 86 yards for a touchdown. On Pittsburgh's next drive, they drove all the way to New York's 23-yard line. But then Bettis fumbled and New York's Erik Coleman recovered it. After forcing a punt, the Steelers drove into scoring range for the third consecutive drive, this time scoring with Roethlisbeger's 4-yard touchdown pass to Hines Ward to tie it at 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, AFC: Pittsburgh Steelers 20, New York Jets 17 (OT)\nThe Jets responded with a drive inside the Steelers 30-yard line, but Brien missed a 47-yard field goal attempt with 2 minutes left in regulation. Two plays later, New York defensive back David Barrett gave his team another chance to score the winning points by intercepting a pass from Roethlisberger and returning it 25 yards to Pittsburgh's 36-yard line. But Brien missed another field goal, this one from 43 yards, as time expired in the fourth quarter, and the game went into overtime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0035-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, AFC: Pittsburgh Steelers 20, New York Jets 17 (OT)\nThe Jets won the coin toss, but were forced to punt. Pittsburgh then drove 72 yards in 14 plays and won the game with a 33-yard field goal from Reed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0036-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, AFC: Pittsburgh Steelers 20, New York Jets 17 (OT)\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Jets and Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0037-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nIn a classic rout, quarterback Michael Vick and the Falcons steamrolled over the Rams in their first home playoff game since 1999, scoring on six of their nine possessions, while racking up 327 rushing yards and 232 yards on special teams. Vick combined for 201 yards (including 119 rushing yards, a playoff record for a quarterback) and threw 2 touchdown passes, while running back Warrick Dunn rushed for 142 yards and 2 touchdowns. Allen Rossum set an NFL post-season record with 152 punt return yards and added another 80 on kickoff returns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0038-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nOn the Falcons opening drive, Vick rushed for 47 yards and later threw an 18-yard touchdown pass to tight end Alge Crumpler, giving his team a 7\u20130 lead after just 3:02 had elapsed in the game. The Rams responded with Marc Bulger's 57-yard touchdown pass to Kevin Curtis, but four plays after the ensuing kickoff, Atlanta running back Warrick Dunn scored on a 62-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0039-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nEarly in the second quarter, Atlanta drove 80 yards in 13 plays. Dunn rushed for 46 total yards on the drive and caught a pass for 2, eventually finishing it off with a 19-yard touchdown run to give the Falcons a 21\u20137 lead. The Rams struck back with an 8-play, 75-yard drive in which Stephen Jackson had three carries for 29 yards. On the last play, Bulger threw a 28-yard touchdown pass to Torry Holt. Then linebacker Tommy Polley ended Atlanta's next drive by forcing a recovering a fumble from Vick on the Rams 18-yard line. But the Falcons defense forced a punt and Rossum returned it 68 yards for a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0040-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nThe Rams responded by driving 43 yards and scoring on Jeff Wilkins' 55-yard field goal to cut the deficit to 28\u201317 on the last play of the second quarter, but the Falcons dominated the second half. First they forced the Rams to punt, and Rossum returned the ball 39 yards to the St. Louis 32-yard line. Five plays later, Vick threw a 6-yard touchdown pass to Peerless Price. Then Rossum returned the Rams next punt 45 yards to the Rams 13-yard line, setting a 38-yard field goal by Jay Feely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0040-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nThroughout the rest of the game, the Falcons intercepted a pass from Bulger, forced him to lose a fumble, and Brady Smith sacked him in the end zone for a safety. After the safety, Atlanta drove 58 yards in 15 plays, taking 9:45 off the clock on the way to running back T. J. Duckett's 4-yard touchdown run with 2 minutes left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0041-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nBulger finished with 292 passing yards and 2 touchdowns, with 1 interception. Curtis caught 7 passes for 128 yards. Duckett rushed for 66 yards and a touchdown. This would be the last playoff game for the St. Louis Rams, as they relocated to Los Angeles in 2016, and the franchise's last overall until 2017, which would also be against Atlanta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0042-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Saturday, January 15, 2005, NFC: Atlanta Falcons 47, St. Louis Rams 17\nThis was the first postseason meeting between the Rams and Falcons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 113], "content_span": [114, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0043-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nThe Eagles advanced to the NFC Championship Game for the fourth straight year on the strength of quarterback Donovan McNabb (21 out of 33 completions for 286 yards and 2 touchdowns). Meanwhile, the Vikings repeatedly shot themselves in the foot with penalties (including 3 pass interference calls for 78 yards), turnovers (including two third quarter interceptions), and other miscues. The most notable was a blown fake field goal attempt which failed because they did not send the right personnel onto the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0044-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nMidway through the first quarter, Darren Bennett's 24-yard punt gave the Eagles a first down on their own 47-yard line. McNabb then completed passes to running back Brian Westbrook for gains of 10 and 24 yards as he led the team 53 yards in 7 plays to score the first points of the game with a 2-yard touchdown pass to Freddie Mitchell. The next time the Eagles got the ball, McNabb completed a 52-yard pass to receiver Greg Lewis, setting up his second touchdown pass on a 7-yard toss to Westbrook to complete a 92-yard drive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0044-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nMewelde Moore returned the ensuing kickoff 39 yards to his own 42-yard line, and two plays later, Vikings quarterback Daunte Culpepper threw a 40-yard completion to Marcus Robinson. After that, he finished the drive with a 7-yard touchdown run, cutting the score to 14\u20137. But the Eagles struck right back on their next drive. First, J. R. Reed returned the kickoff 48 yards to the Vikings 46-yard line. After two penalties against Minnesota gave them 33 yards, McNabb completed two passes to tight end L. J. Smith. Smith fumbled the ball on the second pass, but Mitchell recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown, increasing the Eagles' lead to 21\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0045-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nThe Vikings responded with a drive to Philadelphia's 3-yard line. On fourth down, coach Mike Tice called a fake field goal that was supposed to involve backup quarterback Gus Frerotte passing the ball. But the lineman next to the long snapper didn't hear the call. He remained in and Randy Moss, who was supposed to receive the pass, had to run off the field to avoid a penalty. When the ball was snapped, a confused Frerotte had no receivers to pass too, and was forced to throw the ball away. The Eagles then drove 93 yards the Vikings 4-yard line, but were unable to stop the clock from running out before they could score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0046-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nAfter forcing Philadelphia to punt on the opening second half possession, Minnesota drove to the Eagles 28-yard, only to lose the ball on an interception by Ike Reese. The next time the Vikings got the ball, they fared no better, as Culpepper threw a pass that was intercepted by linebacker Jeremiah Trotter, who returned it 35 yards to the Minnesota 31-yard line. On the following play, Minnesota got the ball back as Brian Russell forced a fumble from Mitchell after he caught a 30-yard pass and was headed for the goal line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0046-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nCornerback Terrance Shaw recovered it in the end zone for a touchdown, and the Vikings drove to a first down on the Eagles 19-yard line. But after an incompletion and a run for no gain, defensive back Brian Dawkins sacked Culpepper for a 12-yard loss, and his subsequent pass attempt to convert the 4th and 22 was incomplete. Philadelphia then took advantage of a 46-yard pass interference penalty against Vikings corner Ralph Brown, scoring on David Akers' 21-yard field goal to go up 24-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0046-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nThen after a Vikings punt, the Eagles drove 55 yards in 10 plays to make the score 27-7 with Akers' 23-yard kick. The Vikings managed to respond with an 80-yard drive capped by Culpepper's 32-yard touchdown pass to Robinson, but they could not recover the onside kick and the Eagles ran out the rest of the clock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0047-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nCulpepper threw for 354 yards and 1 touchdown, but was intercepted twice. Robinson caught five passes for 119 yards and a touchdown. Westbrook rushed for 70 yards and caught five passes for 47 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0048-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Minnesota Vikings 14\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Vikings and Eagles. Philadelphia won the only prior meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 118], "content_span": [119, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0049-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nIn a snowstorm, the Patriots dismantled the league's highest scoring team by forcing three turnovers and holding them to just 276 yards and 3 points, their lowest point total since their opening game of the 2003 season. Peyton Manning suffered his seventh loss in Foxborough, even though he had more yards passing than Brady did in the game. The Patriots limited Manning to 238 passing yards with 1 interception and no touchdowns, and Edgerrin James to just 39 rushing yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0049-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nThe Patriots also held possession of the ball for 37:43, including 21:26 in the second half and recording three long scoring drives that each took over 7 minutes off the clock. New England running back Corey Dillon, playing in his first career playoff game after suffering through 7 losing seasons as a member of the Cincinnati Bengals, rushed for 144 yards and caught 5 passes for 17 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0050-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nBoth teams defenses dominated early, as the first five possessions of the game ended in punts. But after that, the Patriots put together a 16-play, 78 yards scoring drive that took 9:07 off the clock. They lost a touchdown when Dillons' 1-yard score was overturned by a penalty, but Adam Vinatieri kicked a 24-yard field goal to give them a 3\u20130 lead. The next time New England got the ball, a 42-yard run by Dillon set up another Vinatieri field goal, increasing the Patriots lead to 6\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0050-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nThe Colts responded with a drive to New England's 39-yard line, but linebacker Tedy Bruschi ended it by forcing and recovering a fumble from running back Dominic Rhodes. After a Patriots punt, Manning led the Colts 67 yards to a Mike Vanderjagt field goal, cutting the score to 6\u20133 going into halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0051-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nBut the Patriots dominated the second half, holding the ball for nearly all the time in regulation with two long drives. After a criticized Indianapolis punt on 4th and 1 from the New England 49-yard line, the Patriots drove 87 yards in 15 plays on a drive that consumed 8:16 and ended with Brady's 5-yard touchdown pass to David Givens. At the end of the Colts next drive, Hunter Smith's 54-yard punt pinned New England back at their own 6-yard line. But it didn't stop them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0051-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nThe Patriots stormed down the field on a 14-play, 94-yard drive that ate up another 7:24. Dillon rushed for 35 yards and caught a pass for 9 on the drive, including a 27-yard run on third down and 8, while Brady finished it with a 1-yard touchdown run, giving the Patriots a 20\u20133 lead with just over 7 minutes left in the game. Then two plays after the ensuing kickoff, safety Rodney Harrison stripped the ball from Reggie Wayne and Bruschi recovered it, allowing his team to take more time off the clock. Indianapolis responded with a drive to the Patriots 20-yard line, but Harrison intercepted Manning's pass in the end zone with 10 seconds left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0052-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Divisional playoffs, Sunday, January 16, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 20, Indianapolis Colts 3\nThis was the second postseason meeting between the Colts and Patriots. New England won the only previous meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 119], "content_span": [120, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0053-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Atlanta Falcons 10\nDespite a game-time temperature of 17\u00a0\u00b0F (\u22128\u00a0\u00b0C) and a swirling wind that sent wind chills into sub-zero temperatures, the Eagles finally succeeded in advancing to the Super Bowl in their fourth straight NFC Championship Game appearance. The Eagles' defense held Michael Vick to a combined total of 162 yards, sacking him four times. Tight end Chad Lewis caught two touchdown passes of three and two yards from Donovan McNabb; however, he suffered a Lisfranc injury to his foot in the process of catching the second touchdown, and would miss the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0054-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Atlanta Falcons 10\nOn their first drive of the game, the Eagles drove to Atlanta's 32-yard line. But they turned the ball over after trying to convert a fourth down with a fake field goal attempt. The next time they got the ball, a 36-yard run by Brian Westbrook and a 21-yard catch by L. J. Smith set up a 4-yard touchdown run by Dorsey Levens, giving them a 7\u20130 lead. Atlanta responded with a drive to the Eagles 3-yard line, but was forced to settle for a Jay Feely field goal after Vick was sacked by Hollis Thomas on third down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0054-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Atlanta Falcons 10\nSix plays after the ensuing kickoff, Greg Lewis' 45-yard reception moved the ball to the Falcons 4-yard line, setting up McNabb's 3-yard touchdown pass to Chad Lewis one play later. Atlanta struck right back on their next drive, moving the ball 70 yards in just five plays, one a 31-yard reception by tight end Alge Crumpler, and scoring with Warrick Dunn's 10-yard touchdown run with 21 seconds left in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0055-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Atlanta Falcons 10\nThe Eagles dominated the second half, forcing Atlanta to punt on every possession except one which resulted in an interception, and their last one, which ended when they turned the ball over on downs. Meanwhile, Eagles kicker David Akers kicked two field goals, one at the 60-yard drive to start the second half, and the second set up by Brian Dawkins' 19-yard interception return to the Falcons 11-yard line. A 65-yard drive in the fourth quarter, featuring McNabb's 20-yard pass to Greg Lewis, resulted in the final score of the game; McNabb's 2-yard touchdown toss to Chad Lewis with 3:21 left in regulation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0056-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Atlanta Falcons 10\nMcNabb threw for 180 yards and two touchdowns, while also rushing for 32 yards. Westbrook rushed for 96 yards and caught five passes for 39. Atlanta defensive back Allen Rossum returned 4 kickoffs for 102 yards and 2 punts for 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0057-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, NFC: Philadelphia Eagles 27, Atlanta Falcons 10\nThis was the third postseason meeting between the Falcons and Eagles. Both teams split the prior two meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 121], "content_span": [122, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0058-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nThe game-time temperature of 11\u00a0\u00b0F (\u221212\u00a0\u00b0C) made it the second-coldest game ever in Pittsburgh and the coldest ever in Steel City playoff annals. However, it was the Patriots that handed Ben Roethlisberger his first loss as a starter after a 14-game winning streak, the longest by a rookie quarterback in NFL history, as the Steelers became the second NFL team ever to record a 15\u20131 record and fail to reach the Super Bowl. The Patriots converted four Pittsburgh turnovers into 24 points, while committing no turnovers themselves. The Patriots' win also prevented an all-Pennsylvania Super Bowl from being played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0059-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nThe Steelers never recovered from their poor performance in the first quarter. Patriots defensive back Eugene Wilson intercepted Roethlisberger's first pass of the game on his own 48-yard line, setting up Adam Vinatieri's 48-yard field goal to take a 3\u20130 lead. Pittsburgh responded with a drive to the Patriots 39-yard line. But then running back Jerome Bettis lost a fumble while being tackled by Rosevelt Colvin and linebacker Mike Vrabel recovered it. On the next play, Tom Brady threw a 60-yard touchdown pass to receiver Deion Branch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0060-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nLater on, the Steelers took advantage of Josh Miller's 27-yard punt that gave them the ball on their own 48-yard line. Roethlisberger completed a 19-yard pass to Hines Ward on the next play, setting up Jeff Reed's 43-yard field goal that cut the score to 10-3 with 1:26 left in the first quarter. But after an exchange of punts, Branch caught a 45-yard reception on Pittsburgh's 14-yard line. Two plays later, Brady threw a 9-yard touchdown pass to David Givens. Then on the Steelers ensuing drive, safety Rodney Harrison intercepted a pass from Roethlisberger and returned it 87 yards for a touchdown, giving the Patriots a 24\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0061-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nIn the second half, the teams scored three consecutive touchdowns. New England was forced to punt on the opening drive of the third quarter, and Antwaan Randle El returned the ball 9 yards to the Steelers 44-yard line. Then on the Steelers ensuing possession, he caught two passes for 46 yards as they drove 56 yards in five plays. Bettis finished the drive with a 5-yard touchdown run, cutting their deficit to 24\u201310. New England responded by moving the ball 69 yards in seven plays and scoring with Corey Dillon's 25-yard touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0061-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nBut Pittsburgh stormed right back, driving 60 yards in ten plays and scoring with Roethlisberger's 30-yard touchdown pass to Ward. Then after forcing a punt, Randle El returned the ball 22 yards to the Steelers 49-yard line. On their ensuing drive, Ward's 26-yard reception on the last play of the third quarter set up Reed's second field goal, making the score 31\u201320 with 13:32 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0062-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nHowever, the Patriots took over the rest of the quarter. They responded with a 49-yard drive that took 5:26 off the clock and ended with Vinatieri's 31-yard field goal. Then two plays after the ensuing kickoff, Wilson intercepted another pass from Roethlisberger at New England's 45-yard line. The Patriots subsequently marched down the field on another long scoring drive, taking 5:06 off the clock. Branch capped it off with a 23-yard touchdown run on a reverse play, giving the Patriots a 41\u201320 lead. The Steelers responded with Roethlisberger's 7-yard touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress on their next drive, but by then there was only 1:31 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0063-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nBrady completed 14 of 21 passes for 207 yards and 2 touchdowns. Dillon rushed for 73 yards and a touchdown. Branch caught 4 passes for 116 yards, rushed for 37 yards, and scored two touchdowns. Roethlisberger threw for 226 yards and 2 touchdowns, and rushed for 45 yards, but was intercepted 3 times. Ward caught 5 passes for 109 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0064-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Conference Championships, Sunday, January 23, 2005, AFC: New England Patriots 41, Pittsburgh Steelers 27\nThis was the fourth postseason meeting between the Patriots and Steelers. New England had won two of the prior three meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 126], "content_span": [127, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180218-0065-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NFL playoffs, Super Bowl XXXIX: New England Patriots 24, Philadelphia Eagles 21\nThis was the first Super Bowl meeting between the Patriots and Eagles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 87], "content_span": [88, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout\nThe 2004\u201305 NHL lockout was a labor lockout that resulted in the cancellation of the National Hockey League (NHL) season, which would have been its 88th season of play. The main dispute was the league's desire to implement a salary cap to limit expenditure on player salaries. This was opposed by the NHL Players Association (NHLPA), the players' labor union, who proposed an alternative system of revenue sharing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout\nAttempts at collective bargaining before the season began were unsuccessful. The lockout was initiated on September 16, 2004, one day after the expiration of the existing collective bargaining agreement (CBA), which itself had been the result of the 1994\u201395 lockout. During the lockout, further attempts to negotiate a new CBA floundered, with neither side willing to back down, leading to the entire season being canceled in February 2005. The NHL and NHLPA negotiating teams finally reached an agreement on July 13, 2005, with the lockout officially ending 9 days later on July 22, after ratification by the NHL team owners and NHLPA members. The resulting CBA included both a salary cap and revenue sharing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout\nThe lockout had lasted 10 months and 6 days, covering 1,230 unplayed games. As a result, the Stanley Cup was not awarded, for the first time since 1919. Among the major professional sports leagues in North America, this was the first (and so far only) time a whole season was canceled because of a labor dispute, and the second time a postseason was canceled (after the 1994\u201395 MLB strike). Large numbers of NHL players elected to play in European leagues during the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nThe NHL, led by Commissioner Gary Bettman, attempted to convince players to accept a salary structure linking player salaries to league revenues, guaranteeing the clubs what the league called cost certainty. According to an NHL-commissioned report prepared by former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chairman Arthur Levitt, prior to 2004\u201305, NHL clubs spent about 76 percent of their gross revenues on players' salaries\u00a0\u2013 a figure far higher than those in other North American sports\u00a0\u2013 and collectively lost US$273\u00a0million during the 2002\u201303 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nOn July 20, 2004, the league presented the NHLPA with six concepts to achieve cost certainty. These concepts are believed to have ranged from a hard, or inflexible, salary cap similar to the one used in the National Football League, to a soft salary cap with some capped exceptions like the one used in the National Basketball Association, to a centralized salary negotiation system similar to that used in the Arena Football League and Major League Soccer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0004-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nAccording to Bettman, a luxury tax similar to the one used in Major League Baseball would not have satisfied the league's cost certainty objectives. Most sports commentators saw Bettman's plan as reasonable, but some critics pointed out that a hard salary cap without any revenue sharing was an attempt to gain the support of the big market teams, such as Toronto, Montreal, Detroit, the New York Rangers, Vancouver, and Philadelphia, teams that did not support Bettman during the 1994\u201395 lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nThe NHLPA, under executive director Bob Goodenow, disputed the league's financial claims. According to the union, \"cost certainty\" is little more than a euphemism for a salary cap, which it had vowed never to accept. The union rejected each of the six concepts presented by the NHL, claiming they all contained some form of salary cap. The NHLPA preferred to retain the existing \"marketplace\" system where players individually negotiate contracts with teams, and teams have complete control of how much they want to spend on players. Goodenow's mistrust of the league was supported by a November 2004 Forbes report that estimated the NHL's losses were less than half the amounts claimed by the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nSeveral players criticized the contracts that overpaid unproven players. One example was the 2002 Bobby Holik contract in which the New York Rangers signed him to five years for $45\u00a0million. After two years, his contract was bought out by the Rangers: \"In the new world we live in, Bobby was just paid too much,\" according to Glen Sather, the Rangers' president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nAlthough the NHL's numbers were disputed, there was no question that several franchises were losing money, as several had declared bankruptcy. Other franchises had held \"fire sales\" of franchise players, such as the Washington Capitals. Some small-market teams, such as the Pittsburgh Penguins and the remaining small-market Canadian teams, were actually hoping for a lockout, since those teams would make more money by losing a season. The league did not have large TV revenues in the US, so the NHL was reliant on attendance revenues more than other leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Issues\nAfter the lockout of the 2004\u201305 season, NHL teams made on average only 3\u00a0million dollars from television revenues. In addition in May of the 2004\u201305 lockout, ESPN formally denied the option to show NHL games on the network due to low ratings in previous seasons. Many NHL teams had low attendance totals in preceding seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nPrior to the lockout, in late 2003 the union proposed a system that included revenue sharing, a luxury tax, a one-time five percent rollback in player salaries, and reforms to the league's entry level system. The league rejected this proposal almost immediately because it essentially maintained the status quo in favor of the players. Shortly before the lockout commenced in 2004, the NHLPA offered another proposal to the league that was believed to be similar to their earlier proposal. The league again rejected the union offer, claiming the union's new proposal was worse than the offer they rejected in 2003. At this point, negotiations stopped until early December, when the NHLPA made a highly anticipated proposal based on a luxury tax that increased the proposed one-time rollback in players' salaries from 5 to 24 percent. The NHL rejected the offer and countered with a proposal that the union quickly rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 957]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nIn late January 2005, near what the hockey media believed to be the point of no return for the 2004\u201305 season, discussions were held by the negotiators from both sides, excluding Bettman and Goodenow. The NHL was represented by Executive Vice President Bill Daly, outside counsel Bob Batterman, and NHL Board of Governors Chairman Harley Hotchkiss, who also co-owns the Calgary Flames. The NHLPA was represented by President Trevor Linden, Senior Director Ted Saskin, and associate counsel Ian Pulver. After four meetings, the sides remained deadlocked because of, according to Saskin, \"significant philosophical differences.\" Shortly after this series of meetings, Daly presented Saskin a proposal that the league believed made a number of concessions to the players, but was still based on a salary cap linked to revenues. The players' association rejected the proposal, saying that it was \"not the basis for an agreement.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 959]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nAfter these negotiations failed, on Wednesday February 9, Bettman declared that if the lockout was not resolved by the weekend, there would be no hope of saving the season. When talks broke off between the NHL and the NHLPA the next day, there had been no progress in negotiations. On February 14, the union offered to accept a $52\u00a0million salary cap under the condition that it was not linked to league revenues. The league proposed a counteroffer with a $40\u00a0million cap plus $2.2\u00a0million in benefits, which the players association refused.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nThe next day, Bettman sent Goodenow a letter with a final proposal of a $42.5\u00a0million cap plus $2.2\u00a0million in benefits, setting a deadline of 11:00\u00a0am the next day to accept or refuse the offer. The NHLPA presented a counter-offer involving a $49\u00a0million cap, which the league rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nWith no resolution by the 11:00 deadline, Bettman announced the cancellation of the 2004\u201305 season on February 16, 2005, making the NHL the first major professional sports league in North America to cancel an entire season because of a labor dispute; the announcement was to have come on February 14, but it was delayed because of the death of the patriarch of the Sutter hockey family four days prior, whose funeral was held on February 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0011-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nTwo days after the cancellation announcement, The Hockey News reported that a deal with a $45\u00a0million cap had been reached \"in principle\" with the help of owners and former players Wayne Gretzky and Mario Lemieux. Both camps immediately denied this report. A 6\u00bd-hour meeting took place the next day, but no agreement was reached, and the season was lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nBolstered by the thought of losing yet another season to a labor dispute, the sides began meeting again in June, with many pundits believing the lockout would end on July 4, 2005. That date eventually came and went, but sources were reporting to media that marathon sessions were taking place. Indeed, the sides met again for ten consecutive days (July 4\u201313), and a deal was reached \"in principle\" (meaning the sides have agreed, but nothing is signed) on July 13. According to reports, the July 12 session lasted through the night and until 06:00 on July 13, at which point the talks broke off for five hours, and resumed in time to complete the deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 686]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Negotiations\nOn July 21, the players association ratified the agreement with 87 percent of its members voting in favor. The owners unanimously approved it the next day, officially ending the 310-day lockout. The salary cap would be adjusted each year to guarantee players 54 percent of total NHL revenues, and there would also be a salary floor. Player contracts are also guaranteed. The players' share will increase if revenues rise to specific benchmarks, while revenue sharing will split a pool of money from the 10 highest-grossing teams among the bottom 15. There was a $39\u00a0million cap in place for the first year of the CBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout\nA Canadian public opinion poll conducted by Ipsos-Reid near the start of the lockout found that 52 percent of those polled blamed NHL players for the lockout, whereas 21 percent blamed the owners of NHL teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout\nAlso hurting the NHLPA was the fact that its players had very visibly high salaries, which removed much sympathy from lower-to-middle class fans. It did not help that Jeremy Roenick and several NHLPA executives had made controversial statements which showed their apparent disdain for owners and fans alike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout\nDuring the lockout, a movement arose to free the Stanley Cup from the NHL. By the original deed of Lord Stanley, the cup was a challenge cup open to the best amateur hockey team in Canada. Only since 1926 has it been exclusively competed for by NHL teams, and with the 2004\u201305 NHL season canceled, the group felt that the NHL had forfeited its right to award the Cup for the year. On February 7, 2006, a settlement was reached in which the trophy could be awarded to non-NHL teams should the league not operate for a season, although the NHL by that point was playing again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Resolution\nThe loss of the 2004\u201305 season meant that there were no results on which to base the order of the 2005 NHL Entry Draft. The league settled on a lottery system in which all teams had a weighted chance at the first pick, expected to be Sidney Crosby. The lottery was tilted so teams with fewer playoff appearances over the last three seasons and fewer number one overall picks over the last four seasons had a better chance of landing higher picks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0017-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Resolution\nThe complete order was determined by the lottery, and the draft was conducted in a \"snake\" style, meaning in even rounds, the draft order was reversed. This system was an attempt to compromise between those who felt all teams should have had an equal chance at the first pick and those who felt only the weaker teams should have been in the running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Resolution\nTo ease the transition to the salary cap, teams were allowed one week to buy out players at two-thirds the cost of their remaining contract, which would not count against the salary cap. Bought out players could not re-sign with the same team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA\nNHLPA Executive Director and General Counsel Bob Goodenow, seen by many as the biggest villain in the lockout because of his hardline stance against a salary cap, resigned from his position five days after the agreement was ratified amid criticism from many of his constituents. He was replaced by Ted Saskin, formerly senior director of business affairs and licensing for the NHLPA. Saskin was officially named executive director of the NHLPA on November 25, 2005, after the players' vote of confidence was confirmed by accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA\nNHL Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer Bill Daly was promoted to deputy commissioner after the lockout. Both Saskin and Daly had played a key role in brokering the current agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA\nThe lockout did help franchises better manage their finances and increase their value. Combined with finally receiving a stable national television rights deal in the United States with NBC and Versus (which later became sister networks due to the Comcast NBC merger) and the launch of the NHL Network, 26 of 30 NHL franchises saw an increase in value since before the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0021-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA\nLeading the way would be the Pittsburgh Penguins, a team cited even before the lockout to benefit from a lockout due to financial problems related to former team owner Howard Baldwin deferring player salaries in the 1990s (leading to the team's second bankruptcy in 1998) and former star player Mario Lemieux (who became the team's owner due to also being the team's largest creditor) dictating that the team cut costs in order to eliminate the debt from the Baldwin era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0021-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA\nSince the lockout, the Penguins' value increased by a league-high 161.4%, due in no small part to the changing financial landscape of the NHL as well as winning the \"Sidney Crosby sweepstakes\" after the lockout ended and the construction of the Consol Energy Center to replace the aging Mellon Arena. The only teams that have lost value from before the lockout are the Phoenix Coyotes (whose financial problems since the lockout have been well-documented), New York Islanders, Dallas Stars, and Colorado Avalanche.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 68], "content_span": [69, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nThe majority of players who agreed to play in other professional hockey leagues were playing in Europe. During 2004\u201305 season, 388 NHL players played in European leagues. The most popular countries were Russia, with 78 NHL players, Sweden, with 75 NHL players, the Czech Republic, with 51 NHL players, Finland, with 45 NHL players and Switzerland with 43 NHL players. In many cases, players who had originally begun their careers in Europe returned to those same teams for the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nRussian Superleague (now KHL) team AK Bars Kazan signed 11 NHL players, including Ilya Kovalchuk, Aleksey Morozov, and Vincent Lecavalier while Pavel Datsyuk played for HC Dynamo Moscow, Patrik Elias played for Czech HC JME Znojem\u0161t\u00ed Orli and Russian Metallurg Magnitogorsk, and Czech superstar Jaromir Jagr played for HC Kladno and then Avangard Omsk. Morozov never returned to the NHL after 2004 (retiring from the KHL after the 2013\u201314 season), and Jagr would later play three additional seasons with Avangard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nOther Czech players returned to the Czech Republic, including Milan Hejduk (HC Pardubice), Martin Straka (HC Plze\u0148), Ales Hemsky (HC Pardubice) and Martin Rucinsky (HC Litv\u00ednov).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nSwiss Nationalliga A had its own NHL stars when Canadians Joe Thornton and Rick Nash signed with HC Davos, Danny Briere and Dany Heatley signed with SC Bern of the Swiss league. This lockout was a major benefit for Swiss ice hockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nSwedish superstar Peter Forsberg returned to his original club, Modo (although Forsberg had been planning on playing for Modo even if the season had been played). Also returning to Modo along with Forsberg were Canucks teammates Daniel Sedin, Henrik Sedin, and Markus Naslund, all of whom were originally drafted from Modo, while still others joined other Elitserien sides. Some Elitserien games were also being broadcast by Rogers Sportsnet in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nFinnish SM-liiga had its share of players during the lockout. Notable Finnish players included Saku Koivu (TPS, his first professional team), Olli Jokinen (HIFK), Jarkko Ruutu (HIFK) and Vesa Toskala (Ilves). Teemu Selanne also made a contract with Jokerit where he began his professional career, but injuries prevented him from suiting up for the entire season. Foreign players included John Madden who played 2 games for HIFK, Sean Avery, who had a brief stint with the Pelicans, Brian Campbell who played for Jokerit and Hal Gill who played for Lukko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0027-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nSM-liiga featured three top goaltenders as Dwayne Roloson played for Lukko, Tomas Vokoun played for HIFK and Tim Thomas (who had had three previous stints in the SM-liiga) played for Jokerit, leading his team to the championship finals and being awarded the league's most valuable player award. Finnish Mestis also featured NHL talent when Sami Kapanen and Kimmo Timonen played for KalPa. Timonen and Kapanen partially owned the team and the duo was joined by Adam Hall who also played for KalPa during the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nErik Cole, Olaf Kolzig, and Nathan Dempsey were among the notable players to go to Germany to play in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nFair share of Slovak NHL players returned to their home country to play for various Slovak Extraliga sides during the lockout, including Pavol Demitra, Mari\u00e1n Hossa, Mari\u00e1n G\u00e1bor\u00edk (all in HK Dukla Tren\u010d\u00edn), Miroslav \u0160atan and \u013dubom\u00edr Vi\u0161\u0148ovsk\u00fd (both in HC Slovan Bratislava), Michal Handzu\u0161, Richard Zedn\u00edk and Vladim\u00edr Orsz\u00e1gh (all in HKm Zvolen), Ladislav Nagy and Martin \u0160trb\u00e1k (both in HC Ko\u0161ice), and \u017digmund P\u00e1lffy (in HK 36 Skalica).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nLatvian league club HK Riga 2000, which played also in the Belarusian Extraleague, signed several NHL players. Two of them were Latvians Karlis Skrastins and Sergei Zholtok and the third was American Darby Hendrickson, who was a close friend of Zholtok. After Zholtok died due to a heart condition, Hendrickson left the club, so that only Skrastins finished the season with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nA number of NHL players also went to Great Britain. In the Elite Ice Hockey League, Coventry Blaze signed Wade Belak, Cardiff Devils signed Rob Davison, London Racers signed Eric Cairns and Scott Nichol, and Nottingham Panthers signed Nick Boynton, Ian Moran, Steve McKenna. McKenna also used that season to play for the Adelaide Avalanche in the Australian Ice Hockey League. In the British National League, Guildford Flames signed Jamie McLennan and David Oliver, Bracknell Bees signed Brendan Witt while Newcastle Vipers signed Chris McAllister. In 2008, McCallister signed for the Vipers for a second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nAnother notable move came from Karl Dykhuis. He signed with the Amsterdam Bulldogs in the Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nChris Mason (Nashville), Scott Hartnell (Nashville) and Travis Brigley (Colorado) became Norwegian champions with V\u00e5lerenga Ishockey. In addition, Mark Bell, who at the time was playing for Chicago Blackhawks, played for the Norwegian GET-ligaen club Trondheim Black Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nSeveral NHL players signed in the Italian league Serie A, including Eric Belanger to the Bolzano-Bozen Foxes, Craig Adams to the Milano Vipers, Matt Cullen to SG Cortina and Fernando Pisani to the SCL Tigers, among others. Calgary Flames players Steve Montador and Steven Reinprecht won the French Ligue Magnus with HC Mulhouse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0035-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nRob Niedermayer and Jason Strudwick played in the Hungarian league with Ferencv\u00e1rosi TC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0036-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, Europe\nMost of the NHL players playing for European clubs had contract clauses allowing them to leave for the NHL once the lockout ended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 76], "content_span": [77, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0037-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nThere were two attempts to form alternative professional leagues in North America during the lockout, but both failed. A revival of the World Hockey Association had been planned since 2002 and was to start play shortly after the lockout was expected to begin. Despite having former WHA star Bobby Hull as commissioner, however, the league never got off the ground. A lack of stable financing undermined plans to sign both locked-out players and top prospects such as Sidney Crosby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0038-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nAnother league, the Original Stars Hockey League (OSHL), was established in Canada and expected to play four-on-four games between six teams (ostensibly representing the Original Six cities) in various Canadian cities until the lockout was settled. More than 100 players purportedly signed up to play in the OSHL. The league debuted on September 17, 2004 in Barrie, Ontario, Canada. In the inaugural game, \"Toronto\" defeated \"Detroit\" 16\u201313. The next and last game was played in Brampton, Ontario with \"Boston\" defeating \"Montreal\" 14\u201311.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0038-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nJerseys worn by players were based on Original Six (Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Montreal, New York, Toronto), but all had the words \"OSHL\" in white, three stars patches on the shoulders instead of team logos or cities. However, escalating salary demands by players quickly bankrupted the league. Shortly after its first two games, OSHL president Randy Gumbley announced that the league had received firm commitments from only twenty players, and the league soon folded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0039-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nNHL players looking for a place to play clearly preferred stable, established European clubs to upstart leagues that have since been derisively dubbed as \"fly-by-night\" operations by their critics. A small number of players played for established minor league teams near their families and homes, while others chose to repay the league which gave them a start by returning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0040-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nThe Motor City Mechanics of the UHL got a major boost during their first year in existence when the lockout officially started. The team signed Detroit Red Wings players Chris Chelios, Derian Hatcher, and Kris Draper. This happened because Derian Hatcher knew the team was playing at Great Lakes Sports City Superior Arena where he often played growing up. Because of visa problems Kris Draper never played a game for the Mechanics. Later on they also signed Bryan Smolinski and Sean Avery and were able to roll four NHL players on their opponents. All of the players had some experience or connection to the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0041-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nThe ECHL gained some players. Scott Gomez played for his hometown team, the Alaska Aces and won the ECHL's Most Valuable Player award, while Curtis Brown, whose wife is a native of Southern California, played for the San Diego Gulls, and Bates Battaglia joined his younger brother Anthony on the Mississippi Sea Wolves roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0041-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nA pair of Nashville Predators teammates, Shane Hnidy and Jeremy Stevenson, both of whom had early careers in the ECHL, returned to the league and found themselves playing against each other in the first round of the Kelly Cup playoffs, as Hnidy's Florida Everblades faced Stevenson's South Carolina Stingrays in the American Conference quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0042-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nSome prospects who may have never had a serious look were given chances they thought they never would have.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0042-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nUndrafted journeyman Chris Minard had been signed with Alaska for his third season in the ECHL when the lockout allowed Davis Payne to assign him on the same line as Gomez at the Aces. Gomez saw a gem that led to the 2005 ECHL All-Star Game, and a top ECHL player that season; the pairing led to Gomez giving Minard a shot after the lockout ended, and he played his way into the AHL, and eventually signing a two-way contract with the Pittsburgh Penguins, receiving in 2007\u201308 his first call-up to the NHL. Minard said about the experience, \"That's when I learned a lot about being a goal-scorer, playing with a guy like that who can pass the puck. It was a pretty cool experience.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 766]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0043-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nIn addition, many younger players who would be impact players on their NHL rosters stayed down in the American Hockey League for a full season \u2013 most notably Jason Spezza, who won the league scoring title and MVP awards \u2013 changing the aspect of that league's entire season. A record crowd of 20,103 fans packed the Wachovia Center in Philadelphia for Game Four of the Calder Cup finals between the Philadelphia Phantoms and Rosemont's Chicago Wolves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0043-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nThe Wolves, Rochester Americans, Manitoba Moose, Hamilton Bulldogs, and Bridgeport Sound Tigers each saw attendance figures increase over ten percent from 2003 to 2004 in the AHL, with the Moose average attendance soaring 24.09 percent from the previous year. In the ECHL, the Gwinnett Gladiators, San Diego Gulls, Bakersfield Condors, and Charlotte Checkers also saw similar gains, with the Atlanta Thrashers-affiliated Gladiators receiving a gain of over 20 percent in attendance from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0044-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nHowever, the lockout negatively affected many minor-league players, where the influx of NHL players forced many to play in lower-level leagues for less money or out of jobs altogether.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0045-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nIn addition, other minor hockey leagues benefited from the lack of competition from the major professional league. The Ontario Hockey League was a particular beneficiary, with teams such as the London Knights and Saginaw Spirit garnering considerable attention. The lack of the Stanley Cup playoffs also created increased interest in the 2005 Memorial Cup tournament with record TV ratings. Governor General of Canada Adrienne Clarkson mused publicly about the possibility of awarding the Stanley Cup to the best women's hockey team that year, but this idea was so unpopular that instead the Clarkson Cup was created. The 2005 Allan Cup in Lloydminster also attracted elevated national media interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 785]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0046-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, North America\nIn the Western Hockey League, the Calgary Hitmen were the most watched team in North America, averaging 10,062 fans per game. Their season total of 362,227 shattered the WHL and CHL records and represented a 33% increase over 2003\u201304. The Vancouver Giants also experienced a massive increase, finishing second in the WHL with 302,403 fans going through the turnstiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 83], "content_span": [84, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0047-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, International hockey\nThe lockout had a substantial effect on international tournaments run by the International Ice Hockey Federation. The most notable effect was observed in the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Grand Forks, North Dakota, and Thief River Falls, Minnesota. With the NHL inactive, the top eligible U-20 players were not playing in that league and thus were available to their countries for the tournament. The country that benefitted most as a result was Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 90], "content_span": [91, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0047-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, International hockey\nThe Canadians not only ended a seven-year gold medal drought at this competition, they outscored their opponents 41\u20137 and defeated Russia 6\u20131 in the final game. Many analysts believe that the Canadian team was the most dominating ever in this tournament, aided in no small part by players such as Patrice Bergeron who could have expected to have commitments in the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 90], "content_span": [91, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0048-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effect on NHL and NHLPA, International hockey\nAt the time that the 2004\u201305 season was canceled, it was not immediately clear how the lockout would affect the 2005 World Ice Hockey Championships. Normally, NHL players from teams that failed to qualify for the Stanley Cup playoffs participate in this tournament. Since no playoffs were being held, theoretically all NHL players could participate. In reality, however, many NHL players declined to participate, and national teams were naturally reluctant to select players who lacked game conditioning. For all of the teams (including the North American ones), the bulk of the national teams' rosters consisted of players who were playing in Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 90], "content_span": [91, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0049-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effects outside hockey\nCanadian sports fans also turned to the Canadian Football League, and the CFL recorded significant increases in attendance and television ratings during the final weeks of the 2004 CFL season compared to 2003, ultimately setting a new record for total playoff attendance. The league was able to hold onto at least some of these gains in 2005. The National Lacrosse League also saw a modest boost in attendance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0049-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effects outside hockey\nAlso in the United States, the National Basketball Association (NBA) also saw some big gains in attendance in markets which have both NHL and NBA teams; this is in part because the NHL and NBA season run in a similar time frame within the year and often play in the same venue. The National Football League (NFL) and Major League Baseball (MLB) also saw some minor gains in attendance in 2004\u201305. Major League Soccer (MLS) began to become profitable in 2004, which many believed to have been caused by the NHL lockout. To date, the MLS has operated with profit since 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180219-0050-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL lockout, Effects of the lockout, Effects outside hockey\nThe Philips Arena requested the Southeastern Conference to move the SEC Women's Basketball Tournament out of their venue because of logistics, because the 55th NHL All-Star Game was scheduled for late January, while the SEC tournament was scheduled five weeks later. The resulting move led to the BI-LO Center, an ECHL arena 140 miles to the east in Greenville, South Carolina, hosting the tournament, drawing the ire of the NAACP, who wanted the SEC to ban the venue from hosting tournaments because of its location. Philips Arena was granted the NHL All-Star Game in 2008 as compensation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 67], "content_span": [68, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180220-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 NHL season was the National Hockey League's 88th season of operation. The entire 1,230-game schedule, that was set to begin in October, was officially canceled on February 16, 2005 due to an unresolved lockout that began on September 16, 2004. The loss of the 2004\u201305 season's games made the NHL the second North American professional sports league to lose an entire postseason of games because of a labor dispute, the first being the 1994\u201395 MLB strike, which occurred 10 years prior. It was the first time since 1919, when a Spanish flu pandemic canceled the finals, that the Stanley Cup was not awarded. This canceled season was later acknowledged with the words \"2004\u201305 Season Not Played\" engraved on the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180220-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL season\nAccording to the International Ice Hockey Federation, 388 NHL players were on teams overseas at some point during the season, spread across 19 European leagues. Many of these players had a contract clause to return to the NHL when the league started up again, even if it was during the current season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180220-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL season\nKey rule changes which would dominate after the lockout were established as a result of a meeting between the NHL and its top minor league, the American Hockey League. On July 5, 2004, the AHL announced publicly the 2004\u201305 rule changes, many of which were passed as a result of the NHL's recommendation for experimentation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180220-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL season, Stanley Cup controversy\nAs a result of the lockout, no Stanley Cup champion was crowned for the first time since the Spanish flu pandemic in 1919. This was controversial among many fans, who questioned whether the NHL had exclusive control over the Cup. A website known as freestanley.com (since closed) was launched, asking fans to write to the Cup trustees and urge them to return to the original pre-NHL Challenge Cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180220-0003-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL season, Stanley Cup controversy\nAdrienne Clarkson, then Governor General of Canada, alternately proposed that the Cup be presented to the top women's hockey team in lieu of the NHL season, but this idea was so unpopular with NHL fans, players, and officials that the Clarkson Cup was created instead. Meanwhile, a group in Ontario, also known as the \"Wednesday Nighters\", filed an application with the Ontario Superior Court, claiming that the Cup trustees had overstepped their bounds in signing the 1947 agreement with the NHL, and therefore must award the trophy to any team willing to play for the cup regardless of the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180220-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NHL season, Stanley Cup controversy\nOn February 7, 2006, a settlement was reached in which the trophy could be awarded to non-NHL teams in the event the league does not operate for a season, but the dispute lasted so long that, by the time it was settled, the NHL had resumed operating for the 2005\u201306 season, and the Stanley Cup went unclaimed for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180221-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NOFV-Oberliga\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the NOFV-Oberliga was the eleventh season of the league at tier four (IV) of the German football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180221-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NOFV-Oberliga\nThe NOFV-Oberliga was split into two divisions, NOFV-Oberliga Nord and NOFV-Oberliga S\u00fcd. The northern champions, F.C. Hansa Rostock II, decided against taking part in the playoffs for the right to play in the 2005\u201306 Regionalliga Nord, so MSV Neuruppin took their place against southern champions FC Carl Zeiss Jena. FC Carl Zeiss Jena won 4\u20131 over two legs and thus gained promotion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season\nThe 2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season was the fourth season of the revamped NSW Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season\nThroughout the season many Premier League, Super League, Division One and Division Two teams competed in a newly formed FA Cup-style knockout competition called the Statewide Cup in which the Sydney United were crowned champions after defeating Belconnen Blue Devils in 3\u20131 at Parramatta Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season, Changes from Previous Season\nThe number of teams increased from 12 to 16, with the inclusion of former National Soccer League teams following the abolishment of that league in favour of the restructured A-League. These teams included Marconi Stallions, Sydney Olympic, Sydney United and Wollongong Wolves. Manly United were also promoted from the NSW Super League. There was also a significant change to the format. The competition was divided into two stages. The first stage consisted of fifteen rounds with each of the sixteen teams playing each other once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season, Changes from Previous Season\nThe top eight sides would enter the Champions League and the bottom sides the Challengers League. All eight teams in each league would play a further seven matches against those from their league. All points accrued from the first stage would be retained for the second stage to determine the final table positions. Positions one to four from the Champions League and the highest ranked from the Challengers League would compete in the finals series. The bottom three teams in the Challengers League were relegated for the 2006 NSW Super League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season, Teams\nTeams relegated from National Soccer League:(After the end of the 2003\u201304 season)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season, Teams\nTeams promoted from Super League:(After the end of the 2004 season.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180222-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NSW Premier League season, Teams\nTeams relegated to Super League:(After the end of the 2003\u201304 season.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180223-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NTFL season\nThe 2004/05 NTFL season was the 84th season of the Northern Territory Football League (NTFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180223-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NTFL season\nSt Marys have won there 25th premiership title while defeating the Wanderers in the grand final by 28 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180224-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NWHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, OTL = Overtime losses, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180224-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 NWHL season, Notable players\nFuture two-time Olympic Gold Medalist Gina Kingsbury played the 2004-05 season with the Montreal Axion of the National Women's Hockey League. She led the team with 31 goals and added 29 assists, finishing the 30-game season with 60 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180225-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Napoli Soccer season\nNapoli Soccer played its first season in Serie C in 2004\u201305. Following the takeover of the defunct club by Aurelio De Laurentiis, a squad was completed in two weeks, with only a few players from the 2003-04 season being signed. The all-new team did not perform to the level of expectations, and lost out to Avellino in the playoff finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180225-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Napoli Soccer season\nDespite the fact Napoli were playing in such a low division, they retained higher average attendances than most of the Serie A clubs, breaking the Serie C attendance record with 51,000 at one match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180226-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nashville Predators season\nThe 2004\u201305 Nashville Predators season would have been their 7th National Hockey League season; however, it was cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time to save the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180226-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nashville Predators season, Draft picks\nNashville's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One\nThe 2004\u201305 National Division One was the 18th full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Rotherham Titans who were demoted from the 2003-04 Zurich Premiership while Sedgley Park and Nottingham were promoted from the 2003\u201304 National Division Two. Rotherham almost went into liquidation and dropped out of the leagues following their relegation from the Premiership but were saved by a local consortium which enabled them to continue playing in National One. As well as new teams Coventry had a new ground, moving from Coundon Road to the smaller but more modern Butts Park Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One\nBy the end of the season, after two seasons spent in the division, Bristol Shoguns became champions and were promoted back to the Guinness Premiership for season 2005\u201306. Exeter Chiefs were runners\u2013up, and Orrell (last seasons runners\u2013up) along with Henley were relegated to the 2005\u201306 National Division Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Team\n62 - 9 Bristol Shoguns at home to Sedgley Park on 16 January 200568 - 15 Bristol Shoguns at home to Exeter Chiefs on 27 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Team\n53 - 5 Bristol Shoguns away to Orrell on 9 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Team\n68 - 15 Bristol Shoguns at home to Exeter Chiefs on 27 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Team\nRotherham Titans at home to Orrell on 18 September 2004Bristol Shoguns at home to Sedgley Park on 16 January 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Team\nBristol Shoguns at home to London Welsh on 12 September 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Player\nRamiro Pez for Rotherham Titans at home to Orrell on 18 September 2004 Matthew Leek for Coventry at home to Otley on 13 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Player\nDan Ward-Smith for Plymouth Albion at home to Coventry on 9 October 2004 Sean Marsden for Bristol Shoguns away to Orrell on 9 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Player\nRamiro Pez for Rotherham Titans at home to Orrell on 18 September 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Player\nMatthew Leek for Coventry at home to Otley on 13 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Attendances\nBristol Shoguns at home to Exeter Chiefs on 27 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180227-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division One, Season records, Attendances\nOrrell at home to Plymouth Albion on 12 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North\nThe 2004\u201305 National Division Three North was the fifth season (seventeenth overall) of the fourth division (north) of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Three North. New teams to the division included Rugby Lions who were relegated from the 2003\u201304 National Division Two while Bedford Athletic were promoted as champions of Midlands Division 1 along with Bradford & Bingley (champions) and Cleckheaton (playoffs) who both came up from North Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North\nThe season would also see the introduction of a new points system with 4 points being awarded for a win, 2 points being awarded for a draw (replacing the old system of 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw) with the addition of a bonus point being given for scoring 4 or more tries as well as a bonus point given if you manage to lose a game within 7 points of the victorious team. In terms of promotion the league champions would go straight up into National Division Two while the runners up would have a one-game playoff against the runners up from National Division Three South (at the home ground of the club with the superior league record) for the final promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North\nHalifax would finish as runaway champions of the league, ending up 14 points clear of nearest rivals Macclesfield (even with a cancelled game against Blaydon) and gaining promotion to the 2005\u201306 National Division Two. Runners up Macclesfield would fail to join Halifax as they lost their playoff game away to 2004\u201305 National Division Three South runners up Redruth in the north-south playoff in front of a huge crowd of 4,000 at the Recreation Ground.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North\nAlthough Halifax won the league with plenty to spare the rest of the division was fairly closely contested with only 3 wins separating 4th placed Fylde from 12th placed Rugby Lions. In terms of relegation newly promoted Bedford Athletic went down first followed by Dudley Kingswinford. The final spot was taken by Rugby Lions suffering their third successive relegation. Rugby Lions would actually have stayed up had in not been for a five-point penalty given for them fielding too many foreign players in a home game against Bedford Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0001-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North\nAll three relegated teams would drop down to Midlands Division 1 for the following season. Although Rugby Lions were punished from fielding too many overseas players, other teams benefited immensely from their foreign contingent (particularly Halifax and Bradford & Bingley) with six of the top ten try scorers hailing from outside England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Results, Promotion play-off\nThe league runners up of National Division Three South and North would meet in a playoff game for promotion to National Division Two. Redruth were the southern division runners up and as they had a superior league record than northern runners-up, Macclesfield, they hosted the play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\n77 - 7 Bradford & Bingley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\n36 - 3 Rugby Lions away to Dudley Kingswinford on 11 September 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\n77 - 7 Bradford & Bingley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nBradford & Bingley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nBradford & Bingley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nHalifax away to Bradford & Bingley on 16 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Team\nBradford & Bingley at home to New Brighton on 30 October 2004Macclesfield at home to Halifax on 13 November 2004Bradford & Bingley at home to Macclesfield on 11 December 2004Macclesfield away to Dudley Kingswinford on 6 November 2004Tynedale at home to Bradford & Bingley on 2 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nTom Rhodes for Bradford & Bingley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nSimon Mulholland for Kendal at home to Darlington on 11 December 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nTom Rhodes for Bradford & Bingley at home to Dudley Kingswinford on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nDouglas Sanft for Halifax away to Bradford & Bingley on 16 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Player\nTom Rhodes for Bradford & Bingley at home to New Brighton on 30 October 2004 Michael Newell for Macclesfield at home to Halifax on 13 November 2004 Tom Rhodes for Bradford & Bingley at home to Macclesfield on 11 December 2004 Michael Newell for Macclesfield away to Dudley Kingswinford on 6 November 2004 Gavin Beasley for Tynedale at home to Bradford & Bingley on 2 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180228-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three North, Season records, Attendances\nCleckheaton at home to Halifax on 22 January 2005 Bradford & Bingley at home to Halifax on 16 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South\nThe 2004-05 National Division Three South was the fifth season (18th overall) of the fourth division (south) of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Three South. New teams to the division included Lydney who were relegated from 2003\u201304 National Division Two as well as Havant (champions) and Hertford (playoffs) who were promoted from London Division 1 while Reading came up as champions of South West Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South\nThe season would also see the introduction of a new points system with 4 points being awarded for a win, 2 points being awarded for a draw (replacing the old system of 2 points for a win and 1 for a draw) with the addition of a bonus point being given for scoring 4 or more tries as well as a bonus point given if you manage to lose a game within 7 points of the victorious team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0000-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South\nIn terms of promotion the league champions would go straight up into National Division Two while the runners up would have a one game playoff against the runners up from National Division Three North (at the home ground of the club with the superior league record) for the final promotion place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South\nAt the end of the season Barking finished as champions with a fantastic record of 24 wins out of 26 games, finishing 12 points ahead of runners up Redruth, with the Cornish side perhaps having finished champions in a different season with just 3 defeats. Redruth would join Barking in the 2005\u201306 National Division Two by defeating the 2004\u201305 National Division Three North runners up Macclesfield in the north-south playoff in front of a huge crowd of 4,000 fans at the Recreation Ground in Redruth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South\nAt the other end of the table Haywards Heath and Tabard were the first teams to be relegated. Weston-super-Mare were more competitive but still went down in the final relegation place, 7 points off 11th placed Old Patesians. Haywards Heath and Tabard would drop down to London Division 1 while Weston-super-Mare went into South West Division 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Results, Promotion play-off\nThe league runners up of National Division Three South and North would meet in a playoff game for promotion to National Division Two. Redruth were the southern division runners up and as they had a superior league record than northern runners-up, Macclesfield, they hosted the play-off match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\n70 - 0 Barking at home to Haywards Heath on 19 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\n77 - 15 Lydney away to Haywards Heath on 12 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\n77 - 15 Lydney away to Haywards Heath on 12 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Team\nBarking at home to Havant on 4 September 2004Havant away to Tabard on 30 October 2004Redruth at home to Tabard on 6 November 2004Hertford at home to Southend on 22 January 2005Haywards Heath away to Havant on 29 January 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nAdam Westall for Lydney away to Haywards Heath on 12 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nTom Johnson for Reading at home to Dings Crusaders on 29 January 2005 Adam Westall for Lydney away to Haywards Heath on 12 March 2005 Lloyd Williams for Barking at home to Haywards Heath on 19 March 2005 Tom Johnson for Reading at home to Lydney on 23 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nAdam Westall for Lydney away to Haywards Heath on 12 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Player\nBen Montgomery for Barking at home to Havant on 4 September 2004 Sid Claffey for Havant away to Tabard on 30 October 2004 Bede Brown for Redruth at home to Tabard on 6 November 2004 Neil Barrela for Hertford at home to Southend on 22 January 2005 Owen Ashton for Haywards Heath away to Havant on 29 January 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Attendances\nRedruth at home to North Walsham on 5 March 2005 & Barking on 12 March 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180229-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Three South, Season records, Attendances\nReading at home to Tabard on 20 November 2004, Westcombe Park on 12 March 2005 and Hertford on 2 April 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 66], "content_span": [67, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two\nThe 2004\u201305 National Division Two was the fifth version (eighteenth overall) of the third division of the English rugby union league system using the name National Division Two. New teams to the division included Manchester who were relegated from the 2003\u201304 National Division One while Waterloo came up as champions of the 2003\u201304 National Division Three North with Blackheath (champions) and Launceston (playoffs) coming up from the 2003\u201304 National Division Three South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two\nWakefield had also been supposed to join the division having finished 13th in National Division One but sadly due to financial difficulties the club would go into liquidation and cease to exist. This season would see the league points system being overhauled in the division with four points being awarded for a win, two points for a draw as well as bonus points being introduced (the Premiership had been using them since 2000) with teams being awarded an extra point for scoring four or more tries during a game or if losing, being within seven points of the victor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two\nDoncaster would finish as league champions, 13 points clear of nearest rivals, Newbury Blues. Both sides would go up to the 2005\u201306 National Division One. At the other end of the table, apart from Rosslyn Park who were comfortably bottom, it was a very tight relegation battle with Bracknell and Nuneaton eventually going down to join Rosslyn Park despite both sides winning their last games - in the end only 2 points separated 10th placed Esher from 12th placed Nuneaton. Nuneaton would drop down to the 2005\u201306 National Division Three North while Bracknell and Rosslyn Park went into the 2005\u201306 National Division Three South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Team\n79 - 5 Harrogate at home to Bracknell on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Team\n57 - 12 Doncaster away to Wharfedale on 20 4 September 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Team\n79 - 5 Harrogate at home to Bracknell on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nJonathan Davies for Wharfedale at home to Nuneaton on 9 October 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nLee Cholewa for Harrogate at home to Bracknell on 27 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Player\nStephen McCashin for Blackheath away to Stourbridge on 26 February 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180230-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Division Two, Season records, Attendances\nNuneaton at home to Bracknell on 23 October 2004 and Waterloo on 13 November 2004Bracknell at home to Esher on 20 November 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180231-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Football League (India)\nThe 2004\u201305 National Football League was the ninth season of the National Football League, the top Indian professional league for association football clubs, since its inception in 1996. 12 teams took part in the season. Dempo won the league by scoring 47 points in 22 matches. Sporting Clube de Goa won the second position by scoring 45 points in 22 matches. Dudu Omagbemi of Sporting Clube de Goa was the highest goal scorer of the league (21).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180231-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Football League (India), Season awards\nThe following awards were given at the conclusion of the season. Dudu Omagbemi of Sporting Clube, who scored 21 goals, was named the best player and best forward for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 ABN-AMRO Twenty-20 Cup was the first edition of the ABN-AMRO Twenty-20 Cup, a domestic Twenty20 tournament in Pakistan. It was held from 25 to 30 April 2005 in Lahore. The Faisalabad Wolves won the tournament by defeating the Karachi Dolphins in the final. As the winners, the Faisalabad Wolves were invited to compete in the International 20:20 Club Championship in September 2005, which they won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup\nThis was the first Twenty20 tournament in the country, after the introduction of the Twenty20 format in 2003. It was huge success with the final having an attendance of 30,000. It helped increase the popularity of cricket in Pakistan and became an annual tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup\nThe tournament also involved a match-throwing incident with Sialkot Stallions captain Shoaib Malik.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup, Format\nThe eleven teams are divided into three groups: Groups A and B with four teams each and Group C with three. Each team plays a single round-robin tournament and the top team from each group, determined by a point system, advances to the triangular series. The triangular series is another round-robin tournament where the top two teams advance to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup, Format\nThe position of the teams in the points table is determined by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 37], "content_span": [38, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup, Format, Prize money\nThe winners are awarded a trophy and Rs. 300,000 while the runners-up receive Rs. 150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup, Results\nThe top team from each group qualify for the triangular series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup, Match-throwing incident\nThe tournament involved a match-throwing incident in the match between the Sialkot Stallions and the Karachi Zebras. Shoaib Malik, the captain of the Stallions, openly admitted to deliberately losing their match against the Karachi Zebras in an attempt to eliminate the Lahore Eagles from the competition. Neither team received points for the match. PCB declared the match void and Karachi Zebras were denied a place in the triangular phase of the ABN Amro Twenty20 Cup despite winning their Pool \u2018B\u2019 fixture against Sialkot Stallions. Malik was expressing his disappointment at earlier decisions in the competition that he felt went against his side and it did not involve any match-fixing or financial implications.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180232-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 National Twenty20 Cup, Match-throwing incident\nMalik's actions were against his code of conduct as a Test cricketer and had effect on the image of Pakistan cricket, the sponsors and the audience. After realising this, Malik later apologised. He was banned for one Test match and fined Rs. 10,000 and 75% of his match fees for two One Day International matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180233-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nationalliga A season\nThe 2004\u201305 NLA season was the 67th regular season of the Nationalliga A, the main professional ice hockey league in Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180233-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nationalliga A season\nThe season started on September 17, 2004, the last League Qualification game was played on April 14, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180233-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nationalliga A season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180233-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nationalliga A season, Playoffs, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180234-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I\nThe 2004\u201305 Nemzeti Bajnoks\u00e1g I, also known as NB I, was the 103rd season of top-tier football in Hungary. The league was officially named Arany \u00c1szok Liga for sponsoring reasons. The season started on 7 August 2004 and ended on 26 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season\nThe 2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season was the team's 23rd season in the National Hockey League since the franchise relocated to New Jersey. However, the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout prevented the season's games from occurring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, NHL lockout\nDevils general manager Lou Lamoriello sat on the negotiating committee for the league, although he had little to say early on in the proceedings. However, he was invited to a January meeting by the players' union in an attempt to breach sides; Lamoriello was invited because of the respect for the manner in which he ran the Devils organization. That meeting was ultimately unfruitful, although it did lead to further talks between the players and the owners. As late as February 2005, Lamoriello showed hope the season could be salvaged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, NHL lockout\nThey're trying to do everything humanly possible to try to get the game back on the ice... If there is reason to believe that there is hope and a chance, then I think you use that time. We have to have some patience.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, NHL lockout\nMaybe I'm from the old school. But I believe we should lock ourselves in a room and not come out until we've made a deal \u2013 or announced that we can't. I've said all along, until someone tells me it's over, it's not. It's too easy to be negative. There's no question we have something scheduled at this point for (tomorrow) Wednesday. It's looking very bleak right now. But it's not over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, NHL lockout\nLamoriello praised the final decision, saying it put everyone on \"level footing\" and created more parity in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, NHL lockout\nMeanwhile, during the stoppage Devils' center Scott Gomez went home to Anchorage, Alaska to play for the Alaska Aces of the ECHL. He went on to lead the league in scoring, netting 86 points in only 68 games, en route to winning the league's Most Valuable Player award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, Transactions\nThe Devils completed the following transactions before the lockout suspended all activity:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, Transactions, Draft picks\nThe Devils' draft picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft in Raleigh, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180235-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Devils season, Farm teams\nThe Albany River Rats, the Devils' American Hockey League affiliate, finished in last place in their division during the 2004\u201305 AHL season, and failed to make the playoffs for the fifth straight season. Veteran Dean McAmmond led the team in scoring with 61 points, while right on his heels was hot rookie Zach Parise with 58. Meanwhile, goaltenders Scott Clemmensen and Ari Ahonen split the load evenly, although Ahonen had more wins in fewer games played. Parise and Clemmensen would go on to make the Devils' squad full-time the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180236-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Nets season\nThe 2004\u201305 New Jersey Nets season was the Nets' 38th season in the National Basketball Association, and 29th season in East Rutherford, New Jersey. Without Kenyon Martin, who was traded to the Denver Nuggets in the offseason, the Nets stumbled out of the gate losing 11 of their first 13 games including a nine-game losing streak, as Jason Kidd missed the first month of the season from offseason knee surgery. In December, the Nets made a move acquiring All-Star guard Vince Carter from the Toronto Raptors in a trade for Alonzo Mourning, Eric Williams, and Aaron Williams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180236-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Nets season\nMourning did not report to Toronto and he was waived not long after the trade. He later signed with the Miami Heat for his second stint. By the time Carter arrived, Kidd returned from his knee surgery. Richard Jefferson spent most of the season on injured reserve due to a wrist injury. The Kidd and Carter duo-led Nets won 10 of their final 12 games to finished with a 42\u201340 record, winning a tie-breaker for the #8 seed in the Eastern Conference over the Cleveland Cavaliers. Carter was selected for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180236-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Jersey Nets season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, New Jersey faced the top-seeded Miami Heat, led by Shaquille O'Neal and a young Dwyane Wade. They were eliminated from the playoffs by the Heat in four straight games. It was the Nets' first round playoff exit since 1998. Following the season, Brian Scalabrine signed with the Boston Celtics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180237-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Orleans Hornets season\nThe 2004\u201305 New Orleans Hornets season was the franchise's third season in the National Basketball Association. The Hornets moved from the Eastern Conference's Central Division to the tougher Southwest Division of the Western Conference for the season. Under new head coach Byron Scott, the Hornets played their worst basketball ways losing their first eight games, which led to an awful 2\u201329 start. Many players were traded away during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180237-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Orleans Hornets season\nThe team traded David Wesley to the Houston Rockets in December, then midway through the season dealt Baron Davis to the Golden State Warriors, and sent Jamal Mashburn, who was lost for the entire season with a knee injury, to the Philadelphia 76ers for Glenn Robinson, who never played for the Hornets and was released to free agency and signed with the San Antonio Spurs. Mashburn would never suit up for the 76ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180237-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Orleans Hornets season\nThe Hornets continued to struggle, losing their final nine games finishing last place in the Southwest Division with a dreadful 18\u201364 record, which was the same record as the newly-rechristened Charlotte Bobcats. They failed to qualify for the playoffs for the first time in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180237-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Orleans Hornets season, Offseason\nDuring the offseason, the Hornets made many transactions. On June 16, the Hornets claimed Brazilian swingman Alex Garcia on waivers from the San Antonio Spurs. On June 22, the 2004 NBA Expansion Draft took place, and the Hornets lost guard Maurice Carter to the Charlotte Bobcats. Two days later, the NBA Draft took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180237-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Orleans Hornets season, Offseason, Draft picks\nIn the draft, the Hornets drafted J. R. Smith and Tim Pickett. Smith would play only two seasons with the Hornets, and Pickett would not play in the NBA. On July 19, the Hornets signed Chris Andersen. Andersen would be with the Hornets for four seasons, missing the 2006\u201307 season due to a suspension for substance abuse. On August 3, the Hornets signed former Sixth Man of the Year Rodney Rogers. Rogers would be traded to the Philadelphia 76ers, along with Jamal Mashburn, on February 24 for Glenn Robinson. On September 29, the Hornets signed Tremaine Fowlkes and Britton Johnsen. The following day, the team signed Lorinza \"Junior\" Harrington and Lee Nailon. On October 28, the Hornets waived Fowlkes, and three days later, they waived Johnsen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 807]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180238-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Islanders season\nThe 2004\u201305 New York Islanders season was the 33rd season in the franchise's history. However, its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180238-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Islanders season, Off-season\nThe Islanders chose Petteri Nokelainen as their first-round choice, sixteenth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180239-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Knicks season\nThe 2004\u201305 New York Knicks season was the 59th season for the team in the National Basketball Association (NBA). During the offseason, the Knicks acquired Jamal Crawford from the Chicago Bulls. Early in the season, the team released Shandon Anderson after he had played one game; Anderson later joined the Miami Heat as a free agent. The Knicks played around .500 with a 16\u201313 start, but then lost 16 of their next 18 games. Head coach Lenny Wilkens resigned after a 17\u201322 start, and was replaced by assistant Herb Williams for the remainder of the season. The Knicks then lost nine straight games between March and April, finishing fourth place in the Atlantic Division with a 33\u201349 record, and failing to qualify for the NBA Playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180239-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Knicks season\nIn his first full season with the Knicks, Stephon Marbury led the team with 21.7 points, 8.1 assists and 1.5 steals per game, and Jamal Crawford finished second on the team in scoring averaging 17.7 points per game. Following the season, Larry Brown was hired as coach, Kurt Thomas was traded to the Phoenix Suns, Tim Thomas was dealt to the Chicago Bulls and Allan Houston, who only played just 20 games due to injury, retired after twelve seasons in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180240-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Rangers season\nThe 2004\u201305 New York Rangers season was their 79th National Hockey League season; however, its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180240-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Rangers season, Transactions\nThe Rangers were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180240-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New York Rangers season, Draft picks\nNew York's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft in Raleigh, North Carolina at the RBC Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180241-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004\u201305 New Zealand Figure Skating Championships was held in Queenstown from 20 through 23 September 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles across many levels, including senior, junior, novice, adult, and the pre-novice disciplines of juvenile, pre-primary, primary, and intermediate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180242-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Football Championship\n2004\u201305 was the first season of the New Zealand Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180242-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Football Championship, Season summary\nThe league kicked off on 15 October 2004, with a 3\u20131 victory for Auckland City at Napier City Rovers and it soon became clear that Auckland City, along with Waitakere United, were the class teams in the championship. Auckland lost only three games all year en route to be the first winners of the New Zealand Football Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180242-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Football Championship, Season summary\nEven though they were runners-up in both the regular season and Grand Final, Waitakere lost four times to Auckland City, including the thrilling 3\u20132 final in front of 3,800 spectators at Auckland City's home field, Kiwitea Street, where Auckland came back from 2-1 down to win in the last minutes of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180242-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Football Championship, Season summary\nWaikato FC came out best of the rest to take the final playoff position in third, despite making a slow start to the season. Notables among the other teams were Napier City Rovers, who also came back from a slow start to have a chance of making the playoffs in the final week of the season. Otago United won five games all year, but did not win any of their last twelve games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 57], "content_span": [58, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180242-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Football Championship, Finals\nWaitakere and Waikato play in the Elimination Final, the winner of which plays Auckland in Grand Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180242-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand Football Championship, Oceania Club Championship\nBy winning the NZFC, Auckland City went on to represent New Zealand in the Oceania Club Championship in Tahiti. Auckland lost their first game to Australian representatives Sydney FC, 3\u20132 in the dying minutes. Their next game, against tournament hosts AS Pirae of Tahiti, was also a loss, this time by 1\u20130. Auckland City would take some consolation from finishing third in their group after defeating the champions of Papua New Guinea, Sobou FC, by 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 68], "content_span": [69, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180243-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 New Zealand V8 season\nThe 2004\u201305 New Zealand V8 season (the leading motorsport category in New Zealand) consisted of seven rounds beginning on 16\u201317 October 2004 and ending 15\u201317 April 2005. Defending champion Andy Booth held on to take his second New Zealand V8 championship in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Newcastle United's 108th season in English football, and their 22nd in the Premier League. The season began poorly for Newcastle, with no wins in their first four matches, and manager Bobby Robson was sacked, bringing to an end his five-year tenure at the club. His assistant, John Carver took over as caretaker manager, managing one win, but was not considered for the permanent post, and left in September 2004. Blackburn Rovers manager Graeme Souness was brought in, but despite a positive start, he was unable to mount a challenge anywhere near the Champions League challenge the team had managed the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season\nTowards the end of the season, teammates Lee Bowyer and Kieron Dyer were sent off for fighting with each other during a game. Their suspensions, coupled with several injuries, left Newcastle light on players. The club finished in 14th place in the league for the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter nearly five years in charge, Bobby Robson was dismissed on 30 August, following a largely indifferent start to the season and alleged discontent in the dressing room. The team lost two and drew two of their first four games, three in which they actually surrendered from leading positions: they drew 2\u20132 at Middlesbrough in the Tyne\u2013Tees derby after taking the lead twice; they surrendered a 2\u20130 lead against recently promoted Norwich City to draw 2\u20132 and they surrendered a 2\u20131 lead at Villa Park to lose 4\u20132 to Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nA split had grown between Robson and the club owners when they had made a number of high-profile signings, apparently without consulting him - in particular, that of Patrick Kluivert. He was further undermined by the club's high profile, but ultimately futile, offer for Everton's Wayne Rooney, who instead moved to Manchester United. Following Rooney's transfer, Robson stated his dismay at the tendency for overpaid young players to demand all the perks without proving themselves on the pitch. Events during the ensuing season on and off the pitch would go a long way to confirm Robson's assessment, who was later given a \u00a31 million severance payment by Newcastle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 720]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nGraeme Souness, who had guided Blackburn Rovers to the 2002 League Cup trophy and sixth place in the Premiership in recent years, was appointed as Robson's replacement. A ten-match unbeaten run following his appointment suggested that Souness could take Newcastle back to Champions League qualification, but following that the club's form dipped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nCraig Bellamy, a key player in Newcastle's strike force, was loaned to Celtic in January for the remainder of the season, after Souness discovered Bellamy had told teammates he was going to fake an injury. Captain Alan Shearer backed Souness's demand that Bellamy apologise for his behaviour to the whole squad, but he refused to listen. Their dip in performance due to the absence of Shearer through injury worried the fan base, leading to fans debating on whether Bellamy should have departed the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nIn November 2004, club chairman Freddy Shepherd again caused controversy, stating there was no debt owed by the \"elite\" clubs of the Premiership to the rest of the FA \u2013 but with his own team underperforming, this was somewhat ironic as well as inappropriate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nAn unbeaten run in all competitions in February and March was ended in April with a home defeat against Aston Villa; during the match, Lee Bowyer and Kieron Dyer were sent off for an on-pitch fight. As a result of the incident, later described as \"the blackest day\" by Shepherd, Bowyer was fined six weeks' wages (about \u00a3200,000) and both players received playing bans from the FA. The event overshadowed the announcement that Alan Shearer (expected to retire that season) had extended his playing contract for a further year and was to take up a coaching role with the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary\nA rift opened up between Souness and Shepherd, with Souness complaining that the squad, lacking strength in depth after poor judgment in the transfer market (with the promised major signings not materialising) was not up to the challenge. Souness also criticised the state of the club's training ground, stating it was the main reason why so many injuries had taken their toll on the players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Season summary, Cup competitions\nNewcastle had qualified for the UEFA Cup with a fifth-placed finish the previous season, and managed to reach the quarter-finals. Newcastle defeated Portuguese side Sporting Lisbon in the home leg, but were most comprehensively outplayed in the away match and lost 4\u20131, in the process suffering several injuries. In the same week they played Manchester United in an FA Cup semi-final at the Millennium Stadium. The scoreline, again 4\u20131, reflected the one-sided nature of the encounter. This left the Intertoto Cup as the team's only route into European competition in the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Team kit\nThe team kit for the 2004\u201305 season was produced by Adidas. The main shirt sponsor was Northern Rock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Players, Under-18 squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180244-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Newcastle United F.C. season, Players, Trialists\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180245-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball team represented University of North Carolina. The head coach was Roy Williams. The team played its home games at the Dean Smith Center in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and was a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180246-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 North West Counties Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 North West Counties Football League season was the 23rd in the history of the North West Counties Football League, a football competition in England. Teams were divided into two divisions: Division One and Division Two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180246-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 North West Counties Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured four new teams promoted from Division Two", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 57], "content_span": [58, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180247-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Counties East Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Northern Counties East Football League season was the 23rd in the history of Northern Counties East Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180247-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Counties East Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 17 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180247-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Counties East Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 15 clubs which competed in the previous season, along with one new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180248-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Northern Football League season was the 107th in the history of Northern Football League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180248-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division Two:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180248-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 15 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with five new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Northern Premier League season was the 37th in the history of the Northern Premier League, a football competition in England. Teams were divided into two divisions; the Premier and the First. This was the first Northern Premier League system after the creation of Conference North and Conference South", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Premier Division\nDue to a restructuring of the league system in which the new leagues Conference North and Conference South, the league featured 14 new teams promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Premier Division, Play-offs\nThe Premier Division play-offs saw the second to fifth placed sides in the Division compete for one place in the Conference North.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Division One\nDivision One featured 14 new teams due to the creation of Conference North and Conference South:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Division One, Play-offs\nThe First Division play-offs saw the third to sixth placed sides in the First Division compete for a place in the Premier Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Promotion and relegation\nIn the thirty-seventh season of the Northern Premier League Hyde United were promoted as champions while Workington were promoted as play-off winners, where they would both be promoted to the Conference North. Bishop Aukland, Bridlington Town, Bamber Bridge and Spennymoor United were relegated to the First Division; these four clubs were replaced by relegated Conference North sides Runcorn Halton, Ashton United and Bradford Park Avenue. First Division winners North Ferriby United, second placed Ilkeston Town and play-off winners A.F.C. Telford United were all promoted to the Premier Division. In the First Division Rocester were relegated and were replaced by Goole and Fleetwood Town.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Cup Results\nPresident's Cup: 'Plate' competition for losing teams in the NPL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Cup Results\nChairman's Cup: 'Plate' competition for losing teams in the NPL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, Cup Results\nPeter Swales Shield: Between Champions of NPL Premier Division and Winners of the NPL Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, NPL meeting\nThe end of this season saw Spennymoor United fail to fulfil nine of their league fixtures after folding. The Northern Premier League's Board of Directors met on 24 April 2005 to consider how these unplayed games would be treated in the fairest possible manner to all Premier Division member clubs. At this meeting it was decided to expunge the record of Spennymoor United from the table. Subsequent to this meeting the member clubs of Gateshead, Radcliffe Borough, Hyde United and Workington appealed to the Football Association (the FA) against the decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, NPL meeting\nOne of the grounds of appeal was that the meeting did not have a quorum and the FA recommended that the Northern Premier League withdraw their decision to expunge the record of Spennymoor United from the table and for the issue to be considered by a meeting that had a quorum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 86], "content_span": [87, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, Second board meeting\nAt the emergency board meeting held on 1 May 2005, the Board of the Northern Premier Football League confirmed their decision to expunge Spennymoor United's playing record. This meeting came a day after the final day of the Northern Premier League Premier Division season where Workington had finished in first place, Hyde United in second (having played 41 games to Workington and Farsley's 42) and Farsley in third. The confirmation to expunge Spennymoor United's playing record then saw Farsley finish in first place, Hyde United finish in second and Workington finish in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, Second board meeting\nGateshead, Hyde United, Radcliffe Borough and Workington followed up their appeal to the FA and on 4 May 2005 the FA overturned the Northern Premier League Board's decision to expunge the playing record of Spennymoor United. The FA ruled that the Northern Premier League was bound by an undertaking, duly minuted at its management committee meeting in January 2005, that Spennymoor United would not be expelled, nor its record for the season expunged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, Second board meeting\nThe FA decided that Spennymoor United\u2019s playing record would re-instated into the league records and, in addition, three points would be awarded to other teams for each game outstanding against Spennymoor United, although no goals for or against will be allocated. Hyde United were one of the teams awarded three points which awarded them the 2004\u201305 Northern Premier League Premier Division Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, Second board meeting\nFarsley Celtic celebrated winning the Championship on the last day of the season, ignoring the fact that the original meeting on 24 April 2005 did not have a quorum however, as a result of the new overruling finished third in the table. Burscough, who had slipped from fifth to sixth, and out of the final promotion playoff place, thanks to Prescot Cables being awarded six points due to their two unplayed games against Spennymoor United, were aggrieved by this decision and, on 11 May 2005, attempted to get the FA to go to arbitration. This was rejected outright by the FA, and so Farsley Celtic and Burscough attempted to get the FA Appeal Board decision on 4 May overturned by the High Court of Justice in London on 12 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 95], "content_span": [96, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, Conclusive finding\nOn 13 May 2005 the FA and the Northern Premier League confirmed that Hyde United were the champions of the Northern Premier League Premier Division, and were presented with the trophy at their end of season party by Northern Premier League Chairman, Duncan Bayley.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180249-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Northern Premier League, 2005 Northern Premier League Controversy, Conclusive finding\nWorkington, who had finished first on the last day of the season having played a game more than Hyde United, were promoted along with Hyde United having beaten Farsley Celtic in a penalty shootout in the play-off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 93], "content_span": [94, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180250-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Norwich City F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 103rd season in the history of Norwich City. It was the club's first season in the Premier League for nine years, following promotion from the First Division in 2003\u201304. However, they were immediately relegated back to the second tier, notably without having won a competitive match away from home during the whole season. Despite being in pole position to stay up going into the final match of the season against Fulham, a 6\u20130 defeat at Craven Cottage sealed their fate. This article shows statistics and lists all matches played by the club during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180250-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Norwich City F.C. season, First team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180250-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Norwich City F.C. season, First team squad, Out on loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180250-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Norwich City F.C. season, First team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180251-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nottingham Forest F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Nottingham Forest competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180251-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Season summary\nManager Joe Kinnear was hoping to push for promotion from the newly named Coca-Cola Championship in 2004\u201305, but the start to the season was poor. Despite a promising draw with Wigan on the first day of the season (the game which started a run of four consecutive draws), the team's form and league position went downhill. With fans becoming restless, and the threat of demonstrations against the team management, Kinnear resigned in December after a 3\u20130 defeat to arch-rivals Derby County at Pride Park left Forest struggling at the foot of the Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180251-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Season summary\nFollowing Mick Harford's brief reign as caretaker, in January 2005, Gary Megson was named as Nottingham Forest's new manager. He had previously won promotion to the Premiership twice with West Bromwich Albion, having taken over at a time when they were on the verge of relegation to League One, and it was hoped that he could achieve the same success with Forest. After a loss to Millwall in Megson's first match in charge, a six-game unbeaten run gave the fans hope that survival might be on the cards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180251-0001-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Season summary\nHowever, Forest would win only one more league game all season after that, and they finished second from bottom in the Coca-Cola Championship and were relegated to League One. This made them the first former winners of the European Cup to suffer relegation to the third tier of their domestic league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180251-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180251-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Nottingham Forest F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180252-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Notts County F.C. season, Season summary\nGary Mills was sacked in November with Notts County in 21st position. Long-serving midfielder Ian Richardson was appointed caretaker manager for the remainder of the season and guided County to 18th place. He was replaced by former Iceland, Stoke City and Barnsley manager Gu\u00f0j\u00f3n \u00de\u00f3r\u00f0arson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180252-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Notts County F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180252-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Notts County F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180253-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OB I bajnoksag season\nThe 2004\u201305 OB I bajnoks\u00e1g season was the 68th season of the OB I bajnoks\u00e1g, the top level of ice hockey in Hungary. Six teams participated in the league, and Alba Volan Szekesfehervar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 OHL season was the 25th season of the Ontario Hockey League. The OHL inaugurated two awards for scholastic achievement, the Roger Neilson Memorial Award and the Ivan Tennant Memorial Award. Twenty teams each played 68 games. The London Knights set a Canadian Hockey League record, being undefeated in 31 games. The J. Ross Robertson Cup was won by the London Knights, defeating the Ottawa 67's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, Regular season, Final standings\nNote: DIV = Division; GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OTL = Overtime Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched conference title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, CHL Canada/Russia Series\nAfter these two games, OHL had an all-time record of 4\u20130 against the Russian Selects since the tournament began in 2003\u201304.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, London Knights' 2004\u201305 undefeated streak\nIn the 2004\u201305 season the London Knights broke an OHL record, going 28 games in a row without a loss (27\u20130\u20131). They subsequently broke the CHL record of 29 games (held by the 1978\u201379 Brandon Wheat Kings, who went 25\u20130\u20134 during their streak), with a 0\u20130 tie with the Guelph Storm on December 10, 2004, giving them a record of 28\u20130\u20132. The streak ended at 31 games after a 5\u20132 loss to the Sudbury Wolves on December 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, London Knights' 2004\u201305 undefeated streak\n*Tied OHL record previously set by Kitchener in 1983\u201384 **Broke OHL record previously set by Kitchener in 1983\u201384***Tied CHL record previously set by Brandon in 1978\u201379****Broke CHL record previously set by Brandon in 1978\u201379", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 61], "content_span": [62, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, 2005 OHL Priority Selection\nOn May 7, 2005, the OHL conducted the 2005 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection. The Oshawa Generals held the first overall pick in the draft, and selected John Tavares from the Toronto Marlboros. Tavares was awarded the Jack Ferguson Award, awarded to the top pick in the draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, 2005 OHL Priority Selection\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round of the 2005 Ontario Hockey League Priority Selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, 2005 CHL Import Draft\nOn June 29, 2005, the Canadian Hockey League conducted the 2005 CHL Import Draft, in which teams in all three CHL leagues participate in. The Ottawa 67's held the first pick in the draft by a team in the OHL, and selected Jakub Vojta from the Czech Republic with their selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180254-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OHL season, 2005 CHL Import Draft\nBelow are the players who were selected in the first round by Ontario Hockey League teams in the 2005 CHL Import Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 41], "content_span": [42, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180255-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OK Liga\nThe 2004\u201305 OK Liga was the 36th season of the top-tier league of rink hockey in Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180255-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OK Liga, Competition format\nThe eight first teams at the end of the regular season qualified for the playoffs while the three last teams were relegated to Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180255-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OK Liga, Playoffs\nQuarterfinals were played with a best-of-three format, while semifinals and final were played with a best-of-five series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180255-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OK Liga, Playoffs\nSeeded teams played games 1, 2 and 5 of the series at home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 25], "content_span": [26, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180255-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OK Liga, Copa del Rey\nThe 2005 Copa del Rey was the 62nd edition of the Spanish men's roller hockey cup. It was played in Reus between the eight first qualified teams after the first half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180256-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OPJHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 OPJHL season is the 12th season of the Ontario Provincial Junior A Hockey League (OPJHL). The thirty-five teams of the North, South, East, and West divisions competed in a 49-game schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180256-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OPJHL season\nCome February, the top eight teams of each division competed for the Frank L. Buckland Trophy, the OJHL championship. The winner of the Buckland Cup, the St. Michael's Buzzers, competed in the Central Canadian Junior \"A\" championship, the Dudley Hewitt Cup, and finished 2nd. The DHC was hosted and won by the Georgetown Raiders who moved to the 2005 Royal Bank Cup but lost in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180256-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OPJHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched conference title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180256-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OPJHL season, Dudley Hewitt Cup Championship\nHosted by Georgetown Raiders in Georgetown, Ontario. Georgetown won the event, St. Michael's finished second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 52], "content_span": [53, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180256-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OPJHL season, 2005 Royal Bank Cup Championship\nHosted by Weyburn Red Wings in Weyburn, Saskatchewan. Georgetown finished in the semi-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 54], "content_span": [55, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180256-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 OPJHL season, Awards and honours, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 57], "content_span": [58, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180257-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Oddset Ligaen season\nThe 2004\u201305 Oddset Ligaen season was the 48th season of ice hockey in Denmark. Nine teams participated in the league, and the Herning Blue Fox won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180258-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Ohio Bobcats men's basketball team represented Ohio University in the college basketball season of 2004\u201305. The team was coached by Tim O'Shea and played their home games at the Convocation Center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180259-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team represented Oklahoma State University as a member of the Big 12 Conference during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by 15th-year head coach Eddie Sutton and played their home games at Gallagher-Iba Arena. The Cowboys followed the previous season\u2019s Final Four appearance by finishing with a record of 27\u20136 (11\u20135 Big 12) and a No. 8 final ranking in each of the two major polls.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180259-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Oklahoma State Cowboys basketball team\nAfter winning the Big 12 Tournament, Oklahoma State received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament as No. 2 seed in the Chicago region. After defeating Southeastern Louisiana in the opening round, the Cowboys defeated No. 7 seed Southern Illinois to reach the Sweet Sixteen. The run ended in the regional semifinal, as Arizona defeated OSU 79\u201378. It would end up being Coach Sutton\u2019s final Tournament appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180260-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Oldham Athletic A.F.C. competed in the Football League One finishing 19th. The club enjoyed success in the cups \u2013 reaching the 4th round of the FA Cup and the area final of the Football League Trophy", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180260-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Oldham Athletic A.F.C. season, Season summary\nA poor season in the league saw the club finishing 19th, with relegation avoided after manager Brian Talbot was replaced by Ronnie Moore towards the end of the season. Talbot's side had enjoyed cup success, particularly the defeat of Man City in the FA Cup third round. The club also reached the area final of the Football League Trophy for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180261-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Olympiacos F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Olympiacos's 45th consecutive season in the Alpha Ethniki and their 9th consecutive season in the UEFA Champions League. In the beginning of the summertime Olympiacos named Norwegian Trond Sollied coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180261-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Olympiacos F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180262-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Olympique Lyonnais season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 106th season in the existence of Olympique Lyonnais and the club's 16th consecutive season in the top flight of French football. They participated in the Ligue 1, the Coupe de France, the Coupe de la Ligue, the Troph\u00e9e des Champions and UEFA Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180262-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Olympique Lyonnais season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180262-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Olympique Lyonnais season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 76], "content_span": [77, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180263-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Olympique de Marseille season\nOlympique de Marseille had a disappointing season, with three managers passing by en route to a fifth-place finish in Ligue 1 and two premature domestic cup exits. With striker Didier Drogba being sold to Chelsea, and replacements Habib Bamogo and P\u00e9guy Luyindula not performing at a similar level, the goal-scoring went dry, but in spite of scoring two points less than the previous season, OM finished two positions above the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180264-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Omani League\nThe 2004\u201305 Omani League was the 29th edition of the top football league in Oman. It began on 23 September 2004 and finished on 19 May 2005. Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. were the defending champions, having won the previous 2003\u201304 Omani League season. On Thursday, 19 May 2005, Dhofar S.C.S.C. played out a 1-1 draw away in their final league match against Al-Nasr S.C.S.C. and emerged as the champions of the 2004\u201305 Omani League with a total of 46 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180264-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Omani League, Teams\nThis season the league had increased from 12 to 13 teams. Al-Suwaiq Club and Saham SC were relegated to the Second Division League after finishing in the relegation zone in the 2003\u201304 season. The two relegated teams were replaced by Second Division League teams Al-Ahli Club, Al-Ittihad Club and Bahla Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180265-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Orlando Magic season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 16th season of the Orlando Magic in the National Basketball Association (NBA). After finishing the previous year with a league-worst 21\u201361 record, the Magic won the NBA Draft Lottery for the third time in franchise history, and selected high school star Dwight Howard with the first overall pick in the 2004 NBA draft. During the offseason, the Magic acquired All-Star guard Steve Francis and Cuttino Mobley from the Houston Rockets, and signed free agent Hedo Turkoglu. The team looked to be a playoff contender playing above .500 for the first half of the season. In January, Mobley was traded to the Sacramento Kings for Doug Christie. However, head coach Johnny Davis was fired after a 31\u201333 start, and was replaced with Chris Jent. The Magic finished third in the Southeast Division with a 36\u201346 record, a 15-game improvement from the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 912]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180265-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Orlando Magic season\nGrant Hill finally played a full season with the Magic averaging 19.7 points per game, while being selected to play in the 2005 NBA All-Star Game, his first All-Star selection since 2000. Howard was selected to the All-Rookie First Team, while Jameer Nelson made the All-Rookie Second Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180266-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo)\n2004\u201305 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo) was the 99th water polo championship in Hungary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180266-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Orsz\u00e1gos Bajnoks\u00e1g I (men's water polo), First stage\nPld - Played; W - Won; L - Lost; PF - Points for; PA - Points against; Diff - Difference; Pts - Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 60], "content_span": [61, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180267-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ottawa Senators season\nThe 2004\u201305 Ottawa Senators season was the 13th season of the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). All games were cancelled due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout, which cancelled play for the entire League. Several of the Senators' players played for teams in European hockey leagues while some played for the Senators' American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Binghamton Senators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180267-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ottawa Senators season\nSeveral Senators played with the team's AHL affiliate, the Binghamton Senators, including newly-acquired goaltender Dominik Hasek, who only practiced with the group, and Jason Spezza, who played most of the season with Binghamton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180267-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ottawa Senators season\nLike all other NHL teams, the Senators were still eligible to take part in the 2004 NHL Entry Draft and selected Andrej Meszaros in the first round, 23rd overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180267-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ottawa Senators season, NHL lockout\nThe NHL Chairman of the Board, Harley Hotchkiss was a key figure in the resolution of the labour dispute. Initially taking a low key role, Hotchkiss was thrust into the spotlight when he was invited by National Hockey League Players' Association President Trevor Linden to a last-ditch meeting in January 2005 to save the season. While that meeting was unsuccessful in saving the season, the two would continue to meet until an agreement was finally reached on July 13, 2005. Hotchkiss' role in the negotiations was prominently mentioned when he was voted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180267-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ottawa Senators season, Draft picks\nOttawa's draft picks from the 2004 NHL Entry Draft held on June 26 and June 27, 2004 at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180268-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PAOK FC season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was PAOK Football Club\u2019s 79th in existence and the club\u2019s 46th consecutive season in the top flight of Greek football. The team will enter the Greek Football Cup in the First round and will also enter in Champions League starting from the Third qualifying round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180268-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PAOK FC season, Players, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 38], "content_span": [39, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180268-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Squad statistics\nAppearances denote players in the starting lineup, with the numbers in parentheses denoting appearances as substitute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180268-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PAOK FC season, Statistics, Squad statistics\n1 Missing stats for Cup. PAOK played four games in competition. Please Help.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 52], "content_span": [53, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, or known as the 2004-05 Gran Matador Brandy-PBA Philippine Cup for sponsorship reasons, was the All-Filipino Conference of the Philippine Basketball Association's (PBA) 2004-05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup\nThe Barangay Ginebra Kings won its first back-to-back titles with a 4-2 conquest of the Talk 'N Text Phone Pals. The series was marred by a controversial reversal of the Phone Pals' Game One victory after fielding in an ineligible Asi Taulava in the said game. Taulava was serving an indefinite suspension after being cited as one of six Filipino-American players with questionable citizenship papers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup\nEric Menk won another Best Player of the Conference Award, his third in his PBA career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Wildcard phase\nThe #3 vs. #10 and the #4 vs. #9 matchups are in the \"twice-to-beat\" format; the team with the higher seed only needs to win once to advance, but needs to be beaten twice in order to be eliminated. The other two matchups are a best-of-three series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nOn January 26, 2005, Judge Rogelio Pizarro of the Quezon City Regional Trial Court Branch 222 issued a writ of preliminary mandatory injunction \"commanding and directing\" the PBA to allow Taulava \"to play in the current All Filipino Conference and succeeding Conferences of the PBA\" during the term of his contract. This was after Taulava passed citizenship papers that should've allowed him to play in the league; earlier, he was indefinitely suspended from playing after his Filipino citizenship was nullified (only Filipinos are allowed to play in the Philippine Cup).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nThe PBA Board of Governors refused to honor the court order, upholding Commissioner Noli Eala's suspension of Taulava after consultation with the league's legal counsel. Taulava's lawyer Ed Francisco charged Eala with giving the board wrong legal advice. Taulava did play at Game 1, in which Talk 'N Text won easily 89-71. As Taulava was being introduced, the pro-Ginebra crowd jeered him as the outnumbered Talk 'N Text crowd greeted him with cheers, displaying placards with a message \"Welcome Back!\" Eala himself had considered quitting his commissioner's post as he received a phone call \"to make sure that Asi Taulava be allowed to play\". After the game, Barangay Ginebra filed a protest to the commissioner's office. Talk 'N Text intends to play Taulava for the entire duration of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nBarangay Ginebra reportedly indicated that the team may forfeit the Finals series if Taulava continues to be allowed to play and Game 1 won't be forfeited. The league has issued a motion for reconsideration on the court order, and Eala said that Talk 'N Text may face sanctions for violating league rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nIn a board meeting on February 1, there was a \"heated clash\" between Eala and Talk 'N Text alternate representative Paul Gueco in which Gueco reportedly challenged Eala to make a decision on the Taulava case by himself and to tell Talk N Text what his decision was, a statement supported by board chairman Buddy Encarnado of the Sta. Lucia Realtors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nTalk 'N Text did not field Taulava in Game 2 \"in the interest of the Philippine Basketball Association and the public\", even though Eala was filed of contempt charges, and Talk 'N Text's Game 1 win was forfeited against Ginebra. The Gin Kings won against Talk 'N Text by one point, thanks to Eric Menk's last basket with 5.2 seconds left to play. Ginebra's defense disallowed an attempt from the Phone Pals, leading to the 2-0 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nFrancisco pointed out that new rules and regulations covering the eligibility of Filipino-foreign players such as Taulava, who was declared eligible by the PBA based on the Bureau of Immigration clearance and Department of Justice (DOJ) affirmation in 2001, cannot be subject to additional rules or conditions imposed retroactively and any such changes can only be applied prospectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nThe DOJ, for its part, considered on intervening and seek a reversal of the court's ruling allowing the cager to play anew in the PBA despite the DOJ's findings that he is not a Filipino; although they won't intervene if the Court of Appeals would rule favorably on the justice department's petition seeking to lift an injunction against it issued by the Manila RTC on the separate issue of Taulava's deportation. DOJ Secretary Raul Gonzalez said that the rulings of the Quezon City and Manila RTC constitute \"undue interference by the courts.\" Para\u00f1aque Congressman Eduardo Zialcita would seek a congressional inquiry into Eala's \"continued defiance\" on the court orders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180269-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA Philippine Cup, Finals\nNegros Oriental Congressman Jacinto Paras asked the Games and Amusement Board (GAB) to investigate Eala for his \"questionable and dictatorial acts\" as the PBA is under the direct jurisdiction of the GAB. Meanwhile, the Phone Pals appealed to the Board of Governors to reverse Eala's prior decisions of forfeiting game 1 and for the reinstatement of Taulava. Meanwhile, with all of the publicity, the tournament scored the highest TV ratings in years, with ratings of at least 11% and an audience share of at least 17.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 34], "content_span": [35, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season\nThe 2004\u201305 PBA season was the 30th season of the Philippine Basketball Association. Instead of the usual calendar year of February\u2013December, the league changed its schedule to the current October\u2013July format, while limiting the number of conferences from three to two. As part of the new league format, the season was preceded with a transition conference known as the 2004 PBA Fiesta Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2004-05 Philippine Cup\nBarangay Ginebra won its first back-to-back titles and sixth overall crown with a 4-2 conquest over Talk 'N Text Phone Pals. The series was marred by a controversial reversal of the Phone Pals' Game 1 victory after fielding in an ineligible Taulava in the said game. Taulava was serving an indefinite suspension after being cited as one of six Filipino-American players with questionable citizenship papers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2004-05 Philippine Cup\nThe San Miguel Beermen won third place after beating the Shell Turbo Chargers in a one-game match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2004-05 Philippine Cup\nEric Menk won another Best Player of the Conference Award, his third in his PBA career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2004-05 Philippine Cup\nChot Reyes left his post as the Coca Cola Tigers head coach to become the new coach of the Philippine national basketball team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2005 Fiesta Conference\nSan Miguel won its 17th PBA title with a 4-1 series victory over Talk N' Text. The league finally allowed Asi Taulava to play in the finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2005 Fiesta Conference\nShell won third place over Red Bull in a one-game playoff, which turn out to be the last appearance of the Turbo Chargers in the league as it filed a leave of absence in August 2005. Shell eventually sell their rights to Welcoat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180270-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PBA season, 2005 Fiesta Conference\nTalk N' Text's Willie Miller was named the Best Player of the Conference while teammate Jerald Honeycutt won the Best Import plum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180271-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PFC Cherno More Varna season\nThis page covers all relevant details regarding PFC Cherno More Varna for all official competitions inside the 2004\u201305 season. These are A Group and Bulgarian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180272-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PFC Levski Sofia season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Levski Sofia's 83rd season in the First League. This article shows player statistics and all matches (official and friendly) that the club has played during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180272-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PFC Levski Sofia season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180273-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PFF National League\nThe 2004\u201305 PFF National League (now known as PFF League) was the 1st season of second tier of Pakistan Football Federation. The season was scheduled to start on 22 November 2004 and concluded on 1 February 2005. The league's name was originally planned as National League Division B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180274-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PSV Eindhoven season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 Dutch football season, PSV Eindhoven competed in the Eredivisie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180274-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PSV Eindhoven season, Season summary\nDespite losing several key players in the summer, PSV reached the semi-finals of the Champions League before being knocked out by eventual runners-up Milan. PSV won the home leg 3\u20131, but lost 2\u20130 at the San Siro, Milan advancing on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180274-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PSV Eindhoven season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180274-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 PSV Eindhoven season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League season was the inaugural season of Pakistan Premier League, top tier of Pakistani football. The season started on 28 May 2004 and concluded on 13 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Formation\nThe league was created as a replacement for group stage based National championship. The new PFF president, Makhdoom Syed Faisal Saleh Hayat, decided that it was time for Pakistan to have a football league. He felt that past presidents had neglected domestic football, and as a result, the national team suffered. A good example of this was the fact that national champions rarely played in AFC club competitions, and the Pakistan national team was one of the worst in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Formation\nThe new PFF president, Makhdoom Syed Faisal Saleh Hayat, decided that it was time for Pakistan to have a football league. He felt that past presidents had neglected domestic football, and as a result, the national team suffered. A good example of this was the fact that national champions rarely played in AFC club competitions, and the Pakistan national team was one of the worst in the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Formation\nThis would have been the first time since 1948, when the first domestic football tournament was played, that a league system would be used to find a national champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Teams\nEight teams automatically qualified for the league from previous season's PFF Cup. Following teams earned automatic qualification:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Teams\nOther eight teams qualified via regional tournament. Following are the teams qualified from regional tournament:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 38], "content_span": [39, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nSeason started on 28 May 2004, Khuda Bakhsh of WAPDA was the first player to score a goal in new Pakistan Premier League when he scored a brace against Allied Bank.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nThe season saw many one-sided high-scoring matches, as some of the teams lacked in quality and financially. On 28 June, Habib Bank defeated Naka Muhammden 15\u20130, the highest scoring match and the biggest victory and loss and most numbers of player (7) scoring in a single match in the history of Pakistan Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nDuring June, Allied Bank disbanded their team, after refusing to renew the contracts of seven players; but they were able restored their team and returned playing. Bankruptcy hit Naka Muhammadan who withdrew before their 14 July match, they did however returned to complete the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nThe season was dominated by Khan Research Laboratories, Pakistan Army and WAPDA, as they scored a combined goals of 294, each scoring 98 goals, highest ever in Pakistan Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nDue to fixture congestion, WAPDA had to play both their final two matches on the same day, which just happened to be against title rivals Pakistan Army and Khan Research Laboratories. WAPDA and Army drew 2-2, meaning Army were three points ahead at the top of the table, but both shared the same goal difference, and WAPDA still had one match to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nIt meant WAPDA needed to win to finish first, and their opponents, KRL, also needed to win to finish first. In this top of the table clash, it was WAPDA who were victorious, thrashing KRL 4\u20130 to win the title by a superior goal difference, and be crowned as the first winners of the Pakistan Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nArif Mehmood of WAPDA took the honours as the league's top scorer, with over 20 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nAt the end of the season, 6 teams were relegated and 2 promoted as league reduced to 12 teams for 2005 after the number of one sided matches. Panther Club escaped relegation thanks to the withdrawal of Allied Bank from the 2005\u201306 season. National Bank and Pakistan Public Work Department were promoted to the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nWAPDA represented Pakistan at the 2005 AFC President's Cup by virtue of being the national champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180275-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pakistan Premier League, Season summary\nWAPDA, Pakistan Army and KRL set a new national record of 98 goals in a season. WAPDA only conceding 12 goals is also a new record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180276-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Palestinian local elections\nMunicipal elections were held between December 2004 and December 2005, to elect members of local councils in the Palestinian Territories. The elections were approved by President Yasser Arafat of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA), before his death on 11 November 2004. They were administered by the Higher Committee for Local Elections (HCLE), a body established under the authority of the Ministry for Local Government, an institution of the Palestinian National Authority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180276-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Palestinian local elections\nIt were the first local elections held by the PNA. Previous municipal elections were held in 1972 and 1976, organized by the Israeli occupation power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180276-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Palestinian local elections, Proceeding\nThe elections should take place in five rounds, but the fifth was not carried out, because of the situation in Palestinian Territories after formation of Hamas-led government. Approximately 25% of Palestinians live in districts that did not have elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180276-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Palestinian local elections, Proceeding\nIn the first two rounds, council members were elected by Bloc voting election system, and the third and fourth by Party-list proportional representation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180277-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Panathinaikos F.C. season\nIn the 2004\u201305 season Panathinaikos played for 49th consecutive time in Greece's top division, Alpha Ethniki. They also competed in UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup and Greek Cup. Season started with Zden\u011bk \u0160\u010dasn\u00fd as team manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180277-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Panathinaikos F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Paris Saint-Germain's 35th season in existence. PSG played their home league games at the Parc des Princes in Paris, registering an average attendance of 35,369 spectators per match. The club was presided by Francis Graille until 2 May 2005, when Pierre Blayau became the new president. The team was coached by Vahid Halilhod\u017ei\u0107 until 8 February 2005, when Laurent Fournier replaced him. Jos\u00e9-Karl Pierre-Fanfan was the team captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Season summary\nThe season before, PSG had won the Coupe de France and finished second in Ligue 1, just three points away from title glory. However, manager Vahid Halilhod\u017ei\u0107's second season at the club was not a success. From their opening Champions League group stage 0\u20133 home loss to Chelsea, to their poor domestic form, PSG never looked like replicating the winning form of the previous season. Going into the final round of Champions League group stage fixtures in December, the team still had a chance of advancing to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Season summary\nThe club, however, suffered a disappointing 1\u20133 defeat at home, courtesy of a Sergei Semak hat-trick, which meant straight elimination from Europe. It was a bitter loss that even prompted club president Francis Graille to publicly relay his disappointment at the \"lack of pride\" shown by the squad, though remaining guardedly coy when explicitly asked about Halilhod\u017ei\u0107's future at the club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Season summary\nWith only domestic competition to worry about, PSG began 2005 looking to improve its league standing. Sluggish form continued, however, and on 8 February, following a 2\u20130 home defeat versus Lens that saw PSG drop to 12th, the club's management decided to sack Halilhod\u017ei\u0107. He was replaced by the coach of the reserves team, Laurent Fournier, under whom the club eventually finished ninth in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Season summary\nFollowing the conclusion of the season, Sochaux's Guy Lacombe was appointed as manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Players, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180278-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Paris Saint-Germain F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180279-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Parma F.C. season\nParma Football Club only just survived a horror Serie A season for the club, in which the cash-strapped club went from Champions League contenders to relegation strugglers, only surviving thanks to a spareggio victory against Bologna. With lethal striker Alberto Gilardino leaving the club for Milan and goalkeeper S\u00e9bastien Frey for Fiorentina, the future looked bleak, especially given that several clubs had accumulated more than 40 points in the 2004\u201305 season. On a positive note, Parma reached the semi finals of the UEFA Cup, where it drew 0\u20130 to CSKA Moscow, before finally losing 3\u20130 in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180279-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Parma F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180279-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Parma F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180279-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Parma F.C. season, First-team squad, Reserve team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180280-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Partick Thistle F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Partick Thistle compete in the Scottish First Division where they finished in 9th position with 39 points, suffering relegation to the Scottish Second Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180281-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Persepolis F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the Persepolis's 4th season in the Pro League, and their 22nd consecutive season in the top division of Iranian Football. They were also be competing in the Hazfi Cup. Persepolis was captained by Behrouz Rahbarifar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180281-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Persepolis F.C. season, Squad\nAs of October 2004. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180282-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pervaya Liga season\nThe 2004\u201305 Pervaya Liga season was the 13th season of the Pervaya Liga, the third level of ice hockey in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180283-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia 76ers season\nThe 2004\u201305 Philadelphia 76ers season was the 66th season of the franchise, 56th in the National Basketball Association (NBA). During the offseason, the Sixers acquired Corliss Williamson from the Detroit Pistons. Under new head coach Jim O'Brien, the Sixers played mediocre basketball losing 12 of their first 18 games. At midseason, the team traded Williamson back to the Sacramento Kings for All-Star forward Chris Webber, and traded Glenn Robinson, who had not played this season due to tendinitis in his left ankle, to the New Orleans Hornets for Jamal Mashburn. However, Webber struggled to adjust to his new surroundings, and Mashburn was already out for the entire season with a knee injury. The Sixers managed to win eight of their final ten games, finishing second in the Atlantic Division with a 43\u201339 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180283-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia 76ers season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, they lost in five games to the defending champion Detroit Pistons. Following the season, O'Brien was fired after one season coaching the Sixers, Aaron McKie signed as a free agent with the Los Angeles Lakers, and Mashburn retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180283-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia 76ers season\nFor the season, Allen Iverson won his fourth and final scoring title of his career as well as being selected to the 2005 NBA All-Star Game in Denver, where he was the game's MVP. Top draft pick Andre Iguodala was selected to the All-Rookie First Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180283-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia 76ers season, Transactions\nThe 76ers have been involved in the following transactions during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season\nThe 2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season was the Flyers' 38th season in the National Hockey League (NHL), however its games were canceled due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout. The other 29 teams did not play either due to the labor dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nAfter being defeated in the Eastern Conference Finals by the eventual Stanley Cup champion Tampa Bay Lightning in 2003\u201304, the Flyers prepared for the looming labor unrest that was to come. While team captain Keith Primeau was re-signed to a four-year contract worth $17\u00a0million prior to hitting the free agent market, leading scorer Mark Recchi was not \u2013 general manager Bob Clarke said he would not re-sign Recchi until a new collective bargaining agreement was in place \u2013 and instead signed with the Pittsburgh Penguins on July 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Off-season\nUnsigned 2001 first-round draft pick R. J. Umberger, whose NHL rights had previously been held by the Vancouver Canucks and New York Rangers, signed with the Flyers as an unrestricted free agent on June 16. The Flyers signed free agent right wingers Mike Knuble of the Boston Bruins and Turner Stevenson of the New Jersey Devils to three-year contracts after the free agency period began. On July 13 undrafted free agent forward Tony Voce, who played four seasons at Boston College, became the first native of Philadelphia to sign with the Flyers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Schedule\nThe Flyers preseason and regular season schedules were announced on July 14, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, NHL lockout\nThe lockout started on September 16, 2004 and those Flyers with two-way contracts were sent down to the Phantoms. Those Flyers with NHL-only contracts either sat out or played in another league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, NHL lockout, Player activity\nThe following is a list of Flyers with NHL-only contracts and whether they were active during the lockout. Vladimir Malakhov and Alexei Zhamnov are not included since their contracts expired prior to the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Farm teams\nThe Flyers were affiliated with the Philadelphia Phantoms of the American Hockey League (AHL) and the Trenton Titans of the ECHL. Both teams were their league's champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Farm teams, Philadelphia Phantoms\nWith the Flyers season canceled, many players who would normally be in orange and black were in purple, orange, and black instead. Joni Pitkanen and Todd Fedoruk had spent the entirety of the previous season with the Flyers and over a dozen others on the Phantoms roster had previously spent time in the NHL. Led by mid-season acquisition Jon Sim's 35 goals and R. J. Umberger's 65 points, the Phantoms finished second in their division with a record of 48\u201325\u20133\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Farm teams, Philadelphia Phantoms\nReinforced by the arrivals of top junior prospects Jeff Carter and Mike Richards to the team, the Phantoms defeated the Norfolk Admirals in six games, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins in five games, and the Providence Bruins in six games to reach the finals. Holding the Chicago Wolves to four goals the entire series, the Phantoms swept the series and won the Calder Cup. Goaltender Antero Niittymaki was awarded the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as playoff MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 69], "content_span": [70, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Farm teams, Trenton Titans\nTrenton finished second in their division and after defeating the Atlantic City Boardwalk Bullies in three games, the Reading Royals in four games, and the Alaska Aces in seven games, the Titans defeated the Florida Everblades in six games to win the Kelly Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions\nThe Flyers were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Signings, Free agency\nThe following players were signed by the Flyers via free agency. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Signings, Internal\nThe following players were re-signed by the Flyers. Two-way contracts are marked with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 68], "content_span": [69, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Transactions, Departures\nThe following players left the team via free agency, release, or retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180284-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philadelphia Flyers season, Draft picks\nPhiladelphia's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004. The Flyers traded their first-round pick, 25th overall, their 2005 third-round pick, and Jeff Woywitka to the Edmonton Oilers for Mike Comrie on December 16, 2003. The Flyers also traded their originally allotted second, fifth, sixth, and seventh-round draft picks in three different trades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180285-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philippine Basketball League season, 2004-05 Open Championships, Open finals\nMonta\u00f1a won their first-ever PBL title by blasting the Welcoat Paintmasters, 79-65, in the deciding fifth game of their series, the Jewels leaned on another shooting performance from finals MVP Alex Compton, who finish with a game-high 26 points, and also got gritty plays from veteran playmaker Froilan Baguion, who shot 13 points and pulled off three steals. Leo Najorda led Welcoat's charge with 20 points while Welcoat star Anthony Washington struggled offensively for the second straight game after stellar performances early in the finals series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 84], "content_span": [85, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180285-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philippine Basketball League season, 2005 Unity Cup\nIn a double-playoff game on May 24, Magnolia beat Toyota, 81\u201376, to clinch 4th-seed. Welcoat beat Harbour, 92\u201387, for 2nd-seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180285-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philippine Basketball League season, 2005 Unity Cup\nIn the twice-to-beat advantage in the quarterfinal round on May 26, sixth-seeded Granny Goose forces a knockout game against third-seeded Harbour, 78\u201376. Magnolia advances in the final four, repeating over fifth-seeded Toyota-Otis, 66\u201353.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180285-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philippine Basketball League season, 2005 Unity Cup\nOn May 28, Granny Goose eliminates Harbour with a 75\u201360 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180285-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philippine Basketball League season, 2005 Unity Cup, Semifinal series\nTop-seeded teams' Monta\u00f1a and Welcoat needed just two wins in the series to enter the finals while Magnolia and Granny Goose must win three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180285-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Philippine Basketball League season, 2005 Unity Cup, Unity Cup finals\nAfter a string of runner-up finishes, Welcoat Paints collected the PBL Unity Cup championship with a 98-80 victory over Monta\u00f1a in Game 4 for a 3-1 series victory. Finals MVP Jay Washington pumped in 25 points and grabbed 12 rebounds to lead the Paintmasters to their first title since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 77], "content_span": [78, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180286-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Coyotes season\nThe 2004\u201305 Phoenix Coyotes season was the franchise's 33rd season overall, 26th National Hockey League season and their ninth season in Phoenix, however its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180286-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Coyotes season, Transactions\nThe Coyotes were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180286-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Coyotes season, Draft picks\nPhoenix's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 37th for the Phoenix Suns in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Suns re-acquired All-Star guard Steve Nash from the Dallas Mavericks, and signed free agent Quentin Richardson. The Suns got off to a fast start winning 31 of their first 35 games, but then lost six straight afterwards. They finished with the best record in the NBA at 62\u201320 under head coach Mike D'Antoni, tying their franchise best 1992\u201393 season record. Three members of the team, Nash, Amar'e Stoudemire, and Shawn Marion were all selected for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season\nThe Suns also gained solid play from Richardson and Joe Johnson. Nash finished the season averaging 11.5 assists per game, while making 50.2% of his field goals and 43.1% of his three-pointers in the regular season. He ended up winning the MVP award. D'Antoni was awarded Coach of the Year, and Bryan Colangelo Executive of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Suns swept the Memphis Grizzlies in four straight games, then in the semifinals defeated Nash's former team, the Dallas Mavericks in six games. However, in the Western Conference Finals, they would lose to the 2nd-seeded and eventual NBA champion San Antonio Spurs in five games. Following the season, Johnson was traded to the Atlanta Hawks, and Richardson was dealt to the New York Knicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, NBA Draft\nThe Suns drafted Luol Deng with the 7th pick, who was immediately traded to the Chicago Bulls for second-round pick Jackson Vroman, a conditional first-round pick (which conveyed as the 21st overall pick in 2005), and cash considerations. The Suns received the 16th pick (Kirk Snyder) in a trade with the New York Knicks, but traded the pick to the Utah Jazz. The Suns second-round pick was traded to the Orlando Magic in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 49], "content_span": [50, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Offseason, Free agency\nAfter trading Stephon Marbury (owed $76 million through 2008\u201309) and Penny Hardaway (owed $30.4 million through 2005\u201306), the Suns freed enough cap space to sign free agent point guard Steve Nash to a 6-year, $65.6 million deal, with a sixth-year team option, and swingman Quentin Richardson to a 6-year, $43.5 million deal, with a sixth-year player option. The Suns also signed Steven Hunter, Yuta Tabuse and Derrick Dial as free agents. Hunter played the season as a back-up center, Tabuse played 4 games before being waived in December, and Dial was waived before the start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 51], "content_span": [52, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Regular season\nBefore the season, the Suns were widely predicted to finish in the middle of the pack of the Western Conference. Defying expectations, Phoenix won 31 of its first 35 games. The team then lost its next six games, in large part due to a thigh injury suffered by Nash. Despite this minor blip, the Suns finished with a record of 62\u201320. The 33-win improvement over the 2003\u201304 campaign constituted the third-best year-to-year jump in NBA history. Nash won the NBA Most Valuable Player Award, while three Suns \u2013 Nash, Stoudemire, and Marion \u2013 were named to an All-NBA Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Regular season\nIn their first full year under D'Antoni, the Suns channeled his particular basketball philosophy, which emphasized rapid ball movement, pick-and-rolls, and high-volume three-point shooting. This style of play benefitted from rule changes enacted in 2002, which including new penalties against hand check fouls committed on the perimeter. Over the course of the season, Phoenix led the NBA in a large number of metrics, including points per possession, points per game, three-point shots attempted, and three-point shooting percentage. The Suns' fast style of play earned them the moniker \"Seven Seconds or Less.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Legacy\nWriting for the Washington Post in 2017, Tim Bontemps credited D'Antoni and his Suns teams \u2013 starting with the 2004\u201305 squad \u2013 with demonstrating the possibility of success for a team built to play small ball, run a high-tempo offense, and shoot a large number of three-pointers. Bontemps argued that the Suns' model inspired teams around the league to adopt many of D'Antoni's offensive principles, leading to dramatic changes in the NBA's style of play. Other writers have made similar arguments in favor of the proposition that the \"Seven Seconds or Less\" Suns revolutionized the modern game of basketball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Legacy\nMultiple commentators have drawn direct parallels between D'Antoni's Phoenix teams and the 2015\u201316 Golden State Warriors, who also shot a large number of three-pointers and used small ball lineups. The Stephen Curry-led Warriors set the regular season record of 73 wins before falling to the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 2016 NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Legacy\nThe team's roster is featured in the video games NBA 2K16, NBA 2K17, and NBA 2K18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180287-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Phoenix Suns season, Player statistics, Season\n* \u2013 Stats with the Suns. \u2020 \u2013 Minimum 300 field goals made. + \u2013 Minimum 55 three-pointers made. ^ \u2013 Minimum 125 free throws made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180288-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pirveli Liga\n2004\u201305 Pirveli Liga was the 16th season of the Georgian Pirveli Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180289-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Panthers men's basketball team represented the University of Pittsburgh in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by head coach Jamie Dixon, the Panthers finished with a record of 20\u20139 and lost in the first round of the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament where they lost to Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180290-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Penguins season\nThe 2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Penguins season was the franchise's 38th season in the National Hockey League. However, due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout, no games were played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180290-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Draft\nThe 2004 NHL Entry Draft was held on June 26 at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina. The Penguins selected future Calder Memorial Trophy winner Evgeni Malkin with the second overall selection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180290-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Farm teams\nThe American Hockey League (AHL)'s Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins finished fourth in the East Division with a record of 40\u201330\u20137\u20133. They defeated the Binghamton Senators in the first round of the playoffs before losing in the second round to the eventual Calder Cup champion Philadelphia Phantoms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180290-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Pittsburgh Penguins season, Farm teams\nThe ECHL's Wheeling Nailers finished out of the playoffs in sixth in the North Division with a 38\u201325\u20139 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180291-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Plymouth Argyle F.C. season\nThis article provides a summary of Plymouth Argyle's 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180292-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Polish Basketball League\nThe 2004\u201305 Polish Basketball League was the 77th edition of the top basketball league of Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180292-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Polish Basketball League, Teams\nThe first 10 teams will play in Era Basket Liga in the next season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180293-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Polish Volleyball League\n2004\u201305 Polish Volleyball League was the 69th season of Polish Championship (5th season as professional league) organized by Professional Volleyball League SA (Polish: Profesjonalna Liga Pi\u0142ki Siatkowej S.A.) under the supervision of Polish Volleyball Federation (Polish: Polski Zwi\u0105zek Pi\u0142ki Siatkowej).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180293-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Polish Volleyball League\nResovia and G\u00f3rnik Radlin were promoted to Polish Volleyball League in this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180293-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Polish Volleyball League\nIn season 2004/2005 Jastrz\u0119bski W\u0119giel and Polska Energia Sosnowiec played in CEV Champions League, BOT Skra Be\u0142chat\u00f3w, Pamapol AZS Cz\u0119stochowa and PZU AZS Olsztyn played in CEV Challenge Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180294-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Polska Liga Hokejowa season\nThe 2004\u201305 Polska Liga Hokejowa season was the 70th season of the Polska Liga Hokejowa, the top level of ice hockey in Poland. Eight teams participated in the league, and GKS Tychy won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Port Vale's 93rd season of football in the English Football League, and first in the newly created League One. Martin Foyle's first full season in charge, Vale survived a relegation dogfight to finish in eighteenth place, having struggled to compete with the departures of Stephen McPhee and Steve Brooker. His side exited both the FA Cup and the League Trophy at the Second Round, and left the League Cup at the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nThe pre-season saw Martin Foyle add to his squad with a number of free signings: Lee Matthews (Bristol City); Jeff Smith (Bolton Wanderers); Dean Smith (Sheffield Wednesday); Daryl McMahon (West Ham United); and Robin Hulbert (Telford United). The pre-season saw Vale finish 5th in the Isle of Man tournament at The Bowl. They also managed to battle to a draw at home to La Liga outfit Racing de Santander.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nThe season started positively with ten points from five games, though until the end of the season Vale failed to find form, and picked up an average of one point a game despite only playing in five draws all season. At half-time at the opening game of the season at Vale Park, fans were surprised to hear an announcement over the public address system telling them not to sing songs deriding rivals Stoke City. Mark Goodlad picked up an injury, allowing Jonny Brain the chance to impress between the sticks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nAt the end of September, star midfielder Steve Brooker was sold to Bristol City for \u00a3225,000. The club failed to bring in Christian Roberts in return, though Marc Goodfellow was signed on a four-week loan deal the following month. Teenage defender James O'Connor also joined on loan from Aston Villa. In November, Andreas Lipa returned to his homeland to play for Austria Lustenau, after Foyle released the injury-plagued defender. McMahon also left the club to join Leyton Orient. Foyle brought a new signing to Vale Park though, with striker Nathan Lowndes joining on a free transfer from Plymouth Argyle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0002-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nIn December, defender Tyrone Loran joined on a one-month loan from Tranmere Rovers, though returned to Prenton Park when the loan deal was up, after Foyle failed to sign him permanently. Christian Hanson was also signed from non-league Billingham Synthonia. Foyle also signed Nigerian defender George Abbey, who had been released by Macclesfield Town. In January, Dean Smith retired as a player and took up coaching at Leyton Orient. As a replacement, former Vale player Tommy Widdrington joined until the end of the season on non-contract terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0002-0003", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nIn February, veteran midfielder Danny Sonner joined on a one-month loan from Peterborough United. In March, club legend and former teammate of Foyle, Tony Naylor, joined on an emergency short-term contract, though never took to the field. Tony Dinning also was signed on loan from Bristol City. In addition to this, Mark Innes joined on a free transfer from Chesterfield. Sonner's loan deal was also extended until the end of the season, at which point he was signed permanently, as was Dinning. Vale lost to fellow relegation strugglers Torquay United and Wrexham in the last five games of the season, though a 5\u20130 win over Barnsley ensured the club's safety from the drop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nThey finished in eighteenth place with 56 points, leaving them five points clear of relegated Torquay. Their 59 goals conceded was a highly respectable tally, however they failed to score in almost half of their league games, and only recorded five draws all season. Vale lost more games and scored fewer goals than all club's in the division other than Peterborough United and Stockport County, who were both cut adrift early in the season. Billy Paynter was the club's top-scorer with thirteen goals, with other contributions also coming from Lee Matthews and Chris Birchall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, League One\nAt the end of the season teenage prodigy David Hibbert was snapped up by Preston North End, who paid Vale \u00a335,000 after a tribunal. Four players were also released: Simon Eldershaw (Northwich Victoria); Christian Hanson (Billingham Synthonia); Levi Reid (Stafford Rangers); and Ryan Brown (Leek Town). Ian Armstrong also retired due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances\nOn the financial front, Chairman Bill Bratt announced there was a 50-50 chance that an elderly American would put funds into the club, though the investment did not come through. Bratt also went public with his idea of Reginald Mitchell Stadium in honour of the inventor of the Spitfire, hopeful that 85-year-old American billionaire Sidney Frank would thus be encouraged to invest in the club. Foyle was desperate for more funds to attract better players, and was forced to dismiss speculation that he would sell Billy Paynter to Crewe Alexandra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Finances\nOn 13 December, shareholders voted by a margin of 119 to 3 to limit individual holdings in the club to a maximum of 24.9% \"to ensure that no single shareholder can acquire undue influence or control over the company\", in the words of Bill Bratt. The club's shirt sponsorship came from mobile phone company Tricell, though the firm could not afford to pay the club any money as they entered administration, worsening an already bleak financial picture for the \"Valiants\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 49], "content_span": [50, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the FA Cup, Vale avoided embarrassment by coming from behind to defeat local side Kidderminster Harriers 3\u20131. They then lost out to Blackpool in the Second Round with a 1\u20130 defeat at Bloomfield Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the League Cup, Vale travelled to Belle Vue, where they were knocked out by Doncaster Rovers after a 3\u20131 defeat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180295-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Port Vale F.C. season, Overview, Cup competitions\nIn the League Trophy, the \"Valiants\" advanced past Barnsley in front of a Vale Park crowd of just 1,970. However they then exited at the Second Round after a 2\u20131 defeat to Tranmere Rovers at Prenton Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180296-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portland Trail Blazers season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the 35th season for the Portland Trail Blazers in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Blazers acquired Nick Van Exel from the Golden State Warriors and signed free agent Joel Przybilla. The Blazers played around .500 for the first two months, but started to struggle losing 11 of their 15 games in January. Head coach Maurice Cheeks was fired midway through the season with a record of 22\u201333. He was replaced by General Manager Kevin Pritchard, who acted as interim coach for the remainder of the season, in which the team went 5\u201322. For the second year in a row, the Blazers did not qualify for the playoffs. The team's overall record of 27\u201355 was their worst since 1973\u201374, their fourth season of existence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 801]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180296-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portland Trail Blazers season\nFollowing the season, Pritchard was fired as coach, Van Exel signed as a free agent with the San Antonio Spurs, Shareef Abdur-Rahim was traded to the New Jersey Nets, but failed his physical and later on signed with the Sacramento Kings, Damon Stoudamire signed with the Memphis Grizzlies, and Derek Anderson signed with the Houston Rockets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Portsmouth competed in the FA Premier League. It was Portsmouth's second consecutive season in English football's top-flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season, Season summary\nPortsmouth's campaign got off to a good start, winning four of their first ten games including the famous, brilliant 2\u20130 win over Manchester United as they maintained a strong mid-table position in late October. However, manager Harry Redknapp walked out on Portsmouth in November after a row with chairman Milan Mandaric over the appointment of new Director of Football Velimir Zajec at the club. Zajec replaced Redknapp as manager with immediate effect, but under his management the club's form dipped, bringing the club from the top ten to a few points above the relegation zone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season, Season summary\nIn April, Zajec was replaced by Frenchman Alain Perrin; Perrin managed to secure Portsmouth's Premiership status with a few games of the season left. Despite this, Portsmouth still played a pivotal role in the \"Survival Sunday\" relegation drama - by losing 2\u20130 at West Bromwich Albion they both secured Albion's Premiership status and helped relegate arch-rivals Southampton (although Southampton were beaten 2\u20131 at home by Manchester United and would have been relegated even if Albion had lost).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season, Kit\nPortsmouth retained the previous season's kit, manufactured under the club's own brand, Pompey Sport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 35], "content_span": [36, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180297-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Portsmouth F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Powergen Cup was the 34th annual rugby union cup competition in England. Leeds Tykes won the competition for the first time in their history. The event was sponsored by Powergen and the final was held at Twickenham Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup\nThis was the last season in which the competition was confined to English teams only; from the 2005-06 season, the Welsh regional teams joined to form the Anglo-Welsh Cup. This season also marked the last time that teams outside of the English Premiership were permitted to enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nEarlier rounds of the competition were run on a seeded system. Earlier rounds included Clubs which were lower in the RFU league structure, clubs higher in the leagues joined at later rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nThe Qualifier Round consisted of 64 Clubs nominated by the Constituent Bodies (CB). Each CB nominated 2 Clubs, or 3 for the larger CBs such as Middlesex and Lancashire. These teams were usually selected through the previous season's County Cup (CB Cup) competitions. All were Level 5 or below. This Round produced 32 teams for the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nThe Preliminary Round consisted of the 32 winning teams from the Qualifier Round and produced 16 teams for the 1st Round proper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nIn the 1st Round, the 16 teams that won their Preliminary Round matches were joined by 14 National League 3 North and 14 National League 3 South clubs. National 3 was Level 4 of the RFU league structure; these leagues have since been renamed as National League 2 North and South. A total of 44 teams meant that this round consisted of 22 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nFor the 2nd Round, the 22 teams that won their 1st Round matches were joined by 14 National League 2 clubs. National 2 was Level 3 of the RFU league structure; this league have since been renamed as National League 1. A total of 36 teams meant that this round consisted of 18 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nIn the 3rd Round, the 18 teams that won their 2nd Round matches were joined by 14 National League 1 clubs. National 1 was Level 2 of the RFU league structure; this league have since been renamed as the RFU Championship. A total of 32 teams meant that this round consisted of 16 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nThe 4th and 5th Rounds reduced the 16 teams that won their 3rd Round matches to 4 teams to advance to the 6th Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nThe 6th Round consisted of the 4 teams that won their 5th Round matches, joined by 12 Premiership clubs. The Premiership is, and remains, Level 1 of the RFU league structure, the highest level. A total of 16 teams meant that this round consisted of 8 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Earlier Rounds\nSubsequent rounds were a standard knockout format of Quarter-finals, Semi-finals and a Final to produce an outright Cup winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180298-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Powergen Cup, Later Rounds\nThe 12 Premiership teams joined the 4 qualifiers from Round 5 to make up the draw for Round 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 34], "content_span": [35, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180299-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina\nStatistics of Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the 2004\u20132005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180299-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Overview\nIt was contested by 16 teams, and H\u0160K Zrinjski Mostar won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180300-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premier Soccer League\nIn the 2004\u201305 Premier Soccer League season\u00a0\u2013 now known as the South African Premier Division, the top tier of association football in South Africa\u00a0\u2013 contained 16 teams. The championship was won by Kaizer Chiefs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180301-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premiership Rugby\nThe 2004\u201305 Zurich Premiership was the 18th season of the top flight of the English domestic rugby union competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180301-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premiership Rugby\nFor the first time, two of the opening games of the season were played at Twickenham, in the 2004 London Double Header, between the four \"London\" teams: Harlequins, London Irish, London Wasps and Saracens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180301-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premiership Rugby\nAt the end of the season, Harlequins were relegated, to be replaced by Bristol for 2005-06.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180301-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premiership Rugby, Play-offs\nAs for the 2003\u201304 season, the first placed team automatically qualified for the final, where they played the winner of the second vs third place semi-final. This was the last season in which that format of play-off was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180301-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Premiership Rugby, Leading scorers\nNote: Flags to the left of player names indicate national team as has been defined under World Rugby eligibility rules, or primary nationality for players who have not earned international senior caps. Players may hold one or more non-WR nationalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180302-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Preston North End F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Preston North End F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180302-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Preston North End F.C. season, Season summary\nWhen Preston went down 1\u20130 at Brighton thanks to a Marlon Broomes own goal on 28 August 2004, a day later, Craig Brown was sacked and replaced with his assistant Billy Davies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180302-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Preston North End F.C. season, Season summary\nDavies took Preston to the 2005 play-off final for the first time since 2001, at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium but once again Preston ended up on the losing side, this time to West Ham United, losing 1\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180302-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Preston North End F.C. season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180302-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Preston North End F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga\nThe 2004\u201305 Primeira Liga was the 71st edition of top flight of Portuguese football. It started on 28 August 2004 with a match between Belenenses and Mar\u00edtimo, and ended on 22 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga\nBenfica won their 31st league title, with 65 points, three points ahead of the defending champions Porto. The league was contested by 18 clubs, and was considered one of the most competitive seasons in recent years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga\nThe first goal of the season was scored by Belenenses centre-back Rolando. The first red card of the season was given to Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal's Bruno Ribeiro, and the first yellow was given to Belenenses' Juninho Petrolina in the opening match of the season. Benfica and Porto were both qualified for the 2005\u201306 UEFA Champions League group stage, and Sporting CP qualified for the UEFA Champions League qualifying round. At the bottom of the table, Moreirense, Estoril and Beira-Mar were relegated to the Liga de Honra. Li\u00e9dson was the top scorer with 25 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga, Promotion and relegation, Teams relegated to Liga de Honra\nAlverca, Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira, and Estrela da Amadora were consigned to the Liga de Honra following their final classification in 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 81], "content_span": [82, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga, Promotion and relegation, Teams promoted from Liga de Honra\nThe other three teams were replaced by Estoril, Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal, and Penafiel from the Liga de Honra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 82], "content_span": [83, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga, Awards, Footballer of the Year\nThe Footballer of the Year award was won by the Portuguese Ricardo Quaresma of Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180303-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primeira Liga, Awards, Portuguese Golden Shoe\nThe Portuguese Golden Shoe award was won by the Brazilian Li\u00e9dson of Sporting CP, scoring 25 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional\nThe 2004\u201305 Argentine Primera B Nacional was the 19th season of second division professional of football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion and runner-up were promoted to Argentine Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Promotion playoff\nThis leg was played between the Apertura Winner: Tiro Federal, and the Clausura Winner: Gimnasia y Esgrima (J). The winning team was declared champion and was automatically promoted to 2005\u201306 Primera Divisi\u00f3n and the losing team played the Second Promotion Playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Second Promotion Playoff\nThis leg was played by Gimnasia y Esgrima (J), the losing team of the Promotion Playoff, and Hurac\u00e1n, who was the best team in the overall standings under the champions. The winning team was promoted to 2005\u201306 Primera Divisi\u00f3n and the losing team played the Promotion Playoff Primera Divisi\u00f3n-Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Torneo Reducido\nIt was played by the teams placed 4th, 5th, 6th and 7th in the Overall Standings: CAI (4th), Atl\u00e9tico de Rafaela (5th), Nueva Chicago (6th) and San Mart\u00edn (M) (7th). The winning team played the Promotion Playoff Primera Divisi\u00f3n-Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Promotion playoff Primera Divisi\u00f3n-Primera B Nacional\nThe Second Promotion playoff loser (Hurac\u00e1n) and the Torneo Reducido Winner (Atl\u00e9tico de Rafaela) played against the 18th and the 17th placed of the Relegation Table of 2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Relegation\nNote: Clubs with indirect affiliation with AFA are relegated to the Torneo Argentino A, while clubs directly affiliated face relegation to Primera B Metropolitana. Clubs with direct affiliation are all from Greater Buenos Aires, with the exception of Newell's, Rosario Central, Central C\u00f3rdoba and Argentino de Rosario, all from Rosario, and Uni\u00f3n and Col\u00f3n from Santa Fe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Relegation, Tiebreaker 1\nSince San Mart\u00edn (SJ) and Racing (C) finished with the same relegation co-efficient at the dividing line, a one-match playoff was held to determine who had to play in the relegation/promotion playoffs. San Mart\u00edn (SJ) won the playoff so Racing (C) had to play the Relegation Playoff Matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180304-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera B Nacional, Relegation, Tiebreaker 2\nSince Chacarita Juniors and Defensores de Belgrano finished with the same relegation co-efficient at the dividing line, a one-match playoff was held to determine who had to play in the relegation/promotion playoffs and who had to be directly relegated to the Primera B Metropolitana. Chacarita won the match on penalties and continued to the Relegation Playoff Matches; Defensores de Belgrano was relegated to the Primera B Metropolitana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180305-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3, Overview\nIt was contested by 8 teams, and UE Sant Juli\u00e0 won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180306-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n (Costa Rica)\nPrimera Divisi\u00f3n de Costa Rica (Costa Rica First Division) is a Costa Rican football tournament composed of two short tournaments that take up the entire year to determine the champion of Costa Rican football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180307-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n A season\nPrimera Divisi\u00f3n A (M\u00e9xican First A Division) is a Mexican football tournament. This season was composed of Apertura 2004 and Clausura 2005. San Luis was the winner of the promotion to First Division after winning Quer\u00e9taro in the promotion playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180307-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n A season, Promotion final\nThe Promotion Final faced San Luis against Quer\u00e9taro to determine the winner of the First Division Promotion. San Luis was the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 50], "content_span": [51, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180307-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Primera Divisi\u00f3n A season, Promotion final, Relegation play-out\nThe Football Association determined the celebration of a promotion series between the penultimate team of the Primera 'A' Relegation Table against the runner-up of the Second Division, this series faced Chivas La Piedad against the Cachorros UdeG. Chivas La Piedad won the series and remained in the category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 71], "content_span": [72, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180308-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball team represented Purdue University during the 2004-05 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Gene Keady served in his last year as head coach after a 25-year career at Purdue. The Boilermakers failed to beat a ranked team this season for the first time in Keady's time as head coach and for the first time since the 1974\u201375 season. Purdue placed 10th in the Big Ten, ahead of 11th place Penn State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180309-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Purefoods Tender Juicy Hotdogs season\nThe 2004-2005 Purefoods Tender Juicy Hotdogs season was the 17th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180309-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Purefoods Tender Juicy Hotdogs season, Occurrences\nUpon celebrating his 38th birthday in November 2004, Purefoods power forward and four-time MVP Alvin Patrimonio called it quits and retired from active competition a month after the opening of the PBA's 2004-05 season, ending a storied 16-year career and becoming one of the few players to have spent his whole pro career playing for only one team. Patrimonio's last full conference was in the transition tournament called Fiesta Conference earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 58], "content_span": [59, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 QMJHL season was the 36th season in the history of the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League. The QMJHL inaugurates the Guy Carbonneau Trophy, awarded to the league's \"Best Defensive Forward,\" and the Kevin Lowe Trophy, awarded to the league's \"Best Defensive Defenceman.\" Sixteen teams played 70 games each in the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season\nSidney Crosby was the league's top scorer, regular season MVP, Playoff leading scorer, and playoff MVP. Crosby helped lead the Rimouski Oc\u00e9anic on a 28-game unbeaten streak to close out the season, and finishing first overall in the regular season winning their second Jean Rougeau Trophy. Rimouski extended its unbeaten streak to 35 games in the playoffs, and lost only once, en route to winning their second President's Cup, defeating the Halifax Mooseheads in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; OL = Overtime loss; PTS = Points; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 37], "content_span": [38, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season, Canada-Russia Challenge\nThe 2004 ADT Canada-Russia Challenge was hosted by Quebec City and Montreal. On November 21, 2004, the Russian Selects defeated the QMJHL All-stars 4\u20133 in a shootout (2\u20130) at the Colis\u00e9e Pepsi. On November 22, 2004, the Russian Selects defeated the QMJHL All-stars 4\u20133 in a shootout (3\u20130) at the Bell Centre. Since the tournament began in 2003, the Russian Selects had an all-time record of 3 wins and 1 loss versus the QMJHL All-stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season, Playoffs\nEach regular season division winner received a first round bye, and ranked 1st, 2nd, and 3rd overall. Remaining teams were ranked 4th to 13th, regardless of division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season, Playoffs\nSidney Crosby was the leading scorer of the playoffs with 31 points (14 goals, 17 assists).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180310-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 QMJHL season, All-star teams\nCoaches were no longer named to all-star teams as of the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180311-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Qatar Stars League, Overview\nIt was contested by 10 teams, and Al-Gharafa Sports Club won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180312-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy was one of two first-class domestic cricket competitions that were held in Pakistan during the 2004\u201305 season. It was the first edition of the Quaid-e-Azam Trophy under a new sponsorship agreement with ABN AMRO signed by the Pakistan Cricket Board. It was contested by eleven regional association teams, with twelve departmental teams contesting the Patron's Trophy later in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180312-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nThe competition was organised as a round-robin qualifying group stage of 4-day matches, with the top two teams contesting a 5-day final. Group matches took place between 10 October and 24 December 2004, with the final played from 28 December 2004 to 1 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180312-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy\nPeshawar won the trophy for the second time on the basis of having taken a first-innings lead in the final after the match against Faisalabad resulted in a draw when rain reduced play to just 28 overs during the final two days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180312-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Group stage\nThe top two teams in the round-robin group stage (highlighted) advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180312-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Quaid-e-Azam Trophy, Group stage\nPosition determined by total points, most matches won, fewest matches lost, followed by adjusted net run rate (matches with no result, i.e. those where both teams did not complete their first innings, were disregarded); matches finishing in a draw were decided on first innings scores, with points awarded as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180313-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Queens Park Rangers F.C. competed in the inaugural season of the Football League Championship, having been promoted from the old Second Division (now renamed League One) the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180313-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter a slow start to the season, QPR won seven games in a row to rise up to third in the Championship table, though the good form didn't last and the West London side eventually finished in a comfortable midtable position - 12 points from the relegation zone and 11 points off the play-off places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180313-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Season summary\nQPR were eliminated from the League Cup in the second round by Premiership side Aston Villa and the FA Cup in the third round by fellow Championship side Nottingham Forest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180313-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180313-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180313-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180314-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 R.S.C. Anderlecht season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 Belgian football season, Anderlecht competed in the Belgian First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180314-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, Season summary\nAnderlecht were unable to defend their title and finished three points behind champions Club Brugge in second. Despite this, the club still qualified for the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180314-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, Season summary\nThe club had a poor run in the Champions League, losing all six of their games in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180314-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180314-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 R.S.C. Anderlecht season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 75], "content_span": [76, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180315-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 RC Lens season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 99th season in the existence of RC Lens and the club's 14th consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Lens participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180316-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 RC Strasbourg season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 99th season in the existence of RC Strasbourg and the club's third consecutive season in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Strasbourg participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180317-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 RK Zamet season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 48th season in RK Zamet\u2019s history. It is their 4th successive season in the 1.HRL, and 28th successive top tier season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180318-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup\nThe 2005 Radivoj Kora\u0107 Cup was the third season of the Serbian-Montenegrin men's national basketball cup tournament. The \u017du\u0107ko's left trophy awarded to the winner Reflex from Belgrade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 125th season of competitive football by Rangers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nRangers played a total of 51 competitive matches during the 2004\u201305 season. They went into the season looking to recapture their Scottish Premier League crown, which Celtic had won the season before. Manager Alex McLeish made several summer signings, with the signature of Frenchman Jean-Alain Boumsong being his biggest coup. Others included strikers Dado Prso and Nacho Novo, as well as the experienced midfielder Alex Rae and future Ibrox favourite Marvin Andrews.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nRangers League form began poorly picking up only 8 points from their first 5 matches. Rangers lost the first Old Firm derby of the season 1\u20130 at Celtic Park and fell behind Celtic in the league. Rangers form improved following the loss to Celtic and they weren't to lose again in the league until April. This run of form included two wins over Celtic in November, once in the League Cup and the other in the League. They also ended a poor run of results at Celtic Park, with a 2\u20130 victory in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nA 2\u20131 loss to Celtic at home in April left Rangers five points behind with just four games left of the season. Celtic led by two points on the final day of the season and were winning 1\u20130 against Motherwell, but two late goals for Motherwell coupled with Rangers 1\u20130 win over Hibernian saw Rangers win the title, Helicopter Sunday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nRangers also won the League Cup this season, with a 5\u20131 victory over Motherwell in the final. Rangers were beaten in the Scottish Cup however, losing 2\u20131 to Celtic in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Overview\nAfter losing to CSKA Moscow in the third qualifying round of the Champions League, Rangers entered the UEFA Cup. Rangers managed to qualify for the newly formed group stages with a penalty shoot-out win over Maritimo. Rangers failed to progress beyond the group stages however, a 2\u20130 loss at home to Auxerre seeing them fail to stay in Europe beyond Christmas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Scottish Premier League\nLast updated: 22 May 2005Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, UEFA Champions League\nLast updated: 25 August 2004Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, UEFA Cup\nLast updated: 15 December 2004Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Scottish Cup\nLast updated: 9 January 2005Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 50], "content_span": [51, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, League Cup\nLast updated: 20 March 2005Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180319-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rangers F.C. season, Matches, Friendlies\nLast updated: 9 January 2005Source: Wikipedia article1Rangers goals come first.National flags for Ground and Opponent columns are only shown when different to that of Rangers.M = Match; Ground: H = Home, A = Away, N = Neutral, HR = Home replacement, AR = Away replacement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 48], "content_span": [49, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy was the 71st season of the Ranji Trophy. Railways defeated Punjab on first innings lead in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nAssam 273 and 360/4; Baroda 347ScorecardMatch drawnBengal v Karnataka at Kolkata - Nov 7-10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nBengal 315 and 206; Karnataka 179 and 226ScorecardBengal won by 116 runsGujarat v Delhi at Ahmedabad - Nov 7-10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGujarat 214 and 372; Delhi 430/8d and 102/9ScorecardMatch drawnMadhya Pradesh v Andhra at Indore - Nov 7-10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nAndhra 361 and 195/3; Madhya Pradesh 287ScorecardMatch drawnPunjab v Uttar Pradesh at Mohali - Nov 7-10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nUttar Pradesh 269 and 317/8d; Punjab 308 and 164/5ScorecardMatch drawnRailways v Mumbai at Delhi - Nov 7-10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMumbai 361 and 221/3; Railways 284ScorecardMatch drawnTamil Nadu v Hyderabad (India) at Chennai - Nov 7-10, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 163 and 190; Tamil Nadu 461/6dScorecardTamil Nadu won by an innings and 108 runsDelhi v Andhra at Delhi - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nDelhi 491/9d; Andhra 311 and 152/5 (f/o)ScorecardMatch drawnJammu & Kashmir v Orissa at Srinagar - Nov 16-20, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nOrissa 325 and 98/2; Jammu & Kashmir 123 and 299 (f/o)ScorecardOrissa won by 8 wicketsKarnataka v Gujarat at Bangalore - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGujarat 330 and 307/4d; Karnataka 272 and 156/7ScorecardMatch drawnKerala v Himachal Pradesh at Palakkad - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHimachal Pradesh 465 and 187/7d; Kerala 215 and 290/6ScorecardMatch drawnMaharashtra v Baroda at Pune - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nBaroda 446 and 189/1; Maharashtra 387ScorecardMatch drawnMumbai v Madhya Pradesh at Mumbai - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMadhya Pradesh 255 and 222; Mumbai 233 and 81/4ScorecardMatch drawnPunjab v Assam at Amritsar - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nPunjab 422; Assam 213 and 158 (f/o)ScorecardPunjab won by an innings and 51 runsRailways v Bengal at Delhi - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nRailways 348 and 217/6d; Bengal 255 and 212/5ScorecardMatch drawnSaurashtra v Jharkhand at Rajkot - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nSaurashtra 274 and 279/6; Jharkhand 358/9dScorecardMatch drawnServices v Goa at Delhi - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nServices 507/5d; Goa 244 and 269/4 (f/o)ScorecardMatch drawnTripura v Haryana at Agartala - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHaryana 200 and 437/5; Tripura 288ScorecardMatch drawnUttar Pradesh v Tamil Nadu at Lucknow - Nov 16-19, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTamil Nadu 353; Uttar Pradesh 136 and 157/8 (f/o)ScorecardMatch drawnVidarbha v Rajasthan at Nagpur - Nov 16-18, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nRajasthan 101 and 151; Vidarbha 157 and 96/3ScorecardVidarbha won by 7 wicketsBengal v Gujarat at Siliguri - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nBengal 298 and 279/6d; Gujarat 361 and 217/8ScorecardGujarat won by 2 wicketsDelhi v Railways at Delhi - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nDelhi 216 and 395/4; Railways 201ScorecardMatch drawnHaryana v Goa at Gurgaon - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHaryana 293 and 188/6d; Goa 165 and 163ScorecardHaryana won by 153 runsHimachal Pradesh v Saurashtra at Dharamsala - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nSaurashtra 268 and 153; Himachal Pradesh 140 and 282/6ScorecardHimachal Pradesh won by 4 wicketsHyderabad (India) v Maharashtra at Hyderabad - Nov 25-27, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 231 and 170; Maharashtra 83 and 233ScorecardHyderabad (India) won by 85 runsJharkhand v Jammu & Kashmir at Jamshedpur - Nov 25-27, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nJammu & Kashmir 79 and 176; Jharkhand 245 and 11/0ScorecardJharkhand won by 10 wicketsKarnataka v Madhya Pradesh at Bangalore - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nKarnataka 619/5d; Madhya Pradesh 422 and 152/6 (f/o)ScorecardMatch drawnKerala v Orissa at Palakkad - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0028-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nKerala 324 and 149/8d; Orissa 334 and 47/3ScorecardMatch drawnMumbai v Andhra at Mumbai - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0029-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMumbai 515/9d; Andhra 116 and 278 (f/o)ScorecardMumbai won by an innings and 121 runsPunjab v Baroda at Mohali - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0030-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nPunjab 175 and 370/4d; Baroda 155 and 280ScorecardPunjab won by 110 runsServices v Rajasthan at Delhi - Nov 25-28, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0031-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nRajasthan 290 and 326/5; Services 441/8dScorecardMatch drawnUttar Pradesh v Assam at Kanpur - Nov 25-27, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0032-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nAssam 184 and 107; Uttar Pradesh 132 and 163/2ScorecardUttar Pradesh won by 8 wicketsVidarbha v Tripura at Nagpur - Nov 25-27, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0033-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTripura 91 and 164; Vidarbha 154 and 102/4ScorecardVidarbha won by 6 wicketsAssam v Tamil Nadu at Guwahati - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0034-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTamil Nadu 485/5d and 224/4; Assam 430ScorecardMatch drawnBengal v Mumbai at Kolkata - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0035-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMumbai 552/7d; Bengal 239 and 181 (f/o)ScorecardMumbai won by an innings and 132 runsDelhi v Madhya Pradesh at Delhi - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0036-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nDelhi 239/9d and 227; Madhya Pradesh 294 and 156/8ScorecardMatch drawnGoa v Vidarbha at Margao - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0037-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGoa 371 and 211; Vidarbha 300 and 117ScorecardGoa won by 165 runsGujarat v Railways at Ahmedabad - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0038-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGujarat 384 and 227/5; Railways 200ScorecardMatch drawnHimachal Pradesh v Orissa at Dharamsala - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0039-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHimachal Pradesh 425; Orissa 80 and 302 (f/o)ScorecardHimachal Pradesh won by an innings and 43 runsHyderabad (India) v Baroda at Hyderabad - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0040-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 170 and 198; Baroda 93 and 279/5ScorecardBaroda won by 5 wicketsJharkhand v Kerala at Jamshedpur - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0041-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nKerala 321 and 161; Jharkhand 315 and 16/2ScorecardMatch drawnKarnataka v Andhra at Bangalore - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0042-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nAndhra 237 and 245; Karnataka 328 and 158/5ScorecardKarnataka won by 5 wicketsPunjab v Maharashtra at Mohali - Dec 4-6, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0043-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMaharashtra 123 and 205; Punjab 566/4dScorecardPunjab won by an innings and 238 runsRajasthan v Tripura at Jaipur - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0044-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTripura 108 and 116; Rajasthan 338ScorecardRajasthan won by an innings and 114 runsSaurashtra v Jammu & Kashmir at Rajkot - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0045-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nJammu & Kashmir 505/9d and 3/0; Saurashtra 596ScorecardMatch drawnServices v Haryana at Delhi - Dec 4-7, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0046-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHaryana 435; Services 185 and 231 (f/o)ScorecardHaryana won by an innings and 19 runsAndhra v Bengal at Visakhapatnam - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0047-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nBengal 234 and 144; Andhra 188 and 193/6ScorecardAndhra won by 4 wicketsDelhi v Karnataka at Delhi - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0048-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nDelhi 427/7d and 115/1d; Karnataka 292 and 201/7ScorecardMatch drawnHimachal Pradesh v Jammu & Kashmir at Dharamsala - Dec 13-15, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0049-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nJammu & Kashmir 93 and 158; Himachal Pradesh 370ScorecardHimachal Pradesh won by an innings and 119 runsHyderabad (India) v Uttar Pradesh at Hyderabad - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0050-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 246 and 221; Uttar Pradesh 325 and 120ScorecardHyderabad (India) won by 22 runsJharkhand v Orissa at Jamshedpur - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0051-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nOrissa 110 and 294; Jharkhand 268 and 137/4ScorecardJharkhand won by 6 wicketsKerala v Saurashtra at Palakkad - Dec 13-14, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0052-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nKerala 117 and 114; Saurashtra 260ScorecardSaurashtra won by an innings and 29 runsMadhya Pradesh v Railways at Indore - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0053-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nRailways 373 and 82/4; Madhya Pradesh 207 and 303 (f/o)ScorecardMatch drawnMaharashtra v Assam at Aurangabad - Dec 13-15, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0054-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nAssam 201 and 153; Maharashtra 400ScorecardMaharashtra won by an innings and 46 runsMumbai v Gujarat at Mumbai - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0055-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGujarat 232 and 171; Mumbai 467ScorecardMumbai won by an innings and 64 runsRajasthan v Goa at Jaipur - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0056-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGoa 198 and 348/9d; Rajasthan 227 and 214/5ScorecardMatch drawnTamil Nadu v Punjab at Chennai - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0057-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTamil Nadu 244 and 408/9; Punjab 218ScorecardMatch drawnTripura v Services at Agartala - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0058-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTripura 237 and 196; Services 422 and 14/0ScorecardServices won by 10 wicketsVidarbha v Haryana at Nagpur - Dec 13-16, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0059-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHaryana 154 and 230; Vidarbha 57 and 286ScorecardHaryana won by 41 runsAndhra v Railways at Anantapur - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0060-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nRailways 263 and 270/4d; Andhra 202 and 198ScorecardRailways won by 133 runsBaroda v Tamil Nadu at Vadodara - Dec 22-24, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0061-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTamil Nadu 152 and 183; Baroda 64 and 272/6ScorecardBaroda won by 4 wicketsBengal v Delhi at Kolkata - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0062-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nBengal 240 and 232; Delhi 251 and 222/2ScorecardDelhi won by 8 wicketsGujarat v Madhya Pradesh at Ahmedabad - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0063-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGujarat 353 and 124/1; Madhya Pradesh 280ScorecardMatch drawnHyderabad (India) v Punjab at Hyderabad - Dec 22-24, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0064-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 233 and 149; Punjab 105 and 217ScorecardHyderabad (India) won by 60 runsJharkhand v Himachal Pradesh at Jamshedpur - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0065-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHimachal Pradesh 275 and 120; Jharkhand 218 and 155ScorecardHimachal Pradesh won by 22 runsKerala v Jammu & Kashmir at Palakkad - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0066-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nKerala 319 and 281/7d; Jammu & Kashmir 140 and 299ScorecardKerala won by 161 runsMaharashtra v Uttar Pradesh at Karad - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0067-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMaharashtra 394 and 119; Uttar Pradesh 282 and 234/5ScorecardUttar Pradesh won by 5 wicketsMumbai v Karnataka at Mumbai - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0068-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMumbai 292 and 264/8d; Karnataka 166 and 185ScorecardMumbai won by 205 runsRajasthan v Haryana at Udaipur - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0069-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nRajasthan 301 and 202; Haryana 412 and 92/1ScorecardHaryana won by 9 wicketsSaurashtra v Orissa at Rajkot - Dec 22-24, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0070-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nSaurashtra 160 and 245; Orissa 349 and 59/0ScorecardOrissa won by 10 wicketsServices v Vidarbha at Delhi - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0071-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nVidarbha 184 and 50/1; Services 368ScorecardMatch drawnTripura v Goa at Agartala - Dec 22-25, 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0072-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGoa 278 and 190/8; Tripura 211ScorecardMatch drawnAndhra v Gujarat at Visakhapatnam - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0073-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nGujarat 420 and 189; Andhra 314 and 222/7ScorecardMatch drawnBaroda v Uttar Pradesh at Vadodara - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0074-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nBaroda 186 and 283; Uttar Pradesh 124 and 203ScorecardBaroda won by 142 runsBengal v Madhya Pradesh at Kolkata - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0075-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMadhya Pradesh 392 and 111/2; Bengal 397ScorecardMatch drawnHyderabad (India) v Assam at Secunderabad - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 2, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0076-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 340; Assam 158 and 126 (f/o)ScorecardHyderabad (India) won by an innings and 56 runsKarnataka v Railways at Bangalore - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0077-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nKarnataka 194 and 241; Railways 299 and 137/3ScorecardRailways won by 7 wicketsMumbai v Delhi at Mumbai - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0078-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nDelhi 394 and 37/1; Mumbai 600/9dScorecardMatch drawnTamil Nadu v Maharashtra at Chennai - Dec 31, 2004 - Jan 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0079-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nTamil Nadu 277 and 259/8d; Maharashtra 175 and 170ScorecardTamil Nadu won by 191 runsSemi Final: Haryana v Jharkhand at Chandigarh - Mar 18-22, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0080-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHaryana 453 and 26/0; Jharkhand 308ScorecardMatch drawnSemi Final: Mumbai v Punjab at Mumbai - Mar 18-21, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0081-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nMumbai 251 and 168; Punjab 126 and 294/7ScorecardPunjab won by 3 wicketsSemi Final: Himachal Pradesh v Services at Dharamsala - Mar 18-22, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0082-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHimachal Pradesh 50/1ScorecardMatch drawnSemi Final: Railways v Hyderabad (India) at Delhi - Mar 18-20, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0083-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHyderabad (India) 166 and 170; Railways 180 and 160/3ScorecardRailways won by 7 wicketsFinal: Haryana v Services at Gurgaon - Mar 30-Apr 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180320-0084-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ranji Trophy, Scorecards and averages\nHaryana 342 and 312/8d; Services 191 and 157ScorecardHaryana won by 306 runsFinal: Punjab v Railways at Mohali - Mar 30-Apr 3, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180321-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reading F.C. season\nReading Football Club played the season 2004\u201305 in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180321-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reading F.C. season, Review and events\nReading started the season brightly. However, injury to the three strikers, Dave Kitson, Nicky Forster and Shaun Goater, meant that the goals dried up and they slipped down the league. For much of the season Ivar Ingimarsson, a centre back, was the club's main source of goals. However, Kitson's return, coupled with the signings of veterans and former England internationals Les Ferdinand and Martin Keown meant that the club broke a run of 11 league games without a win against West Ham. Reading won 3\u20131, with a Dave Kitson hat-trick. Reading just missed out on a playoff spot on the last day of the season, losing 3\u20131 to Wigan. Dave Kitson was the club's top scorer, with 19 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 731]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180321-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reading F.C. season, Squad, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180321-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reading F.C. season, Squad, Reserve/Academy squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180321-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reading F.C. season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180321-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reading F.C. season, Team kit\nReading's kit for the 2004\u201305 was manufactured by Puma, and the main sponsor was .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180322-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Betis season, Season summary\nBetis finished fourth, qualifying for the Champions League for the first time in their history. They also won the Copa del Rey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180322-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Betis season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180322-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Betis season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180323-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Madrid CF season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Real Madrid C.F. 's 74th season in La Liga. This article shows statistics of the club's players in the season, and also lists all matches that the club played in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180323-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Madrid CF season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180323-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Madrid CF season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180323-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Real Madrid CF season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180324-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Red Bull Barako season\nThe 2004-2005 Red Bull Barako season was the 5th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180325-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Red Star Belgrade season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, Red Star Belgrade participated in the 2004\u201305 First League of Serbia and Montenegro, 2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds and 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180326-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Reggina Calcio season\nReggina Calcio took major steps in establishing itself in Serie A under new coach Walter Mazzarri. The relegation battle was the tightest ever, but Reggina's points average was its highest in the top division yet, resulting in a surprising 10th place. That also meant it lost several key players, with Shunsuke Nakamura, Martin Jir\u00e1nek and Emiliano Bonazzoli being hard to replace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180327-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Regional One-Day Competition\nThe 2004\u201305 Regional One-Day Competition was the 31st edition of the Regional Super50, the domestic limited-overs cricket competition for the countries of the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB). The naming rights sponsor for the previous seven seasons, Red Stripe, did not renew their contract, and, in lieu of a replacement, the competition was unbranded for the first time in its history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180327-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Regional One-Day Competition\nFor the first time since the 1995\u201396 season, the competition did not feature any invitational teams, with only the six regular teams of West Indian cricket competing (Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, the Leeward Islands, Trinidad and Tobago, and the Windward Islands). The round-robin stage was played in Guyana, with the semi-finals and final all played in Barbados. The round-robin was marked by its evenness, with the top four teams all finishing with three wins and two losses. Trinidad and Tobago eventually defeated Guyana in the final to win their seventh domestic one-day title. Leeward Islands batsman Runako Morton led the tournament in runs, while Trinidad and Tobago's Imran Jan took the most wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180327-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Regional One-Day Competition, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180327-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Regional One-Day Competition, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe top five wicket takers are listed in this table, listed by wickets taken and then by bowling average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180328-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Regionalliga\nThe 2004\u201305 Regionalliga season was the eleventh season of the Regionalliga at tier three of the German football league system. It was contested in two geographical divisions with eighteen teams in the south and nineteen in the north. The champions, Eintracht Braunschweig and Kickers Offenbach, and the runners-up, SC Paderborn 07 and Sportfreunde Siegen, of every division were promoted to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180328-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Regionalliga, Team movements, Promoted to 2. Bundesliga, From S\u00fcd\n11. FC Saarbr\u00fccken were promoted due to FC Bayern Munich II being a reserve side which are barred from promotion to the 2. Bundesliga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 73], "content_span": [74, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180329-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rochdale A.F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 Rochdale A.F.C. season was the club's 84th season in the Football League, and the 31st consecutive season in the fourth tier (now renamed as League Two). Rochdale finished the season in 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180330-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Romanian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Romanian Hockey League season was the 75th season of the Romanian Hockey League. Six teams participated in the league, and Steaua Bucuresti won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180331-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ross County F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Ross County compete in the Scottish First Division where they finished in 6th position with 47 points. Ross County reached the 2004 Scottish Challenge Cup Final where they lost 2\u20131 to Falkirk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180332-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rotherham United F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Rotherham United F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180332-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season summary\nDuring the 2004\u201305 season, the club struggled and spent most of the season bottom of the league. The club was bought by the consortium, Millers 05. Ronnie Moore left by mutual consent during the campaign, after his team were rooted to the bottom of the division for the majority of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180332-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rotherham United F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter relegation to League One in April 2005, Mick Harford took over as Millers manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180332-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rotherham United F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180332-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rotherham United F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 79], "content_span": [80, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180333-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Royal League\nThe Royal League 2004\u201305 was the first season of the Scandinavian Royal League football tournament. Play started on 11 November 2004, and ended in a final between FC Copenhagen and IFK G\u00f6teborg on 26 May 2005, with Copenhagen winning the title in a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180333-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Royal League, Bonuses\nThis would give a team with a perfect record throughout the tournament a total of 7,750,000 NOK.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 29], "content_span": [30, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180334-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Royal League statistics\nThis page shows aggregate tables and attendance averages for the 2004/05 season of Royal League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180334-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Royal League statistics, Average attendances by club\nNote: G\u00f6teborg had an extra home game in the final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180335-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rugby Pro D2 season\nThe 2004\u201305 Rugby Pro D2 season was the 2004\u201305 second division of French club rugby union. There is promotion and relegation in Pro Rugby D2, and after the 2004\u201305 season, Toulon finished at the top of the table and were promoted to the top level, and Limoges and CA P\u00e9rigueux were relegated to third division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180336-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rugby Union County Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 Tetley's Bitter Rugby Union County Championship was the 105th edition of England's County Championship rugby union club competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180336-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Rugby Union County Championship\nDevon won their ninth title after defeating Lancashire in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180337-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian Superleague season\nThe 2004\u201305 Russian Superleague season was the ninth season of the Russian Superleague, the top level of ice hockey in Russia. 16 teams participated in the league, and HC Dynamo Moscow won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180337-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian Superleague season, Playoffs\n3rd place: HC Avangard Omsk \u2212 Lokomotiv Yaroslavl 0:2 (3:6, 4:5)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 44], "content_span": [45, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180338-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian gubernatorial elections\nGubernatorial elections in 2004 and 2005 were held in 25 federal subjects of Russia. In several regions these elections were moved from end of 2004 to March 14 to combine with the 2004 Russian presidential election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180338-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian gubernatorial elections\nOn 12 December 2004, at the initiative of Russian President Vladimir Putin, gubernatorial elections were abolished throughout the country. These were the last gubernatorial elections in Russia until September 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180338-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian gubernatorial elections, Bryansk Oblast\nGovernor of Bryansk Oblast Yury Lodkin was going on his third term in 2004 (fourth if 1993\u201396 tenure as Head of Administration counted), but was removed from registration \"for abuse of office\". The application to the regional court was submitted by the candidate from the People's Party Alexander Zhdanov. Lodkin, considered one of the favorites of the campaign, linked his removing from ballot with his Communist Party membership. He accused the United Russia party of \u201cunwillingness to win legally\u201d.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180338-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian gubernatorial elections, Samara Oblast\nThe elections were set up by the regional court on 19 September 2004, after the court recognized that the 5-year term limit, introduced into the Samara Oblast Charter during the 2000 elections, can come into force only after next elections and that Konstantin Titov's term expired on July 2. However, the elections were later canceled by the Supreme Court at the suit of the Central Election Commission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 54], "content_span": [55, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180338-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian gubernatorial elections, Nenets Autonomous Okrug\nGubernatorial elections in Nenets Autonomous Okrug were held on 23 January 2005, the second round was held on February 6. Incumbent governor Vladimir Butov, in office from 1996, could not be nominated due to the two-term limit (the Supreme Court of Russia overturned regional act passed shortly before the elections that allowed Butov to run for a third term). In addition he was convicted for beating a traffic police officer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180338-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Russian gubernatorial elections, Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Aftermath\nOn 18 February 2005, Alexey Barinov officially took office. In May 2006 he was arrested on charges of committing fraud. On June 2 of the same year, President Vladimir Putin removed Barinov from the governorship and appointed the chief federal inspector for the region, Valery Potapenko as the interim governor of NAO. Later, in 2007, Barinov was acquitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season\nThe 2004\u201305 European football season was the 101st season of Sport Lisboa e Benfica's existence and the club's 71st consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football. The season ran from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005; Benfica competed domestically in the Primeira Liga and the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal. The club also participated in the UEFA Champions League as a result of finishing second in the Primeira Liga in the previous season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season\nJos\u00e9 Antonio Camacho led Benfica to another second-place finish and broke an eight-year title drought; he attracted interest from Real Madrid, who signed him in late May. As a replacement, Benfica unsuccessfully inquired after Luiz Felipe Scolari for the position. After much speculation, Benfica announced they had recruited Giovanni Trapattoni, the Italian national team's former manager. Benfica signed more players than the year before, but only Quim, Manuel dos Santos and Azar Karadas became regular first-team fixtures. The most significant departure was that of Tiago, who had been a regular for the past two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season\nBecause their second-place finish only granted a place in the third qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, Benfica had to play Anderlecht for a place in the group stage. A 3\u20131 loss on aggregate led to relegation to the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup. Between both legs, Benfica contested and lost the 2004 Supercup with Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season\nDomestically, Benfica started the season with consecutive wins, rising to the top of the table by early October. After a home loss in the Cl\u00e1ssico, the team's results became poorer, with three draws and two losses that caused the team to drop to third place by New Year. Benfica continued to slip in January, losing the Lisbon derby and twice dropping to fifth place. A home win against Sporting CP for the Portuguese Cup had an apparent positive effect on the players; their best period all season came as they regained first place and opened a six-point lead over the team in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season\nThe league was unusually competitive; a mistake in early April caused Benfica to lose much of their lead. Qualifying for the Portuguese Cup final did not help them to gather momentum. In early May, Benfica suffered a major blow, losing away to Penafiel and dropping to second. A crucial win against Sporting brought back their title hope, and a week later Benfica won their first league title in ten seasons. The season ended with a loss against Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal in the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Final, preventing Benfica from winning their first double since 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nAfter ending an eight-season drought and ensuring qualification to the UEFA Champions League for a second year, Jos\u00e9 Antonio Camacho was linked to the open position at Real Madrid before the end of the season. On 25 May 2004, his move there was made official. Benfica looked for replacements with the same profile as Camacho; they offered the position to Luiz Felipe Scolari, according to his agent. On 9 June, Scolari said, \"When people say I signed a contract with Benfica, they're lying! It's shameless and is bad will with the national team. To Benfica I won't go.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nIn mid-June, Benfica restricted their choices to former Espanyol manager Luis Fern\u00e1ndez and Italian national team manager Giovanni Trapattoni. Negotiations with Fern\u00e1ndez failed, but on 17 June, club president Lu\u00eds Filipe Vieira announced that Benfica had signed a new manager but did not name him. On 5 July, a day after the end of the UEFA Euro 2004, Benfica announced Trapattoni as manager. The 65-year-old Italian started his managerial career in 1974 and came to recognition at Juventus, where he became one of Italy's greatest managers, the only one to have won all UEFA club competitions and the Intercontinental Cup. To assist him, he brought fitness coach Fausto Rossi and goalkeeping coach Adriano Barbin, while \u00c1lvaro Magalh\u00e3es remained as assistant manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nIn the transfer market, the most significant signings were of 28-year-old Quim, Portugal's second-choice goalkeeper, to compete with incumbent starter Jos\u00e9 Moreira. Defender Takis Fyssas also saw the arrival of a competitor, former Marseille player Manuel dos Santos. Benfica also signed Norwegian striker Azar Karadas after his compelling performance against them in the previous season's UEFA Cup with Rosenborg. The most significant departure was Tiago, who moved to Chelsea for a fee that Record announced was around \u20ac12 million. Other than him, only Armando S\u00e1 and H\u00e9lder Crist\u00f3v\u00e3o were regularly used, and both continued their careers abroad, with Villarreal and Paris Saint-Germain respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, Pre-season\nThe pre-season started on 5 July with four days of medical tests on Est\u00e1dio da Luz. On 9 July, Benfica travelled to Nyon, Switzerland, for a two-week tour, where they played their first pre-season matches, with wins against Real Zaragoza and Marseille. On 22 July, Benfica returned to Portugal and continued their pre-season with a presentation match against Real Madrid on 25 July, and the Guadiana Trophy with Real Betis on 28 July. Due to league ranking in 2004, Benfica had to play in the third qualifying round of the Champions League, where they were drawn with Anderlecht on 30 July. The pre-season ended with matches against Braga on 1 August and Estoril on August 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nBenfica started their season with the third qualifying round of the Champions League, attempting to make their first presence in the group stage since 1998\u201399. On 10 August, Benfica beat Anderlecht 1\u20130 after Zlatko Zahovi\u010d scored in the 13th minute. When asked why Anderlecht had more goal opportunities than Benfica, Trapattoni said, \"Do you know international football? It is very balanced nowadays. I wish we had more chances but our opponent was stronger.\" Following the win, Benfica were due to meet Porto in the Supercup on 20 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nRicardo Quaresma of Porto scored the only goal of the game in an individual effort. It was Benfica's tenth consecutive loss in the competition; the previous win occurred in 1989. Four days later, Benfica travelled to Belgium to play Anderlecht. The home team scored first by Aruna Dindane, who scored another on the hour-mark. Nenad Jestrovi\u0107 scored the last goal. Trapattoni blamed fatigue and anxiety for the defeat, saying, \"I said we would try to score, but lacked composure to do so. In the first half he spent a lot of energy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0008-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nOn the second, we tried to fight back, until he conceded a second goal, which killed us.\" The fans insulted the team on their arrival in Lisbon. On 29 August, Benfica made their debut in the Primeira Liga by visiting Beira-Mar. Two goals in the first half and another within five minutes of the second, gave Benfica a lead that help them beat the locals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nOn 11 September, after the international matches Benfica returned with a home match against Moreirense. Petit opened the game with a free kick, while Sim\u00e3o set the final score in the 83rd minute. The following Thursday, Benfica played the first round of the UEFA Cup against Slovak team Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica. Benfica dominated the match, winning 3\u20130 with a double from Sim\u00e3o and one from Jo\u00e3o Pereira. On 19 September, Benfica travelled to Coimbra to face Acad\u00e9mica, beating them 1\u20130 with a goal from Sim\u00e3o to reach the top of the league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0009-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, August\u2013September\nTrapattoni praised his team and said leading is important to their mentality: \"I am happy with the win, but also with the character they have shown. I had the opportunity to lead in Italy and Germany and it is very important. The team starts to believe in themselves more and more.\" A week later, Benfica hosted Braga. Despite playing with two players upfront, Benfica was unable to score, splitting points with them. After the game, Trapattoni acknowledged the difficult game his team had played, saying, \"The final score could disappoint the fans, but let's not forget we are still leaders. Our opponent was a very dangerous team. We had three good chances in the first half, but could not score.\" On 30 September, Benfica closed the month by hosting Bansk\u00e1 Bystrica. Benfica wasted opportunities to build up their score, only beating the Slovaks by 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 918]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nOctober began with an away match away in Guimar\u00e3es against Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es. Benfica played against ten men throughout the second half, securing a win in the 91st minute when Geovanni converted a free kick. Following a two-week international break, Benfica received Porto on 17 October. The match was notable for the controversy regarding Oleg\u00e1rio Benqueren\u00e7a refereeing, with Porto winning 1\u20130 with a goal from Benni McCarthy. Trapattoni criticized the referee, saying, \"I have witness things I had never witnessed before in all of my career.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nThe following Thursday, Benfica opened their UEFA Cup group stage campaign with a home win against Heerenveen. Dos Santos scored the opening goal and Nuno Gomes increased the lead to 2\u20130. Heerenven levelled the score with a penalty in the 53rd minute, but Benfica fought back and scored twice to win the first points. On 24 October, Benfica played at home against Nacional. The opening goal was scored in the second-half by Azar Karadas, with Tomo \u0160okota bringing the score to 2\u20130 minutes later; Nacional evened it to 2\u20131, but Benfica held on and won the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0010-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nThree days later, Benfica started their Portuguese Cup campaign against the third tier club Oriental de Lisboa. Two goals from \u0160okota and another from Geovanni helped the club progress into the next round. On 31 October, Benfica visited the Est\u00e1dio Cidade de Barcelos to play Gil Vicente. Benfica were surprised by the home team and conceded first with a goal from Nandinho. In the last minute of the match, Sim\u00e3o equalized, allowing Benfica to gain a point. Trapattoni blamed the team's na\u00efvety for the goal conceded, but praised their character for not giving up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nBenfica opened November with a UEFA Cup match away against German side VfB Stuttgart. They conceded the first goal by Cacau in the first half and let in two more\u2014both headers\u2014in the second. Trapattoni attributed the defeat to the superior physical ability of the Germans. On 7 November, Benfica hosted Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal and defeated them 4\u20130, retaining first place in the league. Six days later, Benfica dropped two points after a 1\u20130 loss at the Est\u00e1dio dos Barreiros to Mar\u00edtimo. On 21 November, Benfica hosted Rio Ave and had a chance to regain the top spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0011-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nAfter building a 3\u20131 lead at half-time, Benfica allowed the visitors to equalize the game, costing them two more points. Trapattoni criticized his team for the way it conceded the 3\u20133 draw after a free-kick for Benfica turned into a deadly counter-attack against them. On the following Thursday, Benfica received Dinamo Zagreb for the UEFA Cup. Two first-half goals secured the second win in the group stage for Benfica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0011-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, October\u2013November\nOn the last match of November, Benfica visited the Est\u00e1dio Dr. Magalh\u00e3es Pessoa, home of Uni\u00e3o de Leiria, where they conceded a goal in a counter-attack and were unable to equalize in over 70 minutes, losing the match. The loss was their first as visitors; the club slid to fourth place, having lost 12 points since the Cl\u00e1ssico. Trapattoni said Benfica lacked composure in the conceded goal, a problem he had previously addressed but still occurred. He remained confident because the league was long and very balanced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nDecember started with the last group stage match of the UEFA Cup. Benfica visited Beveren and won 3\u20130 with a double from Zlatko Zahovi\u010d, ensuring qualification for the round of 32 behind Stuttgart. On 6 December, Benfica received Estoril. The visitors scored first, but Benfica responded through Sim\u00e3o with a double inside ten minutes, giving them the first league win in a month and returning them to first place. On 12 December, Benfica played away to Belenenses. Trapattoni's team did not perform to expectations and lost 4\u20131, the largest defeat there since 1947\u201348.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0012-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nTrapattoni remained optimistic, saying, \"Losing a game like this is not catastrophic. Give up? No, that is not my vocabulary.\" In the aftermath of the defeat, Jos\u00e9 Moreira lost his starting goalkeeping place to Quim. Trapattoni, in the preview for the upcoming match with Penafiel, said, \"Benfica needs to forget this humiliating defeat quickly. Four goals\u00a0...\u00a0three goals in eight minutes, it is true we are in a state of emergency. We have the mentality to react and will do so.\" On the same day, Benfica discovered their next opponent in the UEFA Cup would be CSKA Moscow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0012-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nOn 18 December, Benfica beat Penafiel 1\u20130 with a goal from Argel. On 21 December, Benfica played the last game of the year, hosting third-tier team AD Oliveirense for the Portuguese Cup. Benfica won 4\u20131 but required extra time to beat the visitors after a 1\u20131 draw in regular time. Throughout the game, Benfica fans whistled the team for the poor game. Later, Trapattoni acknowledged the performance, saying, \"For the first time, I am with the fans since the team deserved the whistles.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nIn January, Benfica opened the month with a visit to the Est\u00e1dio Jos\u00e9 Alvalade to face Sporting CP in the Lisbon derby. Sporting's Li\u00e9dson scored first in the 22nd minute and Nuno Gomes equalized four minutes later. In the second half, Liedson finalized the score at 2\u20131 to Sporting. Benfica dropped to fifth place, their worst league position all season. After the game, Trapattoni said he was slow to make substitutions in the second half, but acknowledged that Sporting performed better. On 16 January, Benfica received Boavista with the chance to become joint leaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0013-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nBenfica opened the game with a penalty in the 40th minute by Sim\u00e3o, with Nuno Gomes and Mantorras also scoring in a 4\u20130 win. Trapattoni praised his team, saying, \"This is their best performance so far\". On 22 January, Benfica played Beira-Mar at the Est\u00e1dio da Luz. The Aveiro-based side gave a strong performance; Santiago Silva scored a double, beating Benfica 2\u20130. Trapattoni was disappointed with his players, saying he had expectations after the win with Boavista but with this performance, he needed to start again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0013-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, December\u2013January\nFour days later, Benfica met Sporting at home for the sixth round of the Portuguese Cup. Benfica's Geovanni scored first but Sporting responded with two goals in three minutes and Geovanni equalized five minutes later. As the game went into extra time, Pa\u00edto and Sim\u00e3o both scored in individual efforts, bringing the final scoreline to 3\u20133. From the penalty spot, Benfica converted all of their goals, while Miguel Garcia missed one for Sporting. On 29 January, Benfica visited the Est\u00e1dio D. Afonso Henriques to play Moreirense. An opening goal by Nuno Gomes was followed by a second by Nuno Assis and Benfica won the match 2\u20131; it was their first away win in five matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nFebruary began with a home game against Acad\u00e9mica. Benfica's Geovanni scored the first goal in the 32nd minute and Sim\u00e3o later scored twice to win the match 3\u20130. Benfica returned to joint-first and won their second consecutive league game for the first time in four months. On 12 February, Benfica played away at the Est\u00e1dio Municipal de Braga against Braga. The match ended in draw and a sharing of points. Trapattoni was happy with the draw, saying Benfica entered a little nervously and were lucky not to lose in some random event, like in past games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0014-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nOn the following Thursday, Benfica travelled to Russia to play in the Kuban Stadium against CKSA Moscow. With the Russians just recently coming out of their pre-season, Benfica dominated possession but failed to score, losing 2\u20130. Trapattoni blamed the pitch, saying he was confident Benfica could win in Lisbon. On 21 February, Benfica received Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es; Benfica's Geovanni scored in the first half and Nuno Gomes assisted Nuno Assis to make the score 2\u20130. C\u00e9sar Peixoto of Guimar\u00e3es scored in the second half. Benfica held the advantage and remained joint-first with Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0014-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nThree days later, Benfica played the second leg of the UEFA Cup. They drew 1\u20131 and were eliminated from the competition. After the game, Trapattoni refuted any lack of attitude from Benfica, saying, \"We played well. I could not ask them anything.\" On 28 February, Benfica visited the Est\u00e1dio do Drag\u00e3o for the second Classico of the season. Porto's Benni McCarthy scored first but Geovanni equalized in the 75th minute, setting the final score at 1\u20131. It was the first time since 1993\u201394 that Benfica did not lose away to Porto.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nBenfica opened March with the quarter-finals of the Portuguese Cup. They played Beira-Mar at home and won 1\u20130 with a goal from Jo\u00e3o Pereira in the 25th minute. Trapattoni analysed the game, saying, \"Everybody knew this match was a revenge for the league defeat. In the first half we dominated, in the second we were dominated. Beira-Mar was fresher \u2013 it is not easy to play every three days. Still, we deserved to win.\" Three days later, on 6 March, Benfica played at Est\u00e1dio da Madeira against Nacional and won 1\u20130 with a goal from Nuno Gomes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0015-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nNear the end, Quim brought down Wendel Geraldo inside the box but failed to convert the penalty, hitting the woodwork. Trapattoni praised his team's commitment saying their victory was deserved and they were lucky with the missed penalty. On 12 March, Benfica played at home against Gil Vicente. With the chance to open a three-point lead over Porto, Benfica won 2\u20130 with an opening goal from Mantorras and a second from Miguel. After the game, Trapattoni argued with a fan after the second goal; he said, \"I argued with a fan, not fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0015-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, February\u2013March\nI was not nice to him, but since the first game, he has not been nice to me.\" He added that the win was very important and that Benfica had not won anything yet. Benfica closed March with an away game against Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal. Benfica's Manuel Fernandes scored first, with Geovanni doubling the lead in the second half in a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nOn 3 April, Benfica hosted Mar\u00edtimo at home. It was a high-scoring match; the teams scored five goals within the first 30 minutes, with a 3\u20132 score at half-time. In the second half, Mitchell van der Gaag of Mar\u00edtimo equalized the game in the 48th minute. With three minutes to extra-time, Mantorras scored the fourth goal for Benfica, securing them a 4\u20133 win. Trapattoni said, \"In the 30 years of my career, I had never had such exciting game as this one.\" A week later, Benfica visited the Est\u00e1dio dos Arcos to play Rio Ave. Despite overwhelming support from their fans, Benfica were surprised by the home team and lost 1\u20130 after a 91st-minute goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nTrapattoni still believed Benifca could win the title, saying, \"What matters is to remain confident.\" On 16 April, Benfica suffered another setback, nearly losing at home against Uni\u00e3o de Leiria. A goal scored by Jo\u00e3o Paulo gave the visitors the lead for over 70 minutes until Mantorras scored the equalizer in the 93rd minute. Four days later, Benfica met Estrela da Amadora for the Portuguese Cup semi-final. Benfica dominated the second tier-side and won 3\u20130, qualifying for the tournament's final. Trapattoni said Benfica had achieved half of their objective in the competition; the other half was winning it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0017-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nOn 24 April, Benfica played away to Estoril. The Estoril team played at the Est\u00e1dio Ant\u00f3nio Coimbra da Mota, but decided to moved the game to Est\u00e1dio do Algarve for financial reasons. Estoril scored the opening goal in the 12th minute and Benfica's Luis\u00e3o equalized 64 minutes later. With Estoril reduced to nine players after two ejections, Mantorras scored the winning goal for Benfica in the 82nd minute. Benfica finished April by hosting Belenenses on April 30, beating them 1\u20130. Sim\u00e3o scored the only goal of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nApproaching the end of the season, Benfica had a three-point lead over Sporting in the league table. Their next opponent was Penafiel, whom they played at their home ground. With the stadium packed with Benfica fans, Penafiel surprised Benfica and beat them 1\u20130, costing them first place. After the game, Trappattoni said, \"It was good game but I did not expect this outcome. We have to keep morale because Saturday we have a important game. There we will decide who is stronger.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nOn 14 May, with Est\u00e1dio da Luz nearly sold-out, Benfica received Sporting for a title-deciding Lisbon Derby. The high-pressure match was unlocked in the 83rd minute when Luis\u00e3o jumped higher than Ricardo and headed in the winning goal. Trapattoni tried to calm excess confidence by saying Benfica still had not won the league title. Two days after the game, in an interview to Italian sports daily Gazzetta dello Sport, Trapattoni announced his intention to leave Benfica at the end of the season and return to Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0019-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nOn 22 May, Benfica visited the Est\u00e1dio do Bessa to face Boavista, needing just one point to win the title. Benfica scored the opening goal with a penalty from Sim\u00e3o. Boavista equalized minutes later but the score remained drawn, ensuring the title for Benfica, their first in ten years and 31st overall. Trapattoni said, \"Winning is always hard. This title was amazing and one of the most important of my career. It was won in a new culture for me and that makes it even better.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0019-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Season summary, April\u2013May\nIn the last game of the season, the 2005 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal Final, Benfica's Sim\u00e3o opened the scoring but allowed Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal to score twice, losing Benfica their ninth tournament final. The loss also prevented a double for Benfica; it would have been their first since 1987. Two days after the defeat, Trapattoni confirmed he was leaving Benfica for personal reasons, ending his one-year tenure in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Player statistics\nThe squad for the season consisted of the players listed in the tables below, as well as staff member Trapattoni (manager), Alvaro Magalh\u00e3es (assistant manager), Fausto Rossi, (fitness coach) and Adriano Barbin (goalkeeping coach).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Player statistics\nNote 1: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180339-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.L. Benfica season, Player statistics\nNote 2: Players with squad numbers marked \u2021 joined the club during the 2004\u201305 season via transfer, with more details in the following section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 46], "content_span": [47, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180340-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S.S. Lazio season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 105th season in Societ\u00e0 Sportiva Lazio's history and their 17th consecutive season in the top-flight of Italian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180341-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SC Bastia season\nFrench football club SC Bastia's 2004\u201305 season. Finished 19th place in league and relegated to Ligue 2. Top scorer of the season, including 7 goals in 7 league matches have been Youssouf Hadji. Was eliminated to Coupe de France end of 64, the Coupe de la Ligue was able to be among the final 16 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180341-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SC Bastia season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180342-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SK Rapid Wien season\nThe 2004\u201305 SK Rapid Wien season is the 107th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180343-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SM-liiga season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Chrisnait (talk | contribs) at 20:13, 9 April 2020 (Added {{Unreferenced}} tag to article (TW)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180343-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SM-liiga season\nThe 2004-05 SM-liiga season was the 30th season of the SM-liiga, the top level of ice hockey in Finland. 13 teams participated in the league, and Karpat Oulu won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180344-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SPHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 Southern Professional Hockey League season was the first season of the Southern Professional Hockey League. The regular season began October 29, 2004, and ended April 1, 2005, after a 56-game regular season and a six-team playoff. The Columbus Cottonmouths won the first SPHL championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180344-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SPHL season, President's Cup playoffs, Quarterfinals, (1) Knoxville Ice Bears and (2) Macon Trax\nThe Knoxville Ice Bears and the Macon trax get byes for the Quarter Finals round of the playoffs. The teams will be reseeded for the Simi Finals round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 104], "content_span": [105, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180344-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SPHL season, Awards\nThe Coach of the Year award was announced on March 21, 2005, followed by the All-Star team on March 22, Goalie of the Year on March 23, Defenseman of the Year on March 24, and MVP and Rookie of the Year on March 25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180344-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SPHL season, Awards, All-Star selections\nF Brent Rumble (Jacksonville) F Kevin Swider (Knoxville) F K.J. Vorhees (Knoxville) D Ryan Aikia (Columbus) D Curtis Menzul (Knoxville) G Chad Collins (Fayetteville)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180345-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SV Werder Bremen season\nDuring the 2004-05 season, SV Werder Bremen played in the Bundesliga, the highest tier of the German football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180345-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SV Werder Bremen season, Season summary\nWerder Bremen never came close to retaining their Bundesliga title and finished 18 points behind champions Bayern Munich. This was still good enough for another season in the Champions League, albeit entering in the third qualifying round. The club also failed to retain its DFB-Pokal crown, being eliminated in the semi-finals by Schalke.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180345-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SV Werder Bremen season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180345-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SV Werder Bremen season, Players, Werder Bremen II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180345-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 SV Werder Bremen season, Players, Youth team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180346-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sacramento Kings season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Kings' 56th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 20th season in Sacramento. The Kings struggled losing four of their first five games, but would then win 12 of their next 13 games. However, as the season progressed, the Kings would trade away their top players. Doug Christie was traded to the Orlando Magic for Cuttino Mobley in January, and All-Star forward Chris Webber was dealt to the Philadelphia 76ers for Kenny Thomas and former Kings' forward Corliss Williamson in February.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180346-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sacramento Kings season\nStill, the Kings managed to finish second in the Pacific Division with a solid 50\u201332 record, clinching a sixth spot in the Western Conference. However, in the playoffs, the Kings failed to make it out of the first round, losing to the Seattle SuperSonics in five games. Following the season, Mobley signed as a free agent with the Los Angeles Clippers, and Bobby Jackson was traded to the Memphis Grizzlies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the Spurs' 29th season in the National Basketball Association, the 32nd in San Antonio, and 38th season as a franchise. During the offseason, the Spurs signed free agent Brent Barry. The Spurs got off to a solid start, winning 16 of their first 20 games, entering the New Year with a 25\u20136 record. In February 2005, the Spurs traded longtime Spur Malik Rose and two draft choices to the New York Knicks for Jamison Brewer and center Nazr Mohammed. Late in the season, the team signed free agent forward Glenn Robinson. The Spurs finished first place in the Southwest Division, and second in the Western Conference with a 59\u201323 record. Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili were both voted to play in the 2005 NBA All-Star Game, which was hosted in Denver. This was Ginobili's first All-Star appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 848]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season\nIn the first round of the playoffs, the Spurs lost Game 1 at home to the Denver Nuggets 93\u201387, but would beat them in five games. In the semifinals, they defeated the Seattle SuperSonics in six games, then upset the top-seeded Phoenix Suns, which featured regular season MVP Steve Nash, Amar'e Stoudemire and Shawn Marion in five games in the Western Conference Finals. In the Finals, the Spurs would win their third NBA championship, defeating the 2004 NBA champions, the Detroit Pistons, in a seven-game series. Following the season, Glenn Robinson retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, Regular season, Overview\nAfter their disappointing second round collapse to the Los Angeles Lakers, the Spurs looked to regain the NBA crown. They would get off to a quick start, posting a 12-3 record in November. The Spurs would stay hot through December as they established a 25-6 record entering the New Year. The Spurs would be near the top in the Western Conference all season battling the Phoenix Suns for the best record in the NBA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, Regular season, Overview\nJust as it appeared the Spurs would cruise toward the playoffs, their season suddenly hit a bump in the road when Tim Duncan went down in a March 20 loss to the Detroit Pistons with a sprained ankle. The rest of the way, the Spurs would limp home winning 9 of their last 17 as they held on to the Southwest Division by just 1 game with a 59-23 record. The Spurs leading scorer during the season was Tim Duncan with 20.3 PPG.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game One\nManu Gin\u00f3bili was widely considered the star of the night, scoring in a virtuoso performance near the end of the game to lead the Spurs to victory. The Pistons were then left 'in the dust', the NBA website reported. Ginobili scored 15 of his 26 points in the fourth quarter to complement a huge game by Tim Duncan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game One\nGinobili, a famous Argentine All-Star, already with championship rings from the NBA and Euroleague and an Olympic gold medal (the only player in history with all three), got to work on his second NBA title by taking over in the final period. He scored eight points in a decisive 12-2 surge that gave the Spurs a 67-55 lead, then throttled a push by the Pistons with a swooping dunk, 3-pointer and running hook for an 81-67 advantage with less than two minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game One\nHaving been idle for a week, the Spurs looked weak. With their defense, however, they were able to overcome adversity. Tim Duncan, who had 24 points and 17 rebounds, also contributed. Although the Pistons tend to suddenly come alive in the fourth quarter, the converse was true this game as San Antonio put together a big quarter to take a commanding lead in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Two\nComing into the game, it seemed as if the resilient Pistons, who survived two elimination games against Miami in the Eastern Finals, would come out strong and give the Spurs a challenge. However, it was the Spurs who came out with a sense of urgency, as they did not want the Pistons to steal a game in San Antonio and take home court advantage away from them. From the opening tip, Game 2 was all San Antonio as the Spurs got out to a quick lead and never looked back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Two\nThe Spurs took advantage of Detroit's uncharacteristic mistakes throughout the night, which included missing 9 shots from inside four feet from the basket. While the Pistons went cold from behind the arc, not scoring a single 3-point basket, the Spurs made 11 3-pointers, including 4 each by Manu Gin\u00f3bili and Bruce Bowen, who did not score a point in game 1. Ginobili finished the game with a game-high 27 points, while Tim Duncan finished with 18 points and 11 rebounds. Antonio McDyess was the high scorer for Detroit, scoring 15 points off the bench.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Two\nThe 2-0 lead proved a daunting challenge to Detroit, historically. In the history of the NBA, in the 153 times when a team with home court advantage was up 2-0 in a series, only seven times has the other team rebounded to win the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nGoing into this game, the Pistons were looking to rebound from the deficit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nIn the past, only two teams in NBA history had ever won a Finals series after facing a 2-0 deficit \u2014 the Boston Celtics in the 1969 NBA Finals and the Portland Trail Blazers in the 1977 NBA Finals \u2014 however, the Miami Heat would later accomplish this feat against the Dallas Mavericks in the 2006 NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nDespite the tough challenge, the Pistons pulled through, and came out with several key steals and two scoring runs in the third quarter, then netted many insurance points in the fourth to win a big game which was a de facto must-win. Ben Wallace was lauded and commended by many for stepping up to the challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Three\nWhen the end of the game came, and the 96-79 final score flashed upon the screens, many Pistons fans, celebrating in jubilation, started filling the air with confetti and conducted other celebratory customs. That was the first time that the Spurs have given up more than 90 points in a Finals game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nIn this game also, as was previously observed in Game 3, the Pistons dominated the Spurs. Reporters began to remark about the tendency in this series for the home team to produce a blowout. Thus far, no game had been decided by less than 15 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nSeven Pistons scored in double figures, and big games were collected from Rasheed Wallace, Chauncey Billups, Ben Wallace, and all the other \u00e9lite stars of the franchise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Four\nThe outcome was never really in doubt, and the Pistons committed a Finals-record low four turnovers, but even this is often deemed an underestimation of the Pistons' defensive power. The deciding factor appears to have been the lack of possession time for the Spurs. This led to infrequent opportunities to score, and combined with an uncharacteristic scoring slump, the Spurs were only able to manage 71 points. For the second straight game, the Pistons scored more than 90 points against the Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nWith the first four games of the 2005 Finals being blowouts by the home team, Game 5 was the close game everyone was waiting for, and it went down as one of the more memorable games in Finals history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nThe game was closely contested by the two teams throughout the night as the lead changed 12 separate times, and the game was tied on 18 occasions. Regulation was not enough to settle this game, so the game went into overtime. The Pistons streaked out to a quick lead in the first few minutes of overtime, and seemed to have the game in hand. However, a missed opportunity with Detroit up 2 with 9 seconds to go opened the door for San Antonio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0017-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nOn the Spurs' next possession, Robert Horry inbounded the ball to Ginobili, who then gave it back to Horry, who was left wide open, to sink the game winning basket. Horry had previously already been famous for nailing the winning shot in Game 4 of the 2002 Western Conference Finals between the Lakers and Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nHorry went 5 for 6 from beyond the arc, including the game-winner, and scored 21 points coming off the bench, after not scoring until the final play of the 3rd quarter. He carried the team in the latter stages of the game as his teammates struggled with nerves that came with the weight of a must-win game on the road against an accomplished adversary. In addition to the game winning three pointer Horry made a spectacular left-handed dunk as the shot clock was winding in one possession, that is one of the highlights of the series. Incidentally, Horry happened to have the most NBA championships of any active player five, and looked to extend that to six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 715]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Five\nTim Duncan, despite struggling from the free-throw line, finished with 26 points and 19 rebounds for the Spurs. Chauncey Billups was the high scorer for the Pistons, finishing with a game high 34 points in the losing effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Six\nGame 6 was a close game all along, and the lead kept fluctuating between the two teams. Again, the leading stars on both teams played big games. Detroit pulled away early in the fourth for an 80-73 lead with five minutes to go, but the Spurs continued to threaten them. Soon, it was back to a one-point game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Six\nThen, Rasheed Wallace planted a three-pointer to pull away, and even with a resilient game by the Spurs, the Pistons had clinched the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Six\nNevertheless, several Pistons free throws were necessary in the final moments of the game to put a win out of reach for the Spurs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Six\nRasheed Wallace had a big game to atone for the mistake he made for leaving Horry open in Game 5. Despite the fact that his mistake ultimately cost the Pistons the championship, Wallace was nonchalant about the play, even commenting incorrectly that he left Horry to guard Duncan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Six\nBillups and Prince again led the Pistons with steady, unwavering defense, which is the key, as it is often said, to victory. Although Duncan and Ginobili finished with 21 points each, neither was able to seriously threaten the strong Pistons defense enough to win the game. Detroit thus won its fifth consecutive game facing elimination. The Pistons became the first road team to force a Game 7 in the NBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 54], "content_span": [55, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Seven\nFor the first time in eleven years, the NBA Finals came down to a decisive game. Momentum was on Detroit's side, but the Spurs had home-court advantage. The Pistons were looking to become the first team to ever win the last 2 games on the road, after being down 3-2. The stats were, as expected, heavily in favor of the Spurs. NBA teams are 74-17 all-time at home in Game 7, and 9-0 when leading 3-2 going home.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Seven\nThe game, like the previous two games of the series, was closely contested for the first three quarters. But the Spurs took control in the fourth quarter and never looked back as for the second time in three years, the Spurs celebrated a championship on the SBC Center floor. The Spurs won Game Seven 81-74, winning the franchise's third Larry O'Brien Trophy. For the game, Tim Duncan finished with a game high 25 points and 11 rebounds, while teammate Manu Gin\u00f3bili pitched in with 23 points. Richard Hamilton, with 15 points, was the high scorer for the Pistons, who fell just short of winning back to back championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180347-0027-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Antonio Spurs season, NBA Finals, Game Seven\nTim Duncan averaged 20.6 PPG on his way to his 3rd NBA Finals MVP award. Manu Gin\u00f3bili, Tony Parker, and Bruce Bowen each received their second championship ring, while Robert Horry became only the second player in NBA history (John Salley being the first) to play on championship teams for three different franchises.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 56], "content_span": [57, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180348-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Jose Sharks season\nThe 2004\u201305 San Jose Sharks season was the Sharks 14th season in the National Hockey League. Its games were cancelled due to the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180348-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Jose Sharks season, Transactions\nThe Sharks were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180348-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Jose Sharks season, Draft picks\nSan Jose's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180349-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Miguel Beermen season\nThe 2004-2005 San Miguel Beermen season was the 30th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180349-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 San Miguel Beermen season, Championship\nThe San Miguel Beermen won their 17th PBA title and their first championship in four years during the 2005 PBA Fiesta Conference, defeating Talk 'N Text Phone Pals, four games to one. The Beermen last won a crown in the 2001 All-Filipino Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180350-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Santosh Trophy\nThe 59th Santosh Trophy 2004 was held in Delhi from 14 October 2004 to 31 October 2004. Kerala won their fifth title beating Punjab (3-2) in the finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Crown Prince Cup was the 30th season of the Saudi premier knockout tournament since its establishment in 1957. It started with the qualifying rounds on 8 December 2004 and concluded with the final on 13 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nAl-Ittihad were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the semi-finals by Al-Hilal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nAl-Hilal won their 5th title following a 2\u20131 win over Al-Qadisiyah in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup\nThe winner of the Crown Prince Cup earns automatic qualification to the 2006 AFC Champions League group stages. However, as Al-Hilal qualified for the AFC Champions League as league winners, Al-Shabab, the league runners-up, took this Champions League spot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Qualifying rounds\nAll of the competing teams that are not members of the Premier League competed in the qualifying rounds to secure one of 4 available places in the Round of 16. The qualifying competition began on 8 December 2004. First Division sides Al-Khaleej, Al-Raed, and Najran, and Second Division side Al-Watani qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Round of 16\nThe Round of 16 fixtures were played on 15, 16, 17 and 18 February 2005. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe Quarter-finals fixtures were played on 3, 4, 5 and 6 March 2005. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Semi-finals\nThe Semi-finals first legs were played on 25 and 26 April 2005 while the second legs were played on 29 and 30 April 2005. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180351-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Crown Prince Cup, Final\nThe final was held on 13 May 2005. All times are local, AST (UTC+3).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180352-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Saudi Premier League\nStatistics of the 2004\u201305 Saudi Premier League, officially known as The Custodian of The Two Holy Mosques League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180353-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe 2004\u20132005 Scottish Challenge Cup was the 14th season of the competition, competed for by all 30 members of the Scottish Football League. The defending champions were Inverness Caledonian Thistle, who defeated Airdrie United 2\u20130 in the 2003 final. Inverness Caledonian Thistle did not compete in the tournament after being promoted to the Scottish Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180353-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Challenge Cup\nThe final was played on 7 November 2004, between Falkirk and Ross County, at McDiarmid Park, Perth. Falkirk won 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180353-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Challenge Cup, First round\nClyde and Stranraer received random byes into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180354-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Scottish Cup was the 120th season of Scotland's most prestigious football knockout competition, also known for sponsorship reasons as the Tennent's Scottish Cup. The Cup was won by Celtic, who defeated Dundee United 1\u20130 in the final; this was Martin O'Neill's last match as Celtic manager.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180355-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish First Division\nAs league champions, Falkirk were promoted to the Scottish Premier League. Partick Thistle and Raith Rovers were relegated to the Second Division, and Second Division winners Brechin City and Stranraer were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180355-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish First Division, Attendances\nThe average attendances for Scottish First Division clubs for season 2004/05 are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180357-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish League Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Scottish League Cup was the 59th staging of the Scotland's second most prestigious football knockout competition, also known for sponsorship reasons as the CIS Insurance Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180357-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish League Cup\nThe competition was won by Rangers, who defeated Motherwell 5\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League was won by Rangers, who claimed the title on the final day of the season by a single point from Celtic, who had gone into the final fixtures leading and were still ahead in the closing minutes of their last game against Motherwell until they conceded two goals (both scored by striker Scott McDonald), costing them the title with Rangers winning their match against Hibernian in Edinburgh. The dramatic events became known in popular culture as 'Helicopter Sunday' due to the aircraft ceremonially delivering the championship trophy changing direction in mid-flight as the identity of its winners altered suddenly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League\nAs league champions, Rangers qualified for the UEFA Champions League, with runners-up Celtic also qualifying. Third-placed Hibernian qualified for the UEFA Cup, as did Dundee United, who took the Scottish Cup place despite losing the final to Celtic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League\nDundee were relegated, and Scottish First Division winners Falkirk were promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League\nJohn Hartson was the top scorer with 25 goals for Celtic, whose manager Martin O'Neill stepped down at the end of the season after five years and a host of major trophies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 1\u201322\nDuring matches 1\u201322 each team played every other team twice (home and away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 54], "content_span": [55, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 23\u201333\nDuring matches 23\u201333 each team played every other team once (either at home or away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League, Results, Matches 34\u201338\nDuring matches 34\u201338 each team played every other team in their half of the table once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180358-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League, Attendances\nThe average attendances for SPL clubs during the 2004\u201305 season are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180359-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Second Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Scottish Second Division was won by Brechin City who, along with second placed Stranraer, gained promotion to the First Division. Arbroath and Berwick Rangers, meanwhile, were relegated to the Third Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180359-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Second Division, Attendances\nThe average attendances for Division Two clubs for season 2004\u201305 are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180360-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Third Division\nThe 2004\u201305 Scottish Third Division was won by Gretna who, along with Peterhead, gained promotion to the Second Division. East Stirlingshire finished bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180360-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scottish Third Division, Attendance\nThe average attendance for Scottish Third Division clubs for the 2004/05 season are shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180361-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Scunthorpe United F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Scunthorpe United compete in Football League Two where they finished in 2nd position with 80 points, gaining automatic promotion to League One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180362-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Seattle SuperSonics season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the SuperSonics' 38th season in the National Basketball Association. After losing their season opener to the Los Angeles Clippers 114\u201384 on November 3, the Sonics went on a nine-game winning streak as they won 17 of their first 20 games. Despite losing eight of their final ten games, the Sonics finished first place in the Northwest Division with a solid 52\u201330 record, marking their first 50-plus win season since 1998, and first playoff appearance since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180362-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Seattle SuperSonics season\nRay Allen led the team averaging 23.9 points per game as he, and Rashard Lewis were both voted to play in the 2005 NBA All-Star Game in Denver. In the first round of the playoffs, the Sonics defeated the Sacramento Kings in five games, but would lose in the second round to the eventual NBA champion San Antonio Spurs in six games. This would be their final playoff appearance as the Sonics. Following the season, head coach Nate McMillan left for the Portland Trail Blazers, and Antonio Daniels signed as a free agent with the Washington Wizards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180363-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Second League of Serbia and Montenegro\nSecond League of Serbia and Montenegro 2004\u201305 (Serbian: Druga savezna liga) consisted of two groups, Serbia with 20 teams and Montenegro with 10 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180364-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n\nThese are the team results from the Segunda Divisi\u00f3n during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180364-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n, Teams\nThe 2004\u201305 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n was made up of the following teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180365-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B\nThe season 2004\u201305 of Segunda Divisi\u00f3n B of Spanish football started August 2004 and ended May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180366-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Divis\u00e3o B\nThe 2004\u201305 Segunda Divis\u00e3o season was the 71st season of the competition and the 55th season of recognised third-tier football in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180366-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Divis\u00e3o B, Overview\nThe league was contested by 59 teams in 3 divisions with SC Covilh\u00e3, FC Vizela and FC Barreirense winning the respective divisional competitions and gaining promotion to the Liga de Honra. The overall championship was won by FC Vizela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180367-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Liga\nThe 2004\u201305 Segunda Liga season was the 15th season of the competition and the 71st season of recognised second-tier football in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180367-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Segunda Liga, Overview\nThe league was contested by 18 teams with FC Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira winning the championship and gaining promotion to the Primeira Liga along with Naval 1\u00ba Maio and Estrela Amadora. At the other end of the table SC Espinho were relegated to the Segunda Divis\u00e3o along with FC Felgueiras who were relegated for financial reasons. Finally 13th placed FC Alverca gave up professional football", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 30], "content_span": [31, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup was the third season of the Serbia and Montenegro's annual football cup. The cup defenders was Red Star Belgrade, but was defeated by FK \u017deleznik in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, First round\nThirty-two teams entered in the First Round. The matches were played on 20, 22, 29 September, 6 and 20 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, First round\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Second round\nThe 16 winners from the prior round enter this round. The matches were played on 26 and 27 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Second round\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe eight winners from the prior round enter this round. The matches were played on 10 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Quarter-finals\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180368-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbia and Montenegro Cup, Semi-finals\nNote: Roman numerals in brackets denote the league tier the clubs participated in the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180369-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbian Hockey League season\nThe Serbian Hockey League Season for 2005-2006 was held. It started on October 14. In the end KHK Crvena Zvezda won, ending the dominance of HK Vojvodina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180370-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbian Second League\nThe Second League Serbia (Serbian: \u0414\u0440\u0443\u0433\u0430 \u043b\u0438\u0433\u0430 \u0421\u0440\u0431\u0438\u0458\u0430, Druga liga Srbija) is the second-highest football league in Serbia (they Serbia and Montenegro). The league is operated by the Serbian FA. 20 teams competed in this league for the 2004\u201305 season. Two teams were promoted to the Serbia and Montenegro SuperLiga and six were relegated the Serbian League, the third-highest division overall in the Serbian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180370-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serbian Second League, Relegation Play-offs\nFirst legs were player on 3 July and second legs on 6 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180371-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie A\nThe 2004\u201305 Serie A (known as the Serie A TIM for sponsorship reasons) was the 103rd season of top-tier Italian football, the 73rd in a round-robin tournament. It was expanded to contain 20 clubs, which played 38 matches against each other, rather than the 34 matches in previous seasons, while relegations were reduced to three. The Coppa Campioni d'Italia was presented to the winners on the pitch for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180371-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie A\nThe first two teams qualified directly to UEFA Champions League, teams ending in the third and fourth places had to play Champions League qualifications, teams ending in the fifth and sixth places qualified to UEFA Cup (another spot was given to the winner of Coppa Italia), while only the last three teams were to be relegated in Serie B, the Italian second division, following a regulations change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180371-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie A\nJuventus finished as champions; however, they were later stripped of the title due to their involvement in the Calciopoli. Runners-up Milan were also implicated in the scandal and that season's title was not awarded to any club. Udinese qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the first time in its history. Palermo, in its first Serie A campaign in over 30 years, finished in sixth place, qualifying for the UEFA Cup for the first time in its history. Roma qualified for the UEFA Cup as the runners-up in the Coppa Italia because the cup winner, Internazionale, had already qualified for the Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180371-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie A\nTwo teams, Brescia and Atalanta, were directly relegated to Serie B, while the third relegation place was to be decided among three teams (Fiorentina, Bologna and Parma), counting only the so-called classifica avulsa; that is, the table composed solely by the six matches between the three teams. Bologna and Parma had fewer points, and played the relegation tiebreaker. The tiebreaker was won by Parma, who were defeated 0\u20131 at home but won 0\u20132 away in the return match. This method of classifying teams on equal points totals was abolished for the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180371-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie A, League table, Positions by round\nThe table lists the positions of teams after each week of matches. In order to preserve chronological evolvements, any postponed matches are not included to the round at which they were originally scheduled, but added to the full round they were played immediately afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180372-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie A (ice hockey) season\nThe 2004\u201305 Serie A season was the 71st season of the Serie A, the top level of ice hockey in Italy. 10 teams participated in the league, and the HC Milano Vipers won the championship by defeating SG Cortina in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180373-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie B\nThe 2004\u201305 Serie B is the 73rd season since its establishment in 1929. It is the second highest football league in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180373-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie B, Teams\nArezzo, Catanzaro, Cesena and Crotone had been promoted from Serie C, while Perugia, Modena, and Empoli had been relegated from Serie A, and Ancona had lost their national professional licence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180373-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie B, Events\nFollowing the long-standing consequences of the \u201cCaso Catania\u201d, the league included 22 teams, while promotions decreased to three spots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180373-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie B, Play-off, Promotion play-off\nTorino Calcio promoted to 2005\u201306 Serie A, but later not admitted for financial problems. Perugia Calcio also was not admitted for financial problems and consequently relegated to 2005\u201306 Serie C1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 45], "content_span": [46, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180374-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie C1\nThe 2004\u201305 Serie C1 was the twenty-seventh edition of Serie C1, the third highest league in the Italian football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180374-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie C1, Overview, Serie C1/A\nIt was contested by 19 teams, and U.S. Cremonese won the championship. It was decided that U.S. Cremonese, A.C. Mantova was promoted to Serie B, and A.S. Andria BAT, F.C. Vittoria, Calcio Como, A.C. Prato was demoted in Serie C2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180374-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Serie C1, Overview, Serie C1/B\nIt was contested by 18 teams, and Rimini Calcio F.C. won the championship. It was decided that Rimini Calcio F.C., U.S. Avellino was promoted to Serie B, and A.C. Reggiana 1919, Benevento Calcio, SPAL 1907, A.S. Sora, A.S.D. Nuova Vis Pesaro Calcio 2006 was demoted to Serie C2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180375-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sheffield Shield season\nThe 2004\u201305 Sheffield Shield season known as the Pura Cup was the 103rd season of the Sheffield Shield, the domestic first-class cricket competition of Australia. New South Wales won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180376-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sheffield United F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Sheffield United competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180376-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sheffield United F.C. season, Season summary\nIn 2004\u201305 season, Warnock once again brought in a host of new faces with the pick being arguably the signings of former Sheffield Wednesday players Bromby, Quinn and Geary. The Blades again flirted around the play-offs places but some inconsistent performances, which included only winning 5 of their last 20 Championship games, saw the club again fall just short of the top six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180376-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sheffield United F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180376-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sheffield United F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180377-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Sheffield Wednesday compete in Football League One where they finished in 5th position with 72 points. They went on to beat Hartlepool United in the 2005 Football League One play-off Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180378-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Shell Turbo Chargers season\nThe 2004-2005 Shell Turbo Chargers season was the 20th and final season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180378-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Shell Turbo Chargers season, Occurrences\nAmerican John Moran was named Shell's new head coach starting the season, replacing Perry Ronquillo, Moran was signed to a six-month contract but on March 22, he was sacked by Shell management after the Turbo Chargers tallied a 1-5 won-loss record, Moran was succeeded by former Shell cager Leo Austria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180379-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Shrewsbury Town F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Shrewsbury Town's compete in League Two where they finished in 21st position with 49 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180380-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak 1. Liga season\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovak 1.Liga season was the 12th season of the Slovak 1. Liga, the second level of ice hockey in Slovakia. 12 teams participated in the league, and HKm Detva (Zvolen B) won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180381-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovak Cup was the 36th season of Slovakia's annual football knock-out cup competition and the twelfth since the independence of Slovakia. It began on 21 September 2004 with Round 1 and ended on 8 May 2005 with the Final. The winners of the competition earned a place in the second qualifying round of the UEFA Cup. Artmedia Petr\u017ealka were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180381-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Cup, First round\nThe thirteen games were played on 21 and 22 September 2004 and the match AS Tren\u010d\u00edn \u2013 Slovan Bratislava was played on 29 September 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180381-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Cup, Second round\nThe match AS Tren\u010d\u00edn \u2013 Slovan Bratislava was played on 6 October 2004 and the seven games were played on 19 and 20 October 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 32], "content_span": [33, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180381-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Cup, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 2 and 3 November 2004. The second legs were played on 9 and 10 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180381-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Cup, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 6 April 2005. The second legs were played on 19 and 20 April 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180382-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Extraliga season\nThe Slovak Extraliga 2004\u201305 was the twelfth regular season of the Slovak Extraliga, the top level of professional ice hockey in Slovakia. During the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout several Slovak players returned to their homeland, including Pavol Demitra, Mari\u00e1n Hossa, Mari\u00e1n G\u00e1bor\u00edk (all in HK Dukla Tren\u010d\u00edn), Miroslav \u0160atan and \u013dubom\u00edr Vi\u0161\u0148ovsk\u00fd (both in HC Slovan Bratislava), Michal Handzu\u0161, Richard Zedn\u00edk and Vladim\u00edr Orsz\u00e1gh (all in HKm Zvolen), Ladislav Nagy and Martin \u0160trb\u00e1k (both in HC Ko\u0161ice), and \u017digmund P\u00e1lffy (in HK 36 Skalica).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180382-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Extraliga season, Regular season, Final standings\nKey - GP: Games played, W: Wins, OTW: Over time wins, T: Ties, OTL: Over time losses, L: Losses, GF: Goals for, GA: Goals against, PTS: Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180382-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Extraliga season, Playout\n* Dubnica sold license for the 2005-06 season to Martin due to financial troubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180382-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Extraliga season, Scoring Leaders\nKey - GP: Games played, G: Goals, A: Assists, PTS: Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180383-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Superliga\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovak First Football League (known as the Slovak Corgo\u0148 Liga for sponsorship reasons) was the 12th season of first-tier football league in Slovakia, since its establishment in 1993. This season started on 24 July 2004 and ended on 15 June 2005. M\u0160K \u017dilina are the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180383-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Superliga, Teams\nA total of 10 teams was contested in the league, including 9 sides from the 2003\u201304 season and one promoted from the 2. Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180383-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovak Superliga, Teams\nRelegation for \u0160K Slovan Bratislava to the 2004\u201305 2. Liga was confirmed on 25 May 2004. The one relegated team were replaced by FC Rimavsk\u00e1 Sobota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 31], "content_span": [32, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180384-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovenian Football Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovenian Football Cup was the 14th season of the Slovenian Football Cup, Slovenia's football knockout competition. The tournament system was changed for this season. 20 lower league teams played in the first round, two last placed Slovenian PrvaLiga teams joined in the second and the rest in the Round of 16. The final was held as a single-legged match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180385-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovenian Hockey League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovenian Ice Hockey League was the 14th season of the Slovenian Hockey League. Seven teams participated in the league, and Olimpija have won the league championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180386-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovenian PrvaLiga\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovenian PrvaLiga season started on 1 August 2004 and ended on 29 May 2005. Each team played a total of 32 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180387-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovenian Second League\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovenian Second League season started on 8 August 2004 and ended on 5 June 2005. Each team played a total of 33 matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180388-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Slovenian Third League\nThe 2004\u201305 Slovenian Third League was the 13th season of the Slovenian Third League, the third highest level in the Slovenian football system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe 2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season was an above-average season in which tropical cyclones formed within the South Pacific Ocean to the east of 160\u00b0E. The season officially ran from November 1, 2004 to April 30, 2005, however a tropical cyclone could form at any time between July 1, 2004 and June 30, 2005 and would count towards the season total. The season got off to an early start, when Tropical Depression 01F developed near the Solomon Islands on October 28, three days before the official start of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season\nThe final disturbance of the season dissipated as the season was drawing to a close on May 1. The season has been above-average in terms of activity, with 9 tropical cyclones and 5 severe tropical cyclones forming during the season. The season featured Cyclone Percy, the most intense of the season in terms of 1-minute sustained winds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season\nDuring the season, tropical cyclones are officially monitored by the Fiji Meteorological Service (FMS), Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) and New Zealand's MetService. The United States Armed Forces through the Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) also monitors the basin and issue unofficial warnings for American interests. The FMS attaches a number and an F suffix to tropical disturbances that form in or move into the basin while the JTWC designates significant tropical cyclones with a number and a P suffix. The FMS, BoM and MetService all use the Australian Tropical Cyclone Intensity Scale and estimate wind speeds over a period of ten minutes, while the JTWC estimated sustained winds over a 1-minute period, which are subsequently compared to the Saffir\u2013Simpson hurricane wind scale (SSHWS)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nThe first tropical depression of the season developed on October 28 to the northeast of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands. Over the next few days the system moved westwards and moved into the Australian region during October 30. There were no significant tropical disturbances observed during November, before Tropical Depression 02F developed to the north of Vanuatu during December 3. The system subsequently meandered over the ocean between Vanuatu and Fiji, before it was last noted to the southeast of Vanuatu during December 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nWhile Tropical Depression 02F was active, the third tropical depression of the season, developed to the south of Tuvalu on December 5. The system subsequently moved south-eastwards, before it was last noted during December 10 to the east of Nuku'alofa, Tonga. The fourth tropical disturbance of the season developed during December 21 and subsequently moved south-westwards, before it was named Judy during December 24, as it developed into the first tropical cyclone of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Judy\nOn December 21, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Disturbance 04F had developed, along an active and slow-moving monsoon trough near French Polynesia. The depression was in an area of high shear, with the deep convection located to the northeast of the center. The low level circulation center at this time was exposed but was developing despite the high shear associated with the system. Early on December 24 deep convection associated with the system moved over the low level circulation center whilst the system was getting better organized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0003-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Judy\nLater that day at 1800\u00a0UTC the Depression was upgraded to a category one tropical cyclone and was named Judy whilst located about 510\u00a0km (320\u00a0mi) southeast of Tahiti and moving towards the southwest. During the next few hours under strengthening shear, Judy struggled to maintain itself. However, as it moved further to the south it came under a strengthening steering field which was being enhanced by a trough of low pressure to the west of the steering field which helped to neutralize the effect of the shear over the cyclone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0003-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Judy\nJudy then intensified slightly further and reached its peak intensity of 85\u00a0km/h (50\u00a0mph), with a peak pressure of 989\u00a0hPa late on December 25 whilst turning towards the south towards TCWC Wellington's area of responsibility. Judy degenerated into an extratropical cyclone during December 27, before it was last noted later that day as it merged with an area of low pressure to the south of Tahiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Kerry\nTropical Cyclone Kerry developed from Tropical Depression 05F on January 5, 315 nautical miles (583\u00a0km) northeast of Port Vila, Vanuatu. Kerry moved to the southwest with 40-knot (70\u00a0km/h) winds as it moved over Vanuatu. Once past the island, Kerry moved on a west-southwest course and it began to intensify after turning to the west. The storm reached a peak intensity of 85 knots (157\u00a0km/h) before turning towards the south-southeast. The storm began to weaken under vertical shear and was downgraded to a depression on January 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Lola\nTropical Storm Lola developed from Tropical Depression 06F on January 31, 100 nautical miles (200\u00a0km) west-southwest of Tongatapu. Lola reached a peak intensity of 40 knots (70\u00a0km/h), but was downgraded to a depression on February 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Meena\nOn February\u00a01, the RSMC Nadi began monitoring a tropical disturbance, which they designated as 07F, to the west of the Northern Cook Islands. The next day, a small area of deep convection developed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Olaf\nThe most intense system of the season, Tropical Cyclone Olaf developed rapidly like Nancy. By February 16, Olaf had attained maximum sustained winds of 145 knots (269\u00a0km/h) and was thrashing American Samoa. However bad the damage was, it could have been worse as Olaf veered east, its eyewall missing the islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Nancy\nCyclone Nancy formed on February 10 as Tropical Disturbance 09F, over the next couple of days. The disturbance gradually developed and was designated as Cyclone Nancy during February 12 due to its outflow improving and a small area of deep convection, developing over the center of circulation, whilst it was located about 485\u00a0km (301\u00a0mi) east-northeast of Pago Pago, American Samoa. During that day Nancy started to rapidly intensify becoming a Severe Tropical Cyclone late on February 13 as a small, irregularly shaped, eye had begun to develop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Nancy\nThe next day both RSMC Nadi, and the JTWC reported that Cyclone Nancy had attained its peak intensity of 175\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph 10-minute winds) and 230\u00a0km/h (145\u00a0mph 1-minute winds). Increasing wind shear then caused Nancy to weaken. Early on February\u00a015, the storm passed directly over Manuae. Continued weakening took place as a trough of low pressure approached from the southwest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0009-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Nancy\nBy February\u00a016, Nancy weakened below hurricane intensity and turned to the southwest as it began to undergo a Fujiwhara interaction with Cyclone Olaf, strong shear associated with the outflow of Cyclone Olaf caused all convection associated with Nancy to be displaced to the southwest on February\u00a016. Early on February\u00a017, Nancy transitioned into an extratropical cyclone as it entered the area of responsibility of TCWC Wellington. Shortly afterwards, the low was absorbed into the larger circulation of Olaf however it was monitored by TCWC Wellington as a separate system until 1200\u00a0UTC on February\u00a018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Nancy\nAlready impacted by Cyclone Meena a week earlier, the Cook Islands sustained significant damage from Cyclone Nancy. Several homes were damaged and destroyed throughout the islands. Downed trees and power lines blocked roads and cut power and minor flooding was reported along coastal areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Cyclone Percy\nPercy quickly formed from an area of low pressure on February 24 and reached Category 1 status north of American Samoa. The cyclone then moved eastward, peaking at Category 5 status before turning southward. Percy then passed through the southwestern Cook Islands causing severe damage before dissipating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 13F\nLate on February 27, RSMC Nadi reported that a suspect tropical disturbance was developing near to the north of Rennel Island, in the Solomon Islands. Over the next couple of days the system gradually developed and before it was declared as a tropical disturbance early on March 1. At this time convection detached from the disturbance's low level circulation center, whilst vertical wind shear around the system remained weak. Early the next day, the Disturbance was then relocated to the northwest of Viti Levu in Fiji, before it was designated as Tropical Depression 13F later that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0012-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Depression 13F\nThe Depression remained weak reaching an estimated central pressure of 1001 hPa (mbar) early on March 3, however there were no winds reported by RSMC Nadi whilst they were monitoring it. RSMC Nadi then issued their last advisory on 13F early on March 4 after no persistent convection reported around the system since the depression reached its peak pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nTropical Depression 01F developed on October 28, within the monsoon trough about 420\u00a0km (260\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Guadalcanal. Over the next couple of days the system moved westwards and moved into the Australian region, during October 30, where it was monitored for a few days by TCWC Brisbane. The second tropical depression of the season developed on December 3, about 280\u00a0km (170\u00a0mi) to the north of Port Villa, Vanuatu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0013-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nOver the next week the poorly organised system meandered over the ocean between Vanuatu and Fiji, before it started to organise during December 12, with RSMC Nadi issuing gale warnings on the system. The system subsequently moved southwards between Vanuatu and Fiji, before it was last noted during December 14, while it was located to the southeast of Port Villa. While Tropical Depression 02F was active, the third tropical depression of the season, developed to the south of Tuvalu on December 5. The system subsequently moved south-eastwards, before it was last noted during December 10 to the east of Nuku'alofa, Tonga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring February 26, RSMC Nadi reported that Tropical Depression 11F had formed, within the Tuamotu Archipelago of islands in French Polynesia. During the next day the system moved eastwards before it was last noted during the next day as it degenerated into a tropical disturbance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring April 20 Tropical Disturbance 16F developed within a monsoon trough, about 570\u00a0km (350\u00a0mi) to the southeast of Apia on the Samoan island: Upolu. During April 21, the disturbance moved towards the southwest and affected Niue while starting to rapidly weaken, before it was last noted during April 22 wrapping into Cyclone Sheila's circulation. Tropical Depression 17F then developed on April 26 while located about 710\u00a0km (440\u00a0mi) to the northeast of Pago-Pago in American Samoa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Systems, Other systems\nDuring April 29, Tropical Depression 18F developed within a monsoon trough about 635\u00a0km (395\u00a0mi), to the northeast of Suva, Fiji. Over the next 24 hours the system moved towards the southeast while deep convection surrounding the system failed to become organized and started to weaken. The depression was last noted during the next day, as it dissipated about 445\u00a0km (277\u00a0mi), to the northeast of Suva.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 60], "content_span": [61, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180389-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South Pacific cyclone season, Season effects\nThis table lists all the storms that developed in the South Pacific to the east of longitude 160\u00b0E during the 2004\u201305 season. It includes their intensity on the Australian Tropical cyclone intensity scale, duration, name, landfalls, deaths, and damages. All data is taken from RSMC Nadi and/or TCWC Wellington, and all of the damage figures are in 2005\u00a0USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nThe 2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season was a near average season, despite beginning unusually early on August\u00a030 with the formation of an early-season tropical depression. M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's meteorological office in R\u00e9union (MFR) ultimately monitored 18\u00a0tropical disturbances during the season, of which 15 became tropical depressions. Two storms \u2013 Arola and Bento \u2013 formed in November, and the latter became the most intense November cyclone on record. Bento attained its peak intensity at a low latitude, and weakened before threatening land. Tropical Cyclone Chambo was the only named storm in December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nIn January, Severe Tropical Storm Daren and Cyclone Ernest existed simultaneously. The latter storm struck southern Madagascar, and five days later, Moderate Tropical Storm Felapi affected the same area; the two storms killed 78\u00a0people and left over 32,000\u00a0people homeless. At the end of January, Severe Tropical Storm Gerard existed as an unnamed tropical storm for 18\u00a0hours due to discrepancies between warning centers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season\nAfter a series of weak tropical systems in February, there were two storms in March. Severe Tropical Storm Hennie brought heavy rainfall to the Mascarene Islands, and Severe Tropical Storm Isang remained away from land. The season's strongest storm originated in the neighboring Australian basin, developing in early April near the Cocos Islands. After being named Adeline by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology (BoM), the MFR renamed the storm Juliet once the storm crossed 90\u00b0E. Juliet would reach maximum sustained winds of 220\u00a0km/h (135\u00a0mph), making it a very intense tropical cyclone. Juliet damaged corn plantations on the island of Rodrigues before becoming an extratropical cyclone on April\u00a011, thus ending the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nM\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's meteorological office in R\u00e9union (MFR) is the official Regional Specialized Meteorological Center for the South-West Indian Ocean, tracking all tropical cyclones from the east coast of Africa to 90\u00b0 E. The agency tracked 18\u00a0tropical disturbances, including one zone of disturbed weather that lasted for one advisory, which was higher than normal. The agency assessed that 15\u00a0disturbances reached tropical depression intensity. Ten of these weather systems intensified into named storms, which was one higher than normal. There were 44\u00a0days in which a named storm was active, lower than the average of 53.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nThere was an unusual period of inactivity across much of the basin from January to March, typically the most active months. During this time, the Intertropical Convergence Zone was located farther south than usual, causing any developing storms to reach their peak intensity at higher latitudes. The exception was southern Madagascar, which was affected by Cyclone Ernest and Tropical Storm Felapi in a five-day span in late January. Four of the named storms attained maximum sustained winds of at least 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph), the threshold for tropical cyclone intensity; this was also near normal. Three tropical cyclones strengthened into intense tropical cyclones, including Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Juliet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal summary\nIn addition to the MFR, the American-based Joint Typhoon Warning Center issued warnings for cyclones in the basin, as well as the entire southern hemisphere. The agency did not track Tropical Storm Felapi, and it estimated that a tropical depression in October attained tropical storm status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Arola\nThe near-equatorial trough spawned an area of convection east of Diego Garcia on November\u00a06, which the MFR classified as a tropical disturbance. The system slowly organized amid favorable conditions, including low to moderate wind shear. On November\u00a08, the MFR upgraded the system to a tropical depression and later Moderate Tropical Storm Arola, and the JTWC classified it as Tropical Cyclone 03S. Steered by a ridge to the south, Arola moved southwestward at first while quickly intensifying. Late on November\u00a08, the MFR estimated peak winds of 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph), making Arola a severe tropical storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0004-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Arola\nEarly the next day, the JTWC upgraded the storm to the equivalent of a minimal hurricane, estimating peak winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph). The storm turned to a westward drift, entering an area of higher wind shear and cooler waters, which caused Arola to weaken. On November\u00a012, the MFR downgraded the storm to a tropical depression, by which time the storm was moving southwestward again, passing south of Diego Garcia. The JTWC discontinued advisories the next day. The MFR tracked Arola until November\u00a018.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Bento\nOn the same day that Arola dissipated, the near-equatorial trough spawned another area of convection east of Diego Garcia. A day later, the MFR classified the system as a tropical disturbance as the thunderstorms organized and consolidated, amid favorable conditions. On November\u00a020, the MFR upgraded the system to Tropical Storm Bento, and the JTWC initiated advisories as Tropical Cyclone 04S. At first, Bento drifted to the southeast, but turned to the west two days later. The MFR upgraded the storm to tropical cyclone status on November\u00a022, the same day that the storm began a rapid intensification phase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Bento\nOn November\u00a023, the MFR estimated peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 215\u00a0km/h (135\u00a0mph), and the JTWC estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 260\u00a0km/h (160\u00a0mph), equivalent to a Category\u00a05 on the Saffir\u2013Simpson scale. This made Bento among the most intense tropical cyclones in the basin within 10\u00ba of the equator, only surpassed by Cyclone Fantala in April 2016. It also made Bento the strongest cyclone in the basin in the month of November, surpassing Cyclone Agnielle in 1995.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Bento\nAround its time of peak intensity, Bento was located far away from land \u2013 about 325\u00a0km (200\u00a0mi) east-southeast of Diego Garcia. It was also moving southwestward due to a ridge to its southeast. On November\u00a024, the cyclone began weakening due to an eyewall replacement cycle, as well as the presence of drier air and increased wind shear. A day later, Bento turned to the southeast, steered by a passing trough. The MFR downgraded the cyclone to tropical storm status on November\u00a026, but upgraded it back to tropical cyclone status a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Bento\nBy late on November\u00a027, the circulation was exposed from the convection. Bento turned to the west and failed to reintensify due to cooler waters. The JTWC discontinued advisories on November\u00a029, but the MFR continued tracking the system as a tropical disturbance until December\u00a03, when Bento was passing north of the Mascarene Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Chambo\nIn the middle of December, the near-equatorial trough spawned an area of convection to the west of Indonesia. For several days, the system drifted westward through an area of minimal wind shear. On December\u00a022, the MFR classified the system as Tropical Disturbance 6 to the northwest of the Cocos Islands. By that time, the thunderstorms were increasing and consolidating. The JTWC classified the system as Tropical Cyclone 06S on December\u00a023. On the next day, the MFR upgraded the system to Moderate Tropical Storm Chambo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Tropical Cyclone Chambo\nThe storm quickly intensified as it moved southwestward, steered by a ridge to its southeast. On December\u00a025, the MFR upgraded Chambo to tropical cyclone status, and the next day estimated peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 155\u00a0km/h (95\u00a0mph). The JTWC meanwhile estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 195\u00a0km/h (120\u00a0mph). Cooler waters and stronger wind shear caused Chambo to begin weakening on December\u00a027. By the next day, the circulation became exposed from the thunderstorms, and the JTWC discontinued advisories. On December\u00a030, the MFR reclassified Chambo as an extratropical cyclone. The storm turned to the south and later southeast, and was last mentioned by the MFR on January\u00a02.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 80], "content_span": [81, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Ernest\nAn area of convection developed west of Diego Garcia on January\u00a016, prompting the MFR to classify it as Tropical Disturbance 8. A day later, the agency briefly discontinued advisories, only to resume them on January\u00a019 as the disturbance passed north of Madagascar. That day, the JTWC classified the system as Tropical Cyclone 12S. On January\u00a020, the MFR upgraded the system to Tropical Storm Ernest to the east of the Comoros. The storm quickly intensified, and within 12\u00a0hours of being named, the MFR upgraded Ernest to tropical cyclone status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0008-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Ernest\nThe cyclone turned to the south through the Mozambique Channel, attaining peak winds of 165\u00a0km/h (105\u00a0mph) on January\u00a022, according to the MFR. The JTWC estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 185\u00a0km/h (115\u00a0mph). On the next day, Ernest turned southeast and made landfall in extreme southern Madagascar, near Itampolo. It quickly emerged over open waters and weakened. On January\u00a024, the MFR reclassified Ernest as an extratropical cyclone, tracking it for one more day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Intense Tropical Cyclone Ernest\nIn southern Madagascar, Ernest produced high wind gusts, reaching 180\u00a0km/h (110\u00a0mph) in Toliara. The same town recorded heavy rainfall during the storm's passage, totaling 237.2\u00a0mm (9.34\u00a0in) over 24\u00a0hours. Ernest's Madagascar impacts were followed by Tropical Storm Felapi five days later. Ernest killed 78\u00a0people in Madagascar. Collectively, Ernest and Felapi damaged 5,792\u00a0buildings, which left 32,191\u00a0people homeless. Madagascar's National Emergency Centre deployed workers to do search and rescue missions and provide water to storm victims. The World Food Programme provided 45\u00a0tons of rice to affected residents, although persistent flooding disrupted relief work.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 88], "content_span": [89, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Daren\nAn area of thunderstorms formed on January\u00a013 to the northwest of the Cocos Islands in the Australian basin. The system moved westward and organized gradually, hampered by strong wind shear. On January\u00a017, the MFR classified the system as Tropical Disturbance 9 to the east of Diego Garcia. On the next day, the JTWC classified the disturbance as Tropical Cyclone 11S. The nascent system intensified into Tropical Storm Daren on January\u00a019, reaching peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 95\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph) that day according to the MFR.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Daren\nThe JTWC meanwhile estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 85\u00a0km/h (55\u00a0mph). Steered by a ridge to its southeast, Daren moved southwestward and failed to intensify further. After encountering stronger wind shear, Daren weakened, and its circulation became exposed from the thunderstorms. The JTWC discontinued advisories on January\u00a020. On the next day, the MFR downgraded Daren to a tropical depression while the system was passing north of Rodrigues. The MFR continued tracking Daren until January\u00a023, when the disturbance was passing north of Mauritius.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Felapi\nThree days after Cyclone Ernest exited the Mozambique Channel, an area of convection developed in the region, which the MFR classified as a tropical disturbance on January\u00a026. The system organized while moving toward western Madagascar. On January\u00a027, the MFR upgraded it to Moderate Tropical Storm Felapi, estimating peak winds of 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph). That day, Felapi moved ashore near Toliara, and quickly weakened back to tropical depression status. The system emerged near the southeast coast of Madagascar and turned to the northeast, transitioning into a subtropical cyclone. On January\u00a031, Felapi turned to the south, and re-intensified to its former peak intensity as a subtropical depression. The storm weakened again and accelerated to the southeast. The MFR continued tracking Felapi until February\u00a03. The JTWC did not issue advisories on the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 946]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Moderate Tropical Storm Felapi\nIn southern Madagascar, Felapi dropped additional rainfall following Cyclone Ernest. Rainfall in Morondava reached 157.2\u00a0mm (6.19\u00a0in). Winds on the island reached 61\u00a0km/h (38\u00a0mph) inland at Ranohira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 87], "content_span": [88, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Gerard\nAn area of convection persisted east of Diego Garcia on January\u00a027. The system moved west-southwestward, with its circulation displaced from the thunderstorms due to strong wind shear and cooler air. The MFR classified the system as a tropical disturbance on January\u00a029 and upgraded it to a tropical depression the next day, only to downgrade it again to a disturbance on January\u00a031, after nearly all thunderstorms diminished. For several days, the weak system drifted southwestward toward the Mascarene Islands, steered by a ridge to the southeast. On February\u00a02, thunderstorm activity increased as the system passed over Rodrigues, although the structure resembled a monsoon depression more commonly found in the Western Pacific Ocean. Over the next day, the structure became more akin to a tropical cyclone, with increasing convection and an eye-like feature near the center.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 964]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Gerard\nOn February\u00a03, the JTWC initiated advisories on Tropical Cyclone 14S, and the MFR upgraded the depression to a moderate tropical storm. Ordinarily, this would result in the system being named; however, the Mauritius Meteorological Services responsible for naming believed it had not yet attained such intensity. For about 15\u00a0hours, the unnamed tropical storm intensified while accelerating to the south due to a passing trough. At 03:00\u00a0UTC on February\u00a04, the Mauritius Meteorological Services named the storm Gerard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0014-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Gerard\nShortly thereafter, the MFR estimated peak winds of 115\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph), just shy of tropical cyclone status, and similar to the JTWC estimate of 110\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph). The MFR noted uncertainty in the peak winds, due to the fast forward speed and small size. On February\u00a05, Gerard rapidly weakened as it transitioned into an extratropical cyclone. In the report to the WMO, the MFR noted that \"for a tropical depression system of such intensity not to be named is unprecedented in the recent historyof the basin.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Hennie\nAfter a period of inactivity lasting about three weeks, a tropical disturbance formed on March\u00a019 to the west of Diego Garcia. With low wind shear, the system developed a broad area of rotating thunderstorms. It moved southwestward, steered by a ridge to the southeast. The JTWC initiated advisories on the system late on March\u00a021 as Tropical Cyclone 24S. On the next day, the MFR upgraded the disturbance to a tropical depression, and the Mauritius Meteorological Services named the system Hennie due to the threat to the Mascarene Islands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0015-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Hennie\nThe MFR upgraded Hennie to a moderate tropical storm on March\u00a023, and by that time the storm was moving southward. On March\u00a024, Hennie passed about 140\u00a0km (85\u00a0mi) east of Mauritius. That day, the MFR estimated peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph), making Hennie a severe tropical storm. The JTWC estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 120\u00a0km/h (75\u00a0mph), equivalent to a minimal hurricane. After passing the Mascarene Islands, Hennie turned to the southeast, entering an area of cooler, drier air. The circulation became exposed from the convection on March\u00a026. On the next day, the MFR reclassified Hennie as an extratropical cyclone, and continued to track the storm for several more days as it accelerated southeastward. The MFR last mentioned the remnants of Hennie on April\u00a01 when the storm was located over the far southeastern Indian Ocean.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 931]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Hennie\nThe storm dropped heavy rainfall in the Mascarene Islands, including a 24-hour precipitation total of 397\u00a0mm (15.6\u00a0in) in the mountainous peaks of R\u00e9union. Rainfall on Mauritius reached 202.8\u00a0mm (7.98\u00a0in) at Sans-Souci. The rains caused flooding on Mauritius, resulting in the closure of airports and ports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 85], "content_span": [86, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Isang\nOn March\u00a029, an area of convection formed east-southeast of Diego Garcia and consolidated around a broad developing circulation. That day, the MFR designated the system as Tropical Disturbance 17. For several days, the system waxed and waned in organization as it drifted to the west-southwest. On April\u00a03, the thunderstorms increased and organized around the center, prompting the MFR to upgrade the system to Moderate Tropical Storm Isang. That day, the JTWC initiated advisories on Tropical Cyclone 25S, located south of Diego Garcia and northeast of Rodrigues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0017-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Severe Tropical Storm Isang\nThe storm moved around the ridge to its southeast, intensifying slowly due to dry air in the region. On April\u00a05, Isang turned to the south-east, and the thunderstorms became more organized, developing an eye-like feature. On the next day, the MFR estimated peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 115\u00a0km/h (70\u00a0mph), and the JTWC estimated peak 1\u00a0minute winds of 100\u00a0km/h (60\u00a0mph). Soon after reaching peak intensity, Isang encountered stronger wind shear and cold, dry air, which resulted in weakening. The MFR re-classified the storm as an extratropical cyclone on April\u00a07, and continued tracking Isang for another day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 84], "content_span": [85, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Adeline\u2013Juliet\nThe near-equatorial trough spawned a circulation in the Australian region on April\u00a02 to the east of the Cocos Islands. The BoM upgraded the system to Tropical Cyclone Adeline on April\u00a03 while the storm was passing south of the islands. Continuing westward, the storm intensified further, reaching the equivalent of tropical cyclone status on April\u00a04. On the same day, the JTWC classified the storm as Tropical Cyclone 26S. On April\u00a05, Adeline crossed 90\u00b0E into the South-West Indian Ocean, whereupon the Mauritius Meteorological Service renamed the storm Juliet. The cyclone intensified further to an intense tropical cyclone on April\u00a06, reaching 10\u00a0minute winds of 185\u00a0km/h (115\u00a0mph) before weakening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 101], "content_span": [102, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Adeline\u2013Juliet\nCyclone Juliet began re-intensifying on April\u00a08, by which time the storm had begun moving to the west-southwest. On April\u00a09, the MFR upgraded Juliet to a very intense tropical cyclone, estimating peak 10\u00a0minute winds of 220\u00a0km/h (135\u00a0mph). This would be the last very intense tropical cyclone until Edzani in 2010. The JTWC estimated slightly higher 1-minute winds of 230\u00a0km/h (145\u00a0mph). On April\u00a010, Juliet turned toward the south, passing about 215\u00a0km (135\u00a0mi) east-southeast of Rodrigues. On the island, the cyclone's strong winds heavily damaged 15\u00a0corn plantations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 101], "content_span": [102, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0019-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Very Intense Tropical Cyclone Adeline\u2013Juliet\nAfter passing Rodrigues, the cyclone weakened due to drier air, cooler waters, and higher wind shear, causing the circulation to become exposed from the convection. Juliet weakened below tropical cyclone status on April\u00a012 while accelerating to the southeast. On the same day, the MFR reclassified the storm as extratropical. The agency followed Juliet until April\u00a016.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 101], "content_span": [102, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nOn August\u00a030, an area of low pressure developed near the edge of M\u00e9t\u00e9o-France's area of responsibility within an unseasonably active monsoonal band which coincided with the Madden\u2013Julian oscillation. Tracking towards the southeast, the low experienced strong deep-level wind shear which kept most of the convection displaced from the center of circulation. On August\u00a031, convection managed to develop around the west and southwestern portions of the low, and was designated as Tropical Depression 01.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0020-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nThe depression reached its peak intensity at this time with winds of 55\u00a0km/h (35\u00a0mph 10-minute winds) and a minimum pressure of 999 hPa (mbar). Shortly after, the depression entered Australian Bureau of Meteorology in Perth's area of responsibility. The depression later intensified into a tropical cyclone and was named Phoebe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0021-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nToward the end of October, low-pressure areas developed on both sides of the equator in the west-central Indian Ocean. The system in the North Indian Ocean failed to develop, but the Southern Hemisphere system became Tropical Disturbance 02 on October\u00a025. Moving westward, the disturbance had an organized area of thunderstorms near the center, with favorable conditions provided by the subtropical ridge. The MFR upgraded the disturbance to a depression on October\u00a026, and briefly downgraded the system after the circulation became exposed, only to upgrade it again to a depression the next day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0021-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nThe JTWC initiated warnings on the system as Tropical Cyclone 02S on October\u00a027, estimating 1-minute winds of 65\u00a0km/h (40\u00a0mph). That day, the system passed about 370\u00a0km (230\u00a0mi) north of Madagascar. Wind shear in the region caused the storm to weaken again. On October\u00a029, the weak disturbance moved ashore in eastern Tanzania near Dar es Salaam, dropping heavy rainfall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0022-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nOn December\u00a011, the MFR issued two bulletins for Subtropical Depression 05. The system formed about halfway between the southern tip of Madagascar, and failed to intensify. On January\u00a04, the MFR began issuing warnings on Tropical Depression 7 in the Mozambique Channel. The system moved southeastward, moving ashore western Madagascar between Morombe and Toliara on January\u00a05, and quickly dissipated. Later in the month, the MFR issued one warning for Zone of Disturbed Weather 10, located well to the southeast of Diego Garcia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0023-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nIn February, there was a series of three week disturbances. Tropical Depression 13 formed on February\u00a04 to the north of Mauritius. It moved southwestward and failed to intensify beyond winds of 55\u00a0km/h (35\u00a0mph). The depression passed just east of Mauritius on February\u00a06, and became extratropical two days later. On the same day, Tropical Disturbance 14 formed to the northwest of Mauritius. For two days the system drifted westward before turning back to the east, reaching a point northeast of Mauritius on February\u00a013. The disturbance then turned to the west-southwest, and was tracked by the MFR until February\u00a017. On February\u00a024, Tropical Disturbance 15 formed east of Diego Garcia. It drifted southward and intensified into a tropical depression on February\u00a026, but dissipated two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 868]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0024-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Systems, Other storms\nIn late November, Cyclone Agni from the North Indian Ocean crossed into the South-West Indian Ocean from the Northern Hemisphere while retaining its anticyclonic circulation, which is unusual due to the Coriolis effect being nonexistent along the equator. Its track was disputed and the JTWC instead assessed it as reaching as far south as 0.5 degrees north. It later crossed back into the Northern Hemisphere although its remnants later reentered the Southern Hemisphere while paralleling the Somalian coastline before dissipating shortly after.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0025-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Storm names\nA tropical disturbance is named when it reaches moderate tropical storm strength. If a tropical disturbance reaches moderate tropical storm status west of 55\u00b0E, then the Sub-regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Centre in Madagascar assigns the appropriate name to the storm. If a tropical disturbance reaches moderate tropical storm status between 55\u00b0E and 90\u00b0E, then the Sub-regional Tropical Cyclone Advisory Centre in Mauritius assigns the appropriate name to the storm. A new annual list is used every year so no names are retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 59], "content_span": [60, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180390-0026-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season, Seasonal effects\nThis table lists all of the tropical cyclones and subtropical cyclones that were monitored during the 2004\u201305 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season. Information on their intensity, duration, name, areas affected, primarily comes from RSMC La R\u00e9union. Death and damage reports come from either press reports or the relevant national disaster management agency while the damage totals are given in 2004\u00a0USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Southampton Football Club competed in the Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season, Season summary\nManager Paul Sturrock left Southampton by mutual consent in August, after only six months as manager; his resignation was attributed to a disappointing run of form and rumours of player unrest and boardroom dissatisfaction with his management. His replacement, Steve Wigley, failed to improve results and he has soon sacked with the club in deep relegation peril.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season, Season summary\nHarry Redknapp came from arch-rivals Portsmouth in an attempt to save the Saints, but despite being able to attain safety and another season of Premiership football by winning on the last day of the season, Southampton lost 2\u20131 at home to Manchester United and were relegated from the Premiership in last place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season, Kit\nThe season's kit was manufactured by the club's own brand, Saints. The kit was sponsored by English life insurance company Friends Provident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 36], "content_span": [37, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180391-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southampton F.C. season, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180392-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southeastern Conference women's basketball season\nThe 2004\u201305 SEC women's basketball season began with practices in October 2004, followed by the start of the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I women's basketball season in November. Conference play started in early January 2005 and concluded in March, followed by the 2005 SEC Women's Basketball Tournament at the Bi-Lo Center in Greenville, South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 102nd in the history of the Southern League, which is an English football competition featuring semi-professional and amateur clubs from the East Midlands, West Midlands, East, South East and South West England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League\nAlso, it was the first season after the creation of the Conference North and South, one step above the Isthmian League. Therefore, it was the inaugural season for the league at the seventh and eighth tiers in the English league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nAfter the creation of the Conference North and South placed above the Southern League, most of the previous season clubs were transferred to the newly created divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Premier Division\nHiston won the Premier Division and get a second promotion in a row along with play-off winners Hednesford Town. Hemel Hempstead, Dunstable, Stamford and Solihull Moors were relegated and returned to division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Premier Division, League formation\nThe Premier Division featured only six clubs from the previous season and 16 new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Eastern Division\nAfter the creation of the Conference North and South one step above the Southern League, most of the Premier Division clubs were transferred to the newly created divisions. Consequently, most of the Eastern Division clubs took up the empty spots in higher divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Eastern Division\nFisher Athletic won the division and were promoted along with runners-up East Thurrock United and play-off winners Maldon Town, who get the second promotion in a row. Erith & Belvedere and Tilbury finished bottom of the league and were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Eastern Division, League formation\nIn the first season as an eighth tier league, the Eastern Division featured five clubs from the previous season and 17 new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Western Division\nAfter the creation of the Conference North and South one step above the Southern League, most of the Premier Division clubs were transferred to the newly created divisions. Consequently, most of the Western Division clubs took up the empty spots in higher divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Western Division\nMangotsfield United won the division and were promoted to the Premier Division along with runners-up Yate Town and play-off winners Evesham United. Oxford City and Egham Town finished bottom of the table and were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180393-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Southern Football League, Western Division, League formation\nIn the first season as an eighth tier league, the Western Division featured eleven clubs from the previous season and eleven new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180394-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sparta Rotterdam season\nThe 2004\u20132005 Sparta Rotterdam season saw the club play in the Dutch Second League for a third year running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180395-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Spartan South Midlands Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Spartan South Midlands Football League season is the 8th in the history of Spartan South Midlands Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180395-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 16 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four clubs, promoted from Division One:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 64], "content_span": [65, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180395-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured eleven clubs which competed in the division last season, along with six new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180395-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured twelve clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180395-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Spartan South Midlands Football League, Division Two\nAlso, Old Dunstablians changed name to AFC Dunstable and Abbey National changed name to Loughton Orient.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180396-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting CP season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Sporting Clube de Portugal's 97th competitive season, 71st consecutive season in the top flight of Portuguese football, and 98th year in existence as a football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180396-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting CP season\nSporting CP's season began on 29 August 2004 with the first game of the Primeira Liga campaign, with a 3\u20132 home victory over Gil Vicente. Despite being top of the league at the half way mark of the season, and claiming home victories over rivals Benfica and Porto, the Le\u00f5es finished in third place, four points behind league champions Benfica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180396-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting CP season\nAside from the Primeira Liga, Sporting CP also competed in the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, where they entered the fourth round courtesy of their league position. After claiming straightforward victories over Naval 1\u00ba de Maio and Pampilhosa, Sporting CP were eliminated by Lisbon rivals Benfica in the sixth round. In a highly entertaining 3\u20133 game, the tie went to penalties which saw the Encarnados defeat the Le\u00f5es 7\u20136 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180396-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting CP season\nGiven their third-place finish in the 2003\u201304 season, the Le\u00f5es secured a place in the first round of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup. After progressing through the group stages, Sporting CP defeated Dutch side Feyenoord, and English sides Middlesbrough and Newcastle United to set up a semi-final tie against AZ. Despite taking a 2\u20131 lead into the second leg, the Cheese Farmers equaled the first leg result which led to extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180396-0003-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting CP season\nAfter Kew Jaliens's 109th-minute strike which gave AZ the aggregate lead, Miguel Garcia scored a stoppage time goal to see Sporting CP progress to the final on the away goals rule. In the final taking place at the Est\u00e1dio Jos\u00e9 Alvalade, Sporting CP met Russian side CSKA Moscow. Despite taking a first half lead, Sporting CP lost their advantage and conceded three second half goals to lose the final 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180396-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting CP season, First team squad\nStats as of the end of the 2004\u201305 season. Games played and goals scored only refers to appearances and goals in domestic league campaigns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180397-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season\nThe 2004\u201305 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season was the seventh consecutive season of the club in Segunda Divisi\u00f3n after its last relegation from La Liga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180397-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Overview\nDue to the high debts, Real Sporting was close to be administratively relegated at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180397-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 39], "content_span": [40, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180397-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sporting de Gij\u00f3n season, Squad, From the youth squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180398-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sri Lankan cricket season\nThe 2004\u201305 Sri Lankan cricket season featured two Test series with Sri Lanka playing against South Africa and West Indies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180398-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sri Lankan cricket season, Test series\nSri Lanka won the Test series against South Africa 1\u20130 with 1 match drawn:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180398-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sri Lankan cricket season, Test series\nSri Lanka won both matches in the two-Test series against West Indies:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180399-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team represented St. Francis College during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Ron Ganulin, who was in his fourteenth year at the helm of the St. Francis Terriers. The Terrier's home games were played at the Generoso Pope Athletic Complex. The team has been a member of the Northeast Conference since 1981.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180399-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. Francis Terriers men's basketball team\nThe Terriers were chosen to finish 7th in the NEC Preseason Coaches Poll. The team finished at 13\u201315 overall and 9\u20139 in conference play to take the 7th seed as predicted. The Terriers qualified for the NEC tournament losing in the quarter finals to Fairleigh Dickinson 60\u201378. After the season Ron Ganulin was fired as head coach of the program.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180400-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 St. John's Red Storm men's basketball team represented St. John's University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was coached by Norm Roberts in his first year at the school replacing interim head coach Kevin Clark. St. John's home games are played at Carnesecca Arena and Madison Square Garden and the team is a member of the Big East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180401-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. Lawrence Saints women's ice hockey season\nThe 2004\u201305 St. Lawrence Saints women's hockey team represented St. Lawrence University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I women's hockey season. The Saints were coached by Paul Flanagan and play their home games at Appleton Arena. The Saints were a member of the Eastern College Athletic Conference and were unable to win the NCAA Women's Ice Hockey Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180402-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. Louis Blues season\nThe 2004\u201305 St. Louis Blues season was the 38th for the National Hockey League franchise. However, its games were cancelled because of the lockout, that lasted from September 16, 2004 until July 22, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180402-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. Louis Blues season, Transactions\nThe Blues were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180402-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 St. Louis Blues season, Draft picks\nSt. Louis' picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180403-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sta. Lucia Realtors season\nThe 2004-2005 Sta. Lucia Realtors season was the 12th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180404-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stade Malherbe Caen season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 91st season in the existence of Stade Malherbe Caen and the club's first season back in the top flight of French football. In addition to the domestic league, Caen participated in this season's edition of the Coupe de France and the Coupe de la Ligue. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180405-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team represented Stanford University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was Trent Johnson's first season with the Cardinal after Mike Montgomery left to join the NBA Golden State Warriors. The Cardinal were a member of the Pacific-10 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180405-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Cardinal finished the 2003-04 season 30-2 and ranked as high as #1. In Pac-10 play they finished 17-1, only losing to Washington in the last game of the regular season. The Cardinal won the Pac-10 Tournament defeating Washington State, next Oregon, and in the Finals a revenge win over Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180405-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stanford Cardinal men's basketball team, Previous Season\nAfter finishing the regular season and Pac-10 Tournament with only one loss, the Cardinal punched their ticket to the NCAA Tournament after winning their tournament. In the NCAA Tournament they received a #1 seed in the Phoenix region facing off against the Southland Conference tournament champion UTSA. In the second round they faced the Alabama but lost to them 70-67.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 64], "content_span": [65, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Stoke City's 98th season in the Football League and the 38th in the second tier, it was also the first season in the new re-branded Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season\nWith supporter expectation now rising there were hopes that Stoke could soon begin to mount a serious attempt to return to the top flight. But after a poor summer in terms of transfer activity those hopes subsided, but soon returned after a good start to the season with Stoke going top of the table in early September. But any hopes of a promotion push soon vanished with some poor performances and most notably a lack of goals being scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season\nIn fact Stoke went on a dull run of 'binary' results, from 23 October 2004 to 22 February 2005 the only score line was that of 0\u20130, 1\u20130, 0\u20131 and 1\u20131. Supporters began to vent their anger at the lack of entertainment on offer as the side fell into mid-table obscurity and a final finish of 12th the outcome of a forgettable season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nPrior to the start of the season the Football League went through a re-branding process with the First Division been renamed the Football League Championship. Stoke had a poor summer in the transfer market with only Dave Brammer and Steve Simonsen joining the club before the start of the season. However these worries were forgotten with a fine pre-season victory over Spanish giants Valencia. Stoke began the 2004\u201305 season very well beating promotion favourites Wolverhampton Wanderers 2\u20131 on the opening day. Victories over Gillingham, Cardiff City and Derby County followed and after a thrilling win over Ipswich Town Stoke went top of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nHowever Stoke then lost their form and went seven matches without a win before beating Millwall 1\u20130 on Halloween. Prior to that on 22 October Stoke drew 1\u20131 away at Leicester City a result which sparked a dull run of results. Through until 22 February the only score line was that of 0\u20130, 1\u20130, 0\u20131 and 1\u20131 which saw manager Tony Pulis come under heavy criticism from supporters form the lack of attacking football and entertainment on offer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0003-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League\nNew signings again failed to arrive with Michael Duberry from Leeds United and Lewis Buxton from Portsmouth the only mainstays from a series of loans, however both players were defenders. Ade Akinbiyi was sold to Burnley despite there being a lack of goalscoring. The 'binary' run of results finally ended with a 3\u20132 win over Leicester City which prompted an upturn in results but any hopes of a late push for a play-off place was ended with an awful defeat at home to rock bottom Rotherham United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, FA Cup\nStoke drew Premier League side Arsenal away in the third round and took the lead through Wayne Thomas. But Stoke could not hold out and Arsenal scored twice to go through 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 53], "content_span": [54, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180406-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Stoke City F.C. season, Season review, League Cup\nStoke made another poor exit in the first round losing against League One side Oldham Athletic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180407-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sun Hei SC season\nThe 2004\u201305 Sun Hei SC season is the 11th season of Sun Hei SC in Hong Kong First Division League. The team was coached by Malaysian coach Koo Luam Khen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180408-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunderland A.F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Sunderland A.F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180408-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Season Summary\nWhile a poor start to the season saw Sunderland win just one of their first six matches, putting manager Mick McCarthy under pressure, the board kept faith with the manager, and were rewarded with a much more consistent season than the previous one. The team never dropped out of the top six after a victory over Millwall in mid-October, and their form steadily improved over the season. Along with a collapse by early-season pace-setters Ipswich Town, this lifted Sunderland to the top of the table with seven matches remaining, and they held onto top spot, returning to the Premier League after two seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 48], "content_span": [49, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180408-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 59], "content_span": [60, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180408-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 66], "content_span": [67, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180408-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunderland A.F.C. season, Players, Reserves\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 51], "content_span": [52, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180409-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunshine Tour\nThe 2004\u201305 Sunshine Tour was the fifth season of professional golf tournaments since the southern Africa based Sunshine Tour was rebranded in 2000. The Sunshine Tour represents the highest level of competition for male professional golfers in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180409-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunshine Tour\nThere were 21 tournaments on the schedule. This was an increase of four from the previous year, primarily due to the addition of the Vodacom Origins of Golf Tour, a series of six regional tournaments that has been held every year since. The other new tournament was the MTC Namibia PGA Championship. The tour was based predominantly in South Africa, with 17 of the 21 tournaments being held in the country. Two events were held in Swaziland, and one event each was held in Botswana and Namibia. Two events, the Dunhill Championship and the South African Airways Open were co-sanctioned by the European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180409-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunshine Tour, Schedule\nThe table below shows schedule of events for the 2004\u201305 Sunshine Tour. As usual, the tour consisted of two distinct parts, commonly referred to as the \"Summer Swing\" and \"Winter Swing\". Tournaments held during the Summer Swing generally had much higher prize funds, attracted stronger fields, and were the only tournaments on the tour to carry world ranking points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180409-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sunshine Tour, Schedule\nPrize funds shown did not count directly towards the Order of Merit. The number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of official money Sunshine Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 31], "content_span": [32, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180410-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Superliga Femenina\nThe 2004\u201305 Superliga season was the 17th since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180411-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sussex County Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Sussex County Football League season was the 80th in the history of Sussex County Football League a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180411-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sussex County Football League, Division One\nDivision One featured 17 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs, promoted from Division Two:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180411-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sussex County Football League, Division Two\nDivision Two featured 14 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with four new clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180411-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Sussex County Football League, Division Three\nDivision Three featured eleven clubs which competed in the division last season, along with two new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180412-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Swansea City Association Football Club's 27th season in the newly formed Football League Two, and their 76th in English football. Alan Curtis had left the club early before the season's start, with Kenny Jackett replacing him. Swansea City gained promotion by finishing in third place. In the cup competitions, they reached the third round of the FA Cup, having defeated Cheltenham Town and Stockport County, before losing 2\u20131 on aggregate against Reading. A 3\u20130 loss against Queens Park Rangers saw Swansea exit in the first round of the League Cup. They were eliminated in the second round of the Football League Trophy, but reached the final in the FAW Premier Cup, beating Wrexham 2\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180412-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swansea City A.F.C. season\nLee Trundle was the club's top goalscorer with 23 goals in all competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180413-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swedish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2004\u201305 Swedish Figure Skating Championships were held in Nyk\u00f6ping from December 8 through 12, 2004. Because they were held in December, they were officially designated by the Swedish federation as the 2004 Swedish Championships, but the champions are the 2005 Swedish Champions. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's and ladies' singles with the results part of the selection criteria for the 2005 World Championships, the 2005 European Championships, and the 2005 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180414-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swindon Town F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Swindon Town's fifth season in the Division Two since their relegation from the second tier of English football in 2000. Alongside the league campaign, Swindon Town will also competed in the FA Cup, League Cup and the Football League Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180415-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swiss Challenge League\nStatistics of the 2004\u201305 season of the Swiss Challenge League. Yverdon-Sport were the league champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180416-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swiss Cup\nSwiss Cup 2004\u201305 was the eightieth season of Switzerland's annual cup competition. It began on 17 September with the first games of Round 1 and ended on 16 May 2005 with the Final held at St. Jakob-Park, Basel. The winners earned a place in the second qualifying round of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180416-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swiss Cup, Round 1\nTeams from Super League and Challenge League were seeded in this round. In a match, the home advantage was granted to the team from the lower league, if applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 26], "content_span": [27, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180417-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swiss Super League\nThe 2004\u201305 Swiss Super League was the 108th season of top-tier football in Switzerland. The competition is officially named AXPO Super League due to sponsoring purposes. It began on 17 July 2004 and has ended on 29 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180417-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Swiss Super League, Overview\nThe Swiss Super League season 2004\u201305 was originally contested by ten teams. On 4 February 2005 the parent company of Servette FC was declared bankrupt. As a consequence of the bankruptcy Servette FC had their license revoked. The eighteen results from the team's first half of the season remained in the league table. The club's second half matches were cancelled entirely and so the second half of the season was competed with only nine clubs. These each played another double round-robin schedule. Each of the nine clubs had played 34 matches at the end of the season. Servettes parent company had run up debts of over 10 million Swiss francs and had not paid the players wages since the previous November. FC Servette were subsequently demoted to the Second Tier. The championship was won by FC Basel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180418-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team represented Syracuse University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I season. This was the first season in which Syracuse used its current nickname of \"Orange\"; previously, Syracuse teams had been known as \"Orangemen\" and \"Orangewomen\", depending on sex. The head coach was Jim Boeheim, serving for his 29th year. The team played its home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York. The team finished with a 27\u20137 (11\u20135) record, while making it to the first round of the NCAA tournament. The team was led by senior Hakim Warrick and junior Gerry McNamara. Seniors Josh Pace and Craig Forth were also major contributors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180418-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Syracuse Orange men's basketball team\nDue to NCAA sanctions for use of ineligible players, 15 wins from this season have been vacated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180419-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 S\u00fcper Lig\nThe 2004\u201305 S\u00fcper Lig was 47th edition of Turkish league and 4th edition of Turkish Super League. Fenerbah\u00e7e won their 16th title, being 3 points ahead Trabzonspor and 4 points ahead Galatasaray. In the final fixture, Diyarbak\u0131rspor were 1 point behind Sakaryaspor. Malatyaspor and Diyarbak\u0131rspor are rivals, but Malatyaspor, defeating 4-2 Sakaryaspor at home, allowed Diyarbak\u0131rspor to remain, winning 1-0 away over Samsunspor. Galatasaray won the Cup, beating rivals Fenerbah\u00e7e with 5-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180420-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 TBHSL season\nThe 2004\u201305 Turkish Ice Hockey Super League season was the 13th season of the Turkish Ice Hockey Super League, the top level of ice hockey in Turkey. Ten teams participated in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180421-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Talk 'N Text Phone Pals season\nThe 2004-2005 Talk 'N Text Phone Pals season was the 15th season of the franchise in the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180421-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Talk 'N Text Phone Pals season, Occurrences\nGame one of the 2004-05 Philippine Cup finals won by Talk 'N Text, 89-71 over the Barangay Ginebra Kings on January 30, were placed under protest when the Phone Pals violated the PBA's suspension on Asi Taulava which the board refused to lift despite a recent Quezon City court ruling ordering the PBA to reinstate the Phone Pals' top player, the league forfeited the series opener in favor of Barangay Ginebra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180422-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tampa Bay Lightning season\nThe 2004\u201305 Tampa Bay Lightning season was the franchise's 13th season in the National Hockey League. Its games were canceled due to the lockout of players. Because the entire season was canceled due to the lockout, the Lightning were allowed to retain their status as the Stanley Cup champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180422-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Transactions\nThe Lightning were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180422-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tampa Bay Lightning season, Draft picks\nTampa Bay's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nThe 2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal was the 65th edition of the Portuguese football knockout tournament, organized by the Portuguese Football Federation (FPF). The 2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal began on 5 September 2004. The final was played on 29 May 2005 at the Est\u00e1dio Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nBenfica were the previous holders, having defeated Porto 2\u20131 in the previous season's final. Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal defeated holders Benfica, 2\u20131 in the final to win their third Ta\u00e7a de Portugal. Vit\u00f3ria by winning the Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, qualified for the 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup first round. Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal would also qualify for the 2005 Superta\u00e7a C\u00e2ndido de Oliveira.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, First round\nFor the first round draw, teams were drawn against each other in accordance to their geographical location. The draw was split up into four sections: teams from the north, the center, the south and the Azores region. All first round cup ties were played on the 5\u201315 September. Due to the odd number of teams at this stage of the competition, Angrense progressed to the next round due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition. The first round of the cup saw teams from the Terceira Divis\u00e3o (IV) start the competition alongside some teams who registered to participate in the cup from the Portuguese District Leagues (V).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Second round\nTies were played between the 19 September and 5 October. The second round saw teams from the Portuguese Second Division (III) enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Third round\nThe draw for the third round took place on the 24 September. Ties were played on the 5\u201313 October. Due to the odd number of teams at this stage of the competition, Marco progressed to the next round due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition. The third round saw teams from the Liga de Honra (II) enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fourth round\nThe draw for the fourth round took place on the 11 October. All fourth round cup ties were played on the 26\u201327 October. Due to the odd number of teams at this stage of the competition, Belenenses progressed to the next round due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition. The fourth round saw teams from the Primeira Liga (I) enter the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Fifth round\nTies were played on the 21\u201323 December and 4\u201312 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180423-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Sixth round\nTies were played on the 25\u201326 January. Due to the odd number of participants involved in the 2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal, Beira-Mar qualified for the quarter finals due to having no opponent to face at this stage of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180424-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Temple Owls men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Temple Owls men's basketball team represented Temple University in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They were led by head coach John Chaney and played their home games at the Liacouras Center. The Owls are members of the Atlantic 10 Conference. They finished the season 16\u201314, 11\u20135 in A-10 play, and reached the 2005 National Invitation Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180425-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Terceira Divis\u00e3o\nThe 2004\u201305 Terceira Divis\u00e3o season was the 55th season of the competition and the 15th season of recognised fourth-tier football in Portugal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180425-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Overview\nThe league was contested by 118 teams in 7 divisions of 10 to 18 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180425-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Promotion Playoff\nThe last A\u00e7ores team in the Segunda Divis\u00e3o competed against the A\u00e7ores champions of the Terceira Divis\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180425-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Terceira Divis\u00e3o, Promotion Playoff\nMadalena were promoted to the Segunda Divis\u00e3o and Lusit\u00e2nia relegated to the Terceira Divis\u00e3o.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180426-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by BHGbot (talk | contribs) at 22:33, 19 June 2020 (WP:BHGbot 6 (List 5): eponymous category first, per MOS:CATORDER; WP:GENFIXES). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180426-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n\nThe 2004\u201305 Tercera Divisi\u00f3n was the fourth division in Spanish football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180427-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team represented The University of Texas at Austin in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Big 12 Conference. They were coached by Rick Barnes in his seventh season as head coach and played their home games at the Frank Erwin Center. The Longhorns finished the season with are record of 20\u201311, 9\u20137 in Big 12 play in a tie for fifth place. They lost to Colorado in the first round of the Big 12 Tournament. They received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament as a No. 8 seed where they lost to Nevada in the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180427-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Texas Longhorns men's basketball team, Previous Season\nThe Longhorns finished the 2003\u201304]] season with an overall record of 25\u20138, 12\u20134 in Big East play to finish in a tie for second place in conference. They lost to Oklahoma State in the finals of the Big 12 Tournament. They received an at-large bid as a No. 3 seed to the NCAA Tournament. In the Tournament, they defeated Princeton and North Carolina to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. there they lost to Xavier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 62], "content_span": [63, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180428-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Texas Tech Red Raiders basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Texas Tech Red Raiders men's basketball team represented Texas Tech University in the Big 12 Conference during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The head coach was Bob Knight, his 4th year with the team. The Red Raiders played their home games in the United Spirit Arena in Lubbock, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180429-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Thai League\nThe 2004-05 Thai Premier League had 10 teams. Two clubs would be relegated as the league would be expanded to 12 teams for the 2006 season. Two teams promoted from the rival Provincial League and two clubs from Thailand Division 1 League. The team that finished in 8th position would play in a relegation play-off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180429-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Thai League, Kings Trophy\nThe King's Trophy was an end of season match between the two clubs that finished first and second in the final Premier League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180429-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Thai League, Kings Trophy\nThailand Tobacco Monopoly, who won the Premier League, beat league runners up Provincial Electricity Authority 4-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180429-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Thai League, Queens Cup\nThe Queen's Cup was postponed because of lack of sponsorship, will be held next year but with reduced prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180430-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top 16 season\nThe 2004-05 Top 16 season was the top level of French club rugby in 2004-05. It was the final season under the 16 club format, as the competition became the Top 14 for the 2005-06 season. Biarritz Olympique won the championship, defeating Stade Fran\u00e7ais Paris in the final at Stade de France. FC Grenoble, B\u00e9ziers and Auch were relegated to Rugby Pro D2 after the 2004-05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League\nThe 2004\u201305 Top League was the second season of Japan's domestic rugby union competition, the Top League. Toshiba Brave Lupus won both the league round-robin and the Microsoft Cup knockout competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Top League season, Final standings\n\u2022 The top 8 teams qualified to the Microsoft Cup play-offs. \u2022 The top 4 teams also qualified to for entry into the All-Japan Rugby Football Championship. \u2022 Teams 9 and 10 went through to the promotion and relegation play-offs against regional challengers. \u2022 Teams 11 and 12 were automatically relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Top League season, Final standings\nFour points for a win, two for a draw, one bonus point for four tries or more (BP1) and one bonus point for losing by seven or less (BP2). If teams are level at any stage, tiebreakers are applied in the following order:\u00a0\u2022 Difference between points for and against\u00a0\u2022 Total number of points for\u00a0\u2022 Number of matches won\u00a0\u2022 Aggregate number of points scored in matches between tied teams\u00a0\u2022 Number of matches won excluding the first match, then the second and so on until the tie is settled", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Microsoft Cup play-offs\nThe top eight teams in the league played off for the Microsoft Cup (2005) knock out tournament, which was won by Toshiba Brave Lupus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Microsoft Cup play-offs, Semi-finals\nThe number of tries and goals being equal, the result was decided in favour of Yamaha by a lottery held at Hanazono after the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Microsoft Cup play-offs, Final\nIn the season Toshiba Brave Lupus were top of the Top League, and Yamaha were second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 50], "content_span": [51, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Top League Challenge Series\nFukuoka Sanix Bombs and Secom Rugguts won promotion to the 2005\u201306 Top League via the 2005 Top League Challenge Series, while Honda Heat and Toyota Industries Shuttles progressed to the promotion play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Promotion and relegation play-offs\nTwo promotion/relegation matches (Irekaesen) were played with the winners qualifying for the 2005\u201306 Top League. The 10th-placed team from the Top League against the 3rd-placed team from Challenge 1. The 9th-placed team from the Top League against the 1st-placed team from Challenge 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180431-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Top League, Promotion and relegation play-offs\nSo Ricoh and World stayed in the Top League for the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 54], "content_span": [55, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180432-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Torneo Argentino A\nThe 2004\u201305 Argentine Torneo Argentino A was the tenth season of third division professional football in Argentina. A total of 20 teams competed; the champion was promoted to Primera B Nacional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180432-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Torneo Argentino A, Apertura 2004, First Stage\nIn every round the bye team played against the bye team of the other zone: Team from Zone A vs Team from Zone B and Team from Zone C vs Team from Zone D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180432-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Torneo Argentino A, Clausura 2005, First Stage\nIn every round the bye team played against the bye team of the other zone: Team from Zone A vs Team from Zone B and Team from Zone C vs Team from Zone D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 54], "content_span": [55, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180432-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Torneo Argentino A, Relegation Playoff\n1: First leg awarded 0-1; originally 3-0 but Real Arroyo Seco used ineligible players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180433-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Maple Leafs season\nThe 2004\u201305 Toronto Maple Leafs season was the 88th season of the franchise, 78th season as the Maple Leafs. The entire season's games were cancelled as a result of the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180433-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Regular season\nThe 2004\u201305 NHL lockout resulted in the cancellation of the entire season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180433-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Transactions\nThe Maple Leafs have been involved in the following transactions during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180433-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Maple Leafs season, Draft picks\nThe 2004 NHL Entry Draft was the 42nd NHL Entry Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Raptors' tenth season in the National Basketball Association. A new management team of head coach Sam Mitchell, and General Manager Rob Babcock was hired before the 2004\u201305 season by the Raptors. On December 17, 2004, disgruntled All-Star Vince Carter was traded to the New Jersey Nets for Eric Williams, Aaron Williams, and Alonzo Mourning. Mourning would never report to Toronto and he was waived not long after the trade. He later signed with the Miami Heat for his second stint. Guard Alvin Williams missed the entire season due to right knee inflammation. The Raptors finished fourth in the Atlantic Division with a 33\u201349 record, which was the same record as the previous season. Sophomore star Chris Bosh showed improvement averaging 16.8 points and 8.9 rebounds per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season\nThis season marked the end of the Vince Carter era and began the Chris Bosh era in Toronto and the Raptors first season without Carter on the roster since the 1997-98 season. Carter, now as a Net, returned to Toronto on April 15, 2005. He was booed by the Toronto crowd during starting lineups and whenever he touched the ball. This tradition continued until 2015, where he has since played for the Phoenix Suns, Orlando Magic, Dallas Mavericks, Memphis Grizzlies, Sacramento Kings, the Atlanta Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Offseason\nIn the NBA draft, the Raptors selected Rafael Ara\u00fajo and Albert Miralles. Miralles was traded to the Miami Heat for Pape Sow and a 2005 2nd round draft pick on draft day. Ara\u00fajo would only play three seasons in the NBA: two with the Raptors, and one with the Utah Jazz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Offseason\nOver the offseason, the Raptors signed two free agents. On July 14, they signed Rafer Alston, and on August 18, they signed Loren Woods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nThe Raptors started the season well, winning their first three games. On November 9, they lost against the Sacramento Kings, but they would win the next game against the Utah Jazz. the Raptors then suffered a five-game losing streak, which was snapped when they won against the San Antonio Spurs on November 21. They would lose against the Washington Wizards on November 23, and the next day, they would win against the New York Knicks. They would lose two straight games against the Knicks and the Wizards, and they would win their last game of the month of November against the Miami Heat. At the end of November, the Raptors had a 7\u20139 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nDecember was the team's worst month of the season, winning 20% of their games. They started the month with a seven-game losing streak which ended on the 15th with a win against the Minnesota Timberwolves. On the 17th, Vince Carter was traded to the New Jersey Nets for Alonzo Mourning, Aaron Williams, Eric Williams, a 2005 1st round draft pick, and a 2006 1st round draft pick. The same day, the Raptors played against the Indiana Pacers and lost. Aaron Williams, Eric Williams, and Mourning did not play the game due to a pending physical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nIronically, the next game (on December 19) was against the New Jersey Nets. However, Vince Carter did not play in this game. The Raptors beat the Nets 110-99. The next day, the Raptors lost to the Houston Rockets. On December 22, the Raptors beat the Utah Jazz. To end the month, the Raptors went on a 3-game losing streak against the Phoenix Suns, the Los Angeles Lakers, and the Golden State Warriors. At the end of the month, the Raptors had a 10-21 record, and during the month of December, they were 0-10 on the road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nJanuary was the team's best month of the season, and they won eight of the 14 games they played during the month. They won two games in a row against the Orlando Magic and the Sacramento Kings to begin the month, and they lost on January 7 against the Milwaukee Bucks. They once again won two games in a row, beating the Golden State Warriors on the 9th, and the Boston Celtics on the 12th. In the game against the Celtics, Morris Peterson scored a team-season high of 37 points. They were defeated by the Philadelphia 76ers on the 14th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nThe Raptors then went on a three-game winning streak, which would be ended by a loss against the Wizards on the 21st. They won against the Charlotte Bobcats on the 23rd, and they would end the month with a three-game losing streak. At the end of the month, the Raptors had an 18-27 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nIn February, the team once again won more than 50% of their games played in the month. In every game played during February, either Chris Bosh or Jalen Rose was the team's leading scorer. The team started February by winning two consecutive games: the first against the Indiana Pacers, and the second against the Wizards. The Raptors then lost four games in a row against the Dallas Mavericks, the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Milwaukee Bucks, and the Philadelphia 76ers. On February 11, the team waived Alonzo Mourning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0007-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nHe would sign with the Miami Heat on March 1, marking his second tenure with the Heat. The Raptors won on February 13 against the Los Angeles Clippers, which would be followed by a loss to the Chicago Bulls on the 16th. The team ended the month with a three-game winning streak, and their record at the end of the month was 24-32.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nIn March, the Raptors won a third of their games played during the month. They started the month with back-to-back losses against the San Antonio Spurs and the Memphis Grizzlies. They then won against the New Orleans Hornets on the 6th. The next day, the Raptors lost to the Dallas Mavericks, which was followed by a win against the Orlando Magic. On the 11th, they lost against the Atlanta Hawks. On the 13th, they won against the 76ers. They lost two consecutive games against the Celtics and the Detroit Pistons. On the 20th, the Raptors won against the Cleveland Cavaliers. The Raptors then lost two straight games against the Chicago Bulls and the 76ers. They won against Atlanta on the 26th, and the Raptors ended the month with two losses against the Miami Heat and the Orlando Magic. At the end of the month, the Raptors' record was 29-42.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 894]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\n\"Boos are boos. You notice it when you get out there, but my focus was on getting the job done and trying to get a win. This game wasn't for bragging rights, this was for the opportunity to get into the playoffs, get one step closer to the playoffs.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nIn April, the Raptors had a mediocre month. Having a 4-7 record for games played in April, they were successful on the road, but they were unsuccessful at home. Their first game of the month was a win against the Charlotte Bobcats. They would then lose two games against the Pistons and the Grizzlies. On April 8, the Raptors won against the Hawks, which was also followed by two straight losses to the Bulls and the Pacers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180434-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toronto Raptors season, Regular season\nOn April 12, the Raptors won against the New York Knicks, which was again followed by two consecutive losses, which were to the Nets and the Celtics. In the April 15 home game against the Nets, Vince Carter returned to Toronto to face his former team. As the starting lineups were announced, Carter was booed by Raptors fans. On April 19, the Raptors won against the Milwaukee Bucks, and they lost the last game of the season against the Cleveland Cavaliers on April 20. At the end of the regular season, the Raptors had a 33-49 record, and they missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180435-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Al\nThe 2004\u201305 Toto Cup Al was the 21st season of the third most important football tournament in Israel since its introduction. This was the first edition to be played with clubs of the Israeli Permier League, after 5 seasons of joint competition with Israeli Premier League and Liga Leumit clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180435-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Al\nThe competition began on 6 August 2004 and ended on 6 April 2005, with Hapoel Petah Tikva beating F.C. Ashdod 4\u20132 on penalties after 3\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180435-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Al, Format\nThe 12 Israeli Permier League clubs were split into three groups, each with 4 clubs. The two top clubs in each group, along with the two best third-placed clubs, advanced to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180435-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Al, Group stage\nThe matches were played from 6 August to 15 December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 32], "content_span": [33, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180436-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Artzit\nThe 2004\u201305 Toto Cup Artzit was the 6th time the cup was being contested as a competition for the third tier in the Israeli football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180436-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Artzit\nThe competition was won by Hapoel Ashkelon, who had beaten Hapoel Ramat Gan 4\u20132 on penalties after 3\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180437-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Leumit\nThe 2004\u201305 Toto Cup Leumit was the 16th time the cup was being contested as a competition for the second tier in the Israeli football league system, and the first time since 1998\u201399 that the competition was contested as a separate competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180437-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Leumit\nThe competition was won by Maccabi Netanya, who had beaten Hapoel Kfar Saba 3\u20132 on penalties after 1\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180437-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Leumit, Format\nThe 12 Israeli Permier League clubs were split into three groups, each with 4 clubs. The two top clubs in each group, Along with the two best third-placed clubs, advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180437-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Toto Cup Leumit, Group stage\nThe matches were played from 6 August to 30 November 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 36], "content_span": [37, 95]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Tottenham Hotspur's 13th season in the Premier League and 27th successive season in the top division of the English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Season summary\nTottenham made a promising start under Jacques Santini and looked to be challenging for a place in Europe, but Santini resigned in November after only 12 games, citing personal reasons. He was replaced by his assistant coach Martin Jol, whose first match in charge saw arch-rivals Arsenal win a thrilling North London derby 5\u20134. Following the derby defeat results picked up and Tottenham were soon back amongst the race for a UEFA Cup spot, but a draw with Blackburn Rovers on the last day of the season saw their slim European hopes dashed. Nonetheless, good cup runs and the resurgence in the league under Jol gave Spurs fans hopes of a greater push for European football the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Players, Reserve squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Statistics, Goal scorers\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180438-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tottenham Hotspur F.C. season, Statistics, Clean sheets\nThe list is sorted by shirt number when total clean sheets are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 63], "content_span": [64, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180439-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Trabzonspor season\nIn the 2004\u201305 season, Trabzonspor finished in second place in the S\u00fcper Lig. In the Turkish Cup, the club was eliminated in the semi-finals by Galatasaray. The top scorer of the team was Fatih Tekke, who scored 34 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180439-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Trabzonspor season\nThis article shows statistics of the club's players and matches during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180440-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1\nThe 2004\u201305 Tunisian Ligue Professionnelle 1 season was the 79th season of top-tier football in Tunisia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League\nThe 2004-05 Turkish Basketball League was the 39th season of the top-tier professional basketball league in Turkey. The season started on October 22, 2004. Efes Pilsen won their twelfth national championship this season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, Turkish Basketball League 2004-05 Play-offs\nQuarterfinal and Semifinal series are 5-match series. The teams reaches the first 3 wins is through to the next round. The team which has won both regular season match-ups starts with a 1\u20130 lead to the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, Turkish Basketball League 2004-05 Play-offs\nFinal series are 7-match series and the team reaches first 4 wins is the champion of the Turkish Basketball League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 78], "content_span": [79, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, Quarterfinals\n(1) Efes Pilsen (24-2) vs. (8) Tekelspor (10-16) (Series starts 1-0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, Quarterfinals\n(2) \u00dclkerspor (21-5) vs. (7) T\u00fcrk Telekom (13-13) (Series starts 1-0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, Quarterfinals\n(3) Be\u015fikta\u015f (17-9) vs. (6) Tuborg Pilsener (16-10) (Series starts 0-0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, Quarterfinals\n(4) Fenerbah\u00e7e (16-10) vs. (5) P\u0131nar Kar\u015f\u0131yaka (16-10) (Series starts 0-0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, Semifinals\n(1) Efes Pilsen (24-2) vs. (4) Fenerbah\u00e7e (16-10) (Series starts 0-0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 96], "content_span": [97, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, Semifinals\n(2) \u00dclkerspor (21-5) vs. (3) Be\u015fikta\u015f (17-9) (Series starts 0-1)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 96], "content_span": [97, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180441-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Basketball League, 2004-05 Play-off seedings, results, and schedules, League Finals\n(1) Efes Pilsen (24-2) vs. (8) Be\u015fikta\u015f (17-9) (Series starts 1-0)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 99], "content_span": [100, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180442-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Turkish Cup\nThe 2004\u20132005 Turkish Cup was the 43rd edition of the annual tournament that determined the association football Super League (S\u00fcper Lig) Turkish Cup (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Kupas\u0131) champion under the auspices of the Turkish Football Federation (Turkish: T\u00fcrkiye Futbol Federasyonu; TFF). Galatasaray SK successfully contested over their archrivals Fenerbah\u00e7e SK 5\u20131 in the final. The results of the tournament also determined which clubs would be promoted or relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180443-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 U.C. Sampdoria season\nU.C. Sampdoria enjoyed its best season since 1993\u201394, when the club finished third in Serie A and won Coppa Italia. In 2004-05 Sampdoria was able to finish fifth in the standings, thanks to a robust defence and a goalscoring ace in secondary striker Francesco Flachi, who played the football of his life. With only 29 goals conceded, the defence of Sampdoria was fully comparable with those of top sides Juventus and Milan, and coach Walter Novellino was hailed for the strong performance in the club's second season since its return to Serie A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180444-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season\nU.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo played the season 2004-05 in the Serie A league. It was the first time Palermo entered the top division since 1973.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180444-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nPalermo returned to Serie A in 2004 as Serie B champions. Francesco Guidolin was confirmed at the helm of the rosanero and a number of valuable signings were made in the summer market: among them, Andrea Barzagli, Cristian Zaccardo, Simone Barone (all three then part of the Italian squad that won the 2006 FIFA World Cup) and Argentines Mariano Gonz\u00e1lez and Ernesto Far\u00edas. The team was widely expected to be a candidate for a mid-table place because of the high quality of its roster. All these events provoked a notable excitement among the local fanbase, leading to a sale of over 30,000 season tickets which caused each Stadio Renzo Barbera seat to be assigned to a season ticket holder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 748]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180444-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nPalermo enjoyed a great start and quickly entered into the race for a UEFA Cup spot, ending the first half of the season in fifth place, only three points behind fourth-placed Inter. For a while the team appeared also capable to fight for a place in the next Champions' League, but failed in do so and Udinese eventually gained the last of the four available spots. Palermo ended in sixth place with 53 points, nine behind Udinese and eight behind fifth-placed Sampdoria. After the final match, Guidolin tended his resignations, and Luigi Delneri was quickly appointed at his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180444-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 U.S. Citt\u00e0 di Palermo season, Review and events\nIn the Coppa Italia tournament, the rosanero reached the round of 16 after having defeated Salernitana 3-2 on aggregate. The return match notably marked the only two goals by Argentine striker Ernesto Far\u00edas, who failed to impress in the Italian top league and was sold to River Plate in the January transfer window. In order to replace him, Davide Possanzini was signed by from AlbinoLeffe. Palermo then went on to be defeated 4-1 on aggregate by AC Milan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 55], "content_span": [56, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180445-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UAE Football League, Overview\nIt was contested by 14 teams, and Al-Wahda FC (Abu Dhabi) won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180446-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team represented the University of California, Irvine during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Anteaters were led by 8th year head coach Pat Douglass and played at the Bren Events Center. They were members of the Big West Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180446-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team, Previous season\nThe 2003\u201304 UC Irvine Anteaters men's basketball team finished the season with a record of 11\u201317 and 6\u201312 in Big West play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 66], "content_span": [67, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180447-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics\nThe 2004\u20132005 UCI Track Cycling World Cup Classics is a multi race tournament over a season of track cycling. The season ran from 5 November 2004 to 20 February 2005. The World Cup is organised by the UCI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180448-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team represented the University of California, Los Angeles in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. UCLA entered the Pacific-10 conference tournament with a regular season conference record of 11\u20137. After losing in the first round, their final conference record was 11\u20138 (7 wins more than the previous season). The team reached the round of 64 in the NCAA tournament, losing to the Texas Tech Red Raiders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180449-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UE Lleida season\nThis is a complete list of appearances by members of the professional playing squad of UE Lleida during the 2004\u201305 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League\nThe 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League was the 50th season of UEFA's premier European club football tournament, and the 13th since it was rebranded as the UEFA Champions League in 1992. The competition was won by Liverpool, who beat Milan on penalties in the final, having come back from 3\u20130 down at half-time. Liverpool captain Steven Gerrard was named as UEFA's Footballer of the Year for his key role in the final and throughout the Champions League season. The final, played at the Atat\u00fcrk Olympic Stadium in Istanbul, Turkey, is often regarded as one of the best in the history of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League\nAs it was their fifth European Cup title, Liverpool were awarded the trophy permanently, and received the UEFA Badge of Honour. A new trophy was made for the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League\nPorto were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Milan's cross-city rival Internazionale in the first knockout round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation\nA total of 72 teams from 48 of the 52 UEFA member associations participated in the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League (the exception being Liechtenstein, which does not organise a domestic league, Andorra and San Marino). Kazakhstan also did not participate this year as none of their clubs were able to obtain UEFA license. The association ranking based on the UEFA country coefficients was used to determine the number of participating teams for each association:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nFor the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, the associations are allocated places according to their 2003 UEFA country coefficients, which takes into account their performance in European competitions from 1998\u20131999 to 2002\u201303.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Association ranking\nApart from the allocation based on the country coefficients, associations may have additional teams participating in the Champions League, as noted below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Distribution\nSince the title holders (Porto) qualified for the Champions League group stage through their domestic league, and the group stage spot reserved for the title holders is vacated, while no team from Kazakhstan was admitted, the following changes to the default access list are made:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 72], "content_span": [73, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Association team allocation, Teams\nLeague positions of the previous season shown in parentheses (TH: Champions League title holders).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Round and draw dates\nThe schedule of the competition is as follows (all draws are held at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland, unless stated otherwise).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 51], "content_span": [52, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\n16 winners from the third qualifying round, 10 champions from countries ranked 1\u201310, and six second-placed teams from countries ranked 1\u20136 were drawn into eight groups of four teams each. The top two teams in each group will advance to the Champions League play-offs, while the third-placed teams will advance to the third round of the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Group stage\nMaccabi Tel Aviv made their debut appearance in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180450-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League, Knockout stage, Final\nAs winners of the competition, Liverpool went on to represent UEFA at the 2005 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage\nThe 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage matches took take place between 14 September and 8 December 2004. The group stage featured teams qualified by their league positions and others who had come through qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding structure\nThe 32 teams were divided into four pots. Pot 1 comprised the previous year's title holders Porto and the top seven clubs in the team ranking. Pot 2 contained the following eight clubs in the rankings and likewise for Pots 3 and 4. Each group contained one team from each pot. A team's seeding was determined by the UEFA coefficients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, Seeding structure\nClubs from the same association were paired up to split the matchdays between Tuesday and Wednesday. Clubs with the same pairing letter would play on different days, ensuring that teams from the same city (e.g. Milan and Internazionale, who also share a stadium) did not play on the same day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 60], "content_span": [61, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, Format\nDuring the group stage, each team plays the other three teams in their group twice (home and away or at an alternative venue). The top two teams with the most points or who meet the tie-breaking criteria progress to the first knockout round. The third placed side entered the UEFA Cup in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, Format, Tie-breaking criteria\nBased on paragraph 4.05 in the UEFA regulations for the current season, if two or more teams are equal on points on completion of the group matches, the following criteria are applied to determine the rankings:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 72], "content_span": [73, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180451-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League group stage, Groups, Group B\nWith Dynamo Kyiv leading 1\u20130, the match was abandoned at half-time after referee Anders Frisk was hit by an object thrown from the crowd. UEFA awarded Dynamo Kyiv a 3\u20130 win and ordered Roma to play their next two European games behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180452-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League knockout stage\nThe knockout stage of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League featured the 16 teams that had finished in the top two of each of the eight groups in the group stage and lasted from 22 February to 25 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180452-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League knockout stage\nThe final pitted four-time European Cup winners Liverpool of England against six-time winners Milan of Italy. After Milan went 3\u20130 up in the first half, Liverpool scored three goals in the space of six second-half minutes before winning the match 3\u20132 on penalties in what has since become known as the \"Miracle of Istanbul.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180452-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League knockout stage\nTimes are CET/CEST, as listed by UEFA (local times are in parentheses).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180452-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Format\nThe knockout stage followed a simple, single-elimination format, with the ties in each round (except for the final) being played over two legs, with whichever team scored the most goals over the course of the two legs progressing to the next round. In the case of both teams scoring the same number of goals over the two legs, the winner was determined by whichever team scored more goals in their away leg. If the teams could still not be separated, a period of extra time lasting 30 minutes (split into two 15-minute halves) was played. If the scores were still level after extra time, the winner was decided via a penalty shoot-out. As in every season of the competition, the final was played as a single match at a neutral venue, which in 2005 was the Atat\u00fcrk Olympic Stadium in Istanbul, Turkey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180452-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Quarter-finals, Second leg\nMilan won 5\u20130 on aggregate. Match was abandoned after 72 minutes as Milan lead 1\u20130 due to flares thrown onto the pitch by Internazionale fans, one of which struck Milan goalkeeper Dida. UEFA awarded Milan a 3\u20130 win (5\u20130 aggregate) and ordered Internazionale to play their next four European games behind closed doors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180452-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League knockout stage, Final\nAs winners of the competition, Liverpool went on to represent UEFA at the 2005 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds\nThe qualifying rounds for the 2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League began on 13 July 2004. In total, there were three qualifying rounds which provided 16 clubs to join the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nThe draw for this round was performed on 25 June 2004 in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round, Seeding\nSkonto HJK Helsinki Gorica Sheriff Tiraspol \u0160iroki Brijeg WIT Georgia Pobeda FBK Kaunas Gomel KR Reykjav\u00edk", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, First qualifying round, Seeding\nSliema Wanderers Shelbourne Pyunik Rhyl Tirana Flora Tallinn Linfield Jeunesse Esch Neftchi Baku HB T\u00f3rshavn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nThe draw for this round was performed on 25 June 2004 in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 72], "content_span": [73, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nSparta Prague Club Brugge Rosenborg Wis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w Red Star Belgrade Shakhtar Donetsk Copenhagen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nMaccabi Tel Aviv Ferencv\u00e1ros Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti Hajduk Split Trabzonspor CSKA Moscow Djurg\u00e5rden", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nYoung Boys Lokomotiv Plovdiv APOEL \u017dilina Skonto HJK Helsinki Gorica", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round, Seeding\nSheriff Tiraspol Neftchi Baku WIT Georgia Pyunik FBK Kaunas Tirana Shelbourne", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 81], "content_span": [82, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round\nThe draw for this round was performed on 30 July 2004 in Nyon, Switzerland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nReal Madrid Manchester United Deportivo La Coru\u00f1a Liverpool Juventus Internazionale PSV Eindhoven Bayer Leverkusen", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nSparta Prague Monaco Anderlecht Club Brugge Rangers Rosenborg PAOK Dynamo Kyiv", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nWis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w Benfica Basel Red Star Belgrade Grazer AK Maccabi Haifa Shakhtar Donetsk Gorica", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Seeding\nMaccabi Tel Aviv Ferencv\u00e1ros Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti Shelbourne Trabzonspor Ban\u00edk Ostrava CSKA Moscow Djurg\u00e5rden", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180453-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds, Third qualifying round, Matches\nMaccabi Tel Aviv won 4\u20130 on aggregate. The first match finished 2\u20131 to Maccabi Tel Aviv but was awarded 3\u20130 against PAOK for fielding a suspended player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 80], "content_span": [81, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup was the 34th edition of the UEFA Cup. The format of the competition had changed from previous seasons, replacing that from the previous one after the abolition of the Cup Winners' Cup in 1999; an extra qualifying round was introduced, as was a group phase after the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup\nThe group stage operated in a single round-robin format consisting of eight groups of five teams, each team plays two games at home and two away and the top three finishers of each group progress to the knock-out round, joining the eight third-placed teams from the UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup\nThe tournament was won by CSKA Moscow, coming from behind in the final against Sporting CP, in whose home stadium the match was played. It was the first win by a Russian side in any European competition. The match was refereed by Graham Poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup\nValencia were the defending champions, but were eliminated by Steaua Bucure\u0219ti in the Round of 32 after dropping out of the UEFA Champions League Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, Teams\nThe labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 23], "content_span": [24, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, Qualifying rounds, First qualifying round\nMatches were played on 12 July and 29 July 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 59], "content_span": [60, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, Qualifying rounds, Second qualifying round\nMatches were played on 12 August and 26 August 2004", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 60], "content_span": [61, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, Group stage\nBased on paragraph 4.06 in the UEFA regulations for the current season, tiebreakers, if necessary, are applied in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180454-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup, Group stage\nTeams that have clinched a spot in the round of 32 are highlighted in green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180455-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup final phase\nThe final phase of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup began on 16 February 2005, and concluded with the final at the Est\u00e1dio Jos\u00e9 Alvalade in Lisbon on 18 May 2005. The final phase involved the 24 teams that finished in the top three in each group in the group stage and the eight teams that finished in third place in the UEFA Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180455-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup final phase\nEach tie in the final phase, apart from the final, was played over two legs, with each team playing one leg at home. The team that had the higher aggregate score over the two legs progressed to the next round. In the event that aggregate scores finished level, the team that scored more goals away from home over the two legs progressed. If away goals are also equal, 30 minutes of extra time were played. If goals were scored during extra time and the aggregate score was still level, the visiting team qualified by virtue of more away goals scored. If no goals were scored during extra time, there would be a penalty shootout after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180455-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup final phase\nIn the final, the tie was played over just one leg at a neutral venue. If scores were level at the end of normal time in the final, extra time was played, followed by penalties if scores had remained tied.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180455-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup final phase, Round of 32, Second leg\n2\u20132 on aggregate, Steaua Bucure\u0219ti won 4\u20133 on penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180455-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup final phase, Round of 16, Second leg\n3\u20133 on aggregate, Austria Wien won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180455-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup final phase, Semi\u2013finals, Second leg\n4\u20134 on aggregate, Sporting CP won on away goals rule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180456-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup first round\nThe first round of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup began on 13 September 2004, which narrowed clubs down to 40 teams in preparation for the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180456-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup first round, First round, Second leg\nWis\u0142a Krak\u00f3w 5-5 Dinamo Tbilisi on aggregate. Dinamo Tbilisi won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180456-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup first round, First round, Second leg\nStandard Li\u00e8ge 1-1 Bochum on aggregate. Standard Li\u00e8ge won on away goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180456-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup first round, First round, Second leg\nMar\u00edtimo 1-1 Rangers on aggregate. Rangers won 4-2 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180457-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup group stage\nThe group stage of the 2004\u201305 UEFA Cup is the second stage of the competition proper. Group stage matches began on 21 October 2004 and concluded on 16 December 2004. The top three teams in each group progressed to the Round of 32, to be joined by the eight third-place finishers from the Champions League group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180457-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Cup group stage, Seeding structure\nThe 40 teams were divided into five pots. Pot 1 comprised the top eight clubs in the team ranking. Pot 2 contained the following eight clubs in the rankings and likewise for Pots 3, 4 and 5. Each group contained one team from each pot. A team's seeding was determined by the UEFA coefficients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 47], "content_span": [48, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180458-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Futsal Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 UEFA Futsal Cup was the 19th edition of Europe's premier club futsal tournament and the 4th edition under the current UEFA Futsal Cup format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180458-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Futsal Cup, Final\nThe 2005 UEFA Futsal Cup Final was played on April 23, 2005 at the Spiroud\u00f4me in Charleroi, Belgium and April 30, 2005 at the Sport Hall \"Druzhba\" in Moscow, Russia. Action 21 won 10\u20139 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 30], "content_span": [31, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180459-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UEFA Women's Cup\nThe UEFA Women's Cup 2004\u201305 was the fourth edition of the UEFA Women's Cup football club tournament. It was won by Germany's FFC Turbine Potsdam against Djurg\u00e5rden/\u00c4lvsj\u00f6 of Sweden in the final for their first title in the competition. It was the second time a German side won the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180460-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 United Hockey League season was the 14th season of the United Hockey League (Colonial Hockey League before 1997), a North American minor professional league. 14 teams participated in the regular season and the Muskegon Fury won the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180461-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ULEB Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 ULEB Cup was the third season of the second-tier level European professional club basketball competition, the EuroCup, which is organized by the Euroleague Basketball Company. The season started on November 9, 2004, and officially ended on April 19, 2005. The second-tier level EuroCup is the European-wide league level that is one tier below the EuroLeague level. Lietuvos rytas won the trophy, by defeating Makedonikos in the final, by a score of 78\u201374.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180461-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ULEB Cup, Format\nEach group contained 6 teams. There were 7 groups. Each team would play amongst each group twice. Top 2 teams from groups A, C, E, F, and G qualify to eighthfinals. Top 3 teams from groups B and D also qualify to the eighthfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180461-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 ULEB Cup, Format\nIn eighthfinals, each team plays against their selected team twice. The winner of the two games with a higher combined score qualifies to quarterfinals. This procedure repeats in quarterfinals and in semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season\nThe 2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen was the 66th season of Norway's premier ice hockey league, Eliteserien, which as of this season became known as the UPC-ligaen after UPC had acquired the naming rights for five years. V\u00e5lerenga won both the League Championship and the Norwegian Championship, completing their nineteenth \"double\". A total of ten teams contested the league, including newcomers Comet who competed at the highest level for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season\nThe regular season commenced on 19 September 2004 and concluded on 20 February 2005. V\u00e5lerenga clinched their twenty-fifth league title after winning 3\u20132 in overtime against the Sparta Warriors on 17 February. This left them with an unassailable lead of seven points over the Trondheim Black Panthers, with only one round left to play. The result also confirmed Trondheim as runners-up ahead of the Storhamar Dragons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season\nThe playoffs to determine the 2005 Norwegian Ice Hockey Champions were contested from 22 February to 20 March 2005. V\u00e5lerenga were crowned champions for the twenty-third time after defeating Trondheim by 4 games to 1 in the best-of-seven Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Regular season, Final standings\nGP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTW = Overtime Wins; OTL = Overtime Losses; SOW = Shootout Wins; SOL = Shootout Losses; PCT = Percent of possible points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PIM = Penalties in Minutes; Pts = Points; C = ChampionsSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 58], "content_span": [59, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nThe following players led the league in points at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nThe following goaltenders led the league in goals against average at the conclusion of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Regular season, Attendance\nFor the 2004\u201305 season, the league attendance totaled 292,711 spectators for an average of 1,394. This was a 9.3% increase from the previous season's total of 267,707 spectators and average of 1,275.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 53], "content_span": [54, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Qualifying for UPC-ligaen 2005\u201306, Final standings\nGP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTW = Overtime Wins; OTL = Overtime Losses; SOW = Shootout Wins; SOL = Shootout Losses; PCT = Percentage of possible points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PIM = Penalties in Minutes; Pts = Points; Q = QualifiedSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 77], "content_span": [78, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180462-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen season, Awards\nThe following players were selected to the 2004\u201305 UPC-ligaen All-Star team:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180463-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 USHL season is the 26th season of the United States Hockey League as an all-junior league. The regular season began on September 24, 2004, and concluded on April 2, 2005, with the regular season champion winning the Anderson Cup. The 2004\u201305 season was the first for the Indiana Ice who moved from Danville, Illinois, after their first season in the USHL. Two years after being named the River City Lancers, the franchise in Omaha, Nebraska, returned to their original name of Omaha Lancers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180463-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USHL season\nThe Clark Cup playoffs features the top four teams from each division competing for the league title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180463-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USHL season, Regular season\nNote: GP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; OTL = Overtime Losses; SL = Shootout Losses; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against; PTS = Points; x = clinched playoff berth; y = clinched division title; z = clinched league title", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season\nIn the 2004\u201305 season, USM Alger competed in the Ligue 1 for the 25th time, as well as the Algerian Cup. It was their 10th consecutive season in the top flight of Algerian football. They were competing in Ligue 1, the CAF Champions League and the Algerian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season, Summary season\nSince everything has an end, 2004\u201305 was for Usmistes the end of an era that has long been dreaming all lovers of the club. The fifth league title was won under the leadership of Mustapha Aksouh it is the last title for Sa\u00efd Allik as a president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season, Summary season\nIn the last round, the struggle for survival was between CR Belouizdad and OMR El Annasser although USM Alger does not need to win, it crushed OMR El Annasser with a four, all scored by Michael Eneramo to be the youngest player to score a hat-trick in USM Alger's first team, at 19 years old.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0001-0002", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season, Summary season\nThe reason why Al Ittihad played with such strength goes back to the 1993\u201394 season in second division, when the struggle for promoted was between ASO Chlef and USM Alger, and in the last round ASO Chlef won against OMR El Annasser it took place at Stade 20 Ao\u00fbt 1955 and USM Alger accused them of facilitating their mission, to go up to the first division by direct match difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season, Squad list\nPlayers and squad numbers last updated on 1 September 2004.Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season, Squad information, Playing statistics\nAppearances (Apps.) numbers are for appearances in competitive games only including sub appearancesRed card numbers denote: Numbers in parentheses represent red cards overturned for wrongful dismissal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 63], "content_span": [64, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180464-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 USM Alger season, Squad information, Goalscorers\nIncludes all competitive matches. The list is sorted alphabetically by surname when total goals are equal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180465-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Udinese Calcio season\nUdinese Calcio had its most successful season for seven years, in which it reached the Champions League thanks to a stable fundament in the team, with several players attractive for bigger clubs. Following the season, coach Luciano Spalletti left to take over Roma, while playmaker David Pizarro was sold to Inter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup\nThe Ukrainian Cup 2004\u201305 was the 14th annual edition of Ukraine's football knockout competition, known as the Ukrainian Cup. The first game was conducted on August 4, 2004 with the game between Rava and Shakhtar Donetsk in Rava-Ruska, Lviv Region. However other sources with a reference to the Professional Football League of Ukraine state that the competition started on August 6, 2004 with game between Olkom and Dynamo Kyiv in Melitopol, Zaporizhia Region. Traditionally the final took place in late May of the next year where the same Shakhtar yielded to Dynamo Kyiv at the Olympic Stadium 0:1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup\nIt was the last season of the format that did not involve any qualification and preliminary rounds. Every club started from the Round of 64 (1/32 of final) regardless of their position in the league's system structure. However the lower division clubs were given a home-field advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup, Round and draw dates\nAll draws held at FFU headquarters (Building of Football) in Kiev unless stated otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup, Competition Schedule, First round\nThe First Round took place in the first half of August 2004. Officially games took place on August 7 unless otherwise indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 56], "content_span": [57, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup, Competition Schedule, Second round\nThe Second Round took place on August 19 through August 22, 2004 with most games taken place on August 22. Unless otherwise indicated games presumed to take place on August 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup, Competition Schedule, Third Round (1/8)\nThe third round matches consisted of eight match-ups out of which four took place on September 11, while the other four \u2013 on September 12, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 62], "content_span": [63, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup, Competition Schedule, Quarterfinals\nThe first leg was scheduled to take place on October 16, while the second leg \u2013 on November 20, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180466-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Cup, Competition Schedule, Semifinals\nThe Semifinals took place on April 21 and May 4, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 55], "content_span": [56, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180467-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian First League\nThe 2004\u201305 Ukrainian First League was the 14th since its establishment. Eighteen teams competed in the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180467-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian First League\nThe competition began on July 17, 2004 with six matches. The competition had a winter break and resumed March 19, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180467-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian First League, Teams, Relegated teams\nOne club was relegated from the 2003-04 Ukrainian Top League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180467-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian First League, Teams, Location\nIn 2004-05 season, the Ukrainian First League consists of the following teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180468-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Hockey Championship\nThe 2004\u201305 Ukrainian Hockey League season was the 12th season of the Ukrainian Hockey League, the top level of ice hockey in Ukraine. 12 teams participated in the league, and HC Sokil Kyiv won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180469-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Second League\nThe 2004\u201305 Ukrainian Second League was the 14th season of 3rd level professional football in Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180469-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Second League\nThe competitions were divided into three groups according to geographical location in the country \u2013 A is western Ukraine, B is southern Ukraine and Crimea, and C is eastern Ukraine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180469-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Promoted\nThe following team was promoted from the 2004 Ukrainian Football Amateur League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 55], "content_span": [56, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180469-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Second League, Team changes, Withdrawn\nSome second teams were withdrawn to reform into reserve teams to compete in separate competitions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180469-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ukrainian Second League, Group A, Final Standings, Expelled teams\nOn March 29, 2005 Spartak-2 Kalush after failing to pay license fees for the second half of the season the PFL expelled them from the competition. Their record at that time was 6 wins, 2 draws, 6 losses, and 17-12 goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 73], "content_span": [74, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180470-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Umaglesi Liga\nThe 2004\u201305 Umaglesi Liga was the sixteenth season of top-tier football in Georgia. It began on 31 July 2004 and ended on 30 May 2005. WIT Georgia were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180470-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Umaglesi Liga, Results\nThe ten teams will play each other four times in this league for a total of 36 matches per team. In the first half of the season each team played every other team twice (home and away) and then do the same in the second half of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 30], "content_span": [31, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180471-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United Counties League\nThe 2004\u201305 United Counties League season was the 98th in the history of the United Counties League, a football competition in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180471-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United Counties League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 21 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with one new club:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180471-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United Counties League, Division One\nDivision One featured 17 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with one new club:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule\nThe following is the 2004\u201305 network television schedule for the six major English language commercial broadcast networks in the United States. The schedule covers primetime hours from September 2004 through August 2005. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series cancelled after the 2003\u201304 season. All times are Eastern and Pacific, with certain exceptions, such as Monday Night Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule\nBeginning this season, the major networks were no longer producing original dramatic content for Saturday broadcast (an exception being ABC's The Wonderful World of Disney, although it often featured rebroadcast material). Saturday schedules consisted instead of nonfiction reality-based programming and rebroadcasts of dramatic series episodes from earlier in the week, or new episodes of series previously scheduled on other nights that had been de facto cancelled and were \"burning off\" unaired episodes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule\nEach of the 30 highest-rated shows is listed with its rank and rating as determined by Nielsen Media Research.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule\nPBS is not included; member stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, Sunday\nNOTES: At mid-season, Fox was supposed to start Sundays with Kelsey Grammer Presents: The Sketch Show at 7:00, King of the Hill at 7:30, Malcolm in the Middle at 8:30, Arrested Development at 9, and American Dad! at 9:30, but it was changed at the last minute. On ABC, Alias was supposed to have aired mid-season in the time slot, but the network had to stick with Desperate Housewives at the last minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, Monday\nNOTE: On Fox, Athens was supposed to have started the night at 8\u20139 at mid-season, but it was cancelled at the last minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, Tuesday\nNOTES: On NBC, Average Joe was supposed to have started the night at 8\u20139, but it was delayed to summer, and The Contender was supposed to premiere in the timeslot on March 1, 2005, but it was delayed to March 9, 2005, before switching places with American Dreams and landed on its Sunday slot. On Fox, The Jury was supposed to have stayed on the night prior to November, but low ratings canned the show at a last minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, Wednesday\nNOTE: On Fox, Method & Red was supposed to have stayed at 9:30-10, but it was cancelled at the last minute due to low ratings of the show from last season and at midseason, Life on a Stick would've been aired at 8:30-9, and The Bernie Mac Show would've been concluded the night at 9:30-10, but it was changed at a last minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, Thursday\nNOTE: On Fox, Tru Calling would've supposed to have stayed at 9-10, but it was pushed up to spring and place North Shore at fall instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, Friday\nNOTES: On Fox, The Jury was supposed to have remained on Fridays, and that The Next Great Champ was supposed to have started the night at 8\u20139, but due to low ratings of The Jury, it was cancelled, and The Complex: Malibu was signed on at the last minute, and at midseason, The Inside would've started the night at 8\u20139, followed by Jonny Zero. On The WB, Commando Nanny would've been aired at 9:30-10, but it was cancelled due to production difficulties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 57], "content_span": [58, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180472-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule, By network, The WB\nNote: The * indicates that the program was introduced in midseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 69], "content_span": [70, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180473-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule (daytime)\nThe 2004\u201305 daytime network television schedule for the five major English-language commercial broadcast networks in the United States in operation during that television season covers the weekday daytime hours from September 2004 to August 2005. The schedule is followed by a list per network of returning series, new series, and series canceled after the 2003\u201304 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180473-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule (daytime)\nAffiliates fill time periods not occupied by network programs with local or syndicated programming. PBS \u2013 which offers daytime programming through a children's program block, PBS Kids \u2013 is not included, as its member television stations have local flexibility over most of their schedules and broadcast times for network shows may vary. Also not included are stations affiliated with PAX, as its schedule is composed mainly of syndicated reruns although it also carried some first-run programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180474-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule (late night)\nThese are the late night schedules for the four United States broadcast networks that offer programming during this time period, from September, 2004 to August 2005. All times are Eastern or Pacific. Affiliates will fill non-network schedule with local, syndicated, or paid programming. Affiliates also have the option to preempt or delay network programming at their discretion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180474-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 United States network television schedule (late night), Schedule\nNote: The Late Late Show featured guest hosts between Kilborn's last episode on August 27, 2004 and Ferguson's first episode as the permanent host on January 3, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 72], "content_span": [73, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180475-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Utah Jazz season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Jazz's 31st season in the National Basketball Association. During the offseason, the Jazz signed free agents Carlos Boozer and Mehmet Okur. The Jazz got off to a strong start winning six of their first seven games, but would struggle later on, losing 12 of their 15 games in December. Their struggles continued as they lost nine straight games in March. The Jazz finished last place in the Northwest Division with a 26\u201356 record, and failed to qualify for the playoffs for the second straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180475-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Utah Jazz season\nIt broke a record sequence of nineteen consecutive winning seasons by the Jazz, a feat which in major professional sports leagues of North America has been bettered only by the NFL\u2019s Dallas Cowboys between 1966 and 1985, by the NHL\u2019s Detroit Red Wings since 1990\u201391 and by the American League\u2019s New York Yankees between 1926 and 1964. In fact, it was the Jazz\u2019 first losing season since 1982\u201383, which would place them second only to the mid-century Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180475-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Utah Jazz season\nFor the season, the Jazz changed their logo and uniforms, adding dark blue to their color scheme. Both the logo and uniforms lasted until 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180476-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Utah Utes men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Utah Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah in the 2004\u201305 season. Led by first year head coach Ray Giacoletti, due to longtime head coach Rick Majerus' resignation one year prior, the Utes made the Sweet Sixteen in the NCAA tournament. After the season, Sophomore forward Andrew Bogut was selected first overall in the NBA draft, by the Milwaukee Bucks, eventually playing with the Golden State Warriors (with whom he would win the NBA championship in 2015), the Dallas Mavericks, the Cleveland Cavaliers, and the Los Angeles Lakers. Bogut (who was born in Australia) also became the first foreign-born player to be drafted first overall from an American college.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180476-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Utah Utes men's basketball team, Tournament results, Mountain West Tournament\n3/10/05 @ Pepsi Center, Denver, CO Vs. Colorado State (Quarterfinals) W, 62\u2013493/11/05 @ Pepsi Center, Denver, CO Vs. UNLV (Semifinals) W, 73\u2013673/12/05 @ Pepsi Center, Denver, CO Vs. New Mexico (Final) L, 56\u201360", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 85], "content_span": [86, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180476-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Utah Utes men's basketball team, Tournament results, NCAA Tournament\n3/17/05 @ McKale Center, Tucson, AZ Vs. UTEP (Round of 64) W, 60\u2013543/19/05 @ McKale Center, Tucson, AZ Vs. Oklahoma (Round of 32) W, 67\u2013583/25/05 @ Frank Erwin Center, Austin, TX Vs. Kentucky (Sweet Sixteen) L, 52\u201362", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 76], "content_span": [77, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180477-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Uzbek parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Uzbekistan on 26 December 2004, with a second round on 9 January 2005. The Uzbekistan Liberal Democratic Party won the most seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180478-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VB Series\nThe 2004\u201305 edition of the VB Series (so-called because of sponsor Victoria Bitter) was a three-team One Day International men's cricket tournament held in Australia in January and February 2005, between the hosting nation's team, Pakistan and West Indies. The teams played each other three times\u00a0, with five points awarded for a win and a possible bonus point awarded either to the winners or losers depending on run rate. The top two teams on points went through to the best-of-three finals series. Five of the nine preliminary games were day-night matches, and both finals played were night matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180479-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VCU Rams men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 VCU Rams men's basketball team represented Virginia Commonwealth University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. It was the 37th season of the University fielding a men's basketball program. Led by third-year head coach Jeff Capel III, they continued to play their home games at the Stuart C. Siegel Center. They were a member of the Colonial Athletic Association. They finished the season 19\u201313, 13\u20135 in CAA play to finish in a tie for second place. The Rams defeated Delaware and UNC Wilmington in the CAA Tournmanet, before losing to Old Dominion in the final. They received an at-large bid to the NIT where they lost in the opening round to Davidson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180480-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Valencia CF season, Season summary\nPopular manager Claudio Ranieri returned to Valencia for a second spell in charge after being dismissed by Chelsea. The team started well, winning the UEFA Super Cup and winning 14 points from their first 6 matches, but in October a strong start were cut short by heralded a run of only one win from 7 games and elimination from the Champions League. Form failed to improve in 2005, with a 6-match winless run and early elimination from the UEFA Cup. Ranieri was sacked in late February with the team in 6th. Youth coach Antonio L\u00f3pez took charge for the rest of the season, which saw Los Che finish in awful 7th place and thus qualified for UEFA Intertoto Cup for next season. Getafe coach Quique S\u00e1nchez Flores was hired as permanent head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180480-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Valencia CF season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180480-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Valencia CF season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180480-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Valencia CF season, Competitions, UEFA Cup, Round of 32\n2\u20132 on aggregate, Steaua Bucure\u0219ti won 4\u20133 on penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180481-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vancouver Canucks season\nThe 2004\u201305 Vancouver Canucks season was the team's 35th season in the NHL. However, the entire season's games were cancelled as a result of the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180481-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vancouver Canucks season, Transactions\nThe Canucks were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially canceled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 46], "content_span": [47, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180481-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vancouver Canucks season, Draft picks\nVancouver's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft in Raleigh, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 45], "content_span": [46, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180482-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n season\nThe 2004\u201305 season of the Venezuelan Primera Divisi\u00f3n, the top category of Venezuelan football, was played by 10 teams. The national champions were Maracaibo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180483-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vermont Catamounts women's ice hockey season\nThe 2004-05 Vermont Catamounts women's ice hockey season was the team's final season in the ECAC. Led by head coach Dennis Miller, the Catamounts had 5 victories, compared to 26 defeats and 3 ties. Their conference record was 3 victories, 17 defeats and 0 ties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180484-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VfL Bochum season\nThe 2004\u201305 VfL Bochum season was the 67th season in club history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180485-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VfL Wolfsburg season\nVfL Wolfsburg dropped off the pace for the second season running. A successful start to the season saw Wolfsburg running first in the league, looking like strong contenders, but as the season processed, the form dropped, and at the end of the season the team had lost one more match than they had won, surprisingly dropping off the top half of the table. Manager Eric Gerets left after one season in charge, and was replaced by former Borussia M\u00f6nchengladbach manager Holger Fach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180485-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VfL Wolfsburg season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180485-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VfL Wolfsburg season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180485-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 VfL Wolfsburg season, Players, VfL Wolfsburg II\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nThe 2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season is the Salmon Kings' inaugural season in the ECHL. While the Victoria region has had a long and distinguished hockey history - the Victoria Cougars won the Stanley Cup in 1925 - the region was the largest Canadian region without either professional or Major-Junior hockey when the WHL Victoria Cougars (a team with no connection to the aforementioned Cougars) moved to Prince George in 1994. This was a crippling blow to Victoria hockey fans, whose highest-level remaining local team was the Tier II Junior 'A' Victoria Salsa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nBy this time, it had become evident that the 50-year-old Victoria Memorial Arena, seating only 4,000 for hockey, would have to be replaced if Victoria expected to be able to attract a new hockey club. After several years of discussion, the construction of a new arena was approved by Victoria voters in a 2002 referendum, with one key condition being that its construction was dependent on Victoria securing a WHL team. When the private-sector partner, RG Properties, was unable to secure a WHL club, the company bought the rights to the defunct ECHL Baton Rouge Kingfish, formerly the Erie Panthers, a charter member of the ECHL, and announced that Victoria's new team would be named the Salmon Kings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nIt became clear as the 2004\u201305 ECHL season approached that Victoria's new arena, now called the Save-on-Foods Memorial Centre, was not going to be ready in time for the season. In response, the ECHL scheduled the Salmon Kings to begin their inaugural season with an unheard-of 14 game road trip.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nThis was not enough time for the arena to be completed, and in the summer of 2004 the Salmon Kings were forced to secure ice time in the Bear Mountain Arena in the suburban community of Colwood, which had been constructed with the needs of the junior 'A' Victoria Salsa and the Victoria Shamrocks box lacrosse club in mind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nDespite all this, the Salmon Kings took to the ice in their first regular-season game on October 22, 2004, in Bakersfield, California, against the Bakersfield Condors. Former University of Alberta player Ryan Wade scored the first goal in Salmon Kings history. They lost this game 7-2; the Salmon Kings would struggle during their 14-game road trip, only winning 3 games, losing 10 games in regulation and one in a shootout. Their first victory came at the expense of the Fresno Falcons on October 24, which the Salmon Kings won by a convincing 5-0 margin. David Brumby, the Kings' starting goaltender at the time, turned away 37 shots for the shutout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nAs the NHL lockout progressed, Dale Purinton and Dan Blackburn of the New York Rangers and Mark Smith of the San Jose Sharks played for the Salmon Kings. Purinton, an enforcer, was suspended twice by the league, the first for a career-ending check into the boards of Condors player Krzysztof Wieckowski, and the second for returning to the ice to fight after being ejected during a bench-clearing brawl involving the Kings and the Falcons. After the latter suspension, Purinton was suspended indefinitely by the Salmon Kings and did not play again that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nAfter the grueling 14-game road trip which lasted for over a month, the Salmon Kings finally played their first home game on December 5, 2004, at Bear Mountain Arena. The Salmon Kings lost this game 4-3 in overtime. They would continue to struggle during their first season, going only 15-52-5 over 72 games; notably, they set an ECHL record for a continuous winless streak, going 0-18-2 between December 31, 2004 and February 4, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Season summary\nThe few positives for the team in their inaugural season was Ryan Wade who would be known by fans as \"Mr. Salmon King\" led the team in scoring (19g-31a) and team captain, Brad Dexter was voted a starter on the National Conference's All-Star Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Schedule and results, Regular season\nLegend:\u00a0\u00a0Win (2 points)\u00a0\u00a0Loss (0 points)\u00a0\u00a0Overtime/shootout loss (1 point)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Player stats, Skaters\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/Minus; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; TOI = Time On Ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; GA = Goals Against; GAA= Goals Against Average; Sv% = Save Percentage; SO= Shutouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180486-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Victoria Salmon Kings season, Player stats, Goaltenders\n\u2020Denotes player spent time with another team before joining Victoria. Stats reflect time with the Salmon Kings only. \u2021Denotes player no longer with the team. Stats reflect time with Salmon Kings only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 63], "content_span": [64, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180487-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vijay Hazare Trophy\nThe 2004\u201305 Vijay Hazare Trophy was the third season of the Vijay Hazare Trophy, a List A cricket tournament in India. It was contested between 27 domestic cricket teams of India, starting in January and finishing in April 2005. The final was tied between Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, and they shared the Trophy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180488-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team represented Villanova University in the 2004\u201305 college basketball season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180488-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team\nVillanova, led by head coach Jay Wright, put together a strong season that formed the foundation of Villanova\u2019s re-emergence as a college basketball elite. Utilizing a starting lineup that consisted of non-seniors (juniors Randy Foye, Jason Fraser, Allan Ray, and Curtis Sumpter, along with sophomore Mike Nardi, the Wildcats played a fast-paced style of basketball that became a common topic of intrigue among analysts. Villanova entered the NCAA tournament as the No. 5 seed in the Syracuse region and made a Sweet Sixteen appearance before losing to eventual champion North Carolina. This was the first of two consecutive years the Wildcats would bow out of the tournament after facing the eventual champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180489-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Villarreal CF season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 81st season in the existence of Villarreal CF and the club's fifth consecutive season in the top flight of Spanish football. In addition to the domestic league, Villarreal participated in this season's editions of the Copa del Rey and the UEFA Intertoto Cup. The season covered the period from 1 July 2004 to 30 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180490-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team represented the University of Virginia during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team was led by 7th-year head coach Pete Gillen, and played their home games at University Hall in Charlottesville, Virginia as members of the Atlantic Coast Conference. On March 14, three days after the end of the season, Gillen stepped down; he was replaced by DePaul head coach Dave Leitao.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180490-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team, Last season\nThe Cavaliers had a record of 18\u201313, with a conference record of 6\u201310, but the team advanced to the second round of the 2004 National Invitation Tournament, where they lost to Villanova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 61], "content_span": [62, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180491-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vyshcha Liha\nThe 2004\u201305 Vyshcha Liha season was the fourteenth since its establishment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180491-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vyshcha Liha\nThe season started on July 15, 2004, with all eight games of the first round. The last day of the competition was June 16, 2005. Shakhtar Donetsk won its second champion's title place ahead of the reigning champions Dynamo that held for the last couple of seasons. The Miners only lost two of their games, one at home to Metalist Kharkiv that had just returned to the top league and another one in Simferopol to Tavriya. Shakhtar also won both of their match-ups with Dynamo Kyiv. The top scorers competition was won by Oleksandr Kosyrin from Chornomorets Odessa who had 14 precise shots on goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180491-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vyshcha Liha\nIllichivets Mariupol was close to qualify for the European competition once again; however, it was not able to convert on the poor playing form of the leading Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk that had a bad stretch at the \"finish line\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180491-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vyshcha Liha\nBoth clubs from the Kiev region, FC Obolon Kyiv and FC Borysfen Boryspil, that performed very well last season were forced into relegation due to their poor performance. Especially, strikingly bad season had Borysfen that won three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180492-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vyshcha Liha Reserves\nThe 2004\u201305 Ukrainian Premier League Reserves season was an inaugural season of competition between reserve teams of Ukrainian Higher League clubs. The competition among reserve teams became the first official competition since fall of the Soviet Union and similar Soviet competitions in which Ukrainian clubs participated previously. The idea to revive such competitions was lingering for last couple of years (see, main article Ukrainian Premier League Reserves).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180493-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Vysshaya Liga season\nThe 2004\u201305 Vysshaya Liga season was the 13th season of the Vysshaya Liga, the second level of ice hockey in Russia. 28 teams participated in the league. MVD Tver and Vityaz Chekhov were promoted to the Russian Superleague.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 WHL season was the 39th season for the Western Hockey League. Twenty teams completed a 72-game schedule. The Kelowna Rockets won the President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season, Regular season, Scoring leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; PIM = Penalties in minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 51], "content_span": [52, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season, Regular season, Goaltending leaders\nNote: GP = Games played; Min = Minutes played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties\u00a0; GA = Goals against; SO = Total shutouts; SV% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season, ADT Canada-Russia Challenge\nOn December 1, Team WHL defeated the Russian Selects 6\u20130 in Red Deer, Alberta before a crowd of 6,443.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season, ADT Canada-Russia Challenge\nOn December 2, Team WHL defeated the Russian Selects 5\u20132 in Lethbridge, Alberta before a crowd of 5,152.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season, ADT Canada-Russia Challenge\nThe WHL has an all-time record of 4\u20130 against the Russian Selects since the tournament began in 2003\u201304.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 47], "content_span": [48, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180494-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WHL season, 2005 Bantam Draft\nThe 2005 WHL Bantam Draft was the 16th annual draft into the WHL. It was held at the WHL head office in Calgary, on May 5, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180495-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WNBL season\nThe 2004\u201305 WNBL season was the 25th season of competition since its establishment in 1981. A total of 8 teams contested the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180495-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WNBL season\nBroadcast rights were held by free-to-air network ABC. ABC broadcast one game a week, at 1:00 p.m. at every standard time in Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180495-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WNBL season\nMolten provided equipment including the official game ball, with Hoop2Hoop supplying team apparel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180496-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WWHL season\nThe 2004\u201305 WWHL season was the first season of the Western Women's Hockey League. Previously this league did not exist and the western teams were in a division of the National Women's Hockey League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180496-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WWHL season, Final standings\nNote: GP = Games played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, GF = Goals for, GA = Goals against, Pts = Points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 36], "content_span": [37, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180496-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 WWHL season, Playoffs\nFinal round: Calgary Oval X-Treme vs Edmonton Chimos in Calgary, Alberta", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180497-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team represented Wake Forest University in the 2004\u201305 season. Led by head coach Skip Prosser and Sophomore Chris Paul, the Demon Deacons put together their most successful season since their 1996\u201397 Campaign as led by Dave Odom and Tim Duncan. The efforts of Paul earned him a consensus All-American selection, and named him ACC Player of the year. After the season, Paul declared for the NBA draft, and the New Orleans Hornets (now New Orleans Pelicans) selected him fourth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180497-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wake Forest Demon Deacons men's basketball team, Tournament results\nACC Tournament Vs. NC State @ MCI Center, Washington D.C. - L, 65-81NCAA TournamentFirst Round Vs. Chattanooga @ Wolstein Center, Cleveland, OH - W, 70-54Second Round Vs. West Virginia @ Wolstein Center, Cleveland, OH - L, 105-111 2OT", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 75], "content_span": [76, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180498-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Capitals season\nThe 2004\u201305 Washington Capitals season was their 31st National Hockey League season. Its games were cancelled as the 2004\u201305 NHL lockout could not be resolved in time. As a result, Alexander Ovechkin would not make his NHL debut until the start of the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180498-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Capitals season, Transactions\nThe Capitals were involved in the following transactions from June 8, 2004, the day after the deciding game of the 2004 Stanley Cup Finals, through February 16, 2005, the day the 2004\u201305 season was officially cancelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 48], "content_span": [49, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180498-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Capitals season, Draft picks\nWashington's picks at the 2004 NHL Entry Draft, which was held at the RBC Center in Raleigh, North Carolina on June 26\u201327, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180499-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Huskies men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Washington Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Washington in the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. This was head coach Lorenzo Romar's 3rd season at Washington. The Huskies played their home games at Bank of America Arena and are members of the Pacific-10 Conference. They finished the season 29\u20136, 14\u20134 in Pac-10 play and they captured the Pac\u201310 Tournament title and an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. They earned the No. 1 seed in the West Region, defeating Montana in the first round and Pacific in the second round before losing to Louisville in the Sweet Sixteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180500-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team represented Washington State University for the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. Led by second-year head coach Dick Bennett, the Cougars were members of the Pacific-10 Conference and played their home games on campus at Beasley Coliseum in Pullman, Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180500-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nThe Cougars were 12\u201315 overall in the regular season and 7\u201311 in conference play, tied for sixth in the standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180500-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington State Cougars men's basketball team\nSeeded sixth in the conference tournament, the Cougars met third seed Stanford in the quarterfinal round. The Cougars had swept the regular season series, but lost by two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180501-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Wizards season\nThe 2004\u201305 NBA season was the Wizards 44th season in the National Basketball Association, and their 32nd season in the city of Washington, D.C.. During the offseason, the Wizards acquired Antawn Jamison from the Dallas Mavericks. The Wizards got off to a decent start and played above .500 for the entire season. The Wizards posted a 20-win improvement over the previous season, finishing second in the Southeast Division with a 45\u201337 record, and made it back to the playoffs for the first time since 1997, back when they were known as the \"Bullets\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180501-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Wizards season\nGilbert Arenas averaged 25.5 points per game and was selected along with Jamison for the 2005 NBA All-Star Game. In the first round of the playoffs, the Wizards defeated the Chicago Bulls in six games after losing the first two games, but were swept in the semifinals by the Miami Heat in four straight games. This was the final full-season at MCI Center changed his name to Verizon Center in January 2006. Also Following the season, Larry Hughes signed as a free agent with the Cleveland Cavaliers, and Kwame Brown was traded to the Los Angeles Lakers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180501-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Washington Wizards season, Transactions\nTransactions listed are from July 1, 2004 to June 30, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 47], "content_span": [48, 107]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180502-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Watford F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Watford competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180502-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Watford F.C. season, Season summary\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw a continuation of the good form of the end of the previous season, with the club well in the upper half of the Championship at the end of September. However, a long run of poor form subsequently saw the club drop steadily towards the relegation zone. Another good cup run further eased the club's financial position, with the team reaching the semi-final of the League Cup, soundly beating Premiership sides Portsmouth and Southampton on the way, before losing narrowly to Liverpool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180502-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Watford F.C. season, Season summary\nThe club's poor league form, however, came to a head in March, with a run of terrible performances and Lewington was sacked on 22 March. His sacking was controversial, and many fans were unhappy at the loss of a man who had led the club to two cup semi-finals in three seasons, enduring considerable financial hardships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180502-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Watford F.C. season, Season summary\nAt the age of 34, Aidy Boothroyd was appointed manager of Watford after serving at Leeds United as a coach; 70-year-old Keith Burkinshaw was recruited as his assistant. Boothroyd's inexperience raised concerns among fans, who worried that he would not be able to keep the side in the Championship. However, Watford secured enough points to ensure survival with two games to go in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 43], "content_span": [44, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180502-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Watford F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180502-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Watford F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180503-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Welsh Alliance League\nThe 2004\u201305 Welsh Alliance League is the 21st season of the Welsh Alliance League, which is in the third level of the Welsh football pyramid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180503-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Welsh Alliance League\nThe league consists of sixteen teams and concluded with Bodedern Athletic as champions and promoted to the Cymru Alliance. Bottom team, Y Felinheli were relegated to the Gwynedd League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180503-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Welsh Alliance League, Teams\nRhyl Reserves were champions in the previous season, Llandyrnog United finished runners-up and were promoted to the Cymru Alliance. They were replaced by Gwynedd League champions Llanrwst United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180504-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Welsh League Cup\nThe 2004\u201305 Welsh League Cup season was won by Carmarthen Town, beating Rhyl FC in the final. It was the first victory for Carmarthen Town in the competition, and the third appearance by Rhyl FC in the final. The final took place at Latham Park, in Newtown, Wales. The match was refereed by N L Morgan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180505-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Welsh Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Welsh Premier League was the 13th season of the Welsh Premier League since its establishment as the League of Wales in 1992. It began on 14 August 2004 and ended on 29 April 2005. The league was won by Total Network Solutions, their second title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180506-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wessex Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 Wessex Football League was the 19th season of the Wessex Football League, and the first in which the league consisted of three divisions, with two new sections being added. The league champions for the second time in their history were Lymington & New Milton, who were promoted to the Isthmian League. There was a full programme of promotion and relegation between the three divisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180506-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wessex Football League\nFor sponsorship reasons, the league was known as the Sydenhams Wessex League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180506-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wessex Football League, League tables, Division One\nDivision One consisted of 22 clubs, the same as the single division of the previous season, after Blackfield & Langley and Whitchurch United were relegated and two new clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180506-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wessex Football League, League tables, Division Two\nDivision Two also consisted of 22 clubs, 17 of them joining from the Hampshire League Premier Division, plus:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180506-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wessex Football League, League tables, Division Three\nDivision Three also consisted of 22 clubs, 13 of them joining from the Hampshire League Division One, and nine from Division Two \u2013 they were DC, Hamble Club, Ludgershall Sports, Netley Central Sports, Ordnance Survey, Otterbourne, QK Southampton, RS Basingstoke and Yateley Green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, West Bromwich Albion competed in the FA Premier League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary\nWest Bromwich Albion managed to retain their Premiership status despite being in last place on Christmas Day. This was the first time in the history of the Premiership this had happened. Sunderland and Leicester City have since equalled this feat (Sunderland in 2013\u201314, Leicester in 2014\u201315), although they secured survival before the final day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 56], "content_span": [57, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary, Final day\nGoing into the final round of matches, no team was assured of relegation. In each of the last three weekends of the season, the team that was bottom of the table at the start of the weekend finished it outside the drop zone. The final round of the season on 15 May started with West Bromwich on the bottom, Southampton and Crystal Palace one point clear and Norwich City in the last safe spot and two points from the bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary, Final day\nFor the first time since the advent of the current Premier League in 1992\u20131993, no club was assured of relegation going into the final day. Even worse, only one will survive. The final matchday was publicised by Sky Sports as \"Survival Sunday\", with accompanying promotional material advertising the last matchday like a title fight or epic movie blockbuster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary, Final day\nWest Brom, who had been bottom of the table and eight points from safety at Christmas, did their part by defeating Portsmouth at home 2\u20130. Norwich, the only side to have their fate completely in their own hands, lost 6\u20130 at Fulham and went down. Southampton lost 2\u20131 at home to Manchester United. Palace, away to Charlton Athletic, were leading 2\u20131 after 71 minutes, but with eight minutes to go Jonathan Fortune equalised for the Addicks to relegate the Eagles. Thus, West Brom stayed up, and changed history, becoming the first club in Premiership history to avoid relegation after being bottom of the table at Christmas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Season summary, Final day\nAt the end of 90 minutes in all 4 matches, Sky cameras focused on the Hawthorns, as confirmation of other results began to filter through. Once the realisation dawned on the players and fans that survival had been achieved, a mass pitch invasion was sparked, with huge celebrations. The Portsmouth fans in the away end of the ground joined in the celebrations and party atmosphere, as, through losing 2\u20130 to West Brom, they had \"helped\" relegate arch-rivals Southampton. The defeat itself mattered little to Portsmouth, as they would be unable to improve on their 16th position due to 15th-placed Blackburn Rovers' greater goal difference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 707]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Players, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 67], "content_span": [68, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180507-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Bromwich Albion F.C. season, Players, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 74], "content_span": [75, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, West Ham United competed in the Football League Championship, having lost the previous season's play-off final 0\u20131 to Crystal Palace at the Millennium Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nFollowing the previous season's First Division play-off final loss to Crystal Palace, Rob Lee, Brian Deane, Wayne Quinn and Shaun Byrne were all released from West Ham on free transfers. They were closely followed by Kevin Horlock, who signed for Ipswich Town, and David Connolly, who left for Leicester City in a \u00a3500,000 deal. S\u00e9bastien Carole also returned to Monaco after his loan spell, while Richard Garcia and Elliott Ward signed new contracts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nThe first signing Alan Pardew made following the end of the previous season was goalkeeper James Walker, signed on a free transfer from Walsall, where he had been a folk hero. He was brought in as cover for Stephen Bywater. The following month former England international Teddy Sheringham and Serhiy Rebrov both signed on free transfers, from Portsmouth and Tottenham respectively. Their arrivals were closely followed by those of AFC Bournemouth captain Carl Fletcher for \u00a3275,000 and winger Luke Chadwick from Manchester United on a free transfer. In September, Malky Mackay signed for \u00a3300,000 from Norwich City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nWest Ham's biggest defeat of the season was away to Cardiff City on 2 November 2004 when they lost 4\u20131. The Welsh team featured former Hammer Jobi McAnuff, who created the first two goals and scored the fourth. West Ham's biggest win of the season came in their home game against Plymouth Argyle on 19 February 2005 when they won 5\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season, Season summary\nWest Ham only lost one of their last ten matches, which helped moved them from seventh to sixth, guaranteeing a play-off spot. The club returned to the FA Premier League at the second time of asking, defeating Preston North End in the 2005 Football League Championship play-off Final with a single goal from Bobby Zamora.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 51], "content_span": [52, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180508-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Ham United F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 78], "content_span": [79, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180509-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Midlands (Regional) League\nThe 2004\u201305 West Midlands (Regional) League season was the 105th in the history of the West Midlands (Regional) League, an English association football competition for semi-professional and amateur teams based in the West Midlands county, Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and southern Staffordshire. It has three divisions, the highest of which is the Premier Division, which sits at step 6 of the National League System, or the tenth level of the overall English football league system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180509-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Midlands (Regional) League, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division featured 18 clubs which competed in the division last season, along with three new clubs:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 57], "content_span": [58, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180510-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 West Virginia Mountaineers men's basketball team represented West Virginia University from Morgantown, West Virginia during the 2004-05 season. The team was led by head coach John Beilein and played their home games at WVU Coliseum. After losing in the championship game of the Big East Tournament, the Mountaineers would gain an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, where they would make a run to the Elite Eight. The team finished with a 24\u201311 record (8\u20138 Big East).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180511-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Western Football League\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 103rd in the history of the Western Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180511-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Western Football League\nThe league champions for the eighth time in their history, and the third time in four seasons, were Bideford. The champions of Division One were Willand Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180511-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Western Football League, Final tables, Premier Division\nThe Premier Division was increased from 18 to 20 clubs after Paulton Rovers were promoted to the Southern League, and Dawlish Town and Elmore were relegated to the First Division. Five clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 63], "content_span": [64, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180511-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Western Football League, Final tables, First Division\nThe First Division was increased from 19 to 20 clubs after Hallen, Bitton, Bristol Manor Farm, Clyst Rovers and Corsham Town were promoted to the Premier Division and six clubs joined:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180512-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers men's basketball team represented Western Kentucky University during the 2004\u201305 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Hilltoppers were led by head coach Darrin Horn and All Sun Belt Conference guard, Anthony Winchester. They finished 2nd in the SBC East Division and were invited to the 2005 National Invitation Tournament. Future NBA player Courtney Lee was SBC Freshman of the Year and was named to the SBC All Tournament team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180513-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wichita Thunder season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Ilamb94 (talk | contribs) at 02:40, 19 November 2019 (+ Infobox). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180513-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wichita Thunder season\nThe 2004\u201305 Wichita Thunder season was the 13th season of the CHL franchise in Wichita, Kansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180514-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wigan Athletic F.C. season\nDuring the 2004\u201305 English football season, Wigan Athletic F.C. competed in the Football League Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180514-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nAfter only 32 years as a Football League club, Wigan Athletic won promotion to English football's top flight for the first time in their history, by virtue of finishing second. This was also their highest-ever finish in the Football League in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180514-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, Season summary\nWigan's league success did not translate to the domestic cup competitions: they only played one match in each cup before being knocked out. This may have turned out to be beneficial to Wigan, as it allowed the club to focus on the league rather than a cup run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 50], "content_span": [51, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180514-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, First-team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180514-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wigan Athletic F.C. season, First-team squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 77], "content_span": [78, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180515-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 William & Mary Tribe men's basketball team represented The College of William & Mary during the 2004\u201305 college basketball season. This was head coach Tony Shaver's second season at William & Mary. The Tribe competed in the Colonial Athletic Association and played their home games at Kaplan Arena. They finished the season 8\u201321, 3\u201315 in CAA play and lost in the quarterfinals of the 2005 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament to rivals Old Dominion after defeating James Madison in the preliminary round. They did not participate in any post-season tournaments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180516-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team\nThe 2004\u201305 Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team represented University of Wisconsin\u2013Madison. The head coach was Bo Ryan, coaching his fourth season with the Badgers. The team played its home games at the Kohl Center in Madison, Wisconsin, and is a member of the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180517-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey season\nThe 2004\u201305 Wisconsin Badgers women's ice hockey team was the Badgers' 5th season. Their record in the WCHA was 20-7-1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 106th season of competitive league football in the history of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers. They played the season in the 2nd tier of the English football system, the Football League Championship, after having suffered relegation from the Premier League during the previous campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season summary\nDespite hopes for an immediate return to the top flight, their 2004\u201305 Championship campaign began dismally, and at one point the side sunk as low as 19th place. Following a 0\u20131 defeat at Gillingham, a side Wolves had beaten 6\u20130 just 18 months previous, Jones was sacked at the beginning of November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Season summary\nAnother former England coach was hired the following month, as Glenn Hoddle was appointed on a rolling one-year contract. Under Hoddle, Wolves lost only one of their final 25 league games, but drew 15 to finish ninth in the final table \u2013 not enough to qualify for the play-offs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 59], "content_span": [60, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Pre season\nPre season began on 5 July with training based at the National Sports Centre at Lilleshall, before the squad flew to Troms\u00f8, Norway to begin a three-match tour (16\u201322 July).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Results, Football League Championship\nA total of 24 teams competed in the Championship during the 2004\u201305 season. Each team would play every other team twice, once at their stadium, and once at the opposition's. Three points were awarded to teams for each win, one point per draw, and none for defeats. The provisional fixture list was released on 24 June 2004, but was subject to change in the event of matches being selected for television coverage or police concerns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 82], "content_span": [83, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nKey:\u00a0\u00a0\u2021 On loan from another club \u00a0\u00a0* First appearance(s) for the club", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Players, Statistics\nCorrect as of end of season. Starting appearances are listed first, followed by substitute appearances in parentheses where applicable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 64], "content_span": [65, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180518-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season, Kit\nThe season saw a new kit manufacturer as Le Coq Sportif began a two-year merchandising deal. Chaucer Consulting began a five-year run as the club's shirt sponsor. This meant new home and away kits were produced; the away kit was a navy blue shirt with white shorts and socks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 48], "content_span": [49, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180519-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Women's National Cricket League season\nThe 2004\u201305 Women's National Cricket League season was the 9th season of the Women's National Cricket League, the women's domestic limited overs cricket competition in Australia. The tournament started on 30 October 2004 and finished on 13 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180519-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Women's National Cricket League season\nThe Victorian Spirit won the tournament after finishing second on the ladder at the conclusion of the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180520-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Sevens Series\nThe 2004\u201305 IRB Sevens World Series was the sixth of an annual IRB Sevens World Series of rugby sevens tournaments for full national sides run by the International Rugby Board since 1999\u20132000. The defending series champions New Zealand retained their title by winning the 2004\u201305 series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180520-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Sevens Series, The season\nIn an event, 16 teams are entered. In each tournament, the teams are divided into pools of four teams, who play a round-robin within the pool. Points are awarded in each pool on a different schedule from most rugby tournaments\u20143 for a win, 2 for a draw, 1 for a loss. The first tiebreaker is the head-to-head result between the tied teams, followed by difference in points scored during the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180520-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Sevens Series, The season\nFour trophies are awarded in each tournament. In descending order of prestige, they are the Cup, whose winner is the overall tournament champion, Plate, Bowl and Shield. Each trophy is awarded at the end of a knockout tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180520-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Sevens Series, The season\nIn an event, the top two teams in each pool advance to the Cup competition. The four quarterfinal losers drop into the bracket for the Plate. The Bowl is contested by the third-place finishers in each pool, while the Shield is contested by the last-place teams from each pool.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180520-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Sevens Series, Points schedule\nThe season championship is determined by points earned in each tournament. For most events, points are awarded on the following schedule:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180521-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings\nThe 2004\u201305 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings is the 2004\u201305 edition of the World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings. It is an assessment of racehorses which was issued by the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA) in August 2005. It includes horses aged three or older which raced or were trained during 2004\u201305 in countries where the flat racing year runs from August 1 to July 31 (and also South America, where it runs from July 1 to June 30). These countries are generally in the Southern Hemisphere, although some areas covered, such as Hong Kong and the United Arab Emirates, are actually north of the equator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180521-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings\nThe ratings represent a weight value in pounds, with higher values given to horses which showed greater ability. It is judged that these weights would equalize the abilities of the horses if carried in a theoretical handicap race. The list includes all horses rated 115 or above, and it also shows the surface and the distances at which the rating was achieved.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180521-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings\nThe highest rating in the 2004\u201305 season was 123, which was given to the performances of both Roses in May in the Dubai World Cup and Silent Witness in the Hong Kong Sprint. In total, 23 horses were included in the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180521-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings, Full rankings for 2004\u201305\nCertain horses may have also recorded a lesser rating over a distance different from that listed above. The IFHA publishes this information when the lower rating represents the overall top performance in a particular category. There was one such additional rating for this season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 72], "content_span": [73, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180521-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 World Thoroughbred Racehorse Rankings, Top ranked horses\nThe tables below show the top ranked horses overall, the top fillies and mares, and the top three-year-olds in the 2004\u201305 Rankings. They also show the top performers in various subdivisions of each group, which are defined by the distances of races, and the surfaces on which they are run. Top ranked horses rated less than 115 are included where known. The IFHA recognizes five distance categories \u2014 Sprint, Mile, Intermediate, Long and Extended \u2014 identified by the acronym \"SMILE\". These are framed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180522-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Yeovil Town F.C. season\nThe 2004\u201305 season was Yeovil Town Football Club's second season in the Football League. It was also the season in which they gained promotion to the third tier of English football for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180522-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Season summary\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the club's second season in the Football League and manager Gary Johnson's fourth season in charge. Although they lost their first game of the season away to Bury, they started the season fairly well and were top of League Two with 10 games played. Despite going the next 5 league games without a win, a run of 10 league wins out of a possible 11 left them top of the table and 8 points clear of 4th placed Southend United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180522-0001-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 Yeovil Town F.C. season, Season summary\nYeovil also had some success in the FA Cup, setting up a 4th round tie away to Charlton Athletic, after defeating Darlington, Histon and Rotherham United in earlier rounds. Town were defeated 3\u20132 by Charlton in a close contest where Yeovil had a shot cleared off the line in the later stages of the game. Yeovil picked up 31 points from a possible 60 after this point, but it was enough for them to secure the title, finishing five points above 4th placed Southend United. The Glovers scored 90 goals, 21 more than any other team whilst Striker Phil Jevons was League Two's top scorer. At the end of the season, the club released five players including Latvian international Andrejs \u0160tolcers while Polish striker Bartosz Tarachulski rejected the club's offer of a new contract.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 825]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180523-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ystalyfera RFC season\nFollowing on from the good form at the end of the previous season, this new campaign started well with two league wins and progress through the preliminary round of the Swansea Valley Cup over Vardre 11-9 and over Treorchy 22-17 in the First Round of the Welsh Cup before the end of September. The Treorchy game was all the more rewarding, they being a Division Two East side experiencing a slide from the top flight \u2013 Simon Chatham scored a try from the wing and new Captain and outside half Damian James a try and four penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180523-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ystalyfera RFC season\nProblems and some bad luck then returned with only two league wins in the next sixteen games. The Welsh Cup Second Round tie versus Maesteg was scratched and exit from the Swansea Valley Cup was inflicted by Abercrave 7-17. Keeping up something of a habit, the last two games of the season were victories over the only teams below us, ensuring we again remained in Division Three. The first of these crucial fixtures was at home to Glynneath.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180523-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ystalyfera RFC season\nAn inspiring 57-17 was achieved by fast flowing rugby all over the field. Christian Roets, David Hawkins and Simon Donovan scored two tries each. Phillip Thomas, John Williams and Peter Abraham one try each, Gareth James kicked 6 conversions. Three days later Ystalyfera beat Ammanford 38-26 at Ynysydarren, Christian Roets scored a try, Damian James a try and four conversions, and Alun Guerrier four tries \u2013 a record in a single game by a forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180523-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 Ystalyfera RFC season\nDamian James scored 202 points this season, Christian Roets getting 9 tries. Christian was also voted Players Player of the year whilst Arwel Williams was Supporters favourite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180524-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Argentine football\nThe 2004-05 Argentine First Division season saw Am\u00e9rico Gallego's Newell's Old Boys win the Apertura title after a fierce battle against V\u00e9lez S\u00e1rsfield for the supremacy. V\u00e9lez soon got over the disappointment after winning the Clausura with Banfield finishing second despite playing most of the tournament with a young squad because they were also competing the Copa Libertadores de Am\u00e9rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180524-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Argentine football\nHurac\u00e1n de Tres Arroyos and Almagro were relegated to the Nacional B after lackluster performance while Argentinos Juniors and Instituto played the promotion against Atl\u00e9tico de Rafaela and Hurac\u00e1n, respectively. Both won their series and were able to stay in the top category of the Argentine Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180524-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Argentine football, Torneo Clausura (\"Closing\" Tournament), Relegation, \"Promoci\u00f3n\" playoff\nArgentinos Juniors wins 4-2 and remains in the Argentine First Division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 102], "content_span": [103, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180524-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Argentine football, Torneo Clausura (\"Closing\" Tournament), Relegation, \"Promoci\u00f3n\" playoff\nInstituto wins 3-1 and remains in the Argentine First Division", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 102], "content_span": [103, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180524-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Argentine football, National team\nThis section covers Argentina's games from August 1, 2004 to July 31, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180524-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Argentine football, National team\nFor the Olympic Games results, please see here. Those results are not tallied here because the team is made of Under\u201323 players, not the full squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180525-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Australian soccer\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 36th season of competitive association football in Australia. After the National Soccer League folded, there was no men's national league competition for the 2004\u201305 season and was soon to be replaced by the A-League for the 2005\u201306 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180526-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Belgian football\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 102nd competitive season in Belgian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180526-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Belgian football, Overview\nThe Brussels derby is played once again since FC Brussels promoted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 37], "content_span": [38, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180526-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Belgian football, National team\nBelgium began their qualifying campaign for the Football World Cup 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180526-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Belgian football, Final tables, Third division, Third division A\nFor their second season since the renewal of the club, Y.R. K.V. Mechelen gained the title this time in extremis before R. Cappellen F.C., who reaches the third division playoffs along with Torhout 1992 K.M. and F.C. Denderleeuw respectively winners of the first and second slices. The third slice went to Mechelen so it is Cappellen that replaces them in the playoffs. K.F.C. Evergem-Center and K. Lyra T.S.V. are relegated to promotion while K.S.K. Wevelgem City will fight in the Promotion playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180526-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Belgian football, Final tables, Third division, Third division B\nUnited Overpelt-Lommel won this year's edition with a comfortable advance and also won the last two slices. Oud-Heverlee Leuven has won the first slice so the 3rd and 4th placed teams (respectively K.S.K. Tongeren and R. Sprimont Comblain Sport) enter the playoffs. At the bottom of the table, Seraing R.U.L. and Veldwezelt will play Promotion next season while U.R. Namur will have to undergo the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 75], "content_span": [76, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180527-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Danish football\nThe 2004-05 season in Danish football, starting July 2004 and ending June 2005:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180528-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Dutch football\nThe 2004-05 season in Dutch football saw PSV winning the double under the guidance of manager Guus Hiddink. Since PSV won the title in the Eredivisie, the losing KNVB Cup finalist, Willem II, earned the right to play in the UEFA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 125th season of competitive football in England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, National team\nEngland began their qualifying campaign for the 2006 FIFA World Cup. They played alongside UK neighbours Wales and Northern Ireland in the European Group 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 42], "content_span": [43, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, FA Premier League\nChelsea, in their first season under new manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho, broke records as they won their first League title for 50 years, losing just one Premiership game all season and setting a top-flight record of 29 wins and 95 points, in addition to winning the League Cup. Arsenal (unbeaten league champions a year earlier) extended their unbeaten run to 49 games before a controversial loss at Manchester United ended this remarkable achievement. Despite this, The Gunners were Chelsea's closest challengers and finished in second place, 12 points behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, FA Premier League\nUnited kept the two London teams under pressure with their own impressive league form since ending Arsenal's run, but slipped up and ultimately took third place. Everton, who had only just avoided relegation a year earlier, surprised all the observers by clinching the fourth Champions League place (even more remarkable considering they lost striker Wayne Rooney to Manchester United at the end of August). Liverpool, in their first season under Rafa Ben\u00edtez, suffered from indifferent domestic form and finished in fifth place, finishing much closer to the relegation zone in terms of points than the top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, FA Premier League\nDespite this, however, Ben\u00edtez showed off his impressive managerial skills with an unforeseen and staggering Champions League run that took them to the final in Istanbul against highly regarded and highly tipped Italian club Milan, forcing the game into extra time and penalties. Liverpool kept the advantage in the shootout, winning 3\u20132 and ending a 21-year wait to win Europe's elite competition. This stunning achievement, considering Liverpool's poor domestic form that season, was enough for UEFA to allow Liverpool to become the fifth English team in next year's competition to take part, a first for European football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, FA Premier League\nBolton Wanderers finished sixth \u2013 their highest league finish in decades and just a lower goal difference keeping them behind Liverpool \u2013 to qualify for the UEFA Cup, having never played in Europe before. Middlesbrough joined them, finishing seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, FA Premier League\nAll three relegation places were decided on the final day of the season, for the first time in Premier League history. Crystal Palace, Norwich City and Southampton (after 27 years) went down, but West Bromwich Albion managed to stay up despite being bottom before the games started and also having the worst record of any Premiership team to avoid relegation (six wins and 34 points). They were also the first-ever Premiership team to avoid relegation after being bottom on Christmas Day, and the first top-flight team to achieve this feat since Sheffield United in 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League Championship\nAfter narrowly missing out on promotion the previous season, Sunderland clinched a return to the top-flight as champions. Wigan Athletic joined them as runners-up, entering the top-tier for the first time in their history and giving manager Paul Jewell his second promotion to the Premier League in six years. West Ham United made amends for their loss in the play-off final the previous year by beating Preston North End.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League Championship\nUnusually, none of the sides relegated to the Championship in 2003\u201304 did particularly well. While Leeds United were widely predicted for a second successive relegation and possible bankruptcy (both of which looked likely in the middle of the season, but were staved off by another takeover), Wolverhampton Wanderers and Leicester City were predicted to challenge for promotion. Instead, both sides started badly, and replaced their managers mid-season, never really looking like promotion contenders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League Championship\nAt the bottom of the table, Rotherham United and Gillingham's luck finally ran out, and both were relegated after a short few years in which both clubs battled the odds on small budgets. What made bigger headlines was Nottingham Forest's relegation to League One, six years after they were in the Premiership, and which made them the first European Cup winners to drop to the third division of their domestic league. Dario Gradi's Crewe Alexandra managed to survive relegation on the last day of the season in their 2\u20131 win over Coventry City, which was their first win without striker Dean Ashton, who was sold to Norwich City for \u00a33\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 95], "content_span": [96, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League One\nLuton Town performed the best out of any League side to clinch promotion. Hull City joined them, their second promotion in as many seasons. Sheffield Wednesday \u2013 who looked like spending another season fighting relegation in the first few months \u2013 returned to the Championship under new manager Paul Sturrock, who put his sacking at Southampton behind him to lead Wednesday to their best season in nearly a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League One\nGoing down to League Two were Stockport, who continued their decline which began with relegation from Division One in 2001\u201302, Peterborough United, feeling the strain of their financial situation, soon followed. Torquay United, whose first season out of the bottom division in 12 years, ended in disappointment and they were also relegated. The fourth relegated side would have been Milton Keynes Dons (formerly Wimbledon), but Wrexham went into administration and lost ten points as a result (despite the club's argument that it would be harder for them to exit administration if they were relegated).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League One\nLeading goalscorer: Stuart Elliott (Hull City) \u2013 27, and Dean Windass (Bradford City) \u2013 27", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League Two\nJust two years after winning the Conference, Yeovil Town followed in Doncaster Rovers' footsteps by winning the League Two title. Scunthorpe United \u2013 relegation candidates the season before \u2013 joined them, while Swansea City edged the last automatic promotion spot. The side that they edged out, Southend United, made amends by winning the play-offs, beating Lincoln City in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Final standings, The Football League, Football League Two\nAt the bottom, Cambridge United and Kidderminster Harriers' finances hit them hard, and they fell out of the league, both on the back of signing several foreign players who proved ineffective. While Cambridge went into administration, this happened after they were already relegated, and made no difference overall, short of lifting Kidderminster above them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 86], "content_span": [87, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Transfer deals, Summer transfer window\nThe summer transfer window runs from the end of the previous season until 31 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180529-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in English football, Transfer deals, January transfer window\nThe mid-season transfer window runs from 1 to 31 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180530-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Pakistani football\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 56th season of competitive football in Pakistan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football\nThe 2004\u201305 season saw Benfica clinch the SuperLiga Galp Energia title after almost 11 years without the championship. The SuperLiga had one of the most competitive years, with both Braga and Boavista fighting for the title for a reasonable amount of time, closing the gap on the Big Three of Benfica, Porto and Sporting CP. The Big Three all managed to qualify for the 2005\u201306 UEFA Champions League, while Braga, Vit\u00f3ria de Guimar\u00e3es and Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal qualified for the 2005\u201306 UEFA Cup. Benfica did not manage to achieve the double, losing to Vit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal in the 2004\u201305 Ta\u00e7a de Portugal final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football\nIn the League of Honour, Pa\u00e7os de Ferreira won the title and alongside newcomers Naval 1\u00ba de Maio and former competitors Estrela da Amadora secured their place in the first level of Portuguese football for 2005\u201306.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football\nIn the UEFA competitions, the Portuguese teams qualified in the 2003\u201304 season were Porto and Benfica in the Champions League; Sporting CP, Braga, Mart\u00edtimo and Nacional in the UEFA Cup; and Uni\u00e3o de Leiria in the 2003 UEFA Intertoto Cup. Early in the season, Porto lost the 2003 UEFA Super Cup to 2002\u201303 Champions League victors Milan. Porto would ultimately reach the round of 16 of the Champions League, where they were eliminated by Internazionale. In the middle of the season, Porto also won their second Intercontinental Cup against Once Caldas. Meanwhile, Sporting CP managed to reach the UEFA Cup Final (which was already chosen to be played at Sporting's Est\u00e1dio Jos\u00e9 de Alvalade) where they lost to CSKA Moscow. The fact that Leiria reached the finals of the Intertoto Cup is also noteworthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football\nMeanwhile, the Portugal national football team managed to secure a comfortable position that would prove decisive in the qualification for the FIFA World Cup 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, SuperLiga\nAfter almost 11 years, the longest \"drought\" period in Benfica's history comes to an end. It was an \"awkward\" season, mainly due to the inconsistency of the perennial title candidates. Never a team had won the championship with such a small number of points since victories awarded three points. The 65 points of Benfica would only be sufficient to manage a fourth-place finish the year before and, considering a percentage of points awarded, their score of 64% would not have been enough to place them in first or second in any other of the previous Portuguese championships. Inconsistency was present in Benfica's season, but their main rivals were no better. In the upper part of the table, Braga's season was noteworthy: it was fighting for the title only four games before the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, SuperLiga, Promoted teams\nThese teams were promoted from the League of Honour at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, SuperLiga, UEFA competitions and relegations\nThese teams were qualified for the UEFA competitions of 2005\u201306:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, SuperLiga, UEFA competitions and relegations\nThese teams were relegated to the League of Honour at the end of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, Ta\u00e7a de Portugal\nVit\u00f3ria de Set\u00fabal won their third Cup after beating Benfica 2\u20131 at the final played 29 May in the Est\u00e1dio do Jamor. Sim\u00e3o scored first for Benfica, a penalty in the fifth minute, but an own goal by Ricardo Rocha in the 26th minute and another by Albert Meyong for Set\u00fabal turned the game around.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, League of Honour, Promoted teams\nThese teams were promoted from the Second Division B at the start of the season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, League of Honour, Promotions and relegations\nThe following teams were promoted to the SuperLiga (future Liga betandwin.com) for 2005\u201306:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, League of Honour, Promotions and relegations\nThe following teams were relegated to the Second Division for 2005\u201306:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180531-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Portuguese football, Portugal national team\nKEY: WCQ3 = World Cup Qualification match - Group 3; F = Friendly", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football\nThe 2004/05 season was one of the best seasons of Divizia A in the 21st century. Steaua Bucure\u0219ti became champions of Romania and Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti won the Romanian Cup and the Romanian Super Cup. Rapid won third place in Divizia A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football, European Cups, UEFA Champions League, Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti\nThis section will cover Dinamo's games from July 28, 2004 until the start of August 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 84], "content_span": [85, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football, European Cups, UEFA Cup, Steaua Bucure\u0219ti\nThis section will cover Steaua's games from August 12, 2004 until March 20, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football, European Cups, UEFA Cup, O\u0163elul Gala\u0163i\nThis section will cover O\u0163elul's games from July 15, 2004 until August 26, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football, European Cups, UEFA Cup, Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti\nThis section will cover Dinamo's games from September 16, 2004 until September 30, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football, European Cups, UEFA Intertoto Cup, Gloria Bistri\u0163a\nThis section will cover Gloria's games from June 20, 2004 until June 27, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180532-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Romanian football, Romania national team\nThis section will cover Romania's games from Football World Cup 2006 (qualification UEFA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180533-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Scottish football\nThe 2004\u201305 season was the 108th season of competitive football in Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180533-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Scottish football, League Competitions, Scottish Premier League\nThe 2004\u201305 Scottish Premier League season saw Rangers win the title after a last day win over Hibernian as Celtic were beaten by two late Motherwell goals from Scott McDonald, a win would have been enough for Celtic to retain their title regardless of Rangers' result. Dundee, also on the last day of the season, were relegated to the Scottish First Division after a draw with Livingston. Rangers and Celtic both qualified for the UEFA Champions League while Hibernian, in manager Tony Mowbray's first season in charge, went into the UEFA Cup. Inverness Caledonian Thistle, in their first season in the top flight, finished in 8th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 74], "content_span": [75, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180534-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Venezuelan football\nThe following article presents a summary of the 2004-05 football season in Venezuela.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180535-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Welsh football, Welsh Cup\nTotal Network Solutions beat Carmarthen Town 1\u20130 in the final of the Welsh Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180535-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 in Welsh football, Welsh League Cup\nCarmarthen Town beat Rhyl 2\u20130 in the final of the Welsh League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180536-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 snooker season\nThe 2004\u201305 snooker season was a series of snooker tournaments played between 11\u00a0September 2004 and 8\u00a0May 2005. The following table outlines the results for ranking events and the invitational events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180536-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 snooker season, Official rankings\nThe top 16 of the world rankings, these players automatically played in the final rounds of the world ranking events and were invited for the Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180536-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 snooker season, Points distribution\n2004/2005 Points distribution for world ranking events, all new players received double points:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180537-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u201305 synchronized skating season\nThe 2004\u201305 synchronized skating season began on July 1, 2004, and ended on June 30, 2005. During this season, which was concurrent with the season for the other four disciplines (men's single, ladies' single, pair skating and ice dancing), elite synchronized skating teams competed on the International Skating Union (ISU) Championship level at the 2005 World Championships and Junior World Challenge Cup. They also competed at various other international as well as national synchronized skating competitions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180538-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132005 Vend\u00e9e Globe\nThe Vend\u00e9e Globe is a non-stop solo Round the World Yacht Race for IMOCA 60 class yachts this is the 5th edition of the race starting on the 7th November 2004 from Les Sables-d'Olonne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180538-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132005 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Summary\nThe start of the 2004 race was watched by an estimated 300,000 people, which took place in mild weather. A fast start was followed by a few minor equipment problems, allowing the first racers to cross the equator just after 10 days. This was three days faster than the previous race, with all of the starters still sailing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180538-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132005 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Summary\nAttrition began on entry into the Roaring Forties: Alex Thomson diverted to Cape Town to make unassisted repairs and continue racing. The fleet encountered a number of other problems. Herv\u00e9 Laurent retired with serious rudder problems, Thomson abandoned, and Conrad Humphreys anchored to make unassisted rudder repairs. Gear problems and abandonments continued, then the fleet ran into an area of ice, and S\u00e9bastien Josse hit an iceberg head-on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180538-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132005 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Summary\nThe lead changed several times as the fleet re-entered the Atlantic. The race remained close right to the finish, which saw three boats finish within 29 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180538-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132005 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Summary\nThe first Race Director Denis Horeau returned to the role after 15 years to head the event management team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 31], "content_span": [32, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180538-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132005 Vend\u00e9e Globe, Entries, Participant Facts Equipment\nTwenty skippers started the race a qualification passage was required to validate the registration of each boat, this course could have been carried out as part of another sailing race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 60], "content_span": [61, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180539-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup First Division\nThe 2004\u201306 European Nations Cup doubled up as an element of qualification for the Rugby World Cup 2007. Ukraine replaced Spain as Champions of Division 2A. Romania and Georgia finished level on points, but Romania won the title on points difference; reigning champions Portugal finished in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThe 2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup was the fifth edition of the newly reformed European Championship for tier 2 & 3 Rugby Union Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division\nIn 2004\u201305 Season, the team of second and third division play the first two round of European qualification for RWC 2007", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division\nThe team defeated in the first round and two new teams (Azerbaijan) and Armenia) played a \"challenge\", that wasn't completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division\nIn 2005\u201306 a tournament was regularly played by the team excluded from third round of European qualification for RWC 2007", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division, Pool A\nThe highest level was the Pool \"A\", with five teams, the best runner-up of RWC qualification", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division, Pool B-C playoff\nPreliminary play off was played between 6 team in two round, with two worst team of RWC 2007 qualification admitted to second round", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 63], "content_span": [64, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180540-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 European Nations Cup Third Division, Pool B\nThe middle level was the Pool \"B\", with five teams:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180541-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 Montenegrin municipal elections\nMontenegrin municipal elections were held in all 21 municipalities, between June 2004 and October 2006. It resulted in the victory of the ruling DPS-SDP coalition in 15 out of 21 municipalities, where they secured a majority, alone or in a coalition with national minority parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180541-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132006 Montenegrin municipal elections, Results, Results in rest of municipalities\nIn seventeen other municipalities ruling Coalition for European Montenegro (DPS, SDP and HGI) win the power in most municipalities. It seize majority in Podgorica, Nik\u0161i\u0107, Ro\u017eaje, Bijelo Polje, Budva, Bar, Danilovgrad,Mojkovac, Cetinje, Plav, Berane and \u0160avnik as well in Ulcinj where they form an post-election coalition with Democratic Union of Albanians to form local government. While the main opposition coalition Together for Change (SNP-SNS-NS-DSS) has secured the majority and forms the local government in Pljevlja, Plu\u017eine, Andrijevica and Kola\u0161in municipalities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 85], "content_span": [86, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180542-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 Mississippi Legislature\nThe last election for the Mississippi Legislature was held in November 2003, with the election winners meeting in January 2004, to begin their four year terms of office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180543-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 legislature of the Romanian Parliament\nIn 2004 Romanian general election, held on 28 November, no party won an outright majority. The Social Democratic Party (PSD) won the largest number of seats but was in opposition because the Justice and Truth Alliance (DA), the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), the Romanian Humanist Party (PUR; which later became the Conservative Party), and the National Minorities formed a governing coalition. The Conservative Party (PC) withdrew in December 2006, meaning that the government lost the majority. In April 2007, the liberal Prime-Minister, C\u0103lin Popescu-T\u0103riceanu, dismissed the Democratic Party (PD) ministers from the government and formed a minority government with the Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania (UDMR), thereby marking the end of the Justice and Truth Alliance (DA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180543-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 legislature of the Romanian Parliament, Senate\nThe President of the Senate for this legislature was Nicolae V\u0103c\u0103roiu, who was elected on 20 December 2004. Following his ad interim presidency of Romania, he delegated his attributions to the vicepresident Doru Ioan T\u0103r\u0103cil\u0103. After V\u0103c\u0103roiu was sworn in as president of the Court of Accounts, Ilie S\u00e2rbu was elected as the new President of the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180543-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 legislature of the Romanian Parliament, Senate\nThe table below gives the state of play before the 2008 election; parties in bold were part of the governing coalition at the end of this legislature.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180543-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 legislature of the Romanian Parliament, Chamber of Deputies\nDuring the 2004\u20132008 legislature, the president of the Chamber of Deputies was Bogdan Olteanu from the National Liberal Party (PNL), who was elected on 20 March 2006, after the Chamber's former president, Adrian N\u0103stase, was forced by his own party (the Social Democratic Party, PSD) to step down amidst allegations of corruption.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180543-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 legislature of the Romanian Parliament, Chamber of Deputies\nAfter the 2004 elections, several deputies from the Social Democratic Party switched to other parties (including the governing Justice and Truth Alliance, DA) or became independents, with the total number of Social Democratic Party seats being reduced from 113 to 105. The number of Justice and Truth Alliance (DA) deputies also increased from 112 to 118, making it the largest formation in parliament as of October 2006. This changed again in December 2006, leaving the Social Democratic Party with 107 seats and the Justice and Truth Alliance (DA) with 101. Since April 2007 the Justice and Truth Alliance (DA) has split leaving the two former members with 51 respectively 50 members. Deputies elected to the European Parliament in the 2007 election resigned, thus reducing the number of deputies to 314 as of 4 December 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 898]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180543-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 legislature of the Romanian Parliament, Chamber of Deputies\nA new election was held in 2008. The table below gives the state of play before the 2008 election; parties in bold were part of the governing coalition at the end of this legislature. That coalition was tacitly supported by the PSD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens\nThe 2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens in Washington, United States has been documented as a continuous eruption in the form of gradual extrusion of magma. Starting in October 2004 and ceasing in January 2008, a new lava dome was built up. The new dome did not rise above the rim of the crater created by the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nOn September 23, 2004, around 2:00\u00a0a.m. PDT, Mount St. Helens experienced an earthquake swarm, with about 200 small (less than magnitude 1) earthquakes occurring less than one-half mile (one kilometer) below the 1980s lava dome. Activity increased, and on September 26, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network issued a \"notice of volcanic unrest\", stating that a \"hazardous event\" was possible, and the U.S. Forest Service closed the mountain to all climbing. They also closed some trails in the area, due to the risk of debris flows from the possible melting of the Crater Glacier in the volcanic crater.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nSeismic activity continued to accelerate following the USGS advisory, with earthquakes approaching magnitude 2.5 occurring at a rate of about four per minute on September 29, prompting the USGS and Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network to issue a second advisory, increasing the \"alert level\" to the second of three levels, and warn of an increased likelihood of a steam explosion or eruption from the lava dome within the next few days. Such an event was expected to be relatively small and not pose a threat to regions beyond the immediate area of the mountain. However, the intensities and occurrences of the earthquakes continued to rise. The largest earthquake recorded was a magnitude 3.3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nAt 12:02\u00a0p.m. PDT on October 1, 2004, the mountain erupted a plume of steam and volcanic ash about 9,700\u00a0feet (about 3\u00a0kilometers) into the air (according to pilot reports), from a vent in the then-unnamed Crater Glacier just southwest of the lava dome. The resulting ash plume was reported to have drifted south to Vancouver, Washington, and Wood Village, Oregon, dusting cars with a fine layer of black, sooty ash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nMount St. Helens vented another plume of steam the next day at 12:14\u00a0p.m. PDT, which was stronger than the previous steam release. A low-frequency harmonic tremor followed the steam release, which led seismologists to raise the \"alert level\" to the third of three levels, indicating a potential threat to life and property. Accordingly, the Johnston Ridge Observatory overlooking Mount St. Helens was evacuated; television media established their bases at Castle Lake Viewpoint about nine miles (14\u00a0km) away, while tourists moved to various locations for several miles along State Route 504.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nOn October 3, low-frequency harmonic tremor activity began at around 3:00\u00a0a.m. PDT and lasted for up to 90\u00a0minutes, which may have indicated the movement of magma beneath the mountain. The tremors were followed by a steam release at around 10:40\u00a0a.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nMount St. Helens' eruptive activity continued over the following days, with steam releases occurring on October 4 at 9:47\u00a0a.m., 2:12\u00a0p.m., and at 5:40\u00a0p.m.; then again on the morning of October 5 at around 9:03\u00a0a.m., with an ash plume that dusted Randle, Morton, and Packwood, Washington, towns on or near U.S. Route 12 about 30\u00a0miles (48\u00a0km) from the volcano. Between steam releases, elevated seismic activity on the mountain continued with the strongest tremors remaining near magnitude 3.0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nOn October 6, the U.S. Geological Survey announced that the alert level was being lowered, saying \"We no longer think that an eruption is imminent in the sense of minutes or hours.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nMagma reached the surface of the volcano around October 11, resulting in the building of a new lava dome on the existing dome's south side. Dome building continued, with the USGS reporting in early November 2004 that magma was being extruded at a rate of 7 to 10 cubic meters per second. Had magma continued to extrude at this rate uninterrupted, the crater would have been completely filled and Mount St. Helens would have regained its former height in about eleven years. The Mount St. Helens located at Johnston Ridge was able to view the new dome especially at night when the glow of new magma was visible via the camera's infrared capabilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 713]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2004 activity\nIncluded in the new dome was a feature dubbed the \"Whaleback\" (named such because of its close resemblance to the back of a whale), which was a lava spine, a long shaft of solidified magma being extruded by pressure of magma underneath it. This feature was very hot but fragile. The edges of it began crumbling rapidly, forming loose material around the new dome. The rate of crumbling soon matched the rate of growth, with the size of the whaleback remaining fairly constant.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2005 activity\nOn February 1, 2005, the new lava dome on Mount Saint Helens measured 7,642\u00a0feet (2,329\u00a0m) in elevation. This brought its elevation to 1,363\u00a0feet (415\u00a0m) above the 1980 crater floor, approximately 2,000\u00a0feet (610\u00a0m) above the surface of the Crater Glacier, and 721\u00a0feet (220\u00a0m) below the highest point of the volcano. The whaleback feature measured approximately 1,550\u00a0feet (470\u00a0m) in length and 500\u00a0feet (150\u00a0m) in width.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0010-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2005 activity\nThe diameter of the new dome was about 1,700\u00a0feet (520\u00a0m), and it contained about 50 million cubic yards (40 million cubic meters) of material. The total amount of glacier lost by this date was estimated to be 5\u201310%, but the flow of water from the crater was almost unchanged because the porous nature of the floor of the crater caused the water to be absorbed quickly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2005 activity\nMount St. Helens experienced major activity again on March 8, 2005, at about 5:30\u00a0p.m. PST, when a 36,000-foot (11\u00a0km) plume of steam and presumably ash was witnessed emerging from the volcano, accompanied by a tremor that measured about magnitude 2.5. The plume was visible from the metropolitan areas of Seattle, Washington, to Salem, Oregon, but only lasted for about 20\u201330\u00a0minutes. Ash was reported falling from the sky in Yakima, Washington, and surrounding areas. This activity was not considered a large eruption but merely a minor release of pressure consistent with the nature of dome building. Scientists believed it was triggered by a partial collapse of the lava dome. There was no increase in quake activity before the volcanic event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 810]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2005 activity\nBy May 5, 2005, the highest point on the new dome was 7,675\u00a0feet (2,339\u00a0m), 688\u00a0feet (210\u00a0m) below the highest point of the volcano. It contained approximately 58 million cubic yards (45 million cubic meters) of material. Growth of the new dome continued steadily, and small earthquakes continued to be observed every few minutes. The whaleback feature disintegrated steadily but continued to be extruded as solidified lava pushed upward from below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2005 activity\nOn July 2, 2005, the tip of the whaleback feature broke off, causing a rockfall that sent ash and dust several hundred meters into the air.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2006 activity\nFollowing the collapse of the dome and whaleback, a new feature, termed the \"slab\", began growing. Approximately the size of a football field, the large, cooled volcanic rock was being forced upward as quickly as 6\u00a0feet (2\u00a0m) per day, though the top part of the slab would usually collapse on a daily basis, under its own weight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2006 activity\nOn July 21, 2006, the crater rim was reopened to hikers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2006 activity\nOn December 19, 2006, an eruption sent a steam plume billowing over Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180544-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132008 volcanic activity of Mount St. Helens, 2008 activity\nAfter a relatively quiet 2007, on January 16, 2008, USGS geologist John S. Pallister spotted steam seeping from the lava dome in Mount St. Helens' crater. At approximately the same time, the Pacific Northwest Seismograph Network recorded a magnitude 2.9 earthquake, followed by a small tremor that lasted for nearly ninety minutes, and a magnitude 2.7 earthquake. But by the end of January, the lava dome growth had stopped. On July 10, 2008, it was determined that the eruption that began in 2004 had ended, after 5 months of inactivity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal\nThe 2004\u2013 2010 Italian football scandal, also known as Caso Plusvalenze, was a scandal over alleged false accounting at Italian football clubs. The investigation started in 2004 and concluded in 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nIn the early 2000s, various Italian football clubs declared bankruptcy as benefactors withdrew financial support. Investigations found a widespread culture of illegality. Involved football clubs included A.C. Fiorentina (2002), Monza (2004), S.S.C. Napoli (2004), Ancona Calcio (2004), Torino Calcio (2005), A.C. Perugia (2005), Como (2005), Reggiana (2005), Salernitana Sport (2005) and A.C. Venezia (2005). In addition, Parma went into administration (bankruptcy) and was re-founded as Parma Football Club S.p.A. (2004).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nPreviously, some of these clubs profited by cross-trading players using the football transfer market, wherein multiple players were exchanged between clubs, generally involving monetary consideration. This practice typically resulted in short-term financial benefit for the clubs, but in the long run it increased expenditure through 'amortisation,' (the counterpart for tangible assets is depreciation) of players' financial value. In February 2003, a law was passed that allowed clubs to defer amortisation expenses (Italian Law 91/1981, Article 18B), and avoid recapitalisation through negative equity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0002-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nDespite the law, many clubs continued to practice cross-trading in order to raise the short-term profit required to meet financial criteria for the 2003\u2013 2004 season. The law was declared unconstitutional in 2005, which caused some clubs to recapitalize and remove their amortisation fund by 30 June 2007. As a result, the clubs had to overcome yet another capital shortfall, which later created controversy when re-evaluating their brand and mortgages to banks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nScandals also involved inaccurate dating of profits obtained via player transfers. For example, in July 2001 Roma sold their Japanese international midfielder Hidetoshi Nakata for 55\u00a0billion lire, but the club documented the profit in their accounts for the 2000\u201301 season, claiming that the deal was agreed to before the cut-off of the financial year, which was 30 June 2001 for most clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nBefore 2003, when cross-trading was prevalent, many injustices became evident. Examples include deals involving Giuseppe Colucci and Alberto Maria Fontana (Roma\u2013Verona, both 12.5 billion lire fee); and an exchange that involved Amedeo Mangone, Paolo Poggi and Sergei Gurenko for Diego Fuser, Raffaele Longo and Saliou Lassissi (Roma\u2013Parma, both 65 billion lire transfer fees in total).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nOther deals included those of Matuzal\u00e9m and an anonymous player (Parma\u2013Napoli, both 14 billion lire); Manuele Blasi and Giuseppe Cattivera (Roma\u2013Perugia, both 18 billion lire); Paolo Ginestra and Matteo Bogani (Milan\u2013Inter); Giammarco Frezza and Alessandro Frau (Inter\u2013Roma, both 8.8 billion lire) in 2001; Vratislav Gre\u0161ko and Mat\u00edas Almeyda (Inter\u2013Parma, both \u20ac16M fee); Luigi Sartor and Sebastiano Siviglia (Parma-Roma, both around \u20ac9M fee); Francesco Coco and Clarence Seedorf (Milan\u2013Inter, both \u20ac29M fee); Davide Bombardini and Franco Brienza (Palermo\u2013Roma, 50% rights both \u20ac5.5M fee); Gabriele Paoletti and Luigi Panarelli for Fontana\u2013Frezza (Torino\u2013Roma, 50% rights both \u20ac10.5M fee) in 2002; Rub\u00e9n Maldonado and Gonzalo Mart\u00ednez in January 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 799]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Background\nThe scandal was a culmination of the period that the Italian media dubbed doping amministrativo (doping[-like] administration), bilanciopoli (balance sheet scandal), plusvalenze fittizie or plusvalenze fai-da-te (DIY profit). Bologna chairman Giuseppe Gazzoni Frascara proclaimed his innocence and reported false accounting to the Italian Football Federation. Bologna, however, was also involved in cross-trading, as when the remaining 50% rights of Jonatan Binotto were acquired from Juventus by selling Giacomo Cipriani, Alessandro Gamberini and Alex Pederzoli in 2000 for the same total transfer fee, and for selling Binotto to Internazionale for Fabio Macellari in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, The trading\nSince the Italian Football Federation was unable to prove that the football clubs intended to \"flop\" the price of mature footballers, only deals involving youth players were punished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 47], "content_span": [48, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, The investigation\nIn 2004, Roma and Lazio, followed by Milan and Internazionale, were investigated for false accounting. Moreover, the liquidator of Como pointed out its failure to Preziosi. The accusation suggested that the owner transferred Como's assets to Genoa at an uneconomical price. On A.C. Fiorentina's side, the liquidator from the Court of Florence found that the date of player profit and cross-trading were wrong on the balance sheet. Perugia's failure was also under investigation. The fall of Spezia Calcio was also linked to its previous owner Internazionale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, The investigation\nA separate charge related to Brunelli's was exposed in 2007; Brunelli claimed that the transfer document did not contain his signature and that he knew nothing when he was transferred from Milan to Internazionale. Brunelli was banned for two months from football, even though he was retired at the time. Brunelli's agent was charged and dismissed, and Brunelli sued Internazionale for negligence, forcing Brunelli to retire. This trial was also dismissed. Lazio was acquitted in 2007 along with Juventus. Roma was fined by the court of Rome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, The investigation\nIn January 2007, the prosecutor exposed the alleged false account of Crespo (cash-plus player swap) and Domenico Morfeo (failure of Fiorentina). During an ongoing investigation of Parma, a football player, Amauri, was signed by Parma from Napoli as a free agent, but a massive agent fee was also paid. Amauri did not have EU citizenship and Italian clubs were commonly buying the non-EU registration quota from other clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, The investigation\nWhile the clubs sold the brand to their subsidiaries and mortgaged them, such as Inter Milan on \"Inter Brand\", A.C. Milan on \"Milan Entertainment\", A.S. Roma on \"Soccer S.A.S. di Brand Management\", and \"S.S. Lazio Marketing & Communication S.p.A.\", the move prompted Guardia di Finanza to visit Co.Vi.Soc. of Italian Football Federation to collect information. However, no further action was taken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 53], "content_span": [54, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Aftermath\nSampdoria denied any wrongdoing in the Kalu\u2013Antonini transfer. Zamparini, the chairman of Palermo, insisted that the fine was heavy, as the cross-trading was under previous ownership (Sensi). The club chose to defer to amortize the \u20ac10 million transfer fee of Franco Brienza (like every other club on flopped signing prior to 2002), instead of writing off \u20ac10 million immediately in order to appear in the 2002\u201303 financial year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Aftermath\nFailure to recapitalize and balance sheet related scandals still occurred, namely Treviso, S.S.C. Venezia, Gallipoli Acireale, Pergocrema and board members of the clubs were given heavy fines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180545-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Italian football scandal, Aftermath\nSome research had criticized the effectiveness of the indicators of FIGC's Covisoc on the actual financial health of the football club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 45], "content_span": [46, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0000-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests\nThe Telangana protests 2004-2010 refers to the movements and agitations related to the Telangana movement that took place between the years 2004 and 2010. For the 2004 Assembly and Parliament elections, the Congress party and the TRS had an electoral alliance in the Telangana region to consider the demand of separate Telangana State. However, again in 2006, the then Chief Minister Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy categorically said that the state would remain united. This again resulted in statewide protests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0000-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests\nIn 2009, Union Minister of Home Affairs P. Chidambaram announced that the Indian government would start the process of forming a separate Telangana state, pending the introduction and passage of a separation resolution in the Andhra Pradesh assembly after an 11-day fast by Kalvakuntla Chandrashekar Rao. This again resulted in protests across both Andhra and Rayalseema as in a short time of the Home Minister's declaration, MLAs from the Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema regions submitted their resignations in protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0001-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nIn the run-up to the 2004 Assembly & Parliament elections, then Union Home Minister L. K. Advani ruled out inclusion of Telangana in the NDA agenda and said \"Unless there is consensus among all political parties in the state and unless that consensus is reflected in a resolution of the state Assembly, we don\u2019t propose to include it in the NDA agenda\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0002-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nFor these elections, the Congress party and the TRS forged an electoral alliance in the Telangana region to consider the demand of separate Telangana State. Congress came to power in the state and formed a coalition government at the centre; TRS joined the coalition after the common minimum programme of the coalition government included that the demand for separate Telangana state will be considered after due consultations and consensus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0003-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nIn the 2004 Parliament's winter session, BJP advised TRS & Congress not to talk about separate Telangana and concentrate on more important issues such as suicides & starvation deaths. The Congress stood by the CWC resolution favouring a second SRC on the demand for smaller states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0004-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nIn April 2006 the then Chief Minister Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy categorically said that the state would remain united. In September 2006 TRS withdrew support from the coalition government for failing to create an independent Telangana state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0005-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nIn December 2006 the TRS won a by-election to the Karimnagar parliamentary constituency with a margin of 2.01 lakh votes. TRS and Congress leaders from Telangana continued their fight for the creation of a Telangana state in 2008. All TRS legislators in Parliament and in the State (4 MPs, 16 MLAs, and 3 MLCs) resigned in the first week of March 2008 and forced by-elections to increase pressure on the Congress party to take action. By-elections for the 16 MLA seats and the 4 MP seats were held on 29 May 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0005-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nDuring the election campaign, the TRS party called the by-election a referendum on a Telangana state. The Congress and TDP parties said it is not a referendum on Telangana, and said that they were not opposed to the formation of Telangana state. In June 2008, Tulla Devender Goud, a politbureau member and Deputy Leader of the Telugu Desam Party, resigned from the party, saying he would devote his time and energy to the formation of a separate Telangana state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0005-0002", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2004 to 2009\nIn July 2008, Goud and other leaders such as E. Peddi Reddy formed a new party called Nava Telangana Praja Party (NTPP). On 9 October 2008 the TDP announced its support for the creation of Telangana. Konda Laxman Bapuji of the Nava Telangana Party announced that \"We solemnly declare statehood for Telangana on 2 November 2008.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0006-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2009 to 2010, 2009 Assembly & Parliament Elections\nIn February 2009 the state government declared that it had no objection, in principle, to the formation of separate Telangana and that the time had come to move forward decisively on this issue. To resolve related issues, the government constituted a joint house committee. In the lead-up to the 2009 General Elections in India, all the major parties in Andhra Pradesh supported the formation of Telangana. The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) again announced that they would create two more states, Telangana and Gorkhaland, if they won the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0006-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2009 to 2010, 2009 Assembly & Parliament Elections\nThe Congress Party said it was committed to Telangana statehood, but claimed that Muslim minorities were opposed to the creation of separate state, along with the majority of the people. The MIM party and Muslim leaders within Congress felt that the new state would jeopardise the interests of minorities, the safety and welfare of Muslims, and the future of the Urdu language.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0007-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2009 to 2010, 2009 Assembly & Parliament Elections\nThe Telugu Desam Party promised to work for Telangana statehood. Telangana Rashtra Samithi (TRS) joined a Mahakutami (\"grand alliance\") with the TDP and other parties to defeat the Congress party for denying statehood. The Praja Rajyam Party (PRP), founded in August 2008 by film star Chiranjeevi, pledged support to Telangana statehood if it becomes inevitable. The Nava Telangana Praja Party announced that it would merge with PRP after it concluded that there was not enough political space for two sub-regional Telangana parties that had Telananga statehood as their main agenda, Devender Goud later quit PRP and returned to the Telugu Desam Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0008-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2009 to 2010, 2009 Assembly & Parliament Elections\nIn the 2009 elections, Congress returned to power both at the center and state. It won 154 out of 294 Assembly seats and 33 out of 42 Parliament seats. Within Telangana, Congress won 50 out of 119 Assembly seats and 12 out of 17 Parliament seats. TRS managed to win only 10 assembly seats out of the 45 it contested and only 2 MP seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 80], "content_span": [81, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0009-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2009 to 2010, YSR's death & KCR's fast\nWithin few months of getting re-elected as popular CM, Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy (YSR) died in a helicopter crash in September 2009. This resulted in a leadership crisis within the Congress party and also created a political vacuum in the state. During this time, TRS president K. Chandrashekar Rao (KCR) raised his pitch for the separate state. On 29 November 2009, he started a fast-unto-death, demanding that the Congress party introduce a Telangana bill in Parliament. He was arrested by the police. Student organisations, employee unions, and various organisations joined the movement. KCR had told a Congress emissary on 6 December that he would break his fast if Congress president Sonia Gandhi made a public appeal to him to do so. General strikes shut down Telangana on 6 and 7 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0010-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, 2009 to 2010, YSR's death & KCR's fast\nIn an all party meeting called by the state government on the night of 7 December to discuss regarding KCR's fast and how to handle it, all major Opposition parties extended their support for a separate state for Telangana. The state Congress and its ally Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen have left it to the Congress high command to take a final decision. Minutes of the meeting were faxed to Congress high command. Student organisations planned a massive rally at the state Assembly on 10 December without government permission. This prompted deployment of police troops throughout Telangana. The apparent decline in KCR's health led to a sense of urgency to the issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0011-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Bifurcation Announcement & rollback\nOn 9 December 2009, Union Minister of Home Affairs P. Chidambaram announced that the Indian government would start the process of forming a separate Telangana state, pending the introduction and passage of a separation resolution in the Andhra Pradesh assembly. KCR ended his 11-day fast claiming it a \"true victory of the people of Telangana.\" Pro-Telangana supporters celebrated the central government decision, while those from the Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema regions protested. Within a short time of the Home Minister's declaration, MLAs from the Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema regions submitted their resignations in protest. By 16 December, at least 147 MLAs including Praja Rajyam Founder and Telugu actor Chiranjeevi and 22 ministers along with many MPs had resigned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0012-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Bifurcation Announcement & rollback\nOn 16 December, there was a split in the Praja Rajyam Party (PRP) over the Telangana issue, with its leader Chiranjeevi as well as 16 out of 18 party MLAs opposing the division of Andhra Pradesh, while Telangana leaders in the party were unhappy with the shift in the party's views. On 23 December, the Government of India announced that no action on Telangana will be taken until a consensus is reached by all parties. Subsequently, Coastal Andhra and Rayalaseema region MLAs & MPs withdrew their resignations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0013-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Telangana (TJAC/JAC)\nThe TRS reacted by calling for another general strike on 24 December 2009 which was aimed at stalling the regional economy. A Joint Action Committee (JAC) was formed with the pro-separation members of the major political parties. There were reports that members of the JAC had widely divergent approaches on the issue of a separate Telangana. MLAs and ministers from Telangana submitted their resignations demanding immediate steps to initiate the process of bifurcating Andhra Pradesh. Pro -Telangana protestors & Osmania University students attacked then Telugu Desam Party leader Nagam Janardhan Reddy, pushed him down, kicked and rained blows on him till he escaped on a bike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0014-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Telangana (TJAC/JAC)\nThe Home minister conducted an all-party meeting on 5 January to elicit views of all parties in the State. On the advice of Congress party's central leadership, all of the Ministers from Telangana withdrew their resignations. Rallies, hunger strikes, and suicides continued throughout Telangana to protest against the delay in bifurcating the State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0015-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Telangana (TJAC/JAC)\nSecurity establishments submitted an assessment to the prime minister that the creation of Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand helped Maoists entrench better, as they took advantage of administrative problems in a new state. Similarly they said \"Remnants of the Maoist movement are strongest in Telangana so any break-up of the state (Andhra) will help them\". On 3 January 2010 Varavara rao, a Maoist Emissary gave an open call at OU students march to launch a militant fight for the statehood cause.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0015-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Telangana (TJAC/JAC)\nOn 6 January 2010, TJAC said the strikes, rail-blockades, various protests would not have been held peacefully if Maoists had infiltrated the pro-Telangana movement. It blamed some Andhra leaders for those allegations. It questioned, how the Maoists could have joined the movement when state government claims that the naxalism had been wiped out in the State?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0016-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Telangana (TJAC/JAC)\nThe JAC started relay hunger strikes and threatened the resignations of all legislators on 28 January, demanding that the Centre spell out its intentions and create a timetable for change. It said the agitations would continue until a Bill was passed in Parliament. On 3 February, the JAC organised human chain a distance of 500 kilometres (310\u00a0mi) from north to south in Telangana. Organizers claimed its longest human chain in India. The Jamaat-e-Islami Hind supported a separate Telangana state with the slogan \"Justice for Telangana and Telangana for Justice\" under the leadership of Malik Motasim Khan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0016-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Telangana (TJAC/JAC)\nThe Jamaat, along with its student wing Students Islamic Organisation of India, organised a massive public meet at Nizam College grounds on 7 February 2010 Prominent leaders such as Kalvakuntla Chandrashekar Rao, Hamid Mohammed Khan and Khaja Arifuddin addressed the crowd. On 16 February, Congress legislators from the Telangana region resigned from the Joint Action Committee due to \"unilateral actions by KCR. \".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0017-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Justice Sri Krishna Committee\nOn 3 February the government announced the five-member committee that would look into the issue. It also announced Terms of Reference to the Srikrishna Committee, with a deadline of 31 December 2010. Telangana-JAC rejected the terms of reference saying that it \"undid\" the Union home minister's statement of 9 December in New Delhi. All ten TRS MLAs, one TDP MLA, and one BJP MLA insisted that the speaker of Assembly accept their resignations. The rest of the Telangana MLAs withdrew their resignations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0018-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Justice Sri Krishna Committee\nThe SKC reported that there were a purported 313 suicides in Telangana between 30 November 2009 and 27 February 2010 according to news reports, but has not confirmed the veracity of the data", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0019-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Justice Sri Krishna Committee\nIn a report submitted to the Srikrishna Committee, ministers from Seema-Andhra region stated that the demand for separate Telangana under grounds of self-respect and self-rule is anti-national and will sow seeds for disintegration of the country. This statement evoked strong protests in Telangana and demands for the dismissal of those ministers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0020-0000", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Justice Sri Krishna Committee\nAll the Telangana MLAs who resigned in protest in February were re-elected in by-elections on 27 July 2010 with huge majorities. Congress and TDP candidates who decided to contest the elections, ignoring the appeal of JAC, lost their deposits by obtaining less than one-sixth of the votes in many constituencies. TDP candidates lost their deposits in all constituencies. On 16 December 2010, two weeks before the deadline for the submission of the Srikrishna report, TRS organised a public meeting in Warangal. It was estimated that 1.2 to 1.5 million people attended this meeting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180546-0020-0001", "contents": "2004\u20132010 Telangana protests, Formation of Justice Sri Krishna Committee\nIt was reported that even more would have attended, but they were stranded on the roads due to traffic jams reaching between 20 kilometres (12\u00a0mi) to 35 kilometres (22\u00a0mi) along roads leading to the city. Telangana Rashtra Samithi president K. Chandrasekhar Rao appealed to prime minister Manmohan Singh to note that the people of Telangana were losing patience. He demanded that the Centre introduce the Bill on Telangana in the next session of Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 72], "content_span": [73, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180547-0000-0000", "contents": "2005\n2005 (MMV) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar, the 2005th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 5th year of the 3rd\u00a0millennium, the 5th year of the 21st\u00a0century, and the 6th year of the 2000s decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180547-0001-0000", "contents": "2005\n2005 was designated as the International Year for Sport and Physical Education and the International Year of Microcredit. 2005 was also the end of the International Decade of the World's Indigenous People (1995\u20132005).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 4], "section_span": [4, 4], "content_span": [5, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180548-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1. deild karla\nThe 2005 season of 1. deild karla was the 51st season of second-tier football in Iceland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180549-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 10,000 Lakes Festival\nThe 2005 10,000 Lakes Festival was held July 21 through July 24.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 91]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas\nThe 2005 1000 Guineas Stakes was a horse race held at Newmarket Racecourse on Sunday 1 May 2005. It was the 192nd running of the 1000 Guineas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas\nThe winner was Susan Magnier and Michael Tabor's Virginia Waters, an American-bred bay filly trained by Aidan O'Brien at Ballydoyle in County Tipperary and ridden by Kieren Fallon. Virginia Waters's victory was the first in the race for her owner and trainer and the fourth for Fallon after Sleepytime (1997), Wince (1999) and Russian Rhythm (2003).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas, The contenders\nThe race attracted a field of twenty runners, sixteen trained in the United Kingdom and four in Ireland: there were no challengers from continental Europe. The favourite was the Barry Hills-trained Maids Causeway who had won the Sweet Solera Stakes and Rockfel Stakes in 2004. The four Irish challengers were headed by the Ballydoyle runner Virginia Waters, the winner of the Leopardstown 1,000 Guineas Trial Stakes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas, The contenders\nThe Godolphin stable were represented by Satin Kiss, who had won two minor races in England in 2004 before winning both the UAE 1000 Guineas and the UAE Oaks on dirt in Dubai in early 2005. The best of the British-trained runners appeared to be Karen's Caper and Cape Columbine, first and second in the Nell Gwyn Stakes, the Masaka Stakes winner Vista Bella and the undefeated, but relatively untested Shanghai Lily. Maids Causeway headed an open betting market at odds of 5/1 ahead of Karen's Caper and Shanghai Lily on 6/1, Satin Kiss (8/1) and Cape Columbine (10/1). Virginia Waters and Vista Bella came next on 12/1,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 654]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas, The race\nSatin Kiss took the lead shortly after the start and set the pace from the 40/1 outsider Fen Shui, with Maids Causeway, Karen's Caper, Cap Columbine all in contention. Karen's Caper moved into the lead just after half distance but was overtaken by Maids Causeway a quarter of a mile from the finish, at which point Virginia Waters and Vista Bella began to make progress from the back of the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas, The race\nVirginia Waters gained the advantage a furlong from the finish, despite hanging to the right, and went clear of her rivals in the closing stages to win by two and a half lengths from Maids Causeway. Vista Bella was half a length away in third ahead of Karen's Caper and Cape Columbine. Satin Kiss faded to finish seventeenth whilst Shanghai Lily came home nineteenth of the twenty runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180550-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 Guineas, The race\nAfter the race, O'Brien said \"Kieren gave her an unbelievable ride. He couldn't believe how much she had improved after she won at Leopardstown. It's great for all the lads, they've put in a lot of effort. You do your best every season \u2013 sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't, but it's great when it does\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 27], "content_span": [28, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180551-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Istanbul\nThe 2005 1000\u00a0km of Istanbul was the fifth and final round of the 2005 Le Mans Series season, held at the Istanbul Park, Turkey. It was run on November 13, 2005. Pescarolo Sport won the qualifying and the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180551-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Istanbul, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180551-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Istanbul, Official results\n\u2020 - #95 Racesport Peninsula TVR was listed as not classified due to failing to complete the final lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180552-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Monza\nThe 2005 1000\u00a0km of Monza was the second round of the 2005 Le Mans Series season and held at Autodromo Nazionale Monza. It was run on July 10, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180552-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Monza, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180553-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of N\u00fcrburgring\nThe 2005 1000\u00a0km of N\u00fcrburgring was the fourth round of the 2005 Le Mans Series season, held at the N\u00fcrburgring, Germany. It was run on September 4, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180553-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of N\u00fcrburgring, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180553-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of N\u00fcrburgring, Official results\n\u2020 - #36 Paul Belmondo Racing was listed as not classified due to failing to complete the final lap of the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180554-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Silverstone\nThe 2005 1000\u00a0km of Silverstone was the third round of the 2005 Le Mans Series season and held at Silverstone Circuit, United Kingdom. It was run on August 13, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180554-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Silverstone, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 45], "content_span": [46, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180555-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Spa\nThe 2005 1000\u00a0km of Spa was the opening race of the 2005 Le Mans Series season and held at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium. It was run on April 17, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180555-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 1000 km of Spa, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180556-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 12 Hours of Sebring\nThe 2005 12 Hours of Sebring was the 53rd running of this event, and took place on March 19, 2005. The race was sponsored by Mobil 1 and was the opening race of the 2005 American Le Mans Series season run by IMSA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180556-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 12 Hours of Sebring, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 42], "content_span": [43, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180557-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 2. deild karla\nThe 2005 2. deild karla was the 40th season of third-tier football in Iceland. The league began on 16 May and was concluded on 10 September. It was contested by a total of ten clubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180557-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 2. deild karla, Teams\nThe 2005 2. deild karla was contested by ten clubs, six of which had played in the division during the previous season. 2004 champions KS and runners-up V\u00edkingur \u00d3lafsv\u00edk were promoted to the second tier; replacing them were Njar\u00f0v\u00edk and Stjarnan, both relegated from the 1. deild after finishing in the bottom two places at the end of the 2004 campaign. Also joining the division were Fjar\u00f0abygg\u00f0 and Huginn, who were promoted from the 3. deild through the play-offs. Fjar\u00f0abygg\u00f0 had reached the third tier of Icelandic football for the first time in their history after being founded in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180557-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 2. deild karla, Season statistics, Top goalscorers\nTwo players, Afturelding midfielder \u00deorvaldur \u00c1rnason and Stjarnan forward Gu\u00f0j\u00f3n Baldvinsson, each scored 14 league goals in the 2005 2. deild season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 55], "content_span": [56, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180557-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 2. deild karla, Awards, Team of the year\nThe KS\u00cd selected a team of the year, which consisted of 11 players and 5 substitutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180558-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 2. divisjon\nThe 2005 2. divisjon season was the third highest association football league for men in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180558-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 2. divisjon\n26 games were played in 4 groups, with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws. Sarpsborg\u00a0Sparta, Manglerud Star, Haugesund and Tromsdalen were promoted to the First Division. Number twelve, thirteen and fourteen were relegated to the 3. divisjon. The winning teams from each of the 24 groups in the 3. divisjon each faced a winning team from another group in a playoff match, resulting in 12 playoff winners which were promoted to the 2. divisjon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180559-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Daytona\nThe 2005 Rolex 24 at Daytona was a Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series 24-hour endurance sports car race held on February 5\u20136, 2005 at the Daytona International Speedway road course. The race served as the first round of the 2005 Rolex Sports Car Series. For the first time, all cars used a standard tire, as the series mandated all cars use Hoosier tires. The overall winner of the race was the No. 10 SunTrust Racing Riley Mk XI driven by Max Angelelli, Wayne Taylor, and Emmanuel Collard. The GT class was won by the No. 71 Farnbacher Racing USA Porsche 996 GT3 Cup driven by Wolf Henzler, Dominik Farnbacher, Perre Ehret, and Shawn Price.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe 73rd 24 Hours of Le Mans (French: 73e 24 Heures du Mans) was an 24 hour automobile endurance race held for Le Mans Prototype and Grand Touring cars from 18 to 19 June 2005 at the Circuit de la Sarthe close by Le Mans, France. It was the 73rd running of the event, as organised by the automotive group, the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) since 1923. Unlike other events, it was not a part of any endurance motor racing championship. A test day was held two weeks prior to the race on 5 June. Approximately 230,000 people attended the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans\nA Pescarolo Sport C60 car shared by Jean-Christophe Boullion, Emmanuel Collard and \u00c9rik Comas started from pole position after Boullion set the overall fastest lap time in the fourth qualifying session. The car led the first two hours until a gearbox fault forced it into the garage for repairs and promoted the Champion Racing Audi R8 vehicle of Emmanuele Pirro to the lead until Pirro crashed after a safety car intervention. The sister Champion car of JJ Lehto, Tom Kristensen and Marco Werner took over the lead and maintained it for the rest of the race to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans\nIt was Werner's first Le Mans win, Lehto's second and Kristensen's seventh. Kristensen eclipsed Jacky Ickx as the all-time leader of overall Le Mans victories and Audi took its fifth win since the 2000 edition. Pescarolo finished two laps behind in second and the sister Champion Audi car of Frank Biela, Allan McNish and Pirro completed the race podium in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans\nThe Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) category was won by the Ray Mallock Racing MG-Lola EX264 car of Thomas Erdos, Mike Newton and Warren Hughes after it took the class lead in the final hour of the race. Karim Ojjeh, Claude-Yves Gosselin and Adam Sharpe in a Paul Belmondo Racing Courage C65 vehicle finished five laps behind the MG-Lola in second while the sister No. 37 car of Didier Andr\u00e9, Paul Belmondo and Rick Sutherland was third in class. Corvette Racing won their fourth class victory since their debut in the 2001 race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans\nOlivier Beretta, Oliver Gavin and Jan Magnussen's No. 64 Chevrolet Corvette C6.R held a two-lap advantage over the No. 63 of Ron Fellows, Max Papis and Johnny O'Connell in the Le Mans Grand Touring 1 (LMGT1) category. Porsches led the Le Mans Grand Touring 2 (LMGT2) class with the No. 71 Alex Job Racing 911 GT3-RSR of Leo Hindery, Marc Lieb and Mike Rockenfeller ahead of the No. 90 White Lighting Racing car of J\u00f6rg Bergmeister, Patrick Long and Timo Bernhard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background\nThe dates of the 2005 24 Hours of Le Mans were released in September 2004. It was the 73rd edition of the race and took place at the 8.482\u00a0mi (13.650\u00a0km) Circuit de la Sarthe road racing circuit close by Le Mans, France, from 18 to 19 June. The automotive journalist Charles Faroux proposed the race to Georges Durand, the president of the Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO), and the industrialist Emile Coquile for a test of vehicle reliability and fuel-efficiency, which was first held in 1923. The event is considered one of the world's most prestigious motor races and is part of the Triple Crown of Motorsport.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background, Regulation and track changes\n2005 marked major changes in the Le Mans regulations for the two Grand Touring (GT) categories. The Le Mans Grand Touring Sport category was renamed Le Mans Grand Touring 1 (LMGT1) and the Le Mans Grand Touring category became the Le Mans Grand Touring 2 (LMGT2) class. New vehicles in both of the classes were required to undergo homologation by both the F\u00e9d\u00e9ration Internationale de l'Automobile, the world governing body of motor racing, and the ACO.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background, Regulation and track changes\n2005 was the final year that cars built to confirm with the Le Mans Prototype 900 (LMP900) regulations could be entered alongside the newer \"hybrid\" cars constructed to comply to the updated aerodynamic regulations in the Le Mans Prototype 1 (LMP1) category. LMP900 cars were required to run with a smaller air restrictor to lower engine performance and were required to weigh more than \"hybrid\" cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background, Regulation and track changes\nThe ACO recommended that LMGT1 cars lapped the Circuit de la Sarthe no faster than 3 minutes, 55 seconds and LMGT2 were not permitted to go quicker than 4 minutes, 8 seconds. Had these rules not been met, the automotive group would immediately intervene to lower the performance of individual cars by altering their aerodynamic efficiency, reducing the size of the air restrictor and the fuel tank for future editions of the Le Mans race. GT2-specification vehicles were allowed to complete if a minimum of 100 road-going cars were constructed by \"the big manufacturers\" and 25 produced by \"the small manufacturers.\" Otherwise, the ACO would suspend holomogation for the 2006 edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Background, Regulation and track changes\nFrom late 2004 to early 2005, the circuit was resurfaced from Mulsanne to Arnage corners and a section of road was levelled at the circuit's 89th post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 66], "content_span": [67, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries\nThe ACO received 78 applications (37 for the Le Mans Prototype (LMP) classes and 41 for the GT categories) by the deadline for entries on 19 January 2005. It granted 50 invitations to the race and entries were divided between the LMP1, Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2), LMGT1 and LMGT2 categories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nAutomatic entries were earned by teams which won their category in the 2004 24 Hours of Le Mans. Teams which won Le Mans-based series and events such as the 2004 Petit Le Mans, the 2004 Le Mans Endurance Series and the 2004 American Le Mans Series were also invited. Some second-place finishers were also granted automatic entries in certain series though none were awarded to the winners and runners-up of the GT and N-GT categories of the 2004 FIA GT Championship as had been the case in the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nAs entries were pre-selected to teams, they were restricted to a maximum of two cars and were not allowed to change their vehicles from the previous year to the next. Entries were permitted to change category provided that they did not change the make of car and the ACO granted official permission for the switch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Automatic entries\nOn 18 January 2005, the ACO published its final list of automatic invitations. Audi Sport Japan Team Goh, the 2004 winners, and the runners-up Audi Sport UK Team Veloqx were among the teams to decline their automatic entries. Dyson Racing, Prodrive Racing, Barron Connor Racing, ChoroQ Racing Team, JMB Racing and Alex Job Racing also did not accept their automatic entries. No replacements were found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 52], "content_span": [53, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nOn 24 March 2005, the ACO announced the full 50-car entry list for Le Mans, plus eight reserves. Following the publication of entries, several teams withdrew their entries. Team Nasamax withdrew its two-year-old bio-ethanol-powered DM139-Judd car, citing financial difficulties causing the team to reduce its schedule for the 2005 racing season. This promoted the No. 91 T2M Motorsport Porsche 911-GT3 RSR to the race entry and it competed in the LMGT2 category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0010-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nFour days later, ACEMCO Motorsports withdrew its No. 63 Saleen S7-R due to aerodynamic deficiencies caused by a modification of the height of the car's rear wing at the 2004 Petit Le Mans to comply with ACO regulations. This promoted the No. 76 IMSA Performance LMGT2-class Porsche to the race from the reserves.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Entries, Entry list and reserves\nA revised entry list released by the ACO on 27 April confirmed the withdrawal of the Team Nasamax and ACEMCO Motorsports entries as well as the dropping of the Graham Nash Motorsport Saleen S7-R, Thierry Perrier's Porsche 911-GT3 RSR, a second Racing for Holland Dome S101-Judd car, a Ferrari 360 Modena GTC fielded by G.P.C. Sport and a second Ferrari 550-GTS Maranello purchased by Larbre Comp\u00e9tition from the reserve list. Four days before the start of scrutineering, Lucchini Engineering were unable to rectify a gearbox ratio problem in its LMP2/04 and were forced to withdraw the car, reducing the number of entries to 49.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nA mandatory pre-Le Mans test day to work on car setup and driver orientation split into two daytime sessions of four hours each was held at the circuit on 5 June, involving 50 entries. Rainfall towards the end of the afternoon session prevented teams from improving their lap times. Pescarolo Sport set the day's pace with a 3 minutes, 32.468 seconds lap from Emmanuel Collard in the No. 16 C60 Hybrid Judd car. Soheil Ayari's sister No. 17 Pescarolo followed in second and Jonathan Cochet's No. 13 Courage Comp\u00e9tition car was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0012-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nThe fastest Audi R8 vehicle was fourth after a lap from JJ Lehto's No. 3 Champion Racing entry and Seiji Ara's No. 5 Jim Gainer International Dome S101 car was fifth. Jo\u00e3o Barbosa set a lap to put the No. 18 Rollcentre Racing Dallara SP1 car in sixth position and Franck Montagny's Team Oreca Audi was seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0012-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nSam Hancock led the LMP2 class in the No. 32 Intersport Racing Lola B05/40 vehicle with a time of 3 minutes, 44.426 seconds ahead of Ray Mallock's No. 32 MG-Lola EX264 of Thomas Erdos, the No. 30 Kruse Motorsport Courage C65 of Phil Bennett and Didier Andr\u00e9's No. 37 Paul Belmondo Racing cars. Aston Martin, in its first Le Mans works entry since the 1989 event, led the LMGT1 category with a 3 minutes, 50.033 seconds lap from Tom\u00e1\u0161 Enge's No. 58 DBR9 with the No. 59 of David Brabham second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0012-0003", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Testing\nChristophe Bouchut's No. 61 Cirtek Motorsport Ferrari and the No. 64 and No. 63 Chevrolet Corvette C6.Rs of Oliver Gavin and Johnny O'Connell occupied third to fifth in class. The No. 90 White Lighting Racing car of Timo Bernhard helped Porsche to lead the LMGT2 category, followed by Robin Liddell's No. 77 Panoz Esperante GT-LM and the No. 76 IMSA Performance car of Romain Dumas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nEight hours of qualifying divided into four two-hour sessions were available to all entrants on 15 and 16 June. During the sessions, all entrants were required to set a time within 115 per cent of the fastest lap established by the fastest vehicle in each of the four categories to qualify for the race. Rain fell at the start of the first session, making the track slippery and reducing visibility. Some drivers met the required minimum distance to drive in the race. Collard led with a lap of 4 minutes, 13.526 seconds, which he set late in the session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nChampion's lead Audi was in second with a lap from Tom Kristensen, and Ryo Michigami's Jim Gainer Dome car was third. Andy Wallace was fourth in Creation Autosportif's No. 7 DBA 03S-Judd car and Michael Krumm's Rollcentre Dallara vehicle came in fifth. Ayari's Pescarolo entry was provisionally sixth and Allan McNish was seventh in the No. 2 Champion car. Bouchut carried the Cirtek Ferrari to provisional pole in LMGT1 with a 4 minutes, 23.885 seconds time, ahead of the two Aston Martin cars by more than 12 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0013-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nA lap of 4 minutes, 24.832 seconds gave the LMP2 lead to Andre's Paul Belmondo Courage and the Intersport Lola of Hancock was second. Earlier, the No. 39 Chamberlain-Synergy Motorsport Lola car of Peter Owen had caused the session to be stopped because of a loss of control at its rear while changing gears. Owen crashed at the exit of the second Mulsanne chicane but he was unhurt. Mike Rockenfeller's Alex Job Porsche was fastest in LMGT2 with a 4 minutes, 37.574 seconds lap, followed by J\u00f6rg Bergmeister's No. 90 White Lighting and Dumas' No. 76 IMSA Performance entries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe track dried towards the conclusion of the second qualifying session and lap times began to lower. Ayari in Pescarolo's No. 17 car improved provisional pole position by more than 12 seconds with a 4 minutes, 1.197 seconds lap just before the session ended, followed by the improved No. 2 Champion Audi of McNish and Nicolas Minassian in Creation Autosportif's No. 7 DBA 03S entry. Montagny put the Oreca Audi on provisional pole with half an hour remaining before falling to fourth. Lehto in the second Champion car fell to fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nMichigami was sixth and Jota's Zytek 04S car of Sam Hignett seventh. The Rollcentre Dallara suffered a flash fire that damaged the car's bodywork due to a seal on a fuel rig braking during a pit stop. The damage to the car curtailed its running early. Hancock gave the Intersport team provisional pole position in the LMP2 class after displacing the Paul Belmondo car of Andre, setting a time of 4 minutes, 11.719 seconds, a second faster than Ian James' second-placed No. 34 Miracle Motorsports Courage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0014-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nIn LMGT1, Larbre Comp\u00e9tition led the session with a 4 minutes, 20.688 seconds lap from Vincent Vosse to displace the Cirtek Ferrari from the top of the category's time sheets. Similarly, Dumas recorded a lap of 4 minutes, 25.598 seconds in the IMSA Performance Porsche to lead the LMGT2 category with 35 minutes to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe weather for the two qualifying sessions on 16 June was humid and dry. For the second consecutive session, Ayari's No. 17 Pescarolo vehicle improved provisional pole position to a 3 minutes, 35.555 seconds lap. Team Oreca's Audi of Montagny placed second and McNish was the fastest Champion car in third. Cochet improved the No. 13 Pescarolo's time in the session's final minutes to go into fourth as Minassian's DBA 03S fell to fifth. Michigami's Jim Gainer Dome maintained sixth and Barbosa's Rollcentre Dallara was seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0015-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nThe No. 16 Pescarolo C60 had its times deleted for Collard touching the car after relieving Jean-Christophe Boullion though the penalty was rescinded 40 minutes later. In LMP2, Warren Hughes' first lap of 3 minutes, 49.845 seconds in the No. 25 Ray Mallock MG-Lola was bettered by James' 3 minutes, 48.819 seconds time in the No. 34 Miracle Courage C65 to lead the category. A crash at the exit to Indianapolis corner by Jean-Bernard Bouvet's No. 23 Gerard Welter WR LMP04 car halted the session after 90 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0015-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nPedro Lamy helped Aston Martin to lead in LMGT1 with a 3-minute, 50.311-second lap, followed by Brabham's No. 59 car and Gavin and O'Connell's Corvettes. Rockenfeller greatly improved Alex Job's Porsche lap to maintain the lead in LMGT2 with a time of 4 minutes, 5.326 seconds. Johannes van Overbeek's No. 80 Flying Lizard Motorsports and Bill Auberlen's No. 77 Panoz were second and third in class. Tom Coronel's throttle stuck in the No. 85 Spyker C8 Spyder GT2-R and he crashed in the Porsche Curves. Andrew Kirkcaldy's No. 93 Scuderia Ecosse Ferrari struck a barrier at the Ford Chicane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nAs temperatures cooled in the final qualifying session, three-quarters of the field improved their fastest laps, including Collard's No. 16 Pescarolo car with a lap of 3 minutes, 34.715 seconds on his first lap. He maintained first for the rest of qualifying to secure pole position. Ayari joined Collard on the grid's front row with a lap that was 0.840 seconds slower. McNish's Champion car was the highest-placed Audi, in third, Katsumoto Kaneishi bettered the Jim Gainer Dome's lap to start fourth and Montagny's Team Oreca Audi qualified fifth. Shinji Nakano's No. 13 Courage C60 and Minassian's No. 7", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0016-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying\nDBA 03 vehicles were sixth and seventh. The No. 34 Miracle Courage C65 car of Andy Lally, Hancock, Erdos and Andre shared the lead of the LMP2 category early in the session until Andre's lap of 3 minutes, 42.301 seconds secured pole position for the Paul Belmondo team. In LMGT1 Aston Martin maintained the first two positions as Brabham led until Enge took pole position with ten minutes left with a lap of 3 minutes, 48.576 seconds. Corvette Racing was third with Gavin's No. 64 car ahead of the Cirtek Ferrari of Alexei Vasiliev. Rockenfeller of Alex Job Racing retained first place in LMGT2 from the No. 80 Flying Lizard and No. 77 Panoz cars. A crash for Bergmeister into Tetre Rouge corner ended Flying Lizard's session early.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 36], "content_span": [37, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying, Post-qualifying\nAlthough G-Force Racing had qualified more than 115 per cent slower than the fastest qualifying car in the LMP2 category, the stewards applied force majeure after the team's No. 35 Courage C65 vehicle was heavily damaged in the first qualifying session. The team were granted dispensation to start the race from the rear of the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 53], "content_span": [54, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Qualifying, Qualifying results\nPole position winners in each class are indicated in bold. The fastest time set by each entry is denoted in gray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 56], "content_span": [57, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nThe drivers took to the track at 09:00 Central European Summer Time (UTC+02:00) for a 45-minute warm-up session to check car functionality in clear and warm weather. The No. 16 Pescarolo car of Boullion was fastest with a lap of 3 minutes, 37.042 seconds. Champion were second and third with the No. 3 R8 of Kristensen and Frank Biela's No. 2 car. S\u00e9bastien Loeb was fourth in the No. 17 Pescarolo car and Jamie Campbell-Walter's No. 7 Creation Autosportif DBA vehicle was fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0019-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Warm-up\nThe fastest LMP2 lap was a 3 minutes, 49.477 seconds from the No. 32 Intersport Lola car of Liz Halliday. Bennett's No. 30 Kruse Courage car was second in class. David Brabham in the No. 59 Aston Martin was quickest in LMGT1 and Lieb's No. 71 Alex Job Porsche led in LMGT2. The No. 8 Rollcentre Dallara emitted smoke from its left-hand exhaust system and the team changed engines. A major oversteer caused Dumas to lose control of the No. 76 IMSA Performance car and damage its front-right corner against a barrier leaving the Indianapolis turn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nThe weather at the start was dry and clear with an air temperature of 32\u00a0\u00b0C (90\u00a0\u00b0F). Approximately 230,000 people attended the race. The French tricolour was waved by Martin Winterkorn, the president of Audi, at 16:00 local time to start the race. Boullion, the pole sitter, led the field. Forty-nine cars planned to take the start but Paul Belmondo's Courage, Bouvet's Gerald Welter WR, the Rollcentre Dallara and the Chamberlain-Synergy Lola vehicles started from the pit lane because they had technical problems.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nBoullion maintained the lead from his teammate Ayari for the first three laps as the pair pulled away from the rest of the field. Michigami's Jim Gainer Dome car passed Emanuele Pirro around the inside for third entering the Dunlop chicane. Auberlen took the lead of LMGT2 from Rockenfeller on the third lap. Gear selection problems forced the No. 25 Ray Mallock Lola car to the garage and Michigami lost a lap due to a minor paddle shift issue. Towards the close of the first hour the LMGT1-class-leading No. 59 Aston Martin of Turner incurred two stop-and-go penalties for driving across a white line denoting the track boundaries at the Ford Chicane, dropping the car to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 736]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nMechanical attrition affected several cars in the second hour. Liddell's Panoz vehicle required repairs to a loose undertray, promoting Lieb's Alex Job car to the lead of LMGT2. A left-rear puncture on Gavin's No. 64 Corvette caused by a lack of pressure on the Mulsanne Straight slowed him to 60\u00a0mph (97\u00a0km/h) and he returned to the pit lane for a replacement wheel. A further delay caused by a water leak delayed Gavin and he fell to third in category.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0021-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nStefan Eriksson had an anxious moment in the No. 92 Cirtek Ferrari with a spin just before the Ford Chicanes, causing several drivers to scramble for space to avoid hitting his car. Not long after, Patrick Bourdais was caught off guard as Ayari lapped his No. 78 Panoz car at Arnage corner, causing Bourdais and Ayari to collide. Bourdais pirouetted into a gravel trap, making minor contact with a tyre barrier. Ayari sustained steering and front bodywork damage to the No. 17 Pesarolo and he drove the car to the garage. Repairs took four minutes and it fell to sixth place with \u00c9ric H\u00e9lary relieving Ayari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 664]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nEnge's No. 58 Aston Martin was elevated into the top ten, when Campbell-Walter had a broken mechanical connection between the No. 7 DBA-Judd's paddle shift and gearbox. Subsequent high water temperatures that took 25 minutes to rectify, dropping the car down the race order. LMP2 was led by Kruse' Courage C65 vehicle of Ian Mitchell, which passed Hancock's Intersport Lola entry and battled the No. 37 Paul Belmondo car. The Petersen Porsche later passed Lieb's Alex Job car to take the lead of LMGT2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0022-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nApproaching the 2-hour and 30-minute mark, the No. 64 Corvette of Beretta sustained a second rear-left puncture and entered the pit lane for another change of tyres. Shortly after, Comas in the No. 16 Pescarolo ceded the race lead to the No. 2 Audi of Pirro as a gear selection fault required a visit to the garage, dropping the car to fifth. It lost further positions as the problem persisted leaving the first Mulsanne chicane with Collard in the car.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nAt the conclusion of the second hour, the Chamberlain-Synergy Lola began leaking oil, necessitating the ACO to deploy three safety cars for 15 minutes as marshals scattered cement dust to dry the spilled oil. As the safety cars were recalled, Pirro locked his cold tyres heavily on the run to Arnage corner, making contact with a tyre barrier with the left-front corner of the No. 2 Audi. Marshals recovered the car and Pirro drove slowly to the pit lane for repairs to its bodywork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0023-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Start and opening hours\nThe No. 2 Audi rejoined in fifth position and Marco Werner assumed the race lead and the Team Oreca car of St\u00e9phane Ortelli moved into second. A left-rear puncture on the No. 16 Pescarolo C60 car midway through the lap required H\u00e9lary to make a pit stop to mend bodywork damage. The vehicle rejoined the race in seventh position after a ten-minute pit stop. The recovering No. 18 Rollcentre Dallara car of Krumm, which had a misfiring engine that was cured, was forced to enter the pit lane to repair a broken power steering pump that required a replenishing of fluid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 55], "content_span": [56, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nAs night fell, the lead of LMGT1 changed to the No. 63 Corvette of Max Papis as Lamy made a pit stop to switch control of the No. 58 Aston Martin with his co-driver Peter Kox. The No. 13 Courage C60H of Bruce Jouanny sustained a major rear left puncture on the approach from Mulsanne corner to Indianapolis turn, removing the car's rear wing and bodywork, necessitating its retirement in the garage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0024-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe incident briefly delayed Ortelli, who drove into a gravel trap at the Dunlop Esses after striking debris from Jouanny's car but he avoided a collision with the barriers beside the track. A suspension problem on the Team Oreca Audi of Jean-Marc Gounon dropped it to sixth overall, promoting Biela's No. 2 Champion vehicle to second. Gounon returned to fourth by passing Vanina Ickx's No. 18 Rollcentre Dallara and Jan Lammers' No. 10 Racing for Holland Dome cars. In the meantime, Alex Job driver Rockenfeller retook the lead of LMGT2 from White Lighting. The No. 63 Corvette of Ron Fellows was overtaken by Kox's No. 59 Aston Martin for the lead of the LMGT1 category going into the first Mulsanne chicane in the seventh hour and Kox began to pull away from the rest of the class field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nNot long after, Donny Crevels' No. 85 Spyker C8 caught fire at its right rear due to a broken oil line spraying oil on its warm exhaust pipe. He retired after a high speed spin into a gravel trap at Indianapolis corner. The safety cars were required for a second time to allow marshals to work for 24 minutes to dry the spilled oil with cement dust.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0025-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nThe No. 34 Miracle Courage shed its left-rear wheel at the exit of the pit lane during the safety car period and the vehicle coasted backwards down a small hill and re-entered the pit lane. This led to the disqualification of the No. 34 Courage car from the race for \"reversing back on track\". Turner subsequently incurred a third time penalty for overtaking another car under yellow flag conditions; the gap between the Alex Job Racing Porsche of Lieb and Timo Bernhard's White Lighting car in the first two positions in LMGT2 was 14 seconds. At midnight, Ayari's No. 17 Pescarolo C60 and Bobby Verdon-Roe's No. 8 Rollcentre Dallara cars made contact at the first Mulsanne chicane, dropping Ayari to 14th while his car was repaired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nHalliday and later Gregor Fisken twice brought the No. 32 Intersport Lola car from the LMP2 lead straight to the pit lane with a fuel injector problem. The team lost 15 minutes and the category lead to the No. 37 Paul Belmondo Courage car. Boullion's No. 16 Pescarolo C60 vehicle was elevated to fourth when driver John Bosch entered the pit lane for debris removal from the Racing for Holland Dome's car sidepod and radiator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0026-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Night\nFuel injector problems on the LMP2-category-leading No. 37 Paul Belmondo Courage forced Andre to drive the car into the garage where its fuel pump and filters were replaced, as the No. 32 Intersport Lola vehicle was retired with a broken engine valve. Andre lost his two-lap lead to the sister No. 36 car of Karim Ojjeh and later Adam Sharpe. Approaching the mid-point in the race, Werner's No. 3 Audi led his Champion teammate McNish by a lap after the No. 2 car made an unscheduled stop to replace a slow puncture. Comas returned to third when the No. 5 Jim Gainer Dome car had its engine control unit changed and fell to fourth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn the early morning, a fast pace from McNish lowered Kristensen's overall lead to less than a minute. Gounon lost control of the Team Oreca R8 and narrowly avoided a collision with Kristensen at the Ford Chicane after he missed his braking point. Soon after, a tyre delamination put the right-front corner of McNish's Audi into a tyre barrier at Indianapolis and it was beached in a gravel trap. He returned to the circuit after marshals recovered the Audi from the gravel but McNish drove straight to the garage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0027-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nRepairs to the Audi's front-right suspension and rear bodywork took 18 minutes to complete. Boullion in the No. 17 Pescarolo car was promoted to second as the No. 2 Audi now driven by Biela emerged in third position. The No. 91 T2M Motorsport Porsche of Xavier Pompidou had a heavy accident with a tree at 190\u00a0km/h (120\u00a0mph) at Indianapolis corner after its left-rear wheel bearing failed before his braking point, forcing its retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0027-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nPompidou was unhurt because the brunt of the impact damaged the car's right-hand corner; he was transported from the circuit via a medical vehicle for a precautionary check-up. Kristsensen had an anxious moment when he selected a gear too early in the No. 3 Audi and ran wide onto the grass at the second Mulsanne chicane; he retained the overall lead from the faster Pescarolo of Boullion. Paul Belmondo Racing's No. 36 Courage vehicle relinquished its four-lap lead in the LMP2 category to the No. 25 Ray Mallock Lola car of Erdos because an overheating problem forced it into the garage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nCampbell-Walter locked his front-left tyre on gravel and oil scattered across the track at the first Mulsanne chicane and had an accident against a tyre barrier. He drove the No. 13 Creation Autosportif DBA-Judd car to the garage for a replacement splitter, bodywork and a new brake disc and rejoined the race in 20th position after 1 hour, 10 minutes. After going off the track and onto an escape road at Indianapolis corner, Loeb brought the No. 16 Pescarolo into the pit lane for a three-minute stop to remove debris from the car's air intakes and bodywork.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0028-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nThe No. 25 Ray Mallock MG-Lola relinquished the lead of LMP2 to Andre in the No. 37 Paul Belmondo Courage vehicle due to a broken layshaft bearing that forced the car to enter the garage for \u00be of an hour, dropping it to third in the category. Soon after, Enge's No. 58 Aston Martin sustained damage to its front splitter. The car lost the lead of LMGT1 to the No. 64 Corvette of Beretta after a five-minute pit stop to repair the damage. St\u00e9phane Sarrazin's No. 59 Aston Martin also passed his teammate Enge for second place in category; though he sustained a left-rear puncture, his pit stop did not lose him second in LMGT1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 685]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nIn the 19th hour, Ayari in fifth place picked up a rear puncture on a bump at the first Mulsanne chicane. He spun through 90 degrees into a tyre wall, damaging the No. 17 Pescarolo car's rear wing, steering and suspension, as well as loosening its bodywork. Ayari slowed for almost an entire lap to enter the garage. Pescarolo were unable to repair the damage after half an hour and retired the car. The No. 17's retirement elevated John Stack's No. 9 Jota Zytek car to fifth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0029-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nThe Zytek car maintained the position until Hignett understeered across a gravel trap at Indianapolis corner and he crashed into a tyre barrier. Marshals freed Hignett from the barrier and the car returned to the track in eighth overall. The attrition rate amongst LMP1 cars promoted the LMGT1-class leading No. 64 Corvette to fifth overall. In the meantime, a right-rear suspension failure on the No. 25 Ray Mallock MG-Lola car of Erdos sent him gyrating into a gravel trap at the Ford Chicane. Erdos was able to drive the car to the pit lane for repairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0029-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Morning to early afternoon\nWith 90 minutes to go, the No. 59 Aston Martin entered the garage to have a water leak in its radiator rectified and Enge's No. 58 car was retired after it ran out of fuel on track. Soon after, the No. 16 Pescarolo began to fall off the race pace after Boullion made an unscheduled visit to the garage to have debris removed from the radiator. The debris was the result of the opening of duct grilles to prevent the car from overheating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 58], "content_span": [59, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nUnchallenged since the third hour of the race, Kristensen took the chequered flag for the No. 3 Audi in a time of 24:01:30.901 at an average speed of 210.216\u00a0km/h (130.622\u00a0mph), two laps ahead of the No. 16 Pescarolo car of Boullion. The No. 2 Champion car was a further four laps behind to complete the podium in third place. The last of the Audi cars was the Team Oreca in fourth, another two laps behind. It was Werner's first Le Mans victory, Lehto's second and Kristensen's seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nKristensen eclipsed Jacky Ickx's all-time record of six overall Le Mans wins, and Werner completed the Triple Crown of Endurance Racing (overall wins in the 24 Hours of Daytona, the 12 Hours of Sebring and the 24 Hours of Le Mans). It was also Audi's fifth overall victory and the last for the R8. The No. 64 Corvette maintained its two-lap advantage at the front of the LMGT1 field over the No. 63 car, earning the team their fourth class win. Aston Martin's No. 59 DBR9 completed the category podium in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0030-0002", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race, Finish\nAlex Job, unchallenged since the fifth hour of the race, were victorious in the LMGT2 category, two minutes ahead of White Lightning's No. 90 Porsche and seven laps in front of Flying Lizard's No. 80 entry. The battle for the win in the LMP2 class continued into the final hour, as the Ray Mallock Lola car overtook the two Paul Belmondo Courage vehicles after they had mechanical problems with 45 minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180560-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 24 Hours of Le Mans, Race classification\nThe minimum number of laps for classification (75 per cent of the overall winning car's race distance) was 277 laps. Class winners are denoted with bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 45], "content_span": [46, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180561-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 3. divisjon\nThe 2005 season of the 3. divisjon, the fourth highest association football league for men in Norway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180561-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 3. divisjon\nBetween 20 and 22 games (depending on group size) were played in 24 groups, with 3 points given for wins and 1 for draws. Twelve teams were promoted to the 2. divisjon through playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180562-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 3000 Pro Series\nThe 2005 3000 Pro Series was the inaugural season of what later would become the International Formula Master racing series. The season consisted of eight rounds, beginning on 10 April at the ACI Vallelunga Circuit and finishing on 9 October at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza. 10 different teams and 26 different drivers competed. In this one-make formula all drivers had to utilize Lola B99/50 chassis and Zytek engines. It was won jointly by Austrian Norbert Siedler and Italian Massimiliano Busnelli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180562-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 3000 Pro Series, Championship Standings, Drivers\nPoints were awarded to the top eight classified finishers using the following structure:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180562-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 3000 Pro Series, Championship Standings, Drivers\nNOTE - Siedler and Busnelli could not be separated by race finishing positions. Siedler had the better qualifying record but it was decided that the title would be shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 53], "content_span": [54, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180563-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 4 Nations Cup\nThe 2005 4 Nations Cup was the tenth playing of the annual women's ice hockey tournament. It was held in Finland, from August 31\u2013September 4, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180564-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 A Lyga\nThe Lithuanian A Lyga 2005 was the 16th season of top-tier football in Lithuania. The season started on 12 April 2005 and ended on 12 November 2005. 10 teams participated with Ekranas winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 11], "section_span": [11, 11], "content_span": [12, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180565-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup\nThe 2005 A-League Pre-Season Challenge Cup was played in the lead up to the inaugural (2005-06) A-League season. It was won by the Central Coast Mariners, who beat Perth Glory in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180566-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 A3 Champions Cup\nThe 2005 A3 Champions Cup was third edition of A3 Champions Cup. It was held from February 13 to 19, 2003 in Seogwipo, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180567-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AAA Championships\nThe 2005 AAA Championships was an outdoor track and field competition organised by the Amateur Athletic Association (AAA), held from 9\u201310 July at the Manchester Regional Arena in Manchester, England. It was considered the de facto national championships for the United Kingdom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180568-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ABA All-Star Game\nThe 2005 American Basketball Association All-Star Game was held at the 17,923 seat Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, where West defeated East, 163\u2013149. Lou Kelly of the Las Vegas Rattlers was named the Most Valuable Player. The big names of the event were the former NBA players Lawrence Moten, Joe Crispin, Todd Day and Anthony Miller. The latter who played 7 seasons in the NBA joined Atlanta Vision mid-season from the Atlanta Hawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180568-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ABA All-Star Game, The best players of the 2005 All-Star game\nThe winning West team was led by Lou Kelly, a UNLV who graduate scored 32 points in the All-Star game and was named the game MVP, Daryl Dorsey from Indiana who added 26 points and Todd Day with 25. The best player for the Eats teams was Randy Gill who performed for 27 points, 15 rebounds and 10 assists. Antwain Barbour and Willie Shaw with 25 and 23 points respectively, also shone for the East All-Stars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 66], "content_span": [67, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180569-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament\nThe 2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 33rd edition of the event known that year as the ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, and was part of the ATP International Series Gold of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the Rotterdam Ahoy indoor sporting arena in Rotterdam, Netherlands, from 14 February through 20 February 2005. First-seeded Roger Federer won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180569-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament\nThe singles draw was led by World No. 1, reigning Wimbledon, US Open and Tennis Masters Cup champion, Australian Open semifinalist, Doha titlist Roger Federer, French Open runner-up, Umag winner Guillermo Coria, and US Open semifinalist Tim Henman. Also present were Australian Open quarterfinalist David Nalbandian, Adelaide and Marseille champion Joachim Johansson, Nikolay Davydenko, Dominik Hrbat\u00fd and Feliciano L\u00f3pez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180569-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament, Finals, Doubles\nJonathan Erlich / Andy Ram defeated Cyril Suk / Pavel V\u00edzner 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180570-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nPaul Hanley and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were the defending champions, but chose not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180570-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Doubles\nJonathan Erlich and Andy Ram won in the final 6\u20134, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, against Cyril Suk and Pavel V\u00edzner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180571-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nLleyton Hewitt was the defending champion, but chose not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180571-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer won in the final 5\u20137, 7\u20135, 7\u20136(7\u20135), against Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs\nThe 2005 ACB Playoffs was the postseason of the 2004\u201305 ACB season. Consisting of 8 teams best classified, the playoffs involved over a two weeks of play and more than 20 games overall. The playoffs were conducted in 3-game series, with the team with the better record holding home court advantage. Real Madrid won the 2005 ACB Playoffs by defeating the defending champions, TAU Cer\u00e1mica, 3-2 in the ACB Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, Quarter finals\n(1) TAU Cer\u00e1mica vs. (8) Gran Canaria:TAU Vitoria win series 3-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, Quarter finals\n(4) Unicaja M\u00e1laga vs. (5) Etosa Alicante:Unicaja win series 3-2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, Quarter finals\n(2) Real Madrid vs. (7) DKV Joventut:Real Madrid win series 3-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, Quarter finals\n(6) Adecco Estudiantes vs. (3) Winterthur FC Barcelona:Adecco Estudiantes win series 3-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, Semi finals\n(1) TAU Cer\u00e1mica vs. (4) Unicaja M\u00e1laga:TAU Vitoria win series 3-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, Semi finals\n(2) Real Madrid vs. (6) Adecco Estudiantes:Real Madrid wins series 3-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 30], "content_span": [31, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, ACB Finals\n(2) Real Madrid vs. (1) TAU Cer\u00e1mica:Real Madrid win series 3-2", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180572-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 ACB Playoffs, ACB Finals\nThe Finals were broadcast in Spain on RTVE. For a list of international broadcasters see .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game\nThe 2005 Dr. Pepper ACC Championship Game was the inaugural contest of the championship game for the recently expanded Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC). It was a regular season-ending American college football contest held at Alltel Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, between the Virginia Tech Hokies and the Florida State Seminoles. The game decided the winner of the ACC football championship. Florida State University (FSU) defeated Virginia Tech 27\u201322 in a game characterized by penalties, defense, and a fourth-quarter comeback attempt by Virginia Tech. The game was the final contest of the regular season for the teams, as bowl games are not considered part of the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game\nVirginia Tech entered the 2005 season having won the 2004\u00a0ACC Championship, the last to be awarded without playing a championship game at the end of the season. Tech won their first eight games and appeared to be on course to have an untroubled run to the ACC Championship Game. But against the fifth-ranked Miami Hurricanes, Tech suffered their first defeat of the season, losing 27\u20137 on November 5. Because each team had one ACC loss (Miami had previously lost to Florida State) and the Hurricanes had the tie-breaking head-to-head win, Miami had the lead in the Coastal Division. But Miami later lost a second ACC game to the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, and the Hurricanes were knocked out of contention for the Coastal Division title in favor of the Hokies, who lost only to Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 813]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game\nFlorida State earned their bid to the ACC Championship Game by fighting through an Atlantic Division schedule that included several nationally ranked teams. After defeating ninth-ranked Miami in their opening contest, the Seminoles won their next four games before losing at Virginia in a close match. Additional losses to North Carolina State and Clemson at the end of the season almost eliminated the Seminoles from contention for a spot in the championship game. But losses by Clemson and the other Atlantic Division leaders gave the Seminoles a second chance and set up an ACC Championship Game between Florida State and Virginia Tech. They had previously played in the 2000 National Championship Game, and the rematch served as a point of public interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 787]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game\nThe first two quarters of the game were characterized by defense and penalties that stifled both teams' offenses. In the second half, Florida State took advantage of a punt return for a touchdown to begin a third-quarter surge. Although Virginia Tech made a late-game comeback, Florida State ran out the clock and secured a 27\u201322 victory. Florida State's win earned it the 2005 ACC Championship and a bid to the 2006 Orange Bowl against Penn State. Virginia Tech was awarded a bid to the 2006 Gator Bowl against Louisville. Following that game, Tech quarterback Marcus Vick was released from the team due to repeated violations of team rules and several legal infractions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 699]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Selection process\nThe ACC Championship Game traditionally matches the winner of the Coastal and Atlantic Divisions of the Atlantic Coast Conference. Before 2005, no championship game existed. The idea for a championship game originated with the league's 2004 expansion, which added former Big East members Miami, Virginia Tech and (in 2005) Boston College. A request to the National Collegiate Athletic Association by conference officials to hold a championship game following the 2004 season was rejected because the ACC lacked the requisite 12 teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Selection process\nThe league's first championship game had to wait until after the addition of Boston College, which had been delayed by a year. Once they had been added, the ACC consisted of 12 teams, allowing it to hold a conference championship game under NCAA rules. Before the start of the 2005 season, both Virginia Tech and Florida State were picked as pre-season favorites to play in the championship game in an annual poll conducted by members of the media who cover the ACC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Selection process, Virginia Tech\nThe Hokies began the 2005 regular season ranked eighth in the country and played their first game at ACC opponent North Carolina State. It was a close-fought game, but quarterback Marcus Vick threw a game-winning touchdown early in the fourth quarter and the defense slowed a late NC State rally as Virginia Tech earned a 20\u201316 win. Following the near loss to NC State, the Hokies blew out their next several opponents. Virginia Tech defeated Duke and Ohio by scores of 45\u20130 each. The Virginia Tech defense held Duke's offense to just 35\u00a0total yards, an NCAA record. Following those victories, Tech hosted 15th-ranked Georgia Tech, beating the Yellow Jackets by a score of 51\u20137. Tech's defensive success in those games was typical of the season as they won their first eight games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 842]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Selection process, Virginia Tech\nIn their ninth game, however, the third-ranked team suffered their first loss. On a Thursday night game at home, the Hokies lost 27\u20137 to the fifth-ranked Miami Hurricanes. Normally, a loss to the division-rival Hurricanes would have knocked the Hokies out of contention for the ACC Championship Game, as Miami had the tie-breaking head-to-head victory and was expected to win the remainder of their games. But because Virginia Tech won the rest of their games and the Hurricanes lost two ACC contests\u2014Virginia Tech's only ACC loss was to Miami\u2014the Hokies won the Coastal Division championship and qualified for the championship game over Miami.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Selection process, Florida State\nThe Seminoles, like Virginia Tech, were picked as pre-season favorites to win their division. Florida State opened their 2005 season against traditional rival Miami, ranked ninth in the country. In a defensive struggle, Florida State managed to upset the favored Hurricanes, 10\u20137. Following the victory, Florida State went on a four-game winning streak, defeating Syracuse, Boston College, Wake Forest and The Citadel en route to a 5\u20130 record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Selection process, Florida State\nIn the Seminoles' sixth season game they traveled to Charlottesville, Virginia, to face the Virginia Cavaliers. In a hard-fought game, the Seminoles lost, 26\u201321, earning their first loss of the season. After winning their next two games, Florida State lost to NC State, Clemson and 19th-ranked Florida, the first time they had suffered three consecutive losses since 1983. Florida State ended the regular season with a conference record of 5\u20133. Because one of those losses had been against a Coastal Division opponent, however, Florida State finished with the best Atlantic Division record and was named that division's representative to the ACC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 60], "content_span": [61, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup\nVirginia Tech quarterback Marcus Vick was predicted to be the key player for the favored Virginia Tech Hokies in pregame discussion. He had led the Hokies to a fifth place national ranking and an offense that earned 610\u00a0rushing yards in the final two games of the regular season. Off the field, the matchup between head coaches also was a point of interest. At the time, Florida State head coach Bobby Bowden had the most wins of any active head coach in college football. Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer was ranked third. Beamer had never defeated Bowden in a game. Before the game, Beamer was named the ACC's 2005 Coach of the Year for the second consecutive year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup\nIn addition, the game was a rematch of the 2000 BCS National Championship Game. In that game, held in New Orleans, Louisiana, Florida State defeated Virginia Tech 46\u201329, despite the performance of Hokie quarterback Michael Vick, who would later be selected as the first overall pick in the 2001 NFL Draft. Vick's brother, Marcus, would be the Hokies' starter at quarterback for the 2005 ACC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Offensive matchups, Virginia Tech\nComing off a season-long suspension in 2004, Marcus Vick led the Virginia Tech offence throwing for 1,855 yards, 14 touchdowns and nine interceptions in the 2005 season leading up to the ACC Championship. Vick also ran for four touchdowns during the season and earned first-team All-ACC honors. Receiving his passes were a number of wide receivers and tight ends. Tight end Jeff King, a second-team All-ACC selection, had 20\u00a0receptions for 230\u00a0yards and five\u00a0touchdowns for the season before the ACC Championship. Wide receivers Eddie Royal and David Clowney also had statistically significant seasons heading into the conference championship. Royal had 21\u00a0catches for 271\u00a0yards and two\u00a0touchdowns during the regular season, while Clowney had 28\u00a0catches for 515\u00a0yards and three\u00a0touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 869]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Offensive matchups, Virginia Tech\nVirginia Tech's rushing offense was led by several running backs: Mike Imoh, Branden Ore, and Cedric Humes. In 2005, Hokie running back Cedric Humes had accumulated a career-high 134\u00a0yards and two\u00a0touchdowns against North Carolina in the Hokies' final regular-season game. Backup running back Branden Ore ran for 104\u00a0yards and a touchdown on 17\u00a0attempts, the second time in as many games that Humes and Ore ran for 100\u00a0yards or more in the same game. The Hokies ran 31\u00a0times in the second half and threw only two\u00a0passes. A similar running game was predicted for the ACC Championship Game. Imoh, meanwhile, was limited by an ankle injury suffered during the course of the season. Heading into the conference championship game, he had rushed for 415\u00a0yards and three\u00a0touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Offensive matchups, Florida State\nThe day before the game, Florida State center David Castillo was named to ESPN The Magazine's Academic All-America Second Team, which recognizes college football players who have achieved academic success. Writers and staffers at the magazine vote on a list of players who are separated into \"teams\" based on position and performance. Castillo, who was a key component of the Seminoles' offensive line, was also a finalist for the Draddy Trophy, informally known as the \"academic Heisman\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Offensive matchups, Florida State\nFSU quarterback Drew Weatherford recorded a statistically impressive year and was the top freshman quarterback in the nation in terms of passing yardage and passing touchdowns. Wide receivers Willie Reid, Greg Carr and Chris Davis were the primary beneficiaries of Weatherford's passing offense during the 2005 season. Carr, a freshman, caught 27\u00a0passes for 593\u00a0yards and a conference-leading nine touchdowns. Davis, a junior, caught more passes and recorded more receiving yards during the 2005\u00a0season than he had in both his previous seasons combined. Reid, the lone senior starting in the Florida State corps of wide receivers, played in a variety of positions on offense and held the Seminoles' team record for most punt return yardage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Offensive matchups, Florida State\nThe Seminoles' rushing offense was led by starting running backs Leon Washington and Lorenzo Booker. Booker led the team in rushing yardage, rushing attempts, rushing touchdowns and average yards per game. Washington was the tenth-ranked rusher in Florida State history in terms of rushing yardage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Defensive matchups, Virginia Tech\nHeading into the ACC Championship Game, the Virginia Tech defense was ranked first in the nation for total defense and scoring defense. In pass defense, the Hokies were second in the nation, allowing an average of just 88.38\u00a0yards a game. ACC rival Miami was first, allowing just 84.57\u00a0yards per game on average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Defensive matchups, Virginia Tech\nOn the field, the Tech defense was captained by safety Justin Hamilton, who recorded 26\u00a0tackles and three\u00a0interceptions during the 2005\u00a0season. On the defensive line, Tech's most significant defensive players were defensive ends Chris Ellis and Darryl Tapp. Tapp, an All-ACC selection, recorded 41\u00a0tackles (including nine\u00a0sacks), three\u00a0forced fumbles, and a blocked field goal. Ellis recorded defensive MVP honors for the Hokies' first-ranked defense. At linebacker, the Hokies started Vince Hall and Xavier Adibi. Hall, a second-team All-ACC performer, led the team in tackles and returned a fumble and an interception for a touchdown during the regular season. Adibi recorded 61\u00a0tackles during the season, having recovered from a torn muscle suffered during the 2004 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 856]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Defensive matchups, Florida State\nOn defense, the Seminoles were led on the defensive line by nose guard Brodrick Bunkley, who ranked among Florida State's historical leaders in tackles for loss. Also on the defensive line was defensive end Kamerion Wimbley, who was among the ACC's leaders in recorded sacks. At linebacker, the Seminoles had A.J. Nicholson, who was a semifinalist for the Butkus Award, traditionally given to the best linebacker in college football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Pre-game buildup, Defensive matchups, Florida State\nBy the end of the 2005 season, the Seminoles had recorded five blocked kicks, 12 interceptions, and more than 1,000 tackles. The Seminoles finished the season ranked 12th in rushing defense and 14th in total defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 79], "content_span": [80, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary\nThe 2005 ACC Championship Game kicked off in Jacksonville, Florida, at 8:11\u00a0p.m. on December 3, 2005. The game was televised by the American Broadcast Company (ABC) in the United States. It earned a Nielsen rating of 5.1, higher than that of either the Big 12 Championship Game or the Southeastern Conference Championship Game. Brent Musburger, Jack Arute, and Gary Danielson were the game's broadcasters. At kickoff, the weather was mostly cloudy with an air temperature of 67\u00a0\u00b0F (19\u00a0\u00b0C)\u00a0degrees. Approximately 72,429 fans were present at the game, but more than 75,000 tickets had been sold. Virginia Tech won the pre-game coin toss, but elected to defer their choice to the second half. Florida State was forced to have the ball on offense to begin the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 802]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nFlorida State received the ball to begin the game and returned the opening kickoff to their 19-yard line. In his opening drive, Seminoles' quarterback Drew Weatherford completed several long passes, including a 37-yard strike from his own 48-yard line to drive the Seminoles' offense inside the Virginia Tech red zone. Once there, however, the Florida State offense began to struggle with the Virginia Tech defense, which had recovered somewhat from the initial shock of Weatherford's offensive success. On the three plays that followed Weatherford's 37-yard pass, Florida State managed only six positive yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0021-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nThis total was largely negated by a five-yard false start penalty that pushed FSU's offense backward. Facing a fourth down, Florida State coach Bobby Bowden sent in kicker Gary Cismesia to attempt a 31-yard field goal. The kick was successful, and the three points gave Florida State an early 3\u20130 lead with 11:06 remaining in the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nVirginia Tech's first possession of the game began at their 15-yard line after the Florida State kickoff. Hokie quarterback Marcus Vick completed his first pass of the game, a nine-yard toss to Eddie Royal, and the Hokies picked up a first down on the next play. From there, however, things began to go downhill for the Virginia Tech offense. Vick was sacked on the next play, running back Cedric Humes was tackled for a five-yard loss, and the Hokies committed a five-yard false start penalty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0022-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nThe miscues prevented Virginia Tech from gaining another first down, and the Hokies were forced to punt the ball away. Florida State recovered the kick at the 50-yard line and began their second offensive possession of the game. Although Weatherford completed his first pass of the drive, both subsequent passes were incomplete. The Seminoles punted the ball back to Virginia Tech, and the kick rolled into the end zone for a touchback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nThe Florida State touchback allowed Vick to start at his 20-yard line for Virginia Tech's second possession of the game. It began no better than the first one, as Virginia Tech committed a 10-yard holding penalty on the first play. On subsequent plays, however, the Hokie offense began to move the ball with success. Vick completed a 12-yard pass to wide receiver Eddie Royal, and the offense was aided by a 15-yard Florida State penalty, which gave the Hokies an automatic first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0023-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nFollowing the first down, Vick completed the first big Virginia Tech play of the game, throwing the ball 35\u00a0yards downfield to Justin Harper, who caught it in Florida State territory. Two more plays pushed Virginia Tech to the edge of the Florida State red zone, but a penalty and another sack prevented the Hokies from advancing the ball further. Virginia Tech was forced to send in kicker Brandon Pace to attempt a 45-yard field goal. The kick was good, and Virginia Tech had tied the game 3\u20133 with 1:00 remaining in the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, First quarter\nAfter receiving the post-field goal kickoff, the Florida State offense began another drive. After an incomplete pass and a short rush, Weatherford completed a 12-yard pass for a first down as time expired in the quarter. After 15\u00a0minutes of play, the score was tied 3\u20133, but Drew Weatherford had begun driving Florida State offense down the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Second quarter\nHaving earned a first down with the final play of the first quarter, Drew Weatherford and the Florida State offense ran into difficulty as the second quarter began. An incomplete pass and a rush for no gain were followed by a false start penalty and another incomplete pass. Florida State was forced to punt. Virginia Tech recovered the ball at their 26-yard line but failed to capitalize on the defensive stop. Marcus Vick threw two incomplete passes and was sacked before Virginia Tech was forced into a punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Second quarter\nFollowing the punt, the two teams continued to trade possessions throughout the quarter. Defense dominated, and what few big plays occurred were either neutralized by penalties or stopped by incomplete passes or rushes for no gain. In the second quarter, Virginia Tech punted the ball twice and turned the ball over on downs once. Florida State punted the ball three times and had the ball when time ran out in the quarter. Neither team managed to score, and only twice did either team manage to penetrate their opponent's territory. At halftime, the score remained tied, 3\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 633]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nBecause Florida State had received the game's opening kickoff, Virginia Tech chose to receive the ball to begin the second half. Like the first half, however, the Virginia Tech offense failed to advance the ball in any meaningful fashion. Marcus Vick threw two incompletions and running back Cedric Humes managed a short three-yard dash. Forced to punt the ball away again, Virginia Tech set up the game's critical play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0027-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nFrom his 34-yard line, punter Nic Schmitt kicked the ball 49\u00a0yards to the Seminoles' Willie Reid, who broke through the Virginia Tech special teams punt coverage for an 89-yard punt-return touchdown. Reid's return was the first touchdown of the game and the first touchdown in ACC Championship Game history. With 13:46 remaining in the third quarter, Florida State had taken a 10\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nAfter the kickoff, the Hokie offense continued the lethargy that had characterized their play in the first half. Mike Imoh was stopped for no or little gain on consecutive plays before the Hokies were called for a five-yard illegal procedure penalty. On the next play, Florida State capitalized on the momentum it had gained with Reid's punt-return touchdown. Defender Pat Watkins intercepted Marcus Vick's pass, returning it to the FSU 44-yard line. Drew Weatherford and the Seminole offense, with the game's momentum in their favor, wasted no time expanding their lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0028-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nWeatherford completed a 6-yard pass, then one for 21-yards, and was aided by a 15-yard facemask penalty against Virginia Tech. Deep inside Virginia Tech territory, the third play of the drive was a 14-yard touchdown rush by Leon Washington. The speed of the drive, after a nearly scoreless first half, frustrated the Virginia Tech defense, which committed a 15-yard personal foul after the touchdown. The scoring drive had taken just three plays and 54\u00a0seconds, and gave Florida State a 17\u20133 lead with 10:23 remaining in the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nVirginia Tech's offense fared no better on their next possession. Two plays were stopped for no gain, and the only positive play\u2014a five-yard pass to Eddie Royal\u2014was negated by a false start penalty. The Hokies were forced to punt the ball away to Florida State again, their fifth of the game. The punt allowed FSU to start at their own 46-yard line. At first, the Seminoles were able to capitalize on that opportunity, showing some of the effectiveness that characterized their prior drive. Lorenzo Booker ran for 24\u00a0yards on two plays, but afterwards, Drew Weatherford threw two incompletions. A false start penalty backed up the Seminoles, who were forced to punt after failing to pick up the first down. The kick allowed Florida State's special teams to be able to get downfield and stop the ball inside the Virginia Tech one-yard line, again hurting the Hokie offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 928]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nThough hampered by the need to work inside his own end zone, Marcus Vick completed an 11-yard pass to tight end Jeff King for a first down. This play was the sole positive gain for the VT offense, however, who were forced into their sixth punt of the game. The kick traveled only 28\u00a0yards before flying out of bounds. Thanks to this kick, Weatherford was able to start his offense inside Virginia Tech territory and took advantage of the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nOn the first play Weatherford completed a 41-yard throw downfield to Willie Reid, who hauled in the ball at the Virginia Tech three-yard line to give the Seminoles a first and goal. After a failed quarterback sneak, however, Florida State was penalized 10\u00a0yards for holding and Weatherford was sacked for a loss of three\u00a0yards on the next play. Although unable to cross the goal line for a touchdown, FSU did send in kicker Gary Cismesia for his second field goal attempt of the day. The kick, a 41-yarder, was good and gave Florida State a 20\u20133 lead with 4:23 remaining in the third quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nFollowing the kickoff, Virginia Tech's offense took the field needing to reduce Florida State's lead to allow enough time for a fourth-quarter comeback. This was not to be, however, as on the sixth play of the drive, wide receiver David Clowney fumbled the ball after catching a three-yard pass from Marcus Vick. It was recovered by Florida State's Broderick Bunkley, thus giving Florida State another chance to score from deep inside Virginia Tech territory. On the second play after the fumble, quarterback Drew Weatherford connected on a 22-yard strike to Greg Carr to drive inside the Virginia Tech 10-yard line. A five-yard facemask penalty against Virginia Tech only added to the Hokies' defensive problems. Two lays later, Weatherford capped the drive with a six-yard touchdown pass to Chris Davis, widening the Florida State lead to 27\u20133 with just 18\u00a0seconds remaining in the quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 948]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Third quarter\nAt the end of the third quarter, any hope of victory was seemingly out of reach for Virginia Tech. Three quick plays after the kickoff resulted in a first down before time ran out, but at the end of the third quarter, Florida State still had a 27\u20133 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 55], "content_span": [56, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nVirginia Tech began the fourth quarter in possession of the ball and with a first down but trailing by 24\u00a0points and virtually out of the game. The first two plays of the fourth quarter were similar to what the Tech offense had shown all game: an incomplete pass and a rush for no yards. On the third play, however, Florida State was penalized 15\u00a0yards for having too many players on the field, and Virginia Tech was awarded an automatic first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0033-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe penalty allowed the Hokie offense to continue their drive, and Marcus Vick scrambled for 16\u00a0yards on the next play, then threw a 28-yard pass to wide receiver Josh Morgan, who broke free for a touchdown. The score was Virginia Tech's first touchdown of the game and came with 13:03 remaining in the game. Following the touchdown, the Hokies attempted a two-point conversion, but Vick's pass fell short and the conversion attempt failed. The score cut the Florida State lead to 27\u20139, but this was still a large margin for the amount of time remaining in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nFlorida State received the post-score kickoff merely needing to run down the clock to secure their lead and the win. Two\u00a0complete passes set up a third-and-two for Drew Weatherford, but his third-down pass fell short, stopping the clock and forcing a Florida State punt. Only a minute and a half had run off the clock, and Virginia Tech recovered the punt at their 22-yard line. On the second play after the punt, Florida State committed a pass interference penalty that gave Virginia Tech 15\u00a0automatic yards and a first down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0034-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nAs in the previous drive, the penalty kick-started the Virginia Tech offense. On the next play, Vick connected with Josh Morgan on a 50-yard pass\u2014the longest offensive play of the game\u2014that drove the Hokies to the Florida State nine-yard line. After that, a Florida State holding penalty gave Virginia Tech a first-and-goal from inside the FSU five-yard line. Marcus Vick scrambled four\u00a0yards for the touchdown, and what had been a 24-point Seminole lead was now cut to 11\u00a0points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0034-0002", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nThe drive had taken just 55\u00a0seconds off the clock, and it appeared that Virginia Tech still had a chance to make it a close game. As before, Virginia Tech attempted a two-point conversion, and as before, it failed. With 10:50 remaining in the game, the score was now Florida State 27, Virginia Tech 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nFlorida State began work at their 30-yard line, again needing to just run down the clock to ensure victory. As before, however, Drew Weatherford took to the air, throwing a two-yard pass. Two rushing plays followed but were stopped for little gain. Florida State again went three-and-out and had to punt. Two and a half minutes had been run off the clock, and Virginia Tech took over at their own 30-yard line after a seven-yard kick return. Unlike the two previous drives, however, Virginia Tech had almost no success on offense. A 10-yard holding penalty pushed the Hokie offense back to start the drive, and quarterback Marcus Vick was sacked for a loss to finish off the Tech possession. VT was forced to punt the ball back to Florida State, which took over at their 43-yard line with 6:21 remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 861]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nBy this point in the game, Florida State was fully committed to running down the clock and executed three straight rushing plays to keep the time running out. Virginia Tech was forced to use two of their timeouts to stop the clock, but was eventually successful in forcing a Seminole punt. The kick rolled inside the Virginia Tech 10-yard line before being downed, pinning the Hokies deep in their territory. The first play of Tech's drive was almost a disaster for them, as Marcus Vick fumbled the ball while attempting to avoid a sack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0036-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nFortunately for the Hokies, the ball was leapt on by Tech's Duane Brown and the drive stayed alive. Virginia Tech moved the ball downfield through the air with difficulty. Due to the limited time remaining, they were forced to rely mainly on passing plays, which stopped the clock when incomplete or were completed for a first down. A 14-yard pass to Josh Morgan and a 10-yard throw to Cedric Humes moved the Hokies to their 47-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0036-0002", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nVick then completed a 19-yard pass to Jeff King and Florida State committed a 15-yard roughing the passer penalty on Marcus Vick, which was tacked onto the end of the play. After the penalty, Virginia Tech's offense was deep in Florida State territory, and two plays later, Marcus Vick ran into the end zone on a one-yard quarterback scramble. Rather than attempt another two-point conversion, the Hokies kicked the extra point, and with 1:44 remaining, Virginia Tech had closed the gap to 27\u201322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nIn a situation with more time, Virginia Tech would have kicked the ball off to Florida State and hoped for a defensive stop to give the offense a chance for a game-winning drive. With less than two\u00a0minutes remaining, however, and with Virginia Tech having used all their timeouts, the only chance for the Hokies was to attempt a difficult onside kick. A successful recovery would give the Hokies another chance on offense. Kicker Brandon Pace teed up the ball, and kicked it forwards, bouncing the ball high into the air to create a jump ball situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0037-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nVirginia Tech's Xavier Adibi recovered the ball, but because the kick had only traveled nine\u00a0yards before the recovery, the ball was awarded to Florida State. NCAA rules state that an onside kick must travel at least 10\u00a0yards before the kicking team can legally touch the ball, and Pace's kick had not traveled the requisite distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Game summary, Fourth quarter\nHaving recovered the ball, and with Virginia Tech having no remaining timeouts and no way to stop the clock, Florida State was able to run out the remaining time in the game and secure a 27\u201322 victory. Towards the end of the game, players on each team acted with hostility towards each other, and several received personal foul penalties. The penalties had no effect on the final outcome of the game, and Florida State won the ACC Championship Game and an automatic bid to the 2006 Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 56], "content_span": [57, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Final statistics\nThanks to his performance in leading Florida State to the win, FSU quarterback Drew Weatherford was named the game's Most Valuable Player. He finished the game having completed 21 of his 35 passes for 225 yards and one touchdown. Weatherford would eventually finish the season with 3,180 passing yards, the most ever recorded by a freshman quarterback in the ACC. On the opposite side of the ball, Virginia Tech quarterback Marcus Vick finished the game 26 for 52 with 335 yards, one interception, and one touchdown. Although Vick was slightly better statistically than Weatherford, and the Hokies were more statistically successful on offense thanks to Vick, the Most Valuable Player award is not usually given to a player on the losing team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Final statistics\nVirginia Tech turned the ball over twice\u2014once on a fumble and once on an interception. These turnovers resulted in two touchdowns for Florida State, and the resulting 14 points were greater than Florida State's margin of victory. The Seminoles did not turn the ball over during the game. Both teams were highly penalized during the game. Virginia Tech finished with 17 penalties for 143 yards, while Florida State was penalized 12 times for 114 yards. The penalties affected each team's ability to convert third downs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0040-0001", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Final statistics\nVirginia Tech was able to convert only nine of 20 third-down attempts, while Florida State was successful on just three of their 13 attempts. Despite trailing for much of the game, and running a pass-heavy offense, Virginia Tech dominated the game's time of possession controlling the ball for over 35 of the game's 60 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Post-game effects\nFlorida State's 27\u201322 victory over Virginia Tech secured it the 2005 ACC Championship and a bid for the Orange Bowl. The victory also had ripple effects for bowl game bids across the Atlantic Coast Conference and lasting repercussions during the football season that followed the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0042-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Post-game effects, Bowl effects\nFlorida State (8\u20134) earned a BCS berth despite a record inferior to the other seven BCS teams. Regardless of that fact, the Seminoles' matchup with Penn State (10\u20131) in the 2006 Orange Bowl, where college football's two most successful coaches, Penn State's 78-year-old Joe Paterno and Florida State's 76-year-old Bobby Bowden, squared off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0043-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Post-game effects, Bowl effects\nVirginia Tech accepted a bid to the 2006 Gator Bowl, which was also played in Jacksonville, albeit a month later than the ACC Championship Game. The Gator Bowl Committee selected the Hokies over Miami due to Virginia Tech's reputation for having a large fan base that traveled well. Virginia Tech's selection bumped Miami to the 2005 Peach Bowl, while the Virginia Cavaliers were selected for the Music City Bowl and the Clemson Tigers earned a bid to the Champs Sports Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0044-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Post-game effects, Bowl effects\nIn the off-season following the ACC Championship Game, and Florida State's selection by the Orange Bowl, the Orange Bowl committee announced it would be entering into an exclusive contract with the ACC to grant the winner of the ACC Championship Game an automatic bid to the Orange Bowl unless it was ranked high enough in the Bowl Championship Series standings to play in the BCS National Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0045-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Post-game effects, Marcus Vick\nFollowing the ACC Championship Game, Virginia Tech quarterback Marcus Vick stormed off the field, refusing to talk to reporters. Vick, who picked up a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty late in the game, also earned several unsportsmanlike conduct penalties in the 2006 Gator Bowl, where post-game replays revealed that he purposefully stomped on the leg of Louisville Cardinals' defensive end Elvis Dumervil. Vick claimed he apologized to Dumervil after the game, but Dumervil stated that no apology had been made. In the wake of the incident, Virginia Tech officials announced that they would be conducting a review of Vick's conduct on and off the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180573-0046-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Championship Game, Post-game effects, Marcus Vick\nOn January 6, 2006, just a few days after that game, Virginia Tech officials dismissed Vick from the Virginia Tech football team, citing a December 17 traffic stop in which Vick was cited for speeding and driving with a revoked or suspended license. Vick had hidden the information from the team and the infraction was not discovered until January. The traffic stop, an earlier suspension from the team, and his unsportsmanlike conduct during the 2005 ACC Championship Game and 2006 Gator Bowl were used as grounds for his dismissal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180574-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 10\u201313 in Washington, D.C., at the MCI Center. This was the first time the tournament was played in Washington itself, as the previous ACC Tournaments in the D.C. area were played in suburban Landover, Maryland, at the Capital Centre. Duke won the tournament, defeating Georgia Tech in the championship game. Duke's JJ Redick won the tournament's Most Valuable Player award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180574-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 ACC Tournament was the first, and only, ACC Tournament with 11 teams participating. Conference newcomers Miami and Virginia Tech participated in their first ACC tournament. Their debuts were unsuccessful, as both teams failed to win a game. The tournament expanded to 12 teams the following season, as Boston College joined from the Big East Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180574-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament\nWake Forest's Chris Paul was suspended for his team's quarterfinal game against NC State for punching Julius Hodge in the groin in the season finale between the two teams. NC State took advantage of his absence, defeating Wake Forest en route to the semifinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180575-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Under-19 Cup\nThe 2005 ACC Under-19 Cup was an international under-19 cricket tournament held in Nepal from 8 to 19 November 2005. The sixth ACC under-19 tournament to be held, matches were played in the capital Kathmandu and three other cities in the Kathmandu Valley, Bhaktapur, Kirtipur, and Lalitpur.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180575-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Under-19 Cup\nThe number of teams at the tournament increased to fifteen (from the ten at the previous edition), with Afghanistan, Bahrain, Brunei, Iran, and Saudi Arabia making their debuts. Coached by Roy Dias and captained by Paras Khadka, Nepal defeated Malaysia in the final at Kirtipur's Tribhuvan University International Cricket Ground, with an estimated 10\u201315,000 people in attendance, as well as television viewership of 1.5 million. The team won its second consecutive title (and third overall), and consecutively qualified for the 2006 Under-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka. Kuwait and Qatar were the losing semi-finalists for the second tournament in a row. The leading runscorer at the tournament was Malaysian batsman Ariffin Ramly, while the leading wicket-taker was Hong Kong's Irfan Ahmed. The tournament's semi-finals and final were broadcast live on Nepal Television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180575-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Under-19 Cup, Statistics, Most runs\nThe top five runscorers are included in this table, ranked by runs scored and then by batting average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 44], "content_span": [45, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180575-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 ACC Under-19 Cup, Statistics, Most wickets\nThe top five wicket takers are listed in this table, ranked by wickets taken and then by bowling average.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180576-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ADAC Procar Series\nThe 2005 ADAC Procar Series season was the eleventh season of the ADAC Procar Series, the German championship for Super 2000 cars. The season consisted of eight separate race weekends with two races each, spread over six different tracks. The championship was won by Mathias Schl\u00e4ppi in a very dominant way, winning 12 out of 16 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180577-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AF2 season\nThe 2005 AF2 season was the sixth season of the AF2. It was preceded by 2004 and succeeded by 2006. The league champions were the Memphis Xplorers, who defeated the Louisville Fire in ArenaCup VI.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180577-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AF2 season, ArenaCup VI\nArenaCup VI was the 2005 edition of the AF2's championship game, in which the National Conference Champions Memphis Xplorers defeated the American Conference Champions Louisville Fire in Bossier City, Louisiana by a score of 63 to 41.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180578-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Champions League\nThe 2005 AFC Champions League was the 24th edition of the top-level Asian club football tournament and the 3rd edition under the current AFC Champions League title. The championship was retained by the Saudi Arabian club Al-Ittihad with a 5-3 aggregate victory over UAE side Al Ain. Following a 1\u20131 draw at the Tahnon Bin Mohammed Stadium in Al Ain in the first leg, Al-Ittihad recorded a 4\u20132 victory at the Prince Abdullah Al Faisal Stadium in Jeddah to lift the trophy for the second consecutive season. They also qualified for the 2005 FIFA Club World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180578-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Champions League, Format\nA total of 28 clubs were divided into 7 groups of four, based on region i.e. East Asian and Southeast Asian clubs were drawn in groups E to G, while the rest were grouped in groups A to D. Each club played double round-robin (home and away) against fellow three group members, a total of 6 matches each. Clubs received 3pts for a win, 1pt for a tie, 0pts for a loss. The clubs were ranked according to points and tie breakers were in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180578-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Champions League, Format\nThe seven group winners along with the defending champion advanced to the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180578-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Champions League, Format\nAll 8 clubs were randomly matched; however, the only restriction was that the clubs from the same country could not face each other in the quarter-finals. The games were conducted in 2 legs, home and away, and the aggregate score decided the match winner. If the aggregate score couldn't produce a winner, \"away goals rule\" was used. If still tied, clubs played extra time, where \"away goals rule\" still applied. If still tied, the game went to penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 33], "content_span": [34, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180579-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Cup\nThe 2005 AFC Cup was the second edition of the AFC Cup, playing between clubs from nations who are members of the Asian Football Confederation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180579-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Cup, Qualification\nThe 'developing' 9 nations in the Asian Football Confederation were invited to nominate one or two clubs to participate in the 2005 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 27], "content_span": [28, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180580-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC Futsal Championship\nThe 2005 AFC Futsal Championship was held in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam from 22 May to 4 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180581-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC President's Cup\nThe 2005 AFC President's Cup was the inaugural season of the AFC President's Cup, a competition for football clubs in countries categorized as \"emerging nations\" by the Asian Football Confederation. The eight teams that competed were split into two groups and played each other team in their group once. The winner of each group then played the runner up in the other group in the semifinals, and the winners of the semifinal matches played in the final match to determine the winner. There was no third place match. The games were played in May 2005 and were held in Kathmandu, Nepal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180582-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFC U-17 Women's Championship\nThe 2005 AFC U-17 Women's Championship was the first instance of the AFC U-16 Women's Championship. It was held from April 16 to 27 in Namhae, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180583-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF Futsal Championship\nThe 2005 ASEAN Futsal Championship was the third edition of the tournament. It was held in Bangkok, Thailand from 2 May to 7 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180584-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF U-17 Youth Championship\nThe AFF U-17 Youth Championship was played for the first time in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180584-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF U-17 Youth Championship\nThe championship was held in Bangkok, Thailand from 26 August to 4 September 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180584-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF U-17 Youth Championship\nSeven nations took part, all from the ASEAN region. No guest nations were invited.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180584-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF U-17 Youth Championship\nThe seven teams were drawn into 2 groups. One group of 3 nations and the second group of 4 nations. The winners and runners up would progress to the semi-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180585-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF U-20 Youth Championship\nThe 2005 AFF U-20 Youth Championship was held in Palembang, Indonesia in August 2005. That was the first edition of the tournament since its inception in 2002. Ten nations took part with nine teams from the ASEAN region and one guest nation, the Maldives, from the South Asian region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180586-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFF U-23 Youth Championship\nThe 2005 AFF U-23 Youth Championship was the first ever edition of the AFF U-23 Youth Championship, organised by ASEAN Football Federation. The tournament was held from 29 August to 7 September in Bangkok, Thailand. This tournament was also known as the pre-SEA Games tournament, as a preparatory tournament for the nations competing in the Manila SEA Games in December of the same year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final\nThe 2005 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Sydney Swans and West Coast Eagles at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 24 September 2005. It was the 109th annual grand final of the Australian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League), staged to determine the premiers for the 2005 AFL season. The match, attended by 91,898 spectators, was won by Sydney by a margin of four points, marking the club's fourth Premiership and their first since 1933.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final\nIt remains the highest-rating AFL game of all time (including 3.4 million metropolitan viewers) since the current OzTam measurement system was introduced in 2001. All told, a total average of 4.449 million people watched the game on TV nationally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Background\nThis was West Coast's first appearance in a grand final since winning the 1994 premiership, whilst it was Sydney's first since losing in 1996, and the Swans had not won a premiership since 1933 (as South Melbourne).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Background\nTwo players from the Eagles' last premiership in 1994 were appearing in this grand final: Drew Banfield for the Eagles and Jason Ball for the Swans in his last AFL game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Background\nAt the conclusion of the home-and-away season, West Coast finished second on the AFL ladder behind Adelaide with 17 wins and five losses. Sydney finished third with 15 wins and seven losses. They met in the qualifying final at Domain Stadium, and West Coast won by four points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Background\nA major turning point in the Swans' season came when they lost to St Kilda at Marvel Stadium in round ten, after which Swans coach Paul Roos came under heavy criticism from the entire AFL for his side's game plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Background\nThe Eagles then punched their ticket to the grand final by defeating minor premiers Adelaide in their preliminary final by 16 points. Meanwhile, Nick Davis famously rescued Sydney in their semifinal at the SCG against Geelong with four 4th-quarter goals including one just seconds before the final siren. The Swans then overcame St Kilda in their preliminary final at the MCG after overturning a 7-point deficit going into the last quarter into a 31-point win with a seven-goal barrage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Background\nIn the week leading up to the grand final, West Coast's Ben Cousins was awarded the Brownlow Medal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nWest Coast opened the game aggressively, with Sydney struggling to get the ball to their end of the field. However, better goal kicking accuracy by the Swans put them ahead by two points at the first change.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nIn the second quarter Sydney appeared to be asserting control of the game, kicking three goals while the Eagles got none. However, after the long break, West Coast put their stamp on the game, kicking three goals while the Swans went goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nBoth teams had seemingly easy goals that were missed, but the Eagles most clearly would remember theirs from the fourth quarter. With just under five minutes remaining in the match, West Coast's Brent Staker almost cost his team the match following a 50-metre penalty to the Swans sending them out of their defensive 50 in a very costly play. With the Swans holding a five-point lead in the closing moments, Sydney's Tadhg Kennelly rushed a behind to blunt a ferocious Eagles attack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0010-0001", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nAfter the ensuing kick in, West Coast regained control of the ball and sent a long kick back to the half-forward line by Dean Cox. Sydney's Leo Barry responded by taking a mark in the midst of the pack full of Eagles players (with the commentator Stephen Quartermain saying a sequence of words made famous through frequent replays: \"Leo Barry, you star! \"), denying the Eagles an opportunity to kick a game-winner on or after the final siren, thus ensuring that the Swans would win their first premiership in 72 years (when they were South Melbourne), ending the longest premiership drought in VFL/AFL history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nThe match has been labelled as a 'classic', with the final margin being the closest since the 1977 drawn grand final. This was the first time since the 1989 VFL Grand Final that the grand final was decided by a goal or less.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nEagles player Chris Judd was awarded the Norm Smith Medal for being judged the best player afield, although he finished on the losing side; this is one of only four instances of a Grand Final player having won a Norm Smith Medal without being on the winning premiership team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180587-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Grand Final, Match summary\nThe same teams met again in the 2006 AFL Grand Final, in another close match, with the Eagles emerging victors by one point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 35], "content_span": [36, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180588-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Rising Star\nThe NAB AFL Rising Star award is given annually to a stand out young player in the Australian Football League. The 2005 medal was won by Richmond player Brett Deledio.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180588-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Rising Star, Eligibility\nEvery round, an Australian Football League rising star nomination is given to a stand out young player. To be eligible for the award, a player must be under 21 on 1 January of that year, have played 10 or fewer senior games and not been suspended during the season. At the end of the year, one of the 22 nominees is the winner of award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 33], "content_span": [34, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180589-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Under 18 Championships\nThe 2005 NAB AFL Under-18 Championships was the 10th edition of the AFL Under 18 Championships. Eight teams competed in the championships: Vic Metro, Vic Country, South Australia and Western Australia in Division 1, and New South Wales/Australian Capital Territory (NSW/ACT), Northern Territory, Queensland and Tasmania in Division 2. The competition was played over three rounds across two divisions. Vic Metro and Tasmania were the Division 1 and Division 2 champions, respectively. The Larke Medal (for the best player in Division 1) was awarded to Victoria Metro's Marc Murphy, and the Hunter Harrison Medal (for the best player in Division 2) was won by Tasmania's Grant Birchall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180589-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Under 18 Championships, Results, Division 2\nTasmanian Todd Grima kicked 10 goals against the Northern Territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180589-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Under 18 Championships, Under-18 All-Australian team\nThe 2005 Under-18 All-Australian team was named on 4 July 2005:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180589-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Under 18 Championships, Under-18 All-Australian team\nFor the first time, the Under-18 All-Australian side was named in position to give balance and recognition to players that played terrific roles in defence, as well as players who were creative up forward, so it was not just a midfielders' side. It recognised players across the ground for their performance they put in throughout the Under 18 Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180589-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Under 18 Championships, Under-18 All-Australian team\nThe 2005 Under-18 All-Australian team selectors were: Kevin Sheehan (AFL Talent Manager), Alan McConnell (AIS-AFL High Performance Coach), James Fantasia (Adelaide Recruiting Manager), Kinnear Beatson (Brisbane Lions Recruiting Manager), Neville Stibbard (Kangaroos Recruiting Manager), Francis Jackson (Richmond Recruiting Officer)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 61], "content_span": [62, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180590-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Women's National Championships\nThe 2005 AFL Women's National Championships took place in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The tournament began on 19 June and ended on 24 June 2006. The 2005 tournament was the 14th Championship, the previous one being held in Adelaide in 2004. The U19-vics of Victoria won the 2005 Championship, defeating Senior-vics of Victoria in the final. It was Victoria U19's 1st title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180590-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Women's National Championships, All-Australian Team\nVIC U19: Karen Paxman, Moana Hope, Penny Cula-Reid, Daisy Pearce", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180590-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL Women's National Championships, All-Australian Team\nVIC: Debbie Lee, Shannon McFerran, Lilian Keung, Michelle Dench, Meg Hutchins, Liz Skinner", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180591-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL draft\nThe 2005 AFL draft was the 2005 event of the AFL draft, the annual draft of players by Australian rules football teams that participate in the main competition of that sport, the Australian Football League. The 2005 draft consisted of a pre-season draft, a national draft, a trade period and a rookie elevation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180591-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL draft\nIn 2005, there were 76 picks to be drafted amongst 16 teams in the national draft. The Carlton Blues received the first pick in the national draft after finishing on the bottom of the ladder during the 2005 AFL season. This was their first ever priority draft pick after the drama of 2002 when they lost draft picks for breaching the salary cap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180591-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL draft\nIn addition to the national draft, the 2005/06 off-season featured trade week (prior to the national draft) and pre-season and rookie drafts (following the national draft).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180591-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL draft, 2006 pre-season draft\nThe 2006 pre-season draft was held on 13 December 2005. For the pre-season draft held in 2004, known as the 2005 pre-season draft, see 2004 AFL draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 37], "content_span": [38, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series\nThe Australian Football League's 2005 finals series began on the weekend of 2 September 2005 and ended with the 109th AFL Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 24 September 2005. The Sydney Swans defeated West Coast, breaking their record 72-year drought between premierships. The top eight teams on the home and away rounds (regular season) ladder qualify for the Finals Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, Ladder\nSeparated only by percentage Adelaide (minor premier) and West Coast topped the ladder (W-L: 17\u20135), trailed by third placed Sydney (15\u20137). The matchups for the first round of finals were only set after all matches of the final home-and-away game had been completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, The finals system\nThe system is a final eight system. This system is different from the McIntyre Final Eight System, which was previously used by the AFL, and was used by the National Rugby League until 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, The finals system\nThe top four teams in the eight receive what is popularly known as the \"double chance\" when they play in week-one qualifying finals; this means that if a top-four team loses in the first week, it still has a chance to redeem itself by getting a chance to play in a semi-final the next week against the winner of an elimination final. The bottom four of the eight are forced to play what are called elimination finals, in which only the winners survive and move on to week two to play the losers of the qualifying finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, The finals system\nIn the second week, the winners of the qualifying finals receive a bye to the third week, while the losers of those qualifying finals must play the winners of the elimination finals for a chance to play the qualifying finals winners. Home-ground advantage goes to the team with the higher seed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, The finals system\nIn the third week, the winners of the semi-finals from week two play the winners of the qualifying finals in the first week, with the latter receiving home-ground advantage. The winners of those matches move on to the Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne, where the new premier will be crowned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, The finals system\nThe favourites for the 2005 Grand Final were Adelaide, St Kilda, Sydney and West Coast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, Week One, Second Qualifying Final (2 vs 3), Scorecard\nSydney entered the game as the in form team of the competition. West Coast topped the ladder most of the season, and were only denied the minor premiership on percentage. The Eagles led the game most of the first half, but the Swans appeared to be marching onward to victory by taking control of the third quarter. In a foreshadowing of things to come, West Coast responded by taking control of the fourth quarter. Two controversial fourth quarter umpiring decisions against Sydney hurt their cause. Even more damaging were two late marks in defence by Eagle Dean Cox snubbing Swan attempts to kick a game winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 77], "content_span": [78, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, Week Two, Second Semi Final, Scorecard\nA thrilling victory for Sydney, and a heartbreaking loss for Geelong. The game seemed decided, with Geelong ahead by 23 points early in the final quarter - Sydney needed four goals to win, and had kicked only three for the night. But the Swans did come back, with Nick Davis kicking all four of the final quarter goals, including the game-winner with less than ten seconds remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 62], "content_span": [63, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180592-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL finals series, Week Three, First Preliminary Final, Scorecard\nSydney opened the game strongly, but once St. Kilda righted their effort they took the lead and steadily built upon it. With the Saints on the verge of putting the game out of reach they were unable to match Sydney's endurance. In the final quarter the Swans blew the game out of reach by kicking seven un-answered goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 70], "content_span": [71, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180593-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL season\nThe 2005 Australian Football League season was the 109th season of the elite Australian rules football competition and the 16th under the name 'Australian Football League', having switched from 'Victorian Football League' after 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180593-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL season\nSee List of Australian Football League premiers for a complete list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180593-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL season, Notable events\nThree players celebrated 200th game milestones against eventual premiers the Sydney Swans during the regular season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180593-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AFL season, Notable events\nAdditionally, Michael Voss (Brisbane Lions) played his 250th AFL game and Mal Michael his 100th club game for the Lions, both also against the Swans, in round 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180594-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships\nThe 2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 32nd edition of the event known that year as the AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships, and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2005 ATP Tour, and of the Tier III Series of the 2005 WTA Tour. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Ariake Coliseum in Tokyo, Japan, from 3 October through 9 October 2005. Wesley Moodie and Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180594-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships, Finals, Men's Doubles\nSatoshi Iwabuchi / Takao Suzuki defeated Simon Aspelin / Todd Perry, 5\u20134(7\u20133), 5\u20134(15\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180594-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships, Finals, Women's Doubles\nGisela Dulko / Maria Kirilenko defeated Shinobu Asagoe / Mar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi, 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180595-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJared Palmer and Pavel V\u00edzner were the defending champions, but they chose not to participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180595-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nSatoshi Iwabuchi and Takao Suzuki won the title by defeating Simon Aspelin and Todd Perry 5\u20134(7\u20133), 5\u20134(15\u201313) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180596-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k was the defending champion, but did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180596-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nWesley Moodie won the title, defeating Mario An\u010di\u0107 in the final 1\u20136, 7\u20136(9\u20137), 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180597-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nShinobu Asagoe and Katarina Srebotnik were the defending champions, but Srebotnik did not compete this year. Asagoe teamed up with Mar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi and lost in the final 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 6\u20133 against Gisela Dulko and Maria Kirilenko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180597-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nIt was the 2nd WTA title for both Dulko and Kirilenko in their respective doubles careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180598-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Sharapova was the two-time defending champion, but decided not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180598-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AIG Japan Open Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nSecond-seeded Nicole Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 was leading 7\u20136(7\u20134), 3\u20132 in the final against third-seeded Tatiana Golovin, when Golovin retired due to an achilles tendon injury, giving Vaidi\u0161ov\u00e1 the title. This remains one of the youngest finals in WTA history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180599-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIHL season\nThe 2005 AIHL season was the sixth season of the Australian Ice Hockey League (AIHL). It ran from 16 April 2005 until 28 August 2005, with the Goodall Cup finals following on 3 and 4 September 2005. The Adelaide Avalanche won the V.I.P. Cup after finishing the regular season first in the league standings. The Newcastle North Stars won the Goodall Cup for the second time by defeating the Adelaide Avalanche in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180599-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AIHL season, Regular season\nThe regular season began on 16 April 2005 and ran through to 28 August 2005 before the top four teams advanced to compete in the Goodall Cup playoff series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180599-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AIHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Scoring leaders\nList shows the ten top skaters sorted by points, then goals. Current as of 4 September 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 61], "content_span": [62, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180599-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AIHL season, Regular season, Statistics, Leading goaltenders\nOnly the top five goaltenders, based on save percentage with a minimum 40% of the team's ice time. Current as of 4 September 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180599-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 AIHL season, Goodall Cup playoffs\nThe 2005 playoffs was scheduled for 3 September with the Goodall Cup final held on 4 September 2005. Following the end of the regular season the top four teams advanced to the playoff series which was held at the Hunter Ice Skating Stadium in Newcastle, New South Wales. The series was a single game elimination with the two winning semi-finalists advancing to the Goodall Cup final. The Goodall Cup was won by Newcastle North Stars (2nd title) who defeated the Adelaide Avalanche 3\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 38], "content_span": [39, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180600-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AIK Fotboll season\nFor the 2005 season, AIK Fotboll was relegated to the second flight Superettan, just six years after playing Barcelona, Arsenal and Fiorentina in the Champions League of 1999\u20132000. Following relegation, AIK changed coach to Rikard Norling, and after a shaky start (including a shock defeat to V\u00e4sby), AIK soon were at the top of the table, promoted back into Allsvenskan, as arch rivals Djurg\u00e5rden won the national title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180601-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AMA National Speedway Championship\nThe 2005 AMA National Speedway Championship Series was staged over three rounds, which were held at Auburn (September 1), Industry Hills (September 2) and Auburn (October 7). Greg Hancock won the title for a sixth time, and for the third time in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180601-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AMA National Speedway Championship, Event format\nOver the course of 20 heats, each rider raced against every other rider once. The field was then split into sections of four riders, with the top four entering the 'A' Final. Points were then awarded depending on where a rider finished in each final. The points in the 'A' Final were awarded thus, 20, 18, 16 and 14. Bonus points for were also awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180602-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AMA Superbike Championship\nThe 2005 AMA Superbike Championship is the 30th season of the AMA Superbike Championship", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180603-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ANAPROF\nANAPROF 2005 is the 2005 season of the Panamanian football (soccer) league, ANAPROF. The season started on February 11, 2005 with the \"Torneo Apertura 2005\" and finalized on November 12, 2005 with the Torneo Clausura 2005. The Apertura champion was Plaza Amador and the Clausura champion was San Francisco, on November 22, 2005 the ANAPROF 2005 final was played and Plaza Amador was crowned champion over San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180604-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open\nThe 2005 Hyderabad Open was a Tier IV WTA Women's Tennis Tournament held in Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh, India from 7\u201312 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180604-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open\nHometown favourite Sania Mirza, a resident of Hyderabad, impressed the crowds at the tournament by becoming the first ever Indian woman to win a WTA Singles Title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180604-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open, WTA Entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180604-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open, WTA Entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received entry through the Lucky Loser spot:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180604-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open, Champions\nYan Zi / Zheng Jie defeated Li Ting / Sun Tiantian, 6-4, 6-1", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180605-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Doubles\nLiezel Huber and Sania Mirza were the defending champions, but only Mirza chose to participate that year. She paired up with Shikha Uberoi but lost in the quarterfinals to Yan Zi and Zheng Jie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180605-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Doubles\nYan and Zheng won the title, defeating Li Ting and Sun Tiantian 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in an all-Chinese final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180606-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Singles\nNicole Pratt was the defending champion, but decided not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180606-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 AP Tourism Hyderabad Open \u2013 Singles\nSania Mirza won in the final, defeating Alona Bondarenko 6\u20134, 5\u20137, 6\u20133 to become the first ever Indian woman to win a WTA singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180607-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ARCA Re/Max Series\nThe 2005 ARCA Re/Max Series was the 53rd season of the ARCA Racing Series, a division of the Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA). The season was scheduled to begin on February 7, 2005 with the Advance Discount Auto Parts 200 at Daytona International Speedway, and ended with the Food World 300 at Talladega Superspeedway eight months later. Frank Kimmel won driver's championship, his seventh in the series, while Joey Miller won the Rookie of the Year award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180607-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ARCA Re/Max Series, Schedule\nThe 2005 ARCA Re/MAX Series schedule consisted of twenty-three races, at seventeen tracks in twelve states. Fourteen events on the schedule were televised live by SPEED Channel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 33], "content_span": [34, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180607-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ARCA Re/Max Series, Results and standings, Drivers' championship\n(key) Bold\u00a0\u2013 Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0\u2013 Pole position set by final practice results or rainout. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 69], "content_span": [70, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180608-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ARFU Asian Rugby Series\nThe 2005 ARFU Asian Rugby Series was the second edition of a tournament created by Asian Rugby Football Union for national teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180608-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ARFU Asian Rugby Series\nIt was also valid as first round of Asian qualification for 2007 Rugby World cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180608-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ARFU Asian Rugby Series, Second division\nValid also for 2007 Rugby World Cup \u2013 Asia qualification", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 45], "content_span": [46, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180608-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 ARFU Asian Rugby Series, Third division\nValid also for 2007 Rugby World Cup \u2013 Asia qualification", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180609-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASB Classic\nThe 2005 ASB Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland, New Zealand that was part of Tier IV of the 2005 WTA Tour. It was the 20th edition of the tournament and took place from 3 January until 8 January 2005. Unseeded Katarina Srebotnik won the singles title and earned $22,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180610-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASB Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMervana Jugi\u0107-Salki\u0107 and Jelena Kostani\u0107 were the defending champions, neither chose to compete in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180611-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASB Classic \u2013 Singles\nEleni Daniilidou was the two-time defending champion, but was defeated in the first round by Mara Santangelo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180611-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ASB Classic \u2013 Singles\nKatarina Srebotnik won the title, defeating Shinobu Asagoe in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180612-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Club Championship\nThe 2005 ASEAN Club Championship or the 2005 ACC is the second edition of the ASEAN Club Championship, an international association football competition between domestic champion clubs sides affiliated with the member associations of the ASEAN Football Federation. This year, Tampines Rovers FC from Singapore won the championship. The champions of Liga Indonesia (Persebaya Surabaya) apparently did not enter due to a congested fixture list (AFC Champions League, Liga Indonesia and Indonesian Cup). The champions of Laos (MCTPC, aka Telecom and Transportation) and the champions of Philippines (National Capital Region FA) presumably renounced on participation for financial reasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180612-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Club Championship, Knockout stage, 3rd Place Playoff\nNone, DPMM and Ho\u00e0ng Anh Gia Lai are joint third-placers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 63], "content_span": [64, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games\nThe 2005 ASEAN Para Games, officially known as the 3rd ASEAN Para Games, was a Southeast Asian disabled multi-sport event held in Manila, Philippines from 14 to 20 December 2005, nine days after the 2005 Southeast Asian Games. This was the first time Philippines hosted the ASEAN Para Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games\nPhilippines is the third country to host the ASEAN Para Games after Malaysia and Vietnam. Around 1000 athletes from 11 participating nations participated at the games which featured 394 events in 10 sports. The games was opened by Lito Atienza, the Mayor of Manila at the Rizal Memorial Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games\nThe final medal tally was led by Thailand, followed by Vietnam and Malaysia with host Philippines in sixth place. Several Games and National records were broken during the games. The games were deemed generally successful, with the rising standards of disabled sports competition amongst the Southeast Asian nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, Development and preparation\nThe 3rd ASEAN Para Games Organising Committee was formed to oversee the staging of the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, Development and preparation, Venues\nThe 3rd ASEAN Para Games had 11 venues for the games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 58], "content_span": [59, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, Marketing, Logo\nThe logo of the 2005 ASEAN Para Games is an image of an athlete reaching for the stars. The logo was inspired by previous Paralympic Games logos and the 1992 Summer Olympics logo. The four colours represent the four primary colours of the Philippine flag. The three stars symbolise the three main geographical regions of the Philippines as well as the three objectives of the games. The upward position of the arm symbolises the aspiration for equality and regional unity.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, Marketing, Mascot\nThe mascot of the 2005 ASEAN Para Games is a whale shark named Buboy Butanding. The whale shark is said to be the largest fish in the world, which can be seen in the waters off the eastern coast of the province of Sorsogon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, Marketing, Songs\nThe games' theme song is Power Of My Dream sung by Broadway actress and Tony Award winner Lea Salonga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, The games, Opening ceremony\nThe opening ceremony was held at the Rizal Memorial Stadium on 14 December 2005 at 20:00 (PST). The games was opened by Manila's Mayor, Lito Atienza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, The games, Closing ceremony\nThe closing ceremony was held at the Rizal Memorial Stadium on 20 December 2005 at 20:00 (PST). The ASEAN Para Games responsibilities was handed over to Thailand, host of the 2008 ASEAN Para Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 50], "content_span": [51, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, The games, Sports\n10 Main Sports are introduced for the 2005 ASEAN Para Games, with 8 of them are Paralympics events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, The games, Sports\n4 Demonstration Sports are introduced along with the 10 main sports in the games. Among the various sports introduced was sailing, using the disability-friendly Access 2.3 Dinghys. This sport is open to those with mobility disabilities, amputees, visual disabilities and those with cerebral palsy as detailed by the International Association For Disabled Sailing rules. The sailing demo introduced the ease of dinghy sailing to disabled guests, as coached by disabled sailors from Malaysia, Singapore and host country Philippines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, The games, Sports\nThe subsequent 4-part triangle course race between said representatives from the 3 countries, was also held near Baywalk, Roxas Boulevard and the Manila Yacht Club. After the games, two Access 2.3 dinghys were donated by Sailability Singapore to the Philippine Sailing Association to encourage people with any type of disability, the elderly, the financially and socially disadvantaged to start sailing in the Philippines. The others demonstration sports introduced being Boccia, Wheelchair fencing, and Ten-pin bowling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180613-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 ASEAN Para Games, The games, Medal table\nA total of 784 medals comprising 394 gold medals, 236 silver medals and 154 bronze medals were awarded to athletes. The Host Philippines' performance was their best ever yet in ASEAN Para Games History and was placed sixth overall among participating nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 45], "content_span": [46, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180614-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASFA Soccer League\nThe 2005 season of the ASFA Soccer League (now known as the FFAS Senior League) was the twenty fifth season of association football competition in American Samoa. PanSa Soccer Club won the championship, their fourth recorded title, with the winners of the 1998 league competition and a number of previous seasons unknown. It also does not appear that a full competition took place in the prior year, with sources suggesting only youth league took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180614-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ASFA Soccer League, League setup\nIt appears that this league was the first time since 2001 that all American Samoan clubs were united in one league. Seventeen teams competed in 3 separate pools, from which the top two qualified for a second stage round-robin group to determine the four semi-finalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180615-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ASP World Tour\nThe ASP World Tour is a professional competitive surfing league. It is run by the Association of Surfing Professionals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180616-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Buenos Aires\nThe 2005 ATP Buenos Aires was an Association of Tennis Professionals men's tennis tournament held in Buenos Aires, Argentina. It was the 33rd edition of the event and was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. The tournament was played on outdoor clay court and held from 7 February to 14 February 2005. Second-seeded Gast\u00f3n Gaudio won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180616-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Buenos Aires, Finals, Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl defeated Jos\u00e9 Acasuso / Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto 6\u20132, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180617-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nLucas Arnold and Mariano Hood were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180617-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl won the title, defeating Jos\u00e9 Acasuso and Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto 6\u20132, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180618-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Buenos Aires \u2013 Singles\nGast\u00f3n Gaudio defeated Mariano Puerta 6\u20134, 6\u20134 to win the 2005 ATP Buenos Aires singles competition. Guillermo Coria was the champion but did not defend his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180619-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Challenger Series\nThe ATP Challenger Series is the second tier tour for professional tennis organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP). The 2005 ATP Challenger Series calendar comprised 150 tournaments, with prize money ranging from $25,000 up to $150,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180620-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Masters Series\nThe table below shows the 2005 Tennis Masters Series schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180620-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Masters Series\nThe ATP Masters Series are part of the elite tour for professional men's tennis organised by the Association of Tennis Professionals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180621-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Tour\nThis is a list of the tournaments played in the 2005 season of Men's tennis (calendar year), including ATP events and ITF events (This does not include the ITF Men's Circuit, only the ATP circuit).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180621-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Tour, Changes\nThe third set of doubles matches was no longer played as a traditional set. Instead it was played as a match tie break first to 10 and clear by 2, to decide the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 22], "content_span": [23, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180621-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Tour, Entry rankings\nNote: Mariano Puerta received a ranking penalty at the end of the 2005 season. His ranking dropped from 13 to 56.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 29], "content_span": [30, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180621-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Tour, Notable breakthrough players\nThe 2005 season saw the debut of future world No. 1 Novak Djokovic into the main ATP Tour. Ranked world no. 186 at the beginning of the year, he qualified for the Australian Open but was defeated heavily in the first round by the eventual champion Marat Safin. He then recorded his first Grand Slam match victory at the French Open, defeating Robby Ginepri in the first round, before losing to Guillermo Coria in the second. He then reached the third round at both Wimbledon and the US Open, losing to S\u00e9bastien Grosjean and Fernando Verdasco, respectively. Djokovic would finish 2005 ranked world no. 78.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180621-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Tour, Notable breakthrough players\nFuture world No. 1 Andy Murray also made his breakthrough into the ATP Tour in 2005. Murray began the season ranked world No. 407 and was still participating in the junior tour, where he reached the semifinals of the French Open but lost to eventual champion Marin \u010cili\u0107. He was awarded a wildcard into the main draw at Wimbledon, where he defeated George Bastl in the first round, and fourteenth seed Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in the second, before losing to former finalist David Nalbandian in the third, despite having gone two sets to love up. He reached his first ATP Tour level final in October, at the 2005 Thailand Open as a wildcard, losing to Roger Federer; his run saw him enter the ATP's Top 100 for the first time. He eventually finished the season ranked world No. 63.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 815]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180621-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 ATP Tour, Retirements\nFollowing is a list of notable players (winners of a main tour title, and/or part of the ATP Rankings top 100 (singles) or top 50 (doubles) for at least one week) who announced their retirement from professional tennis, became inactive (after not playing for more than 52 weeks), or were permanently banned from playing, during the 2002 season:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 26], "content_span": [27, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180622-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Aaron's 499\nThe 2005 Aaron's 499 was the 9th race of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season, held on May 1, 2005, at Talladega Superspeedway in Lincoln, Alabama. The race was won by Jeff Gordon, who led 139 laps of the 194 lap race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180622-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Aaron's 499\nThe race was extended from the scheduled 188 laps due to a late race caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180623-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel\nThe 2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel was both a men's and women's tennis tournament on the 2005 ATP and WTA Tours that was held in Acapulco, Mexico. The tournament was held from February 21 to February 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180623-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel, Finals, Men's Doubles\nDavid Ferrer / Santiago Ventura defeated Ji\u0159\u00ed Van\u011bk / Tom\u00e1\u0161 Z\u00edb 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180623-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel, Finals, Women's Doubles\nAlina Jidkova / Tatiana Perebiynis defeated Rosa Mar\u00eda Andr\u00e9s Rodr\u00edguez / Conchita Mart\u00ednez Granados, 7\u20135, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180624-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, but they competed in Scottsdale this week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180624-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Doubles\nDavid Ferrer and Santiago Ventura won the title by defeating Ji\u0159\u00ed Van\u011bk and Tom\u00e1\u0161 Z\u00edb 4\u20136, 6\u20131, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180625-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Singles\nCarlos Moy\u00e1 was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Mariano Puerta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180625-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Men's Singles\nRafael Nadal won in the final 6\u20131, 6\u20130, against Albert Monta\u00f1\u00e9s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180626-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLisa McShea and Milagros Sequera were the defending champions, but Sequera did not compete this year. McShea teamed up with Jennifer Russell and lost in first round to Lilia Osterloh and Antonella Serra Zanetti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180626-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Doubles\nAlina Jidkova and Tatiana Perebiynis won the title by defeating Rosa Mar\u00eda Andr\u00e9s Rodr\u00edguez and Conchita Mart\u00ednez Granados 7\u20135, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180627-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Singles\nIveta Bene\u0161ov\u00e1 was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180627-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abierto Mexicano Telcel \u2013 Women's Singles\nFlavia Pennetta won the title by defeating \u013dudmila Cervanov\u00e1 3\u20136, 7\u20135, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180628-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abkhazian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Abkhazia on 12 January 2005. The result was a victory for Sergei Bagapsh of United Abkhazia, who received over 90% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180628-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abkhazian presidential election, Background\nA Presidential election had been held in Abkhazia on 3 October, but had resulted in a prolonged conflict over the results between the two main contenders, Raul Khadjimba, who had been Prime Minister and who was backed by the seriously ailing outgoing President Vladislav Ardzinba and by Russia, and Sergei Bagapsh, the main opposition candidate who had received a narrow majority of the votes. On 5 December 2004 Bagapsh and Khadjimba agreed to hold new elections. In these elections they would run on a joint ticket, with Khadjimba as vice presidential candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180628-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nOn 17 December, Sergei Bagapsh was officially nominated by an initiative group. On 21 December, Bagapsh and Khajimba created a joint coordinating council to run their election campaign, consisting of five representatives each: Nugzar Agrba, Valeri Kvarchia, Vakhtang Pipia, Daur Tarba, Alik Logua, Roman Gvinjia, Raul Khonelia, Beslan Kobakhia, Vasili Avidzba and Timur Nadaria, cochaired by Agrba for Bagapsh and Kvarchia for Khajimba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180628-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nIn the early morning of 23 December an explosion occurred in the centre of Sukhumi, causing no casualties. Later that day, Iakub Lakoba, who had come fifth and last in the first election, was nominated by an initiative group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180628-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Abkhazian presidential election, Campaign\nBagapsh and Lakoba were officially registered as candidates by the Central Election Commission on 28 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180628-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Abkhazian presidential election, Aftermath\nOn 2 June 2005, United Abkhazia suspended the membership of Sergei Bagapsh, as required by the Abkhazian constitution since he had become President.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180629-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Abruzzo regional election\nThe Abruzzo regional election of 2005 took place on 3\u20134 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180629-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Abruzzo regional election\nOttaviano Del Turco (Italian Democratic Socialists, then Democratic Party) defeated incumbent Giovanni Pace (National Alliance) by a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180630-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic\nThe 2005 Acura Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts in San Diego in the United States. It was part of Tier I of the 2005 WTA Tour. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and was held from August 26 through August 7, 2005. Mary Pierce won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180630-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic, Champions, Doubles\nConchita Mart\u00ednez / Virginia Ruano Pascual defeated Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 / Ai Sugiyama, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20131, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180631-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Rennae Stubbs were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Ai Sugiyama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180631-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic \u2013 Doubles\nConchita Mart\u00ednez and Virginia Ruano Pascual won in the final, defeating Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Ai Sugiyama 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20131, 7\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180631-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180632-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport was the defending champion, but withdrew due to a lower-back strain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180632-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic \u2013 Singles\nMary Pierce won in the final, defeating Ai Sugiyama 6\u20130, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180632-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Acura Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 35], "content_span": [36, 93]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival\nThe 2nd Adelaide Film Festival took place in Adelaide, Australia, from 18 February to 3 March 2005. Katrina Sedgwick was again Festival Director.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival\nDennis O'Rourke received the 2005 Don Dunstan Award for his contribution to the Australian film industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival\nThe poster this year depicts two children shining a light on the festival theme, Image is Everything.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival\nThe festival opened with Look Both Ways directed by Sarah Watt, the first feature to be funded through the Adelaide Film Festival Investment Fund, and closed with Ten Canoes directed by Rolf de Heer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nAdelaide was the first Australian festival to \"pursue a production agenda. The event\u2019s integration with local and regional industries brought it into line with the model adopted by several major Asian festivals such as Hong Kong and Pusan.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nThe second Adelaide Film Festival began an association with the highly successful Italian children's festival, the Giffoni Film Festival, which showcases new films to panels of young film critics. The Giffoni Film Festival was set up in 1971, in Salerno, by Claudio Gubitosi, who was then 18. It has been so successful it has been exported to other parts of Europe and North America, including Los Angeles, where actor Jon Voight is involved. The 2005 Adelaide Film Festival attracted the Giffoni to Adelaide and the director \"hopes it will be a permanent association\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nIn the second of two programmed lectures, special guest film scholar David Bordwell described the second biannual Adelaide Film Festival as one of the most friendly and rewarding festivals he has experienced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180633-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Adelaide Film Festival, Development\nThe 2005 festival incorporated the Australian International Documentary Conference 2005 (AIDC) \"at a moment when documentary is in the ascendancy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 40], "content_span": [41, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180634-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Advance Auto Parts 500\nThe 2005 Advance Auto Parts 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on April\u00a010, 2005 at Martinsville Speedway in Ridgeway, Virginia. The race was the sixth of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. The pole position was won by Scott Riggs of MB2 Motorsports, his first career pole, while Tony Stewart of Joe Gibbs Racing led the most laps with 247. Hendrick Motorsports' Jeff Gordon won the race. Sergeant Sean McGuire gave the starting command from Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180634-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Advance Auto Parts 500, Race\nPole-sitter Scott Riggs lost the lead on the first lap after getting loose in turn 4, sliding up and colliding with Ryan Newman, allowing Jeremy Mayfield to take the lead. A tire on Newman's car popped, which brought out the first caution. Much of the early portion of the race was dominated by Mayfield, Tony Stewart, Bobby Labonte, and defending race winner Rusty Wallace.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180634-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Advance Auto Parts 500, Race\nMeanwhile, Jeff Gordon fell behind three laps by lap 70 due to a loose wheel, but regained two laps, and via the beneficiary rule, got back on the lead lap after a caution on lap 276, while gaining the lead with 35 laps left. Sometime during the race, Gordon and Kurt Busch made contact, sending Busch into the wall. With three laps left, Travis Kvapil's car spilled oil on the track, bringing out the final caution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180634-0001-0002", "contents": "2005 Advance Auto Parts 500, Race\nGordon had a strong jump on the restart, and held off Kasey Kahne, Mark Martin and Newman to claim his 71st career win, his seventh at Martinsville, and his second of the season. Wallace closed out the Top 5, with Sterling Marlin, Ricky Rudd, points leader Jimmie Johnson, Elliott Sadler, and Joe Nemechek rounding out the Top 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 33], "content_span": [34, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180635-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Advanta Championships\nThe 2005 Advanta Championships was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at The Pavilion in Villanova, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States that was part of Tier II of the 2005 WTA Tour. It was the 21st and last edition of the tournament and was held from October 31 through November 6, 2005. Third-seeded Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo won her third consecutive singles title and earned $93,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180635-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Advanta Championships, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Lisa Raymond / Samantha Stosur 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180636-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Advanta Championships \u2013 Doubles\nAlicia Molik and Lisa Raymond were the defending champions, but Molik chose not to compete in 2005; Raymond played alongside Samantha Stosur, but lost in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180637-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Advanta Championships \u2013 Singles\nAm\u00e9lie Mauresmo was the two-time defending champion, and successfully defended her title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180638-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships\nThe 4th Aerobic Gymnastics European Championships was held in Coimbra, Portugal, October 27\u201330, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Afghanistan alongside provincial elections on 18 September 2005. Former warlords and their followers gained the majority of seats in both the lower house and the provincial council (which elects the members of the upper house). Women won 28% of the seats in the lower house, six more than the 25% guaranteed in the 2004 constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nApproximately twelve million voters were eligible to vote for the 249-seat Wolesi Jirga, the lower house of parliament, and 34 provincial councils. The 2,707 parliamentary candidates (328 female, 2,379 male) are all independent; parties are not recognized by law and lists do not exist. This has been the subject of criticism: relatively unknown people could win a seat as easily as very popular candidates. It has also made it considerably difficult for the population to decide whom to vote for, even though some candidates may be a member of or (financially) backed by a political party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nAnother source of criticism is the use of the single, non-transferable vote in multi-member constituencies, particularly in the absence of party lists. In other words, each province elects a number of members, but each voter can vote for only one candidate. This runs the risk of fragmenting the vote to the point where candidates can be elected virtually by chance. Early returns confirmed this fear. For example, in Farah Province, one of the first provinces to declare , 46 candidates competed for five seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nNo candidate polled more than 11%, and four of the five elected candidates polled less than 8%. In Kabul, which had 33 seats available, most of the candidates elected received well under 1% while over 30% of the votes cast went to three candidates, with the leading candidate receiving over 25 times the vote of the candidate elected with the lowest vote share, and several elected candidates receiving less than 2000 votes. This creates the risk of a legislature in which the majority of members have little or no legitimacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nBecause a sizable percentage of the Afghan population is unable to read and write, all candidates had an icon as well. Those icons were included on the lists. These included, but were not limited to, pictures of footballs, cars or different sorts of flowers. Because there were not enough different icons, some candidates had multiple icons as their symbol: two or three footballs behind each other, like Gulallay Habib ( of the Kabul parliament candidate list). For example, the candidate list for the Nuristan section of the parliament looked . Candidates were not able to choose the icons themselves: instead, the electoral committee chose them. Forty-five candidates were refused because of connections with armed groups or for not giving up their government jobs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 821]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nPeople vote for a candidate in their own province. Each province has a number of representatives in parliament, depending on the population. The largest province by population, Kabul, has 33 seats (390 candidates, 50 female, 340 male), whereas the small ones like Nuristan, Nimruz and Panjshir, have only two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe total number of candidates for the provincial councils was 3,025. Each province, except Oruzgan, had women running for seats in the provincial council. Female candidates ran for parliament in all districts. District council elections, originally also scheduled for the same date, were not held in 2005 (district numbers, boundaries and population figures had to be determined first).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThese were the first parliamentary elections in Afghanistan in 33 years: after communist rule, civil war and Taliban rule, the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan toppled the Taliban regime and after the presidential elections in 2004, parliamentary elections were organized in 2005. Originally, according to the 2001 Bonn agreement, the elections were to be held in June 2004. However, due to the security situation, Hamid Karzai (then interim President, now President of Afghanistan) moved the elections more than a year to the later date. Security was still an issue, as Taliban and others threatened to disrupt the elections violently. Several candidates were killed before polling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Electoral system\nA quarter of the seats - 68 seats - in the parliament are reserved for women, as well as 10 seats for the Kuchi community. Those are minimum numbers: there is no maximum for the number of seats for those groups. The 102 members of the Meshrano Jirga, the upper house, are indirectly elected by the provincial councils.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 52], "content_span": [53, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Conduct\nDuring the 2009 Afghan elections, former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan Ronald E. Neumann recalled that the \"indelible\" ink used in the 2005 election to prevent people from voting more than once had turned out to be washable after all. The same problem had also occurred in the 2004 presidential elections, and was repeated again in the 2009 elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Results\nTurnout was estimated at 50%, substantially lower than at the presidential election in October 2004. This is blamed on the lack of identifiable party lists as a result of Afghanistan's new electoral law, which left voters in many cases unclear on who they were voting for. Turnout was highest in the Turkmen, Uzbek and the Tajik populated provinces in the north - generally over 60% - and 50% in some of the Pashtun southeastern areas where the Taliban insurgency is strongest. Turnout was also surprisingly low (34%) in the capital Kabul, which is dominated by Tajiks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180639-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Afghan parliamentary election, Results\nThe first results were declared on 9 October, with final results being delayed by accusations of fraud, and were finally announced on 12 November. Only a minority of candidates contested the election on a party ticket, whilst a number of elected MPs were loosely associated with certain parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180640-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Africa Cup\nThe 2005 Africa Cup (Official name \"Top 9\") was the 6th edition of the continental rugby union tournament arranged by Confederation of African Rugby (CAR).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180640-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Africa Cup\nIt was won by Morocco, that defeated Madagascar in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 77]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180640-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Africa Cup\nThe final was played at the \"Stade de France\" before the match between France and South Africa match of the 2005 South Africa rugby union tour of Argentina and Europe. The match was arranged in that venue, due to participation of South African Amateurs selection, who were surprisingly defeated in the semifinal by Madagascar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180640-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Africa Cup, First round, Pool A\nThree point for victory, two for draw, and one for lost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180640-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Africa Cup, First round, Pool B\nThree point for victory, two for draw, and one for lost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180640-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Africa Cup, First round, Pool C\nThree point for victory, two for draw, and one for lost", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 36], "content_span": [37, 92]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180641-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 African Judo Championships\nThe 2005 African Judo Championships were the 26th edition of the African Judo Championships, and were held in Port Elizabeth, South Africa from 18 May to 21 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180642-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 African Junior Athletics Championships\nThe 2005 African Junior Athletics Championships was the seventh edition of the biennial, continental athletics tournament for African athletes aged 19 years or younger. It was held in the Tunisian cities of Tunis and Rad\u00e8s from 1\u20134 September. A total of 44 events were contested, 22 by men and 22 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180642-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 African Junior Athletics Championships\nThe two cities also played dual hosts to the 2005 Arab Athletics Championships later that same month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180643-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 African U-17 Championship\nThe 2005 African U-17 Championship was a football competition organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). The tournament took place in Gambia. The top three teams qualified for the 2005 FIFA U-17 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180643-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 African U-17 Championship, Qualification, Preliminary round\nThe first leg matches were played on either the 26th or 27 June 2004. The second leg matches were played on either the 10th or 11 July 2004. The winners advanced to the First Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180643-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 African U-17 Championship, Qualification, First round\nThe first leg matches were played on either the 20th or 21 November 2004. The second leg matches were played on either the 4th or 5 November 2004. The winners advanced to the Second Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180643-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 African U-17 Championship, Qualification, Second round\nThe first leg matches were played on either the 8th or 9 January 2005. The second leg matches were played on either the 22nd or 23 January 2005. The winners advanced to the Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180643-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 African U-17 Championship, Knock-out stage, Semifinals\nFor winning their semifinals, Ghana and Gambia qualified for the 2005 FIFA U-17 World Championship with Ivory Coast and South Africa meeting in the third place playoff for the third and final place in the 2005 FIFA U-17 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180643-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 African U-17 Championship, Knock-out stage, Third place playoff\nFor winning the third place playoff, Ivory Coast qualified for the 2005 FIFA U-17 World Championship with South Africa missing out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180644-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship\nThe 2005 African Youth Championship was an international football competition that took place between 15 and 29 January 2005. The tournament was hosted by Benin and also served as qualification for the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180644-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship, Qualification, Preliminary round\nBurundi and Mauritius withdrew. As a result, the Republic of Congo and Lesotho advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 65], "content_span": [66, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180644-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship, Qualification, First round\nRepublic of Congo, Congo Kinshasa, Ethiopia, Gabon and Tanzania withdrew. As a result, Cameroon, Nigeria, Zambia, Ghana and Zimbabwe advanced to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180644-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship, Qualification, Second round\nNiger were disqualified by the FIFA. Accusations were made to each other from Lesotho and Zimbabwe of using over-aged players, but no actions were taken.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 60], "content_span": [61, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180644-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship, Qualification to World Youth Championship\nThe four best performing teams qualified for the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 74], "content_span": [75, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180644-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship, Murder of Samiou Yessoufou\nAfter Benin lost 3-0 to Nigeria on the opening day, Benin fans became outraged with goalkeeper Samiou Yessofou believing he was to blame for their loss. So they broke into a hotel bar just as Yessofou was beginning to drink alcohol for the first time. They grabbed glass bottles and smashed them on him and stabbed with a knife and tortured him with beating sticks. Then they left the bar causing Yessofou to fall the floor and he died. However, this did not stop the tournament which continued as normal and Benin went on to win a bronze medal later on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180645-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 African Youth Championship squads\nThis article will display the squads for the 2005 African Youth Championship. Only players born on or after 1 January 1985 were eligible to play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup\nThe Afro-Asia Cup was a cricket competition played for the first time in 2005 and which is intended to run for at least three years. The idea was to raise money for the Asian Cricket Council and the African Cricket Association, and the whole venture was given a massive boost when the ICC, somewhat controversially, agreed to give the series of one-day matches full ODI status.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup\nThe inaugural competition was a series of three one day matches played between an Asian XI and an African XI. Controversially, the games have been awarded official One Day International status. The teams were selected by former Test match players rather than by national selectors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup\nThe ICC expected that there would be a strong competitive tender for television rights. However, the main television broadcasters, ESPN/Star and Ten Sports, declined to bid. The rights were eventually bought by Nimbus Sports for the 2005 competition and the next two competitions in the following years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup\nThere was much controversy over the final squad lists: many of the leading players were either unavailable for selection, withdrew from participating or chose to fulfil commitments with domestic teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup\nThe 2005 tournament was closely fought. Africa won the first match by just two runs, while Asia won the second by 18 runs to set up a series decider. However, after Africa had been bowled out for 106, the Asian innings was curtailed by rain, and the match eventually declared a no result. Thus, the series was tied 1\u20131 and the trophy shared.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Squads, African XI Squad\nThe African squad was selected from players from South Africa, Zimbabwe and Kenya. As the first match clashed with Zimbabwe's Test match against New Zealand, the Zimbabweans did not play in the first game. Justin Ontong was available for selection for the first game instead. Graeme Smith still had two matches of a four-match suspension to serve, and so was unavailable for the first two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Squads, Asian XI Squad\nThe Asian side was selected from players from Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. With the exception of Bangladesh (whose selector had previously only played in the ICC Trophy), each country had one ex-Test cricketer as a selector: Majid Khan (Pakistan), Ravi Shastri (India), Graeme Labrooy (Sri Lanka) and Shafiq Ul-Haque (Bangladesh).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Squads, Asian XI Squad\nThere was controversy surrounding the omission of Indian captain Sourav Ganguly from the Asian side, leading to Ganguly criticising the selection panel and process; although there were reports that the selection panel decided unanimously against including Ganguly, and that any suggestion that he should have been included would have led to Majid Khan and Ravi Shastri walking out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 42], "content_span": [43, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Squads, Criticism\nThe competition was considered to be missing a large number of the top players from each continent, for several underlying reasons. Pakistan made it clear that its players did not have to play if they did not want to, and leading South African bowler Makhaya Ntini announced that he would be playing for English county side Warwickshire and was unavailable for selection for the African side. Injuries also ravaged the tournament, as four players pulled out a week before the matches were due to start, whilst other big names \u2013 including Sachin Tendulkar \u2013 were not even available for selection due to injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Matches, First ODI\nIn front of a crowd of about 1,000 people at Centurion \u2013 usually figures more associated with domestic cricket matches \u2013 Africa won the first of three ODIs. The African side included ten South Africans and two Kenyans \u2013 and one of the Kenyans was substituted for a South African without getting the chance to bat. Zaheer Khan made early breakthroughs as Africa collapsed to 57 for 5 \u2013 Justin Ontong and Steve Tikolo both dismissed for ducks \u2013 but Ashwell Prince and Mark Boucher set Africa back on the right track with an 86-run partnership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Matches, First ODI\nPrince finished on 78 not out as he ran out of partners to bat with, Africa eventually being dismissed for 198. Asia, however, lost wickets at regular intervals, but a 24-run ninth-wicket partnership between Zaheer Khan and Shoaib Akhtar looked to turn it Asia's way. Asia needed to eke out five runs for the last wicket, with twenty-two balls to spare, but Ashish Nehra was bowled by a straight delivery from ODI debutant Dale Steyn, and Asia finished two runs short of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Matches, Second ODI\nAsia XI rebounded at Kingsmead to square the series with one match to play. Good contributions from the entire top order \u2013 the top six hit one six each, Shahid Afridi getting out the next ball but all the others at least passing 30 \u2013 saw Asia XI to 267 for 7, with the two Sri Lankans Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene making half-centuries. Kenyan Thomas Odoyo was statistically the best bowler for the African XI, with three wickets for 45, making him tied best wicket-taker for the African XI so far in the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Matches, Second ODI\nIndeed, the Kenyan contingent of the African side performed well, with Steve Tikolo making a run-a-ball 43 from number seven \u2013 but AB de Villiers used up 67 balls for making his 39, the African XI had to suffer three run outs, and in the end two wickets from Zaheer Khan wrapped up the African innings \u2013 18 runs short of victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180646-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Afro-Asia Cup, Matches, Third ODI\nAfter Africa XI had been bowled out for a measly 106, rain poured down steadily on Kingsmead, and the umpires eventually declared that play was not possible. The rain had already caused the start of the game to be delayed for two hours, before Shoaib Akhtar and Zaheer Khan unleashed their fast bowling on the African side. When Tatenda Taibu departed for 10, the score was 51 for 7, and only good hitting and running from Shaun Pollock, who hit 44 not out, carried Africa past 100. Steve Tikolo, the top-scorer from the last match, was intriguingly dropped. Then, Dale Steyn and Shaun Pollock ripped out the two Asian openers Virender Sehwag and Shahid Afridi, and, with the score eight for 2, the weather intervened. No further play was possible, and thus the two continents shared the title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 833]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest\n2005 Ahvaz unrest or 15 April Ahvaz Protests were violent riots, initiated by Iranian Arabs in the city of Ahvaz in southwestern Iranian province of Khuzestan. The unrest erupted on 15 April 2005, and lasted for 4 days. Initially, the Iranian Interior Ministry stated that only one person had been killed, however an official at a hospital in Ahvaz said that there were between 15 and 20 mortal casualties. Government officials blamed the unrest on Britain, whose troops based just across the border in southern Iraq. Following the unrest, several bombings were carried out in Ahvaz, killing 28 people. In 2006, Iran executed five Arab separatists, convicted of carrying out the bombings in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 714]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nThe Arabs of Iran are concentrated in the province of Khuzestan and number between half a million to 2 million. These Arabs are descendants of Shi'ite Arab tribes gradually migrating to Iran since 16th (During Ottomon sovereignty on Arabian peninsula). Most Iranian Arabs are Shi'a, but a small minority of Sunni Muslim Arabs live along the Persian Gulf coastline. In Khuzestan, Arabs are the dominant ethnic group in Shadegan, Hoveyzeh and Susangerd, a majority in Mahshahr and Khorramshahr, a minority in Abadan and together with Persians, Arabs are one of the two main ethnic groups in Ahvaz.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nThe Constitution of Iran guarantees freedom of cultural expression and linguistic diversity. Kh\u016bzest\u0101n Province has radio and television stations in Arabic. School education is in Persian, the official language, but use of Arabic is allowed under the constitution of the Islamic Republic. Article 15 of the constitution states:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nThe Official Language and script of Iran, the lingua franca of its people, is Persian. Official documents, correspondence, and texts, as well as text-books, must be in this language and script. However, the use of regional and tribal languages in the press and mass media, as well as for teaching of their literature in schools, is allowed in addition to Persian", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nHowever, some human rights groups have accused the Iranian government of discrimination and other human rights violations against Iranian Arabs and violating the constitutional guarantees of equality. Amnesty International says:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nDespite the Arab population remaining largely loyal to Iran during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s, the central government in Tehran has continued to view Arab Iranians with suspicion. Iranian Arabs claim this has led to discriminatory policies and unequal access to resources aimed at social development.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nIn general the government (i.e. of Iran) did not discriminate on the basis of race, disability, language, or social status; however, it discriminated on the basis of religion, sex, and ethnicity. The poorest areas of the country are those inhabited by ethnic minorities, such as by the Baluchis in Sistan va Baluchestan Province and by Arabs in the southwest. Much of the damage suffered by Khuzestan Province during the eight-year war with Iraq has not been repaired; consequently, the quality of life of the largely Arab local population was degraded. Kurds, Azeris, and Ahvazi Arabs were not allowed to study their languages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Background\nAccording to Article 16 of Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Arabic is taught in all classes of secondary school and in all areas of study including universities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Causes\nA forged letter attributed to Mohammad-Ali Abtahi, an adviser to Iran's Reormist President Mohammad Khatami, began circulating in the blogosphere, and was widely circulated by hand and subsequently cited in a report by al-Jazeera network. The fake letter proposed measures to reduce the proportion of Arabs in Khuzestan. The letter inspired crowds of young Arab rioters to attack government buildings and institutions in Ahvaz city. Some Iran experts and analysts at the time speculated that the move was part of a plan by the conservative establishment to discredit the reformist camp among Arabs in the run-up to the 2005 presidential poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Casualties\nThe Iranian Interior Ministry stated that only one person had been killed, while an official at a hospital in Ahvaz said that between 15 and 20 mortal casualties. Another government official said clashes with security services resulted in 3 or 4 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Casualties\nA spokesman for the Ahvaz Arab People Democratic Popular Front, Abu Shaker al-Ahwazi, mentioned the names of 20 people who he said had been killed in the clashes. He said that \"dozens of people had been wounded and 300 others had been arrested.\" Amnesty International has cited \"unconfirmed reports\" that 29 people were killed. Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported at least 50 deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Casualties\nNews reports and accounts have put the number of fatal casualties at between 5 and 20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Aftermath\nThe Iranian government officials blamed the Khuzestan unrest on UK, which hosts the headquarters of the Iranian Arab militant group \"Al-Ahwaz Arab Peoples Democratic Popular Front\". The government also temporarily banned broadcasts by the Arabic-language satellite-television station Al-Jazeera, accusing it of fanning the unrest. Ali Yunesi, the intelligence minister at the time, said those arrested in Khuzestan were mainly \"young, innocent people\" who had been provoked by \"real criminals\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0012-0001", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Aftermath\nDefense Minister at the time \u2013 Ali Shamkhani, who is an ethnic Arab, was dispatched by the Reformist Government of Khatami, to the Ahvaz area to look into the reasons behind the unrest. He met with local leaders, and he stressed that ethnic Arabs are an integral part of the country but acknowledged that Khuzestan Province suffers from \"underdevelopment\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Aftermath\nFollowing the riots, in June 2005 four bombings by Arab separatist militants in Ahvaz and two others in Tehran killed 10 people and injured at least 90. Two other bombings in Ahvaz, one in October 2005 and another in January 2005, killed 12 people. In 2006, Iran executed five Arab separatists convicted of carrying out the bombings in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Aftermath\nAccording to an April 2006 report by the Amnesty International, on 4 November 2005, during a Muslim feast celebrating the end of Ramadan, several hundred Iranian Arab demonstrators marched towards the centre of Ahvaz city, and were met by the security forces, who reportedly fired tear gas grenades into the crowd causing two youths to fall into the Karoun River and drown, apparently under the effects of the tear gas which caused temporary paralysis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0013-0002", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Aftermath\nAmnesty International has also stated that there were further clashes in Khuzestan between Iranian Arabs and the security forces on 11 and 12 January 2006, during the Muslim Feast of Sacrifice, which reportedly resulted in 3 deaths and 40 injured persons. The demonstrators were reportedly demanding \"an end to Arab persecution, poverty and unemployment, and the release of political prisoners detained since April 2005\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180647-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Ahvaz unrest, Aftermath\nOn 15 April 2011, there was a protest by the Sunni Arab minority in Ahvaz, to mark the sixth anniversary of the 2005 events. In a letter, written to the UN high commissioner for human rights, Iran's Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi stated that \"more than 12 people were killed, around 20 injured and tens of protesters have been arrested.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180648-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Air Canada Cup\nThe 2005 Air Canada Cup was the third edition of the women's ice hockey tournament. It was held from February 10-12, 2005 in Duisburg, Germany. The Canadian U22 national team won the tournament, going undefeated over three games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180649-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Air Force Falcons football team\nThe 2005 Air Force Falcons football team represented the United States Air Force Academy in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were a member of the Mountain West Conference. The Falcons were coached by Fisher DeBerry and played their home games at Falcon Stadium. They finished the season 4\u20137, 3\u20135 in Mountain West play to finish in seventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180650-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Air Kasai Antonov An-26B crash\nOn 9 September 2005, an Air Kasai Antonov An-26B crashed in the Republic of the Congo north of Brazzaville, killing all 13 people on board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180650-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Air Kasai Antonov An-26B crash, Accident\nAntonov An-26B 9Q-CFD was on a domestic flight in the Democratic Republic of the Congo from Kinshasa to Boende Airport in Boende on 9 September 2005. Its route took it over the neighboring Republic of Congo, where at about 15:45 local time it crashed about 50\u00a0km (31 miles) north of Brazzaville. All 13 people aboard (four crew members and nine passengers) died in the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180650-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Air Kasai Antonov An-26B crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft was a twin-engine Antonov An-26B, manufacturer's serial number either 10605 or 12901 (sources differ). It had first flown in 1983 and was registered as 9Q-CFD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180651-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Akron Zips football team\nThe 2005 Akron Zips football team represented the University of Akron in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Akron competed as a member of the East Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) The Zips were led by J. D. Brookhart in his second year as head coach. Brookhart would lead Akron to its first MAC title, upsetting Northern Illinois 31-30 in the conference championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180652-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Al Anbar governorate council election\nThe election for the governorate council of Iraq's Al Anbar Governorate were held on January 30, 2005, the same date as the Iraqi legislative election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180652-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Al Anbar governorate council election, Election\nThe largely Sunni province was one of the most violent in Iraq during the Iraqi insurgency, and turnout was extremely low, with the vast bulk of Anbar's residents choosing to boycott the election out of a mixture of distrust for a system perceived to be unfair, and a fear of violence from insurgent groups. Of the total population of some 2.2 million, only 3,775 voted in the governorate council election. Some 13,000 voted in the concurrently held transitional assembly elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 535]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180652-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Al Anbar governorate council election, Election\nHelped by the low turnout, the Iraqi Islamic Party was able to win 70.1% of the governorate's council seats on a total of 2,692 votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 52], "content_span": [53, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180653-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Al Hillah bombing\nThe Al Hillah bombing killed 127 people, chiefly men lining up to join the Iraqi police forces, at the recruiting centre on February 28, 2005 in Al Hillah, Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180653-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Al Hillah bombing\nThe bombing caused a worsening of Iraqi-Jordanian diplomatic relations after it was learned that suicide bomber, Raed Mansour al-Banna, had come from Jordan. Banna's family in Jordan gave him a heroic funeral, angering many Iraqi Shia. Thousands protested outside the Jordanian embassy in Baghdad and demanded it close, and the dispute led to both countries recalling their respective ambassadors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180653-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Al Hillah bombing\nAl-Banna had earlier tried to enter the United States in July 2003, although he was turned away at O'Hare Airport as he possessed \"multiple terrorist risk factors\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede\nThe 2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede occurred on August 31, 2005 when 953 people died following a stampede on the Al-Aaimmah bridge, which crosses the Tigris river in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Incident\nAt the time of the stampede, around one million pilgrims had gathered around or were marching toward Al Kadhimiya Mosque, which is the shrine of the Shi'ite Imam Musa al-Kazim. Tensions had been high within the crowd. Earlier in the day, seven people had been killed and dozens more wounded in a mortar attack upon the assembled crowd for which an Al-Qaeda linked insurgent group claimed responsibility. Near the shrine, rumors of an imminent suicide bomb attack broke out, panicking many pilgrims. Interior Minister Bayan Baqir Solagh said that one person \"pointed a finger at another person saying that he was carrying explosives...and that led to the panic\". The man was presumed to be wearing a suicide explosive belt on the bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Incident\nThe panicked crowd flocked to the bridge, which had been closed. Somehow, the gate at their end of the bridge opened, and the pilgrims rushed through. Some people fell onto the concrete base and died instantly. The ensuing crush of people caused many to suffocate. The pressure of the crowd caused the bridge's iron railings to give way, dropping hundreds of people 9\u00a0m (30 feet) into the Tigris river. There was nowhere on the bridge for the people to go, as the other end of the bridge remained closed, and was impossible to open anyway, as it opened inward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Incident\nOwing to the nature of the incident many of those who died were those who could be considered physically weakest, such as the elderly, women and children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Incident, Attempts to rescue people\nPeople dived in from both ends of the bridge trying to help those drowning in the river. On the Sunni side, calls went out from the loudspeakers of local mosques to help those in trouble. A Sunni Arab teenager, Othman Ali Abdul-Hafez (Arabic: \u0639\u064f\u0640\u062b\u0652\u0640\u0645\u064e\u0640\u0627\u0646 \u0639\u064e\u0640\u0644\u0650\u064a \u0639\u064e\u0640\u0628\u0652\u0640\u062f\u064f \u0627\u0644\u0652\u0640\u062d\u064e\u0640\u0627\u0641\u0650\u0640\u0638\u200e, \u2018Uthm\u0101n \u2018Al\u012b \u2018Abdul-\u1e24\u0101fi\u1e93), succumbed to exhaustion as he rescued people in the water. Thus he had drowned, and was later praised as a \"martyr\" by Iraqi politicians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Aftermath\nA three-day mourning period was announced by Iraqi Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari. Iraqi President Jalal Talabani said the catastrophe \"will leave a scar in our souls and will be remembered with those who died in the result of terror acts.\" Many of the dead were buried in the holy Shia Islamic town of Najaf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Aftermath\nThere was some political fallout also from the event, with Mutalib Mohammad Ali, the Minister for Health, blaming the defence ministers for not doing enough to secure the area. However, the prime minister dismissed any calls for resignation for any ministry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, Aftermath\nAfter the stampede, a few commentators in the Western media speculated that given the scale of the incident it might tip the country into a civil war by antagonizing the Shi'a community. However, there was no immediate surge in sectarian violence. Opposition groups blamed the government and security forces for failing to prevent the incident. However, these groups themselves often encourage high turn-outs at religious events to prove the relative strength of their sect. Another factor leading to a high turn-out at Shia religious events is the fact such events were banned under Saddam Hussein, and so many attend to express faith in a way they were banned from doing for decades.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180654-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Aaimmah bridge stampede, World reaction\nGovernments and world leaders offered their condolences after the deadly stampede:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash\nThe 2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash refers to an aviation accident which occurred on January 26, 2005 when a United States Marine Corps CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter crashed while ferrying U.S. military personnel in the Al-Anbar province of western Iraq, near the town of Ar-Rutbah. All thirty-one troops aboard the helicopter died in the crash which made it the deadliest single incident for U.S. troops during the Iraq War. The accident took place while coalition forces were trying to secure the country ahead of the January 2005 Iraqi parliamentary election slated to take place later that month. The cause of the crash was determined to be the pilots becoming disoriented when they flew into a sandstorm", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 733]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Background\nThe CH-53E Super Stallion first entered service in 1981, becoming the largest and heaviest helicopter in the inventory of the United States military. Its three gas turbine engines gave the helicopter a superior amount of thrust capability and allowed it to become the workhorse of the U.S. Marine Corps, its primary operator.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Background\nU.S. forces in Iraq were also at the time facing increasing opposition to its previously unchallenged air superiority. Insurgent forces were increasingly targeting coalition aircraft, usually American helicopters which provided ample targets. In November 2003, a CH-47 Chinook helicopter was shot down near Fallujah by a shoulder-fired missile, killing 16 American troops. In 2004, a total of 13 U.S. helicopters were brought down by enemy ground fire over Iraq. The increasing prevalence of ground fire led American forces to change their tactics, and helicopters began flying low and predominantly at night to avoid drawing fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Background\nAnother threat to U.S. helicopters in Iraq was sand. The arid desert environment led many U.S. aircraft to become contaminated with large quantities of sand, affecting aircraft performance and overall mechanical well-being as well as posing a threat to pilots who can be blinded during landing operations. At an October 2003 hearing of the House Armed Services Committee, Representative Joel Hefley (R-CO), the chairman, said the typical Super Stallion returning from service in Afghanistan and Iraq was found to have 150 pounds of sand spread throughout its interior.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Accident\nAt 1:20am AST on 26 January 2005 a CH-53E Super Stallion helicopter (164536), code named Sampson 22 from Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 361 (HMH-361) was ferrying a platoon of U.S. Marines from the 3rd Marine Division in Al-Anbar province, Iraq near the town of Ar-Rutbah, about seventy miles from the Jordanian border when it encountered a sandstorm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Accident\nSampson 22's pilots, Captain Paul C. Alaniz, 32, and Captain Lyle L. Gordon, 31, became disoriented in the storm and did not realize the helicopter was banking to the left when it crashed into the ground. Of the four crew and 27 passengers, of which all but one were U.S. Marines, all were killed. General John Abizaid, commander of US troops in Iraq, said the helicopter was on \"a routine mission in support of the elections\". The helicopter was carrying the troops to secure a polling site in preparation for the January 2005 Iraqi parliamentary elections set to take place four days from the day of the crash.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 36], "content_span": [37, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Aftermath\nAt 10:00am the same day of the crash, the Marines confirmed the loss of all thirty-one aboard the helicopter. The helicopter crash was the deadliest loss of American troops in a single incident of the entire Iraq War and as a result January 26, 2005 became the deadliest day for U.S. troops during the war since six more American troops were killed throughout the country on that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Aftermath\nCaptain Norman T. Day, the mishap CH-53E's wingman, was relieved of flying duty as a result of the crash and faced the threat of charges of dereliction of duty after it was revealed that he was responsible for providing updated weather information for the flight. A heavily redacted 400 page report cited causes such as spatial disorientation, overconfidence in the use of night-vision goggles, and pilot error in addition to the poor weather conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180655-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Al-Anbar CH-53E crash, Aftermath\nIn a statement on January 26, President George W. Bush paid condolences to the men killed in the crash in a larger statement about the Iraqi elections stating \"The story today is going to be very discouraging to the American people,\" Bush said at the White House. \"I understand that. We value life. And we weep and mourn when soldiers lose their life. And\u2014but it is the long-term objective that is vital, and that is to spread freedom. Otherwise, the Middle East will be\u2014will continue to be a cauldron of resentment and hate, a recruiting ground for those who have this vision of the world that is the exact opposite of ours\" and \"Anytime we lose lives, it is a sad moment.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe 2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team represented the University of Alabama during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. This was the team's 73rd season in the SEC. The 2005 squad collected a record of 10\u20132 under coach Mike Shula. The team started off the season at 9\u20130, notching wins over Florida and Tennessee. The team lost their final two regular season games against LSU and Auburn. The Crimson Tide received a bid to the 2006 Cotton Bowl Classic against Texas Tech, where they defeated the Red Raiders on a last-second field goal by Jamie Christensen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nThe season was also marked by a notable catch by wide receiver Tyrone Prothro, known to Alabama fans as The Catch. Prothro's career ended later that season as he suffered a broken leg against Florida. Prothro's catch would win ESPN's Game Changing Performance for week two, and later the ESPY Award for Best Play in all of sports for 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team\nFollowing the 2005 season, the NCAA levied sanctions against the Crimson Tide, forcing Alabama to vacate all of their 10 wins.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee\nAlabama opened the 2005 season by defeating the Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders 26\u20137. Alabama scored first on a defensive play. Late in the first quarter, Mark Anderson sacked the Blue Raider quarterback Clint Marks for a safety and a 2\u20130 Crimson Tide lead. Alabama then scored their first touchdown of the season in the second quarter on a one-yard Tim Castille run to cap a 51-yard drive. The Blue Raiders responded on the next drive with a 14-yard Marks touchdown pass to Nick McAfee to cut the Alabama lead to 9\u20137 at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Middle Tennessee\nThe Crimson Tide scored on their opening drive of the third quarter when Brodie Croyle threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Tyrone Prothro. Later in the quarter, Alabama extended their lead to 23\u20137 after Castille scored his second touchdown from one-yard out in the game. Ryan Saxby then scored the final points of the game in the fourth with his 32-yard field goal to make the final score 26\u20137. The victory improved Alabama's all-time record against the Blue Raiders to 2\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Southern Mississippi\nAfter going down 21\u201317 at halftime, the Crimson Tide came-from-behind and defeated the Southern Miss Golden Eagles 30\u201321. Alabama took an early 10\u20130 lead after Brodie Croyle threw a 26-yard touchdown pass to D. J. Hall and Jamie Christensen connected on a 33-yard field goal. The Golden Eagles then rallied with a pair of first-quarter touchdowns to take a 14\u201310 lead at the end of the quarter. The first came on a defensive score when Gerald McRath intercepted a Croyle pass and returned it 33-yards and the second on a 12-yard Dustin Almond pass to Anthony Perine. Early in the second quarter Southern Miss extended their lead to 21\u201310 after Almond threw a 37-yard touchdown pass to Perine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 770]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Southern Mississippi\nOn their final offensive possession of the second quarter, Tyrone Prothro made one of the most memorable receptions in Alabama history. On a fourth-and-twelve, Croyle threw a 42-yard pass that Prothro caught on the back of Golden Eagles cornerback Jasper Faulk. Prothro had to wrap his right arm around Faulk's neck and his left arm under Faulk's right armpit to catch the ball (which appeared on replays to be blocked from his view by Faulk), and then he had to maintain possession of the ball until his knee touched down at the one-yard line. Referred to as simply The Catch, the play won the 2006 Best Play ESPY Award. The Crimson Tide then cut the lead on the following play to 21\u201317 just before the half after Croyle connected with Le'Ron McClain on a one-yard touchdown reception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 864]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Southern Mississippi\nAlabama retook the lead in the third quarter after Tim Castille scored on a two-yard touchdown run, and led 23\u201321 after a failed Christensen extra point. The final points of the game came early in the fourth quarter on the second two-yard Castille touchdown run of the evening to give the Crimson Tide the 30\u201321 victory. For his 97 yards in kickoff returns and 34 yards punt returns, Tyrone Prothro was named the SEC Special Teams Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, South Carolina\nIn the first road game of the season, Alabama defeated the South Carolina Gamecocks 37\u201314 for what was then only the third road win all-time for head coach Mike Shula. Brodie Croyle scored first for the Crimson Tide on a 15-yard run to give Alabama a 7\u20130 lead after their opening drive. South Carolina then tied the game at 7\u20137 on the ensuing drive with a one-yard Mike Davis touchdown run. Alabama then retook the lead for good on the following possession when Croyle threw a 46-yard touchdown strike to Keith Brown. Jamie Christensen then scored a pair of second-quarter touchdowns from 41 and 29 yards to give the Crimson Tide a 20\u20137 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, South Carolina\nChristensen connected on a 27-yard field goal early in the third to extend the Alabama lead to 23\u20137. On the following Gamecock possession, a Carlos Thomas fumble was recovered by Alabama's Rudy Griffin at the South Carolina 39-yard line. Three plays later Kenneth Darby scored on a 22-yard touchdown run to give the Crimson Tide a 30\u20137 lead entering the fourth quarter. With the second-string playing in the fourth, John Parker Wilson threw a 36-yard touchdown pass to Brown for the final Alabama points of the afternoon. The final touchdown came on the ensuing South Carolina drive when Blake Mitchell threw a six-yard touchdown pass to Sidney Rice to make the final 37\u201314 score. For his 145 rushing yards and one touchdown, Kenneth Darby was named the SEC Offensive Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 71], "content_span": [72, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nWith this 24\u201313 victory over the Arkansas Razorbacks to open divisional play, Alabama secured their first 4\u20130 start since the 1996 season. After a scoreless first quarter, Arkansas scored first with a 34-yard Chris Balseiro field goal. The Crimson Tide responded with a 43-yard Brodie Croyle touchdown pass to D. J. Hall to give Alabama a 7\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nArkansas quarterback Robert Johnson fumbled the ball on the opening offensive possession of the second half. Simeon Castille caused it with his quarterback sack, and DeMeco Ryans made the recovery at the Razorback 19-yard line. Three plays later Alabama extended their lead to 10\u20133 after a 36-yard Jamie Christensen field goal. On the second play of the fourth quarter, Tim Castille scored on a one-yard touchdown run to take a 17\u20133 lead. On the following Arkansas possession, Peyton Hillis made a 12-yard run and then Darren McFadden scored on a 70-yard touchdown run to cut the Alabama lead to 17\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Arkansas\nAfter holding the Crimson Tide to a three-and-out, the Razorbacks' Kyle Dickerson blocked a Jeremy Schatz punt that was recovered by John Aaron Rees at the Alabama eleven-yard line. The Alabama defense was able to get a stop and hold Arkansas to a 27-yard Balseiro field goal. The Crimson Tide scored the final points of the game late in the fourth when Croyle connected again with Hall, and this time it was on a five-yard pass to make the final score 24\u201313. For his 15 tackle performance, DeMeco Ryans was named the SEC Defensive Player of the Week; and for his 275 punting yards that included a 72-yard punt, Jeremy Schatz was named the SEC Special Teams Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Florida\nIn what was Urban Meyer's first game as the Florida Gators head coach against Alabama, the Crimson Tide was victorious 31\u20133. After fumbling the Florida punt after their first offensive series, Tyrone Prothro responded on Alabama's first offensive play of the afternoon by taking a Brodie Croyle slant pass 87-yards for a 7\u20130 Crimson Tide lead. On the ensuing Florida possession, Chris Harris intercepted a Chris Leak pass and returned it to the Gators' two-yard line. Three plays later, Alabama had a 14\u20130 lead after a one-yard Tim Castille touchdown run. Jamie Christensen added a 22-yard field goal to give the Crimson Tide a 17\u20130 lead at the end of the first quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 735]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Florida\nOn the first play of the second quarter, the Alabama defense completed a goal line stand after Mark Anderson and Freddie Roach combine to tackle DeShawn Wynn at the one-yard line on fourth down. Chris Hetland then scored the only Florida points of the game on their next offensive possession with his 37-yard field goal. Following the Hetland field goal, Alabama again scored on a one-play drive when Croyle connected with Keith Brown for a 65-yard touchdown reception to give the Crimson Tide a 24\u20133 halftime lead. Prothro then scored the final points of the game early in the third quarter with his 15-yard touchdown reception to make the score 31\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Florida\nAlthough Alabama did go on to win 31\u20133, the game is also notable as being the last played by Tyrone Prothro. Early in the fourth quarter, he broke both his tibia and fibula after landing awkwardly in a failed attempt to make a touchdown reception on a fourth-and-five play. For his four tackle performance, Mark Anderson was named the SEC Defensive Lineman of the Week; and for his 283 passing yards and three touchdowns, Brodie Croyle was named the SEC Offensive Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nIn a game dominated by both defenses Alabama defeated their long-time rival, the Ole Miss Rebels 13\u201310 in Oxford. After Tim Castille failed to gain a first down on a fourth-and-one on the Rebels' six-yard line, both teams traded turnovers on successive drives. DeMeco Ryans forced a fumble by Taye Biddle that was recovered by Charlie Peprah at the Alabama 16-yard line. On the following Alabama play, Travis Johnson caused D. J. Hall to fumble that was recovered by Garry Pack.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0016-0001", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nThree plays later Ole Miss took a 7\u20130 lead after Micheal Spurlock threw a 27-yard touchdown pass to Mario Hill. After Jamie Christensen missed a 38-yard field goal early in the second quarter, Ramzee Robinson intercepted a Spurlock pass on the first play of the ensuing possession to set up a 43-yard Christensen field goal to make the score 7\u20133. The Rebels missed one and had a second field goal attempt blocked later in the quarter to give Ole Miss a 7\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Ole Miss\nOn their first possession of the second half, Alabama scored their only touchdown of the game on a 48-yard Kenneth Darby touchdown run. The Rebels tied the game up early in the fourth with a 24-yard Robert Bass field goal, but the Crimson Tide won the game with a 31-yard Christensen field goal as time expired to make the final score 13\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Tennessee\nIn a defensive struggle against long-time rival Tennessee, Alabama extended their overall, season record to 7\u20130 with this 6\u20133 victory over the Volunteers. After trading fumbles on two of the three opening possessions, Jamie Christensen missed a 50-yard field goal attempt late in the first quarter for Alabama. Neither team would have another scoring opportunity again until midway through the third quarter. After DeMeco Ryans recovered a fumbled punt by Lucas Taylor at the 50-yard line, Christensen connected on a 33-yard field goal six plays later to give the Crimson Tide a 3\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Tennessee\nTennessee tied the game at 3\u20133 on their first possession of the fourth quarter with a 32-yard James Wilhoit field goal. On the Volunteers' next possession, Roman Harper forced a Cory Anderson fumble into the endzone that was recovered by Alabama for a touchback to keep the game tied at 3\u20133. The Crimson Tide responded with a ten-play, 63-yard drive and a 34-yard Christensen field goal to win the game 6\u20133 with only seconds remaining in the game. For his 11 tackle performance, DeMeco Ryans was named the SEC Defensive Player of the Week and the Walter Camp Football Foundation Defensive Player of the Week; and for his two field goals in the victory, Jamie Christensen was named the SEC Special Teams Player of the Week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nIn what was the final regular season, non-conference game, Alabama defeated the Utah State Aggies 35\u20133 on homecoming in Tuscaloosa. The Crimson Tide took a 21\u20130 halftime lead after a trio of Brodie Croyle touchdown passes. The first came on a nine-yard pass to Ezekial Knight, the second on a one-yard pass to Le'Ron McClain and the third on a 13-yard pass to D. J. Hall. The Aggies scored their only points of the game on their opening drive of the second half when Justin Hamblin connected on a 24-yard field goal. After a Hall fumble resulted in an Aggie touchback on the following Alabama possession, Hamblin missed a 41-yard field goal on the ensuing possession to keep the score 21\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Utah State\nThe Crimson Tide then scored their fourth touchdown later in the third on a 38-yard Kenneth Darby touchdown run. With the reserves playing in the fourth quarter, Alabama scored their final points when John Parker Wilson connected with Glen Coffee for a nine-yard touchdown reception and a 35\u20133 Crimson Tide victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nAgainst long-time rival Mississippi State, the Alabama defense had its first shutout of the season and the offense did not have a touchdown in their 17\u20130 victory over the Bulldogs. After a scoreless first, Jamie Christensen scored the first points of the game with his 38-yard field goal to give the Crimson Tide a 3\u20130 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Mississippi State\nOn the opening kickoff of the second half, Jimmy Johns forced the Bulldogs' Derek Pegues to fumble. Matt Miller recovered the fumble and returned it 15-yards for a touchdown and a 10\u20130 Alabama lead. On the ensuing Mississippi State drive, Michael Henig threw an interception to Rudy Griffin that was returned 17-yards for an Alabama touchdown and a 17\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, LSU\nWith College GameDay in town, in what was the first loss of the season for the Crimson Tide, the LSU Tigers defeated Alabama 16\u201313 in overtime. After Jamie Christensen missed a 46-yard field goal, on the following Alabama offensive possession in the first quarter he connected on a 28-yard field goal to give Alabama a 3\u20130 lead. The Crimson Tide then scored their only touchdown of the game early in the second quarter when Brodie Croyle threw an eight-yard touchdown strike to D. J. Hall to give Alabama a 10\u20130 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, LSU\nLSU tied the game up at 10\u201310 in the third quarter. They scored first on a one-yard Justin Vincent touchdown run and then on a 42-yard Chris Jackson field goal. After a pair of missed Jackson field goals in the fourth quarter for LSU, the game went into overtime. Alabama went on offense first and managed to score on a 34-yard Jamie Christensen field goal to take a 13\u201310 lead. On the Tigers' possession, JaMarcus Russell threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Dwayne Bowe to give LSU the victory 16\u201313.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nA week after suffering their first loss of the season, the Auburn Tigers defeated Alabama 28\u201318 in the 2005 edition of the Iron Bowl to keep the Crimson Tide of consideration for a BCS Bowl game. Auburn took a 21\u20130 lead in the first quarter. The Tigers scored first on a seven-yard touchdown pass from Brandon Cox to Benjamin Obomanu; second on an eight-yard Kenny Irons touchdown run; and third on a 45-yard Obomanu touchdown run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0026-0001", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nAfter a Prechae Rodriguez fumble was recovered by Charlie Peprah, Alabama scored their first points on the ensuing drive when Tim Castille scored on a one-yard touchdown run to make the score 21\u20137. Auburn responded later in the second quarter with a five-yard Cox touchdown pass to Cole Bennett to give the Tigers a 28\u20137 lead at halftime.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Auburn\nThe Crimson Tide scored on their first possession of the second half on a 43-yard Jamie Christensen field goal. After Auburn was able to get a defensive stand late in the fourth to ice the game, Alabama did score a late touchdown on a one-yard John Parker Wilson touchdown run. A successful two-point conversion pass from Wilson to D. J. Hall made the final score 28\u201318. The Tigers' victory marked their fourth straight over the Crimson Tide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 63], "content_span": [64, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nOn December 4 officials from the Cotton Bowl announced their 2006 contest would feature the Crimson Tide competing against the Texas Tech Red Raiders of the Big 12 Conference. In a game that featured the nation's number one passing offense of Texas Tech against the nation's number one scoring defense of Alabama, the Crimson Tide won 13\u201310. Alabama scored their only touchdown of the game on just their second offensive play when Brodie Croyle threw a 76-yard touchdown pass to Keith Brown for a 7\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0028-0001", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nThe Red Raiders responded later in the quarter with a 34-yard Alex Trlica field goal to cut the lead to 7\u20133. A scoreless second quarter saw the only scoring opportunities coming on a trio of failed field goal attempts. Alabama's Jamie Christensen missed a 39-yard field goal and the second blocked by Chris Hudler and recovered by Dwayne Slay. The Red Raiders' Trlica had a 37-yard field goal blocked by Mark Anderson as time expired to give Alabama the 7\u20133 halftime lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, Game summaries, Texas Tech\nChristensen extended the Alabama lead to 10\u20133 early in the third quarter with his 31-yard field goal. Texas Tech then tied the game up at 10\u201310 late in the fourth quarter after Cody Hodges threw a 12-yard touchdown pass to Jarrett Hicks. The Crimson Tide responded on the following drive with Christensen kicking the game-winning field goal from 45-yards out as time expired to give Alabama the 13\u201310 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 67], "content_span": [68, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, Awards\nFollowing the SEC Championship Game, the conference named its award winners. DeMeco Ryans was named by the coaches' as the SEC Defensive Player of the Year. Kenneth Darby, Roman Harper and Ryans were named to the Coaches' All-SEC First Team. Mark Anderson, Tyrone Prothro and Freddie Roach were named to the Coaches' All-SEC Second Team. Antoine Caldwell, B. J. Stabler, Nick Walker and Bobby Greenwood were named to the 2005 Freshman All-SEC Team. In addition to his conference awards, Ryans was also named to the 2005 College Football All-America Team by AFCA and the Associated Press. He also won the Lott Trophy for 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 698]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, NCAA sanctions\nIn October 2007, the athletic department discovered a potential NCAA-violation present throughout the athletics program. The violations stemmed from athletes from several sports, including football, receiving improper benefits as a result of a failure in the distribution system of textbooks to student athletes from the university. In essence, student athletes received textbooks for classes that they were not taking. Although it was not admitted that any excess textbooks amounted to an improper payment, it was possible that some athletes signed up for classes, received free textbooks, and then sold the textbooks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180656-0031-0001", "contents": "2005 Alabama Crimson Tide football team, After the season, NCAA sanctions\nAfter a prolonged investigation, in June 2009 the NCAA ruled all athletes that received improper benefits related to the textbook distribution system were deemed ineligible. As such, as part of the penalties imposed on the football program, all victories which those included in the inquiry participated, were officially vacated from the all-time record. The penalty to vacate victories does not result in a loss (or forfeiture) of the affected contests or award a victory to the opponent. As such, all ten victories from the 2005 season (Middle Tennessee, Southern Mississippi, South Carolina, Arkansas, Florida, Ole Miss, Tennessee, Utah State, Mississippi State and Texas Tech) were vacated making the official record for the season zero wins and two losses (0\u20132).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 73], "content_span": [74, 841]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180657-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alabama State Hornets football team\nThe 2005 Alabama State Hornets football team represented Alabama State University as a member of the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180658-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alamo Bowl\nThe 2005 Alamo Bowl was a college football bowl game held on December 28, 2005 at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas. It was the 13th Alamo Bowl. The Nebraska Cornhuskers, second-place finishers in the Big 12 Conference's North Division, defeated the Michigan Wolverines, third-placed finishers in the Big Ten Conference. This matchup was notable in that it featured the two schools that shared the 1997 national championship. At the time, Michigan and Nebraska were two of only five schools in NCAA Division I history with 800 or more victories.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180658-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alamo Bowl, Game summary\nNebraska started the scoring with a 52-yard touchdown pass from Zac Taylor to wide receiver Terrence Nunn. Michigan tied it at 7\u20137 on a 13-yard pass from Chad Henne to tight end Tyler Ecker. In the second quarter, Henne hooked up with Mike Massey for a 16-yard touchdown pass, giving Michigan a 14\u20137 lead. Taylor found wide receiver Nate Swift for a 14-yard touchdown pass late in the second quarter, knotting the score at 14\u201314 going into the half. In the third quarter, kicker Jordan Congdon gave Nebraska a 17\u201314 lead with a 20-yard field goal. Henne later found wide receiver Mario Manningham for a 21-yard touchdown and Michigan reclaimed the lead, 21\u201317.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180658-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Alamo Bowl, Game summary\nHenne led off the scoring in the fourth quarter with a rushing touchdown, extending Michigan's lead to 28\u201317. Running back Cory Ross then scored on a 31-yard touchdown scamper for Nebraska. Taylor found Todd Peterson for the ensuing two-point conversion, narrowing Michigan's lead to 28\u201325. With 4:29 left in the game, Taylor and Nunn hooked up again for a 13-yard go-ahead touchdown to give Nebraska a 32\u201328 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 29], "content_span": [30, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180658-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Alamo Bowl, Game summary, Final Play\nMichigan's last-ditch attempt to win the game came on a seven-lateral scramble somewhat reminiscent of the famous Cal-Stanford band play. Henne completed a pass across the middle of the field to Jason Avant, who caught the ball at midfield and immediately lateraled to Steve Breaston. Breaston threw the ball backwards to Mike Hart, who lateraled back to Avant. Avant then threw the ball across the entire width of the field, where it was caught by Manningham as he was being tackled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180658-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Alamo Bowl, Game summary, Final Play\nManningham attempted another backward pass, which hit the ground and bounced two or three times off the hands of two Nebraska defenders, before being picked up by another Michigan player, who lateraled to Tyler Ecker. Because the ball had hit the ground, several members of both teams and the media, believing the play was dead, rushed onto the field while Ecker ran downfield. Nebraska players also gave their coach the Gatorade dunk before the play was over, reminiscent of the Bluegrass Miracle. Ecker dodged several players and coaches and returned the ball approximately 60 yards to the Nebraska 16-yard line, at which point Cornhusker cornerback Zackary Bowman knocked him out of bounds after time had expired ending the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 41], "content_span": [42, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180659-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian Supercup\nAlbanian Supercup 2005 is the 12th edition of the Albanian Supercup since its establishment in 1989. The match was contested between the Albanian Cup 2005 winners KS Teuta and the 2004\u201305 Albanian Superliga champions KF Tirana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180659-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian Supercup\nThe regular and extra time result ended goalless, therefore the verdict of penalty shoot-outs 5-4 crowned KF Tirana winners of the Supercup for the 5th time, three of these trophies won over the same team, KS Teuta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180660-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Albania on 3 July 2005. The result was a victory for the opposition Democratic Party (PD) and its allies, prominently the Republican Party (PR). Former president Sali Berisha became prime minister as a result of the election. Voter turnout was only 48.0%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180660-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe 140 members of parliament were elected using the mixed-member proportional representation. Voters elected 100 deputies directly from constituencies and 40 from party lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180660-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian parliamentary election, Conduct\nThe proper conduct of the election was seen as crucial in maintaining Albania's eventual EU hopes. For the most part, election day was peaceful, but OSCE monitors said that the poll only partially complied with international standards, citing disorganization, improper procedures and \"a few violent incidents.\" The Central Election Commission (CEC) received over 300 complaints.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180660-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian parliamentary election, Conduct\nMonitors from the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe called the election a \u201cdisappointment,\u201d saying it failed to comply with international standards because of \u201cserious irregularities,\u201d intimidation, vote-buying and \u201cviolence committed by extremists on both sides.\u201d", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180660-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Albanian parliamentary election, Results\nOn 14 July the CEC released final results for 97 constituencies as well as the tentative national proportional results. The clear winners were the Democratic Party and its allies, though with many close constituency races between the PD and the governing Socialist Party of Albania (PSSh). The only party to win both proportional and constituency-level seats was the Socialist Movement for Integration (LSI) of former prime minister Ilir Meta, as Meta himself won the party's lone constituency mandate. Despite this, the LSI did not fulfill pre-election expectations that it might emerge as a dealmaker in the next parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election\nThe Alberta Alliance Party, a conservative political party in Alberta, Canada, held its second leadership election on November 18 and 19, 2005, in Red Deer, Alberta. The leadership position was vacated by Alberta Alliance Party founder and leader Randy Thorsteinson in March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election\nPaul Hinman was elected leader on the third ballot, defeating the other candidates, Marilyn Burns, David Crutcher and Ed Klop. Hinman lead the party from this leadership election to the merge with the Wildrose Party of Alberta in 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Election results\nThe election was held using a preferential ballot. Members indicated their preferences in order on the ballot. After each round of voting, the candidate receiving the fewest votes was removed from the election, and his or her votes allocated to other candidates on the basis of the voters' indicated preferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Election results\nAll members who registered or renewed their memberships before October 6, 2005, were mailed a ballot. Members could mail in their ballots or take them to the leadership convention in Red Deer. Ballots had to be mailed in by November 18, 2005 to be eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 65], "content_span": [66, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms\nFour candidates were officially nominated. Candidates needed 100 party member signatures and a $5,000 deposit to run for leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 73], "content_span": [74, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms, Marilyn Burns\nCampaign slogan: \"A Brighter Future, A Better Way\"Marilyn Burns: Marilyn Burns is the Alberta Alliance justice critic and candidate for Stony Plain in the 2004 election. Marilyn was the first candidate to get her campaign off the ground. One of her main principles is defending Alberta's provincial rights, under a heavily expanded version of the Alberta Agenda. She is a lawyer, politician and mother of four from Edmonton Alberta. Informal polls have shown her to be fighting for the lead in the race with David Crutcher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 88], "content_span": [89, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms, David Crutcher\nDavid Crutcher, a member of the Progressive Group for Independent business, backed by Craig Chandler, ran in Calgary-Egmont, and won the largerst percentage of the popular vote of any Alliance candidate in Calgary in the 2004 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 89], "content_span": [90, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms, Paul Hinman\nPaul Hinman: deputy leader of the Alberta Alliance and the party's only current Member of the Legislative Assembly, representing Cardston-Taber-Warner. Believes that by having its leader in the legislature, the party will get more respect and attention in both the legislature and media. Has been endorsed by Lethbridge Conservative MP Rick Casson and former Little Bow Member of the Legislative Assembly Raymond Speaker.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 86], "content_span": [87, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms, Ed Klop\nCampaign slogan: \"Building Together\"Ed Klop: Ed Klop is 38 years old from Red Deer; he ran for the Alberta Alliance in Lacombe-Ponoka. Ed achieved second place taking 18% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms, Ed Klop\nEd Klop has focused his platform around party building. His platform includes building constituency associations and the provincial council committees. Klop wants to increase communication through the various organizations in the party, as well as more communication with the membership at large.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates and platforms, Ed Klop\nEd believes in building a solid base of conservative policies through regional policy development sessions all over the province, as well as working to increase fundraising and party membership.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 82], "content_span": [83, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates leadership debates\nDuring the leadership election, two debates took place. The debate was hosted by the Freedom Radio Network, a radio show that was broadcast on AM 1140 in southern Alberta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates leadership debates\nThe entire audio of the debate was broken down into two parts to be rebroadcast later. The debate itself was taped before a live studio audience who purchased tickets beforehand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates leadership debates\nCandidate Ed Klop joined the race after the debate and is not featured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Candidates leadership debates\nThe second debate was held on October 18, 2005, in Edmonton. All four candidates participated. The second debate was held by the party and moderated by Eleanor Maroes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 78], "content_span": [79, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Campaign controversies\nThe election race's major developments in October 2005 centred on Craig Chandler and David Crutcher, whom many Alberta Alliance members began increasingly attacking for what they viewed as undesirable spin and campaign tactics. These tactics included attacking leadership candidates, former election, some party policies and the provincial council. The Crutcher team believes many on the council, including Eleanor Maroes, the interim leader, are actively campaigning for other candidates against party rules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Campaign controversies\nThe first blow to the Craig Chandler campaign came on October 18, 2005 when Travis Chase, a former Alberta Alliance candidate in Calgary Fort issued a public statement removing himself from being associated with Craig Chandler and David Crutcher. He announced his support for Marilyn Burns. The result prompted the Craig Chandler campaign to threaten legal action against Travis Chase. On October 25, 2005 Travis responded by issuing a press release,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Campaign controversies\nOn October 25, 2005, former party leader Randy Thorsteinson broke his silence and endorsed Ed Klop, and attacking the Chandler campaign. The Crutcher camp responded with a deamon dialer phone message attempting to dismiss the statements as campaign propaganda. Craig Chandler responded with legal action against Randy Thorsteinson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 71], "content_span": [72, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180661-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Alberta Alliance Party leadership election, Speculated candidates\nThe following people had been mentioned as possible choices to run for leader:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180662-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Albuquerque mayoral election\nThe Albuquerque mayoral election of 2005 was held on October 4, 2005 to elect the Mayor of Albuquerque. Incumbent Democrat Martin Chavez won reelection, with 41,023 votes (47.2%) to City Councilor Eric Griego's 22,523 (26%), City Councilor Brad Winter's 21,352 (24.6%), and realtor David Steele's 1,859 (2.1%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180663-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alexandria riot\nThe 2005 Alexandria riot was an anti-Christian riot in the Egyptian port city of Alexandria. The riot erupted on 21 October when a group of Muslims staged a demonstration outside St. George's, a Coptic church, to protest a play they said offended Islam which resulted in 3 deaths. The situation got out of hand after some protesters began throwing stones at the building and at police who were present at the scene.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180664-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Algarve Cup\nThe 2005 Algarve Cup is the 12th edition of the Algarve Cup, an invitational women's football tournament held annually in Portugal. It took place 9\u201315 March 2005. The USA won the tournament defeating Germany, 1-0, in the final-game. The tournament victory was the fourth for the US, and their third in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180664-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe twelve invited teams are split into three groups that played a round-robin tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180664-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Algarve Cup, Format\nSince the expansion to 12 teams in 2002, the Algarve Cup format has been as follows: Groups A and B, containing the strongest ranked teams, are the only ones in contention to win the title. The group A and B winners contest the final - to win the Algarve Cup. The runners-up play for third place, and those that finish third in the groups play for fifth place. The teams in Group C played for places 7\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180664-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Algarve Cup, Format\nThe winner of Group C played the team that finished fourth in Group A or B (whichever has the better record) for seventh place. The Group C runner-up played the team who finishes last in Group A or B (with the worse record) for ninth place. The third and fourth-placed teams in Group C played for the eleventh place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180664-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Algarve Cup, Format\nPoints awarded in the group stage followed the standard formula of three points for a win, one point for a draw and zero points for a loss. In the case of two teams being tied on the same number of points in a group, their head-to-head result determined the higher place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 24], "content_span": [25, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180665-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian Cup Final\nThe 2005 Algerian Cup Final was the 41st final of the Algerian Cup. The final took place on June 21, 2005, at Stade 5 Juillet 1962 in Algiers with kick-off at 16:00. ASO Chlef beat USM S\u00e9tif 1\u20130 to win their first Algerian Cup. The competition winners are awarded a berth in the 2006 CAF Confederation Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum\nThe 2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum took place in Algeria on 29 September 2005. The referendum was held on a Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation which had been drawn up to try to bring closure to the Algerian Civil War. The official results showed an overwhelming vote in favour on a high turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Background\nThe Algerian Civil War, which had begun in 1991 after the military cancelled the 1991 National Assembly elections to prevent Islamists from winning, had led to at least 150,000 people dying by 2005. Since the late 1990s violence had been declining and the government of President Abdelaziz Bouteflika began drawing up plans for an amnesty for both members of the military and Islamists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Background\nThe Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation that was produced would offer an amnesty to anyone who had taken part in the civil war unless they had taken part in rapes, mass murders or public bombings. The charter removed any blame to the state for the events of the civil war and prevented any leaders of the Islamist rebels from re-entering politics in Algeria. It also provided for compensation to be given to the families of the dead and those who disappeared during the civil war.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 60], "content_span": [61, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Referendum question\nAre you for or against the Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation project that the government has proposed?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 69], "content_span": [70, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Campaign\nPresident Bouteflika personally led the campaign in favour of the charter and for several weeks before the referendum he travelled across Algeria to campaign for a yes vote. The government said that there was no alternative to the charter and used the slogan \"From concord to national reconciliation. For Algeria\". Public enthusiasm for the charter was not much evident during the campaign but there was support as people saw the referendum as a chance to bring the long conflict to a conclusion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Campaign\nOpponents, including some opposition parties, said that the charter would prevent people from obtaining justice as it would not hold those who committed crimes accountable for them. There was a call for a boycott and opponents described it as just giving more legitimacy to the government and president. However no opposition groups were allowed to get their point of view on national television or radio stations during the campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Campaign\nOn the day of the referendum there was violence in the eastern regions of Algeria and particularly Kabylie province where turnout was much lower than in the rest of the country. Turnout varied widely with Tizi Ouzou Province seeing a turnout of only a little over 11%, while in Khenchela official figures showed a 99.95% turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 58], "content_span": [59, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180666-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Algerian national reconciliation referendum, Results\nThe government described the official results as having given \"real backing for the president's project\". However critics, such as human rights groups, said that the official turnout figures were completely overstated, with polling stations in and around Algiers seeing little evidence of a large turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180667-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All England Open Badminton Championships\nThe 2005 Yonex All England Open was the 95th edition of the All England Open Badminton Championships. It was a four star tournament held in Birmingham, England, from 8 to 13 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180668-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All Thailand Golf Tour\nThe 2005 All Thailand Golf Tour is the seventh season of the All Thailand Golf Tour, the main professional golf tour in Thailand since it was established in 1999.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180669-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Big 12 Conference football team\nThe 2005 All-Big 12 Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big 12 Conference players for the 2005 Big 12 Conference football season. The conference recognizes two official All-Big 12 selectors: (1) the Big 12 conference coaches selected separate offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Coaches\" team); and (2) a panel of sports writers and broadcasters covering the Big 12 also selected offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Media\" team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180669-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Big 12 Conference football team, Key\nBold = selected as a first-team player by both the coaches and media panel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 45], "content_span": [46, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180670-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Big Ten Conference football team\nThe 2005 All-Big Ten Conference football team consists of American football players chosen as All-Big Ten Conference players for the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The conference recognizes two official All-Big Ten selectors: (1) the Big Ten conference coaches selected separate offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Coaches\" team); and (2) a panel of sports writers and broadcasters covering the Big Ten also selected offensive and defensive units and named first- and second-team players (the \"Media\" team).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180670-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Big Ten Conference football team, Key\nBold = selected as a first-team player by both the coaches and media panel", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 46], "content_span": [47, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180671-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 22nd staging of the All-Ireland hurling championship. The championship began on 15 May 2005 and ended on 3 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180671-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Intermediate Hurling Championship\nCork were the defending champions, however, they were defeated in the All-Ireland semi-final. Wexford won the title after defeating Galway by 1\u201315 to 0\u201316 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180672-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship was the 74th staging of the All-Ireland Minor Football Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county Gaelic football tournament for boys under the age of 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180672-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nTyrone entered the championship as defending champions, however, they were defeated by Down in the Ulster quarter-final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180672-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Football Championship\nOn 25 September 2005, Down won the championship following a 1-15 to 0-8 defeat of Mayo in the All-Ireland final. This was their fourth All-Ireland title overall and their first title in six championship seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180673-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by CorkMan (talk | contribs) at 23:41, 27 March 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180673-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship was the 75th staging of the All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Gaelic Athletic Association in 1928. The championship began on 31 March 2005 and ended on 11 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180673-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nOn 11 September 2005, Galway won the championship following a 3-12 to 0-17 defeat of Limerick in the All-Ireland final. This was their second All-Ireland title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180673-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Minor Hurling Championship\nLimerick's Eoin Ryan was the championship's top scorer with 4-40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship\u2014known as the Foras na Gaeilge All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship for sponsorship reasons\u2014was the high point of the 2005 season in the sport of camogie. The championship was won for the 21st time by Cork who defeated Tipperary by a four-point margin in the final and became part of the legendary \u201crebel treble\u201d of 2005 when Cork won the senior hurling, camogie and ladies\u2019 football titles. The attendance was 14,350.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 514]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, New sponsors\nThe championship was the first to take place under the sponsorship of Gala, who replaced Foras na Gaeilge as headline sponsors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Group Stages\nTwo goals in three second-half minutes saw Wexford through to the semi-final on August 20 when they beat Galway in Ballinasloe. The first goal came with seven minutes left from Ursula Jacob and they added two more through Kate Kelly and Una Leacy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Semi-finals\nCork defeated Limerick by 27 points in the most one-sided semi-final for thirty years. Tipperary defeated Wexford by eight points to qualify for their seventh consecutive All-Ireland final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 57], "content_span": [58, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Final\nFor a time it appeared that a lucky Tipperary goal three minutes before half-time seemed to have established the destiny of the final. Claire Grogan's speculative lob bounced in front of All Star goalkeeper Aoife Murray who took her eye off it momentarily to allow it through her legs, a huge set-back after Cork had battled back from a four-point deficit to trail by just a point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Final\nTipperary looked destined to retain their title throughout the second half until Cork produced five late points, Cork manager John Cronin having switched the 18-year-old Briege Corkery and Gemma O'Connor to midfield in the second half to roll back the dominance of Philly Fogarty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180674-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, Leg 2 of the Rebel Treble\nAfter the match Cork captain Elaine Burke memorably announced: \"Rebels ab\u00fa ar\u00eds\" reflecting the euphoria surrounding Cork\u2019s recapture of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship from Galway a week earlier. Rena Buckley, Briege Corkery and substitute Angela Walsh were to feature in Cork\u2019s victory in the All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship a fortnight later, after which Cork captain Juliet Murphy coined the phrase \u2018rebel treble.\u201d Five players featured on both camogie and ladies football panels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 71], "content_span": [72, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180675-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final was the 74th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship, an inter-county camogie tournament for the top teams in Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180675-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Camogie Championship Final\nTipp led 1-10 to 0-8 at half-time, but Cork persistence, as well as an Una O'Dwyer own goal, gave them victory in the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180676-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship final was a hurling match played at Croke Park on 17 March 2005 to determine the winners of the 2004\u201305 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, the 35th season of the All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champion clubs of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by James Stephens of Kilkenny and Athenry of Galway, with James Stephens winning by 0-19 to 0-14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180676-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nThe All-Ireland final was a unique occasion as it was the first ever championship meeting between James Stephens and Athenry. It remains their only clash in the All-Ireland series. Athenry were hoping to make history by winning a record-equaling fourth All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180676-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nA tight first half saw James Stephens' Peter Barry turn in a big performance in the half-back line alongside Philly Larkin and Jackie Tyrrell to keep the Athenry forwards in check. The sides were level eight times in that 30 minute period with Eoin Larkin accounting for 0-7 of James Stephens' tally. Athenry captain Eugene Cloonan was their chief scorer with 0-4 from placed balls to keep the Galway outfit in with a good shout as they trailed by 0-10 to 0-9 at the interval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180676-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nJoe Murphy scored immediately after the restart for Stephens to open up a two-point margin for the first time in the game at 0-11 to 0-9. It was a visible turning point and they quickly pulled further away with points from Eoin McCormack, Richie Hayes and David McCormack to lead 0-14 to 0-10. Cloonan responded with a couple of points for Athenry. James Stephens had a 0-16 to 0-12 lead coming into the final stage, and three unanswered points from Eoin McCormack ultimately eased the Leinster champions to All-Ireland glory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180676-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nJames Stephens' All-Ireland victory was their first since 1982. The win gave them their third All-Ireland title over all and put them joint second on the all-time roll of honour along with Athenry, Blackrock and Ballyhale Shamrocks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180676-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Club Hurling Championship Final\nAthenry were appearing in their first All-Ireland final since they triumphed in 2001. It was their second All-Ireland defeat from five final appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe All-Ireland Senior Football Championship 2005, known for sponsorship reasons as the 2005 Bank of Ireland All-Ireland Senior Football Championship was the premier Gaelic football competition in 2005. It consisted of 33 teams and began on Saturday 7 May 2005. Few surprises came during the championship with the dominance of the Ulster teams evident once again. Gaelic football's \"Big Three\" of this era - Armagh, Kerry, Tyrone - all progressed to the semi-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship\nThe Championship concluded on Sunday 25 September 2005 when Tyrone defeated Kerry, who were playing in their second consecutive All-Ireland Final, by a scoreline of 1-16 to 2-10. Tyrone had to play ten games (including three replays) in order to win the Championship - more than any other team before or since.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Format\nSince the introduction of the so-called \"back-door\" system a few years ago, a number of changes have taken place in the championship format. In 2005 the following system was used.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe provincial championships in Munster, Leinster, Ulster and Connacht ran as usual on a \"knock-out\" basis. These provincial games were then followed by the \"Qualifier\" system:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Format\nThe All-Ireland Quarter-Finals: Each of the four Provincial Champions played one of the four winners from Round 4. The All-Ireland Semi-Finals shall be on a Provincial rots basis, initially determined by the Central Council. If a Provincial Championship winning team is defeated in its Quarter-Final, the team that defeats it shall take its place in the Semi-Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Results, All-Ireland qualifiers\nThe losers of the Preliminary round matches and quarter final matches of each provincial championship started the qualifier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 78], "content_span": [79, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 2\nThe winners of round 1 were joined by the semi final losers of each provincial championship. The matches would be between a round 2 winner and a provincial championship semi final loser.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 3\nThe winners of round 2 contest as the matches from here were lowered to four. Matches were open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Results, All-Ireland qualifiers, Round 4\nThe winners of round 3 were joined by the losers of each provincial championship final. The matches would be between a round 3 winner and the loser of a provincial championship final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 87], "content_span": [88, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180677-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, Results, All-Ireland series\nThe provincial champions and the winners of round 4 contested the quarter finals. The quarter final matches would be between a provincial champion and a round 4 winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 74], "content_span": [75, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180678-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final was the 118th All-Ireland Final and the deciding match of the 2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship, an inter-county Gaelic football tournament for the top teams in Ireland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180678-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nTyrone captained by Brian Dooher won their second title with a three-point win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180678-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final\nIn 2018, Martin Breheny listed this as the second greatest All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180679-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship was the 119th staging of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament, since its establishment in 1887. The draw for the provincial fixtures took place on 17 October 2004. The championship began on 15 May 2005 and ended on 11 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180679-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 11 September 2005, Cork won the championship after a 1\u201321 to 1\u201316 defeat of Galway in the All-Ireland final at Croke Park. This was their 30th All-Ireland title overall and their second title in succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180679-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship\nGalway's Ger Farragher was the championship's top scorer with 3-57.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180679-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, New Format\nOn 17 April 2004, the Hurling Development Committee's proposal to restructure the entire championship system was endorsed by Congress. The new format resulted in a three-tier championship. In the top grade 12 teams would compete for the Liam MacCarthy Cup, with the first round losers and beaten semi-finalists from Leinster and Munster joining Antrim and Galway in a league section split into two groups. The group winners would re-enter the championship at the All-Ireland quarter-final stage, meeting the losing provincial finalists. The runners-up in each group would face the Leinster and Munster champions in the last eight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180679-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, New Format\nThe new format provided two additional quarter-finals, a minimum of three games for each team and four for the vast majority. In the league section, matches would be played on a home and away basis. The bottom-placed teams in both groups would contest the relegation section with the eventual loser being relegated to the Christy Ring Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180679-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship, Teams, Overview\nTwelve teams participated in hurling's top tier in 2005. These were the same 12 teams who competed in Division 1 of the National Hurling League. The provincial championships in Leinster and Munster featured five teams each, while Antrim and Galway entered the championship at the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final was a hurling match that took place on Sunday, 11 September 2005. The match was played at Croke Park in Dublin, Ireland, to determine the winner of the 2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship. The final was contested by Cork and Galway, with Cork winning on a score line of 1\u201321 to 1\u201316. It was their second consecutive All-Ireland title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThis was the 29th championship meeting between Cork and Galway in over one hundred years of competitive games. Cork had won the previous twenty-four encounters while Galway had only put Cork to the sword four times. Furthermore, Cork had a 100% record over Galway in All-Ireland finals. Their last meeting at this stage of the championship was in 1990, when Cork staged a great comeback to take the title. Galway's four victories over Cork, on the other hand, came in games when Cork were expected to win easily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final\nThe All-Ireland semi-finals of 1975, 1979 and 1985 saw Galway catch Cork on the hop, while their most recent victory over 'the Rebels' came in an All-Ireland qualifier in 2002. The game was shown live in Ireland on RT\u00c9 Two as part of the Sunday game live with match commentary provided by Ger Canning and analysis by Michael Duignan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nCork, as reigning All-Ireland champions, began the game in confident mood. Their defence stood up to the Galway attack with Ronan Curran producing his best game of the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nIt was 0\u20134 to 0\u20131 after just ten minutes, during which time Brian Corcoran looked threatening in full-forward line. All of the Cork players settled much better than their Galway counterparts, with Timmy McCarthy, Tom Kenny and Jerry O'Connor all winning the most of the possession in the centre of the field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nCork were almost totally in control by the half-way stage of the opening thirty-five minutes. It wasn't a surprise, then, to see them produce a goal in the sixteenth minute, coming from Ben O'Connor's clinical finishing. Cork were now six points in front and there were still no signs of Galway repeating their semi-final performance and springing an ambush.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nDerek Hardiman and Alan Kerins launched the Galway attack. The latter scored three points against John Gardiner, resulting in the Cork number five being moved to the opposite wing. Kerins might have had a goal immediately after O\u2019Connor's strike, only for Donal \u00d3g Cusack bringing off a terrific save.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nNiall Healy was unable to trouble full-back Diarmuid O'Sullivan, while Damien Hayes didn't get enough ball to trouble corner-back Pat Mulcahy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nThere was no appreciable change in the direction of the game until about 15 minutes from half time, by which time Galway had begun to make real progress. It started with a tightening of the defence, which saw former captain Ollie Canning excel in the left corner, Tony \u00d3g Regan starting to come to terms with the threat from Corcoran and David Collins coming into his own at left-half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nCork gave away frees which presented Ger Farragher with two scores and saw the two midfielders each put over a score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nFor the first time, Cork were beginning to struggle as a result of their lack of penetration in the half-forward line, the inability of Joe Deane to make any headway against Damien Joyce and Corcoran's struggle to make space for himself at full-forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, First half\nInaccuracy was another factor which lessened their influence and Galway finished the half trailing by only two points \u2013 1\u20139 to 0\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 77], "content_span": [78, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Second half\nOn the restart Cork quickly recovered their form with three points in a seven-minute period. It meant that Cork's ability to pick off scores more easily than Galway gave them the confidence to hurl comfortably within themselves, without being put under serious pressure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Second half\nThat self-belief also came through after Hayes put the ball in the net following another excellent save by Cusack, from Richie Murray. The margin was now down to just a single point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Second half\nThe game was now at its most critical stage, when Galway were either going to continue their revival or the champions were going to draw on their reserves of confidence and craft. Essentially, the latter happened. Once again, they came out on top in defence \u2013 John Gardiner's move to left wing-back benefiting him, while captrain Se\u00e1n \u00d3g \u00d3 hAilp\u00edn was inspirational in everything he did.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Second half\nGalway contributed to their own downfall through poor shooting and a disappointing response from Murray and David Forde in the half-forward line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Second half\nThe advantage from the back gradually moved forward, eliciting excellent play once more from Kenny and Jerry O\u2019Connor, who put valuable scores on the board.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180680-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final, Match Summary, Second half\nCork scored six points to Galway's two over the last 10 minutes. With Ronan Curran finishing as strongly as he started the game and Ben O\u2019Connor picking off some great scores, Cork eased their way to victory \u2013 1\u201321 to 1\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 78], "content_span": [79, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180681-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final featured Cork and Galway. It was Cork's first final and Galway's third. Galway were also the reigning champions, having won the 2004 final. Galway led 0\u20134 to 0\u20133 at half-time, but Player of the Match, Valerie Mulcahy, subsequently scored 1\u20135 to help Cork win their first All-Ireland title. Cork eventually won 1\u201311 to 0\u20138. It was also the first of five consecutive All-Ireland finals that Cork would win between 2005 and 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180681-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final\nThe Galway team featured Annette Clarke as well as Claire Molloy, a future Ireland women's rugby union international, and Niamh Fahey, a future Republic of Ireland women's association football international.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180681-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nTeam:1 Elaine Harte2 Br\u00edd Stack3 Angela Walsh4 Rena Buckley5 Briege Corkery6 Ciara Walsh7 S. O'Reilly8 Juliet Murphy (c)9 Norita Kelly10 Amanda Murphy11 Regina Curtin12 Nollaig Cleary13 Valerie Mulcahy14 Caoimhe Creedon15 Geraldine O'Flynn", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180681-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:Mary O'Connor forO\u2019Flynn (27)Deirdre O'Reilly for Creedon (40)A O'Connor forCurtin (55)N Keohane for A. Murphy (62)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180681-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nTeam:1 Una Carroll2 M. Glynn3 Ruth Stephens4 Anne-Marie McDonough5 Marie O'Connell6 Aoibheann Daly (c)7 Emer Flaherty8 Annette Clarke9 Edel Concannon10 Geraldine Conneally11 Niamh Duggan12 Philomena Ni Fhlatharta13 Rebecca McPhilbin14 Niamh Fahey15 Lorna Joyce", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180681-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Senior Ladies' Football Championship Final, Teams\nSubstitutes:Patricia Gleeson for Joyce (41)Claire Molloy for McDonough(44)Lisa Cohill for McPhilbin (52)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180682-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship was the 42nd staging of the All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, the Gaelic Athletic Association's premier inter-county hurling tournament for players under the age of twenty-one. The championship began on 31 May 2005 and ended on 18 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180682-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship\nOn 18 September 2005, Galway won the championship following a 1-15 to 1-14 defeat of Kilkenny in the All-Ireland final. This was their 8th All-Ireland title and their first since 1996.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180683-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by AnomieBOT (talk | contribs) at 02:43, 16 June 2020 (Dating maintenance tags: {{Moresources}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180683-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nThe 2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship final was a hurling match that was played at the Gaelic Grounds, Limerick on 18 September 2005 to determine the winners of the 2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, the 42nd season of the All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the champion teams of the four provinces of Ireland. The final was contested by Galway of Connacht and Kilkenny of Leinster, with Galway winning by 1-15 to 1-14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180683-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nThe All-Ireland final between Galway and Kilkenny was their sixth meeting in a decider, including one replay. Galway were hoping to claim their 8th championship. Kilkenny, the reigning champions of the previous two years, were hoping to claim their 10th title and a hat-trick of titles for the first time in their history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180683-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nGalway led 1-7 to 1-6 at the break, with Eoin Larkin scoring all but one of Kilkenny's points. Aonghus Callanan scored Galway's goal in the 13th minute. Kilkenny looked certain winners as they went into the final six minutes armed with a 1-14 to 1-11 lead, however, they failed to score again. Galway cracked home the final four points, including two from 2004 minor-winner Kerril Wade, to clinch a one-point victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180683-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Ireland Under-21 Hurling Championship Final\nGalway's All-Ireland victory was their first since 1996. The victory put them in joint third position with Tipperary on the all-time roll of honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180684-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Pacific-10 Conference football team\nThe 2005 All-Pacific-10 Conference football team consists of American football players chosen by various organizations for All-Pacific-10 Conference teams for the 2005 college football season. The USC Trojans won the conference, posting an undefeated 8\u20130 conference record (though this was later vacated).. USC then lost to the Texas Longhorns in the Rose Bowl BCS National Championship Game 41 to 38. USC running back Reggie Bush was voted Pac-10 Offensive Player of the Year. Oregon defensive tackle Haloti Ngata and Arizona State linebacker Dale Robinson were voted Pat Tillman Pac-10 Co-Defensive Players of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180685-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-Pro Team\nThe 2005 All-Pro Team was composed of the National Football League players that were named to the Associated Press, Pro Football Writers Association, and The Sporting News All-Pro Teams in 2005. Both first and second teams are listed for the AP team. These are the three teams that are included in Total Football II: The Official Encyclopedia of the National Football League. In 2005 the Pro Football Writers Association and Pro Football Weekly combined their All-pro teams, a practice which continued through 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180686-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 All-SEC football team\nThe 2005 All-SEC football team consists of American football players selected to the All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) chosen by the Associated Press (AP) and the conference coaches for the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180686-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 All-SEC football team\nThe Georgia Bulldogs won the conference, beating the LSU Tigers 34 to 14 in the SEC Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180686-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 All-SEC football team\nVanderbilt quarterback Jay Cutler was voted AP SEC Offensive Player of the Year. Alabama linebacker Demeco Ryans, a unanimous selection by both AP and the coaches, was voted AP SEC Defensive Player of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180686-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 All-SEC football team, Key\nBold = Consensus first-team selection by both the coaches and AP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 31], "content_span": [32, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180687-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Allan Cup\nThe 2005 Allan Cup was the Canadian national senior ice hockey championship for the 2004-05 Senior \"AAA\" season. The event was hosted by the Lloydminster Border Kings in Lloydminster, Saskatchewan/Alberta. The 2005 tournament marked the 97th year that the Allan Cup has been awarded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180687-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Allan Cup\nThis Allan Cup coincided with the 2004-05 NHL lockout which had wiped out the entire 2004-05 NHL season including the Stanley Cup Playoffs. As a result, the tournament enjoyed considerably more media coverage compared to what is typically devoted to the Allan Cup. Among the participants involved was Theoren Fleury, a former National Hockey League all-star, playing for the Horse Lake Thunder during the lockout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180688-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad\nThe 2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Roy Emerson Arena in Gstaad in Switzerland and was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It was the 60th edition of the tournament and was held from July 4 through July 10, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180688-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad, Finals, Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl defeated Michael Kohlmann / Rainer Sch\u00fcttler 7\u20136(8\u20136), 7\u20136(13\u201311)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180689-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and David Rikl were the two-time defending champions, but did not participate this year. Rikl was also the three-time defending champion, having won the title with Joshua Eagle in 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180689-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl won the title, defeating Michael Kohlmann and Rainer Sch\u00fcttler in the final, 7\u20136(8\u20136), 7\u20136(13\u201311).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180690-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180690-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Allianz Suisse Open Gstaad \u2013 Singles\nGast\u00f3n Gaudio won the tournament, beating Stanislas Wawrinka in the final, 6\u20134, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180691-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Allsvenskan\nAllsvenskan 2005, part of the 2005 Swedish football season, was the 81st Allsvenskan season played. The first match was played 9 April 2005 and the last match was played 23 October 2005. Djurg\u00e5rdens IF won the league ahead of runners-up IFK G\u00f6teborg, while Landskrona BoIS, GIF Sundsvall and Assyriska F\u00f6reningen were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180692-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Combined, Calendar\nFor the first time the combined was held as a separate event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 55], "content_span": [56, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180692-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Combined, Final point standings\nIn Men's Combined World Cup 2004/05 only one competition was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180693-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Downhill\nThe 2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Downhill season involved 11 events at sites in North America and Europe between November 2004 and March 2005. Austria's Michael Walchhofer won the individual title, while his Austrian team took the team title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180693-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Downhill, Final point standings\nIn the last race only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 68], "content_span": [69, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180694-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Giant Slalom, Final point standings\nIn Men's Giant Slalom World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180694-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Giant Slalom, Final point standings\nIn the last race only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 72], "content_span": [73, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180695-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Slalom, Final point standings\nIn the last race only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180696-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Super G, Final point standings\nIn Men's Super G World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 121]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180696-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Super G, Final point standings\nIn the last race only the best racers were allowed to compete and only the best 15 finishers were awarded with points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 67], "content_span": [68, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180696-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Men's Super G, Men's Super G Team Results\nThe last race saw two winners, both from the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 72], "content_span": [73, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180697-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Women's Combined, Final point standings\nIn Women's Combined World Cup 2004/05 only one competition was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 70], "content_span": [71, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180699-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Women's Giant Slalom, Final point standings\nIn Women's Giant Slalom World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [53, 74], "content_span": [75, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180701-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Alpine Skiing World Cup \u2013 Women's Super G, Final point standings\nIn Women's Super G World Cup 2004/05 all results count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 69], "content_span": [70, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180702-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 America East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 America East Conference Baseball Tournament took place from May 26\u201328 at Centennial Field in Burlington, Vermont. The top four regular season finishers of the league's eight teams qualified for the double-elimination tournament. In the championship game, second-seeded Maine defeated third-seeded Vermont, 6-5, to win its third tournament championship (its second under head coach Paul Kostacopoulos). As a result, Maine received the America East's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180702-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 America East Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe top four finishers from the regular season were seeded one through four based on conference winning percentage only. They then played in a double-elimination format. In the first round, the one and four seeds were matched up in one game, while the two and three seeds were matched up in the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180703-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 America East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 America East Men's Basketball Tournament was held from March 4\u20136 at the Binghamton University Events Center. The final was held on March 12, at Patrick Gym on the campus of the University of Vermont. Vermont gained its third consecutive berth to the NCAA Tournament with its win over Northeastern. Vermont was given the 13th seed in the Austin Regional of the NCAA Tournament and lost in the second round to Michigan State 72\u201361, after upsetting #4 Syracuse 60\u201357 in overtime. Both Boston University and Northeastern gained a bid to the NIT and lost in the first round to Georgetown and Memphis respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series\nThe 2005 American Le Mans Series season was the 35th season for the IMSA GT Championship, with it being the seventh under the American Le Mans Series moniker. It was a series for Le Mans Prototypes (LMP) and Grand Touring (GT) race cars divided into 4 classes: LMP1, LMP2, GT1, and GT2. It began March 19, 2005 and ended October 16, 2005 after 10 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series, Schedule\nThe schedule change from 2004 to 2005 was minimal, with only one event being added to the existing schedule. The Grand Prix of Atlanta returned once more, once again shortly after the 12 Hours of Sebring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series, Season results\n\u2020 - The #8 B-K Motorsports entry failed to finish but completed enough laps to score points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nPoints are awarded to the top 10 finishers in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nExceptions were for the 4 Hour Monterey Sports Car Championships was scored in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nAnd for the 12 Hours of Sebring and Petit Le Mans which award the top 10 finishers in the following order:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180704-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans Series, Teams Championship\nCars failing to complete 70% of the winner's distance are not awarded points. Teams only score the points of their highest finishing entry in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180705-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio\nThe 2005 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio was the third race for the 2005 American Le Mans Series season held at Mid-Ohio sports car course. It took place on May 22, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180705-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180705-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 American Le Mans at Mid-Ohio, Official results\n\u2020 - #10 Miracle Motorsports was disqualified for having a driver in the car over the maximum allowable limit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 51], "content_span": [52, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series\nThe 2005 American League Championship Series (ALCS), the second round of the 2005 American League playoffs, which determined the 2005 American League champion, matched the Central Division champion Chicago White Sox against the West Division champion Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. The White Sox, by virtue of having the best record in the AL during the 2005 season, had the home-field advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series\nThe White Sox won the series four games to one to become the American League champions, and faced the Houston Astros in the 2005 World Series, in which the White Sox swept the Astros in four games to win their first World Series championship in 88 years; as a result of the 2005 All-Star Game played in Detroit, Michigan at Comerica Park on July 12, the White Sox had home-field advantage in the World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0000-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series\nThe series was notable both for a controversial call in Game 2 of the series, and the outstanding pitching and durability of Chicago's starting rotation, pitching four consecutive complete games; the +2\u20443 of an inning Neal Cotts pitched in the first game was the only work the White Sox bullpen saw the entire series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series\nThe White Sox and Angels were victorious in the AL Division Series (ALDS), with the White Sox defeating the defending World Champion and wild card qualifier Boston Red Sox three games to none, and the Angels defeating the Eastern Division champion New York Yankees three games to two. It was the first ALCS since 2002 not to feature the Red Sox or the Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nTuesday, October 11, 2005 at U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, Illinois", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nIn the series opener, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim won 3\u20132 in their third game in as many nights and as many cities. The Angels took the lead in the second inning on a Garret Anderson leadoff home run. Next inning, Steve Finley and Adam Kennedy hit back-to-back leadoff singles and advanced one base each on Chone Figgins's sacrifice bunt. Orlando Cabrera's single and Vladimir Guerrero's groundout scored a run each. White Sox starter Jos\u00e9 Contreras allowed no more runs, going 8+1\u20443 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 1\nIn the bottom of the inning, Joe Crede's home run off of Paul Byrd put the Sox on the board. Next inning, Chicago's Carl Everett singled with one out, moved to second on a groundout, and scored on A. J. Pierzynski's single to make it a one-run game. However, neither team would score for the rest of the game. It was the first time in six tries that the Angels won a Game 1 under manager Mike Scioscia, despite having won the World Series in 2002. This turned out to be the only game the White Sox would lose in the entire postseason.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nWednesday, October 12, 2005 at U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, Illinois", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nThen-Senator and future President of the United States Barack Obama threw out the ceremonial first pitch. Behind a complete game from Mark Buehrle and a now infamous strikeout in the bottom of the ninth, the White Sox evened the series at a game apiece. In the bottom of the first, Scott Podsednik reached second on an error, moved to third on a sacrifice bunt, and scored on Jermaine Dye's ground out. Jarrod Washburn and two relievers held the Sox scoreless over the next seven innings while Robb Quinlan's fifth inning home run tied the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nIt remained tied until the bottom of the ninth. With two strikes, A. J. Pierzynski swung and missed at a low pitch from Angels pitcher Kelvim Escobar for strike three. Josh Paul, the Angels catcher, rolled the ball to the mound and left the infield. Pierzynski realized strike three had been called, so he ran to first base in case the umpire ruled that the catcher had not legally caught the strike-three pitch (see Uncaught third strike rule).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 2\nIn a controversial call, home-plate umpire Doug Eddings ruled that the ball hit the ground before going into the catcher's glove and signalled strike 3 but did not call him out, so the pitch was considered uncaught and Pierzynski was safe at first. A pinch-runner, Pablo Ozuna, stole second base. Third baseman Joe Crede delivered a base hit three pitches later, scoring Ozuna for the winning run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nFriday, October 14, 2005 at Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 3\nChicago jumped to a 3\u22120 lead in the first inning off of John Lackey as the series moved west to Anaheim. Scott Podsednik hit a leadoff single, moved to second on a sacrifice bunt and came home on Jermaine Dye's single before Paul Konerko's two-run home run capped the scoring. Tadahito Iguchi singled to lead off the third, moved to second on a walk, and scored on Carl Everett's single. Two innings later, Iguchi doubled with one out and scored on Konerko's two-out single to put Chicago up 5\u22120. A two-run home run by Orlando Cabrera in the sixth cut the lead to 5\u22122, but it would not be enough as the White Sox took the series lead, two games to one, with Jon Garland pitching a complete game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nSaturday, October 15, 2005 at Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nThe visitors again jumped to a 3\u22120 lead in the first. Angel starter Ervin Santana walked Scott Podsednik and hit Tadahito Iguchi before Paul Konerko, after a disputed check swing on a 2\u20132 pitch, homered for the second straight game. The Angels cut it to 3\u22121 in the second when Darin Erstad walked with one out, moved to third on Casey Kotchman's single and White Sox pitcher Freddy Garcia's throwing error to first, then scored on Bengie Molina's single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nWith men on first and third, Steve Finley hit a ground ball to second for an inning-ending double play, but argued that Sox catcher A. J. Pierzynski had interfered with his swing. Chicago got that run back when Jermaine Dye reached on shortstop Orlando Cabrera's throwing error to first, stole second, and scored on Carl Everett's base hit. Pierzynski's home run next inning made it 5\u22121.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0009-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 4\nIn the bottom of the inning, Angel Garret Anderson singled with one out and scored on Coachman's two-out double, but in the fifth, Podsednik drew a leadoff walk and after Scot Shields relieved Santana, stole second and scored on Everett's single. Esteban Yan walked Everett to lead off the eighth, allowed a subsequent double to Aaron Rowand followed by Joe Crede's two-run single to put the Sox up 8\u22122. Garc\u00eda pitched the White Sox's third straight complete game, helping put them one win from their first World Series visit since 1959.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nSunday, October 16, 2005 at Angel Stadium of Anaheim in Anaheim, California", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nStill on the road, Chicago struck first in Game 5 when Aaron Rowand hit a leadoff ground-rule double in the third off of Paul Byrd, moved to third on a sacrifice bunt, then scored on Joe Crede's sacrifice fly. But the Angels tied it in the third when Juan Rivera hit a leadoff double, moved to third on pitcher Jose Contreras's pickoff attempt error, and scored on Adam Kennedy's single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nIn the top of the fifth, Juan Uribe doubled and scored on Jermaine Dye's single, but in the bottom of the inning, Kennedy hit a leadoff single and scored on Chone Figgins's double. Figgins scored on a Garret Anderson sacrifice fly to put the Angels up 3\u22122. Crede's leadoff home run in the seventh off of Kelvim Escobar tied the game. Next inning, Escobar walked Rowand with two outs and an error moved him to second. Francisco Rodriguez relieved Escobar and Crede greeted him with an RBI single to put the White Sox up 4\u22123.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0011-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nThey got two insurance runs in the ninth when Paul Konerko's double after back-to-back walks and Rowand's sacrifice fly scored a run each. Contreras delivered the fourth consecutive complete game by a White Sox pitcher, retiring the Angels in order in the ninth. Chicago captured its first American League pennant since 1959. This marked the first time in 77 years that a team threw four straight complete-game victories in the playoffs, becoming the first time it was done by four different pitchers since the Chicago Cubs did it in the 1907 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Game summaries, Game 5\nKonerko was named the ALCS MVP. He finished the series batting .286, with two home runs and seven RBIs. His two home runs came in the first innings of Games 3 and 4; he became only the third player in Major League history to hit homers in the first inning of consecutive playoff games, the other two having been Dan Ford during the 1979 ALCS and Carlos Beltr\u00e1n during the 2004 NLCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 447]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Composite box\n2005 ALCS (4\u20131): Chicago White Sox over Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nDoug Edding's controversial call in Game 2, when he ruled that a strikeout to A.J. Pierzynski by Kelvim Escobar had not been legally caught (an uncaught third strike) by catcher Josh Paul but made no audible call that the ball hit the ground, proved to be the most pivotal point in the series. At the team's ten-year anniversary in 2015, White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf acknowledged that losing home-field advantage and going down 0-2 in a best-of-seven series would have been too difficult of a hole to climb out of.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nCatcher A.J. Pierzynski, who was at the center of the call, said the year before when he was in San Francisco, he was on the other end of that same type of play. Both Paul Konerko and general manager Kenny Williams believed that Edding's likely got the call wrong. According to umpire supervisor Rich Rieker, the replays showed \"there was definitely a change in direction there\" indicating the ball touched the ground and felt, at best, the replay was inconclusive. A.J. Pierzynski was booed every time he played in Anaheim until his retirement for his role in the controversy. Major League Baseball did not adopt review via instant replay on calls such as this until the 2014 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 737]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180706-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Championship Series, Aftermath\nTo date, the White Sox four straight complete games from starting pitchers from Game 2 through 5 was the last time a team pitched four straight complete games in the postseason. In an era where managers show more trust in fresh relievers than tired starters, it is likely to assume it will be the last.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 51], "content_span": [52, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series\nThe 2005 American League Division Series (ALDS), the opening round of the 2005 American League postseason, began on Tuesday, October 4, and ended on Monday, October 10, with the champions of the three AL divisions\u2014along with a \"wild card\" team\u2014participating in two best-of-five series. They were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series\nThe higher seed (#1 is the highest) had the home field advantage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series\n2005 was the first year since 2001 that the Minnesota Twins had not participated in the ALDS. Other than the White Sox' victory in the AL Central, the participants were identical to those of the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series\nThe two victorious teams went on to meet in the AL Championship Series (ALCS). The victorious White Sox advanced to defeat the National League champion Houston Astros and win the 2005 World Series, their first World Series title since1917.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Matchups, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim vs. New York Yankees\n\u2020: Game was postponed due to rain on October 8", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 98], "content_span": [99, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 1\nThe White Sox rocked Red Sox starter Matt Clement for five runs in the first inning. Clement hit Scott Podsednik to lead off the game. Podsednik moved to second on a groundout, then after another hit-by-pitch, stole third and scored on Paul Konerko's force out at second. Carl Everett singled before Konerko scored on Aaron Rowand's RBI single, then A.J. Pierzynski's three-run home run made it 5\u20130 Chicago. Konerko's home run in the third made it 6\u20130 White Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 1\nThe Red Sox scored their only runs of the game in the fourth when Trot Nixon and Jason Varitek hit back-to-back singles aided by an error to put them on third and second, respectively. Jose Contreras's wild pitch scored Nixon, then Kevin Millar's double scored Varitek. Contreras went 7+2\u20443 innings, giving up eight hits. In the bottom of the fourth, Juan Uribe's two-run home run extended Chicago's lead to 8\u20132 and forced Clement out of the game. Geremi Gonzalez allowed a leadoff walk and subsequent hit-by-pitch in the sixth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 1\nOne out later, a single by Uribe scored a run, then Scott Podsednik's three-run home run made it 12\u20132 Chicago. Podsednik had gone homerless in the regular season and this was his first home run since September 30, 2004. In the eighth, Pierzynski's second home run of the game off of Bronson Arroyo made it 13\u20132 Chicago. After two walks, Willie Harris's RBI single capped the scoring at 14\u20132 Chicago. Cliff Politte pitched a scoreless ninth to give the White Sox a 1\u20130 series lead. Boston's postseason winning streak was snapped at eight games with this loss. This was the White Sox' first postseason home win since Game 1 of the 1959 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 2\nThe Red Sox struck first in Game 2 on Manny Ramirez's two-run single off of Mark Buehrle with runners on second and third. In the fourth, they loaded the bases on a single, double and intentional walk before Jason Varitek's single and Trot Nixon's groundout scored a run each. David Wells (6+2\u20443 innings, two earned runs, seven hits) looked tough, giving up only two hits in the first four innings. But in the White Sox half of the fifth, the White Sox struck pay-dirt. Carl Everett hit a leadoff single, then scored on Aaron Rowand's double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 2\nOne out later, Rowand scored on Joe Crede's single. Boston second baseman's Tony Graffanino error on Juan Uribe's ground ball put two runners on and one out later, Tadahito Iguchi's three-run home run put the White Sox up 5\u20134, those three runs unearned. Buehrle (seven innings, four earned runs, eight hits) earned the win with the save going to Bobby Jenks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 3\nFor the first time since 1993, the White Sox secured their place in the ALCS by beating the Red Sox in Game 3. Freddy Garc\u00eda (five innings, five hits, three earned runs) faced Tim Wakefield (5+1\u20443 innings, six hits, four runs). The White Sox struck first, when Juan Uribe doubled with two outs, then Scott Podsednik's double and Tadahito Iguchi's single scored a run each in the third. Back-to-back home runs by David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez leading off the fourth tied the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 3\nIn the sixth, Paul Konerko, with Jermaine Dye on base, hit a home run to put the White Sox in the lead for good. Ramirez's second home run of the game in the bottom of the inning cut the lead to 4\u20133, then Damaso Marte relieved Garcia and allowed a single and two walks to load the bases with no outs. El Duque, Orlando Hern\u00e1ndez, came in relief and induced Jason Varitek to foul out, Tony Graffanino to pop out to short, and Johnny Damon to strike out to end the inning without giving up another run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 565]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0007-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Game 3\nHe proceeded to pitch three total innings, giving up one hit. The White Sox got an insurance run in the ninth off of Mike Timlin when A.J. Pierzynski hit a leadoff double, moved to third on a groundout and scored on Juan Uribe's fielder's choice. Bobby Jenks retired the Red Sox in order in the bottom half, earning his second save of the series. This was the White Sox's first postseason series win since the 1917 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 64], "content_span": [65, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Chicago vs. Boston, Composite line score\n2005 ALDS (3\u20130): Chicago White Sox over Boston Red Sox", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 1\nThe Yankees were able to get to AL Cy Young Award winner Bartolo Col\u00f3n early. Three two-out singles loaded the bases in the top of the first, then rookie Robinson Can\u00f3 lifted a line drive over the reaching hand of left fielder Garret Anderson. The double would clear the bases, giving the Yankees a 3\u20130 lead. Next inning, Derek Jeter singled with two outs, moved to second on a hit-by-pitch, and scored on Jason Giambi's single. Though Col\u00f3n and Scot Shields held the Yankees scoreless for the rest of the game, starter Mike Mussina pitched 5+2\u20443 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 1\nBengie Molina's home run in the seventh off of Tanyon Sturtze put the Angels on the board. In the ninth, Mariano Rivera walked Vladimir Guerrero with one out. After stealing second, Guerrero scored on Darin Erstad's single, but Rivera retired the next two batters to give the Yankees a 1\u20130 series lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 2\nIn Game\u00a02, the starters were John Lackey for the Angels and Chien-Ming Wang for the Yankees. The Yankees scored the first run of the game in the second when Hideki Matsui and Robinson Can\u00f3 hit back-to-back doubles. They made it 2\u20130 in the fifth after Alex Rodr\u00edguez walked, moved to third on Jason Giambi's double and scored on Gary Sheffield's ground out. The Angels got on the board in the bottom of that inning on Juan Rivera's home run. In the sixth, Alex Rodr\u00edguez's error allowed Orlando Cabrera to make it to first base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0010-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 2\nHe would move to second on Vladimir Guerrero's ground out and score on Bengie Molina's single, tying the game at two. In the next inning, Wang's throwing error would allow Jeff DaVanon and Steve Finley to reach third and second, respectively. Both scored on Cabrera's single, giving the Angels a 4\u20132 lead. In the eighth, Molina's home run off of Al Leiter extended the Angels lead to three. In the ninth, Jorge Posada's home run off of Francisco Rodriguez cut the lead back to two, but K. Rod retired the next three batters to end the game and tie the series heading to New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 3\nIn Game\u00a03, it was Randy Johnson pitching for the Yankees while Paul Byrd pitched for the Angels. Johnson ran into trouble early, giving up a three-run home run to Garret Anderson in the first after back-to-back two-out singles and a two-run homer to Bengie Molina in the third to give the Angels a 5\u20130 lead. After allowing a double and single in the fourth without getting an out, Johnson was taken out of the game while being booed. The Yankees rallied in the bottom of the inning. First, Hideki Matsui homered to put the Yanks on the board 5\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 3\nThen Robinson Can\u00f3 and Bernie Williams hit back to back singles and moved one base each on a groundout. Can\u00f3 scored on Jorge Posada's groundout and Williams on Derek Jeter's single. After a walk, Brendan Donnelly relieved Byrd and Jason Giambi's single scored Jeter and cut the Angels' lead to one. In the next inning, after Matsui walked, Can\u00f3 doubled to left and a throwing error by Cabrera allowed Matsui to score and Can\u00f3 to go to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0011-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 3\nScot Shields relieved Donnelly and gave up a sacrifice fly to Bernie Williams that scored Can\u00f3, giving the Yankees a 6\u20135 lead, but in the sixth Reliever Aaron Small allowed a one-out double to Juan Rivera before Darin Erstad's RBI single tied the game. After a strikeout and single, Chone Figgins's RBI single put the Angels back in front 7\u20136. Tom Gordon allowed a leadoff single and subsequent hit-by-pitch before Garret Anderson's RBI single made it 8\u20136 Angels. Two errors loaded the bases before Steve Finley's RBI groundout off of Al Leiter made it 9\u20136 Angels.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0011-0003", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 3\nIn the eighth, Leiter allowed a leadoff triple, then after a one-out intentional walk, back-to-back RBI singles by Jos\u00e9 Molina and Anderson off of Scott Proctor made it 11\u20136 Angels. The Yankees got only one more run on Jeter's leadoff home run in the eighth off of Kelvim Escobar as the Angels' 11\u20137 win put them one win away from the ALCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 4\nThe Angels struck first in Game\u00a04, scoring two runs in the top of the sixth on two doubles by Chone Figgins and Orlando Cabrera off Yankees starting pitcher Shawn Chac\u00f3n after a leadoff walk. The Yankees cut the lead to one in the bottom of the inning when Alex Rodriguez walked, moved to second on a groundout and scored on Gary Sheffield's single off Angels starting pitcher John Lackey. In the bottom of the next inning, Robinson Can\u00f3 singled and Jorge Posada walked off of Scot Shields. They would score on singles from Rub\u00e9n Sierra and Derek Jeter. Al Leiter earned the win in relief and Mariano Rivera pitched a perfect eighth and ninth as the Yankees won 3\u20132 to force a Game\u00a05 back in Anaheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 5\nGame\u00a05 had the same starting pitchers as in Game\u00a01, Bartolo Col\u00f3n for the Angels and Mike Mussina for the Yankees. Col\u00f3n left the game in the second inning due to a hand injury after giving up two hits in the first and was relieved by Ervin Santana, who walked Robinson Can\u00f3 (who was caught out stealing), Bernie Williams, and Jorge Posada. Williams scored on Bubba Crosby's single and Posada on Derek Jeter's sacrifice fly as the Yankees took an early 2\u20130 lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 5\nMussina, however, after pitching a perfect first, allowed a leadoff home run to Garret Anderson in the second to cut the lead to one. Then, Bengie Molina singled to center. After getting two outs, Mussina walked Steve Finley before Adam Kennedy hit the ball to right center. Bubba Crosby and Gary Sheffield collided on the outfield wall trying to catch it, allowing Molina and Finley to score to give the Angels a 3\u20132 lead. Next inning, Mussina allowed back-to-back leadoff singles to put runners on first and third, then Anderson's sacrifice fly scored a run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0013-0002", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Game 5\nAfter a single again put runners on first and third, Darin Erstad's RBI single extended the Angels' lead to 5\u20132. Mussina was pulled from the game one out later in his shortest postseason start ever. Randy Johnson, making his first postseason relief appearance since Game 7 of the 2001 World Series with the Arizona Diamondbacks against the Yankees, kept the Angels scoreless for the rest of the game, allowing just three hits. Jeter's home run in the seventh off Santana cut the lead to two. Jeter opened the ninth with a single off closer Francisco Rodr\u00edguez, but Alex Rodriguez grounded into a double play. Jason Giambi and Gary Sheffield both hit singles afterward, but Hideki Matsui grounded out to first to end the game. The Angels would face the Chicago White Sox in the ALCS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180707-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 American League Division Series, Los Angeles vs. New York, Composite line score\n2005 ALDS (3\u20132): Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim over New York Yankees", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 84], "content_span": [85, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180708-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 American Society of Cinematographers Awards\nThe 20th American Society of Cinematographers Awards were held on February 26, 2006, honoring the best cinematographers of film and television in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180708-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 American Society of Cinematographers Awards, Winners and nominees, Television\nOutstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Miniseries, Pilot, or Television Film", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 82], "content_span": [83, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings\nThe 2005 Amman bombings were a series of coordinated suicide bomb attacks on three hotel lobbies in Amman, Jordan, on 9 November 2005. This attack occurred about 4 years after the tragedy of 9/11 in the United States. The explosions at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, the Radisson SAS Hotel, and the Days Inn started at around 20:50 local time (18:50 UTC) at the Grand Hyatt. The three hotels are frequented by foreign diplomats. The bomb at the Radisson SAS exploded in the Philadelphia Ballroom, where a Jordanian wedding hosting hundreds of guests was taking place. The attacks killed 57 people and injured 115 others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings\nAl-Qaeda in Iraq was quick to claim the attack. The bombings, a rare terror attack in Jordan, then spurred a wave of new anti-terror measures by the Jordanian government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Radisson SAS\nAt the Radisson SAS Hotel (now known as the \"Landmark Hotel\"), two suicide bombers (a husband and wife team\u2014Ali Hussein Ali al-Shamari and Sajida Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi)\u2014entered the Philadelphia Ballroom, where Ashraf Akhras and his bride, Nadia Al-Alami, were celebrating their wedding with around 900 Jordanian and Palestinian guests. Sajida al-Rishawi was unable to detonate her belt. Her husband Ali al-Shamari, apparently admonished her and told her to get out of the room. As she was leaving, the lights went out in the ballroom, Ali jumped onto a dining-room table and detonated himself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Radisson SAS\nAmong the 38 people killed in the explosion were the fathers of the bride and groom. In addition, the explosion destroyed the ballroom, blew out the large windows bordering the street, and knocked down ceiling panels. The hotel lobby was also affected: ceiling panels and light fixtures collapsed, furniture was destroyed, and the hotel's glass doors were shattered. Cleanup and rebuilding commenced shortly afterwards. The hotel was actually targeted in the 2000 millennium attack plots nearly six years prior, but the plan was foiled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 46], "content_span": [47, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Grand Hyatt\nThe second blast happened about 500 yards (457 metres) from the Radisson SAS. It destroyed the hotel's entrance and brought down pillars and ceiling tiles, along with badly damaging the reception and bar areas. After the bomber ordered orange juice in the hotel's coffee shop, he went to another room (possibly to get his explosive belt) and then came back and detonated his bomb. Seven hotel employees were killed in this blast, as were Syrian-American movie producer Moustapha Akkad and his daughter, Rima.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Grand Hyatt\nAkkad, who is best known for producing the Halloween series of slasher films, was also the producer of Mohammad, Messenger of God. At the time of his death, he was in the early stages of producing a film about Saladin, the Kurdish Muslim leader who expelled the Crusaders from the Levant. Hyatt began cleanup shortly after the attacks and reopened their hotel on November 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Days Inn\nAt the Days Inn, the bomber entered the restaurant on the hotel's ground floor. He tried to detonate his explosive belt but had trouble; a waiter noticed this and called security. The bomber ran outside the hotel and successfully detonated himself, killing three members of a Chinese military delegation. Property damage at the Days Inn was expected to amount to around $200,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Casualties\nAccording to one Jordanian official, Maj. Bashir al-Da'aja, early in the investigation, local authorities confirmed a series of coordinated suicide attacks as the cause of the blasts. Jordanian Deputy Prime Minister Marwan al-Muasher initially announced that at least 67 people had died and 300 people had been injured. However, the Jordanian government subsequently revised the number of casualties down to at least 59 dead and 115 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Casualties\nAmong the dead were thirty-six Jordanians, mostly from a Muslim wedding, including the fathers of both the bride and groom. The rest were six Iraqis, five Palestinians, four Americans, two Arab-Israelis, two Bahrainis, three Chinese delegates of the People's Liberation Army (PLA), one Saudi, and one Indonesian citizen. Famous filmmaker Moustapha Akkad died with his daughter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Casualties\nThe Palestinian fatalities included Major-General Bashir Nafeh, the head of military intelligence in the West Bank, Colonel Abed Allun, a high-ranking Preventive Security forces official, Jihad Fatouh, the commercial attache at the Palestinian Embassy in Cairo, and Mosab Khorma, a senior Palestinian-American banker and former Paltel CEO. Both of the Israeli fatalities were Arabs. One was Husam Fathi Mahajna, a businessman from Umm al-Fahm, the other was an unidentified resident of East Jerusalem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Suspects\nJordanian police initially stated that there were at least four attackers (the fourth, a female, was later captured), including a couple. A number of Iraqis were among the more than 100 suspects who were arrested in the following days. Police claimed to have found maps that were used in planning the attack. On November 12, Jordan's Deputy Prime Minister Marwan Muasher confirmed that the attackers were Iraqi and that there were only three suicide bombers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, The attacks, Suspects\nOn November 13, King Abdullah announced the arrest of a woman believed to be a fourth would-be suicide bomber, whose explosive belt failed to detonate. The three dead suicide bombers were identified, and their names were announced by Deputy Prime Minister Muasher. They were Ali Hussein Ali al-Shamari (SAS Radisson), Rawad Jassem Mohammed Abed (Grand Hyatt), and Safaa Mohammed Ali (Days Inn). The woman in custody was identified as Sajida Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi. She was married to al-Shamari and intended to blow herself up at the Radisson. Muasher also said that she was the sister of a close aide of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. Rishawi was executed in February 2015 in response to the murder of Jordanian air force pilot Muath al-Kasasbeh by ISIL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Perpetrators\nAn internet statement released the day after claimed that the bombers were: Abu Khabib, Abu Muaz, Abu Omaira and Om Omaira, all Iraqis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Perpetrators\nAl-Qaeda in Iraq immediately claimed the attack on a website, saying they were trying to hit \"American and Israeli intelligence and other Western European governments\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Perpetrators\nThe Radisson hotel was previously an Islamist target during the 2000 millennium attack plots. Jordanian police foiled the original attempt after arresting Khadr Abu Hoshar, a Palestinian militant, along with 15 others on December 12, 1999. It is believed that some of the hotels are frequented by American, Israeli, and European military contractors, journalists, business people, and diplomats, and the city itself has long been described as a \"gateway\" for Westerners into Baghdad and Iraq at large, leading many to entertain the possibility of a connection between the Amman bombings and the War in Iraq.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 33], "content_span": [34, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Response, Domestic\nJordan - King Abdullah II cut short a state visit to Kazakhstan and returned to Jordan, where he pledged that \"justice will pursue the criminals\" and condemned the attacks. King Abdullah also cancelled an upcoming visit to Israel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Response, Domestic\nJordanians reacted to the bombings with outrage. Thousands of people in Amman participated in protests against the bombings, chanting \"burn in hell, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi\". King Abdullah and Queen Rania visited several victims of the bombings in hospital. The King said \"The pain you felt for the loss of your beloved ones, who were killed for no crime they committed, was shared by all Jordanians, regardless of their origins or religions.\" A relative of one of the victims presented a copy of the Qur'an to Abdullah during his visit to the hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Response, Domestic\nThe family of Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the al-Khalayleh tribe, took out half-page advertisements in Jordan's three main newspapers, to denounce him and his actions. 57 members of the al-Khalayleh family, including al-Zarqawi's brother and cousin, also reiterated their strong allegiance to the king. The ads said,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Response, Domestic\n\"As we pledge to maintain homage to King Abdullah and to our precious Jordan ... we denounce in the clearest terms all the terrorist actions claimed by the so-called Ahmed Fadheel Nazzal al-Khalayleh, who calls himself Abu-Musab al-Zarqawi ... We announce, and all the people are our witnesses, that we - the sons of the al-Khalayleh tribe - are innocent of him and all that emanates from him, whether action, assertion or decision. ... We sever links with him until doomsday.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Response, International\nUnited Nations - Secretary-General Kofi Annan had planned to visit Jordan on November 10, 2005, but postponed the trip in light of the bombings. Kofi Annan issued a statement \"strongly condemning\" the attacks, and underscoring the need for additional security measures against terrorist attacks worldwide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, Response, International\nUnited States - A spokesman for the White House called the bombings \"a heinous act of terror.\" Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice called the bombings a \"great tragedy\" that show \"the very difficult war that we're fighting.\" President George W. Bush said \"The bombing should remind all of us that there's an enemy in the world that is willing to kill innocent people, willing to bomb a wedding celebration in order to advance their cause.\" The New York City Police Department had Brandon del Pozo, a newly-stationed overseas intelligence officer, working in Amman. He investigated the incident on behalf of New York City, rather than the US federal government, to ascertain what vulnerabilities it might reveal in the way the city protected its hotels from similar threats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 44], "content_span": [45, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180709-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Amman bombings, New anti-terror measures\nAfter the incident, Jordanian government pledged to take new anti-terror measures to ensure that this would not happen again. No major successful terrorist attacks have since been reported in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 45], "content_span": [46, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180710-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Amstel Gold Race\nThese are the results for the 40th edition of the annual Amstel Gold Race cycling classic, which was held on Sunday April 17, 2005 and gave Liquigas\u2013Bianchi its first major classic win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180711-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Amsterdam Admirals season\nThe 2005 Amsterdam Admirals season was the 11th season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Bart Andrus in his fifth year, and played its home games at Amsterdam ArenA in Amsterdam, Netherlands. They finished the regular season in second place with a record of six wins and four losses. In World Bowl XIII, Amsterdam defeated the Berlin Thunder 27\u201321. The victory marked the franchise's first World Bowl championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180712-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Amsterdam Tournament\nThe LG Amsterdam Tournament 2005 was a pre-season football tournament contested by Ajax, Arsenal, Boca Juniors and Porto on 29 July and 31 July 2005 at the Amsterdam Arena.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180712-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Amsterdam Tournament, Table\nNB: An extra point is awarded for each goal scored.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180713-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Am\u00edlcar Cabral Cup\nThe 2005 Am\u00edlcar Cabral Cup was held in Conakry, Guinea at the Stade du 28 Septembre. The winner was Guinea, which beat Senegal 1-0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180714-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Anaheim Storm season\nThe Anaheim Storm were a lacrosse team based in Anaheim, California playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2005 season was the 4th in franchise history, second in Anaheim (previously the New Jersey Storm), and last before the franchise folded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180714-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Anaheim Storm season\nThe Storm followed up their 1\u201315 inaugural season in Anaheim by improving to 5\u201311, and finishing 4th in the West division. The 5\u201311 record was tied for the best in team history, and was the first time the Storm (whether based in Anaheim or New Jersey) had not finished last in their division. The Storm suspended operations following the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180714-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Anaheim Storm season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180714-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Anaheim Storm season, Player stats, Runners (Top 10)\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180714-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Anaheim Storm season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180715-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Andorran parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Andorra on 24 April 2005. The result was a victory for the Liberal Party of Andorra, which won 14 of the 28 seats. Its leader, Marc Forn\u00e9 Moln\u00e9, remained Prime Minister. Voter turnout was 80.4%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180716-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Angola Cup\nThe 2005 Ta\u00e7a de Angola was the 24th edition of the Ta\u00e7a de Angola, the second most important and the top knock-out football club competition following the Girabola. ASA beat Interclube 1\u20130 in the final to secure its third title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180716-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Angola Cup\nInterclube, the runner-up, qualified to the CAF Confederation Cup since ASA, the winner, contested the CAF Champions League in their capacity as the Girabola runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180716-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Angola Cup, Championship bracket\nThe knockout rounds were played according to the following schedule:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 37], "content_span": [38, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180716-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Angola Cup, Final\nSquad: Black, Dias Caires, Fofan\u00e1, Hugo, Humberto, Jacinto, Jamba, Kadima, Lofo, Love, Malamba, Manuel, Milex, Nuno, Papy, Rasca, Rats, Sim\u00e3o, Vieira, Yamba Asha, Yemo Head Coach: Bernardino Pedroto", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 22], "content_span": [23, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Anguilla on 21 February 2005 to elect the seven elected seats in the House of Assembly. The Anguilla United Front, an alliance of the Anguilla National Alliance and the Anguilla Democratic Party, won the elections retaining four of the elected seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Background\nIn the previous elections in 2000, the governing Anguilla United Party was defeated by a coalition of the Anguilla National Alliance and the Anguilla Democratic Party. Together the two parties won four of the seven elected seats and the leader of the Anguilla National Alliance, Osbourne Fleming, became Chief Minister. In May 2004 the leadership of the opposition passed from Hubert Hughes, leader of the Anguilla United Movement party, to Edison Baird, leader of the Anguilla Strategic Alliance. This came after one member of the House of Assembly, Albert Hughes, changed parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Electoral system\nThe House of Assembly has 11 members. Seven members are directly elected by the plurality voting system while the other four members are appointed. One of the appointed members is chosen by the governing party, while the other three are appointed by the Governor, with one of the three appointments being made in consultation with the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Campaign\nTowards the end of January 2005 Chief Minister Osbourne Fleming announced that the election would be held on 21 February, with nominations required by the 8 February. A record 25 candidates put themselves up for election by the 7,560 eligible voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Campaign\nThe governing Anguilla United Front stood based on the development they had brought over the past five years, including the island's first 18 hole golf course, the renovation of Wallblake Airport and plans for a luxury hotel. Osbourne Fleming claimed that the developments would bring jobs and had made Anguilla significantly different from how it had been five years before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Campaign\nThree opposition parties, the Anguilla Strategic Alliance, Anguilla United Movement and Anguilla Progressive Party fielded candidates. Opposition leader Edison Baird of the Anguilla Strategic Alliance said that the government had not been open enough in explaining how the development project would benefit ordinary Anguillans. Opposition parties also criticised tax concessions given to the company who would be building the luxury hotel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Results\nAll 6 incumbents who sought re-election kept their seats in the election. The only change took place in Valley North where the previous representative, Eric Reid, stood down and was succeeded by Evans McNeil Rogers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180717-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Anguillian general election, Aftermath\nThe day after the elections was declared a national holiday and the four elected members of the Anguilla United Front were sworn into government by the Governor Alan Huckle. Following the election, Albert Hughes, left the Anguilla Strategic Alliance and joined the government. This meant the opposition was evenly split between the Anguilla Strategic Alliance and the Anguilla United Movement, so the Governor did not appoint a Leader of the Opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180718-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Antrim Borough Council election\nElections to Antrim Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used three district electoral areas to elect a total of 19 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180718-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Antrim Borough Council election, Districts results, Antrim North West\n2001: 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180718-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Antrim Borough Council election, Districts results, Antrim South East\n2001: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2005: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: Alliance gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 74], "content_span": [75, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180718-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Antrim Borough Council election, Districts results, Antrim Town\n2001: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 2 x SDLP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP and Alliance gain from UUP and SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180719-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Anzac Test\nThe 2005 Anzac Test was a rugby league test match played between Australia and New Zealand at the Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane on 22 April 2005. It was the 6th Anzac test played between the two nations since the first was played under the Super League banner in 1997 and the first to be played in Brisbane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180720-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team\nThe 2005 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team represented Appalachian State University as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) in the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The team was led by 17th-year head coach Jerry Moore and played their home games at Kidd Brewer Stadium in Boone, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180720-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Appalachian State Mountaineers football team\nThe Mountaineers won the NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship. Appalachian State is the only university in North Carolina, public or private, to win a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championship in football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180721-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Apulian regional election\nThe Apulian regional election of 2005 took place on 3\u20134 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180721-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Apulian regional election\nNichi Vendola (Communist Refoundation Party) defeated incumbent Raffaele Fitto (Forza Italia). The success of Vendola came somewhat unexpected. In a Southern Italian Region, expected to be morally conservative, Vendola, a communist and homosexual, defeated Fitto, a conservative Christian democrat. Vendola was the first candidate ever to be appointed by its coalition through a primary election instead of agreements between parties. A defeat of Vendola might have resulted in a cancellation of the primary election of The Union for choosing the candidate for Prime Minister in the 2006 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180722-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arab Athletics Championships\nThe 2005 Arab Athletics Championships was the fourteenth edition of the international athletics competition between Arab countries which took place in Rad\u00e8s/Tunis, Tunisia from 12\u201315 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180723-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arab Futsal Championship\nThe 2005 Arab Futsal Championship took place in Cairo, Egypt from 19 July to 24 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180724-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ards Borough Council election\nElections to Ards Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 23 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180724-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ards Borough Council election, Districts results, Ards East\n2001: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance2005: 4 x DUP, 2 x UUP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain (two seats) from UUP and Alliance", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180724-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ards Borough Council election, Districts results, Ards West\n2001: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180724-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ards Borough Council election, Districts results, Newtownards\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Independent2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 66], "content_span": [67, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180724-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Ards Borough Council election, Districts results, Peninsula\n2001: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180725-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arena Football League season\nThe 2005 Arena Football League season was the 19th season of the Arena Football League. The league champions were the Colorado Crush, who defeated the Georgia Force in ArenaBowl XIX. The AFL changed its playoff format to allow the top four teams per conference to make the playoffs. Previously, the top eight teams in the league make the playoffs, regardless of their conference. Also, there was no inter-conference play in the playoffs until the Arena Bowl starting in 2005. The division champions also received an automatic playoff berth. This was probably brought on by the fact that the year before the Eastern Division champion New York Dragons missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180726-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentina rugby union tour of Scotland and Italy\nThe 2005 Argentina rugby union tour of Scotland and Italy was a series of matches played in November 2005 in Scotland and Italy by Argentina national rugby union team. The \"Pumas\" won both the matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180726-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentina rugby union tour of Scotland and Italy\nAfter the victory with Scotland, Argentina beat also Italy after a first half where Italy was very close in the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180726-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentina rugby union tour of Scotland and Italy, Results\nScotland: 15.Chris Paterson, 14.Rory Lamont, 13.Marcus di Rollo, 12.Andrew Henderson, 11.Sean Lamont, 10.Dan Parks, 9.Mike Blair, 8.Simon Taylor , 7.Ally Hogg, 6.Jason White (capt), 5.Scott Murray, 4.Craig Hamilton, 3.Bruce Douglas, 2.Dougie Hall, 1.Gavin Kerr, - replacements: 16.Scott Lawson, 17.Craig Smith, 18.Allan Jacobsen, 19.Alastair Kellock, 21.Chris Cusiter, 22.Hugo Southwell - No entry\u00a0: 20.Kelly BrownArgentina: 15.Juan Martin Hernandez, 14.Federico Aramburu, 13.Manuel Contepomi, 12.Felipe Contepomi, 11.Francisco Leonelli, 10.Federico Todeschini, 9.Agustin Pichot (capt. ), 8.Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe, 7.Martin Schusterman, 6.Martin Durand, 5.Pablo Bouza, 4.Ignacio Fernadez Lobbe, 3.Omar Hasan Jalil, 2.Mario Ledesma, 1.Rodrigo Roncero, - replacements: 17.Martin Scelzo, 18.Manuel Carizza, 19.Juan Manuel Leguizamon, 21.Lucas Borges, 22.Bernardo Stortoni - No entry: 16.Eusebio Guinazu, 20.Nicolas Fernandez Miranda", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 1008]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180726-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentina rugby union tour of Scotland and Italy, Results\nItaly: 15.Ezio Galon, 14.Mirco Bergamasco, 13.Gonzalo Canale, 12.Cristian Stoica, 11.Ludovico Nitoglia, 10.Ramiro Pez, 9.Paul Griffen, 8.Josh Sole, 7.Aaron Persico, 6.Sergio Parisse, 5.Marco Bortolami (capt. ), 4.Carlo Antonio del Fava, 3.Carlos Nieto, 2.Carlo Festuccia, 1.Andrea Lo Cicero, - replacements: 16.Fabio Ongaro, 17.Matias Aguero, 18.Martin Castrogiovanni, 19.Mauro Bergamasco, 20.Alessandro Zanni - No entry\u00a0: 21.Pablo Canavosio, 22.Luciano OrqueraArgentina: 15.Bernardo Stortoni, 14.Federico Aramburu, 13.Gonzalo Tiesi, 12.Felipe Contepomi, 11.Francisco Leonelli, 10.Juan Martin Hernandez, 9.Agustin Pichot (capt. ), 8.Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe, 7.Santiago Sanz, 6.Martin Durand, 5.Pablo Bouza, 4.Ignacio Fernadez Lobbe, 3.Omar Hasan Jalil, 2.Mario Ledesma, 1.Rodrigo Roncero, - replacements: 16.Eusebio Guinazu, 17.Martin Scelzo, 18.Manuel Carizza, 19.Juan Manuel Leguizamon, 20.Nicolas Fernandez Miranda - No entry: 21.Federico Todeschini, 22.Lucas Borges", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 62], "content_span": [63, 1050]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election\nArgentina held national parliamentary elections on Sunday, 23 October 2005. For the purpose of these elections, each of the 23 provinces and the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires are considered electoral districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election\nEach district elected a number of members of the Lower House (the Argentine Chamber of Deputies) roughly proportional to their population. Eight districts (Buenos Aires, Formosa, Jujuy, La Rioja, Misiones, San Juan, San Luis, and Santa Cruz) also elected members to the Upper House of Congress (the Argentine Senate); as usual, three senators were elected (two for the majority, one for the first minority).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election\nIn most provinces, the national elections were conducted in parallel with local ones, whereby a number of municipalities elected legislative officials (concejales) and in some cases also a mayor (or the equivalent executive post). Each provincial election followed local regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election\nA number of districts had held primary elections beforehand. In most cases, primary elections are optional and can be called for by the local political parties as needed; in Santa Fe, however, the primaries were universal and compulsory due to a recent law that repealed the much-criticized Ley de Lemas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Background\nThe main parties and coalitions competing in these elections were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Background\nIn some districts, different factions of the Justicialist Party (PJ) presented candidates separately. In Buenos Aires Province and the city of Buenos Aires, the main intra-party division of the PJ was between the center-right, traditional Peronist faction led by Hilda Gonz\u00e1lez de Duhalde (wife of former governor and interim president Eduardo Duhalde), and the more center-left \"heterodox\" faction with candidates that answer to President N\u00e9stor Kirchner. These included his own wife, Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner, and Minister of Foreign Relations, Rafael Bielsa. In the Province of Buenos Aires, this split was protested by other parties, on the grounds that the PJ (taken as a whole) would most likely win the three senatorial benches available (as it finally occurred).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Background\nKirchner took a prominent role in the campaign for \"his\" candidates of the Front for Victory (Frente para la Victoria, FV) in most provinces, explicitly stating that these elections were a referendum on his administration. Kirchner also campaigned against former President Carlos Menem, a leading conservative Peronist, in La Rioja Province, where the latter was ultimately elected to the Senate for the third (minority party) seat. The opening and closing campaign meetings of the FV were both held in Rosario, a typically progressive city that, since 1987, had been governed successfully by a Socialist local government. This party changed the traditional electoral paradigm in the Province of Santa Fe, largely displacing Peronism and the UCR in that district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 811]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Results\nBuoyed by a strong recovery in the Argentine economy, candidates endorsed by Kirchner (mainly on the Front for Victory ticket) obtained an overwhelming triumph. Of the 127 deputies elected, the FV won 69 seats (54%); the UCR only got 19. The rest of the Justicialist Party obtained 11 seats; Recrear got 9, the ARI got 8, and the Socialist Party got 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Results\nOnly the three most voted in this list have an established national structure; Recrear and the ARI are relatively recent offshoots of the UCR (to the right- and left-wing side of the political spectrum, respectively), and the Socialist Party's five deputies all belong to the province of Santa Fe, the only district where the PS is strong.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Results\nAs explained above, eight provinces were also scheduled to renew their senators (the Senate is renewed by thirds every two years). The Front for Victory won 17 of the 24 senatorial seats. The other factions of Peronism got 4 senators. The UCR got the remaining 3 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180727-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Argentine legislative election, Results\nAmong the remarkable results were the victory of First Lady Cristina Fern\u00e1ndez de Kirchner in Buenos Aires, the largest in the country, beating former First Lady Hilda Gonz\u00e1lez de Duhalde by about 25% of the votes; and the defeat of Carlos Menem in his home district, La Rioja (though he won the first minority seat).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180728-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe 2005 season was the Arizona Cardinals' 86th in the National Football League, their 107th overall and their 18th in Arizona. The team was unable to improve upon their 6\u201310 record from the previous season, and failed to make the playoffs for the seventh year in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180728-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe October 2 game was the first regular season game to be played outside the United States, and was known as NFL Futbol Americano. The game was a Cardinals home game, and the Cardinals defeated their division rivals, the San Francisco 49ers, 31\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180728-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe Cardinals, as a team, had a paltry 1,138 rushing yards in 2005, only 71.1 yards per game. Remarkably, the Cardinals only had one 100-yard rushing game, when they ran for 129 yards in the season finale at Indianapolis. Arizona's season total is the fifth-fewest rushing yards by a team in a 16-game season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180728-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe Cardinals passing offense, however, led the league, with 4,437 yards. Kurt Warner's 271.3 passing yards per game were third in the NFL, and his 24.2 pass completions per-game led the league. Wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald tied for the league lead in receptions, with 103, edging out his teammate Anquan Boldin, who had 102 (tied for third in the NFL) Fitzgerald's 1,409 yards, and Boldin\u2019s 1,402 yards receiving were fourth and fifth in the NFL, respectively, in 2005. Boldin\u2019s 100.1 receiving yards per game led the NFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180728-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Cardinals season\nThe season also saw the Cardinals change their logo and uniforms, which remains in use today. It was also their final season playing at Sun Devil Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180728-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Cardinals season, Regular season, Schedule\nIn the 2005 regular season, the Cardinals\u2019 non-divisional, conference opponents were primarily from the NFC East, although they also played the Carolina Panthers from the NFC South, and the Detroit Lions from the NFC North. Their non-conference opponents were from the AFC South.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180729-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Diamondbacks season\nThe 2005 Arizona Diamondbacks baseball team looked to improve on their 51\u2013111 record from 2004. They looked to contend in what was once again a weak National League West Division. They finished the season with a record of 77\u201385, good for second place in the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180729-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Diamondbacks season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 55], "content_span": [56, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180730-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona State Sun Devils football team\nThe 2005 Arizona State Sun Devils football team represented Arizona State University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. It played its home games at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Arizona.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180730-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona State Sun Devils football team\nThe September 10 game vs. LSU was scheduled to be played at Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, but was moved to Tempe due to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in south Louisiana. LSU's Pete Maravich Assembly Center, which is just north of Tiger Stadium, was serving as a triage center for seriously injured victims from the storm. Arizona State had to grant dispensation for ESPN to televise the game, as the Pac-10 did not have a broadcast contract in place with ESPN at the time, and for the use of Southeastern Conference game officials in a Pac-10 stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180730-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona State Sun Devils football team\nAfter a victory over the Arizona Wildcats in the Territorial Cup, Arizona State went on to play in the 2005 Insight Bowl defeating the Rutgers Scarlet Knights 45-40 for their second consecutive bowl victory in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180731-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Sting season\nThe Arizona Sting are a lacrosse team based in Arizona playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2005 season was the 5th in franchise history and 2nd as the Sting (formerly the Columbus Landsharks).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180731-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Sting season\nThe Sting finished 2nd in the West division with a 9-7 record, and hosted the Colorado Mammoth in the opening round of the playoffs. Arizona defeated Colorado 16-13 to advance to the Western division final against the defending champion Calgary Roughnecks. The Sting defeated Calgary 19-15 in Calgary, advancing to the Championship game in only their second year in Arizona. The Sting faced the Toronto Rock in Toronto for the Championship, and with an NLL record crowd of over 19,400 fans, the Rock defeated the Sting 19-13 to win their fifth championship in seven years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 598]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180731-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Sting season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180731-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Sting season, Player stats, Runners (Top 10)\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 57], "content_span": [58, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180731-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Sting season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180732-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arizona Wildcats football team\nThe 2005 Arizona Wildcats football team represented the University of Arizona during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were coached by Mike Stoops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180733-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season\nThe 2005 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season was the 8th season of the highest classification of high school boys soccer in Arkansas since being sanctioned by the Arkansas Activities Association. It was contested by 28 of the largest 32 schools in the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180733-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season, Conference Alignment\nThe 2005 season was the first under the 2004-2006 classification cycle. Four of the thirty two AAAAA schools did not field teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 72], "content_span": [73, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180733-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season, State Playoffs\nThe top four teams from each conference qualified to state. The first three rounds were hosted by Conway at First State Park. The championship match was played at Ladyback Field in Fayetteville, Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 66], "content_span": [67, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180733-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas High School AAAAA Boys Soccer Season, All State\nA total of 46 players were selected to the All State team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 61], "content_span": [62, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180734-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nThe 2005 Arkansas Razorbacks football team represented the University of Arkansas during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. It was Arkansas' second straight losing season under Houston Nutt after six straight bowl appearances.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180734-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas Razorbacks football team\nRunning back Darren McFadden became the first freshman to rush for over 1,000 yards in a season (1,113) for Arkansas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180734-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas Razorbacks football team, Preseason\nArkansas was ranked as the 45th best team in the country by NationalChamps.net and projected to finish 6-5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180735-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas State Indians football team\nThe 2005 Arkansas State Indians football team represented Arkansas State University in the 2005 NCAA Division I FBS college football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180735-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arkansas State Indians football team, After the season\nA 31-month-long investigation by the NCAA discovered that 31 ineligible athletes in various sports were fielded in several different sports programs at Arkansas State. As a result, four of the 2005 football season wins and all six of the 2006 season wins were vacated as self-imposed penalties by Arkansas State University.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 59], "content_span": [60, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180736-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Arlington mayoral election\nThe 2005 Arlington mayoral election was held on May 7, 2005 to elect the mayor of Arlington. The election was officially nonpartisan. It saw the reelection of incumbent mayor Robert Cluck.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180736-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Arlington mayoral election\nIf no candidate had obtained a majority of the vote, a runoff would have been held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180737-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Armagh City and District Council election\nElections to Armagh City and District Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 22 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180737-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Armagh City and District Council election, Districts results, Armagh City\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180737-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Armagh City and District Council election, Districts results, Crossmore\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 76], "content_span": [77, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180737-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Armagh City and District Council election, Districts results, Cusher\n2001: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180737-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Armagh City and District Council election, Districts results, The Orchard\n2001: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2005: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 78], "content_span": [79, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180738-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Cup\nThe 2005 Armenian Cup was the 14th edition of the Armenian Cup, a football competition. In 2005, the tournament had 17 participants, out of which 5 were reserve teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180738-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Cup, Results, Preliminary round\nThe first leg was played on the 8 March 2005. The second leg was played on the 11 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180738-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Cup, Results, First round\nThe first legs were played on 14 and 15 March 2005. The second legs were played on 19 and 20 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180738-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Cup, Results, Quarter-finals\nThe first legs were played on 3 and 4 April 2005. The second legs were played on 7 and 8 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180738-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Cup, Results, Semi-finals\nThe first legs were played on 22 April 2005. The second legs were played on 26 and 28 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180739-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian First League\nThe 2005 Armenian First League season started on 19 April 2005. The last matches were played on 8 October 2005. Pyunik-2 became the league champions, but because they are a reserve team they were unable to promote to the Armenian Premier League. As a result, the second placed team Ararat Yerevan was given promotion. The third placed team Gandzasar played in the promotion/relegation play-off, which they lost.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180740-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Premier League\nThe 2005 Armenian Premier League season was the fourteenth since its establishment, and started on 12 April 2005. The last matches were played on 6 November 2005. FC Pyunik were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180740-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Premier League, Championship round, Championship round league table\nThe qualified teams only keep their head-to-head results to participate in the Championship stage, resulting in the following table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 81], "content_span": [82, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180740-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian Premier League, Relegation round, Relegation round league table\nThe qualified teams kept their complete results before entering the stage. The team finishing in 7th position remained in the Premier League, the 8th ranked team played the Promotion/Relegation play-off, while the 9th team was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in Armenia on 27 November 2005. The referendum was on a series of changes to the constitution of Armenia which were backed by the international community. The official results had a high turnout and overwhelming support for the changes. However the opposition and election monitors said that there were serious irregularities with the referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum\nThe referendum was nicknamed the \"referendum of ghosts\" by the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Background\nAs part of Armenia's commitment on joining the Council of Europe in 2001 changes to the 1995 constitution of Armenia were required. An earlier attempt at amending it were unsuccessful at a 2003 referendum. The early drafts of a new constitution were criticised by the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe but amendments were made in September 2005 to address their objections. The new constitution was passed by the National Assembly of Armenia unanimously after the opposition parties boycotted the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Background\nThe changes to the constitution would transfer some powers from the President to the National Assembly, the Prime Minister and other ministers. The independence of the judiciary was meant to be strengthened by removing the President from the Council of Judges, which appoints the judges in Armenia. The amended constitution was intended to introduce more respect for human rights and permit Armenians who live overseas to gain citizenship by allowing Armenians to be citizens of more than one nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Background\nOther changes would give the President immunity from prosecution for most offences while in office, remove the requirement for a referendum to be held on any changes to the borders and make the mayoralty of Yerevan an elected post. Most of the changes to the constitution would come into effect after the next parliamentary elections in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nIn order for the referendum to be successful a majority of those who voted had to support the changes and the supporters had to be at least a third of the 2.3 million registered voters of Armenia. This requirement for a third of voters to vote became the biggest issue in the referendum with most talk over whether that turnout would be reached. Opinions polls for Yerevan in July and September showed that there would only be a low turnout, with the September poll showing only 13% would definitely vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nA coalition of 17 opposition parties came out against the changes in the constitution. They were opposed to some specific changes such as giving the president immunity and giving overseas Armenians citizenship. However their main opposition was based less on any specific clauses in the constitution, but because they said that the government which was proposing the changes was illegitimate. Their position was that the President Robert Kocharyan had come into, and stayed in, power through rigged elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe opposition called on voters to boycott the vote, to take part in civil disobedience and tried to use the Rose Revolution in Georgia as an example. However the opposition had little access to the media and their campaign saw widespread public apathy. An opposition rally in Yerevan on the weekend before the election saw only about 1,500 people take part, while another rally on the day before the election had a participation in the hundreds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe government campaigned in favour of the constitution and attempted to get copies of the draft constitution to every family in Armenia in the weeks before the referendum. They confidently predicted success and President Kocharyan pledged to respect the results of the referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe European Union, United States and Council of Europe all backed the proposed changes to the constitution. After the changes made to the proposed draft constitution in September 2005, the Venice Commission backed the changes, and the Council of Europe urged Armenians to vote in order to show their commitment to Europe. The United States said that the changes would strengthen the institutions in Armenia. As the election neared the British Council sponsored a \"Rock the Referendum\" concert to try to increase voter interest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nFew international Election monitors observed the referendum, with only 12 coming from the Council of Europe. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) did not send any observers as they said they had not received any invitation from the government of Armenia. The Armenian government's position was that the OSCE's Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights had no mandate to observe referendums. A local group, Choice is Yours, did arrange for around 2,000 Armenians to monitor the referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Conduct\nOn the day of the election President Kocharyan was among the people to vote and the opposition criticised him for publicly showing his 'yes' ballot paper, which they said violated the constitution. Reports on the vote said that many polling places were deserted with few people voting. However the official results showed a turnout of over 65% of the electorate with an overwhelming yes vote, thus easily meeting the required level. This turnout level was one of the highest in Armenia's post-soviet history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Conduct\nThe opposition said that there was massive ballot stuffing and that turnout in reality was only 16 to 21% of the electorate. The observers from the Council of Europe reported that there were serious abuses in the referendum and said that the official turnout figures did not match reality. However they did believe that the required 33% turnout level was probably met. The United States State Department called on the government to investigate abuses in the referendum while the European Union expressed concern. Neither, however, supported the protests that the opposition were calling for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 640]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Conduct\nPresident Kocharyan described the result as \"a great victory in the strengthening of democracy and the making of civil society in Armenia.\" The governing political parties in Armenia also described the referendum as a success and said that any problems with the referendum would not have affected the result. Some government members and supporters expressed concerns including, Hranush Kharatian, the head of the government department of ethnic minorities and religious affairs and Alvard Petrosian, a deputy from the governing Armenian Revolutionary Federation party. The head of the Central Electoral Commission certified the results but with the opposition members of the commission disagreeing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 747]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180741-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Armenian constitutional referendum, Aftermath\nThe opposition held a series of rallies in the two weeks following the referendum but did not attract a large number of people confirming the largely apathetic feelings of much of the population. The first rally on the 28 November attracted five to ten thousand people but over the next two weeks the rallies gradually fizzled out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180742-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Army Black Knights football team\nThe 2005 Army Black Knights football team represented the United States Military Academy as an independent during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180743-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Aruban general election\nGeneral elections were held in Aruba on 23 September 2005. They were won by the People's Electoral Movement, which took 11 of the 21 seats in the Estates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180743-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Aruban general election, Results\nThis Aruba-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180743-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Aruban general election, Results\nThis Caribbean election-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nThe 2005 Ashes series was that year's edition of the long-standing cricket rivalry between England and Australia. Starting on 21 July 2005, England and Australia played five Tests, with the Ashes held by Australia as the most recent victors. The final result was a 2\u20131 series win for England, who succeeded (for the first time since 1986\u201387) in their biennial attempt to win the urn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nIn March, Australia captain Ricky Ponting said this Ashes series would be the closest since Australia's dominance began in 1989. Since 1989, when Australia started their winning Ashes streak, England had lost by more than one match in all but one of the series played, that of 1997. During that period, Australia were the pre-eminent side in the world, while England had dropped from being the top-rated in 1981 to sixth for much of the 1990s. They reached a low point in 1999 with a series loss to New Zealand leaving them bottom of the unofficial Wisden Cricketers' Almanack rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nHowever, since the previous series in 2002\u201303, England had improved on their fifth place in the official rankings, and were second before this series. Australia were still top-ranked, but England had won 14 and drawn three of their 18 previous Test matches since March 2004, and had won six successive series. Nonetheless, before the First Test some Australians, including fast bowler Glenn McGrath, were suggesting that a 5\u20130 win in the series for Australia was a serious possibility.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nThe BBC reported on the day after the series that it was \"hailed as the most thrilling series ever\". Individual matches were very closely fought, with one match decided by a two-run margin, one match drawn with only one wicket remaining, and one match won by three wickets. The outcome of the contest was not decided until the last day of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nAustralia won the first Test comfortably, but in the second Test, considered to be one of the greatest of all time, England levelled the series with a two-run victory, the narrowest win in Ashes history. The third Test ended in a draw (with England one wicket away from a win), and England won the fourth Test in Nottingham (Trent Bridge) by three wickets, losing seven men in a chase of 129, after England enforced the follow on after gaining a lead of 259 on first innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nThe fifth and final Test started on 8 September, at the Oval in London. It entered its final day with England batting in their second innings, 40 runs ahead with nine wickets in hand. Australia needed a win to force a 2\u20132 series draw and retain the Ashes; any other result would give the Ashes to England and end 16 years and eight series of Australian dominance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series\nAfter a day of fluctuating fortunes, England established a lead of 341 after Kevin Pietersen's maiden century, and Australia batted for one over before the teams went off for bad light, the stumps were pulled out of the ground, and the match was declared a draw, ensuring the return of the Ashes to England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Squads\na) Collingwood was added on 1 August for the second Test, but sent back to his county on 3 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Squads\nb) An injury to Simon Jones saw Anderson come into the squad for the fifth Test, while Tremlett was dropped because he was \"not on top of his game\" according to England's chairman of selectors David Graveney. Collingwood was also called up again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Squads\nc) Clark was called up as cover for pace bowlers McGrath and Lee before the third Test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 25], "content_span": [26, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nThe first day of cricket at Lord's saw 17 of the total of 40 wickets fall, and though Australia lost 10 of them, the BBC saw it as \"advantage Australia\". Ricky Ponting won the toss and chose to bat, and Steve Harmison shook up the opening batsmen early on, hitting Australia's batsmen with bouncers; the second ball of the match hit Justin Langer on the elbow but he went on to make 40 and top score for Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nThe pitch offered bounce and swing from the start, while Matthew Hoggard got a ball on line to swing between Matthew Hayden's bat and pad and into his off stump. Hayden was gone for 12, having, according to the BBC report, \"played nervously from the word go\". Australia still scored at a rate above 4.5 runs per over in the mini-session before drinks, which was taken when Harmison cut Ponting on the right cheek, and in his next over Harmison got his first wicket of the series as Ponting edged him to Andrew Strauss at third slip for 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0008-0002", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nLanger was next to depart, having scored at above five an over when he top-edged a pull shot to Harmison at square-leg for 40 off the bowling of Andrew Flintoff, whose first over in Ashes cricket was a wicket maiden. In the next over, Simon Jones was brought on, he got an immediate reward, with Damien Martyn caught behind for 2, and in the penultimate over before lunch Michael Clarke was lbw to Jones, leaving Australia five down after the first session of play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nAdam Gilchrist, Simon Katich and Shane Warne all played a part in getting Australia past 100, forging innings in the 20s, but Flintoff had Gilchrist for 26 before Warne and Katich added 49 for the seventh wicket. Harmison, coming back for a second spell, was wicketless in his first two overs but after drinks he took four wickets for seven runs in 2.2 overs as Australia were all out for 190. He finished with five for 43. Glenn McGrath was the not out batsman, ending with 10 runs, and he also opened the bowling with Brett Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nEngland batted for six overs until tea without losing a wicket, scoring 10 runs, but McGrath, who bowled his usual accurate line and length, reaped the rewards after tea. Marcus Trescothick fell first ball after tea, edging to slip to become McGrath's 500th victim in Test cricket, and Strauss fell in similar fashion three balls later. Michael Vaughan and Ian Bell survived six overs, adding seven runs before McGrath had them bowled in the 13th and 15th over respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0009-0002", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nWith Flintoff bowled by McGrath in the 17th, and England had lost five wickets for 21 runs, with five of their top six batsmen out in single figures. However, Kevin Pietersen and Geraint Jones batted together to make England's highest partnership of the innings, adding 58 and, according to the BBC report, \"treating Jason Gillespie with some disdain\". A short ball from Lee was too much for Geraint Jones, though, and he fended it to wicket-keeper Gilchrist, out for 30. Ashley Giles hit two quick boundaries to bat out the over, but the last ball of Lee's next over was glanced to the keeper, and Giles was out for 11, and England were 92 for 7 overnight \u2013 needing 98 for the last three wickets to get level with Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 804]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nEngland cut the deficit on the second morning, but were still bowled out before they could build a first-innings lead. Hoggard departed for a 16-ball duck, cutting a delivery from Warne to Hayden in the slips. Pietersen now started to attack, taking 21 runs off seven deliveries before he was out caught by Martyn, a diving catch just inside the boundary, and England were nine down for 122, still trailing by 68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0010-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nThe English 10th wicket pairing of Simon Jones and Harmison added 33 after that, a stand that was the fifth-highest of the game thus far and which reduced Australia's lead to 35 runs. In the field, England started by having Langer run out for 6 in the fifth over, but Hayden and Ponting rebuilt to bat until lunch unbeaten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nThough Hayden was bowled by Flintoff for 34 three overs after lunch, the batsmen from three to six all passed 40; it was to be the only time in the series that Australia accomplished this feat. Clarke needed an extra life to do it, but made England pay after Pietersen dropped him on 21, and thus the partnership was allowed to last for 34.3 overs, with 155 runs being scored. Flintoff was smashed to all corners, with 84 runs being scored off him in his 19 second-day overs, but in the last 10 overs England came back to take wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nStarted by an inside-edge from Clarke off Hoggard, which left Australia's 24-year-old batsman bowled for 91, and Australia lost a further three wickets for 24 runs before the end of the day. The Australian lead was still 314, twice England's first innings total and then some, and Katich was still batting, not out on 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nFour overs into the morning, specialist spin bowler Giles was involved in a dismissal for the only time in the match, having Lee run out for 8. However, Gillespie batted for an hour and 15 minutes, and took part in a 52-run stand with the recognised batsman, Katich before Simon Jones got his reward with an away-swinger that crashed into Gillespie's off stump, after having three catches dropped. The last-wicket partnership rubbed it in with 43 more runs before Katich was caught by Simon Jones off Harmison, but England were set what would be a world record 420 to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nThey started positively, riding some favourable umpiring decisions; Aleem Dar turned down four strong leg before wicket (LBW) appeals off Warne. Strauss and Trescothick could thus add 80 for the first wicket before Strauss edged a short ball from Lee back into the bowler's waiting hands. Vaughan got off the mark with a four with his second ball, before facing 24 dot balls in the next three-quarters of an hour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nMeanwhile, wickets fell at the other end, as Trescothick departed for 44, edging a straight ball from Warne to first slip after having taken him for 10 in the previous over, and Bell was out LBW to a ball that did not turn. Three overs later, Vaughan was bowled cleanly by Lee and Flintoff gave a catch to Gilchrist, England were five down for 119, and though Pietersen once again put on more than 40 runs with Geraint Jones, England still needed 301 for the last five wickets, which would mean five partnerships higher than England had managed all match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, First Test: England v Australia (21\u201325 July)\nRain frustrated both Australia and neutral fans who wanted to see cricket played on the morning of the fourth day, but at 1545 BST the rain relented and the covers were taken off. Then, it took 10 overs for Australia to wrap up England's innings, McGrath taking four of the five wickets required and Warne the last; Giles, Hoggard, Harmison and Simon Jones were all dismissed for ducks, and England could only cut 24 runs off Australia's eventual win margin of 239. Twenty-two of those fourth-day runs came from Pietersen who was left stranded on an unbeaten 64 to have a Test batting average of 121 after his first match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 78], "content_span": [79, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nThe psychological battles before the match included many Australian statements to the press about how the pitch \"played into [their] hands\", that England had been \"spending too much time talking\", and that their top order had been \"taking bad options\". England kept quieter, until just before the game stories appeared about how the Edgbaston game would be decided at the toss: whichever side won it would choose to bowl first and would win, as had happened in 12 of the 13 Tests at Edgbaston since 1991. England came out on top in the mind game after Ricky Ponting won the toss and put England in to bat; Jonathan Agnew of the BBC claimed \"it was clear that his decision had backfired\" once England started batting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 796]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nEngland took advantage of being inserted and came back strongly, becoming the first team to hit 400 runs in a first day of Test cricket against Australia since 1938. The English scored at a pace above four an over in their opening partnership, helped by the freak injury that Glenn McGrath sustained before the match; during a warm-up (playing rugby), the paceman accidentally stood on a stray cricket ball, tearing ankle ligaments. Australia had to field Michael Kasprowicz as replacement, and missed McGrath's superior control and wicket-taking abilities in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nThe English innings began with Marcus Trescothick hitting nine boundaries off Brett Lee, while Andrew Strauss preferred Jason Gillespie and Kasprowicz. Their 112-run partnership was the highest by England in the series thus far; the Australians had only surpassed that once, through Damien Martyn and Michael Clarke's 155 at Lord's. To add to Australia's woes, Trescothick was caught off a no-ball on 32, and eventually went on to make 90, being the second man out shortly after lunch, with the score 164 for 2 after 32.3 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nIn the next five overs, England lost both Ian Bell, who notched up his third successive single-figure score, and Michael Vaughan, who pulled a short Gillespie delivery to the hands of Lee, but that did little to slow the scoring rate. 132 runs had been taken in the morning session; the afternoon yielded 157. Kevin Pietersen, in his second Test match, hit ten fours and one six, and made a 103-run partnership in 105 balls with Andrew Flintoff. Flintoff's 68 was scored off 62 balls, and Lee's 18 balls were taken for 26 runs, including two sixes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nLee bowled 17 overs, and conceded 111 runs, but got the one wicket of Pietersen, who pulled to Simon Katich for 71 off 76 balls, and with the score on 342 for 7 with 24 scheduled overs remaining in the day. Then, Steve Harmison smacked two fours and a six in a 15-minute 17, and Simon Jones stuck around with Matthew Hoggard for a last-wicket partnership of 32, Jones making 19 not out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0019-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nShane Warne finally got the better of Hoggard, to end with four for 116, but by that time England had gone past 400 and ended up with a total of 407 in just under 80 overs. Just as Australia's opening batsman walked out and prepared for their innings, the rain began to fall on Edgbaston, and play had to be stopped.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nEngland's total could have been significantly higher with a bit more top-order application, especially given the high scoring rate. However, England's bowlers started well when Harmison bowled a maiden over first up to Justin Langer, and Matthew Hayden drove Harmison's new-ball partner Hoggard to short mid-off for a golden duck \u2013 the first of Hayden's Test career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nThen, Ponting and Langer hit runs just as quickly as England had done, before the umpire's finger went up twice more before lunch; Ponting swept a shot off Ashley Giles to the opposing captain Vaughan for 61, and Martyn was run out taking a single for 20, again by Vaughan. Langer and Clarke continued after lunch in the same vein, hitting 76 runs in an hour and a half, but a couple of wickets within five overs took Australia to 208 for 5, needing 199 for the last five wickets for parity. The partnership between Langer and Adam Gilchrist saw them to tea with no further loss, as Langer continued his four-hour unbeaten knock and went into the tea break on 72.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nThe pair looked to close England's lead and batted unbeaten after tea for eight overs, but again the England bowlers intervened, this time in the shape of Simon Jones, who got plenty of reverse swing both ways and used that to trap Langer with a yorker \u2013 gone for 82, which was to be Australia's highest score in the innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0021-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nAustralia's last four, which now included Kasprowicz, who had a batting average 10 runs higher than McGrath, were nevertheless all dismissed for single-figure scores, Flintoff taking the last two men LBW with the last two balls, although there was some argument about whether the first dismissal, that of Gillespie, should have been given. Meanwhile, Giles' return of 3/78, including Ponting, Clarke and Warne, was to be his best bowling figures all series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nHowever, England got their 99-run lead and continued to build their lead before stumps were drawn. After Trescothick and Strauss had hit five boundaries in six overs and taken the second innings total to 25 for 0, Ponting brought on Warne in the seventh over, and Warne broke through with his second ball of the innings; his leg break came into the left-hander's stumps and broke them completely, and Strauss was bowled for 6. Nightwatchman Hoggard survived four balls to end the day, when England held a lead of 124 runs, with nine wickets in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nThe third day saw a total of 17 wickets fall, with Warne and Flintoff being the leading performers for their sides. First up, Lee grabbed three wickets in 12 minutes: Trescothick slashed a wide delivery and got an edge to the keeper, captain Vaughan got his third single-figure score in the series as he failed to cover his stumps to a straight one, and Hoggard edged to Hayden in the slips for 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nEngland had lost four wickets for six runs, and were 31 for 4 with Bell and Pietersen at the crease. Pietersen survived what looked like an edge on the first ball he faced, and went on to make 20 before he was given out in a similar situation from Warne. His 41-run partnership with Bell took England's lead past 150, and with Bell having batted past the hour mark, he needed 29 more for his half-century when he gave a tiny edge to Gilchrist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 523]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nEngland's last recognised batting pairing, between Flintoff and wicket-keeper Geraint Jones, saw England to lunch, but Flintoff had suffered an injury to his left shoulder and looked in obvious pain, and Jones departed shortly after lunch. Giles lasted longer, batting through 45 minutes before he was caught by Hayden, and Harmison faced one delivery to leave England at 131 for 9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nSimon Jones and Flintoff carried on, however. Jones managed 12 runs in his 42-minute stay at the crease while Flintoff took Lee for 33 off the 28 balls he faced from the Australian paceman. Flintoff also took runs off Kasprowicz, with his third over yielding 20 runs for England, including a couple of no-balls. At one point during Flintoff's innings, Ponting had nine men on the boundary, with only the bowler and wicket-keeper inside the circle. However, Flintoff hit a six over them, too, and another of his sixes landed on top of the stands. Flintoff ended with 73, as the only man to pass 25 for England, before he was bowled by Warne. Warne finished with figures of six for 46 from 23.1 overs, having bowled unchanged from the seventh over till the end.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nHayden and Langer started positively, taking runs off the occasional bad balls that were served up by Harmison, Hoggard and Giles, and by the 12th over, they had racked up 47 for no loss, and were well on the way to chasing the target of 282. Then, Flintoff came and bowled the over of the series. He failed to make the hat-trick he was on from the last innings, but with his second ball he bowled Langer with a leg cutter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0027-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nHis third delivery was narrowly turned down for lbw, the fourth found Ponting's edge but failed to carry to slip, an lbw appeal on the fifth was also turned down, but his sixth which Ponting left outside the offstump was a no-ball, so there was a seventh and final delivery, another leg cutter and Ponting was out caught behind. Including the previous innings, Flintoff had taken four wickets in nine balls. But more importantly, Australia had been reduced from 47/0 to 48/2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nHayden kept going, and his dismissal came in an over where Australia had taken eight runs from the first four balls; however, Simon Jones got the last laugh over Hayden, only to later be reprimanded and fined by the International Cricket Council for his celebrations. England kept on the pressure, getting three more wickets before the scheduled close of play; Giles getting two, dismissing Katich and Gilchrist, and an in-swinging ball from Flintoff took care of Gillespie, who was trapped lbw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nAn extra half-hour of play was allowed, as a result was nearing, but Warne and Clarke defied the English. Warne \"took the attacking approach\", and took on Giles for 12 in one over. He ended on 20 not out overnight, as Warne and Clarke batted together for 40 minutes before Harmison, bowling his third spell of the day, brought the third day's proceedings to an end with a slower ball that was not read correctly by Clarke, who missed the ball completely to be bowled. Mark Nicholas, in live commentary, described the delivery as \"...one of the great balls. Given the moment, given the batsman and given the match, that is a staggering gamble that has paid off for Harmison. He bowled it perfectly.\" England now needed two wickets on the fourth day, while Australia needed 107 runs for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 877]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nEngland were said to be \"on the brink of...victory\", but Australia came back thanks to two partnerships worth more than 40 to take themselves within three runs of a 2\u20130 series lead. First, Warne and Lee added 45 for the ninth wicket, before Warne trod on his own stumps after a full Flintoff ball and was out hit wicket. Kasprowicz came in and supported Lee well, fending off aggressive bowling from Flintoff and Harmison, and Simon Jones dropped Kasprowicz with 15 left to get.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nWith Australia edging towards victory, preferring singles to risky boundaries, England were now bowling aggressive short balls at the tail-enders, hoping for short catches or to surprise the batsmen with a yorker. With four runs needed to win, Lee drove Harmison's attempted yorker towards the boundary where it was fielded. The Australians crossed for a single, leaving three runs to win with the weaker batsman Kasprowicz on strike. Harmison delivered another short ball, which Kasprowicz fended and Geraint Jones took an athletic catch down the leg side. England appealed, and Kasprowicz was given out caught by Bowden. However subsequent replays suggested that the ball contacted Kasprowicz's glove while not in contact with the bat handle, rendering Bowden's decision technically incorrect. England were nonetheless declared victors \u2013 if in almost the most narrow way possible \u2013 and the series was thus level with three matches left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 1018]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nAfter a short engagement with his team in victory celebrations, the subsequent reaction of Flintoff to the winning dismissal was to console the despondent batsman, Lee \u2013 a gesture which was widely commented upon as indicative of the good sportsmanship and mutual respect between the teams which characterised the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Second Test: England v Australia (4\u20137 August)\nEngland's two-run victory was the narrowest result in Ashes cricket history thus far (there had been two Ashes Tests won by a margin of only three runs). It is also the second narrowest margin of victory in Test cricket history behind only the West Indies' victory by a single run over Australia in Adelaide in 1994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 79], "content_span": [80, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nWith the series square after England's close win in the second match at Edgbaston in Birmingham, neither side could secure the series win after the third Test at Old Trafford in Manchester, so there was still all to play for.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0033-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nThe match began with England winning the toss, and choosing to bat first, thus giving Shane Warne a chance to become the first man to take 600 Test wickets in England's first innings, and he did so by getting Marcus Trescothick out caught behind by Australian wicket-keeper Adam Gilchrist when he mistimed a sweep shot, earning Warne a standing ovation from the Old Trafford faithful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nAfter naming an unchanged line-up, England were immediately faced by the pairing of Glenn McGrath and Brett Lee. There were doubts about whether they could play before the match started, because of the injuries they had sustained earlier, but they both passed fitness tests. Though Andrew Strauss succumbed in the tenth over, England lost no further wickets before lunch, and only one more before tea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0034-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nThere were many missed opportunities for Australia, who dropped Trescothick, Michael Vaughan (twice) and Ian Bell on the first day, which helped Trescothick and Vaughan to get a partnership of 137 before Trescothick was dismissed after lunch. Vaughan powered on, making his hundred after 206 minutes to become the first man in the series to get a century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nHaving made 166 runs, an innings described as \"majestic\", Vaughan eventually hit Simon Katich straight to McGrath at the boundary, but had still made what was to be the highest individual score in the series. Together with Vaughan, Australia were also faced with a more defiant Bell, who had not passed 25 in his four first innings in the series, but made 59 before the day ended. Picking up where Vaughan left off, Bell, Kevin Pietersen and nightwatchman Matthew Hoggard closed out the day for England with the scoreboard reading 341 for 5, with Lee adding two wickets to the tally before the end of the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nBell did not add to his overnight score, being given out caught behind in controversial circumstances, as replays indicated any contact with the ball involved neither bat nor glove. Following a brief rain interval England then lost two more wickets just before lunch, Andrew Flintoff after scoring a quick-fire 46 and Geraint Jones for 42. After lunch Australia quickly dispatched the remaining two wickets for just a further 10 runs, bowling England out for a score of 444, with McGrath finishing on his worst-ever Test figures of nought for 86.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nAustralia started their innings tentatively with Hoggard dropping a low catch from Matthew Hayden off his own bowling. Just before tea Australia lost their first wicket with Hayden out caught at short leg from Ashley Giles first over. After tea Australia lost another couple of wickets, Ricky Ponting caught for seven and Hayden given out lbw for 34. Gilchrist put on 30 before edging the first ball of Simon Jones' spell to Geraint Jones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nThis brought in Michael Clarke who had been recuperating at the team hotel after damaging his back on the first day. Owing to this injury, Clarke needed Hayden to act as a runner. Warne made inroads with the bat, just as at Edgbaston four days previously, but Clarke only managed to add seven runs before being deceived by a reverse swinging delivery from Simon Jones. Warne and Jason Gillespie saw the day out with Warne finishing on 45 not out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nThe day finished with Australia on 214 for 7, 230 behind and needing another 31 runs to avoid a follow-on. The score was adjusted from 210 overnight owing to an umpire failing to signal four byes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nRain delayed the start of play until 16:00 BST, and even then only eight overs were possible before play was again suspended, although a further six overs were bowled later on before yet more rain meant that play was abandoned for the day. Australia had the better of the short day's play, adding 50 runs without loss to pass the follow-on target, although Warne was lucky to survive on two occasions thanks to errors by Geraint Jones: with Warne on 55, Jones missed a relatively straightforward stumping opportunity, and on 68 he was dropped after edging a ball from Flintoff. Australia closed on 264 for 7, still 180 in arrears, but England probably felt that they missed several opportunities to put the game beyond their opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nHaving been hampered by a rain-shortened day three, the Australians were ready to put more wood to the ball on day four, and they did not disappoint. Warne continued his march towards his maiden Test century before holing out with a hook shot to a well-placed Giles at 90. Simon Jones mopped up the other two wickets to bowl Australia out for 302, Jones finishing the innings with a career best figures of six for 53.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0042-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nThe English opening partnership of Strauss and Trescothick began their response, scoring 26 before lunch. After lunch, Trescothick played on to be bowled after scoring 41 giving McGrath his first wicket of the match. Strauss put together a fine century, his sixth from just 17 matches, scoring 106 before getting out caught. Gilchrist missed two stumping opportunities to remove Bell and failing to hold a catch to remove Flintoff. Bell capitalised on Gilchrist's errors, partnering Strauss for 28 overs and recording a well-deserved 65.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0042-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nGeraint Jones also added a swift 27 with England more concerned about scoring quickly than staying at the crease, and England declared on 280 to give them a spell at Australia in the evening and a chance of winning the match the next day. McGrath recorded another five-wicket haul in an innings, but was expensive, giving away 115 runs. Warne, despite bowling 25 overs, failed to take a wicket, recording figures of 0/74.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0043-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nAustralia needed 423 to win, which would be a record fourth innings total to win a match. Australia saw out the last 10 overs without losing a wicket and put on 24 runs, leaving 399.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0044-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nEnglish hopes of a win were high, and 20,000 people were locked out of the stadium in addition to the 23,000 capacity crowd. Australia started the day needing 399 more runs from 98 overs if they were to claim an unlikely victory. The day started poorly for them with Justin Langer falling for 14 on the seventh ball of the day, nicking a ball delivered by Hoggard behind to Geraint Jones. Ponting narrowly survived being run out early on and this proved crucial in the context of the match as the momentum gradually swung in Australia's direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0044-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nAt one point Australia racked up runs at such a rate that a win became a real possibility. Despite losing Clarke and Gillespie in quick succession to send the team to 264 for 7, Ponting battled on before eventually succumbing to Steve Harmison after seven hours at the crease to record the first Australian century of the series with a score of 156. This was good enough to earn Man of the Match honours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0045-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Third Test: England v Australia (11\u201315 August)\nAfter the dismissal of Ponting, Australia were 354 for 9 with only four overs remaining, and another thrilling climax occurred with England having a real chance of snatching victory in similar fashion to the second Test. However, the unfancied pairing of Lee and McGrath handled the remaining 24 deliveries to finish on 371 for 9, 52 short of victory but sufficient to draw the game and leave the series tied at 1\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 80], "content_span": [81, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0046-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nGlenn McGrath was once again ruled out because of injury, this time to his elbow, and Australia also dropped the out-of-form Jason Gillespie, leaving them with a seam attack of Brett Lee, debutant Shaun Tait and Michael Kasprowicz. England, having been on top in the last two Tests, were unchanged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0047-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nEngland won the toss and chose to bat, and they got off to a flyer. Boosted by no-balls from the seamers \u2013 a total of 18 before lunch \u2013 Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss made hay quickly, and enjoyed batting on a pitch which gave the bowlers no aid. They recorded their second 100-run opening partnership of the series, before Strauss was freakishly dismissed for 35, sweeping Shane Warne onto his boot and into Matthew Hayden's waiting hands at slip \u2013 a wicket confirmed by the third umpire. Michael Vaughan continued on his fine form from Old Trafford, though, punishing bad balls from Lee to go into lunch with his score on 14. Trescothick, meanwhile, rode his luck, as he was bowled off a no-ball on 55, much to Lee's displeasure. At lunch England were 129 for 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 853]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0048-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nOnly 3.1 overs were possible in the afternoon session, owing to rain. Coming back after tea, England immediately lost two wickets to Tait, who used the cloud cover to good effect and swung the ball well. However, Vaughan and Kevin Pietersen batted well together for a 67-run partnership, although they were each dropped once. Towards the end of the day, Ricky Ponting brought himself on, and his medium pace yielded a wicket \u2013 that of Vaughan for 58. Overnight, the match was evenly poised with England 229 for 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0049-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nAustralia dismissed Pietersen at the beginning of the morning's play, edging a full outswinger from Lee through to wicket-keeper Adam Gilchrist. But an unbeaten century partnership from Andrew Flintoff and Geraint Jones took England's score to 344 for 5 at lunch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0050-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nAfter lunch, the pair continued to score quickly for another hour, and extended their partnership to 177 before Flintoff was lbw to Tait for 102, his first Test century against Australia. The loss of Flintoff did not deter the English, as Jones continued to hit runs through the off side on the way to his highest score against the Australians, making 85 before he was caught and bowled by Kasprowicz. The next two wickets fell quickly, but a stubborn last-wicket partnership of 23 between Matthew Hoggard and Simon Jones \u2013 including an incident where the ball hit the stumps but the bails failed to fall off \u2013 saw England to 477 all out at tea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0051-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nIn the evening session, England's bowlers, especially Hoggard, managed to find much more swing than the Australian bowlers had done, and ripped through the Australian top order. The first three wickets fell in a crucial period of 11 balls (although the third, which dismissed Damien Martyn lbw, was a poor decision \u2013 television replays indicated that the ball hit the bat before the body). By stumps Australia had been reduced to 99 for 5 to complete an excellent day for England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0052-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nKatich and Gilchrist decided that attack was the best form of defence, adding 58 in only 8.5 overs in the morning, before England came back to take the next four wickets for the addition of only 18 runs, leaving Australia perilously placed at 175 for 9. Simon Jones was the main culprit, using swing to good effect as he removed Katich and Warne in successive balls, and then had Kasprowicz clean bowled. Lee added 47 in 44 balls, including three huge sixes, to take Australia's score to 218, before he was caught off Jones' bowling to give Jones his fifth wicket of the innings. Despite their aggressive batting, Australia therefore finished the first innings 259 runs behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0053-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nVaughan then gambled, by enforcing the follow-on on the visitors (the first time Australia had followed on in 17 years and 190 Tests, as they had not been made to follow on since facing Pakistan in Karachi in 1988). By lunch, Australia had reached 14 without loss in their second innings, and they powered on in the afternoon session, only losing Hayden and adding 100 more runs before tea. For England, the afternoon session was their worst of the match \u2013 to compound their misery, Simon Jones showed signs of injury, and Strauss dropped Justin Langer on 38.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0054-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nIn the evening session, England managed to take three wickets, but also dropped a catch and missed a stumping. Australia thus finished the day still 37 runs in arrears but with six wickets still in hand. Simon Jones also went off the field during the evening session with an ankle injury, and was taken to hospital for an ankle scan. While Jones was off the field receiving attention, substitute fielder Gary Pratt ran out Australia captain Ponting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0054-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nAs he left the field, Ponting expressed his displeasure to the England dressing room at their frequent use of subs (allegedly to keep their key bowlers fresh). Although this tactic was widely felt by commentators to be against the spirit of the game, there was no legal stipulation against it. In fact, Pratt was on the field owing to a genuinely serious injury to Simon Jones, and he never played international cricket again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0055-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nDay Four began in earnest with Michael Clarke and Katich continuing their partnership from the previous day. However, Katich had already twice flirted with dismissal, saved only by chance both times. In the words of BBC cricket commentator Henry Blofeld, \"It's very much a game of chess \u2013 white-flannelled figures on green grass.\" The English and the Australians proceeded into a cold war for a good part of the morning, with England attempting to frustrate the Australian batting, but with the latter refusing to take the bait. England's lead slowly evaporated without a wicket falling, but Hoggard's taking of Clarke's and then Gilchrist's scalps on either side of the lunch break swung the initiative back into England's hands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0056-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nThe injury to Simon Jones became somewhat obvious as the pacers struggled to capture the magic that Jones had created the previous day that had forced Australia to follow on. Despite this, the Australian run rate remained low as both sides stared each other down. Mistakes by Geraint Jones and Pietersen were quickly nullified by the dismissal of Warne for 45 and Kasprowicz for 19, and after a few overs' resistance, Tait was bowled middle stump for 4, leaving 129 for the English to chase after tea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0057-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nEngland then proceeded to send the game into a nailbiter; Trescothick started the chase positively, scoring 27 from 22 balls, out of 32 scored while he was at the crease. Then English wickets fell quickly as Warne took three wickets: Trescothick, Vaughan (0) and Strauss (23). Lee dismissed Ian Bell (3) and at 57 for 4 England were in trouble. Flintoff (26) and Pietersen (23) then steadied the ship with an invaluable partnership of 46 before both fell in quick succession to Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0057-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fourth Test: England v Australia (25\u201328 August)\nDespite Geraint Jones' dismissal by Warne for 3, the partnership of Ashley Giles (7 not out) and Hoggard (8 not out) guided England home. Man of the match honours went to Flintoff, but more importantly this gave the English a crucial 2\u20131 lead heading back to London for the fifth and final Test, ensuring that they could not lose the series. However, with the Ashes going to Australia in the event of a drawn series, there was still all to play for at The Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 81], "content_span": [82, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0058-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nAustralia named Glenn McGrath, recovered from an elbow injury, to replace Michael Kasprowicz. England's Simon Jones did not recover from his ankle injury from the previous Test in time to be included in the England team, and was replaced after much speculation by all-rounder Paul Collingwood, in preference to specialist fast bowler James Anderson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0059-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThe final match to decide the fate of the legendary Ashes urn finally began, and the proverbial first blood was drawn by England as Michael Vaughan won his third toss of the series (much to the delight of the partisan Oval crowd). Vaughan elected to have his side bat first, and the English first innings got underway. Marcus Trescothick and Andrew Strauss added 82 for the first wicket, as England's batsmen looked to take on the Australians, but subtle spin variations bowled from Shane Warne yielded three wickets as England went to lunch on 115 for 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0060-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nWarne continued after lunch by taking the wicket of Kevin Pietersen for 14. Andrew Flintoff emerged to form a vital partnership of 143 with Strauss, before to falling to McGrath for 72 an hour after tea. Strauss made his second century of the series, before being dismissed by Warne off an acrobatic catch by Simon Katich. The day ended with Geraint Jones and Ashley Giles at the crease, with England 319 for 7. Certain forecasts for London called for showers sometime during the weekend, which, it was thought, might wipe up to a day of action or more from the ledger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0061-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nDay two began positively for the Australians, with Jones being bowled for 25 off Brett Lee, and Matthew Hoggard managing a meagre 2 before being dismissed by McGrath. However, Giles and Steve Harmison frustrated the Australians by taking the score past 370, before Warne trapped Giles lbw shortly before midday, leaving England all out for 373.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0062-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThe Australian first innings got off to a solid start, with Justin Langer forging a 100 partnership with fellow opener Matthew Hayden \u2013 the first opening-partnership century of the series by the Australians. Langer played some blistering strokes off Giles' bowling in particular, but survived a sharp chance to Trescothick at first slip. The Australians were offered the light immediately after tea, despite the English protesting and wanting to bowl Giles. The Australians accepted it, and the light never improved, with light rain coming down later. Thus, the day concluded with Australia 112/0, 261 runs behind England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0063-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nAfter a delay for wet field conditions, the third day began with a flurry of action, as both Langer and Hayden had close calls with lbw appeals, which replays suggested should have been out, and shies at the stumps that just missed. However, no batsman was given out in the morning session, where only 14 overs of play was possible, owing to rain. Australia added 45 runs in that time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0064-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nAfter lunch Hayden and Langer continued their solid batting, frustrating the England bowlers, with Langer reaching his 22nd Test century. Shortly afterwards, England gained a minor victory as Harmison dismissed Langer, who departed to a rapturous ovation. Ricky Ponting should then have been dismissed for a bat-pad catch off Giles, but Bowden turned down the appeal. Hayden also achieved three-figure success later in the day \u2013 his first century for over a year, while Flintoff's hostile and accurate bowling was rewarded with the wicket of Ponting, caught at slip by Strauss. With this wicket, Flintoff equalled Ian Botham's hitherto unique achievement of 300 runs and 20 wickets in an Ashes series. Flintoff had a later appeal for a catch behind turned down by Rudi Koertzen, despite it hitting the bat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 889]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0065-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThe Australian batsmen once again ended the day early by accepting an offer of bad light, bringing a much-interrupted day to a close after only 45.4 overs. Thanks to dogged batting and at least four umpiring decisions in their favour on the third day, they finished 96 runs behind with eight wickets of their first innings intact.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0066-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThe fourth day started brightly for England, Damien Martyn hooking a short ball from Flintoff straight into the hands of Collingwood, in the third over of the day, having added only one to his overnight score of nine. Further wickets fell, with an excellent knock by Hayden been brought to an end by Flintoff, who continued with impetus and trapped Katich lbw for 1, before Hoggard had Adam Gilchrist lbw with an inswinger at the stroke of lunch. Gilchrist, however, had added a quick 23 that could be vital, as Australia went into the pavilion 17 runs behind with four wickets in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0067-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nHowever, it only took six post-lunch overs for England to end the Australian effort. Jones dropped a catch off Michael Clarke's bat, but it did not prove to be crucial, as Clarke was lbw to Hoggard in the next over. Warne and McGrath both went for ducks, caught off a mistimed hook and in the slips respectively. Finally Hoggard had Lee (6) caught in the deep and Australia were bowled out for 367. Flintoff finished with five wickets, the second five-for of his career, while Hoggard's four for 97 was his best return of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0068-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThus England, who had expected to begin their second innings chasing a hundred runs or more, were actually leading by six as they took up their bats in mid-afternoon. Australia took a very quick wicket, that of Strauss, who was dismissed again by Warne, caught bat-and-pad by Katich for a solitary run. The wicket was Warne's 167th against England, equalling Dennis Lillee's Ashes bowling record. 11 balls after this dismissal, umpires Rudi Koertzen and Billy Bowden judged it unfair to continue play, owing to inadequate light. One additional session of play was however subsequently possible, taking England to a 40-run lead without further loss, before poor light ended the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0069-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThe fifth day began with the game still finely balanced. Ponting put his trust in his two proven wicket takers: McGrath and Warne. England batted well for 40 minutes, with Vaughan taking the game to the Australian bowlers, but McGrath produced two beautiful outswingers to dismiss him and Ian Bell (for a pair) with consecutive deliveries. The Australian charge was diminished by a couple of uncharacteristic dropped catches, but Warne and McGrath combined to take four wickets before lunch, leaving England 133 runs ahead with five wickets remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0070-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nThe afternoon session was anchored by Pietersen, the beneficiary of three dropped catches, who scored his maiden Test century, with obdurate support from Collingwood and Giles. The session saw only two wickets fall, Collingwood was caught acrobatically by silly mid-off Ponting for 10, and Jones (1) decisively bowled when he was deceived by a rapid Shaun Tait delivery. Pietersen was finally dismissed for 158, a superlative innings including 15 fours and 7 sixes, while Giles added 59 and Harmison was dismissed for a duck to bring Australia in to bat with fewer than 19 overs remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0071-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nAs the Australians began their innings, it was clear that not enough time remained for them to make up the 341 runs by which they trailed. Almost immediately they were offered the light; and having accepted it, both teams had to return to the dressing rooms to wait for a formal finish. The situation became somewhat farcical. With the match effectively over, the crowd were eager for the Ashes to be presented to England, and the celebrations to begin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0071-0001", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nAfter a period of some uncertainty and confusion, at 18:17 BST umpires Koertzen and Bowden removed the bails and pulled up the stumps to signal the end of the match. Australia had scored just four leg byes in their second innings, making it the only innings in Test cricket history in which every run was an extra. With no result in this fifth and final Test, England took the series 2\u20131, regaining the Ashes for the first time since 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0072-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Match details, Fifth Test: England v Australia (8\u201312 September)\nPietersen, having scored his maiden Test century at a crucial point, was voted Man of the Match by Channel 4 viewers. Flintoff was chosen by Australian coach John Buchanan as English Man of the Series while English coach Duncan Fletcher selected Warne as the Australian Man of the Series. The new Compton\u2013Miller medal for the overall man of the series (as selected by each side's chairman of selectors: Trevor Hohns and David Graveney) was also presented to Flintoff. Finally, the replica urn was presented to Vaughan, thus ending the series in favour of the home side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 82], "content_span": [83, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0073-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Post-match reactions\nImmediately following the final match, Elizabeth II sent a congratulatory memo to Michael Vaughan and the team, saying: \"My warmest congratulations to you, the England cricket team and all in the squad for the magnificent achievement of regaining the Ashes... both sides can take credit for giving us all such a wonderfully exciting and entertaining summer of cricket at its best.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0074-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Post-match reactions\nPolitical leaders like Prime Minister Tony Blair, Conservative leader Michael Howard and Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy also sent their congratulations. Blair stated that \"By bringing the Ashes back after so long, you have given cricket a huge boost and lit up the whole summer\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0075-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Post-match reactions\nHoward added \"... Vaughan, his team, and all involved, should be proud of this achievement and the manner in which they have played during this extraordinary summer of excitement and tension.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0076-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Post-match reactions\n\"England's victory is historic, and I send hearty congratulations to the team... It has been impossible not to get caught up by the excitement and sense of good will in the past few days,\" stated Kennedy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0077-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Post-match reactions\nOn the other end of the ledger Australia's Prime Minister, John Howard (who was in New York for a UN summit and was given the bad news by an aide during a luncheon with the Asia Society) was gracious in his congratulations to England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0078-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Post-match reactions\n\"Look, there's natural disappointment but it's a situation where you give credit to the team that won,\" Howard stated, noting that there would not be a national day of mourning. \"They will no doubt celebrate and that will be difficult for some, but that's the nature of these contests and we should not take anything away from England... They played very well. It's the best team that England has had for a very long period of time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0079-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England team parade\nOn Tuesday 13 September, England, along with their Women's Ashes-winning counterparts, were feted with a 90-minute bus tour from Mansion House to Trafalgar Square, where they were greeted by tens of thousands of Londoners and cricket fans in a celebration of their momentous achievements (to the surprise of Matthew Hoggard, who expected \"three men and a dog\").", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0080-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England team parade\nThousands of people also lined the streets along the parade route as the two buses made their way to Trafalgar Square. While the rest of the team simply enjoyed the sights, 5th Test Man-of-the-Match Kevin Pietersen sprayed champagne from the bus onto joyous revelers on the street, while wicketkeeper Geraint Jones held onto a Dalek doll with the words \"Australians exterminated\" attached to it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0081-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England team parade\nAt Trafalgar Square, the crowd was treated to a victory celebration for both England teams, and before the ceremony closed the square broke into a rendition of \"Jerusalem\", which had become an unofficial hymn for the team during the 5th Test. Interviews were carried out with all members of the men's team and Clare Connor, the captain of the women's team, by David Gower and Mark Nicholas, while the ceremony was broadcast live in the UK on BBC One, Channel 4 and Sky Sports News and around the world. Afterwards, the side was entertained by the Prime Minister as guests of honour at 10 Downing Street, then returned the urn to its sacred home at Lord's for safekeeping.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0082-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Australian criticism\nAlmost immediately criticism began in Australia; the Sydney Morning Herald immediately took issue with the fact that not only was captain Ricky Ponting out-thought by his opposite number Vaughan but the side was too old and simply did not score the runs when they were needed. The Age of Melbourne criticised the team for opening their big mouths once too often, hitting at Australia's earlier whitewash boast. Psychological warfare, The Age went on to state, is great when it works but when it backfires those who are responsible ought to be brought to account.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0083-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Australian criticism\nFormer fast bowler Dennis Lillee was particularly scathing. Writing in Perth's The West Australian, he stated that all who perpetrated this \"disaster\" must be sacked and Shane Warne be appointed the captain in place of Ponting (because of how Warne had delivered time and again in the series). Losing to other sides is not the end of the world, stated Lillee, but losing the Ashes is.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0084-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Australian criticism\nFormer captain Steve Waugh defended the side, calling it \"a very good side, a really experienced side. They will be disappointed but they will move on from it\" he said, but also conceding that the selectors were likely to ponder a few changes given that only three of the Australia team at The Oval were aged under 30. \"They'll have a couple of players in mind which they will bring in the side over the next couple of years\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0085-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Australian criticism\nAlong with Waugh, selector and former batsman David Boon defended their selections. \"Sometimes you're going to have to make a hard decision to keep a subtle rotation going through so you don't have mass retirements... But you've also got to pick the best cricket team you possibly can to represent your country\", he stated. \"If we keep producing cricketers who are 25 plus, they're mature, they're ready to play, they've still got a seven or eight-year career, then we're doing OK.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 47], "content_span": [48, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0086-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Ponting hits back, the axe falls\nPonting was confronted by a large media pack shortly after his arrival at Sydney Airport and said he wasn't aware of Lillee's comments. \"I'm not concerned about those things. As long as I am doing the right thing by everyone in my dressing room as the team and the coaching staff, well then that's all I can do... But as long as I am looking after the guys in my dressing room, then I'll be happy,\" Ponting stated, adding that he wished to remain captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0087-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Ponting hits back, the axe falls\nPonting also responded to Lillee's comments that Warne should be captain, and that he made more decisions than Ponting during the series: \"I like to talk to a lot of guys out on the field and use their ideas and thoughts. I'll go to Gilly (Adam Gilchrist) and even Matty Hayden, Justin Langer, Damien Martyn... The way I think is not going to be right 100 percent of the time, but that's the way I do it. Warne has got a cricket brain as good as anybody around. But I wouldn't agree [he was the pseudo captain].\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0088-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, Ponting hits back, the axe falls\nRegardless, when the Australian side for the Johnnie Walker ICC Super Series was announced, three members of the Ashes-losing side were dropped: Damien Martyn was retained only for the ODI squad, while Jason Gillespie and Michael Kasprowicz were dropped altogether. Brad Hodge, Stuart MacGill and Shane Watson were added in their places. While Cricket Australia officials assured that these omissions were not a signal that the Test careers of these three players were over, many experts said otherwise. However, all three players made successful returns to the Test team in early 2006. Lillee once again called for the replacement of Ponting as captain with Warne after the squad announcement, however this was once again rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 59], "content_span": [60, 792]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0089-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\nWith England's victory in the series, the top of the ICC Test Championship rankings ladder changed slightly as the English closed in on the top-ranked Aussies. In a BBC interview the week after the series, Simon Jones claimed that the English should one day be regarded as the best, despite statistics and the Test Championship rankings speaking otherwise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0090-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\n\"The Ashes series was talked about so much. People were wondering if England could do it and Glenn McGrath said Australia would win 5\u20130, but we beat them 2\u20131 and could have been 3\u20131 up after Old Trafford,\" Jones told the BBC. \"Australia are statistically the best side in the world, and rightly so. They've played so much great cricket over the past 10 years and built up an advantage on the points system... But I think that's changing and hopefully we will have the mantle one day.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0091-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\nMeanwhile, as Pakistan and India prepared for the Ashes keepers' visit in the winter, with the Pakistanis relishing the opportunity to test their mettle against the side that took down the Australians, Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer stated, \"England have done well but they have still to create that aura of invincibility of the West Indies of the 1970s and 80s and Australia recently. The side which does well in all three departments will win the series and we have to be very disciplined against England, who have quality batsmen and bowlers.\" Pakistan would later defeat England at home with a 2-0 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0092-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\nFollowing their performances in the series both Andrew Flintoff and Michael Vaughan were given the Freedom of the City in their home towns of Preston and Sheffield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0093-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\nOn 29 September, the Royal Mail issued a set of four stamps commemorating the Ashes victory. The stamps cost 68p, which is, incidentally, the cost of sending first-class mail to Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0094-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\nIn the 2006 New Year Honours, 11 of the 12 playing members of the England team were awarded the MBE, with captain Vaughan awarded the OBE, for their roles in the successful Ashes victory. There was some critical comment that the limited role of some did not warrant the honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180744-0095-0000", "contents": "2005 Ashes series, Legacy, England's epilogue\nHowever, after the following series in which Australia regained the Ashes in a 5\u20130 whitewash, the English public began to criticise the celebrations of the previous year. This issue also flared up during the Test series when Warne commented on Paul Collingwood's MBE for scoring 17 runs during the 2005 series. Former England captain Geoff Boycott criticised the fact that the MBE had been awarded to the whole side when Warne, who had already taken over 600 wickets by then, had not been honoured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180745-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asia Series\nThe first Konami Cup Asia Series was held in November 2005 with four teams participating. The champions from the domestic leagues in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan along with a team of all stars from China's domestic league took part in the competition. All games were held in the Tokyo Dome in Japan. The tournament was sponsored by the Nippon Professional Baseball Association and Konami. The Chiba Lotte Marines defeated the Samsung Lions in the title game to win the championship for Japan. Outfielder Benny Agbayani was named the MVP of the series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180745-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asia Series, Matchups, November 11\nAttendance: 18,911\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0Time: 2:20Note: Game ended at seventh inning due to mercy rule", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 39], "content_span": [40, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180746-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship\nThe 2005 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship season (APRC) was an international rally championship organized by the FIA. The champion was Finnish driver Jussi Valimaki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180747-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Airgun Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Airgun Championships were held in Bangkok, Thailand between 12 and 19 September, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180748-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 23rd edition of the Men's Asian Amateur Boxing Championships were held from August 29 to September 4, 2005 in Phan \u0110\u00ecnh Ph\u00f9ng Stadium, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180749-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Archery Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Archery Championships was the 14th edition of the Asian Archery Championships. The event was held in Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, New Delhi, India from November 4 to November 10, 2005 and was organized by Asian Archery Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180750-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Athletics Championships were the 16th edition of the international athletics competition between Asian nations. It was held in Incheon, South Korea between 1\u20134 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180751-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180752-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180752-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: +0.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +0.3\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: 0.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 4: +0.3\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180753-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1st and 2nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180754-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180755-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk\nThe men's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180756-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180756-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nWind: Heat 1: 0.0\u00a0m/s, Heat 2: +0.1\u00a0m/s, Heat 3: +0.3\u00a0m/s", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 69], "content_span": [70, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180757-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 67], "section_span": [67, 67], "content_span": [68, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180758-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180759-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180760-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180761-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180762-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180763-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180764-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180765-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180766-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180767-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180768-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180769-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180770-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180771-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180772-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180773-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe women's 10,000 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180774-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180775-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180776-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180777-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk\nThe women's 20 kilometres walk event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180778-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180779-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180780-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180781-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180782-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180783-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180784-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180784-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Final\nNote: Santhi Soundarajan originally finished second with 2:04.01 but was later disqualified after failing a gender verification test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 71], "content_span": [72, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180785-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180786-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180787-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180788-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180789-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180790-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180791-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180792-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180793-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Athletics Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump event at the 2005 Asian Athletics Championships was held in Incheon, South Korea on September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180794-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Badminton Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Badminton Championships was the 25th edition of the Asian Badminton Championships. It was held in Hyderabad, India from September 6 to September 11, 2005 as a four-star tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180795-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Baseball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Baseball Championship was the 23rd installment of the tournament. Japan won the competition for the second consecutive time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180796-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Canoe Slalom Championships were the 4th Asian Canoe Slalom Championships and took place from July 1\u20132, 2005 in Naein-chun, Inje, South Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180797-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Canoe Sprint Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Canoe Sprint Championships was the 11th Asian Canoe Sprint Championships and took place from December 17\u201320, 2005 in Putrajaya, Malaysia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180798-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Cross Country Championships\nThe 8th Asian Cross Country Championships took place on March 12, 2005 in Guiyang, China. Team rankings were decided by a combination of each nation's top three athletes finishing positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180799-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Cycling Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Cycling Championships took place at the Punjab Agricultural University's Velodrome, Ludhiana, India from 11 to 18 December 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180800-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Fencing Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Fencing Championships was held at the Likas Sports Complex, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia from 25 July to 30 July, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180801-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Indoor Games\nThe 1st Asian Indoor Games were held in Bangkok, Thailand from November 12 to 19, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180801-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Indoor Games, Emblem\nThe \u201cLogo\u201d of the 1st Asian Indoor Games itself comprises 9 sparkling stars that represent the opinions of the Asian people at large:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180801-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Indoor Games, Emblem\nThe sun is the symbol of the Olympic Council of Asia. The redline, the blue line and the golden line forming like an \u201cA\u201d shape, together with a Thai roof, represent the Asian continent and the Asian Games. The golden line that resembling Thai smile, expressing a warm welcome to visitors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180801-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Indoor Games, Mascot\nEach sport discipline is animated with an elephant, thus giving the appearance of its cartoon movements in all events to be competed in the 1st Asian Indoor Games 2005. Children and other people alike will be fond of them, pleasant to look at them and keeping them for a souvenir after the end of the Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180801-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Indoor Games, Mascot\nThe blue and athletic elephant was named Hey and the yellow and plump one was H\u00e1. They were to convey the meaning of amusement, merriment and relaxation, thus in a way reflecting the natures of the Asian Indoor Games a great deal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180801-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Indoor Games, Participating nations\nThere are 37 Asian countries confirmed to participate in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 46], "content_span": [47, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180802-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Judo Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Judo Championships were held in Tashkent, Uzbekistan from 14 May to 15 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180803-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Junior Badminton Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Junior Badminton Championships is an Asia continental junior championships to crown the best U-19 badminton players across Asia. This tournament were held in Tennis Indoor Senayan, Gelora Bung Karno Sports Complex, Jakarta, Indonesia from 11\u201317 July. In the team event, South Korean boys', and the Chinese girls' team won the gold medal respectively. In the individual event, China won three gold medal in the boys' singles, girls' singles and girls' doubles event, while South Korea won two gold medal in the boys' and mixed doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180804-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Junior and Cadet Table Tennis Championships\nThe 11th Asian Junior Table Tennis Championships 2005 were held in New Delhi, India, from 23 \u2010 28 July 2005. It was organised by the Table Tennis Federation of India under the authority of the Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU) and International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180805-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Karate Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Karate Championships are the 7th edition of the Asian Karate Championships, and were held in Macau, China from 19 to 22 May, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180806-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Men's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Men\u2019s Club Volleyball Championship was the 6th staging of the AVC Club Championships. The tournament was held in Liaqut Gymnasium, Islamabad, Pakistan. Rahat CSKA of Kazakhstan won the tournament in round robin format.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180807-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship was the 13th Asian Championship, which took place from September 20 to September 27, 2005 in Suphanburi, Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180807-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2003 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180807-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Men's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\n* Kazakhstan withdrew, Vietnam moved from Pool C to B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 59], "content_span": [60, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180808-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Men's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Men's Youth Handball Championship (1st tournament) took place in Bangkok from 26 June\u20132 July. It acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2005 Men's Youth World Handball Championship in Qatar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180809-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Table Tennis Championships\nThe 17th Asian Table Tennis Championships 2005 were held in Jeju-do, South Korea from 27 August to 2 September 2005. It was organised by the Korea Table Tennis Association under the authority of Asian Table Tennis Union (ATTU) and International Table Tennis Federation (ITTF).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180810-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Tour\nThe 2005 Asian Tour was the 11th season of the modern Asian Tour, the main men's professional golf tour in Asia excluding Japan, since it was established in 1995. Thaworn Wiratchant won the Order of Merit, becoming the first player to pass $500,000 earnings in a season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180810-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Tour, Tournament results\nThe number in brackets after each winner's name is the number of Asian Tour events he had won up to and including that tournament. This information is only shown for Asian Tour members.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 35], "content_span": [36, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180810-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Tour, Leading money winners\nThere is a complete list on the official site .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 38], "content_span": [39, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180811-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Weightlifting Championships were held in Dubai in United Arab Emirates between September 23 and October 1, 2005. It was the 37th men's and 18th women's championship. The event was organised by the Asian Weightlifting Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180811-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Weightlifting Championships, Medal table\nRanking by all medals: Big (Total result) and Small (Snatch and Clean & Jerk)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 51], "content_span": [52, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180812-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe 3rd edition of the Women's Asian Amateur Boxing Championships were held from August 5 to August 12, 2005, in Kaohsiung, Chinese Taipei.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180813-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Club Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Women\u2019s Club Volleyball Championship was the 6th staging of the AVC Club Championships. The tournament was held in Ninh B\u00ecnh, Vietnam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180814-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship was the 13th Asian Championship, which took place from September 1 to September 8, 2005 in Taicang, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180814-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2003 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180814-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nChina (Host & 1st)\u00a0Thailand (4th)\u00a0Hong Kong\u00a0North Korea\u00a0Philippines\u00a0Kazakhstan", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180814-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nJapan (2nd)\u00a0South Korea (3rd)\u00a0Chinese Taipei\u00a0Vietnam\u00a0India\u00a0Australia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180815-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Women's Youth Handball Championship (1st tournament) took place in Bangkok from 26 June\u20131 July. It acts as the Asian qualifying tournament for the 2006 Women's Youth World Handball Championship in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180816-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Wrestling Championships\nThe 2005 Asian Wrestling Championships were held in Wuhan, China. The event took place from May 24 to May 29, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180817-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Youth Boys Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Youth Boys Volleyball Championship was held in Azadi Volleyball Hall, Tehran, Iran from 13 to 19 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180817-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Youth Boys Volleyball Championship, Pools composition\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2003 Asian Youth Boys Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180818-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Youth Girls Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Asian Youth Girls Volleyball Championship was held in Mandaue Sports Complex, Mandaue City, Philippines from 24 to 31 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180818-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Asian Youth Girls Volleyball Championship, Teams\nThe teams are seeded based on their final ranking at the 2003 Asian Youth Girls Volleyball Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180819-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards\nThe 2005 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards (simplified Chinese: Astro\u534e\u4e3d\u53f0\u7535\u89c6\u5267\u5927\u59562005; traditional Chinese: Astro\u83ef\u9e97\u81fa\u96fb\u8996\u5287\u5927\u734e2005), presented by Astro in Malaysia, was an awards ceremony that recognises the best Hong Kong television programmes that had aired on Malaysia's Astro Wah Lai Toi in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180819-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards\nThe ceremony took place on 7 January 2006 at the Sunway Pyramid in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It was televised live on Astro's Cantonese channel, Astro Wah Lai Toi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180819-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Astro Wah Lai Toi Drama Awards, Winners and nominees\nWinners are 100% based on popular vote. Top five nominees are in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 57], "content_span": [58, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180820-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Braves season\nThe 2005 Atlanta Braves season marked the franchise's 40th season in Atlanta and the 135th season overall. The Braves won their 11th consecutive division title under Manager of the Year Bobby Cox, finishing 2 games ahead of the second-place Philadelphia Phillies. The Braves lost the 2005 Divisional Series to the Houston Astros, 3 games to 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180820-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Braves season\nTim Hudson joined the Braves' rotation and rookies Jeff Francoeur, Kelly Johnson and Brian McCann had their first seasons with Atlanta in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180820-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Braves season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180820-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Braves season, 2005 National League Division Series, Atlanta Braves vs. Houston Astros\nHouston wins series, 3\u20131. Game 4 was a thrilling series clinching 18 inning victory for Houston, and has been cited by many critics as \"The greatest first round game in MLB history\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 99], "content_span": [100, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180820-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Braves season, Awards and honors\nAndruw Jones and John Smoltz represented the Atlanta Braves in the 2005 All Star Game. Jones hit a home run and Smoltz took the loss in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 45], "content_span": [46, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180821-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Falcons season\nThe 2005 Atlanta Falcons season was the franchise\u2019s 40th in the National Football League (NFL). It began with the team trying to defend their NFC South division title and 11\u20135 record in 2004. The Falcons started 6\u20132, but injuries on defense caused them to finish the second half 2\u20136 to finish the season 8\u20138. Bright spots included the Falcons ending their Monday Night Football jinx by going 3\u20130, and on Thursday, November 24, the Falcons played on Thanksgiving Day for the first time in franchise history with a 27\u20137 victory over the Detroit Lions. On the next-to-last game of the regular season, the Falcons were eliminated from postseason contention with a 27\u201324 overtime loss against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The Falcons failed to improve over their 11\u20135 season, therefore finishing with a .500 record and once again failed to attain back-to-back winning seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 896]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180821-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta Falcons season, Images\nThe Thanksgiving Day game between the Falcons and the Detroit Lions", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180822-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlanta mayoral election\nThe 2005 mayoral election in Atlanta, Georgia took place on November 8, 2005 alongside other Atlanta municipal races. Incumbent Mayor Shirley Franklin faced no serious opposition and was re-elected with 90.49% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180823-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held from May 25\u201328 at Fifth Third Field in Dayton, OH. It featured the top two regular-season finishers of each six-team division, plus the next two best finishers. Top-seeded Rhode Island defeated George Washington in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the Atlantic 10's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180823-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding and format\nThe league's top six teams, based on winning percentage in the 24-game regular season schedule, qualified for the field. The top two teams in each division qualified for the tournament automatically; the two division winners, Rhode Island in the East and George Washington in the West, received the top two seeds and byes through to the second round of the double elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180823-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team\nThe following players were named to the All-Tournament Team. Rhode Island second baseman Wayne Russo, one of four Rams selected, was named Most Outstanding Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180823-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team\nRhode Island's Josh Nestor (2004) and George Washington's Ryan Roberson (2003) were second-time selections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 68], "content_span": [69, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180824-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament was played from March 9 to March 12, 2005, at U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati, Ohio. The winner was named champion of the Atlantic 10 Conference and received an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. George Washington won the tournament. The top two teams in each division received first-round byes. George Washington earned the conference's only bid to the NCAA tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180824-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nAll games played at U.S. Bank Arena in Cincinnati. * - Overtime", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180825-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Championship\nThe 2005 Toyota Atlantic Championship season was contested over 12 rounds. 14 different teams and 27 different drivers competed. In this one-make formula all drivers had to utilize Swift chassis and Toyota engines. This season also saw a C2-class running older Swift chassis and Toyota engines. In C2-class 12 different drivers competed, but none of them for the whole season. The Toyota Atlantic Championship Presented by Yokohama Drivers' Champion was Charles Zwolsman Jr. driving for Condor Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180825-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Championship, Final driver standings\nRace 3, 4, 5 and 6 only one additional point awarded to the fastest qualifier, because only one session was held for each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180825-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Championship, Final driver standings\nIn all races not all points were awarded (not enough competitors).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 50], "content_span": [51, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180826-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, FL from May 25 through May 29. Georgia Tech won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180827-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2005 AHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 2nd Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament. It was played between March 9 and March 19, 2005. Play-in and quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the semifinals and championship games were played at the Quinnipiac home venue: Northford Ice Pavilion in Northford, Connecticut. By winning the tournament, Mercyhurst received the Atlantic Hockey Association's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180827-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured three rounds of play and a play-in game. All games in the tournament are single-elimination. The play-in game consists of the eighth and ninth seeds competing to decide the final qualifier. In the quarterfinals, the first seed plays the winner of the play-in game while the second and seventh seeds, the third and sixth seeds and the fourth and fifth seeds play to determine who advances to the semifinals. of the four remaining teams, the highest and lowest remaining ranked teams play each other with the other two teams facing one another to determine the championship participants. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 56], "content_span": [57, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180827-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 70], "content_span": [71, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180828-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Indoor Football League season\nThe 2005 Atlantic Indoor Football League season was the league's first overall season. The league champions were the Richmond Bandits, who defeated the Erie Freeze in American Bowl I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180829-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Melching Field at Conrad Park on the campus of Stetson University in DeLand, Florida from May 26 through 28. Stetson won its fifth tournament championship to earn the Atlantic Sun Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180829-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament, Seeding\nThe top six teams (based on conference results) from the conference earn invites to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180829-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Tournament Most Valuable Player\nShane Jordan was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Jordan was an outfielder for Stetson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 102], "content_span": [103, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180830-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 3\u20135 at the Curb Event Center at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180830-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nCentral Florida defeated top-seeded Gardner\u2013Webb in the championship game, 63\u201354, to win their fourth (and second consecutive) Atlantic Sun/TAAC men's basketball tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180830-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Golden Knights, therefore, received the Atlantic Sun's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180830-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nWith the Atlantic Sun's membership remaining stable at eleven teams, no changes were made to the tournament format. As such, only the top eight teams from the conference tournament were eligible for the tournament. These eight teams were seeded based on regular season conference records and were all entered into the quarterfinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe 2005 Atlantic hurricane season was the most active Atlantic hurricane season in history, until the record was broken 15 years later. The season broke numerous records at the time, with 28\u00a0tropical or subtropical storms recorded. The United States National Hurricane Center named 27\u00a0storms, exhausting the annual pre-designated list and resulting in the usage of six Greek letter names, and also identified an additional unnamed storm during a post-season re-analysis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season\nA record 15\u00a0storms attained hurricane status, with maximum sustained winds of at least 74\u00a0mph (119\u00a0km/h); of those, a record seven became major hurricanes, which are a Category\u00a03 or higher on the Saffir\u2013Simpson scale. Four storms of this season became Category\u00a05 hurricanes, the highest ranking on the scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe four Category\u00a05 hurricanes that developed during the season were: Emily, Katrina, Rita, and Wilma. In July, Emily reached peak intensity in the Caribbean Sea, becoming the first Category\u00a05 hurricane of the season, later weakening and striking Mexico twice. In August, Katrina reached peak winds in the Gulf of Mexico but weakened by the time it struck the U.S. states of Louisiana and Mississippi. The most devastating effects of the season were felt on the Gulf Coast of the United States, where Katrina's storm surge crippled New Orleans, Louisiana, for weeks and devastated the Mississippi coastline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season\nKatrina became the costliest U.S. hurricane, leaving $125\u00a0billion in damage and 1,833\u00a0deaths. Rita followed in September, reaching peak intensity in the Gulf of Mexico before weakening and hitting near the border of Texas and Louisiana. The season's strongest hurricane, Wilma, became the most intense Atlantic hurricane on record, as measured by barometric pressure. Lasting for ten days in October, Wilma moved over Cozumel, the Yucat\u00e1n peninsula, and Florida, causing $19\u00a0billion in damage and 48\u00a0deaths.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season\nThe season's impact was widespread and catastrophic. Its storms caused an estimated 3,912\u00a0deaths and approximately $171.7\u00a0billion in damage. It was the costliest season on record at the time, until its record was surpassed 12 years later. It also produced the second-highest accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) in the Atlantic basin, surpassed only by the 1933 season. The season officially began on June\u00a01, 2005, and the first storm \u2013 Arlene \u2013 developed on June\u00a08. Hurricane Dennis in July inflicted heavy damage to Cuba. Hurricane Stan in October was part of a broader weather system that killed 1,668\u00a0people and caused $3.96\u00a0billion in damage to eastern Mexico and Central America, with Guatemala hit the hardest. The final storm \u2013 Zeta \u2013 formed in late December and lasted until January\u00a06, 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts\nAhead of the formal start of the season, various groups issued forecasts for the number of named storms, hurricanes, and major hurricanes in the upcoming season, including Colorado State University (CSU), the Cuban Institute of Meteorology (InsMet), Tropical Storm Risk (TSR), and the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Some forecasts predicted how many tropical cyclones would affect a particular country or territory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nThe first of these forecasts was issued by CSU, which predicted on December\u00a05, 2004 that the season would be above average and feature 11\u00a0named storms, 6\u00a0hurricanes and 3\u00a0intense hurricanes. They also noted that the Caribbean and the entire United States coastline faced an increased risk of a major hurricane making landfall. TSR issued its first forecast a few days later and predicted that the season would feature 9.6\u00a0tropical storms, 5.7\u00a0hurricanes, 3.3\u00a0major hurricanes, and predicted that the accumulated cyclone energy (ACE) rating would be 145.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nDuring January 2005, TSR increased its forecast to 13.9\u00a0tropical storms, 7.8\u00a0hurricanes, 3.6\u00a0major hurricanes, and predicted that the ACE rating would be 157. CSU issued its first updated forecast on April\u00a01, increasing their prediction to 13\u00a0tropical storms, 7\u00a0hurricanes, and 3\u00a0major hurricanes, with a continued risk of a major hurricane landfall in the Caribbean or United States. The increase was based on the Atlantic continuing to warm and a strong belief that El Ni\u00f1o conditions would not persist into the hurricane season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Pre-season forecasts\nOn May\u00a02, the Cuban Institute of Meteorology (InsMet) issued their seasonal forecast, which predicted that the season would feature 13\u00a0tropical storms and 7\u00a0hurricanes. This was followed on May\u00a016 by NOAA, who predicted a 70% chance of above normal activity, with 12\u201315 tropical storms, 7\u20139 hurricanes, and 3\u20135 major hurricanes. CSU issued its second forecast update on May\u00a031, revising its forecast to 15\u00a0named storms, 8\u00a0hurricanes and 4\u00a0major hurricanes; by this point, the group believed El Ni\u00f1o conditions were unlikely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 72], "content_span": [73, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Midseason outlooks\nIn their July forecast update, TSR anticipated that the season would be exceptionally active and well above average; the group increased their forecast to 15.3\u00a0tropical storms, 8.8\u00a0hurricanes, and 4.1\u00a0major hurricanes, with an ACE rating of 190. By the end of July, seven tropical storms and two major hurricanes had developed within the basin, which prompted CSU, InsMet, NOAA and TSR to significantly increase their seasonal forecasts at the start of August. In their August\u00a05 update, CSU predicted that 13\u00a0more storms would form, with seven more hurricanes and three more major hurricanes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal forecasts, Midseason outlooks\nAt the start of September, CSU updated their forecasts and predicted that eight more storms would form, with six more hurricanes and three major hurricanes. By the end of September, 17\u00a0named storms had developed, of which nine had developed into hurricanes and four had become major hurricanes. Within their final update for the year, CSU predicted that October would feature three named storms, two hurricanes and one major hurricane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe 2005 Atlantic hurricane season is second only to the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season as the most active Atlantic hurricane season on record. The 28 nameable storms (27\u00a0named storms and one unnamed subtropical storm) set the record for most storms, surpassing the total of 20 from 1933. A total of 7\u00a0named storms formed before August\u00a01, which exceeded the record of 5\u00a0set in 1997 and was later beaten in 2020. The fourth named storm developed at a then-record early date that was later surpassed in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe fifth though eleventh and the thirteenth and onward named storms developed at then-record early dates that were later surpassed in 2020. Further, the months of July and November set records for number of named storms, with 5 and 3, respectively. The 2005 season featured 15\u00a0hurricanes, surpassing the previous record of 12, set in 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nOf the 15\u00a0hurricanes, 5\u00a0formed in September, with the season becoming only the sixth to feature 5 in that month. The 2005 season also featured a record seven major hurricanes, one more than the previous record, set in 1926, 1933, 1950, 1996, and 2004. The four Category\u00a05 hurricanes were also a record. The season's activity was reflected with an ACE rating of 250, the second-highest value on record in the Atlantic basin, after the 1933 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe extremely active 2005 hurricane season was a continuation of an extended sequence of active years for tropical activity in the Atlantic. Tropical cyclone activity in the Atlantic Ocean between 1995 and 2004 was more active than any other decade in reliable record. With the exception of two years in which El Ni\u00f1o conditions were prevalent (1997 and 2002), all hurricane seasons were individually above average. This was associated with an active phase of the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation (AMO), with a similar period of elevated tropical activity occurring between 1950 and 1969.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary\nThe anomalously frequent formation of tropical storms and hurricanes reflected the emergence of unusually warm sea surface temperatures across the tropical Atlantic. The Climate Prediction Center (CPC) predicted in May\u00a02005 that the conditions associated with this active multi-decadal signal would continue into the 2005 hurricane season, providing favorable conditions for tropical cyclogenesis in the tropical Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nChylek and Lesins (2008) determined that the likelihood of a season generating as much tropical activity as 2005 was less than 1\u00a0percent. The consecutive occurrence of hurricane seasons as active as 2004 and 2005 in the Atlantic was unprecedented. While environmental conditions favorable for the development of tropical cyclones were analogous to other active seasons, they were more pronounced and encompassed larger areas in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0010-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nThe CPC determined that this environmental enhancement was primarily driven by four factors: the Atlantic multidecadal oscillation, the reduction of atmospheric convection in the tropical Pacific, record-high sea surface temperatures in the tropical Atlantic and Caribbean, and conducive wind and pressure patterns across the western Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. The multidecadal oscillation increased the potency of conducive environmental factors for tropical development, including the increased strength of subtropical ridges in the northern and southern Atlantic and the eastern Pacific.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0010-0002", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nThis amplified the African easterly jet and enhanced upper-level easterlies, attenuating wind shear detrimental to tropical cyclogenesis across the central tropical Atlantic and the Caribbean. Frequent lulls in convection over the tropical Pacific also contributed to the strength of these ridges, focusing hurricane activity in the Atlantic. Most of the tropical storms and all major hurricanes in the Atlantic in 2005 formed when a lack of convection was present near the International Dateline, while a brief uptick in storms near the International Dateline led to a lull in tropical cyclogenesis in the Atlantic for the first half of August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nThe Gulf of Mexico saw record levels of tropical activity in 2005, with 11\u00a0named storms entering the basin. The unusual activity was attributed to a persistent high pressure area over the Southeastern United States, the northeastward displacement and amplification of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) over the eastern Pacific, and above average sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico. These factors reduced vertical wind shear and favored cyclonic flow, creating an environment highly supportive of tropical development. The high pressure area also steered incoming storms into the Gulf of Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 680]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nIn addition, the El Ni\u00f1o\u2013Southern Oscillation (ENSO) was in a neutral phase, lowering the likelihood of storms making landfall on the East Coast of the United States and leading to a concentration of impacts farther west. This focusing mechanism led to a complementary reduction in storms developing close to Cape Verde. During the peak of the 2005 season, the Loop Current\u00a0\u2013 an ocean current that transports warm water from the Caribbean Sea northward into the Gulf of Mexico and offshore the U.S. East Coast\u00a0\u2013 propagated northward, reaching its most poleward point in advance of Hurricane Katrina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0011-0002", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nThis protrusion detached into a warm core ring, or a small region of warm waters to an abnormally deep depth, and began to drift southwest as Hurricane Rita traversed the region. By mid-October, the Loop Current returned to its typical position in the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula. This evolution provided enhanced ocean heat content to both hurricanes and was partially responsible for the extreme intensities attained by those cyclones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nIn addition to the unusually high amount of tropical activity, the 2005\u00a0season also featured an abnormally high amount of storms in the typically inactive early and latter parts of the season. Lowered sea-level atmospheric pressures in the late spring and early summer of 2005 curtailed the strength of trade winds, resulting in a reduction of latent heat loss from the tropical Atlantic and Caribbean. This allowed the persistence of the anomalously warm sea surface temperatures that had contributed to the active 2004 hurricane season; this warmth remained until November\u00a02005. The activity in later parts of the 2005\u00a0season was elevated by the unusual development of four tropical cyclones from non-tropical origins over the eastern Atlantic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 812]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nIn the wake of the season, questions arose regarding the potential impact of global warming on Atlantic hurricane activity. Hurricane experts noted that establishing a conclusive relationship would be difficult given the significant role that natural variability plays on hurricane formation and significantly improved tropical cyclone detection methods compared to decades past. A series of international workshops were established after 2005. After five years of analysis, researchers were unable to confirm whether the recent increase in tropical cyclone activity could be attributed more to climate change than natural variability.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nModels developed within the workshops projected that the number of tropical cyclones under Category\u00a03 intensity would fall over the 21st century, while the number of intense Category\u00a04\u20135 hurricanes would increase significantly. One potential hypothesis for these findings was a projected increase in vertical wind shear contradicted by warmer ocean temperatures for hurricanes to utilize. The team also concluded that the amount of precipitation produced by tropical cyclones would increase over the next century.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0013-0002", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Record activity\nIn May\u00a02020, researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the University of Wisconsin at Madison built upon this research and, for the first time, established a statistically significant global trend toward more intense tropical cyclones, particularly in the Atlantic basin. The research not only reaffirmed a trend toward stronger, wetter tropical cyclones, but it also identified a trend toward increased rapid intensification events and a general slowing of tropical cyclones' forward motion near land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Impacts\nThe storms of the season were extraordinarily damaging and were responsible for significant loss of life. Total damage is estimated to be about US$171.7\u00a0billion, and the seasons' storms contributed to the deaths of 3,912\u00a0people. There were a record 15\u00a0storms making landfall, including seven storms that struck the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Impacts\nThe hardest-hit area was the United States Gulf Coast from eastern Texas to Florida, affected to varying degrees by Arlene, Cindy, Dennis, Katrina, Ophelia, Rita, Tammy, and Wilma. Dennis left $2.23\u00a0billion in damage along the Florida Panhandle. Katrina caused catastrophic damage to the Gulf Coast, devastating a long stretch of coast along Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama with a 30-foot (9\u00a0m) storm surge. Wind damage was reported well inland, slowing down recovery efforts. Storm surge also breached levees in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, flooding about 80% of the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0015-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Impacts\nTotal damage has been estimated at $125\u00a0billion, making Katrina the costliest hurricane in U.S. history, surpassing Andrew in 1992 and tying Harvey in 2017. At least 1,836\u00a0people were killed by the storm, making it the deadliest hurricane in the U.S. since 1928. Southeastern North Carolina suffered some damage from the slow-moving Ophelia. Rita struck near the border of Louisiana and Texas. The hurricane re-flooded New Orleans (though to a far less degree than Katrina), and caused about $18.5\u00a0billion in damage. Wilma caused about $19\u00a0billion in damage when it moved across southern Florida in October. The hurricane contributed to 30\u00a0deaths, five of whom were killed directly by the storm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Impacts\nThree hurricanes struck Mexico \u2013 Emily, Stan, and Wilma. Emily struck Quintana Roo and Tamaulipas as a major hurricane, causing US$343\u00a0million ($3.4\u00a0billion MXN) in damage. Stan killed 80\u00a0people in Mexico, and damage in the county was estimated at US$1.2\u00a0billion ($13.2\u00a0billion MXN). Stan was part of a broader weather system across Central America that killed 1,513\u00a0people in Guatemala, where damage was estimated at US$996\u00a0million. Wilma dropped historic rainfall while drifting across the Yucat\u00e1n peninsula. It killed four people in the country and left US$454\u00a0million ($4.8\u00a0billion MXN) in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Impacts\nIn the Caribbean, Cuba suffered the effects of Dennis and Wilma. The former killed 16\u00a0people and left US$1.4\u00a0billion in damage when it struck Cuba twice. Later, Wilma flooded parts of western Cuba, leaving US$704\u00a0million in damage. The island of Hispaniola experienced Dennis in July, which killed 56\u00a0people in Haiti. Emily killed one person and left US$111\u00a0million in damage when it struck Grenada, and later it killed five people on Jamaica. Collectively, Dennis and Emily caused about US$96\u00a0million (J$6\u00a0billion) in damage to Jamaica. Wilma killed 12\u00a0people in Haiti and one in Jamaica. Alpha killed 26\u00a0people in the Caribbean. In Central America, Beta killed nine people and caused US$11.5\u00a0million in damage when it struck Nicaragua in October. In November, Tropical Storm Gamma killed two people in Bequia in the Grenadines, 34\u00a0people in Honduras, and 3 in Belize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 927]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Seasonal summary, Impacts\nUnusual impacts were felt in Europe and nearby islands. The remnants of Maria caused a landslide in Norway that killed three people. The unnamed subtropical storm in October moved through the Azores. Also in October, Vince became the first recorded tropical cyclone to strike Spain, making landfall at tropical depression intensity. In November, the extratropical remnants of Delta struck the Canary Islands, causing 7 fatalities, with 12\u00a0people missing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Arlene\nThe season's first tropical depression developed north of Honduras on June\u00a08 from the interaction of the ITCZ and a series of tropical waves. A day later it intensified into Tropical Storm Arlene while taking a northward track. On June\u00a010, Arlene struck western Cuba. The storm intensified further in the eastern Gulf of Mexico, reaching winds of 70\u00a0mph (110\u00a0km/h) early on June\u00a011. Later that day, the storm moved ashore just west of Pensacola, Florida. Over the next two days, Arlene continued northward through the United States, dissipating over southeastern Canada on June\u00a014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Arlene\nIn western Cuba, Arlene produced wind gusts of 49\u00a0mph (79\u00a0km/h) at Punta del Este and 6.81\u00a0in (173\u00a0mm) of rainfall in the city of Pinar del R\u00edo. Arlene left mostly minor damage throughout the United States, estimated at $11.8\u00a0million. Storm surge damaged coastal roads in the Florida Panhandle and Alabama. In Miami Beach, Florida, a student died when she was caught in a rip current. Rainfall in the United States peaked at 9.84\u00a0in (250\u00a0mm) in Lake Toxaway, North Carolina. The remnants of Arlene dropped approximately 6 to 7\u00a0in (150 to 180\u00a0mm) of rainfall in Warren County, New York, in just two hours, washing out several roadways and flooding numerous homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bret\nBetween June\u00a024 and June\u00a027, a tropical wave and weak low-pressure area moved in tandem across Central America and eastern Mexico. The system reached the Bay of Campeche early on June\u00a028 and quickly organized into a tropical depression that day around 18:00\u00a0UTC. Six hours later, at 00:00\u00a0UTC on June\u00a029, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Bret and peaked with sustained winds of 40\u00a0mph (65\u00a0km/h). Bret moved ashore northeastern Mexico near Tuxpan, Veracruz, around 12:00\u00a0UTC, dissipating early on June\u00a030 over San Luis Potos\u00ed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Bret\nThe cyclone dropped heavy rainfall, reaching at least 10.47\u00a0in (266\u00a0mm) in El Raudal, Veracruz. One person drowned in Cerro Azul, while another death occurred in Naranjos due to cardiac arrest. The floods forced the evacuation of approximately 2,800\u00a0people, damaged around 3,000\u00a0houses, isolated 66\u00a0villages, and caused about $100\u00a0million (MXN, US$9.2\u00a0million) in damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Cindy\nA tropical depression formed on July\u00a03 in the western Caribbean Sea from a tropical wave that moved off Africa nine days prior. The depression crossed the Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula and dropped rainfall, reaching 2.8\u00a0in (71\u00a0mm) in Canc\u00fan. The system entered the Gulf of Mexico, strengthening into Tropical Storm Cindy early on July\u00a05. Cindy intensified further into a minimal hurricane early on July\u00a06, with peak winds of 75\u00a0mph (120\u00a0km/h). The hurricane struck southeastern Louisiana and later southern Mississippi. Cindy continued across the southeastern United States and transitioned into an extratropical cyclone on July\u00a07 over The Carolinas; it eventually dissipated over the Gulf of St. Lawrence on July\u00a012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 762]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Cindy\nAcross the United States, the hurricane caused $320\u00a0million in damage and three fatalities \u2013 one in Georgia from flooding, and two in Maryland from a car crash. Across Louisiana, the hurricane left 280,000\u00a0people without power. Rainfall in the United States peaked at 9.50\u00a0in (241\u00a0mm) in Saint Bernard, Louisiana. Cindy spawned a large tornado outbreak, including an F2 tornado near Hampton, Georgia, that caused over $40\u00a0million in damage at the Atlanta Motor Speedway alone. The same tornado inflicted severe damage to 11\u00a0planes and 5\u00a0vintage helicopters at Tara Field and impacted hundreds of homes to some degree.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dennis\nA tropical wave led to the development of Tropical Depression Four in the southeastern Caribbean late on July\u00a04 and further strengthened into Tropical Storm Dennis early the next day. The storm moved west-northwestward, strengthening into a hurricane on July\u00a06 to the south of Hispaniola. On the next day, Dennis rapidly intensified into a Category\u00a04 hurricane while moving between Jamaica and Haiti. Early on July\u00a08, the hurricane briefly moved over Granma Province in southeastern Cuba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0025-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dennis\nAfter briefly weakening, Dennis restrengthened to attain peak winds of 150\u00a0mph (240\u00a0km/h) in the Gulf of Guacanayabo, making it the strongest Atlantic hurricane before August; its record was broken eight days later by Hurricane Emily. Later on July\u00a08, Dennis moved ashore again in Matanzas Province. The hurricane crossed Cuba entered the Gulf of Mexico on July\u00a09 as a weakened hurricane. Dennis re-intensified to a secondary peak of 145\u00a0mph (230\u00a0km/h) on July\u00a010, only to weaken prior to its final landfall later that day near Pensacola, Florida. Dennis weakened and moved through the southeastern United States, the Ohio Valley, and eventually dissipating on July\u00a018 over Ontario.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Dennis\nThe outer rainbands of Dennis produced widespread flooding and landslides in Haiti, killing at least 56\u00a0people and leaving US$50\u00a0million in damage. Dennis brought torrential rain to Jamaica, reaching 24.54\u00a0in (623\u00a0mm) in Mavis Bank. One person died in Jamaica, and damage was estimated at US$31.7\u00a0million. The storm's heaviest rainfall occurred in Cuba, reaching 43.0\u00a0in (1,092\u00a0mm), making Dennis the wettest storm for the island since Hurricane Flora of 1963. Across the island, Dennis killed 16\u00a0people, and left US$1.4\u00a0billion in damage, affecting agriculture, tourist areas, infrastructure, and houses. Dennis moved ashore Florida near where Hurricane Ivan struck ten months prior. Damage from Dennis in the United States totaled $2.545\u00a0billion, and there were 15\u00a0deaths in the country, all but one in Florida. Rainfall in the United States reached 12.80\u00a0in (325\u00a0mm) near Camden, Alabama.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 949]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Emily\nOn July\u00a011, a tropical wave spawned a tropical depression east of the Lesser Antilles which quickly intensified into Tropical Storm Emily. Moving westward, Emily strengthened into a minimal hurricane and struck Grenada at that intensity on July\u00a014. Continuing across the Caribbean Sea, Emily eventually strengthened into a Category\u00a05 hurricane on July\u00a016 to the southwest of Jamaica, reaching peak winds of 160\u00a0mph (260\u00a0km/h). Emily broke the record set by Dennis for the strongest Atlantic hurricane before August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0027-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Emily\nEmily weakened after its peak intensity, striking the northeastern Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula on July\u00a018 with winds of 135\u00a0mph (185\u00a0km/h). Emily emerged into the Gulf of Mexico and restrengthened, making another landfall in Mexico on July\u00a018 in Tamaulipas with winds of 125\u00a0mph (205\u00a0km/h). A day later, Emily dissipated over land. Emily was the earliest 5th named storm before being surpassed by Tropical Storm Edouard in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Emily\nIn Grenada, Emily killed one person and caused US$111\u00a0million in damage, with thousands of roofs damaged. The hurricane's large circulation also damaged houses in other nearby islands. Heavy rainfall from Emily affected Haiti, killing five people. In Jamaica, Emily produced 15.43\u00a0in (392\u00a0mm) of rainfall; associated flooding killed five people on the island. Collectively, Emily and earlier Hurricane Dennis left about US$96\u00a0million (J$6\u00a0billion) in damage to Jamaica. In Honduras, a man drowned in a river swollen by rains from Emily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0028-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Emily\nDamage was heaviest where Emily made its two landfalls in Mexico, with damage in the country estimated at US$343\u00a0million ($3.4\u00a0billion MXN). Two helicopter pilots were killed when their aircraft crashed while evacuating offshore oil platforms operated by Pemex. A man in Playa del Carmen was electrocuted to death while preparing for the hurricane. The outskirts of Emily dropped heavy rainfall in southern Texas, damaging about $4.7\u00a0million worth of cotton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Franklin\nTropical Depression Six formed northeast of the Bahamas on July\u00a021, originating from a tropical wave that exited the coast of Africa on July\u00a010. The depression quickly intensified into Tropical Storm Franklin, but wind shear disrupted the storm's initial development. As the storm moved to the north and northeast, it intensified; on July\u00a023, Franklin attained peak winds of 70\u00a0mph (110\u00a0km/h). Three days later the storm passed west of Bermuda. An approaching trough turned Franklin to the northwest and weakened Franklin to a minimal tropical storm. Franklin restrengthened slightly as it accelerated northeastward. On July\u00a030, the storm transitioned into an extratropical cyclone south of Nova Scotia, and a day later it was absorbed by a larger extratropical storm near Newfoundland. Franklin held the record for the earliest sixth named storm until it was broken by Tropical Storm Fay in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 962]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Franklin\nOn July\u00a026, Bermuda recorded wind gusts of 37\u00a0mph (59\u00a0km/h) while the storm made its closest approach. The storm brought light rainfall to Newfoundland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gert\nA tropical wave, the same that spawned Tropical Storm Franklin, moved off Africa on July\u00a010. It tracked west-northwest into the Bay of Campeche on July\u00a023, where it contributed to the development of a tropical depression later that day. As convection increased near the center, the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Gert early on July\u00a024. The cyclone did not persist long over water, instead moving ashore north of Cabo Rojo, Mexico, with 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h) winds early on July\u00a025.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0031-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gert\nIt continued inland, affecting the same areas impacted by Hurricane Emily just days prior, and quickly dissipated over high terrain at the end of that day. Gert dropped heavy rainfall, reaching 8.46\u00a0in (214.9\u00a0mm) in San Luis Potos\u00ed. Gert caused about US$6\u00a0million ($60\u00a0million 2005 MXN) in damage, and resulted in one fatality in Nuevo Le\u00f3n. Gert was the earliest seventh named storm until it was surpassed by Tropical Storm Gonzalo in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Harvey\nTropical Depression Eight formed on August\u00a02 southwest of Bermuda from a tropical wave that left the African coast on July\u00a022. The depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Harvey on August\u00a03 while moving northeastward. Due to strong wind shear, Harvey initially exhibited subtropical characteristics. On August\u00a04, Harvey passed 45\u00a0miles (75\u00a0km) south of Bermuda. After moving away from the island, Harvey attained peak winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h) late on August\u00a04 and continued northeastward for a few days, transitioning into an extratropical storm on August\u00a09. The storm gradually weakened and eventually dissipated northwest of the Azores on August\u00a014. Harvey was the earliest eighth named storm on record before being surpassed by Hurricane Hanna during the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 858]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Harvey\nOn Bermuda, Harvey dropped 5.02\u00a0in (128\u00a0mm) of rainfall at Bermuda International Airport, flooding some roads. Sustained winds on the island reached 45\u00a0mph (75\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Irene\nA high-latitude tropical wave led to the genesis of Tropical Depression Nine west of Cabo Verde on August\u00a04. It moved to the northwest without much initial development. On August\u00a07, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Irene, only to weaken into a tropical depression again the next day. Irene turned to the west, and later resumed its northwest track. It re-intensified into a tropical storm on August\u00a011. On August\u00a015, the storm turned to the north, passing between Bermuda and North Carolina. On the next day, it strengthened into a hurricane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0034-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Irene\nIrene intensified further after turning to the northeast and later east. Late on August\u00a016, the cyclone attained peak winds of 105\u00a0mph (165\u00a0km/h). An approaching trough weakened Irene and caused it to accelerate northeastward. On August\u00a018, Irene weakened into a tropical storm, and later that day was absorbed by a larger extratropical storm to the southeast of Newfoundland. Rip currents near Long Beach, New York killed a 16-year-old boy. Irene was the earliest ninth named storm on record before being surpassed by Hurricane Isaias in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Ten\nTropical Depression Ten formed between the Lesser Antilles and Cabo Verde on August\u00a013 from a tropical wave that entered the Atlantic five days earlier. The depression moved slowly westward in an environment of strong vertical shear. Some weather models predicted relaxing shear and intensification of the system; however, the hostile conditions ripped the system apart, causing the depression to degenerate into a remnant low, and the NHC discontinued advisories on August\u00a014, when no organized deep convection remained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0035-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Ten\nThe remnants of Tropical Depression Ten continued drifting northwestward, before degenerating further into a tropical wave north of the Leeward Islands, on August\u00a018. Soon afterward, the low-level and mid-level circulations split, with the mid-level circulation lagging behind to the east. The remnant low-level circulation continued westward, before dissipating near Cuba on August\u00a021. Producing occasional bursts of convection, the mid-level remnant circulation eventually merged with another tropical wave approaching from the east, on August\u00a019. This new system would become Tropical Depression Twelve over the Bahamas and, eventually, Hurricane Katrina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 64], "content_span": [65, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Jose\nA tropical wave, plausibly the same that spawned Tropical Depression Ten nine days earlier, led to the formation of Tropical Depression Eleven over the Bay of Campeche on August\u00a022. The depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Jose later that day and achieved a maximum strength of 60\u00a0mph (95\u00a0km/h). Jose made landfall in the Mexican state of Veracruz near the Laguna Verde Nuclear Power Station on August\u00a023. The cyclone became more organized two hours before making landfall and was forming an eye, but its winds remained under hurricane strength. Jose rapidly weakened and soon dissipated as it moved inland over Mexico. Jose was the earliest 10th named storm until surpassed by Tropical Storm Josephine in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Jose\nWhile drenching Mexico's Gulf coast, Jose forced some 25,000\u00a0residents from their homes in Veracruz state and damaged at least 16,000\u00a0homes in the state. Jose killed 11\u00a0people in Veracruz and 5 in Oaxaca. Damage in Mexico totaled roughly $45\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Katrina\nA tropical depression developed on August\u00a023 from the complex interaction of a tropical wave, the mid-level remnants of Tropical Depression Ten, and a nearby upper-level trough. The depression became a tropical storm on August\u00a024 and a hurricane on August\u00a025, making landfall as a Category\u00a01 hurricane in southeastern Florida. Katrina imparted about $500\u00a0million in crop and infrastructure damage to the state. The hurricane quickly crossed Florida and emerged into the Gulf of Mexico. Katrina rapidly intensified to Category\u00a05 status early on August\u00a028, becoming the seventh most intense Atlantic hurricane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0038-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Katrina\nTurning northward, the hurricane weakened as it approached the northern Gulf Coast. On August\u00a029 at 11:10\u00a0UTC, Katrina made landfall in southeastern Louisiana as a Category\u00a03 hurricane, with 125\u00a0mph (200\u00a0km/h) winds, and a barometric pressure of 920\u00a0mbar (27\u00a0inHg); it was the third lowest pressure for a landfalling United States hurricane at the time, and fourth as of 2018. Katrina then crossed the Breton Sound, making a third and final landfall with 120\u00a0mph (190\u00a0km/h) winds near Pearlington, Mississippi. The cyclone quickly weakened after moving inland and became extratropical over Kentucky on August\u00a030.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Katrina\nOn August\u00a027, the New Orleans National Weather Service issued an urgent weather bulletin describing potentially catastrophic impacts, comparing Katrina to Hurricane Camille of 1969. A day later, New Orleans mayor Ray Nagin issued the city's first-ever mandatory evacuation. About 80% of the city and 83% of neighboring Jefferson Parish evacuated ahead of the storm. The hurricane left catastrophic damage across southern Louisiana, with more than 300,000\u00a0houses damaged or destroyed; most of these were in Orleans Parish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0039-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Katrina\nIn New Orleans, storm surge breached the levees along the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and 17th Street and London Avenue Canals, flooding about 80% of the city. Portions of the city remained underwater for 43\u00a0days. The Mississippi and Alabama coastlines also suffered catastrophic damage from the storm's 30\u00a0ft (9\u00a0m) storm surge, with very few structures remaining on the coast of the former. Across the region, the hurricane flooded and ruined about 350,000\u00a0vehicles. About 2.4\u00a0million people lost access to clean drinking water. Katrina also spawned an outbreak of 62\u00a0tornadoes across the eight states in the eastern United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 690]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Katrina\nHurricane Katrina imparted catastrophic damage in portions of Louisiana and Mississippi, with overall damage estimated at $173\u00a0billion; this makes Katrina the costliest natural disaster in U.S. history. Throughout the United States, Katrina killed 1,836\u00a0people, making it one of the deadliest hurricanes in the United States, and the deadliest American hurricane since 1928. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) managed the aftermath of the hurricane, and faced criticism for its response time, lack of coordination with state agencies, supply shortages, and insufficient housing for federal workers. Tens of thousands of people lost their jobs following the hurricane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0040-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Katrina\nResidents across the New Orleans area suffered health effects, including rashes and respiratory problems, from polluted water and air following the hurricane. Katrina forced about 800,000\u00a0people to move temporarily, which was the greatest number of displaced people in the country since the Dust Bowl. The United States federal government spent $110.6\u00a0billion in relief, recovery and rebuilding efforts, including $16\u00a0billion toward rebuilding houses, which was the nation's largest ever housing recovery project. Within a year of the storm, most of the levees were largely repaired. Various countries and international agencies sent supplies or financial aid to assist in the hurricane response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 755]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lee\nA tropical wave moved off the coast of Africa on August\u00a024. It developed into Tropical Depression Thirteen on August\u00a028 while 960\u00a0miles (1550\u00a0km) east of the Lesser Antilles. Strong wind shear prevented much organization, and the depression degenerated into a low pressure area late on August\u00a029. The remnants moved to the north and northeast, steered by a larger non-tropical system to the north. The convection increased on August\u00a031; that day the system regenerated into a tropical depression, which strengthened further into Tropical Storm Lee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0041-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Lee\nThe storm attained peak winds of 40\u00a0mph (65\u00a0km/h) while located between Bermuda and the Azores. After 12\u00a0hours as a tropical storm, Lee weakened back to a tropical depression as it turned to the northwest, steered by the larger non-tropical storm. On September\u00a02, the depression degenerated into a remnant low, which was absorbed by a cold front two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0042-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Maria\nA strong tropical wave entered the eastern Atlantic on August\u00a027. The broad disturbance was initially hindered by strong wind shear but eventually organized into a tropical depression about halfway between the Leeward Islands and Cabo Verde early on September\u00a01. The tropical cyclone moved northwest and steadily organized as upper-level winds became more conducive. It strengthened into Tropical Storm Maria on September\u00a02 and eventually became the fifth hurricane of the season early on September\u00a04. As the cyclone developed a well-defined eye, Maria reached peak winds of 115\u00a0mph (185\u00a0km/h), Category\u00a03 strength, early on September\u00a06.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0042-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Maria\nAround the time of its peak, Maria turned to the north and northeast, moving around the subtropical ridge as it gradually weakened. Maria fell to tropical storm intensity on September\u00a09 and became extratropical a day later between Newfoundland and the Azores. The former hurricane re-intensified over the northern Atlantic Ocean, only to weaken before passing near southern Iceland. On September\u00a014, the extratropical storm that was once Maria merged with another extratropical storm while approaching Norway. The remnants of Maria brought heavy rainfall to Norway, triggering a landslide in Bergen that killed three people and injured seven others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0043-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Nate\nA tropical wave left Africa on August\u00a030 and moved into the southwestern Atlantic, where subsequent interaction with an upper-level low led to the genesis of a tropical depression south-southwest of Bermuda on September\u00a05. This depression quickly intensified into Tropical Storm Nate, which moved slowly northeastward. On September\u00a07, Nate intensified into the sixth hurricane of the season. A day later, the hurricane passed southeast of Bermuda, where it produced wind gusts of 50\u00a0mph (80\u00a0km/h). Early on September\u00a09, Nate attained peak winds of 90\u00a0mph (150\u00a0km/h) as it accelerated northeastward ahead of a trough. The same trough created unfavorable conditions, causing Nate to weaken quickly back to tropical storm status. On September\u00a010, Nate transitioned into an extratropical storm which was absorbed by a larger extratropical storm near the Azores on September\u00a013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 929]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0044-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Nate\nCanadian Navy ships headed to the U.S. Gulf Coast to help in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina were slowed down trying to avoid Nate and Ophelia. Rip currents caused by hurricanes Nate and Maria killed one person in New Jersey, and severely injured another person.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0045-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ophelia\nThe interplay of a cold front and a trough led to the development of Tropical Depression Sixteen over the northern Bahamas on September\u00a06. The depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Ophelia on September\u00a07 and briefly into a hurricane on September\u00a09 while stalled off the east coast of Florida. Ophelia fluctuated between hurricane and tropical storm intensity for the next week as it meandered off the southeastern United States. Twice it attained peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (140\u00a0km/h). On September\u00a014, the northern eyewall moved over the North Carolina coast from Wilmington to Morehead City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0045-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ophelia\nAfter moving away from the state, Ophelia weakened to tropical storm status for a fourth and final time due to stronger wind shear and dry air. The storm accelerated northeastward and passed southeast of Cape Cod. Ophelia transitioned into an extratropical storm on September\u00a018 and subsequently crossed Nova Scotia and Newfoundland, eventually dissipating on September\u00a023 north of the Scandinavian Peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0046-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Ophelia\nOphelia caused significant coastal erosion from the churning waves. The hurricane caused extensive damage in the Outer Banks and around Cape Fear. Damage in the United States was estimated at $70\u00a0million. The storm's remnants produced strong winds and heavy rain over Atlantic Canada. Ophelia killed three people \u2013 a drowning in Florida from high surf, a traffic fatality in North Carolina, and a death from a fall in Nova Scotia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0047-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Philippe\nOn September\u00a017, Tropical Depression Seventeen formed from a tropical wave about 350\u00a0miles (560\u00a0km) east of Barbados. It quickly intensified into Tropical Storm Philippe while taking a track to the north-northwest. Early on September\u00a019, Philippe attained hurricane status and reached peak winds of 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h) a day later. Wind shear from an upper-level low caused the hurricane to weaken back to a tropical storm, exposing the center from the convection.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0047-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Philippe\nOn September\u00a021, Philippe accelerated to the north and began moving around the upper-level low, which had extended to the surface and developed into a non-tropical cyclone. The storm briefly threatened Bermuda as it turned to the northwest and began a counterclockwise loop. On September\u00a023, Philippe weakened to a tropical depression and later a remnant low; it was absorbed by the larger non-tropical cyclone a day later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0048-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Philippe\nPhilippe brought gusty winds and moisture to Bermuda, with 0.15\u00a0inches (3.8\u00a0mm) of precipitation reported on September\u00a023. The circulation that absorbed Philippe dropped light rainfall on the island, and was responsible for the lowest barometric pressure during the month. When Philippe formed in September 17, Philippe became the earliest 16th named storm on record until the record was shattered by 2020's Hurricane Paulette by 10 days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 59], "content_span": [60, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0049-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Rita\nIn mid-September, the southern extent of a stationary front devolved into a trough north of the Leeward Islands. A tropical wave interacted with this feature to form a tropical depression near the Turks and Caicos Islands on September\u00a018. It organized into Tropical Storm Rita later that day. Moving to the west-northwest, the storm's intensification attenuated over the Bahamas before resuming thereafter, becoming a hurricane on September\u00a020 between Cuba and Florida. Rapid intensification ensued as Rita moved into the Gulf of Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0049-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Rita\nLate on September\u00a021, Rita strengthened into a Category\u00a05 hurricane, and the next day it attained peak winds of 180\u00a0mph (285\u00a0km/h). Its minimum pressure of 895\u00a0mbar (hPa; 26.43\u00a0inHg) was the lowest of any storm in the Gulf of Mexico on record. The hurricane weakened as it approached the northwest Gulf Coast. On September\u00a024, Rita made landfall near the Texas\u2013Louisiana border with sustained winds of 115\u00a0mph (185\u00a0km/h). It rapidly weakened over land as it turned to the north and northeast, and was later absorbed by an approaching cold front on September\u00a026 over Illinois.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 631]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0050-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Rita\nAcross the United States, Rita imparted $18.5\u00a0billion in damage and killed 120\u00a0people, although only seven deaths were directly related to the hurricane. Early in its evolution, Rita flooded houses in northern Cuba and the Florida Keys. Rita's approach to the U.S. Gulf Coast prompted one of the largest mass evacuations in the country's history, with an estimated 3.7\u00a0million people fleeing the Texas coast between Corpus Christi and Beaumont.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0050-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Rita\nDue in part to high temperatures preceding Rita's landfall and elderly susceptibility to excessive heat, at least 80\u00a0people died during the mass evacuation; a coach fire en route to Dallas claimed 23\u00a0lives. Rita generated a 15-foot (4.6\u00a0m) storm surge that devastated parts of Cameron Parish in Louisiana, destroying most structures in towns like Cameron and Holly Beach. Storm surge also damaged homes in adjoining Jefferson County in Texas. In New Orleans, Rita produced additional flooding and overtopped levees that had been repaired after Hurricane Katrina a month earlier. Impacts from heavy rainfall, gusty winds, and tornadoes associated with Rita affected much of the lower Mississippi River Valley, and over a million electricity customers lost power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 817]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0051-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Rita\nA third of Cameron Parish's population left the parish following the devastation wrought by Rita. FEMA granted over $1.3\u00a0billion to Louisiana to support recovery efforts; $668.8\u00a0million was allocated in the form of public assistance grants for initial recovery measures, and $523.5\u00a0million was sent to individuals as part of the agency's Individuals and Households program. Over $1\u00a0billion in federal assistance was also disbursed to Texas. Texas' Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery Program aided 1.85\u00a0million people in addition to supporting longer-term infrastructure repairs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0052-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Depression Nineteen\nOn September\u00a030, a tropical wave developed into Tropical Depression Nineteen to the west of Cabo Verde. The newly formed cyclone exhibited deep convection in the southern semicircle, but its cloud pattern quickly deteriorated under the influence of strong wind shear. The system moved northwestward and failed to intensify beyond winds of 35\u00a0mph (55\u00a0km/h), instead dissipating on October\u00a02 without affecting land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 69], "content_span": [70, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0053-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Stan\nA tropical wave emerged from Africa on September\u00a017 and moved across the central Atlantic, hampered by north-northeasterly wind shear. The disturbance eventually traveled into the western Caribbean Sea, where it organized into a tropical depression southeast of Cozumel around 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a01. High pressure directed the cyclone toward the west-northwest, and the depression intensified into Tropical Storm Stan shortly before making landfall along the eastern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0053-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Stan\nStan briefly weakened to a tropical depression as it crossed over land, but it regained tropical storm strength over the Bay of Campeche on October\u00a03, when ridging further intensified and forced the storm west-southwest. Rapid intensification ensued, allowing Stan to become a Category\u00a01 hurricane before its second landfall east-southeast of Veracruz early on October\u00a04. Once inland, the system rapidly unraveled over the mountainous terrain of Mexico, dissipating in the state of Oaxaca just after 06:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a05.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0054-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Stan\nStan killed 80\u00a0people in Mexico, and damage in the county was estimated at US$1.2\u00a0billion ($13.2\u00a0billion MXN). Stan was associated with a larger weather system across eastern Mexico and Central America. Torrential rainfall across this region killed 1,513\u00a0people in Guatemala, making it the deadliest natural disaster in the country's history. Damage in Guatemala was estimated at US$996\u00a0million. El Salvador's Santa Ana Volcano erupted on October\u00a01, occurring simultaneous to the flooding. The flooding killed 69\u00a0people in the country, and damage from the two disasters was estimated at US$355.6\u00a0million. In Honduras, the weather system killed seven people and left US$100\u00a0million in damage. There were also three deaths in Nicaragua and one in Costa Rica. Road damage in Costa Rica from Stan and earlier Hurricane Rita was estimated at US$57\u00a0million (\u20a128\u00a0billion (CRC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 926]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0055-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Unnamed subtropical storm\nIn the post-season analysis, the National Hurricane Center identified an additional subtropical storm that had gone unclassified during the course of the season. In late September, an upper-level low formed west of the Canary Islands and moved westward, organizing into a subtropical depression early on October\u00a04. It quickly intensified into a subtropical storm while curving northeast ahead of an approaching cold front. The storm attained peak winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h) as it moved through the eastern Azores, where Santa Maria Island reported sustained winds up to 40\u00a0mph (60\u00a0km/h). Early on October\u00a05, the storm merged with the cold front; later that day, its remains were absorbed by a non-tropical low. The low that absorbed the storm would eventually become Hurricane Vince.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 66], "content_span": [67, 849]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0056-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Tammy\nOn October\u00a05, Tropical Storm Tammy developed east of Florida following the interaction of a tropical wave and an upper-level trough. That day, it strengthened to reach peak winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h) and made landfall near Jacksonville, Florida. Tammy weakened as it moved inland, crossing southern Georgia and Alabama. It was absorbed by a larger extratropical storm on October\u00a06. Tammy dropped locally heavy rainfall along its path, causing minor damage. The frontal system that absorbed Tammy was a partial cause for severe flooding in New York, New Jersey and New England that killed 10\u00a0people in mid-October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0057-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Subtropical Depression Twenty-Two\nSubtropical Depression Twenty-Two formed from a non-tropical low 450\u00a0miles (725\u00a0km) southeast of Bermuda on October\u00a08. The system encountered unfavorable conditions as it turned westward and degenerated into a remnant low on October\u00a010, before becoming extratropical on the following day. The NHC continued to monitor the remnant as it headed towards the East Coast of the United States. The extratropical system transported tropical moisture northward, and was, along with Tropical Storm Tammy, a partial cause of severe flooding in New York, New Jersey and New England during early-to-mid-October. The flooding killed 10\u00a0people after 6 to 10\u00a0in (150 to 250\u00a0mm) of precipitation fell in some locales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 776]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0058-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Vince\nSubtropical Storm Vince formed in the eastern Atlantic near Madeira on October\u00a08 from the same non-tropical low that absorbed the unnamed subtropical storm. Vince transitioned into a tropical storm on the following day and was upgraded to a hurricane shortly thereafter. Although Vince was a very small and short-lived storm that only briefly reached hurricane strength, it was notable for developing in the northeastern Atlantic, well away from where hurricanes usually form. Vince made landfall on the Iberian Peninsula near Huelva, Spain, on October\u00a011 just after weakening to a tropical depression. Vince was the first tropical cyclone on record to make landfall in Spain. The storm left minor flooding in some areas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0059-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nAn upper-level low over the southwestern Atlantic helped facilitate the formation of a large, monsoon-like gyre over the Caribbean Sea in middle October. A series of tropical waves moved into this area of disturbed weather and helped form a low-pressure system that developed into Tropical Depression Twenty-Four southwest of Jamaica on October\u00a015. It intensified into Tropical Storm Wilma two days later. Wilma moved slowly through the warm waters of the western Caribbean Sea and began a period of rapid deepening on October\u00a018 that lasted into the following day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0059-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nThis culminated in the cyclone attaining Category\u00a05 hurricane status, reaching peak winds of 185\u00a0mph (295\u00a0km/h) and setting a record for the lowest barometric pressure in an Atlantic hurricane; at 12:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a019, the Hurricane Hunters recorded a pressure of 882\u00a0mbar (26.0\u00a0inHg) in the center of the tiny, well-defined eye of Wilma. Wilma weakened to Category\u00a04 intensity by the time it made landfall on Cozumel on October\u00a021. It later crossed the northeastern Yucat\u00e1n Peninsula and emerged into the Gulf of Mexico, turning northeast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0059-0002", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nOn October\u00a024, Wilma made landfall in southwestern Florida at Cape Romano with winds of 120\u00a0mph (190\u00a0km/h). The hurricane quickly crossed the state and continued across the western Atlantic Ocean. Wilma transitioned into an extratropical cyclone on October\u00a026, which was absorbed by a larger extratropical storm a day later over Atlantic Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0060-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nIn its formative stages, Wilma's large circulation spread across much of the western Caribbean Sea, killing 12\u00a0people in Haiti and one in Jamaica. Wilma set a record in Mexico, and for the entire Western Hemisphere, for the highest 24\u00a0hour rainfall total, with 64.330\u00a0in (1,633.98\u00a0mm) recorded at Isla Mujeres. There were four deaths in Mexico, and nationwide damage was estimated at US$454\u00a0million ($4.8\u00a0billion MXN). Local and federal troops quelled looting and rioting in Canc\u00fan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0060-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nCanc\u00fan's airport was closed to the public in the days after the storm, forcing stranded visitors to fly out of M\u00e9rida, Yucat\u00e1n, the region's closest functioning airport. On November\u00a028, Mexico declared a disaster area for 9 of Quintana Roo's 11\u00a0municipalities. Mexico's development bank \u2013 Nacional Financiera \u2013 provided financial assistance for businesses affected by Wilma and Stan through a $400\u00a0million fund (MXN, US$38\u00a0million).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0061-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nA significant storm surge flooded areas of western Cuba, leaving US$704\u00a0million in damage. In Florida, Wilma caused $19\u00a0billion in damage and killed 30\u00a0people; five of the deaths were caused directly by the hurricane. Wilma's storm surge caused the worst flooding in the Florida Keys since Hurricane Betsy in 1965. Wilma inflicted a multi-billion dollar disaster in the Miami metropolitan area, including $2.9\u00a0billion in damage in Palm Beach County, $2\u00a0billion in Miami-Dade County, and $1.2\u00a0billion in Broward County.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0061-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Wilma\nNumerous homes and businesses experienced some degree of impact, with over 55,000\u00a0dwellings and 3,600\u00a0workplaces damaged in Palm Beach County alone. On October\u00a024, 2005, the same day Wilma made landfall in Florida, President George W. Bush approved a disaster declaration for 13\u00a0Florida counties. FEMA expended $342.5\u00a0million to the 227,321\u00a0approved applicants. Additionally, public assistance from FEMA totaled over $1.4\u00a0billion and grants for hazard mitigation projects exceeded $141.5\u00a0million. After leaving Florida, Wilma killed one person and left US$6.4\u00a0million in damage to the Bahamas, when it passed northwest of the country. On Bermuda, Hurricane Wilma produced wind gusts of 51\u00a0mph (81\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 56], "content_span": [57, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0062-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Alpha\nA tropical wave organized into Tropical Depression Twenty-Five in the eastern Caribbean on October\u00a022. Later that day, the depression strengthened into Tropical Storm Alpha as it moved west-northwestward. Around 10:00\u00a0UTC on October\u00a023, Alpha made landfall near Barahona, Dominican Republic, with winds of 50\u00a0mph (85\u00a0km/h). Alpha weakened to a tropical depression over Hispaniola's steep mountains. The cyclone emerged into the Atlantic Ocean, where it was absorbed by Hurricane Wilma on October\u00a024.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0062-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Alpha\nAlpha was the 22nd named system in the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season, breaking the 1933 season's record, and became the first tropical storm to be named using the Greek Alphabet. The storm claimed 26\u00a0lives, with more than half of them in Haiti. Alpha destroyed 43\u00a0homes and damaged 191\u00a0others in Haiti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0063-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Beta\nLate on October\u00a026, the same tropical wave that spawned Tropical Storm Alpha led to the formation of Tropical Depression Twenty-Six over the southwestern Caribbean Sea. Early the next day, it was upgraded to Tropical Storm Beta. The storm strengthened into a hurricane on October\u00a029 and reached major hurricane intensity on October\u00a030, with sustained winds around 115\u00a0mph (185\u00a0km/h). That brought the total number of major hurricanes in the 2005 season to seven, a record breaking achievement. However, Beta weakened to a Category\u00a02 prior to landfall in Nicaragua. The storm rapidly weakened inland and dissipated on October\u00a031.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0064-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Beta\nThe Colombian island of Providencia was subjected to hurricane-force winds for several hours as the center of the storm moved very slowly by the island. Reports indicate extensive damage to homes and a loss of communications with the islanders. In Honduras and Nicaragua, over 1,000\u00a0structures were damaged by the storm, hundreds of which were destroyed. Overall, Beta caused nine fatalities and more than $15.5\u00a0million in damage across four countries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0065-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gamma\nLate on November\u00a013, Tropical Depression Twenty-Seven formed from a tropical wave about 115\u00a0mi (185\u00a0km) west-southwest of St. Lucia. While passing through the Lesser Antilles, the heavy rainfall caused mudslides, killing two people on Bequia. The cyclone briefly attained tropical storm status, but wind shear prevented further development of the system, and advisories were discontinued on November\u00a016 as it lost its closed circulation about 305\u00a0mi (490\u00a0km) southeast of Kingston, Jamaica. The remnants of the depression continued westward and moved along the northern shore of Honduras, merging with parts of a larger low pressure system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0065-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Gamma\nIt is uncertain whether the remnants of Gamma absorbed the low pressure system or vice versa. The storm strengthened and a closed circulation formed on November\u00a018, making Gamma a tropical storm for the second time. After regeneration, and after making landfall over northern Honduras, floods from Gamma killed 34\u00a0people in Honduras. Three people died in Belize related to the storm. Gamma meandered in the Caribbean Sea for a short time, until slowly weakening and eventually disintegrating into a remnant low late on November\u00a020. The storm caused 39\u00a0deaths in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0066-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Delta\nDelta originated from a broad and non-tropical low-pressure area that arose 1,380\u00a0miles (2,220\u00a0km) southwest of the Azores on November\u00a019, initially moving northeast along the trailing fringes of a passing cold front. Convection developed atop the center of the nascent disturbance two days later, and satellite data suggested that it was acquiring thermodynamic characteristics exhibited by tropical cyclones. On November\u00a022, the NHC classified the low-pressure system as a subtropical storm with the name Delta. Delta took a south-southwestward course and further coalesced its associated showers, leading to its re-designation as a tropical storm on November\u00a023.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0066-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Delta\nIt stalled 1,320\u00a0miles (2,130\u00a0km) west-southwest of the Canary Islands and attained peak winds of 70\u00a0mph (110\u00a0km/h) on November\u00a024. Delta moved erratically over the next two days and weakened to a low-end tropical storm in response to increasing wind shear. A strengthening trough over western Europe accelerated Delta towards the east-northeast on November\u00a027, concurrent with the brief emergence of an eye and a period of intensification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0066-0002", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Delta\nDelta's tropical characteristics later succumbed to wind shear and cold air, resulting in its extratropical transition on November\u00a028 while 250\u00a0miles (400\u00a0mi) west-northwest of the western Canary Islands; as an extratropical system, Delta tracked east, passing north of the Canary Islands before moving into Morocco and Algeria on November\u00a029, where it dissipated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0067-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Delta\nDelta caused severe damage in the Canary Islands and claimed at least seven lives, including six who drowned after boats overturned; there were 12\u00a0people missing from the overturned boat. El Dedo de Dios, a geological feature which had been pointing towards the sky for over a millennium and an important landmark for the Canary Islands, was toppled during the storm. Damage throughout the Canary Islands was estimated at \u20ac312\u00a0million ($364\u00a0million 2005 US dollars). Delta also caused power outages, leaving some 200,000\u00a0people without power and forcing airports to close down. The remnants of Delta later moved into Morocco, bringing needed rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0068-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Epsilon\nA surface low attached to a stationary front formed underneath an upper-level low east of Bermuda on November\u00a027. The surface low detached from the frontal zone and acquired tropical characteristics as deep convection wrapped around its center, leading to the development of Tropical Storm Epsilon early on November\u00a029. The NHC consistently forecast that the storm would weaken; however, Epsilon gradually intensified as it moved westward and later looped to the northeast. The storm attained hurricane status on December\u00a02 as the track shifted to the east.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0068-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Hurricane Epsilon\nEpsilon attained peak winds of 85\u00a0mph (140\u00a0km/h) on December\u00a05, maintaining its intensity due to low wind shear. A ridge turned Epsilon to the southwest on December\u00a06. Epsilon lasted as a hurricane until December\u00a07, the most for any Atlantic tropical cyclone in December. Epsilon degenerated into a remnant low on December\u00a08; the circulation dissipated two days later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0069-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Zeta\nTowards the end of December, an upper-level low interacted with a cold front, which produced an area of low-pressure by December\u00a028, about 750\u00a0mi (1,205\u00a0km) to the west-northwest of Cabo Verde. Over the next couple of days, the system developed a low-level circulation and atmospheric convection increased as it moved north-westwards, before the NHC classified it as Tropical Storm Zeta during December\u00a030. As a result, Zeta became the second latest-forming tropical cyclone in the Atlantic on record behind Alice of December\u00a01954.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0069-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Zeta\nOver the next couple of days, the system gradually intensified further in a region of favorable anticyclonic outflow, as it slowly moved west-northwest in response to a mid-level low to the southwest. During January 1, Zeta became only the second tropical storm on record to exist in two calendar years, while it peaked with 1-minute sustained winds of 65\u00a0mph (100\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0069-0002", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Systems, Tropical Storm Zeta\nIt weakened on January\u00a02, only to re-intensify to its peak intensity on January\u00a03. Zeta weakened again as it turned westward, degenerating into a remnant low on January\u00a06; the circulation dissipated on the next day to the southeast of Bermuda. Zeta affected the 2005 Atlantic Rowing Race by producing high swells that moved boats off course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 60], "content_span": [61, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0070-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names\nThe list below highlights the names used in the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. This was the same list used for the 1999 season, with the exceptions of Franklin and Lee, which replaced Floyd and Lenny. The names not retired from this list were used again in the 2011 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0070-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names\nThe names Franklin, Lee, Maria, Nate, Ophelia, Philippe, Rita, Stan, Tammy, Vince and Wilma from the regular list were used for the first (and only, in the cases of Rita, Stan and Wilma) time this year, as were the auxiliary list Greek letter names of Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon and Zeta. The 2005 season was the first Atlantic hurricane season to have storm names beginning with 'V' and\u00a0'W'. Also, when the list of 21\u00a0storm names pre-approved for the season by the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) was exhausted, 2005 became the first to move into the auxiliary list of names.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 43], "content_span": [44, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0071-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nAfter the season had ended, the WMO's hurricane committee retired five names: Dennis, Katrina, Rita, Stan and Wilma and replaced them with Don, Katia, Rina, Sean and Whitney for the 2011 season. This surpassed the previous record for the number of hurricane names retired after a single season\u00a0\u2013 four, held by the 1955, 1995, 2004 seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0072-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nThere was considerable discussion on the usage of the Greek alphabet. The committee agreed that the usage of the Greek alphabet had a \"major important political, economic and social impact globally, which might not have happened if a secondary or circular list of names had been used\", and that the Greek alphabet would be used again if the traditional naming list was exhausted. It was also decided that it was not practical to retire a Greek letter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0072-0001", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Storm names, Retirement\nStorms named with Greek letters that would otherwise be eligible for retirement would appear in the retired name list, but have a notation affixed with the circumstances. However, due to the devastation caused by Eta and Iota during the 2020 season, the next season that the auxiliary Greek alphabet had to be used, the WMO decided to discontinue the entire Greek alphabet to avoid any confusion and replaced it with a new auxiliary list of given names to be used, which will allow the names to be retired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 55], "content_span": [56, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180831-0073-0000", "contents": "2005 Atlantic hurricane season, Season effects\nA table of the storms that formed during the 2005 Atlantic hurricane season is given below: it includes storm name, duration, peak strength, areas affected, damage, and death total. Damage and deaths include amounts while the storm was extratropical, a wave, or a low. The death toll includes all indirect deaths, such as traffic accidents or electrocutions. Damage figures are in 2005 USD.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180832-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Auburn Tigers football team\nThe 2005 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Despite having four starters from the 2004 team selected in the first round of 2005 NFL Draft, Auburn finished the season with a 9\u20133 record, including a 7\u20131 record in the Southeastern Conference. The Tigers shared the SEC Western Division championship with LSU, but because the Bayou Bengals defeated Auburn 20\u201317 in overtime on October 22, the Tigers did not advance to the SEC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180832-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Auburn Tigers football team\nHead coach Tommy Tuberville became only the third Tigers coach to lead Auburn to a fourth consecutive win over arch rival Alabama when the Tigers defeated the Crimson Tide 28\u201318 at Jordan\u2013Hare Stadium on November 19. Auburn finished the season ranked #14 in both the Coaches Poll and AP Poll, with a #13 consensus ranking.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180833-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours 2005 are appointments to various orders and honours to recognise and reward good works by Australian citizens. The list was announced on 26 January 2005 by the Governor General of Australia, Michael Jeffrey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180833-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia Day Honours\nThe Australia Day Honours are the first of the two major annual honours lists, the first announced to coincide with Australia Day (26 January), with the other being the Queen's Birthday Honours, which are announced on the second Monday in June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180834-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia national soccer team season\nThis page summarises the Australia national soccer team fixtures and results in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180834-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\n2005 saw the Australian national football team playing twelve senior matches in what proved to be a definitive season for the history of the men's senior national side. The games included participating in the 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup in Germany and a dramatic end to a 32 year absence from the FIFA World Cup by qualifying, via a penalty shoot-out for the 2006 FIFA World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180834-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia national soccer team season, Summary\nAfter six years in charge of the Australian side, a disappointing 2005 FIFA Confederations Cup campaign saw coach Frank Farina replaced by the more experienced Dutchman Guus Hiddink, who was appointed to qualify Australia for the World Cup finals, and take them through that campaign should they succeed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 51], "content_span": [52, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180834-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia national soccer team season, Match results, World Cup qualifiers\nThe aggregate score for the two legs against Uruguay was tied 1\u20131 and, since the away goals rule could not be applied, the play-off was decided on a penalty shoot-out. Australia qualified after winning 4\u20132.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 79], "content_span": [80, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe\nThe 2005 Wallabies Spring Tour was a series of five matches played by the Australia national rugby union team in November 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, France\nIn this match, George Gregan played his 115th test match, beating the world record of Jason Robinson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, France\nFrance: 15.Julien Laharrague, 14.Aurelien Rougerie, 13.Florian Fritz, 12.Yannick Jauzion, 11.Cedric Heymans, 10.Frederic Michalak, 9.Jean-Baptiste Elissalde, 8.Thomas Lievremont, 7.Remy Martin, 6.Yannick Nyanga, 5.Jerome Thion, 4.Fabien Pelous (capt. ), 3.Pieter de Villiers, 2.Dimitri Szarzewski, 1.Olivier Milloud, \u2013 replacements: 16.Sebastien Bruno, 17.Sylvain Marconnet, 18.Lionel Nallet, 19.Gregory Lamboley, 20.Sebastien Chabal, 21.Yann Delaigue, 22.Thomas Castaignede Australia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Wendell Sailor, 13.Lote Tuqiri, 12.Morgan Turinui, 11.Mat Rogers, 10.Matt Giteau, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.George Smith, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.Rocky Elsom, 5.Nathan Sharpe, 4.Mark Chisholm, 3.Al Baxter, 2.Brendan Cannon, 1.Matt Dunning, \u2013 replacements: 16.Stephen Moore, 17.Greg Holmes, 18.Hugh McMeniman, 19.John Roe, 20.Chris Whitaker, 21.Lloyd Johansson, 22.Drew Mitchell", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 62], "content_span": [63, 940]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, England\nWallabies lost this match, the same scoreline against France a week earlier. The man of the match was Andrew Sheridan. For the Wallabies the situation was dire, with Eddie Jones facing removal as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, England\nEngland: 15.Josh Lewsey, 14.Mark Cueto, 13.Jamie Noon, 12.Mike Tindall, 11.Ben Cohen, 10.Charlie Hodgson, 9.Matt Dawson, 8.Martin Corry(capt. ), 7.Lewis Moody , 6.Pat Sanderson, 5.Danny Grewcock, 4.Steve Borthwick, 3.Phil Vickery, 2.Steve Thompson, 1.Andrew Sheridan, \u2013 replacements: 21.Olly Barkley, 22.Mark van Gisbergen \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 16.Lee Mears, 17.Matt Stevens, 18.Louis Deacon, 19.Chris Jones, 20.Harry EllisAustralia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Mark Gerrard, 13.Lote Tuqiri, 12.Morgan Turinui, 11.Drew Mitchell, 10.Mat Rogers, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.George Smith, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.John Roe, 5.Nathan Sharpe, 4.Hugh McMeniman, 3.Al Baxter , 2.Brendan Cannon, 1.Matt Dunning, \u2013 replacements: 16.Tatafu Polota-Nau, 17.Greg Holmes, 18.Mark Chisholm, 19.Scott Fava, 20.Chris Whitaker, 21.Matt Giteau, 22.Lloyd Johansson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, Ireland\nThis was the only test-match won by the Wallabies. The match was played in Lansdowne Road, with reduced capacity to 42,000 after a fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, Ireland\nIreland: 15.Geordan Murphy, 14.Shane Horgan, 13.Andrew Trimble, 12.Gordon D'Arcy, 11.Tommy Bowe, 10.Ronan O'Gara, 9.Peter Stringer, 8.Denis Leamy, 7.Johnny O'Connor, 6.Simon Easterby (capt. ), 5.Malcolm O'Kelly, 4.Donncha O'Callaghan, 3.John Hayes, 2.Shane Byrne, 1.Marcus Horan, \u2013 replacements: 16.Rory Best, 17.Simon Best, 18.Matt McCullough, 19.Neil Best, 20.Kieran Campbell, 21.David Humphreys, 22.Girvan Dempsey Australia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Mark Gerrard, 13.Lote Tuqiri, 12.Morgan Turinui, 11.Drew Mitchell, 10.Mat Rogers, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.George Smith, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.John Roe, 5.Nathan Sharpe, 4.Hugh McMeniman, 3.David Fitter, 2.Brendan Cannon, 1.Greg Holmes, \u2013 replacements: 16.Tatafu Polota-Nau, 17.Al Baxter, 18.Mark Chisholm, 19.Scott Fava, 20.Matt Henjak, 21.Lloyd Johansson, 22.Wendell Sailor", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 63], "content_span": [64, 884]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, Wales\nAfter the victory against Ireland, the Wallabies crashed to a low with a close loss to Wales.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, Wales\nThe day after the game, Eddie Jones was axed due to poor results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180835-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Australia rugby union tour of Europe, The Matches, Wales\nWales: 15.Gareth Thomas(capt. ), 14.Dafydd James, 13.Matthew Watkins, 12.Sonny Parker, 11.Shane Williams, 10.Stephen Jones, 9.Gareth Cooper, 8.Michael Owen, 7.Martyn Williams, 6.Colin Charvis, 5.Robert Sidoli, 4.Ian Gough, 3.Chris Horsman, 2.T.Rhys Thomas, 1.Duncan Jones, \u2013 replacements: 16.Mefin Davies, 17.Adam R. Jones, 21.Ceri Sweeney \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 18.Ian Evans, 19.Jonathan Thomas, 20.Mike Phillips, 22.Lee ByrneAustralia: 15.Chris Latham, 14.Mark Gerrard, 13.Lote Tuqiri, 12.Morgan Turinui, 11.Drew Mitchell, 10.Mat Rogers, 9.George Gregan (capt), 8.George Smith, 7.Phil Waugh, 6.John Roe, 5.Nathan Sharpe, 4.Hugh McMeniman, 3.David Fitter, 2.Brendan Cannon, 1.Matt Dunning, \u2013 replacements: 17.Al Baxter, 18.Mark Chisholm, 20.Chris Whitaker, 22.Wendell Sailor \u2013 No entry: 16.Tatafu Polota-Nau, 19.Scott Fava, 21.Lloyd Johansson", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 61], "content_span": [62, 910]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180836-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Carrera Cup Championship\nThe 2005 Australian Carrera Cup Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing championship open to Porsche 911 GT3 Cup cars. The championship, which was the third Australian Carrera Cup Championship, was administered by CupCar Australia Pty Ltd. and was promoted as the \u201cWright Patton Shakespeare Carrera Cup Australia\u201d. The title was won by Fabian Coulthard.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180836-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Calendar\nThe championship was contested over a nine round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180836-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Points system\nPoints were awarded in each race as per the following table:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 55], "content_span": [56, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180836-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Results\nAll cars were Porsche 911 GT3 Cup Type 996s as mandated by the technical regulations for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180836-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Carrera Cup Championship, Results\nRace 2 at the Bathurst round was stopped after an accident and no points were awarded for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 49], "content_span": [50, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180837-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Club World Championship Qualifying Tournament\nThe 2005 Australian Club World Championship Qualifying Tournament was as association football knock-out competition to determine the Australian entrant into the 2005 OFC Club Championship. The tournament consisted of seven teams, being the teams competing in the inaugural A-League season in 2005\u201306, with the exception of New Zealand Knights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180837-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Club World Championship Qualifying Tournament\nA standalone tournament was necessary to determine to determine Australia's Oceania Club Championship entrant for the year as there had yet to be any competitive matches for the new A-League clubs. It was to be a one-off competition, with Australia joining the Asian Football Confederation from 2006 onwards, and future continental qualification places determined by teams' performances in the A-League. The competition represented the first competitive matches of any kind for several of the teams. Perth Glory was given a bye in the first round as Champions of the final National Soccer League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180837-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Club World Championship Qualifying Tournament\nSydney FC won the tournament, defeating Central Coast Mariners 1\u20130 in the final. The final was scheduled to be held at Hindmarsh Stadium in Adelaide but was moved to Express Advocate Stadium in Gosford after two teams based in New South Wales qualified for the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180838-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Drivers' Championship\nThe 2005 Australian Drivers' Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing title for drivers of cars conforming to Formula 3 regulations. It was the first time Formula 3 had contested the Australian Drivers' Championship, with Formula Holden/Formula Brabham/Formula 4000 being demoted from ADC status after 16 years. The title was contested over an eight-round, 16 race series with the winner awarded the 2005 CAMS Gold Star. The series, which was officially known as the Kumho Tyres Australian Formula 3 Championship for the Australian Drivers' Championship, was organised and administered by Formula 3 Australia Inc. It is recognised by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport as the 49th Australian Drivers' Championship and as the fifth Australian Formula 3 Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180838-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Drivers' Championship\nAaron Caratti won the series driving a Dallara F304-Renault. Caratti won eight of the 16 races and finished 32 points ahead of nearest rival, Michael Trimble (Dallara F304). The margin to third place was again 32 points with Chris Alajajian (Dallara F304-Renault) filling the position. In addition to Caratti's eight race wins, Trimble took four wins and Alajajian two with single victories being taken by returning former F3 champion Michael Caruso (Dallara F301 Alfa Romeo) and Ian Dyk (Dallara F304 Opel).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180838-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Drivers' Championship, Calendar\nThe championship was contested over an eight-round series with two races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180838-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Drivers' Championship, Class structure\nThe relevant FIA Formula 3 regulations were subject to specific amendments for Australian competition, as outlined in the championship regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180838-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Drivers' Championship, Points system\nFormula 3 Championship points were awarded on a 20\u201315\u201312\u201310\u20138\u20136\u20134\u20133\u20132\u20131 basis for the first ten Championship class places in each race. One bonus point was awarded to the driver attaining pole position for the Championship class for each race. One bonus point was awarded to the driver setting the fastest Championship class race lap in each race, provided that the driver was a classified finisher in that race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180838-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Drivers' Championship, Points system\nTrophy Class points were awarded on the same basis as Formula 3 Championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180839-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Film Institute Awards\nThe 47th Annual Australian Film Institute Awards (generally known as AFI Awards), were a series of awards which included the AFI Craft Awards and the AFI Awards Ceremony. Presented by the Australian Film Institute (AFI), the awards celebrated the best in Australian feature film, television, documentary and short film productions of 2005. The two events were held in Melbourne, Victoria, with the former presentation at the Waterfront City Pavilion, and the latter at the Melbourne Central City Studios, on 25 November and 26 November 2005, respectively. The AFI Awards Ceremony was televised on the Nine Network, with actor Russell Crowe hosting both this and the AFI Craft Awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180839-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Film Institute Awards\nLook Both Ways received the most feature film awards with five, including Best Film and Best Direction. Little Fish and The Proposition collected four awards each. The only other winner was Three Dollars with one for Best Adapted Screenplay. In the television categories, Love My Way won five awards, including Best Drama Series, Best Direction and Best Screenplay. MDA was given two awards. Other television winners were Holly's Heroes, John Safran vs God, The Glass House and The Incredible Journey of Mary Bryant, with one each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180839-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Film Institute Awards, Ceremony\nAfter poor viewership of the 2004 Awards ceremony, the AFI hired live entertainment promoter Paul Dainty to revamp the event. This included splitting the awards into two separate events: The AFI Craft Awards and the AFI Awards Ceremony, which were held on the 25 November and 26 November, respectively. The Craft Awards were presented for technical achievements in feature films, television and non-feature films. The chief executive of the AFI said the reason behind the split was to give \"craft nominees more respect, with their own black-tie event.\" The decision, however, was met with some criticism from industry members, who felt that they were being undermined and overshadowed by the other non-technical categories. Australian Screen Editors said the \"split undermines the uniquely collaborative nature of filmmaking and sent the wrong message for the next generation of filmmakers.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 939]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180839-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Film Institute Awards, Ceremony\nAustralian actor Russell Crowe was chosen to host the AFI Craft Awards and the AFI Awards Ceremony. Awards at both presentations were handed out on the 25 November and 26 November, respectively. The latter event received a delayed broadcast on Nine Network at 10:55\u00a0pm, and a five-minute segment dedicated to the Craft Awards was shown. The ceremony drew in an audience of 900,000 viewers. Crowe's work as host, and the AFI's decision to hire Dainty to produce the event was well received by critics. The Age felt Dainty's involvement in the production of the ceremony \"was pivotal to the awards' renaissance\", adding that splitting the awards \"put an end to the drawn-out ceremonies of years past.\" Michaela Boland from Variety praised Crowe for his \"charming [and] funny\" performance hosting the show.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 851]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180839-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Film Institute Awards, Winners and nominees\nThe nominations were announced by Australian actors Claudia Karvan and Alex Dimitriades on 21 October 2005 at the Wharf Restaurant in Sydney, New South Wales. Leading the feature film nominees was Little Fish with thirteen. Love My Way gained the most television nominations with six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup\nThe 2005 Australian Football International Cup was the second time that the Australian Football International Cup tournament, an international Australian rules football competition was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup\nThe event was hosted by both Melbourne and Wangaratta, Australia in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup\n10 nations participated following the late withdrawal of both Nauru and Denmark and the introduction of Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup\nAll sides were scheduled to play 4 games, after which the top 4 sides played off in semi-finals for a berth in the Grand Final decider. The Grand Final was between Papua New Guinea and New Zealand. Both sides went through the tournament undefeated. It was played as a curtain raiser to an official Australian Football League premiership season match and was replayed on Fox Sports (Australia) and the Fox Footy Channel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup, Tournament results, Grand final\nThe Grand Final was replayed on Fox Sports (Australia) and the Fox Footy Channel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup, Tournament results, Grand final\nThe Best and Fairest medal was awarded to New Zealand's James Bowden.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup, Tournament results, Grand final\nGrand Final was played as a curtain raiser to the round 20 AFL match between Collingwood vs Carlton, so this figure is the total crowd for the match, although not all spectators were inside the stadium at the start or conclusion of the curtain raiser event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 75], "content_span": [76, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180840-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Football International Cup, 2005 Australian Football International Cup All Stars Team\nLike the All-Australian Team in the Australian Football League, a team selected from the best players in the International Cup was selected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 101], "content_span": [102, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180841-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula 4000 Championship\nThe 2005 Australian Formula 4000 Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing title for drivers of Formula 4000 racing cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180841-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula 4000 Championship\nThis was the first title to be contested under the Australian Formula 4000 Championship name although the category had competed for the Australian Drivers' Championship under its previous Formula Holden and Formula Brabham names from 1989 to 2002 and then as Formula 4000 in 2003 and 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180841-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula 4000 Championship, Calendar\nThe title was contested over a six round series with two races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180841-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula 4000 Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded on a 20-15-12-10-8-6-4-3-2-1 basis to the top ten finishers in each race. A bonus point was allocated to the driver setting pole position at each round and to the driver achieving the fastest lap in each race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180842-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula Ford Championship\nThe 2005 Australian Formula Ford Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing title for drivers of Formula Ford racing cars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180842-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Calendar\nThe title was contested over an eight-round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 51], "content_span": [52, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180842-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Formula Ford Championship, Points\nChampionship points were awarded on a 20-16-14-12-10-8-6-4-2-1 basis to the top ten finishers in each race with an additional point awarded to the driver earning pole position for Race 1 at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 49], "content_span": [50, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180843-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian GT Championship\nThe 2005 Australian GT Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing title for drivers of \"Closed Production Based GT Cars\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180843-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian GT Championship\nIt was the ninth Australian GT Championship and the first to be held since 1985. CAMS revived the GT Championship after the demise of the Australian Nations Cup Championship at the end of 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180843-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian GT Championship, Schedule\nThe title was contested over a five-round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180843-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian GT Championship, Points system\nChampionship points were awarded on a 38-32-28-25-23-21-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis to the first 25 classified finishers in each race. An additional 3 points were awarded to the fastest qualifier at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180843-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian GT Championship, Australian Porsche Drivers Challenge\nThe Australian Porsche Drivers Challenge, which was run concurrently with the Australian GT Championship, was won by Bryce Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 69], "content_span": [70, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Australian Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Foster's Australian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Melbourne Grand Prix Circuit on 6 March 2005. It was the first round of the 2005 Formula One season. The 58-lap race was won by Renault driver Giancarlo Fisichella after he started from pole position. Rubens Barrichello finished second for the Ferrari team and Fisichella's team-mate Fernando Alonso came in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Practice\nThe first practice session of the 2005 Australian Grand Prix was dominated by Vitantonio Liuzzi who was appearing at his first grand prix for Red Bull at their first race. Twenty-two cars participated with reserve drivers Pedro de la Rosa for McLaren, Ricardo Zonta for Toyota, Robert Doornbos for Jordan and Liuzzi for Red Bull. Neither of the Minardis ran. Juan Pablo Montoya was fourth fastest while Rubens Barrichello was only 12th. Michael Schumacher didn't participate in this session. The only casualty was Narain Karthikeyan for Jordan whose engine blew up after 6 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Practice\nPedro de la Rosa and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen put their McLarens fastest in the second session just ahead of Nick Heidfeld and Michael Schumacher. Juan Pablo Montoya was left fifth with a happy Felipe Massa sixth. The main drama was Vitantonio Liuzzi's spin at turn three which left him in the gravel and he had to abandon the car. Narain Karthikeyan was hit with a fine with him speeding in the pit lane during his first ever outing in the last practice session with a speed of 86.2\u00a0km/h his fine was US$6750. Once again both Minardis didn't take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Practice\nAfter the overnight rain in Australia the track was wet for the start of the third practice session with the Ferraris of Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello leading the way ahead of Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in the McLaren. Both Minardis got to run but Christijan Albers spun on his final lap at Turn 3. Neither of the Sauber, Williams or Renault drivers set lap times but Christian Klien and Juan Pablo Montoya did go out as did Mark Webber but spun twice on his only lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Practice\nThe final session got underway and the dampness of the track led to times all over the place but Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Fernando Alonso did well to fight for fastest with the Finn coming out best. Juan Pablo Montoya put in a last gasp lap for 3rd ahead of Giancarlo Fisichella and Jenson Button. Another drama for Narain Karthikeyan as he spun at turn nine and had to abandon his car before it briefly caught fire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nPrior to the session several teams' weather forecasts predicted a rain storm after 20 minutes. To begin with the track was merely damp after the early morning rain. The session was run the reverse order of the 2004 Brazilian Grand Prix as Christijan Albers shaded teammate Patrick Friesacher to set fastest time. Despite spinning in Turn 12 on his out lap, Narain Karthikeyan went 5 seconds faster than the Minardis with his teammate following behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nJenson Button had been an early retirement in Interlagos the previous year, so he had to go out fifth and quickly went fastest with a 1m 41.512. Williams drivers Nick Heidfeld and Mark Webber beat Button's time with 1m 39.717 and a 1m 36.717 respectively. Christian Klien moved to second place before Jarno Trulli put his Toyota on pole with a 1m 35.270.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nA disappointing 1m 38.320 for David Coulthard in the Red Bull, the Scot was complaining of poor balance. Jacques Villeneuve was the first man to put on the dry tyre but it looked like he'd got it wrong as he spun wildly on his out lap. He brought his Sauber home for 3rd place before Giancarlo Fisichella put in a 1m 33.171 to take fastest time before the rain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe torrential rain arrived just as Felipe Massa started his flying lap on the dry tyre, he had to abort his lap and had to settle for 20th. Michael Schumacher switched to his wet Bridgestone tyre and the 7 time world champion could only do a 1m 57.931 to put him 18th after all the drivers finished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe session had to be stopped when Takuma Sato in the BAR crashed at Turn 8 on his out lap. When the session resumed the conditions had slightly improved and Ralf Schmacher's lap put him 17th. Fernando Alonso settled for 14th and Rubens Barrichello qualified 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nLast out were Juan Pablo Montoya and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen (McLaren teammates), but both had to fight for 10th and 11th fastest on the list.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe first attempt to start the race was yellow flagged, due to the stalled McLaren of Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who would eventually start the abbreviated race (57 laps from 58) in pit lane. When the red lights did finally go out, front row starters Fisichella and Jarno Trulli protected their positions and led the rest of the field through the first lap. Starting third in his home grand prix, Mark Webber\u2013 in his Williams debut\u2013 was outsprinted to the first corner by David Coulthard's Red Bull.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0012-0001", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nRubens Barrichello and Fernando Alonso each moved up three spots on the first lap, showing more of their cars' true potential than what was seen in the rain-soaked qualifying. Sato made the best start, moving from last place to 14th. Jacques Villeneuve had the worst start\u2013 his first in the Sauber\u2013 as he dropped five positions on the opening lap after losing forward momentum in a first-corner position skirmish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs Fisichella and Trulli raced away at the front, Coulthard began to gradually fall back, holding up Webber, Nick Heidfeld (also making his Williams debut), Christian Klien, Juan Pablo Montoya and Barrichello. Several seconds further back was Villeneuve, struggling to hold off a charging Alonso, who was himself just ahead of Jenson Button and Ralf Schumacher (in his first start for Toyota). Close behind were Felipe Massa, Sato, the elder Schumacher, and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who doggedly pursued the champion but could not find a way past. The four rookies were a little further back: the two Jordans of Tiago Monteiro and Narain Karthikeyan led the Minardi duo of Patrick Friesacher and Christijan Albers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAlonso passed Villeneuve, only to have the Canadian retake the position moments later. But just before the first round of pit stops, Alonso would finally find a way around the former champion, saving any podium hopes for the young Spaniard. While passing backmarkers on lap 15, Coulthard and Webber nearly collided with one another; Webber briefly went onto the grass, but no serious damage was done. After lap 17, unable to pull out of the pits due to a gearbox problem, Albers retired his Minardi, which had lost second gear as early as the formation lap. This was the only mechanical retirement of the afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nFisichella remained firmly in command after his first pit stop, although he briefly relinquished the lead while refueling. Barrichello gained the most in the pits, as he moved up from eighth to fourth place; Alonso continued his hard charge, gaining four positions as well. However, Trulli's Toyota slowly began dropping back, getting passed again and again; it would later turn out to be a blistered rear tyre, which would affect him for the remainder of the race. Teammate Ralf Schumacher had a problem of his own, and was forced to pit twice in quick succession to tighten a loose safety harness. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was able to get by the elder Schumacher into tenth (his starting grid position) and pull away from the champion in pursuit of Heidfeld.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 786]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter Michael Schumacher's second stop, he emerged from the pitlane just ahead of Heidfeld, who thought he saw an opening going into the third turn. Schumacher, who momentarily lost sight of Heidfeld's Williams in his mirrors, closed the door on his fellow German, forcing him onto the grass. With no traction on the grass, Heidfeld braked in vain, sliding into the side of the F2004M, pushing both cars into the gravel. Heidfeld's race was finished; although Schumacher was able to get his Ferrari back on track, nevertheless he retired in the pits soon thereafter, due to collision damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMontoya went onto the grass briefly at Turn Eight as he prepared to make his second pit stop; this, plus another off-track excursion while tangling with a backmarking rookie, cost him valuable time. When he later lost part of his rear deflector, Montoya eased up to finish the race and to preserve his Mercedes-Benz power plant for the next race. Teammate R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen also lost a significant portion of his deflector, which became embedded under his side barge board; mechanics were later seen removing it during a pit stop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter the second round of stops, the final order of finish was nearly determined. While most of the field slowed to conserve their engines, Alonso continued pushing hard on Barrichello's heels. Barrichello, despite battling a brake balance problem, was able to answer the challenge, and held off Alonso for second. Fisichella, who flawlessly managed the gap to his nearest opponent all race long, easily took the chequered flag for his second career victory, with his only other victory being for Jordan in 2003. He never put a foot wrong, and his R25 chassis, although not seriously challenged, performed flawlessly to claim the inaugural race of the season. Teammate Alonso clocked the fastest lap of the race, and was noticeably the fastest car on track for most of the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 820]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180844-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nBoth BARs pulled into the pits on the final lap of the race; by not officially finishing the event, they effectively exempted themselves from the new two-race engine rule. By taking advantage of this loophole in 2005 regulations, they were entitled to replace the cars' Honda engines in Malaysia without incurring any penalty. The loophole was immediately closed, as a car was in future required to have a genuine technical problem to be entitled to a new engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180845-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Labor Party leadership spill\nA leadership spill of the Australian Labor Party (ALP), the official opposition party in the Parliament of Australia, was held on 28 January 2005. The outgoing Opposition Leader, Mark Latham, stood down 13 months after assuming the leadership in December 2003. Kim Beazley was the only contender for the ballot, and was therefore elected unopposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180845-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Labor Party leadership spill, Background\nMark Latham became leader in December 2003 after Simon Crean stood down after losing support from his caucus. However, Latham went on to lose the federal election in October 2004. Latham stayed on as leader after the election, until January 18, 2005 when Latham stood down, citing ill health.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 56], "content_span": [57, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180845-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Labor Party leadership spill, Potential candidates named in the press and elsewhere\nThe following individuals ruled themselves out as candidates or were the subject of media speculation but did not stand:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 99], "content_span": [100, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180846-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Lacrosse League season\nThese are the results and statistics for the Australian Lacrosse League season of 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open\nThe 2005 Australian Open was a Grand Slam tennis tournament held in Melbourne, Australia from 17 until 30 January 2005. Roger Federer was unsuccessful in defending his 2004 title, being defeated in the semi-finals by eventual champion Marat Safin in a rematch of the 2004 final. Safin defeated third-seed Lleyton Hewitt in the final in four sets. Justine Henin-Hardenne could not defend her 2004 title due to an injury suffered in the second half of 2004. Serena Williams, the champion in 2003, defeated Lindsay Davenport in the women's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Seniors, Men's Doubles\nWayne Black / Kevin Ullyett defeated Bob Bryan / Mike Bryan, 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Seniors, Women's Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova / Alicia Molik defeated Lindsay Davenport / Corina Morariu, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 46], "content_span": [47, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Seniors, Mixed Doubles\nSamantha Stosur / Scott Draper defeated Liezel Huber / Kevin Ullyett, 6\u20132, 2\u20136, [10\u20136]", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Juniors, Boys' Doubles\nKim Sun-yong / Yi Chu-huan defeated Thiemo de Bakker / Donald Young, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Juniors, Girls' Doubles\nVictoria Azarenka / Marina Erakovic defeated Nikola Fra\u0148kov\u00e1 / \u00c1gnes Sz\u00e1vay, 6\u20130, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Wheelchair, Men's Doubles\nRobin Ammerlaan / Martin Legner defeated David Hall / Anthony Bonaccurso, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180847-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open, Wheelchair, Women's Doubles\nMaaike Smit / Florence Gravellier defeated Yuka Chokyu / Mie Yaosa, 6-3, 6-3", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 49], "content_span": [50, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180848-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Doubles\nKim Sun-yong and Chu-Huan Yi won the title by defeating Thiemo de Bakker and Donald Young 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180849-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nGa\u00ebl Monfils was the defending champion, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180849-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Boys' Singles\nDonald Young defeated Kim Sun-yong (6\u20132, 6\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180850-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Doubles\nVictoria Azarenka and Marina Erakovic won the title by defeating Nikola Fra\u0148kov\u00e1 and \u00c1gnes Sz\u00e1vay 6\u20130, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180851-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nShahar Pe'er was the defending champion, but did not compete in the Juniors in this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180851-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Girls' Singles\nVictoria Azarenka defeated \u00c1gnes Sz\u00e1vay (6\u20132, 6\u20132) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180852-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMicha\u00ebl Llodra and Fabrice Santoro were the defending champions, but they lost in quarterfinals 6\u20137(2), 5\u20137, against Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Max Mirnyi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180852-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nWayne Black and Kevin Ullyett defeated Bob Bryan and Mike Bryan 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final to win the Men's Doubles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180853-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nMarat Safin defeated Lleyton Hewitt in the final, 1\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20134, 6\u20134 to win the Men's Singles tennis title at the 2005 Australian Open. It was Safin's second and last major title, having also won the 2000 US Open. Hewitt was the first Australian player to reach the final since Pat Cash in 1988.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180853-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRoger Federer was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Safin despite holding a match point in the fourth set. This ended Federer's 26-match winning streak starting from the 2004 US Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180853-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThe final attracted many viewers in Australia (primarily due to the presence of countryman Hewitt), averaging 4.05 million viewers. The viewing audience remains one of the highest in Australian history. The match was broadcast in the host nation by host broadcaster the Seven Network with commentators Bruce McAvaney and two-time champion Jim Courier (in his first commentating appearance).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180853-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nThis tournament was the first major in which future nine-time Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic competed in the main draw (lost to Safin in the first round), and the last Australian Open where four-time champion Andre Agassi competed in the main draw. Future 20-time major champion Rafael Nadal advanced beyond the third round of a major for the first time, losing to Hewitt in the fourth round. It was also the last major in which neither Djokovic, Federer, nor Nadal made the final until the 2014 US Open, a span of 38 events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180854-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Men's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Men's singles at the 2005 Australian Open tennis tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180855-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nSamantha Stosur and Scott Draper defeated Liezel Huber and Kevin Ullyett in the final 6\u20132, 2\u20136, [10\u20136] to win the mixed doubles title at the 2005 Australian Open. This was the first Grand Slam title for both Stosur and Draper, and would be Draper's only Grand Slam title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180855-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Mixed Doubles\nElena Bovina and Nenad Zimonji\u0107 were the defending champions, but Bovina did not compete due to a left foot injury. Zimonji\u0107 participated with Elena Likhovtseva, and the pair lost in the second round to Stosur and Draper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180856-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez were the defending champions, but Su\u00e1rez did not participate due to injury. Ruano Pascual partnered Conchita Mart\u00ednez, but lost in the first round to Jennifer Hopkins and Mashona Washington.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180856-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nSvetlana Kuznetsova and Alicia Molik won the title, defeating Lindsay Davenport and Corina Morariu in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134. This was Davenport's sixth and final appearance in the Women's Doubles final at the Australian Open; her loss in the final meant that she was not able to complete the Career Grand Slam in Doubles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180857-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams defeated Lindsay Davenport in the final, 2\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20130, to win the Women's Singles tennis title at the 2005 Australian Open. It was her second Australian Open singles title and her seventh major title overall. Serena saved three match points in her semifinal match against Maria Sharapova. She came back again in the final: at 2-6, 2-2 down, Serena saved four break points and won 10 of the last 11 games to win the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180857-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but she could not compete this year due to a knee injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180857-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nThis event is notable for the first major appearances for future world No. 1 and Grand Slam champion Ana Ivanovic and two-time Grand Slam champion Li Na. Both reached the third round before losing to Am\u00e9lie Mauresmo and Sharapova, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180858-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Open \u2013 Women's Singles Qualifying\nThis article displays the qualifying draw for the Women's singles at the 2005 Australian Open.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180859-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Performance Car Championship\nThe 2005 Australian Performance Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned motor racing championship, organised by GT Performance Racing Pty Ltd. It was the first championship to be contested under the Australian Performance Car Championship name with similar titles having been run in the two previous years as the Australian GT Performance Car Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180859-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Performance Car Championship\nPeter Floyd won the series by 39 points driving a HSV GTS. It was the first time a driver of a HSV had won the series. Garry Holt finished second in the championship with 2003 champion Mark King in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180859-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Performance Car Championship, Calendar\nThe championship was contested over a seven round series with three races per round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180859-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Performance Car Championship, Points system\nPoints were awarded on a 30-24-20-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis to the first 21 classified finishers in each race. An additional 3 points were awarded to the driver setting the fastest qualifying time at each round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180860-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Production Car Championship\nThe 2005 Australian Production Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned national motor racing title open to Group 3E Series Production Cars. It was organised by the Production Car Association of Australia and was the 12th Australian Production Car Championship. The title was won by Colin Osborne driving a Toyota Celica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180860-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Production Car Championship, Race calendar\nThe championship was contested over a seven round series with three races per round. Race 1 at each round utilised a mass standing start and Races 2 and 3 at each round featured a handicap standing start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180860-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Production Car Championship, Points system\nPoints for class and outright were awarded on race results as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180860-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Production Car Championship, Points system\nIn addition, the fastest competitor in each Class in Qualifying was awarded 3 points towards both class and outright.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180860-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Production Car Championship, Points system\nRace 1 at each round had points awarded for class titles only and Races 2 and 3 at each round had points awarded for both class and outright titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180860-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian Production Car Championship, Points system\nCompetitors registered as \u201cTrophy\u201d competitors are not eligible to score points in the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 58], "content_span": [59, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180861-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian football code crowds\nThis is a list of crowd figures for 2005 Australian football codes. Specifically, they include home matches in the following seasons:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180861-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by League\nSome codes have multiple competitions, several competitions are compared here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180861-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian football code crowds, Attendances by Team\nTotal home attendances for domestic league competitions are listed here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180862-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifteenth round of the 2005 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 13\u201315 October 2005 at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit. It was also the final victory for Valentino Rossi at Phillip Island until the 2014 event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180862-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Australian motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round fifteen has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 85], "content_span": [86, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180863-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Austrian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Austrian Figure Skating Championships (German: \u00d6sterreichischen Staatsmeisterschaften im Eiskunstlauf 2005) took place between 18 and 19 December 2004 in Innsbruck. Skaters competed in the discipline of men's singles, ladies' singles. The results were used to choose the Austrian teams to the 2005 World Championships and the 2005 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180864-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Austrian Open\nThe 2005 Austrian Open was men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 35th edition of the Austrian Open, and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the Kitzb\u00fchel Sportpark Tennis Stadium in Kitzb\u00fchel, Austria, from 25 July until 31 July 2005. Third-seeded Gast\u00f3n Gaudio won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180864-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Austrian Open, Finals, Doubles\nLeo\u0161 Friedl / Andrei Pavel defeated Christophe Rochus / Olivier Rochus 6\u20132, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20130", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 35], "content_span": [36, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180865-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Austrian Open \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl were the defending champions, but \u010cerm\u00e1k did not compete this year. Friedl teamed up with Andrei Pavel and successfully defended his title, by defeating Christophe Rochus and Olivier Rochus 6\u20132, 6\u20137(5\u20137), 6\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180866-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Austrian Open \u2013 Singles\nIn the 2005 Austrian Open Singles, Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa was the defending champion, but lost in the semifinals to Fernando Verdasco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180866-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Austrian Open \u2013 Singles\nGast\u00f3n Gaudio won the title, defeating Verdasco 2\u20136, 6\u20132, 6\u20134, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500\nThe 2005 Auto Club 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on February 27, 2005 at California Speedway in Fontana, California. Contested over 250 laps on the 2-mile (3.23\u00a0km) asphalt D-shaped oval, it was the second race of the 2005 Nextel Cup Series season. Greg Biffle of Roush Racing won the race, his first win of the season. Jimmie Johnson finished second and Kurt Busch finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Background\nThe track, Auto Club Speedway, is a four-turn superspeedway that is 2 miles (3.2\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked from fourteen degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, is banked at eleven degrees. Unlike the front stretch, the backstraightaway is banked at three degrees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nMagic Johnson gave the command for drivers to start their engines, and California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger waved the green flag, which was taken by 19-year-old Kyle Busch. Busch became the youngest driver to ever take the green flag on pole position. Busch was still leading after the first lap, with Brian Vickers in second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nBefore the race, Greg Biffle had promised to reporters and commentators that he would have the lead within 5 laps. He also happened to promise to win the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nGreg Biffle took the lead in only 4 laps, followed by Matt Kenseth in second place, and Biffle was still in the lead after 26 laps, when Bill Elliott went into the wall. Biffle was immediately overtaken by Matt Kenseth after the restart. Dale Earnhardt Jr. pitted on lap 38, going down a lap, with problems on his left front tire. Carl Edwards took over the lead around lap 46.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nOn lap 59, Earnhardt\u00a0\u2013 already a lap down\u00a0\u2013 had another problem with his left front tire and the debris brought out the caution a lap later. Ultimately Earnhardt would end up 13 laps behind. Edwards was still in the lead when the caution came out. Kenseth took over the lap during the caution, and Edwards retook it within a lap. Kenseth recaptured the lead at lap 70.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nGreen flag pitstops started on lap 105. However, on lap 107, well before the green flag pitstops had cycled, a caution came out for debris. Joe Nemechek led on the restart on lap 116. Dave Blaney hit the wall on lap 143 leading to the third caution, with Nemechek still leading over Johnson. At the restart on lap 151, Nemechek was leading from Mark Martin and Jimmie Johnson with 26 cars on the lead lap. Within a lap, Johnson was second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nAnother caution came out on lap 161 when Kasey Kahne went into the wall. At the restart, Johnson led over Nemechek, but after a three-car tussle for the lead, Nemechek led on lap 166. However, Nemechek's success was short-lived: around lap 180, engine problems saw him fall down the leader board and he had to retire. Edwards took over the lead. Harvick then took over with about 55 laps to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nWith 48 laps to go Michael Waltrip\u2019s engine blew, bringing out the 6th caution, and when the green came out with 41 laps to go, Harvick was leading in front of Kenseth and Gordon. With 34 laps to go, the 7th caution came out because Jason Leffler was in trouble. Most of the leaders pitted, but cars that stayed out took the first six places on the restart, led by Kurt Busch. The race restarted with 29 laps to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180867-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Auto Club 500, Summary\nWith 25 laps to go, Busch and Biffle pulled out into a 2-second lead, vying together for first place. Greg Biffle finally retook the lead on lap 228 and kept it to win the race ahead of Jimmie Johnson and Kurt Busch, with only 0.525 of a second separating the top three men.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180868-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao general election\nAutonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao general elections were held in the ARMM for the regional governor, vice-governor posts and election of members of the ARMM Regional Legislative Assembly on August 8, 2005. Voting results are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180869-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Azerbaijani parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Azerbaijan on 6 November 2005. They pitted candidates of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party (NAP) against opposition led by the Azadl\u0131q (Freedom) bloc of the Azerbaijan Popular Front Party, Musavat and the Azerbaijan Democratic Party. The NAP won 61 of the 125 seats. The results were contested, with allegations of vote-rigging from the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180869-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Azerbaijani parliamentary election, Conduct\nHuman Rights Watch expressed concern about widespread intimidation of opposition supporters, saying that the elections could not be free or fair under such conditions. Several opposition leaders were arrested two days before the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180869-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Azerbaijani parliamentary election, Conduct\nARTICLE 19 said Azerbaijani authorities were responsible for the violent harassment of journalists covering opposition rallies, frequent attacks and forced closure of independent media outlets, and widespread abuse of state and local resources in favour of pro-government candidates. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe reported that the vote counting process was \"bad or very bad in 43 per cent of counts observed.\" However, observers from the Commonwealth of Independent States claimed the irregularities \"were not of mass character and did not have [an] impact on the free expression of voters' will\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180869-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Azerbaijani parliamentary election, Conduct\nThe opposition had hoped for another color revolution, but analysts doubted this would happen. Movements like Yox!, Yeni Fikir or Meqam were not yet ready for revolution according to Emin Huseynov, founder of Meqam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180869-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Azerbaijani parliamentary election, Results\nThe Central Election Commission reported, with 28% of votes counted, 62% win for the NAP, 3% for the Equality Party, 1% for the APFP, 2% for independent candidates and 2% each to two other small parties. These results were contradicted by a Mitofsky International and Edison Media Research poll which predicted the NAP going from 75 to 56 seats in the 125-member assembly, with the Azadliq bloc winning 12 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm\nThe 2005 Azores subtropical storm was the 19th nameable storm and only subtropical storm of the extremely active 2005 Atlantic hurricane season. It was not officially named by the US National Hurricane Center as it was operationally classified as a non-tropical low. The storm developed in the eastern Atlantic Ocean out of a low-pressure area that gained subtropical characteristics on 4\u00a0October. The storm was short-lived, crossing over the Azores later on 4\u00a0October before becoming extratropical again on 5\u00a0October. No damages or fatalities were reported during that time. After being absorbed into a cold front, the system went on to become Hurricane Vince, which affected the Iberian Peninsula.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm\nMonths after the hurricane season, when the National Hurricane Center was performing its annual review of the season and its named storms, forecasters Jack Beven and Eric Blake identified this previously unnoticed subtropical storm. Despite its unusual location and wide wind field, the system had a well-defined centre convecting around a warm core.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm, Meteorological history\nThe system originated out of an upper-level low just west of the Canary Islands on 28\u00a0September. The low organized itself over the next days, producing several bursts of convection. While remaining non-tropical with a cold core it moved gradually west to northwest. On 3\u00a0October, it became a broad surface low about 400 nautical miles (740\u00a0km, 460\u00a0mi) southwest of S\u00e3o Miguel Island in the Azores. Early on 4\u00a0October, convection increased as the surface low organized itself, and the system became a subtropical depression.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm, Meteorological history\nAround the same time, the depression turned northeast into a warm sector ahead of an oncoming cold front, and strengthened into a subtropical storm. The system continued to track northeast and strengthened slightly, reaching its peak intensity of 85\u00a0km/h (50\u00a0mph) as it approached the Azores that evening. After tracking through the area, the storm weakened slightly as it moved to the north-northeast. Through an interaction with the cold front early on 5\u00a0October the subtropical storm became extratropical. The system was fully absorbed by the front later that day. The newly absorbed system would separate from the dissolving frontal system and become Subtropical Storm Vince on 8\u00a0October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm, Meteorological history\nAt the time, the system was not believed to have been subtropical. However, there were several post-season findings that confirmed that the system was indeed one. The first finding was the cloud pattern, in which it had deep convection around the center and was better organized with a well-defined center of circulation. In addition, the system had a warm core more typical of tropical cyclones as opposed to the cold core of extratropical cyclones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm, Meteorological history\nThe warm-core nature also meant that there were no warm or cold fronts attached to the system, as temperatures did not change ahead of and behind the system, until an unrelated cold front passed the Azores. Satellite imagery suggested that the system was briefly a tropical storm as the warm core was found; however, the widespread wind field and the presence of an upper-level trough confirmed that it was only subtropical.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm, Impact, classification and records\nTropical storm-force winds were reported across parts of the Azores, primarily on the eastern islands. The strongest winds were reported on Santa Maria Island, where 10-minute sustained winds reached 79\u00a0km/h (49\u00a0mph) with gusts to 94\u00a0km/h (59\u00a0mph). Ponta Delgada faced 61\u00a0km/h (38\u00a0mph) winds, with the peak recorded gust being 85\u00a0km/h (52\u00a0mph). No damage or fatalities were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180870-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Azores subtropical storm, Impact, classification and records\nThe 2005 Azores storm was not classified as a subtropical storm until April 2006, after a reassessment by the National Hurricane Center. Had it been operationally classified as such, it would have been named Tammy. Every year, the National Hurricane Center (NHC) re-analyzes the systems of the past hurricane season and revises the storm history if there is new data that was operationally unavailable. This reanalysis revealed that the storm became a subtropical storm on 4\u00a0October, making it the earliest forming 19th Atlantic tropical or subtropical storm on record. The previous record holder was an unnamed 1933 tropical storm that developed on 26\u00a0October. It held this distinction until 2020, when Hurricane Teddy attained tropical storm strength on 14\u00a0September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180871-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy\nThe 2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts. It was the 31st edition of the event known that year as the BA-CA-TennisTrophy, and was part of the International Series Gold of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the Wiener Stadthalle in Vienna, Austria, from 10 October until 16 October 2005. Fourth-seeded Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107 won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180871-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy, Finals, Doubles\nMark Knowles / Daniel Nestor defeated Jonathan Erlich / Andy Ram, 5\u20133, 5\u20134(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 40], "content_span": [41, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180872-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Doubles\nMartin Damm and Cyril Suk were the defending champions, but Damm did not participate this year. Suk partnered Pavel V\u00edzner, losing in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180872-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Doubles\nMark Knowles and Daniel Nestor won the title, defeating Jonathan Erlich and Andy Ram 5\u20133, 5\u20134(7\u20134) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180873-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Singles\nFeliciano L\u00f3pez was the defending champion but lost to Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek in the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180873-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BA-CA-TennisTrophy \u2013 Singles\nIvan Ljubi\u010di\u0107 won the title defeating Juan Carlos Ferrero 6\u20132, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20135) in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180874-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BC Lions season\nThe 2005 BC Lions finished in first place in the West Division with a 12\u20136 record. They appeared in the West Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180874-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BC Lions season, Playoffs, Scotiabank West Championship\nVANCOUVER \u2013 On the heels of his benching against Calgary, it seemed likely that Edmonton head coach Danny Maciocia would leave Ricky Ray as the backup for the West final against the BC Lions. However, Maciocia said mid-week that Ray would start, leaving Jason Maas remaining as the backup. In BC, Dave Dickenson unsurprisingly got the start over former Most Outstanding Player Casey Printers, leading some to joke that four of the CFL's best quarterbacks would be in this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180875-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BCR Open Romania\nThe 2005 BCR Open Romania was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 14th edition of the event known that year as the BCR Open Romania, and was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the Arenele BNR in Bucharest, Romania, from September 12 through September 19, 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180875-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BCR Open Romania, Finals, Doubles\nJos\u00e9 Acasuso / Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto defeated Victor H\u0103nescu / Andrei Pavel 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 38], "content_span": [39, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180876-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BCR Open Romania \u2013 Doubles\nLucas Arnold Ker and Mariano Hood were the defending champions, but Arnold Ker did not compete this year. Hood teamed up with Mart\u00edn Garc\u00eda and lost in the quarterfinals to Juan Ignacio Chela and Luis Horna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180876-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BCR Open Romania \u2013 Doubles\nJos\u00e9 Acasuso and Sebasti\u00e1n Prieto won the title by defeating Victor H\u0103nescu and Andrei Pavel 6\u20133, 4\u20136, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180877-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BCR Open Romania \u2013 Singles\nJos\u00e9 Acasuso was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Rub\u00e9n Ram\u00edrez Hidalgo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180877-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BCR Open Romania \u2013 Singles\nFlorent Serra won the title by defeating Igor Andreev 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180878-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BDO World Darts Championship\nThe 2005 Lakeside World Professional Darts Championship was held from 1\u20139 January 2005 at the Lakeside Country Club in Frimley Green, Surrey. Raymond van Barneveld lifted the title for a fourth time, defeating England captain Martin Adams 6\u20132 in the final. The defending champion Andy Fordham suffered a first round loss to Vincent van der Voort. The women's event saw Trina Gulliver win her fifth successive title defeating Francis Hoenselaar 2\u20130 in a repeat the last year's final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180878-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BDO World Darts Championship, Prize money\nThe prize money was \u00a3199,000 for the men's event and \u00a310,000 for the women's event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180878-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 BDO World Darts Championship, Prize money\nThere was also a shared 9 Dart Checkout prize of \u00a352,000, along with a High Checkout prize of \u00a32,000 per event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 46], "content_span": [47, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180879-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BFL season\nThe 2005 season of the Belgian Football League (BFL) is the regular season played in the Belgium. The Antwerp Diamonds won Belgian Bowl XVIII against the Brussels Black Angels by a score of 12-2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180879-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BFL season, Regular season, Regular season standings\nW = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PCT = Winning Percentage, PF= Points For, PA = Points Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180880-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Championship\nThe 2005 BMW Championship was the 51st edition of the BMW Championship, an annual professional golf tournament on the European Tour. It was held 26\u201329 May at the West Course of Wentworth Club in Virginia Water, Surrey, England, a suburb southwest of London.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180880-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Championship\nIt was the first year the event's sponsorship had been taken on by BMW, after Volvo's contract to sponsor the event had expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180880-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Championship\n\u00c1ngel Cabrera won by two strokes ahead of Paul McGinley, having had two previous runner-up finishes in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180881-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Open\nThe 2005 BMW Open was a men's Association of Tennis Professionals tennis tournament held in Munich, Germany. It was part of the 2005 ATP Tour and was classified as an International Series event. The tournament was played on outdoor clay courts and held from 25 April through 2 May 2005. First-seeded David Nalbandian won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180881-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Open, Finals, Doubles\nMario An\u010di\u0107 / Julian Knowle defeated Florian Mayer / Alexander Waske 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 30], "content_span": [31, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180882-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nJames Blake and Mark Merklein were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180882-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Open \u2013 Doubles\nMario An\u010di\u0107 and Julian Knowle won in the final 6\u20133, 1\u20136, 6\u20133, against Florian Mayer and Alexander Waske.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180883-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nNikolay Davydenko was the defending champion, but lost in the second round this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180883-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BMW Open \u2013 Singles\nDavid Nalbandian won the title, defeating Andrei Pavel 6\u20134, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180884-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters\nThe 2005 Paris Masters (also known as the BNP Paribas Masters for sponsorship reasons) was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 33rd edition of the Paris Masters, and was part of the ATP Masters Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France, from 31 October to 6 November 2005. Tom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180884-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters\nThe singles line up included ATP No. 3, Wimbledon and Indianapolis runner-up, Cincinnati champion Andy Roddick, US Open quarterfinalist, Umag winner, Monte Carlo, Rome and Beijing finalist Guillermo Coria, and French Open semifinalist, St. P\u00f6lten winner Nikolay Davydenko. Other top seeds were French Open runner-up, Casablanca titlist Mariano Puerta, Munich winner David Nalbandian, Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107, Gast\u00f3n Gaudio and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180884-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters, Finals, Singles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych defeated Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107, 6\u20133, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 4\u20136, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180884-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters, Finals, Doubles\nBob Bryan / Mike Bryan defeated Daniel Nestor / Mark Knowles, 6\u20134, 6\u20137(3\u20137), 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180885-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Doubles\nJonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Todd Woodbridge were the defending champions, but did not participate together this year. Bj\u00f6rkman partnered Max Mirnyi, losing in the first round. Woodbridge retired from professional tennis earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180885-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20137(3), 6\u20134, against Mark Knowles and Daniel Nestor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180886-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles\nTom\u00e1\u0161 Berdych defeated Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107 in the final, 6\u20133, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 4\u20136, 6\u20134, to win the Singles title at the 2005 Paris Masters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180886-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles\nMarat Safin was the defending champion but chose not to compete.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180886-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 BNP Paribas Masters \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. All sixteen seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180887-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 BYU Cougars football team\nThe 2005 BYU Cougars football team represented Brigham Young University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180887-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 BYU Cougars football team, Schedule\n\u2022SportsWest Productions (SWP) games were shown locally on KSL 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180888-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Babil governorate council election\nThe Babil Governorate elections resulted in the election of 41 members of the Provincial Council (PC). The results are presented in the following table and the parenthesis indicates the position selected by the PC after their first meetings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180889-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Badminton World Cup\nThe 2005 Badminton World Cup was the twentieth edition of an international tournament Badminton World Cup. The event was held at the Olympic Sports Park in Yiyang, Hunan, China from 14 to 18 December 2005. It was sanctioned by the International Badminton Federation and Table Tennis and Badminton Administration Center under China's State General Administration of Sport, with a total prize money of US$250,000. This was the first time after 1997, this tournament was being conducted. Between 1997 and 2005, this tournament was halted due to various problems. In the end of the competitions, China won the titles in all 5 disciplines.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180890-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain GP2 Series round\nThe 2005 Bahrain GP2 Series round was a GP2 Series motor race held on September 29 and 30, 2005 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain. It was the final round of the 2005 GP2 Series season. The race weekend was a stand-alone event unlike the previous GP2 rounds which support Formula One Grands Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180890-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain GP2 Series round, Background\nComing into the final round of the season, Nico Rosberg held a five point lead in the driver's championship from Heikki Kovalainen with 22 points up for grabs in the final round at the Bahrain International Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Bahrain Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 3 April 2005 at the Bahrain International Circuit in Sakhir, Bahrain. The 57-lap race was the third round of the 2005 Formula One season and the second running of the Bahrain Grand Prix, since its inception the year before.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix\nThe race was won by polesitter and championship leader Fernando Alonso for the Renault team. Jarno Trulli finished in second place in a Toyota car and Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen completed the podium in third position for McLaren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThe race was only the second Formula One grand prix held in the Middle East, bringing the challenges of high temperatures and dusty conditions. The race was held the day after Pope John Paul II died, with several teams and drivers offering their respects, most notably Ferrari, who raced with blackened nose cones as a mark of respect. The celebrations on the podium were also muted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThe circuit had been modified slightly from 2004, with turn 4 in particular being widened on the exit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Background\nBefore the race, McLaren driver Juan Pablo Montoya injured his shoulder. This led to him being replaced by Pedro de la Rosa at this race, and Alexander Wurz at the next one in San Marino, before his return at the Spanish Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nFirst qualifying on Saturday resulted in few surprises\u2013 for the first few drivers, the circuit was still somewhat sandy, providing poor grip, while the later runners performed well, with Fernando Alonso taking provisional pole with a lap time of 1:29.848.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nFinal qualifying on Sunday morning again passed without major incident, with Alonso taking pole position, and Michael Schumacher taking second, driving the brand-new F2005 car. Rubens Barrichello, having had gearbox problems on Friday and Saturday, qualified 15th, and elected to change his engine, resulting in him starting from the back of the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nRace afternoon brought the highest ever recorded temperatures experienced at a grand prix, with air temperature of 42.5\u00a0\u00b0C (108.5\u00a0\u00b0F) and track temperatures of 56\u00a0\u00b0C (133\u00a0\u00b0F). This surpassed the record temperatures of the 1955 Argentine Grand Prix and the 1984 Dallas Grand Prix. Christian Klien failed to get away from his seventh position on the grid for the formation lap. His car was pushed into the pits but could not be restarted, and he became the first of eight retirements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe leaders made a clean start, with Alonso first to turn one. Schumacher moved from his second grid slot across to the clean side of the track, ahead of Jarno Trulli, who made a strong challenge to pass Schumacher in the first two corners, without success. Barrichello made an aggressive start, moving up to tenth by the end of lap one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nGiancarlo Fisichella's engine began to smoke during lap two, and he pulled into the pits to retire. However, as he applied the pit lane speed limiter, he felt power return, and was waved through by his team. But the resurgence was short-lived, and he was back in the pits on lap four to retire. On lap three, Narain Karthikeyan's car suffered an electrical failure that looked similar to Christian Klien's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nSchumacher continued to closely pursue Alonso until lap 12, when the world champion overshot turn nine, and performed a 270\u00b0 turn in the run-off area. At the end of the lap, Schumacher coasted back to the pits, making this his first mechanical retirement since the 2001 German Grand Prix\u2013 a remarkable run of 58 consecutive grands prix. It later emerged that the car's hydraulics had failed, meaning he could not downshift to use engine braking for corners. Therefore, Trulli now took second place, 2.7 seconds behind Alonso, with Mark Webber in third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 18, Ralf Schumacher in fourth place made the first scheduled pit stop of the front-runners, and rejoined in 12th place. Alonso, Trulli and then Webber all pitted over the next few laps, in what appeared to be the now fairly standard three-stop pattern. After the pit stops, Alonso retained the lead, followed by Trulli, Webber, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Ralf, and Barrichello.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nNick Heidfeld was the next retirement, with a blown engine on lap 25, although it took him around half a lap to pull off the track to stop. He was shortly followed by Takuma Sato, whose front brakes had been smoking for a while, and who spun and then retired in the pits on lap 27. His teammate Jenson Button's brakes also appeared to be giving off more dust than usual, as Button fought to keep Pedro de la Rosa from taking his seventh place. De la Rosa was making his first start for McLaren, replacing the sidelined Juan Pablo Montoya. De la Rosa finally managed to pass Button on lap 33, outbraking him at turn one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 657]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe following lap, Webber lost control out of turn eight, spun on the entrance to turn nine, and allowed R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Ralf Schumacher to pass\u2013 on a circuit with very forgiving run-off areas, the spin upset the balance of Webber's car and flat-spotted his tyres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nIn the next few laps, before the second pit stops, the closest fight was between Barrichello in sixth, and de la Rosa in seventh. De la Rosa continually pressured the remaining Ferrari, but initially he only succeeded in pushing himself too far, running wide at turn one, and allowing Button to close up behind him. Eventually, though, he was able to take sixth place in the final corner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAlonso put in several fast laps to extend his lead, and pitted on lap 41. The other drivers also pitted without incident, except Button, who stalled his BAR-Honda. After several attempts at restarting the engine, he almost took his rear jack with him back into the race\u2013 only to retire at the end of the pit-lane due to a clutch failure, making this the second race in a row where both BAR drivers had retired. After the second round of pit stops, Alonso still led the race, followed by Trulli, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Ralf Schumacher, Webber, de la Rosa, Barrichello, and Felipe Massa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nIn the closing stages, the main fight was between Webber and de la Rosa for fifth place. Webber defended strongly, but de la Rosa eventually overcame him two laps from the end of the race. Jacques Villeneuve retired from ninth place into the pits on the penultimate lap, while Barrichello slipped further and further back, allowing Massa to take seventh place and score points in his Sauber team's 200th Grand Prix, and David Coulthard took eighth place on the last lap, making Ferrari scoreless for the first time since the 2003 Brazilian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180891-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahrain Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAlonso won the race by a comfortable 13.4 seconds from Trulli, bringing Renault engines their 100th World Championship Grand Prix win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180892-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bahraini Crown Prince Cup\nThe 2005 Bahraini Crown Prince Cup was the 5th edition of the cup tournament in men's football (soccer). This edition featured the top four sides from the Bahraini Premier League 2004-05 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180893-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Balad bombings\nOn September 29, 2005, three near-simultaneous car bombs exploded in Balad, Iraq. The bombs went off in a busy vegetable market, by a bank and by a police station. More than 95 were killed and 100 wounded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings\nThe 2005 Bali bombings were a series of terrorist suicide bomb and a series of car bombs and attacks that occurred on 1 October 2005, in Bali, Indonesia. Bombs exploded at two sites in Jimbaran Beach Resort and in Kuta 30\u00a0km (19\u00a0mi) away, both in south Bali. The terrorist attack claimed the lives of 20 people and injured more than 100 others. The three bombers also died in the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Explosions\nThe Indonesian national news agency, ANTARA, reported that the first two explosions occurred at 6:50\u00a0p.m. local time, near a Jimbaran food court and the third at 7:00 pm. in Kuta Town Square. Other reports claim that the blasts occurred at around 7:15\u00a0p.m. At least 3 blasts were reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Explosions\nOne of the blasts struck Raja's Restaurant at the Kuta Square shopping mall in central Kuta. Another two bombs exploded at warungs along the Jimbaran beach, one of which was near the Four Seasons Hotel. These areas are generally popular with Western tourists. Police later said they had found three unexploded bombs in Jimbaran. They had apparently failed to go off after the security forces hastily shut down the island's mobile telephone network following the first blasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Explosions\nAccording to Indonesia's head of counter-terrorism, Major General Ansyaad Mbai, early evidence indicates that the attacks were carried out by at least three suicide bombers in a similar fashion to the 2002 bombings. The remnants of backpacks and excessively mutilated bodies are believed to be evidence of suicide bombings. There remains also a possibility that backpacks were hidden inside the target restaurants before detonation. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty said that the bombs used appear to have differed from previous blasts in that most deaths and injuries had been inflicted by shrapnel, rather than chemical explosion. A medical officer's x-rays showed foreign objects described as \"pellets\" in many victims' bodies and a victim reported ball bearings lodged in her back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 834]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Explosions\nThe bombings occurred the same day that Indonesia cut its fuel subsidies resulting in gas prices rising by 675% and just two days before the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan and 11 days before the third anniversary of the 2002 Bali bombing. The attack came during the school holiday period in some states of Australia, when an estimated 7,500 Australians are believed to have been visiting Bali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Casualties\nThe latest report cites 20 dead and between 101 and 129 injured. Some earlier reports put the number of fatalities at between 26 and 36 people, but those figures have since been lowered. Among those killed were 15 Indonesians, 4 Australians, and a Japanese national, not counting the 3 assassins. The wounded included many Indonesians, mostly Hindus while the rest were 19 Australians, 8 South Koreans, 6 Americans, 4 Japanese, 3 Canadians and 1 Briton. As there were no records at the hospitals or morgues on the locations from where the victims arrived, it is not possible to determine the casualty figures at each blast location separately.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Casualties\nMost of the casualties were sent to Bali's Sanglah General Hospital, and mostly treated for injuries caused by broken glass. Others were sent to Griya Asih Hospital. As in the 2002 bombings, some of the injured, primarily foreign nationals, were evacuated to medical facilities in Australia and Singapore. The less seriously injured were evacuated to Singapore, while other casualties, among them Australians, Japanese and an Indonesian, were evacuated to treatment in Darwin, Australia aboard a Royal Australian Air Force C-130 Hercules.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Casualties\nFollowing the 2002 Bali bombings, in which more Australians than any other nationals were killed and injured, and the 2004 bombing of Australia's Embassy in Jakarta, the latest attacks received extensive coverage in Australia and were denounced by some officials, such as Federal Opposition Leader Kim Beazley, as an attack on Australians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Prior warnings\nIndonesian authorities were expecting such an event, after the Indonesian president warned of more bombings within the country, and the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs (DFAT) had issued warnings two days before the event. However, the Australian government claimed that it received no specific prior warning of a terrorist attack being imminent in Bali. Minister Downer also played down any knowledge of specific signs of the potential event, despite the DFAT warning on the last day of September. DFAT warned Australians against non-essential travel to Indonesia since before the 2002 attacks\u00a0\u2013 a warning still in effect. The department advises travellers against congregating in areas popular with Western tourists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Prior warnings\nIn May 2005, the US State Department issued a travel warning against non-essential trips to Indonesia. The travel warning was last updated 9 January 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Prior warnings\nA Philippine security official said that for months intelligence officials in Southeast Asia had received information that the al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah group was orchestrating a major strike, possibly in the Philippines or Indonesia, but were unable to uncover the plot's details in time to prevent it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Prior warnings\nThe Australian Broadcasting Corporation's National News Radio network reported on 3 October that several Australian tourists had heard rumours about a planned bombing, prompting federal Opposition Leader Kim Beazley to urge the Australian government to form closer intelligence ties with Indonesia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Prior warnings\nOn 31 August 2005, one month before the second Bali bombing, terrorists managed to put a partially assembled bomb on the 4th floor of Kuta Paradiso hotel. The bomb passed the security check at the hotel and the security cameras on the hotel were broken. There were no explosives in the bomb.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nThe attacks bear the hallmarks of the active terrorist network Jemaah Islamiah (JI), which is believed to be responsible for several bombings in Indonesia, including the Philippine consulate bombing in Jakarta, the Jakarta Stock Exchange bombing, the Christmas Eve 2000 Indonesia bombings, the 2002 Bali nightclub bombing, the 2002 Makassar bombing, the 2003 Marriott Hotel bombing, the 2004 Australian Embassy bombing, the 2005 Palu market bombing and the 2009 Jakarta bombings. Rohan Gunaratna, head of terrorism research at Singapore's Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, told Agence France-Presse that \"The only group that has the intention and capability to mount a coordinated and simultaneous attack against a western target in Indonesia is Jemaah Islamiyah.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nAlthough a link to JI has not been confirmed, the bombings were quickly condemned as terrorist attacks by the authorities. Police Major General Ansyaad Mbai, a top Indonesian anti-terrorism official, told the Associated Press that the bombings \"were clearly the work of terrorists\". Major General Mbai identified Malaysian men, already wanted in connection to previous bombings in Indonesia, as the suspected masterminds of the attacks. The chief suspect was Azahari Husin, a member of JI who was an engineering expert and former academic with a doctorate from University of Reading (late 1980s).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nHusin was nicknamed the \"Demolition Man\" and was thought to have collaborated with the second suspect: Noordin Mohammed Top, a bomb maker whose wife was sentenced to three years in prison for harbouring him. Azahari was killed in a police raid in November 2005, while Noordin \"has been killed after a lengthy and violent siege, Indonesia's police chief said\" by \"heavily armed counter-terrorism police\" on 16 September 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nMotivations for the bombings remain unclear. Some, such as the Australian Prime Minister, have suggested the attacks were intended to undermine Indonesia's moderate democratic government. Moreover, media organisations have suggested that the attack was planned to correspond with massive fuel price increases in Indonesia, so as to maximise economic and political damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0015-0001", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nOn the contrary, Sidney Jones, of the International Crisis Group, believes that it was not an attempt to undermine democracy \"per se\", but rather an example of jihadist extremism: \"I think they very much see the world in a black and white way, us against them, Muslims against infidels... [ They see] that the infidels led by the United States as part of a Christian-Zionist conspiracy are out to persecute and attack and eliminate Muslims around the world, and therefore, [they] have to run away.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0015-0002", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nHowever, in common with the Prime Minister, Jones believes the attack was indiscriminate and not an attack on Australians \"per se\". She suggested Bali was selected as the site of the attacks because there was less chance of Indonesian gangsters being killed, and there was \"a chance of getting a few foreigners\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nFollowing the attacks Abu Bakar Bashir, who is alleged to be JI's spiritual leader, released a statement from his prison cell, condemning the attack. But he added that the bombings were a sign of God's displeasure with the Indonesian government. He said: \"I suggest the government bring themselves closer to God by implementing his rules and laws because these happenings are warnings from God for all of us.\" In an interview with Scott Atran from his cell in Cipinang Prison, Jakarta, Bashir said: \"I call those who carried out these actions all mujahid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0016-0001", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Suspects\nThey all had a good intention, that is, Jihad in Allah\u2019s way, the aim of the jihad is to look for blessing from Allah. They are right that America is the proper target because America fights Islam. So in terms of their objectives, they are right, and the target of their attacks was right also.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Investigation\nIndonesian police believed that three suicide bombers carried out the bombings. A presidential spokesman Dino Djalal said that the police found a total of \"six legs and three heads but no middle bodies, and that's the strong sign of suicide bombers.\" Photos of the three heads were published in The Jakarta Post on Monday, 3 October 2005. Initially, there were conflicting reports on the number of bombs; but later, the police confirmed only three bombs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Investigation\nAn amateur video capturing the scene at the restaurant in Kuta showed one bomber with a backpack walking inside just seconds before a huge explosion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Investigation\nOn the following Monday, on 3 October 2005, the police issued an appeal to the public for help identifying the suspected suicide bombers whose dismembered remains were found at the scene. Photos of the dead suspects were later distributed widely and a hotline was set up to receive tips.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Investigation\nAccording to Banten Police Chief Senior Commissioner Badrodin Haiti, the Indonesian police are seeking five members of a ring led by Imam Samudra, who has been sentenced to death for his role in the 2002 Bali bombings. Three of the five men had already served jail sentences for holding explosives belonging to Samudra. They were under police surveillance but had disappeared from their homes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Investigation\nOn 9 October 2005, police in Bali arrested a man, identified by the initials HS, who was allegedly a former roommate of one of the suicide bombers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180894-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Bali bombings, Investigation\nAccording to Indonesian police, in 2005, a corrupt prison warden at the Kerobokan prison smuggled a laptop inside for Imam Samudra, the leader of the terrorist group involved in the first Bali bombing. He then used the laptop and a wireless connection to chat with other terrorist suspects.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180895-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ball State Cardinals football team\nThe 2005 Ball State Cardinals football team represented Ball State University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Ball State competed as a member of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). The Cardinals were led by Brady Hoke in his third year as head coach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180896-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballon d'Or\nThe 2005 Ballon d'Or, given to the best football player in Europe as judged by a panel of sports journalists from UEFA member countries, was delivered to the Brazilian midfielder Ronaldinho on 28 November 2005. On 24 October 2005, was announced the shortlist of 50 male players compiled by a group of experts from France Football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180896-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Ballon d'Or\nThere were 52 voters, from Albania, Andorra, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, England, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Malta, Moldova, Netherlands, Northern Ireland, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Ireland, Romania, Russia, San Marino, Scotland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, Wales and Yugoslavia. Each picked a first (5pts), second (4pts), third (3pts), fourth (2pts) and fifth choice (1pt).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180896-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballon d'Or\nRonaldinho was the third Brazilian to win the award after Rivaldo (1999) and Ronaldo. Petr \u010cech (Czech Republic) was the top ranked goalkeeper in the list, at 14th place. Paolo Maldini (Italy) was the best ranked defender, at sixth, while Thierry Henry (France) was the top-ranked forward, at fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180896-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballon d'Or, Rankings, Non-voted players\nThe following 26 men were originally in contention for the 2005 Ballon d\u2019Or, but did not receive any votes:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180897-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymena Borough Council election\nElections to Ballymena Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 24 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180897-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymena Borough Council election, Districts results, Ballymena North\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 2 x Independent, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180897-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymena Borough Council election, Districts results, Ballymena South\n2001: 4 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 5 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 75], "content_span": [76, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180897-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymena Borough Council election, Districts results, Bannside\n2001: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 68], "content_span": [69, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180897-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymena Borough Council election, Districts results, Braid\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180898-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymoney Borough Council election\nElections to Ballymoney Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used three district electoral areas to elect a total of 16 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180898-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymoney Borough Council election, Districts results, Ballymoney Town\n2001: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 76], "content_span": [77, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180898-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymoney Borough Council election, Districts results, Bann Valley\n2001: 3 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180898-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ballymoney Borough Council election, Districts results, Bushvale\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in and DUP gain from UUP (two seats), Independent leaves DUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 69], "content_span": [70, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180899-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baltic Cup\nThe 2005 Baltic Cup football competition took place without one of the usual contenders in this Baltic states' championship: Estonia. Therefore, the event was reduced to a single match between Lithuania and Latvia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180900-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baltimore Orioles season\nThe 2005 Baltimore Orioles season involved the Orioles finishing 4th in the American League East with a record of 74 wins and 88 losses. The team started off hot, compiling a record of 42 wins and 30 losses while spending 62 days in first place in AL East. After June 23, the team started slipping on the way to a losing record and manager Lee Mazzilli's dismissal in early August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180900-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Baltimore Orioles season, Season summary\nThe Baltimore Orioles had one of the best starts in franchise history, posting a record of 47\u201340. The Orioles, however, posted a 27\u201348 record after the all-star break, finishing 21 games behind the Boston Red Sox and the New York Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180900-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Baltimore Orioles season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180901-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baltimore Ravens season\nThe 2005 Baltimore Ravens season was the team's tenth season in the NFL. They were unable to improve upon their previous output of 9\u20137, instead going 6\u201310 and missing the playoffs for the second straight season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180902-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Banbridge District Council election\nElections to Banbridge District Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used three district electoral areas to elect a total of 17 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180902-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Banbridge District Council election, Districts results, Banbridge Town\n2001: 3 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2005: 2 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 75], "content_span": [76, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180902-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Banbridge District Council election, Districts results, Dromore\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 68], "content_span": [69, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180902-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Banbridge District Council election, Districts results, Knockiveagh\n2001: 2 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2005: 3 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180903-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bandy World Championship\nThe 2005 Bandy World Championship was played between 11 men's national bandy teams in Russia on 30 January-6 February 2005. Sweden became champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180904-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bandy World Championship squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2005 Bandy World Championship final tournament in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180905-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bangkok International Film Festival\nThe 2005 Bangkok International Film Festival started on January 13 and ran until January 24. The Golden Kinnaree Awards were announced on January 21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180906-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bangladesh bombings\nOn 17 August 2005, around 500 bomb explosions occurred at 300 locations in 63 out of the 64 districts of Bangladesh. The bombs exploded within a half-hour period starting from 11:30\u00a0am. An terrorist organization, Jama'atul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB) claimed responsibility for the bombings. The group, led by Shaykh Abdur Rahman and Siddiqur Rahman (also known as Bangla Bhai), is alleged to be affiliated with Al Qaeda, although this has not been proven. Another terrorist group, named Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami, was associated with JMB in executing the co-ordinated attack. Following the bombings, both groups were banned by the Government of Bangladesh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180906-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bangladesh bombings, Attacks\nThe bomb exploded near Government facilities. In Dhaka, they exploded near Bangladesh Secretariat, the Supreme Court Complex, the Prime Minister's Office, the Dhaka University campus, the Dhaka Sheraton Hotel and Zia International Airport. At least 115 people were injured when 500 small bombs were exploded in 62 out of 63 districts of Bangladesh. The explosion killed two people (a child in Savar, near Dhaka, and a rickshaw-puller in Chapai Nawabganj District), and injured a further 50.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180906-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bangladesh bombings, Trials\nThe main perpetrators of the bombing, Bangla Bhai and Shaykh Abdur Rahman, were captured by the Rapid Action Battalion in early March 2006. They were convicted of murder and terrorism charges, along with four other militants, and were executed by hanging on 30 March 2007. Five suspects were sentenced to death and one to 20 years in prison for their part in the bomb attacks in Bogra. By 2013, 200 cases out of 273 cases filed in connection with 2005 Bangladesh bombings have been disposed of. Different courts have sentenced 58 people to death and 150 were sentenced to life in prison and 300 others were sentenced to various terms in prisons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 32], "content_span": [33, 679]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180907-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic\nThe 2005 Bank of the West Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was part of the Tier II Series of the 2005 WTA Tour. It was the 34th edition of the tournament and took place at the Taube Tennis Center in Stanford, California, United States, from July 25 through July 31, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180907-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic, Finals, Doubles\nCara Black / Rennae Stubbs defeated Elena Likhovtseva / Vera Zvonareva 6\u20133, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 46], "content_span": [47, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180908-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Doubles\nEleni Daniilidou and Nicole Pratt were the defending champions, but Pratt did not compete this year. Daniilidou teamed up with Jennifer Russell and reached the quarterfinals, before being eliminated by Kv\u011bta Peschke and Francesca Schiavone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180908-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Doubles\nCara Black and Rennae Stubbs won the final, defeating Elena Likhovtseva and Vera Zvonareva 6\u20133, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180909-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport was the defending champion, but retired in the second round against Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld due to a low back strain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180909-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles\nKim Clijsters won the title, defeating Venus Williams 7\u20135, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180909-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bank of the West Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe first four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180910-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open\nThe 2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the inaugural edition of the Slovenia Open, and was part of the WTA Tier IV tournaments of the 2005 women's professional tennis season. It was held in Portoro\u017e, Slovenia, in mid-September, 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180910-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open, Finals, Doubles\nAnabel Medina Garrigues / Roberta Vinci claimed the title, when Jelena Kostani\u0107 / Katarina Srebotnik, 6\u20134, 5\u20137, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 47], "content_span": [48, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180911-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open \u2013 Doubles\nThe Doubles Tournament at the 2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open took place in mid-September on outdoor hard courts in Portoro\u017e, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180911-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open \u2013 Doubles\nAnabel Medina Garrigues and Roberta Vinci emerged as the winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180912-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open \u2013 Singles\nThe Singles Tournament at the 2005 Banka Koper Slovenia Open took place in mid-September on outdoor hard courts in Portoro\u017e, Slovenia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180913-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Barbarians end of season tour\nThe 2005 Barbarians rugby union tour was a series of matches played in May 2005 in by Barbarians F.C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180913-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Barbarians end of season tour, Results\nIn the first match, Scotland, without the player involved in Cardiff with the Lions tour to New Zealand, won easily.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180913-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Barbarians end of season tour, Results\nScotland. : C.Paterson; Rory Lamont, Mark di Rollo, A.Henderson, Sean Lamont; G.Ross, Mike Blair; Allan Jacobsen, S. Lawson, B.Douglas, S.Grimes, S.Murray, K.Brown, A.Hogg, J.Petrie(capt) \u2013 Replacements: D Hall, E.0 Murray, C. Hamilton, A.Wilson, G.Beveridge, Dan Parks, Hugo Southwell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180913-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Barbarians end of season tour, Results\nBarbarians: G.Dempsey (Ireland); B.Lima (Samoa), M-Burke(Australia), K.Maggs (Ireland), Sereli Bobo (Fiji); D.Humphreys (capt. ), B.redpath; A. lo Cicero, F.Sheahan (Ireland), D.Morris (Wales), Gary Longwell (Ireland), AJ Venter (South Africa), O.Finegan (Australia), Semo Sititi (Samoa), E.Miller (Ireland) -Replacements: R.Ibanez (France), C.Visagie (South Africa), S.Boome (South Africa), J.O'Connor (Ireland), M.Robinson (New Zealand), T.Castaignede (France), K.Logan (Scotland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 527]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180913-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Barbarians end of season tour, Results\nAgainst Ireland (also without the better player involved in the Lions's tour, Barbarians obtain an easy win)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission\nThe 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission preliminary list was released by the United States Department of Defense on May 13, 2005. It was the fifth Base Realignment and Closure (\"BRAC\") proposal generated since the process was created in 1988. It recommended closing 22 major United States military bases and the \"realignment\" (either enlarging or shrinking) of 33 others. On September 15, 2005, President George W. Bush approved the BRAC Commission's recommendations, leaving the fate of the bases in question to the United States Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission\nCongress had a maximum of 45 days to reject the proposal by passing a joint resolution of disapproval, or the recommendations automatically enter into effect. Such a resolution (H.J.Res. 65) was introduced to the House of Representatives on September 23, 2005, by Rep. Ray LaHood (R-IL) (no such resolution was introduced in the Senate). The House took up debate of the resolution on October 26, 2005. The resolution failed to pass by a 324-85 margin, thereby enacting the list of recommendations. The Secretary of Defense was required to begin implementing the recommendations by September 15, 2007 and to complete implementation no later than September 15, 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 709]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission, Justifications\nPentagon officials calculated that, if adopted in full by the nine-member BRAC Commission, the recommendations would have saved almost $50 billion over 20 years. The BRAC Commission (officially known as the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission) disputed this claim, pointing out what it considered to be significant flaws in the Department's methodology. The Commission recalculated the 20-year savings of the DOD recommendation list at just above $37 billion. Between late May and late August, the Commission reviewed the list and amended many of the Pentagon's recommendations, removing several major installations from the closure list. The Commission calculated the overall 20-year savings to the government in carrying out its amended list of recommendations as close to $15 billion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission, Justifications\nOn May 12, 2005 Gen. Richard Myers, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said that the two-year effort to produce the list had several objectives:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission, Justifications\nThe 2005 BRAC round was the fifth since the process was initiated in 1988, and the first since 1995. It differed significantly from preceding rounds in several respects:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 60], "content_span": [61, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission, Recommendations\nBy merging adjacent installations belonging to different services 13 Joint Bases were created.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 61], "content_span": [62, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180914-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission, Results\nThe 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission resulted in a $35 billion increase in military spending, partly due to building new facilities. The military claimed, however, that it also resulted in a $4 billion reduction in annual spending.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 53], "content_span": [54, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nElections to the Baseball Hall of Fame for 2005 proceeded in keeping with rules enacted in 2001. The Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA) held an election to select from recent players, voting Ryne Sandberg and Wade Boggs into the Hall. The Veterans Committee held a separate election to select from players retired more than 20 years, but did not elect anyone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting\nInduction ceremonies in Cooperstown were held July 31 with Commissioner Bud Selig presiding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThe BBWAA was again authorized to elect players active in 1985 or later, but not after 1999; the ballot included candidates from the 2004 ballot who received at least 5% of the vote but were not elected, along with selected players, chosen by a screening committee, whose last appearance was in 1999. All 10-year members of the BBWAA were eligible to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nVoters were instructed to cast votes for up to 10 candidates; any candidate receiving votes on at least 75% of the ballots would be honored with induction to the Hall. Results of the 2005 election by the BBWAA were announced on January 4. The ballot consisted of 27 players; 516 ballots were cast, with 387 votes required for election. A total of 3263 individual votes were cast, an average of 6.32 per ballot. Those candidates receiving less than 5% of the vote (26 votes) will not appear on future BBWAA ballots, but may eventually be considered by the Veterans Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nCandidates who were eligible for the first time are indicated here with a dagger (\u2020). The two candidates who received at least 75% of the vote and were elected are indicated in bold italics; candidates who have since been selected in subsequent elections are indicated in italics. The candidates who received less than 5% of the vote, thus becoming ineligible for future BBWAA consideration, are indicated with an asterisk (*).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nThe newly-eligible candidates included 10 All Stars (two of whom were not on the ballot), who were selected for a combined total of 43 times. Wade Boggs, a 12-time All Star, and Darryl Strawberry, an eight-time All Star, were the only new candidates selected five or more times. The ballot included one Rookie of the Year (Strawberry), one Cy Young Award-winner (Jack McDowell), and one MVP (Willie McGee).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nPlayers eligible for the first time who were not included on the ballot were: Paul Assenmacher, Jeff Blauser, Mike Blowers, John Cangelosi, Jim Corsi, Rich DeLucia, Tony Fossas, Carlos Garc\u00eda, Jack Howell, Darrin Jackson, Jeff King, Mike Macfarlane, Kirt Manwaring, Derrick May, Brian McRae, Eric Plunk, Mark Portugal, Mel Rojas, Paul Sorrento, and Dale Sveum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, BBWAA election\nOf the new players on the ballot, only Wade Boggs was elected; Willie McGee was the only other first-timer to receive enough votes to remain on the ballot, receiving the exact minimum (26) to stay eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 52], "content_span": [53, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee\nRules enacted in August 2001 provided that the Veterans Committee would be expanded from its previous 15 members, elected to limited terms, to include the full living membership of the Hall. Elections for players retired over 20 years would be held every other year, with elections of non-players (managers, umpires and executives) held every fourth year. No candidates were elected from either ballot in 2003. Following 2004, when no Veterans election was held, the Committee voted in 2005 on players who were active no later than 1983; the next such election was in 2007. There was no 2005 election for non-players; the last such election was in 2003, and the next was held in 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nIn December 2003, a Historical Overview Committee of nine sportswriters appointed by the BBWAA's Board of Directors met at the Hall of Fame's library and nominated 200 players who were active in the major leagues no later than 1983. They were provided with statistical information by the Elias Sports Bureau, official statistician for Major League Baseball since the 1920s, which also identified the 1,400 players with 10 or more years of play who were eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nThe Historical Overview Committee comprised Bob Elliott (Toronto Sun), Steve Hirdt (Elias Sports Bureau), Rick Hummel (St. Louis Post-Dispatch), Moss Klein (Newark Star-Ledger), Bill Madden (New York Daily News), Ken Nigro (former Baltimore Sun writer), Jack O'Connell (The Hartford Courant), Tracy Ringolsby (Rocky Mountain News), and Mark Whicker (Orange Country Register). Their list of 200 players was announced April 19, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 507]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nPlayers. (\u2020 marks those newly eligible since 2003 (eight). They last played in the majors during 1982 or 1983.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nBabe Adams - Joe Adcock - Dick Allen - Felipe Alou - Sal Bando - Dick Bartell - Ginger Beaumont - \u2020Mark Belanger - Wally Berger - Bobby Bonds - Ken Boyer - Harry Brecheen - Tommy Bridges - Pete Browning - Charlie Buffinton - Lew Burdette - George H. Burns - George J. Burns - Dolph Camilli - \u2020Bert Campaneris - Bob Caruthers - George Case - Norm Cash - Phil Cavarretta - Spud Chandler - Ben Chapman - Rocky Colavito - Mort Cooper - Walker Cooper - Wilbur Cooper - Doc Cramer - Del Crandall - Gavvy Cravath - Lave Cross - Mike Cuellar - Bill Dahlen - Alvin Dark - Jake Daubert - Tommy Davis - Willie Davis - Paul Derringer - Dom DiMaggio - Patsy Donovan - Larry Doyle - Jimmy Dykes - Bob Elliott - Del Ennis - Carl Erskine - Elroy Face - Wes Ferrell - Freddie Fitzsimmons - Curt Flood - Bill Freehan - Jim Fregosi - Carl Furillo - Mike Garcia - Junior Gilliam - Jack Glasscock - Joe Gordon - Charlie Grimm - Dick Groat - Heinie Groh - Stan Hack - Harvey Haddix - Mel Harder - Jeff Heath - Tommy Henrich - Babe Herman - Pinky Higgins - John Hiller - Gil Hodges - Ken Holtzman - Willie Horton - Elston Howard - Frank Howard - Dummy Hoy - Larry Jackson - Jackie Jensen - Sam Jethroe - Bob L. Johnson - Davey Johnson - Joe Judge - \u2020Jim Kaat - Willie Kamm - Ken Keltner - Don Kessinger - Johnny Kling - Ted Kluszewski - Ray Kremer - Harvey Kuenn - Joe Kuhel - Vern Law - Sam Leever - Mickey Lolich - Sherm Lollar - Herman Long - Eddie Lopat - Dolf Luque - \u2020Sparky Lyle - Sal Maglie - Jim Maloney - Firpo Marberry - Marty Marion - Roger Maris - Mike G. Marshall - Pepper Martin - \u2020Lee May - Carl Mays - Tim McCarver - Frank McCormick - Lindy McDaniel - Gil McDougald - Sam McDowell - Stuffy McInnis - Denny McLain - Roy McMillan - Dave McNally - Andy Messersmith - Bob Meusel - Irish Meusel - Bing Miller - Stu Miller - Minnie Mi\u00f1oso - Terry Moore - Tony Mullane - Thurman Munson - \u2020Bobby Murcer - Johnny Murphy - Buddy Myer - Art Nehf - Don Newcombe - Bobo Newsom - Lefty O'Doul - Tony Oliva - Claude Osteen - Andy Pafko - Milt Pappas - Camilo Pascual - Ron Perranoski - Jim Perry - Johnny Pesky - Rico Petrocelli - Deacon Phillippe - Billy Pierce - Vada Pinson - Wally Pipp - Johnny Podres - Boog Powell - Jack Quinn - Vic Raschi - Ed Reulbach - Allie Reynolds - Eddie Rommel - Charlie Root - Al Rosen - Schoolboy Rowe - Pete Runnels - Jimmy Ryan - Johnny Sain - Ron Santo - Hank Sauer - Wally Schang - George Scott - Rip Sewell - Bob Shawkey - Urban Shocker - Roy Sievers - Curt Simmons - \u2020Reggie Smith - Vern Stephens - Riggs Stephenson - Mel Stottlemyre - Harry Stovey - Jesse Tannehill - Tony Taylor - Johnny Temple - Fred Tenney - Bobby Thomson - \u2020Luis Tiant - Mike Tiernan - Joe Torre - Cecil Travis - Hal Trosky - Virgil Trucks - Johnny Vander Meer - George Van Haltren - Bobby Veach - Mickey Vernon - Dixie Walker - Bucky Walters - Lon Warneke - Will White - Cy Williams - Ken R. Williams - Maury Wills - Smoky Joe Wood - Wilbur Wood - Glenn Wright - Jimmy Wynn - Rudy York", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 3052]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nThe 200 players were almost evenly divided between players retired less than 50 years (99 players retired from 1955 to 1983) and those retired over 50 years (101 players retired 1954 or earlier).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nThe list of 200 was almost identical to the list prepared for the 2003 election; apart from the eight players who were newly eligible, only Larry Doyle, Andy Pafko and Smoky Joe Wood were added to the list, for a net change of 11 individuals. Perhaps due to the reliance on official statistics \u2013 often incomplete in the sport's early years \u2013 provided by the Elias Sports Bureau, the committee included very few players from the sport's first half-century, which remained poorly represented in the Hall; only 15 players were included who made their debut before 1893.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nAlthough the Hall's current membership included fewer than a dozen non-pitchers of the 1870s and 1880s, compared to nearly 50 from the 1930s and 1940s, the committee included nearly 50 more players from the period between 1920 and 1945, but only 7 who played primarily in the 25 years before 1893: first baseman/outfielder Harry Stovey, shortstop Jack Glasscock, outfielder Pete Browning, and pitchers Charlie Buffinton, Bob Caruthers, Tony Mullane and Will White. The inclusion of Will White was remarkable in that his brother Deacon White is widely accepted as having been a far greater player. In addition to Deacon White, stars of the 19th century who were omitted included Paul Hines, Deacon McGuire, Cupid Childs, Bobby Lowe, George Gore, Hardy Richardson, Ezra Sutton, Arlie Latham, Fred Pfeffer and Joe Start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Preliminary phase\nBy primary fielding position the nominees were starting pitchers (66), relief pitchers (9), catchers (10), first basemen (24), second basemen (8), third basemen (13), shortstops (19), left fielders (18), center fielders (17) and right fielders (16).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 75], "content_span": [76, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Phase two\nThe Historical Overview nominations were forwarded to a 60-member BBWAA screening committee comprising two writers from each major league city. In summer 2004 they elected 25 players who would appear on the final ballot. (Everyone voted for 25 nominees.) Meanwhile, a committee of six Hall of Fame members independently selected five of the 200 nominees who would appear on the final ballot, which would thereby comprise 25 to 30 players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Phase two\nEvidently the writers named all of the Hall of Fame members' five selections, for there were 25 on the final ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 67], "content_span": [68, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Final ballot\nOn December 6, 2004, the final ballot of 25 candidates was announced. Those selected played primarily from the 1950s onward, with only 5 of the 25 candidates having retired before 1960, and only three pitchers \u2013 Smoky Joe Wood, Carl Mays and Wes Ferrell \u2013 having retired before 1950. The BBWAA screening committee had failed to include any candidates from the era before 1910. This likely reflected a tendency among the voting writers to vote only for those players they had seen themselves, and to withhold votes from earlier players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Final ballot\nAll 60 living members of the Hall were eligible to cast ballots in the final election, along with the 8 living recipients of the J. G. Taylor Spink Award, the 14 living recipients of the Ford C. Frick Award, and the sole additional member of the pre-2001 Veterans Committee whose term had not yet expired (John McHale). Balloting was conducted by mail in January 2005, with voters permitted to vote for up to 10 candidates from the ballot of 25 individuals; all candidates who received at least 75% of the vote would be elected. Results of the voting by the Veterans Committee were announced on March 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Final ballot\nThere were 83 eligible voters, 80 of whom cast ballots; 60 votes were required for election. In all, 458 individual votes were cast, for an average of 5.73 votes per ballot. For the second consecutive Veterans Committee election, no player was elected. Of the 21 candidates who were also on the 2003 ballot, only 7 gained more votes in 2005, with only Joe Torre (7), Ron Santo (6) and Ken Boyer (4) increasing their totals by more than two votes. Candidates who were considered by the Committee for the first time are indicated here with a \u2020; candidates who have since been elected in subsequent elections are indicated in italics. The complete ballot, with the number of votes cast for each candidate, was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 778]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nHall of Fame chairwoman Jane Forbes Clark responded to the Committee's failure to elect anyone by saying: \"The results of the last two elections show that the writers \u2013 by and large \u2013 have done a great job of electing players to the Hall of Fame. The current process works by upholding the Hall of Fame's high standards for election and by providing a more open, more inclusive and more understandable process.\" Noting that the top candidates gained slightly from the 2003 voting, she added: \"What's encouraging for me is that this shows the process to be dynamic, not static.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nHall of Fame member Tom Seaver, noting that he had voted for three candidates including Gil Hodges, said of the chances of future selections: \"I'm of the opinion it's going to be awfully hard, and maybe that's how it should be.\" He added: \"Will somebody make it out of this committee one day? Absolutely. I'm convinced they will.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nBut response from observers in the press and throughout baseball was widely critical. Stephen Cannella of Sports Illustrated wrote: \"Seaver's right. Hall of Fame standards should be high. But letting the inmates play gatekeeper allows them to make those standards unreachable. ... it might be too much to ask Hall of Famers to be guardians of their realm. ... Would you want to belong to a club that would have anyone else as a member?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nMike Downey of the Chicago Tribune wrote: \"And once again these gentlemen made it crystal clear they like their society being extremely exclusive. They act as aristocratically as a board from a private school or a homeowners association in the Hamptons. ... if the vote were left strictly to former players, they might not let another soul in.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nDave Anderson wrote in The New York Times: \"It's time not only for the Cooperstown pooh-bahs to rethink this realigned committee's selection process, but also to question the responsibility of the do-nothing committee ... after two veterans committee shutouts, it's fair to wonder how responsibly do the Hall of Famers, especially the 58 ex-players among them, take their duty as voters?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0025-0001", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nDo they really study the two pages of statistics, rankings and highlights supplied to them for each of the 25 candidates on the ballot \u2013 particularly those of players from other eras whom they never competed against and probably know nothing about? Do they just glance at the list and make a snap judgment?\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nSome writers specifically lamented the failure to elect particular candidates. Ken Rosenthal wrote for The Sporting News: \"The writers blew it, and now the Veterans Committee is blowing it. Former Cubs third baseman Ron Santo should be in the Hall of Fame. Santo's career .826 OPS is more than 100 points higher than Brooks Robinson's and is only 30 points lower than George Brett's. Nine All-Star Games, five Gold Gloves \u2013 what exactly is the problem?\" And Bill Madden of the New York Daily News wrote: \"Another exercise in futility by the new and expanded Veterans Committee has again left Gil Hodges waiting on the Hall of Fame doorstep.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Veterans Committee, Reaction\nCandidate Tony Oliva responded to the election by saying: \"It's almost impossible to go into the Hall of Fame the way the system is now. It's ridiculous.\" And Ron Santo said: \"It was a very tough day. ... I'm fortunate to have a wonderful family that puts everything into perspective. ... It was hard to believe no one got in. One thing I can say is the next time I won't be sitting at home waiting for the phone.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nPeter Gammons received the J. G. Taylor Spink Award honoring a baseball writer. (The award was voted at the December 2004 meeting of the BBWAA, dated 2004, and conferred in the summer 2005 ceremonies.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThe Spink Award has been presented by the BBWAA at the annual summer induction ceremonies since 1962. It recognizes a sportswriter \"for meritorious contributions to baseball writing\". The recipients are not members of the Hall of the Fame, merely featured in a permanent exhibit at the National Baseball Museum, but writers and broadcasters commonly call them \"Hall of Fame writers\" or words to that effect. Living recipients were members of the Veterans Committee for elections in odd years 2003 to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nThree final candidates, selected by a BBWAA committee, were named on July 13, 2004 in Houston in conjunction with All-Star Game activities; the finalists were: Peter Gammons of The Boston Globe, Sports Illustrated and ESPN The Magazine; the late Vern Plagenhoef, who covered the Detroit Tigers for Michigan's Booth Newspaper Group; and Tracy Ringolsby, who has covered the Colorado Rockies for the Rocky Mountain News since 1993 and has completed 30 seasons as a baseball writer. All 10-year members of the BBWAA were eligible to cast ballots in voting conducted by mail in November.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 646]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, J. G. Taylor Spink Award\nOn December 12, Peter Gammons was announced as the recipient, having received 248 votes out of the 448 ballots cast, with Ringolsby receiving 134 votes and Plagenhoef receiving 66.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nJerry Coleman received the Ford C. Frick Award honoring a baseball broadcaster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nThe Frick Award has been presented at the annual summer induction ceremonies since 1978. It recognizes a broadcaster for \"major contributions to baseball\". The recipients are not members of the Hall of the Fame, merely featured in a permanent exhibit at the National Baseball Museum, but writers and broadcasters commonly call them \"Hall of Fame broadcaster\" or words to that effect. Living honorees were members of the Veterans Committee for elections in odd years 2003 to 2007.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nTo be eligible, an active or retired broadcaster must have a minimum of 10 years of continuous major league broadcast service with a ball club, a network, or a combination of the two; more than 160 candidates were eligible.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nOn December 13, 2004, 10 finalists were announced. In accordance with guidelines established in 2003, seven were chosen by a research committee at the museum: Jerry Coleman, Ken Coleman, Dizzy Dean, Gene Elston, Tony Kubek, France Laux and Graham McNamee. Three additional candidates \u2013 Dave Niehaus, Tom Cheek and Ron Santo \u2013 were selected in voting by over 65,000 fans prior to November 2004 at the Hall's official website .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180915-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball Hall of Fame balloting, Ford C. Frick Award\nOn February 22, Jerry Coleman was announced as the 2005 recipient ; a former major league infielder and the voice of the San Diego Padres almost continuously since 1972, he was selected in a January vote by a 20-member committee composed of the 14 living recipients, along with six additional broadcasting historians or columnists: Bob Costas (NBC), Barry Horn (The Dallas Morning News), Stan Isaacs (formerly of New York Newsday), Ted Patterson (historian), Curt Smith (historian) and Larry Stewart (Los Angeles Times). Committee members are asked to base the selection on the following criteria: longevity; continuity with a club; honors, including national assignments such as the World Series and All-Star Games; and popularity with fans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 57], "content_span": [58, 800]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180916-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball World Cup\nThe 2005 Baseball World Cup (BWC) was the 36th international Men's amateur baseball tournament. The tournament was sanctioned by the International Baseball Federation, which titled it the Amateur World Series from the 1938 tournament through the 1986 AWS. The tournament was held, for the second time, in the Netherlands, from September 2 to 17. Cuba defeated South Korea in the final, winning its 26th title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180916-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball World Cup\nThere were 18 participating countries, split into two groups, with the first four of each group qualifying for the finals. Games were played in the Dutch cities of Rotterdam, Haarlem, Almere, Amsterdam and Eindhoven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180916-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Baseball World Cup\nThe next three competitions were also held as the BWC tournament, which was replaced in 2015 by the quadrennial WBSC Premier12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180917-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Basilicata regional election\nThe Basilicata regional election of 2005 took place on 17\u201318 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180917-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Basilicata regional election\nDue to some legal issues with the presentation of the list of Social Alternative, Basilicata did not vote along with the other Italian regions in the 3-4 April 2005 regional elections, but a couple of weeks later instead, on 17\u201318 April 2005. The victory of The Union coalition, which obtained more than two thirds of the vote, was the largest in Italy and Vito De Filippo (DL) was elected President by a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election\nThe 2005 Basque regional election was held on Sunday, 17 April 2005, to elect the 8th Parliament of the Basque Autonomous Community. All 75 seats in the Parliament were up for election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election\nThe electoral coalition Basque Nationalist Party\u2013Basque Solidarity (PNV\u2013EA) won 29 seats, the Socialist Party of the Basque Country\u2013Basque Country Left (PSE\u2013EE) came second with 18 seats, the People's Party (PP) came in third with 15 seats. The controversial Communist Party of the Basque Homelands (PCTV/EHAK) won 9 seats, having been endorsed by the banned Batasuna party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe Basque Parliament was the devolved, unicameral legislature of the autonomous community of the Basque Country, having legislative power in regional matters as defined by the Spanish Constitution of 1978 and the regional Statute of Autonomy, as well as the ability to vote confidence in or withdraw it from a lehendakari.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nVoting for the Parliament was on the basis of universal suffrage, which comprised all nationals over eighteen, registered in the Basque Country and in full enjoyment of their political rights. The 75 members of the Basque Parliament were elected using the D'Hondt method and a closed list proportional representation, with an electoral threshold of three percent of valid votes\u2014which included blank ballots\u2014being applied in each constituency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nSeats were allocated to constituencies, corresponding to the provinces of \u00c1lava, Biscay and Guip\u00fazcoa, being allocated a fixed number of 25 seats each to provide for an equal representation of the three provinces in parliament as required under the regional statute of autonomy. This meant that \u00c1lava was allocated the same number of seats as Biscay and Gipuzkoa, despite their populations being, as of 1 January 2005: 298,830, 1,132,163 and 684,269, respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Overview, Electoral system\nThe use of the D'Hondt method might result in a higher effective threshold, depending on the district magnitude.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 57], "content_span": [58, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe term of the Basque Parliament expired four years after the date of its previous election, unless it was dissolved earlier. The election decree was required to be issued no later than the twenty-fifth day prior to the date of expiry of parliament and published on the following day in the Official Gazette of the Basque Country (BOPV), with election day taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication. The previous election was held on 13 May 2001, which meant that the legislature's term would have expired on 13 May 2005. The election decree was required to be published in the BOPV no later than 19 April 2005, with the election taking place on the fifty-fourth day from publication, setting the latest possible election date for the Parliament on Sunday, 12 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Overview, Election date\nThe lehendakari had the prerogative to dissolve the Basque Parliament at any given time and call a snap election, provided that no motion of no confidence was in process. In the event of an investiture process failing to elect a lehendakari within a sixty-day period from the Parliament re-assembly, the Parliament was to be dissolved and a fresh election called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 54], "content_span": [55, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Parties and candidates\nThe electoral law allowed for parties and federations registered in the interior ministry, coalitions and groupings of electors to present lists of candidates. Parties and federations intending to form a coalition ahead of an election were required to inform the relevant Electoral Commission within ten days of the election call, whereas groupings of electors needed to secure the signature of at least one percent of the electorate in the constituencies for which they sought election, disallowing electors from signing for more than one list of candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Parties and candidates\nBelow is a list of the main parties and electoral alliances which contested the election:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180918-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Basque regional election, Opinion polls\nThe table below lists voting intention estimates in reverse chronological order, showing the most recent first and using the dates when the survey fieldwork was done, as opposed to the date of publication. Where the fieldwork dates are unknown, the date of publication is given instead. The highest percentage figure in each polling survey is displayed with its background shaded in the leading party's colour. If a tie ensues, this is applied to the figures with the highest percentages. The \"Lead\" column on the right shows the percentage-point difference between the parties with the highest percentages in a given poll. When available, seat projections are also displayed below the voting estimates in a smaller font. 38 seats were required for an absolute majority in the Basque Parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 44], "content_span": [45, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180919-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Batman Begins 400\nThe 2005 Batman Begins 400 was a NASCAR NEXTEL Cup Series racing event held on June 19, 2005, at Michigan International Speedway in the American community of Brooklyn, Michigan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180919-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Batman Begins 400\nRun over 200 laps, the race was the fifteenth in the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season and took place around the time of the controversial 2005 United States Grand Prix that Michael Schumacher would dominate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180919-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Batman Begins 400, Race recap\nOn April 27, 2005 Warner Bros. would announce that the race would be sponsored by the movie Batman Begins, marking the first time a motion picture sponsored a Cup Series race. In a press release, NASCAR CEO and chairman Brian France said \"Batman will cheer on the 43 super heroes that will be competing for the Batman Begins 400 at Michigan International Speedway.\" Along with the sponsorship, the Batmobile served as the honorary pace car for the race, while Batman was the grand marshal, and Karen Newman sang the national anthem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180919-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Batman Begins 400, Race recap\nMark Martin also ran a Batman Begins paint scheme, along with Ricky Craven at the Paramount Health Insurance 200 on the previous day. Defending race winner Ryan Newman of Penske Racing won the pole position after breaking the track record with a speed of 194.232 miles per hour (312.586\u00a0km/h), breaking the original record held by Dale Earnhardt, Jr. in 2001, while Roush Racing's Greg Biffle won the race. Michigan International Speedway has been a Ford dominated track starting in 1984, and a Mercury track before that from 1969-78. It was also a track that suited a smooth driver or a driver that could change his driving tactics for Michigan International Speedway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180919-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Batman Begins 400, Race recap\nTony Stewart would dominate the race, he would end up leading a race-high 97 laps. However, on lap 168, Stewart took a four-tire pit stop, while Greg Biffle, Elliott Sadler and Roush Racing teammates Matt Kenseth, Carl Edwards and Kurt Busch, as they and other drivers had pitted 12 laps earlier; Joe Nemechek and Michael Waltrip also beat Stewart to the track, forcing him to start in eighth on lap 174. Biffle, who led 67 laps, would go on to win his eighth career Cup race and fifth of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180919-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Batman Begins 400, Race recap\nStewart was able to fight his way into second, while Mark Martin finished in third. Kenseth and Edwards rounded out the top five. Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished the race in 32nd and 17th, respectively, and were knocked out of contention for the 2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180920-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships\nThe 2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 26th edition of the Amelia Island Championships, and was part of the WTA Tier II series of the 2005 WTA Tour. It took place at the Amelia Island Plantation in Amelia Island, Florida, from April 4 through April 10, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180920-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships, Singles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180920-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships, Doubles main draw entrants, Other entrants\nThe following pair received wildcards into the doubles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 76], "content_span": [77, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180920-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships, Finals, Singles\nIt was the 2nd title for Davenport in the season and the 47th title in her singles career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180920-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships, Finals, Doubles\nIt was the 2nd title for both Stewart and Stosur in their respective doubles careers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 49], "content_span": [50, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180921-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Doubles\nNadia Petrova and Meghann Shaughnessy were the defending champions, but were forced to withdraw as Shaughnessy suffered a lower back injury during her singles match against Peng Shuai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180921-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Doubles\nBryanne Stewart and Samantha Stosur won the title by defeating Kv\u011bta Peschke and Patty Schnyder 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180922-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Singles\nLindsay Davenport was the defending champion and successfully defended her title by defeating Silvia Farina Elia 7\u20135, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180922-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bausch & Lomb Championships \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nThe top eight seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 49], "content_span": [50, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180923-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bavarian Cup\nThe 2005 Bavarian Cup was the eighth edition of this competition, organised by the Bavarian Football Association (BFV), which was started in 1998. It ended with the Jahn Regensburg winning the competition. Together with the finalist, FC Ingolstadt 04, both clubs were qualified for the DFB Cup 2005-06.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180923-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bavarian Cup\nThe competition is open to all senior men's football teams playing within the Bavarian football league system and the Bavarian clubs in the Regionalliga S\u00fcd (III).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180923-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bavarian Cup, Rules & History\nThe seven Bezirke in Bavaria each play their own cup competition which in turn used to function as a qualifying to the German Cup (DFB-Pokal). Since 1998 these seven cup-winners plus the losing finalist of the region that won the previous event advance to the newly introduced Bavarian Cup, the Toto-Pokal. The two finalists of this competition advance to the German Cup. Bavarian clubs which play in the first or second Bundesliga are not permitted to take part in the event, their reserve teams however can. The seven regional cup winners plus the finalist from last season's winners region are qualified for the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180923-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bavarian Cup, Participating clubs\nThe following eight clubs qualified for the 2006 Bavarian Cup:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 38], "content_span": [39, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180923-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bavarian Cup, DFB Cup 2005-06\nThe two clubs, Jahn Regensburg and FC Ingolstadt 04, who qualified through the Bavarian Cup for the DFB Cup 2005-06 both were knocked out in the first round of the national cup competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180924-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt\nThe 2005 Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt was the 26th edition of the Bayern\u2013Rundfahrt cycle race and was held on 25 May to 29 May 2005. The race started in Kempten and finished in Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz. The race was won by Michael Rich.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180925-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baylor Bears baseball team\nThe 2005 Baylor Bears baseball team represented Baylor University in the 2005 NCAA Division I baseball season. The head coach was Steve Smith, serving his 11th year. The team played its home games at Baylor Ballpark in Waco, Texas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180925-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Baylor Bears baseball team, Season summary\nThe Bears played one of the toughest schedules in the nation and managed a 39-21 record going into NCAA postseason play. The team won the Big 12 Conference behind a 19-8 conference record and hosted an NCAA Regional in Waco. The Bears defeated UTSA, TCU, and Stanford, to progress to an NCAA Super Regional. The Clemson Tigers, out of the ACC Conference, came to Waco for the two-of-three series. The Bears lost the Saturday night game but rebounded on Sunday and Monday to advance to the 2005 College World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180925-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Baylor Bears baseball team, Season summary\nIn the CWS, the Bears were matched against the University of Texas, whom they had beaten 3 times during conference play. The Longhorns defeated the Bears in Game 1, putting Baylor into an elimination bracket with Oregon State. In an extra innings contest, the Bears defeated Oregon State, 4-3, to advance to play #1 Tulane. After being down 7-0 early in the game, Baylor scored 8 runs in the 7th, 8th, and 9th innings, including 3 runs in the 9th, to beat the highly ranked Green Wave, 8-7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180925-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Baylor Bears baseball team, Season summary\nIn a rematch against the University of Texas, Baylor led 3-2 in the 8th inning, but fell to the Longhorns 4-3 to end the season. The strength of the 2005 team was their pitching, with a weekend rotation of Trey Taylor, Cory VanAllen, and Mark McCormick with closers Abe Woody and Ryan LaMotta. The offense was criticized heavily in the regular season for lack of power, but produced in postseason play. Many players from this team continue to play baseball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 47], "content_span": [48, 505]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180926-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Baylor Bears football team\nThe 2005 Baylor Bears football team (variously \"Baylor\", \"BU\", or the \"Bears\") represented Baylor University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. They were represented in the Big 12 Conference in the South Division. They played their home games at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. They were coached by head coach Guy Morriss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180927-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Beach Volleyball World Championships\nThese page shows the results of the Beach Volleyball World Championships, held 21\u201326 June 2005 in Berlin, Germany. It was the fifth official edition of this event, after ten unofficial championships (1987\u20131996) all held in Rio de Janeiro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180928-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bedford municipal election\nThe 2005 Town of Bedford municipal election took place on November 6, 2005, to elect a mayor and councillors in the town of Bedford, Quebec. All members of council were returned without opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180929-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Begumpet suicide bombing\nThe 2005 Begumpet suicide bombing resulted in the deaths of two persons at the Hyderabad City Police Commissioner's Task Force office at Begumpet. On 12 October 2005, at around 7.30 PM IST, a suicide bomber detonated explosives outside the Task Force office killing himself and 45-year-old home guard A. Satyanarayana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180929-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Begumpet suicide bombing\nThe suicide bomber was reported to be a Bangladeshi national Dalin alias Mohtasim Billal, member of Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami (HuJI), a banned Islamic terror group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180929-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Begumpet suicide bombing\nGhulam Yazdani and Shahed Bilal key accused in the bombing died on 8 March 2006 and 30 August 2007 respectively. The bombing was reported to be carried out to avenge the killing of Mujahid Salim, son of SIMI patron Maulana Abdul Aleem Islahi, by Gujarat police in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180930-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Beijing Guoan F.C. season\nThe 2005 Beijing Guoan F.C. season was their 2nd consecutive season in the Chinese Super League, established in the 2004, and 15th consecutive season in the top flight of Chinese football. They competed in the Chinese Super League, FA Cup and Super League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180930-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Beijing Guoan F.C. season, First team\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180931-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian First League\n2005 Belarusian First League was the fifteenth season of 2nd level football championship in Belarus. It started in April and ended in November 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180931-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2004 season\nTwo top teams of the last season (Lokomotiv Minsk and Vedrich-97 Rechitsa) were promoted to Belarusian Premier League. They were replaced by two teams that finished at the bottom of 2004 Belarusian Premier League table (Lokomotiv Vitebsk and Belshina Bobruisk).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180931-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2004 season\nTwo teams that finished at the bottom of 2004 season table (Vertikal Kalinkovichi and Dinamo-Juni Minsk) relegated to the Second League. They were replaced by two best teams of 2004 Second League (Smena Minsk and Orsha).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180931-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2004 season\nVedrich-97 Rechitsa were not able to fulfill Premier League licensing criteria and remained in the First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180931-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian First League, Team changes from 2004 season\nMolodechno-2000 (who finished 13th last season) withdrew to the Second League due to insufficient financing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 59], "content_span": [60, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180932-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian Premier League\nThe 2005 Belarusian Premier League was the 15th season of top-tier football in Belarus. It started on April 16 and ended on November 5, 2005. Dinamo Minsk were the defending champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180932-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian Premier League, Team changes from 2004 season\nTwo lowest placed teams in 2004 (Lokomotiv Vitebsk and Belshina Bobruisk) relegated to First League. Lokomotiv Minsk won the 2004 First League and were promoted. Vedrich-97 Rechytsa finished 2nd in First League and were supposed to be promoted as well. However, due to weak club infrastructure they couldn't obtain licence to compete in Premiere League and decided to stay in First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180932-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Belarusian Premier League, Team changes from 2004 season\nTorpedo-SKA Minsk, who finished 6th in 2004, lost financial support from their sponsor in early 2005 and, after losing almost all their main squad and not having funds to pay entrance fee for next season's Premiere League, had to relegate to Second League. BFF decided not to replace two withdrawn teams with anyone and the league was reduced to 14 clubs. Zvezda-VA-BGU Minsk changed their name to Zvezda-BGU Minsk.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 61], "content_span": [62, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180932-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belarusian Premier League, Overview\nShakhtyor Soligorsk won their 1st champions title and qualified for the next season's Champions League. The championship runners-up Dinamo Minsk and 2005\u201306 Cup winners BATE Borisov qualified for UEFA Cup. Zvezda-BGU Minsk and Slavia, who finished on last two places, relegated to the First League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election\nElections to Belfast City Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used nine district electoral areas to elect a total of 51 councillors, most representing the more heavily populated north and west.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election\nThe DUP emerged as the largest party, and Wallace Browne became Lord Mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Balmoral\n2001: 2 x UUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x DUP2005: 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Castle\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 60], "content_span": [61, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Court\n2001: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x Independent2005: 3 x DUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x Independent2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 59], "content_span": [60, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Laganbank\n2001: 2 x SDLP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2005: 2 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Lower Falls\n2001: 4 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2005: 5 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Oldpark\n2001: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x PUP2005: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: UUP gain from PUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 61], "content_span": [62, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Pottinger\n2001: 3 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x Alliance2005: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x PUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: DUP and Alliance gain from UUP and Sinn F\u00e9in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 63], "content_span": [64, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Upper Falls\n2001: 4 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2005: 4 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180933-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast City Council election, District results, Victoria\n2001: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 2 x Alliance2005: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 2 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 62], "content_span": [63, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots\nThe 2005 Belfast riots were serious loyalist riots and civil disturbances in Belfast, Northern Ireland in September 2005. The violence broke out after the Protestant Orange Order Whiterock parade was re-routed to avoid the Irish nationalist Springfield Road area. Clashes also broke out in several towns in County Antrim. The incidents took place amid a fierce feud between members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) and Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF), who are also thought to have orchestrated the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Background\nAmid increasing sectarian violence and feuds between loyalists, the Whiterock Orange Order parade was delayed in June by the Order in protest against the decision to re-route it via a disused factory site. Irish nationalists opposed the Order to run through their streets. On 8 September, the Parades Commission said that the decision will stand. Loyalists blocked roads in north and west Belfast as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Background\nOn 13 July 2005, 80 police officers and seven civilians were injured during nationalist rioting in Ardoyne, north Belfast. Members of the Continuity IRA were blamed after police officers were attacked after withdrawing from policing an Orange Order parade with petrol and blast bombs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Background\nOn 4 August 2005, a five-hour loyalist riot in north Belfast injured 40 police officers. The rioting broke out after the arrests of six men in connection with the loyalist feud between the UVF and LVF paramilitaries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Clashes\nOn the first night of violence on Saturday 10 September, a policeman was shot in the eye as a barrage of petrol bombs were thrown at Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) officers. An Ulster Defence Association (UDA) member was also hurt in a bomb blast. A cameraman from the BBC was also abducted by loyalist gunmen in Lower Shankill estate, where his camera was destroyed before being released.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Clashes\nRioting continued for a second day on 11 September as a 700-strong mob clashed with police, blocking roads and setting cars on fire. The violence spread to Albertbridge Road in east Belfast. 1,000 police officers and 1,000 British Army soldiers were deployed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Clashes\nOn the third night of rioting, violence spread to County Antrim where police were attacked and cars set ablaze in Lisburn, Ballymena, Carrickfergus and other towns. The situation in Belfast was reduced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Aftermath\nThe riots were the worst in Northern Ireland since the end of the Troubles. PSNI statistics show that 115 shots were fired at police, 146 blast bombs thrown, and 116 vehicles were hijacked. The Orange Order blamed the PSNI's actions for being \"brutal\". A police investigation discovered a loyalist bomb factory in Highfield estate, north Belfast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Aftermath\nOn 14 September 2005, the Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain announced that the British government no longer recognised the UVF's ceasefire implemented in 1994 following the \"ruthless\" attacks on police during the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180934-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Belfast riots, Aftermath\nTwo loyalist men, John Main and Colin Harbinson, from Belfast's Glencairn area, were jailed in 2007 for opening fire and attempting to murder security forces during the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180935-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Cup Final\nThe 2006 Belgian Cup Final, took place on 28 May 2005 between Club Brugge and Germinal Beerschot. It was the 50th Belgian Cup final and was won by Germinal Beerschot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180936-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Belgian Figure Skating Championships (Dutch: Belgisch Kampioenschap 2005; French: Championnat de Belgique 2005) took place between 26 and 27 November 2004 in Lommel. Skaters competed in the discipline of ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Belgian Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Belgian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held on 11 September 2005 at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in Spa, Belgium. It was the sixteenth race of the 2005 FIA Formula One World Championship and the 62nd Belgian Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix\nThe 44-lap race was won by Finnish driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, driving a McLaren-Mercedes, after he started from second position. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's Colombian teammate, Juan Pablo Montoya, took pole position and led until his second pit stop on lap 33; he then maintained second place until a late collision with Brazilian driver Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia in the Williams-BMW. Spaniard Fernando Alonso thus took second in his Renault, with Englishman Jenson Button third in a BAR-Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix\nWith three races remaining, Alonso led the Drivers' Championship by 25 points from R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, needing only six more to clinch the title. In the Constructors' Championship, McLaren reduced Renault's lead to six points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Background\nBefore the race, Renault were leading the Constructors' Championship with 144 points and McLaren were second with 136 points, with Ferrari third on 58 points. In the World Drivers' Championship, Renault driver Fernando Alonso was leading with 103 points; Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was second on 76 points, 27 points behind Alonso. Behind Alonso and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in the Drivers' Championship, Michael Schumacher was third on 55 points in a Ferrari, with Juan Pablo Montoya and Jarno Trulli on 50 and 43 points respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 43], "content_span": [44, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nFour practice sessions were held before the Sunday race\u2014two on Friday from 11:00 to 12:00 and 14:00 to 15:00 local time, with the final two sessions held on Saturday morning between 09:00 to 09:45 and 10:15 to 11:00.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nSaturday's afternoon qualifying session took place as a one-lap session held between 13:00 and 14:00. Drivers went out one at a time in the reverse order of their finishing positions at the previous race. The cars ran on the fuel that would be used for the Sunday race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nGiancarlo Fisichella started the race from 13th place \u2013 the result of a ten-place grid penalty given for an engine change between final practice and qualifying on the Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 56], "content_span": [57, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe race took place in the afternoon from 14:00 local time. On lap 11 Fisichella had an accident at Eau Rouge, emerging unhurt from his wrecked Renault but this brought out the safety car. On lap 14, Takuma Sato hit Michael Schumacher's car from behind, causing both to retire. Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia crashed into Juan Pablo Montoya\u2014in second position at the time\u2014shortly before the finish of the race. Jacques Villeneuve was able to finish sixth by virtue of a one-stop pit strategy, while other drivers stopped as many as five times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThis race saw the Jordan team score their final point, courtesy of Tiago Monteiro, while the BAR team achieved their last podium finish through Jenson Button. Also, Ralf Schumacher scored his last, and Toyota's first, fastest lap.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Post-race\nThe race stewards ruled that Sato had caused the collision with Schumacher, and he would consequently drop ten places on the grid for the next Grand Prix in Brazil. They also fined Pizzonia $8,000 for his collision with Montoya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180937-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Grand Prix, Report, Post-race\nUnusually, McLaren did not send a representative to the podium to collect the constructors' trophy, so, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen accepted it on behalf of the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180938-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Super Cup\nThe 2005 Belgian Supercup was a football match between the winners of the previous season's Belgian First Division and Belgian Cup competitions. The match was contested by Cup winners Germinal Beerschot, and 2004\u201305 Belgian First Division champions, Club Brugge on 30 July 2005 at the ground of the league champions as usual, in this case the Jan Breydel Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180938-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belgian Super Cup\nClub Brugge won its fourth consecutive Supercup title and 13th in total, as it beat Germinal Beerschot on penalty kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest\nThe 2005 protests in Belize are two separate but related incidents of civil unrest in the Central American nation, occurring in January and April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 2005 budget protests\nCivil unrest broke out in the capital city of Belmopan in Belize during mid-January 2005. The unrest was provoked by the release of a new national budget with significant tax increases. It was also guided by anger at the ruling People's United Party for the worsening fiscal condition of the Belizean government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 48], "content_span": [49, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 2005 budget protests, Run-up\nOn January 14, 2005 Said Musa's administration announced its budget for 2005-2006. The budget included major tax increases on a variety of businesses and commodities. It included an 11% increase in the real estate sales tax, a five percent tax increase for financial institutions, an eight percent tax increase on tobacco, and a 100% tax increase on rum. The government claims that these tax increases were comparable to increases instituted in 1998 under the United Democratic Party (UDP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 2005 budget protests, Run-up\nHowever, after years of popular frustration at alleged financial mismanagement and corruption by the People's United Party (PUP), the new budget sparked condemnation from local interest groups and protests at the National Assembly building on January 14, with demonstrations continued throughout the following week. The main protesters were the National Trade Union Congress of Belize and the Belize Chamber of Commerce.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 20 and 21\nOn January 20, the business community and labor unions called for a two-day nationwide strike. Employees did not report to work, and water service for much of Belize was turned off. A major public demonstration planned by the opposition took place on January 21 in Belmopan. (The ruling PUP reportedly planned a counter-demonstration.) This was a large demonstration outside the National Assembly building in Belmopan which ended in violence. Protesters threw rocks at the police, who responded with rubber bullets and riot gas. The gunfire and sirens were audible at a distance of at least 1\u00a0km. At least one larger booming sound, significantly louder than gunfire, was heard; the cause of this is unclear.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 20 and 21\nSeveral protesters were arrested, including 'Yellowman', a UDP stalwart. The permission for the demonstration ended at 3pm, but the protesters were given a one-hour extension. At the end of the extension, repeated demands for dispersal were largely ignored. Former Superintendent (now Assistant Commissioner) of Police Crispin Jeffries read the riot act to the crowd, and after waiting an additional 40 minutes he ordered riot police to disperse the crowd, which they did using teargas and rubber bullets. Some union workers laid down and refused to disperse; they were physically dragged from the area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 20 and 21\nThis is only the third time that this kind of unrest has hit Belize. The most recent occasion was in the 1980s, when a proposal was drafted to cede part of the country to Guatemala occasioned the Heads of Agreement Crisis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, January 20 and 21\nReports indicate that the police were very calm throughout the day, although some police cadets were said to have employed unnecessary force against orders. There were reports of fully trained officers restraining cadets and removing them from the police lines, and some people assert that no rocks were thrown until after a protester was hit in the head by a club wielded by a cadet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Between the protests\nAfter the conclusion of the Friday protest, the Belize National Teachers' Union, led by President Anthony Fuentes, began a prolonged strike action that left the majority of schools closed going into February. Shortages of water and electricity were also common.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Between the protests\nInitial agreements were made as of January 26 between the government and the Congress; in support of these deals university and college students took to the streets that day, representing the University of Belize and ATLIB affiliated institutions. But by Friday January 28, talks had broken down again as the Public Service Union of government workers left their jobs and forced a new round of negotiations that dragged on in the early days of February even as teachers began to return to school.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Between the protests\nTaking advantage of numerous faults in communication between the union representatives, Government negotiators Carla Barnett and Assad Shoman came up with an agreement on February 11. The NTUCB received a review of the budget, salary increases for its members, various reform measures tied to national development corporations and a promise of cooperation. The budget's tax increases were suspended to March 1, pending their review. A planned national shutdown and strike was averted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Between the protests\nAlmost an aberration in the midst of the storm and fury was the takeover of Belize Telecommunications Limited by the Government following investor Jeffrey Prosser's failure to pay for his batch of shares bought the previous year. That deal would be more closely examined in the months to come.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 40], "content_span": [41, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nThe Union Congress and GOB met in talks throughout late February, but as of February 28, there was little progress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nOn March 1, the agreed-upon tax increases were implemented with little comment other than a threat of strike action from the NTUCB. Other proposals, such as committees to investigate alleged wrongdoing at the Social Security Board and Development Finance Corporation were implemented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nThe main news in early March centered on the utility companies, BTL, BEL and BWS. BTL was locked in an investor war between Michael Ashcroft of England and Jeffrey Prosser, majority holder at the time, of the United States. Ashcroft's reps claimed Prosser was not fulfilling his duties to the board of BTL and challenged his authority in a court order after he was found unable to pay for his stake in the company, which was taken over by GOB. Meanwhile, BEL had applied for a rate hike of 14% over five years, and BWS were granted a small increase.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nOn March 11, the trend was set for confrontation. In Miami, Florida, judge Ursula Ungaro Benages restored Prosser to his position on the board with six directors to Ashcroft's two, throwing out the deal Government had made to offer shares to Belizeans. March 14 marked the first appearance of the Belize Communication Workers Union, led by Paul Perriott, who insisted that foreign ownership was not desirable for the workers of BTL and called for funding to put the company in Belizean hands. The NTUCB planned a demonstration for later that week in Belmopan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nOn March 15, phones across the nation were cut off, purportedly by BTL workers as part of their disgust with the Government and foreigners. The Supreme Court issued a ruling against the Miami injunction, declaring it non-enforceable in Belize.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nFriday, March 18, saw the planned demonstration by the trade unions, precipitated by a nationwide blackout beginning the previous night. The unions were much more peaceful than in their previous protest in January. Inside the House, the government passed the reform measures agreed to by the Unions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, Conditions leading to March and April unrest\nGoing into the long Easter weekend, the big story was government's deal with Michael Ashcroft's Ecom Ltd. to buy the shares not paid for by Prosser; upon appeal to the Miami Court Benages reversed her decision and agreed with the GOB position-or so it was thought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 64], "content_span": [65, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath\nGoing into April, the back and forth between Michael Ashcroft and Jeffrey Prosser in both Miami and Belize reached new lows. On March 31, Benages found GOB in contempt; the ruling was challenged days later by Belize Supreme Court Justice Abdulai Conteh, but Prosser appealed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath\nBenages, on April 13, agreed with Prosser and fined GOB $50,000 US dollars per day for every day in contravention of her order since March 29. Government planned to comply, but not before appealing the decision. On April 14, disgruntled BTL workers left the compound (or were forced out by a bomb threat), which was seized on by the Communication Workers' Union to express its dissatisfaction at the legal wrangling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath\nThe week of April 18 brought to a head the majority of the troubles facing Belize in this period. Over the weekend telephone service was brought down and the BTL compound on Saint Thomas Street barricaded by workers and supporters, who gave in only as Police stormed the compound. BTL manager Dale Trujeque was arrested for illegal strike action. The unions called on April 18 for Prime Minister Musa to resign; his response was that the BTL situation was not properly handled but that he would not resign based on \"politics.\" On April 19, the Opposition United Democratic Party unveiled a plan of \"civil disobedience\" to force early elections, and the country's tertiary level students came out in support of the unions and BTL workers. Late on April 19 another crippling electricity blackout was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 854]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath, April 20\nAt about 1:00 pm that Wednesday afternoon, students of the University of Belize, Faculty of Management and Social Sciences, walked out of their campus on College Street in West Landivar and went to rouse students from schools in the area, including St. John's College High School and Junior College, Edward P. Yorke, Nazarene and Pallotti High Schools. Having achieved a sizable number of participants, the march traveled to Said Musa's home in the City for an hour (ignoring Police attempts to disperse them) and then marching to and blocking the Belcan Bridge, one of the City's main arteries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath, April 20\nUnion leaders and Opposition politicians joined them thereafter and police and crowd engaged in a standoff with occasional outbursts and usual elements of protesting until nightfall, when a few city residents came out and began burning tires on the bridge. The crowd then began to disperse, some chanting \"Albert Street\", the main commercial center of Belize City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath, April 20\nWhat happened next was an hour to 90 minutes of indiscriminate looting in the downtown area, particularly on King, Bishop, Church, Albert and Regent Streets, but extending as well to the Pound Yard Bridge and Vernon Street. Police failed to restore calm before damage amounting to more than a million dollars occurred.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath, April 20\nFingers flew all next day, April 21, as the Government, Opposition and unions made claims, counterclaims and threats. Meanwhile, accused looters were being brought to court and UB student body president Moses Sulph charged for leading the previous day's strike. Another tense moment came on the afternoon of April 21 as reports of Sulph's arraignment (he was actually arraigned April 22) brought out hundreds to the Queen and North Front Street areas for a few hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, April unrest and aftermath, April 20\nOn Monday, April 25, plans were announced by public servants and teachers to strike, but these were called off by the end of the week after limited participation. One last tense moment came in Belmopan near the end of April when Opposition rep Patrick Faber was roughed up while attending a meeting of the Prime Minister and UB students there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 56], "content_span": [57, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, In popular culture\nArtist Dan Man released a song called \"Albert Street\" mocking the looting on that City street on April 20. Poet Erwin X (Jones)' \"Life Haad Out Ya\" was another favorite of protesters, and the phrase became a catchphrase for much of 2005 and 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180939-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Belize unrest, In popular culture\nThe season 1 episode of the Canadian TV series Survivorman named \"Lost At Sea\" featured the host Les Stroud attempt to survive one week in a life raft adrift off of the Belize coast. Filming began mere days before the unrest broke out, and filming the episode had to be cut short before the end of Les' 6th day - as the unrest made the situation difficult for the foreign-based production crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes\nThe 2005 Belmont Stakes was the 137th running of the Belmont Stakes. The 1\u00a01\u20442-mile (2,400\u00a0m) race, known as the \"test of the champion\" and sometimes called the \"final jewel\" in thoroughbred horse racing's Triple Crown series. It was held on June 11, 2005, three weeks after the Preakness Stakes and five weeks after the Kentucky Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes\nIn 2005, the Kentucky Derby was won by long-shot Giacomo while the Preakness Stakes was won by Afleet Alex. Therefore, there was no Triple Crown at stake, which caused a sharp decline in attendance from the year before when Smarty Jones was attempting to sweep the three races. The race proved fairly uneventful, with favorite Afleet Alex winning by seven lengths and stamping himself as the top three-year-old in the nation. Longshots finished in the next three places, resulting in high payouts for the trifecta and superfecta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nGiacomo won the 2005 Kentucky Derby in a major upset at odds of 50-1. Afleet Alex, who had finished third in the Derby, rebounded to win the Preakness Stakes despite nearly falling when another horse swerved into his path at the head of the stretch. Afleet Alex was favored to win the Belmont, with morning line odds set at 6-5 while Giacomo was the second choice at 4-1. The third choice at 6-1 was Reverberate, who had finished second in his previous start in the Peter Pan Stakes. The other horses in the field were all at double digit odds. Trainer Nick Zito entered three horses in the Belmont, having already entered five in the Derby and three in the Preakness without finishing in the money. Andromeda's Hero was considered to have the best chance, having finished eighth in the Derby and with an excellent pedigree for the taxing distance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 878]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nAfleet Alex arrived at Belmont Park on June 4. His trainer Tim Ritchey focused on long exercise sessions to build up the colt's stamina, including two gallops on the Wednesday before the race when the colt galloped a total of \u200b4\u00a01\u20442 miles. Meanwhile, various racetracks across the country agreed to set up Alex's Lemonade Stands on Belmont day to raise money for pediatric cancer research. The charity was set up by a young girl, Alex Scott, and had come to the attention of Afleet Alex's owners. By the end of 2005, over $4 million had been raised. By 2015, the fundraising has surpassed $100 million, and the publicity associated with Afleet Alex's Triple Crown run was a major factor in the continued success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Pre-race\nA \"docile\" crowd of 62,274 showed up to watch the race. The previous year, a record crowd of over 120,000 had attended to watch Smarty Jones attempt to sweep the Triple Crown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nLongshot Pinpoint went to the early lead and set a slow pace, with Afleet Alex sitting back in eighth place. His jockey, Jeremy Rose, had been cautioned about making his move too early \u2013 a common mistake for young jockeys not familiar with the dimensions of Belmont Park. \"He was the best horse\", he said. \"I knew that if I didn't do something stupid, I was going to win this race. He's just that good.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nHis biggest challenger, Giacomo, raced just a few lengths behind the early leaders, a change from his normal come-from-behind tactics. His jockey Mike Smith explained that the horse had \"flipped his palate\" before the start of the race, which obstructed his breathing. \"I could hear (a roaring sound) into the gate\", said Smith, \"and it got louder during the race.\" By being closer to the pace, Smith hoped to conserve energy and get a jump on Afleet Alex. Giacomo moved to the lead at the top of the stretch but then tired, eventually finishing seventh.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nAfleet Alex continued to rate near the back of the pack for the first \u200b1\u00a01\u20448 miles then unleashed a \"devastating\" kick around the far turn. He quickly hit the lead and continued to draw away down the stretch, winning by seven lengths. He ran the final quarter mile in 24.50 seconds, the fastest closing fraction since Arts and Letters in 1969. \"We expected this kind of performance\", said Ritchey. \"I wasn't surprised he was that far back, but when he got rolling, it was a lot of fun.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nAndromeda's Hero and Nolan's Cat used similar tactics to Afleet Alex but could not match his acceleration. Andromeda's Hero moved from 10th place early in the race to finish 2nd, while Nolan's Cat closed from 11th to 3rd. \"I stayed comfortable in good position, trying to stay close to Afleet Alex,\" said Rafael Bejarano, the jockey of Andromeda's Hero. \"When he moved at the three-eighths pole, I followed him, and when I asked my horse at the quarter pole, my horse started running strong. But Afleet Alex just ran away.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Race description\nDue to the slow early pace, the final time was a modest 2:28.75.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180940-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Belmont Stakes, Chart\nSource: EquibaseTimes: \u200b1\u20444 \u2013 0:24.47; \u200b1\u20442 \u2013 0:48.62; \u200b3\u20444 \u2013 1:12.92; mile \u2013 1:38.05; \u200b1\u00a01\u20444 \u2013 2:02.45; final \u2013 2:28.75. Fractional Splits: (:24.47) (:24.15) (:24.30) (:25.13) (:26.20) (:24.50)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 26], "content_span": [27, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180941-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Berlin Marathon\nThe 2005 Berlin Marathon was the 32nd edition of the Berlin Marathon. The marathon took place in Berlin, Germany, on 25 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180941-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Berlin Marathon\nThe men's race was won by Philip Manyim in 2:07:41 hours and the women's race was won by Mizuki Noguchi in a time of 2:19:12 hours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180942-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Berlin Thunder season\nThe 2005 Berlin Thunder season was the seventh season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Rick Lantz in his second year, and played its home games at Olympic Stadium in Berlin, Germany. They finished the regular season in first place with a record of seven wins and three losses. In World Bowl XIII, Berlin lost to the Amsterdam Admirals 27\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 418]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180944-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Betta Electrical 500\nThe 2005 Betta Electrical 500 was the ninth round of the 2005 V8 Supercar Championship Series. It was held on the weekend of the 9 to 11 September at Sandown Raceway in Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180945-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bhutan A-Division\nThe 2005 season of the Bhutanese A-Division was the eleventh recorded season of top-flight football in Bhutan. The league was won by Transport United, their second title in a row. As a result, they qualified as Bhutan's representatives in the 2006 AFC President's Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180945-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bhutan A-Division, League table\nTeams played each other on a home and away basis, with the bottom two teams qualifying for a relegation playoff against the top two teams from the B-Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 36], "content_span": [37, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180945-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bhutan A-Division, Relegation playoffs\nChoden won the final of the B-Division on 19 June 2005, beating Rookies 3-0. Choden and another unknown team then entered the playoffs against Rigzhung and Dzongric. From the known fixtures that took place in 2006, it can be extrapolated that Choden beat Dzongric, whilst Rigzhung beat the other unknown team from the B-Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 43], "content_span": [44, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180946-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Biante Model Cars Historic Touring Car Series\nThe 2005 Biante Models Cars Historic Touring Car Series was an Australian motor racing competition for Group N cars. It was recognised by the Confederation of Australian Motor Sport as a National Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180946-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Biante Model Cars Historic Touring Car Series\nThe series was won by Brad Tilley driving a Ford XY Falcon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180946-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Biante Model Cars Historic Touring Car Series, Schedule\nThe series was contested over six rounds with each round contested over three races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 60], "content_span": [61, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180946-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Biante Model Cars Historic Touring Car Series, Points system\nOutright series points were awarded at each race on the following basis:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180946-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Biante Model Cars Historic Touring Car Series, Points system\nClass points were awarded at each race on the following basis:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 65], "content_span": [66, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180946-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Biante Model Cars Historic Touring Car Series, Series standings\nThe above table shows only the top ten series placings outright and the top three placings in each class.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 68], "content_span": [69, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180947-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Championship Game\nThe 2005 Dr. Pepper Big 12 Championship Game was held at Reliant Stadium on December 3, 2005. The game saw the Big 12 South champions Texas Longhorns take on the Colorado Buffaloes, winners of the Big 12 North. Texas, undefeated and at #2 in the BCS standings, was looking to travel to the national championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180947-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Championship Game\nTexas defeated Colorado, 70\u20133. The win was the 8th largest margin of victory in Texas football history, and sent the Longhorns to the BCS title game in Pasadena, where they defeated USC 41\u201338. The game would also be the last for Colorado head coach Gary Barnett, who was replaced on December 15 by Dan Hawkins. Colorado would go on to lose 19\u201310 to Clemson in the Champs Sports Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180948-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big 12 Conference Baseball Tournament was held at AT&T Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City, OK from May 25 through May 29. Nebraska won their fourth tournament in seven years and earned the Big 12 Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last year that the tournament mirrored the format of the College World Series, with two 4-team double-elimination brackets and a final championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180949-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Conference Softball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big 12 Conference Softball tournament was held at ASA Hall of Fame Stadium in Oklahoma City, OK from May 11 through May 14, 2005. Texas won their fourth conference tournament and earned the Big 12 Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180949-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Conference Softball Tournament\nTexas A&M, Oklahoma, Texas, Baylor, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma State received bids to the NCAA tournament. Texas would go on to play in the 2005 Women's College World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180950-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big 12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament, known for sponsorship reasons as the 2005 Phillips 66 Big 12 Women's Basketball Championship, was the 2005 edition of the Big 12 Conference's championship tournament. The tournament was held at the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City from 8 March until 12 March 2005. The Quarterfinals, Semifinals, and Finals were televised on the ESPN family of networks. The championship game, held on March 12, 2005, featured the number 1 seeded Baylor Lady Bears, and the number 3 seeded Kansas State Wildcats. Baylor won the contest by a 68-55 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180951-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2005 Big 12 Conference Women's Soccer Tournament was the postseason women's soccer tournament for the Big 12 Conference held from November 2 to 6, 2005. The 7-match tournament was held at the Blossom Athletic Center in San Antonio, TX with a combined attendance of 6,768. The 8-team single-elimination tournament consisted of three rounds based on seeding from regular season conference play. The Texas A&M Aggies defeated the Colorado Buffaloes in the championship match to win their 4th conference tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180952-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament was the postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big 12 Conference. It was played from March 10 to 13 in Kansas City, Missouri at the Kemper Arena. Oklahoma State won the tournament for the 2nd time and received the conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180952-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeding\nThe Tournament consisted of a 12 team single-elimination tournament with the top 4 seeds receiving a bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180953-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Commerce Bank Ballpark in Bridgewater, NJ. This was the twenty first annual Big East Conference Baseball Tournament and last to be held at Commerce Bank Ballpark. The Notre Dame Fighting Irish won their fourth tournament championship in a row and claimed the Big East Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. Notre Dame would go on to win five championships in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180953-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe Big East baseball tournament was a 4 team double elimination tournament in 2005. The top four regular season finishers were seeded one through four based on conference winning percentage only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 64], "content_span": [65, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180953-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Big East Conference Baseball Tournament, Jack Kaiser Award\nMatt Edwards was the winner of the 2005 Jack Kaiser Award. Edwards was a senior first baseman for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 63], "content_span": [64, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180954-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big East Men's Basketball Championship was played from March 9 to March 12, 2005. The tournament took place at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The Syracuse Orange won the tournament and were awarded an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180954-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, Bracket\nNote: By finishing in last place during the regular season, St. John's did not qualify for the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 50], "content_span": [51, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180955-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big League World Series\nThe 2005 Big League World Series took place from July 30-August 6 in Easley, South Carolina, United States. Easley, South Carolina defeated Thousand Oaks, California in the championship game. It was South Carolina's third straight championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180956-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big Sky Men's Basketball Tournament was played from March 5 to March 9. The First Round of the tournament was held at the higher seed's home arena, and the semi-finals and championship were held at the Memorial Coliseum in Portland, Oregon, which is the home of regular season champion Portland State. The top 6 teams from regular season play qualified and the top 2 teams received a bye to the semi-finals. The tournament was won by Montana and they received an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180957-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament was the postseason baseball tournament for the Big South Conference, held from May 25\u201328, 2005 at Charles Watson Stadium, home field of Coastal Carolina in Conway, South Carolina. The top six finishers participated in the double-elimination tournament. The champion, Winthrop, won the title for the fourth time, and earned an invitation to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180957-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, Format\nThe top six finishers from the regular season qualified for the tournament. The teams were seeded one through six based on conference winning percentage and played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 53], "content_span": [54, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180957-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Big South Conference Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nDaniel Carte was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. Carter was an outfielder for Winthrop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 88], "content_span": [89, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180958-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 1\u20135, 2005 at campus sites. The tournament was won by the Winthrop Eagles, their first of what would become four consecutive titles, led by head coach Gregg Marshall. They defeated the #7 Charleston Southern Buccaneers in the championship game 68\u201346.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180958-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe top eight of the conference's nine teams were eligible for the tournament, seeded by conference winning percentage. All games were hosted at campus sites, with home-field advantage going to the higher seed. This gave the #1 seed Winthrop home-court advantage throughout the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [55, 61], "content_span": [62, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180959-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big Ten Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Illinois Field on the campus of the University of Illinois at Urbana\u2013Champaign in Champaign, Illinois from May 15 through 19. The top six teams from the regular season participated in the double-elimination tournament, the twenty fourth annual tournament sponsored by the Big Ten Conference to determine the league champion. Ohio State won their seventh tournament championship and earned the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180959-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2005 tournament was a 6-team double-elimination tournament, with seeds determined by conference regular season winning percentage only. Michigan claimed the fourth seed over Ohio State by tiebreaker. As in the previous three years, the top two seeds received a single bye, with the four lower seeds playing opening round games. The top seed played the lowest seeded winner from the opening round, with the second seed playing the higher seed. Teams that lost in the opening round played an elimination game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180959-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, Tournament\n* - Indicates game required 13 innings. \u2020 - Indicates game required 11 innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 44], "content_span": [45, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180959-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Outstanding Player\nSteve Caravati was named Most Outstanding Player. Caravati was an outfielder for Ohio State.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 78], "content_span": [79, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180960-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Conference football season\nThe 2005 Big Ten Conference football season was the 110th season for the Big Ten Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180961-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was played between March 9 and March 12, 2005 at the United Center in Chicago, Illinois. This was the eighth annual Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament. The championship was won by Illinois who defeated Wisconsin in the championship game. As a result, Illinois received the Big Ten's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The win marked the second tournament championship for Illinois in their fifth championship game appearance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 526]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180961-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Men's Basketball Tournament, Seeds\nAll Big Ten schools played in the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records. Seeding for the tournament was determined at the close of the regular conference season. The top five teams received a first round bye.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 47], "content_span": [48, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180962-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Softball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big Ten Conference Softball tournament was held at Alumni Field on the campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan from May 12 through May 14, 2005. The championship game was aired on CSTV. As the tournament winner, Michigan earned the Big Ten Conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Softball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180962-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big Ten Softball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe 2005 tournament was an eight team single-elimination tournament. The top eight teams based on conference regular season winning percentage earned invites to the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 52], "content_span": [53, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180963-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 9\u201312 at Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180963-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nUtah State defeated Pacific in the championship game, 65\u201352, to obtain the sixth Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament championship in school history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180963-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Aggies earned the conference's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament as the #14 seed in the Chicago regional. Pacific received an at-large bid as the #8 seed in the Albuquerque regional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180963-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nEight of the ten teams in the conference participated, with UC Riverside and Cal Poly not qualifying. Teams were seeded based on regular season conference records. The top four seeds received byes, with the top two seeds receiving a second bye into the semifinal round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 60], "content_span": [61, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180964-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Billboard Music Awards\nThe 2005 Billboard Music Awards were held December 6, 2005 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada. The awards recognized the most popular artists and albums from 2005. Green Day and 50 Cent dominated the awards this year, with both winning 6 awards each.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots\nThe Birmingham riots of 2005 occurred on two consecutive nights on Saturday 22 October and Sunday 23 October 2005 in the Lozells and Handsworth area of Birmingham, England. The riots were derived from ethnic tensions between the Caribbean and British Asian communities, with the spark for the riot being an alleged gang rape of a teenage black girl by a group of South Asian men. The rape allegation has never been substantiated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots\nNo evidence has been found to support the rumour nor has any victim come forward (further rumours asserted that this was because the victim was present in Britain unlawfully and feared deportation). The clashes involved groups of Caribbean and South Asian men committing serious acts of violence against various targets from both communities. The riots were connected to the deaths of two men, 23-year-old Isaiah Young-Sam and 18-year-old Aaron James.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Background\nThe majority of the Asian population in the Lozells area are of Pakistani origin. The black population is predominantly of Caribbean origin. The animosity that preceded the rioting appears to have been largely based on local economic rivalry combined with possible agitation from opposing criminal gangs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Background\nDuring a 2004 documentary titled Who You Callin' a Nigger? writer and broadcaster Darcus Howe picked up and commented upon a backdrop of mutual ethnic minority racism both in the West Midlands and the rest of Britain. His documentary did not focus solely on the differences between the Caribbean and British Asian community but also included tensions between the Caribbean community and recent African immigrants as well as inter-Asian racism. The problems specific to the Lozells area appear to be centered on the prevalence of Asian-owned businesses, the \"unfair treatment\" and \"derogatory attitudes\" of each community to the other.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, The alleged rape\nThere has never been agreement on the date the alleged rape occurred and the exact circumstances remain unclear: descriptions of the event change dependent on source. The earliest news items concerning the issue seem to begin with the BBC reporting a \"Stop traffic\" protest on 18 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, The alleged rape\nThe rumours involved a 14-year-old girl of Jamaican heritage attempting to shoplift from a branch of \"Beauty Queen Cosmetics\". When caught by the British Pakistani owner, either she offered herself sexually or he proposed to her that in exchange for sex she would be free to go. The girl was then allegedly raped by a group of eight to nineteen men. Afraid of being deported due to her illegal immigrant status the girl supposedly refused to provide a statement to the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, The alleged rape\nThe police appealed for any evidence of the event occurring and stated at the very least her immigrant status would not be an issue until after the allegations had been dealt with. Despite the appeal, forensic searches and questioning of several individuals, the allegations have never been substantiated and no witnesses have come forward, nor was the girl - if she even existed - ever identified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Rumours and riot\nLocal pirate radio stations, most notably Hot 92 along with one of its DJs 'Warren G' discussed the details of the alleged rape and a picket was set up outside the premises of the shop in question. There were also calls for boycotts of other British Asian businesses. Ajaib Hussein, 33, the shop owner denied the event ever occurred and blamed business rivals for starting the rumour. A public meeting was held on Saturday 22 October at the New Testament Church of God. At around 17:45 the meeting ended and violence erupted outside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Rumours and riot\nGangs of men fought running battles and at 19:15 Isaiah Young-Sam, who later died, was stabbed. As the night progressed the police recorded 80 offences occurring. Rioting also occurred to a lesser extent during the night of 23 October. Between 30 and 50 individuals were thought to be involved in the most serious incidents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Rumours and riot\nThree men were convicted, but after a subsequent retrial acquitted of the murder of Isaiah Young-Sam. A man pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of Aaron James. In July 2007 six people were convicted of various offences related to the riots; four men were subsequently jailed in November 2007. In May 2008 four men were convicted for a being part of a mob that confronted and threatened a fire crew with firearms and machetes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Rumours and riot\nIn the aftermath of the riots a solidarity march for unity was conducted by Caribbean, white and British Asian women and children. On 5 November 2005 graves in the Muslim part of a local cemetery were desecrated. Vandals who pushed over and destroyed several grave stones left behind leaflets insulting Muslims. The leaflets were signed by a group calling itself \"Black Nation\". There is no previous history of any such organisation and it is not known whether it does in fact exist. Dr John Sentamu, the first African archbishop in the Church of England, strongly condemned the desecrations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 39], "content_span": [40, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Media coverage\nOn 21 February 2006 the Press Complaints Commission censured The Voice, the leading Black newspaper in Britain, for reporting the alleged rape in terms that suggested it was unchallenged fact (the newspaper had headlined \"Gang of 19 rape teen\"). The rumours were picked up by two Caribbean websites Blacknet and Supertrax which each allowed their chatrooms to post reactions from around the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180965-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Birmingham riots, Media coverage\nSupertrax reported that Lozells was swarming with \"Paki gangs\" with \"sumtin to prove\"; whilst Blacknet, a website promoted by The British Council, printed various contributions one of which was: \"I hope Asian women are getting their throats cut as we speak\", followed by a response: \"Narrow it down to Pakistani women and I'll agree with you\". After the riot, Blacknet apologised and removed what it called \"absolutely disgusting\" material posted on its site.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado\nThe 2005 Birmingham tornado was one of the strongest tornadoes recorded in Great Britain in nearly 30\u00a0years, occurring on 28 July 2005 in the suburbs of Birmingham. It formed on a day when thunderstorms were expected to develop across the Midlands and eastern England. The tornado struck at approximately 14:30 BST in the Sparkbrook area and also affected King's Heath, Moseley and Balsall Heath as it carved a 7 kilometre-long path through the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado\nIts main effects were felt on Ladypool Road, which bore the brunt of the damage. Ladypool Primary School was extensively damaged and lost its distinctive Martin & Chamberlain tower. The adjacent St Agatha's Church also suffered some damage. Christ Church (consecrated in 1867), on the corner of Dolobran Road and Grantham Road in Sparkbrook, was also damaged and has now been demolished.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado\nThe Met Office and TORRO (The Tornado and Storm Research Organisation) estimated that the tornado had a general T4 rating on the TORRO scale, with a short spell as a T5 tornado, which would indicate wind speeds between 137 and 186\u00a0mph (220 and 299\u00a0km/h), equivalent to an F2 or F3 tornado on the Fujita scale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado\nThere were no fatalities, although there were approximately 19 injuries, three of which were reported to be serious. The tornado uprooted an estimated 1,100 trees, removed the roofs of buildings, picked up and deposited cars and caused other damage during its short existence. The total cost of damage was estimated at \u00a340\u00a0million, making it the most costly tornado in British history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado\nWhile the United Kingdom has more reported tornadoes, relative to its land area, than any other country excluding the Netherlands, the vast majority are weak. The strongest recorded tornado in the country struck Portsmouth on 14 December 1810, with a T8 (F4) rating and a top wind speed of 213 to 240\u00a0mph (343 to 386\u00a0km/h).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado, Second tornado\nThree months later, thunderstorms brought a second tornado, which hit less than 1 mile (1.6 kilometres) away from the original twister. The Met Office said there were winds of up to 80\u00a0mph (130\u00a0km/h) and it was strong enough to rip the roof off a corner house. Following this came widespread flooding across the region which brought havoc to Birmingham.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180966-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Birmingham tornado, Earlier tornadoes\nA tornado struck the city in 1931, killing one woman and severely damaging several houses. On 23 November 1981, during a record-breaking nationwide tornado outbreak, two tornadoes touched down within the Birmingham city limits \u2013 in Erdington and Selly Oak \u2013 with six tornadoes touching down within the boundaries of the wider West Midlands county.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 42], "content_span": [43, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180967-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Birthday Honours\nThe Birthday Honours 2005 for the Commonwealth realms were announced on 11 June 2005 to celebrate the Queen's Birthday of2005. The recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour, and arranged first by the country whose ministers advised the Queen on the appointments, then by honour, with classes (Knight, Knight Grand Cross, etc.) and then divisions (Military, Civil, etc.) as appropriate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180968-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)\nThe 2005 Queen's Birthday Honours in New Zealand, celebrating the official birthday of Queen Elizabeth II, were appointments made by the Queen in her right as Queen of New Zealand, on the advice of the New Zealand government, to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by New Zealanders. They were announced on 6 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180968-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Birthday Honours (New Zealand)\nThe recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180969-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes\nThe 2005 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes was the 81st running of the Black-Eyed Susan Stakes. The race took place on May 20, 2005, and was televised in the United States on the Bravo TV network owned by NBC. Ridden by jockey John Velazquez, Spun Sugar, won the race by three and three quarter lengths over runner-up R Lady Joy. Approximate post time on the evening before the Preakness Stakes was 5:14\u00a0p.m. Eastern Time and the race was run for a purse of $200,000. The race was run over a fast track in a final time of 1:53.27. The Maryland Jockey Club reported total attendance of 23,994.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180970-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boise State Broncos football team\nThe 2005 Boise State Broncos football team represented Boise State University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Boise State competed as a member of the Western Athletic Conference (WAC), and played their home games at Bronco Stadium in Boise, Idaho. The Broncos were led by fifth-year head coach Dan Hawkins. He resigned at the end of the regular season to take the head coaching job at Colorado, but remained to coach the Broncos in their bowl game. The Broncos finished the season 9\u20134 and 7\u20131 in conference to win their fourth straight WAC title (shared with Nevada) and played in the MPC Computers Bowl, where they lost to Boston College, 27\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 704]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games\nThe XV Bolivarian Games (Spanish: Juegos Bolivarianos) were a multi-sport event held between 12\u201321 August 2005 in Armenia and Pereira, Colombia. Some events took place in Cartagena de Indias and in Bogot\u00e1. The Games were organized by the Bolivarian Sports Organization (ODEBO).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games\nThe opening ceremony took place on August 12, 2005, at the Estadio Hern\u00e1n Ram\u00edrez Villegas in Pereira, Colombia. The Games were officially opened by Colombian president \u00c1lvaro Uribe. Torch lighter was former road racing cyclist Rub\u00e9n Dar\u00edo G\u00f3mez, gold medallist at the 1961 Bolivarian Games. The athlete's oath was sworn by weightlifter \u00d3scar Figueroa", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Venues\nArmenia hosted the following competitions:athletics (Pista Atl\u00e9tica La Villa), basketball (Coliseo del Caf\u00e9), billiards (Bolo Club de Armenia), boxing (Coliseo Municipal de La Tebaida), fencing (Coliseo Colegio San Luis Rey), football (Estadio Centenario), artistic gymnastics (Coliseo de Gimnasia), rhythmic gymnastics (Coliseo del Sur), karate (Coliseo Municipal de Calarca), roller speed skating road (Pista Estadio Centenario), roller speed skating track (Patinodromo Parque de la Vida), squash (Canchas Universidad del Quind\u00edo and Portal del Quind\u00edo), table tennis (Coliseo Universidad del Quind\u00edo), wrestling (Coliseo del INEM)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Venues\nPereira hosted the following competitions:archery (Cancha Liga de F\u00fatbol Villa Ol\u00edmpica), beach volleyball (Parque Metropolitano del Caf\u00e9), bowling (Bolera Pereira), BMX racing (Parque Metropolitano del Caf\u00e9), mountain biking (Parque Metropolitano del Caf\u00e9), road cycling, track cycling (Vel\u00f3dromo Alfonso Hurtado Sarria), diving (Piscinas Ol\u00edmpicas Villa), football (Estadio Hern\u00e1n Ram\u00edrez Villegas), judo (Coliseo Menor), racquetball (Canchas Universidad Tecnol\u00f3gica de Pereira), shooting (Club de Tiro Punto 30), swimming (Piscinas Ol\u00edmpicas Villa), taekwondo (Coliseo Menor), tennis (Tenis Country Club), volleyball (Coliseo Mayor), weightlifting (Coliseo Instituto T\u00e9cnico Superior)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Venues\nCartagena hosted the following competitions:baseball\u2020 (Estadio 11 de Noviembre), canoeing (Laguna Luruaco), softball\u2020 (Estadio Unidad Deportiva El Campestre), triathlon (Boca Grande and Castillo Grande), yachting (Bah\u00eda de Cartagena) \u2020: Event initially scheduled, but cancelled at short notice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Venues\nBogot\u00e1 hosted the following competitions:equestrianism (Country Club), water skiing (Parque Sim\u00f3n Bol\u00edvar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Participation\nAbout 2026 athletes from 6 countries were reported to participate:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 36], "content_span": [37, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Sports\nBoth baseball and softball competitions were cancelled at short notice. The following 28 sports were explicitly mentioned:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180971-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivarian Games, Medal count\nThe medal count for these Games is tabulated below. This table is sorted by the number of gold medals earned by each country. The number of silver medals is taken into consideration next, and then the number of bronze medals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 34], "content_span": [35, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Bolivia on 18 December 2005. Evo Morales of the Movement for Socialism (MAS) party was elected President of Bolivia with 54% of the vote, the first time a candidate had received an absolute majority since the flawed 1978 elections. Morales was sworn in on 22 January 2006 for a five-year term. The MAS also won a majority of seats in the Chamber of Deputies and emerged as the largest party in the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election\nSimultaneously voters elected prefects, the highest executive office in each of Bolivia's nine departments. This was the first time the office had been chosen at the ballot box. Subsequently, departmental elections were held separately from national elections, with the next one held in April 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Background\nIn the early 2000s there were high levels of political instability across the country, including five Presidents in four years. Much of the instability dates back to the economic reforms otherwise known as \"shock therapy\" implemented by President Gonzalo S\u00e1nchez de Lozada whereby many formerly public utilities were privatized.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Background\nThese reforms ultimately led to the First Bolivian Gas War in October 2003 where protesters, many of them of indigenous descent, essentially forced the resignation of S\u00e1nchez de Lozada. Vice President Carlos Mesa took office as president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Background\nIn his year in office, Mesa held a national referendum on the prospect of the nationalization of the hydrocarbons industry which he claimed to have won. Critics however said that the questions were vague and ambiguous with regard to outright nationalization of the hydrocarbons industry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Background\nIn May 2005 the Second Bolivian Gas War began after Congress agreed to raise taxes on foreign companies from 18% to 32%. The unions, led by Evo Morales, felt the law did not go far enough and effectively shut down the country, blockading major roads and cutting off the food supplies of several large cities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Background\nIn June 2005 the protests ultimately led to Mesa's resignation. Supreme Court Chief Justice Eduardo Rodr\u00edguez assumed the position of interim President of the Republic after the presidents of both the Senate and Chamber of Deputies declined the position and Rodr\u00edguez was fourth in line of succession.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Background\nViewed as an apolitical figure, Rodr\u00edguez was welcomed by protesters and called for the presidential elections slated to take place in 2007 to be brought forward to December 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Electoral system\nVoters had two ballots; a national-level ballot to elect the President and the nationally-elected members of Congress, and one for members of Congress elected in single-member constituencies in the Chamber of Deputies. Senators and Deputies were returned on a departmental basis; Senators were elected on a majoritarian basis, with the first-place party receiving two and the second-place party one, while deputies were elected on a mixed-member basis, with district deputies joining list deputies awarded by compensatory proportional representation. However, there was no national distribution of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Electoral system\nVoting was compulsory for all Bolivians over the age of 18, but Bolivians living abroad were not able to take part.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180972-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Bolivian general election, Aftermath\nMorales claimed his victory marked Bolivia's first election of an indigenous head of state, but this claim generated controversy, due to the number of mestizo presidents who came before him, and was challenged publicly by such figures as Mario Vargas Llosa, who accused Morales of fomenting racial divisions in an increasingly mestizo Latin America.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180973-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bonnaroo Music Festival\nThe 2005 Bonnaroo Music Festival took place from June 10\u201312, and more than 75,000 people were in attendance. New Line Cinema introduced a twenty-four-hour \"cinema tent,\" showing popular and cult films. Wireless Internet access was provided by Cisco Systems. There was a \"comedy tent\" featuring Jim Breuer as well as some lesser-known comedians and even daily yoga classes. Like 2004, rain marked each day of the festival. The children's area was provided by Kidz Jam.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180973-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bonnaroo Music Festival, Superjam\nHerbie Hancock (keyboard), Pino Palladino (bass), Ahmir \u201cQuestlove\u201d Thompson (drums), Lionel Loueke (guitar)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180974-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston City Council election\nBoston City Council elections were held on November 8, 2005. Ten seats (six district representatives and four at-large members) were contested in the general election, as the incumbents in districts 5, 7, and 8 were unopposed. Five seats (the four at-large members, and district 9) had also been contested in the preliminary election held on September 27, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180974-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston City Council election, At-large\nCouncillors Michael F. Flaherty, Felix D. Arroyo, and Stephen J. Murphy were re-elected, while the seat formerly held by Maura Hennigan was won by Sam Yoon. Hennigan did not seek re-election, as she ran for Mayor of Boston; she was defeated by incumbent Thomas Menino in the general election. Yoon became the first Asian American to hold elected office in Boston.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180974-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston City Council election, District 1, Special election\nScapicchio resigned his seat effective April 30, 2006, in order to join a private lobbying firm. This created a vacancy that needed to be filled by a special election, which took place on June 13, 2006, with the preliminary election on May 16, 2006. Salvatore LaMattina was elected to serve the remainder of Scapicchio's term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180974-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston City Council election, District 2, Special election\nKelly died in January 2007, creating a vacancy that needed to be filled by a special election, which took place on May 15, 2007, with the preliminary election on April 17, 2007. Bill Linehan was elected to serve the remainder of Kelly's term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180975-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston College Eagles football team\nThe 2005 Boston College Eagles football team represented Boston College during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Boston College was in their first year as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Eagles played their home games at Alumni Stadium in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, which has been their home stadium since 1957.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180976-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Marathon\nThe 2005 Boston Marathon was the 109th running of the annual marathon race in Boston, United States and was held on April 18. The elite men's race was won by Ethiopia's Hailu Negussie in a time of 2:11:45 hours and the women's race was won by Kenya's Catherine Ndereba in 2:25:13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season\nThe 2005 Boston Red Sox season was the 105th season in the franchise's Major League Baseball history. The Red Sox finished second in the American League East with a record of 95 wins and 67 losses, the same record as the New York Yankees. The Yankees were deemed the division winner, due to their 10\u20139 head-to-head record against the Red Sox during the regular season. The Red Sox qualified for the postseason as the AL wild card, but were swept by the American League Central champion Chicago White Sox in the ALDS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season\nOn offense, the Red Sox led Major League Baseball in runs scored (910), hits (1,579), doubles (339), RBI (863), walks (653), batting average (.281), OBP (.357), OPS (.811) and sacrifice flies (63). Red Sox pitchers hit opposing batters with 89 pitches, the most by any major league pitching staff in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Offseason\nThe Red Sox made a few notable offseason moves coming off their 2004 World Series championship. The team brought back Jason Varitek by re-signing the veteran catcher to a 4-year $40 million deal. Outfielder Dave Roberts \u2013 who played a key role as a base stealer during the 2004 postseason \u2013 was traded to the Padres in exchange for shortstop Ramon Vazquez and left fielder Jay Payton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Offseason\nManagement sought to fill the void left by Orlando Cabrera and Pokey Reese at shortstop by signing free agent \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda to a 4-year $40 million year with a 5th year option. The move sat well with fans because Renter\u00eda was coming off a very successful 2004 campaign with the St. Louis Cardinals. Renter\u00eda hit .287 with 10 homeruns and 72 RBI in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Offseason\nThe Red Sox front office looked to bolster their starting pitching by signing two veteran pitchers. The need for starting pitching was a point of emphasize due to the departure of Pedro Mart\u00ednez to the New York Mets after 7 years in a Red Sox uniform. The first pitcher signed was former Padres starter David Wells. Wells was coming off a surprising 2004 season with the Padres in which he posted a 3.73 ERA over 195 innings pitched at the age of 41. The second pitcher signed was former Cubs starter Matt Clement. Clement was coming off a season in which he posted a respectable 3.68 ERA over 181 innings pitched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ER = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 66], "content_span": [67, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, ALDS\nThe Chicago White Sox swept the Red Sox in the American League Division Series. The White Sox went on to win the World Series that year against the Houston Astros. The Red Sox were forced to play in the 2005 Postseason as a wild card team even though they had the same regular season record as their interdivision rival the New York Yankees. That is due to the fact that the Yankees had won the regular season head to head matchups versus the Red Sox 10-9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, ALDS\nA crucial moment of the series came in game 2 when Red Sox second baseman Tony Graffanino made a crucial error that led to the White Sox scoring three unearned runs in the fifth inning. A slow groundball hit to the right side of the infield was able to get past Graffanino and a key double play was not turned. Later in the inning, White Sox second baseman Tadahito Iguchi hit a three-run homerun to give the White Sox a one-run lead. Red Sox pitcher David Wells was pitching well in the game until the error. The error is viewed by many fans as having the Red Sox lose Game 2 and eventually the American League Division Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, ALDS\nRed Sox ace Curt Schilling did not start a game in the American League Division Series after pitching in the last game of the season against the Yankees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180977-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston Red Sox season, Farm system\nThe Wilmington Blue Rocks replaced the Sarasota Red Sox as the Class A-Advanced affiliate, and the Greenville Bombers replaced the Augusta GreenJackets as the Class A affiliate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180978-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston mayoral election\nThe Boston mayoral election of 2005 occurred on Tuesday, November 8, 2005, between incumbent mayor Thomas Menino and City Councilor Maura Hennigan. Menino was re-elected to a fourth term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180978-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston mayoral election\n36% of registered voters turned out to vote in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180978-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Boston mayoral election\nAs Menino and Hennigan were the only two candidates, no preliminary election was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180979-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bowling Green Falcons football team\nThe 2005 Bowling Green Falcons football team represented Bowling Green State University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Gregg Brandon and played their home games in Doyt Perry Stadium in Bowling Green, Ohio. It was the 87th season of play for the Falcons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180980-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boxing World Cup\nThe 2005 Boxing World Cup was held in Moscow, Russia from July 12 to July 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180981-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship\nThe 2005 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship was the 6th edition of the Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship, organised by Europe's governing volleyball body, the CEV. It was held in Riga, Latvia from March 29 to April 3, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180981-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship\nPoland won their 1st title in the tournament by defeating France. Jakub Jarosz was elected the Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180981-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Boys' Youth European Volleyball Championship, Pool standing procedure\nMatch won 3\u20130 or 3\u20131: 3 match points for the winner, 0 match points for the loserMatch won 3\u20132: 2 match points for the winner, 1 match point for the loser", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180982-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brabantse Pijl\nThe 2005 Brabantse Pijl was the 45th edition of the Brabantse Pijl cycle race and was held on 27 March 2005. The race started in Zaventem and finished in Alsemberg. The race was won by \u00d3scar Freire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season\nThis article details the Bradford Bulls rugby league football club's 2005 season, the 10th season of the Super League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls started their campaign with a 28\u201316 loss to Wakefield Trinity Wildcats, Iestyn Harris, Jamie Langley and Karl Pryce all scored for the Bulls whilst Paul Deacon kicked 2 goals. Bradford continued their poor start to the season by losing 31\u201322 to Widnes Vikings, Iestyn Harris, Karl Pryce, Leon Pryce and Andy Smith scored tries whilst Deacon kicked 3 goals. Bradford finally got their first win of the season by beating Wigan Warriors 28\u201327. Iestyn Harris, Jamie Langley, Jamie Peacock, Stuart Reardon and Michael Withers all scored and Deacon kicked 4 conversions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford started March with a 48\u201322 win over London Broncos. Paul Deacon and Lesley Vainikolo both scored 2 tries whilst Paul Johnson, Jamie Langley, Brad Meyers, Robbie Paul and Karl Pryce also scored. Deacon added 6 goals. The Bulls continued their good form as they hammered Leigh Centurions 46\u20136, Iestyn Harris and Karl Pryce both grabbed a brace each while Deacon, Langley, Rob Parker, Leon Pryce and Vainikolo all scored 1 a piece. Deacon added 5 goals. Bradford grabbed another win as they beat Hull F.C. 32\u201322.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nIestyn Harris, Andy Lynch, Karl Pryce and Leon Pryce all scored tries and Deacon kicked 8 goals to ensure Bradford won the game. Bradford's winning streak came to an abrupt halt as they lost 42\u201312 to rivals Leeds Rhinos. Karl Pryce and Stuart Reardon scored the Bulls only tries and Deacon converted both. The final game of the month saw the Bulls lose to St Helens R.F.C.. Lynch scored a brace of tries and scored from Robbie Paul and Karl Pryce wasn't enough to get the win, Deacon also kicked 5 goals and a drop goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls progressed in the Challenge Cup by beating Featherstone Rovers 80\u201314. Robbie Paul and Andy Smith grabbed hat-tricks, Iestyn Harris and Brett Ferres scored a brace each. Rob Parker, Stuart Fielden, Leon Pryce and Karl Pratt also scored. Paul Deacon kicked 11 goals and Joe Vagana also kicked 1. Bradford's poor form in the league was extended as Warrington Wolves beat them 35\u201332, Jamie Langley and Lesley Vainikolo both scored two tries each whilst Brad Meyers and Michael Withers also crossed, Deacon kicked 4 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford recorded a 54\u201310 win over the Huddersfield Giants, Vainikolo scored a hat-trick, Stuart Reardon scored two, Stuart Fielden, Jamie Langley, Robbie Paul, Karl Pratt and Lee Radford wrapped up the scoring. Deacon kicked a goal and Iestyn Harris kicked six. The Bulls beat Wigan Warriors 40\u20138 in a one sided affair, Brad Meyers scored a brace whilst Fielden, Paul, Reardon, Vainikolo and Withers also scored tries. Deacon kicked 6 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls started May with a big win over London Broncos. The Bradford side ran out 41\u201322 winners with tries coming from Stuart Fielden, Iestyn Harris, Jamie Langley, Jamie Peacock, Karl Pryce, Leon Pryce and Stuart Reardon. Paul Deacon kicked 6 goals and also knocked over a drop goal. Bradford's Challenge Cup was ended by a strong Hull F.C. side. The Bulls went down 26\u201324 with Peacock, Lesley Vainikolo (2) and Karl Pryce all scoring, Deacon kicked 4 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nTheir league form was still going strong with a 58\u20130 win against Salford City Reds, Karl Pryce and Deacon both scored hat-tricks whilst Vainikolo grabbed 2 tries. Other scores came with tries from Rob Parker, Karl Pratt and Leon Pryce, Deacon kicked 7 goals. The following week Bradford lost 44\u201324 to Warrington Wolves, Iestyn Harris, Peacock, Reardon and Vainikolo scored tries and Deacon converted all 4. In revenge for their Challenge Cup loss the Bulls hammered Hull F.C. 42\u201324. Tries came from Leon Pryce (2), Brett Ferres, Brad Meyers, Karl Pryce and Reardon, Deacon managed to kick all 9 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford didn't get off to a good start in June as they were beat 66\u20134 by St Helens R.F.C. with Stuart Reardon scoring Bradford's only try. They followed this defeat with a 38\u201320 win against Huddersfield Giants, Robbie Paul scored 2 tries whilst Ben Harris, Rob Parker, Karl Pryce, Lee Radford and Reardon also touched down to score. Paul Deacon added 5 goals to ensure a Bradford win. However their next game against Widnes Vikings ended in an 18\u201318 draw, Paul scored 2 tries, Deacon and Radford also crossed to score tries and Deacon kicked 4 goals and a drop goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nJuly started off with two defeats for the Bulls. The first was a 36\u201326 loss to archrivals Leeds Rhinos. Tries came from Paul Johnson (2), Ben Harris, Brad Meyers and Jamie Peacock whilst Paul Deacon kicked 3 goals. The second defeat at the start of July came at the hands of Wakefield Trinity Wildcats who beat Bradford 44\u201334. Karl Pratt claimed a hat-trick while Deacon, Meyers and Michael Withers also scored, Deacon kicked 5 goals. However the Bulls got back to winning ways with a 58\u201312 win over Leigh Centurions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBen Harris grabbed a hat-trick, Stuart Fielden, Iestyn Harris, Ian Henderson, Meyers, Pratt, Leon Pryce and Withers all scored tries. Deacon kicked 6 goals and Iestyn Harris kicked 3 goals. This win was followed by a hard fought 24\u201318 victory against Salford City Reds, Deacon, Iestyn Harris, Karl Pryce and brother Leon Pryce all scored tries whilst Deacon kicked 3 goals and Iestyn Harris slotted over a goal to ensure the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nBradford's first game in August was against Widnes Vikings, the Bulls racked up a 74\u201324 win against the struggling side. Shontayne Hape, Stuart Reardon, Lesley Vainikolo and Michael Withers all scored 2 tries each while Stuart Fielden, Iestyn Harris, Andy Lynch, Jamie Peacock and Leon Pryce all took a try a piece. Paul Deacon kicked 11 goals to round off a huge victory. This was followed by a 58\u201312 win against Salford City Reds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nHape and Iestyn Harris both grabbed 2 tries, Deacon, Paul Johnson, Lynch, Peacock, Leon Pryce and Vainikolo also scored with Deacon kicked 7 goals and Iestyn Harris kicked 2 goals. The Bulls last game in August came against their old rivals Leeds Rhinos, this time Bradford managed a 42\u201310 win. Hape grabbed a hat-trick while Deacon, Iestyn Harris, Jamie Langley, Lynch and Robbie Paul rounded off the tries, Deacon kicked 5 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nLesley Vainikolo had an outstanding start to September as he scored a Super League record 6 tries in the 49\u20136 win over Hull FC, other tries came from Stuart Fielden, Shontayne Hape, Jamie Peacock and Joe Vagana. Paul Deacon kicked 4 goals and a drop goal. This win was followed up by a 52\u201334 victory over the Huddersfield Giants. Tries were scored by Paul Johnson (2), Vainikolo (2), Deacon, Fielden, Ian Henderson, Brad Meyers and Lee Radford. Deacon kicked 8 goals to ensure victory. The last league game of the season came against St Helens R.F.C. at Knowsley Road.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe Bulls won 32\u201318 with Johnson and Vainikolo scoring a brace of tries, Ben Harris and Leon Pryce rounded off the try scoring whilst Deacon kicked 4 goals. This win meant the Bulls finished the season on an 8-game winning streak and finished the league in 3rd place. The playoffs pitted Bradford against London Broncos, the Bulls came away with a convincing 44\u201322 win, Iestyn Harris scored 2 tries, Vainikolo scored 2 tries with Hape, Henderson, Peacock and Karl Pryce all grabbing a try a piece. Iestyn Harris kicked 5 goals while Karl Pryce kicked 1 goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nThe next round of the playoffs saw Bradford against Hull FC, the Bulls achieved a record playoff win as they coasted to a 71\u20130 win. Lesley Vainikolo scored 4 tries, Ian Henderson grabbed a brace while Stuart Fielden, Shontayne Hape, Iestyn Harris, Paul Johnson, Jamie Peacock and Michael Withers also crossed for tries. Paul Deacon kicked 10 goals, Robbie Paul kicked a goal and Iestyn Harris kicked a drop goal. In the semi final the Bulls beat St Helens R.F.C. 23\u201318, Hape grabbed 2 tries, Johnson also crossed for a try and Jamie Langley grabbed the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Season review\nDeacon kicked 4 goals and a drop goal to ensure the Bulls a place in the Grand Final. The Grand Final marked the 6th consecutive appearance for the Bulls and it pitted them in a rematch of the 2004 Grand Final as they faced arch enemies Leeds Rhinos. The Bulls won 15\u20136 with Vainikolo and Leon Pryce scoring, Deacon kicked 3 goals and Iestyn Harris slotted a drop goal to give the Bulls their 4th Super League title. It also marked the last game for Bradford legend Robbie Paul as he moved to Huddersfield Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 41], "content_span": [42, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180983-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Bradford Bulls season, Table\nSource: . Classification: 1st on competition points; 2nd on match points difference. Competition points: for win = 2; for draw = 1; for loss = 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180984-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brasil Open\nThe 2005 Brasil Open was an ATP men's tennis tournament held in Mata de S\u00e3o Jo\u00e3o, Brazil. It was the fifth edition of the tournament and was held from February 14 to February 21. Rafael Nadal won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180984-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brasil Open, Finals, Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl defeated Jos\u00e9 Acasuso / Ignacio Gonz\u00e1lez King 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180985-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nMariusz Fyrstenberg and Marcin Matkowski were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Franti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180985-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brasil Open \u2013 Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20134, against Jos\u00e9 Acasuso and Ignacio Gonz\u00e1lez King.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180986-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nGustavo Kuerten was the defending champion, but chose not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180986-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brasil Open \u2013 Singles\nRafael Nadal won in the final 6\u20130, 6\u20137(2\u20137), 6\u20131, against Alberto Mart\u00edn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180987-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Brazilian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Grande Pr\u00eamio do Brasil 2005) was a Formula One motor race held on at the Aut\u00f3dromo Jos\u00e9 Carlos Pace in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil on 25 September 2005. The 71-lap race was the seventeenth round of the 2005 Formula One season. The race was won by McLaren driver Juan Pablo Montoya, who took the final race victory of his career, ahead of his teammate, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who finished second. Renault driver Fernando Alonso became the Drivers' Champion for the first time after he finished the race in third place. Only he and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen had entered the race within mathematical contention of winning the title, and Alonso's podium ensured that he did with two rounds remaining. Alonso also qualified in pole position for the race, but the fastest lap went to R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 838]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180987-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180987-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nAs Takuma Sato was subject to a ten-place grid penalty given for the accident in the Belgian Grand Prix where he crashed into Michael Schumacher, Sato did not attempt a qualifying lap. Jarno Trulli also had a ten-place penalty, in his case the result of an engine change before qualifying. The Italian started from 18th on the grid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 45], "content_span": [46, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180987-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nJuan Pablo Montoya won the race ahead of teammate Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen; McLaren's first 1\u20132 finish since the 2000 Austrian Grand Prix. Fernando Alonso finished 3rd and thus became World Champion for the first time, at the time the youngest ever champion at 24 years and 59 days surpassing Emerson Fittipaldi's record of 25 years and 273 days set in 1972. Jacques Villeneuve was forced to start from pit lane as a penalty for infringement of parc ferme regulations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180987-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Brazilian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter getting involved in an accident at the start of the race, Mark Webber was able to rejoin, over 20 laps behind the leaders and do some laps, sufficient to position himself fourth in the official qualifying order for the subsequent Grand Prix at Suzuka. The result of the Grand Prix marked the only point during the season when McLaren had more championship points than Renault. Due to a driveshaft failure, this was Tiago Monteiro's only retirement of the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 39], "content_span": [40, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180987-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian Grand Prix, Classification\nCommentators have judged Renault's qualifying performance as evidence that their \"conservative phase\" was over. Renault's Pat Symonds had said that the team was not aiming to settle for a simple podium finish, rather they were aiming to win. BBC's Maurice Hamilton said that \"the thought that Fernando Alonso might cruise to the Championship.....was dispelled in the most convincing fashion\". McLaren CEO Ron Dennis remained confident of his team's race strategy given Juan Pablo Montoya's strong second position, despite a major error in the qualifying lap of Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum\nOn October 23, 2005, Brazil held a country-wide referendum on article 35 of the Disarmament Statute to determine whether to approve or disapprove the article, which states in full, \"The sale of firearms and ammunition is prohibited in the entire national territory, except to those entities provided in article 6 of this Law.\" (\"Art. 35. \u00c9 proibida a comercializa\u00e7\u00e3o de arma de fogo e muni\u00e7\u00e3o em todo o territ\u00f3rio nacional, salvo para as entidades previstas no art. 6o desta Lei.\") The referendum failed by nearly \u2154 and that part of the statute was not enacted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 611]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum\nThe referendum and its date had been provided by the Disarmament Statute itself (art. 35, \u00a71o). During the drafting and development of the law, it had been decided that article 35 should be submitted to a referendum because of the importance of its subject. On July 7, 2005, the Federal Senate of Brazil promulgated legislative decree 780, which authorized the referendum. Article 2 of its decree stipulated that the public consultation should employ the following question: \"Should commerce in firearms and ammunition be prohibited in Brazil?\" (\"O com\u00e9rcio de armas de fogo e muni\u00e7\u00e3o deve ser proibido no Brasil?\")", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nVoting was compulsory for people between the ages of 18 and 70. The belief of a fundamental natural human right to self-defense, low efficacy of police, high levels of use of illegal weapons in crimes in contrast to a very rare usage of legal weapons, are some of the factors that may have influenced 65% of Brazilian people to vote against the ban proposal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nThe gun ban proposal received broad support in the press, while celebrities were generally in favor of it, only Brazil's anti-ban social groups and right-wing press, most importantly Veja the Brazilian news magazine (indeed weekly publication of any kind) with the largest paid circulation in the country. Other media, like the powerful Globo group (owners of Brazil's largest TV network Rede Globo) and newspapers of record like Folha de S.Paulo advocated clearly pro gun ban. The then President Lula was a self-declared pro gun ban power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nAccording to the Brazilian constitution, every citizen has the right to self-defense and the pro-gun campaigners focused their arguments on this constitutional right, as well as making economic arguments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nA decisive argument made by the pro-gun campaigners was to question the morality of the government removing a right from its citizens, resulting in a strong feeling among voters that no rights should ever be allowed to be taken away by the government. Also, there were debates about the significant cultural status of gun ownership in the southern states of the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nAnother major argument used by the pro-gun ownership campaigners was the fact that the absolute majority of the gun crimes in Brazil were committed with unregistered and illegal guns, specially high caliber guns, that were already forbidden in Brazil and due to that, it would be of no use to forbid law-abiding citizens to own legal registered guns in accordance to the law. This argument was strongly reinforced by the fact that the regions where gun ownership is widespread were the ones with the smallest number of gun-related deaths. In the South region where there is the highest number of legal guns per citizen only 59% of all murders were caused by firearms in contrast to 70% in the Northeast where there is the lowest number of legal firearms per citizen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nThe anti-gun proponents argued that guns are dangerous for society and that their only reason to exist is to harm others.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nThe anti-gun campaign received widespread support from several famous actors, musicians and other Brazilian celebrities and a noticeable support from the nation's main TV station, Rede Globo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background\nThe ban had the backing of the federal government and sections of the Brazilian Roman Catholic Church. The anti-gun lobby received vast support and free coverage from the press, including Rede Globo, Brazil's largest TV network despite its parent company fairly neutral stance which eventually was reflected. By that time most Protestant-evangelical news organizations had taken a clearly anti-ban stance (including the Igreja Universal do Reino de Deus-owned Rede Record, Globo's main competitor at the time).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 572]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Background, International support\nThe IANSA member groups Instituto Sou da Paz and Viva Rio campaigned for a complete ban on civilian gun sales in Brazil, in support of the referendum. A week before the vote, IANSA, an international gun control organization coordinated an international day of support for the Brazilian ban, with demonstrations taking place in Britain, Italy, South Africa, and other countries. IANSA urged support of the ban to \"reinforce the movement in favor of gun control in other Latin American countries riddled with armed violence, and back the efforts to control private gun ownership at [an] international level.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 84], "content_span": [85, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180988-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian firearms and ammunition referendum, Results\nThe result of the referendum ended with a victory of those against the gun ban, with over 63% of the voters opposed. Although the Brazilian federal government, the Catholic Church, and the United Nations argued in favor of a gun ban, it was argued successfully that guns are needed for personal security.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal\nM\u00e1fia do Apito (literally The Whistle Mafia), sometimes referred to as the Esc\u00e2ndalo do Apito (The Whistle Scandal), was the name given by the Brazilian press to the football match-fixing scandal reported by Veja magazine on 23 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nSome investors, who were not related to any club, bribed referees Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho (a member of the FIFA referee staff) and Paulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon to fix results according to what was determined by the betting websites Aebet and Futbet. The investors made a deal with Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho to fix the results of the matches refereed by him, and then, the investors made millionaire bets on the betting websites.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nEd\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho said that he agreed to receive R$10,000 (US$4,400) to fix the result of the Brazilian National Championship match between Juventude and Figueirense, and that he was paid between R$10,000 and R$15,000 per fixed match. Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho said he accepted the money to fix the results only because he had a R$30,000 debt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nThe eleven Brazilian National Championship matches refereed by Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho was made null and void by the Supreme Court of Sporting Justice (STJD), presided by Luiz Zveiter, even though Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho assured he did not fix all eleven matches. The Supreme Court decided that all eleven matches needed to be replayed. This decision was not popular among the board of directors and supporters of the harmed clubs. Five clubs, which are Ponte Preta, Santos, Internacional, Figueirense and Cruzeiro appealed the decision, but the decision was kept.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nOn 28 November, Brazilian lawyer Lu\u00eds Carlos Crema sought a court injunction requesting the cancellation of the decision that annulled the eleven Brazilian National Championship matches, Minister Nancy Andrighi of the Second Section of the Supreme Court of Justice rejected the demand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nHowever, another lawyer, Leandro Konrad Konflanz sought a lawsuit requesting the annulment of the replayed matches. If those matches are annulled, Internacional would win the competition, instead of Corinthians. The decision was that no club should be announced as champion during the dawn of Sunday, 5 December. CBF, ignoring the decision, on 6 December, declared Corinthians as the 2005 Campeonato Brasileiro champion. Judge Munira Hanna, of the First Civil Court of Porto Alegre, dispatched a temporary restraining order obligating the CBF to obey that decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nHowever, FIFA and CBF rules forbid clubs to petition regular courts of justice (courts that are not dedicated to sporting arbitration) when the claim is directly related to a match, as was the case; thus, on 7 December, Internacional's chairman, Fernando Carvalho, made a request to lawyer Konflanz to withdraw the lawsuit, which he did on 9 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nFour Brazilian Second Division first stage matches were refereed by Paulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon. These matches were not annulled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nPaulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon and Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho, together, refereed 22 Paulista Championship matches. None of these matches has been annulled, including two of them which were initially considered suspected of being fixed. Both suspected matches were refereed by Paulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon. The S\u00e3o Paulo Football Sporting Justice Court's Inquiry Court, after analyzing all the 22 matches, concluded that no matches were fixed, with the exception of the two suspected matches. Even after coming to the conclusion that these two matches were fixed, the S\u00e3o Paulo Football Sporting Justice Court decided that the results should be kept.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 684]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180989-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Brazilian football match-fixing scandal, Overview\nEd\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho was banned for life by the STJD's First Disciplinary Commission. Paulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon was removed from the referee staff of Paulista Football Federation. On 31 October 2005, the S\u00e3o Paulo Football Sporting Justice Court's First Disciplinary Commission banned for life both Edilson Pereira de Carvalho and Paulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon. So, they are prohibited from refereeing Paulista football competitions matches. Both Ed\u00edlson Pereira de Carvalho and Paulo Jos\u00e9 Danelon face charges of fraud, conspiracy and crimes against the economy. The entrepreneur Nagib Fayad (nicknamed Gib\u00e3o), suspected of commanding the gambling ring in Piracicaba was arrested on 25 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup\nThe 2005 Breeders' Cup World Championships was the 22nd edition of the premier event of the North American thoroughbred horse racing year. The eight races, all of which were Grade I, took place on October 29 at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York and were telecast by NBC. The Breeders' Cup is generally regarded as the end of the North America racing season, although a few Grade I events take place in later November and December. The results of the races were highly influential in that year's Eclipse Award voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup\nThe highlight of the event was Saint Liam's victory in the Classic, wrapping up a campaign that earned him Horse of the Year honors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Lead-up\nIn 2005, Belmont Park celebrated its 100th anniversary and hosted the Breeders' Cup for the fourth time. At the time, Belmont Park was part of a regular rotation of the event between racetracks on the East Coast, West Coast (Hollywood Park or Santa Anita), Kentucky (Churchill Downs) and Florida (Gulfstream Park) with smaller venues also used on occasion. Despite the success of the 2005 event, Belmont Park has not played host since that time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Lead-up\nMost of the races had a strong morning-line favorite, led by four horses who were unbeaten in 2005 and some returning champions:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Lead-up\nHowever, the Classic was considered wide open, in part because of the injury or retirement of several stars including dual Classic winner Afleet Alex and the 2004 Horse of the Year Ghostzapper. In their absence, Saint Liam was slightly favored over Rock Hard Ten and Borrego in a full field of 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nA crowd of 54,289 attended the event and bet $14.6 million on-track, then the largest handle in Belmont Park history. Only two favorites won and they had been considered the most vulnerable according to the morning line odds: Folklore and Saint Liam. Saint Liam's job was made easier by the late scratch of 2nd favorite Rock Hard Ten. He had however drawn an outside post position, which was a particular disadvantage as the Classic started on the clubhouse turn due to the dimensions of Belmont Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nSaint Liam broke poorly but jockey Jerry Bailey got him to settle before starting his move on the far turn. Saint Liam dueled with Flower Alley down the stretch, then drew away in the last 100 yards. \"You shouldn't dismiss the fact that the post this horse had breaking,\" said Bailey. \"He took the worst of it today, and still was very authoritative in winning.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nThe most disappointing performance was by Lost in the Fog, who would finish unplaced after starting his career with 10 straight wins. It is possible that he was already suffering the effects of the cancer that was diagnosed in August of the next year. In the Filly & Mare Turf, Ouija Board made a late run but could not catch front-running Intercontinental. Ashado was defeated by 30-1 longshot Pleasant Home, who made an explosive move from last to first and won by 9+1\u20444 lengths, the largest margin of victory at the 2005 Breeders' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nStevie Wonderboy posted a slight upset in the Juvenile, and the impressive performance combined with an earlier win in the Del Mar Futurity earned him Champion Two-Year-Old honors. It was the first win at the Breeders' Cup for owner Merv Griffin, trainer Doug O'Neill and jockey Garrett Gomez. Stevie Wonderboy became the early favorite for the 2006 Kentucky Derby but suffered a condylar fracture while in training for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nShirocco became the first German-bred horse to win a Breeders' Cup race when he topped an \"all-European trifecta\" over Ace and Azamour in the Turf. Jockey Christophe Soumillon said, \"(Shirocco) likes soft ground and a good pace to run at and with the pacemaker in there, we got both today. When I got to the turn, I just wanted to let him go and not try to pull him back to mix up his action. We got two (lengths) in front and when he saw the wire, he just flew home.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 496]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nSeveral jockeys and trainers achieved notable results at the event. Jerry Bailey earned his fifteenth Breeders' Cup win on Saint Liam in the Classic \u2013 then a record. Garrett Gomez won both the Juvenile on Stevie Wonderboy and Mile on Artie Schiller, earning him the Shoemaker Award for outstanding performance by a jockey at the Breeders' Cup. Edgar Prado had also been under consideration for the award after scoring two wins of his own. Both Prado and Gomez had been winless at the Breeders' Cup prior to 2005. Trainer D. Wayne Lukas scored a record 18th victory with Folklore in the Juvenile Fillies. Trainer Rick Dutrow, who had served a 60-day suspension earlier in the year, trained two winners \u2013 Saint Liam in the Classic and Silver Train in the Sprint.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 788]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nThe races were telecast live by NBC, while Sirius Satellite Radio produced an 8-hour radio broadcast hosted by track announcer Dave Johnson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180990-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup, Results\nIn the 2005 Eclipse Award voting, four Breeders' Cup winners went on to be named the champion in their divisions (Stevie Wonderboy, Folklore, Saint Liam and Intercontinental), with Saint Liam also being named Horse of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic\nThe 2005 Breeders' Cup Classic was the 22nd running of the Breeders' Cup Classic, part of the 2005 Breeders' Cup World Thoroughbred Championships program. It was run on October 29, 2005 at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York with a purse of $4,000,000. It was won by Saint Liam, who was subsequently named American Horse of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic\nThe Classic is run on dirt at a distance of \u200b1\u00a01\u20444 miles (approximately 2000 m). It is run under weight-for-age conditions, with entrants carrying the following weights:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nThe Classic drew a full field although some of the most highly regarded horses of 2005 (Ghostzapper, Roses in May and Afleet Alex) were retired early due to injury. The leading contenders for the Classic were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nIn the absence of Afleet Alex and Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo, Flower Alley (Travers Stakes) was the most highly regarded three-year-old. The New Zealand-bred horse Starcraft, who won the 2004 Australian Derby and 2005 Queen Elizabeth II Stakes, was supplemented to the Classic at a cost of $800,000 as he had not been nominated as a foal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Contenders\nDue to the dimensions of Belmont Park, the starting gate for the Classic was located on the clubhouse turn. This placed horses who drew outside post positions (especially Saint Liam and Starcraft) at a disadvantage as they would have to run somewhat farther. Rock Hard Ten drew post position one, which was also disadvantageous as he risked getting caught in traffic along the rail.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race Description\nRock Hard Ten was scratched shortly before the race due to a hoof injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race Description\nAfter breaking poorly, Saint Liam settled into fifth place behind a moderate early pace set by Sun King and Suave. Flower Alley stalked the early leaders then took command rounding the turn. Racing four wide, Saint Liam moved alongside Flower Alley at the top of the stretch and gradually pulled away, winning by a length. Perfect Drift closed late to finish third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race Description\nSaint Liam was the first major winner for trainer Rick Dutrow, who was highly emotional after the race. \"I can't explain the feeling. He gives me a feeling I've never had before. I owe him everything. He is my boy. I see him every night before I go to bed. And I'm going to miss him so much. Words just can't describe this horse.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Race Description\nIt was jockey Jerry Bailey's fifteenth win at the Breeders' Cup, then a record. Bailey felt that Saint Liam had cemented Horse of the Year honors with the win, pointing out how much ground Saint Liam had lost at the start due to his outside post position and a poor break that shifted his course even further outside. \"He took the worse of it today, and still was very authoritative in winning.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180991-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Breeders' Cup Classic, Results\nTimes: \u200b1\u20444 \u2013 0:23.98; \u200b1\u20442 \u2013 0:47.68; \u200b3\u20444 \u2013 1:12.23; mile \u2013 1:36.87; final \u2013 2:01.49. Fractional Splits: (:23.98) (:23.70) (:24.55) (:24.64) (:24.62)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 35], "content_span": [36, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180992-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brickyard 400\nThe 2005 Allstate 400 at The Brickyard, the 12th running of the event, was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on August 7, 2005, at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Speedway, Indiana. Contested at 160 laps on the 2.5 mile (4.023 km) speedway, it was the twenty-first race of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. Tony Stewart of Joe Gibbs Racing won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180992-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brickyard 400, Background\nThe Indianapolis Motor Speedway, located in Speedway, Indiana, (an enclave suburb of Indianapolis) in the United States, is the home of the Indianapolis 500 and the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard. It is located on the corner of 16th Street and Georgetown Road, approximately six miles (10\u00a0km) west of Downtown Indianapolis. It is a four-turn rectangular-oval track that is 2.5 miles (4.023\u00a0km) long. The track's turns are banked at 9 degrees, while the front stretch, the location of the finish line, has no banking. The back stretch, opposite of the front, also has a zero degree banking. The racetrack has seats for more than 250,000 spectators.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 677]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180992-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brickyard 400, Qualifying\nFailed to qualify: Kevin Lepage (#37), Tony Raines (#92), Mike Garvey (#66), Stuart Kirby (#51), Mike Wallace (#4), P. J. Jones (#34), Morgan Shepherd (#89), Kenny Wallace (#00), Jimmy Spencer (#50)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180992-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Brickyard 400, Race recap\nA late race crash by Jimmie Johnson, combined with the win by Stewart, put him into the Nextel Cup points lead. As part of the victory celebration, Tony Stewart went to turn two, where a fan handed him a can of Coca-Cola. Then upon returning to the frontstretch, Tony Stewart climbed the fence, along with the rest of his teammates. Kasey Kahne and Jeremy Mayfield finished 2nd and 4th for Evernham Motorsports. If Bill Elliott had finished in the top 10, all Evernham drivers would have finished in the top 10 for the first time that season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180993-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brigham municipal election\nThe 2005 Brigham municipal election was held on November 6, 2005, to elect a mayor and councillors in Brigham, Quebec.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180993-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brigham municipal election, Results\nSource: \"Meet your new municipal councils,\" Sherbrooke Record, 8 November 2005, p.\u00a07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180994-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane Broncos season\nThe 2005 Brisbane Broncos season was the eighteenth in the club's history, and they competed in the NRL's 2005 Telstra Premiership. Coached by Wayne Bennett and captained by Darren Lockyer, they finished the regular season 3rd (out of 15) despite ending the year with another long losing streak which continued into the play-offs and saw them knocked out once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180994-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nWith Gorden Tallis' retirement at the end of the previous season, the Broncos' captaincy was passed onto star fullback-turned-5/8th Darren Lockyer. In round 1 of NRL season 2005 Lockyer led the Broncos out for the first time and won 29-16 against the North Queensland Cowboys, the team that knocked them out of the finals in their last match the previous year. Three weeks later, the Broncos suffered their worst defeat in the club's history with a 50-4 loss to the Melbourne Storm at Olympic Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180994-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nAfter this match, the Broncos won their next ten matches straight from round 5 to round 17 to lead the competition, only to lose their last five regular season game in a row from round 22 to round 26, finishing third heading into the finals. The losing streak extended into the finals with defeats in the Qualifying Final to the Melbourne Storm 24-18 and in the Semi Final to the Wests Tigers 34-6, sending them out of the competition and making it seven consecutive losses in and seven straight finals losses for the Broncos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180994-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane Broncos season, Season summary\nAt the end of the 2005 season, after five successive years without a grand final appearance, Bennett decided to have a cleanout of the coaching staff, removing such long-time allies as Gary Belcher, Glenn Lazarus and Kevin Walters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 44], "content_span": [45, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180995-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane Lions season\nThe Brisbane Lions' 2005 season was its ninth season in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180996-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane bomb hoax\nThe 2005 Brisbane bomb hoax involved several bomb threats that were made to police in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia on 14 and 15 November 2005. The threats resulted in the halting of public transport services throughout the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180996-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane bomb hoax, Threats\nOn 14 November 2005, three calls were made to police warning of bombs on buses and trains in Brisbane. All bus and train services in the city were evacuated at 12:00 pm and again at 4:45 pm. The shutdowns caused major problems for the thousands of people who relied on the services.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180996-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane bomb hoax, Threats\nAt 7.32 am on 15 November, another call was made to police telling them to remain vigilant and \"keep their eye on the ball.\" Each of the four calls had been made from different a payphone in suburban Brisbane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180996-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane bomb hoax, Aftermath\nOn the night of 15 November, Rodney Bruce Watson, a 46-year-old truck driver from Munruben, was arrested and charged with four counts of making bomb threats. Police reported that his fingerprints had been found on three of the four payphones used to make the bomb threats, although Watson's lawyer said Watson claimed he had not \"been to a phone box in years.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180996-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane bomb hoax, Aftermath\nWatson appeared in the Brisbane Magistrates Court on 16 November. He did not enter a plea and made an application for bail. The bail hearing was adjourned, pending a psychiatric report on Watson, and he was remanded in custody. Watson reportedly said to police that he had been \"inspired by the recent arrests of terrorist suspects in southern states,\" and he subsequently had two applications for bail denied on the basis that there was a risk that he would reoffend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180996-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Brisbane bomb hoax, Aftermath\nOn 7 March 2006, Watson pleaded guilty to four counts of making a bomb threat, and on 28 July was sentenced to three years in prison, to be suspended after 12 months, followed by a supervision period of three years. With time already served this meant Watson was released from prison in November 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180997-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bristol City Council election\nThe 2005 Bristol City Council election took place on 5 May 2005, on the same day as other local elections. The Liberal Democrats made a number of gains and became the largest party on the Council, but failed to gain enough seats to form an overall majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180998-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brit Awards\nThe 2005 Brit Awards were the 25th edition of the biggest annual pop music awards in the United Kingdom. A Special BRITs 25 Award for the best single from the past 25 years was awarded to Robbie Williams \"Angels\". The show attracted 6.32 million viewers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180998-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brit Awards\nThe producers added a fake film effect to the TV coverage of the 2005 awards show, which was criticised by some who thought ruined the immediacy of the awards show, and was dizzying when combined with fast camera movements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180998-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brit Awards\nThe host was Chris Evans and the venue for the event was Earls Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand\nIn 2005, the British & Irish Lions rugby union team toured New Zealand for the first time since 1993, playing seven matches against first and second division teams from the National Provincial Championship, one match against the New Zealand Maori team, and three test matches against New Zealand (the All Blacks). The Lions lost the test series 3-0, the first time in 22 years that they lost every test match on tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand\nThe team was managed by former England and Lions player Bill Beaumont, coached by former England coach Sir Clive Woodward, and originally captained by Ireland captain Brian O'Driscoll. O'Driscoll suffered a controversial tour-ending injury two minutes into the first test, and Wales captain Gareth Thomas took over as captain for the final four games of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand\nThe poor test results of the 2005 Lions, despite having one of the most experienced playing squads and the largest management team of any Lions tour, led to criticism of Woodward, particularly his selection policy, and prompted commentators to question the future of the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand\nThis tour followed the Lions' 2001 tour to Australia and preceded the 2009 tour to South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Schedule\nThe Lions' campaign involved a warm-up match against Argentina (which was retroactively awarded Test status by the International Rugby Board in March 2008) before the departure for New Zealand, three Tests against the All Blacks, and several tour matches, where the quality of the opposition was expected to be high. This proved to be the case against New Zealand M\u0101ori and Auckland, and most of the other tour matches were close for at least the first half. But the match against Manawatu (the Lions' only opponent from the second division of New Zealand's domestic league, the National Provincial Championship) was a one-sided affair, the Lions winning by a score of 109\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 56], "content_span": [57, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Squad\nThe 44-man tour squad was announced on 11 April 2005, with 20 Englishmen, 11 Irishmen, 10 Welshmen and three Scots selected. Three further Englishmen were selected subject to them proving their fitness. The squad also included English players who had retired from international rugby (Neil Back, Lawrence Dallaglio), were returning from injury (Richard Hill and potentially Jonny Wilkinson, Phil Vickery and Mike Tindall), or had no international experience (Andrew Sheridan). The original 44-man squad was named as:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 53], "content_span": [54, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Squad, Additions to the squad\nInjured England players Jonny Wilkinson, Phil Vickery and Mike Tindall were pencilled in, to be added to the squad subject to them regaining fitness. Only Wilkinson subsequently did so and was called up on 8 May. Iain Balshaw suffered a torn thigh muscle and was replaced in the squad by Mark Cueto on 17 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Squad, Additions to the squad\nAdditional players were called up when players suffered injury (and in one case a ban) during the tour proper:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Squad, Additions to the squad\nThree players did not travel to New Zealand with the bulk of the touring party. Jason Robinson was excused to spend time with his pregnant wife. Stephen Jones and Gareth Thomas were forced to delay their departures due to commitments to their French clubs. Jones arrived in New Zealand on 31 May, before the Lions played their first tour match, while Robinson arrived on 7 June. For a time, it was doubtful whether Thomas would be able to contend for a spot in the first Test, as he had not been released by his club, Toulouse. However, Toulouse lost in the Top 14 semi-finals, allowing Thomas to leave for New Zealand. Thomas also arrived in New Zealand on 7 June. Thomas later replaced Brian O'Driscoll as tour captain after O'Driscoll suffered a dislocated shoulder.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 77], "content_span": [78, 847]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Management\nThere were 26 staff. For the first time, there was a separate group of coaches for the midweek games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 58], "content_span": [59, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Argentina\nThe Lions played Argentina in a warm-up Test match at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 23 May. The Pumas were without 25 players who may have made their first-choice team due to club commitments and the Lions rested many of their top players to field a second-string line-up. Tour captain Brian O'Driscoll was rested, so Wales vice-captain Michael Owen took his place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Argentina\nThe Lions looked disjointed, turning the ball over 15 times in open play. Their pack was outplayed; the Pumas shoved them off their own scrum three times. The Lions also conceded five penalties for holding on to the ball while grounded, usually because their support failed to arrive in time. In the meantime, the Pumas played a match that was almost universally called \"inspired\" by rugby media worldwide. The Pumas led 19\u201316 at half-time, and could easily have been ahead by more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Argentina\nThe main plus for the Lions was the performance of Jonny Wilkinson, making his first appearance against international opposition since the 2003 Rugby World Cup Final; Wilkinson set up the Lions' first try, converted it and kicked six penalties. His last penalty saved the Lions from defeat, salvaging a 25\u201325 draw in the eighth minute of stoppage time. The match was granted full test status by the IRB in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 66], "content_span": [67, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Bay of Plenty Steamers\nThe first tour match was against the Bay of Plenty Steamers on 4 June in Rotorua. The Lions started the match strongly, with Josh Lewsey scoring a try after two minutes and then a second four minutes later. The Lions were up 17\u20130 after 11 minutes, but the Steamers recovered for a 17\u201317 half-time score. The Lions controlled the second half and won 34\u201320. A significant injury was the fractured ankle suffered by experienced back-rower Lawrence Dallaglio, who had to withdraw from the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 79], "content_span": [80, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Taranaki\nTaranaki hosted the Lions at New Plymouth on 8 June. The first half was closely fought in more ways than one, as the Lions' Danny Grewcock and Taranaki's Paul Tito came to blows. The Amber-and-Blacks had a 7\u20136 lead at half-time, but soon after the break Martin Corry scored a try for the Lions. Shortly afterwards, Taranaki's Andrew Hore was sin-binned for holding the ball, and the Lions took control. Consensus man of the match Charlie Hodgson kicked two penalties during Hore's absence, and the Lions kept their momentum even after Hore returned. Shane Horgan added a try and Geordan Murphy two as the Lions won 36\u201314.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 687]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, New Zealand M\u0101ori\nThe match against the New Zealand M\u0101ori at Hamilton on 11 June promised to be the most competitive test lead-up, being billed by rugby media as virtually a fourth test. In the first half, the M\u0101ori had the better of possession and tackling, but the Lions had the better of the set-pieces, and the half ended 6\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, New Zealand M\u0101ori\nJust before the break, Lions prop Andrew Sheridan was sin-binned for punching M\u0101ori fly-half Luke McAlister. When the sin-bin period ended, Sheridan was replaced by Gethin Jenkins. A McAlister penalty shortly afterwards, a Leon MacDonald try (converted by McAlister) and then a second McAlister penalty gave the Maori a 19\u20136 lead. The last 15 minutes were the Lions' best period, rewarded by a Brian O'Driscoll try, which was converted by Stephen Jones. The Lions threatened strongly, but the M\u0101ori, inspired by their replacement fly-half Carlos Spencer and stalwart captain Jono Gibbes held on for an historic 19\u201313 win \u2013 their first ever over the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 74], "content_span": [75, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Wellington Lions\nAfter the loss to the M\u0101ori, the Lions went to Wellington to take on the city's NPC side, the Wellington Lions, on 15 June. The British & Irish Lions team was selected primarily from players in contention for the Test team, including Jonny Wilkinson in his first tour match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Wellington Lions\nThe British & Irish Lions had most of the possession and scoring chances, but committed numerous unforced errors when points looked likely. Tries came from Gethin Jenkins and Gareth Thomas, both converted by Wilkinson, who also scored three penalties. The British & Irish Lions' 23\u20136 win, while seemingly showing their tour was back on track, left almost as many questions as answers. In post-match comments, O'Driscoll said, \"The ball was like a bar of soap out there and both sides made a lot of unforced errors.\" Wellington Lions coach John Plumtree remarked, \"The All Blacks would have put 50 or 60 points on us.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 73], "content_span": [74, 691]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Otago\nIn their first appearance in the South Island, the Lions played Otago on 18 June at Carisbrook in Dunedin. The stadium is known to visiting teams as the \"House of Pain\", particularly for the Lions, who had lost games to the Otago side on four previous tours.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Otago\nOtago began strongly and the Lions were penalised four times in the first 11 minutes, Otago converting two. The Lions' stronger scrum play brought them back into the game, and the first half was closely fought, ending 13\u201313. The Lions clearly had the momentum, as Will Greenwood scored a try, converted by Charlie Hodgson, just before the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Otago\nOtago took a 16\u201313 lead shortly after half-time, but strong Lions scrum play led to a try by man of the match Ryan Jones, who put himself in contention for a Test position. The try and Hodgson's conversion gave the Lions a solid, though far from insurmountable, lead. Otago rallied to 20\u201319 with a penalty, but the Lions pulled away soon afterwards. A Hodgson penalty and a try from Shane Williams converted by Hodgson took the final margin to 30\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 62], "content_span": [63, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Southland Stags\nThe Southland match at Invercargill on 21 June was the last before the first Test. Lions coach Clive Woodward announced that no players in the night's line-up would play in the Test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Southland Stags\nIn the first 15 minutes, the Lions looked formidable as they took an early 10\u20130 lead over the Stags, keyed by a Gavin Henson try. However, they became disjointed and by half-time had turned over the ball 14 times and were considered lucky to be ahead 10\u20133 at the break.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Southland Stags\nThe first few minutes of the second half were even worse for the Lions, as Hale T-Pole scored a converted try. Woodward immediately substituted four players to settle down his team. T-Pole made an interception to save a Mark Cueto try, but the Lions kept the pressure on, and Henson scored his second try. The Lions then changed tactics, choosing to kick for territory more often, and were never truly threatened again, winning by 26\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, First Test\nLess than two minutes into the first test, the Lions lost their captain Brian O'Driscoll, who suffered a dislocated shoulder after a joint tackle by New Zealand captain Tana Umaga and hooker Keven Mealamu. At a ruck, they attempted to clear O'Driscoll by each lifting one of his legs before driving him into the ground. O'Driscoll twisted his body as he came down to avoid landing on his head, but that meant most of the force went through his shoulder, which was dislocated, ending his tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0024-0001", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, First Test\nOpinions differed on the incident; the Lions staff and many British and Irish commentators believed that it was an illegal spear tackle, and Lions coach Woodward reported the pair to the IRB's citing commissioner, William Venter. Venter decided, based on the video footage available, not to refer the matter to a disciplinary tribunal. New Zealand commentators largely took the view that the two All Blacks were just clearing out the ruck and had no intention to injure O'Driscoll. Referee Jo\u00ebl Jutge admitted in 2017 that he should have shown at least one red card to Umaga and Mealamu for the tackle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, First Test\nEight minutes into the game, Dan Carter opened the scoring for the All Blacks with a penalty. Three minutes later, the Lions suffered a further blow when Paul O'Connell was sin-binned for a professional foul, and Carter kicked the penalty. Already a player short, the Lions then lost Richard Hill to injury. Ali Williams scored the first New Zealand try shortly after O'Connell returned, and the half ended with the Lions down 11\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, First Test\nCarter kicked a penalty in the second half, followed by a converted try from Sitiveni Sivivatu to end the All Blacks' scoring, and Jonny Wilkinson kicked a penalty in the 56th minute to provide the Lions with their only points of the night. The 21\u20133 win was considered by almost every commentator to be even more one-sided than the score indicated. The Lions' sloppy set-piece play included ten losses of their own line-outs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, First Test\nIt was announced after the match that, in addition to O'Driscoll, two more injured Lions were out for the rest of the tour \u2013 Hill from the incident during the match, and Tom Shanklin for inflammation from an existing knee injury. Danny Grewcock was also suspended for two months after he was cited for biting All Blacks hooker Keven Mealamu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Manawatu Turbos\nThe Lions scored their first convincing tour victory in this game at Palmerston North against NPC second division side Manawatu Turbos, winning 109\u20136. They led 38\u20136 at half time and scored 71 unanswered points in the second. Welshman Shane Williams scored five tries to help the Lions post their all-time record score in New Zealand, surpassing their 64\u20135 victory over Marlborough/Nelson 46 years earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0028-0001", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Manawatu Turbos\nIn addition to Williams' five, the Lions' tries were scored by Ronan O'Gara (2), Mark Cueto (2), Geordan Murphy, Charlie Hodgson, Jason Robinson, Martin Corry, Neil Back, Gareth Cooper, Gordon D'Arcy and Ollie Smith, with Manawatu restricted to two Jonathan Hargreaves penalties. Lock Donncha O'Callaghan and flanker Martyn Williams were substituted at half-time but had impressed enough to secure Test selection for the following Saturday. Murphy also impressed at full-back, but it was Shane Williams, with elusive running and awareness, who most thrilled Lions supporters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 72], "content_span": [73, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Second Test\nFrom the high point against Manawatu, the Lions fell to a low in the second Test at Wellington Regional Stadium in Wellington on 2 July, losing 48\u201318 and conceding the highest number of points against a New Zealand team in a Test. Woodward selected a radically different Test squad from the one that had been embarrassed in Christchurch a week earlier, replacing eleven players. Key to the Lions' hopes of staying in the series was Woodward's decision to add several of the Welsh team that won the Grand Slam in the 2005 Six Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Second Test\nThe Lions started strongly, with captain Gareth Thomas scoring a try under the posts and Jonny Wilkinson converting two minutes in. A minute later, Wilkinson hit the post with a penalty attempt, but gathering the rebound the Lions were in a good attacking position when Paul O'Connell was penalised for diving over a ruck. The All Blacks settled down and then scored through two Dan Carter penalties before he set up their first try, racing 50 metres off a turnover before offloading to captain Tana Umaga to score near the posts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Second Test\nAlthough the rest of the half remained close, the All Blacks went into the break with a 21\u201313 lead. The second half turned into a showcase for New Zealand in general and Carter in particular. He scored two tries, converted three, kicked two penalties, and constantly kept the Lions on the back foot with his distribution. Flanker Richie McCaw powered his way over for a try after Carter missed a hat trick by a matter of inches. Rugby media were in virtually unanimous agreement that the Lions were greatly improved and that the All Blacks were dominant. Carter's tally of 33 points broke the all-time record for points by an All Black against the Lions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 68], "content_span": [69, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Auckland\nHaving lost the Test series on the previous Saturday, the midweek Lions came to Eden Park with something to prove. The match was marked by the Lions' inability to find touch and Auckland's willingness to attack and run the angles. Auckland gave up some guaranteed points from early penalties to take the Lions on in set piece play. Auckland tighthead prop John Afoa was denied a try after a tap and run saw him held up in goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0031-0001", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Auckland\nA series of handling errors throughout the first half let Auckland down and saw the Lions to a 14\u20133 lead at the half. The second half saw the Lions give away points to a stoic Auckland pack and the scoreline was narrowed to 14\u201313 Lions lead. A late Ronan O'Gara penalty saw the Lions extend to a 4-point winning margin of 17\u201313. This victory completed an impressive clean sweep of matches for the midweek Lions against host unions throughout New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 65], "content_span": [66, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Third Test\nFollowing two early penalties by Stephen Jones, the Lions led 6\u20130 and things looked promising for them. All Black captain Tana Umaga was sin-binned for killing the ball, but even without their captain, the All Blacks managed to score two tries, by Conrad Smith and Ali Williams, both converted by Luke McAlister. The Lions were awarded two more penalties, which Stephen Jones kicked, but just before the break, Umaga scored a try to give the All Blacks a half-time lead of 24\u201312.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Matches, Third Test\nSeven minutes into the second half Umaga scored another try. Soon after, scrum-half Byron Kelleher was replaced by Justin Marshall, who then played his final half-hour of All Black rugby. Another All Black try was thwarted when Jerry Collins was sin-binned for a late tackle. The All Blacks then spent several minutes defending as the Lions pushed towards the line from within ten meters, and after a long struggle Lewis Moody managed to score, making it 31\u201319. Both sides made errors that cost them tries. Sitiveni Sivivatu had two very close calls but it was Rico Gear who followed his own deep kick to toe the ball over the line and score a fine individual try. McAlister converted, giving him a 100 percent kicking rate, to make the full-time score 38\u201319.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 67], "content_span": [68, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00180999-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 British & Irish Lions tour to New Zealand, Lions anthem\nSir Clive Woodward commissioned an anthem, The Power of Four, specially for the 2005 tour. Neil Myers composed the tune, and the piece was performed for the first time in public by Welsh opera singer Katherine Jenkins before the Lions' match against Argentina at the Millennium Stadium in 2005. It was played before all games on the tour, but was not used in the Lions tour to South Africa in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181000-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Academy Television Awards\nThe 2005 British Academy Television Awards were held on Sunday 17 April at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London. The ceremony was hosted by Irish comedian and television presenter Graham Norton.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181001-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Academy Television Craft Awards\nThe British Academy Television Craft Awards of 2005 are presented by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) and were held on 8 May 2005 at The Dorchester, Mayfair, the ceremony was hosted by Jon Culshaw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum\nA referendum was held in the Canadian province of British Columbia on May 17, 2005, to determine whether or not to adopt the recommendation of the Citizens' Assembly on Electoral Reform to replace the existing first-past-the-post electoral system (FPTP) with a single transferable vote system (BC-STV). It was held in conjunction with the BC Legislative Assembly election of 2005. Voters were given two ballots at that time: a ballot to vote for a Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia (MLA) in their constituency and a referendum ballot. The referendum received considerable support from the electorate but failed in meeting the demanding threshold that had been set. A second referendum was held in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Background\nThe first half of the 2000s was marked by a growing movement in favour of electoral reform in Canada. Liberals in British Columbia, Quebec and Ontario campaigned successfully in each of these provinces with commitments to electoral reform. A reform initiative was launched as well in PEI, as well, in response to a series of lopsided elections in that province. In 2004, the Law Commission of Canada published an influential , with a strong recommendation in favour of Mixed Member Proportionality (MMP).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Background\nIn British Columbia, impetus was created by the anomalous provincial election result in 1996, in which the NDP won reelection as a majority government with 39.5% of the vote and 39 seats, despite gaining 3% fewer votes than the Liberals at 41.8% of the total and 33 seats. The balance of the vote was picked up by the Reform Party, which won 9.3% of the vote (two seats) and the Progressive Democrats with 5.7% of the vote (one seat), representing a perfect example of vote-splitting by conservative and liberal parties leading the NDP to majority status. There followed another lopsided election in 2001, in which the Liberals won 77 out of 79 seats, virtually wiping out the opposition, with 57% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Background\nAccording to Pilon, \"British Columbia has had a long dalliance with voting reform initiatives\" municipally and provincially since the 1930s, coinciding with the emergence of left wing forces capable of splitting the vote and going \"up the middle\" to take power \u2014in the way that the NDP won the 1996 election. In his view, this is what led the Liberals to take up voting system reform at the provincial level in the late 1990s.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Background\nThe Liberal government of Premier Gordon Campbell had campaigned in favour of electoral reform in 2001, and was under pressure to deliver. Following the Liberal victory in the 2001, the Liberals faced the political dilemma of having campaigned on an issue that no longer interested them in the same way. Meanwhile, the Green party attempted to use the provincial initiative referendum process to force the issue, and although they were unsuccessful, this kept the issue alive. In 2003, the Liberal government, with the agreement of the opposition New Democratic Party, established a Citizens' Assembly on Electoral Reform, mandating it to propose a new electoral system that would subsequently be put to a referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 61], "content_span": [62, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Timeline of Citizen's Assembly process\nThe following indicates some of the key events leading up to the referendum:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 89], "content_span": [90, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Proposed changes to the electoral system\nThe current electoral system in BC is Single Member Plurality, otherwise known as First Past The Post (FPTP). In this system, a voter gives one vote to one candidate in one electoral district. Each political party runs one candidate in each electoral district. The candidate with the most votes in the electoral district wins and is charged with representing all voters in the electoral district.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Proposed changes to the electoral system\nThe proposed electoral system is a customised version of Single Transferable Vote (STV) called BC-STV. In this system, each electoral district would have between 2 and 7 seats depending on its population and geographic size, and electors would vote for district representatives. Although each elector would have only one vote, as the expression STV indicates, the ballot would allow electors to rank their preferences. The STV model proposed by the Assembly avoided the use of party lists, which they felt would be unpopular with British Columbians. Instead, voters would choose among candidates by name and when ranking candidates, could choose candidates from different parties, thus retaining the maximum amount of freedom in choosing whom to elect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 844]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Proposed changes to the electoral system\nHaving multiple seats in one district would allow those seats to be allocated in a way that reflects the distribution of votes among the electorate candidates in a roughly proportional way. Political parties may nominate as many candidates in an electoral district as there are available seats, or might prefer to concentrate their efforts on a smaller number of candidates. Major parties will typically nominate more candidates than minor parties, as they will be hopeful of electing a larger number of MLAs. Candidates would be grouped by political party in separate columns on the ballot paper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Proposed changes to the electoral system\nTo establish the winners, a quota for the district would be determined based on the number of valid ballots cast and the number of seats available in the district. All the votes would be counted and sorted by the voters' first preferences. Those candidates with enough first-preference votes to meet or exceed the quota are elected. A multiple-step vote counting and transfer process is then used to determine the winners of the remaining seats in the district, based on voters' secondary preferences. Although the mechanics of the vote-transfer process can be complicated, the general principle is that all votes should count, so that if a candidate is not elected, or has more votes than needed to be elected, the votes in question will be transferred to another candidate based on secondary preferences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 91], "content_span": [92, 899]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Question and thresholds\nThe question asked was: Should British Columbia change to the BC-STV electoral system as recommended by the Citizens' Assembly on Electoral Reform?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Question and thresholds\nAlthough according to Pilon, there was no compelling legal or historical precedent for doing so, the Electoral Reform Referendum Act established two super-majority thresholds for the referendum results to be binding on government:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nAlthough the Citizen's Assembly had come to a remarkable degree of consensus in favour of BC-STV after months of study and deliberation, there is an important distinction to be made between such a consultative process and a general referendum in which there is much less opportunity for learning and deliberation by ordinary voters and where political interests are more likely to come into play. As LeDuc et al. point out, \"Deliberative democracy and direct democracy are different processes, and the dynamic of a referendum campaign will typically be quite different than that of a deliberative body.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nThe referendum campaign started with the Citizen's Assembly's announcement of its conclusions in late October 2004. This was followed by an initial flush of media coverage, including a favorable op. ed. by the influential Gordon Gibson in the Globe and Mail. However, other Globe and Mail coverage was much less favourable, and indeed dismissive. Provincial media seemed more sympathetic, drawing attention to the work of the Citizen's Assembly. Some high-profile media and columnists eventually endorsed the STV proposal, based on the case put forward by the Citizen's Assembly but many others remained opposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nPublic efforts to educate the public about the referendum were under the responsibility of Elections BC and the BC government. In order to protect the neutrality of its role, Elections BC did not provide information on the Citizens' Assembly proposal in comparison to the FPTP system. Its role was to ensure that voters had information on voter registration opportunities and information on the administration of the referendum. This left responsibility for promoting awareness and understanding of the two electoral systems to the government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nIn March 2005, the government established a Referendum Information Office with a mandate to provide voters with information to make an informed choice on the referendum question. The Referendum Information Office created a website and fact sheets, mailed a brochure to every residential household in the province, and established a toll-free information line (: 36).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nPoll results about the extent of voter knowledge about the referendum suggest that these efforts were ineffective (see the section on Voter polls and surveys, below). An unfortunate hiccup flagged by ) is that the brochures distributed to each household by the Referendum Information Office resembled newspaper advertising inserts and were likely discarded unopened by most voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nHowever, the onus of informing the public did not rest exclusively on public organizations. As noted, the media also played a role, and aside from expressing their own views or those of their columnists, they also provided a space for advocates on both sides to express their views (: 79).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nLegislation regulating the referendum process did not establish a formal role for \"Yes/No\" groups but required advertising sponsors to register, include identification statements on all advertising and submit financial reports following the referendum. No spending limits were imposed on referendum advertising sponsors\" (Elections BC 2005: 36). Two groups did form in an attempt to fill the information gap and influence the outcome. In support of the STV proposal was a group called YES-STV led organizationally by a local advocacy group called Fair Voting BC. It included members of the former Citizen's Assembly, activists from Fair Vote Canada and a number of academics and celebrity supporters. The No side, calling itself KNOW-STV included a few former politicians, backroom operatives from the Liberal and NDP parties, and two former members of the Citizen's Assembly (: 78).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 947]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nRemarkably, as Pilon elaborates (: 78-79), none of the major parties came out formally in support of the proposed reforms. Even Green Party leader Adrienne Carr expressed a preference for a different version of proportional representation than STV, although many Green candidates ignored their leader and openly supported the Citizen's Assembly proposal. The NDP and its leader Carole James were also critical of the proposed STV model while refusing to make it a campaign issue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0018-0001", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, The campaign\nEven though the BC NDP had committed to adopt proportional representation in 1999, they claimed to prefer a different model and the party was deeply split on the issue in general. As for the Liberals, Premier Campbell remained neutral but as a party, the Liberals were largely opposed to electoral reform. Indeed, the government imposition of a supermajority requirement for the referendum to be binding was widely seen as a concession to members of the Liberal caucus opposed to reform. Voters seeking guidance from the parties on how to vote in the referendum were thus left without very much direction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 63], "content_span": [64, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Voter polls and surveys\nVoter polls and surveys conducted prior to the referendum dealt with the degree of voter awareness and knowledge about the referendum as well as voter intentions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Voter polls and surveys\nOn the former subject, various surveys pointed to low levels of awareness that did not seem to improve significantly as the referendum approached. ) cites the following results:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Voter polls and surveys\nAs Pilon concludes, \"the public seemed only vaguely aware of the referendum and poorly informed of what was at stake in making their decision\" (ibid. ).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Voter polls and surveys\nMeanwhile, surveys on voter intentions such as the following showed rising support for the referendum over time, and some decline in the share of undecided voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Voter polls and surveys\nBy the time of the above Ipso-Reid survey results announced on the eve of the referendum, the referendum seemed destined to secure majority support and might even pass the 60% threshold. Much would depend on how voters would swing at the last moment on an important issue about which most of them felt ill-informed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 74], "content_span": [75, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Results\nThe final result of the referendum was favourable to the proposed reform, which was supported by 57.7% of the electorate, vs. 42.3% voting against it. A majority of pro-reform votes was obtained in 77 out of 79 districts. The following table provides the details.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Results\nAlthough the proposal failed to meet the thresholds established for the reform to be binding, the result was very close. The threshold requiring majority support in at least 60% of districts was easily met, with 97% of districts satisfying this criterion, and the overall popular vote was just 2.3% shy of the threshold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 58], "content_span": [59, 379]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Analysis\nThe unexpectedly high popularity of the voting reform surprised many. Although polls conducted in April and May indicated more support for the proposal than against it, the number of undecided voters remained high, and there was an expectation that \"a bewildered public would simply vote it down on election day\" as can typically happen (: 80). Yet despite this, the measure gained a 57.7% approval in the province on voting day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Analysis\nThat the public was poorly informed right up to the date of the referendum is certain. Post-referendum research and analysis pointed to the ineffectiveness of public education efforts, of the YES-STV and KNOW-STV campaigns, and of the media to act as \"effective grassroots indicators\" (: 81). Meanwhile, the referendum campaign received limited media attention, as both major parties were officially neutral on the proposed change. Just days before the referendum, two thirds of British Columbians admitted to knowing \"nothing/very little\" about the proposed STV system (: 77 and 79).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Analysis\nHowever they were strongly inclined towards proportionality, choice among multiple parties, and even coalition governments. Post-election analysis confirmed that most people knew little about the details of STV. Better informed voters did tend to vote in support of the proposal, but other supporters of the proposal seemed to rely on a positive appreciation and respect for the work of the Citizen's Assembly. Positive appreciation of the Citizen's Assembly thus appears to have been an important factor in the level of approval that was achieved, and the Assembly members played a role in this, by calling attention to the role of the Assembly in drafting the referendum question.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 742]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Analysis\nAccording to a post-referendum survey conducted by Nordic Research, over half of those who voted against STV said that they did so because they did not feel knowledgeable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Analysis\nA remarkable feature of the BC 2005 referendum was the extent of voter support across party lines. In particular, the research showed Liberals, Greens and undecided voters quite supporting of STV, with well over 60% support among these groups, but support among Liberals was fairly high as well, at about 50% (, op. cit.).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Analysis\nAs Pilon points out, the aftermath of the 1996 and 2001 elections had left many partisans of both the NDP and Liberal parties unsure about their parties future and open to proposals for reform and the moment was ripe for the referendum to secure support across party lines, despite the lack of support or even opposition from party leaders (: 80)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 59], "content_span": [60, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Aftermath\nThere was some ambivalence on how to proceed following the referendum, considering the strong support that it had shown, while falling short of the threshold for it to be binding. The Liberal government, which had been reelected the day of the referendum, put off any comment on how it would respond until the fall of 2005. The public itself was quite divided; and some in the electoral reform community expressed concern that the Legislature might impose a \"watered-down\" or partisan-inspired system in lieu of the STV model.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Aftermath\nThe Liberals' response came in Premier Gordon Campbell's . The speech rejected the call for introducing STV immediately and rejected a re-opening of the process to consider other options. Instead, it announced a second referendum on the STV proposal, with some adjustments: this time, a provisional map of STV ridings would be prepared in advance, and public funds would be provided to both pro- and anti-STV groups \"to support active information campaigns for supporters and detractors of each model.\" BC-STV would remain intact as the proposed alternative to FPTP and the 60% threshold would also remain in place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181002-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia electoral reform referendum, Aftermath\nThe original intent in the Speech from the Throne was that the referendum would be rerun in conjunction with the B.C. municipal elections in November 2008 in time to be implemented in the next provincial election should it be approved. However, the Premier later issued a , indicating that the date of the referendum would be postponed until May 2009 to coincide with the next provincial election. He explained that this was being done after consulting with Elections BC to reduce the cost of running the referendum while ensuring that there would be enough time to prepare for the next election should the referendum call for an STV model to be implemented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 60], "content_span": [61, 719]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election\nThe 2005 British Columbia general election was held on May 17, 2005, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) of the Province of British Columbia (BC), Canada. The British Columbia Liberal Party (BC Liberals) formed the government of the province prior to this general election under the leadership of Premier Gordon Campbell. The main opposition was the British Columbia New Democratic Party (BC NDP), whose electoral representation was reduced to two MLAs in the previous provincial election in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election\nThe BC Liberals retained power, with a reduced majority of 46 out of 79 seats, down from the record 77 out of 79 in 2001. Voter turnout was 58.2 per cent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election\nUnder amendments to the BC Constitution Act passed in 2001, BC elections are now held on fixed dates: the second Tuesday in May every four years. This was the first provincial election for which elector data in the provincial elector list was synchronised with the National Register of Electors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Electoral reform referendum\nThe BC electoral reform referendum was held in conjunction with this election. This referendum asked voters whether or not they support the proposed electoral reforms of the Citizens' Assembly on Electoral Reform, which included switching to a single transferable vote (STV) system. Had it been approved by 60% of voters in 60% of ridings), the new electoral system would have been implemented for the general election in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Electoral reform referendum\nAlthough the proposed reform attracted a clear majority (58% of the popular vote in favour, with 77 out of 79 ridings showing majority support), the level of support was just short of that required for mandatory implementation. A new vote on a revamped version of STV was held in conjunction with the 2009 British Columbia general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 67], "content_span": [68, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Results by party\n* denotes that the party did not contest the election in question", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 56], "content_span": [57, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Opinion polls and predictions\nBelow are the set of polls closest to the election, from organizations polling in British Columbia", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Opinion polls and predictions\nBesides the usual public polling by market research firms, other organizations have been attempting to predict the results of the upcoming election using alternate methods. Results suggest that all three projections below underestimated NDP seats and overestimated Liberal seats:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Opinion polls and predictions\nUBC's Election Stock Market tracks the prices of contracts whose value depend on election results: Popular vote: Lib 44.5%, NDP 35.9%, Green 13.9%, Other 5.3%Seats: Lib 48.6 (61.5), NDP 29.4 (37.2), Other 1.6 (2.0)(values in parentheses are values of actual contracts, in cents)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Opinion polls and predictions\nThe aggregates submissions from the Internet and subjectively predicts winners based on the submissions (see ):Seats: Lib 50, NDP 29, Other 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Opinion polls and predictions\nWill McMartin at the progressive online newspaper makes by looking at \"historic election results and selected demographics, as well as public opinion polls, regional sources and input from Election Central readers\" (see ):Seats: Lib 51, NDP 28, Other 0", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 69], "content_span": [70, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties\nBritish Columbia has Canada's least restrictive elections laws with regard to political party registration, and consequently there are currently nearly 50 parties registered with Elections BC, by far the most of any jurisdiction in the country. Twenty-five parties contested the 2005 election, also a considerably greater number than anywhere else in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 57], "content_span": [58, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, British Columbia Liberal Party\nThe BC Liberals won 77 of 79 seats in the 2001 election. At dissolution, the party held 72 seats. One member elected as a Liberal left the party to sit as a member of Democratic Reform British Columbia; one member elected as a Liberal left to sit as an independent; the party lost one by-election to the opposition New Democratic Party; and two former Liberal seats were vacant when the election was called. In 2005 election, the Liberal party dropped from 72 to 46 seats in the legislature, yet still won the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 89], "content_span": [90, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, New Democratic Party of British Columbia\nThe NDP's legislative caucus was reduced from a majority to just two seats in the 2001 election. It won another seat in an October 2004 by-election to bring the total to three. Carole James led the NDP to 33 seats to become the Leader of the Opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 99], "content_span": [100, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Green Party of British Columbia\nThe Green Party ran 72 candidates in 2001, winning 12 percent of the vote but no seats in the legislature. Some argued that the Green Party support peaked in 2001, drawing on dissatisfied NDP voters, and they would remain incapable of winning a seat in 2005 under the First-Past-the-Post system; others believed that if there had been four or more competitive parties in this election, the Greens might elect a handful of members. Alternatively, if they had received more votes, they would have been more likely to win a seat. The Greens may benefit if a later election is conducted using the proposed BC-STV system. In 2005, the Greens received 9% of the popular vote and no seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 90], "content_span": [91, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Democratic Reform British Columbia\nDemocratic Reform British Columbia is a new party created in early 2005 by the merger of the British Columbia Democratic Coalition\u2014a coalition of minor centrist parties\u2014 with the All Nations Party of British Columbia and key elements of the Reform BC. Independent MLA Elayne Brenzinger, a former Liberal, became DRBC's first MLA on January 19, 2005. Controversially, no invitation was extended for Morino to participate in the leader's debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 93], "content_span": [94, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, British Columbia Marijuana Party\nThe BC Marijuana Party nominated 43 candidates in this election. It was the only party other than the Liberals and NDP to run candidates in all 79 districts in 2001. The party chose not to run in certain districts and instead endorse New Democrat and Green candidates who publicly favour the legalization of marijuana. Party founder Marc Emery ran against Solicitor General Rich Coleman, an anti-drug hardliner, in staunchly conservative Fort Langley-Aldergrove. He gained controversy early in the campaign for claiming that the government spends too much money on senior citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 91], "content_span": [92, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nThe WLP is an anti-materialist political movement that hopes to achieve socialist and green ends through, among other things, the promotion of a four-day work-week. The 2005 BC election marked the debut in Western politics of any registered party expressly driven by the ideology of voluntary simplicity. It nominated 11 candidates, all in urban ridings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nPlatinum Party of Employers Who Think and Act to Increase Awareness", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nNominated seven candidates. Former provincial affiliate of the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nNominated six candidates. Provincial affiliate of the Libertarian Party of Canada", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nNominated five candidates. Provincial affiliate of the Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nA new autonomist/separatist party that nominated four candidates around the province.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nNominated three candidates. Provincial affiliate of the Communist Party of Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nNominated three candidates in the City of Vancouver. Billed itself as \"the world's first sex-positive party.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nAlthough Social Credit governed British Columbia for most of the period from 1952 to 1991, the party is now a minor party, with little organization or support. It nominated the minimum two candidates in order to retain party status this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nAlthough the WCC did not run in the 2001 election, it has been a constant, if minor, force in the BC political fringes for decades. Christie, its controversial leader, and a second candidate were nominated by the party in Greater Victoria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nThe BC Party is also a relatively old minor party, one of several populist conservative organizations that attempted to fill the vacuum after the collapse of Social Credit in the mid-nineties. This was the first election in which it nominated candidates. It nominated two candidates. A third possible candidate, Summer Davis in Surrey-Tynehead, ran as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nThe majority of the Moderates, including leader Matthew Laird, joined DRBC. The party's registration did not lapsed, however. The two candidates running under its banner opposed the merger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nBC Unity finished fourth in 2001, winning slightly over 3% of the vote with a slate of 56 candidates. It stood poised to potentially benefit from right-of-centre voters disenchanted with Campbell, but instead fell victim to serious internal division following a failed merger with the BC Conservative Party, which led to Chris Delaney's resignation as party leader. It appointed Daniel Stelmacker as its interim leader until it can hold a full leadership convention in the autumn of 2005. Stelmacker was its only nominated candidate, in Skeena riding.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nAborted mergers with BC Unity and DRBC drained supporters left and right from BC Reform, leaving only a tiny core of what was briefly BC's third party. Party founder Ron Gamble was the party's sole candidate in North Vancouver-Lonsdale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Political parties, Minor parties\nYPP appears to be a one-man political movement; its website made mention of no figures other than Filippelli, the party's founder and leader, who was its sole candidate in this election. He ran in Port Moody-Westwood.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 72], "content_span": [73, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181003-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia general election, Candidates\nThe deadline for candidate registration was Wednesday, May 4, 2005, at 1:00\u00a0p.m. Pacific Time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181004-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia municipal elections\nThe Canadian province of British Columbia held municipal elections on November 19, 2005. Voters in each of BC's 157 municipalities elected mayors and councillors, and rural voters elected directors for their regional district electoral area. School boards and other specialized public bodies (such as the Vancouver Park Board) have also been elected, and various local referendums are held concurrently.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181004-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia municipal elections\nPolitical parties and slates are a common feature of governance in some municipalities in the Metro Vancouver and Greater Victoria areas, though the rest of the province's cities and towns resemble the majority of Canada in lacking overt partisan alliances. The City of Vancouver, as well as its neighbour Richmond in particular, has an entrenched and polarized party system unique in the country.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 439]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181004-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia municipal elections, Metro Vancouver, Surrey, Councillors\nElectors could vote for eight candidates. Percentages are determined in relation to the total number of votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 79], "content_span": [80, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181004-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 British Columbia municipal elections, Metro Vancouver, Vancouver\nSam Sullivan defeated Jim Green, and 18 other candidates, in the race for mayor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 69], "content_span": [70, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181005-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Formula 3 International Series\nThe 2005 British Formula 3 International Series was the 55th British Formula 3 International Series season. It commenced on 2 April 2005 and ended on 9 October after twenty two races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181005-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British Formula 3 International Series, Drivers and teams\nThe following teams and drivers were competitors in the 2005 British Formula 3 International Series. The National class is for year-old Formula Three cars. Teams in the Invitation class are not series regulars, and do not compete for championship points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 62], "content_span": [63, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181005-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British Formula 3 International Series, Calendar and results\nThe Spa, Monza, Silverstone and N\u00fcrburgring races were held supporting the Le Mans Series. The remaining rounds supported the British GT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix\nThe 2005 British Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Foster's British Grand Prix) was a Formula One race held in Silverstone Circuit on 10 July 2005 at 13:00 BST (UTC+1). It was the eleventh race of the 2005 Formula One season and the last race for then Minardi driver Patrick Friesacher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nFor the second consecutive race, Renault's Fernando Alonso took pole position while his championship rival, McLaren's Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, was demoted ten places on the grid following an engine failure. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who had originally qualified second with a time just 0.027 seconds slower than Alonso's, suffered this engine failure during Saturday free practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nThis promoted BAR's Jenson Button, in his home race, to the front row, with the top ten being completed by Juan Pablo Montoya in the second McLaren, Jarno Trulli in the Toyota, Rubens Barrichello in the Ferrari, Giancarlo Fisichella in the second Renault, Takuma Sato in the second BAR, Ralf Schumacher in the second Toyota, Michael Schumacher in the second Ferrari, and Jacques Villeneuve in the Sauber. Jordan's Tiago Monteiro started at the rear of the grid after failing to set a time, following an engine failure during Friday practice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nBefore the race, a minute of silence was held as a mark of respect for those who had lost their lives in the London bombings three days earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nThe weather was hot, with air temperature at 30\u00a0\u00b0C, and the track temperature at 45\u00a0\u00b0C as the cars completed the formation lap. Sato stalled as he came to the grid, but race director Charlie Whiting nonetheless started the race, with the safety car being deployed on lap 2 to allow the marshals to safely return the BAR to the pit lane. Sato would eventually rejoin the race, two laps behind the leaders. Montoya made a fast start, passing Button off the grid and then overtaking Alonso for the lead into Becketts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nAfter the safety car period, Montoya retained the lead until the first round of pit stops, although Alonso remained no more than a second and a half behind as he and the Colombian traded fastest laps. Button held third, while Barrichello and Fisichella passed a slow-starting Trulli, who in turn was holding up Michael Schumacher. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, already up four places, was thus able to close up behind Schumacher and Trulli, but was unable to overtake them until the pit stops.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 506]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nMontoya made his first pit stop on lap 21, a lap earlier than planned due to traffic. Alonso followed on lap 23, rejoining the race almost side-by-side with Montoya, who again held his line. Fisichella led for the next two laps, setting the fastest lap in the process, before making his first stop. On lap 28, with every driver except Sato having pitted, Montoya led Alonso by three seconds, followed by Fisichella, Button, Barrichello, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Michael Schumacher and Trulli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nOn lap 32 Barrichello, on a three-stop strategy, made his second stop. This enabled R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, now the fastest man on the track, to close up behind Button. Montoya responded to his team-mate's pace, and to Alonso, by setting back-to-back fastest laps on laps 40 and 41, increasing his lead over the Spaniard to over six seconds. On lap 43, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen took fourth when Button made his second stop, easily retaining this position after his own stop two laps later. Montoya pitted on lap 44, putting Alonso back in front, before Barrichello made his third stop on lap 45. On lap 46 Fisichella, on course for his first podium since winning the opening race of the season in Australia, made his second stop, but stalled as he tried to leave the pits, promoting R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen to third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nAlonso led for five laps before pitting on lap 49, but lost time trying to lap Trulli. This meant that he did not have a big enough lead to make his stop and rejoin the race in front of Montoya, though he was comfortably ahead of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. In the end, the Colombian took his first win for McLaren by 2.7 seconds. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen set the fastest race lap on the final lap to finish less than 12 seconds behind Alonso, while Fisichella ended up 3.5 seconds behind the Finn. Button finished a distant fifth, ahead of Michael Schumacher and Barrichello, while Ralf Schumacher edged out Toyota team-mate Trulli for the final point.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nThere was only one retirement in the race, Jordan's Narain Karthikeyan dropping out on lap 11 with an electrical failure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181006-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 British Grand Prix, Report\nThe result allowed Alonso to increase his lead over R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen in the Drivers' Championship by two points, 77 to 51. Michael Schumacher remained in third on 43 points, while Montoya moved up to sixth with 26. In the Constructors' Championship, McLaren reduced the deficit to Renault by three points, 102 to 87, Ferrari remaining in third on 74.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 31], "content_span": [32, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181007-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British National Track Championships\nThe 2005 British National Track Championships were a series of track cycling competitions held from 6\u20139 October 2005 at the Manchester Velodrome. They are organised and sanctioned by British Cycling, and were open to British cyclists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181008-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Rowing Championships\nThe 2005 British Rowing Championships known as the National Championships at the time, were the 34th edition of the National Championships, held from 15\u201317 July 2005 at the National Water Sports Centre in Holme Pierrepont, Nottingham. They were organised and sanctioned by British Rowing, and are open to British rowers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181009-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Speedway Championship\nThe 2005 British Speedway Championship was the 45th edition of the British Speedway Championship. The Final took place on 10 July at Oxford Stadium in Oxford, England. The Championship was won by Scott Nicholls, who beat Chris Harris, Joe Screen and Mark Loram in the final heat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181010-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Superbike Championship\nThe 2005 British Superbike season started on 26 March and ended on 9 October. It included 55 riders on 25 teams from 8 countries.# Riders used machines from 5 different constructors, including Honda, Ducati, Kawasaki, Suzuki and Yamaha.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship\nThe 2005 Dunlop MSA British Touring Car Championship season was the 48th British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) season. As in 2004, there were ten racing weekends at nine different circuits; each round comprising three races, making a thirty round competition in total.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nAfter 2004 saw the BTCC boasting its largest number of entries since the height of the Super Touring era in the 1990s, the following season brought a significant decline in interest. Proton and Honda pulled their manufacturer support from the series, with many of the smaller independent teams also deciding against returning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nReigning champions Vauxhall stayed on as one of the two remaining manufacturers, dropping its Astra Coupe after four straight titles with the chassis, and introducing the all new Astra Sport Hatch (again prepared by Triple 8). Reigning champion James Thompson had left the BTCC to contest the World Touring Car Championship with Alfa Romeo, leaving the 2004 runner-up and 2003 champion Yvan Muller to head the team. SEAT Cupra Cup graduate Gavin Smith joined the team after appearing in an Astra Coupe for GA Motorsport at one meeting in 2004, and Colin Turkington moved into Thompson's seat after two promising seasons with the WSR MG squad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 717]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nTheir only manufacturer opposition came from SEAT, expanding their effort to three Super 2000-spec Toledos for their second season. 2001 champion Jason Plato remained as team leader, but Rob Huff departed to join the Chevrolet WTCC campaign. He was replaced by Luke Hines, moving from Vauxhall, with James Pickford taking the third seat as reward for winning the SEAT Cupra Cup in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nTeam Dynamics took a brave gamble by replacing their Honda Civic Type Rs with a pair of brand new, self-developed Integras. Matt Neal and Dan Eaves remained as drivers. A third car was entered late in the season for Gareth Howell in order to support Neal's title campaign. West Surrey Racing again campaigned the MG ZS as an independent entry after MG Rover withdrew their support at the end of 2003. Rob Collard moved from his self-run Astra Coupe to fill Colin Turkington's seat, but a second driver with sufficient budget could not be found.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nArena Motorsport also continued their campaign despite losing manufacturer support, entering a single Honda Civic Type-R for the returning Tom Chilton from the second round onwards. The only other full-time returnees were Synchro Motorsport, with James Kaye driving their ex-works Civic Type-R once again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nTwo new squads joined the series, both on very low budgets. SpeedEquipe (as HPI Racing) graduated from the Renault Clio Cup together with their drivers Richard Williams and Ian Curley, to run Lexus IS200s, while Fast-Tec Motorsports and team owner/driver Mark Proctor moved from the SCSA stock car series to run the Astra Coupe that Rob Collard had taken to the Independents title in 2003.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Changes for 2005, Teams and drivers\nKartworld Racing returned mid-season with team principal Jason Hughes again racing an ex-works MG ZS, as did Tech-Speed Motorsport running their Astra Coupe (now bio-ethanol powered) for rookie Fiona Leggate. Daniels Motorsport entered another Astra Coupe for Andy Neate for the final round at Brands Hatch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 74], "content_span": [75, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181011-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 British Touring Car Championship, Season Calendar\nAll races were held in the United Kingdom (excepting Mondello Park round that held in Ireland).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 54], "content_span": [55, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181012-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 British motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2005 British motorcycle Grand Prix was the ninth round of the 2005 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 22\u201324 July 2005 at the Donington Park circuit. It was also marked the final victory of Valentino Rossi in the wet race at the British circuit until the 2015 event was held at the Silverstone Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181012-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 British motorcycle Grand Prix, 125 cc classification\nThe race, scheduled to be run for 25 laps, was stopped after 7 full laps due to heavy rain. It was later restarted for 9 laps, with the grid determined by the running order before the suspension. The second part of the race determined the final result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 57], "content_span": [58, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181012-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 British motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round nine has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181013-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bromont municipal election\nThe 2005 Bromont municipal election took place on November 6, 2005, to elect a mayor and councillors in Bromont, Quebec. Incumbent mayor Pauline Quinlan was re-elected to a third mandate without difficulty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181013-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bromont municipal election, Results\nSource: Joshua Bleser, \"Pauline Quinlan returned as mayor of Bromont,\" Sherbrooke Record, 7 November 2005, p.\u00a04.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181014-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brown Bears football team\nThe 2005 Brown Bears football team was an American football team that represented Brown University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Brown won the Ivy League championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181014-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brown Bears football team\nIn their eighth season under head coach Phil Estes, the Bears compiled a 9\u20131 record and outscored opponents 368 to 218. James Frazier, Jamie Gasparella and Nick Hartigan were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181014-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brown Bears football team\nThe Bears' 6\u20131 conference record topped the Ivy League standings. They outscored Ivy opponents 252 to 166.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181014-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Brown Bears football team\nBrown was unranked to start the year, and did not enter the national top 25 until November. After closing out the year on an eight-game win streak, the Bears were ranked No. 15 in the final poll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181014-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Brown Bears football team\nBrown played its home games at Brown Stadium in Providence, Rhode Island.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181015-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Brownlow Medal\nThe 2005 Brownlow Medal was the 78th year the award was presented to the player adjudged the fairest and best player during the Australian Football League (AFL) home and away season. Ben Cousins of the West Coast Eagles won the medal by polling twenty votes during the 2005 AFL season. It was Cousins' first Brownlow Medal win, and with Daniel Kerr finishing the runner up, it was the first time in 79 years that the top two votegetters were from the same club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181015-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Brownlow Medal, Voting procedure\nThe three field umpires (those umpires who control the flow of the game, as opposed to goal or boundary umpires) confer after each match and award three votes, two votes and one vote to the players they regard as the best, second best and third best in the match, respectively. The votes are kept secret until the awards night, and are read and tallied on the evening.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181015-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Brownlow Medal, Voting procedure\nAs the medal is awarded to the fairest and best player in the league, those who have been suspended during the season by the AFL Tribunal (or, who avoided suspension only because of a discount for a good record or an early guilty plea) are ineligible to win the award; however, they may still continue to poll votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 37], "content_span": [38, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181016-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Buckinghamshire County Council election\nElections to Buckinghamshire County Council were held on 5 May 2005, alongside the 2005 UK General Election and other local elections in England and Northern Ireland. The entire council was up for election, with each successful candidate serving a four-year term of office, expiring in 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181016-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Buckinghamshire County Council election\nThe Conservative Party remained in overall control of the council, winning 44 out of 57 seats. 11 of the remaining seats were won by the Liberal Democrats, whilst the remaining 2 were won by Labour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181016-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Result\nThe overall turnout was 65.4% with a total of 295,905 valid votes cast. A total of 2,397 ballots were rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 52], "content_span": [53, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181016-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Council Composition\nFollowing the last election in 2001 the composition of the council was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 65], "content_span": [66, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181016-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Buckinghamshire County Council election, Ward Results\nAll results by ward are listed below. The turnout numbers recorded is the valid voter turnout, not the total number of ballots cast including those that were spoiled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 58], "content_span": [59, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181017-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bucknell Bison football team\nThe 2005 Bucknell Bison football team was an American football team that represented Bucknell University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Bucknell finished last in the Patriot League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181017-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bucknell Bison football team\nIn their third year under head coach Tim Landis, the Bison compiled a 1\u201310 record. Sean Conover and Stephen Watts were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181017-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bucknell Bison football team\nThe Bison were outscored 332 to 179. Bucknell's winless (0\u20136) conference record finished seventh in the Patriot League standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181017-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bucknell Bison football team\nBucknell played its home games at Christy Mathewson\u2013Memorial Stadium on the university campus in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181018-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Buenos Aires 200km\nThe 2005 200\u00a0km of Buenos Aires is the second edition of this race on the TC2000 season. The race was held in the Aut\u00f3dromo Juan y \u00d3scar G\u00e1lvez in Buenos Aires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181018-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Buenos Aires 200km, Results\nThis article related to touring car racing is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181019-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bandits season\nThe Buffalo Bandits are a lacrosse team based in Buffalo playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2005 season was the 14th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181019-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bandits season\nThe Bandits finished second in the east after stellar seasons from veterans John Tavares and Steve Dietrich, who was named Goaltender of the Year. They hosted the Rochester Knighthawks in the division semi-final game, but the Knighthawks defeated the Bandits 19-14, winning the right to face the eventual champion Toronto Rock in the division finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181019-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bandits season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181019-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bandits season, Player stats, Runners (Top 10)\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 59], "content_span": [60, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181019-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bandits season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181020-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bills season\nThe 2005 Buffalo Bills season was their 46th in the National Football League. The team was unable to improve upon their previous season\u2019s output of 9\u20137, instead finishing 5\u201311. This was the sixth consecutive season in which the team missed the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 279]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181020-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bills season, Offseason\nDrew Bledsoe, who had been the team\u2019s quarterback from 2002\u20132004, was released by the Bills after the 2004 season to make way for backup quarterback J. P. Losman. It was the second time that Bledsoe\u2019s team had let him go for a younger quarterback. When Bledsoe was later signed by the Dallas Cowboys, he expressed bitterness with the Bills for the move, stating \"I can't wait to go home and dress my kids in little stars and get rid of the other team\u2019s [Buffalo\u2019s] stuff.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181020-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bills season, Offseason\nThe Bills failed to re-sign defensive tackle Pat Williams, who would sign with the Minnesota Vikings for the 2005 season. The Bills also lost starting offensive tackle Jonas Jennings to the San Francisco 49ers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 36], "content_span": [37, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181020-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bills season, Offseason, Draft\nBuffalo had six draft picks in the 2005 draft. The Bills traded their only first round pick in 2005 to the Dallas Cowboys to move up in the previous draft, a pick they used to draft J. P. Losman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 43], "content_span": [44, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181020-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bills season, Schedule\nIn addition to their regular games with AFC East rivals, the Bills played teams from the AFC West and NFC South as per the schedule rotation, and also played intraconference games against the Bengals and the Texans based on divisional positions from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181021-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo Bulls football team\nThe 2005 Buffalo Bulls football team represented the University at Buffalo in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Bulls offense scored 110 points while the defense allowed 327 points. Buffalo also didn't score a touchdown until a Week 4 game against Western Michigan, where they lost 31-21.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election\nThe 2005 Buffalo Mayoral Election took place on November 8, 2005. After incumbent Anthony M. Masiello, a Democrat, announced on April 29, 2005 that he would not seek a fourth term as mayor, a field of several Democratic candidates emerged, from which New York State Senator Byron Brown emerged victorious in the primary election. In the general election, Brown went on to defeat Republican challenger Kevin Helfer, former member of the Buffalo Common Council for the University District, as well as two minor-party candidates. Buffalo's 2005 mayoral election is notable as the first in the city to be won by an African-American candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Democratic primary, Candidates\nIn addition to Brown, candidates for the Democratic nomination for Mayor in 2005 included Brown's predecessor as State Senator for the 57th District, Al Coppola, attorney and government reform advocate Kevin Gaughan, restaurateur Steven Calvaneso, neighborhood activist and perennial candidate Judith Einach, and Erie County Democratic Committee member Darnell Jackson. Coppola dropped out of the race early, while the latter two hopefuls were removed from the ballot in August 2005 by the Erie County Board of Elections due to petition irregularities, leading to a three-way contest between Brown, Gaughan and Calvaneso for the Democratic nomination.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 74], "content_span": [75, 726]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Democratic primary, Results\nThe Democratic primary election was held on September 13, 2005. Brown placed first in the polls with 16,900 votes cast, or 60.6% of the total, winning the Democratic nomination. In second place was Gaughan with 9,264 votes (34.5%), and Calvaneso placed third with 1,362 votes (4.9%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 71], "content_span": [72, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Conservative primary, Candidates\nDespite the fact that Brown was cross-endorsed by the Erie County Conservative Party under the terms of New York State's electoral fusion law, Republican candidate Kevin Helfer mounted an unprecedented write-in campaign in the Conservative primary election on September 13, 2005 that was described as \"crucial\" for his hopes to win the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 76], "content_span": [77, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Conservative primary, Results\nThe Conservative primary was held on September 13, 2005. Helfer won the election handily, earning 190 votes (65.1%) to Brown's 95 (32.5%). Gaughan also earned 7 write-in votes (2.4%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Independence Party primary, Candidates\nDespite the fact that the Erie County Independence Party officially endorsed Brown for mayor, there were two candidates from that party who also sought the nomination: Louis P. Corrigan, the Secretary of the Erie County Independence Party, and former local party chairman Charles J. Flynn. Corrigan was ruled ineligible for the ballot by the Erie County Board of Elections due to petition challenges, while Flynn's petitions withstood a similar legal challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 82], "content_span": [83, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Independence Party primary, Results\nThe Independence Party primary was held on September 13. Flynn placed first with 135 votes (45.2%); Brown took second place with 128 (42.8%). Also, Helfer earned 32 write-in votes (10.7%), and Gaughan won four (1.3%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 79], "content_span": [80, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, Nominations, Other candidates\nDespite the petition irregularities which kept her off the ballot in the Democratic primary, Judith Einach was able to secure the nomination of the Green Party and contest the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 60], "content_span": [61, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, General election, Endorsements\nIn addition to the Erie County Democratic Party, Brown received the endorsement of the Erie County Working Families Party. Brown was also endorsed by both of New York's United States Senators, Charles Schumer and Hillary Clinton, as well as New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, and New York State Assemblyman and future Congressman Brian Higgins. Helfer was endorsed by the Erie County Republican Party as well as the Buffalo Niagara Partnership, the Buffalo News, and local businessman and future gubernatorial candidate Carl Paladino.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181022-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Buffalo mayoral election, General election, Results\nThe general election was held on November 8, 2005. Brown placed first with 46,613 votes cast, or 63.8% of the total. Helfer placed second with 19,853 votes (27.2%). In third place was Einach, with 3,525 votes (4.8%), and in fourth was Flynn with 3,082 votes (4.2%).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181023-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian Cup Final\nThe 2005 Bulgarian Cup Final was played at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia on May 25, 2005 and was contested between the sides of Levski Sofia and CSKA Sofia. The match was refereed by Anton Genov and was won by Levski Sofia. The win gave Levski their 24th Bulgarian Cup success.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181024-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Bulgarian Figure Skating Championships were the National Championships of the 2004\u201305 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181024-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian Figure Skating Championships\nThe results were used to choose the teams to the 2005 World Championships and the 2005 European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181025-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian Supercup\nThe 2005 Bulgarian Supercup was the third Bulgarian Supercup match, a football match which was contested between the \"A\" professional football group champion, CSKA Sofia, and the winner of Bulgarian Cup, Levski Sofia. The match was held on 31 July 2005 at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia, Bulgaria. Levski beat CSKA 4\u20132 (after penalties) to win their first Bulgarian Supercup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Bulgaria on June 25, 2005, for the 240 members of the National Assembly. According to exit polls, the Socialists had a lead with around 31%, but without a majority, necessitating the creation of a coalition. The National Movement for Simeon II, in power before the election, was in second place, with around 21%. Following the election, Socialist Party leader Sergei Stanishev became Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nAt least 6,000 candidates (from 22 parties) ran for election to the 240 member parliament. The turnout of 56% was the lowest on record. 4% of the votes are needed to gain a seat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nThe opposition led the election, but did not gain an outright majority. Sergei Stanishev, leader of the socialist party, stated he would attempt to form a governing coalition. \"We won the confidence of the people ... We are ready to form a government ... and we will negotiate with any democratic party,\" Stanishev said in a press conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nIn the last five free elections held since 1989, no government has been re-elected\u2014each has had to implement stringent economic and social reforms, since the fall of communism, and has lost popular support as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election\nFor a political analysis of the 2005 parliamentary elections see published by the European Parties Elections and Referendums Network.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nAs no one party received a majority in the Assembly the Socialists were faced with the task of putting together a coalition government. The Socialists faced many difficulties when trying to establish a coalition as all of the other political parties that had crossed the 4% threshold in the parliament were to the right of the Socialists, meaning compromise would be needed to ensure a workable coalition agreement. The Socialists tried to form a coalition of the three largest parties: themselves, the NDSV, and the DPS.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 570]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nHowever, while they gained the support of the DPS, they failed to gain the support of the NDSV. While the Socialists tried to enter into a two party minority government with DPS as their coalition partner, this was rejected by parliament when despite voting for Sergei Stanishev to be prime minister in a close 120-119 vote the parliament voted against his proposed cabinet. As per the constitution the mandate to form a government was passed to the next largest political party, NDSV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181026-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 Bulgarian parliamentary election, Aftermath\nHowever, on August 11, NDSV announced that they had decided to reject the offer due to the \"complicated political situation,\" this then lead to the third largest party, DPS to receive the mandate to try and form a coalition government, finally after talks with the leaders of the two largest parties Ahmed Dogan, leader of the DPS was able to form a coalition agreement between the Socialists, NDSV and his own DPS. Sergei Stanishev leader of the socialist's was elected prime minister and the coalition held 169 seats in the 240 seat parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181027-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulldogs RLFC season\nThe 2005 Bulldogs RLFC season was the 71st season in the club's history. They competed in the NRL's 2005 Telstra Premiership, finishing the regular season 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181027-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulldogs RLFC season, Squad movement, Debuts\n\"Debut\" means players who have not played in an elite Australian or European league competition previously.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181027-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Bulldogs RLFC season, Representatives\nThe following players have played a representative match in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election\nThe 2005 Burgenland state election was held on 9 October 2005 to elect the members of the 19th Landtag of Burgenland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election\nThe governing Social Democratic Party of Austria (SP\u00d6) won in a landslide, securing an absolute majority for the first time since 1982. This came to the detriment of the Freedom Party of Austria (FP\u00d6), which conversely suffered its worst result since 1982. The Austrian People's Party (\u00d6VP) stayed level on 13 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election\nThe SP\u00d6 could have governed alone thanks to its majority, but chose to renew its coalition with the \u00d6VP. Niessl was sworn in as Governor for a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election, Background\nPrior to amendments made in 2014, the Burgenland constitution mandated that cabinet positions in the state government (state councillors, German: Landesr\u00e4ten) be allocated between parties proportionally in accordance with the share of votes won by each; this is known as Proporz. As such, the government was a perpetual coalition of all parties that qualified for at least one state councillor.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election, Background\nIn the 2000 election, the SP\u00d6 remained the largest party with 17 seats. The Greens entered the Landtag for the first time with two seats, while the \u00d6VP and FP\u00d6 lost one each. The SP\u00d6 formed a coalition with the \u00d6VP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election, Electoral system\nThe 36 seats of the Landtag of Burgenland are elected via open list proportional representation in a two-step process. The seats are distributed between seven multi-member constituencies, corresponding to the seven districts of Burgenland (the statutory cities of Eisenstadt and Rust are combined with Eisenstadt-Umgebung District). Apportionment of the seats is based on the results of the most recent census.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election, Electoral system\nFor parties to receive any representation in the Landtag, they must either win at least one seat in a constituency directly, or clear a 4 percent state-wide electoral threshold. Seats are distributed in constituencies according to the Hare quota, with any remaining seats allocated using the D'Hondt method at the state level, to ensure overall proportionality between a party's vote share and its share of seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election, Electoral system\nIn addition to voting for a political party, voters may cast preferential votes for specific candidates of that party, but are not required to do so. These additional votes do not affect the proportional allocation based on the vote for the party or list, but can change the rank order of candidates on a party's lists at the state and constituency level. Voters may cast one preferential vote at the state level, or three at the constituency level. A voter may not cross party-lines to cast a preference vote for a candidate of another party; such preference votes are invalid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181028-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Burgenland state election, Contesting parties\nIn addition to the parties already represented in the Landtag, one party collected enough signatures to be placed on the ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 50], "content_span": [51, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Burkina Faso on 13 November 2005. Incumbent president Blaise Compaor\u00e9 was re-elected with around 80% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Background\nCompaor\u00e9 has been in power since October 1987, was first elected in 1991, and was re-elected in 1998. In August 2005 he announced his intention to run for a third term as President. Opposition politicians argued that Compaor\u00e9 could not run in the election because a constitutional amendment passed in 2000 limited a president to two terms. The amendment also reduced the term length from seven to five years. Compaor\u00e9's supporters, however, argued that the amendment could not be applied retroactively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Background\nIn October 2005, the Constitutional Council ruled that because Compaor\u00e9 was President in 2000, the amendment would not apply until the end of his current term, thereby allowing his candidacy in the 2005 election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 48], "content_span": [49, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Campaign\nThe most contentious political issues facing the nation's government were freedom of press, economic viability, and tension with neighboring Ivory Coast caused by alleged Burkinab\u00e9 support for Ivorian insurgents and the migration of workers to the Ivory Coast and Ghana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Campaign\nCompaor\u00e9's campaign manager Salif Diallo expressed confidence in his candidate: \"Our objective is not the victory of our candidate in the first round - that's already a sure thing, given the mobilisation of our supporters and the popularity of our candidate. Our goal is rather that the turnout and the lead be high.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Campaign\nOn 27 and 28 October 18 labour unions called a two-day strike for higher salaries and pensions, and lower taxes on basic necessities. While in Gaskinde, B\u00e9n\u00e9wend\u00e9 Stanislas Sankara stated \"The labour union strikes demonstrate that the citizens have had enough of this government.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Campaign\nSeveral parties did not nominate their own candidates, but supported those of other parties; the Alliance for Democracy and Federation \u2013 African Democratic Rally and the Rally of Democrats for Faso supported Compaor\u00e9, the Sankarist Democratic Front supported Sankara, the Convergence for Social Democracy and the Union of Progressive Forces supported Philippe Ou\u00e9draogo, and Convergence of Hope backed Norbert Tiendr\u00e9b\u00e9ogo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Campaign\nHermann Yam\u00e9ogo of the National Union for the Defence of Democracy withdrew his candidacy in October, but due to the lateness of his withdrawal, he remained on the ballot paper. Prior to his withdrawal, he had been supported by the Citizens League of Builders, the Group of Patriotic Democrats, the Movement for Democracy and Rebirth, the National Convention of Progressive Democrats, the National Republican Party-Right Path, the Party of Independent Forces for Development, the Patriotic Front for Change, the Union of Democrats and Independent Progressives and the Union of Forces for Renewal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 643]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181029-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Burkinab\u00e9 presidential election, Aftermath\nFollowing Compaor\u00e9's victory, he was sworn in for another term on 20 December 2005 in Ouagadougou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 47], "content_span": [48, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181030-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian communal elections\nCommunal elections were held in Burundi on 3 June and 7 June 2005. The elections were won by the National Council for the Defense of Democracy \u2013 Forces for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD-FDD), which won 1,781 of the 3,225 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181030-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian communal elections, Conduct\nThe election was largely peaceful in most parts of the country, however, violence and intimidation in some communes of Bujumbura Rural and Bubanza provinces led to a re-poll held on 7 June. Observers considered the communal elections generally free and fair, despite some minor irregularities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 42], "content_span": [43, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181031-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in Burundi on 28 February 2005. The new constitution was approved by 92% of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181031-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian constitutional referendum, Proposed constitution\nThe proposed new constitution guaranteed representation for both Hutu and Tutsi ethnic groups by setting out ethnic quotas for parliament, government and the army, which had been dominated by Tutsis since independence;", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 282]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181031-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nMost political parties urged a \"Yes\" vote in the poll, but some Tutsi parties urged a \"No\" vote, stating that the new constitution doesn't give Tutsis enough guarantees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181032-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian legislative election\nParliamentary elections were held in Burundi on 4 July 2005. The result was a victory for the National Council for the Defense of Democracy \u2013 Forces for the Defense of Democracy (CNDD\u2013FDD), which won 64 of the 118 seats in the National Assembly", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181032-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian legislative election, Conduct\nVoting was largely peaceful throughout the country during election day. Observers deemed the polls generally free, fair, and transparent while the major political parties accepted the results as legitimate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181032-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian legislative election, Results, National Assembly\nIn order to ensure the 60%-40% ethnic split and 30% quota for women, a further 18 members, including the three Twa representatives foreseen by the Electoral Code, were co-opted after the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181032-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian legislative election, Results, Senate\nFollowing the National Assembly elections, the Senate was indirectly elected on 29 July. Of the 49 Senate members, 34 were elected by electoral colleges formed by councillors, three were co-opted Twas, four were former Presidents, and eight further members were co-opted to ensure that at least 30% of its members were women. A total of 119 candidates stood for election to the Senate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181033-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian presidential election\nIndirect presidential elections were held in Burundi on 19 August 2005. Members of the National Assembly and Senate chose the new president of the republic for a five-year term. The sole candidate, Pierre Nkurunziza of the CNDD\u2013FDD, was elected by a vote of 151\u20139. Nkurunziza was sworn in on 26 August 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181033-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Burundian presidential election, Electoral system\nThe election was held using the multiple round system. In order to win in the first round of voting, Nkurunziza was required to receive at least two-thirds of the vote (108 votes).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181034-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament was held from March 4\u20137, 2005 at the Richmond Coliseum in Richmond, Virginia. The winner of the tournament was Old Dominion, who received an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181035-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League\nThe 2005 CAF Champions League was the 41st edition of the CAF Champions League, the Africa's premier club football tournament prize organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF). It was started on 29 January 2005 with a preliminary round. Al Ahly of Egypt defeated \u00c9toile du Sahel of Tunisia in the final to win their fourth title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181035-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League, Qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n1 Wallidan FC were withdrawn by the Gambia Football Federation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 63], "content_span": [64, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181035-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League, Knockout stage, Semi-Finals\nThe first leg was played on 24\u201325 September and the second on 15\u201316 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181035-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League, Top goalscorers\nThe top scorers from the 2005 CAF Champions League are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 42], "content_span": [43, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final\nThe 2005 CAF Champions League Final was the final of the 2005 CAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final\nIt was a football tie held over two legs in December 2005 between Al Ahly, and \u00c9toile du Sahel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Qualified teams\nIn the following table, finals until 1996 were in the African Cup of Champions Club era, since 1997 were in the CAF Champions League era.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 48], "content_span": [49, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Background\nAl Ahly reached a total of four finals, winning three (1982, 1987, 2001) and losing one (1983). \u00c9toile du Sahel reached the second consecutive final in his history after they lost against Enyimba in the previous edition 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Background\nBoth teams qualified as winners of their groups. Both teams also qualified for the semifinals on the second-last matchday. In the semifinals \u00c9toile du Sahel defeated the Moroccan side Raja Casablanca 2\u20130 on aggregate, after winning twice with the same result (1\u20130): the first leg in Casablanca, and the second leg in Sousse. Al Ahly faced his compatriot Zamalek winning the first leg (2\u20131) and the second leg (2\u20130) after playing the two matches in Cairo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Stade Olympique de Sousse\nStade olympique de Sousse is a multi-purpose stadium in Sousse, Tunisia. It is used by the football team \u00c9toile du Sahel, and was used for the 2004 African Cup of Nations. The stadium holds 28,000 people. It hosts within it the meetings played by the football team of the city: \u00c9toile sportive du Sahel (ESS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Stade Olympique de Sousse\nFor many decades, Sousse footballers knew only the clay surfaces and knew the turf surfaces only when the stadium was inaugurated with an initial capacity of 10,000 places. It passes over the years to 15,000 seats and is then expanded again on the occasion of the 1994 African Cup of Nations with 6,000 additional seats to reach a capacity of 21,000 seats; A luminous panel is installed at the same time. The last expansion was carried out in 1999 to bring the capacity of the stadium to 28,000 seats for the 2001 Mediterranean Games, a reorganization of the gallery of honor was carried out, from a capacity of 70 to 217 places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Stade Olympique de Sousse\nIt hosted 1977 FIFA World Youth Championship, 1994 African Cup of Nations, 2001 Mediterranean Games and 2004 African Cup of Nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 66], "content_span": [67, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Cairo Military Academy Stadium\nCairo Military Academy Stadium is located in Cairo, Egypt and has a total capacity of 28,500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Cairo Military Academy Stadium\nSeven miles up the road from Cairo International Stadium, heading for Cairo International Airport, there is the Cairo Military Academy Stadium at the far end of Orouba Street in the north-eastern Heliopolis district of Cairo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Cairo Military Academy Stadium\nIt was built in 1989 for the use of military teams and students at the military academy. The ground accommodated home games of Al Ahly and Zamalek during the refurbishing of the Cairo International Stadium and occasionally still serves to stage matches of the old foes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Venues, Cairo Military Academy Stadium\nAl Ahly was forced to move out of its usual stadium, that is, the Cairo International Stadium, due to the work that started in it because of Egypt organizing the 2006 Africa Cup of Nations after three months, it underwent a major renovation, and was brought up to 21st century world standard along with all its multi-game Olympic facilities.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 71], "content_span": [72, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Format\nThe final was decided over two legs, with aggregate goals used to determine the winner. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule would have been applied, and if still level, the tie would have proceeded directly to a penalty shootout (no extra time is played).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 39], "content_span": [40, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181036-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League Final, Matches, Second leg\nAssistant referees:Loss\u00e9ni Par\u00e9 (Burkina Faso)Brama Millogo (Burkina Faso)Fourth official:Nasser Sadek (Egypt)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181037-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League group stage\nThe group stage of the 2005 CAF Champions League was played from 26 June to 11 September 2005. A total of eight teams competed in the group stage, the group winners and runners-up advance to the Knockout stage playing semifinal rounds before the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181037-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Champions League group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners and the runners-up of each group advanced to the Knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup\nThe 2005 CAF Confederation Cup was the second edition of the CAF Confederation Cup. It started with the preliminary round (home-and away ties) that was played in January and February 2005. FAR Rabat of Morocco beat Dolphins F.C. of Nigeria in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, Preliminary round\n1st legs played 30 January 2005 and 2nd legs played 13 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, First round\n1st legs played 5 March 2005 and 2nd legs played 19 March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, Second round\n1st legs played 8\u201311 April 2005 and 2nd legs played 23-24 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 59], "content_span": [60, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup, Qualifying rounds, Play-off round\nIn this round, the 8 winners of the round of 16 play the losers of the round of 16 of the Champions League for 8 places in the group stage. 1st legs played May 6\u20138, 2005 and 2nd legs played May 21\u201323, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 61], "content_span": [62, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup, Knockout stage, Final\nThe 1st leg was played on November 6 and the 2nd leg on November 19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181038-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup, Top goalscorers\nThe top scorers from the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup are as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 43], "content_span": [44, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181039-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup group stage\nThe group stage of the 2005 CAF Confederation Cup was played from 23 July to 16 October 2005. A total of eight teams competed in the group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181039-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Confederation Cup group stage, Format\nIn the group stage, each group was played on a home-and-away round-robin basis. The winners of each group advanced directly to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 46], "content_span": [47, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181040-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Super Cup\nThe 2005 CAF Super Cup was the 13th CAF Super Cup, an annual football match organized by the Confederation of African Football (CAF), between the winners of the previous season's CAF Champions League and CAF Confederation Cup competitions. The match was contested by 2004 CAF Champions League winners, Enyimba, and 2004 CAF Confederation Cup winners, Hearts of Oak, at the Aba Stadium in Aba, Nigeria, on 20 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181040-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CAF Super Cup\nAfter the regular 90 minutes ended in a 0\u20130 draw, Nigerian side Enyimba won the match 2\u20130 in extra time. This was the second consecutive title for Enyimba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181041-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CAR Development Trophy\nThe 2005 CAR Development Trophy is the second edition of second level rugby union tournament in Africa. The competition involved nine teams that were divided into two zones (North and South). The winner of the two zone were admitted to final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games\nThe 34th CARIFTA Games was held in the Dwight Yorke Stadium in Bacolet, Tobago on March 26\u201328, 2005. The event was relocated from the National Stadium, St. George's, Grenada, because of the aftermath of Hurricane Ivan destroying 90 percent of the island's houses. An appraisal of the results has been given.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Participation (unofficial)\nDetailed result lists can be found on the CACAC, the CFPI and the \"WorldJunior Athletics History\" website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Participation (unofficial)\nAn unofficial count yieldsthe number of about 427 athletes (215 junior (under-20) and 212 youth(under-17)) from about 25 countries: Anguilla (3), Antigua and Barbuda (10),Aruba (2), Bahamas (51), Barbados (37), Bermuda (12), British Virgin Islands(7), Cayman Islands (16), Dominica (5), French Guiana (1), Grenada (31),Guadeloupe (19), Guyana (8), Haiti (11), Jamaica (69), Martinique (31),Montserrat (2), Netherlands Antilles (6), Saint Kitts and Nevis (8), SaintLucia (8), Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (3), Suriname (3), Trinidad andTobago (59), Turks and Caicos Islands (18), US Virgin Islands (7).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 46], "content_span": [47, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Records\nIn the boys' U-20 category, Gr\u00e9gory Gamyr from Martinique achieved 18.11metres in shot put.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Records\nIn the boys' U-17 category, Theon O'Connor from Jamaica set the new 800mgames record to 1:53.72. The 4x400 metres relay team from Trinidad and Tobago set the new gamesrecord to 3:15.09.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Records\nIn the girls' U-17 category, the 4x100 metres relay team from Jamaica finished in45.43 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Records\nMoreover, a total of 8 national (senior) records were set by the junior athletes. In the men's category, Junior Hines set the 3000 metresrecord for the Cayman Islands to 9:59.68.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Records\nIn the women's category, individual records were set by Shara Proctor (long jump, 6.24m, wind: +0.9\u00a0m/s) for Anguilla,by Skyler Wallen (1500 metres, 4:44.79) for the Bahamas,by La Troya Darrell (triple jump, 12.29m, wind: -0.9\u00a0m/s) for Bermuda, by Opal Bodden (triple jump, 10.70m, wind: +0.8\u00a0m/s) for the Cayman Islands,and by Sanny Eugene (800 metres, 2:12.75) for the U.S. Virgin Islands. Moreover, the 4x100 metres relay teams of Grenada (45.41s) and the Turks and Caicos Islands(51.88s) established new national records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 27], "content_span": [28, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Austin Sealy Award\nThe Austin Sealy Trophy for themost outstanding athlete of the games was awarded to Theon O'Connor ofJamaica. He won 2 gold medals (800m, and 1500m) inthe youth (U-17) category, setting a new 800m games record.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 38], "content_span": [39, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Medal summary\nMedal winners are published by category: Boys under 20 (Junior), Girls under 20 (Junior), Boys under 17 (Youth), and Girls under 17 (Youth). Complete results can be found on the CACAC, the CFPI and the \"World Junior Athletics History\"website.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181042-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 CARIFTA Games, Medal table (unofficial)\nThe medal count has been published. There is a mismatch between the unofficial medal count and thepublished medal count for the Bahamas and Trinidad and Tobago. This can be explained bythe fact that there were only three competitors in the boys U20 polevault event, therefore not having been considered in the published medal count.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 44], "content_span": [45, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181043-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2005 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 34th CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament. It was played between March 11 and March 19, 2005. Opening round games were played at campus sites, while all \"super six\" games were played at Joe Louis Arena in Detroit, Michigan. By winning the tournament, Michigan won the Mason Cup and received the Central Collegiate Hockey Association's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181043-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured four rounds of play. In the first round, the first and twelfth seeds, the second and eleventh seeds, the third seed and tenth seeds, the fourth seed and ninth seeds, the fifth seed and eighth seeds, and the sixth seed and seventh seeds played a best-of-three series, with the two highest-seeded winners advancing to the semifinals and the remaining four winners playing in the quarterfinals. In the quarterfinals, the highest and lowest seeds and second highest and second lowest seeds play a single-game, with the winner advancing to the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181043-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nIn the semifinals, the highest and lowest seeds and second highest and second lowest seeds play a single-game, with the winner advancing to the championship game and the loser advancing to the third place game. The tournament champion receives an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Men's Division I Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181043-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 59], "content_span": [60, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181044-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CD Universidad San Mart\u00edn season\nThe 2005 season was the 2nd season of competitive football by Universidad San Mart\u00edn de Porres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181045-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CECAFA Cup\nThe 2005 CECAFA Cup was the 29th edition of the tournament. It was held in Rwanda, and was won by Ethiopia. The matches were played between November 26\u2014December 10. All matches were played in Stade Amahoro in Kigali.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181045-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CECAFA Cup\nKenya was disqualified for failure to pay fees to CECAFA.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 73]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181046-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CEMAC Cup\nThe 2005 CEMAC Cup was the second edition of the CEMAC Cup, the football championship of Central African nations", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181046-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CEMAC Cup, Knockout stage\nChad reached the final after beating hosts Gabon 3-2. The first goal was scored by Hamtouin Djenet (3'), Gai\u00fcs Doumde added the second (10'), while Cyprien Nguembaye added the third (66'). Scorers for Gabon were Ren\u00e9 Nsi Akou\u00e9 (6', pen.) and Serge Mabiala (68'). Cameroon beat Congo 4-3 after penalties shootout. The match had tied 0-0 at the end of full time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 392]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181047-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL Draft\nThe 2005 CFL Draft took place on Thursday, April 28, 2005 at 11:30 AM ET. 53 players were chosen from among eligible players from Canadian Universities across the country, as well as Canadian players playing in the NCAA. Of the 53 draft selections, 33 players were drafted from Canadian Interuniversity Sport institutions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season\nThe 2005 Canadian Football League season is considered to be the 52nd season in modern-day Canadian football, although it is officially the 48th Canadian Football League season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nNew ownership groups took control of two CFL franchises in the 2005 season. The Calgary Stampeders were sold to an ownership group that is led by Ted Hellard and former Stampeder legend, John Forzani. After going through ownership in-fighting, the Ottawa Renegades announced that a new ownership group led by Bill Smith and former Ottawa Rough Riders owner, Bernie Glieberman, would take over the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nIn April, the Toronto Argonauts plans to build a new stadium at York University had been cancelled due to rising costs. However, the owners of the Rogers Centre announced that the Argonauts would be able to remain at the stadium rent-free. Previously, the Argonauts were charged the highest in terms of rent than any other team in the CFL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nBefore the season began, the CFL through its partnership with Reebok, introduced new home and away uniforms for all nine teams. Third alternate uniforms were created for all of the teams with the exception of the Toronto Argonauts and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nOn June 11, the first ever CFL game in Halifax, Nova Scotia is played for the special Touchdown Atlantic pre-season game between the Toronto Argonauts and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, which ended in a 16\u201316 draw at Huskies Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nMore than 2,303,455 fans filled the stadiums across the country to catch CFL games in 2005, which was a 4% increase from the 2004 season. The 2005 regular season attendance figure also became the all-time highest grossing regular season attendance record in CFL history, by breaking the previous record of 2,229,834 that was set in the 16-game 1978 season. In addition, it marked the fourth consecutive year of national attendance increases for the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nThe 2005 season also saw television audience increases on TSN, CBC and RDS. TSN's CFL broadcast drew an average of 395,000 viewers for its 55 regular season games (and one preseason game), the highest average CFL audience in TSN history. The figure eclipsed the 2004 average minute audience by 27%, with ratings in the male 18\u201334 demographic specifically, increasing 30% over last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nCFL on CBC recorded a 6% increase in 2005 with an average audience of 462,000 (versus 437,000 in 2004), despite a 50-day Canadian Media Guild strike that left the CBC without access to any announcers between August 20 and October 4. Average audiences in RDS were also on the rise in 2005. With an 18-game schedule, RDS averaged 201,000 viewers (versus 189,000 in 2004), a 6% increase over last season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nOn October 28, Saskatchewan linebacker, Trevis Smith was charged with aggravated sexual assault in Surrey, BC for allegedly having unprotected sex while knowing that he is HIV positive. Then on November 18, Trevis Smith was charged with the same offence in Regina, Saskatchewan after another woman came forward alleging that Smith did not tell her that he was HIV positive before they had unprotected sex. A court date has been set for 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005\nOn November 27, the Grey Cup game was decided in overtime for only the second time in its 93-year history, as the Edmonton Eskimos defeated the Montreal Alouettes, 38\u201335 in double OT, at BC Place Stadium in Vancouver, B.C..", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005, Records and Milestones\nWinnipeg slotback, Milt Stegall surpassed Allen Pitts' mark for most career receiving TDs with 126.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005, Records and Milestones\nEskimos quarterback, Ricky Ray completed 479 passes, which marked the highest single season total for a quarterback.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005, Records and Milestones\nWinnipeg Blue Bombers punter, Jon Ryan broke Lui Passaglia's single season average punt record of 50.2 yards by averaging 50.6 yards per punt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005, Records and Milestones\nAfter setting the CFL historical precedent of four receivers on one team reaching the 1000-yard mark in one season the previous year, the Montreal Alouettes again accomplished the feat in 2005, this time with Kerry Watkins (1364 yards), Terry Vaughn (1113 yards), Ben Cahoon (1067 yards), and Dave Stala (1037 yards).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, CFL News in 2005, Records and Milestones\nThe BC Lions started the season by winning 11 consecutive games and were two wins away of breaking the 12\u20130 record set by the 1948 Calgary Stampeders. The Lions could have broken the record, but eventually lost four straight games and ended their last seven games by going 1\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 57], "content_span": [58, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, Regular season\nNote: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 31], "content_span": [32, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181048-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 CFL season, Grey Cup playoffs\nThe Edmonton Eskimos are the 2005 Grey Cup Champions, defeating the Montreal Alouettes 38\u201335 in an overtime thriller played in Vancouver's BC Place Stadium. It was the first Grey Cup game in 44 years to go to overtime. The Eskimos' Ricky Ray (QB) was named the Grey Cup's Most Valuable Player and the Eskimos' Mike Maurer (FB) was the Grey Cup's Most Valuable Canadian.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 34], "content_span": [35, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181049-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CFU Club Championship\n2005 Caribbean Football Union Club Championship was an international club football competition held in the Caribbean to determine the region's qualifier to the CONCACAF Champions' Cup. The 2005 edition included 13 teams from 10 football associations, contested on a two-legged basis. Trinidad and Tobago champion North East Stars, which was only in its fourth year of existence, was given a bye to the quarterfinals. The club then withdrew before the quarterfinals due to a lack of financing. This allowed Surinamese champion Robinhood to eventually reach the final despite never playing a team from Jamaica or Trinidad and Tobago. After Robinhood stunned Jamaican champion Portmore United with a first-leg victory, Portmore recovered to win the tournament with a decisive 4-0 win in the return leg, thereby advancing to the 2006 CONCACAF Champions' Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 881]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181049-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CFU Club Championship, Final\nPortmore United 2005 CFU champions, advance to 2006 CONCACAF Champions' Cup quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181050-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2005 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was played between March 11 and March 13, 2005, at the IRA Civic Center in Grand Rapids, Minnesota. By winning the tournament, Bemidji State received College Hockey America's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181050-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format\nThe tournament featured six teams. The top two teams from the regular season received byes to the semifinals where they played the winners from the quarterfinal games. The two semifinal winners met in the championship game on March 13, 2005, with the winner receiving an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181050-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Format, Conference Standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction\nThe CIA interrogation videotapes destruction occurred on November 9, 2005. The videotapes were made by the United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) during interrogations of Al-Qaeda suspects Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri in 2002 at a CIA black site prison in Thailand. Ninety tapes were made of Zubaydah and two of al-Nashiri. Twelve tapes depict interrogations using \"enhanced interrogation techniques\", a euphemism for torture. The tapes and their destruction became public knowledge in December 2007. A criminal investigation by a Department of Justice special prosecutor, John Durham, decided in 2010 to not file any criminal charges related to destroying the videotapes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 739]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Creation and destruction\nThe first high value detainee in CIA custody was Abu Zubaydah. He was held at a black site in Thailand starting in the spring of 2002. Near the beginning of Zubaydah's detention, a video camera was set up to continuously tape him. Tapes were also made of another early CIA detainee, Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, who arrived in October. The tapes were made from April to December 2002. Ninety tapes were made of Zubaydah and two of al-Nashiri. Twelve tapes depict interrogations using \"enhanced interrogation\" techniques, reportedly including Zubaydah \"vomiting and screaming\" during a waterboarding session.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 675]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Creation and destruction\nSoon after the taping had stopped, CIA clandestine operation officers were pushing for the tapes to be destroyed. However, the General Counsel of the CIA, Scott W. Muller, advised the CIA director, George Tenet, to not destroy the tapes on the CIA's authority. Instead, Muller notified the House and Senate Intelligence Committees in February 2003 that the CIA would like to have them destroyed. Representatives Porter Goss (who later served as CIA Director) and Jane Harman thought that would be politically and legally risky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Creation and destruction\nDays after the photographs from Abu Ghraib became public in May 2004, the CIA tapes were discussed among CIA and White House lawyers. Muller, representing the CIA, met with Alberto Gonzales, David Addington and John B. Bellinger III. The three White House lawyers recommended that the tapes not be destroyed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Creation and destruction\nTenet and Muller left the CIA in mid-2004. By late 2004, several top leadership positions at the CIA had changed. Goss was Director, John A. Rizzo was acting General Counsel, and Jose A. Rodriguez Jr. was chief of the Directorate of Operations. There was also a new White House Counsel, Harriet Miers. In early 2005, Miers told Rizzo not to destroy the tapes without checking with the White House first.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Creation and destruction\nOn November 4, 2005, just after the Washington Post had printed a story about the existence of secret prisons run by the CIA in Eastern Europe, Rodriguez called two CIA lawyers for their opinions. Steven Hermes, a clandestine service lawyer, told Rodriguez he had the authority to destroy the tapes. Robert Eatinger, the top lawyer at the CIA Counterterrorism Center, said there was no legal requirement to keep the tapes. The AP reported that, as both lawyers knew of standing orders from the White House not to destroy the tapes, neither thought Rodriguez would immediately act based on their advice.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Creation and destruction\nRodriguez sent a cable to the CIA's Bangkok station ordering the destruction of the tapes on November 8, 2005. The cable was not copied to anyone other than Rodriguez's chief of staff. It was against standard procedure to act on the advice of agency lawyers without copying them on a decision. Rodriguez informed Goss and Rizzo on November 10, 2005. Rodriguez was never reprimanded for the destruction of the tapes. According to Rodriguez's memoir, Gina Haspel was responsible for \"draft[ing] a cable\" ordering the destruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 71], "content_span": [72, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Requests for interrogation tapes\nBeginning in 2003, lawyers for Zacarias Moussaoui asked for videotapes of interrogations of detainees that might help prove Moussaoui wasn't involved in the September 11 attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Requests for interrogation tapes\nIn May 2005, Senator Jay Rockefeller made a request on behalf of the Senate Judiciary Committee for the CIA to turn over a hundred documents related to the alleged torture of prisoners in American custody. In September, after Porter Goss was named as the new Director of the CIA, Rockefeller renewed his request. Both times, he also mentioned the videotapes, which \"undoubtedly sent a shiver through the agency\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Requests for interrogation tapes\nFrom May to November 2005, Judge Leonie Brinkema was also pressuring the CIA to turn over any videotapes of detainee interrogations as evidence in the trial against Moussaoui. On November 14, the Department of Justice told the court that the CIA did not possess the videotapes that were requested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Requests for interrogation tapes\nThe tapes were not provided to the September 11 Commission, which used classified transcripts of interrogations of Zubaydah in writing its report. Philip D. Zelikow, the Executive Director of the Commission, stated, \"We believe that we asked for such material and we are sure that we were not provided such material.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Requests for interrogation tapes\nThe ACLU claimed that at the time they were destroyed, the tapes should have been turned over according to a federal court order to comply with a FOIA request for information about interrogations. A federal judge ruled in 2011 that the CIA would not be sanctioned for the destruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 79], "content_span": [80, 364]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Making the destruction of the tapes public, December 2007\nOn December 6, 2007, The New York Times advised the Bush administration that they had acquired, and planned to publish, information about the destruction of tapes made of Zubaydah's interrogation, believed to show instances of waterboarding and other forms of possible torture.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Making the destruction of the tapes public, December 2007\nMichael Hayden, the Director of the CIA, sent a letter to CIA staff the next day, briefing them on the destruction of the tapes. Hayden asserted that key members of Congress had been briefed on the existence of the tapes, and the plans for their destruction. Senator Jay Rockefeller, the chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, disputed Hayden's assertion, saying that he only learned of the tapes in November 2006, a year after their destruction.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Making the destruction of the tapes public, December 2007\nJane Harman, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee and one of just four senior members of Congress who was briefed on the existence of the tapes, acknowledged being briefed. Harman responded to Hayden's assertions by saying she had objected, in writing, to the tapes' destruction. \"I told the CIA that destroying videotapes of interrogations was a bad idea and urged them in writing not to do it,\" Harman stated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 104], "content_span": [105, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Investigation\nOn December 8, 2007, the CIA Office of Inspector General and the Department of Justice announced a preliminary joint investigation into the destruction of videotapes of interrogations of the first two detainees in the CIA's custody. Attorney General Michael Mukasey announced the appointment of Connecticut federal prosecutor John H. Durham to start a criminal investigation of the destruction of the tapes on January 2, 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0015-0001", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Investigation\nHayden claimed that the continued existence of the tapes represented a threat to the CIA personnel involved, saying that if the tapes were leaked they might result in CIA personnel being identified and targeted for retaliation. Hayden stated that the tapes were destroyed \"only after it was determined they were no longer of intelligence value and not relevant to any internal, legislative, or judicial inquiries.\" In February 2009, the Obama administration revealed that the CIA had destroyed ninety-two videotapes that contained hundreds of hours of the interrogations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181051-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 CIA interrogation videotapes destruction, Investigation\nOn November 8, 2010, Durham closed the investigation without recommending any criminal charges be filed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 60], "content_span": [61, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181052-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CIS football season\nThe 2005 CIS football season began on September 1, 2005, and concluded with the 41st Vanier Cup national championship on December 3 at Ivor Wynne Stadium in Hamilton, Ontario, with the Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks winning their second championship. Twenty-seven universities across Canada competed in CIS football this season, the highest level of amateur play in Canadian football, under the auspices of Canadian Interuniversity Sport (CIS).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181052-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CIS football season, Results, Regular season standings\nNote: GP = Games Played, W = Wins, L = Losses, OTL = Overtime Losses, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 59], "content_span": [60, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181052-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CIS football season, Results, Championships\nThe Vanier Cup is played between the champions of the Mitchell Bowl and the Uteck Bowl, the national semi-final games. In 2005, according to the rotating schedule, the winners of the Canada West conference Hardy Trophy meet the Dunsmore Cup Quebec champion for the Mitchell Bowl. The winners of the Atlantic conference Loney Bowl championship travel to the Ontario conference's Yates Cup championship team for the Uteck Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181053-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup\nThe 2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup was the 40th. edition of the annual international club football competition held in the CONCACAF region (North America, Central America and the Caribbean), the CONCACAF Champions' Cup. The tournament was also a qualifying event for the 2005 FIFA Club World Championship. Qualifying began September 21, 2004 and final rounds took place in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181053-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup\nCosta Rica's Deportivo Saprissa won the title with a 3\u20132 aggregate win over Mexico's UNAM Pumas in the final. Saprissa had advanced with dramatic wins, once in extra time and once on penalties. Saprissa qualified for the 2005 FIFA Club World Championship in Japan, finishing third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181053-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup\nAs of 2020, this is the last time a non-Mexican team has won the CONCACAF Champions' Cup, now named the CONCACAF Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181053-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, Qualified teams, North American zone\nUNAM Pumas - 2004 Clausura and 2004 Apertura champion Monterrey - 2004 Apertura runner-up D.C. United - 2004 MLS Cup champion Kansas City Wizards - 2004 MLS Cup runner-up", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181053-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Champions' Cup, Qualified teams, Central American zone\nMunicipal - UNCAF champion Saprissa - UNCAF runner-up Olimpia - UNCAF third place", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181054-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nThe 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup was the eighth edition of the Gold Cup, the football championship of North America, Central America and the Caribbean (CONCACAF). It was contested in the United States in July 2005. The United States emerged victorious in the final against an upstart Panama team led by tournament MVP Luis Tejada. After regulation and 30 minutes of extra time ended scoreless, the USA won 3-1 on penalties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181054-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nFor this edition, the format was switched from four groups of three teams each to the three groups of four teams. As a result, there was one more group stage game for each team, and the likelihood of teams advancing on a coin toss was much less. The top two teams from each group and the two best third-place teams would advance to the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181054-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup\nAs usual for the Gold Cup, several of the top teams fielded less than their top squads, including guest teams Colombia and South Africa. Mexico and the United States were missing at least half their usual starters, and a few top name players on smaller nations (Paulo Wanchope and Amado Guevara, among others) also declined to participate. During the tournament, matches in Miami's Group A had to be postponed because of Hurricane Dennis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181054-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup, Squads\nThe 12 national teams involved in the tournament were required to register a squad of 23 players; only players in these squads were eligible to take part in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 30], "content_span": [31, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181055-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final\nThe 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final was a football match to determine the winners of the 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup. The match was held at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on 24 July 2005. It was contested by the winners of the semi-finals, United States and Panama. The game would end in a 0\u20130 draw after extra time, leading to a penalty shoot-out which the United States would win 3\u20131 with the decisive kick coming from Brad Davis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181056-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads\nBelow are the list of squads who participated in the 2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181056-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Player representation, By club nationality\nNations in bold are represented by their national teams in the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181056-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF Gold Cup squads, Player representation, By club nationality\nThe above table is the same when it comes to league representation, with only the following exception:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181057-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament\nThe 2005 CONCACAF U-20 Qualifying Tournament was held to determine the four CONCACAF entrants into the 2005 FIFA World Youth Championship, which was hosted by the Netherlands. The tournament final was held in two groups of four with the top two from each group advancing. Group A was held in United States and Group B was held in Honduras. On January 16, 2005, the United States and Panama qualified to the U-20 World Cup. On January 30, 2005, Canada and Honduras achieved qualification.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181057-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament, Group A\nUnited States hosted Group A. All of the matches were played at the Home Depot Center in Carson, California between January 12\u201316.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181057-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament, Group B\nHonduras hosted Group B. All of the matches were played at Estadio Francisco Moraz\u00e1n in San Pedro Sula between January 26\u201330.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 38], "content_span": [39, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181058-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament qualifying\nThis article features the 2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament qualifying stage. Caribbean and Central American teams entered in separate tournaments. The North American teams Canada and Mexico automatically qualified, as well as main tournament hosts Honduras (Central America) and the United States (North America). Nineteen Caribbean teams entered, of which two qualified and five Central American teams entered, of which two qualified.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181058-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament qualifying, Caribbean, Final Round\nIn this round, Haiti withdrew after one match. The second match was awarded to Jamaica 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 64], "content_span": [65, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181059-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament squads\nThe 2005 CONCACAF U-20 Tournament was an eight nation competition arranged to decide which four nations were to qualify for the FIFA 2005 Under 20 World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181060-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U17 Tournament\nThe 2005 CONCACAF U17 Tournament was played in Costa Rica and Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 98]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181061-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF U17 Tournament qualification\nThe qualification for the 2005 CONCACAF U-17 Tournament took place between July and December 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181062-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CONCACAF and CONMEBOL Beach Soccer Championship\nThe 2005 CONCACAF and CONMEBOL Beach Soccer Championship, also known as the 2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualifiers for (CONCACAF and CONMEBOL), was the first beach soccer championship for the Americas, held in March 2005, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Hosts Brazil won the championship, beating Uruguay in the final, whilst the United States beat Argentina in the third place play off to finish third and fourth respectively. These nations moved on to play in the 2005 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup in Rio de Janeiro from May 8 to May 15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181063-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 COSAFA Cup, Format\nIn the first round, twelve teams were divided into three groups of four teams each. Each group played a knockout tournament. The winners of each group joined Angola (holders) into the final round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 23], "content_span": [24, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181064-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThe 2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n was the 2005 edition of the Spanish official show jumping horse show, at Las Mestas Sports Complex in Gij\u00f3n. It was held as CSIO 5*.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181064-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n\nThis edition of the CSIO Gij\u00f3n was held between 27 August to 4 September.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 89]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181064-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nThe competition was a show jumping competition with two rounds. The height of the fences were up to 1.60 meters. The best six teams of the eleven which participated were allowed to start in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181064-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Nations Cup\nGrey penalties points do not count for the team result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 28], "content_span": [29, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181064-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix\nThe Gij\u00f3n Grand Prix, the Show jumping Grand Prix of the 2005 CSIO Gij\u00f3n, was the major show jumping competition at this event. It was held on 7 August 2005. The competition was a show jumping competition over two rounds, the height of the fences were up to 1.60 meters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 33], "content_span": [34, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181065-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nThe 2005 Cal Poly Mustangs football team represented California Polytechnic State University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181065-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nCal Poly competed in the Great West Football Conference (GWFC). The Mustangs were led by fifth-year head coach Rich Ellerson and played home games at Mustang Stadium in San Luis Obispo, California. The team finished the regular season as co-champion of the GWFC, with a record of eight wins and three losses (8\u20133, 4\u20131 GWFC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 361]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181065-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cal Poly Mustangs football team\nAt the end of the season, the Mustangs qualified for the Division I-AA playoffs. In the first playoff game they defeated Montana. In the quarterfinal playoff game they were defeated by Texas State. That brought their final record to nine wins and four losses (9\u20134, 4\u20131 GWFC). The Mustangs outscored their opponents 354\u2013232 for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181065-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cal Poly Mustangs football team, Team players in the NFL\nThe following Cal Poly Mustang players were selected in the 2006 NFL Draft.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 61], "content_span": [62, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181066-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Calabrian regional election\nThe Calabrian regional election of 2005 took place on 3\u20134 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181066-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Calabrian regional election\nAgazio Loiero (DL, The Union) was elected President of the Region by a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs\nThe 2005 Calder Cup playoffs of the American Hockey League began on April 19, 2005. The sixteen teams that qualified, eight from each conference, played best-of-7 series for division semifinals, finals and conference finals. The conference champions played a best-of-7 series for the Calder Cup. The Calder Cup Final ended on June 10, 2005 with the Philadelphia Phantoms defeating the Chicago Wolves four games to none to win the second Calder Cup in team history. Philadelphia's Antero Niittymaki won the Jack A. Butterfield Trophy as playoff MVP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs\nPhiladelphia set an AHL record by winning 11 consecutive home games in a single playoff. By playing the postseason in the Wachovia Center, the team also managed to settle postseason attendance records, with 20,103 spectators in the cup-clinching game 4 against Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs\nAs the National Hockey League was in the midst of a lockout that canceled that league's entire 2004\u201305 season, the 2005 playoffs featured a higher number of players from the NHL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff seeds\nAfter the 2004\u201305 AHL regular season, 16 teams qualified for the playoffs. The top four teams from each division qualified for the playoffs. The Rochester Americans were the Western Conference regular season champions as well as the Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy winners with the best overall regular season record. The Manchester Monarchs were the Eastern Conference regular season champions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 39], "content_span": [40, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs, Bracket\nIn each round the higher seed receives home ice advantage, meaning they can play a maximum of four home games if the series reaches seven games. There is no set series format for each series due to arena scheduling conflicts and travel considerations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 33], "content_span": [34, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff statistical leaders, Leading skaters\nThese are the top ten skaters based on points. If there is a tie in points, goals take precedence over assists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff statistical leaders, Leading skaters\nGP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/\u2013 = Plus-minus; PIM = Penalty minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 70], "content_span": [71, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff statistical leaders, Leading goaltenders\nThis is a combined table of the top five goaltenders based on goals against average and the top five goaltenders based on save percentage with at least 420 minutes played. The table is initially sorted by goals against average, with the criterion for inclusion in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 74], "content_span": [75, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181067-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Calder Cup playoffs, Playoff statistical leaders, Leading goaltenders\nGP = Games played; W = Wins; L = Losses; SA = Shots against; GA = Goals against; GAA = Goals against average; SV% = Save percentage; SO = Shutouts; TOI = Time on ice (in minutes)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 74], "content_span": [75, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181068-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Calgary Roughnecks season\nThe Calgary Roughnecks are a lacrosse team based in Calgary playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2005 season was the 4th in franchise history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181068-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Calgary Roughnecks season\nThe Roughnecks followed up their Championship season by finishing first in the west in 2005. However, they were not as successful in the playoffs, losing to the Arizona Sting in the division final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181068-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Calgary Roughnecks season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 68], "content_span": [69, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181068-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Calgary Roughnecks season, Player stats, Runners (Top 10)\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 62], "content_span": [63, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181068-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Calgary Roughnecks season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 57], "content_span": [58, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181069-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Calgary Stampeders season\nThe 2005 Calgary Stampeders season was the 48th season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 67th overall. The Stampeders finished 2nd place in the West division with an 11\u20137 record. They appeared in the West Semi-Final where they lost to the Edmonton Eskimos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181070-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Golden Bears football team\nThe 2005 California Golden Bears football team represented the University of California, Berkeley in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at California Memorial Stadium in Berkeley, California and were coached by Jeff Tedford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181070-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Golden Bears football team\nAt the beginning of the season quarterback Nate Longshore was chosen to succeed Aaron Rodgers as the starting quarterback. However he was injured during the first game of the season and replaced by Joe Ayoob for the next nine games. The Bears got off to their best start, at 5\u20130, since Steve Mariucci coached them in 1996. But then stumbled and lost four of their next five games. Third string quarterback Steve Levy, replaced Ayoob, and was named as the starter for the Big Game. Levy played as fullback during the previous season, in his first time as a starter he led the team to defeat Stanford 27-3. The team ended up in the 2005 Las Vegas Bowl, where they beat BYU, 35\u201328.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 721]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181070-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Golden Bears football team, Schedule, Game summaries, USC\nCal then hosted the #1-ranked USC Trojans, led by head coach Pete Carroll and an offense including Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Matt Leinart and running back Reggie Bush. The Trojans scored first after Ayoob's first of four interceptions in the game, on a LenDale White rush. Ayoob recovered after the interception, and led the Bears to a field goal to cut their deficit to four at the end of the first quarter. In the second quarter, Leinart rushed for a pair of touchdowns to give the Trojans a 21\u20133 lead at half-time. After a pair of White rushing touchdowns, the Bears scored again on a Chris Manderino rush that ended scoring in the game, with the Trojans winning 35\u201310. With the win, the Trojans clinched at least a share of the Pac-10 title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 73], "content_span": [74, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181070-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California Golden Bears football team, Schedule, Game summaries, Stanford\nSteve Levy had 125 yards passing and Marshawn Lynch had 123 yards running.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 78], "content_span": [79, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181071-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 73\nProposition 73, the Parental Notification Initiative, would have amended the California Constitution to bar abortion on an unemancipated minor until 48 hours after physician notifies minor's parent/legal guardian, except in medical emergency or with parental waiver. The amendment permitted a judicial waiver of notice based on clear and convincing evidence of the minor's maturity or best interests. The minor's physician must report abortions performed on minors and State shall compile statistics. The amendment authorized monetary damages for violation. The minor must consent to abortion unless mentally incapable or in medical emergency. Permits judicial relief if minor's consent to abortion is coerced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 741]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181071-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 73, State official summary\nProposition 73: Termination of Minor's Pregnancy. Waiting Period and Parental Notification. Initiative Constitutional Amendment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 54], "content_span": [55, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181071-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 73, State official summary, Ballot Summary\nAmends California Constitution to bar abortion on unemancipated minor until 48 hours after physician notifies minor's parent/legal guardian, except in medical emergency or with parental waiver. However, the abortion can still be enacted by the minor with or without the parent's approval after the parents have been notified. Permits judicial waiver of notice based on clear and convincing evidence of minor's maturity or minor's best interests. Physician must report abortions performed on minors and State shall compile statistics. Authorizes monetary damages for violation. Minor must consent to abortion unless mentally incapable or in medical emergency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181071-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 73, State official summary, Ballot Summary\nPermits judicial relief if minor's consent to abortion is coerced. Summary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments: The net costs of this measure to Medi-Cal and other programs are unknown, but are probably not significant in the context of the total expenditures for these programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 70], "content_span": [71, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74\nProposition 74 (2005) was a ballot proposition in the 2005 California special election that intended to extend probationary periods for the state's public school teachers from two years to five before attaining tenure. It failed at the polls, with 55% of voters rejecting it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Background\nNew Jersey actually became the first state to pass tenure legislation when, in 1910, it granted fair-dismissal rights to college professors. The Incumbent law, passed in 1983, required that teachers be evaluated for performance during a two-year probationary period before gaining tenure. In the winter of 2004, California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger sponsored a bill to amend the state Constitution to require merit pay for teachers. The state legislature voted against the bill in February 2005. The next month, Governor Schwarzenegger formally endorsed the Put Kids First Act, written and submitted by Assemblymember Bonnie Garcia (Republican, Cathedral City). That act laid out the conditions for Proposition 74, including increasing probationary period from two to five years and allowing school districts to dismiss teachers who receive two consecutive negative job evaluations. It qualified for the ballot June 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 966]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Summary (From the State Attorney General)\nProposition 74: Public School Teachers. Waiting Period for Permanent Status. Dismissal. Initiative Statute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Summary (From the State Attorney General)\nSummary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 73], "content_span": [74, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Campaign, Support\nGovernor Schwarzenegger, along with former United States Secretary of State and economic advisor to the governor George Shultz and Fresno County Superintendent of Schools Pete Mehas, supported Proposition 74. Prop 74 was one of four propositions (the other three were 73, 75, and 76) the governor touted as his reform package.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Campaign, Support\nOne major point the proponents constantly cited was a horror story: A Riverside teacher swore at her students, showed them R-rated movies, and generally was a bad teacher; however, due to tenure rules, the district had to pay the teacher $25,000 USD to quit. They said that Proposition 74 would make it easier to fire these kinds of teachers because they had a longer tenure period and less paperwork and procedures to fire a teacher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 49], "content_span": [50, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Campaign, Opposition\nCalifornia's two teachers unions, the California Teachers Association and California Federation of Teachers, as well as state superintendent of education Jack O'Connell, opposed the measure. Arguments that the unions presented against Proposition 74 included that its new requirements would discourage new teachers and encourage school districts to lay off older teachers for costing more in salary and benefits, all while doing little to nothing to improve classrooms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 52], "content_span": [53, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181072-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 74, Result\nOn November 8, 2005, California voters soundly rejected the proposition, with 44.8% voting for and 55.2% voting against.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 38], "content_span": [39, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75\nProposition 75 was a ballot proposition in the California special election, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75, Summary (Prepared by the Attorney General)\nProposition 75: Public Employee Union Dues. Required Employee Consent for Political Contributions. Initiative Statute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75, Summary (Prepared by the Attorney General)\nSummary of Legislature Analyst's estimate of net state and local government fiscal impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75, Reaction\nOpponents of this proposition portrayed it as a measure to \"silence the unions,\" since private corporations would not be affected. They also cited a Supreme Court case in which union members could not be forced to join a union, and said that union members could already restrict their dues (opt-out process) towards political purposes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75, Reaction\nThe proponents cited this as a \"Paycheck Protection\" proposition, saying that this would help check union abuse.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75, Reaction\nThe proposition was rejected on November 8, 2005 by 7% or about 500,000 votes statewide", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181073-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 75, Reaction\nSEIU's use of compulsory fees on nonmembers to fund its campaign against Prop. 75 was later found illegal by the U.S. Supreme Court in Knox v. Service Employees International Union, Local 1000. The Court was disturbed that \"SEIU's procedure was to force many nonmembers to subsidize a political effort designed to restrict their own rights.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181074-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 76\nProposition 76 was a ballot proposition in the state of California in the referendum election. It involves school funding, state spending, and is an initiative constitutional amendment.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181074-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 76, Official summary (From the Attorney General)\nSummary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 76], "content_span": [77, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181074-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 76, Results\nThe proposition was defeated with a 24.6% margin or about 1 876 383 voters rejecting it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181075-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 77\nProposition 77 was a California ballot proposition on the 2005 California special election ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181075-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 77, Official summary\nSummary of Legislative Analyst's estimate of net state and local government fiscal impact:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181075-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 77, Results\nThe proposition was rejected with a margin of 19.4% of voters rejecting it (About 1,474,930 ballots).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181076-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 78\nCalifornia Proposition 78, the Prescription Drug Discounts Initiative, was rejected by voters in the California special election, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181076-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 78, Summary\nAccording to a press release from the office of the California Secretary of State, Bruce McPherson the proposition summary was:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181076-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 78, Summary\nEstablishes a discount drug program, overseen by the Department of Health Services. Enables certain low- and moderate- income California residents to purchase prescription drugs at reduced prices. Imposes $15 application fee, renewable annually. Requires Department\u2019s prompt determination of residents\u2019 eligibility, based on listed qualifications. Authorizes Department to contract with pharmacies to sell prescription drugs at agreed-upon discounts negotiated in advance, and to negotiate rebate agreements with drug manufacturers. Permits outreach programs to increase public awareness. Creates state fund for deposit of rebate payments from drug manufacturers. Allows program to be terminated under specified conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 763]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181076-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 78, Summary\nSummary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments: One time and ongoing state costs, potentially in the millions to low tens of millions of dollars annually, for administration and outreach activities to implement the new drug discount program. A significant share of these costs would probably be borne by the state General Fund.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181076-0002-0002", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 78, Summary\nA largely one-time state cost, potentially in the low tens of millions of dollars, to cover the funding gap between the time when drug rebates are collected by the state and when the state pays funds to pharmacies for drug discounts provided to consumers. Any such costs not covered through advance rebate payments from drug manufacturers would be borne by the state General Fund. Unknown savings on state and county health program costs due to the availability of drug discounts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181077-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 79\nCalifornia Proposition 79 (2005) was an initiative (a.k.a. Initiative Statute) in the November 8, 2005 elections that covers the areas of Prescription Drug Discounts and State-Negotiated Rebates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181077-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 79, Summary\nProvides for prescription drug discounts to Californians who qualify based on income-related standards, to be funded through rebates from participating drug manufacturers negotiated by California Department of Health Services. Rebates must be deposited in State Treasury fund, used only to reimburse pharmacies for discounts and to offset administration costs. At least 95% of rebates must go to fund discounts. Prohibits new Medi-Cal contracts with manufacturers not providing the Medicaid best price to this program, except for drugs without therapeutic equivalent. Establishes oversight board. Makes prescription drug profiteering, as defined, unlawful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181077-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 79, Summary\nSummary of estimate by Legislative Analyst and Director of Finance of fiscal impact on state and local governments: One-time and ongoing state costs, potentially in the millions to low tens of millions of dollars annually, for administration and outreach activities for a new drug discount program. A significant share of these costs would probably be borne by the state General Fund. A largely one-time state cost, potentially in the low tens of millions of dollars, to cover the funding gap between the time when drug rebates are collected by the state and when the state pays funds to pharmacies for drug discounts provided to consumers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 681]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181077-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 79, Summary\nAny such costs not covered through advance rebate payments from drug makers would be borne by the state General Fund. Unknown costs and savings as a result of provisions linking drug prices for the new drug discount program to Medi-Cal prices, including the potential effect on the state's receipt of supplemental rebates; unknown savings on state and county health program costs due to the availability of drug discounts; and unknown costs and offsetting revenues from the anti-profiteering provisions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 39], "content_span": [40, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181078-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 80\nCalifornia Proposition 80 was a proposition on the ballot for California voters in a special election to be held November 8, 2005. Of the eight propositions on the ballot, all of which failed, Proposition 80 failed by the largest margin, with 2,580,536 (34.4%) yes votes and 4,920,679 (65.6%) no votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181078-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 80\nDespite being on the special election called by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, the measure was not related to the Schwarzenegger initiatives, nor was the placement on the November ballot intended by proponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181078-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 80, Text from California Voter Information Guide, Summary\nSubjects electric service providers to regulation by California Public Utilities Commission. Restricts electricity customers' ability to switch from private utilities to other providers. Requires all retail electric sellers to increase renewable energy resource procurement by 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181078-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 80, Text from California Voter Information Guide, Summary\nFiscal Impact: Potential annual administrative costs ranging from negligible to $4 million, paid by fees. Unknown net impact on state and local costs and revenues from uncertain impact on electricity rates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 85], "content_span": [86, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181078-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 80, Text from California Voter Information Guide, What Your Vote Means\nA YES vote on this measure means: The Public Utilities Commission (PUC) would have broadened authority to regulate electric service providers. The PUC's current policies related to the electricity procurement process, resource adequacy requirements, and the renewables portfolio standard would be put into law. Small electricity customers in existing buildings could not be required to accept time-differentiated electricity rates without their consent. The current prohibition on new \"direct access\" for electricity service would be continued beyond 2015.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181078-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 California Proposition 80, Text from California Voter Information Guide, What Your Vote Means\nA NO vote on this measure means: The PUC would not have broadened authority to regulate electric service providers. The PUC's current policies related to the electricity procurement process, resource adequacy requirements, and the renewables portfolio standard would not be put into law. The PUC would determine whether and how small electricity customers in existing buildings would be required to have time-differentiated electricity service. New \"direct access\" for electricity service would continue to be prohibited until 2015, after which time it would be allowed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 98], "content_span": [99, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election\nThe California special election of 2005 was held on November 8, 2005 after being called by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on June 13, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Summary\nThe California special election of 2005 was held on November 8, 2005 after being called by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on June 13, 2005. California voters rejected all eight ballot propositions. Propositions 73, 76, and 77 were initiative constitutional amendments while the others were initiative statutes. The election was believed to have been the most expensive in California history. Lobby groups spent hundreds of millions of dollars on gathering signatures and advertising for this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Summary\nSchwarzenegger called the election to allow voters to decide on propositions regarding teacher tenure requirements (Proposition 74), the use of union dues for political campaign contributions (Proposition 75), state budgetary spending limits (Proposition 76), and redistricting (Proposition 77). Schwarzenegger originally proposed a fifth proposition on the issue of public pension, but dropped that proposition amid criticism that the proposition would eliminate death benefits to widows of police and firefighters who died in the line of duty The four propositions that made it to the ballot eventually came to be known as Governor Schwarzenegger's Reform Agenda. The Governor claimed his agenda would clear the way for correction of the problems he was elected to solve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Summary\nAn alliance of public sector unions expended $24 million campaigning against Schwarzenegger's fiscal reform, with the California Teachers Association expending an additional $56 million and going so far as to mortgage its Sacramento headquarters to fund more campaign spending. Schwarzenegger likewise spent nearly $8 million of his own fortune campaigning. The tenor was highly divisive, with Schwarzenegger calling his opponents \u201cstooges\u201d and at one point Warren Beatty leading a bus full of public employees to follow the governor and shout down his events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Summary\nAll Governor Schwarzenegger\u2019s other fiscal reform agenda initiatives were defeated by wide margins. It had been the most expensive election in California history. As the results came out in Sacramento a public union boss waived a broom over his head while state employees chanted \u201csweep, sweep, sweep\u201d. SEIU's use of compulsory fees on nonmembers to fund its campaign was later found illegal by the U.S. Supreme Court in Knox v. Service Employees International Union, Local 1000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Summary\nFour other propositions appeared on the ballot because they qualified for the next statewide elections. The four other propositions were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 41], "content_span": [42, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 73: Parental Notification, Summary\nAmends California Constitution to bar abortion on unemancipated minor until 48 hours after physician notifies minor's parent/legal guardian, except in medical emergency or with parental waiver. Permits judicial waiver of notice based on clear and convincing evidence of minor's maturity or minor's best interests. Physician must report abortions performed on minors and State shall compile statistics. Authorizes monetary damages for violation. Minor must consent to abortion unless mentally incapable or in medical emergency. Permits judicial relief if minor's consent to abortion is coerced.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 74: Public School Teachers Tenure, Summary\nIncreases length of time required before a teacher may become a permanent employee from two complete consecutive school years to five complete consecutive school years; measure applies to teachers whose probationary period commenced during or after the 2003-2004 fiscal year. Authorizes school boards to dismiss a permanent teaching employee who receives two consecutive unsatisfactory performance evaluations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 102], "content_span": [103, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 75: Union Dues - Political Contributions, Summary\nProhibits public employee labor organizations from using dues or fees for political contributions unless the employee provides prior consent each year on a specified written form. Prohibition does not apply to dues or fees collected for charitable organizations, health care insurance, or other purposes directly benefiting the public employee. Requires labor organizations to maintain and submit to the California Fair Political Practices Commission records concerning individual employees' and organizations' political contributions; those records are not subject to public disclosure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 109], "content_span": [110, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 76: State Spending Limits, Summary\nChanges state minimum school funding requirements (Proposition 98), permitting suspension of minimum funding, but terminating repayment requirement, and eliminating authority to reduce funding when state revenues decrease. Excludes above-minimum appropriations from schools' funding base. Limits state spending to prior year total plus revenue growth. Shifts excess revenues from schools/tax relief to budget reserve, specified construction, debt repayment. Requires Governor to reduce state appropriations, under specified circumstances, including employee compensation, state contracts. Continues prior year appropriations if new state budget delayed. Prohibits state special funds borrowing. Requires payment of local government mandates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 94], "content_span": [95, 836]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 77: Redistricting, Summary\nAmends state Constitution\u2019s process for redistricting California\u2019s Senate, Assembly, Congressional and Board of Equalization districts. Requires three-member panel of retired judges, selected by legislative leaders, to adopt new redistricting plan if measure passes and again after each national census. Panel must consider legislative, public proposals/comments and hold public hearings. Redistricting plan becomes effective immediately when adopted by judges\u2019 panel and filed with Secretary of State. If voters subsequently reject redistricting plan, process repeats. Specifies time for judicial review of adopted redistricting plan; if plan fails to conform to requirements, court may order new plan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 86], "content_span": [87, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 78: Drug Discounts, Summary\nEstablishes discount prescription drug program, overseen by the Department of Health Services. Enables certain low - and moderate - income California residents to purchase prescription drugs at reduced prices. Imposes $15 application fee, renewable annually. Requires Department's prompt determination of residents' eligibility, based on listed qualifications. Authorizes Department to contract with pharmacies to sell prescription drugs at agreed-upon discounts negotiated in advance, and to negotiate rebate agreements with drug manufacturers. Permits outreach programs to increase public awareness. Creates state fund for deposit of rebate payments from drug manufacturers. Allows program to be terminated under specified conditions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 87], "content_span": [88, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 79: Drug Discounts (Consumer Groups Backed), Summary\nProvides for prescription drug discounts to Californians who qualify based on income-related standards, to be funded through rebates from participating drug manufacturers negotiated by California Department of Health Services. Rebates must be deposited in State Treasury fund, used only to reimburse pharmacies for discounts and to offset administration costs. At least 95% of rebates must go to fund discounts. Prohibits new Medi-Cal contracts with manufacturers not providing the Medicaid best price to this program, except for drugs without therapeutic equivalent. Establishes oversight board. Makes prescription drug profiteering, as defined, unlawful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 112], "content_span": [113, 769]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181079-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 California special election, Propositions, Proposition 80: Electricity Regulation, Summary\nSubjects electric service providers, as defined, to control and regulation by California Public Utilities Commission. Imposes restrictions on electricity customers' ability to switch from private utilities to other electric providers. Provides that registration by electric service providers with Commission constitutes providers' consent to regulation. Requires all retail electric sellers, instead of just private utilities, to increase renewable energy resource procurement by at least 1% each year, with 20% of retail sales procured from renewable energy by 2010, instead of current requirement of 2017. Imposes duties on Commission, Legislature and electrical providers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 95], "content_span": [96, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181080-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California wildfires\nThe 2005 California wildfires were a series of wildfires that were active in the state of California during the year 2005. In total, there were 7,162 fires that burned 222,538 acres (900.58\u00a0km2) of land.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181080-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California wildfires, Fires\nBelow is a list of all fires that exceeded 1,000 acres (4.0\u00a0km2) during the 2005 fire season. The list is taken from CAL FIRE's list of large fires.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 32], "content_span": [33, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181080-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California wildfires, Labor Day brush fire\nOn Labor Day Monday, September 5, 2005, a small brush fire erupted and burned parts of Rancho Pe\u00f1asquitos and Black Mountain Open Space Park. The wildfire quickly grew to 200 acres (0.81\u00a0km2), and triggered the evacuation of 200 homes in Rancho Pe\u00f1asquitos, before further growth was stopped by firefighters. The fire was fully extinguished by September 7. Despite its small size, the brush fire was the worst wildfire to affect San Diego City in two years, since the Cedar Fire of 2003. The wildfire resulted in 6 injuries, but did not result in structural damages. The brush fire determined to have been started by a teenage boy, who was subsequently arrested.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 47], "content_span": [48, 710]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election\nIn the fall of 2005, a special election was held in California's 48th congressional district to choose a United States Representative to replace Republican Christopher Cox, who resigned effective August 2, 2005, to become Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. A Special primary election was held on October 4. Because no candidate received more than 50% of the vote, a runoff general election took place on December 6, 2005. The top vote getter from each party moved to the runoff contest, which only required a candidate to receive a plurality of the vote. Republican candidate John Campbell ultimately won the runoff with only 44% of the vote, as there were three major candidates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, District geography\nThe district is located in Orange County in southern California, and includes the cities of Aliso Viejo, Dana Point, Irvine, Laguna Beach, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Woods Lake Forest (formerly known as El Toro), Tustin, and parts of Newport Beach, San Juan Capistrano, and Santa Ana.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 82], "content_span": [83, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates\nTen Republicans qualified for the special primary election. California State Senator John Campbell won the Republican nomination by coming in first in the special primary election. Former State Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer came in second. Other Republican candidates included dentist David R. Crouch, former Tustin councilman John Kelly, attorney Scott MacCabe, attorney Guy E. Mailly, real estate agent Masha A. Morris, businessman Marshall Samuel Sanders, businessman Edward A. Suppe, and physician Don A. Udall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates\nFour Democrats qualified for the special primary election. Attorney Steve Young, UCI professor John Graham (who ran for the seat in three previous elections against Chris Cox: 2000, 2002 and 2004), teacher Bea Foster, and marketing consultant Tom Pallow.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates\nReal estate agent Bruce D. Cohen of the Libertarian Party and teacher B\u00e9a Tiritilli of the Green Party were both unopposed for the nominations of their respective parties. Minuteman Project founder Jim Gilchrist was eventually chosen for the American Independent Party nomination. Former Republican Congressman Bob Dornan also briefly tried to capture the nomination of the American Independent Party, but was rebuffed by the party's leaders. Dornan would later endorse Gilchrist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates\nCampbell and Brewer were generally considered the frontrunners, with Gilchrist viewed as a possible spoiler against Campbell in the special primary election. Campbell had the backing of many major Republican officeholders, including Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, and closely identified with the policies of President George W. Bush. Brewer was considered the more moderate alternative, in favor of abortion and stem cell research and endorsed by Senator John McCain. A sore point for some conservatives in the district was Campbell's position on illegal immigration. Gilchrist ran as a third party candidate primarily on his support for stronger immigration laws.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates, Political climate\nThe district is overwhelmingly conservative, with Republicans enjoying a 2 to 1 voter registration advantage (Christopher Cox won his last bid for re-election with 65% of the vote). Most pundits therefore viewed the contest as which Republican candidate would get the honor of filling the vacant seat. Because John Campbell obtained the majority of the endorsements within the Republican establishment, and was able to raise over $2,000,000, it quickly became apparent that Campbell would be destined to win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 93], "content_span": [94, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates, Political climate\nCampbell's strategy was to ensure that Jim Gilchrist would not \"steal\" too many votes that would have otherwise gone to him had Gilchrist not run. Gilchrist for his part, spent $500,000 to ensure that the topic of illegal immigration is prominent in the race. Democratic attorney Steve Young spent a large amount of his own money in the hope that Gilchrist and Campbell will split the conservative vote to a point which would allow him to edge both of them. Although Gilchrist spent more than twice the amount Young spent, Young edged Gilchrist for second place by two percentage points in the December 6 general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 93], "content_span": [94, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Candidates, Political climate\nCampbell's confidence in his victory was quite evident. In September, he skipped a candidate forum, and in November he attended a fundraiser for himself in Washington D.C. in which Dick Cheney was the guest of honor. He also bought a December 7 early morning airplane ticket to Washington days before the December 6 runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 93], "content_span": [94, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Results of special primary election\nOn October 4, Republican John Campbell garnered 45.5 percent of the vote, 4.5 percent short of the majority necessary to avoid a runoff race. He faced the leading vote getter from the four other parties participating: American Independent Jim Gilchrist, Democrat Steve Young, Green B\u00e9a Tiritilli, and Libertarian Bruce Cohen in a December 6 runoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 99], "content_span": [100, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Results of special general election\nThe result of the December 6 general election are notable in that Campbell's plurality actually decreased by more than a point, and the combined Democratic total nearly doubled in the general election, with Gilchrist additionally gaining ten points. This would seem to indicate that a large majority of the voters who voted for a Republican candidate other than Campbell in the October 4 special primary election, did not rally behind Campbell in the special general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 99], "content_span": [100, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Postscript\nCampbell's victory caused a vacancy in the 35th State Senate district. A special primary election was scheduled for April 11, 2006. Two Republicans: Assemblymember and former Huntington Beach, California councilmember Tom Harman, and Dana Point, California councilmember Diane Harkey raised $330,000 and $800,000 respectively for the race (Harkey spent $620,000 of her own money). The Democratic candidate, Larry Caballero, spent virtually nothing. In a race that was largely centered on the issue of illegal immigration, Harman edged Harkey by 236 votes, out of over 98,000 votes cast.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Postscript\nHarkey sought a recount of the official results, at a cost of $14,000 (which she had to pay for). The recount did not change the outcome, with Harman's lead shrinking to 225 votes. Harman faced Caballero in a runoff on June 6 and won the race to succeed Campbell by a 2-1 margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181081-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 48th congressional district special election, Postscript\nHarman's election to the State Senate left a vacancy in the State Assembly, which stayed vacant until December 4, 2006, when Jim Silva was sworn in after winning the regularly scheduled election for the seat on November 7.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 74], "content_span": [75, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181082-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 California's 5th congressional district special election\nOn March 8, 2005, a special election was held in the California's 5th congressional district to choose a U.S. Representative to replace Bob Matsui, who had died of pneumonia shortly after being re-elected in the 2004 elections. Matsui's wife, Doris, was quickly able to win support from the Democratic Party officials, and ended up winning over two-thirds of the vote in the special primary election, meaning a run-off would not be needed. As of 2021, this is the last time a widow succeeded their spouse in Congress.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181084-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cambridgeshire County Council election\nAn election to Cambridgeshire County Council took place on 5 May 2005 as part of the 2005 United Kingdom local elections. The election took place on the same day as the 2005 United Kingdom General Election. 69 councillors were elected from 60 electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting. New electoral division boundaries were brought in for this election, increasing the number of seats from the 59 seats at the 2001 Cambridgeshire County Council election. The Conservative Party retained their majority on the council, while the Labour Party lost all their rural councillors with their representation limited to the city of Cambridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 744]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181084-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cambridgeshire County Council election, Party strength by electoral division\nThe following maps show the percentage of the vote each party obtained by electoral division. A colour key for each map can be viewed by clicking on the image.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181085-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cameroonian Premier League\nIn the 2005 Cameroonian Premier League season, 18 teams competed. Cotonsport Garoua won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181086-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campania regional election\nThe Campania regional election of 2005 took place on 3\u20134 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181086-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campania regional election\nAntonio Bassolino (Democrats of the Left, then Democratic Party) was re-elected defeating Italo Bocchino (National Alliance) by a landslide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181087-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campbell's Hall of Fame Championships\nThe 2005 Campbell's Hall of Fame Championships was the 30th edition of the tennis tournament Hall of Fame Tennis Championships. It was played on outdoor grass courts at the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in the United States and was part of the ATP International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place from July 4 through July 10, 2005. Third-seeded Greg Rusedski won the final over Vince Spadea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181087-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campbell's Hall of Fame Championships, Finals, Doubles\nJordan Kerr / Jim Thomas defeated Graydon Oliver / Travis Parrott 7\u20136(7\u20135), 7\u20136(7\u20135)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 59], "content_span": [60, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181088-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campbell's Hall of Fame Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nGreg Rusedski was the defending champion. Rusedski successfully defended his title, beating Vincent Spadea in the final, 7\u20136(7\u20133), 2\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181089-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby, Campeonato\nNew formula: 8 eight teams divided in two pools. The first two of each pool admitted to semifinals. The fourth teams to a play-out to avoid relegation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181089-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Argentino de Rugby, Ascenso\nSixteen team divided in 4 pools . The first two of each pool to play-offs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A\nThe 2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A (officially the Ta\u00e7a Nestl\u00e9 Brasileir\u00e3o 2005 for sponsorship reasons) was the 49th edition of the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A. Corinthians claiming their fourth national title. The season officially kicked off on April 23, 2005 and concluded on December 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, The season, Champion and contenders\nPre -season favorites Corinthians captured their fourth national championship edition despite a turbulent early season and a campaign that went through 3 different head coaches. Key players Carlos Tevez, Carlos Alberto, Roger and Gustavo Nery led the team to a result of 81 points in 42 games. Despite early season turmoil, Corinthians benefited from being one of the few teams in Brazil who could afford to maintain their talent base throughout the season without having to sell key players. The legitimacy of their title was disputed late in the season due to several scandals on and off the field. As 2005 champions, Corinthians received berth into the first round of the Libertadores Cup as well as the South American Cup in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 806]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, The season, Champion and contenders\nInternacional of Rio Grande du Sul executed a strong campaign, finishing with a total of 78 points. Coach Muricy Ramalho led a team with Rafael Sobis, Fernand\u00e3o, and Tinga to the best performance of any team in the second half, narrowly missing the opportunity for their own fourth national title, but also securing a place in the first round of the Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, The season, Champion and contenders\nGoi\u00e1s and Palmeiras were awarded pre-Libertadores qualifying matches with teams to be determined by Conmebol for their 3rd (Goi\u00e1s's best ever) and 4th-place finishes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, The season, Consolation prize\nIn the top middle of the pack Fluminense, Atl\u00e9tico/PR, Paran\u00e1, Cruzeiro, Botafogo, Santos, and S\u00e3o Paulo were awarded allocations in the 2006 Copa Sul-Americana; with S\u00e3o Paulo, who cannot participate due to Libertadores commitments, ceding their spot to 12th placed Vasco da Gama. Santos in particular saw their season nose-dive as star player Robinho was transferred to Real Madrid mid season (a similar fate encountered by Cruzeiro as striker Fred was shipped off to Lyon). Atl\u00e9tico/PR and S\u00e3o Paulo both suffered for having to dedicate their primary attention to the 2005 Libertadores Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, The season, The bottom\nFinishing in the bottom four and relegated to S\u00e9rie B for 2006 are storied franchise Atl\u00e9tico Mineiro as well as perennial mid-majors Coritiba, Paysandu, and Brasiliense. S\u00e9rie B champions and runner-up Gr\u00eamio and Santa Cruz took their place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 58], "content_span": [59, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Turmoil on and off the field\nThe season experienced significant turmoil off the field, marred by a match fixing scandal, which resulted in the replay of 11 s\u00e9rie A matches between rounds 31 and 37.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 64], "content_span": [65, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181090-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie A, Statistics, Mid-season transactions\nWhile the CBF and Clube dos 13 continue to modify the league format in the hopes of decreasing the number of mid-season departures and improve the overall quality of play, the 2006 edition saw a significant number of players depart for Europe and elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 71], "content_span": [72, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181091-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B 2005, the second level of the Brazilian National League, was played from April 23 to November 26, 2005. The competition had 22 clubs, of which two were promoted to the S\u00e9rie A and six were relegated to the S\u00e9rie C.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 283]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181091-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nIn the first round, every team played against each other, much like what happens in the S\u00e9rie A. Differently from the S\u00e9rie A, each team played against the other only once. Thus, each team played 21 games, 11 home and 10 away (or the opposite), for a total of 231 games. The eight best ranked teams advanced to the second round, where they were divided into two groups of four. Teams in each group played against each other home and away. The two best ranked teams in each group advanced to the final round. Those four teams were put into a single group, and played against each other home and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181091-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie B\nThe Gr\u00eamio finished with the most points, advancing to the S\u00e9rie A along with Santa Cruz. The six last ranked teams in the first round (Anapolina, Bahia, Caxias, Crici\u00fama, Uni\u00e3o Barbarense and Vit\u00f3ria) were relegated to play the S\u00e9rie C in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181092-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C\nIn 2005, the Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C was composed of five rounds. In the first one, the 64 teams were divided in 16 groups of 4 teams each. Teams in each group played against each other in home and away games. The two best ranked teams of each group advanced to the second round, where they were paired 2-by-2 and played home and away games. The 32 teams played such rounds until there were just four teams left. The four eventual finalists were put in a single group, and played against each other in home and away games. Am\u00e9rica (RN) and Remo (PA) were promoted to the S\u00e9rie B, beating Novo Hamburgo (RS) and Ipatinga (MG).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 666]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181093-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Carioca\nThe 2005 edition of the Campeonato Carioca kicked off on January 22 and ended on April 17, 2005. It is the official tournament organized by FFERJ (Federa\u00e7\u00e3o de Futebol do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, or Rio de Janeiro State Football Federation. Only clubs based in the Rio de Janeiro State are allowed to play. Twelve teams contested this edition. Fluminense won the title for the 30th time. Olaria was relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense\nThe 80th season of the Campeonato Catarinense began on January 23, 2005, and ended on April 17, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Format\nThe winner of the third stage is crowned the champion. The champion qualify to Campeonato Brasileiro S\u00e9rie C 2005 and qualify to Copa do Brasil 2006", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Format\nThe teams that do not participate in Brazilian S\u00e9rie A and Brazilian S\u00e9rie B will participate in S\u00e9rie A2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 35], "content_span": [36, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Third stage, Semi-Finals\n*The first games were played in Team 1 StadiumItalic: Teams qualify to Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 53], "content_span": [54, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Third stage, Final\n* The Game 2 was played in Ibirama, because the Clube Atl\u00e9tico Hermann Aichinger (Atl\u00e9tico de Ibirama) had better Punctuation in the two stages (Stage 1 points + Stage 2 points).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Final standings\n* Atl\u00e9tico de Ibirama qualify to S\u00e9rie C, because Crici\u00fama already was qualify to Serie B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Other Divisions\n* Marc\u00edlio Dias qualify to S\u00e9rie C, because Joinville already was qualify to Serie C", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181094-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Catarinense, Other Divisions\n*The Serie A2 transformed in 2006 in Divis\u00e3o Especial and S\u00e9rie B1 in Divis\u00e3o de Accesso", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181095-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A\nThe 2005 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol de la Serie A 2005, known as 2005 Copa P\u00edlsener Serie A for sponsorship reasons, was the 48th season of the Serie A, the top level of professional football in Ecuador. The season was divided into two tournaments, called the Apertura and Clausura, with the winner of each earning separate national titles. To date, it marks the only time in Serie A history that two titles were awarded in one year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181095-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Campeonato Apertura\nThe Apertura tournament was set into two stages. The First Stage was a double round-robin tournament where each team plays the other nine teams twice, once at home and once away. The top eight teams advanced to a two-leg single elimination knockout stage. The last team in the First Stage was relegated to Serie B. The winner of the knockout stage is the Apertura champion, and qualifies as the Ecuador 1 berth in the 2006 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181095-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Campeonato Apertura, Playoff stage\n(*) Barcelona and D. Cuenca advance because of better First Stage records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 81], "content_span": [82, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181095-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Ecuatoriano de F\u00fatbol Serie A, Campeonato Clausura\nThe Clausura tournament was set into two stages. The First Stage was a double round-robin tournament where each team played the other nine teams twice, once at home and once away. The top six teams in the First Stage advanced to the Liguilla Final, with the top three earning bonus points (3, 2, and 1 point respectively). The last team in the First Stage was relegated to Serie B. The winner of the Liguilla Final was the Clausura champion. The champion and runner-up qualified as the Ecuador 2 and Ecuador 3 berth in the 2006 Copa Libertadores. ESPOLI was promoted to Serie A at the end of Serie B's 2005 Apertura tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 66], "content_span": [67, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181096-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Ga\u00facho\nThe 2005 Campeonato Ga\u00facho kicked off on January 30, 2005 and ended June 12, 2005. The 85th season of the league saw eighteen teams participating, with holders Internacional beating 15 de Novembro in the finals for their 37th title. Guarani de Ven\u00e2ncio Aires and S\u00e3o Gabriel were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181097-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Mineiro\nThe 2005 Campeonato Mineiro de Futebol do M\u00f3dulo I was the 91st season of Minas Gerais's top-flight professional football league. The season began on January 23 and ended on April 17. Ipatinga won the title for the 1st time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 248]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181098-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato Paulista\nThe 2005 Campeonato Paulista de Futebol Profissional da Primeira Divis\u00e3o - S\u00e9rie A1 was the 104th season of S\u00e3o Paulo's top professional football league. The competition began on 19 January and ended on 17 April. S\u00e3o Paulo were the champions for the 21st time in history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181099-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campeonato da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o do Futebol\nStatistics of Campeonato da 1\u00aa Divis\u00e3o do Futebol in the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181100-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campe\u00f3n de Campeones\nThe 2005 Campeon de Campeones was the 41st edition of this Mexican Super Cup football two leg match played by:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181101-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia\nThe 2005 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia was a men's tennis tournaments played on outdoor clay courts in Palermo, Italy that was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It was the 27th edition of the tournament and was held from 26 September until 2 October 2005. Unseeded Igor Andreev won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181101-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Campionati Internazionali di Sicilia, Finals, Doubles\nMart\u00edn Garc\u00eda / Mariano Hood defeated Mariusz Fyrstenberg / Marcin Matkowski 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 58], "content_span": [59, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181102-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Cup\nThe 2005 Canada Cup was a women's rugby union competition held in Ottawa, Canada, between 29 June 2005 \u2013 8 July 2005. It was the sixth tournament held, and the fourth to be called the \"Canada Cup\"; for the first time the USA did not take part\u00a0\u2014 Canada's opponents were New Zealand and Scotland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181102-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Cup\nThe competition returned to the 2003 format with a three nation round-robin, followed by a final between the top two.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181103-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Cup of Curling\nThe 2005 Strauss Canada Cup of Curling was held March 15\u201320, 2005, at Sport Mart Place in Kamloops, British Columbia. The winning teams received berths into the 2005 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181103-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Cup of Curling\nFuture Olympic champion Kevin Martin won the men's event, while 2006 Olympic bronze medalist Shannon Kleibrink won the women's event, which aided her path to reach the Olympics. She had already qualified for the Trials, so the runner-up Jan Betker rink earned a berth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181103-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Cup of Curling\nThe total purse for the event was $180,000. Martin's team won $37,750, while Team Kleibrink took home $37,250.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181103-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Cup of Curling\nWhile it was the third edition of the Canada Cup, the 2005 event was the first to be a part of Curling Canada's Season of Champions programme.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181104-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada Summer Games\nThe 2005 Canada Summer Games were held in Regina, Saskatchewan, from August 6\u201320, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181105-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada rugby union tour of France and Romania\nThe 2005 Canada rugby union tour of France and Romania was a series of matches played in November 2005 in France and Romania by the Canada national rugby union team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181105-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada rugby union tour of France and Romania, Results, Against France\nFrance: 15.Thomas Castaignede, 14.Aurelien Rougerie, 13.David Marty, 12.Yannick Jauzion, 11.Cedric Heymans, 10.Frederic Michalak, 9.Dimitri Yachvili, 8.Thomas Lievremont, 7.Remy Martin, 6.Julien Bonnaire, 5.Jerome Thion (capt), 4.Lionel Nallet, 3.Pieter de Villiers, 2.Sebastien Bruno, 1.Sylvain Marconnet, \u2013 replacements: 16.Raphael Ibanez, 17.Olivier Milloud, 18.Gregory Lamboley, 19.Yannick Nyanga, 20.Pierre Mignoni, 22.Julien Laharrague \u2013 No entry\u00a0: 21.Yann DelaigueCanada: 15.Derek Daypuck, 14.Mike Pyke, 13.Ryan Smith, 12.John Cannon, 11.Brodie Henderson, 10.Ed Fairhurst, 9.Morgan Williams (capt), 8.Aaron Carpenter, 7.Stan McKeen, 6.Mike Webb, 5.Jamie Cudmore, 4.Mike James, 3.Garth Cooke, 2.Aaron Abrams, 1.Kevin Tkachuk, \u2013 replacements: 16.Mark Lawson, 17.Casey Dunning, 18.Forrest Gainer, 19.Mike Burak, 20.Adam Kleeberger, 21.Matt Weingart, 22.Ryan McWhinney", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 75], "content_span": [76, 953]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181105-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canada rugby union tour of France and Romania, Results, The test against Romania\nRomania: 15.Catalin Fercu, 14.Gabriel Brezoianu, 13.Valentin Maftei, 12.Romeo Gontineac, 11.Ion Teodorescu, 10.Ionut Dimofte, 9.Lucian Sirbu, 8.Ovidiu Tonita, 7.Alex Manta, 6.Florin Corodeanu, 5.Sorin Socol (capt), 4.Cristian Petre, 3.Petrisor Toderasc, 2.Marius Tincu, 1.Petru Balan, \u2013 replacements: 16.Marcel Socaciu, 17.Cezar Popescu, 18.Valentin Ursache, 19.Cosmin Ratiu, 20.Dan Vlad, 21.Dan Dumbrava Canada: 15.Mike Pyke, 14.Ryan Stewart, 13.Ryan Smith, 12.Ryan McWhinney, 11.Brodie Henderson, 10.Dave Spicer, 9.Morgan Williams (capt. ), 8.Aaron Carpenter, 7.Stan McKeen, 6.Josh Jackson, 5.Scott Hunter, 4.Mike Burak, 3.Garth Cooke, 2.Mark Lawson, 1.Kevin Tkachuk, \u2013 replacements: 16.Aaron Abrams, 17.Casey Dunning, 18.Forrest Gainer, 19.Adam Kleeberger, 21.Dean van Camp \u2013 No entry: 20.Matt Weingart, 22.Derek Daypuck", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [52, 85], "content_span": [86, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181106-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Canadian Figure Skating Championships took place from January 17 through 23rd, 2005 at the John Labatt Centre in London, Ontario. It is a figure skating national championship held annually to determine the national champions of Canada and is organized by Skate Canada, the nation's figure skating governing body. Skaters competed at the senior and junior levels in the disciplines of men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181106-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Figure Skating Championships\nAlthough the official ISU terminology for female skaters in the singles category is ladies, Skate Canada's official terminology is women and that is the term used in the official results. Due to the number of entries, the men's and women's competition had a qualifying round and the qualifying round was split in half to accommodate all the skaters. The results of this competition were used to pick the Canadian teams to the 2005 World Championships, the 2005 Four Continents Championships, and the 2005 World Junior Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Canadian Grand Prix (officially the Formula 1 Grand Prix du Canada 2005) was a Formula One motor race held on 12 June 2005 at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The 70-lap race was the eighth round of the 2005 Formula One season, the 43rd running of the Canadian Grand Prix, and the 37th running as a round of the World Championship. It set a ratings record and was the most watched F1 race in history. It was also the first of two consecutive North American rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix\nThe race was won by McLaren driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, taking his third win from four races. The two Ferrari cars completed the podium, with Michael Schumacher in second place and Rubens Barrichello in third. Both Renaults failed to finish the race, but the team maintained their lead in the Constructors' Championship; their driver, Fernando Alonso also kept his lead in the Drivers' Championship, despite the gap between himself and nearest rival R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen closing by ten points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nChristian Klien returned for the first of four confirmed races in the Red Bull Racing car, with American Scott Speed filling in the Friday testing role.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Practice and qualifying\nAfter retiring on the last lap of the European Grand Prix, Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was the 11th driver on the track in qualifying, and he managed to line up 7th on the grid. Ferrari's Rubens Barrichello suffered a gearbox failure before the start of his qualifying lap, and was forced to abort his run. Jenson Button managed to take pole position, with Michael Schumacher second, and both Renault drivers on the second row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 57], "content_span": [58, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nBarrichello, who would have been last on the grid, decided to start the race from pitlane, putting extra fuel in his car. At race start, both Button and Schumacher got away slowly, and Giancarlo Fisichella and Fernando Alonso took off well to move into first and second by the first corner. The McLarens of Juan Pablo Montoya and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen were also able to pass Schumacher, moving into 4th and 5th behind Button. Further back in the field, BAR's Takuma Sato made a small mistake, but did not lose a large amount of time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn the second lap, Fisichella was able to widen the gap back to Alonso, while local driver Jacques Villeneuve was forced to pit for a new front wing, leaving him at the back of the field. As the race continued, the Renault's pulled further away from the pack, and Barrichello was constantly moving up the field, up to 15th position by the end of lap 8. Narain Karthikeyan had a spin after a mistake in turn 1, allowing Jordan teammate Tiago Monteiro past.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMichael Schumacher became the first driver to take his scheduled pitstop, refuelling on lap 12 to drop from 6th to 12th position. Three laps later, Button and Ralf Schumacher showed their hands, also entering the pits for more fuel. Button dropped from 3rd to 7th, leaving the two Renaults to lead from the two McLarens. On lap 21, the first of the two-stoppers pitted, with Felipe Massa, Nick Heidfeld and Klien all entering pitlane. The following lap, Sato entered his garage, apparently retiring from the race with gearbox trouble.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nLap 24 saw the first of the leaders pit, with championship contenders Alonso and R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen refuelling, before both of their teammates pitted on the following lap. On exiting the pits, Montoya went too fast on cold tyres, leaving the track and allowing Alonso to retain 2nd position. Karthikeyan hit the wall at the back end of the circuit, forcing him to retire from the race. Mark Webber, up to 7th position through a very long first stint, pitted on lap 28, and fed back into the race 9th, just ahead of Massa, Heidfeld and Ralf Schumacher. On the following lap, Webber went wide onto the grass, and in attempting to make up time, braked too late into the hairpin, running very wide and losing 3 positions. Barrichello became the final driver to pit on lap 31, dropping from 8th to 12th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 828]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAfter following close behind for several laps, and appearing to be quicker, Alonso passed teammate Fisichella for the lead on lap 33, but Fisichella obviously had a technical problem, as Montoya easily passed him on the same lap. Fisichella entered the pits to retire at the end of the lap, with hydraulic system problems. On lap 34, both Button and Michael Schumacher took their second stops, retaining 4th and 5th positions. On lap 35, Alonso led from Montoya, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, Button, Schumacher and Jarno Trulli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nHowever, on lap 39, Alonso ran wide at the exit of turn 4 and hit the outside wall, damaging his suspension and forcing him to retire from the race. This left Montoya in the lead, followed by R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen. After following Massa for several laps, Heidfeld's BMW engine failed, allowing Ralf Schumacher into 7th and Webber to 8th. Takuma Sato rejoined the race 24 laps behind, after the B.A.R team fixed his car in order to gain him a slightly better starting position in qualifying for the following grand prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 49, the gap from Montoya to R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was reduced to around 3 seconds. Button, under pressure from Michael Schumacher, made a mistake at the final chicane, hitting the inside kerb heavily, which forced him into the \"wall of champions\" on the outside. Button was forced to retire from the race, handing 3rd position to Schumacher, and causing the deployment of the safety car as Button's car was in a dangerous position. Every car took the opportunity to pit besides Montoya, who was forced to stay out an extra lap while R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was refuelled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn exiting the pits, Montoya re-entered the race under the safety car, which had just led the train of cars through turns 1 and 2. Montoya slipped into 2nd, slightly ahead of David Coulthard on track, although the Red Bull Racing driver had been lapped. Before the restart, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen led from Montoya, Michael Schumacher, Trulli, Webber, Massa, Barrichello and Ralf Schumacher. As the safety car re-entered the pits, Webber made a mistake into turn 1, allowing both Massa and Barrichello through, although the Sauber driver was forced wide and Barrichello moved into 5th. Soon after, it was announced that Montoya was under investigation by the stewards, and he was black-flagged (disqualified) from the race for exiting the pits while a red light was showing (as the safety car was on the pit straight), making it his 2nd consecutive disqualification in Canada.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 901]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs the race entered the closing stages, Michael Schumacher closed in on R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, who was troubled by a misaligned steering wheel. Trulli appeared to be having trouble with his brakes, and retired when they failed, leaving Barrichello in a comfortable 3rd position. However, Barrichello made a small error, allowing Massa to close up behind, but Webber was also close to Massa. Meanwhile, Takuma Sato appeared to have a mechanical failure which forced him to spin at the hairpin, before the rear of his car caught fire due to overheating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181107-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was able to retain his 1-second gap back to Schumacher to take the race win, with Barrichello more than 30 seconds behind in 3rd position. Webber was close to Massa into the final corner, but was unable to pass, leaving Massa to take a valuable 4th position and 5 championship points. Completing the pointscorers were Ralf Schumacher, Coulthard and Klien. The result meant R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen reduced the gap in the championship standings to just 22 points, and the double-podium for Ferrari allowed them to close up in the constructors championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181108-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Junior Curling Championships\nThe 2005 K\u00e4rcher Canadian Junior Curling Championships were held February 5-13 at the Capital Winter Club and the Lady Beaverbrook Rink in Fredericton, New Brunswick. The winning teams represented Canada at the 2005 World Junior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181108-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nThe Teranet Ontario Junior Curling Championships were held January 5-9 at the Peterborough Curling Club in Peterborough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181108-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nErin Morrissey of the Rideau Curling Club defeated Laura Payne from the Prescott Curling Club in the women's final. Payne had beaten the Leslie Bishop rink from the Weston club in Toronto 8-5 in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181108-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Junior Curling Championships, Qualification, Ontario\nIn the men's final, Mark Bice of Sarnia defeated Mike Callan of Oakville 9-3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181109-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2005 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship was held November 21-28, 2004 at the Prince Albert Golf and Country Club in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181109-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nThe 2005 Mixed was the 2nd Canadian Mixed Championship to be held in the 2004 calendar year, as the Canadian Curling Association moved the event from the Spring to the Fall. The Mixed has been held in the Fall ever since, and has been referred to the following calendar year ever since. The event also changed playoff formats, moving from the page playoff system to a 3-team playoff.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181109-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Mixed Curling Championship\nNewfoundland and Labrador won its first ever Mixed championship, as Mark Nichols, sister Shelley Nichols, Brent Hamilton and Jennifer Guzzwell from the St. John's Curling Club won the championship, defeating Saskatchewan in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181110-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian National Challenge Cup\nThe 2005 Canadian National Challenge Cup was won by Scarborough G.S. United", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181110-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian National Challenge Cup\nOctober 10, 2005 in Edmonton, Alberta. Scarborough GS United 3 (Calixterio, T. Kouzmanis, Haitham)Edmonton Green and Gold 2 (Korthuij, Diaz)HT: Att: Ref: John De la Cruz", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181110-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian National Challenge Cup, Rosters, Edmonton Green & Gold\nEdmonton (Squad): Jordan Robinson, Devon Fraser, Jarin Myskiw, Neil Morrow, Jamie Belous, Troy Hart,Kenny Nutt, Damir Jesis, Nikola Vignjevic, Jordan Gillespie, Mark Korthuij, Ben Drummond, Sam Lam,Vikray Kaushail, Quenton Zalazar, Brett Bacheln, Ian Diaz, Erit Pinnell, Herman Braich, Matteo Saccomano.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 68], "content_span": [69, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181110-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian National Challenge Cup, Rosters, Scarborough G.S. United\nScarboro (Squad): Courtney Campbell, Courtney Brown, Tony Marshall, Valentine Anozie, Emil Calixterio,Ryan Dummett, Decio Rego, Thomas Kouzmanis, Jonathan Westmass, Sultan Haitham,Shawn Long, Ron Belfon, Lyndon Hooper, John Williams, Wayne Morgan, Jermaine Coleman, Shaun Griffith, Richard Kirwan, Gus Kouzmanis, Lester Bruno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 70], "content_span": [71, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181111-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials\nThe 2005 Canadian Olympic Curling Trials were held from December 3 to 11 at the Halifax Metro Centre in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The winning teams represented Canada at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181112-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Open of Curling\nThe 2005 Canadian Open curling Grand Slam tournament was held January 27\u201330, 2005 at the MTS Centre in Winnipeg, Manitoba.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181112-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Open of Curling\nThe final was an all-Edmonton match between Kevin Martin's rink and his rivals, the Randy Ferbey rink. Martin won the game 8-7, taking home $30,000 for his team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181112-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Open of Curling, Tie breakers\nThe scores for the tie breaker matches were as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 43], "content_span": [44, 99]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181113-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Paralympic Athletics Championships\nThe 2005 Canadian Paralympic Athletics Championships is a disabled athletics competition held in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181114-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season\nThe 2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season was the 8th season for the Canadian Professional Soccer League. The season began on May 21, 2005 and concluded on October 10, 2005 with Oakville Blue Devils defeating Vaughan Shooters 2-1 to win their first CPSL Championship. The final was played at Esther Shiner Stadium, which gave North York Astros a playoff wildcard match. In the regular season the Vaughan Shooters won their first Eastern Conference title, while Hamilton Thunder secured their third Western Conference title. The league increased in membership with the return of the Laval Dynamites. For the first time in the league's history the CPSL introduced a Women's Canada Cup tournament, which included 6 district all-star teams from the existing men's soccer districts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181114-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Changes from 2004 season\nThe season saw the resignation of chairman/president Vince Ursini in order to fully devote his time to his Ontario Soccer Association duties. His replacement was the CPSL management consultant Cary Kaplan to the newly created position of CPSL Commissioner. The league increased to 12 teams with the return of Laval Dynamites, while the Metro Lions relocated to the Halton Region territory to form the Oakville Blue Devils. The Brampton Hitmen were sold to Joe Fuliere, and renamed the team to the Brampton Stallions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 73], "content_span": [74, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181114-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, All-Star Game\nThe 2005 CPSL all-star match was against Rangers F.C. of the Scottish Premier League who were in Canada for a nine-day training camp before kicking off their season. The game was played at Varsity Stadium, but was closed to the public being only open to people associated to the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 62], "content_span": [63, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181114-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Awards\nThe annual CPSL awards ceremony was held at the La Contessa Banquet Hall on October 9, 2005 in North York, Toronto. This was the first awards ceremony where the awards were distributed equally without a majority winner. Vaughan, Windsor, London, and North York each went home with two awards. Vaughan's Desmond Humphrey was voted the MVP, while team owner Tony De Thomasis was given the President of the Year award. London City went home with the Goalkeeper and Rookie of the Year awards with Haidar Al-Shaibani and Dennis Peeters as its recipients.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181114-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Awards\nFormer Detroit Titans alumni Aaron Byrd of Windsor Border Stars won the Golden Boot. Windsor's Fil Rocca was voted the Defender of the Year. The Coach of the Year went to former S.League, and USL A-League veteran Dejan Gluscevic, who went on to manage various national youth teams in Asia. North York Astros also received their first Fair Play award. Andrzej Jasinski the match official for the championship final was voted the Referee of the Year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 504]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181114-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Professional Soccer League season, Women's Canada Cup\nA women's league debuted in 2005 which featured 6 all-star teams from the existing municipal soccer districts where the men's team competed. Throughout the regular season they played in 10 matches with London City Selects winning the regular season title. The finals featured London City against York Region Lady Shooters, where York Region won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 67], "content_span": [68, 430]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181115-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian Senior Curling Championships\nThe 2005 Canadian Senior Curling Championships were held March 19 to 27 at the East St. Paul Curling Club in East St. Paul, Manitoba. The winning teams represented Canada at the 2006 World Senior Curling Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181116-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian electoral calendar\nThis is a list of elections in Canada in 2005. Included are provincial, municipal and federal elections, by-elections on any level, referendums and party leadership races at any level.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget\nThe 2005 Canadian federal budget was the budget of the Government of Canada for the 2005\u20132006 fiscal year. It was presented on February 23, 2005, by Finance Minister Ralph Goodale. It was the first Canadian federal budget presented by a minority government since the budget of the Joe Clark Progressive Conservative government in 1979, which was defeated by the opposition parties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget\nHaving fewer than half the seats in the House of Commons of Canada meant that the governing Liberal Party of Canada had to win the support of members of other parties for the 2005 budget to pass. Without that support, the budget would have been defeated, and new elections would likely have been called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget\nIn the 2005\u201306 fiscal year, the government had a large surplus of expected revenues over expenses, making the government able to fund a wide array of new initiatives. The budget bill (C-43) received Royal Assent on June 28, 2005. In order to gain the necessary support of the New Democratic Party (NDP) the budget was amended (Bill C-48) and given assent three weeks later following considerable debate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 432]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Details of the budget\nThe budget was the eighth balanced budget in a row presented by the Liberal government. It contained minor tax cuts for both businesses and individuals over a five-year period. These cuts, however, were mostly scheduled to begin in the latter years of the five-year period, which meant that the majority of them were unlikely to occur before the next election was held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 51], "content_span": [52, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Details of the budget, Expenditures\nThe budget also contained $12.7 billion for the Department of National Defence over the following five years. However, not all of this money was new funding and, as with most of the budget, it was back-loaded. The total new funding for 2006 was to be $500 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Details of the budget, Expenditures\nStart-up money was provided for Canada's efforts to comply with the Kyoto Accord and for a national child care program. Additional funding was provided for cities, health care, and foreign aid. Some cuts were made. The Air Travel Complaints Commissioner was abolished, and foreign aid to Thailand, Malaysia, and all countries now in the European Union was ended. In total, $11 billion in savings are expected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 65], "content_span": [66, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Opposition parties, Initial response by opposition parties\nThe Conservative Party, the largest opposition party, surprised many by announcing that it would support the budget immediately after it was read in the House of Commons. Party leader Stephen Harper described it as \"better than expected\", and described its focus on tax cuts and defence spending as being in line with Conservative policy. It is highly unusual for the official opposition to vote in favour of the government's budget. However, Harper later changed his position on the budget, and his party joined with the NDP and the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois in the largest abstention in Canadian history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 99], "content_span": [100, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Opposition parties, Initial response by opposition parties\nThe Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois and party leader Gilles Duceppe, who were demanding an overhaul to employment insurance and the elimination of the fiscal imbalance, voted against the budget.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 99], "content_span": [100, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Opposition parties, Initial response by opposition parties\nThe New Democratic Party voted against the budget on first reading. Leader Jack Layton agreed with Harper that it was a \"conservative budget\" and was especially critical of the corporate tax cuts and the limited new funding for social programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 99], "content_span": [100, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Opposition parties, Changes following the Liberal-NDP deal\nPrior to the second reading the political situation changed dramatically due to Jean Brault's explosive testimony at the Gomery Inquiry. Stephen Harper announced that the Liberals had lost the moral authority to govern and vowed to bring down the government. Thus when the budget came to its second reading the Conservatives rallied against it. In order to ensure the continued confidence of the House, the Liberals struck a deal with the NDP to amend the budget. This amendment called for a reduction of the foreseen corporate tax cuts and $4.6 billion in additional spending on social programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 99], "content_span": [100, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Opposition parties, Changes following the Liberal-NDP deal\nDespite the NDP support, the government remained in a precarious position, requiring the support of all three independent Members of Parliament (MPs). On May 17, Conservative MP Belinda Stronach crossed the floor to the Liberals, giving them a crucial extra vote. Soon after, Liberal polling numbers ended their slide and began to recover. Two Conservative MPs from Newfoundland and Labrador, Loyola Hearn and Norman Doyle, were also pressured by provincial premier Danny Williams to vote in favour of the budget, as it included the provisions of the government's recent Atlantic Accords. The Conservatives eventually announced that they would vote in favour of the main budget bill, containing the Atlantic Accord, but would vote against the second bill containing the NDP amendments.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 99], "content_span": [100, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Business community and labour unions\nThe budget was criticized by many labour unions and interest groups:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Business community and labour unions\nThe budget was not received warmly by the business community:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 77], "content_span": [78, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Reactions, Provinces\nThe p\u00e9quiste Bernard Landry, leader of the Official Opposition in Quebec, strongly criticized the budget, even saying that the Premier of Quebec Jean Charest had been cheated by the budget. He notably criticized Jean Charest for not standing up to Ottawa on fiscal imbalance and the federal government for its intrusion in provincial competencies, notably in childcare. Fran\u00e7ois Legault, PQ's finance critic, also criticized the increase in defence spending and the tax cuts to wealthy individuals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 50], "content_span": [51, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nAfter Stronach's move, the government could count on the same number of votes as the opposition: the Liberals, the NDP and independent MP Carolyn Parrish supported the budget, while the Conservatives and the Bloc opposed it. The fate of the government thus hung on the decisions of the other two independent MPs: David Kilgour and Chuck Cadman. The government needed the support of at least one of the two to continue to enjoy the confidence of the House. Cadman was suffering from malignant melanoma, and before the day of the vote it was not clear whether or not he would be able to attend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nOn May 19, a vote was held for second reading of Bill C-43 (the main budget), and Bill C-48 (the amendments). The main budget bill passed on a vote of 250 to 54, with only the Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois voting against. The second bill received a vote of 152 Yea and 152 Nay. The Conservatives and Bloc Qu\u00e9b\u00e9cois voted against second reading, while the Liberals and NDP voted in favour. Conservative MP Darrel Stinson was unable to attend the vote due to cancer surgery, so Liberal MP Peter Adams agreed to sit out as a courtesy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 577]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0015-0001", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nIndependent MP Kilgour voted against the budget, while Parrish and Cadman voted in favour. In the event of a tied vote, the Speaker casts the tie-breaking vote. According to parliamentary convention, the Speaker votes, whenever possible, for the continuation of debate. Thus, the Speaker voted in favour of second reading, \"to allow the House time for further debate so that it can make its own decision at some future time.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nThe Speaker's vote allowed Martin to maintain the confidence of the House by 153\u2013152. It was the first time in Canadian history that the Speaker had cast a vote on a confidence motion concerning the Prime Minister.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nAllegations were later made in a book by Vancouver journalist Tom Zytaruk in early 2008 that the Conservative Party attempted to get Cadman to support the Conservative's positions by offering him a $1 million life insurance policy. Conservative leader and Prime Minister at the time of the allegations Stephen Harper denied that the party bribed Cadman. As of February 2008, the allegations have not been proven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nAfter this vote, the Conservatives admitted their defeat and backed away from their pledge to bring down the government. On June 14, a series of 16 votes were held pertaining to the budget: one for concurring in the committee report for Bill C-43 and dozens of amendments and other motions. As many as 15 were considered confidence votes and could have triggered an election if one was lost. Several opposition members were absent. The government won each vote, virtually guaranteeing that no election would be held in the summer of 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nTwo days later, Bill C-43 was finally passed and moved to the Senate. Meanwhile, the NDP amendments came out of committee and debate was launched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nOn June 23, the House voted to extend the session into the summer to deal with C-48 and with the same-sex marriage bill (Bill C-38). Then, in a late-night session, after several Conservative members had already left the house, the Liberals, NDP, and Bloc voted to invoke closure on the debate. The Liberals and NDP then voted in favour of passing Bill C-48, defeating the Conservatives and Bloc by a margin of 5 votes. The outcome upset Conservative MPs and left the same-sex marriage bill as the only major business to be dealt with during the extended session in the House. It, too, was passed on June 28, allowing the House to call a recess.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181117-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Canadian federal budget, Voting in the House of Commons\nThe bills moved to the Senate. Bill C-43 was still in committee hearing stage on the morning of June 28, but Liberal senators rushed the bill through the legislative process all day, allowing it to receive Royal Assent before the day was over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival\nThe 58th Cannes Film Festival started on 11 May and ran until 22 May 2005. Twenty movies from 13 countries were selected to compete. The awards were announced on 21 May. The Palme d'Or went to the Belgian film L'Enfant by Dardenne brothers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival\nThe festival opened with Lemming, directed by Dominik Moll and closed with Chromophobia, directed by Martha Fiennes. C\u00e9cile de France was the mistress of ceremonies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Main competition\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury for the feature films of the 2005 Official Selection:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Un Certain Regard\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury of the 2005 Un Certain Regard:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 52], "content_span": [53, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Cin\u00e9fondation and short films\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury of the Cin\u00e9fondation and short films competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Juries, Camera d'Or\nThe following people were appointed as the Jury of the 2005 Camera d'Or:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Un Certain Regard\nThe following films were selected for the competition of Un Certain Regard:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 64], "content_span": [65, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Films out of competition\nThe following films were selected to be screened out of competition:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Cin\u00e9fondation\nThe following short films were selected for the competition of Cin\u00e9fondation:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 60], "content_span": [61, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Official selection, Short film competition\nThe following short films competed for the Short Film Palme d'Or:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 69], "content_span": [70, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, International Critics' Week\nThe following films were screened for the 44th International Critics' Week (44e Semaine de la Critique):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Parallel sections, Directors' Fortnight\nThe following films were screened for the 2005 Directors' Fortnight (Quinzaine des R\u00e9alizateurs):", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 66], "content_span": [67, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181118-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Cannes Film Festival, Awards, Official awards\nThe following films and people received the 2005 Official selection awards:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 50], "content_span": [51, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup\nThe 2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup was a series of eight races in 4 canoeing and kayaking categories organized by the International Canoe Federation (ICF). It was the 18th edition. The series consisted of 4 continental championships (European, Pan American, Oceania and Asian), 3 world cup races and the world championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Final standings\nThe winner of each world cup race was awarded 30 points. Semifinalists were guaranteed at least 5 points and paddlers eliminated in heats received 2 points each. The continental championships had a lesser status with the winner earning 20 points, semifinalists at least 2 points and all others were awarded 1 point for participation. Because the continental championships were not open to all countries, every athlete could only compete in one of them. The world championships points scale was the same as for the world cups multiplied by a factor of 1.5. That meant the world champion earned 45 points, semifinalists got at least 7.5 points and paddlers eliminated in heats received 3 points apiece. If two or more athletes or boats were equal on points, the ranking was determined by their positions at the world championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 874]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, 2005 Continental Cup Oceania\nContinental Cup Oceania took place in Mangahao, New Zealand from 29 to 30 January. The C1 event did not count for the world cup and the C2 event was not held.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 66], "content_span": [67, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, 2005 European Championships\nThe European Championships took place at the Tacen Whitewater Course, Slovenia from 24 to 26 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, 2005 Asia Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe Asia Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Naein-chun, South Korea from 1 to 2 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 74], "content_span": [75, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 1\nThe first regular world cup race of the series took place at the Hellinikon Olympic Canoe/Kayak Slalom Centre in Athens, Greece from 8 to 10 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 2\nWorld Cup Race 2 took place at the Augsburg Eiskanal, Germany from 15 to 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, World Cup Race 3\nWorld Cup Race 3 took place at the Segre Olympic Park in La Seu d'Urgell, Spain from 23 to 24 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 54], "content_span": [55, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, 2005 Pan American Championships\nThe Pan American Championships took place on the Kern River in California from 26 to 27 August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 69], "content_span": [70, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181119-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Slalom World Cup, Results, 2005 World Championships\nThe World Championships took place at the Penrith Whitewater Stadium, Australia from 29 September to 3 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 62], "content_span": [63, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181120-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Canoe Sprint European Championships\nThe 2005 Canoe Sprint European Championships were held in Pozna\u0144, Poland.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181121-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cape Verdean Football Championships\nThe 2005 Cape Verdean Football Championship season was the 26th of the competition of the first-tier football in Cape Verde. Its started on 14 May and finished on 16 July, earlier than the last season. The tournament was organized by the Cape Verdean Football Federation. FC Derby won the 3rd title and did not receive entry to the 2006 CAF Champions League. No second place club would also receive entry to the 2006 CAF Confederation Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181121-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nSporting Clube da Praia was the defending team of the title. A total of 12 clubs participated in the competition, one from each island league and one who won the last season's title. The season would be the first to have 12 titles for Sporting Praia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181121-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nAlso it was the only time that a participant from Boa Vista (Desportivo Est\u00e2ncia Baixo) came from the Rabil area and Est\u00e2ncia de Baixo and the first time that a participant from the north of Santiago was from the municipality of Calheta de S\u00e3o Miguel and was Flor Jovem.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181121-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nThe season would break national records even in scoring, the annual goal totals was 146, Derby scored a record 10-1 against Acad\u00e9mica from Porto Novo, later Sporting Praia first scored 6 against Morabeza two weeks later scored a record 13 against Est\u00e2ncia Baixo, they would score 6 again in the semis and removing Sal Rei from the finals. Other high scoring matches were Acad\u00e9mica from Fogo scored 6 against Morabeza and Derby scored 7 points against Morabeza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181121-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nSporting Praia had a record of 35 goals scored (24 in the regular season) and remains unbeaten as of 2016, while Derby scored a record 32 goals (23 in the regular season) . Also in the competition record was the scorer Z\u00e9 di Tch\u00e9tcha of Sporting Praia who scored 14 goals and remains unbeaten as of 2015. The Flor Jovem-Paulense match was cancelled and neither two would advance into the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181121-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cape Verdean Football Championships, Overview\nTwo clubs from Santo Ant\u00e3o who played in the same group had their first meeting since the break-up into the two zones.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 50], "content_span": [51, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl\nThe 2005 Capital One Bowl was a post-season college football bowl game between the Iowa Hawkeyes and the LSU Tigers on January 1, 2005, at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida. Spread bettors favored LSU by seven points, but Iowa won, 30\u201325, when quarterback Drew Tate completed a 56-yard pass to wide receiver Warren Holloway for a touchdown as time expired. The game was part of the 2004 college football season and was the concluding game of the season for both teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl\nPrior to the game, LSU head coach Nick Saban announced that he was leaving LSU to become the head coach for the Miami Dolphins. Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz also drew attention from NFL teams, but ultimately signed a contract extension through 2012. Saban and Ferentz worked together in 1993 and 1994 as assistants to Bill Belichick with the Cleveland Browns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl\nThe game had 70,229 fans in attendance; Tate was named the game's Most Valuable Player.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl\nLSU became the first defending BCS national champion to lose a non-BCS bowl the following year by losing this game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Teams\nThe game was played between the LSU Tigers of the Southeastern Conference and the Iowa Hawkeyes of the Big Ten Conference. It was the first meeting between the two programs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Teams, LSU Tigers\nLSU entered the bowl with a 9\u20132 record (6\u20132 in conference).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Teams, Iowa Hawkeyes\nIowa entered the bowl with a 9\u20132 record (7\u20131 in conference). The Hawkeyes were co-Big Ten champions with Michigan; however, the Wolverines were granted the Big Ten's automatic BCS bid due to their 30\u201317 victory over Iowa on September 25, 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 43], "content_span": [44, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Game summary, Statistics\nIn total yardage, the teams were fairly equal; LSU had 346 yards to Iowa's 334. The Tigers held advantages many statistical categories, such as first downs, rushing yards, turnovers and time of possession. The Hawkeyes held the advantage in passing yards, 287\u2013228.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Game summary, Statistics\nTate was the game's leading passer, throwing for all 287 of Iowa's passing yards. JaMarcus Russell was LSU's leading passer, throwing for 128 yards and two touchdowns, both to Skyler Green. Iowa's Jonathan Babineaux led the game in sacks, with three. Babineaux also led the game in tackles for loss, with 4.5. LSU intercepted Tate twice during the game; Marcus Randall was intercepted once by the Hawkeyes. Both teams fumbled the ball once, though neither time was the ball recovered by the other team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Game summary, Statistics\nIn special teams play, Iowa's David Bradley punted the ball six times for 295 yards, a 49.2-yard average. LSU's Chris Jackson punted the ball four times for 181 yards, a 45.2-yard average. Jackson was also two-for-two in field goal kicking; Iowa's Kyle Schlicher was one-for-one in that regard. Green had the game's longest return of any kind, taking a kickoff return 58 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Game summary, Statistics\nSaban finished his five-year tenure at LSU 48-16. He returned to college football, and the SEC, two years after this game by accepting the head coaching position at Alabama. The Crimson Tide are 2-0 in the Capital One/Citrus Bowl under Saban, defeating Michigan State 49-7 in 2011 and Michigan 35-16 in 2020.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181122-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Capital One Bowl, Game summary, Statistics\nTwo days after the game, LSU named Oklahoma State coach Les Miles to succeed Saban. Miles went 114-34 at LSU over 11-plus seasons, highlighted by a national championship in 2007. Miles' Tigers lost the 2010 game to Penn State 19-17. The Tigers won the December 2016 game 29-9 over Louisville and lost the 2018 game 21-17 to Notre Dame under current coach Ed Orgeron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup\nThe 2005 Caribbean Cup (known as the Digicel Caribbean Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the thirteenth edition of the Caribbean Cup hosted by Barbados and won by Jamaica. In all 30 countries participated (6 withdrew).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Qualifying tournament, First qualifying round (Group stage), Group A\nGroup A Qualifier: Saint-Martin w/o \u00a0Sint Maarten (Sint Maarten withdrew)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 88], "content_span": [89, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Qualifying tournament, First qualifying round (Group stage), Group C\nBahamas qualified but they also withdrew; their place was taken by Guyana. The participants were supposed to be: \u00a0Cuba, \u00a0Netherlands Antilles, \u00a0Guyana, \u00a0Dominican Republic, and the matches were planned to be played in Cuba. However, Netherlands Antilles, Guyana, Dominican Republic all withdrew later, and so Cuba won the group automatically.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 88], "content_span": [89, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Qualifying tournament, First qualifying round (Group stage), Group D\nGroup D qualifier: \u00a0Guyana both through \u00a0Suriname. The matches were scheduled to be played on 5 and 11 September but Guyana were requested to replace the Bahamas from Group C who withdrew so Suriname was drawn into Group D.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 88], "content_span": [89, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Qualifying tournament, First qualifying round (Group stage), Group E\nPlayed in Saint Vincent; originally planned for Cayman Islands, but rescheduled due to hurricane damage", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 88], "content_span": [89, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Qualifying tournament, First qualifying round (Group stage), Group E\nNB: Bermuda have protested the eligibility of three BVI players (Montgomery Butler, Avondale Williams, Venton James) as being Saint Vincentians.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 88], "content_span": [89, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Qualifying tournament, First qualifying round (Group stage), Group F\nGroup F qualifier: \u00a0Antigua and Barbuda w/o \u00a0Anguilla (Anguilla withdrew)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 88], "content_span": [89, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181123-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Cup, Final round\nJamaica, Cuba and Trinidad and Tobago qualified for CONCACAF Gold Cup 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181124-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Caribbean Series\nThe forty-seventh edition of the Caribbean Series (Serie del Caribe) was played in 2005. It was held from February 1 through February 6 featuring the champion baseball teams of the Dominican Republic, \u00c1guilas Cibae\u00f1as; Mexico, Venados de Mazatl\u00e1n; Puerto Rico, Indios de Mayag\u00fcez, and Venezuela, Tigres de Aragua. The Series was held at Estadio Teodoro Mariscal in Mazatl\u00e1n, Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181125-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Challenge Cup\nThe 2005 Carolina Challenge Cup was a four-team round robin pre-season competition hosted by the Charleston Battery. It was the second edition of the tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season\nThe 2005 season was the Carolina Panthers' 11th in the National Football League (NFL) and their fourth under head coach John Fox. It was also the team's ninth season at Bank of America Stadium. They improved on their 7\u20139 record from 2004, going 11\u20135, and made it to the playoffs for the first time since their Super Bowl appearance in 2003. They eventually fell to the Seattle Seahawks 34\u201314 in the NFC Championship Game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Wild Card Round\nThe Panthers forced five turnovers, limited the Giants to only 109 yards of total offense, and became the first club to shut out a home playoff team since the Los Angeles Rams shut out the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 1979 NFC Championship Game. Although the Giants entered the game with Pro Bowler Tiki Barber starting at running back, the Panthers running game, featuring DeShaun Foster and Nick Goings, outgained the Giants 223 yards to 41 on the ground. Carolina wide receiver Steve Smith caught 10 passes for 84 yards and scored two touchdowns, a 22-yard reception and a 12-yard run, while kicker John Kasay added three field goals and Foster rushed for 151 yards. Meanwhile, quarterback Eli Manning threw three interceptions in his first playoff start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Wild Card Round\nAfter the first five possessions of the game ended with punts, Carolina drove 77 yards in 12 plays and scored with Jake Delhomme's 22-yard touchdown pass to Smith. On Carolina's next possession, they were forced to punt, but New York safety Gibril Wilson muffed the kick and Panthers defensive back Dante Wesley recovered the ball at the Giants 15-yard line, setting up a 31-yard Kasay field goal to increase the lead to 10\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Wild Card Round\nCarolina dominated the second half, intercepting Eli Manning three times. Midway through the third quarter, Ken Lucas intercepted a pass from Manning and returned it 14 yards to the Giants 12-yard line, setting up Delhomme's 12-yard touchdown pass to Smith on the next play. On New York's next drive, a 17-yard pass interference penalty on Lucas nullified his second interception and gave the Giants a first down at the Panthers 43-yard line. But two plays later, Manning's pass was intercepted by Marlon McCree at the 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Wild Card Round\nOn the Panthers ensuing drive, Foster rushed three times for 44 yards, and Delhomme completed a 25-yard pass to Keary Colbert, moving the ball to the Giants 27-yard line where Kasay's 45-yard field goal made the score 20\u20130. Then five plays after the kickoff, McCree recorded his second interception on the Panthers 44-yard line. Carolina subsequently closed out the scoring with a 14-play, 55-yard drive that ended with Kasay's third field goal with 2:40 left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Divisional Round\nThe Panthers recorded 434 yards of total offense, and avenged a 13\u20133 regular season defeat by the Bears, to advance to their third NFC Championship Game in their eleven-year existence. Carolina receiver Steve Smith caught 12 passes for 219 yards and 2 touchdowns, the first coming 55 seconds into the contest, and rushed for 26 yards. Panthers kicker John Kasay contributed three second-quarter field goals, while quarterback Jake Delhomme threw for 319 yards and 3 touchdowns. The Panthers managed to hold off the Bears, however the team lost key running back DeShaun Foster to a broken ankle in the third quarter (which would severely cripple their running game in the NFC Championship match up to the Seahawks.)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Divisional Round\nThe Panthers got the ball first and scored quickly. Jamal Robertson returned the opening kickoff 34 yards to the 40-yard line, and one play later, Delhomme threw a 58-yard touchdown pass to Smith. Later on, Smith's 46-yard reception set up a 20-yard field goal on the first play of the second quarter, increasing their lead to 10\u20130. On their next drive, Carolina had a chance to increase their lead even more after Delhomme completed passes to Drew Carter for gains of 14 and 29 yards, moving the ball to the Bears 23-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Divisional Round\nBut linebacker Brian Urlacher ended the drive by intercepting a pass from Delhomme at the 10. However, the Panthers forced another punt and scored with a second field goal from Kasay. Bears quarterback Rex Grossman completed 5 passes for 62 yards on a 67-yard drive that ended with a 1-yard touchdown run by Adrian Peterson cutting the score to 13\u20137. But Carolina stormed right back, driving 51 yards and scoring with Kasay's third field goal on the last play of the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Divisional Round\nAfter the second half kickoff, a 24-yard run by Bears halfback Thomas Jones moved the ball to the Panthers 41-yard line. Then Grossman went to work, completing two passes to Bernard Berrian for 29 yards before finishing the drive with a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Desmond Clark. But after an exchange of punts, Delhomme threw a 39-yard touchdown pass to Smith, and the Panthers retook their 9-point lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Divisional Round\nEarly in the fourth quarter, Chicago's Jason McKie scored a 3-yard touchdown run to cut their deficit to 23\u201321. But Delhomme led the Panthers right back, completing five passes for 45 yards and scoring with a 1-yard touchdown pass to tight end Kris Mangum. After an exchange of punts, the Bears drove into Carolina territory, but defensive back Ken Lucas put the game away by intercepting a pass from Grossman on the Panthers 22-yard line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 59], "content_span": [60, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Conference Championship\nThe Seahawks forced four turnovers, and allowed only 36 rushing yards and 14 points, as they advanced to their first Super Bowl trip in the team's 30-year history. Meanwhile, running back Shaun Alexander, coming off his divisional round injury, rushed for a franchise playoff record 134 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Conference Championship\nMidway through the first quarter, the Seahawks drove 57 yards in five plays, featuring a 28-yard reception by Seneca Wallace, and scored with quarterback Matt Hasselbeck's 17-yard touchdown pass to Jerramy Stevens. Then three plays after the ensuing kickoff, linebacker Lofa Tatupu intercepted a pass from Jake Delhomme and returned it 22 yards to the Panthers 20-yard line, setting up a field goal from Josh Brown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Conference Championship\nThe next time Carolina got the ball, Delhomme was intercepted again, this time by Marquand Manuel, who returned it 32 yards to the Panthers 17-yard line, setting up Alexander's 1-yard touchdown run that increased Seattle's lead to 17\u20130 on the first play of the second quarter. The Panthers eventually cut the score to 17\u20137 on Steve Smith's 59-yard punt return for a touchdown with 9:56 left in the first half.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181126-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Carolina Panthers season, Postseason, Conference Championship\nThe Seahawks scored another 17 unanswered points. On their first drive after the punt return touchdown, that moved the ball 57 yards and scored with a 39-yard field goal from Brown. Brown missed a field goal on the Seahawks next possession, but on the first drive of the second half, they score with Hasselbeck's 20-yard touchdown pass Darrell Jackson. Then in the fourth quarter, they put the game completely out of reach with a 53-yard drive that ended with Alexander's second touchdown. Carolina responded with a 47-yard touchdown pass from Delhomme to receiver Drew Carter, cutting the score to 34\u201314, but by then there was only 5 minutes left in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 66], "content_span": [67, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181127-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Carrickfergus Borough Council election\nElections to Carrickfergus Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used three district electoral areas to elect a total of 17 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181127-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Carrickfergus Borough Council election, Districts results, Carrick Castle\n2001: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 78], "content_span": [79, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181127-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Carrickfergus Borough Council election, Districts results, Kilroot\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2005: 3 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from Alliance", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 71], "content_span": [72, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181127-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Carrickfergus Borough Council election, Districts results, Knockagh Monument\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 2 x Alliance2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from Alliance", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 81], "content_span": [82, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181128-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Castlereagh Borough Council election\nElections to Castlereagh Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 23 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181128-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Castlereagh Borough Council election, Districts results, Castlereagh Central\n2001: 3 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP, 1 x PUP2005: 4 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from PUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 81], "content_span": [82, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181128-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Castlereagh Borough Council election, Districts results, Castlereagh East\n2001: 4 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x Independent2005: 5 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181128-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Castlereagh Borough Council election, Districts results, Castlereagh South\n2001: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Alliance2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 79], "content_span": [80, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181128-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Castlereagh Borough Council election, Districts results, Castlereagh West\n2001: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x Alliance, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 78], "content_span": [79, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181129-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix was the sixth round of the 2005 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 10\u201312 June 2005 at the Circuit de Catalunya located in Montmel\u00f3, Catalonia, Spain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181129-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round six has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181130-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Catalunya GP2 Series round\nThe 2005 Spanish GP2 round was a GP2 Series motor race held on 7 May and 8 May 2005 at the Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain. It was the second race of the 2005 GP2 Series season. The race was used to support the 2005 Spanish Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181130-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Catalunya GP2 Series round\nThe first race was won by Gianmaria Bruni for Coloni Motorsport, with Scott Speed second for iSport International and Heikki Kovalainen finishing third for Arden International.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181130-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Catalunya GP2 Series round\nThe second race was won by Jos\u00e9 Mar\u00eda L\u00f3pez for DAMS, with Nelson \u00c1ngelo Piquet for Hitech/Piquet Racing and Scott Speed also on the podium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181131-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Categor\u00eda Primera A season\nThe 2005 Categor\u00eda Primera A season is the 58th season of Colombia's top-flight football league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181131-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Apertura\nThe Copa Mustang 2005-I is the first tournament of the year for the Colombian League. This new season will include the new team Boyac\u00e1 Chic\u00f3; changing its name from Chico FC, they also moved to a new city Tunja from Bogot\u00e1. The season began on February 12, and concluded on June 26.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 52], "content_span": [53, 335]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181131-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Apertura, Semifinals\nThe second phase of the 2005-I tournament consisted of two groups of 4 teams semifinals. This was disputed by the best eight teams from the first phase of the tournament. the winners of each group will face on the finals to define a champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 64], "content_span": [65, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181131-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Finalizaci\u00f3n\nThe Copa Mustang 2005-II was the second tournament of the season of Colombian Professional Football, first division in Colombian football. The season began on July 10 and finished December 18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 56], "content_span": [57, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181131-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Categor\u00eda Primera A season, Campeonato Finalizaci\u00f3n, Semifinals\nThe second phase of the 2006 tournament consisted of two groups of 4 teams semifinals. This was disputed by the best eight teams from the first phase of the tournament. the winners of each group will face on the finals to define a champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 68], "content_span": [69, 309]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181132-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Caymanian general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Cayman Islands on 11 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181132-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Caymanian general election\nThey were won by the People's Progressive Movement, which took 10 of the 15 seats in the Legislative Assembly. Following the elections, Kurt Tibbetts was re-elected as the Leader of Government Business.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181133-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cebu's 5th congressional district special election\nA special election for Cebu's 5th district seat in the House of Representatives of the Philippines was held on May 30, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181133-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cebu's 5th congressional district special election, Background\nIn 2004, representative Joseph Ace Durano (Lakas-CMD) was appointed by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo as Secretary of Tourism. Durano accepted the appointment on November 30, 2004, which caused his seat to be vacated. As a result, the House of Representatives issued a resolution on March 2, 2005, declaring the seat vacant, paving way for the Commission on Elections to call an election on May 30, 2005. Candidates filed their certificates of candidacy from April 22 to 28. Campaign period was from April 29 to May 28.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 67], "content_span": [68, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181133-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cebu's 5th congressional district special election, Result\nDurano's brother, Ramon Durano VI of the Nationalist People's Coalition (NPC), won convincingly to keep the seat within the Durano family, winning in all 891 polling precincts in the district's ten towns and Danao. His grandfather, Ramon Durano, Sr., previously held the seat from 1949 to 1971 (the area was districted as Cebu's 1st district at that time). Ramon VI's father, Ramon Durano III, then mayor of Danao, later became congressman and then represented the district for three consecutive terms from 1987 to 1998, before Joseph Ace succeeded him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181133-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Cebu's 5th congressional district special election, Result\nJoseph Ace was on his second term when he was appointed Tourism secretary. Even before the votes were cast, Durano's opponent, Dean Severo Dosado, was quoted as having said he did not think he was going to win. He and the other candidate, Wilfredo Tuadles, did not field any poll watchers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181133-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cebu's 5th congressional district special election, Result\nThe low turnout (48.56%) was blamed on the non-inclusion of areas outside the district in the special holiday for the election. Another factor was the nonexistence of campaign materials from the candidates. The turnout in Liloan, the town with the lowest turnout at 31.78%, was blamed on the town fiesta that prevented the electorate from voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181133-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cebu's 5th congressional district special election, Result\nDosado described the election as a \"waste of money\" and blamed Joseph Ace for it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [57, 63], "content_span": [64, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181134-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Doubles\n\u00c5sa Svensson and Meilen Tu were the defending champions, but Svensson was no longer active in the WTA Tour, having played her last professional match in October 2004. Tu partnered with Teryn Ashley and lost in first round to Yuliya Beygelzimer and Alina Jidkova.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181134-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Doubles\nMiho Saeki and Yuka Yoshida won the title by defeating Laura Granville and Abigail Spears 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181135-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cellular South Cup \u2013 Singles\nVera Zvonareva was the defending champion and successfully defended her title by defeating Meghann Shaughnessy 7\u20136(7\u20133), 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election\nGeneral elections were held in the Central African Republic on March 13, 2005 to elect the President and National Assembly. A second round was held for both elections on May 8, marking the end of the transitional process that began with the seizure of power by Fran\u00e7ois Boziz\u00e9 in a March 2003 coup, overthrowing President Ange-F\u00e9lix Patass\u00e9. A new constitution was approved in a referendum in December 2004 and took effect the same month.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 476]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election\nThe presidential elections saw Boziz\u00e9 attempt to win a five-year term after two years as transitional leader, alongside ten other candidates, with Patass\u00e9 excluded from running. As no candidate received over 50% of the vote in the first round, a runoff was held between Boziz\u00e9 and former Prime Minister Martin Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9, resulting in a victory for Boziz\u00e9, who received 64.6% of the vote. He was inaugurated on 11 June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election\nIn the simultaneous parliamentary elections, the National Convergence \"Kwa Na Kwa\" party emerged as the largest in the National Assembly, winning 42 of the 105 seats, whilst the Movement for the Liberation of the Central African People emerged as the second-largest party with 12 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 324]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Background\nThe elections had originally been planned for December 2004 or January 2005, with the election date announced on August 28, 2004: January 30, 2005, with a run-off date of February 27. The elections were, however, subsequently delayed to February 13 by a decree of president Boziz\u00e9 in mid-December 2004. In late January 2005, they were delayed further by one month to March 13. They were held on this date, and the second round of the elections, initially scheduled for May 1, took place on May 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Candidates\nAfter taking power with the seizure of the capital, Bangui, on March 15, 2003, Boziz\u00e9 said that his rule was a transitional period, and that he would step down at the end of the transition. In 2004, however, speculation increased that he intended to run in the presidential election that would mark the end of the transition, with many of his supporters calling on him to run. Eventually, following a referendum on a new constitution on December 5, 2004, Boziz\u00e9 announced his candidacy in the presidential election as an independent candidate on December 11, 2004, while speaking to supporters. He cited what he considered the will of the people in his decision:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 712]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Candidates\nTen other candidates also contested the presidential election, including one former president and three former prime ministers. Andr\u00e9 Kolingba, who ruled the Central African Republic from 1981 until his defeat in the 1993 election, was the candidate of the Central African Democratic Rally (Rassemblement d\u00e9mocratique centrafricain). He came in second in the September 1999 election, although Patass\u00e9 defeated him by a wide margin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Candidates\nAbel Goumba also ran as the candidate of the Patriotic Front for Progress (Front patriotique pour le progr\u00e8s); a long-time politician, he served as prime minister in the late 1950s and again from March to December 2003, following Boziz\u00e9's seizure of power, subsequently becoming vice-president under Boziz\u00e9 until being dismissed shortly after the first round of the election. He previously ran for president in 1981, 1993, and 1999; in 1993 he came in second place and was defeated by Patass\u00e9 in the run-off. Additionally, Martin Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9, who was prime minister from 2001 to 2003 (Patass\u00e9's last prime minister prior to his ouster), contested the election, along with Jean-Paul Ngoupand\u00e9 of the National Unity Party (Parti de l'unit\u00e9 nationale), who was prime minister from 1996 to 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Candidates\nThe other candidates were former defense minister Jean-Jacques D\u00e9mafouth, the lawyer Henri Pouz\u00e8re, who was previously a presidential candidate in 1999, then taking about 4% of the vote, Charles Massi of the Democratic Forum for Modernity (Forum d\u00e9mocratique pour la modernit\u00e9), also a 1999 candidate, then taking a little over 1% of the vote, Olivier Gabirault of the Alliance for Democracy and Progress (l'Alliance pour la d\u00e9mocratie et le progr\u00e8s), Auguste Boukanga of the Union for Renewal and Development (l'Union pour la Renaissance et le d\u00e9veloppement) and Pasteur Josu\u00e9 Binoua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nIn late March 2004, the National Transitional Council voted by a large majority in favor of a bill setting up a body to oversee the planned elections, the Commission \u00e9lectorale mixte ind\u00e9pendante (CEMI), which was initially planned to have 45 to 60 members. This was re-examined by National Transitional Council at the government's request in April 2004, and on April 30, Boziz\u00e9 issued the decree promulgating it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nOn May 24, 2004, Boziz\u00e9 approved 30 members of CEMI who had been chosen by three groups: political parties, professional groups, and the national administration. Each of these three groups chose 10 of the members, although the country's 44 parties took some time to reach a compromise on who should be their 10 members. The 31st and last member of CEMI, its president, was not named at this time, however. The 30 members were sworn in on June 4. Jean Willybiro-Sako was subsequently chosen as president of the commission, selected out of four candidates, two of whom were nominated by the prime minister and two by the president of the National Transitional Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 728]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nEarlier in the year, Alpha Oumar Konar\u00e9, the chairman of the commission of the African Union and former president of Mali, reportedly urged Boziz\u00e9 not to stand for election. Boziz\u00e9 gave an interview to Radio France Internationale on May 17 in which he refused to say whether or not he would run, but he confirmed that Konar\u00e9 had spoken to him about it, while criticizing Konar\u00e9 for what he called interference in the country's affairs, and wondering whether he had consulted the opinions of the Central African people before getting involved. He stressed that the matter would depend on the will of the people. Some of his supporters campaigned prominently for him to stand. About 5,000 people walked in Bangui on June 19 to support his candidacy; Boziz\u00e9 thanked them and asked for time to reflect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 860]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nAn electoral census was conducted from October 16 to October 29, 2004; it was initially planned to end on October 24 but was extended for several days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nIn November 2004, former president Ange-F\u00e9lix Patass\u00e9, who was living in exile in Togo following his 2003 ousting by Boziz\u00e9, was nominated as the presidential candidate of his party, the Movement for the Liberation of the Central African People (Mouvement pour la Lib\u00e9ration du Peuple Centrafricain, MLPC). In December, Abel Goumba and Henri Pouz\u00e8re submitted applications to run.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nOn December 30, the transitional constitutional court decided that all but five candidates\u2014Boziz\u00e9, Andr\u00e9 Kolingba, Abel Goumba, Henri Pouz\u00e8re, and former minister Auguste Boukanga\u2014would be excluded from running for various reasons. Patass\u00e9 was among the seven who were barred, which the court said was due to problems with his birth certificate, as well as with his land title. In rejecting the candidacy of Jean-Jacques D\u00e9mafouth, it said that there was a conflict between the date of birth given on his birth certificate (October 3, 1950) and that given in his declaration of candidacy and criminal record (October 3, 1959). The other candidates who were rejected were Martin Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9, Jean-Paul Ngoupand\u00e9, Charles Massi, Olivier Gabirault, and Pasteur Josu\u00e9 Binoua.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nPrior to the court's decision, three of the 15 initial candidates had already withdrawn from the race, leaving only 12 candidacies to judge. Fid\u00e8le Gouandjika, who took less than 1% of the vote in the 1999 presidential election, withdrew in favor of Boziz\u00e9 on December 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nJoseph Bendounga, a former mayor of Bangui and an opponent of Boziz\u00e9's transitional government, announced his withdrawal on the morning of December 30 because he could not pay the required guarantee of five million CFA francs; he had been named as a candidate by his party, the Democratic Movement for Renewal and Development in Central Africa, in May 2004. Enoch D\u00e9rant-Lakou\u00e9, who was prime minister for several months in 1993 and took a little more than 1% in the 1999 election, withdrew as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nThe court's decision caused controversy and was followed by demands for the annulment of the decision and the dissolution of the court. Although the chairman of the court, Marcel Malonga, reaffirmed the decision on state radio on January 3, 2005, Boziz\u00e9 made a conciliatory gesture on January 4 by announcing that three of the disqualified candidates would be permitted to run: Jean-Paul Ngoupand\u00e9, Martin Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9, and Charles Massi. In this decision, he invoked presidential powers available to him according to the new constitution, citing Article 22.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nAt the same time, however, he maintained the exclusion of the remaining four candidates, and in a reference to Patass\u00e9, who is accused of stealing 70 billion CFA francs from the national treasury, he said that he thought candidates who were \"the subject of judicial proceedings, for violent and economic crimes, should be permanently rejected\". This did not resolve the dispute, however, and the three he approved refused to accept his validation of their candidacies, accusing Boziz\u00e9 of trying to divide the opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0014-0002", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nAll seven of the initially barred candidates continued to demand the dissolution of the court and also put forward a request for the invalidation of Boziz\u00e9's own candidacy. A few days later, Boziz\u00e9 fired the justice minister, Lea Koyassoum-Doumta (also secretary-general of Ngoupand\u00e9's party), after she made a statement critical of the government. Boziz\u00e9 sharply criticized the seven candidates in a speech in the city of Mobaye on January 15, which was carried on state radio, accusing them of \"nothing more or less than sorcery\" and \"madness, bad faith, coupled with a dose of misinformation\". He further said that, in contrast to them, his policy \"does not aim at destroying the country, it is not based on violence, lies, betrayal, manipulation or strikes\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nAmidst this tension and controversy, the seven excluded candidates, along with the originally accepted candidates Kolingba and Goumba, called for the mediation of Gabonese president Omar Bongo. On January 22, the matter was effectively resolved through the signing by Boziz\u00e9 and his rivals of an agreement in Libreville, which allowed all the candidates except Patass\u00e9 to participate and brought the total number of candidates to 11. According to the agreement, Patass\u00e9 would remain barred because he was the subject of judicial proceedings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 603]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0015-0001", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nThe date of the election was also delayed to March 13, and it was agreed that the constitutional court would not be dissolved, but that it would lose powers regarding the election, which would instead go to CEMI. Subsequently, although Patass\u00e9 rejected the agreement\u2014saying that he had not authorized Luc Apollinaire Dondon, the first vice-president of the MLPC, to sign it\u2014the MLPC announced on January 26 that it would support the candidacy of Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9, who had previously been running as an independent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nAn official list of candidates, including 11 of them and excluding only Patass\u00e9, was published by the election commission on January 26, following the agreement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nElections were also held to fill the 105 seats of the national assembly, whose members will serve five-year terms. Initially, 261 of 970 candidates were barred from running by the electoral commission on January 10, but on January 21 a court ruling permitted 219 of the 261 to run, bringing the number of candidates to 928. Boziz\u00e9's wife Monique was among the 709 candidates who were initially approved on January 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Events and controversy\nThe 2005 election marked the first time that the country's voters used a single ballot in each of the two polls, presidential and parliamentary, and an awareness campaign about this was launched on February 2, continuing until February 26. Previously, a multiple ballot system had been used in elections. Subsequently, the campaign for the elections began on the morning of February 26 and lasted until midnight on March 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 61], "content_span": [62, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, First round aftermath\nPartial results (28.9% of polling stations, or 1,198 out of 4,145 stations) from the election on March 18 put Boziz\u00e9 in the lead with about 55% of the votes, according to the election commission: 184,734 out of 334,732 votes counted were for Boziz\u00e9. This was over 140,000 votes more than his nearest rivals, Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9 and Kolingba, who took 12.86% (43,058 votes) and 12.65% (42,374 votes) of the vote respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, First round aftermath\nThe opposition Union of Active Forces of the Nation (l'Union des forces vives de la Nation, UFVN), a grouping of Boziz\u00e9's rivals, denounced the elections on the grounds of alleged fraud and irregularities, and it called for the elections to be declared null. On the other hand, election observers endorsed the vote as free and fair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, First round aftermath\nOn March 31, official results were announced: Boziz\u00e9 came in first with just under 43% of the votes, while Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9 came in second with 23.5%. Turnout among voters was said to have been 68.27%. Since no candidate won a majority, a second-round presidential vote was required between Boziz\u00e9 and Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, First round aftermath\nIn the parliamentary election, contested by a total of 909 candidates, 17 of the 105 seats were won outright in the first round; the remainder were decided by the results of the second round. Convergence Kwa Na Kwa, the coalition supporting Boziz\u00e9, did not win any seats in the first round. Among those who did win seats were Jean-Paul Ngoupand\u00e9, also a presidential candidate, and Mireille Kolingba, the wife of presidential candidate Andr\u00e9 Kolingba. Three of the presidential candidates who were defeated in the first round, Abel Goumba, Charles Massi, and Henri Pouz\u00e8re, ran in the parliamentary second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, First round aftermath\nIn voting that was taking place abroad in Paris, voters destroyed election materials and results there were cancelled as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 60], "content_span": [61, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nThe run-off between Boziz\u00e9 and Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9, initially scheduled to take place on May 1, was postponed to May 8. The reason for the postponement was to avoid interference with the marking of Labour Day on May 1. Campaigning took place from April 23 to May 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nTheoretically, as all the opposition candidates (except Auguste Boukanga) were part of the UFVN, there was, based on the mathematical results of the first round, a majority against Boziz\u00e9. However, support for Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9 in the UFVN was not unconditional. Josu\u00e9 Binoua refused to endorse either candidate, while Ngoupand\u00e9, Massi and Goumba backed Boziz\u00e9. Kolingba, the third-place finisher, did not endorse either candidate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nEarly results from CEMI on May 12 showed Boziz\u00e9 with a strong lead. In Bangui, he was said to have received 103,446 votes, while Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9 took 42,959. He also was credited with 79.5% of the vote in Ombella-M'Poko province (where his wife Monique also won the seat she was contesting, constituency Bimbo 2) and 93.7% in Lobaye province. Subsequently, partial results from CEMI on May 16 showed Boziz\u00e9 with slightly more than 60% of the total vote, according to results from 1,698 of the country's 4,161 polling stations. The head of CEMI, Jean Willybiro-Sako, said that CEMI had 15 days from the election to make the final results public, and that the inauguration of the winner would follow 45 days after the results were proclaimed; CEMI's mandate was also to come to an end at that time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 840]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nIn mid-May, there were riots in Bangui after CEMI said that the speaker of the transitional parliament (which was being replaced by the parliamentary elections), Nicolas Tiangaye, had been narrowly defeated in his constituency by a candidate of the pro-Boziz\u00e9 Kwa Na Kwa. Tiangaye called for calm among his supporters \"to avoid a bloodbath.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nOn May 24, Jean Willybiro-Sako announced that Boziz\u00e9 had won the presidential election with 64.6% of the vote. Turnout in the second round was 64.63%, slightly down from the first round. Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9 tried to have Boziz\u00e9's victory invalidated, claiming that soldiers had forced or intimidated people into voting for Boziz\u00e9, but this was rejected by the constitutional court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nIn the legislative elections, Kwa Na Kwa won the most seats in the new parliament, taking 42 out of 105. 34 independent candidates were elected. Zigu\u00e9l\u00e9 and Patass\u00e9's party, the MLPC, received only 11 seats, while Kolingba's party, the RDC, took eight. The Social Democratic Party took four seats, Goumba's party, the FPP, took two seats, the Alliance for Democracy took two seats, and the Londo association took one. The vote for one seat, in Boganangone in the south, was cancelled due to fraud, and another vote had to be held there.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181136-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Central African general election, Second round\nThe new parliament met for the first time on June 3. Subsequently, it elected C\u00e9lestin Gaombalet, the prime minister, as its speaker. He defeated Luc-Apollinaire Dondon Konamabaye of the MLPC, receiving 78 votes against 18 for Dondon. Boziz\u00e9 was sworn in on June 11 by the head of the constitutional court, Marcel Malonga. Gaombalet resigned as prime minister after Boziz\u00e9's inauguration to take up his new post, and Elie Dot\u00e9 was appointed to replace him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 51], "content_span": [52, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181137-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Championships in Athletics\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Tassedethe (talk | contribs) at 18:23, 28 March 2020. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181137-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Championships in Athletics\nThe 17th Central American Championships in Athletics were held at the Estadio Nacional in San Jos\u00e9, Costa Rica, between June 3\u20134, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181137-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Championships in Athletics\nA total of 44 events were contested, 22 by men and 22 by women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181137-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Championships in Athletics, Medal table (unofficial), Note\n\u2020: Women's 3000 metres steeplechase and heptathlon mighthave been treated as exhibition because of the low number of participants(only 2 and 3 athletes, respectively). This could explain the difference between a published medal table and the unofficial count above for Costa Rica and El Salvador.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 80], "content_span": [81, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181138-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics\nThe 2005 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics were held at the Estadio de Atletismo del Instituto Nicarag\u00fcense de Deportes in Managua, Nicaragua, between May 21\u201322, 2005. Organized by the Central American Isthmus Athletic Confederation (CADICA), it was the 18th edition of the Junior (U-20) and the 13th edition of the Youth (U-18) competition. A total of 80 events were contested, 40 by boys and 40 by girls. Overall winner on points was \u00a0Costa Rica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181138-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Medal summary\nComplete results can be found on the CADICA and on the CACAC webpage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181138-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Team trophies\nThe placing table for team trophy awarded to the 1st place overall team (boys and girls categories) was published.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181138-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American Junior and Youth Championships in Athletics, Participation\nA total number of 250 athletes and officials were reported to participate inthe event. Belize, El Salvador, and Honduras did not participate because of badweather conditions caused by Hurricane Adrian. The number of athletes of some teams participating in the event was reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181139-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics\nThe 2005 Central American and Caribbean Championships in athletics were held at the Thomas Robinson Stadium in Nassau, Bahamas, between 8\u201311 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181140-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics \u2013 Results\nThese are the official results of the 2005 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics which took place on July 8\u201311, 2005 in Nassau, Bahamas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181141-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central Hockey League All-Star Game\nThe 2005 CHL All-Star Game (for sponsorship reasons officially named the 2005 Dodge CHL All-Star Game) was played on January 12, 2005 in Laredo, Texas. The format featured the Northern Conference All-Stars vs. the Southern Conference All-Stars, with each Central Hockey League team having a minimum of one representative to appear on the All-Star roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181141-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Central Hockey League All-Star Game\nThe starting line-ups were selected through balloting among the CHL coaches, broadcasting and/or public relations staff, and designated media members in each CHL market. The remaining players were chosen by the All-Star coaches in concurrence with the CHL's hockey operations department.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181142-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Central Michigan Chippewas football team\nThe 2005 Central Michigan Chippewas football team represented Central Michigan University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Central Michigan competed as a member of the West Division of the Mid-American Conference (MAC). The Chippewas were led by second-year head coach Brian Kelly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181143-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Centrix Financial Grand Prix of Denver\nThe 2005 Centrix Financial Grand Prix of Denver was the ninth round of the 2005 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season, held on August 14, 2005 on the streets of Denver, Colorado near the Pepsi Center. Paul Tracy sat on the pole and S\u00e9bastien Bourdais won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181144-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cerezo Osaka season\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 17:56, 4 January 2020 (\u2192\u200eOther pages: Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (1\u00d7);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181145-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chadian constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in Chad on 6 June 2005. The amendments to the constitution were approved by 66% of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181145-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chadian constitutional referendum, Background\nThe proposed amendments to the constitution included the removal of two-term limit on the President, the replacement of the Senate with a Cultural, Economic and Social Council and giving the President powers to amend the constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181145-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chadian constitutional referendum, Background\nThe amendments were proposed by incumbent President Idriss D\u00e9by, who was due to complete his second term in 2006. In June 2001 D\u00e9by had promised to step down after his second term, stating: I make a public commitment: I will not be candidate at the 2006 presidential election. I will not change the Constitution [...] What remains to do for me in my last mandate, is to prepare Chad for alternation in government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 50], "content_span": [51, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181145-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chadian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nWhile D\u00e8by's Patriotic Salvation Movement (MPS) campaigned for \"yes\", the opposition was divided among those who called for a boycott of the vote and those who called for a \"no\" vote. The abstensionists allied themselves in the Coordination des Partis politiques pour la D\u00e9fense de la Constitution (CPDC), an alliance of 24 parties including the Rally for Democracy and Progress and the Union for Renewal and Democracy. The parties that campaigned for a \"no\" vote included the Front of Action Forces for the Republic and the Rally for the Republic \u2013 Lingui.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 48], "content_span": [49, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181145-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chadian constitutional referendum, Results\nDo you support the constitutional law proposal of revision of the Constitution of 31 March 1996 approved by the National Assembly on 23 May 2004?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 47], "content_span": [48, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181145-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chadian constitutional referendum, Aftermath\nThe constitutional amendment allowed D\u00e9by to contest the 2006 presidential elections, in which he won a third term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 49], "content_span": [50, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181146-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Bell\nThe 2005 Challenge Bell was a tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts at the PEPS de l'Universit\u00e9 Laval in Quebec City in Canada that was part of Tier III of the 2005 WTA Tour. It was the 13th edition of the Challenge Bell, and was held from October 31 through November 6, 2005. Amy Frazier won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181146-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Bell, Champions, Doubles\nAnastasia Rodionova / Elena Vesnina def. L\u012bga Dekmeijere / Ashley Harkleroad, 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181147-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Bell \u2013 Doubles\nCarly Gullickson and Mar\u00eda Emilia Salerni were the defending champions, but Gullickson decided not to participate this year. Salerni partnered with Marion Bartoli, but withdrew from their semifinal match against L\u012bga Dekmeijere and Ashley Harkleroad.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181147-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Bell \u2013 Doubles\nAnastasia Rodionova and Elena Vesnina won the title, defeating Dekmeijere and Harkleroad 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181148-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Bell \u2013 Singles\nMartina Such\u00e1 was the defending champion, but decided not to participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181148-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Bell \u2013 Singles\nAmy Frazier won the title, defeating Sofia Arvidsson 6\u20131, 7\u20135 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181149-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Cup\nThe 2005 Powergen Rugby League Challenge Cup was played by teams from across Europe during the 2005 rugby league season. Hull F.C. won the cup defeating Leeds Rhinos in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181149-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Cup, Final\nKatherine Jenkins performed at the match which was on 27 August at Millennium Stadium, Cardiff and attended by 74,213 spectators. Leeds came to the final 4/1 favourites to win and stamped their authority on the game in the early stages with a penalty try which was converted by Kevin Sinfield. Hull fought back with a try from Motu Tony converted by Danny Brough. Hull took the lead for the first time through Gareth Raynor's try in the corner after a superb pass by Nathan Blacklock. Brough converted brilliantly to make the score 12\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 563]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181149-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Challenge Cup, Final\nLeeds fought back and a try from Danny Ward was converted by Sinfield to draw the scores level. A dreadful Marcus Bai error in his own in-goal area as he tried to keep the ball alive gifted Richard Whiting a try for Hull which was converted by Brough. Minutes later Brough added a drop goal to make the score 19\u201312 to Hull. A Mark Calderwood converted try set up a tense finish with the score at 19\u201318.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181149-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Cup, Final\nIt seemed as though Leeds were going to walk away with the spoils as Marcus Bai rectified his earlier error by grabbing a late try which was converted by Sinfield and left the score 24\u201319. To immense noise from the Hull fans, Hull-born Paul Cooke broke through the Leeds defence and grounded the ball down underneath the posts to allow for a simple conversion. The youngster Danny Brough capped off an outstanding performance by converting the try under pressure to make the score 25\u201324 to Hull. In the dying seconds Richard Swain charged down a drop goal attempt to keep the scores as they were and Hull held on for arguably the best Challenge Cup final ever. Hull overturned all the odds, beating Bradford and cup holders St Helens along the way.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 774]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181149-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Cup, Final, Man of the Match\nKevin Sinfield was the man of match winning the Lance Todd Trophy, but was the losing captain.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 43], "content_span": [44, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181150-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Tour\nThe 2005 Challenge Tour was a series of golf tournaments known as the Challenge Tour, the official development tour run by the PGA European Tour. The tour was started as the Satellite Tour in 1986 and was renamed the Challenge Tour ready for the start of the 1990 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181150-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Tour\nThe Challenge Tour Rankings was won by Scotland's Marc Warren.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181150-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Tour, Rankings\nThe top 20 on the Challenge Tour Rankings gained membership of the European Tour for the 2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181151-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Tour graduates\nThis is a list of players who graduated from the Challenge Tour in 2005. The top 20 players on the Challenge Tour's money list in 2005 earned their European Tour card for 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181151-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Tour graduates\n* European Tour rookie in 2006T = Tied \u00a0 The player retained his European Tour card for 2007 (finished inside the top 118). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2007, but retained conditional status (finished between 119\u2013150). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2007 (finished outside the top 150).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181151-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Challenge Tour graduates\nThe players ranked 16th through 20th were placed below the Qualifying School graduates on the exemption list, and thus could improve their status by competing in Qualifying School. Tom Whitehouse and Ross Fisher both improved their status in this way, with Whitehouse medalling at Q School.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season\nThe 2005 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season was the 27th overall and the second season of the Champ Car World Series era of American open-wheel racing. It began on April 10, 2005 in Long Beach, California and ended on November 6 in Mexico City, Mexico after 13 races. The Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford Drivers' Champion was S\u00e9bastien Bourdais, his second consecutive championship. The Rookie of the Year was Timo Glock.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams\nThe 2.65 liter turbo V8 Ford-Cosworth XFE engine continued to be the exclusive power plant for the series. Bridgestone continued on as the exclusive series tire supplier as well. The two companies continued the marketing agreement that branded the series Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford. All teams ran the Lola B02/00 chassis after the 2002 bankruptcy of Reynard Motorsport prevented further development of their Reynard 02I, causing it to become uncompetitive against the Lola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams\nThe following teams and drivers competed in the 2005 Champ Car season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 40], "content_span": [41, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season, Drivers and teams, Team and driver changes\nSimilar to the 2003 and 2004 seasons, there were once again many changes for the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 65], "content_span": [66, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season, Season summary, Schedule\nO\u00a0 Oval/Speedway\u00a0R\u00a0 Dedicated road course\u00a0S\u00a0 Temporary street circuit", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season, Season summary, Schedule\nThe initial 2005 schedule announced by Champ Car included 14 races, but only 13 races actually took place during the season. The 14th race was scheduled to take place at a newly constructed permanent road circuit in the city of Ansan, South Korea on October 16, the week before the race at Surfers Paradise. The race was canceled in September when it was determined that the circuit was not ready to host the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181152-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Champ Car season, Season summary, Schedule\nIt was the second year in a row that a race in Korea was canceled, as a street circuit race in the capital of Seoul was removed from the 2004 schedule. A date at the Ansan circuit was placed on Champ Car's initial 2006 schedule but that race would never take place either.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 47], "content_span": [48, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181153-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Champion Hurdle\nThe 2005 Champion Hurdle was a horse race held at Cheltenham Racecourse on Tuesday 15 March 2005. It was the 75th running of the Champion Hurdle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181153-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Champion Hurdle\nThe race was won for the second consecutive year by Laurence Byrne's Hardy Eustace, an eight-year-old gelding trained in Ireland by Dessie Hughes and ridden by Conor O'Dwyer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181153-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Champion Hurdle\nHardy Eustace started the 7/2 joint-favourite and led throughout to win by a neck from Harchibald, with Brave Inca in third. The other runners included Rooster Booster (winner of the race in 2003), Back In Front, Macs Joy, Al Eile and Intersky Falcon. All fourteen runners completed the course.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181154-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Champions Tour\nThe 2005 Champions Tour was the 26th season for the golf tour now known as PGA Tour Champions since it officially began in 1980 as the Senior PGA Tour. The season consisted of 28 official money events with purses totalling $51,200,000, including five majors. Hale Irwin won the most tournaments, four. The tournament results, leaders, and award winners are listed below.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181154-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Champions Tour, Tournament results\nThe following table shows all the official money events for the 2005 season. \"Date\" is the ending date of the tournament. The numbers in parentheses after the winners' names are the number of wins they had on the tour up to and including that event. Senior majors are shown in bold.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 39], "content_span": [40, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl\nThe 2005 Champs Sports Bowl was the 16th edition to the college football bowl game and was played on December 27, 2005, featuring the Clemson Tigers and the Colorado Buffaloes. James Davis, the Clemson Running back was the Most Valuable Player of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl, Background\nThe Buffaloes were 7\u20132 at one point, losing only to #12 Miami and #2 Texas. The Colorado Buffaloes were champions of the Big 12 North Division, and they faced off against Texas in the Big 12 Championship game. They were soundly defeated in the Big 12 Championship game by eventual BCS Champion Texas 70\u20133. Texas would go on to win the BCS Championship in the 2006 Rose Bowl. Barnett had survived a recruiting scandal and a suspension following derogatory remarks about a female kicker, Katie Hnida, who claimed she was raped by a teammate in 2000. But the losses to Miami, Iowa State, Nebraska and the second Texas drubbing ultimately led to his forced resignation. Three weeks prior to the game, Colorado head coach Gary Barnett resigned and so the Buffalos were coached by defensive coordinator Mike Hankwitz against Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 863]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl, Background\nMeanwhile, Clemson began their season with a win over #17 Texas A&M at home, with a win over Maryland the following week. However, they lost their next three games (including one over #13 Miami) before a win over NC State righted the ship. They lost only once more to Georgia Tech for the rest of the year, closing out the year with wins over #17 Florida State and #19 South Carolina. They finished in 2nd place in the Atlantic Coast Conference Atlantic Division to Florida State and Boston College, the latter who Clemson had lost to during the skid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl, Background\nThis game was a rematch of the 1957 Orange Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl, Game summary\nClemson scored first with a 26 yard field goal by Jad Dean, making it 3\u20130 Clemson in the opening moments. Colorado's Mason Crosby answered with a 36 yard field goal, tying it at 3. Clemson's Jad Dean kicked another field goal, an 18 yarder, giving Clemson a 6\u20133 lead. That score held up at half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl, Game summary\nIn the third quarter, quarterback Charlie Whitehurst scored on a 5 yard touchdown run, increasing the lead to 13\u20133. In the fourth quarter, Brian White threw a 2 yard touchdown pass to Quinn Sypniewski, cutting the margin to 13\u201310. James Davis added a 6 yard touchdown run to make the final margin 19\u201310, Clemson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 37], "content_span": [38, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181155-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Champs Sports Bowl, Aftermath\nColorado made just one more bowl appearance in the decade, in 2007, which they also lost. They have not won a bowl game since 2004. Clemson went to four more bowl games in the decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 34], "content_span": [35, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181156-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Charles University Rector election\nThe Charles University Rector election, 2005 was held when term of previous Rector Ivan Wilhelm expired. Wilhelm was ineligible to run for third term. V\u00e1clav Hampl won the election and became the youngest Rector in history of the University. It was duel of candidates from three medical faculties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181156-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Charles University Rector election, Result\nCandidate needed at least 36 votes to be elected. And\u011bl was eliminated in the first round and Sva\u010dina in second. Hampl was elected when he received 42 votes in the third round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181157-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Charlotte Sting season\nThe 2005 WNBA season was the ninth season for the Charlotte Sting. The team finished the season with the worst record in the league. It was also the Sting's final season of play at the Charlotte Coliseum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181158-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Charlotte mayoral election\nThe Charlotte mayoral election of 2005 was held on 8 November 2005 to elect a Mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina. It was won by Republican incumbent Pat McCrory, who won a sixth consecutive term by defeating Democratic nominee Craig Madans in the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\nThe 2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup served as the ten-race playoff series among the top ten drivers in the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series. After the Chevy Rock and Roll 400 on September 10, 2005, the ten drivers atop the standings were locked into the playoff, with the participants as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\nNOTE: Some NASCAR multiple car teams have owners other than the official listed owner. In the past, NASCAR limited one car owner to two teams, and teams found ways around it by having personnel other than the owner register the car in their name, such as employees and family members of car owners. That, plus Roush Racing having five of the ten cars in the 2005 Chase, has resulted in a NASCAR rule change limiting teams to four cars in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\n1 \u2013 Geoff Smith, the official owner of the #16, is the president of Roush Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\n2 \u2013 Jeff Gordon is the official owner of the #48, through his work in signing Johnson to Hendrick Motorsports, licensing of merchandising through Hendrick Gordon Licensing LLC, and holds minority interest in the team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\n3 \u2013 Georgetta Roush is Jack's mother, and the official owner of the #97.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\n4 \u2013 Mark Martin is the official owner of the #17 because of his work in signing Kenseth, and holds minority interest in that team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup\nThe most points that can be gained by a driver in a race is 156.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 94]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, UAW-Ford 500 Running Order among Chase Drivers\nNOTE: Some media outlets reported that Newman was the new point leader by one point over Stewart after the race. NASCAR scoring freezes immediately upon a caution being signaled, and a caution was signaled on Lap 190 of 188 (the race was extended because of a late-race caution) midway through the lap after a crash. Under NASCAR rules for late-race situations, video of the race is used with the AMB timing system intermediates to determine final placings. Stewart was ahead of Newman by two places when the caution light was signaled.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 77], "content_span": [78, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Bass Pro Shops MBNA Running Order among Chase Drivers\nNote: Some media outlets said R. Wallace, Kurt Busch, and Mayfield were mathematically eliminated from the championship. That is not true. The most points a driver can make up in a race is 156 points, and in theory, all three drivers would have to have big points days when the leaders falter. However, no driver can be eliminated officially until a driver is behind the leader by 156 points multiplied by the number of races remaining. A driver is still in contention as long as the difference between the leader and such driver is no greater than 156 points (the difference between first and 43rd) multiplied by the number of races remaining, provided said drivers start all remaining races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 84], "content_span": [85, 779]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Checker Auto Parts 500 Running Order among Chase Drivers\nOn Sunday, November 13, Roush Racing suspended Kurt Busch prior to the running of the Checker Auto Parts 500 race at Phoenix International Raceway after being arrested for charges against him of reckless driving off the track. By NASCAR rules, the team remains in the Chase, although for the Owner's Championship only for teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Checker Auto Parts 500 Running Order among Chase Drivers\nNOTE: Kenny Wallace, who was replacing Kurt Busch because of his suspension by Roush Racing because of his arrest for reckless driving, will earn owners' points for the #97. By NASCAR rules, owner points are calculated as part of the Chase. K. Wallace finished 16th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Checker Auto Parts 500 Running Order among Chase Drivers\n\u00a7 \u2014 Mathematically eliminated from championship competition (Being 190 points or back from the leader - 156 points once the final race starts).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Checker Auto Parts 500 Running Order among Chase Drivers\n\u2248 \u2014 Kurt Busch was suspended for the final two races by Roush Racing after his arrest because of reckless driving charges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 87], "content_span": [88, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400 Running Order among Chase Drivers\nJimmie Johnson was eliminated on Lap 127 when a tire blew and he crashed into Turn Three at Homestead-Miami Speedway, Carl Edwards led the most laps, and Greg Biffle won the race by .017 seconds over teammate Mark Martin leading a top four Roush Racing sweep, the team's third podium sweep (top three) in eleven races, but when Tony Stewart crossed the finish line in 15th place, he clinched the 2005 NEXTEL Cup championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400 Running Order among Chase Drivers\nKenny Wallace, driving for suspended driver Kurt Busch, finished 21st, and the #97 team finished eighth in owner points, 336 points behind the #20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400 Running Order among Chase Drivers\n52. Kenny Wallace -6,157 points (-304 #97 team overall) y - $36,471", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400 Running Order among Chase Drivers\nNextel Cup Top Ten bonus monies do not include a share of the Nextel Cup Leader Bonus left unclaimed at the end of 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400 Running Order among Chase Drivers\n\u00d7 \u2014 Biffle finishes second because he had more wins (six) than Edwards (four).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181159-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Chase for the Nextel Cup, Ford 400 Running Order among Chase Drivers\ny - Because of Kurt Busch's suspension from the final two races of 2005, and the #97 team's overall eight-place owner points position, the payouts for 8th, 9th, and 10th places are different.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 73], "content_span": [74, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181160-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatham Cup\nThe 2005 Chatham Cup was the 78th annual nationwide knockout football competition in New Zealand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181160-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatham Cup\nUp 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. In all, 129 teams took part in the competition. The numbering of rounds in the competition is unclear \u2014 some sources record one preliminary round and four full rounds, followed by quarter-finals, semi-finals, and a final; other sources record five rounds. The latter numbering is used in this article.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181160-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatham Cup\nThe scoring record for any Chatham Cup match was equalled in the second round, with Central United demolishing Norwest United 21-0. This tied the previous record set in 1998, when Metro also put 21 goals past the hapless Norwest United.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181160-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatham Cup, The 2005 final\nThe Jack Batty Memorial Cup is awarded to the player adjudged to have made to most positive impact in the Chatham Cup final. The winner of the 2005 Jack Batty Memorial Cup was Central United captain and goalkeeper Ross Nicholson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election\nA by-election was held for the Legislative Assembly of Queensland district of Chatsworth on 20 August 2005. It was triggered by the resignation of sitting Labor member and Deputy Premier Terry Mackenroth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election\nThe by-election was held to coincide with the Redcliffe by-election on the same day. Both contests resulted in the Labor Party losing the seat to the rival Liberal Party. Michael Caltabiano was elected as the new member for Chatsworth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election, Background\nTerry Mackenroth first entered parliament at the 1977 state election and held the seat of Chatsworth at every election thereafter. When Labor came to power in 1989, Mackenroth became a minister under the premiership of Wayne Goss and remained so until the downfall of the Goss government in 1996. When Labor returned to power under the leadership of Peter Beattie in 1998, Mackenroth was once again made a minister. From 2000 onwards he served as Deputy Premier under Beattie, and from 2001 he was Treasurer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election, Background\nOn 25 July 2005, Mackenroth announced his retirement from politics. He had been planning to wait until the following month, but the retirement of fellow Labor MP Ray Hollis and the resulting cabinet reshuffle caused him to bring forward his own resignation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election, Candidates\nLabor chose school teacher Chris Forrester to defend the seat they'd held for the previous 28 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election, Candidates\nThe Liberal Party chose Brisbane City Councillor\u2014and so-called \"factional warrior\"\u2014Michael Caltabiano as their candidate. Caltabiano held the council ward of Chandler, which overlapped with the state seat of Chatsworth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election, Aftermath\nThe by-election win of Michael Caltabiano, along with that of Terry Rogers in Redcliffe, was a flip for the Liberal Party, who increased their numbers in the Legislative Assembly from five to seven. However, the Liberal Party's hold on these two seats did not last long; both returned to the Labor fold at the 2006 state election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181161-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chatsworth state by-election, Aftermath\nLabor's unsuccessful candidate for the Chatsworth by-election, Chris Forrester, had initially been chosen to contest Chatsworth again at the 2006 state election. However, he was dumped in favour of media personality Chris Bombolas closer to the election. It was believed that Forrester would be chosen as Labor's candidate for the seat of Bonner at the 2007 federal election instead. However, he lost party preselection to local councillor Kerry Rea. Both Bombolas and Rea went on to win their respective election contests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181162-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chattanooga Mocs football team\nThe 2005 Chattanooga Mocs football team represented the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga as a member of the Southern Conference (SoCon) in the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Mocs were led by third-year head coach Rodney Allison and played their home games at Finley Stadium. They finished the season 6\u20135 overall and 3\u20134 in SoCon play to tie for fifth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181163-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chattogram City Corporation election\nThe 2005 election for mayor of Chattogram City Corporation was held on 12 May 2005.The result was a victory again for the Bangladesh Awami League candidate A B M Mohiuddin Chowdhury. He beat Mir Mohammed Nasiruddin, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party's candidate and previous Mayor who was appointed to his post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181164-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheadle by-election\nThe Cheadle by-election, in Greater Manchester, England, was caused by the death of Patsy Calton, the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament (MP) for Cheadle on 29 May 2005. The election was held on 14 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 236]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181164-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheadle by-election\nThe Liberal Democrat candidate succeeding Calton was Stockport council leader Mark Hunter. The Conservative candidate was Stephen Day (who held the seat from 1987 to 2001, and lost to Calton in the 2005 general election). In his victory speech, Hunter described the campaign of the Conservatives as 'nasty' and 'misleading'.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181164-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheadle by-election\nThe campaign was marred by accusations of dirty tricks and ruthless negative campaigning, principally accusing the Conservative campaign. Both the Liberal Democrats and a local newspaper threatened legal action over inaccuracies and defamation in Conservative campaign leaflets. The most significant example was a Conservative leaflet that superimposed a headline about Hunter's voting record on crime with a headline from a local newspaper about a rape, prompting the Liberal Democrats to threaten legal action. With only 4.6% of the vote the Labour Party candidate, Martin Miller, lost his deposit; Labour did not fight an energetic campaign in a seat that was a Liberal Democrat/Conservative marginal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181164-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheadle by-election\nWith the exception of the 1997 Winchester by-election, where the General Election result was annulled, it was the first seat to be defended in a by-election by the Liberal Democrats since their formation in 1988. Their predecessor parties last defended a seat in a by-election at Truro in 1987.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181165-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chechen legislative election\n2005 Chechen legislative election took part on November 27 of that year. This was the first parliamentary election in the Chechen Republic since the constitutional referendum that took place in 2003 and resulted in the adoption of the Constitution of the Chechen Republic.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181165-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chechen legislative election, Background\nOn August 2005 Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a presidential decree \"On the election to Parliament of the Chechen Republic of the first convocation\" announcing the election were to be held on November 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 45], "content_span": [46, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181166-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Checker Auto Parts 500\nThe 2005 Checker Auto Parts 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race held on November 13, 2005 at Phoenix International Raceway in Avondale, Arizona. Contested over 312 laps on the 1-mile (1.609\u00a0km) asphalt oval, it was the thirty-fifth race of the 2005 Nextel Cup Series season. Kyle Busch of Hendrick Motorsports won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181166-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Checker Auto Parts 500, Background\nPhoenix International Raceway \u2013 also known as PIR \u2013 is a one-mile, low-banked tri-oval race track located in Avondale, Arizona. It is named after the nearby metropolitan area of Phoenix. The motorsport track opened in 1964 and currently hosts two NASCAR race weekends annually. PIR has also hosted the IndyCar Series, CART, USAC and the Rolex Sports Car Series. The raceway is currently owned and operated by International Speedway Corporation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181166-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Checker Auto Parts 500, Background\nThe raceway was originally constructed with a 2.5\u00a0mi (4.0\u00a0km) road course that ran both inside and outside of the main tri-oval. In 1991 the track was reconfigured with the current 1.51\u00a0mi (2.43\u00a0km) interior layout. Lights were installed around the track in 2004 following the addition of a second annual NASCAR race weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 39], "content_span": [40, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181166-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Checker Auto Parts 500, Summary\nThe Checker Auto Parts 500 was held November 13 at Phoenix International Raceway. Denny Hamlin, who hadn't competed in a full season in Nextel Cup at the time, won the pole. The race was surrounded by controversy when defending champion Kurt Busch was cited for reckless driving and was reported by a cop to have \"had the whiff of alcohol\", although he was below the legal limit of .008 in Arizona, when it was discovered Kurt Busch actually had .0018 in alcohol. Due to his actions, he was suspended by Roush Racing for the rest of the season, and Kenny Wallace took the wheel of the 97 car. Ironically, his brother Kyle won the race, and in victory lane, he criticized the media for their handling of the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 749]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181166-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Checker Auto Parts 500, Summary\nJerry Robertson would make his only NASCAR Nextel Cup Series start in this event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 36], "content_span": [37, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy\nThe 2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy was the 4th Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, an English county cricket tournament, held between 3 May and 3 September 2005. The competition was contested by all 18 first-class counties, as well as 10 minor counties and the national teams of Scotland, Ireland, the Netherlands and Denmark, to make up a full 32-team tournament. The final was won by the Hampshire Hawks, who beat the Warwickshire Bears by 18 runs at Lord's on 3 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy\nThis would be the final year that the competition used a purely knockout format, and was also the final year to date in which the minor counties also participated. It would be the first year white balls and coloured clothing were used, although red balls and white clothing were still used in the early stages in matches between first class counties and the minor counties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Format\nThe eighteen first-class counties were joined by ten minor counties \u2013 Bedfordshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Devon, Northumberland, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Suffolk, Wales Minor Counties and Wiltshire \u2013 as well as the national teams of Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands and Scotland. Teams who won in the first round progressed to the second round, those who won in the second round progressed to the quarter-finals. Winner from the quarter-finals progressed to the semi-finals and winners from that round progressed to the final at Lord's, which was held on 3 September 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 43], "content_span": [44, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nThe first round was held on 3\u20135 May. While some upsets looked possible at times, with teams such as the Netherlands, Berkshire and Staffordshire threatening their first-class opponents, there were no first round surprises. Two of the games featured two first-class sides: Durham lost to Derbyshire by one wicket off the last ball; Somerset were edged out by Leicestershire in a very low-scoring thriller.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nNorthamptonshire's Charl Pietersen took 7 for 10 at Svanholm Park, Br\u00f8ndby as Denmark fell to the competition's second lowest score in its history, for 56 all out. 24 of those runs were extras, with no Dane scoring more than 8 with the bat. Pietersen, who was playing in his debut match for the Northants first team said, \"The ball was swinging about and they were perfect conditions for bowling. I just concentrated on getting the ball in the right areas and the conditions did the rest. I'm grateful for the opportunity I've been given by Northants. I'm here to learn and try to get myself in the first team on a regular basis. No cricketer wants to play second-team cricket and I'm no different. But one performance won't get me in, I've got to be consistent with my wicket-taking and my economy.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 859]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nIt took Northamptonshire one ball less than 17 overs to make 59 for 2 to win the match just before lunch as the Danes were humbled. Afterwards the Danish coach said, \"We knew it was going to be difficult. We are short of money but we are trying to develop every time we play against different opposition. We have a lot of young players and it was good for them to test themselves against the professionals.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nNick Knight made 108 in Rotterdam to take Warwickshire to 237 for 5, despite five maidens being bowled by the Dutch. In reply Holland were 101 for 4 off 27 overs when rain prevented play for the first day, leaving them 137 to win off 23 overs on the second day. Daan van Bunge was doing well with 37 off 37 balls at close.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nVan Bunge was the mainstay of the reply on the second day, and the Dutch looked good as long as he and Billy Stelling were at the crease, and they led the way to 205 for 5 before Stelling was caught off Neil Carter. That precipitated a collapse, as the last 4 wickets went for 9 runs, and Warwickshire managed a 23-run victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 386]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nBerkshire did well at their home ground in Reading. Despite 80 from Phil Weston, Gloucestershire only made 223 from 49.3 overs. Apart from a second-wicket partnership worth 118 between Weston and Chris Taylor, wickets fell regularly, leaving the minor county in with a clear chance. Berkshire progressed well in reply, reaching 69 for 2 off 14 overs when rain halted play for the day. On the second day, however, Berkshire soon capitulated for 138, as Sri Lankan spinner Upul Chandana took 4 for 27. The last eight wickets fell for 26 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nAndrew Crook scored freely for Lancashire at Sir Paul Getty's Ground at Wormsley as he broke Lancashire's one-day record with his 162 not out. Glen Chapple gave support as he scored the competition's fastest ever half-century, making 55 in just 16 balls as the first-class team finished on 370 for 4. They were denied the chance to wrap up the win on the first day though, as rain halted play with Buckinghamshire on 39 for 2. No play was possible on the second day, and with 10.3 overs of Buckinghamshire's innings bowled, a decision was possible on the Duckworth-Lewis method.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nNo play was possible on the first day at Exmouth because of rain. When play started on what was a wettish pitch with a slow outfield Essex hit over the top and ended on 264 for 5 off their 50 overs, with Andy Flower and Ravinder Bopara recording half-centuries. Devon were not competitive in reply and soon succumbed, making only 84, although that could be seen as a recovery from 23 for 6 - a position they were in thanks to Essex pacers Andre Adams and Darren Gough, who took three wickets each with the new ball. Neil Hancock, who turned out in two Twenty20 games and one National League match for Somerset in 2004, top scored with 40 despite batting at seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 722]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nIreland, trying to emulate their success in this competition against Surrey the previous year, fared poorly on the first day at Belfast. After being put into bat by Yorkshire, the visitors' fast bowler Matthew Hoggard took two wickets to help reduce them to 33 for 3 when rain put an end to proceedings for the day after 12.3 overs. After the play that was possible, Irish vice-captain Kyle McCallan said, \"It was disappointing losing our top three batsmen so early on. But our strength is in our depth of batting. It's not the end of the world at the moment and we're still hoping to post a total of around 200.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 672]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nOn the second day they achieved this, reaching 201 thanks to half-centuries from Eoin Morgan and Peter Gillespie, but it was never going to be enough against Yorkshire. Half-centuries from Ian Harvey, Michael Vaughan and Phil Jaques saw the visitors home with 15 balls to spare as they made 202 for 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nRain meant there was no play on the first day at Jesmond. On a second day where plenty of runs were available, Northumberland put on 206 for 8 with Stephen Humble making an unbeaten 88 from number 8 in the batting order. Middlesex in the shape of Ed Smith and Paul Weekes knocked them off in just 31.3 overs. Weekes ended up with 106, Middlesex' first List A century of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 440]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nKent came close to being humiliated by the minor county Wiltshire at Salisbury as they were bowled out for 160, with Kevin Nash taking 4 for 46. In reply, Wiltshire were always in with a chance, but lost wickets regularly, with Simon Cook taking 4 for 22. However, with 10 runs needed off the last over, Nash was run out to seal a Kent win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nBedfordshire batted first at Luton. They progressed slowly, making their first 50 in the 23rd over. Whilst they improved to 143 for 9 in their 50 overs, it was never going to be enough. By way of comparison, it took Sussex six overs to reach their first 50, with Ian Ward (65 off 44) scoring most of the early runs, although admittedly batting was easier on the drying pitch. Sussex overhauled their modest target with 31.3 overs to go - almost two thirds of their allotted quota.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nDurham put on 234 in their 50 overs at Chester-le-Street, mostly thanks Paul Collingwood, who scored 82 from 83 balls. Spin bowler Ant Botha took 4 for 44. In reply, Steve Harmison performed well, trapping Michael Di Venuto lbw with his third ball and, in a hostile and accurate spell, had Hassan Adnan caught at first slip. He ended with three for 45. Derbyshire were wobbling, but anchored by Chris Bassano who eked out 57 from 104 balls. This, along with 50 from Graeme Welch, kept Derbyshire in the game, but it needed a tenth wicket partnership of 16 between Botha and Kevin Dean to see them through on the last ball of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 693]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nIt was an unusual game at Grace Road, which was all done by 3.30pm. The ball swung greatly, and there was seam movement, and Charl Willoughby of Leicestershire made the most of them first, taking 6 for 16 as Somerset were dismissed for 94 - though it could have been much worse, as they were 58 for 9 before Ian Blackwell and Simon Francis attacked and added 36 for the last wicket. Marcus Trescothick, the Somerset captain, who only made 11 said, \"Conditions were not conducive to one-day cricket, that's for sure. Unfortunately, we lost the toss and had the worst of it, but we still thought we could win because we have more consistent length bowlers. Even 130 or so could have been a great score.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 760]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nLeicestershire themselves struggled in reply, and Somerset took wickets regularly, reducing the hosts to 70 for 7. However, they were not able to take another, as Leicestershire ended on 96 for 7 - Ottis Gibson and Claude Henderson adding 26 for the eighth wicket, Leicestershire's highest partnership of the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nThe first day at The Grange saw no play because of rain. After losing the toss, Scotland were put in, and the bowlers immediately made it very difficult for Scotland. It took them six overs to make their first ten runs, and every time they tried to accelerate, they lost wickets. In the end, they could only muster 134 all out in 46.5 overs. Vikram Solanki and Stephen Moore made this target look easy, passing the required 135 runs without losing a wicket in 5 balls fewer than 20 overs. Both batsmen made half-centuries.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nShropshire batted first at Whitchurch, making only 132 as Shane Warne and Richard Logan took 3 wickets each. This was never a big enough target to hold off Hampshire. The crowd were treated to a powerful innings by England's new star one-day performer, Kevin Pietersen, who had been promoted to No. 1 in the batting order. He scored 76 off 49 balls in an innings that included six sixes and seven fours as Hampshire racked up 133 for 3 off 21.1 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nLast year, Surrey were knocked out in Round One of this Trophy by Ireland, and so they would have come to Leek determined to avoid the same ignominy this time round. Staffordshire did push them hard, however. Staffordshire batted first, and made 186, with 23 wides showing how inaccurate the Surrey bowling was. In reply, ex-Middlesex bowler, David Follett, took 3 for 13 to reduce Surrey to a worrying 47 for 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nThen Mark Ramprakash came in, who steaded the Surrey ship with 49, before he was run out, leaving Surrey 45 to win off 62 balls with 4 wickets left. Rikki Clarke and Martin Bicknell got most of them, as Surrey won with 192 for 7 with 7 balls to go, Bicknell winning the game with a six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nAfter rain, play only began at 3pm at Bury St Edmunds with Glamorgan batting first. The highlight of their innings was an undefeated 100 from Matthew Elliott in 104 balls, with his partners contributing usefully as the visitors racked up an imposing 320 for 5. Suffolk were never in contention, and to spare the need for the match going into a second day, play continued in near-darkness to 8.40pm, with Glamorgan bowling their last 32 overs (all with spin, in order to make conditions playable for batsmen) in 80 minutes. Staffordshire finally finished on 177 for 8 off their 50 overs, recovering from 69 for 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, First Round\nAfter a four-and-a-half hour rain delay, Wales Minor Counties batted first at Swansea, and fared poorly. The only score of any note came from Willy Bragg, an 18-year-old left-hander, currently in the middle of his A-Level exams. He made an undefeated 41 runs, as Wales Minor Counties were dismissed for 119. Mark Ealham took 4 for 28 and Andrew Harris 3 for 31. Nottinghamshire were never really threatened, but did lose 4 wickets in making 121 off 26.2 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nThe Second Round was played on 17 and 18 May. The surprise of the round was the elimination of defending champions Gloucestershire by a Surrey team that had lost all four of its one-day games against first-class counties up to that point in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nAt Derby, Derbyshire won the toss and chose to field against Kent, who scored 257 for 4 after healthy contributions from the entire top order, Geraint Jones top-scoring with 70 while Derbyshire's South African all-rounder Ant Botha took three for 40 with his left-arm spin. Martin Saggers (three for 21), Amjad Khan (one for 12) and Simon Cook (one for 22) then reduced Derbyshire to 27 for 5, and Derbyshire were never in the match from there. Eventually they were bowled out for 130 in 42.5 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nZimbabwean all-rounder Sean Ervine and veteran wicket-keeper Nic Pothas made the most important contributions as Hampshire overpowered Glamorgan at Cardiff. Only Michael Powell showed some sort of resistance, scoring 56 in Glamorgan's 214, while Ervine took five for 50 from his ten overs - admittedly mostly tail-enders, but he got the most wickets. Chris Tremlett also took three for 32. Pothas then notched up the first limited-over century of the Hampshire season, scoring 114 not out off 127 balls and standing tall while Glamorgan's fast bowlers Andrew Davies and Simon Jones made inroads with the ball. England prospect Kevin Pietersen continued his fine form with 69 off 64 balls, including four sixes, as he shared a 130-run partnership with Pothas. Thanks to the quick scoring of Pothas and Pietersen, Hampshire won with nearly 11 overs to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 916]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nSurrey overcame their poor one-day form, with four losses in four National League games, to reach the quarter-finals in a close game at Bristol against Gloucestershire. Surrey won the toss and fielded first, restricting Gloucestershire to 230 for 8 after most of the Surrey bowlers got wickets. Chris Taylor made 74 and top-scored, but it was the all-rounder Alex Gidman who managed to keep his head calm, scoring 58 not out while the tail crashed to single figure scores around him. In reply, Surrey struggled to 110 for 4, losing wickets at key moments, but Rikki Clarke (62 not out) stood tall towards the end, taking the winning runs off James Averis with three balls and three wickets remaining in the innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 775]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nAndrew Flintoff took 4 for 26 in helpful bowling conditions as Essex made only 195 for 9 at Old Trafford. In reply, Lancashire's opening partnership of Mal Loye and Stuart Law put on 53 in 10.1 overs, before Alex Tudor dismissed them both. Brad Hodge, however, kept the run rate up. Hodge was dropped on 32, and Lancashire might have been put under pressure if it had been taken, but instead he went on to make 82 off 102 balls, as Lancashire made there target with 6 wickets and 6 overs to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nNorthamptonshire batted first at Lord's. Their top order performed well, with Usman Afzaal making 75 off 120 balls, and useful contributions from Bilal Shafayat (46) and David Sales (40). However, once they were out, 7 wickets fell for 40 runs, leaving them on 215 for 9, before Robert White smacked 36 to lift the visitors to 238. Middlesex got off to a good start, reaching 148 for 2 and 168 for 3, as opener Paul Weekes scored a century. However, then Damien Wright took 4 wickets for 1 in 7 balls, as Middlesex collapsed in more spectacular fashion than the visitors, losing their last 6 wickets for 8 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nDougie Brown took a wicket in each of his first three overs to help a poor Warwickshire one-day side to victory at Edgbaston. Warwickshire batted first, and the hosts were on 78 for two after 15 overs, with Nick Knight (69) and Ian Bell (35) in control. Then Bell was stumped attacking a ball from Claude Henderson leaving the score on 116 for 3 in the 22nd over. There then was a collapse as 5 fell for 64, before Heath Streak and Tony Frost put on 55 in the last 9 overs to lift Warwickshire to 235.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nIn Leicestershire's innings immediately faltered as Brown's wickets reduced them to 16 for 3. Brown was helped by good tight bowling from Heath Streak at the other end, which meant they chose to attack Brown. Leicestershire tried to rebuild, but never managed it, finally being dismissed for 152 with 6.3 overs to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nYorkshire batted first at Headingley and fared poorly at first, slumping to 88 for 4 when Michael Vaughan cut the ball from Zander de Bruyn onto his stumps. Craig White and Anthony McGrath then put on 83 in 22 overs, and late hitting gave Yorkshire a defendable total of 241 for 9 with 52 off the last 5 overs. The Worcestershire innings followed a similar course. First they were reduced to 50 for 3, and then Kabir Ali (67) and Zander de Bruyn (82) came together, putting on 117. White then interrupted them, taking three wickets. The run-chase was thus effectively curtailed, and Worcestershire finished well behind on 227 for 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nNottinghamshire got off to a bad start at Hove by losing their first 3 wickets for only 12 runs. They continued to lose wickets at regular intervals until the score moved on to 111 for 8, when Samit Patel (61) and Gareth Clough (22) came together and lifted the total to 195 for 9 off the 50 overs. Three Nottinghamshire batsmen were run out. Sussex immediately lost Ian Ward and Mike Yardy, moving to 1 run for 2 wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0032-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Second Round\nHowever, the ship was steadied with half-centuries from Murray Goodwin and Carl Hopkinson and they eventually eased through with 3 wickets and 18 balls to go. The win, however, came at a price for Sussex, who now had to play Lancashire away in the next round, rather than host the touring Australians in a 3-day game. The cost of the win was estimated at \u00a350,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 59], "content_span": [60, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Quarter-Finals\nAndrew Symonds scored 101 and took two wickets for 46 to be the difference between the sides at Old Trafford. Having been sent in to bat, Lancashire owed much of their success to a partnership of 118 between Symonds and Marcus North, and good lower-order hitting took the total to 249 for 8, despite three wickets each from Sussex' Pakistanis, Rana Naved-ul-Hasan and Mushtaq Ahmed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0033-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Quarter-Finals\nThe Sussex chase looked on when they were 112 for 1 with Matt Prior and Chris Adams at the crease, as they were just waiting for opportunities to up the run-rate, but instead Symonds and England all-rounder Andrew Flintoff ran through them with the ball, and Robin Martin-Jenkins and Ahmed eventually had to consolidate to 214 for 8, losing by 35 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Quarter-Finals\nDespite an unbeaten 158 from Jonathan Batty, Surrey still lost their quarter-final game at The Oval, having first batted to make 358 for 6 in 50 overs. James Benning with 73, and Graham Thorpe with 60, also contributed, as Hampshire used seven bowlers who all failed to keep their conceded runs below six an over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0034-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Quarter-Finals\nIn reply, Azhar Mahmood served up a wicket maiden over in the first over of Hampshire's innings, leaving Hampshire 359 to win with nine wickets in hand, but Shane Watson and Craig McMillan put the visitors from the south back on track with a partnership of 81 for the fourth wicket. When McMillan was run out, Hampshire were 200 for 4, but Watson powered on to make 132, his highest career List A cricket score to boost Hampshire to 342 for 8 when Tim Murtagh broke through his defences. By then, it was too late, as Shaun Udal completed his 44 not out, having added 63 with Watson for the eighth wicket earlier, and Hampshire made it to the target with thirteen balls to spare - although they had been given eleven extra balls due to no-balls and wides.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 816]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Quarter-Finals\nAndrew Hall and Robert Key gave Kent some hope of winning the match at Edgbaston with their opening partnership of 120 runs, but spinners Ashley Giles and Alex Loudon broke through twice each to limit the final score to 259 for 6. Warwickshire's reply centred on former England ODI player Nic Knight, who made fourteen fours in his 27th one-day century. Three wickets from Justin Kemp had earlier set Warwickshire back to 118 for 3, but Knight and Trevor Penney who made 50 not out off 43 balls, guided Warwickshire to the target with nearly four overs to spare.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Quarter-Finals\nMichael Lumb with 89 and Ian Harvey with 74 lifted Yorkshire to 270 all out at Headingley in the fourth quarter-final of the C&G Trophy. It was a bit of an implosion from 227 for 3, but runs came thick and fast in that period, so Yorkshire wouldn't be too disappointed with losing their wickets. Northamptonshire started well, getting to 163 for 2 after all their top four got starts, but two wickets from England Test bowler Matthew Hoggard started to turn the match. From then on, the Northamptonshire effort just stopped dead, as they lost five wickets for 24 runs to fall to 216 for 9. Steffan Jones and Jason Brown paired up for 21 for the last wicket, but it was too little, too late.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 752]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Semi-Finals\nYorkshire never managed to score in the semi-final match at The Rose Bowl, which meant that Hampshire were set a relatively easy target of 198 to win. Michael Lumb top-scored with 43, but the late order failed to score runs quickly enough to get past 200; number ten John Blain only made six off 20 deliveries, while number nine Tim Bresnan made three off ten.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0037-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Semi-Finals\nYorkshireman Deon Kruis served up some economical bowling early on to John Crawley, and bowled him for a 28-ball 8, but a 147-run partnership between Nic Pothas and Sean Ervine saw Hampshire right on track, as they won with over 10 overs to spare. Ervine made his second List A century, off 96 balls, but was caught and bowled by Richard Dawson three balls later. It didn't matter much - Hampshire only needed 20 runs to win, and Shane Watson and Nic Pothas knocked them off to book Hampshire's place in the C&G Trophy final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Semi-Finals\nWarwickshire put in a fine bowling effort to send Lancashire out of the C&G Trophy, despite Lancashire's Australian Marcus North taking three wickets. North's bowling - and others, Sajid Mahmood took two wickets - set Warwickshire back to 155 for 7, but Michael Powell and Tony Frost put on an eighth-wicket partnership of 81 runs to carry Warwickshire to a total of 236 for 8 after 50 overs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0038-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Semi-Finals\nLancashire looked on track when Mal Loye and Stuart Law negotiated some tricky early bowling to put on 49 for the fourth wicket and see the score to 80 for 3, but medium pacer Jamie Anyon took two wickets, and a fiery spell from Neil Carter, which included two wickets to see him end with four for 26, had Lancashire bowled out for 137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 58], "content_span": [59, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Final\nHampshire became the third team to win a major county trophy in 2005, as they prevailed in a high-scoring final at Lord's, leaving only the County Championship left for grabs. Nic Pothas and Sean Ervine added 136 runs for the second wicket to propel Hampshire to a big total against Warwickshire, whose bowlers gave away 20 runs from wides but still managed to bowl Hampshire out on the last ball. Ervine was fifth out, taking 91 balls for his second successive C&G century, before he was caught off Jonathan Trott, who finished with three wickets for 35 runs. Neil Carter took five wickets to redeem his 66 conceded runs, while Makhaya Ntini bowled two maiden overs for Warwickshire, but went wicketless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Final\nWarwickshire were set to chase 291 to win, and Carter fulfilled his job as a pinch hitter well, scoring four fours and one six en route to 32, and Nick Knight and Ian Bell kept up with the required run rate well. However, Bell suffered cramps just before he reached 50, and that limited his movements - he succumbed shortly afterwards, chipping a simple catch to Chris Tremlett and was gone for 54.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181167-0040-0001", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy, Fixtures, Final\nThe other batsmen tried to add runs with Knight, but yielded to the Hampshire bowling and fielding effort, and when Knight was finally dismissed for 118 Warwickshire needed 40 runs for the last three wickets. Shane Watson effectively stopped that, having Dougie Brown and Ashley Giles out bowled, leaving Warwickshire to hit about 20 runs in the last over. It was too much for Makhaya Ntini, who was bowled by Chris Tremlett with the second ball of the last over, and thus Hampshire took an 18-run victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 52], "content_span": [53, 559]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181168-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nThe 2005 Cheltenham Gold Cup was a horse race which took place at Cheltenham on Friday 18 March 2005. It was the 77th running of the Cheltenham Gold Cup, and it was won by the pre-race favourite Kicking King. The winner was ridden by Barry Geraghty and trained by Tom Taaffe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181168-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham Gold Cup\nKicking King was the first winner of the Gold Cup to be trained in Ireland since Imperial Call in 1996. The three-time winner Best Mate was withdrawn from the race a week earlier after bursting a blood vessel. A fourth day was added to the Cheltenham Festival this year, and the Gold Cup was switched to a new day, Friday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181168-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cheltenham Gold Cup, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter. nk = neck; PU = pulled-up.\u2020 Trainers are based in Great Britain unless indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181169-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chennai Open\nThe 2005 Chennai Open was an ATP tennis tournament held in Chennai, India. The tournament was held from 3 to 10 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181169-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chennai Open, Finals, Doubles\nRainer Sch\u00fcttler/ Yen-Hsun Lu defeated Mahesh Bhupathi / Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 34], "content_span": [35, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181170-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chennai Open \u2013 Doubles\nRafael Nadal and Tommy Robredo were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181170-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chennai Open \u2013 Doubles\nRainer Sch\u00fcttler and Yen-Hsun Lu won in the final 7\u20135, 4\u20136, 7\u20136(7\u20134), against Mahesh Bhupathi and Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181171-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chennai Open \u2013 Singles\nCarlos Moy\u00e0 was the defending champion and won in the final 3\u20136, 6\u20134, 7\u20136(7\u20135) against Paradorn Srichaphan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181172-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chennai floods\nThe 2005 Chennai floods were some of the worst floods to have hit the city of Chennai, India. The floods occurred during the North-East monsoon season (November-December 2005) as a result of heavy rain. Over 50 people were killed in two incidents of stampede for food and money in relief camps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study\nThe 2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study (also known as the Task Force on Traffic Capacity Across the Chesapeake Bay) was a study conducted by the state of Maryland in 2005 in order to explore the possibility of building a new crossing of the Chesapeake Bay. The crossing would either be an entirely new crossing that would complement the existing Chesapeake Bay Bridge and Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel in Virginia or would be an upgrade to the current Maryland crossing (by adding a third span).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study\nSince 2000, traffic congestion has become an increasing problem for the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. During the MdTA's 2004 fiscal year (July 1\u2013June 30), it was utilized by approximately 25.8 million vehicles. Plans by Maryland to construct a third crossing of the Chesapeake Bay are currently in the preliminary stages. During the summer and fall of 2005, a specially-appointed task force met to discuss the pros and cons of building a new bridge in four different locations. Members of the task force included Maryland Secretary of Transportation Robert L. Flanagan who chaired the task force, and Maryland State Senator E. J. Pipkin.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Options\nScenarios for the new bridge include a northern crossing between Baltimore and Kent Counties (\"Zone 1\"), adding a third bridge adjacent to the existing bridges (\"Zone 2\"), a crossing from Anne Arundel County or Calvert County to Talbot County (\"Zone 3\"), and a southern crossing between southern Calvert County and Dorchester County (\"Zone 4\").", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Options, Zone 1\nRoughly 50% of summer-weekend bridge traffic originates from Baltimore, and Baltimore accounts for 70% of non-summer weekday bridge traffic. In addition, the crossing will be across more shallow waters than the other crossings. The cons for building a bridge in such a location include the need to upgrade roads in Kent County as well as Kent County residents' concerns that historic towns in the county such as Chestertown would become suburbs of Baltimore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Options, Zone 2\nThe plan for Zone 2 would have the existing crossing upgraded by adding a third span to it, thus increasing the capacity of US 50/301 across the bay. This option, the equivalent of which was chosen in the 1960s studies, would require the shortest bridge. However, in order to accommodate the higher capacity of the upgraded crossing (planned to be 10 lanes total), US 50/301 would have to be widened, which would be difficult mostly through Annapolis and Kent Island due to development near the highway.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 555]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Options, Zone 3\nA new option explored during the 2000s studies was for a crossing from either Anne Arundel or Calvert County to Talbot County. This crossing would divert more traffic than the Zone 4 crossing while still providing a more direct connection between Ocean City, the most popular of the Eastern Shore resorts, and the Western Shore than the current crossing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Options, Zone 3\nIts major downfalls are that a series of small bridges would have to be built in Talbot County to serve the bridge, and the main bridge across the Chesapeake would be 10\u201312 miles (16\u201319\u00a0km) long, over twice as long as the existing crossing and comparable to the length of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Options, Zone 4\nThe southern crossing, between Calvert and Dorchester Counties, would provide the most direct connection between Ocean City and the Western Shore. It has met with much opposition, however, due to environmental concerns that the approach roads on the Eastern Shore would be built on marshland. In addition, it would divert less traffic than the other crossings and, like the Zone 3 crossing, it would require the construction of small bridges on the Eastern Shore side. The total lengths of these bridges could be greater than the length of the main bridge itself.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 51], "content_span": [52, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Other possibilities\nIn 2006 a hydrofoil ferry service between Baltimore and Rock Hall was proposed to begin by mid-2007; however, the service did not receive authorization from the Maryland General Assembly and therefore never came to fruition. Reasons the service was not seen as a viable option included the fact that a ferry would take longer to cross than a car driving over a bridge, and those seeking the path of least resistance when crossing would opt for using the bridge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Other possibilities\nAlso, fees would be much higher with a ferry service to cross a car ($25 to $45) versus a bridge (current charge on existing bridge was $6.00 at the time). Estimates are that a ferry service would only be able to transport approximately 25,000 to 335,000 vehicle per year versus 24 million vehicles per year with a bridge. The task force concluded that a ferry service would not address the traffic congestion in a sufficient matter to be considered as a viable alternative, but may be a possible recreational feature for the bay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181173-0007-0002", "contents": "2005 Chesapeake Bay crossing study, Other possibilities\nIn early 2007, a private organization announced plans for a commuter ferry service that would directly link Kent Island with Baltimore and Annapolis. Unlike earlier proposals, the ferries would not carry vehicles, allowing them to carry more passengers than a vehicle-carrying ferry. Because of this, the ferries will connect with the local transit systems in Baltimore and Annapolis. Maryland governor Martin O'Malley has stated that he prefers a ferry over a new bridge. If any ferry service comes about, it would be the first major cross-bay ferry service in Maryland since the building of the Bay Bridge. Proposals have also been made for a new rail bridge rather than a highway bridge to cross the bay as part of a public transportation line.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 55], "content_span": [56, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181174-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chevy American Revolution 400\nThe 2005 Chevy American Revolution 400 was the 11th stock car race of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. It was held on Saturday, May 14, 2005, before a crowd of 107,000 watching the race at Richmond, Virginia at Richmond International Raceway. The 400-lap race was won by Kasey Kahne from Evernham Motorsports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181174-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chevy American Revolution 400, Qualifying\nKasey Kahne would win qualifying with a 20.775. Meanwhile, during Carl Long's run, he would spin and crash his car during his lap, causing him to not qualify for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 46], "content_span": [47, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season\nThe 2005 season was the Chicago Bears' 86th in the National Football League (NFL). The team improved to an 11\u20135 record from a 5\u201311 record in 2004, earning them their first playoff birth and NFC North title since 2001 title and the second seed in the NFC for the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season\nThe season started off with the team trying to rebound from a 5\u201311 season under now coach Lovie Smith. Smith, in his first year with the Bears, had been eager to lead his young team to a Super Bowl, but a preseason injury to starting quarterback Rex Grossman spelled disaster for the Bears.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season\nThe 2005 Bears started the season slowly, winning only one of their first four games. Despite their poor passing game, the Bears managed to win eight consecutive games, through perseverance on defense and a solid running game. The Bears eventually clinched a playoff berth on Christmas Day against the Green Bay Packers. However, in their first playoff game in almost four years, the Carolina Panthers upset the Bears, 29\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 451]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season\nThis season is notable for Bears linebacker Brian Urlacher winning Defensive Player of the Year. He was the first Bear to earn the award since 1988 when Mike Singletary won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Training camp\nHopeful expectations were crushed as quarterback Rex Grossman's ankle was broken in the 2nd preseason game against the St. Louis Rams. Backup quarterback Chad Hutchinson was benched and cut after struggling heavily in the next two preseason games against the Indianapolis Colts and Buffalo Bills. The Bears then turned to rookie Kyle Orton to lead their offense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Training camp\nRookie running back Cedric Benson held out of training camp over a contract dispute until just before the final preseason game. His absence in camp meant that Thomas Jones would be the starting running back going into the regular season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Offseason, Training camp\nDespite all these setbacks, the Bears were still hopeful because franchise middle linebacker Brian Urlacher had made it through the preseason in good health, unlike the year before when he battled injuries all season, beginning with a pulled hamstring on the first day of training camp.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 51], "content_span": [52, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nQ2 \u2013 WAS \u2013 1:00 \u2013 John Hall 43-yard field goal (WAS 6\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 11:28 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 7\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 1: at Washington Redskins\nQ3 \u2013 WAS \u2013 2:54 \u2013 John Hall 19-yard field goal (WAS 9\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nQ1 \u2013 DET \u2013 9:54 \u2013 Roy Williams 51-yard pass from Joey Harrington (kick failed) (CHI 7\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 6:04 \u2013 Doug Brien 48-yard field goal (CHI 10\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 11:34 \u2013 Bobby Wade 73-yard punt return (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 17\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 1:14 \u2013 Muhsin Muhammad 28-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 24\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:57 \u2013 Mike Brown 41-yard interception return (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 31\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 2: vs. Detroit Lions\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 12:13 \u2013 Thomas Jones 16-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CHI 38\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 68], "content_span": [69, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nQ1 \u2013 CIN \u2013 5:31 \u2013 Shayne Graham 33-yard field goal (CIN 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nQ3 \u2013 CIN \u2013 7:03 \u2013 Chris Henry 36-yard pass from Carson Palmer (Shayne Graham kick) (CIN 17\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:30 \u2013 Thomas Jones 2-yard run (Doug Brien kick) (CIN 17\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nQ4 \u2013 CIN \u2013 11:56 \u2013 Chad Johnson 40-yard pass from Carson Palmer (Shayne Graham kick) (CIN 24\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 3: vs. Cincinnati Bengals\nThis was Chicago's only loss at home during the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Cleveland Browns\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 9:01 \u2013 Robbie Gould 44-yard field goal (3\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Cleveland Browns\nQ2 \u2013 CLE \u2013 0:37 \u2013 Phil Dawson 44-yard field goal (CLE 6\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Cleveland Browns\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:29 \u2013 Marc Edwards 8-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 10\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Cleveland Browns\nQ4 \u2013 CLE \u2013 3:02 \u2013 Antonio Bryant 33-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Phil Dawson kick) (CLE 13\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 5: at Cleveland Browns\nQ4 \u2013 CLE \u2013 2:24 \u2013 Antonio Bryant 28-yard pass from Trent Dilfer (Phil Dawson kick) (CLE 20\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 70], "content_span": [71, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:37 \u2013 Desmond Clark 3-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:28 \u2013 Desmond Clark 2-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 14\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:03 \u2013 Thomas Jones 24-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 21\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 6: vs. Minnesota Vikings\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 4:11 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 28\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nQ2 \u2013 BAL \u2013 8:46 \u2013 Matt Stover 40-yard field goal (CHI 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nQ2 \u2013 BAL \u2013 0:26 \u2013 Matt Stover 29-yard field goal (CHI 7\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 2:52 \u2013 Robbie Gould 23-yard field goal (CHI 10\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 7: vs. Baltimore Ravens\nBefore the game, Bears great Walter Payton, who died in 1999, was honored by teammate Dan Hampton, who played together in the Bears' 1985 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 9:29 \u2013 Muhsin Muhammad 23-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 1:51 \u2013 Robbie Gould 38-yard field goal (CHI 10\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:17 \u2013 Robbie Gould 20-yard field goal (CHI 13\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nQ3 \u2013 DET \u2013 3:15 \u2013 Kevin Jones 6-yard run (Jason Hanson kick) (CHI 13\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nQ4 \u2013 DET \u2013 13:20 \u2013 Jason Hanson 30-yard field goal (13\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nOT \u2013 CHI \u2013 8:43 \u2013 Charles Tillman 22-yard interception return (CHI 19\u201313)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 8: at Detroit Lions\nBears rookie Mark Bradley was placed on injured reserve this game, and was replaced by Justin Gage. Bradley had recorded 18 receptions for 230 yards at the time of his injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 67], "content_span": [68, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 6:26 \u2013 Justin Gage 4-yard pass from Kyle Orton (Robbie Gould kick) (7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0042-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nQ2 \u2013 NO \u2013 9:57 \u2013 Dont\u00e9 Stallworth 15-yard pass from Aaron Brooks (John Carney kick) (NO 10-7)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0043-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:22 \u2013 Robbie Gould 35-yard field goal (10\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0044-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:29 \u2013 Adrian Peterson 6-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 17\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0045-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nQ4 \u2013 NO \u2013 7:44 \u2013 Aaron Brooks 1-yard run (John Carney kick) (17\u201317)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0046-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:06 \u2013 Robbie Gould 28-yard field goal (CHI 20\u201317)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0047-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nDue to damage from Hurricane Katrina to the Louisiana Superdome, the Saints were forced to host the game at LSU's Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge. The Saints scored first on a John Carney field goal, but the Bears struck back with a Kyle Orton to Justin Gage touchdown pass. After the Saints scored on an Aaron Brooks touchdown pass to Dont\u00e9 Stallworth, Robbie Gould tied the game on a 35-yard field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0047-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 9: at New Orleans Saints\nIn the second half, Adrian Peterson gave the Bears the lead on a 6-yard run, which was countered with Brooks scoring on a 1-yard touchdown run in the fourth. Orton eventually threw a 22-yard pass to Muhsin Muhammad to set up a game-winning field goal from Gould with six seconds left in the game. Gould eventually scored on a 28-yard field goal to give the Bears a 20\u201317 lead. The Saints' last chance to march 65 yards to win was crushed when Brooks' pass to Az-Zahir Hakim was intercepted by Nathan Vasher. The win was the Bears' fourth-straight, which hasn't been accomplished by the team since their 2001 season. In the first quarter, Bears running back Thomas Jones went out with an injury, but his backups Adrian Peterson and Cedric Benson combined for 137 yards and a touchdown.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0048-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:00 \u2013 Nathan Vasher 108-yard missed field goal return (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0049-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nQ3 \u2013 SF \u2013 9:38 \u2013 Joe Nedney 34-yard field goal (CHI 7\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0050-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 14:33 \u2013 Adrian Peterson 7-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 14\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0051-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nQ4 \u2013 SF \u2013 10:54 \u2013 Joe Nedney 29-yard field goal (CHI 14\u20139)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0052-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 10: vs. San Francisco 49ers\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:40 \u2013 Robbie Gould 37-yard field goal (CHI 17\u20139)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0053-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:41 \u2013 Robbie Gould 33-yard field goal (CHI 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0054-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:52 \u2013 Robbie Gould 39-yard field goal (CHI 13\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0055-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 11: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ4 \u2013 CAR \u2013 8:31 \u2013 John Kasay 38-yard field goal (CHI 13\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0056-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nQ1 \u2013 TB \u2013 2:12 \u2013 Matt Bryant 27-yard field goal (CHI 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0057-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:17 \u2013 Robbie Gould 25-yard field goal (CHI 10\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0058-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:47 \u2013 Robbie Gould 36-yard field goal (CHI 13\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0059-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 12: at Tampa Bay Buccaneers\nQ4 \u2013 TB \u2013 7:00 \u2013 Mike Alstott 2-yard run (CHI 13\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 75], "content_span": [76, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0060-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nQ2 \u2013 GB \u2013 7:03 \u2013 Samkon Gado 2-yard run (Ryan Longwell kick) (GB 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0061-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 4:33 \u2013 Robbie Gould 40-yard field goal (GB 7\u20136)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0062-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:02 \u2013 Robbie Gould 25-yard field goal (CHI 9\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0063-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 8:22 \u2013 Robbie Gould 35-yard field goal (CHI 12\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0064-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 13: vs. Green Bay Packers\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:06 \u2013 Nathan Vasher 45-yard interception return (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 19\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0065-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nQ1 \u2013 CHI \u2013 2:30 \u2013 Robbie Gould 29-yard field goal (PIT 7\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0066-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nQ2 \u2013 PIT \u2013 7:25 \u2013 Jerome Bettis 1-yard run (Jeff Reed kick) (PIT 14\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0067-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nQ3 \u2013 PIT \u2013 5:23 \u2013 Jerome Bettis 5-yard run (Jeff Reed kick) (PIT 21\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0068-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 14: at Pittsburgh Steelers\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:38 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1-yard run (kick failed) (PIT 21\u20139)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0069-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 6:33 \u2013 Robbie Gould 35-yard field goal (3\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0070-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 3:20 \u2013 Robbie Gould 29-yard field goal (CHI 6\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0071-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 8:17 \u2013 Thomas Jones 1-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 13\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0072-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 15: vs. Atlanta Falcons\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 0:53 \u2013 Robbie Gould 39-yard field goal (CHI 16\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 71], "content_span": [72, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0073-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nQ2 \u2013 GB \u2013 12:05 \u2013 Noah Herron 1-yard run (Ryan Longwell kick) (7\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0074-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 5:05 \u2013 Thomas Jones 2-yard run (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 14\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0075-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 9:39 \u2013 Robbie Gould 45-yard field goal (CHI 17\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0076-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 4:01 \u2013 Lance Briggs 10-yard interception return (Robbie Gould kick) (CHI 24\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0077-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nQ4 \u2013 GB \u2013 7:54 \u2013 Antonio Chatman 85-yard punt return (Ryan Longwell kick) (CHI 24\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0078-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nQ4 \u2013 GB \u2013 1:54 \u2013 Ryan Longwell 26-yard field goal (CHI 24\u201317)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0079-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 16: at Green Bay Packers\nThe win marked the first time since 1991 that the Bears swept the Green Bay Packers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0080-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ2 \u2013 MIN \u2013 14:53 \u2013 Paul Edinger 54-yard field goal (3\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0081-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ2 \u2013 MIN \u2013 7:37 \u2013 Ciatrick Fason 2-yard run (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 10\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0082-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ2 \u2013 MIN \u2013 0:03 \u2013 Travis Taylor 17-yard pass from Brad Johnson (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 17\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0083-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ3 \u2013 MIN \u2013 3:58 \u2013 Mewelde Moore 7-yard pass from Brad Johnson (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 24\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0084-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ4 \u2013 MIN \u2013 14:52 \u2013 Paul Edinger 27-yard field goal (MIN 27\u20133)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0085-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 7:08 \u2013 Justin Gage 4-yard pass from Jeff Blake (Robbie Gould kick) (MIN 27\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0086-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Game summaries, Week 17: at Minnesota Vikings\nQ4 \u2013 MIN \u2013 5:10 \u2013 Michael Bennett 61-yard run (Paul Edinger kick) (MIN 34\u201310)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 72], "content_span": [73, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0087-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ2 \u2013 CAR \u2013 14:57 \u2013 John Kasay 20 yd FG (CAR 10\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0088-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ2 \u2013 CAR \u2013 6:26 \u2013 John Kasay 38 yd FG (CAR 13\u20130)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0089-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ2 \u2013 CHI \u2013 2:58 \u2013 Adrian Peterson 1 yd TD run (Robbie Gould kick) (CAR 13\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0090-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ2 \u2013 CAR \u2013 0:00 \u2013 John Kasay 37 yd FG (CAR 16\u20137)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0091-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ3 \u2013 CHI \u2013 11:21 \u2013 1 yd TD pass from Rex Grossman to Desmond Clark (Gould kick) (CAR 16\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0092-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ3 \u2013 CAR \u2013 2:07 \u2013 39 yd TD pass from Jake Delhomme to Steve Smith (Kasay kick) (CAR 23\u201314)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0093-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ4 \u2013 CHI \u2013 13:23 \u2013 Jason McKie 1 yd TD run (Gould kick) (CAR 23\u201321)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0094-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nQ4 \u2013 CAR \u2013 8:04 \u2013 1 yd TD pass from Jake Delhomme to Kris Mangum (kick failed) (CAR 29\u201321)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0095-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe Bears hosted their first playoff game since the 2001 season against the red hot Panthers, fresh off a victory over Eli Manning and the New York Giants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0096-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThings were bad from the beginning for the Bears, who allowed a 58-yard Jake Delhomme TD pass to Steve Smith just 55 seconds into the game. Cornerback Charles Tillman slipped on the play, and it only signified things to come the rest of the game for the vaunted Bears defense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0097-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe Panthers added two field goals to their total before the Bears got their first points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0098-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe Bears offense got off to a slow start, having their first 5 possessions end in punts. Their first score came midway through the second quarter, when running back Adrian Peterson scored a touchdown on a 1-yard run. The Bears had opted to go for it on 4th down to get the score, cutting the Carolina lead to 13\u20137. Before the half expired, the Panthers' John Kasay kicked a 37-yard field goal with 5 seconds left in the half, extending the lead to 16\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 537]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0099-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe Bears offense came out at halftime firing on all cylinders, mounting an 8-play, 68-yard drive to close to within 2 points of the Panther lead. It was a balanced drive that led to the score, with the Bears running and passing 5 times each, with Rex Grossman capping the drive with a 1-yard TD pass to Desmond Clark.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0100-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe spark provided by the offense was short-lived, as midway through the 3rd quarter, Delhomme went deep to Steve Smith again, this time for a 39-yard touchdown that put the Panthers up 23\u201314. Chris Thompson, a reserve defensive back for the Bears, fell down on the play to let Smith slip past him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0101-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe Bears managed to score one more time on a drive that started with 2:07 remaining in the 3rd quarter. Grossman completed 3 of 4 passes on the drive, and running back Thomas Jones almost scored on a 7-yard run. After a replay challenge by Carolina, however, the officials reversed the call to say that Jones had fumbled into the endzone, which would have resulted in a Carolina touchback. However, a major facemask penalty on Carolina defensive back Marlon McCree gave Chicago a first down at the Carolina 3. From there, fullback Jason McKie rumbled in for a touchdown, making the score 23\u201321 to the Panthers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 694]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0102-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nThe Panthers extended their lead once more with a 1-yard Delhomme pass to tight end Kris Mangum. Kasay missed the extra point try though, making the Panthers' lead 29\u201321.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181175-0103-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Bears season, Playoffs, NFC Divisional Playoff: vs. Carolina Panthers\nWhen the Bears offense started moving the ball once more, disaster struck for the Bears, as on a 3rd-and-10 play from the Carolina 37-yard line, Grossman threw an ill-advised interception to Ken Lucas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 82], "content_span": [83, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181176-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Cubs season\nThe 2005 Chicago Cubs season was the 134th season of the Chicago Cubs franchise, the 130th in the National League and the 90th at Wrigley Field. The Cubs finished 79\u201383, 4th place in the NL Central. This was the first season for the WGN-TV broadcast pairing of Bob Brenly and Len Kasper.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181176-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats\nStats in bold are the team leaders. Players in bold are on the active roster.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181176-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Walks; SO = Strikeouts; SB = Stolen bases; Avg. = Batting average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181176-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Cubs season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G=Games played; AB=At Bats; H=Hits; Avg.=Batting Average; HR=Home Runs; RBI=Runs Batted In", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181177-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago Marathon\nThe 2005 Chicago Marathon was the 28th running of the annual marathon race in Chicago, United States and was held on October 9. The elite men's race was won by Kenya's Felix Limo in a time of 2:07:02 hours and the women's race was won by home athlete Deena Kastor in 2:21:25.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season\nThe 2005 Chicago White Sox season was the White Sox's 105th season. They finished with a 99\u201363 record in the regular season and first place in the American League Central division by six games over the Cleveland Indians. In the playoffs, they won the American League Division Series 3\u20130 over the defending World Series champion Boston Red Sox, the American League Championship Series 4\u20131 over the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, and the World Series 4\u20130 over the Houston Astros, ending an 88-year championship drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season\nThe Chicago White Sox had a total attendance of 2,342,833 in 2005, 7th in the American League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, The manager\nMuch that happened in 2005 was under the direction of manager Ozzie Guill\u00e9n. After his inaugural season in 2004, in which his club went 83\u201379 and finished second in the American League Central Division, Guill\u00e9n approached general manager Kenny Williams. He asked Williams for a makeover for his club. Guill\u00e9n envisioned his team playing small ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, The manager\nWilliams agreed with Guill\u00e9n. The Sox already had a feisty manager, solid pitching, and power hitters. The Sox decided to clean up a bit and bring in players with the team first attitude. Guill\u00e9n wanted more quickness, so speedy Scott Podsednik was brought in to be the number one hitter and to create havoc for opposing pitchers. Guill\u00e9n wanted pitching, so Williams got Freddy Garc\u00eda, Orlando \"El Duque\" Hern\u00e1ndez, Luis Vizca\u00edno, Dustin Hermanson, and in July, hard throwing closer Bobby Jenks was brought up from the minor leagues.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, The manager\nAnother important factor to Guill\u00e9n's new plan was to have players who put the team ahead of personal accomplishments. Jermaine Dye was added for veteran leadership and provided an important bat and glove in the lineup. Tadahito Iguchi came in from Japan to play second base and bat second behind Podsednik. Iguchi proved his value all year long.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, The manager\nFinally, the Sox decided to add a little fire into a mostly laid back and quiet clubhouse. This need brought catcher A. J. Pierzynski to Chicago after playing six years for division rival Minnesota, and one year for San Francisco.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Season summary\nThe White Sox began their season by winning the first two games, and were 7\u20133 after the first 10 games. They won 19 out of their next 24, including two 8-game winning streaks, and at the end of April were 17\u20137. In mid-May, after beating the Texas Rangers 2 of 3 games, they also took two of three from the Chicago Cubs, but got swept by the Texas Rangers in a two-game series after splitting four games with eventual American League Championship Series opponent Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Season summary\nFinishing May with a 35\u201317 record, the Sox, in interleague play, swept both the Colorado Rockies and Los Angeles Dodgers, but did lose the other series to the Cubs two games to one. At the end of June they were 53\u201324, and just before the All-star break, the Sox were swept by the Oakland Athletics in a 3-game series at home, going into the break at 57\u201329. Then, after the break, they swept the Cleveland Indians in a four-game series, shutting out the Indians twice and scoring seven runs in the other two games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0006-0002", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Season summary\nAt the end of July they were 68\u201335, a 14+1\u20442-game lead in the American League Central over both Cleveland and the Minnesota Twins. However, from August 12 through August 23, they lost 8 out of 9 games they played, including a 7-game losing streak and sweeps at the hands of the Boston Red Sox and Twins, while Cleveland, who had been in second place for the majority of the season, suddenly started playing their best baseball of the year and putting pressure on the Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0006-0003", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Regular season, Season summary\nFinishing strong, though, the White Sox began September by winning their first 7 games and ended the season by winning 8 of 10. They finished the regular season with a 99\u201363 record and a 6-game lead over Cleveland, winning their second American League Central title. The White Sox ended the season with the best record in the AL and the second best record in the major leagues. Their best hitter in terms of statistics was first baseman Paul Konerko, who hit 40 home runs, had 100 runs batted in, and hit .283 on the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Base on balls; SO = Strikeouts; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Player stats, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason\nChicago began its eighth trip to the postseason in 2005. The last time they reached the playoffs, during the 2000 season, they were swept by the wild card Seattle Mariners in three games after having the best record in the American League that season. The White Sox' power, or lack thereof in the series, ultimately doomed them. The pitching, which had been average at best all year, collapsed against Seattle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason\nThe time before that, after their 1993 AL West Division title, the White Sox won two games against the eventual World Series Champion Toronto Blue Jays. Expectations were pretty high for the 2005 playoffs, especially if they could erase that 88-year World Series drought.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 1\nManager Ozzie Guill\u00e9n reminded his team not to feel happy just to be in the playoffs, and the White Sox took it to heart. The \"South Siders\" pounded the Red Sox 14\u20132 behind two home runs from A. J. Pierzynski. Paul Konerko, Juan Uribe, and Scott Podsednik added solo home runs. Podsednik's homer was his first of the season. The White Sox also got another solid performance from starter Jos\u00e9 Contreras, who went 72\u20443 innings, allowing only two runs, and striking out six.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 584]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 1\nThe White Sox beat up on former Cub Matt Clement, as his day was done after just 31\u20443 innings, giving up eight runs. The White Sox played a just about flawless game all together, with plays like Tadahito Iguchi's surprise throw to third to nail Trot Nixon, taking some momentum out of the Red Sox. Everything was looking up for the White Sox, but Boston was the defending champion, so they weren't counting out the Red Sox that easily. Final score: White Sox 14, Boston 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 2\nWhite Sox ace Mark Buehrle got his chance in this game to turn in a solid postseason performance. Buehrle was with the White Sox in 2000 for their last playoff run, and pitched 1/3 scoreless inning of relief back then. But given his first chance to start, he looked to help his team put the Red Sox in a 2-0-hole that would be awfully hard to get out of. Buehrle was a little substandard, giving up four runs and eight hits over seven innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0012-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 2\nHowever, he still got the win partially thanks to Boston second baseman Tony Graffanino, a former White Sox. With one out and Joe Crede on first in the fifth inning, Juan Uribe hit a ground ball up the middle. Graffanino took his eyes off the ball and started to flip the ball to shortstop \u00c9dgar Renter\u00eda before he had actually fielded it. The ball went through his legs and into the outfield. This allowed Crede to move to third, allowing a prime scoring opportunity for the White Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 2\nScott Podsednik spoiled the first chance, fouling out to third. That sent Tadahito Iguchi up to bat with the White Sox down 4\u20132. Iguchi sent a curveball from pitcher David Wells into the left field seats for a 5\u20134 lead. The White Sox never relinquished this lead, as Bobby Jenks came on in the eighth inning to claim the two inning save. The Sox had just won their second postseason game in a row, and headed to Boston, up two games to none. However, the Red Sox had come back from three down in the American League Championship the year before on their way to winning the World Series, so no one was taking Boston lightly. Final Score: White Sox 5, Boston 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 772]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 3\nGame 3 proved to be perhaps the most exciting of the whole series. The White Sox headed into Boston, taking on Johnny Damon, Manny Ramirez, and David Ortiz, and were confident. Freddy Garc\u00eda was starting, ready to nail down his second clinching win of the season (He had been the winning pitcher in the game where the White Sox clinched the Central Division title.). The White Sox took a 2\u20130 lead in the top of the third inning with some key hits. However, Garc\u00eda did not have a very good start, which kept the Red Sox in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 3\nHe gave up two runs in the bottom of the fourth inning to tie the game. But Paul Konerko, the White Sox' number one run producer the whole season, stepped to the plate in the top of the sixth inning with Jermaine Dye on base. He sent a pitch over the left field wall to put the White Sox ahead 4\u20132, and keep a lead that they never lost. A particularly tense point came in the sixth inning.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0014-0002", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 3\nGarc\u00eda gave up a mammoth home run to Manny Ramirez to bring Boston to within one, and then Boston loaded the bases with a single and two walks. That prompted manager Ozzie Guill\u00e9n to bring on Orlando \"El Duque\" Hern\u00e1ndez, who was brought to Chicago for his incredible postseason track record while with the New York Yankees. With no outs, Hern\u00e1ndez got Jason Varitek and Tony Graffanino to pop up in consecutive at-bats. Then after Johnny Damon drew a full count from Hern\u00e1ndez, El Duque got him to miss, ending the inning and putting the Red Sox down to rest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 673]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0014-0003", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 3\nHern\u00e1ndez pitched two more scoreless innings, allowing only one more hit. The White Sox added a run in the top of the ninth inning for security, leading to Bobby Jenks closing out his second game of the series and sending Chicago into the American League Championship Series. Final Score: White Sox 5, Boston 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Division Series- White Sox vs. Boston Red Sox, Game 3\nThis was the White Sox first postseason series win since the 1917 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 112], "content_span": [113, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 1\nBy virtue of their sweep in the Division Series, the White Sox got to enjoy a three-day break in between the two series, while the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim and New York Yankees battled it out. Due to a rain-out, the Angels had to fly from New York to Anaheim for Game 5 of the series, and then fly to Chicago in back to back nights. It was assumed that the White Sox had an advantage in this series, because they were very well rested and Los Angeles was very tired. However, that was not the case.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0016-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 1\nThe Angels were led by a home run from Garret Anderson in the second, and Chicago was unable to execute in the field, leading to two more Angel runs. The White Sox got on the board with a Joe Crede home run in the third. They added on another run to cut the lead to 3\u20132 with A. J. Pierzynski's RBI single in the fourth. However, that was all the production the Sox could muster, as they wasted opportunities in the later innings. A solid start by Jos\u00e9 Contreras couldn't save the Sox either.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 623]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0016-0002", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 1\nContreras went 81\u20443 innings, giving up three runs. It was Contreras's first loss since August 15, when he suffered defeat to the Minnesota Twins. The White Sox were now in a hole, and faced a crucial Game 2, or risk going to Anaheim down 2\u20130 in the series. Final Score: Los Angeles 3, White Sox 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 2\nMark Buehrle was the mound in Game 2, and turned in an incredible outing. Through nine innings, he only gave up a Robb Quinlan home run in the fifth, and the White Sox scored a run in the bottom of the first via errors. With the score tied 1\u20131 with two outs in the bottom of the ninth and Buehrle getting ready to start the tenth inning, A. J. Pierzynski stepped to the plate. He swung on a split-finger fastball in the dirt from Kelvim Escobar for strike three. Home Plate Umpire Doug Eddings called Pierzynski out on three strikes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0017-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 2\nPierzynski began walking toward the dugout, but then ran to first base. Pierzynski claimed the ball was not caught. After much discussion between the umpires he was awarded first base, and the inning continued. Pablo Ozuna went in to pinch run, and on the first pitch, stole second base without a throw. Joe Crede, after taking two strikes, lined the next pitch from Escobar off the left field wall for a walk-off double. The White Sox pulled out a victory and evened the series. Final Score: White Sox 2, Los Angeles 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 652]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 3\nThe series now switched to Anaheim, where the White Sox had a history of playing poorly. But the White Sox disregarded tradition and won three straight. Jon Garland, who hadn't pitched in the Division Series, made his first career playoff start. Garland picked up right where Mark Buehrle had left off. Throwing a complete game of his own, Garland gave up only two runs on an Orlando Cabrera home run in the sixth inning while striking out seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0018-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 3\nHe was helped by his offense, specifically Paul Konerko, who hit a two-run home run in the top of the first inning, proving to be the game winning runs as the White Sox built a 3\u20130 lead after one. The lead was extended to 5\u20130 by the sixth before the Cabrera home run. The final score was 5\u20132, Chicago.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 3\nThis game had no controversy, although Doug Eddings, the home plate umpire in Game 2 who ruled the third strike to A. J. Pierzynski hit the ground, did get booed while being introduced. The White Sox had put together a 2\u20131 series lead as well as back to back complete games in a postseason series for the first time since 1982, when it was accomplished by Tommy John and Bruce Kison for the California Angels. The Sox headed into Game 4 looking to take a three games to one lead. Final Score: White Sox 5, Los Angeles 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 653]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 4\nInspired by his teammate's performances the last two games of the series, Freddy Garc\u00eda followed suit, tossing yet another complete game. Garc\u00eda was masterful over the game, giving up only six hits and two runs. He was helped by a three-run lead in the first inning. This time, Paul Konerko hit a three-run homer. This complete game marked the first time a team had thrown three straight complete games in a postseason series since the 1973 National League Championship Series when Tom Seaver, Jon Matlack, and Jerry Koosman accomplished the feat for the New York Mets, despite Seaver's being a loss.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 4\nAnother incident involving catcher A. J. Pierzynski took place in the second inning. There were runners on first and third at the time, and Steve Finley was at the plate. Finley swung and clipped Pierzynski's glove during his follow through. As Finley ran to first he looked back at the umpires and yelled for catcher's interference. However, the call was not made, and Finley eventually ended up grounding into an inning ending double play. The victory put the White Sox one victory away from heading to the World Series, and one step closer to ending their long World Series Championship drought. Final Score: White Sox 8, Los Angeles 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 771]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 5\nJos\u00e9 Contreras, who had pitched well in Game 1 but lost, was on the mound for Game 5, trying to send the White Sox to their first World Series since 1959. Contreras definitely did his part. Contreras fired a fourth complete game. He surrendered three runs on five hits over the game, but the White Sox offense scored enough runs to give him a 6\u20133 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0022-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 5\nThe four consecutive complete games in a postseason was a League Championship Series record, and the first time since the New York Yankees got five complete games in a row from Whitey Ford, Tom Sturdivant, Don Larsen (which was a perfect game), Bob Turley, and Johnny Kucks during the 1956 World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 464]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 5\nThe White Sox started the scoring in the second on Joe Crede's sacrifice fly. The Angels tied it in the third with an Adam Kennedy single. In the fifth, Jermaine Dye hit a two-out double that put the White Sox ahead 2\u20131. However, the Angels struck right back with a ground rule double from Chone Figgins and a sacrifice fly from Garret Anderson. However, it was all White Sox after that. Joe Crede hit a game-tying home run off Kelvim Escobar in the seventh. In the eighth, A. J. Pierzynski was at it again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0023-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 5\nHe hit a slow rolling ground ball down the first base line and Escobar tagged him. However, replay showed Escobar tagged with his glove- while the ball was in his hand. Randy Marsh, the first base umpire, called Pierzynski out, but then the umpires talked it over after manager Ozzie Guill\u00e9n ran out to argue. The call was reversed, and Pierzynski was rewarded first base with Aaron Rowand on second with two out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0023-0002", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, American League Championship Series- White Sox vs. Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, Game 5\nJoe Crede faced Angels closer Francisco Rodr\u00edguez, who set the major league record for saves in a season in 2008 with 62, and Crede laced a single up the middle to score Rowand and put the White Sox ahead for good. Paul Konerko added an RBI double in the ninth for insurance. Konerko won the ALCS MVP award as the White Sox looked to win their first World Series since 1917. Final Score: White Sox 6, Los Angeles 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 131], "content_span": [132, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 1\nChicago's opponent in the 2005 World Series was the National League Champion Houston Astros, who defeated the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Championship Series to clinch a trip to their first World Series in franchise history. The night was special for Craig Biggio and Jeff Bagwell, two longtime Astros making their first trip to the World Series. Game 1 was Jos\u00e9 Contreras vs. Roger Clemens. However, Clemens re-injured his hamstring in the second inning, and so his night was done early. In the fourth, with the score tied 3\u20133, Joe Crede took control of the game. He homered in the inning, and then, in the sixth, he made two diving stops to save runs and keep the White Sox ahead by one.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 1\nThe story of the night, though, was the bullpen. After Contreras lasted seven plus innings, Neal Cotts relieved him. Willy Taveras had hit a leadoff double off Contreras, and then Cotts entered. He gave up a hard outfield single to Lance Berkman, which was hit at a fielder, and hit so hard that Taveras couldn't score, and stopped at third. However, Cotts then went on to strike out Morgan Ensberg and Mike Lamb, bringing up Bagwell. That prompted manager Ozzie Guill\u00e9n to bring on closer Bobby Jenks. Jenks struck out Bagwell with his 100-mile per hour fastball. He then got the next three outs in the top of the ninth to give the White Sox a Game 1 victory. Final Score: White Sox 5, Houston 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 798]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 2\nFresh off a victory the night before, the White Sox tried to make it two in a row in the Series, but this time the opposing pitcher was Andy Pettitte, an excellent pitcher who was making his 34th career postseason start. This game was sloppy, as temperatures were cold and it was raining. Mark Buehrle wasn't throwing his best pitches, as he gave up four runs in seven innings. However, with the White Sox down 4\u20132 in the seventh, Paul Konerko took over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 553]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0026-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 2\nWith the bases loaded, he sent the first pitch he saw from reliever Chad Qualls into the left field bullpen for a 6\u20134 White Sox lead on a grand slam. The slam was the first one in White Sox postseason history. However, the lead only lasted for an inning. Bobby Jenks, evidently not playing his best either, gave up two runs in the top of the ninth to tie the game. Fortunately enough for Jenks, Scott Podsednik came to the rescue.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0026-0002", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 2\nHitting second in the ninth, Podsednik sent a pitch from Brad Lidge into the right field seats for a walk-off home run, his second homer of the whole season. It was the 14th walk-off home run in World Series history, and sent the White Sox to Houston up two games to none. Final Score: White Sox 7, Astros 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 3\nThis game was the longest game in World Series history time wise, and tied for the longest game in World Series history according to innings. In the first World Series game played in the state of Texas, the hometown Astros got off to a good start. They jumped out to a 4\u20130 lead through four innings. However, in the fifth, the White Sox scored 5 runs to take the lead 5\u20134 in a 46-pitch inning for Houston's Roy Oswalt. But the Astros tied the score in the bottom of the eighth, and as neither team scored in the ninth inning, the game went into extra innings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 3\nThe game kept going on and on until the top of the fourteenth inning when Geoff Blum stepped to the plate. Blum did not have a postseason at-bat for the White Sox since Game 1 of the Division Series. But he connected on a home run off Ezequiel Astacio to give the White Sox a one-run lead. They added another run later in the inning. After D\u00e1maso Marte began the bottom half of the inning, Mark Buehrle came out and got the save for Chicago. After using nine pitchers to the Astros' eight, and playing for 5 hours and 41 minutes, the White Sox were just one win away from clinching their first World Series championship in 88 years. Final Score: White Sox 7, Houston 5.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 4\nHeeding the words of Ozzie Guill\u00e9n to win the World Series as soon as possible, the White Sox took it to heart in a trademark 1\u20130 win. Freddy Garc\u00eda was on the mound against the young but talented Brandon Backe. Locked in a pitchers' duel through seven innings, Guill\u00e9n decided to take Garc\u00eda out and replace him with a pinch hitter in the top of the eighth inning. Willie Harris pinch-hit for Garc\u00eda and started the inning off with a single.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0029-0001", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 4\nAfter moving to third with two outs, Jermaine Dye drove him in with a single up the middle against Brad Lidge, who had given up Scott Posednik's game-winning home run earlier in the series. Dye won World Series MVP honors for his good hitting throughout the series. After Cliff Polite and Neal Cotts pitched a scoreless eighth, Bobby Jenks came in to close the game out. He gave up a leadoff single, and got an out via a sacrifice bunt, but then it was all Juan Uribe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0029-0002", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 4\nUribe chased down a foul ball and dove into the stands to make the acrobatic catch. He then made the play on a slow, bouncing hit over the head of Jenks to throw out Orlando Palmeiro to win the game and the World Series for the White Sox. Final Score: White Sox 1, Houston 0.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181178-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Chicago White Sox season, Postseason, 2005 World Series- White Sox vs. Houston Astros, Game 4\nWith their 11\u20131 record, the White Sox tied the 1999 New York Yankees for the best record in a single postseason. In calling the final out, White Sox broadcaster John Rooney's call of \"A White Sox winner and a World Championship!\" echoed Jack Buck's call of the St. Louis Cardinals winning the 1982 World Series: \"That's a winner! That's a winner! A World Series winner for the Cardinals!\" Following the series, Rooney coincidentally joined the Cardinals broadcasting team and announced their victory in the 2006 World Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 98], "content_span": [99, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election\nThe 2005 Chilean parliamentary election took place on December 11, 2005, in conjunction with the presidential election. All of the 120 seats in the Chamber of Deputies were contested, while 20 out of 38 seats in the Senate were up for election (even-numbered regions and the metropolitan region). Deputies serve for a period of four years, while senators serve for a period of eight years. Reelection is permitted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 450]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election\nAccording to national legislation, all Chilean citizens may participate in the election (that is, all Chilean nationals over the age of 18 qualified by law to do so), as well as foreign residents with over five years of stay in the country (under certain conditions). In any case, all electors must register first in the Electoral Register if they want to vote. Once registered, voting is mandatory. Over seven million people voted in the election (less than half of the total population).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election, Major parties\nThe Chamber of Deputies prior to this election was composed of 62 CPD deputies (23 Christian Democrats, 20 PPD, ten Socialists, six PRSD and three independents), 57 APC deputies (31 UDI, 18 RN and eight independents) and one independent (off-pact).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election, Major parties\nThe Senate prior to this election was composed of 38 directly elected senators and nine non-elected senators (institutional senators, or senators for life). Among the elected, 20 seats are held by the CPD (eleven Christian Democrats, five Socialists, three PPD and one PRSD) and 18 by the APC (six independents, six UDI and six RN). A constitutional reform in 2005 eliminated non-elected senators starting on March 11, 2006, the day the newly elected senators were sworn in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election, Major parties\nOf the Senate seats being contested, eleven were held by the CPD (ten Christian Democrats and one Socialist) and nine by the APC (four independents, three UDI and two RN).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 50], "content_span": [51, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election, Election results, Elected candidates\nThese results are based on official information given by the Election Qualifier Tribunal (Tricel) on January 29, 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181179-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chilean parliamentary election, Election results, Elected candidates\nElected candidates appear in bold. (R) indicates candidates running for reelection. Strikethrough names indicate candidacies rejected by the Electoral Service (Servel).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 73], "content_span": [74, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181180-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Baseball League season\nThe 2005 China Baseball League season saw the Beijing Tigers defeat the Tianjin Lions in 2 games to win the Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181181-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Masters\nThe 2005 China Masters was a badminton tournament which took place at the University Students' Gymnasium in Beijing, China, on 29 August\u20134 September 2005 and had a total purse of $250,000. This is the inaugural edition of the tournament, and rated as 6\u2013star IBF World Grand Prix event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181182-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (snooker)\nThe 2005 China Open was a professional ranking snooker tournament that took place from 26\u00a0March to 3\u00a0April 2005 at the Haidian Stadium in Beijing, China. It was the penultimate ranking event of the 2004\u201305 season, preceding the 2005 World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181182-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (snooker)\nThe event was last held in 2002, where Mark Williams won the tournament by defeating Anthony Hamilton 9\u20138.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181182-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (snooker)\nDing Junhui won in the final 9\u20135 against Stephen Hendry. Ding became the second youngest player after Ronnie O'Sullivan to capture a ranking title. Along with several other Chinese players, Ding gave up his normal tournament entry position in order to accept an offer to enter the tournament as a wild-card player and thus he did not receive either prize money or ranking points for his tournament win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181182-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (snooker), Prize fund\nThe breakdown of prize money for this year is shown below:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181182-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (snooker), Prize fund\nWinner: \u00a330,000Runner-up: \u00a315,000Semi-final: \u00a37,500Quarter-final: \u00a35,600Last 16: \u00a34,000Last 32: \u00a32,500Last 48: \u00a31,625Last 64: \u00a31,100", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181182-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (snooker), Qualifying\nQualifying for the tournament took place at Pontin's in Prestatyn, Wales between January 25\u201328, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181183-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (tennis)\nThe 2005 China Open was an ATP International Series and WTA Tour Tier II tennis tournament held in Beijing, China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181183-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (tennis), Finals, Men's Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob / Nathan Healey defeated Dmitry Tursunov / Mikhail Youzhny, 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181183-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (tennis), Finals, Women's Doubles\nNuria Llagostera Vives / Mar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi defeated Yan Zi / Zheng Jie, 6\u20132, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181183-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open (tennis), Finals, Women's Doubles\nThis WTA Tour tennis tournament article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181184-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJustin Gimelstob and Graydon Oliver were the defending champions, but Oliver did not participate this year. Gimelstob partnered Nathan Healey and successfully defended his title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181184-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nGimelstob and Healey won the title, defeating Dmitry Tursunov and Mikhail Youzhny 4\u20136, 6\u20133, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181185-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nMarat Safin was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181185-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nRafael Nadal won the title, beating Guillermo Coria 5\u20137, 6\u20131, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181186-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi and Dinara Safina were the defending champions, but none competed this year. Gagliardi competed in Kolkata at the same week, while Safina decided to rest after her participation in the Fed Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181186-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nNuria Llagostera Vives and Mar\u00eda Vento-Kabchi won the title by defeating Yan Zi and Zheng Jie 6\u20132, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181187-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nSerena Williams was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Sun Tiantian. Tiantian became the first ever player ranked outside the top 100 to defeat Williams in a main draw match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181187-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nMaria Kirilenko won the title by defeating Anna-Lena Gr\u00f6nefeld 6\u20133, 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181187-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 China Open \u2013 Women's Singles, Seeds\nThe top four seeds receive a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 40], "content_span": [41, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181188-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese FA Cup\nThe 2005 Chinese FA Cup (Chinese: 2005\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u676f) was the 11th edition of Chinese FA Cup. The matches of first round were kicked off on 26 March 2005, and the final took place on 20 November 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181188-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese FA Cup, Results, Final\nThe final is a single match, with extra time and penalty shootout if necessary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181189-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Chinese Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Sinopec Chinese Grand Prix) was the nineteenth and final Formula One motor race of the 2005 Formula One season which took place on 16 October 2005 at the Shanghai International Circuit. This was the second Chinese Grand Prix to be held since the event's 2004 inception. The race was won by the new World Champion, Renault's Fernando Alonso. McLaren driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was four seconds behind in second position, a reflection of their season long duel for the championship. Toyota driver Ralf Schumacher was third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181189-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese Grand Prix\nRenault won the Constructors' Championship at this race; they had led McLaren by two points before the start of the race. This was the final race for Ant\u00f4nio Pizzonia, the Minardi and Jordan teams, although both teams continued into 2006 under different names (Scuderia Toro Rosso and Midland F1 Racing respectively). This was also the last win for a car equipped with a 6-speed gearbox and with a V10 engine.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 434]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181189-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Grand Prix, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 39], "content_span": [40, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181189-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Grand Prix, Race\nDuring warmup, as the cars ran from the pits to line up on the grid, a slow-moving Michael Schumacher pulled left into the path of Christijan Albers who was at speed. The cars collided causing considerable damage to each, earning Schumacher a reprimand from the stewards after the race. Both drivers changed to their teams' spare cars and started the race from the pitlane, along with Narain Karthikeyan. Alonso dominated the race, taking a lights-to-flag victory, capping a best ever season for Renault which included victories in both titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181189-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese Grand Prix, Race\nRenault's number two driver Giancarlo Fisichella's chances of making the podium ended when he received a drive-through penalty for obstructive driving in the pits during the second safety car period. He ended the race less than a second behind Ralf Schumacher. Red Bull Racing's Christian Klien had a career best drive to take fifth position with Felipe Massa, Mark Webber and Jenson Button completing the point scoring finishers. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen recorded the race's fastest lap, a record equalling tenth for the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 29], "content_span": [30, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181189-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Grand Prix, Classification, Qualifying\nMichael Schumacher, Narain Karthikeyan and Christijan Albers started from the pit lane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 51], "content_span": [52, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League\nThe 2005 Chinese Super League season was only the second season of China's top-tier football competition. With no relegation the previous season, the league expanded from 12 to 14 clubs with the promotion of Shanghai Zobon and Wuhan Huanghelou. The season was scheduled to start on 5 March 2005, but was postponed until April due to a sponsorship problem and finished on 5 November with Dalian Shide, seven-time champions in the old first division, clinching their eighth title. Defending champions Shenzhen Jianlibao finished third from bottom, the second consecutive year in which the defending champions has done so.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League\nThe FA had announced at the start of the season that no teams would be relegated for this season and they kept to this decision.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season\nThe two-year-old league provided a more positive side of football than the previous season, with much fewer drug-abusing, match-fixing and other scandals on and off the pitch. However, the season was criticised for being unexciting with some stating that the only reason that particular clubs did well was because of foreign talent.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 370]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season\nMost teams had not invested enough into their squads for the season to compete for the top positions in the CSL. As the decision to cancel relegation had been announced before the start of the season, unlike the previous season where it was decided halfway through. Teams with no chance of winning the league were thus reluctant to spend money in the transfer market.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season\nNevertheless, there was still strong competition at the top of the table with six teams fighting for the top two AFC Champions League spots. Dalian Shide remained at the top for almost the whole length of the season but there was a constant rotation of second place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season\nAt the lower half of the table, Chongqing Lifan finished at the bottom of the table for two years running while Shenyang Ginde deteriorated to second from bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 37], "content_span": [38, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season, Early surprises\nAmong the contenders for the second spot, Wuhan Huanghelou was no doubt the surprise package. The team, promoted to the CSL the previous season, was little known to their opponents; but they started superbly, embarking on a seven match winning streak at one point, which put them hot on the heels of Dalian Shide. However, like many inexperienced sides, their composure failed in the second half of the season but they still finished a remarkable fifth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 54], "content_span": [55, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season, Late dash\nIn the second half of the season, the battle for second was mainly between Shanghai Shenhua and Tianjin Teda. The gap between the two clubs was tiny and neither could afford slip-ups, although Shandong Luneng Taishan and Beijing Hyundai, who were also within striking distance, were eyeing their opponents' performances closely.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season, Late dash\nShanghai Shenhua had a late surge of form to secure second with Shandong Luneng Taishan finished third to miss the final Champions League spot by just one point while Tianjin Teda was happy enough with a fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 266]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181190-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League, The season, Late dash\nDalian Shide won their eighth top-tier title with a 12 points cushion although they and Shanghai Shenhua had lost the same number of games because they had managed to win 6 games more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181191-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Super League Cup\nThe 2005 Chinese Super League Cup (Chinese: 2005\u4e2d\u56fd\u8db3\u7403\u534f\u4f1a\u8d85\u7ea7\u8054\u8d5b\u676f) was the 2nd and the last edition of Chinese Super League Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181192-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Taipei National Football League\nThe 2005 season of the Chinese Taipei National Football League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181192-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese Taipei National Football League, All-star team\nThe following players were voted to be the greatest players in the 2005 season of the Chinese Taipei National Football League:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 59], "content_span": [60, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix was the third round of the 2005 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 29 April-1 May 2005 at the Shanghai International Circuit. It was the first time that MotoGP raced in China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThis race was most notable for the very wet race conditions, as well as Valentino Rossi's win and Olivier Jacque's first and only podium on the Kawasaki.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAfter two races, it is Valentino Rossi who has a narrow lead in the standings with 45 points, followed by Brazilian veteran Alex Barros with 38 points and Marco Melandri with 29 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nDuring Saturday qualifying it was Sete Gibernau who took his first pole position of the year with a time of 1:59.710, followed by Marco Melandri in second and Loris Capirossi in third place. The second row of the grid consists out of John Hopkins, Nicky Hayden and finally Valentino Rossi in fourth, fifth and sixth position. Olivier Jacque only managed to qualify a lowly fifteenth, replacing the injured Alex Hofmann after not racing for seven months and Dutch veteran Jurgen van den Goorbergh replaced the injured Makoto Tamada as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAll the riders make their way through the warm-up lap, then line up on their respective grid slots. As the lights go out, Hopkins blasts past Melandri and then Gibernau, who goes wide entering Turn 1 to take a surprise lead on the opening lap. Gibernau goes from first to third as teammate Melandri snatches second from him. At the first sector, the top six is as follows: Hopkins, Melandri, Gibernau, Kenny Roberts Jr., Nicky Hayden and Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAt Turn 5, Rossi takes fifth from Hayden and Roberts Jr. picks up two positions at Turn 6 by passing both Gibernau and Melandri on the outside, catapulting him into second behind his teammate. At Turn 8, Rossi also makes quick work of Melandri by going down his inside and effortlessly passing the Movistar Honda rider for fourth place. Rossi then also passes Gibernau for third, going side by side with him at the short straight before Turn 11 but taking the lead by going up his inside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0004-0002", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nHopkins then makes a mistake at Turn 12, going wide and gifting Roberts Jr. the lead and Rossi second place. Gibernau also goes slightly wide, granting Toni El\u00edas - who had worked his way up the field - just enough space to steal fourth place away from him. El\u00edas then goes up the inside and takes third from a now struggling Hopkins at the end of the long straight before Turn 14.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap two, Roberts Jr. has pulled a slight gap back to Rossi, who is being pursuited himself by El\u00edas. A gap back to Hopkins now also has formed. Max Biaggi goes up the inside of Gibernau at Turn 1 for fifth place. Coming out of Turn 4, he has a bit of a wobble which allows Gibernau to almost retake the place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAt the entrance of Turn 7, Biaggi then tries a move at the inside on Hopkins for fourth, the American holding on as they go side by side through the corner and winning the battle with Biaggi, who then gets overtaken by Gibernau instead as he exits the corner with poor traction. At Turn 11, Gibernau takes fourth away from Hopkins by diving up his inside, with Biaggi trying likewise and almost clipping the back of Hopkins as a result.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nExiting the swooping Turn 13, Biaggi and Melandri both overtake Hopkins coming up to the long straight, making good use of their superior Honda top speed to pass the Suzuki effortlessly. At the end of the straight, multiple riders make their moves. Hopkins repasses Melandri for sixth, Capirossi passes Hayden for - and runs wide doing so, allowing Jacque to pass both riders for eighth place. Barros also manages to overtake van den Goorbergh for eleventh, with Troy Bayliss trying likewise but the Dutchman holding him off at Turn 16. Jacque then gets passed by Hayden at the short straight before Turn 16, demoting him to ninth position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap three and Rossi has closed the gap to leader Roberts Jr by now. Jacque, making good use of a good exit of the final corner, retakes eighth from Hayden but with Capirossi using his Ducati speed on the start/finish straight before Turn 1, he passes both riders, demoting the Frenchman to ninth and the American to tenth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nVan den Goorbergh also managed to pass both Barros and Hayden at the first sector, then passes Capirossi on the inside of Turn 7 by taking a tighter line for ninth position, with Jacque also having passed the Italian earlier on to reclaim eighth place. Jacque's teammate Shinya Nakano retires from the race due to technical problems. Jacque then takes two positions in two corners - one by diving down the inside of Melandri at Turn 11 for seventh and the other by exiting better out of Turn 12 to pass Hopkins at the beginning of the long straight. Hopkins goes up the inside of Melandri for sixth at the end of the long straight, with Jacque and Van den Goorbergh right behind the battling duo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 751]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap four, the top nine looks as follows: Roberts Jr. - who just set the fastest lap of the race -, Rossi, El\u00edas, Gibernau, Biaggi, Hopkins, Melandri, Jacque and Van den Goorbergh. Gibernau passes El\u00edas and takes third at the entry of Turn 1, with Dutchman Van den Goorbergh taking eighth place from Jacque as well by passing him on the inside of Turn 1. Melandri tries likewise at the exit for sixth place but fails and almost touches the rear of Hopkins in the process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nRoberts Jr. at the front meanwhile has a significant gap back to Rossi, with the Italian having an even bigger gap back to El\u00edas in third. It is then signalled that Barros has jumped the start, meaning he has to come in and serve a penalty. Biaggi has also overtaken El\u00edas for fourth. El\u00edas has also been accredited with a jump start, making him the second rider to have been accredited a jump start.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap five and Rossi is now slowly closing the gap to Roberts Jr. 'The Doctor' has a little moment as he touches the white line at Turn 5 but doesn't lose any time or positions from it. Roberts Jr. then runs wide at the Turn 6 hairpin, gifting Rossi the lead of the race. Bayliss has gone down and Roberts Jr. is slowing significantly, stopping on the outside of Turn 11. He then continues, but is practically out of contention due to technical problems. This moves Gibernau up into second and Biaggi up into third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 574]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap six, Hopkins sets the fastest lap of the race in fifth position. Jacque has moved up into sixth and Van den Goorbergh into seventh thanks to the Frenchman overtaking Van den Goorbergh and because of Roberts Jr.'s retirement. Carlos Checa in the back has also crashed out at Turn 16 - sliding very far onto the pit road due to the vast levels of water on the circuit - the rider running to his machine to get back into the race but to no avail. Roberts Jr. now has made it back into the pits, confirming his retirement.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nExiting Turn 9, Jacque has a big moment, almost causing him to crash but somehow holds on and doesn't lose a place. At the end of the long straight before Turn 14, Hopkins passes the now fading El\u00edas for fourth place, Jacque then trying to do the same but running wide, allowing the Spaniard to reclaim fifth place. Just as it looks like Jacque makes a move to take fifth place again, El\u00edas goes straight on into the pits to take his jumpstart penalty, promoting the Frenchman up to fifth without much effort.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap seven has started and Rossi now sets the fastest lap of the race. El\u00edas now has taken his penalty and rejoins at the back of the field. Hopkins - comfortably in fourth - goes wide exiting Turn 3 and into the gravel trap. The rider manages to stay on the bike and continue his race, albeit a couple of places down. This promotes Jacque up into fourth position. The gap Rossi has to Gibernau in sector 2 is +5.702 seconds, then it increases to +5.965 seconds at sector 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 528]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap eight, the top nine is as follows: Rossi, Gibernau, Biaggi, Jacque, Van den Goorbergh, Melandri, Barros, Hayden and Capirossi. The gap Rossi has to Gibernau has increased again, this time it is +5.996 seconds. Barros comes into the pits to serve his jumpstart penalty, demoting him to the back of the field as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap nine and the gap Rossi has to Gibernau has decreased slightly, from +5.996 to +5.898 seconds. Barros exits the pits and is well behind the leading group now. During this lap, Jacque has caught third place Biaggi and overtakes him at the entry of Turn 11 for third, going up his inside and outbreaking him. Biaggi gets back at him by using his superior Honda top end speed at the end of the long straight leading up to Turn 14, retaking the bottom step of the podium. Jacque then retakes third once more by diving down the inside of the Italian at the short left-hand kink of Turn 16.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap ten and Jacque sets a surprise fast lap, still being harassed by Biaggi as he does so. Biaggi tries to lunge at his inside at Turn 1 but isn't able to, allowing Jacque to now ride away and hunt down Gibernau for second position. The gap Gibernau has to Jacque is +1.448 seconds in sector 2, diminishing to +1.254 seconds in sector 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap eleven - the halfway point of the race - and Jacque sets another fastest lap, still hunting down Gibernau. Van den Goorbergh is still in fifth place behind Biaggi. Jacque is still closing down the gap to Gibernau.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twelve, Jacque now caught the Spaniard and is right behind him all throughout the lap. Exiting Turn 13, Jacque gets on the kerb and has a bit of a wobble but doesn't crash or lose places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap thirteen and Jacque is still all over the back of Gibernau. However, he is not able to make a move on Frenchman due to the superior top end speed of the Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nCrossing the line to start lap fourteen, Rossi now sets the fastest lap of the race. Jacque is still stalking Gibernau's Honda.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap fifteen, Melandri sixth placed Melandri now sets the fastest lap of the race. He is right behind Van den Goorbergh but runs his bike wide at Turn 6, making him lose ground to the Dutchman. Rossi's teammate Colin Edwards is shown with a puff of smoke coming out of his engine exiting Turn 14 on the previous lap, but it is unclear whether or not he has engine troubles. It is on this lap that Jacque has also finally managed to pass Gibernau for second position, now setting his sights for race leader Rossi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap sixteen and the top nine consists out of Rossi, Jacque, Gibernau, Biaggi, Van den Goorbergh, Melandri, Hayden, Hopkins and Edwards, who does not seem to have any engine problems. Rossi's gap to Jacque is +6.181 seconds in sector 1, then increases to +6.230 seconds in sector 2. Melandri meanwhile has overtaken Van den Goorbergh and is now right behind Biaggi, chasing down fourth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap seventeen, Melandri shadows Biaggi, then makes a move by outbreaking him at Turn 6, taking fourth. Rossi's gap to Jacque is now +5.889 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap eighteen and Jacque is still clawing back time from Rossi. The gap Rossi has to Jacque is now +5.201 seconds, then diminishes even more to +5.023 seconds at sector 1. The gap in sector 2 increases again slightly to +5.091 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nAs Rossi crosses the line and lap nineteen begins, his gap to Jacque has now decreased even further - from +5.091 to +4.379 seconds. The gap in sector 2 has decreased even further to +3.745, then got cut again to +3.493 in sector 3.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn lap twenty, Rossi's gap to Jacque continues to get slimmer - now only being +3.297 seconds. Jacque also sets the fastest lap of the race as well. In sector 1, the gap decreases slightly to +3.190 seconds. In sector 2, the gap comes down again to +3.141 and in sector 3, the gap increases again slightly to +3.236 due to a slight moment Jacque had coming out of Turn 13.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nLap twenty-one, the penultimate lap, begins and Rossi sets the fastest lap for a brief moment, only for Jacque to set a faster one behind him. Gibernau crosses the line a distant third and is shaking his head, either out of disappointment or to get rid of some of the water on his helmet. In sector 1, Rossi's lead to Jacque continues to diminish - this time it's only +3.031 seconds. In sector 2, Jacque continues his charge and the gap comes down to only +2.599 seconds. In sector 3, the new gap consists out of +2.411 seconds - another slight decrease.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThe last lap - lap twenty-two - begins and Rossi's gap to Jacque increases again to +2.557 seconds. The gap increases once again in sector 1 to +2.679 seconds. Behind the duo, Melandri has caught a struggling Gibernau and is all over the back of him as well. The gap Rossi has to Jacque in sector 2 has decreased again, this time it's +2.619 seconds. At Turn 11, Melandri overtakes his teammate and takes third on the last lap. In sector three - the final sector before the finish - Rossi's lead to Jacque has decreased again to +2.502 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0025-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThe gap is more than enough for Rossi to cruise to the flag, putting his arms in the air and win the race - his first in China and second of the season - with Jacque coming home in a stunning second place - Jacque's first ever podium in the premier class - with Melandri finishing third. Gibernau crosses the line in fourth, Biaggi in fifth and the other replacement rider Van den Goorbergh finishes in a great sixth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nOn the parade lap back to parc ferm\u00e9, Rossi stops for some of his fans - who invaded the track - at the outside of Turn 2 to celebrate his win. Gibernau meanwhile has parked up his stricken Gresini Honda at the armco barrier at the end of the start/finish straight before Turn 1, looking at his bike chain to figure out what the problem is, then walks over to the pits. After the celebrations, Rossi gets going again, throwing his arm in the air in celebration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 516]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0026-0001", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nFireworks also go off to celebrate Rossi's win, with 'The Doctor' stopping to make sure his number 46 is still attached on the bike. He kisses his bike, then steps back on and continues on. An ecstatic Jacque also talks to a happy Van den Goorbergh on the bike as the fireworks still go off.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 346]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nMelandri is the first rider to arrive at parc ferm\u00e9, being awaited by two of his Gresini Honda crewmembers, one of which hugs him for his achievement. Jacque also arrives at parc ferm\u00e9 and immediately goes to hug his team at the fence. Finally, Rossi also arrives and jubilantly puts his arms in air as two Gauloises Yamaha crewmembers hug and congratulate him. Rossi then talks to his team and salutes his fans by looking into the camera and doing a peace sign, showing off the rubber gloves he has on. He then congratulates and hugs Jacque. Rossi takes off his helmet, kisses the camera screen in glee, then goes over to a group of fans at parc ferm\u00e9 to hug them also.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nThe riders make their way up onto the podium, starting with Melandri, then an ecstatic Jacque and a happy Rossi. He shakes hands with Melandri, then Jacque. Chief mechanic Davide Brivio stands on the podium also to receive the constructors trophy. The respective figures hand out the trophies, then the Italian national anthem plays for Rossi. The champagne get handed out and Rossi cheekily sprays one of the girls on the podium, as well as the other two who by now also spray the champagne. The trio then group together for the final photo shoot for the press.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 617]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, MotoGP race report\nRossi's win extends his lead in the championship. The Italian now has 70 points, followed by the other Italian Melandri who overtakes Barros in the title hunt with 45 points, followed by Barros with 43 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round three has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 82], "content_span": [83, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181193-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Chinese motorcycle Grand Prix, Notes\nThis is the last race where no Spanish riders managed to get on the podium in all classes until the 2015 Qatar Grand Prix.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 41], "content_span": [42, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181194-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chivas USA season\nThe 2005 Chivas USA season was the club's first season of existence, and their first in Major League Soccer, the top flight of American soccer. The club competed in the MLS's Western Conference, where they finished in sixth place, or last place, in the Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181194-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chivas USA season, Season review\nThomas Rongen was appointed as Chivas USA's head coach in September 2004, and coached the team until May 2005, when he was replaced with Javier Ledesma on an interim basis. At the end of June, Hans Westerhof was appointed as the permanent manager until the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 37], "content_span": [38, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181194-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chivas USA season, Competitions, Major League Soccer, Results summary\nLast updated: October 16, 2005Source: Pld = Matches played; Pts = Points; W = Matches won; T = Matches tied; L = Matches lost; GF = Goals for; GA = Goals against; GD = Goal difference", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 74], "content_span": [75, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181195-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chi\u0219in\u0103u mayoral election\nElections for the post of mayor of Chi\u0219in\u0103u were held on 10 July, 24 July, 27 November, and 11 December 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181195-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Chi\u0219in\u0103u mayoral election, July Election\nElections for the post of mayor of Chi\u0219in\u0103u on 10 July 2005 have been declared invalid, as they participated in only 27% of voters. The by-election on 24 July 2005 was attended by only 19,8% of voters. These elections were also declared invalid because of the participation of less than one-third of voters on the electoral lists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181195-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Chi\u0219in\u0103u mayoral election, November\u2013December Election\nFollowing elections were held on 27 November 2005. 22,42 % of the voters was not enough to recognize the election. Another attempt to elect the mayor of the capital was made on 11 December 2005. At this time the polls were 22.62% of the inhabitants of Chi\u015fin\u0103u. The mayor was not elected. From 2005 to 2007 mayor was Vasile Ursu. On 25 January 2007 Vasile Ursu was appointed Minister of Transport and acting mayor of Chi\u0219in\u0103u became Veaceslav Iordan, former deputy of Ursu.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 58], "content_span": [59, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181196-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Christian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party leadership election\nA leadership election for Christian and Democratic Union \u2013 Czechoslovak People's Party (KDU-\u010cSL) was held on 12 November 2005. The incumbent leader Miroslav Kalousek received almost 80% of votes and was reelected. Kalousek didn't have a rival.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 85], "section_span": [85, 85], "content_span": [86, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181197-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup\nThe 2005 Christy Ring Cup was the inaugural staging of the Christy Ring Cup, the Gaelic Athletic Association's second-tier hurling championship. Competing teams, from Connacht, Leinster, Munster and Ulster were divided into two groups of five, in which teams played each other only once, meaning two home games and two away games per team. The top two teams of each group qualified for the knock-out stages.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181197-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup\nOn 14 August 2005, Westmeath won the Christy Ring Cup following a 1-23 to 2-18 defeat of Down in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181197-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup\nKildare's Mattie Dowd was the Christy Ring Cup top scorer with 2-39.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181198-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup Final\nThe 2005 Christy Ring Cup final was a hurling match played at Croke Park on 14 August 2005 to determine the winners of the 2005 Christy Ring Cup, the inaugural season of the Christy Ring Cup, a tournament organised by the Gaelic Athletic Association for the second tier hurling teams. The final was contested by Westmeath of Leinster and Down of Ulster, with Westmeath winning by 1-23 to 2-18.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 421]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181198-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup Final\nThe Christy Ring Cup final between Westmeath and Down was the second championship meeting between the two teams, with Down failing to beat Westmeath in the earlier group stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181198-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup Final\nDown led 0-5 to 0-2 after eight minutes, but inspired by some excellent play from defenders Brendan Murtagh and Darren McCormack and Enda Loughlin, Westmeath retired 0-12 to 0-9 up at half-time. The referee, however, seemed to have made a timekeeping error an only thirty-three minutes and 24 seconds had been played. Unaware, the players headed for the dressing room, although a Down selector did approach referee Denis Richardson with his stopwatch to bring the mistake to his attention, however, he was waved away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181198-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup Final\nAn opportunist goal from Gareth Johnson on 43 minutes, after Westmeath goalkeeper, Mark Briody, had saved from Martin Coulter, edged Down 1-12 to 0-14 in front. But, on 54 minutes, a similar score from John Shaw after a point attempt from Barry Kennedy had come back off the bar, made it 1-18 to 1-14 for the midlanders, who, by the 61st minute, had stretched their advantage to 1-21 to 1-15.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 420]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181198-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Christy Ring Cup Final\nHowever, in the space of three minutes, Down were only a point adrift, with their second goal coming from Stephen Clarke, who drilled the sliotar to the top right-hand corner of the net. On 70 minutes, Martin Coulter levelled from a free, only for Westmeath to crucially hit the last two points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181199-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Chrono des Herbiers\nThe 2005 Chrono des Herbiers was the 24th edition of the Chrono des Nations cycle race and was held on 16 October 2005. The race started and finished in Les Herbiers. The race was won by Ond\u0159ej Sosenka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181200-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Churchill Cup\nThe 2005 Churchill Cup was held between 14 June and 21 June 2005 in Edmonton, Canada. It was the third edition of the Churchill Cup competition. three of the four rugby union teams taking part in the 2004 men's competition, Canada, England A, the USA, returned to compete, while Argentina A replaced the M\u0101ori.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181200-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Churchill Cup\nThere was no women's event, although a similar event, the 2005 Canada Cup did take place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181200-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Churchill Cup, Format\nThe competition took on a straight 'knock-out' format. Four teams played in two semi-final matches, with the North American sides kept apart. The winners of each semi final competed in the final match, while the losers took part in a 3rd/4th place playoff. Four matches were played over a period of two weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 26], "content_span": [27, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181201-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bearcats football team\nThe 2005 Cincinnati Bearcats football team represented the University of Cincinnati in the 2005 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team, coached by Mark Dantonio, played its home games in Nippert Stadium, as it has since 1924.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season\nThe 2005 Cincinnati Bengals season was the franchise's 36th season in the National Football League, the 38th overall, and the third under head coach Marvin Lewis. It was the team's first season with a winning record, playoff berth, and division title since 1990. In the fourteen seasons and 224 games in between (1991\u20132004), the Bengals' record was 71\u2013153, a 0.317 winning percentage. It would be the Bengals' lone playoff appearance in a span of 18 years (1991\u20132008).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season\nQB Carson Palmer got off to a strong start on his way to a solid 3836-yard season with 32 Touchdown passes, earning a trip to the Pro Bowl. Receiving many of Palmer's passes was Chad Johnson, who followed teammate Palmer to the Pro Bowl in Hawaii, racking up an impressive 1,432 yards in receiving with nine TDs, many of which were followed by unique celebrations that made him a regular star on the sports highlight shows.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season\nFollowing a 42\u201329 win over the Baltimore Ravens, the Bengals faced the Steelers again, this time in Pittsburgh, where the Bengals offense continued to fly behind Carson Palmer, who had three touchdown passes and 227 yards passing in an impressive 38\u201331 win that gave the Bengals first place in the AFC North at 9\u20133. The Bengals would not relinquish first place, winning the next two games to clinch the division with two weeks to go. On December 18, with a 41\u201317 win over the Detroit Lions, the Bengals clinched a playoff spot. After clinching the division the Bengals played cautiously and dropped their final two games to finish with an 11\u20135 record, beating out the eventual Super Bowl champion Steelers, who finished with an identical record, on a tiebreaker situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 803]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season\nHowever, a costly loss to the Steelers in the wild card round extended their playoff win drought to 16 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season, Regular season\nIn addition to their regular games with AFC North rivals, the Bengals played teams from the AFC South and NFC North as per the schedule rotation, and also played intraconference games against the Bills and the Chiefs based on divisional positions from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 46], "content_span": [47, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season, Postseason, Wild Card vs Steelers\nOn January 8, 2006, the Cincinnati Bengals took on the Pittsburgh Steelers in the opening round of the playoffs, making it the Bengals\u2019 first playoff appearance of the decade. Early in the game, disaster struck for the Bengals when Steelers lineman Kimo von Oelhoffen hit Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer's knee, resulting in a tear of Palmer's anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). Backup quarterback Jon Kitna took over and did very well, giving Cincinnati leads of 10\u20130 and 17\u20137 at points of the game. All seemed well for the Bengals until the Steelers came back with 24 unanswered points and upset the Cincinnati Bengals with a final score of 31\u201317. The Steelers went on to win the Super Bowl.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 761]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181202-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Bengals season, Postseason, Wild Card vs Steelers\nWith the costly loss, the Bengals season ended at 11\u20136, thus once again it extended their playoff win drought to 16 years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 65], "content_span": [66, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season\nThe Cincinnati Reds' 2005 season consisted of the Reds finishing in fifth place in the National League Central Division. The Reds were managed by Dave Miley for most of the season, and after being fired, was followed by Jerry Narron.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season\nThe Reds missed the playoffs for the tenth straight season, tying a record set between 1980-89.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Regular season, Season information\nThe Reds finished with an overall record of 73-89, 16 games under .500, and in 5th place behind the division winner, the St. Louis Cardinals. They were 27 games behind the Cardinals in their division, and 16 games behind the second place team, the Houston Astros, the eventual National League champions. The Reds finished 8 games behind the third place team, the Milwaukee Brewers, and 6 games behind the fourth place team, the Chicago Cubs. The Reds were six games ahead of the last place team, the Pittsburgh Pirates.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 583]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Regular season, Season information\nSean Casey led the team in batting average with an average of .312. Adam Dunn led the team in both home runs and RBI, with 40 and 101, respectively. Aaron Harang led the team in wins with 11. Felipe L\u00f3pez was the only Red to make the National League All-Star team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 328]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Regular season, Season information\nThe Reds finished in 13th out of 16 teams in the National League in attendance. The Reds scored 820 runs and allowed 889 runs. Ken Griffey, Jr. led the team in season salary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 63], "content_span": [64, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 72], "content_span": [73, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 65], "content_span": [66, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 70], "content_span": [71, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181203-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati Reds season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181204-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati mayoral election\nThe 2005 Cincinnati mayoral election took place on November 8, 2005, to elect the Mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio. The election was officially nonpartisan, with the top two candidates from the September 13 primary advancing to the general election, regardless of party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181204-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cincinnati mayoral election\nWhile the election was nonpartisan, both Mallory and Pepper were known Democrats. Also a known Democrat was Alicia Reece, who was eliminated in the primary. Sylvan Grisco and Charlie Winburn, who were both eliminated in the primary, were known Republicans", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181205-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Claxton Shield, Results, Round 2 Make-up: Thursday, 27 January 2005\nGames 1 and 2 on 23 January were rained out, so a make up round was called.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 72], "content_span": [73, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181206-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Clemson Tigers football team\nThe 2005 Clemson Tigers football team represented Clemson University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by Tommy Bowden and played their homes game at Memorial Stadium in Clemson, South Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181206-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Clemson Tigers football team, Season\nClemson started off its season with wins over a ranked Texas A&M team and the Maryland Terrapins. However, Clemson then lost the following three games to Miami, Boston College, and Wake Forest. The losses to Miami and Boston College came in overtime. Clemson then rebounded to win the next two games against NC State and Temple. The next week, Clemson lost a close game to Georgia Tech. Clemson then closed out the regular season with three straight wins over Duke, ACC rival Florida State, and instate rival South Carolina. In the post-season, Clemson received an invitation to play in the 2005 Champs Sports Bowl against Colorado. Clemson won the game, 19\u201310, to finish the season at 8\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 732]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181206-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Clemson Tigers football team, Season\nClemson finished the season ranked in the top 25 (21st in both the AP and the Coaches' Poll) for the second time in three years. Clemson also recorded wins against three AP top 20 teams in the 2005 season for just the fourth time in school history. Clemson lost its four games by a combined 14 points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 41], "content_span": [42, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181207-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland Browns season\nThe 2005 season was the Cleveland Browns' 53rd in the National Football League (NFL) and their 57th overall. It was their first season under general manager Phil Savage and head coach Romeo Crennel. They posted a record of 6\u201310, improving upon their 2004 record of 4\u201312. However, the Browns failed to qualify for the playoffs for the third consecutive season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 388]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181207-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland Browns season, Schedule\nIn addition to their regular games with AFC North rivals, the Browns played teams from the AFC South and NFC North as per the schedule rotation, and also played intraconference games against the Miami Dolphins and the Oakland Raiders based on divisional positions from 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181208-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland Indians season\nThe 2005 Cleveland Indians season was the 105th season for the franchise. It involved the Indians attempting to win the American League Central division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181208-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Cleveland Indians season\nThey had a very good September (with 17 wins and 9 losses), and went into a season-closing series with the Chicago White Sox with a chance to tie the White Sox record (though the White Sox held the tiebreaker and had already won the division) and make it into the playoffs, but lost three close games to finish 6 games behind the White Sox, who were the eventual World Series winners, eliminating Cleveland from the possibility to go to the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 480]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181208-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland Indians season, Player stats, Batting\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 52], "content_span": [53, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181208-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland Indians season, Player stats, Pitching\nNote: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 53], "content_span": [54, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181209-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland mayoral election\nThe 2005 Cleveland mayoral election took place on November 8, 2005, to elect the Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio. The election was officially nonpartisan, with the top two candidates from the October 4 primary advancing to the general election, regardless of party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181209-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cleveland mayoral election\nIncumbent Democratic Mayor Jane L. Campbell ran for re-election to a second term in office, but lost the general election to Cleveland City Council President Frank G. Jackson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181210-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Clipsal 500\nThe 2005 Clipsal 500 Adelaide was a motor race for V8 Supercars held on the weekend of 17 - 20 March 2005. The event was held at the Adelaide Street Circuit in Adelaide, South Australia, and consisted of two races of 250 kilometres in length. It was the first round of thirteen in the 2005 V8 Supercar Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181211-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda\nThe 2005 Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda was the 20th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de Almer\u00eda cycle race and was held on 27 February 2005. The race started in El Ejido and finished in Almer\u00eda. The race was won by Iv\u00e1n Guti\u00e9rrez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181212-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n\nThe 2005 Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n was the 25th edition of the Cl\u00e1sica de San Sebasti\u00e1n cycling classic. Constantino Zaballa gave Saunier Duval-Prodir their second win in this race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181213-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cl\u00e1sico RCN\nThe 45th edition of the annual Cl\u00e1sico RCN was held from October 2 to October 9, 2005 in Colombia. The stage race started in C\u00facuta and finished with an individual time trial in Manizales. RCN stands for \"Radio Cadena Nacional\" \u2013 one of the oldest and largest radio networks in the nation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181214-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coahuila state election, 2005 Coahuila state election\nOn September 24 elections took place in the Mexican state of Coahuila to elect its governor, deputies in the state legislature and presidents for the 38 municipios the state is divided in.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181214-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Coahuila state election, Results\nWith 98% of polling stations accounted for by September 25 the results are:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181215-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team\nThe 2005 Coastal Carolina Chanticleers football team represented Coastal Carolina University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. The Chanticleers were led by third-year head coach David Bennett and played their home games at Brooks Stadium. Coastal Carolina competed as a member of the Big South Conference. They finished the season 9\u20132 with a 3\u20131 record in conference play, winning a share of the Big South championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600\nThe 2005 Coca-Cola 600, the 46th running of the race, was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on May 29, 2005, at Lowe's Motor Speedway in Charlotte, North Carolina. The race was the twelfth of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season. The pole position was won by Penske Racing's Ryan Newman, while the race was won by Jimmie Johnson of Hendrick Motorsports. The race featured the most caution flags in Cup history, as well as the most lap leaders (21) in track history.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600\nFor the first time since 2001, the race received lower TV ratings than the Indianapolis 500, which occurred earlier that day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Background\nLowe's Motor Speedway is a motorsports complex located in Concord, North Carolina, United States 13 miles from Charlotte, North Carolina. The complex features a 1.5 miles (2.4\u00a0km) quad oval track that hosts NASCAR racing including the prestigious Coca-Cola 600 on Memorial Day weekend and the NEXTEL All-Star Challenge, as well as the UAW-GM Quality 500. The speedway was built in 1959 by Bruton Smith and is considered the home track for NASCAR with many race teams located in the Charlotte area. The track is owned and operated by Speedway Motorsports Inc. (SMI) with Marcus G. Smith (son of Bruton Smith) as track president.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 658]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Qualifying\n53 drivers attempted to qualify for the race, the most since the 2005 Daytona 500, which featured 57 cars attempting to make the field. The pole position was won by Ryan Newman, his 18th career pole, after recording a lap time of 27.981 seconds and speed of 192.988 miles per hour (310.584\u00a0km/h), surpassing Mike Bliss' record of 28.540 seconds and 189.280 miles per hour (304.617\u00a0km/h) set at the NEXTEL Open held six days earlier; the top 18 qualifiers eventually passed Bliss' record. Jason Leffler, Bobby Hamilton, Jr., Hermie Sadler, Boris Said, Jeff Fuller, Carl Long, Tony Raines, Mike Garvey, Kirk Shelmerdine and Greg Sacks failed to qualify for the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Race recap\nThe race was marred by a Cup Series record 22 caution flags. The first flew on lap 7 for Martin Truex, Jr.'s accident in turn 2, followed by Kurt Busch's crash on lap 11. Another caution was flown for debris on lap 94, and on lap 102, five cars (Jimmy Spencer, Scott Riggs, Mike Skinner, Robby Gordon, and Michael Waltrip) crashed on the backstretch.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Race recap\nAnother debris caution was flown on lap 115, and on the 140th lap, Johnny Sauter crashed in turn 3. Elliott Sadler's spin on lap 151 brought out another caution, and on lap 163, Busch was involved in another crash in turn 2. On lap 201, Scott Wimmer was spun, and Travis Kvapil's crash on lap 210 caused the tenth caution of the race. On lap 217, Truex, Sterling Marlin, and Casey Mears crashed in turn 2, and on lap 228, Marlin and Mears' Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Jamie McMurray crashed in turn 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0004-0002", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Race recap\nOn lap 235, Gordon was involved in an accident in turn 4, and six laps later, McMurray was spun in turn 4. On lap 247, Waltrip, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Matt Kenseth, and Terry Labonte were involved in a crash on the frontstretch. The crash caused Labonte to be taken to the Carolinas Medical Center, where he was eventually released. After a debris caution on lap 267, Dave Blaney was spun on the frontstretch on lap 290. On lap 308, another caution was flown for an oil spill on the track, and another debris caution was flown on lap 357.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0004-0003", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Race recap\nThe twentieth caution of the race occurred on lap 368 when Blaney's car stalled while entering pit road. On lap 380, Jeff Gordon, Brian Vickers (who led the most laps of the race with 98), Kevin Harvick, Mark Martin, and Bill Elliott crashed in turn 1, while the final and 22nd caution was thrown on lap 392 for Joe Nemechek and Wimmer's accident in turn 4. The last caution eventually forced the red flag to be flown, temporarily pausing the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181216-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Coca-Cola 600, Race recap\nMeanwhile, Jimmie Johnson, the only Hendrick Motorsports driver in contention after teammates Jeff Gordon, Brian Vickers, and Terry Labonte had crashed and Kyle Busch had fallen back, was in fourth for the final restart with five laps remaining. After passing pole-sitter Ryan Newman and Carl Edwards, Johnson beat Bobby Labonte to the finish by .027 seconds, the closest finish in Lowe's Motor Speedway history since the introduction of electronic scoring. The win was Johnson's third consecutive 600, a NASCAR record, passing six drivers (Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt, Darrell Waltrip (twice), Neil Bonnett, and Buddy Baker) for the record. Edwards, Jeremy Mayfield and Newman rounded out the top five, Greg Biffle, Martin Truex, Jr., Dale Jarrett, Ken Schrader, and Rusty Wallace closed out the Top 10.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 835]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181217-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coleraine Borough Council election\nElections to Coleraine Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 22 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181217-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Coleraine Borough Council election, Districts results, Bann\n2001: 3 x UUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP2005: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP and Sinn F\u00e9in gain from UUP and SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 64], "content_span": [65, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181217-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Coleraine Borough Council election, Districts results, Coleraine Central\n2001: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181217-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Coleraine Borough Council election, Districts results, Coleraine East\n2001: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 74], "content_span": [75, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181217-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Coleraine Borough Council election, Districts results, The Skerries\n2001: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 72], "content_span": [73, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181218-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe 2005 Colgate Raiders football team was an American football team that represented Colgate University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Colgate won the Patriot League co-championship but lost in the first round of the NCAA Division I-AA national playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181218-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Colgate Raiders football team\nIn its 10th season under head coach Dick Biddle, the team compiled a 8\u20134 record (8\u20133 in the regular season). Jared Nepa and Mike Saraceno were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181218-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Colgate Raiders football team\nThe Raiders outscored opponents 283 to 245. Colgate's 5\u20131 conference record tied with Lafayette for first in the Patriot League standings. Colgate was awarded the Patriot League's automatic berth in the national playoffs, though co-champion Lafayette also participated, as an at-large selection. Both teams lost their first-round games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181218-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Colgate Raiders football team\nThroughout the regular season, Colgate was unranked in the Division I-AA national top 25. Just before the start of the playoffs, the Raiders entered the poll at No. 24. In the year-end rankings, they rose to No. 23.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181218-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Colgate Raiders football team\nColgate played its home games at Andy Kerr Stadium in Hamilton, New York.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181219-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colima gubernatorial election\nAn extraordinary gubernatorial election was held in the Mexican state of Colima on 10 April 2005. The election was necessitated by the death of incumbent governor Gustavo V\u00e1zquez Montes of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) in a plane crash on 24 February 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181219-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Colima gubernatorial election, Results\nTurnout was around 55% of the registered electorate, which both candidates described as disappointingly low.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181220-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 College Baseball All-America Team\nAn All-American team is an honorary sports team composed of the best amateur players of a specific season for each team position\u2014who in turn are given the honorific \"All-America\" and typically referred to as \"All-American athletes\", or simply \"All-Americans\". Although the honorees generally do not compete together as a unit, the term is used in U.S. team sports to refer to players who are selected by members of the national media. Walter Camp selected the first All-America team in the early days of American football in 1889.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 569]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181220-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 College Baseball All-America Team\nThe NCAA recognizes four different All-America selectors for the 2005 college baseball season: the American Baseball Coaches Association (since 1947), Baseball America (since 1981), Collegiate Baseball (since 1991), and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (since 2001).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181221-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 College Football All-America Team\nThe 2005 College Football All-America Team is composed of the following All-American Teams: Associated Press, Football Writers Association of America, American Football Coaches Association, Walter Camp Foundation, The Sporting News, Sports Illustrated, Pro Football Weekly, ESPN, CBS Sports, College Football News, and Rivals.com.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181221-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 College Football All-America Team\nThe College Football All-America Team is an honor given annually to the best American college football players at their respective positions. The original usage of the term All-America seems to have been to such a list selected by football pioneer Walter Camp in the 1890s. The NCAA officially recognizes All-Americans selected by the AP, AFCA, FWAA, TSN, and the WCFF to determine Consensus All-Americans.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181221-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 College Football All-America Team\nEighteen players were recognized as consensus All-Americans for 2005, 12 of them unanimously. Unanimous selections are followed by an asterisk (*)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181222-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cologne Centurions season\nThe 2005 Cologne Centurions season was the second season for the franchise in the NFL Europe League (NFLEL). The team was led by head coach Peter Vaas in his second year, and played its home games at RheinEnergieStadion in Cologne, Germany. They finished the regular season in third place with a record of six wins and four losses.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181223-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament was held at Brooks Field in Wilmington, North Carolina from May 26 through May 29. The event determined the champion of the Colonial Athletic Association for the 2005 season. Third-seeded VCU won the tournament for the third time and earned the CAA's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181223-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament\nEntering the event, former member East Carolina had won the most championships, with seven. Among active members, Old Dominion led with three titles while George Mason and VCU had each won twice and UNC Wilmington and William & Mary had won once.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181223-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, Format and seeding\nThe top six teams from the CAA's round-robin regular season qualified for the tournament. Teams were seeded by conference winning percentage. They played a double-elimination tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 74], "content_span": [75, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181223-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Colonial Athletic Association Baseball Tournament, All-Tournament Team, Most Valuable Player\nTim St. Clair was named Tournament Most Valuable Player. St. Clair was a first baseman and designated hitter for VCU.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [56, 97], "content_span": [98, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team\nThe 2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team represented the University of Colorado at Boulder in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The previous year's team won the Big 12 North Conference. That marked the third Big 12 North championship for the Buffaloes in four years. The team had expectations to improve on their winning and appeared to be on the right track with a 7\u20132 record to begin the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team\nBut in the end, head coach Gary Barnett had his contract bought out and Colorado suffered four straight losses including an embarrassing 70\u20133 loss to Texas in the Big 12 Championship Game. They finished the season 7\u20136. In the 2005 Champs Sports Bowl against Clemson, Mike Hankwitz acted as interim head coach, even though Dan Hawkins had been hired as the new head coach. Hawkins coached his final game with Boise State in the MPC Computers Bowl game the day after Colorado played.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Pre-season\nColorado had plenty of returning players (they graduated only 11 seniors, returned 50 letterman and 17 starters) and were ranked in the Top 25 in 4 pre-season polls. They were also picked to win the Big 12 North in 9 rankings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Pre-season\nQB Joel Klatt had a solid lock on his starting position. But there was uncertainty of who would be the starting RB, through TB Lawrence Vickers had the inside chance and main competition from Hugh Charles. The shining part of the team was Special Teams, with kicker Mason Crosby and punter John Torp. Other notable returners on offense were tight ends Joe Klopfenstein and Quinn Sypniewski, wide receiver Evan Judge, and most of the offensive line: Brian Daniels, Jr.; Mark Fenton, Clint O'Neal and Gary Moore.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Pre-season\nDefense was also solid with few key losses and most returning: (line) James Garee, Alex Ligon, Vaka Manupuna; (linebackers) Thaddaeus Washington, Jordon Dizon, Akarika Dawn, Brian Iwuh; (backs) Terrence Wheatley, Lorenzo Sims, Tyrone Henderson, Dominique Brooks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Season summary\nAlthough Colorado won the Big 12 North, they back-doored their way in because they lost their two final conference games and needed Iowa State to lose their final game in order to win. Iowa State missed a field goal in OT and thus, Colorado won the Big 12 Conference North Division Title. In the Big 12 Conference Title game, Joel Klatt suffered a concussion and was taken to a hospital. His career at Colorado was then over, as he sat out the bowl game. The key game of the season was Colorado's game against Iowa State. Colorado was leading the game into the fourth quarter, but gave up two touchdowns late in the game to go on and lose. It seemed their spirit was broken as they never pulled it together after that and were never really in any game they played afterwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 829]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Season summary\nThey also ended up setting the school records for most penalties in a season with 123 (since 1996) and most penalty yards in a season with 1084 yards. They were the most penalized team in NCAA Division I-A and 116th (of 117 teams) in penalty yards per game with 83.38 (Texas Tech was 117th with 83.42). They had 35 flags thrown in the last four games of the season which helped with their downfall. Penalties often came at bad times to stop a drive or assist an opponent's drive just when they needed it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 53], "content_span": [54, 558]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181224-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Buffaloes football team, Roster\nS=Scholarship; WO=Walk-On; #/#\u2014clock as of 2005 season, i.e., 3/2: three years available to play two in eligibility. #L=indicates number of letters earned through 2004; HS=high school; JC=junior college transfer; RS=freshman redshirt in 2004; TR=transfer;VR=varsity reserve performer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 45], "content_span": [46, 330]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181225-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Mammoth season\nThe Colorado Mammoth are a lacrosse team based in Colorado playing in the National Lacrosse League (NLL). The 2005 season was the 19th in franchise history and 3rd as the Mammoth (previously the Washington Power, Pittsburgh Crossefire, and Baltimore Thunder).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181225-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Mammoth season\nThe 2005 season was lacrosse legend Gary Gait's final season as a player. He led the Mammoth to an 8-8 record, 3rd in the Western division, but they were eliminated from the playoffs by the Arizona Sting in the division finals. Gait would take over as the Mammoth's head coach the next season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181225-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Mammoth season, Regular season, Conference standings\nx:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth; c:\u00a0Clinched playoff berth by crossing over to another division; y:\u00a0Clinched division; z:\u00a0Clinched best regular season record; GP:\u00a0Games PlayedW:\u00a0Wins; L:\u00a0Losses; GB:\u00a0Games back; PCT:\u00a0Win percentage; Home:\u00a0Record at Home; Road:\u00a0Record on the Road; GF:\u00a0Goals scored; GA:\u00a0Goals allowedDifferential:\u00a0Difference between goals scored and allowed; GF/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals scored per game; GA/GP:\u00a0Average number of goals allowed per game", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181225-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Mammoth season, Player stats, Runners (Top 10)\nNote: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; LB = Loose Balls; PIM = Penalty Minutes", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 60], "content_span": [61, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181225-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Mammoth season, Player stats, Goaltenders\nNote: GP = Games Played; MIN = Minutes; W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals Against; Sv% = Save Percentage; GAA = Goals Against Average", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 55], "content_span": [56, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181226-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Rockies season\nThe Colorado Rockies' 2005 season was the 13th for the Rockies. They tried to win the National League West. Clint Hurdle was the manager. They played home games at Coors Field. They finished with a record of 67-95, last in the NL West.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 264]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181226-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 73], "content_span": [74, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181226-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181226-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 71], "content_span": [72, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181226-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Pitching, Other pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 68], "content_span": [69, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181226-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado Rockies season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181227-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Colorado State Rams football team\nThe 2005 Colorado State Rams football team represented Colorado State University in the college football 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. They played their home games at Hughes Stadium in Fort Collins, CO and were led by head coach Sonny Lubick.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 293]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181228-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Columbia Lions football team\nThe 2005 Columbia Lions football team was an American football team that represented Columbia University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Columbia finished last in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181228-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Columbia Lions football team\nIn their third and final season under head coach Bob Shoop, the Lions compiled a 2\u20138 record and were outscored 337 to 116. Bill Beechum, Prosper Nwokocha and Joe Winters were the team captains.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181228-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Columbia Lions football team\nThe Lions' winless (0\u20137) conference record placed eighth in the Ivy League standings. Columbia was outscored 293 to 63 by Ivy opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181228-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Columbia Lions football team\nColumbia played its homes games at Lawrence A. Wien Stadium in Upper Manhattan, in New York City.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181229-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting\nThe 2005 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting was the 19th Meeting of the Heads of Government of the Commonwealth of Nations. It was held in Valletta, Malta, between 25 November and 27 November 2005, and hosted by Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181229-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting\nMalta is the smallest country to have hosted a CHOGM, committing the country to a major undertaking. Nonetheless, the event passed smoothly, marked by the visit of both Queen Elizabeth II, Head of the Commonwealth, and the British aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181229-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group\nThe Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) put much emphasis on the position held by Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, and overcame opposition from Pakistan to declare that his holding the two positions of President and Chief of Army Staff were \"incompatible with the basic principles of democracy and the spirit of the Harare Commonwealth principles\" and that \"until the two offices are separated, the process of democratization will not be irreversible\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 551]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181229-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group\nOf note to commentators and the media was the non-discussion of Uganda, where opposition leader Kizza Besigye was arrested days before the CHOGM, and two months before the country's first multiparty elections since Yoweri Museveni took power in 1986. Uganda's capital, Kampala, had been arranged to host the 2007 CHOGM, and the Commonwealth leaders were keenly aware that to hold the CHOGM in a country that was deemed undemocratic would reflect badly on the Commonwealth Secretariat and undermine the Commonwealth's commitment to human rights and good governance.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 649]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181229-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group\nCMAG membership rotated once again, with Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Saint Lucia, and the United Kingdom joining it, as the Bahamas, India, Samoa, and Nigeria left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [47, 84], "content_span": [85, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181230-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup\nThe 2005 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup was the thirteenth edition of the competition between the champions of former republics of Soviet Union. It was won by Lokomotiv Moscow for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 247]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181230-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup, Format\nThis edition of the tournament featured a unique one-off format. In attempt to persuade Russian and Ukrainian champions to field their strongest squads, Lokomotiv Moscow and Dynamo Kyiv were given a straight bye to the Semifinal, avoiding Group phase and Quarterfinal. As a result, two of four groups featured only three clubs, and only four group winners advanced to the knock-out round. Ultimately, the change did not make desirable effect on Dynamo, who brought a reserve squad, and the format was reverted since next year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 578]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181231-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia leadership election\nThe Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia (KS\u010cM) held a leadership election on 1 October 2005. It was held following the resignation of the incumbent leader Miroslav Greben\u00ed\u010dek. Vojt\u011bch Filip defeated V\u00e1clav Exner and became the new leader of KS\u010cM. Filip was considered the candidate who is more similar to Greben\u00ed\u010dek.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181232-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Concertaci\u00f3n presidential primary\nThe presidential primaries of the Concertation of Parties for Democracy of the year 2005 was the electoral system to define the presidential candidate of such Chilean coalition for the presidential election of 2005. It confronted Michelle Bachelet Jeria, candidate by the Socialist Party (PS), the Party for Democracy (PPD), and the Radical Social Democratic Party (PRSD), and Soledad Alvear Valenzuela, candidate for the Christian Democratic Party of Chile (PDC). However, the process remained unfinished after Alvear retired from competition months before the completion of the primary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 627]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181232-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Concertaci\u00f3n presidential primary, Campaign and Alvear withdrawal\nAfter defining the two presidential candidates (a unique event in the history of the country, since the Concertaci\u00f3n would present a woman who has real chances of getting elected), began a series of meetings between both commands to define the system of election of the candidate only. Finally, on March 22, an open national election was agreed for all registered voters (except those registered in parties of another coalition), on July 31, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181232-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Concertaci\u00f3n presidential primary, Campaign and Alvear withdrawal\nIn addition, a series of debates were scheduled in each of the regions, of which only two would be televised nationally; The first, in Hualp\u00e9n (Concepci\u00f3n), scheduled for April 28, 2005, 7 and the last, scheduled for July 27 of the same year in the city of Santiago. The other regional debates were scheduled in the following order: Valparaiso (May 18), note 1 Temuco (May 26), Puerto Montt (May 27), Antofagasta (June 9), Iquique (June 10), Rancagua (23 June), Talca (24 June), Copiap\u00f3 (7 July), La Serena (8 July), Punta Arenas (21 July) and Coyhaique (22 July).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 635]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181232-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Concertaci\u00f3n presidential primary, Campaign and Alvear withdrawal\nThe campaign was not without friction between the \"progressive\" bloc (PS-PPD-PRSD) and the PDC, especially after statements by President Ricardo Lagos in March, when he gave a glimpse of his support for Bachelet in an interview with Televisi\u00f3n Nacional. Alvear reacted by stating that \"I do not deserve this attitude; I trust that the President, in the course of this morning, rectify his sayings \", and received the support of his party. Lagos had to refine his comments, stating that \"There are two candidates of the Concertaci\u00f3n. They both worked loyally with me. I therefore have two candidates\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181232-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Concertaci\u00f3n presidential primary, Campaign and Alvear withdrawal\nAfter holding two of the thirteen regional debates\u2014those of Hualp\u00e9n and Valpara\u00edso--, on 24 May, the Christian Democratic banner declined to continue in the presidential race, leaving the only candidacy in the Concertacion to the socialist Michelle Bachelet.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 329]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181232-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Concertaci\u00f3n presidential primary, Campaign and Alvear withdrawal\nBoth met the next day, when Bachelet failed to get Alvear to join his command PDC Senator Jorge Pizarro, declared that Alvear's resignation \"has to do with the finding of a political picture that at one point could jeopardize the possibility of a new government of the Concertaci\u00f3n\" referring to the possible dispute of votes of center by the candidate of National Renovation, Sebasti\u00e1n Pi\u00f1era, who came from a family that had strong ties with the Christian Democratic Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 70], "content_span": [71, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181233-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference National play-off Final\nThe 2005 Football Conference play-off Final took place on 14 May 2005 and was contested between Stevenage Borough and Carlisle United. It was held at the Britannia Stadium, Stoke and had an attendance of 13,422.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181233-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference National play-off Final, Match, Summary\nCarlisle had the first major chance when the ball fell to Derek Holmes and he turned and shot, but Alan Julian in the Stevenage goal saved comfortably. Stevenage's first chance came when they had a corner which they took quickly and Anthony Elding shot just wide from outside the area. The same corner routine had paid off in the semi-final as it had led to Dino Maamria's winning goal against Hereford.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 459]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181233-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference National play-off Final, Match, Summary\nAt the other end, Holmes flicked on a long ball for Glenn Murray who controlled the ball on his chest and shot in one movement from 14 yards out, but Julian again saved well. Carlisle then took the lead in the 23rd minute after Tom Cowan's cross was headed into the bottom corner by Peter Murphy. Stevenage pressed forward looking for the equalising goal with Jon Brady finding Darryn Stamp at the back post with a good cross, whose header was deflected over. At the other end, Goodliffe cleared a header off the line to keep Stevenage in the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181233-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference National play-off Final, Match, Summary\nThe second half saw Stevenage try everything to get an equaliser. Elding blazed over from just inside the area, George Boyd hit a well worked free kick over the crossbar while Michael Warner had a good run into the area, cutting inside onto his left foot before seeing his goalbound shot saved by the feet of Matt Glennon. In stoppage time there was a late flurry with the ball bouncing around in the Carlisle penalty area with shots raining in from all angles. But Stevenage could not break down Carlisle and it was they who won and gained promotion back to the Football League at first invitation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 55], "content_span": [56, 655]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181234-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Baseball Tournament\nThe 2005 Conference USA Baseball Tournament was the 2005 postseason college baseball championship of the NCAA Division I Conference USA, held at Pete Taylor Park in Hattiesburg, Mississippi from May 25 through May 29, 2005. Both TCU and Tulane were declared co-champions due to inclement weather but Tulane was given the automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. The tournament consisted of eight teams, with two double-elimination brackets, and a single-game final that was cancelled due to inclement weather.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181234-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Baseball Tournament, Finish order\n\u2020 - Winner of the tournament and received an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. # - Received an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181235-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Football Championship Game\nThe 2005 Conference USA Football Championship Game was played on December 3, 2005, at the Citrus Bowl, now known as Camping World Stadium, in Orlando, Florida to determine the 2005 football champion of Conference USA (C-USA). The game featured the UCF Golden Knights, the East Division champions, and the Tulsa Golden Hurricane, the West Division champions. The game kicked off at 12:00pm EST and was televised by ESPN.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181235-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Football Championship Game, Game summary\nWith the win, the Tulsa Golden Hurricane won the first-ever Conference USA championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181236-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe 2005 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 9\u201312 at the FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181236-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nTop-seeded Louisville defeated hosts Memphis in the championship game, 75\u201374, to clinch their second Conference USA men's tournament championship. It was the Cardinals' second title in three years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181236-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament\nThe Cardinals, in turn, received an automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Tournament. They were joined in the tournament by fellow C-USA members UAB, Charlotte, and Cincinnati, all of whom earned at-large bids. Louisville would ultimately advance to the Final Four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181236-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThere were no changes to the tournament format from the previous year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181236-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament, Format\nThe top four teams were given byes into the quarterfinal round while the next eight teams were placed into the first round. The two teams with the worst conference records were not invited to the tournament. All remaining tournament seeds were determined by regular season conference records.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [49, 55], "content_span": [56, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181237-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament\nThe 2005 Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament was the eleventh edition of the Conference USA Men's Soccer Tournament. The tournament decided the Conference USA champion and guaranteed representative into the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship. The tournament was hosted by Southern Methodist University and the games were played at Westcott Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181238-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut Huskies football team\nThe 2005 Connecticut Huskies football team represented the University of Connecticut in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season as a member of the Big East Conference. The team was led by seventh-year head coach Randy Edsall and played its home games at Rentschler Field in East Hartford, Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 343]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181239-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut Sun season\nThe 2005 WNBA season was their seventh season and their third in Connecticut. The Sun attempted to return to the postseason for the third consecutive season and were successful. They also attempted to return to the WNBA Finals for the second consecutive year and were successful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181239-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut Sun season, Schedule, Playoffs\nIn the first round of the Eastern Conference Playoffs, the Sun had to face the Detroit Shock. Since the Sun had the better record, the series would be played with game 1 at Detroit, game 2 at Connecticut, and game 3 (if needed) at Connecticut. Even though Detroit had won three of the four regular season meetings, the Sun swept the Shock and game 3 was not needed. In the second round of the Eastern Conference Playoffs, the Sun had to face the Indiana Fever.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181239-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Connecticut Sun season, Schedule, Playoffs\nAgain, the Sun had the better record and the series would be played with game 1 at Indiana and games 2 and 3 (if needed) at Connecticut. The Sun swept the Fever and game 3 was not needed. The Sun advanced to the WNBA Finals. The team would be facing off against the Sacramento Monarchs. The Sun had the better record so the series would be played with games 1, 2, and 5 at Connecticut and games 3 and 4 at Sacramento. In the regular season, the Sun had beaten the Monarchs in both meetings. It was not enough, however. The Monarchs beat the Sun 3 games to 1 to win the WNBA Finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 47], "content_span": [48, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert\nOn February 1, 2005, the Emergency Alert System was activated in portions of Connecticut calling for the immediate evacuation of the entire state. The activation was in error. Later studies showed that residents did not evacuate, and that the most common response was to 'change the channel' or seek other confirmation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Background Info\nThe Emergency Alert System (EAS) is a public warning system in the United States that allows designated government authorities to suspend and preempt terrestrial radio and television broadcasts when needed to issue urgent public safety alerts. The highest priority alert that can be issued is an Emergency Action Notification (EAN), sometimes called a \"presidential alert\". An EAN sets into motion a series of events that causes all of the United States' television and radio stations to become networked together to simulcast the President of the United States, or another federal official. An Emergency Action Notification has never been used for an actual event. However, local and state-level activations of the EAS routinely occur for emergencies such as tornadoes, 911 system outages, and other, localized, exigent events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 56], "content_span": [57, 885]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Incident\nAt 2:10\u00a0p.m. on Tuesday, February 1, 2005, a state-level activation of the EAS occurred in Connecticut. A scheduled, unannounced test of the system had been planned for that day. However, the system instead informed television and radio stations that an evacuation of the state was underway. Both the Connecticut Office of Emergency Management and Governor Jodi Rell issued statements shortly after the broadcast confirming the activation had been in error and there was no evacuation underway, though clarifications were not issued until more than an hour after the transmission.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Incident\nOfficials initially blamed hackers for the misactivation, though an employee of the state's Office of Emergency Management later said they had accidentally registered the incorrect code prior to what should have been an EAS test, prompting the broadcast of the evacuation notification instead of the test message.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Incident\nAccording to media reports, the message broadcast began, \"civil authorities have issued an immediate evacuation order for all of Connecticut, beginning at 2:10\u00a0p.m. and ending at 3:10\u00a0p.m\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Reaction\nDespite the critical nature of the message, officials from the Connecticut State Police reported they received no calls from the public inquiring as to its authenticity or the circumstances that would require the evacuation of Connecticut. Though some local police reportedly received calls from members of the public, the message \"failed to set off a noticeable exodus into Massachusetts, Rhode Island or New York\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Reaction\nA study conducted after the activation discovered that 11 percent of the state's residents had received the warning while it was being broadcast. Of those persons, 63 percent reported they were \"a little or not at all concerned\" when receiving it. The most common reaction reported by residents was to seek confirmation of the emergency by changing channels; other common reactions were looking outside or consulting neighbors, and only one percent of persons surveyed who heard the broadcast actually attempted to flee Connecticut.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181240-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Connecticut false evacuation alert, Reaction\nThe most common reasons given by people for not following the evacuation orders were because no specific threat was described in the broadcast, because no specific area was mentioned other than \"the entire state of Connecticut\", and because there was no observable activity indicative of an emergency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 351]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election\nThe 2005 Conservative Party leadership election was called by party leader Michael Howard on 6 May 2005, when he announced that he would be stepping down as Leader of the Conservative Party in the near future. However, he stated that he would not depart until a review of the rules for the leadership election had been conducted, given the high level of dissatisfaction with the current system. Ultimately, no changes were made and the election proceeded with the existing rules, which were introduced in 1998.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election\nThe contest formally began on 7 October 2005, when the Chairman of the 1922 committee, Michael Spicer, received a letter of resignation from Howard. Nominations for candidates opened immediately, and closed on 13 October.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election\nThe first round of voting amongst Conservative Members of Parliament took place on 18 October and Kenneth Clarke was eliminated (38 votes) leaving David Davis (62 votes), David Cameron (56 votes) and Liam Fox (42 votes) to go through to the second ballot on 20 October. In the second ballot, Fox was eliminated (51 votes), leaving Cameron (90 votes) and Davis (57 votes) to go through to a postal ballot. The ballot, whose result was declared on 6 December, saw Cameron win 68% of votes to Davis' 32%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidates\nThe following candidates declared their intention to seek the leadership, but withdrew before voting began after gathering limited support:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Candidates\nAlan DuncanMP for Rutland and Melton, Shadow Secretary for Transport", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 55], "content_span": [56, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Results\nThe first ballot of MPs was held on 18 October. The results were announced, ten minutes later than expected, at 5:30\u00a0pm by Sir Michael Spicer, the Chairman of the 1922 Committee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest\nMuch speculation surrounded the review of the rules, as it is widely estimated that the system eventually adopted could prove a help or hindrance to particular candidates with strong support in certain areas of the party. However, on 27 September 2005, the proposal to change the rules was rejected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 69], "content_span": [70, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules\nUnder the rules adopted in 1998, under which both Iain Duncan Smith and Michael Howard were elected, a leadership contest can be initiated either by the incumbent leader resigning or by the Parliamentary Party passing a vote of no confidence in the present leader. The latter is called if 15% of the Parliamentary Party write to the Chairman of the 1922 Committee. If a vote of no confidence is passed, a leadership election is called and the incumbent is barred from standing in it.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules\nThe returning officer is the Chairman of the 1922 Committee. Candidates must be nominated by any two MPs taking the Conservative whip. If only one candidate stands (as happened in the 2003 leadership election) then they are elected nem con (uncontested).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules\nIf two candidates stand, then the election immediately proceeds to a ballot of all members of the party. If more than two candidates stand, then MPs first hold a series of ballots to reduce the number to two. On each round, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. (If two or more candidates tie for last place, as happened in the 2001 contest, then the ballot is repeated, and if the tie remains, all bottom-placed candidates are eliminated.) Candidates may also withdraw between rounds (this also happened in the 2001 contest).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 629]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules\nThe series of ballots by MPs continues until there are only two candidates remaining. At this point the all-member ballot begins; this lasts for some weeks. To be eligible to vote, an individual has to have been a paid-up member of the party for at least three months. The candidate who tops the poll is declared leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 89], "content_span": [90, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules, Criticisms of the existing rules\nMany criticisms have been made of the rules, in light of some problems encountered in previous elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 123], "content_span": [124, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules, Criticisms of the existing rules\nMany have criticised the system as having been devised to try to answer those who believed that a leader should have the backing of the bulk of MPs, to answer demands for ordinary party members to have a say, and to allow for the removal of a failing leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 123], "content_span": [124, 382]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules, Criticisms of the existing rules\nIt is possible for a candidate to reach the final two with the support of barely a third of MPs in the final ballot (or even less if the rival candidate has overwhelming support in the Parliamentary Party) and then be elected leader by the party members. Conversely, they are then vulnerable to being removed as leader by the MPs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 123], "content_span": [124, 454]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, The existing rules, Criticisms of the existing rules\nSome have argued that party members are unrepresentative of the electorate at large and are prone to elect a leader reflecting their views rather than those of the country at large.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 123], "content_span": [124, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Initial proposals for electing a new leader\nFollowing the Conservative Party's defeat at the 2005 general election, in a speech on 6 May 2005, Howard announced his intention to retire as leader of the Conservative Party. However, he indicated that before he stood down he wanted to oversee changes to the Party\u2019s process of electing a new leader. These new proposals were set out in principle in the Conservative Party document A 21st Century Party:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 167], "content_span": [168, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Initial proposals for electing a new leader\nThis proposal was put to the 1922 Committee on 15 May 2005, but rejected. About 100 of the 180 backbenchers that attended the meeting instead endorsed a motion drawn up by the executive of the committee. The 1922 Committee proposal included a consultative period with all local associations, but the choice of leader would ultimately be decided by the parliamentary party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 167], "content_span": [168, 540]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Revised proposals for electing a new leader\nUnder the 1922 Committee proposed system, Sir Michael Spicer, Chairman of the 1922 Committee of MPs, would seek nominations for leader from Conservative Members of Parliament. Contenders would need the support of 5% of the party, or 10 MPs (in the current Parliament), in order to stand. Once nominations had closed MPs would then start a two-week consultation process with their constituencies, MEPs and local councillors to ascertain their preferred candidates. They would then report back to Sir Michael, who would assess their findings and inform MPs of the two candidates who gained most support, in order of preference. MPs would then hold the first ballot, in which all nominated candidates would be able to participate. As in the current system the MP with the lowest number of votes would be eliminated. The process would then be repeated, as required, until one candidate remained.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 167], "content_span": [168, 1059]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Revised proposals for electing a new leader\nAndrew Tyrie, the Conservative MP for Chichester hailed the decision by the parliamentary party to accept the new proposals, by 127 votes to 50 on 20 July 2005 at a meeting of the 1922 committee, as a \"victory for common sense\". The 1922 Committee proposal was then put to the Conservative Party Board which duly supported it. Following this result Party Chairman, Francis Maude commented; \"I am pleased that these changes, agreed by the Party Board and the 1922 Committee, are going to be put forward.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 167], "content_span": [168, 670]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0018-0001", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Revised proposals for electing a new leader\nIf these changes go through, the Conservative Party will have a new Leader in place by the middle of November.\" However, other MPs were less enthusiastic about the new system. In a letter to the Daily Telegraph a number of MPs including David Willetts, Michael Ancram, Andrew Lansley, Theresa May and Iain Duncan Smith, wrote: \"It is not too late for the parliamentary party to find a way of involving grassroots members in the Conservative Party\u2019s most important decisions. Any proposals that do not facilitate democratic involvement deserve to be defeated.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 167], "content_span": [168, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Proposal not backed by the Constitutional College\nWhen the results of the ballot of the Constitutional College of the Conservative Party were announced on 27 September 2005, the proposals had failed to gain enough backing. A total of 1,001 (87.7% of full membership) ballots were returned, the votes in each section were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 173], "content_span": [174, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Proposal not backed by the Constitutional College\nThis equated to a total of 61 per cent of the constitutional college in favour. For the changes to be approved, 50 per cent of all those eligible to vote were required to vote in favour, along with 66 per cent of MPs who voted and 66 per cent of the National Convention members who voted; it is this final threshold that was not reached.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 173], "content_span": [174, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, The rules of the contest, Proposals to change the leadership election process, Proposal not backed by the Constitutional College\nAs a result of the Constitutional College ballot, no changes were made to the party\u2019s rules on electing a leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 173], "content_span": [174, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Party Conference\nAt the 2005 Conservative Party conference, each of the five announced candidates at the time was allowed a 20-minute speech. This was seen by many as the start of the leadership campaign by each of the candidates and their speeches were closely analysed by party members and the media. Many felt that front-runner (at the time of his speech) David Davis had performed rather poorly, while the speeches of Kenneth Clarke, Liam Fox, Sir Malcolm Rifkind and David Cameron were much better.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0022-0001", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Party Conference\nThis led to a rapid change in the odds of the five candidates on the betting markets \u2013 on the morning of 6 October, David Davis was the clear leader and David Cameron third, but by the evening of the same day the two had swapped places. By the end of the conference, David Cameron had become the front runner, with Ken Clarke and David Davis closely behind.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 419]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Party Conference\nThe conference was also seen as similar to the Conservatives' 1963 conference, where there was also a race to become leader.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 61], "content_span": [62, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Polling\nThe Sunday Times and YouGov polled 746 members of the Conservative Party just after the conference. The poll showed support slipping away from David Davis (14%) and Ken Clarke (26%) and moving to Liam Fox (13%) and David Cameron (39%) instead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 296]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Polling\nThe Daily Telegraph and YouGov polled 665 members of the Conservative Party just after the first ballot, where Clarke was eliminated leaving only three contestants. The poll showed that 59 percent backed David Cameron, against 18 percent for Liam Fox and 15 per cent for Mr Davis. This poll showed support for Mr Cameron being strong amongst the grassroots of the party on the eve of the final (membership) ballot.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181241-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Conservative Party leadership election, Polling\nIn a YouGov poll published on 12 November, more than two-thirds of party members looked set to vote for the younger candidate as party leader. Around 68 per cent of voters who had already returned their ballot papers had opted for Mr Cameron, while 66 per cent of those still to vote said they were likely to choose him over the then-Shadow Home Secretary David Davis. 57 per cent of those still to vote said they may change their minds between then and the postal ballot deadline on 5 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 52], "content_span": [53, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181242-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cook Islands Round Cup\nThe 2005 season of the Cook Islands Round Cup was the thirty second recorded season of top flight association football competition in the Cook Islands, with any results between 1951 and 1969 and also in 1986 and 1988\u20131990 currently unknown. Nikao Sokattack won the championship, their third recorded championship. Either Tupapa Maraerenga or Matavera were runners up, with Takuvaine finishing in third place following a seven match unbeaten run at the end of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181243-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cookstown District Council election\nElections to Cookstown District Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used three district electoral areas to elect a total of 16 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181243-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cookstown District Council election, Districts results, Ballinderry\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 72], "content_span": [73, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181243-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cookstown District Council election, Districts results, Cookstown Central\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: SDLP gain from Sinn F\u00e9in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 78], "content_span": [79, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181243-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cookstown District Council election, Districts results, Drum Manor\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x DUP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 71], "content_span": [72, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181244-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Aerosur\nFollowing are the results of the 2005 Copa Aerosur, the Bolivian football tournament held in La Paz, Cochabamba and Santa Cruz, sponsored by AeroSur airline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181245-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Am\u00e9rica de Ciclismo\nThe 5th edition of the Copa Am\u00e9rica de Ciclismo was held on 9 January 2005 in S\u00e3o Paulo, Brazil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181246-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar\nThe 2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts at the Club Campestre El Rancho in Bogot\u00e1, Colombia that was part of Tier III of the 2005 WTA Tour. It was the eighth edition of the tournament and ran from 14 February through 20 February 2005. Second-seeded Flavia Pennetta won the singles title and earned $27,000 first-prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 424]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181246-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar, Finals, Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi / Tina Pisnik defeated \u013dubom\u00edra Kurhajcov\u00e1 / Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 53], "content_span": [54, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181247-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Doubles\nBarbara Schwartz and Jasmin W\u00f6hr were the defending champions, but Schwartz did not compete this year. W\u00f6hr teamed up with \u00c9milie Loit and lost in semifinals to runners-up \u013dubom\u00edra Kurhajcov\u00e1 and Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181247-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi and Tina Pisnik won the title by defeating \u013dubom\u00edra Kurhajcov\u00e1 and Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181248-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Singles\nFour-time champion Fabiola Zuluaga failed to defend her title after losing to Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino in the semifinals. The loss also ends Zuluaga's 17-match winning streak at her home soil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 237]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181248-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Colsanitas Seguros Bolivar \u2013 Singles\nFlavia Pennetta won the title by defeating Lourdes Dom\u00ednguez Lino 7\u20136(7\u20134), 6\u20134 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181249-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Indonesia\nThe 2005 Copa Indonesia was the first edition of Piala Indonesia, the nationwide football cup tournament in Indonesia, involving clubs from Premier Division, First Division and Second Division. The winner of the tournament qualified to play for 2006 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181249-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Indonesia\nArema Malang became champions after a victory over Persija Jakarta in the final match at Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181250-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Indonesia Final\nThe 2005 Copa Indonesia Final was a football match that took place on 19 November 2005 at Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta. It was the inaugural final of Piala Indonesia, Indonesia's premier football cup competition. The match was contested by Persija Jakarta and Arema Malang. Arema won the match 4\u20133 after extra time and entered the group stage of the 2006 AFC Champions League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores\nThe 2005 Copa Libertadores was the 46th edition of the Copa Libertadores. The champion also qualified for the 2005 FIFA Club World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores\nIt was the first time ever that two teams from the same country reached the final. This year's tournament was also the first Copa Libertadores to employ the away goals rule in knockout ties. S\u00e3o Paulo won the tournament, becoming the first Brazilian team to win the cup on three occasions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Preliminary round\n12 teams from 11 football associations dispute 6 places in the Group Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 41], "content_span": [42, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Group stage\nThe six winners from the preliminary round join the other twenty-six teams in the group stage. The top 2 teams in each group advanced to the knockout stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 35], "content_span": [36, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Knockout Round, Qualified teams\nThe teams seeded 1 to 8 (first placed teams of each group) and 9 to 16 (second placed teams of each group) and the ties were 1 vs 16, 2 vs 15, etc.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 55], "content_span": [56, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Knockout Round, Round of 16\nFirst leg matches were played between May 17, 2005 and May 19, 2005. Second leg matches were played between May 24, 2005 and May 26, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 51], "content_span": [52, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Knockout Round, Quarterfinals\nFirst leg matches were played on June 1, 2005 and June 2, 2005. Second leg matches were played between June 14, 2005 and June 16, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 53], "content_span": [54, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Knockout Round, Semifinals\nFirst leg matches were played on June 22, 2005 and June 23, 2005. Second leg matches were played on June 29, 2005 and June 30, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 50], "content_span": [51, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181251-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores, Knockout Round, Finals\nFirst leg match was played on July 6, 2005. Second leg match was played on July 14, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 46], "content_span": [47, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181252-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores Finals\nThe 2005 Copa Libertadores Final was a two-legged football match-up to determine the 2005 Copa Libertadores champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181252-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Libertadores Finals, Final summary, Second leg\nAssistant referees: Rodolfo Otero Juan Carlos RebolloFourth official: Sergio Pezzotta", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 56], "content_span": [57, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2005 Copa Per\u00fa season (Spanish: Copa Per\u00fa 2005), the promotion tournament of Peruvian football.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe tournament has 5 stages. The first four stages are played as mini-league round-robin tournaments, except for third stage in region IV, which is played as a knockout stage. The final stage features two knockout rounds and a final four-team group stage to determine the two promoted teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 306]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa\nThe 2005 Peru Cup started with the District Stage (Spanish: Etapa Distrital) on February. The next stage was the Provincial Stage (Spanish: Etapa Provincial) which started, on June. The tournament continued with the Departamental Stage (Spanish: Etapa Departamental) on July. The Regional Staged followed. The National Stage (Spanish: Etapa Nacional) started on November. The winner of the National Stage will be promoted to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Departmental Stage\nThe following list shows the teams that qualified for the Regional Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 34], "content_span": [35, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage\nThe following list shows the teams that qualified for the Regional Stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region I\nRegion I includes qualified teams from Amazonas, Lambayeque, Tumbes and Piura region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region II\nRegion II includes qualified teams from Ancash, Cajamarca, La Libertad and San Mart\u00edn region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 135]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region IV\nRegion IV includes qualified teams from Lima, Loreto, Callao and Ucayali region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region V\nRegion V includes qualified teams from Ayacucho, Huancavelica and Ica region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 40], "content_span": [41, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VI\nRegion VI includes qualified teams from Huanuco, Junin and Pasco region. Two teams qualified from this stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 41], "content_span": [42, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VII\nRegion VII includes qualified teams from Arequipa, Moquegua and Tacna region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 42], "content_span": [43, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, Regional Stage, Region VIII\nRegion VIII includes qualified teams from Apur\u00edmac, Cusco, Madre de Dios and Puno region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 43], "content_span": [44, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181253-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Per\u00fa, National Stage\nThe National Stage started in November. The winners of the National Stage will be promoted to the First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 30], "content_span": [31, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181254-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago\nThe 2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago was a professional tennis tournament played on outdoor red clay courts. It was part of the 2005 ATP Challenger Series. It took place in Santiago de Chile, Chile between 24 and 30 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181254-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago, ATP entrants, Other Entrants\nThe following players received wildcards into the singles main draw:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 58], "content_span": [59, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181254-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago, Champions, Doubles\nDaniel K\u00f6llerer / Oliver Marach def. Lucas Arnold Ker / Giovanni Lapentti, 6\u20134, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181255-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago \u2013 Doubles\nEnzo Artoni and Ignacio Gonz\u00e1lez King were the defending champions, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181255-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago \u2013 Doubles\nDaniel K\u00f6llerer and Oliver Marach defeated Lucas Arnold Ker and Giovanni Lapentti 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181256-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago \u2013 Singles\n\u00d3scar Hern\u00e1ndez was the defending champion, but lost in semifinals to Rub\u00e9n Ram\u00edrez Hidalgo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181256-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Petrobras Santiago \u2013 Singles\nJ\u00falio Silva defeated Rub\u00e9n Ram\u00edrez Hidalgo 6\u20132, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 104]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181257-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Sudamericana\nThe 2005 Copa Sudamericana, also known as the 2005 Copa Nissan Sudamericana de Clubes for sponsorship reasons, was the 4th edition of the international football cup competition played annually by clubs of CONMEBOL, and starting with this edition invited teams from CONCACAF. Boca Juniors successfully defended the Sudamericana trophy, winning the tournament for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181258-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nThe 2005 Copa Sudamericana Finals was a two-legged football match-up to determine the 2005 Copa Sudamericana champion. It was contested by Mexican club UNAM and Argentinian club Boca Juniors. Boca was defending their trophy and Pumas UNAM were playing in their first Copa Sudamericana finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181258-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa Sudamericana Finals\nThe first leg was played in Estadio Ol\u00edmpico Universitario in Mexico D.F. on 6 December 6, and the match was tied 1\u20131. The second leg was played in La Bombonera (\"Estadio Alberto J. Armando\"), in Buenos Aires on December 18, and, again, the match was tied 1\u20131, so in the penalty shoot-out Boca won 4\u20133 and was thus crowned the champions, successfully defending their title. As the winner, Boca earned the right to play in the 2006 Recopa Sudamericana against the winner of the 2005 Copa Libertadores.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181259-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol\nThe 2005 Copa de S.M. La Reina de F\u00fatbol was the 23rd edition of Spain's women's football national cup. The previous edition's reduction to four teams was reverted, and the cup was contested by the top eight teams in the 2004-05 Superliga from May 15 to June 12, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181259-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa de la Reina de F\u00fatbol\nDefending champion Levante UD defeated CFF Puebla in the final to win its fifth title in six years. AD Torrej\u00f3n and Rayo Vallecano also reached the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181260-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa del Rey Final\nThe 2005 Copa del Rey Final was the 103rd final of the Spanish cup competition, the Copa del Rey. The match was played at Vincente Calderon in Madrid, on 11 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181260-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa del Rey Final\nReal Betis beat Osasuna 2\u20131 in extra time, to win the tournament for the second time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181261-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa del Rey Juvenil\nThe 2005 Copa del Rey Juvenil was the 55th staging of the tournament. The competition began on May 15, 2005 and ended on June 26, 2005 with the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181262-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa del Rey de Baloncesto\nThe 2005 Copa del Rey was the 69th edition of the Spanish basketball Cup. It was organized by the ACB and was disputed in Zaragoza in the Pabell\u00f3n Pr\u00edncipe Felipe between days 17 and 20 of February. The winning team was Unicaja.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181263-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa del Rey de Balonmano\nThe 2004/2005 edition of Copa del Rey de Balonmano was held in Pontevedra, Galicia. The champion was BM Valladolid.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181264-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa do Brasil\nThe Copa do Brasil 2005 was the 17th staging of the Copa do Brasil.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181264-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa do Brasil\nThe competition started on February 2, 2005 and concluded on June 22, 2005 with the second leg of the final, held at the Est\u00e1dio S\u00e3o Janu\u00e1rio in Rio de Janeiro, in which Paulista lifted the trophy for the first time after a 0-0 draw with Fluminense.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181264-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa do Brasil\nFred, of Cruzeiro, with 15 goals, was the competition's topscorer.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 86]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181264-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Copa do Brasil, Format\nThe competition was contested by 64 clubs in a knock-out format where all rounds were played over two legs and the away goals rule was used, but in the first two rounds if the away team won the first leg with an advantage of at least two goals, the second leg was not played and the club automatically qualified to the next round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 27], "content_span": [28, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181265-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coppa Italia Final\nThe 2005 Coppa Italia Final was the final of the 2004\u201305 Coppa Italia, the 58th season of the top cup competition in Italian football. The match was played over two legs between Roma and Internazionale. This was the 12th Coppa Italia final played by Roma and the 8th by Inter. It was the first meeting of these two clubs in the finals. The first leg was played in Rome on 12 June 2005, in which Inter won 2\u20130. The second leg was played on 15 June 2006 in Milan and Inter won 1\u20130 to seal the trophy on an aggregate result of 3\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181266-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship was the 96th staging of the Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1909. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place on 12 December 2004. The championship began on 1 May 2005 and ended on 9 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181266-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 9 October 2005, Argideen Rangers won the championship after a 2\u201308 to 1\u201308 defeat of Nemo Rangers in a final replay at P\u00e1irc U\u00ed Rinn. It remains their only championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181266-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Intermediate Hurling Championship\nNemo Rangers' James Masters was the championship's top scorer with 3-35.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181267-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship was the 108th staging of the Cork Junior A Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1895. The championship began on 24 September 2005 and 19 November 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181267-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nOn 19 November 2005, Fr. O'Neill's won the championship following a 0-15 to 1-9 defeat of Kilworth in the final. This was their first championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181267-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Junior A Hurling Championship\nKilworth's Paudie Lynch was the championship's top scorer with 1-20.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181268-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship was the second staging of the Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board. The draw for the opening round fixtures took place at the Cork Convention on 12 December 2004. The championship began on 30 April 2005 and ended on 1 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 398]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181268-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nOn 1 October 2005, Ballinhassig won the championship following a 1-16 to 1-11 defeat of Aghada in the final. This was their first championship title in the grade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181268-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Premier Intermediate Hurling Championship\nAghada's Trevor O'Keeffe was the championship's top scorer with 1-45.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 51], "section_span": [51, 51], "content_span": [52, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181269-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Football Championship\nThe 2005 Cork Senior Football Championship was the 117th staging of the Cork Senior Football Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the opening fixtures took place on 12 December 2004. The championship began on 9 April 2005 and ended on 23 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181269-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Football Championship\nOn 23 October 2005, Nemo Rangers won the championship following a 1-14 to 0-07 defeat of Muskerry in the final. This was their 14th championship title overall and their first title since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181269-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Football Championship\nJames Masters from the Nemo Rangers club was the championship's top scorer with 2-40.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181270-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nThe 2005 Cork Senior Hurling Championship was the 117th staging of the Cork Senior Hurling Championship since its establishment by the Cork County Board in 1887. The draw for the 2005 fixtures took place at the Cork Convention on 12 December 2004. The championship began on 27 May 2005 ended on 16 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 349]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181270-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nNa Piarsaigh were the defending champions, however, they were defeated by University College Cork at the quarter-final stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181270-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nOn 16 October 2005, Newtownshandrum won the championship following a 0-15 to 0-09 defeat of Cloyne in the final. This was their third championship title overall and their first in two championship seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 243]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181270-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cork Senior Hurling Championship\nCloyne's Paudie O'Sullivan was the championship's top scorer with 3-19.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 109]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181271-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cornell Big Red football team\nThe 2005 Cornell Big Red football team represented Cornell University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Ivy League. They were led by second-year head coach Jim Knowles and played their home games at Schoellkopf Field. Cornell finished the season 6\u20134 overall and 4\u20133 in Ivy League play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181272-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cornwall County Council election\nThe 2005 Cornwall County Council election took place on 5 May 2005, concurrently with other local elections across England and Wales. It was the first election to take place under new ward boundaries, which increased the number of seats from 79 to 82. Cornwall County Council was a county council that covered the majority of the ceremonial county of Cornwall, with the exception of the Isles of Scilly which had an independent local authority. The Liberal Democrats gained control of the council, which had previously been under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181273-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cotton Bowl Classic\nThe 2005 Cotton Bowl Classic was a post-season college football bowl game between the Tennessee Volunteers and the Texas A&M Aggies on January 1, 2005, at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas, Texas. It was the final game of the 2004 NCAA Division I FBS football season for each team and resulted in a 38\u20137 Tennessee victory. Tennessee represented the Southeastern Conference (SEC) while Texas A&M represented the Big 12 Conference.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181273-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cotton Bowl Classic, Game summary\nTennessee was up 38\u20130 before A&M scored late to make the final score 38-7 as A&M turned the ball over 5 times (4 on fumbles) and Rick Clausen went 18 of 27 for 222 yards. McNeal went 23 of 38 for 241 yards and set a new school single-season passing yards record, but only had one touchdown while throwing an interception.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181274-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Country Music Association Awards\nThe 2005 Country Music Association Award, 39th Annual Ceremony, took place on November 15, 2005 and was the first ceremony to be held at the Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York, hosted by Brooks & Dunn. This was the final ceremony to be distributed by CBS, before the ceremonies' switch to ABC.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181275-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 County Championship\nThe 2005 County Championship season, known as the Frizzell County Championship for sponsorship reasons, was contested through two divisions: Division One and Division Two. Each team played all the others in their division both home and away. The top three teams from Division Two were promoted to the first division for 2006, while the bottom three sides from Division 1 were relegated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181275-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 County Championship, Division One, Standings\nSource: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd matches won; 3rd fewest defeatsP = Position; Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; L = Matches lost; Tie = Matches tied; D = Matches drawn; Aban = Matches abandoned; Deduct = Points deducted; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181275-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 County Championship, Division two, Standings\nSource: Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd matches won; 3rd fewest defeatsP = Position; Pld = Matches played; W = Matches won; L = Matches lost; Tie = Matches tied; D = Matches drawn; Aban = Matches abandoned; Deduct = Points deducted; Pts = Points", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 49], "content_span": [50, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181276-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coupe de France Final\nThe Coupe de France Final 2005 was a football match held at Stade de France, Saint-Denis, on 4 June 2005, that saw Auxerre defeat Sedan 2\u20131, winning on goals from Benjani and Bonaventure Kalou.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 220]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181277-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Coupe de la Ligue Final\nThe Coupe de la Ligue Final 2005 was a football match held at Stade de France, Saint-Denis on 30 April 2005, that saw RC Strasbourg Alsace defeat Stade Malherbe Caen 2\u20131 thanks to goals by Mamadou Niang and Jean-Christophe Devaux.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181278-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cowansville municipal election\nThe 2005 Cowansville municipal election was held on November 6, 2005, to elect a mayor and councillors in Cowansville, Quebec. Incumbent mayor Arthur Fauteux was re-elected without opposition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181278-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cowansville municipal election, Results\nSource: \"Meet your new municipal councils,\" Sherbrooke Record, 8 November 2005, p.\u00a07.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181279-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Craigavon Borough Council election\nElections to Craigavon Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 26 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181279-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Craigavon Borough Council election, Districts results, Craigavon Central\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2001\u20132005 Change: DUP gain from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 77], "content_span": [78, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181279-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Craigavon Borough Council election, Districts results, Loughside\n2001: 3 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in2005: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP2001\u20132005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181279-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Craigavon Borough Council election, Districts results, Lurgan\n2001: 4 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 3 x UUP, 3 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001\u20132005 Change: DUP and Sinn F\u00e9in gain from UUP and SDLP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 66], "content_span": [67, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181279-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Craigavon Borough Council election, Districts results, Portadown\n2001: 2 x DUP, 2 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2005: 3 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP, 1 x Independent2001\u20132005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 69], "content_span": [70, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181280-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 Lib\u00e9r\u00e9\nThe 2005 Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 Lib\u00e9r\u00e9 was the 57th edition of the Crit\u00e9rium du Dauphin\u00e9 Lib\u00e9r\u00e9 cycle race and was held from 5 June to 12 June 2005. The race started in Aix-les-Bains and finished in Sallanches. The race was won by Spanish rider \u00cd\u00f1igo Landaluze, who has given positive in a doping test but whose case is still under dispute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181281-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatia Open Umag\nThe 2005 Croatia Open Umag was a men's tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. It was the 16th edition of the Croatia Open Umag, and was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the International Tennis Center in Umag, Croatia, from 25 July through 31 July 2005. Second-seeded Guillermo Coria won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 378]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181281-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatia Open Umag, Finals, Doubles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k / Petr P\u00e1la defeated Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k / David \u0160koch, 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181282-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Doubles\nJos\u00e9 Acasuso and Fl\u00e1vio Saretta were the defending champions, but none competed this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181282-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Doubles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k and Petr P\u00e1la won the title by defeating Michal Merti\u0148\u00e1k and David \u0160koch 6\u20133, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181283-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Ca\u00f1as was the defending champion, but did not participate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181283-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatia Open Umag \u2013 Singles\nGuillermo Coria won the title, defeating Carlos Moy\u00e1 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181284-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Croatian Figure Skating Championships (Croatian: Prvenstvo Hrvatske za 2005) were the National Championships of the 2004\u201305 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181284-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Ladies\n* Maria Dikanovic and \u017deljka Krizmani\u0107 placed first and second respectively in the junior competition, and the ISU recognizes them as the senior silver and bronze medalists.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 66], "content_span": [67, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181285-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian Football Cup Final\nThe 2005 Croatian Cup Final was a two-legged affair played between the Adriatic rivals Rijeka and Hajduk Split. The first leg was played in Rijeka on 11 May 2005, while the second leg on 25 May 2005 in Split.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 241]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181285-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian Football Cup Final\nRijeka won the trophy with an aggregate result of 3\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181286-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian Football Super Cup\nThe 2005 Croatian Football Super Cup was the seventh edition of the Croatian Football Super Cup, a football match contested by the winners of the previous season's Croatian First League and Croatian Football Cup competitions. The match was played on 15 July 2005 at Stadion Poljud in Split between 2004\u201305 Croatian First League winners Hajduk Split and 2004\u201305 Croatian Football Cup winners Rijeka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 431]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Croatia in January 2005, the fourth such elections since independence in 1991. They were the first presidential elections held after the constitutional changes of November 2000, which replaced a semi-presidential system with an incomplete parliamentary system, greatly reducing the powers of the President in favor of the Prime Minister and their cabinet. Incumbent president Stjepan Mesi\u0107, who had been elected in 2000 as the candidate of the Croatian People's Party, was eligible to seek reelection to a second term and ran as an independent as the constitution prohibits the President from holding party membership while in office.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 706]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election\nThe elections resulted in the landslide re-election of Mesi\u0107 for a second five-year term. They were also the first in which a woman, HDZ candidate Jadranka Kosor, took part in the runoff. The percentage of the vote received by Mesi\u0107 in the second round \u2013 65.93% \u2013 is the highest of any president to date.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election\nMesi\u0107 had received an absolute majority of the votes cast within Croatia itself in the first round, but the votes of Croatian citizens living abroad forced a run-off by reducing Mesi\u0107's overall percentage to just under the necessary 50% + 1 vote threshold needed to win in the first round. Voter turnout was 50.57% in the first round and 51.04% in the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election\nMesi\u0107 was sworn in for a second term on 18 February 2005 by the Chief justice of the Constitutional Court.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election, Background\nThe Croatian State Elections Committee published a list of potential candidates on 15 December 2004. President Stjepan Mesi\u0107 stood for re-election, and the governing HDZ nominated cabinet minister Jadranka Kosor. A total of thirteen candidates were accepted, each after having submitted 10,000 citizen signatures, an endorsement required by law.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election, Background\nMesi\u0107 won a landslide victory gaining nearly 49% of the vote in the first round, held on 2 January 2005. He only narrowly missed the 50% target for an outright win, with Kosor trailing with 20% and a surprising independent candidate Boris Mik\u0161i\u0107 with 18% of the vote. The elections went to a second round held on 16 January 2005 in which Mesi\u0107 and Kosor were the only candidates. This time, Mesi\u0107 won an overwhelming majority with about 66% of the vote against Kosor's 34%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election, Results, Analysis\nMost polls before the first round were predicting the incumbent president Stjepan Mesi\u0107 would be reelected without a runoff, securing 50% + 1 vote. However, Jadranka Kosor benefited from the votes coming from the citizens living abroad, which narrowed the president's victory by only a couple of points, but enough to secure a second round. The greatest surprise of the election was the independent candidate Boris Mik\u0161i\u0107, a Croatian businessman and entrepreneur living in the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election, Results, Analysis\nHis campaign was heavily based on the message of a 'Croatian dream', similar to the American dream he said he achieved during his career in the US. On the night of the election, the first exit polls indicated president Mesi\u0107 might secure a second term without the need of a runoff, while Kosor and Mik\u0161i\u0107 were shown battling for second place. As the first results started coming in it was evident that Mesi\u0107 was not going to secure 50% + 1 vote and that a runoff is inevitable.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election, Results, Analysis\nAs votes from the citizens living abroad were tallied, Kosor overtook Mik\u0161i\u0107, placing second and qualifying for the second round. The campaign began immediately the next day and during the two-week-long campaign, three presidential debates were held, one on each of Croatia's three major television networks. Despite most observers and post debate polls indicating Kosor won the debates, Mesi\u0107 maintained his lead in the polls. As Election Day neared, the Kosor campaign exceeded all previous campaign spending records, trying to motivate the conservative base.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181287-0005-0003", "contents": "2005 Croatian presidential election, Results, Analysis\nOn Election Day, as polls around the country closed at 7\u00a0pm, all television networks announced Mesi\u0107 won a landslide victory based on the exit polls, which official results later confirmed. Kosor conceded and congratulated Mesi\u0107 on his victory. After the elections, Boris Mik\u0161i\u0107 claimed the elections were fraud and that Mesi\u0107 and Prime Minister Ivo Sanader made a deal of \"bringing\" Kosor in the second round. He claimed to have received 15,000 election ballots with serial numbers that were not evidented.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 54], "content_span": [55, 562]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots\nThe 2005 Cronulla riots were a race riot in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It began in the beachside suburb of Cronulla on 11 December, and spread over to additional suburbs the next few nights.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots\nThe riots were triggered by an event the previous Sunday, when an altercation turned physical between a group of youths of Middle-Eastern appearance (referred to as \"Lebanese\" or \"Lebos\" by their opponents) and Anglo-Australian lifeguards on the beach. Following the reporting of this event by the tabloid media and \"shock jocks\" on local radio, a racially motivated gathering was organised via chain texting for the following weekend.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots\nA crowd gathered at Cronulla on the morning of Sunday, 11 December, and, by midday, approximately 5,000 people had gathered near the beach. The police eventually intervened. Violence spread to other southern suburbs of Sydney, where assaults occurred, including two stabbings and attacks on ambulances and police officers. Travel warnings for Australia were issued by some countries but were later removed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots\nThe riots were widely condemned by local, state and federal members of parliament, police, local community leaders, and residents of Cronulla and adjacent areas. A large number of arrests were made over the subsequent months, from both the initial riot on 11 December and the retaliations over the subsequent nights. Some media were criticised and well-known radio personality Alan Jones was formally censured and fined for his inflammatory broadcasts during that week.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots\nThe far-right Australia First Party, in particular its youth wing the Patriotic Youth League, were involved in the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Background\nNew South Wales Police had been recording racial and ethnic tensions and incidents in and around Cronulla since October 2005. There is also a history of conflict between Cronulla locals and visiting beachgoers from the western suburbs (\"Westies\") with \"bashings\" common since the 1960s as part of a turf war between Westies and local surfers. The previous summer on Australia Day (26 January 2005), a non-racial riot occurred with around 2,000 to 3,000 young people in the Cronulla area engaged in \"civil disobedience\", at one stage hurling missiles at police attempting to control the crowd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 636]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, 4 December 2005\nJust after 3\u00a0pm on Sunday, 4 December 2005, police were called to North Cronulla Beach following a report of an assault on two off-duty surf lifesavers by four members of a group of eight Middle Eastern men. A verbal exchange had taken place after three lifesavers approached a group of four young Lebanese men on Cronulla Beach with both groups accusing the other of staring at them. One of the Lebanese men reportedly responded to the accusations, \"I'm allowed to; now fuck off and leave our beach\", to which a lifesaver responded, \"I come down here out of my own spare time to save you cunts from drowning\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 659]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, 4 December 2005\nThe verbal exchange escalated with one Lebanese youth attempting to defuse the situation. Another then threw a punch, missing, prompting a pushing match that escalated into a fight. One of the lifesavers was badly hurt after falling and striking his head. One of the lifesavers later informed police that the four were part of a group of eight Lebanese that had been on the beach most of the day and that there had been no problems with their prior behaviour. Despite media reports to the contrary, no Middle Eastern men converged on the area and there were no more than the original eight present.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Media reporting\nWhat kind of grubs? Well I'll tell you what kind of grubs this lot were. This lot were Middle Eastern grubs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Media reporting\nOne media report stated that there was already tension between the community and Lebanese youths before this event and people, particularly women, claimed to have been harassed, almost daily, by \"groups of young Lebanese men\" attempting to \"pick them up\" and describing the women as being \"Aussie sluts\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 353]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Media reporting\nThe events were reported widely across the Sydney media, particularly tabloid; also generating discussions on talkback radio. When a listener identified as \"Berta\" commented to shock jock Alan Jones of Sydney's 2GB Radio that she had heard \"really derogatory remarks\" aimed at Middle Eastern people, Jones interrupted stating \"We don't have Anglo-Saxon kids out there raping women in Western Sydney\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0010-0001", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Media reporting\nJones also broadcast and endorsed one listener's suggestion that bikie gangs be brought down to Cronulla railway station to deal with \"Lebanese thugs\" and that the event be televised, arguing that despite their notoriety bikie gangs do \"a lot of good things\". By Thursday, Jones had stirred significant discussion, and stated \"I'm the person that's led this charge here. Nobody wanted to know about North Cronulla, now it's gathered to this.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Media reporting\nAfter the riots, Jones was found to have breached the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) Code of Conduct section 1.3(a), as his comments were \"likely to encourage violence or brutality and to vilify people of Lebanese and Middle-Eastern backgrounds on the basis of ethnicity\". In December 2009, the NSW Administrative Decisions Tribunal found Jones and radio station 2GB guilty of vilifying Lebanese Muslims in earlier \"Cronulla Riot\" broadcasts. A fine of $10,000 was imposed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 544]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Media reporting\nPolice were concerned about the repercussions of these events. Later investigations revealed that over 270,000 individual SMS text messages were transmitted inciting a racially motivated confrontation at North Cronulla Beach the following Saturday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 297]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, 11 December 2005\nOver the course of Sunday, 11 December 2005, approximately 5,000 people gathered in and around North Cronulla Beach. Early in the morning, people began to gather and impromptu barbecues and \"partying\" took place. However at 12:59, a young man of \"Middle Eastern appearance\" was spotted on the beach and the crowds began \"chanting stuff [and] yelling out things\" before rushing him. The man attempted to avoid the crowd by quickly entering \"Northies\", a local pub, but the crowd forcibly dragged him out and attacked him. The police, having been in Cronulla since the early morning (including police helicopters and patrol boats), quickly intervened and resolved the situation. A Cronulla High School teacher later claimed that the crowd had attacked the man after he had shouted \"I'm going to blow youse all up\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 862]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, 11 December 2005\nAt 13:30, two women verbally argued with a small group; the police arrived and both parties left. However, an hour later, they again met and a scuffle ensued. At 13:45, another two boys from Bangladesh were surrounded by the crowd, and had bottles thrown at them, with the crowd repeatedly chanting \"Fuck off Lebs!\". The two boys escaped by car, which were smashed, stomped on and pelted with objects along the way. Chants and slogans such as \"Fuck off Lebs! \", \"We grew here, you flew here\", \"Aussie Pride\", \"Fuck off wogs! \", were repeated and displayed throughout the day by the crowd. The crowd also attacked the police by throwing beer bottles. Police vehicles were also prevented from entering the area. Around 14:00 another three males were assaulted on the beach with the crowd throwing sausages and beer bottles at them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 879]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, 11 December 2005\nRumours had persisted throughout the day that an additional 600 people would arrive by train, mostly from the west of Cronulla, to join the crowds. At approximately 15:00, \"two young men of Middle Eastern appearance\" arrived at Cronulla train station with the crowd outside chanting \"Fuck off wogs!\". The two men (one of whom was an Russian-born Afghan) took refuge in the train. However, the mob entered the carriage and began assaulting them; a police officer entered the train and violently cleared the crowd, later being found to have used excessive force.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, 11 December 2005\nAt 15:20, two separate assaults took place; one involved a crowd attacking a man of \"Middle Eastern appearance\" and throwing beer bottles. In this case an officer intervened and removed the victim as they were both struck by the bottles. A second assault took place outside a takeaway restaurant; three men were taken inside the restaurant as refuge and the diners already inside were moved towards the back. The glass doors and windows were broken and those inside were moved outside without incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 552]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Injuries and arrests\nBy the end of the day, 26 people had been treated for injuries. The 15:20 assault required the victim and the police officer to receive hospital treatment. A total of 16 were arrested and charged with 42 offences including: malicious damage, assaulting a police officer, affray, offensive conduct, resisting arrest and numerous driving offences.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0017-0001", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Injuries and arrests\nOne police officer was hit by a car and two ambulance officers were also amongst the injured as their ambulance, under mounted police escort, was surrounded and beer bottles were thrown, with one of the ambulance officers being hit on the head by a bottle and the other receiving lacerations on the arm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 53], "content_span": [54, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Evening retaliation\nAt 19:45, around 100 locals of Punchbowl (a suburb 20 kilometres [12\u00a0mi] to Cronulla's northwest) gathered together at the local Punchbowl Park. Additional groups, armed with baseball bats, also gathered at The Promenade and Arncliffe Park. Between 20:30 and 21:00, the groups formed a convoy of \"more than 40 cars\" and drove down to the beaches \"to get revenge\" with many of the cars ending up in Maroubra. At 22:45, police were ordered \"not to approach convoys of men of Middle Eastern appearance\"; however car details and registration details were to be recorded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Evening retaliation\nA local of Maroubra reported that each of the cars that arrived was \"full, you know, had four passengers\". The convoy was reportedly armed with bars and bats, knives, machetes and guns. The group assaulted several people, knocking one unconscious and threatening another with rape, and damaged between 60 and 100 cars, setting at least one on fire. Police in riot gear moved to contain the violence and the crowds responded by throwing bricks and glass. Residents reported that in some streets \"every car\" had had their windows smashed, with glass covering the streets. Police also confiscated 40 iron bars and arrested 14 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Evening retaliation\nAt approximately 22:25, a 26-year-old mechanic referred to as \"Dan\" was stabbed in the back three times and twice in the thigh with a 9.8\u00a0cm (3.9\u00a0in) blade. The incident occurred outside Woolooware golf club when two cars carrying a group of males \"described as being of Mediterranean or Middle Eastern appearance\" approached the man and his friends. Dan and his friends attempted to flee from the group, who were shouting \"Get the Aussie dogs... get the Aussie sluts\". Dan was knocked to the ground and was repeatedly kicked in the head.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 591]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Evening retaliation\nThe attack ended when the knife snapped off in the victim's back. He was taken to hospital in a serious condition as the blade had narrowly missed his spine and lungs. The getaway driver for the attack was arrested and held in jail for 9 months, after which he was paroled 5 months later for good behaviour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Evening retaliation\nA man named Jake Schofield was attacked by a group of four men of \"Middle Eastern appearance\", who beat him repeatedly, stabbing him twice and hitting him with a piece of concrete before stealing his wallet and keys. The attack left him with a fractured eye socket and nose. All four assailants were arrested and charged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 374]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Chronology, Evening retaliation\nA woman wearing a headscarf had her car stopped by a group of white males and was then abused and threatened by this group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Aftermath\nAdditional smaller riots occurred on the following nights in the suburbs of Maroubra, Brighton-le-Sands and Cronulla. Text messages similar to the earlier 270,000 inciting racial violence had also turned up in other states including Queensland, Victoria and Western Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Aftermath\nOn 12 December, rioters had written various messages including; \"Aussi [sic] to Die\", \"Intifada\", \"It's war\", \"Sunday cowards die, Soldiers rize [sic]\", \"Never rest assie [sic] dog\", \"We came in planes yous came by chains u convict dogs\", and \"We fear no ozy [ sic] pigs\" before continuing to destroy cars and local shops. Approximately 2000 people gathered inside Lakemba Mosque with another 800 gathered outside the evening after the riot. Sheikh Shady Alsuleiman spoke to the crowd and called for calm. However some were armed with Glock pistols which were displayed to the media.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0024-0001", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Aftermath\nAt least some of the people gathered were reported to have planned to go on to Maroubra; however the police blocked roads leading into Maroubra and 20 police cars surrounded the mosque. The Uniting Church in Auburn, a predominantly Tongan congregation, was burned and those attending Christmas carols were abused and threatened. More than 30 Molotov cocktails were also confiscated by police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Aftermath\nEight hundred police officers formed Operation Seta and were on patrol on the following nights, with up to 450 police officers blockading Cronulla on the night of 13 December and an additional 11 people were arrested; five were arrested in relation to a replica pistol and six were arrested for property damage. An additional seven people were injured including another police officer. A husband and wife were taken to hospital after the wife was struck in the head and the husband tried to defend her, and another man was struck by a baseball bat and suffered a fractured forearm.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Groups involved in the riots\nThe far-right political party known as the Australia First Party claimed that 120 members and supporters attended the riots, and both members of the AFP and their youth wing, the Patriotic Youth League, were seen handing out anti-immigration leaflets and supplying alcohol there. The now defunct Patriotic Youth League also played a part by distributing white power leaflets in the days prior to the riots, and held banners saying \"Aussies fighting back\" during the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 522]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Criminal prosecutions\nBy 19 July 2006, police had laid 285 charges against 104 people, 51 having been arrested as a result of the original Cronulla riot and 53 arrested from the retaliation riots. These persons were charged with, amongst other things: malicious damage, possession or use of a prohibited weapon, assaulting police, rioting, resisting arrest, threatening violence and affray.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 42], "content_span": [43, 411]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Criminal prosecutions, Strike Force Enoggera\nStrike Force Enoggera was established on 13 December 2005, tasked with investigating the riots. The strike force initially consisted of 28 members under the command of Superintendent Dennis Bray, but was increased to 100 officers on 20 January 2006. During a radio interview, New South Wales Police Commissioner Ken Moroney claimed to have no video footage of the retaliatory attacks on 11 December; however it was later revealed that the police had had a video for five weeks, leading Moroney to sack Bray, who was later reinstated to a lesser role, having been replaced by Detective Superintendent Ken Mckay.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 65], "content_span": [66, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Media and community responses\nWe knew always there was racism, but we never knew it was to this extent. I mean, all your life you've been \u2013 you've been raised to be Australian. I mean, you carry the Australian flag. When you go to sports events and all that, you're happy to be Australian and all that. And all of sudden people reject you. \"Go home!\" They shout your names. Like, \"Go home, you Middle Eastern Lebs,\" or whatever. \"Go home.\" I mean, that's a shock to us. \"Go home.\" I mean, like, you get cut inside your heart, you know. Like you feel like you're not part of society no more.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 622]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Media and community responses\nBrian Wilshire, a 2GB radio host, stated the following weekend on air, \"Many of them have parents who are first cousins whose parents are first cousins, the result of this inbreeding \u2014 the result of which is uneducationable [sic] people... and very low IQ\", comments for which he later apologised.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Media and community responses\nAn anti-racism rally, attended by 2,000 people, was held in Bourke Street, Melbourne, Victoria. Apologies for the riots at Cronulla were later issued on behalf of some local surf clubs, arguing their members rejected racism and violence. The gathering was justified as a protest against \"ethnic gangs\" with blame for the rioting and violence largely placed on alcohol and the agitation of far-right groups. During a press conference along with the Comancheros MC (which has a large number of Middle Eastern members), an apology from the Maroubra \"Bra Boys\" was also issued to leaders of the Islamic community. Apologies from several others involved were also issued to Sydney's Lebanese community, though the earlier \"protest\" part of the day was still defended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Media and community responses\nWriting a year after the riots, novelist Hsu-Ming Teo of Macquarie University was worried that Australian multiculturalism was being eroded, stating that multiculturalism was one of Australia's defining features that allowed it to broker differences with its geographical neighbours, and that it was almost unique in its ethnic and cultural origins. She suggested that in recent years multiculturalism had begun to be derided with conservative politicians calling for one homogeneous, non-diverse culture, citing amongst others the \"popularity and success\" of Pauline Hanson and her One Nation Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 662]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Media and community responses\nIn 2008, Australian portrait photographer Michel Lawrence published All of Us, a book containing photographs of people born in 200 other countries, but who were now living in Australia. Lawrence said the All of Us project was wholly inspired by the Cronulla riots. \u201cYou watch this stuff on TV and you wonder why people are doing this \u2013 this is no way for a multicultural society to behave,\u201d said Lawrence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 61], "content_span": [62, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Government responses\nThe New South Wales parliament convened on 15 December to pass laws giving police new powers including: the ability to seize cars and mobile phones for up to seven days, close licensed premises and prohibit bringing alcohol into lock\u2013down zones. A new offence of \"assault during a public disorder\" was also introduced and both rioting and affray had their minimum sentences increased. New South Wales Premier Morris Iemma called the attacks \"disgusting, cowardly behaviour\" and condemned the rioters. He also called on the community leaders to use \"their influence to get the hot heads to cool it\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 651]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Government responses\nNew South Wales Police Commissioner Ken Moroney called the riots \"absolutely totally un-Australian\", saying that \"I saw, in my 40 years of police service, some of the most disgraceful behaviour and conduct by adults that I'd ever seen.\" New South Wales Opposition leader Peter Debnam called it \"a real disgrace\" and called for a tougher police response.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0035-0001", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Government responses\nAustralian Prime Minister John Howard condemned the violence describing it as \"sickening and deplorable\" but denied any racial undertones, saying the events were primarily an issue of law and order \u2014 a view echoed by the Treasurer Peter Costello, who described the Sydney riots as \"an example of hoodlums who got out of control\". However this was viewed by many people who live in Sydney as the government burying its head in the sand over racial tension so foreign ownership in Australia would not be affected. Federal opposition leader Kim Beazley described the attacks as \"simply criminal behaviour, that's all there is to it\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 683]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Government responses\nOne Nation NSW figure David Oldfield blamed the riots on the \u201cfailed social policy of multiculturalism\u201d and called for an alternative assimilationist approach that highlights \"the principles of unity given by a single national identity.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 52], "content_span": [53, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Economic impacts\nLook at what a beautiful day it is. The weekend before Christmas. Over there should be absolutely packed, but there's just a sea of empty tables.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Responses, Economic impacts\nMany of the small businesses in and around Terrigal on the New South Wales Central Coast (two hours north of Cronulla) reported that a police lockdown of the beach caused business to drop to 10% of normal levels on a Saturday, with only 25% of Christmas shopping crowds turning up on the Sunday. Tourism and hospitality workers in the area were laid off or had their hours cut. The New South Wales state government announced a A$250,000 tourism campaign after authorities in Great Britain, Canada and Indonesia issued travel warnings to their citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 48], "content_span": [49, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Tenth anniversary\nThe Party for Freedom (PFF) planned to mark the tenth anniversary of the events with a rally on Saturday, 12 December 2015. PFF chairman Nicholas Folkes was refused permission in the Supreme Court of New South Wales \"on the grounds it would stir up racial hatred\". In a separate case, the Federal Court of Australia ruled that no other person or groups could commemorate the anniversary. The Federal ruling was in response to a joint application by Jamal Rifi, a prominent member of the Lebanese Muslim community in Australia, and the Sutherland Shire Council who applied for the Federal Court ruling.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Tenth anniversary\nIn place of the rally a \"halal-free\" barbecue, attended by about 50, was held on Don Lucas Reserve near Wanda Beach. A larger number of counter protesters in \"the hundreds\", including Antifa members, were also present. A heavy police presence included the riot squad, mounted police and helicopter, and the two groups were mostly kept apart. Two anti-racism protesters were arrested. The majority of the anti-racism protesters were escorted by police to Cronulla Railway station and onto trains headed towards Sydney city. They were accompanied by riot police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 38], "content_span": [39, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181288-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla riots, Film\nThe 2016 film Down Under is set in the aftermath of the riots.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 25], "content_span": [26, 88]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181289-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season\nThis article details the Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks rugby league football club's 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181289-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nThe Sharks started season 2005 brightly; at one stage they were joint ladder leaders after round 11. Early season highlights included wins over the 2003 premiers Penrith in the opening round, Parramatta in round three at Parramatta Stadium, 2004 premiers the Bulldogs at home in round four, North Queensland in round five, the Melbourne Storm in Melbourne in round eight, the New Zealand Warriors in Perth in round nine, the Canberra Raiders at Canberra Stadium in round ten and again over the Penrith Panthers at Penrith in round eleven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 593]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181289-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nHowever, the season would fall apart with losses to Parramatta at home (the Sharks trailed 22-0 at halftime before rallying in the second half to go down 34-26), North Queensland in Townsville, the eventual premiers Wests Tigers at Campbelltown in round 14 before winning against the Sydney Roosters at home in round fifteen.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181289-0001-0002", "contents": "2005 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nThree more wins followed; a thrilling 30-26 golden point win over the struggling but resurgent Newcastle Knights at home with Vince Mellars scoring the winning try, a 40-16 hammering of the Melbourne Storm at home in what was now-Dragons premiership player Beau Scott's debut match and a massive 68-6 annihilation of Manly in round 24. Late season losses to Souths, St. George Illawarra, the Wests Tigers, Sydney Roosters and the Newcastle Knights in Newcastle all proved costly. The Sharks finished seventh, equal with Manly but higher courtesy of the round 24 result, making the finals for the first time since 2002 but eliminated by the Dragons 28-22 in front of a massive Wollongong crowd in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181289-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks season, Season summary\nThe Sharks' round two loss to the Manly-Warringah Sea Eagles was marred by the sickening injury suffered by Keith Galloway as a result of a high elbow shot from Manly winger John Hopoate. Galloway missed a huge part of the 2005 season partly as a result from the injury and due to limited opportunities at Cronulla he signed with the Wests Tigers for the 2006 season onwards. For his part, Hopoate was sacked by the Sea Eagles after receiving a mammoth 17-week ban by the NRL Judiciary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [40, 54], "content_span": [55, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181290-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Crystal Skate of Romania\nThe 2005 Crystal Skate of Romania was the 7th edition of an annual senior-level international figure skating competition held in Romania. It was held between November 4 and 5, 2005 in Bucharest. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 298]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181291-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cumbria County Council election\nElections to Cumbria County Council were held on 5 May 2005. This was on the same day as other UK county council elections. The Labour Party lost their majority and the council fell under no overall control.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181292-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cup of China\nThe 2005 Cup of China was the third event of six in the 2005\u201306 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Capital Gymnasium in Beijing on November 2\u20136. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2005\u201306 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Tango Romantica.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 467]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181293-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cup of Russia\nThe 2005 Cup of Russia was the fifth event of six in the 2005\u201306 ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating, a senior-level international invitational competition series. It was held at the Ice Palace in Saint Petersburg on November 24\u201327. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Skaters earned points toward qualifying for the 2005\u201306 Grand Prix Final. The compulsory dance was the Yankee Polka.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181294-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final\nThe 2005 Cupa Rom\u00e2niei Final was the 67th final of Romania's most prestigious cup competition. The final was played at the Stadionul Cotroceni in Bucharest on 11 May 2005 and was contested between Divizia A sides Dinamo Bucure\u0219ti and Farul Constan\u0163a. The cup was won by Dinamo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 302]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181295-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cura\u00e7ao status referendum\nA status referendum was held on the island of Cura\u00e7ao on 8 April 2005. The option of becoming an autonomous area within the Kingdom of the Netherlands was approved by 68% of voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181295-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cura\u00e7ao status referendum, Background\nAfter the 1993 referendum failed to show support for a separate status for Cura\u00e7ao, the government of the Netherlands Antilles tried to restructure the Netherlands Antilles and attempted to forge closer ties between the islands, as is exemplified by the adoption of an anthem of the Netherlands Antilles in 2000. A new referendum on Sint Maarten, which was in favour of a separate status for Sint Maarten as a country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands, sparked a new series of referendums across the Netherlands Antilles, however. Cura\u00e7ao was the last island to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup\nThe 2005 Currie Cup (known as the ABSA Currie Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the 67th season in the South African Currie Cup competition since it started in 1889.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup\nIn a rematch of the 2004 final, the Free State Cheetahs reversed the result, coming from behind to defeat the Blue Bulls 29\u201325 and win their first Currie Cup since 1976.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Qualification Round, Competition\nThe fourteen provincial teams were divided in two equal strength sections (Section X and Section Y) according to the standings of the teams at the end of the 2004 competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Qualification Round, Competition\nAll the teams played a single round of games within their section, meaning every team played six matches \u2013 three at home and three away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Qualification Round, Competition\nTeams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that scored 4 or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by 7 points or less. Teams were ranked by points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Qualification Round, Competition\nThe top four teams in each section qualified to the Premier Division, while the bottom three teams in each section qualified to the First Division. No points from the qualifying round were carried over to the Premier Division or First Division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 49], "content_span": [50, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Premier Division, Competition\nThe eight teams that qualified to the Premier Division remained in the same sections (Section X and Section Y) as they were during the Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Premier Division, Competition\nAll the teams played a double round of games against teams in the other section, meaning every team played eight matches \u2013 four at home and four away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Premier Division, Competition\nTeams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that scored 4 or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by 7 points or less. Teams were ranked by points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Premier Division, Competition\nThe top two teams in each section qualified to the title play-offs, where the section winners would have home advantage against the runners-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 46], "content_span": [47, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, Premier Division, Player Statistics\nThe following table contain only points which have been scored in competitive games in the 2005 Currie Cup Premier Division:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 52], "content_span": [53, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, First Division, Competition\nThe six teams that qualified to the First Division remained in the same sections (Section X and Section Y) as they were during the Qualifying Round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, First Division, Competition\nAll the teams played a double round of games against teams in the other section, meaning every team played six matches \u2013 three at home and three away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, First Division, Competition\nTeams received four points for a win and two points for a draw. Bonus points were awarded to teams that scored 4 or more tries in a game, as well as to teams that lost a match by 7 points or less. Teams were ranked by points, then points difference (points scored less points conceded).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181296-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Currie Cup, First Division, Competition\nThe top two teams in each section qualified to the title play-offs, where the section winners would have home advantage against the runners-up in the same section.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [17, 44], "content_span": [45, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181297-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cyberathlete Professional League World Tour\nThe 2005 CPL World Tour was a year-long gaming competition held by the Cyberathlete Professional League (CPL). This competition took place throughout 2005, with a total of nine international stops and a finals event held in the New York City, United States and televised by MTV.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181297-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Cyberathlete Professional League World Tour\nThe total purse was US$1,000,000, with $50,000 at each international stop, and a $500,000 final. The official game of the 2005 World Tour was Painkiller. The CPL's \"strategic partners\", organizations designated to operate regional World Tour stops, also chose to hold smaller tournaments for other popular competitive games, such as Counter-Strike.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181297-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Cyberathlete Professional League World Tour\nThe World Tour Grand Finals took place between November 20 and 22 2005 and were hosted in New York City, New York, United States. The Finals hosted the top 32 Painkiller winners from all stops around the globe. They pitted in a one versus one tournament for the largest first place prize in the CPL's history: US$150,000. The total prize fund for the finals tournament was $500,000, the largest ever for a Painkiller tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181297-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Cyberathlete Professional League World Tour\nThe champion of the 2005 CPL World Tour was Johnathan 'Fatal1ty' Wendel, who took the grand prize of $150,000. Sander \"Vo0\" Kaasjager was named the MVP of the tour, an award worth $20,000, and took $100,000 for becoming the runner-up in the finals. By this, Wendel took his fourth CPL World Championship, taking the crown back from Kaasjager, who had taken it from him a year earlier.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 433]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181298-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Cyprus Rally\nThe 2005 Cyprus Rally was the sixth round of the 2005 World Rally Championship season. It took place between May 13\u201315, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181299-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Czech Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Czech Figure Skating Championships were held in Ostrava between December 16 and 19, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181300-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Czech Lion Awards\n2006 Czech Lion Awards ceremony was held on 25 February 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 84]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181301-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix\nThe 2005 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix was the eleventh round of the 2005 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 26\u201328 August 2005 at the Masaryk Circuit located in Brno, Czech Republic. The race saw the beginning of the end of tobacco advertising in Grand Prix motorcycle racing due to a Europe-wide ban.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 368]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181301-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round eleven has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 89], "content_span": [90, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181302-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election\nThe Czech Social Democratic Party (\u010cSSD) leadership election of 2005 happened when incumbent Vladim\u00edr \u0160pidla resigned as a result of party's poor performance in European Parliament election. Stanislav Gross and Zden\u011bk \u0160kromach duelled in the election. Gross was front-runner and was endorsed by 12 regional organisations while \u0160kromach was supported by only 1 region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 422]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181302-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Czech Social Democratic Party leadership election\nGross defeated \u0160kromach when he received votes of 291 delegates. 552 delegates were allowed to vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 54], "section_span": [54, 54], "content_span": [55, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season\nThe 2005 season was the ninth season in D.C. United history, as well as their ninth season in Major League Soccer, the top tier of American soccer. The season covers the period from November 15, 2004 through October 30, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season\nUnder Piotr Nowak's tenure as head coach, this was the first and only season where he did not lead D.C. United to a trophy of any kind. D.C. United entered the season as the defending MLS Cup champions defeating Kansas City Wizards 3\u20132 in last season's championship. During Nowak's second season as head coach, he led the team to a slightly better regular season record, finishing third in the overall standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 436]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season\nD.C. United made their first appearance in the CONCACAF Champions' Cup (now Champions League) for the first time in three years, earning qualification through winning the 2004 MLS Cup championship. In the continental tournament, D.C. United were the only American club to reach the semifinals of the tournament before losing to Mexico's UNAM Pumas 6\u20131 on aggregate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season\nIn other external competitions, United finished as runners-up in the preseason Carolina Challenge Cup, reached the quarterfinals of the U.S. Open Cup and won the Atlantic Cup rivalry series against MetroStars.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 233]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season, Background\nD.C. United entered the 2005 season as the defending MLS Cup champions, earning their first league championship since 1999. During the 2004 MLS regular season, United finished second in the Eastern Conference table and fourth in the overall regular standings. Their playoff run included a 4\u20130 aggregate series victory over their Atlantic Cup rivals, MetroStars in the conference semifinals. In the conference final, United defeated the Eastern Conference regular season champions, New England Revolution in a penalty shoot-out, after a 3\u20133 draw in regulation and extra time. Their playoff campaign culminated in MLS Cup 2004 defeating Kansas City Wizards 3\u20132 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 35], "content_span": [36, 708]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season, League standings, Conference\nEastern Conference regular season champion2\u00a0\u00a0Qualify for 2005 MLS Cup Playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 53], "content_span": [54, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181303-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 D.C. United season, League standings, Overall\nMLS Supporters' Shield, Western Conference regular season champion1\u00a0\u00a0Eastern Conference regular season champion2\u00a0\u00a0Qualify for 2005 MLS Cup Playoffs", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [25, 50], "content_span": [51, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181304-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 D1 Grand Prix series, 2005 Schedules, 2005 D1 Grand Prix Point Series\nRound 1 - February 26/27 - Irwindale Speedway, Irwindale, California, USA - Yasuyuki Kazama (S15)Round 2 - April 16 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Katsuhiro Ueo (AE86)Round 3 - May 7/8 - Sports Land SUGO, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan - Yasuyuki Kazama (S15)Round 4 - August 6/7 - Autopolis, \u014cita Prefecture, Japan - Toshiki Yoshioka (AE85)Round 5 - August 20/21 - Ebisu South Course, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan - Yasuyuki Kazama (S15)Round 6 - October 22/23 - Fuji Speedway, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan - Masao Suenaga (FD3S)Round 7 - November 20 - Tsukuba Circuit, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan - Youichi Imamura (FD3S)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 74], "content_span": [75, 696]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181304-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 D1 Grand Prix series, 2005 Schedules, 2005 D1 Grand Prix Exhibition Matches\nD1 Odaiba Allstar Exhibition - April 17 - Metropolitan Parking, Odaiba, Japan - Youichi Imamura (FD3S)D1 Street Legal Exhibition - August 20/21 - Ebisu South Course, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan - Naoto Suenaga (S15)D1 UK Exhibition - October 2 - Silverstone, England - Ryuji Miki (S15)D1 Street Legal Exhibition 2 - November 20 - Tsukuba Circuit, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan - Kazuto Ichiyanagi (RPS13)D1 USA vs Japan Allstar Exhibition - December 17 - Irwindale Speedway, Irwindale, California, USA - Vaughn Gittin Jr. (MUSTANG)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 80], "content_span": [81, 608]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181304-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 D1 Grand Prix series, Race Reports, USA vs Japan All Star Exhibition\nThis event was originally were to be run at the same Auto Club Speedway as a double bill of the GT Live event, but due to unforeseen circumstances. The JGTC organisers cancelled the event and the D1GP event were moved to Irwindale.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181304-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 D1 Grand Prix series, Race Reports, USA vs Japan All Star Exhibition\nDuring the USA vs Japan All Star Exhibition event in December, the organisers, rather than running the course the usual anti-clockwise route that is found in ovals, the course was run in the other direction. Many drivers had trouble adjusting to the new track change, including Ken Nomura, the Import drag racing star Stephan Papadakis on his debut drifting season and Rhys Millen who all crashed during qualifying.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181304-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 D1 Grand Prix series, Race Reports, USA vs Japan All Star Exhibition\nOne notable debuts was the father of Rhys, Rod Millen, the rallying and Pikes Peak legend, with all the thirty year motorsport experiences he gained, he broke into the last 16 on his first ever D1 outing in his Mazda RX-8. After a long break from his Last 16 appearance at round 1 in 2004 due to competing in a Dodge Viper Competition Coupe, which rendered him ineligible for participation, Samuel Hubinette would make a return with his SRT-10 at the last 16 along with Alex Pfeiffer and Tanner Foust.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 575]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181304-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 D1 Grand Prix series, Race Reports, USA vs Japan All Star Exhibition\nThe event was mainly noted for having a non Japanese driver and car to win over the Japanese who usually dominates all the D1 events. Vaughn Gittin Jr took first place after defeating Tatsuya Sakuma, who was driving an APP Racing Silvia S15 with his Falken Tire sponsored Ford Mustang GT through a One More Time rerun. He also defeated two championship winners (Yasuyuki Kazama and Youichi Imamura) en route.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 73], "content_span": [74, 482]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181305-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DFB-Pokal Final\nThe 2005 DFB-Pokal Final decided the winner of the 2004\u201305 DFB-Pokal, the 62nd season of Germany's premier knockout football cup competition. It was played on 28 May 2005 at the Olympiastadion in Berlin. Bayern Munich won the match 2\u20131 against Schalke 04, giving them their 12th cup title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181305-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DFB-Pokal Final, Route to the final\nThe DFB-Pokal began with 64 teams in a single-elimination knockout cup competition. There were a total of five rounds leading up to the final. Teams were drawn against each other, and the winner after 90 minutes would advance. If still tied, 30 minutes of extra time was played. If the score was still level, a penalty shoot-out was used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 403]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181305-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 DFB-Pokal Final, Route to the final\nNote: In all results below, the score of the finalist is given first (H: home; A: away).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 40], "content_span": [41, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181306-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DFL-Ligapokal\nThe 2005 DFL-Ligapokal was the ninth edition of the Ligapokal, now under control of the Deutsche Fu\u00dfball Liga (DFL) as opposed to the German Football Association (DFB). The competition saw some format changes, with the preliminary round matches being played consecutively in the same stadium, and the final moved to the new Zentralstadion in Leipzig. Schalke 04 won their first title, beating VfB Stuttgart 1\u20130 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181306-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DFL-Ligapokal, Participating clubs\nA total of six teams qualified for the competition. The labels in the parentheses show how each team qualified for the place of its starting round:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 39], "content_span": [40, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181307-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DFL-Ligapokal Final\nThe 2005 DFL-Ligapokal Final decided the winner of the 2005 DFL-Ligapokal, the 9th edition of the reiterated DFL-Ligapokal, a knockout football cup competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181307-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DFL-Ligapokal Final\nThe match was played on 2 August 2005 at the Zentralstadion in Leipzig. Schalke 04 won the match 1\u20130 against VfB Stuttgart for their 1st title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181307-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 DFL-Ligapokal Final, Route to the final\nThe DFL-Ligapokal is a six team single-elimination knockout cup competition. There are a total of two rounds leading up to the final. Four teams enter the preliminary round, with the two winners advancing to the semi-finals, where they will be joined by two additional clubs who were given a bye. For all matches, the winner after 90 minutes advances. If still tied, extra time, and if necessary penalties are used to determine the winner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181308-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic\nThe 2005 DFS Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on grass courts at the Edgbaston Priory Club in Birmingham in the United Kingdom that was part of Tier III of the 2005 WTA Tour. The tournament was held from 6 June until 12 June 2005. First-seeded Maria Sharapova won the singles tile.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 312]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181308-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic, Finals, Doubles\nDaniela Hantuchov\u00e1 / Ai Sugiyama defeated Eleni Daniilidou / Jennifer Russell 6\u20132, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 33], "content_span": [34, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181309-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic \u2013 Doubles\nMaria Kirilenko and Maria Sharapova were the defending champions but lost in the first round to Marion Bartoli and Tamarine Tanasugarn.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181309-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic \u2013 Doubles\nDaniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Ai Sugiyama won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20133 against Eleni Daniilidou and Jennifer Russell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181309-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic \u2013 Doubles, Seeds\nChampion seeds are indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which those seeds were eliminated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181310-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic \u2013 Singles\nMaria Sharapova was the defending champion, and successfully defended her title, defeating Jelena Jankovi\u0107 6\u20132, 4\u20136, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181310-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DFS Classic \u2013 Singles, Seeds\nA champion seed is indicated in bold text while text in italics indicates the round in which that seed was eliminated. The top nine seeds received a bye to the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 33], "content_span": [34, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181311-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 DPR Korea Football League\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Footwiks (talk | contribs) at 09:21, 17 November 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181311-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 DPR Korea Football League\nStatistics of DPR Korea Football League in the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 90]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181311-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 DPR Korea Football League, Overview\nPyongyang City Sports Club won the championship, their second in a row.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 40], "content_span": [41, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181312-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Daegu FC season\nThe 2005 season was Daegu F.C. 's third season in the South Korean K-League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181312-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nAs with the 2004 season, the 2005 K-League season was split up into first and second stages. Following the conclusion of the first stage, it did not bode well for a successful season for Daegu. They had won a mere 2 games of the first stage, placing the club 12th, ahead of only Gwangju in the first stage table. However, they fared much better for the second stage, winning 6 games, drawing 3, and losing 3. These results placed them third in the second stage table, and this translated into 8th place in the overall table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 561]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181312-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nTheir offensive spearhead was Brazilian import, Sandro Hiroshi, brought in for the 2005 season with Nonato and Jefferson having been loaned out for 2005 (to FC Seoul and Seongnam Ilhwa respectively). Hiroshi scored 10 goals from 24 games, which was the equal third highest overall for the season. Jin Soon-Jin finished the season as captain, after Hong Soon-Hak moved to one of Austria's most successful clubs, Grazer AK. Hong would ultimately only play 3 games in two years for his new club, before returning to Korea.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181312-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Daegu FC season, Season summary\nHiroshi was the leading goal scorer (7 goals) in the Samsung Hauzen Cup, although this didn't translate into sustained success in the competition itself, as Daegu placed only 7th. In the FA Cup, after defeating University and National League sides, Daegu were knocked out in the quarterfinals in a 1-2 loss to another K-League side, the Chunnam Dragons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 36], "content_span": [37, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181312-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Daegu FC season, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 27], "content_span": [28, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181312-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Daegu FC season, K-League, Standings\n|+Final table!Pos!Team!Qualification|-bgcolor=\"#bbf3bb\"|align=\"center\"|1|Ulsan Hyundai Horang-i (C)|align=\"center\"|Qualification for the Champions League|-|align=\"center\"|2|Incheon United|rowspan=\"3\"||-|align=\"center\"|3|Seongnam Ilhwa Chunma|-|align=\"center\"|4|Busan IPark|}", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 316]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181313-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dakar Rally\n2005 Dakar Rally also known as the 2005 Paris-Dakar Rally was the 27th running of the Dakar Rally event. The 2005 event was 5,565 miles (8,956\u00a0km) long, began in Barcelona on 31 December 2004 and passed through Morocco, Mauritania and Mali before ending at Dakar in Senegal on 16 January 2005. The course was shorter than in 2004 but was more challenging. A record number of competitors, 696 cars, motorbikes and trucks (including assistance vehicles) in total, entered the rally.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181313-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dakar Rally\nRobby Gordon and Colin McRae swapped the lead in the early stages of the rally, until McRae suffered a crash during the sixth stage between Smara and Zouerat and retired from the event. Stephane Peterhansel took the lead after winning the seventh stage. The eighth stage between Tichit and Tidjikja across the Mauritanian desert was cancelled due to stormy weather. Luc Alphand won the ninth stage although Peterhansel retained the overall lead. Peterhansel won the tenth stage around the town of Atar in Mauritania, and retained his lead after the twelfth stage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181313-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Dakar Rally\nThe motorcycle stage was cancelled as a mark of respect for Fabrizio Meoni, twice winner of the motorcycle category, who died following an accident on the 11th stage. Peterhansel also won the thirteenth stage from Bamako to Kayes in Mali. The 14th stage was won by Ari Vatanen, the 51st of his career, the 15th was won by Giniel de Villiers, and the final stage by Bruno Saby. The overall title was won by Stephane Peterhansel for the second successive year. The motorcycle category was won by Cyril Despres.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 525]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181313-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dakar Rally, Entries, Bikes\nNote: Number one was not issued as a mark of respect Richard Sainct, who was killed during the Rally of the Pharaohs in Egypt in September 2004. The reigning champion in the category, Nani Roma, switched to the car category for this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 32], "content_span": [33, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season\nThe 2005 season was the Dallas Cowboys' 46th in the National Football League (NFL), their 17th under the ownership of Jerry Jones, their 34th playing their home games at Texas Stadium, and their third season under head coach Bill Parcells. Despite the Cowboys being 7\u20133 by Week 11 and tying the Giants for first in the NFC East, the Cowboys suffered a season collapse going 2\u20134 during the last six games. The Cowboys missed the playoffs for the second consecutive season after the Washington Redskins beat the Philadelphia Eagles. However, the Cowboys were able to improve on their 6\u201310 record from last season and finished the season at 9\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Offseason\nDuring the 2005 offseason, the team found a temporary solution to the quarterback situation by signing former Buffalo Bills quarterback Drew Bledsoe. Earlier in his career, Bledsoe played for Bill Parcells while he was the coach for the New England Patriots. The Cowboys also signed cornerbacks Aaron Glenn and Anthony Henry.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Offseason\nAlso, during free agency, the Cowboys signed former Green Bay Packers guard Marco Rivera and former New York Jets defensive tackle Jason Ferguson.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Offseason\nThe Cowboys also lost their last remaining three-time Super Bowl champion when Darren Woodson announced his retirement just before the offseason began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Offseason\nThe Cowboys installed a 3\u20134 defensive scheme, marking the first departure from the 4\u20133 defense since the clubwas founded in 1960. In their first year in the new system the team finished tenth in the NFL in total defense and opponents completed just 54.7 percent of their passes against the Cowboys\u2019 secondary, the second-lowest number in the NFL that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 37], "content_span": [38, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 1: at San Diego Chargers\nAfter losing on opening weekend for five straight years, the Cowboys looked to end the streak on opening weekend against the San Diego Chargers. The defending AFC West Champion Chargers just had a 12\u20134 season and they were at home. The game was not decided until the final 30 seconds, when looking to score the game-winning touchdown on the Dallas 7-yard line, San Diego Quarterback Drew Brees threw an interception to Aaron Glenn. Both teams would go on to finish with 9\u20137 record. This was the Cowboys' last win against the Chargers until 2021.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 619]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 2: vs. Washington Redskins\nGoing into the game, the Dallas Cowboys had won 14 of the last 15 meetings between the two teams. After holding a 13\u20130 lead with 3:46 remaining in the fourth quarter, the Redskins came out with an extremely improbable rally late in the fourth quarter to stun the Cowboys 14\u201313 when Mark Brunell threw two touchdown passes to Santana Moss. It was the first time (after 77 times) that Coach Parcells lost after going into the fourth quarter with at least a 13-point lead. The Redskins had won in Texas Stadium for the first time in a decade.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 3: at San Francisco 49ers\nThe Dallas Cowboys did the exact opposite of what they did a week earlier by scoring 15 unanswered point in the fourth quarter to shock the 49ers 34\u201331, in a game that was decided with less than 2 minutes remaining.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 4: at Oakland Raiders\nDespite staying in the Bay area over the week to prepare for the game against the Raiders game, the Cowboys were unable to take advantage of the winless Oakland Raiders, and failed to score on a potential game saving drive late in the fourth quarter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 321]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 5: vs. Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Cowboys exploded offensively in what Parcells said was the best performance he has seen since coming to Dallas. The Cowboys would not let the Eagles offense score a single touchdown (they had one defensive touchdown), and the Cowboys outscored the Eagles 27\u20133 in the first half to put the game out of reach.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nDallas hoped to continue playing great offensively as they did in the previous week by beating the New York Giants at home. Instead, they played very sloppily and Coach Parcells said his team was \"fortunate\" to win. The Cowboys were sacked 4 times for a loss of 36 yards and turned over the ball 4 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 6: vs. New York Giants\nThe Cowboys lost left tackle Flozell Adams for the remainder of the season when he tore an ACL in his knee. With an immobile quarterback like Drew Bledsoe, this would be devastating for the Dallas Cowboys later in the Season because Bledsoe would be sacked 36 more times over the course of ten games (3.6 sacks per game), compared to having been sacked 13 times during the first six games (2.17 sacks per game). Bledsoe would also throw 13 more interceptions after this game (while throwing only 4 picks during the first six games).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 7: at Seattle Seahawks\nThe Cowboys came to Seattle for a defensive showdown. After scoring a touchdown early in the first quarter, the Cowboys had the lead until 59 minutes and 20 second into the game when Seattle tied the game at 10\u201310. Trying to win with 14 seconds left in regulation, Drew Bledsoe threw an interception and Seahawks kicker Josh Brown kicked the game-winning field goal, taking their first lead of the game as time expired.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 491]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 7: at Seattle Seahawks\nJose Cortez missed a field goal which cost Dallas the game, and he was fired after the game. Ryan Hannam, who scored a game-tying touchdown late in the fourth quarter signed with the Dallas Cowboys as a free agent the following season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 8: vs. Arizona Cardinals\nThe Dallas Cowboys bounced back from a loss a week earlier and routed the Arizona Cardinals. The Cowboys had a new kicker on their roster, rookie Shaun Suisham, and another rookie making his first start was Marion Barber, who was starting in place of injured Julius Jones. He ran for 127 yards and scored two touchdowns in his breakout game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 10: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThe Cowboys came to Philadelphia hoping to sweep the Eagles for the first time since 1998, and beat them at Philadelphia for the first time since 1998. After trailing by 13 points late in the fourth quarter, the Cowboys stunned the Eagles by scoring two touchdowns (one of which was an interception return) to win the game 21\u201320. Also, Donovan McNabb injured his knee and he would leave for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 10: at Philadelphia Eagles\nThis was the last Cowboys game to air on ABC as the network's relationship with the NFL ended after the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 11: vs. Detroit Lions\nEarlier in the week, Coach Parcells hung mousetraps in the locker room to warn his players that this game was a \"trap game\". Dallas rushed for 149 yards and 2 touchdowns, and kicker Billy Cundiff kicked a franchise record 56-yard field goal. After the game, the Cowboys were 7\u20133 and tied for second place in the NFC. The Cowboys had already won more games than they did in the previous season", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 70], "content_span": [71, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 12: vs. Denver Broncos\nIn the annual Thanksgiving Day Game, the Dallas Cowboys hosted the Denver Broncos. The Cowboys offense had 314 yards, greater than Denver's 293 yards, but Cowboys kicker Billy Cundiff a missed field goal in the fourth quarter so the game went into overtime. Denver won the coin toss and Broncos backup runningback Ron Dayne ran 55 yards on the second play in overtime and Jason Elam kicked the game-winning field goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 13: at New York Giants\nIn this season's rematch, the New York Giants made the Dallas Cowboys pay for an overtime 16\u201313 win earlier in the season, but both teams had a sloppy performance overall. Both teams threw two interceptions, but the Cowboys lost two fumbles. Drew Bledsoe was sacked 4 times for a loss of 21 yards, both quarterbacks completed under 40% of their passes, and both teams missed a field goal. The Giants ran for 127 yards rushing (including 115 yards by Tiki Barber) and one rushing touchdown which made the difference in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 14: vs. Kansas City Chiefs\nIn a back-and-forth offensive thriller, Kansas City running back Larry Johnson scored three touchdowns and Drew Bledsoe threw for three touchdowns. The Chiefs offense had 493 yards, more than the Cowboys 445 yards, but the Chiefs mistakes (including a lost fumble) made the difference in the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 15: at Washington Redskins\nWashington gave Bill Parcells his biggest loss ever as an NFL coach. Tight end Chris Cooley had a career day catching three touchdown passes. After being down 35\u20130 early in the fourth quarter, Dallas prevented a shutout by throwing a consolation touchdown pass to Jason Witten. Drew Bledsoe was sacked seven times and threw three interceptions. Only the Danny White-led Dallas 44\u201314 victory on September 9, 1985, had a larger margin of victory between the two teams.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 16: at Carolina Panthers\nGoing into the game, the Panthers needed a win to secure a playoff spot. The Cowboys needed a win to stay alive in the playoff race after losing three out of the last four games. Despite falling behind 0\u201310 early in the game, the Cowboys rallied to outscore Carolina 17\u20133 for almost three quarters, including two Julius Jones touchdowns. Julius Jones rushed for 194 yards, the fourth best in franchise history. Late in the fourth quarter while trailing 17\u201320, Billy Cundiff attempted to tie the game on a 33-yard field goal, but missed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0022-0001", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 16: at Carolina Panthers\nThe only reason Dallas still managed to win the game was because Carolina was penalized for \"running into the kicker\" (Carolina contended that they had slightly blocked the kick but replays proved inconclusive) and Terry Glenn scored a touchdown with one hand to take the lead (he dislocated his hand early in the game).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 394]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 16: at Carolina Panthers\nBilly Cundiff had a 32-yard field goal attempt blocked, and missed a 33-yard attempt. He already missed two field goals earlier in the season, including one that cost Dallas the game on Thanksgiving against Denver, so two days after the game he was fired by coach Parcells . Carolina won next week to secure a wildcard spot in the playoffs, but despite several likely playoff scenarios Dallas was eliminated from the playoffs before their last game when the Panthers, the Redskins, and the Giants all won a week later.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 73], "content_span": [74, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 17: vs. St. Louis Rams\nOnly minutes before the game, the Cowboys were eliminated from the playoff race when the Washington Redskins beat the Philadelphia Eagles The deflated Cowboys only managed to score 10 points against the St. Louis Rams, who came into the game 5\u201310. After running for a meager 35 yards, Julius Jones had 993 yards for the season, painfully just 7 yards short of 1,000 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181314-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Dallas Cowboys season, Regular season, Week 17: vs. St. Louis Rams\nJust days after the game, head coach Bill Parcells announced he was staying for at least one more season, and his contract was extended through 2007. At the time, there had been some speculation he would be retiring.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181315-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dally M Awards\nThe 2005 Dally M Awards were presented on Tuesday 6 September 2005 at the Sydney Town Hall in Sydney and broadcast on Fox Sports. Warren Smith presided as Master of Ceremonies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181315-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dally M Awards, Hall of Fame Inductees\nJimmy Craig, Chris McKivat, Brian Carlson, Ron Coote, Duncan Thompson and Brian Bevan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181316-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish Cup Final\nThe 2005 Danish Cup Final was the final and deciding match of the Danish Cup 2004-05. It took place on Thursday 5 May 2005 at Parken Stadium in Copenhagen and saw the Superliga leaders Br\u00f8ndby IF beat no. 3 in the league FC Midtjylland after extra time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181316-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish Cup Final\nBr\u00f8ndby have won the Cup on four previous occasions (1989, 1994, 1998 and 2003). Midtjylland have never won the Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 138]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181317-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Danish Figure Skating Championships (Danish: Danmarks Mesterskaberne 2005) was held in December 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles and ladies' singles. Not all disciplines were held on all levels due to a lack of participants.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election\nGeneral elections were held in Denmark on 8 February 2005. Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's Venstre retained the largest number of seats in parliament. The governing coalition between the Venstre and the Conservative People's Party remained intact, with the Danish People's Party providing the parliamentary support needed for the minority government. The Danish Social Liberal Party made the biggest gains of any party, although it remains outside the governing group of parties. The election marked the second time in a row that the Social Democrats were not the largest party in the parliament, a change from most of the 20th century. The party lost 5 seats and leader Mogens Lykketoft resigned immediately after the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 764]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election\nThe prime minister called the elections on 18 January. He claimed that he would have called it earlier, but the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake which killed a number of Danes delayed it. Rasmussen still had almost a year left in his term, but said he wanted to call the election before municipal elections in November. His reasoning was that he wanted a clear mandate for the municipal and county government restructuring that his government was implementing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election\nFrom the last election the governing coalition of Venstre and the Conservative People's Party had 94 of the 175 seats together with the supporting Danish People's Party. This number was unchanged after the 2005 election. Voter turnout was 84.5% in Denmark proper, 73.0% in the Faroe Islands and 59.4% in Greenland. This was the last election in which counties were used as constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election, Campaign\nVenstre campaigned on their municipal restructuring plan, as well as a continuation of the \"tax-freeze\" and tight immigration requirements. They also promised to see 60,000 jobs created during a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election, Campaign\nThe largest opposition party, the Social Democratic Party led by Mogens Lykketoft focused on employment, which they claim has decreased under the current government.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election, Campaign\nThe Danish People's Party, who support the Venstre\u2013Conservative coalition, criticized the \"tax-freeze\" but agreed, conditionally, to support it for another parliamentary term. They also wanted increasingly tough immigration restrictions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election, Results\n63 out of the 179 members of the new folketing were newly elected. Although women made up 38% of the total, several women held prominent positions, notably Pia Kj\u00e6rsgaard, leader of the third largest party, Danish People's Party. Marianne Jelved (leader of the Danish Social Liberal Party), Connie Hedegaard (Minister of the Environment), Pernille Rosenkrantz-Theil (front figure of Enhedslisten) and Helle Thorning-Schmidt (later elected as leader of Social Democrats) were other important woman in the parliament. A couple of parties, including the Social Democrats were holding leadership races, which might have been won by women. 9 of the top 20 candidates, in terms of personal votes, were women.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 37], "content_span": [38, 740]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181318-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish general election, Aftermath\nFollowing the election, Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen reformed his liberal-conservative cabinet as the Cabinet of Anders Fogh Rasmussen II with parliamentary support from Danish People's Party.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 240]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections\nThe Danish local elections of 2005 were held on 15 November 2005. 2522 municipal council members were elected in Denmark's 98 municipalities and 205 regional council members in the five regions. Most of these were newly formed municipalities, namely 66 municipalities, that would only begin working from Monday 1 January 2007, as would the newly formed regions, and one municipality, \u00c6r\u00f8, which was also part of the reform, which was allowed by the government to commence work for the first time already Sunday 1 January 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 554]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections\nSo the first term of office in this newly created municipality was the whole period of four years from 2006 until 2009. The reform was approved 26 June 2005 by the lawmakers in the Folketing and signature by the head of state (when?). The 238 municipal councils (Danish: kommunalbestyrelser; singular: kommunalbestyrelse) and 13 county councils that were to be abolished 1 January 2007 just continued their work one year more than the term of office (2002-2005) they were elected for until 31 December 2006 and then ceased to exist.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0000-0002", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections\nAmong the remaining 31 municipalities having their new councils elected was Bornholm Regional Municipality that was formed and began its work 1 January 2003. This was only the second time it had a new council elected, the first time being on 29 May 2002, and it was the first time its council served the whole term of office. Bornholm's merger was not a part of the reform, having been decided by the island's voters already on 29 May 2001. It was the new center-right government elected at the end of 2001 that drove the reform through parliament. The 30 municipalities that remained were not merged with other municipalities, so their newly elected councils served the whole term of office 1 January 2006 until 31 December 2009.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 758]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections, Results, Results of regional elections\nThe Ministry of interior informed that voter turnout was 69.4%. The regions are not municipalities, and are not allowed to levy any taxes, but are financed only through block grants from the central government and the municipalities within each region. The results of the regional elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 67], "content_span": [68, 359]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections, Results, Results of municipal elections\nThe Ministry of interior informed that voter turnout was 69.5%. The results of the municipal elections:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 68], "content_span": [69, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections, Results, Results of municipal elections, Mayors in the municipalities\nThe mayors (Danish:Borgmester; plural:Borgmestre) of the 98 municipalities heads the council meetings and is the chairman of the finance committee in each of their respective municipalities. Only in Copenhagen, this mayor - the head of the finance committee and council meetings - is called the Lord Mayor (Danish:Overborgmester).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 98], "content_span": [99, 429]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181319-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Danish local elections, Results, Old and new mayors in the municipalities\nThe term of office for the mayors elected by the majority of councillors among its members in each municipal council is the same as for the councils elected. The correct name for the municipality on the somewhat remote island of Bornholm is Regional Municipality, because the municipality also handles several tasks not carried out by the other Danish municipalities but by the regions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 78], "content_span": [79, 465]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181320-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Danmark Rundt\nThe 2005 Danmark Rundt was ridden from 3 August to 7 August 2005. This edition is remembered for the complete dominance of Ivan Basso, who won 4 of the 6 stages, and the overall classification. It was the 15th edition of the men's stage race, which was established in 1985.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181320-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Danmark Rundt, Final classifications, Overall classement (yellow jersey)\nIvan Basso's average speed for the race was 42.489\u00a0km/h.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 77], "content_span": [78, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181321-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe 2005 Dartmouth Big Green football team was an American football team that represented Dartmouth College during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Dartmouth finished second-to-last in the Ivy League.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181321-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe Big Green compiled a 2\u20138 record and were outscored 260 to 126. Joshua Dooley and Anthony Gargiulo were the team captains. Head coach Eugene \"Buddy\" Teevens returned to lead the Big Green for the 2005 season. He had previously been the head coach at Dartmouth from 1987 to 1991.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 320]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181321-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nThe Big Green's 1\u20136 conference record placed seventh in the Ivy League standings. Dartmouth was outscored 162 to 64 by Ivy opponents.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181321-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dartmouth Big Green football team\nDartmouth played its home games at Memorial Field on the college campus in Hanover, New Hampshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 38], "section_span": [38, 38], "content_span": [39, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181322-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors\nThe 2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 36th edition of the event known that year as the Davidoff Swiss Indoors, and was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It took place at the St. Jakobshalle in Basel, Switzerland, from 24 October through 30 October 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181322-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors\nThe singles line up included ATP No. 7, US Open quarterfinalist, Rome and Monte Carlo Masters runner-up, Umag champion Guillermo Coria, Australian Open, Wimbledon, US Open quarterfinalist, Munich titlist David Nalbandian, and former World No. 1, Barcelona, Vienna finalist Juan Carlos Ferrero. Also seeded were Auckland, Amersfoort winner Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez, Australian Open quarterfinalist Dominik Hrbat\u00fd, Tim Henman, Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k and Tommy Haas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181322-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors, Finals, Doubles\nAgust\u00edn Calleri / Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez defeated Stephen Huss / Wesley Moodie, 7\u20135, 7\u20135", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 44], "content_span": [45, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181323-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Doubles\nBob Bryan and Mike Bryan were the defending champions, but lost in the semifinals to Agust\u00edn Calleri and Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181323-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Doubles\nAgust\u00edn Calleri and Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez won in the final 7\u20135, 7\u20135, against Stephen Huss and Wesley Moodie.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181324-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Singles\nJi\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k was the defending champion, but lost in the second round to Paradorn Srichaphan.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181324-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davidoff Swiss Indoors \u2013 Singles\nFernando Gonz\u00e1lez won in the final 6\u20137(8\u201310), 6\u20133, 7\u20135, 6\u20134, against Marcos Baghdatis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181325-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup\nThe 2005 Davis Cup was the 94th edition of the most important tournament between nations in men's tennis. A total of 130 teams participated in the tournament. The final took place 2\u20134 December at the Sibamac Arena in Bratislava, Slovakia, with Croatia defeating Slovakia for their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [14, 14], "content_span": [15, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181325-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup, World Group, Draw\nFirst round losers compete in Play-off ties with Zonal Group I Qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 14], "section_span": [16, 33], "content_span": [34, 108]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181326-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Americas Zone\nThe Americas Zone was one of three Zones of Davis Cup competition in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181326-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Americas Zone, Group III\nVenue: Club de Tenis La Paz, La Paz, Bolivia (clay)Date: Week of 28 February", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 39], "content_span": [40, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181326-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Americas Zone, Group IV\nPlayed July 13\u201317 in San Jose, Costa Rica, on outdoor hard courts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 38], "content_span": [39, 105]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181326-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Americas Zone, Group IV, Results of Individual Ties\nTrinidad & Tobago and Costa Rica promoted to Group III for 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 66], "content_span": [67, 131]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181327-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone\nThe Asia/Oceania Zone was one of three zones of regional competition in the 2005 Davis Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181327-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group III\nVenue: Victoria Park Tennis Centre, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong (hard)Date: 13\u201317 July", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 43], "content_span": [44, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181327-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone, Group IV\nVenue: Thein Byu Tennis Club, Yangon, Myanmar (hard)Date: Week of 25 April", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 42], "content_span": [43, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181328-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I\nThe Asian and Oceanian Zone is one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181328-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Asia/Oceania Zone Group I\nIn the Asian and Oceanian Zone there are four different groups in which teams compete against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181329-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone\nThe Europe/Africa Zone was one of three groups of Davis Cup competition in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181329-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group III, Venue 1\nVenue: Smash Tennis Academy, Cairo, Egypt (clay)Date: 27 April-1 May", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 53], "content_span": [54, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181329-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone, Group IV\nVenue: Lugogo Tennis Club, Kampala, Uganda (clay)Date: Week of 28 February", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 43], "content_span": [44, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181330-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nThe European and African Zone was one of the three zones of regional Davis Cup competition in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181330-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup Europe/Africa Zone Group I\nIn the European and African Zone there were four different groups in which teams competed against each other to advance to the next group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181331-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup World Group\nThe World Group was the highest level of Davis Cup competition in 2005. The first-round losers went into the Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, and the winners progress to the quarterfinals. The quarterfinalists were guaranteed a World Group spot for 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181331-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup World Group\nOn February 13, 2006 the International Tennis Federation (ITF) announced that Karol Beck had tested positive for the beta agonist clenbuterol during the semifinal for Slovakia against Argentina. As a consequence, the ITF suspended him from the game for two years.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 290]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181332-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs\nThe World Group Play-offs were the main play-offs of 2005 Davis Cup. Winners advanced to the World Group, and loser were relegated in the Zonal Regions I.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181332-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Davis Cup World Group Play-offs, Teams\nBold indicates team has qualified for the 2006 Davis Cup World Group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 43], "content_span": [44, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500\nThe 2005 Daytona 500, the 47th running of the event, was held on February 20, 2005 at Daytona International Speedway in Daytona Beach, Florida as the first race of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup season. Dale Jarrett won the pole and Jeff Gordon won the race, making this his third Daytona 500 win. Kurt Busch finished second and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. finished third.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500\nAs the result of NASCAR's implementation of the green-white-checker finish rule the previous season, the race had three extra laps due to a caution with three laps to go, reaching a total distance of 203 laps and 507.5 miles (816.7\u00a0km). Because of that, this was the first Daytona 500 to go longer than 500 miles. It was also the first Daytona 500 to end at sunset, around 6:18 pm EST.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500\nA crowd of 200,000 people were estimated to have attended this race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 85]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Qualifying and Gatorade Duels\nThree-time Daytona 500 champion Dale Jarrett won his third pole for this race with a speed of 188.312 miles per hour (303.059\u00a0km/h). 2001 and 2003 winner Michael Waltrip won the first Gatorade Duel and 2002 Cup Series champion Tony Stewart won the second. The main story focusing on the Gatorade Duels was an accident involving Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick, which turned into a minor feud.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 47], "content_span": [48, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe green flag waved with Dale Jarrett leading the field, but he lost the first lap to Jimmie Johnson and fell back through the field after a small bump from behind from defending Daytona 500 champion Dale Earnhardt, Jr.. Tony Stewart took the lead from Johnson on lap 4 and led 12 laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe first caution came out on lap 15 halfway through the first fuel run when Bobby Labonte blew an engine. Scott Wimmer, who had only changed two tires, led when the race restarted.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe second caution flew on lap 28 when Ricky Rudd spun out in the middle of the field, collecting five cars. On lap 36, Matt Kenseth, one of the pre-race favorites in trouble with a smoking exhaust, pitted under green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nOn lap 61, there came to the start of green-flag pit stops, with the Dodges coming in first, as they did not get as good fuel mileage as others. Earnhardt, Jr. was pushed by Jeff Burton coming into his pit stop, and had to back up to get out after his tires were changed, causing him to drop down through the field. There was a total of seven speeding violations on pit road during these pit stops, most notably Johnson. Once the green flag pit stops cycled through on lap 64, Jeff Gordon had the lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 533]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nDebris on the racetrack brought out the third caution on lap 86, with Gordon still out in front. Stewart led the race at the restart, and he was still leading at halfway and when the fourth caution came out on lap 105 for debris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nOn lap 137, there came another round of green-flag pit stops, with Stewart still taking the lead. The fifth caution came out on lap 144 and the sixth one came on lap 155. Waltrip brought out the seventh caution, allowing him to leave the race and led to another round of pit stops on lap 164. Jason Leffler and Kasey Kahne came together on pit road, dropping them both down the field. The wreck on pit road occurred when Kasey Kahne, who was 4th when the pit stops began, was exiting his pit stall, and Leffler was turning into his, unbeknownst to Kahne. Kahne would later rebound before becoming a victim of a couple of crashes not of his own making.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nWith 32 laps to go, John Andretti, running three-wide and following a group of cars going four-wide, crashed and turned into Leffler, taking that driver out of the race. This would bring up the eight caution, with Stewart still out in front.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nStewart became the first driver since Bobby Allison in 1981 and 1982 to lead the most laps in two consecutive Daytona 500's.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe \"Big One\" occurred on lap 184. This began when Greg Biffle ran into Scott Riggs, collecting 11 cars in turn 3. Scott Wimmer's car took the worst of it, as his car went onto the apron, flipped over four times, spun on its nose, and crashed hard on its wheels. This crash brought out the ninth caution. Only some cars chose to pit, and Stewart and the others stayed out. Earnhardt, Jr., who had languished in midfield for the earlier part of the race, was now up to third place. Kasey Kahne was right in the middle of this crash in his #9 mango colored Dodge Charger, but managed to miss it. Kahne charged again back up through the field when the race went back green.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nWhen the race restarted on lap 187, Andretti drove straight into Mike Skinner, starting a chain reaction crash (another \"Big One\") involving at least eight cars, bringing out the immediate 10th caution. This crash was the result of someone (possibly Skinner) missing a gear at the restart. Kasey Kahne was also involved in this crash, because as he checked up Dale Jarrett in the 88 accidentally punted him into the infield grass.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nKahne spent a lot of time on pit road, but he did not lose a lap, and apparently his car was, or should have been being checked for fender rubs, when the race restarted Kahne made his way from about the 20th position to about the 8th position, but there was clearly still a tire rub on his right front fender; because it was clearly smoking, and FOX commentator Darrel Waltrip even made mention of it, as he made his way back up through the field again.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe race restarted with six laps to go. With five to go, Earnhardt, Jr. briefly took the lead, but Stewart retook it on the next lap. The two drivers raced side-by-side until Earnhardt, Jr. retook the lead. Gordon took the lead before the 11th caution came out with three laps to go.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe caution came out when Kasey Kahne was on the outside moving forward from the 8th position trying keep his momentum up and move into the top 6 or so, as Kurt Busch made a pass on Tony Stewart, who was in the lead; but Jeff Gordon was also fighting on the outside with Stewart for the lead; Kahne slid up the race track hard probably due to a cut tire and as he did so, his teammate Jeremy Mayfield in the 19 car apparently got into the back of him as well and Kahne went into the wall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 519]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0014-0002", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nHe could not get off the wall until about the middle of the backstretch, when NASCAR finally brought out the caution. Kahne would end up scored 22nd after being crashed while running 7th and possibly moving up into the top 5 to contend for the win. Oddly as the cars came around for the green flag Kahne's teammate Jeremy Mayfield came down to pit road from running 9th on the track, but apparently returned to the race and would end up finishing a position behind his teammate.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThe race length of 200 laps and 500 miles (800\u00a0km) was completed under yellow, so a green-white-checker finish would take place. The race restarted on lap 202 with two laps to go. Despite much activity behind him, Gordon was able to hold off Kurt Busch and Earnhardt, Jr. to win his third Daytona 500 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181333-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Daytona 500, Race summary\nThis was the third-slowest Daytona 500 to go the distance, with only both the 1960 and 2011 races were slower. Two other runnings of this race in the 2000s were also slower, but they both were rain-shortened.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 30], "content_span": [31, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede\nThe 2005 December Chennai stampede incident happened on 18 December 2005 in a school at MGR Nagar in Chennai, the capital of the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu, where the relief supplies were distributed by the state government for the people affected by severe flooding. There were 42 deaths in the accident, which left another 37 injured. The state government appointed a one-man commission under retired justice A. Raman to look into the enquiry. The state government also announced a compensation of \u20b9100,000 for all the victims and \u20b915,000 for the injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede\nDuring 2005, there were heavy rains in Tamil Nadu and its coastal areas were flooded. Many people were rendered homeless by flooding during November and December. Relief measures were announced by the government that necessitated collecting tokens from authorities in different centres across the city.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 333]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Background\nDuring 2005, there were heavy rains in Chennai and the surrounding areas that resulted in severe flooding. Most coastal areas of the state were flooded. Many people were rendered homeless by the floods during the months of November and December. Relief measures were announced by the government that necessitated collecting tokens from authorities in different centres across the city. The government centres were distributing \u20b9 2,000, 10\u00a0kg of rice, dhotis and saris to the people affected by the floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 548]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Background\nThe relief measures were to be originally distributed from the ration shop in the area, but the street being narrow, the venue was changed to Arignar Anna Government School. On Saturday 17 December 2005, the day before the accident, 3,452 families were issued tokens and the authorities were planning to distribute for 4,5000 families on Sunday. The announcement was made with the help of public addressing system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 42], "content_span": [43, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, The accident\nOn 18 December 2005, Sunday, around 4,500 people were gathered around the Arignar Anna Government High school in MGR Nagar where the tokens to the relief measures were about to be distributed for people under the jurisdiction of three ration shops. The people assembled from 3\u00a0a.m., while the relief was planned to be distributed at 9 a.m. There was a sudden downpour at 3:45\u00a0a.m., and there were rumours that the relief measures would be given only on first come first basis to 1,000 families.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 539]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, The accident\nAt around 4 a.m, people broke through the cordons set up by police to enter the building. There was a concrete slope at the entrance and people at the front end of the queue slipped and others stumbled over them. The gates were closed with difficulty, but by then the stampede caused 42 deaths and 37 injuries. Eyewitness claimed that the sudden downpour resulted in chaos in the area. The police were few in number to control the large crowd. They also claimed that the police controlling the crowd early during the day would have averted the situation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 44], "content_span": [45, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Aftermath\nThe stampede is counted among the twenty deadliest stampedes during the period of 1968\u20132005. The President of India, A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, condoled the death of the people who lost their lives in the tragedy. On account of the poor lighting and rain, the rescue personnel found it difficult to reach the spot. The crowd did not disperse without understanding the seriousness of the situation and only left after an announcement was made that the distribution would be made at their doors. Umbrellas, footwear and ration cards were strewn all over the place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Aftermath\nSixteen of the injured were admitted to the government hospital and eleven, including six women, were admitted to the Royapettah Government Hospital. The Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu, J. Jayalalithaa visited the injured in the hospital. During her interaction with the media after her hospital visit, she said that this might have been the handiwork of some of the miscreants trying to tarnish the image of the government. She stated that \"There was no need for people to come in so early during the day when it had been announced that relief distribution would begin from 9 am.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 620]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0004-0002", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Aftermath\nWe had made elaborate arrangement by restricting the number of relief-seekers to 500 at each of the nine counters and deployed heavy security. It was announced that everyone would get relief,\". The Tamil Nadu police said that it was raining heavily during the distribution of relief supplies. The state government also announced a compensation of \u20b9one lakh for all the victims and \u20b9 15,000 for the injured. The leader of the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party Muthuvel Karunanidhi, accused the government of buying votes by distributing freebies for the forthcoming elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 621]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0004-0003", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Aftermath\nHe also added that it was the poor administration of the government that resulted in the tragedy. His son, M. K. Stalin, an MLA from the DMK party, accused the government of not setting up a committee to monitor the relief measures. As a mark of respect to those who died in the accident, the shops in the area closed at 2 p.m. on the day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 41], "content_span": [42, 381]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Investigation\nThe police arrested Dhanasekaran, the areas' councillor who belonged to the opposing DMK party, on 20 December 2005 on charges of spreading rumours. He was charged under IPC sections 120-B for criminal conspiracy, 147 for punishment for rioting, 304 for punishment for culpable homicide not amounting to murder, 109 for abetment, 323 for voluntarily causing hurt and 325 voluntarily causing grievous hurt. It was alleged that he and his supporters roamed around the previous evening announcing that Sunday would be the last day and token distribution would begin by 5 a.m.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Investigation\nHe argued in a lower court that he was politically targeted and the tragedy was because of an administrative failure. He quoted the transfer of Chennai collector and police officials involved in the case to support his argument. He was granted bail by the court on 26 December. He was charged in Goodas Act before the court could grant bail. He was granted bail by the Madras High Court on 5 January.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Investigation\nThe government filed a special leave petition against the order in the Supreme Court of India on 27 January 2006, but the court rejected the plea and accused the government of negligence. The court stated that \"The incident occurred because of the negligence of your officers. This is not the first time that such an incident has happened in Tamil Nadu. Repeatedly, it is happening in Tamil Nadu for such petty things,\". The court also noted that \"The incident was because of the officers not making preparations for providing flood relief\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 587]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0005-0003", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Investigation\nM. Karunanidhi, in a statement, claimed that it was a moral victory for the party against the hate campaign run by Jayalalitha and her All India Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (ADMK) government. He said \"The Supreme Court, which was approached by the same government, has blamed the Jayalalithaa regime for the stampede. The Supreme Court judges after hearing the two sides has said that DMK Councillor Dhanasekharan was not the reason behind the stampede, but only the Tamil Nadu Government,\". The state government appointed a one-man commission under retired justice A Raman to enquire the incident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0005-0004", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Investigation\nThe terms of the commission were notified on 20 December 2013 by the government that instructed the commission to probe the alleged rumours, circumstances leading to the stampede, find any shortcomings of issue of tokens and ways to avoid such incidents in future. Dhanasekaran sought a stay on the proceedings of the commission quoting \"Witnesses are being examined at an amazing speed, and about 35 witnesses were examined on a single day.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181334-0005-0005", "contents": "2005 December Chennai stampede, Investigation\nThe main aim for constituting the Commission is to divert attention on the inefficient handling of flood relief by the State Government, and to obtain a report that absolves the Government of all liability. The Commission is proceeding at such a speed that it would release a report before the coming Assembly polls on May 8\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181335-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team\nThe 2005 Delaware Fightin' Blue Hens football team represented the University of Delaware in the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season as a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference (A\u201310). They were led by K. C. Keeler, who was in his fourth season as head coach of the Fightin' Blue Hens. The team played its home games at Delaware Stadium in Newark, Delaware.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings\nThe 29 October 2005 Delhi bombings occurred on 29 October 2005 in Delhi, India, killing 62 people and injuring at least 210 others in three explosions. The bombings came only two days before the important festival of Diwali, which is celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs, and Jains. The bombs were triggered in two markets in central and south Delhi and in a bussouth of the city. Indian investigators believe the Kashmir separatist/ Islamic terrorist group Lashkar-e-Taiba was behind the attacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings\nPresident A P J Abdul Kalam condemned the blasts in Delhi and sent condolences to the bereaved and other victims. Kalam appealed to the people \"to maintain calm and help the agencies in relief and rescue work.\" Parts of India were moved to higher alert following the blasts.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [19, 19], "content_span": [20, 294]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Timeline\n(*Note:IST stands for Indian Standard Time, which is equal to UTC+5.5)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 100]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Suspects\nThe Pakistan-based Islamist terrorist organisation, the Islamic Revolutionary Front or Islamic Inquilab Mahaz, claimed responsibility for the Delhi terrorist attacks. The Mahaz has previous history of terrorism \u2013 It was one of the organisations involved in terrorist attacks in the south Pakistan city of Karachi against French, American and other citizens.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Suspects\nThe Delhi Police released three sketches of one of the suspected bombers involved in the bombings. According to NDTV, ten suspects have been detained following the blasts. Five of them were picked up from the Delhi Railway station and others from other railway stations and bus terminals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Suspects\nTariq Ahmad Dar, was arrested in Kashmir, as the alleged suspect of the attacks on 10 November 2005. The police also arrested the suspected Govindpuri bomber, Mohammed Rafiq Shah. They were freed in Feb 2017 for lack of evidence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 259]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Casualties\nThirty eight people were declared dead in Safdarjang hospital, ten in Lady Hardinge Hospital, five in Ram Manohar Lohia hospital and two in AIIMS. The number of fatalities later rose to 62, with about 210 injured.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 31], "content_span": [32, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Rescue and relief operations\nRelatives of the dead and injured received money and medical help from the government:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 49], "content_span": [50, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Reactions\nDelhi police ordered all temples and restaurants in Delhi closed shortly after the explosions, and the city of Delhi went on red alert.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 30], "content_span": [31, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Reactions, Bomb hoaxes\nAt least two have been received by the Delhi police, including a false report of a bomb in a school (or a fair) for people with visual disabilities. In addition, there was a phone call reporting a (purportedly fake) bomb near a bank in Khari Baoli before the attacks occurred; the object referred to by the call was a suitcase, in which there were documents, batteries, and wires. In the midst of the attacks, there was another hoax call reporting a bomb going off in the Gole Market.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, Reactions, Bomb hoaxes\nThe Delhi police, after the explosions, sent out messages to the public asking them to report unidentified objects. This led to a wave of reports of \"bombs\", all of which proved to be either nonexistent or more benign objects, including a \"bomb\" at the Som Bazaar in eastern Delhi and another \"bomb\" near the Sanjay Gandhi Hospital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 43], "content_span": [44, 376]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181336-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Delhi bombings, World reaction\nThe bombings have provoked strong international condemnation from the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, China, Sri Lanka, Japan, Belgium, Brazil, Iran, UAE, European Union, Bangladesh, Maldives, and South Africa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 35], "content_span": [36, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181337-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships\nThe 2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships was an ATP men's tennis tournament held in Delray Beach, Florida, United States that was part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It was the 13th edition of the tournament and was held from January 31 to February 7. Third-seeded Xavier Malisse won the singles title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [52, 52], "content_span": [53, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181337-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships, Finals, Doubles\nSimon Aspelin / Todd Perry defeated Jordan Kerr / Jim Thomas 6\u20133, 6\u20133", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 52], "section_span": [54, 69], "content_span": [70, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181338-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nLeander Paes and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek were the defending champions, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181338-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Doubles\nSimon Aspelin and Todd Perry won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20133 against Jordan Kerr and Jim Thomas.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181339-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships \u2013 Singles\nXavier Malisse defeated Ji\u0159\u00ed Nov\u00e1k 7\u20136(8\u20136), 6\u20132 to win the 2005 Delray Beach International Tennis Championships singles event. Ricardo Mello was the defending champion.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 232]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181340-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic National Committee chairmanship election\nThe 2005 Democratic National Committee (DNC) chairmanship election was held on February 12, 2005, to elect a chairperson to the DNC for a four-year term. Howard Dean was elected as the DNC chair, succeeding Terry McAuliffe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 280]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181340-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic National Committee chairmanship election, Race\nFollowing the 2004 U.S. presidential election, some Democratic Party insiders wanted Terry McAuliffe to remain DNC chair. The netroots pushed for a different leader who would move the party away from the large donors. Howard Dean, a candidate for the Democratic Party nomination for president in 2004, announced his bid to become DNC chair on January 11.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 62], "content_span": [63, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181340-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Democratic National Committee chairmanship election, Race\nOther candidates to declare included Former U.S. Representative Tim Roemer of Indiana, former Al Gore and John Kerry staffer Donnie Fowler, Mayor of Denver Wellington Webb, New Democrat Network founder Simon Rosenberg, Former U.S. Representative Martin Frost of Texas, and Ohio Democratic Party Chair David J. Leland. Kate Michelman almost ran due to Roemer's anti-abortion stance, but she opted not to run. Harold M. Ickes also considered running, but did not.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 62], "content_span": [63, 524]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181340-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic National Committee chairmanship election, Race\nDean became the front-runner in the race, though Roemer received the endorsements of Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic Party leaders in the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives, respectively. Though the executive committee of the Association of State Democratic Party chairs recommended an endorsement of Fowler, the group chose to endorse Dean on January 31. Webb dropped out and endorsed Dean. On February 1, Dean announced the endorsements of 53 more members of the DNC, increasing his total number of DNC supporters to 102. The AFL\u2013CIO opted not to endorse a candidate. Meanwhile, the Service Employees International Union endorsed Dean. Without the support of the labor movement, Frost dropped out. Receiving little support, Leland dropped out as well.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 62], "content_span": [63, 857]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181340-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic National Committee chairmanship election, Race\nRosenberg dropped out on February 4 and endorsed Dean. Fowler dropped out on February 5 and endorsed Dean. Roemer, Dean's last challenger, dropped out on February 7. Dean was elected by a voice vote on February 12.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 62], "content_span": [63, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181341-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic Republic of the Congo constitutional referendum\nA constitutional referendum was held in the Democratic Republic of Congo on 18 and 19 December 2005. Voters were asked whether they approved of a proposed new constitution. It was approved by 84% of voters, with the first elections held under the new constitution in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 337]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181341-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic Republic of the Congo constitutional referendum, Background\nThe constitution was approved by the Senate and National Assembly after being agreed by all factions involved in the Second Congo War. It was then required to be put to a referendum. If approved, it would replace a transitional constitution in place since 2002.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 75], "content_span": [76, 338]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181341-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic Republic of the Congo constitutional referendum, Proposed constitution\nThe new constitution introduced a two-term limit on the presidency and a minimum age of 30 for presidential candidates (reduced from 35), allowing the incumbent President Joseph Kabila to run for office. It also granted citizenship to all ethnic groups present in the country at the time of independence in 1960 and increased the number of provinces from 10 to 26, as well as guaranteeing free primary education.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 86], "content_span": [87, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181341-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Democratic Republic of the Congo constitutional referendum, Conduct\nThe referendum was originally scheduled to be held on 17 December, but ran into a second day due to issues with heavy rain and incomplete voter rolls. Observers from the European Union said the poll was \"largely free and fair\" and that the atmosphere at the time of the referendum was peaceful.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 72], "content_span": [73, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181342-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Denmark Open\nThe 2005 Denmark Open in badminton was held in Aarhus, Denmark, from October 18 to October 23, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 118]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181343-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Denmark Open darts\n2005 Denmark Open is a darts tournament, which took place in Denmark in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 23], "section_span": [23, 23], "content_span": [24, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season\nThe 2005 Denver Broncos season was the franchise's 36th season in the National Football League and the 46th overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season\nThe Denver Broncos closed out the 2005 regular season with a 13\u20133 record, the franchise's second-best number of wins of all time and their third best win percentage ever. They won their first playoff game since their 1998 Super Bowl-winning season. Although they eliminated the defending back-to-back Super Bowl champion New England Patriots to end their hopes of becoming the first NFL team to three-peat, they failed to get to the Super Bowl, losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers, the eventual champions, in the AFC Championship game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season\nThe Broncos were expected by many to make the Super Bowl for the first time in the post-John Elway era. Denver would not make the postseason again until 2011 under Tim Tebow's leadership or another Conference championship until 2013, under the leadership of Peyton Manning whom the Broncos acquired in 2012.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, 2005 season\nAfter losing their first game 34\u201310 to the Miami Dolphins on September 11, the Broncos won 5 straight games, defeating the San Diego Chargers 20\u201317, the Kansas City Chiefs 30\u201310, the Jacksonville Jaguars 20\u20137, the Washington Redskins 21\u201319, and the two-time defending champion New England Patriots 28\u201320 on October 16 before losing to the New York Giants on October 23 by a final score of 24\u201323. They then beat the defending NFC champion Philadelphia Eagles 49\u201321 on October 30.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, 2005 season\nIn that game, the Broncos became the first team in NFL history to have two players, Mike Anderson and Tatum Bell, rush for over 100 yards and another player, Jake Plummer, pass for over 300 yards in a single game. They then beat the Oakland Raiders on November 13, 31\u201317. They beat the New York Jets on November 20, 27\u20130. It was the first time the Broncos had shut out a team at home since the Carolina Panthers on November 9, 1997.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 472]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0002-0002", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, 2005 season\nThey played the Dallas Cowboys on Thanksgiving day, November 24, winning a very hard fought game in overtime 24\u201321. The key play that led to Jason Elam's 24-yard game-winning field goal was a 55-yard run by Ron Dayne who filled in for the injured Tatum Bell. They lost to the Chiefs 31\u201327 on December 4, but defeated the Baltimore Ravens the following week 12\u201310. On December 17, the Broncos defeated the Buffalo Bills 28\u201317. On Christmas Eve 2005, the Denver Broncos clinched the AFC West division title as they finished 8\u20130 at Invesco Field beating the Oakland Raiders 22\u20133. On December 31, 2005, the Broncos got win number 13 by going on the road and sweeping their division rivals, the Chargers, with a final score of 23\u20137.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, 2005 season\nThe Broncos entered their third consecutive year in the playoffs with the momentum of a four-game winning streak. With a record of 13\u20133, they were tied with the Seattle Seahawks for second overall in the league, behind the 14\u20132 Indianapolis Colts. They were seeded number two in the AFC behind the Colts. On January 14, 2006, the Broncos defeated the two-time defending champions, the New England Patriots, 27\u201313, ending the Patriots chance of becoming the first NFL team ever to win three consecutive Super Bowl championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 567]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0003-0001", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, 2005 season\nThe last team with a chance of winning three consecutive Super Bowls before the Patriots were the Broncos themselves. The Broncos' run came to an end by losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Championship 34\u201317 on January 22, 2006. Their strength of controlling the ball collapsed with 4 turnovers. They were outscored in the first half 24\u20133 and were not able to come from behind to win in the second half. The Steelers went on to win Super Bowl XL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 39], "content_span": [40, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Off Season\nThe Broncos failed to retain safety Kenoy Kennedy, who signed with the Detroit Lions, defensive end Reggie Hayward, who signed with the Jacksonville Jaguars and cornerback Kelly Herndon, who signed with the Seattle Seahawks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Off Season\nDuring the offseason, the Broncos brought back Keith Burns and Ian Gold after one season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Playoffs, AFC Divisional Game vs New England Patriots\nDespite scoring 27 points on offense, the Broncos defense was the story of the day. They forced five Patriots turnovers, including intercepting Tom Brady twice, while recovering three fumbles. A Mike Anderson one yard touchdown run in the third quarter was set up by a 100-yard interception return by Champ Bailey. It was the second longest interception return in NFL playoff history. The Patriots outgained the Broncos 420 to 286 in yardage, but the turnovers were too much for New England to overcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 81], "content_span": [82, 585]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Playoffs, AFC Championship Game vs Pittsburgh Steelers\nThe Broncos season ended with getting blown out by the eventual Super Bowl XL Champions. This is the last time the Broncos made the playoffs until 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 82], "content_span": [83, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Team stats\nThe Broncos relied on a more consistent Jake Plummer, their running game behind Tatum Bell, Ron Dayne, and Mike Anderson, and their defense to stop opposing running backs. The Broncos placed second in the league in rushing yards per game, fourth in total offense and allowed the second fewest rushing yards in the league.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Team stats\nThe key to Denver's success that year was their ability to keep control of the ball. In the regular season they committed just 16 turnovers, tied for the second-least in the league, and took it away from their opponents 36 times, fifth-best in the league. This resulted in a turnover differential of +20, second-best in the NFL. Jake Plummer, after throwing an NFL-high-tying 20 interceptions in the 2004 season, threw only 7 interceptions on the year, and had the second-lowest interception percentage rate of any quarterback in the league (behind Brad Johnson). His only omission of a serious number of turnovers occurred, unfortunately, in the AFC Championship, with two interceptions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 727]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Team stats\nIn 2005 the Broncos had 5,766 total offensive yards and gave up 5,006 yards. They outrushed their opponents 2,539 to 1,363. They were, however, outpassed 3,643 to 3,227. They had 28 sacks and gave up 23. They had 46 touchdowns to their opponents' 31. They were tied for fifth in total touchdowns and were seventh in the league in points per game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Team stats\nThe Broncos had 753 tackles to their opponents' 837, made 20 interceptions for the year and gave up only seven.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 38], "content_span": [39, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Player stats\nJake Plummer threw 277 completions out of 456 attempts for 3366 yards and 18 touchdowns. He had 7 interceptions and a quarterback rating of 90.2. He also ran 46 times for 151 yards and 2 touchdowns.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Player stats\nMike Anderson had 239 rushes for 1014 yards and 12 touchdowns. Tatum Bell ran 173 times for 921 yards and 8 touchdowns. He also had 18 catches and 104 receiving yards. Ron Dayne had 53 carries for 270 yards. He also had 18 receptions for 212 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Player stats\nRod Smith led in receiving with 85 receptions for 1105 yards and 6 touchdowns. Ashley Lelie had 42 receptions, 770 yards, and 1 touchdown. Jeb Putzier made 37 catches for 481 yards. Charlie Adams had 21 receptions and 203 yards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Player stats\nIan Gold had 72 tackles, 16 assists, 3 sacks and 2 fumble recoveries. Nick Ferguson made 61 tackles and had 18 assists and 1 fumble recovery. Al Wilson had 61 tackles, 11 assists, 3 sacks and 1 fumble recovery. Domonique Foxworth made 64 tackles, had 6 assists and 2 fumble recoveries. Champ Bailey had 8 interceptions and 2 touchdowns, 59 tackles and 5 assists. John Lynch had 44 tackles, 17 assists, and 4 sacks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181344-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver Broncos season, Player stats\nJason Elam kicked 24 field goals out of 32 attempted and 43 out of 44 extra points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 40], "content_span": [41, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting\nOn May 8, 2005, two Denver police officers were shot in a Denver, Colorado dance hall by Ra\u00fal G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda, a Mexican national and undocumented immigrant to the United States. One victim, , was killed, while the other, Detective John Bishop, was wounded. The incident sparked questions surrounding illegal immigration in the U.S. and created an international incident with Mexico, where G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda was apprehended.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Shooting\nFrom the evening of May 7 until the early morning of May 8 (Mother's Day), 2005, Denver Police Detectives Donnie Young and John Bishop were working off-duty providing security at the Salon Ocampo Hall. The hall was hosting an invitation-only baptismal party. On the evening of May 7, Young and Bishop escorted Ra\u00fal G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda out of the hall. G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda returned about 1 a.m., approached both detectives from behind, and shot Donnie Young three times, including one shot to the head. G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda also shot John Bishop once in the chest, but Bishop was not killed due to his bulletproof vest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 642]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Shooting\nRa\u00fal G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda, a.k.a. Ra\u00fal Garc\u00eda-G\u00f3mez, was an undocumented immigrant working at the \"Cherry Cricket,\" a restaurant owned by the then Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper. G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda used forged identification to obtain a job as a dishwasher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Shooting\nPrior to the shooting, G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda had been stopped three times for traffic violations. G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda fled to his native Mexico where he was arrested June 4, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 45], "content_span": [46, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Extradition\nIn 1978, the United States signed a treaty with Mexico that acknowledged Mexico's right not to extradite one of its citizens if the citizen faced the death penalty. The Mexican Supreme Court also declared it against the law to extradite a Mexican citizen facing life in prison without the possibility of parole. The Mexican Consul announced that unless the Mexican government received assurances that G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda would not face either of these punishments, there would be no extradition. The mandatory penalty for first degree murder in Colorado is either execution or life in prison without the possibility of parole.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 668]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Extradition\nAs a result of this potential outcome, Colorado Representative Bob Beauprez introduced legislation before the United States House to cut foreign aid to countries that refused to extradite people suspected of murdering American law enforcement agents. This bill was signed into law in November 2005. One local radio personality declared that if anything good came of Young's death it would be because it would highlight the problem of illegal immigration.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Extradition\nWhile murdering a police officer is usually a capital offense in Colorado, on June 9, 2005, Denver District Attorney Mitch Morrisey announced that G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda would be charged with second degree murder and first degree attempted murder. These charges posed a maximum of 32\u201396 years in prison. Morrisey justified the charges, stating, \"It is my understanding that I would be prohibited from extraditing him if I sought first-degree murder charges in this case.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 48], "content_span": [49, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Trial\nIn his trial G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda claimed that he only wanted to scare the officers, but the arresting officers and his ex-girlfriend testified that he was proud to have murdered Officer Young. He testified that he was humiliated by Young, but that it was the heckling of his friends that drove him to return to the dance hall to shoot the police officers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Trial\nOn October 26, 2006 G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda was convicted and sentenced to the maximum punishment of 80 years. He was wearing the number \"13\", a symbol associated with the street gang Sure\u00f1os, shaved into his hair. The judge expressed the opinion the sentence was not severe enough.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181345-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Denver police officer shooting, Crime Stoppers controversy\nFlorencia Casta\u00f1eda Rodr\u00edguez, G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda's grandmother, was instrumental in the arrest of Raul G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda. Without her help, the Mexican authorities would not have known where to find G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda. Crime Stoppers had offered an award of $100,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of Raul G\u00f3mez-Garc\u00eda. Crime Stoppers, however, declared that Mrs. Rodr\u00edguez was ineligible for the reward money because she did not contact them before notifying the Mexican authorities of her grandson's whereabouts. This decision by Crime Stoppers was heavily criticized in Denver area media, where Mrs. Rodr\u00edguez was portrayed as a \"very poor\" napkin maker whose house was destroyed by a hurricane.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 63], "content_span": [64, 768]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181346-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Derry City Council election\nElections to Derry City Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used five district electoral areas to elect a total of 30 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181346-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Derry City Council election, Districts results, Cityside\n2001: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP2005: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 61], "content_span": [62, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181346-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Derry City Council election, Districts results, Northland\n2001: 4 x SDLP, 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in2005: 4 x SDLP, 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181346-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Derry City Council election, Districts results, Rural\n2001: 3 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2005: 3 x SDLP, 2 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 58], "content_span": [59, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181346-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Derry City Council election, Districts results, Shantallow\n2001: 3 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in2005: 3 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 63], "content_span": [64, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181346-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Derry City Council election, Districts results, Waterside\n2001: 3 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2005: 3 x DUP, 2 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 62], "content_span": [63, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181347-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Desafio Internacional das Estrelas\n2005 Desafio Internacional das Estrelas was the first edition of Desafio Internacional das Estrelas (International Challenge of the Stars) kart race, held in 2005 in Brazil, was won by Daniel Serra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181348-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Desaf\u00edo Corona season\nThe 2005 Desafio Corona season was the second season of stock car racing in Mexico.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181348-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Desaf\u00edo Corona season, Cars\nFord Mustang made its debut in this year. Pontiac again won the majority of the races. Dodge won the other 3 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 32], "content_span": [33, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181348-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Desaf\u00edo Corona season, Results, Standings\n(key) Bold\u00a0- Pole position awarded by time. Italics\u00a0- Pole position set by final practice results or rainout. *\u00a0\u2013 Most laps led.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181349-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Lions season\nThe 2005 season was the Detroit Lions' 76th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 82nd since moving to Detroit and becoming the Lions. The Lions failed to improve on their 6\u201310 record in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181349-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Lions season\nThe Lions began their 2005 season with a 17\u20133 win over the rival Packers. However, the next week, the Lions were throttled, 38\u20136, by the Bears in Chicago. By week 10, the Lions had a 4\u20135 record after they had defeated the Arizona Cardinals 29\u201321 at home. However, the Lions lost five consecutive games following that win, and were eliminated from the playoffs with a 16\u201313 overtime loss to the Packers. The Lions would win one more game for the rest of the season, which was a 13\u201312 win over the Saints. The season concluded with a 35\u201321 loss to the eventual Super Bowl champion Steelers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 614]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181349-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Lions season\nDuring the season, after the Lions lost 27\u20137 on Thanksgiving Day to the Atlanta Falcons, the Lions fired Steve Mariucci, and hired Dick Jauron to be the interim head coach for the remainder of the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181350-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Shock season\nThe 2005 WNBA season was the eighth for the Detroit Shock. Although they played mediocre basketball, the Shock barely made the playoffs, as they eventually made a quick exit from the playoffs, losing in a sweep by the Connecticut Sun.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181351-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Tigers season\nThe 2005 Detroit Tigers season was a season in American baseball. It involved the Detroit Tigers finishing fourth in the AL Central with a 71-91 record, 28 games in back of the World Series Champion Chicago White Sox.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181351-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Tigers season, Player stats, Batting, Starters by position\nNote: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 71], "content_span": [72, 196]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181351-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Tigers season, Player stats, Batting, Other batters\nNote: G = Games played; AB = At bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting average; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 64], "content_span": [65, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181351-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Tigers season, Player stats, Pitching, Starting pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; IP = Innings pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 69], "content_span": [70, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181351-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit Tigers season, Player stats, Pitching, Relief pitchers\nNote: G = Games pitched; W = Wins; L = Losses; SV = Saves; ERA = Earned run average; SO = Strikeouts", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 67], "content_span": [68, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election\nThe Detroit mayoral election of 2005 took place on November 8, 2005. It saw the reelection of incumbent mayor Kwame Kilpatrick to a second term.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Background\nIn 2001, Kwame Kilpatrick, at the age of 31, became the youngest mayor ever elected in Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Background\nIn 2005, Kilpatrick, now seeking reelection to a second term as mayor, found himself the subject numerous scandals, had faced budget deficits as mayor, and had faced a poor city economy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 228]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Background\nAmong the scandals Kilpatrick faced were allegations that he had used city funds to enrich himself and his family.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Campaigning\nIn the general election, polls and media coverage showed Freman Hendrix to be the frontrunner, leading over the embattled Kilpatrick. Hendrix promised to both restore dignity to the office of mayor, which he faulted Kilpatrick with having eroded, and prosperity back to the city at large.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Campaigning\nMany political pundits saw Kilpatrick as a weakened incumbent. He had become the first incumbent to place second in a mayoral primary in Detroit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Campaigning\nAmid his reelection campaign, Kilpatrick made an appearance delivering an eulogy at the highly-covered funeral of Rosa Parks, held shortly before the general election. This was seen as helpful to his reelection. Kilpatrick was also able to garner strong support from younger voters.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 42], "content_span": [43, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181352-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Detroit mayoral election, Results, Primary\nFreman Hendrix and incumbent mayor Kwame Kilpatrick won the top-two spots, thereby advancing to the general election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181353-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters\nThe 2005 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters was the nineteenth season of premier German touring car championship and also sixth season under the moniker of Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters since the series' resumption in 2000. The number of race weekends were increased from 10 events in 2004 to eleven in 2005 (although 2004 had eleven events including the non-championship race at Shanghai). Originally each track hosted one race each with the exception of Hockenheimring (two races, premier and finale), but when Avignon lost their race, EuroSpeedway also hosted two events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181353-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters, Teams and drivers\nThe following manufacturers, teams and drivers competed in the 2005 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. All teams competed with tyres supplied by Dunlop.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 52], "content_span": [53, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181354-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Deutschland Tour\nThese are the results for the 2005 edition of the Deutschland Tour cycling race, won by Levi Leipheimer of Team Gerolsteiner.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181355-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Devon County Council election\nThe 2005 Devon County Council election was an election to Devon County Council which took place on 5 May 2005 as part of the 2005 United Kingdom local elections. 62 councillors were elected from various electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions had been redrawn since the last election in 2001. No elections were held in Plymouth and Torbay, which are unitary authorities outside the area covered by the County Council.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181355-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Devon County Council election\nAll locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on election day were entitled to vote in the local elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181355-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Devon County Council election, Summary\nThe election saw the Liberal Democrats regained control of the council, which had last been under Liberal Democrat control after the 1997 election, but had been under no overall control since the 2001 election. The Conservative Party gained only one seat, despite the increase in the number of seats from 54 to 62 after redistricting, becoming the second-largest party on the council and therefore the official opposition party. The Liberal Party lost all three of its seats in the election, while the Independent grouping lost one seat. The Gallagher index for the election, which measures the disproportionality of seat allocation, was 11.94.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 43], "content_span": [44, 688]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181356-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dhaka garment factory collapse\nThe 2005 Dhaka garment factory collapse or Spectrum garment factory collapse was a structural failure that occurred on Monday, 11 April 2005 in the Savar Upazila of Dhaka, Bangladesh where a nine-story commercial building collapsed. The site is located about 30\u00a0km northwest of Dhaka. The explosion of a boiler on the ground floor triggered the collapse. The owner of the building was Shahriar Sayeed Husain, a Bangladeshi businessman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181357-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dhivehi League, Overview\nHurriyya SC won the Dhivehi League. Victory Sports Club won the Maldives National Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 19], "section_span": [21, 29], "content_span": [30, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181358-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dickies 500\nThe 2005 Dickies 500 was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series stock car race, which was held on November 6, 2005, at Texas Motor Speedway (TMS) in Fort Worth, Texas. It was the inaugural running of the Dickies 500 after being created for the 2005 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 261]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181358-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dickies 500, Summary\nThe race was the 34th of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series season, and the eighth race in the 2005 Chase for the NEXTEL Cup, and was the first race to be run under the lights at TMS. Track president Eddie Gossage later announced that the total purse money for the race was $6,815,880, then the largest in Chase history, and the fourth largest during the 2005 season, trailing the Daytona 500, the Allstate 400 at the Brickyard, and the Samsung/RadioShack 500.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 485]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181358-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dickies 500, Summary\nThe pole position was held by Penske Racing's Ryan Newman, and was won by Carl Edwards of Roush Racing. The race was created as a result of the Ferko lawsuit, which took out the Southern 500 at Darlington Raceway, along with the Subway 400 at North Carolina Speedway. The race featured six cautions, which at the time was the fewest at Texas Motor Speedway in a Nextel Cup race, and the 151.005 miles per hour (243.019\u00a0km/h) average speed which was also at the time the highest at the track in a Cup race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181358-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dickies 500, Summary\nPole-sitter Ryan Newman was forced to start in the back after his car crashed on the second qualifying lap, and had to drive a backup car, and Matt Kenseth took over the pole position. Following the first caution flag, Greg Biffle passed Kenseth, but had to pit due to a loose wheel. Kenseth would dominate much of the race, leading a race-high 149 laps. Later in the race, with 11 laps remaining, Mark Martin did not change tires, and led on the restart. However, with two laps left, Carl Edwards, on newer tires, passed Martin and held him and Kenseth off for the victory by a margin of .584 seconds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 25], "content_span": [26, 628]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181359-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dissolution Honours\nThe 2005 Dissolution Honours List was issued after the General Election of the same year on the advice of the Prime Minister, Tony Blair.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181359-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dissolution Honours\nThe lists consists of 27 retiring MPs \u2013 16 Labour, six Conservative and five Liberal Democrat.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181360-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Division 1 (Senegal)\nThe 2005 Division 1 season was the 40th of the competition of the first-tier football in Senegal. The tournament was organized by the Senegalese Football Federation. The season began on 8 January and finished on 1 October. ASC Port Autonome won the third and their recent title. Port Autonome along with Diaraf would compete in the 2006 CAF Champions League the following season. AS Douanes who won the 2005 Senegalese Cup participated in the 2006 CAF Confederation Cup, along with Compagnie sucri\u00e8re s\u00e9n\u00e9galaise. The clubs that elevated into Division 1 would relegate do Division 2 as Renaissance sportive de Yoff was 17th and Mboro was 18th.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 669]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181360-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Division 1 (Senegal)\nThe season would feature 18 clubs. 306 matches were played and 519 goals were scored, fewer than last season, not a single club finished with a total of under 20 goals. The following season would feature the group and playoff system where two groups would have nine clubs each, this would be used for the next few seasons.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181360-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Division 1 (Senegal), Overview\nThe league was contested by 18 teams with ASC Port Autonome again winning the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 35], "content_span": [36, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181361-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Djiboutian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Djibouti on 8 April 2005. The incumbent President of Djibouti, Ismail Omar Guelleh, was re-elected to a second six-year term in an unopposed election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 224]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181361-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Djiboutian presidential election, Background\nHassan Gouled Aptidon was president of Djibouti from independence in 1977 until he stepped down in 1999. He had reintroduced multi-party democracy in 1992 under international pressure, but the 1999 presidential election saw Aptidon's nephew, Ismail Omar Guelleh, elected with 74% of the vote. The last parliamentary elections in 2003 saw Guelleh's political party, the Union for a Presidential Majority win all 65 seats in an election the opposition claimed saw significant rigging.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 49], "content_span": [50, 532]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181361-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Djiboutian presidential election, Campaign\nThe main opposition parties in Djibouti did not put up a candidate in the presidential election and called on their supporters to boycott the election. The only opposition candidate who had said they would stand in the election was Mohamed Daoud Chehem. However, on the 10 March 2005 he withdrew from the election as he said that he did not have enough money to take part in the election. A statement from one opposition party on the 18 March said that \"change through the ballot box is almost impossible in the Republic of Djibouti\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 582]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181361-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Djiboutian presidential election, Campaign\nDespite having no opponents President Guelleh campaigned strongly in the run up to the election. He held rallies in the evenings and pledged to reduce poverty, increase women's rights and improve the transparency of the government. He also accused the opposition of being afraid to stand against him and said that he regretted having no opponent in the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 410]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181361-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Djiboutian presidential election, Campaign\nOn the day of the election itself there was a protest against the election which was broken up by the police firing tear gas. The official news agency of Djibouti reported that there was a high turnout of over 70% of voters in the election, however members of the opposition said that this was incorrect.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 47], "content_span": [48, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181361-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Djiboutian presidential election, Aftermath\nGuelleh was sworn in as President for a second term on 9 May 2005 and pledged to increase economic development in Djibouti.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 48], "content_span": [49, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181362-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF season\nDjurg\u00e5rden will in the 2005 season compete in the Allsvenskan, Svenska Cupen and UEFA Cup", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181362-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Djurg\u00e5rdens IF season, Squad information, Squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 52], "content_span": [53, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500\nThe 2005 Dodge Charger 500, the 56th running of the event, was a NASCAR Nextel Cup Series race held on May 7, 2005 at Darlington Raceway in Darlington County, South Carolina. Contested over 367 laps on the 1.366 mile (2.198\u00a0km) speedway, it was the tenth race of the 2005 NASCAR Nextel Cup season. The race was extended to 370 laps because of a green-white-checker finish. Greg Biffle of Roush Racing won the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 438]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500\nIn 2004, Francis Ferko, a shareholder of the company that owned Texas Motor Speedway, sued NASCAR, saying they had violated antitrust laws by refusing to have a second race at Texas Motor Speedway, as many other tracks had. The case was settled in his favor, and NASCAR was forced to give up one of its Darlington dates so that a second race could be held at Texas. In 2005, Darlington was forced to contract down to one race per year. Officials replaced Darlington's two events with the one 500-mile race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500\nThe race was situated on the Saturday of Mother's Day weekend in mid-May, a date that was normally avoided by NASCAR over its history. The \"Southern 500\" moniker was dropped for the race. The Carolina Dodge Dealers, a consortium of Dodge dealerships in North and South Carolina, continued the sponsorship of this race, having it renamed to promote Dodge's Charger automobiles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [22, 22], "content_span": [23, 399]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500, Background\nDarlington Raceway, nicknamed by many NASCAR fans and drivers as \"The Lady in Black\" or \"The Track Too Tough to Tame\" and advertised as a \"NASCAR Tradition\", is a race track built for NASCAR racing located near Darlington, South Carolina. It is of a unique, somewhat egg-shaped design, an oval with the ends of very different configurations, a condition which supposedly arose from the proximity of one end of the track to a minnow pond the owner refused to relocate. This situation makes it very challenging for the crews to set up their cars' handling in a way that will be effective at both ends.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 634]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500, Background\nThe track, Darlington Raceway, is a four-turn 1.366 miles (2.198\u00a0km) oval. The track's first two turns are banked at twenty-five degrees, while the final two turns are banked two degrees lower at twenty-three degrees. The front stretch (the location of the finish line) and the back stretch is banked at six degrees. Darlington Raceway can seat up to 60,000 people.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 401]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500, Qualifying\nFailed to qualify: Johnny Sauter (No. 09), Robby Gordon (No. 7), Tony Raines (No. 61), Morgan Shepherd (No. 89)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500, Race recap\nGreg Biffle led a race-high 176 of 370 laps en route to his third Nextel Cup victory of 2005. With four laps to go, Biffle's Roush Racing teammate Mark Martin spun out (sliding into the apron) trying to pass third-place runner and pole-sitter Kasey Kahne. Biffle took two tires on his final pit stop, while race leader Ryan Newman and Ken Schrader stayed out. Newman was expecting more of the teams, like Schrader in the #49 Dodge, at the tail of the lead lap (18 in all) to stay out for track position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181363-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Dodge Charger 500, Race recap\nNewman accelerated on the restart, brake-checked Schrader to hold off the pack, and accelerated again, leaving Schrader spinning his tires. Biffle passed both of them on a green-white-checker finish restart. Jeff Gordon finished second, followed by Kahne, Martin, and Newman, who fell back three spots in two laps. Schrader finished in 18th position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 22], "section_span": [24, 34], "content_span": [35, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election\nGeneral elections were held in Dominica on 5 May 2005. The result was a victory for the ruling Dominica Labour Party, which won 12 of the 21 seats in the House of Assembly. The opposition United Workers' Party unsuccessfully made legal challenges to several of the constituency results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Background\nIn the previous 2000 elections the ruling United Workers' Party won one fewer seats than the Dominica Labour Party, despite receiving more votes. As a result, the Dominica Labour Party with 10 seats was able to form a coalition government with the Dominica Freedom Party, which had won two seats. In 2004 Prime Minister Pierre Charles died and was succeeded by Minister of Education Roosevelt Skerrit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 43], "content_span": [44, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Campaign\nOn 7 April Skerrit announced that the elections would take place on 5 May. Altogether 47 candidates stood in the elections; 21 candidates from the United Workers' Party, 19 from the Dominica Labour Party, 3 from the Dominica Progressive Party, 2 from the Dominica Freedom Party and 2 independents. Just under 66,000 voters were registered to vote in the election at 249 polling stations spread over the 21 constituencies.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Campaign\nMajor elections issues included an International Monetary Fund austerity economic plan for Dominica and the Dominica Labour Party government's decision to switch recognition from the Republic of China (Taiwan) to the People's Republic of China.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 286]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Campaign\nOn the Monday before the election, there was an incident when motorcades for the two main parties collided with each other. No major injuries resulted and rallies for each party were held afterwards. The police then refused either party permission to hold motorcades on the day before the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Campaign\nThe campaign was judged as being particularly long and divisive, with the election seen as very close and likely to come down to voter turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 41], "content_span": [42, 185]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Opinion polls\nA poll in February predicted that the United Workers' Party would win 12 seats, compared to 7 for the Dominica Labour Party and 2 for the Dominica Freedom Party. However another poll in March had the Dominica Labour Party winning 12 seats, the United Workers' Party 7 seats and the Dominica Freedom Party 2 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Results\nThe Dominica Labour Party increased their number of seats from 10 to 12, obtaining a majority. The United Workers' Party lost one seat, one independent candidate was elected, whilst the Dominica Freedom Party lost both its seats. It was the first election in 35 years where the Dominica Freedom Party\u2014the governing party of Eugenia Charles from 1980 to 1995\u2014did not win any seats. Prime Minister Skerrit announced that the day after the election would be a national holiday and called for Dominica to unite behind the government after the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 590]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181364-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Dominican general election, Aftermath\nFollowing the elections, the United Workers' Party made legal challenges to the results of five constituencies, Castle Bruce, Soufriere, Mahaut, St Joseph and Carib Territory alleging that there were problems with the counts and that the results were rigged by the government. Initial counts in the Castle Bruce constituency had the United Workers' Party candidate ahead but the final result saw the Dominica Labour Party win by one vote. Opposition supporters protested the results outside of the government headquarters in Roseau. On the 28 October 2005 the legal challenges were dismissed by a High Court Justice, Hugh Rawlins. The appeals court also rejected the lawsuit in April 2006 and the United Workers' Party then dropped the challenges.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 42], "content_span": [43, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181365-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Down District Council election\nElections to Down District Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 23 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181365-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Down District Council election, Districts results, Ballynahinch\n2001: 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2005: 2 x SDLP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 68], "content_span": [69, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181365-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Down District Council election, Districts results, Downpatrick\n2001: 4 x SDLP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2005: 4 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x Green2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in and Green gain from UUP and Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 67], "content_span": [68, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181365-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Down District Council election, Districts results, Newcastle\n2001: 3 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2005: 3 x SDLP, 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181365-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Down District Council election, Districts results, Rowallane\n2001: 3 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 2 x UUP, 2 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 65], "content_span": [66, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181366-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Sevens\nThe 2005 Dubai Sevens was an international rugby sevens tournament that took place at the Dubai Exiles Rugby Ground between 1 and 2 December 2005. It was the 18th edition of the Dubai Sevens (sixth as a World Series event) and was the first tournament of the 2005\u201306 World Sevens Series. Sixteen teams competed in the tournament and was separated into four groups of four with the top two teams from each group qualifying to the cup tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181366-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Sevens\nAfter winning the group, South Africa took out the cup final defeating Fiji by a score of 28\u201326. New Zealand took out the plate while the bowl and shield was won by Wales and Kenya respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181367-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships\nThe 2005 Dubai Duty Free Men's and Women's Tennis Championships was the 13th edition of this tennis tournament and was played on outdoor hard courts. The tournament was part of the International Series Gold of the 2005 ATP Tour and the Tier II series of the 2005 WTA Tour. It took place in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from February 21 through March 7, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181367-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships, Champions, Men's doubles\nMartin Damm / Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek defeated Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman / Fabrice Santoro 6\u20132, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 57], "content_span": [58, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181367-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships, Champions, Women's doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual / Paola Su\u00e1rez defeated Svetlana Kuznetsova / Alicia Molik, 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20132, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 59], "content_span": [60, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181368-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\n2005 Dubai Tennis Championships. Mahesh Bhupathi and Fabrice Santoro were the defending champions. Bhupathi partnered with Todd Woodbridge, losing in the semifinals. Santoro partnered with Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman, finishing runner-up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181368-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Doubles\nMartin Damm and Radek \u0160t\u011bp\u00e1nek won in the final 6\u20132, 6\u20134, against Jonas Bj\u00f6rkman and Fabrice Santoro.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181369-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Men's Singles\nTwo-time defending champion Roger Federer clinched a third successive success at the event, defeating Ivan Ljubi\u010di\u0107 6\u20131, 6\u20137(6\u20138), 6\u20133, in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 197]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181370-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nJanette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 and Conchita Mart\u00ednez were the defending champions, but Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 did not compete this year. Mart\u00ednez teamed up with Elena Likhovtseva and lost in quarterfinals to Daniela Hantuchov\u00e1 and Francesca Schiavone.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181370-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Doubles\nVirginia Ruano Pascual and Paola Su\u00e1rez won the title by defeating Svetlana Kuznetsova and Alicia Molik 6\u20137(7\u20139), 6\u20132, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 186]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181371-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nJustine Henin-Hardenne was the defending champion, but chose not to participate that year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181371-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles\nLindsay Davenport won the final, beating Jelena Jankovi\u0107, 6\u20134, 3\u20136, 6\u20134.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 122]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181371-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai Tennis Championships \u2013 Women's Singles, Singles results, Seeds\nThe top four seeds received a bye into the second round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [51, 73], "content_span": [74, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181372-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai World Cup\nThe 2005 Dubai World Cup was a horse race held at Nad Al Sheba Racecourse on Saturday 26 March 2005. It was the 10th running of the Dubai World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181372-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai World Cup\nThe winner was Kenneth & Sarah Ramsey's Roses In May, a five-year-old brown horse trained in the United States by Dale Romans and ridden by John R. Velazquez. Roses In May's victory was the first in the race for his owner, trainer and jockey.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181372-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dubai World Cup\nRoses In May had been one of the leading dirt performers in the United States in 2004 when he won the Whitney Stakes and finished second to Ghostzapper in the Breeders' Cup Classic. Before being shipped to Dubai he finished second to Saint Liam in the Donn Handicap in February. In the 2005 Dubai World Cup he started the 11/8 favourite and won by three lengths from his fellow American challenger Dynever, with Choctaw Nation one and a quarter lengths back in third. The Richard Mandella-trained second favourite Congrats finished fifth of the twelve runners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181373-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dublin Senior Football Championship\nKilmacud Crokes won the 2005 Dublin Senior Football Championship against Na Fianna. Kilmacud won by 1-12 to 0-9 against a Na Fianna side which came under new management with the loss of Paul Caffrey to the Dublin Senior Football Team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181374-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dublin Women's Soccer League\nThe 2005 Dublin Women's Soccer League was the 12th season of the women's association football league featuring teams mainly from the Greater Dublin Area. Newly promoted Dublin City University lost all twelve games. This included a 13\u20130 away defeat against Dundalk City in a game which saw Sonia Hoey score ten goals. Debutant Paula Murray also added a hat-trick. UCD won the title for a third successive season. They also completed a league double after defeating Dundalk City 2\u20130 in the DWSL Premier Cup final at the AUL Complex. The winning UCD team included Sylvia Gee. Dundalk City won the 2005 FAI Women's Cup, defeating a Peamount United team featuring Katie Taylor 1-0 in the final at Lansdowne Road. Sonia Hoey scored the winner in the 16th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181375-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Duke Blue Devils football team\nThe 2005 Duke Blue Devils football team represented the Duke University in the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was led by head coach Ted Roof. They played their homes games at Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, North Carolina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 276]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181376-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council election\nElections to Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council were held on 5 May 2005 on the same day as the other Northern Irish local government elections. The election used four district electoral areas to elect a total of 22 councillors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [56, 56], "content_span": [57, 292]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181376-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council election, Districts results, Blackwater\n2001: 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2005: 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 87], "content_span": [88, 217]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181376-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council election, Districts results, Clogher Valley\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: No change", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 91], "content_span": [92, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181376-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council election, Districts results, Dungannon Town\n2001: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x UUP, 1 x DUP, 1 x SDLP2005: 2 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 2 x DUP, 1 x UUP, 1 x SDLP2001-2005 Change: DUP gain from UUP", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 91], "content_span": [92, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181376-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council election, Districts results, Torrent\n2001: 3 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP, 1 x Independent2005: 4 x Sinn F\u00e9in, 1 x SDLP, 1 x UUP2001-2005 Change: Sinn F\u00e9in gain from Independent", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 56], "section_span": [58, 84], "content_span": [85, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181377-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Durham County Council election\nElections to Durham County Council took place on 5 May 2005 as part of the 2005 local elections in the United Kingdom. The election also took place on the same day as the 2005 general election. This was the council's final election before it became a unitary authority as part of changes to local government in 2009, with the first elections to the new unitary council taking place in 2008. New electoral division boundaries were introduced for this election, with 63 divisions returning one councillor each using the first past the post voting system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181377-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Durham County Council election\nLabour kept control of the council with 53 seats. The Liberal Democrats were second with five seats and the Conservatives won two seats. There were also three independents elected, including two from the Derwentside Independents group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181378-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Durham mayoral election\nThe 2005 Durham mayoral election was held on November 8, 2005 to elect the mayor of Durham, North Carolina. It saw the reelection of incumbent mayor Bill Bell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181378-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Durham mayoral election, Results, Primary\nCandidate Vincent Brown formally withdrew before the election, thus no votes were counted for him.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum\nA consultative referendum on the Treaty establishing a Constitution for Europe was held in the Netherlands on 1 June 2005 to decide whether the government should ratify the proposed Constitution of the European Union. The result was a \"No\" vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum\nThe vote was the first national referendum for over two hundred years, and was not binding on the government, meaning that despite the electorate rejecting the Constitution it could theoretically still be ratified by the States-General. The government did say, however, that it would abide by a decisive result, provided turnout exceeded 30%. Official results say that 61.6% of voters rejected the Constitution, on a turnout of 63.3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 478]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum\nThe possible answers were voor (For), tegen (Against). At some polling stations in the larger cities it was also possible to cast a blank ballot. The latter did not count for the result, but allowed voters to make an affirmative abstention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum\nThe referendum came just three days after the French referendum on the Constitution resulted in its rejection. Because all EU member states needed to ratify the treaty for it to take effect, some regarded the Dutch referendum as irrelevant. However, Dutch campaigners for a \"Yes\" vote appealed to the electorate to avoid damaging the Netherlands' standing in Europe in the way that the French result was perceived, in some quarters, to have weakened the position of France. Before the plebiscite, many \"No\" campaigners expressed the view that French rejection of the treaty would encourage Dutch voters to follow suit. A second \"No\" vote in a referendum in another of the founding countries of the European Communities was widely regarded as having the power to \"kill off\" the treaty. Opinion polls in the days leading up to the referendum gave the \"No\" campaign a clear lead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 920]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Debate in Parliament\nThe bill that led to the referendum was drafted by Members of the Dutch parliament: Farah Karimi (GreenLeft), Niesco Dubbelboer (Dutch Labour Party) and Boris van der Ham (D66). The government was not in favor of this bill. During and after the debate about the bill several political parties made clear how they would act with the different possible outcomes of the referendum. While the referendum was officially non-binding most parties were willing to follow the outcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 65], "content_span": [66, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Campaign\nThe governing and major opposition parties, making up 80 percent of the country's members of parliament, all backed the Constitution, along with the major newspapers. The parties of the coalition\u2014Christian Democratic Appeal, People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, and Democrats 66\u2014all campaigned for a \"Yes\" vote, as did the opposition Labour Party and GreenLeft. The Socialist Party, Pim Fortuyn List, Group Wilders, Reformed Political Party and ChristianUnion all campaigned for a \"No\" vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 550]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Campaign\nThe result is notable, since the largest party to campaign a \"No\" was the Socialist Party, with 6 percent of the votes during the last elections. The \"Yes\" campaign was supported by all major parties (most of which were before and directly after the no-vote at loss in the polls).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Campaign\nOpinion polls in the months before the vote tended to show the public split on the issue, with the \"No\" campaign taking a clear lead as the referendum approached; but as many as half of the electorate admitted to having little or no knowledge of the contents and provisions of the Constitution.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 348]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Campaign\nA popular Internet vote test called Referendumwijzer was launched on 21 April, but critics argued that it was biased towards the Constitution, pointing out that even those most strongly against the treaty were receiving results in favour of it because of questions regarding democracy and the environment which were not necessarily relevant to the Constitution. Television broadcasts by the \"Yes\" campaign provoked controversy for raising the spectre of war and chaos in Europe if the Constitution was rejected. The most emotive of the adverts, which featured emotive images of the Holocaust and Srebrenica Massacre, were never aired by the \"Yes\" campaign, but received national news coverage and were received very poorly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 777]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Campaign\nA TNS\u2013NIPO poll on 19 May indicated that 38% of people intended to vote, with 27% in favour, and 54% against the Constitution. A poll by the same organisation on 30 May\u2014two days before the referendum\u2014concluded that 58% of those who intended to vote would reject the treaty.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Campaign\nAs the referendum approached, many \"Yes\" campaigners began to predict defeat, and some even expressed relief after the French rejection of the treaty, taking the view that this would prevent the Netherlands from being the first or only country to obstruct the course of ratification, even though they also expressed dismay that the French result had given the \"No\" campaign greater legitimacy and acceptance, and had suggested to the public that the Netherlands' standing in Europe would not be significantly damaged by a \"No\" vote, with some going as far as saying that the Netherlands would look like a fool in front of the rest of Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 53], "content_span": [54, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Results, By Region\nOnly in 26 of the 467 Dutch municipalities was there a majority on the subject. In 446 municipalities, the majority voted against. Local context such as the average disposable income, unemployment rate, the percentage of non-Western immigrants and the address density were associated with local differences in referendum outcome.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 63], "content_span": [64, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Reasons for rejection\nAccording to a poll by Maurice de Hond, 30% of the Constitution's opponents used the referendum as an opportunity to demonstrate their dissatisfaction with the government, instead of confining their deliberations to the contents of the treaty that was put before them. At the time of the referendum, the Netherlands' centre-right coalition government, led by Jan Peter Balkenende, was suffering a period of unpopularity as it tried to push through cuts in public spending, and there was widespread disillusion with the country's political elite.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 612]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Reasons for rejection\nSome matters relating to the European Union that motivated the \"No\" vote were also not strictly connected to the provisions of the Constitution. The debate over the accession of Turkey to the European Union, as well as countries of Eastern Europe, led to fears of an increase in immigration, or an outsourcing of jobs to new member states.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0012-0001", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Reasons for rejection\nFurthermore, the Netherlands had not held a referendum on the euro, and amidst concern that its adoption had led to an increase in the cost of living (combined with Dutch citizens' status as the largest net per capita contributors to the EU), around 30% of the voters took the opportunity to \"take revenge\" on the political establishment for seeking to advance European integration in a manner that did not engage the public to the extent that it could have done.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Reasons for rejection\nA larger group of voters, however, voted \"No\" for reasons that were connected to the Constitution itself. 48% thought the new Constitution was worse than the existing treaties, and 44% cited the declining influence of the Netherlands in the EU, with the treaty as an important motivation. Linked to this was a fear of being dominated by the powerhouses of the European Union (particularly the United Kingdom, France and Germany). The perception of an aggressive and ruthless style on the part of the \"Yes\" campaign also put off many.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 600]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181379-0013-0001", "contents": "2005 Dutch European Constitution referendum, Reasons for rejection\nThe Minister of Justice, Piet Hein Donner, warned that a rejection would raise the chances of war and stated that \"the C in CDA [for 'Christian'] implies that you vote in favour of the constitution.\" The Minister for Economic Affairs, Laurens Jan Brinkhorst, said that \"the lights would go off\" in the case of a rejection and that the Netherlands would become \"the Switzerland of Europe.\" The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy withdrew a controversial television broadcast, in which rejection was connected with the Holocaust, the genocide in Srebrenica and the terrorist attacks on March 11, 2004 in Madrid. This seriously damaged the \"Yes\" campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 66], "content_span": [67, 725]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181380-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Dutch Figure Skating Championships took place between 7 and 9 January 2005 in The Hague. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, and ice dancing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181381-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open (badminton)\nThe 2005 Dutch Open in badminton was held in Den Bosch, Netherlands, from October 12, 2005 to October 16, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181382-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open (tennis)\nThe 2005 Dutch Open, also known by its sponsored name The Priority Telecom Open, was an ATP men's tennis tournament staged in Amersfoort, Netherlands and part of the International Series of the 2005 ATP Tour. It was the 46th edition of the tournament and was held from 18 July until 24 July 2005. Second-seeded Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez won his second event of the year, and the sixth title of his professional career.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 435]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181382-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open (tennis), Finals, Doubles\nMart\u00edn Garc\u00eda / Luis Horna defeated Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez / Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 41], "content_span": [42, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181383-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open \u2013 Doubles\nJaroslav Levinsk\u00fd and David \u0160koch were the defending champions, but Levinsk\u00fd did not participate this year. \u0160koch partnered Ji\u0159\u00ed Van\u011bk, losing in the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181383-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open \u2013 Doubles\nMart\u00edn Garc\u00eda and Luis Horna won in the final 6\u20134, 6\u20134, against Fernando Gonz\u00e1lez and Nicol\u00e1s Mass\u00fa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 126]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181384-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open \u2013 Singles\nMartin Verkerk was the defending champion, but did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 103]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181384-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch Open \u2013 Singles\nFernando Gonz\u00e1lez won the tournament, beating Agust\u00edn Calleri in the final, 7\u20135, 6\u20133.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 111]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181385-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch TT\nThe 2005 Dutch TT was the seventh round of the 2005 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 23\u201325 June 2005 at the TT Circuit Assen located in Assen, Netherlands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181385-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Dutch TT, Championship standings after the race (motoGP)\nBelow are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round seven has concluded.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 61], "content_span": [62, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181386-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Dwars door Vlaanderen\nThe 2005 Dwars door Vlaanderen was the 60th edition of the Dwars door Vlaanderen cycle race and was held on 23 March 2005. The race started in Kortrijk and finished in Waregem. The race was won by Niko Eeckhout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181387-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 D\u00e9castar\nThe 29th edition of the annual D\u00e9castar took place on 17 September and 18 September 2005 in Talence, France. The track and field competition, featuring a decathlon (men) and a heptathlon (women) event, was part of the 2005 IAAF World Combined Events Challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181388-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 E3 Prijs Vlaanderen\nThe 2005 E3 Prijs Vlaanderen was the 48th edition of the E3 Harelbeke cycle race and was held on 26 March 2005. The race started and finished in Harelbeke. The race was won by Tom Boonen of the Quick-Step team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181389-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 EAFF Women's Football Championship\nThe First EAFF Women's Football Championship was a football competition held from August 1 to August 6, 2005 in South Korea. South Korea won the first edition by beating its opponents to finish first, DPR Korea finished second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 267]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181390-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament\nThe 2005 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament was the 44th tournament in league history. It was played between March 4 and March 19, 2005. Opening round and quarterfinal games were played at home team campus sites, while the final four games were played at the Pepsi Arena (subsequently renamed Times Union Center) in Albany, New York. By winning the tournament, Cornell received the ECAC's automatic bid to the 2005 NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey Tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181390-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ECAC Hockey Men's Ice Hockey Tournament, Conference standings\nNote: GP = Games Played; W = Wins; L = Losses; T = Ties; PTS = Points; GF = Goals For; GA = Goals Against", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181391-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ECM Prague Open\nThe 2005 ECM Prague Open was a professional tennis tournament played on clay courts at the I. Czech Lawn Tennis Club in Prague, Czech Republic from in mid-May, 2005. It was the 10th edition of the men's tournament which was part of the 2005 ATP Challenger Series and the 9th edition of the women's tournament which was part of the 2005 WTA Tour as a Tier IV tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181391-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ECM Prague Open, Points and prize money\nNote: this information was only available for the women's tournament", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 44], "content_span": [45, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181391-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ECM Prague Open, Finals, Women's Doubles\n\u00c9milie Loit / Nicole Pratt defeated Jelena Kostani\u0107 / Barbora Str\u00fdcov\u00e1, 6\u20137(6\u20138), 6\u20134, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 45], "content_span": [46, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181394-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ED224\n2005 ED224 is the soonest virtual impactor of an asteroid larger than 50 meters in diameter with a better than 1:1-million chance of impacting Earth. On 11 March 2023 it has a 1-in-500,000 chance of impact. It is estimated to be 54-meters in diameter and has a short observation arc of 3-days. On 11 March 2023 it is nominally expected to be 2.7\u00a0AU (400\u00a0million\u00a0km) from Earth but has an uncertainty region billions of kilometers long. Since it has not been observed since 2005 and has an orbital period of 2.6\u00b10.3\u00a0years, we do not know where on its orbit 2005 ED224 is. Between 2005 and 2023 it could orbit the Sun 6.2 to 7.8 times.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 644]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181394-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ED224\nIt was first observed on 13 March 2005 when the asteroid was estimated to be 0.056\u00a0\u00b1\u00a00.006\u00a0AU (8.38\u00a0\u00b1\u00a00.90\u00a0million\u00a0km) from Earth and had a solar elongation of 137 degrees.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181394-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 ED224\nThe 11 March 2018 virtual impactor did not occur. The line of variation (LOV) for 2018 was billions of kilometers long and wrapped around the asteroid's orbit so that the asteroid could have been numerous different distances from the Earth.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 10], "section_span": [10, 10], "content_span": [11, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181395-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 ESPY Awards\nThe 2005 ESPY Awards (for the Olympic year 2004 and the year 2005) were announced from Kodak Theatre on July 13, 2005 and showed during the telecast on ESPN, July 17, 2005. ESPY Award is short for Excellence in Sports Performance Yearly Award.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181395-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 ESPY Awards\nThe show was hosted by Matthew Perry and had performances from Destiny's Child.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 96]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181396-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 EU Cup Australian rules football\nThe 2005 EU Cup of Australian rules football was held in London (England) on October 9, 2005, with 10 national teams. The tournament was won by Belgium who were crowned European Champions after defeating Sweden in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 262]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181397-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Football Championship\nThe 2005 EAFF East Asian Football Championship was a football competition between teams from East Asian countries and territories held from 31 July to 7 August 2005 in South Korea, with the qualifiers held in Taiwan in March 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181397-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Football Championship\nChina PR, South Korea, and Japan were the automatic finalists. The fourth finalist spot was competed among North Korea, Guam, Hong Kong, Chinese Taipei, and Mongolia. North Korea was the winner in the qualifiers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 250]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181397-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Football Championship, Preliminary competition, Matches\nMacau was suspended by FIFA from entering the competition during the match period. Each countries played against the other 4 countries on a round robin basis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 71], "content_span": [72, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181397-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Football Championship, Final tournament, Matches\nThe final tournament started on 31 July 2005. China won their first ever international title. The next tournament was scheduled for 2008.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 64], "content_span": [65, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181398-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Football Championship Final squads\nBelow are the squads for the 2005 East Asian Football Championship tournament in Japan. There were 23 players in each squad, including 3 goalkeepers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 50], "section_span": [50, 50], "content_span": [51, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games\nThe 4th East Asian Games was an international multi-sport event for countries in East Asia which was held in Macau from October 29 to November 6, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games, Host city\nAt the 11th EAGA Council Meeting held in Guam in March 1996, Macau, then a Portuguese colony was awarded the right and honour to host the 4th East Asian Games.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 32], "content_span": [33, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games, Emblem\nThe official emblem is the swirling pattern image of five Olympic colours blue, black, red, yellow and green which represents the Five Elements - Metal, Wood, Water, Fire and Earth as well as Macau as a new era multi-cultural city that fuse the Western and Eastern culture in the East Asian region with strong global influence.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 357]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games, Mascot\nThe official mascot is \"Pak Pak\" the squirrel which comes from Guia Hill, a place in Macau which has a lot of fir trees and is the site of the oldest lighthouse on the China coast - the Guia Lighthouse. He is described as friendly, sporty and happy-go-lucky.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games, Motto\nThe official motto: \"New East\tNew Era\tLet's All Join The Games\" represents the East Asians' powerful energy that generates the new era, new beginning and progress towards prosperity with the rest of the world.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 28], "content_span": [29, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games, Theme song\nThe official theme song is \"We Will Shine\" which represents the value and meaning of persistence, sacrifice and pain and the dreams of the athletes and the celebration of the games as part of life.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 33], "content_span": [34, 231]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181399-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 East Asian Games, Sports\nThe 2005 East Asian Games featured events in 17 sports, which was a new high for the competition. 11 of them are Olympic sports.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 29], "content_span": [30, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181400-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 East Carolina Pirates football team\nThe 2005 East Carolina Pirates football team represented East Carolina University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181401-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team\nThe 2005 Eastern Illinois Panthers football team represented Eastern Illinois University as a member of the Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) during the 2005 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by 19th-year head coach Bob Spoo, the Panthers compiled an overall record of 9\u20133 with a mark of 8\u20130 in conference play, winning the OVC title. Eastern Illinois was invited to the NCAA Division I-AA Football Championship playoffs, where they lost Southern Illinois in the first round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181402-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern League season\nThe 2005 Eastern League season began on approximately April 1 and the regular season ended on approximately September 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181402-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern League season\nThe Akron Aeros defeated the Portland Sea Dogs 3 games to 1 to win the Eastern League Championship Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181402-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern League season, Playoffs, Divisional Series, Northern Division\nThe Portland Sea Dogs defeated the Trenton Thunder in the Northern Division playoffs 3 games to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181402-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern League season, Playoffs, Divisional Series, Southern Division\nThe Akron Aeros defeated the Altoona Curve in the Southern Division playoffs 3 games to 2.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181402-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern League season, Playoffs, Championship Series\nThe Akron Aeros defeated the Portland Sea Dogs in the ELCS 3 games to 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 57], "content_span": [58, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181403-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team\nThe 2005 Eastern Michigan Eagles football team represented Eastern Michigan University during the 2005 NCAA Division I-A football season. Eastern Michigan competed as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) West Division. The team was coached by Jeff Genyk and played their homes game in Rynearson Stadium.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 355]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181404-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe 2005 East\u2013West Shrine Game was the 80th staging of the all-star college football exhibition game featuring NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision players. The game featured over 80 players from the 2004 college football season, and prospects for the 2005 Draft of the professional National Football League (NFL). In the week prior to the game, scouts from all 32 NFL teams attended. The proceeds from the East\u2013West Shrine Game benefit Shriners Hospitals for Children.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 501]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181404-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe game was played on January 15, 2005, at 11\u00a0a.m. PT at SBC Park in San Francisco, and was televised by ESPN. This was the last Shrine Game played in California.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181404-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 East\u2013West Shrine Game\nThe offensive MVP was Stefan LeFors (QB, Louisville), while the defensive MVP was Alex Green (S, Duke). The inaugural Pat Tillman Award was presented to Morgan Scalley (S, Utah); the award \"is presented to a player who best exemplifies character, intelligence, sportsmanship and service\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 315]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181404-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 East\u2013West Shrine Game, Coaching staff\nEast head coach: Joe Tiller (Tiller was a player in the 1963 game)East assistants: Jim Chaney & Brock SpackWest head coach: Mike RileyWest assistants: Mark Banker & Paul ChrystSource:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181405-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Edmonton Eskimos season\nThe 2005 Edmonton Eskimos finished 3rd in the West Division with an 11\u20137 record and won the Grey Cup. This was the last season in their 34-year streak of making the playoffs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181406-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Edward Jancarz Memorial\nThe 9th Edward Jancarz Memorial was the 2005 version of the Edward Jancarz Memorial. It took place on 4 June in the Stal Gorz\u00f3w Stadium in Gorz\u00f3w Wielkopolski, Poland. The Memorial was won by Jason Crump who beat Rune Holta, Leigh Adams and Tony Rickardsson in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181406-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Edward Jancarz Memorial, Heat details\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fell \u2022 ns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum\nThe 2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum took place in Egypt on 25 May 2005. The referendum was on a proposed change to the constitution of Egypt which would establish direct elections for the presidency. The opposition parties called for a boycott of the vote, which was passed by a large majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Background\nUnder the existing constitution, the People's Assembly, the lower house of the then-bicameral Parliament of Egypt, decided upon a candidate for president. That candidate was then confirmed by the people in a referendum. The incumbent president Hosni Mubarak was confirmed in four referendums in 1981, 1987, 1993 and 1999 receiving at least 95% supporting votes in each referendum. By 2005 international and domestic pressure grew for reforms to this process to permit direct elections for the presidency.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Background\nOn the 26 February 2005 President Mubarak called on parliament to amend Article 76 of the constitution to allow multi candidate elections for president to take place in time for the presidential election due later in the year. This change would then be put to a referendum in May. On the 10 May the Parliament of Egypt overwhelmingly approved the change to the constitution by 405 votes to 34 and the referendum was set for the 25 May.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 51], "content_span": [52, 487]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Referendum question\nDo you agree to amending Article 76 of the Constitution of the Arab Republic of Egypt?", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 60], "content_span": [61, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nOpposition parties called on voters to boycott the referendum. They were opposed to the strict requirements that the amended constitution would require candidates to meet in order to be able to stand in presidential elections. Under the proposed amendment independent candidates would be required to get the support of 250 elected members of councils and parliament including 65 of the 444 members of the People's Assembly of Egypt in order to stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 500]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0004-0001", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nCandidates from political parties could stand in the upcoming election in September, but for future presidential elections they would have to win 5% of the seats in the People's Assembly before being able to field a candidate. Political parties would also have to have existed for five years before they could put a candidate up for election. The councils and parliament were all dominated by members of the governing National Democratic Party and no other political party then met the 5% level. As a result, the opposition said that the changes would not allow candidates to stand unless the governing party permitted them to. As well as the legal opposition parties, the banned Muslim Brotherhood group also called on voters to boycott the vote, describing it as meaningless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 827]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nThe government described the amendment as the historic beginning of a new democratic era. They said that restrictions on who could stand as a candidate were necessary in order to prevent candidates who would use their wealth to buy votes and to ensure that only candidates who had a serious chance could stand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 360]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Campaign\nOn the 24 May five petitions by the opposition to stop the vote were rejected by the Egyptian judiciary.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 49], "content_span": [50, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Voting\nOn the day of the referendum itself demonstrations were made against the strict rules on who would be able to stand in future presidential elections. At protests in Cairo demonstrators were beaten by government agents and supporters. Observers reported seeing a low turnout at the polls in the capital Cairo but reports said there had been a larger turnout elsewhere.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Voting\nMany Egyptians got time off from work to vote and the Governor of Cairo gave free public transport to those who showed their voter registration card. In a number of areas government employees were taken by bus to the polling stations in order to vote with support for President Mubarak being said to be one of the main reasons for people to vote yes in the referendum. The official turnout figures at around 54% were higher than in any previous presidential referendum.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 47], "content_span": [48, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Aftermath\nFollowing the referendum a report produced by Egyptian judges for the Cairo Judges' Syndicate said that the referendum had seen large scale fraud and that the results had been falsified. They said that polling stations where they had supervised voting had seen only a very low turnout, while in areas overseen by civil servants turnout was often over 90%. The Interior Ministry, however, rejected these claims saying that people in Southern Egypt had turned out in high levels due to their interest in voting.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 560]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181407-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian constitutional referendum, Aftermath\nPresidential elections were held under the amended constitution in September 2005 and President Mubarak was re-elected with over 88% of the vote on a low turnout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 50], "content_span": [51, 213]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election\nParliamentary elections were held in Egypt in three-stage elections in November and December 2005 to elect 444 of the 454 members of the People's Assembly. The elections formed the Eighth Assembly since the adoption of the 1971 Constitution. Over 7,000 candidates competed in 222 constituencies for the Assembly's 444 elected seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 369]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election\nThey were viewed as yet another test to the current wave of political reform, occurring only 2 months after the first multi-candidate presidential elections. Although the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) maintained its majority and control of the Assembly, large gains were made by others at the expense of the NDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 358]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election\nFurther importance is attached to these elections as a party must achieve 5% of the seats in the Assembly to field a candidate in the next Egyptian presidential elections in 2011.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 216]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe election process ran in the three stages from November 7 to December 9, 2005 using single member plurality, with over 32 million registered voters in the 222 constituencies. Official registration for the candidates began on October 12, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 300]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe role of the police is restricted to maintaining peace and order at the polling stations without interference in the voting process or entering the voting stations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe first stage was held on Wednesday November 9, with run-off elections on Tuesday November 15 with 10.7 million registered voters covering 8 Egyptian governorates: Cairo, Giza, al-Minufiyah, Bani Suwayf, Asyut, al-Minya, Matruh and al-Wadi al-Jadid", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 305]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe second stage was held on Sunday November 20, with run-off elections on Saturday November 26 with 10.5 million registered voters covering 9 Egyptian governorates: Alexandria, al-Buhayrah, al-Isma'iliyah, Bur Sa'id, as-Suways, al-Qalyubiyah, al-Gharbiyah, al-Fayyum and Qina.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 332]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Electoral system\nThe third stage was held on December 1, with run-off elections on Wednesday December 7 with 10.6 million registered voters covering 9 Egyptian governorates: ad-Daqahliyah, ash-Sharqiyah, Kafr ash Shaykh, Dimyat, Suhaj, Aswan, al-Bahr al-Ahmar, South Sinai and North Sinai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 327]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Contesting parties\nThe 2000 legislative election resulted in the following seat distribution in the Seventh Assembly:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Contesting parties\nInitially the NDP scored only 40% of the seats, but many independents switched their political affiliation back to NDP giving it its soaring majority.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 56], "content_span": [57, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Campaign\nOfficially, the campaign period starts immediately after the announcement of the final list of candidates and ends one day before election day. In case of run-offs, it restarts the day following the results day to end the day before election day. Campaign expenditures are limited to not more than 70,000 Egyptian pounds, with restrictions of any foreign financial assistance or endorsements. Restrictions are also put on using public utilities (transportation, buildings, public sector companies, as well as companies with government-owned shares).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 46], "content_span": [47, 596]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Conduct\nThe official monitors of the elections are the judiciary and the governmental National Council for Human Rights (NCHR). Over 30 human rights organizations, civil society groups and NGOs pledged to monitor the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Conduct\nThe judiciary asked the civil society organizations to form a \"National Authority for monitoring elections\" that would monitor the elections. Also this authority would replace the wooden ballot boxes with transparent ones (this was done this year), put surveillance cameras inside the polling stations that would provide constant monitoring of the election process (currently under study and is done partially by the media) and to air the vote count live on state television.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 521]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Issues\nThe main concern during the election was not on certain electoral programs or campaigns but rather on how much the oppositions will gain which push for more reform in the future and pave the way for more balance of power in the Egyptian politics. The relevance of this year's elections to the 2011 presidential election gives it even more importance in the Egyptian political arena. Some other issues include the potential amendments promised to the constitution, and the introduction of more laws to political and economic reform.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 44], "content_span": [45, 576]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181408-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian parliamentary election, Results\nOn 12 December 2005 President Mubarak appointed ten members of the Assembly. Of the appointed, five are men, five are women and four of them are Copts. The appointed members were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 45], "content_span": [46, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election\nPresidential elections were held in Egypt on September 7, 2005, the first to feature more than one candidate. Incumbent president Hosni Mubarak was re-elected for a fifth consecutive six-year term in office, with official results showing he won 88.6% of the vote. Mubarak's main opponent, Ayman Nour, of the Tomorrow Party, is estimated to have received 7.3% of the vote and Numan Gumaa received 2.8%, however, Nour claimed that prior polling results showed over 30%. Criticism of the election process has centred on the process of selecting the eligible candidates, and on alleged election-law violations during voting. Mubarak was sworn in for his new term on September 27.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 711]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Candidates\nThe election was the first-ever multi-party election in the history of Hosni Mubarak's authoritarian rule. Ten parties were set to take part; the leading candidates were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 47], "content_span": [48, 218]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Change from referendum on Mubarak's rule\nUntil recently, Egyptians had only been able to approve or reject a candidate appointed by parliament, which is dominated by Hosni Mubarak's NDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Change from referendum on Mubarak's rule\nMubarak had been re-elected four times during his 24-year rule by such a referendum. Mubarak won the 1999 referendum with almost 94% of the vote, though turnout was probably around 10%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Change from referendum on Mubarak's rule\nUnder United States pressure, Egypt agreed to allow multi-party elections for the first time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Change from referendum on Mubarak's rule\nA constitutional amendment approved in a referendum in May 2005 opened the way for multi-candidate presidential elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 77], "content_span": [78, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nUnder Egyptian election law, all Egyptians over age eighteen are required to vote. However, out of a population of approximately 77,500,000 (the largest in the Arab world), only about 32 million voters were registered (approximately 40% of the total population).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 334]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nUnder the election law, parties proposed candidates for the election, which were reviewed by the Presidential Election Commission. Of the 30 proposed candidates, only 10 were allowed to participate in the presidential election by the Presidential Election Commission. One prominent candidate not allowed to run was Talaat Sadat, the nephew of former President Anwar Sadat, who appealed his disqualification unsuccessfully.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 494]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nEgypt's largest Islamic group, the Muslim Brotherhood, was not permitted to field a candidate for the election because the organization is banned by the government, which prohibits political parties with a stated religious agenda. The Brotherhood did not back any of the other candidates, but they encouraged Egyptians to go to the polls and vote for anyone other than Mubarak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nThe election campaign kicked off on August 17, 2005 and lasted until September 4, 2005. While many believed Hosni Mubarak's re-election a foregone conclusion, he campaigned seriously, trying to win votes across Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\n9,865 polling places were open until 10:00\u00a0p.m. Wednesday, September 7, so that voters could cast their ballots. Full results were not expected until at least Thursday September 8.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nThe election was overseen by Egyptian judges. No international monitors were allowed to oversee the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nAccording to a late August report by the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, media coverage was biased in favour of Hosni Mubarak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, 2005 presidential election process\nIf no candidate had received 50% of the vote, the top two candidates would have contested a second election scheduled for September 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Criticisms of the 2005 presidential election arrangements\nSome of the main legal opposition parties, including the leftist Tagammu Party and the Nasserist Party, boycotted the election, saying it was unlikely to be free or fair. Those opposing the election said the electoral reforms had not gone far enough because the election regulations severely restricted independent candidates and overwhelmingly favoured the NDP.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 94], "content_span": [95, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Criticisms of the 2005 presidential election arrangements\nSecondly, the Muslim Brotherhood, believed to be the most popular opposition group in Egypt, was excluded from running in the elections because Mubarak's government had made it officially illegal and barred from major political processes. Supporters of the Brotherhood and other opposition parties stated that this undermined the credibility of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 94], "content_span": [95, 453]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Criticisms of the 2005 presidential election arrangements\nIn addition, there appeared to be official harassment of the leading opposition candidate Nour, who was stripped of his parliamentary immunity and arrested on January 2005, on what many observers regarded as trumped-up charges. He was imprisoned for a short time that year before public and international outcry resulted in his release before trial.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 94], "content_span": [95, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Criticisms of the 2005 presidential election arrangements\nThe New Wafd Party and the Tomorrow (Ghad) Party contested the election even though they had opposed the May 2005 constitutional referendum, and their respective candidates, Numan Gumaa and Ayman Nour, drew significant support\u2014Nour won 12% and Gumaa won 5-7%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 94], "content_span": [95, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Conduct\nAt 10:00\u00a0a.m. on September 7, two hours after the start of the election, Egypt's Presidential Election Commission unexpectedly stated that it would allow civil society groups to monitor the election. However, in many cases they were not allowed into polling places and were beaten and interrogated, especially in Southern Egypt.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 373]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Conduct\nThese citizen monitors were in addition to the Egyptian judges who have been allowed to independently monitor the elections.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Conduct\nAllegations of election law violations surfaced during the voting. News media reported that Mubarak's National Democratic Party transported voters to the polls by bus, and allegedly did not allow voters to mark their choices behind a curtain, an essential requirement of a secret ballot. Polling stations in Cairo were plastered with Mubarak posters and members of the NDP hovered over voters, taking ballots from voters and handing them to polling station officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Conduct\nAyman Nour of the Tomorrow Party, one of the most prominent opposition candidates, along with others, has accused the government of not using truly indelible ink on the hands of voters, allowing voters favoring Hosni Mubarak to remove stamps indicating they had voted and return to vote again. Indelible ink was used only in major boxes, while non-permanent ink was used in many other boxes. There were rumors of certain voters that had no ink at all which would make voter fraud even less difficult. Nour also alleged that there was widespread vote-buying, a charge supported by the Egyptian Organisation for Human Rights, though not otherwise corroborated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Conduct\nThe Egyptian Organisation for Human Rights, while supporting Nour's claims, has stated that the irregularities were insufficient to require a rerun of the election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Results\nThe Mubarak government initially stated that turnout was high, though numbers varied. Surprisingly, on September 9, the government released results and turnout figures that were low and may have been accurate, as low in some places as 19%. On September 8, however, an election official and Mubarak's campaign both stated that it was around 30%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Results\nBoth on election day and afterwards, election monitoring groups stated that turnout was low, reportedly because ordinary Egyptians thought the outcome a foregone conclusion. On September 8, anonymous sources stated turnout in Alexandria, the second-largest city in Egypt, was 17%, and turnout in Isma\u00eflia (a city of about 750,000) was about 24%, with Mubarak taking more than 80% of the vote.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Results\nWael Namara, a spokesman for Ayman Nour of the Tomorrow Party, estimated turnout to be between 10 and 15% in the countryside and from 3 to 5% in the cities. In previous elections, voter turnout has run at less than 10 percent. Voter turnout in the May 2005 referendum that allowed the presidential election was officially reported as 54%, but judges monitoring the elections said it was more like 3%.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 445]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Results\nMedia reports on September 8, based on anonymous statements from election commission officials, stated that preliminary results showed President Hosni Mubarak winning 78% - 80% of the vote and Ayman Nour winning 12%. Gumaa was reported as receiving 5-7%. Late reports from September 8 placed Mubarak's numbers at approximately 72%, based once again on anonymous sources.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 415]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Results\nThe official result, that Mubarak won the election with 88.6% of the vote, was announced on September 9, 2005. Detailed results, with results and voting breakdowns by province for 15 of the 26 provinces (not including the largest provinces), were published in Al-Ahram, a state newspaper. The same source states that Nour won 6.2% in the 15 provinces, 20% in the Nile delta province of Buheira, and 16% in Alexandria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 44], "content_span": [45, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, Nour demands rerun\nFollowing widespread reports of election law violations, Nour immediately demanded a rerun of the election. However, the Presidential Election Commission rejected his request as baseless on September 8, 2005, a decision that cannot be appealed. Nour's campaign manager, Wael Nawara, noted the Nour camp's surprise that the Presidential Election Commission would reject Nour's claims \"despite the coverage from the media and the repetitive nature of these complaints.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 66], "content_span": [67, 534]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, International reactions\nSaudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal stated that the elections show that Mubarak has democratic intentions and that elections can take place there without harming stability: \"The poll that took place in Egypt refutes the case made by those who claim Egypt is unstable and question its march toward the future.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, International reactions\nUnited States State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said that the United States saw this election as a \"historic departure\" and the debate during the election process would \"enrich the Egyptian political dialogue, certainly for years to come.\" McCormack also stated that \"the Egyptian security services showed discipline in ensuring safety and security\" and praised the \"relative calm\" of Election Day. However, McCormack criticized the lack of international monitors and the late decision to allow monitors, as well as the lack of media access that prevented opposition candidates from getting their message out.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 689]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, International reactions\nAs for election day itself, he stated that \"there were reports of some irregularities at polling places in terms of campaign posters or t-shirts being seen at the actual polling place and a variety of other issues.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 287]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0030-0002", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, International reactions\nThe United States expressed its hope that \"the Egyptian Government and the Egyptian people can build upon this positive first step in holding this multi-candidate presidential election and build on the positive experiences, the positive actions in this election, as they look towards parliamentary elections in the fall time and look to addressing some of those issues that I mentioned that were less positive.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 71], "content_span": [72, 483]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, Protests by Kefaya movement\nOn September 7, men in plainclothes broke up a Cairo protest by the Kefaya movement calling for Egyptians to boycott the elections, beating some of the protesters. Media sources state that as many as three thousand Kifaya protesters illegally marched on central Cairo, possibly the largest crowd ever drawn by that protest movement, while armed soldiers and police watched.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 75], "content_span": [76, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181409-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 Egyptian presidential election, Aftermath, More protests\nA larger protest of around 10,000 people was organized by Kifaya on September 10, 2005, to contest the election results and the mass rigging activities and cheating that occurred on the election day. It was reported by independent observers, reporters and candidate representatives that the NDP (Mubarak's Party) used government resources to change the election results. In some cases, citizens were beaten or forced to vote for Mubarak. In other cases, the boxes were already filled with marked ballots. However, the most explicit action that provoked the protest was allowing pro-Mubarak voters only to vote without being previously registered in the voter lists, giving Mubarak between 20 and 30 extra illegal points in the results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 61], "content_span": [62, 797]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181410-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eindhoven Team Time Trial\nThese are the results for the 2005 edition of the TTT Eindhoven race, won by Gerolsteiner ahead of Phonak.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181411-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 El Mreiti base attack\nThe 2005 El Mreiti base attack occurred on 4 June 2005 when militants from the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, a predecessor group of AQIM, attacked a remote army garrison in western Mauritania, killing eighteen government troops and capturing a significant amount of weapons. According to a statement released by militants, the attackers surrounded the base and engaged in a battle that lasted several hours, eventually breaching the base, seizing large quantities of weapons and ammunition, and fleeing. The same statement claimed that fifty Mauritanian troops had been killed in the assault.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181411-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 El Mreiti base attack\nFive GSPC militants, all Algerian nationals, were killed during the battle. The attack was led by Mokhtar Belmokhtar, an Algerian jihadist and veteran of the Soviet\u2013Afghan War. It was one of the first al-Qaeda linked operations to occur on Mauritanian soil and spurred the government of Mauritania to ally with Algeria and Mali in a bid to root out militants in the region.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 400]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181412-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 El Paso mayoral election\nThe 2005 El Paso mayoral election was held on May 7 and June 6, 2005, to elect the mayor of El Paso, Texas. It saw the election of John Cook, who unseated incumbent mayor Joe Wardy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181412-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 El Paso mayoral election\nThis was the first election held for a newly extended four-year term, as previous elections had been to two-year terms.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season\nThe 2005 Elite League speedway season was the 71st season of the top division of speedway in the United Kingdom and governed by the Speedway Control Bureau (SCB), in conjunction with the British Speedway Promoters' Association (BSPA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season, Season summary\nIn 2005, the league consisted of ten teams, with the title being decided by a play-off between the top four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season, Season summary\nBelle Vue Aces topped the regular season table and won the Knockout Cup. Their world champion rider Jason Crump was in superb form throughout the season. Fellow Australian Leigh Adams topped the league averages for Swindon for arguably the second consecutive season but it was Coventry Bees that experienced their first title success since the glory days of the late 1980s. Coventry had finished bottom of the table during the previous season and with the exception of finishing runner-up in 2003 had been starved of success. The club made a change that proved instrumental, they brought in Scott Nicholls from Ipswich and supported by Andreas Jonsson and Chris Harris the team defeated Belle Vue in the Elite League Play off final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 49], "content_span": [50, 782]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season, Play-offs\nSemi-Final decided over one leg. Grand Final decided by aggregate scores over two legs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 44], "content_span": [45, 132]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season, Play-offs, Final, Second leg\nThe Coventry Bees were declared League Champions, winning on aggregate 101-83.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 63], "content_span": [64, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season, Elite League Knockout Cup\nThe 2005 Elite League Knockout Cup was the 67th edition of the Knockout Cup for tier one teams. Belle Vue Aces were the winners of the competition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 60], "content_span": [61, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181413-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Elite League speedway season, Elite League Knockout Cup, Final, Second leg\nThe Belle Vue Aces were declared Knockout Cup Champions, winning on aggregate 97-83.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [35, 79], "content_span": [80, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181414-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Emerald Bowl\nThe 2005 Emerald Bowl, part of the 2005\u201306 NCAA bowl game season, was played on December 29, 2005, at AT&T Park in San Francisco, California. It featured the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, and the Utah Utes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181414-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Emerald Bowl, Game summary\nUtah took a 6\u20130 lead with 12:26 left in the first quarter, following a 14-yard touchdown pass from Brett Ratliff to wide receiver Travis LaTendresse. With 3:59 left in the first quarter, Ratliff again found LaTendresse, this time for a 23-yard score, and Utah increased its lead to 13\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 319]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181414-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Emerald Bowl, Game summary\nJust 30 seconds into the third quarter, Ratliff found LaTendresse for a third time, connecting on a 25-yard touchdown pass, as Utah opened up a 20\u20130 lead. Georgia Tech attempted to claw its way back in the game, after Reggie Ball threw a 31-yard touchdown pass to George Cooper, cutting Utah's lead to 20\u20137. With 3 seconds left in the half, Travis Bell kicked a 29-yard field goal, to make the halftime score 20\u201310 Utah.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181414-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Emerald Bowl, Game summary\nIn the third quarter, Dan Beardall added a 23-yard field goal, increasing Utah's lead to 23\u201310. With 11:44 left in the game, Ratliff found LaTendresse for the fourth time in the game, throwing a 16-yard touchdown pass, giving Utah a 31\u201310 lead. Quinton Ganther's 41-yard touchdown run sealed the deal, as Utah went on to win 38\u201310.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 31], "content_span": [32, 363]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181415-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Emilia-Romagna regional election\nThe Emilia-Romagna regional election of 2005 took place on 3\u20134 April 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181415-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Emilia-Romagna regional election\nThe incumbent President Vasco Errani, a member of the social democratic Democrats of the Left, was re-elected defeating by a landslide Carlo Monaco, the candidate of the centre-right coalition led by Forza Italia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 251]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181415-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Emilia-Romagna regional election, Electoral law\nThe Legislative Assembly of Emilia-Romagna (Assemblea Legislativa dell'Emilia-Romagna) is composed of 50 members. 40 councillors are elected in provincial constituencies by proportional representation using the largest remainder method with a Droop quota and open lists, while 10 councillors (elected in bloc) come from a \"regional list\", including the President-elect. One seat is reserved for the candidate who comes second. If a coalition wins more than 50% of the total seats in the Council with PR, only 5 candidates from the regional list will be chosen and the number of those elected in provincial constituencies will be 45. If the winning coalition receives less than 40% of votes special seats are added to the Council to ensure a large majority for the President's coalition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 52], "content_span": [53, 839]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181416-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Emperor's Cup\nThe 85th Emperor's Cup was held between September 17, 2005 and January 1, 2006. The tournament was won by Urawa Red Diamonds. The J.League Division 2 clubs qualified automatically to the third round, while the J.League Division 1 clubs qualified automatically to the fourth round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 299]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181417-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Emperor's Cup Final\nThis is the current revision of this page, as edited by Monkbot (talk | contribs) at 00:19, 8 January 2020 (\u2192\u200etop: Task 15: language icon template(s) replaced (1\u00d7);). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 255]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181417-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Emperor's Cup Final\n2005 Emperor's Cup Final was the 85th final of the Emperor's Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on January 1, 2006. Urawa Reds won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181418-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Empress's Cup, Overview\nIt was contested by 32 teams, and Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181419-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Empress's Cup Final\n2005 Empress's Cup Final was the 27th final of the Empress's Cup competition. The final was played at National Stadium in Tokyo on January 1, 2006. Nippon TV Beleza won the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181419-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Empress's Cup Final, Overview\nDefending champion Nippon TV Beleza won their 7th title, by defeating Tasaki Perule FC 4\u20131 with Shinobu Ono, Eriko Arakawa and Yuki Nagasato goal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 34], "content_span": [35, 181]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181420-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eneco Tour\nThe 2005 Eneco Tour of Benelux road cycling race took place from August 3 to August 10. The Eneco tour is the continuation of the Tour of the Netherlands. This first edition covered parts of the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany. 184 cyclists and 23 cycling teams participated. 20 are UCI ProTour teams, the three remaining are Shimano Memory-Corp and the Belgian teams MrBookmaker and Chocolade Jacques. The winner, Bobby Julich (Team CSC), won the last stage, an individual time trial with a time of 31'14\". This launched him from the twelfth place 12 to the first. Leif Hoste (Discovery Channel), thirteenth, became second. Max van Heeswijk (DSC) wore the red jersey two days (the 2nd and the 3rd) and Rik Verbrugghe five days.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 745]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181420-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Eneco Tour\nThis edition was somewhat tainted by an incident during stage 4. Near Stavelot, the peloton were sent in the wrong direction, while the handful of men ahead were on the correct course. As a result, their lead grew to about 15 minutes, which would have made it nearly impossible for anyone else to attain the overall victory, destroying the appeal of the race. The jury decided that the leaders would have to halt until the peloton's lag was reduced to what it was before, but they initially refused. Eventually, they had to be halted by the police, causing leader Bart Dockx to sit on the ground by way of protest.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 630]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181420-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Eneco Tour\nIn the final time trial, Bobby Julich climbed from 12th to 1st overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 15], "section_span": [15, 15], "content_span": [16, 87]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby\nThe 2005 William Hill Greyhound Derby took place in June and July with the final being held on 2 July 2005 at Wimbledon Stadium. The winner Westmead Hawk received the title and \u00a3100,000 in prize money.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 230]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Final result, Distances\n1\u00be, 3, \u00bd, \u00be, short head (lengths)The distances between the greyhounds are in finishing order and shown in lengths. One length is equal to 0.08 of one second.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 53], "content_span": [54, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Final result, Final Report\nThe 2005 title was won by Westmead Hawk. It was the second year in a row that trainer Nick Savva won. After coming last out of the traps and having found trouble in the race, the winner was at the back of the field for most of the final. However, he ran on strong and took the lead just before the finishing line, providing a great climax to the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 56], "content_span": [57, 408]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe leading English hopes were the Charlie Lister range including Robbie De Niro, Bell Devotion and Laurels champion Ningbo Jack. The Carly Philpott duo of Ballymac Pires and Ballymac Kewell were also considered dangers. Ireland sent over an impressive group led by the Frazer Black's Irish Derby finalists Droopys Marco (also the Scottish Greyhound Derby champion) and Droopys Maldini. The Seamus Graham pair Blue Majestic and Mineola Farloe lined up alongside the McKenna team now under control of Ger McKenna's son Owen, which included Superb Pass, Irish Derby finalist Geldrops Touch, Agassis Ace and Boherduff Light.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe 2004 Greyhound of the Year Fire Height Dan won his first round heat on 2 June but it was found that he had injured a pisiform bone. His connections announced that he would be retired. Droopys Leroy went fastest on the night, winning in 28.59. On the third night of heats Droopys Marco (28.60), Ballymac Pires (28.48) and Droopys Maldini (28.49) all impressed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 412]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nThe second round began on 10 June with surprise eliminations including Agassis Ace, Hee Haws Barney and Ballymac Pires. The following night Westmead Hawk won again in a heat that contained Droopys Maldini, Droopys Marco impressed again going fastest in 28.58.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 308]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nDroopys Leroy was eliminated in the first heat of round three which was won by Count Gelignite. The next heats went to Toms View, Velvet Rebel, Geldrops Touch and Ballymac Niloc before Droopys Marco held on to defeat the strong finishing Westmead Hawk in a sensational heat. Blue Majestic and Lenson Thierry completed the night's winners. Droopys Maldini and Romeo Paddy were high profile casualties.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 449]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nNingbo Jack won the first quarter final and Blue Majestic and January Tiger won heats 3 and 4 respectively but heat 2 was another meeting between Droopys Marco and Westmead Hawk. However this time Hawk caught Droopys Marco on the run-in to claim a revenge victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 313]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181421-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 English Greyhound Derby, Competition report\nWestmead Hawk became a strong favourite when Droopys Marco failed to progress to the final in the first semi final, he found trouble in a race won by Ningo Jack and finished last. Blue Majestic and Geldrops Touch claimed the other two qualifying places. In the second semi final Westmead Hawk also found trouble but made his way through the field to finish second behind Mineola Farloe with outsider Blonde Mac taking third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 48], "content_span": [49, 479]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181422-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 English National Badminton Championships\nThe 2005 English National Badminton Championships were held at the Manchester Velodrome in Manchester, from 4-6 February, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 45], "section_span": [45, 45], "content_span": [46, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season\nThe 2005 English cricket season was the 106th in which the County Championship had been an official competition. Before it began, a resurgent England cricket team had won four Test series in a row, going unbeaten through the 2004 calendar year. The start of the international season saw England defeat Bangladesh 2\u20130 in their two-match series, winning both Tests by an innings. This was followed by a tri-nations one-day tournament that also featured Australia. Australia still started the Test series as favourites but most fans expected England to put up a challenge.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season\nDespite losing the first Test by 239 runs. England came back to win the second and fourth Tests, and draw the third and fifth, to win the Ashes for the first time since 1986\u201387. It was the 72nd test series between the two sides with England finally winning 2-1. Andrew Flintoff dominated with both bat and ball for England, scoring 402 runs \u2013 more than any Australian \u2013 and taking 24 wickets \u2013 more than any Australian bar Shane Warne. Warne also had a spectacular series, with 40 wickets at a bowling average of 19.92, and 249 runs, but most of his efforts came in losing causes \u2013 such as making 42 with the bat in the second innings of the second Test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 682]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season\nIn domestic cricket, Nottinghamshire won the County Championship, for the first time since 1987, and Durham enjoyed promotion in both the shorter and the longer form of the game. Surrey, the 2000 and 2002 Championship winners, were relegated in the Championship, and played in Division Two in both the Championship and the National League in 2006. Hampshire Hawks won the 50-over knock-out C&G Trophy, but were relegated in the National League, which Essex Eagles won in emphatic fashion, as they lost only one game and had a 14-point gap to the runners-up, Middlesex Crusaders.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 606]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season\nThe Australian women also toured England at the same time as the men, and England won the Women's Ashes 1\u20130 after two Tests. However, the Australian women won the ODI series 3\u20132. To round off the season, investors in partnership with Leicestershire arranged an International 20:20 Club Championship, which Pakistani side Faisalabad Wolves won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 371]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, April\nThe cricket season started early, on 8 April, with MCC playing the Champion County, or at least it would have done if the rain had not delayed the start till the next day. The other games played were all between the first-class counties and university sides. The first matches showed a bumper crop of centuries, with little joy for bowlers, but there were no surprises. The MCC ended up beating Warwickshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, April\nAway from the cricket field, on 8 April the ECB announced that triangular One Day International tournaments would no longer be played in England. On 11 April Kevin Pietersen, England's South African-born all-rounder was reported to have a foot injury that could see him miss the start of the season, and Chris Schofield began his case for unfair dismissal against Lancashire, which he eventually won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, April\nThe first round of the Frizzell County Championship saw Warwickshire gain maximum points, with Hampshire also winning in Division One. Durham replicated Warwickshire's feat in Division Two, where Worcestershire also won.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 278]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, April\nThe first round of the totesport National Cricket League was held on 17 April, though most of the games were affected by the rain. 5 results were possible in the 8 matches. Rain continued to bedevil the second round of the County Championship, with only Yorkshire and Durham securing wins. In the MCC University matches, Bradford/Leeds UCCE shocked an injury-weakened Surrey by beating them at the Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, April\nThe second round of the totesport League saw a heavy defeat for Surrey away to Durham, with other wins for Northamptonshire, Middlesex, Kent and Sussex, which left Middlesex and Durham at the top of the tables at the end of April.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 288]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, April\nIn the third round of the Championship, Surrey thrashed what already appear to be Division One whipping boys Glamorgan to go third, with Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire also recording big wins to go second and first respectively. In the second division, Essex and Lancashire beat Somerset and Worcestershire respectively. However, Durham, who sat this round out, led the table at the end of April, from Essex and Worcestershire, with Derbyshire and Leicestershire propping the table up.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 57], "content_span": [58, 545]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\nMay started with one-day games played on 1 and 2 May. Middlesex established themselves at the top of Division One after winning their first three matches. Yorkshire and Durham were the unbeaten sides in the Second Division. This was followed by the first round of the C&G Trophy, which for the last time included the minor counties and Scotland, Holland, Denmark and Ireland. However, there were no upsets. Durham lost to Derbyshire by 1 wicket, and Leicestershire beat Somerset by 3 wickets in the only all first-class county fixtures.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 592]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\nThe fourth round of the Championship saw Gloucestershire sent Glamorgan down for another heavy defeat., as title contenders Hampshire and Nottinghamshire win against Middlesex and Surrey respectively. Surrey were found guilty of ball-tampering in this match, which later led to all their cricketers being fined by Surrey, and to the loss of 8 Championship points. The Second Division saw wins for Durham, Essex, Lancashire and Yorkshire. Whilst these games were being played Loughborough UCCE chalked up the second victory for a UCCE side this season by thrashing Worcestershire by 8 wickets in a game the students dominated in throughout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\nOn 10 May the Bangladeshis got their tour off with a three-day game against the British Universities, which was drawn. The fifth round of the Championship saw Surrey dish out another defeat to Glamorgan as Middlesex and Sussex won. The Second Division saw Durham maintaining their lead at the top with a 9 wicket win against Lancashire. Worcestershire overcame bottom club Derbyshire, with Yorkshire beating Leicestershire in the only other decided game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 510]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\nEssex, Lancashire, Hampshire, Worcestershire and Durham all won their totesport games on 15 May, with Leicestershire beating Surrey to continue Surrey's dismal form. The quarter-finals of the C&G Trophy followed, as did a tour match between the Bangladeshi's and Sussex in which the tourists lost by an innings and 226 runs, boding ill for the impending Test series. On 20 May Surrey finally won a totesport League game, beating fellow wooden spoon candidates, Scotland, in Edinburgh by five wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 556]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\n20 May saw the start of another Championship round. Glamorgan lost yet again, this time to Hampshire, and in the other first division tie, Kent beat Nottinghamshire by 196 runs. Division Two saw Worcestershire beat Essex, as first-placed Durham drew with second-placed Yorkshire, and Lancashire drew at Somerset. At the same time, Bangladesh put up a stronger performance in Northampton in a match severely hampered by rain. The last round of the County Championship in May saw Nottinghamshire beat Gloucestershire to finish may top of Division One.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 605]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0014-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\nWarwickshire beat Hampshire by ten wickets to leave them third and second in the table respectively, as Kent and Surrey drew to keep them in fourth and fifth. The table remains propped up by Glamorgan, who are strong favourites for relegation, with Sussex, Middlesex and Gloucestershire in places six to eight. Durham did not play in this round of the Championship, but remained in first place in Division Two, with Yorkshire missing a chance of taking over as leaders when they drew with Essex. Also in the round Somerset beat Northamptonshire and eighth placed Leicestershire beat ninth- (and bottom-) placed Derbyshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 678]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, May\nThe Test match season finally started on 26 May, with Bangladesh completely overwhelmed in just over two days. After being dismissed for 108, Bangladesh could only watch as England made 528 for 3 declared, Marcus Trescothick top-scoring with 194. In their second innings, the tourists could only muster 159 as they went down by a mammoth innings and 261 runs. The one-day league games played over the Spring Bank Holiday weekend left Middlesex top of Division One, with Essex one win behind them with two games in hand. Gloucestershire, Hampshire and Nottinghamshire (who had not won a game by the end of May) were in the relegation spots. As with the County Championship, Durham led the Second Division from Yorkshire, with Derbyshire, Scotland and Leicestershire occupying the bottom three places.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 55], "content_span": [56, 855]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nThe eighth round of the Championship saw Hampshire beat title rivals Nottinghamshire and Kent beat Gloucestershire, and then lose 8 points for the poor quality of the Maidstone pitch. The other First Division matches were draws, with Glamorgan avoiding defeat after following-on against Sussex. The Second Division saw four draws. Meanwhile, the students of Cambridge UCCE edged past Middlesex by 2 wickets. The Second Test against Bangladesh at Chester-le-Street was another one-sided affair. 5 wickets from Stephen Harmison, on his home ground, helped dismiss the Bangladeshis for 104. Trescothick's 151, Ian Bell's 162* and Graham Thorpe's 66* saw England to 447 for 3 declared. Although Bangladesh did better in their second innings, their 316 saw them lose by an innings and 27 runs.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 845]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nAfter another totesport League round, the top division of the Championship continued with Kent thrashing Glamorgan, Warwickshire thrashing Gloucestershire and local rivals Surrey and Middlesex drawing. In the Second Division, Durham pulled away further at the top with another win, this time against Essex, with Worcestershire also scoring a win against Somerset. However, the main focus was on the warm-up games for the NatWest Series and the first ever Twenty20 International between England and Australia. The only surprise in the warm-ups was a welcome win for Bangladesh over Worcestershire, which provided a welcome confidence boost to the Bangladeshis before they took on England and Australia in the NatWest Series.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 780]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nThe Twenty20 International on 13 June saw England score 179 for 8, a total probably 20 above the par score at the Rose Bowl. The Australian innings was a dream for Darren Gough (3 wickets), Jon Lewis (4 wickets) and all Englishmen as the Aussies were reduced to 31 for 7. Ultimately they were dismissed for 79 \u2013 first blood to England by 100 runs. Lord's hosted a 50-over match between the next day as part of the World Cricket Tsunami Appeal to raise funds to help countries hit by the Indian Ocean tsunami of 26 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 580]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0018-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nAn MCC side including Shaun Pollock, Sourav Ganguly and Stephen Fleming beat an International XI that included Brian Lara, Rahul Dravid, Shane Warne and Graeme Smith by 112 runs. Then on 15 June came another surprise \u2013 Australia were beaten in their final NatWest Series warm-up match by Somerset, or more specifically Graeme Smith and Sanath Jayasuriya, who put on 197 for Somerset's first wicket.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nThe first NatWest series match saw England easily defeat Bangladesh at the Oval by 10 wickets. The last County Championship round before the mid-season Twenty20 break saw Surrey beat Hampshire, Middlesex beat Glamorgan, Kent beat Warwickshire and Sussex and Nottinghamshire draw to leave Kent top, and Glamorgan bottom of the first division. In the second division, Lancashire beat Derbyshire, who remain bottom; Leicestershire beat second-placed Worcestershire; and leaders Durham drew with Northamptonshire. The last round of the totesport League before the break left Essex and Middlesex at the top of Division One, with Nottinghamshire and Gloucestershire propping them up. Durham held top place in Division Two, with Surrey languishing one place below Scotland at the bottom.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 837]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nThe second NatWest match on 18 June saw what many described as the biggest-ever upset in one-day cricket, and wild celebrations in Dhaka as Bangladesh restricted World Champions Australia to 249 for 5, before Mohammed Ashraful's 100 assisted the Bangladeshis in reaching their target with four balls and five wickets spare. With England scoring a narrow three wicket victory against Australia, the Aussies finished the weekend bottom of the NatWest table, with England well on top. 20 June saw the second tsunami appeal match of the season, this time a Twenty20 affair at the Oval.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nAn Asian XI including Dravid, Muralitharan and Harbhajan Singh scored 157 in an innings finished with a hat-trick from Adam Hollioake. The total was easily surpassed with Greg Blewett's 91 meaning that Stephen Fleming's duck and Brian Lara's 9 could not prevent the International XI winning by 6 wickets with 11 balls left.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nThe fourth NatWest Series match saw normal service resumed, with England beating Bangladesh by 168 runs after the hosts put on 391 for 4, the second-highest score in ODIs. The 2005 Twenty20 Cup started on 22 June, again with large audiences, and with last year's winners, Leicestershire, and runners-up, Surrey, both scoring wins. The fifth ODI allowed Australia back in, with a comfortable 57 win against England.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0021-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nAny anticipation over the next Australia v Bangladesh tie was easily brushed aside by the Aussies, who struck out Bangladesh for 139, and then reached their target in 19 overs without losing a wicket. Bangladesh were eliminated from the Series in the seventh ODI, when England beat them by five wickets. The eighth match should have been a rehearsal for the final, and Australia's 261 for 9 set the stage well. But rain was always expected and the contest was rained off as a \"no result\" with England 37 for 1 off 6 overs in their reply.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 594]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0021-0002", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, June\nBangladesh's tour of England ended with a creditable performance against Australia in the ninth ODI, although their 250 for 8 was ultimately overcome by the Aussie with six wickets and eleven balls left after they had wobbled earlier in the innings. At the same time, the Twenty20 Cup was continuing apace, and Oxford University (610 for 5 declared) beat Cambridge University (129 and 268), with Salil Oberoi's 247 gaining positive comment in his native India.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 517]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nJuly began with Twenty20 Cup group games, before England tied the final of the NatWest Series after coming back from 33 for 5 to post 196 for 9 \u2013 the same as Australia \u2013 on 2 July. Two days later, Lancashire became the first team to qualify for the Twenty20 Cup quarter-finals, and the following day Northamptonshire and Surrey joined them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 397]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nThe final round of the group stage of the Twenty20 Cup was played on 6 July. Middlesex made it through from the South Division despite loss \u2013 while Sussex, Middlesex' conquerors, were knocked out. Warwickshire and Somerset qualified from the Midlands/Wales/West Division thanks to wins over Northamptonshire and Gloucestershire respectively, while Derbyshire sneaked through from the North Division after a win over Nottinghamshire, and Leicestershire defeated Yorkshire to join them.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nIn the NatWest Challenge, a three-ODI series played over five days, England won the first ODI but lost the next two to lose the series 1\u20132, their only tournament loss in the entire season. In the County Championship, Nottinghamshire enjoyed the lead in Division One for a couple of days after beating Glamorgan by ten wickets \u2013 Glamorgan's eighth loss \u2013 but Kent, whose match started on 10 July took it back despite losing to Sussex, the six bonus points being enough to take the lead. In Division Two of the Championship, Durham's lead was closed from 21 points to 11 after losing to Lancashire by an innings and 228 runs, the highest margin of victory thus far in the season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 734]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nThe following day, Surrey got off the last place in Division Two of the totesport League thanks to a three-run victory over Yorkshire, but Surrey were knocked out of the C&G Trophy on 15 July \u2013 Hampshire, Lancashire, Warwickshire and Yorkshire reached the semi-finals. Three days later, the quarter-finals of the Twenty20 Cup were held, and Lancashire, Leicestershire, Somerset and Surrey proceeded to the semi-finals at The Oval on 30 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 498]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nIn the National League, Essex Eagles beat Lancashire Lightning by eight wickets on 19 July to extend their lead in the first division to eight points with one game in hand. The next round of Championship matches saw Hampshire, Kent, Nottinghamshire and Middlesex record victories to form the top four on 23 July. In Division Two, Northamptonshire and Yorkshire recorded wins, while the top sides Durham and Lancashire drew to remain on top.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nHowever, the eyes of most cricket fans were on Lord's, where England took on Australia. Glenn McGrath worried the English batsmen to end with nine wickets for 82, and Australia recorded their highest team score of the entire series with their second-innings 384 as they completed a 239-run victory on the fourth day of the Test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nEngland Under-19s began their three-ODI series with Sri Lanka Under-19s on 26 July, with a win, before they travelled to Old Trafford where they played out a no-result and a win to take the series 2\u20130. In the County Championship, there were four draws in five matches, as rain thwarted play on the first three days of the round from 26 to 29 July. Division Two leaders Durham were the only team to win after beating Somerset at the Riverside.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, July\nThe month was rounded off with the finals day of the Twenty20 Cup on 30 July, where Lancashire Lightning beat Surrey Lions in the first match, amassing 217 for 4 to win by 20 runs, before Somerset Sabres eked through in the second semi-final after a four-run victory. In the final, however, Graeme Smith hit 64 not out for the Sabres, and Somerset won by four wickets to take their first Twenty20 Cup win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 56], "content_span": [57, 462]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nAugust began with the Australian tourists completing a draw against Worcestershire in a three-day tour match, while Sussex Sharks kept up their good National League run with a win over Somerset Sabres, their seventh win in succession. Six matches in the Championship started on 3 August, with Kent, Sussex, Warwickshire and Hampshire recording victories. In Division Two, Lancashire used their victory at Grace Road in Leicestershire to exploit a rare slip-up from Durham and grab 16 points in the title-battle, closing the gap to 18 with a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nHowever, the Championship matches came in the background due to the second Ashes Test, where England took on Australia at Edgbaston Cricket Ground for the second Test of the five-match series. England carried a 0\u20131 series deficit into Edgbaston, and after three days of cricket England led by 106 with two Australian wickets left to grab. Shane Warne, Brett Lee (Australia's top-scorer with 43 not out) and Michael Kasprowicz cut 104 of those runs off the target, but Kasprowicz gloved Steve Harmison behind to Geraint Jones, to leave England 2-run winners and the series tied at one-all.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 647]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nThe English youth team were the first English representative team to record a Test victory this summer, however, beating Sri Lanka by 220 runs in an Under-19 Test two days before England seniors defeated Australia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0032-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nOn 6 August, Essex Eagles took control of Division One of the National League after eking out a four-run win over Middlesex Crusaders, and three days later the second Under-19 Test and the first women's Test began \u2013 the first ended in an England win, almost as convincing as the first Test, while Arran Brindle scored a maiden Test century to save the draw for England Women. The Ashes battle recommenced on 11 August, and after two English centuries \u2013 166 from Michael Vaughan and a second-innings 106 from Andrew Strauss \u2013 Ricky Ponting played a rearguard 156 to save the draw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 638]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nThere were also matches in the Championship during the Test \u2013 rain played a major part, however, and four of seven matches ended in draws, including the top of the table battle in Division One between Kent and Hampshire. Kent gained two bonus points over Hampshire, however, and now led by 17 points. Another National League round on 15 August saw the table-toppers in Division 1, Essex Eagles, fell to 122 and a 60-run loss against Gloucestershire Gladiators, while Sussex Sharks suffered their second successive loss in Division Two. England's youth team also completed their series, whitewashing Sri Lanka with a 173-run win in the final Test.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nThe following day, five Championship matches began, including a drawn Roses match between Lancashire and Yorkshire, while Sussex went top of Division One after beating Middlesex inside two days. On 18 August, Australia were scheduled to play Scotland in a match that was to be broadcast on BBC \u2013 however, the match was rained off, giving the Australians even less time to warm up. Two days later, they began a drawn two-day friendly game with Northamptonshire, on the same day as the C&G Trophy semi-finals. Warwickshire and Hampshire took convincing victories to reach the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 639]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0034-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nMeanwhile, in the Midlands, Australia's women played two ODIs with England on 19 August and 21 August, winning the first after bowling England out for 128 to go 2\u20130 up in the series, but losing the second by a two-run margin. There were also a total of ten National League matches from 21 August to 24 August \u2013 three were rained off, while the Sharks took a four-point lead in Division Two despite losing their first match with Leicestershire Foxes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 508]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nCounty Championship cricket began again on 24 August, with eight matches played in this period. Four were drawn, but Division One table-toppers Sussex fell to a 101-run defeat against Warwickshire as their Pakistani overseas player Rana Naved-ul-Hasan went wicketless in the first innings. Lancashire also recorded a win to go second in Division Two, six points off leaders Durham with a game in hand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nOn the international stage, England and Australia began their battle for the Ashes once again on 25 August, where England chased 129 to win with seven wickets down after earning a 259-run lead on first innings and becoming the first team to ask Australia to follow on in 17 years. The men's win got much more media coverage than the women's first Ashes victory since 1963, achieved through a six-wicket victory in the second and final Test inspired by the all-round efforts of Katherine Brunt (who took nine wickets and made 52 runs in her only innings).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 613]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, August\nMore National League games followed, with Essex Eagles securing the title thanks to a 12-run win over C&G Trophy finalists Hampshire Hawks, while Sussex Sharks ended the month with wins over Scottish Saltires and Surrey Lions to take a ten-point lead in Division Two, though with second-placed Durham Dynamos having two games in hand. The County Championship also moved towards its conclusion, with Nottinghamshire and Hampshire recording wins on the matches that started on 30 August to take the top two spots in the Division One table. In Division Two, Derbyshire came close to breaking their winless streak when they finished three runs short of a winning total against Durham, and had to settle for a draw; runners-up Lancashire lost further ground in the title battle through a 285-run defeat at the hands of Northamptonshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 58], "content_span": [59, 890]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nSeptember began with Australia's women recording a four-run win in the final ODI of the five-match series \u2013 Clare Connor out as last woman when England needed five to win off the last over. Karen Rolton then hit 96 not out in the second women's Twenty20 international ever to be played, as Australia won by seven wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0038-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nOn 3 September, Hampshire batted first to make 290 in the C&G Trophy final, and Andy Bichel, Shane Watson and Chris Tremlett combined to bowl their final opponents Warwickshire out for 272 to win the Trophy, becoming the third club to win a major trophy in England this season. Meanwhile, former England Under-19 player Alastair Cook took the Australian bowlers on for 270 in a drawn non-first class tour match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 473]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nThere were National League games from 4 September to 6 September, and Sussex Sharks became the first team to promote from Division Two, despite not even playing. In the Championship, Nottinghamshire began their match two days early, and completed an innings defeat inside two days to take a 23.5-point lead over second-placed Hampshire. Hampshire had a bye, however, so Sussex took the opportunity to go second with a two-day victory over Glamorgan. Nottinghamshire had a game in hand and 10 points on Sussex, however, and their only challenge looked to come from Kent, who drew their match with Middlesex to be third in the table, trailing by 19.5 points with the same number of games as Nottinghamshire.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 767]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nThe final Test match of the season started on 8 September with England needing a draw or better to win back the Ashes after 16 years of Australian domination. England opener Andrew Strauss made a first-innings century, which was matched by his Australian counterpart Matthew Hayden, who ground out his hundred from 218 balls and went on to top score with 138. However, Andrew Flintoff and Matthew Hoggard grabbed the last nine wickets for 103 runs as Australia were bowled out six overs into the fourth day afternoon.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0040-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nGoing into the second innings with a 4-run lead, England fell to 199 for 7, but Ashley Giles held out for his fourth Test half-century and a 109-run stand with Kevin Pietersen \u2013 who made the series' second-highest score with 158 to give England a total of 335. Australia walked off after three minutes in their second innings, to give England the draw and the 2\u20131 series victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nMeanwhile, in the County Championship, Lancashire assumed the ascendancy of Division Two with an eight-wicket win over Essex which also secured their return to Division One after only one season on the lowest rung of the Championship ladder. National League losses for Worcestershire Royals and Hampshire Hawks then left four teams on 22 points in the bottom of Division One \u2013 three of them would have to go down.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 475]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0042-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nNottinghamshire and Kent then faced off for the match that would decide the County Championship title, with Kent trailing by 19.5 points before the match at Trent Bridge. Kent failed to chase 420 in five hours, and Nottinghamshire recorded a 214-run win to take the Championship title. Durham and Yorkshire also secured Championship promotion with draws, while the first International 20:20 Club Championship was won by Faisalabad Wolves after a five-wicket win over Chilaw Marians in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0043-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nIn the National League, Warwickshire Bears won three matches in seven days to go third in the Division Two table before the final round, with Derbyshire Phantoms the only team that had a theoretical possibility of catching the Bears. Lancashire Lightning and Worcestershire Royals both lost in Division One, leaving them tied on points with two other teams at the bottom of the table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 446]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0043-0001", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nThe final round of the Championship saw Hampshire beat the newly crowned county champions Nottinghamshire by an innings and 188 runs, their second win over Nottinghamshire in the Championship this year, but they still finished 2.5 points behind. Surrey were relegated after conceding too many bonus points to Middlesex, and a total of four innings victories were registered on the final matchday.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 458]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181423-0044-0000", "contents": "2005 English cricket season, Month by Month review, September\nThe season ended with nine National League matches \u2013 Lancashire Lightning survived in Division One after beating Worcestershire Royals, while Gloucestershire Gladiators were relegated despite a win. Warwickshire Bears confirmed promotion, despite losing to Durham Dynamos, while Scottish Saltires played their last National League game, losing by eight wickets.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [29, 61], "content_span": [62, 423]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181424-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Epsom Derby\nThe 2005 Epsom Derby was a horse race which took place at Epsom Downs on Saturday 4 June 2005. It was the 226th running of the Derby, and it was won by the pre-race favourite Motivator. The winner was ridden by Johnny Murtagh and trained by Michael Bell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 271]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181424-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Epsom Derby, Full result\n* The distances between the horses are shown in lengths or shorter. hd = head.\u2020 Trainers are based in Great Britain unless indicated.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 29], "content_span": [30, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181424-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Two-year-old races\nNotable runs by the future Derby participants as two-year-olds in 2004.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 51], "content_span": [52, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181424-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, The road to Epsom\nEarly-season appearances in 2005 and trial races prior to running in the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 50], "content_span": [51, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181424-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Epsom Derby, Form analysis, Subsequent Group 1 wins\nGroup 1 / Grade I victories after running in the Derby.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 56], "content_span": [57, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181424-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Epsom Derby, Subsequent breeding careers, Other Stallions\nFracas (4th) - Fairly useful flat and jumps winners including Smash Williams (1st Round Tower Stakes 2015)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 62], "content_span": [63, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181425-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Equatorial Express Airlines An-24 crash\nThe 2005 Equatorial Express Airlines An-24 crash, also known as the 2005 Baney plane crash occurred on 16 July 2005 after an Equatorial Express Airlines Antonov An-24 crashed into a side of a mountain near Baney, Equatorial Guinea. The accident killed all 60 passengers and crew on board the flight.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 344]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181425-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Equatorial Express Airlines An-24 crash, Aircraft\nThe aircraft that was used on this flight was an Antonov An-24 registration 3C-VQR that had its first flight back in 1967. It had flown for Aerol\u00edneas de Guinea Ecuatorial (AGE) from February 2002 after being brought to Equatorial Guinea. It has been reported that the aircraft did not receive its 1,000-hour maintenance check after moving to Equatorial Express.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181425-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Equatorial Express Airlines An-24 crash, Accident\nThe flight took off from Malabo International Airport on a short haul flight to Bata Airport with 54 passengers and 6 crew on board. Just minutes into the flight the aircraft tilted and fell, skidded over trees for a distance of about half a mile and crashed into a side of mountainous jungle area near Baney at 10:00pm. An hour later the wreck of the aircraft was found and there were some conflicting reports regarding the number of persons on board. According to the airline, the flight manifest shows 10 crew and 35 passengers. Government sources reported 60 people were on the plane, after first reports of 55 occupants. The total bodies found at the crash site were 60 passengers and crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 54], "content_span": [55, 750]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181425-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Equatorial Express Airlines An-24 crash, Cause\nA witness saw flames coming from the side of the plane shortly after take-off. The cause of the accident was that the aircraft was overloaded and the aircraft was only built to accommodate a maximum of 48 passengers and crew.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [46, 51], "content_span": [52, 277]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181426-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Erbil bombing\nThe 2005 Erbil bombing was a suicide attack on the offices of Kurdish political parties in Erbil, Iraq, on May 4, 2005. The attacker detonated explosives strapped to his body as people lined up outside a police recruiting center in Erbil. Ansar al-Sunna claimed responsibility. This attack is an example of religious terrorism, groups who commit terrorist acts because of religion believe that their deity or deities are on their side and that their violence is divinely inspired and approved. This attack is also an example of Strategic terrorism. Which is a form of terrorism where the terrorist plans to inflict mass casualties. The goals of Strategic terrorism are normally not local objectives but global objectives or regional objectives. Ansar al-Sunna's goal is to transform the country of Iraq into an Islamic state so their goals are regional.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 872]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181426-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Erbil bombing, Ansar al-Sunna\nAnsar al-Sunna stands for Supporters of Islam. \"They are an militant Islamic Kurdish separatist movement seeking to transform Iraq into an Islamic state\". This group has a Salafist worldview, which means that they insist on a puritanical form of Islam and they seek to emulate the practices of Muhammad. This movement was founded in 2001 by\u00a0Mullah Krekar and they got financial and logistical help from\u00a0al-Qaeda\u00a0and\u00a0Osama Bin laden. Some of the members of this organization transport money from Germany to northern Iraq to help finance the group.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181426-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 Erbil bombing, Ansar al-Sunna\n\"This group targets secular Iraqi\u00a0Kurds-particularly members of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK)\". Ansar was named a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO) by the U.S. Department of State on March 22, 2004. They are considered an active terrorist group in northern and central Iraq today. Ansar al-Islam operates primarily in northern and central Iraq and claims the second largest number of\u00a0Sunni\u00a0jihadist attacks in Iraq after Al-Qaeda. This organization is also known to behead their captives. The goal of Ansar-al Sunna is to have an Islamic country where its people are strong. There are a maximum of two thousand \"hard fighters\" in Ansar-al-Sunna.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 692]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181426-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Erbil bombing, The bombing\nIn the bombing on May 4, 2005, the suicide bomber dressed up as a job seeker and blew himself up outside a police recruiting center in the Kurdish provincial capital, killing at least 60 Kurds, most of them prospective policemen, and wounding 150 others. This attack was intended as retribution for the involvement of Kurdish troops fighting insurgents alongside American forces. This bombing was the biggest act of terrorism in Iraq since early March 2005. Because the bomber could not get into the police recruiting center he detonated himself by the gate where young men gathered, killing 46, including the policeman standing outside of the recruiting center. Later it was found that a total of 60 people were found dead.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 31], "content_span": [32, 756]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181426-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Erbil bombing, Reasons for the conflict between Kurds and Ansar-al Sunna\nThe Kurdish Islamic Conflict began in 2001. In 2003, the conflict merged with the larger 2003 invasion of Iraq, which led to the defeat of Ansar al-Islam. After the invasion, Ansar al-Islam continued a low-level terrorist revolt against the Kurdish Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan. Ansar al-Islam and its allied groups seized control of the area around Halabja from the PUK in late 2001 and that is why there is military conflict between them. Fighting continued throughout 2002. Ansar al-Sunna has tortured prisoners and executed PUK officials.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 77], "content_span": [78, 645]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181426-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Erbil bombing, Reason for the conflict between Baghdad and Erbil\nConflict has also arisen with the Kurds because they have aimed to repopulate Kirkuk and that has arisen some problems with the Arabs in Baghdad. The Arabs have lived there for more than 30 years and they're reluctant to leave. One of the largest oilfields in the area lies underneath Kirkuk and that complicates the dispute. The conflict between the Kurds and Baghdad is mostly due to land. It has been difficult to resolve the conflict between Baghdad and Erbil because it dates back decades and has a lot to do with natural resources. It seems the Kurds are reluctant to renounce their claim of the land and this conflict might take some 50 to 100 years to resolve.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 69], "content_span": [70, 738]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181427-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Esiliiga\nThe 2005 Esiliiga is the 15th season of the Esiliiga, second-highest Estonian league for association football clubs, since its establishment in 1992.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181427-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Esiliiga\nJK P\u00e4rnu Vaprus gained automatic promotion to the Meistriliiga. FC Ajax Lasnam\u00e4e also went up after winning the promotion/relegation play-off against FC Kuressaare. The league's top-scorer was FC Ajax Lasnam\u00e4e youngster Nikita Andreev with 29 goals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [13, 13], "content_span": [14, 263]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181427-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Esiliiga, Promotion/Relegation playoff\nFC Ajax Lasnam\u00e4e beat FC Kuressaare 2\u20132 on away goals rule. Ajax Lasnam\u00e4e promoted to Meistriliiga, Kuressaare relegated to Esiliiga.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 13], "section_span": [15, 43], "content_span": [44, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181428-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Essex County Council election\nAn election to Essex County Council took place on 9 May 2005 as part of the 2005 United Kingdom local elections. 75 councillors were elected from various electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. The electoral divisions were redrawn for this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 384]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181428-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Essex County Council election\nThe Conservative Party retained control with an increased majority, winning 52 of the 75 seats. Labour and the Liberal Democrats both lost seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181428-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Essex County Council election, Results by District, Basildon\nBetween 2001 and 2005, the seat was won by the Liberal Democrats candidate in a by-election, however it is shown as a hold as it is compared to the previous full council election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 65], "content_span": [66, 245]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181429-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Estonian Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 Estonian Figure Skating Championships (Estonian: Eesti Meistriv\u00f5istlused) were held in Tallinn from December 10 to 12, 2004. Skaters competed in the disciplines of ladies' singles and pair skating.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 249]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181429-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Estonian Figure Skating Championships, Senior results, Pairs\nOlga Boguslavska / Andrei Brovenko of Latvia were guest competitors who finished 2nd.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 65], "content_span": [66, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181429-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Estonian Figure Skating Championships, Junior results\nThe 2005 Estonian Junior Figure Skating Championships took place in Tallinn from January 14 through 16, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181430-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open\nThe 2005 Estoril Open was a tennis tournament played on outdoor clay courts. This event was the 16th edition of the Estoril Open for the men (the 9th for the women), included in the 2005 ATP Tour International Series and in the 2005 WTA Tour Tier IV Series. Both the men's and the women's events took place at the Estoril Court Central, in Oeiras, Portugal, from 25 April through 1 May 2005. Gast\u00f3n Gaudio and Lucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 won the singles titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181430-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open, Finals, Men's Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k / Leo\u0161 Friedl defeated Juan Ignacio Chela / Tommy Robredo, 6\u20133, 6\u20134", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 128]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181430-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open, Finals, Women's Doubles\nLi Ting / Sun Tiantian defeated Micha\u00eblla Krajicek / Henrieta Nagyov\u00e1, 6\u20133, 6\u20131", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 42], "content_span": [43, 125]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181431-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nJuan Ignacio Chela and Gast\u00f3n Gaudio were the defending champions. Chela participated with Tommy Robredo this year, finishing runner-up. Gaudio did not participate this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181431-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Doubles\nFranti\u0161ek \u010cerm\u00e1k and Leo\u0161 Friedl won in the final 6\u20133, 6\u20134, against Juan Ignacio Chela and Tommy Robredo.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181432-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Men's Singles\nIn the men's singles final, Gast\u00f3n Gaudio defeated Tommy Robredo with a score of 6\u20131, 2\u20136, 6\u20131.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 129]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181433-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nEmmanuelle Gagliardi and Janette Hus\u00e1rov\u00e1 were the defending champions, but none competed this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181433-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Doubles\nLi Ting and Sun Tiantian won the title by defeating Micha\u00eblla Krajicek and Henrieta Nagyov\u00e1 6\u20133, 6\u20131 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181433-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Doubles, Seeds\nThe top three seeds received a bye into the quarterfinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 42], "content_span": [43, 101]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181434-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Singles\n\u00c9milie Loit was the defending champion, but did not compete this year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181434-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Estoril Open \u2013 Women's Singles\nLucie \u0160af\u00e1\u0159ov\u00e1 won the title by defeating Li Na 6\u20137(4\u20137), 6\u20134, 6\u20133 in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election\nGeneral elections were held in Ethiopia on 15 May 2005, for seats in the House of Peoples' Representatives and four regional government councils. Under pressure from the international community, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi promised that this election would be proof that more democracy would come in this multi-ethnic nation; international elections observers from the European Union (EU) and the U.S.-based Carter Center were present to observe the results. This election succeeded in attracting about 90% of the registered voters to the polls. A government ban on protests was imposed throughout the election period.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 650]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Campaigning\nEU observers remarked on the \"significantly enlarged freedoms for political campaigning in comparison to previous elections\". Political parties campaigned actively, and opposition parties appeared to be increasingly active in the rural areas. The observer mission described the atmosphere \"during the campaign was calm, culminating in two massive, peaceful rallies in Addis Ababa, one by the EPRDF and one by the opposition.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Campaigning\nDespite this, opposition parties alleged numerous cases of intimidation, and arrests of its supporters. While the EU observers could not investigate all of the alleged cases, it did confirm those it investigated. International human rights groups likewise cataloged a number of cases of human rights violations. However, the EU observers wrote in their final report, they \"recorded no arrests of EPRDF supporters for campaign offences.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 481]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Campaigning\nTowards the close of the campaigning, the language became more vicious, with each side accusing the other of numerous violations of the campaigning rules. \"Campaign rhetoric became insulting,\" the EU observer's report noted, then continued:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Campaigning\nThe most extreme example of this came from the Deputy Prime Minister, Addisu Legesse, who, in a public debate on 15 April, compared the opposition parties with the Interhamwe militia, which perpetrated the 1994 Rwandan genocide. The Prime Minister made the same comparison on 5 May in relation to the CUD. The EPRDF made the same associations during its free slots on radio and TV. The opposition coalition UEDF then used the comparison against the government in a TV spot showing footage of the movie \"Hotel Rwanda\". Such rhetoric is unacceptable in a democratic election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 44], "content_span": [45, 618]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Early results\nEarly results showed the opposition with a big lead, sweeping all of the contested seats in the capital Addis both in the race for parliamentary as well as local government. By the afternoon of 16 May, the opposition claimed it was halfway towards winning a majority in the national parliament with only about a third of the constituencies reporting complete results.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 414]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Early results\nLater that day, trailing badly in the preliminary report covering just under 200 seats released by the National Election Board, the ruling Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) announced that it had won more than 317 seats out of 547, while conceding that opposition parties won all 23 seats in the capital city Addis Ababa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 391]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Early results\nThe two major opposition parties, the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD) and the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces (UEDF) claimed on that same day that they had won 185 of the approximately 200 seats for which the National Election Board of Ethiopia (NEBE) had released preliminary results. That was a significant improvement over the 12 seats the opposition had in the previous parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 443]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Early results\nBy law, the NEBE was required to announce the official results on 8 June. However, the vote tallying process was jeopardized when the opposition claimed that the Addis Ababa vote was rigged and during the evening of 16 May, the Prime Minister declared a state of emergency, outlawed any public gathering, assumed direct command of the security forces, and replaced the capital city police with federal police and special forces drawn from elite army units. The NEBE, simultaneously, ordered the vote tallying process to stop, an order which was not rescinded for nearly a week, yet another action against which the opposition and the independent election monitors strongly objected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 729]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Early results\nThe next official report from the NEBE, released on 27 May, showed that the EPRDF had won 209 seats, and affiliated parties 12 more. The report indicated the opposition parties had won 142 seats. \"These results are provisional, and these results could change because we are looking into complaints by some of the parties,\" said NEBE spokesman Getahun Amogne.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 46], "content_span": [47, 405]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nObservers from the European Union afterwards \"assessed the closing and counting processes negatively in almost half of urban polling stations observed, a very high figure for international observers to record, and even worse in rural polling stations observed.\" Counting was slow, a remarkably high number of ballots were ruled invalid, and there was a lack of transparency in the results. \"Result sheets were only displayed at 29 per cent of rural polling stations observed and 36 per cent of urban polling stations observed at the completion of counting. In 25 per cent of polling stations observed, political party representatives were not provided with a copy of the results.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 743]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nThe situation only deteriorated with the following day, according to the observers,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nstarting with a blanket ban, issued immediately after the end of voting, on freedom of assembly in the capital. Media coverage also worsened. State media published statements by government/EPRDF personnel claiming victory in the elections, despite the fact that counting was still underway, but refused to publish opposition statements. Incidents involving students started on the night of 5 June and extended on 6 and 7 June with hundreds being arrested. During a demonstration in Addis Ababa on 8 June, security forces killed at least 36 citizens and in the aftermath arrested thousands of persons, mostly linked to the opposition, who were accused of spreading \"political unrest\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 746]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nThe CUD lodged complaints in 139 constituencies, the UEDF lodged 89 complaints, while the EPRDF has raised concerns over irregularities in more than 50 seats. Including the complaints lodged by small parties, complaints concerning the results in 299 parliamentary seats were lodged. According to an official of the NEBE, political parties had until June 3 to provide evidence of fraud, or their complaints would be dismissed. However investigations led to elections being re-run at a minimum of 16 voting stations, and affecting elections for at least six seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 625]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0011-0001", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nWriting in November of that year, scholar Christopher Clapham noted that \"the official results of the elections are both complex in themselves, and deeply affected by fraud\". On one hand, he pointed out that the EPRDF lost heavily in those cities of Ethiopia which were bellwethers of public opinion; on the other,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 377]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nProvisional results were scheduled to be released on May 23, but the need to investigate claims of voting irregularities and disruptions in two southern regions \u2014 Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples Region and Oromia \u2014 delayed the release of these results until June 8, the date originally scheduled for releasing the official results. When the ruling party was unofficially reported the winner of the election, demonstrations protesting alleged election fraud broke out, and continued into June.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 568]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0012-0001", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nHundreds of students were arrested in at least nine cities, including Gondar, Bure, Bahir Dar, Debre Marqos, Dessie and Awassa for demonstrating despite a month-old ban on protests imposed on the government. At the same time, security forces arrested dozens of locally prominent CUD members in Gondar, Dessie, Wondo Genet, Kombolcha and Jinka; unconfirmed reports of arrests following a similar pattern came from several other towns. On June 8, police shot 42 people gathering at the Piazza and Merkato markets of Addis Ababa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0012-0002", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Alleged voting irregularities\nThe government afterwards stated that an appropriate level of force was used and accused the CUD of fomenting dissent; the CUD denied these accusations, and claimed that the government was attempting to distract attention from election fraud. This led to the leaders of the CUD, including head Hailu Shawul, being put under house arrest while hundreds of security forces patrolled the streets of the capital.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 62], "content_span": [63, 471]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Official results\nOn July 8, the NEBE released the first official results for 307 of the 547 national parliamentary seats. Of the 307 seats, the EPRDF had won 139, while CUD and UEDF won 93 and 42, respectively. Smaller parties and independent candidates won the remaining 33 seats. However, Berhanu Nega, vice-chairman of the CUD, had criticized the process on July 20, claiming that \"The investigation process was a complete failure. Our representatives and witnesses have been harassed, threatened, barred and killed upon their return from the hearings.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 589]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Official results\nMeanwhile, the NEBE investigated voting fraud and other irregularities, while also arranging new polls to resolve some disputes. On August 9, official results were released, acknowledging that the ruling EPRDF had won 296 of the total 524 seats \u2014 about 56% \u2014 enabling it to form a government, while its allied parties won 22 seats. The UEDF won 52 seats. Berhanu said his party, which had officially won 109 seats, was debating whether they would challenge the results in court. Repeat elections were scheduled for August 21 in 31 areas where either irregularities were reported or results were challenged.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 656]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Official results\nOpposition parties had decided to boycott the related August 21 elections in the Somali Region. The CUD withdrew 10 of the 17 candidates it was fielding in Somali region, while the Western Somali Democratic Party, the Somali Democratic Alliance Forces and Del Wabe People's Democratic Movement who had planned to field 43 candidates for the Federal Parliamentary Assembly and 273 candidates for the regional parliament in the regional capital of Jijiga, also announced that they would boycott this election.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 557]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Official results\nOn September 5, the NEBE released its final results, in which the EPRDF retained its control of the government with 327 seats; within the EPRDF, the Oromo People's Democratic Organization won 110 seats, the Southern Ethiopian People's Democratic Movement 92 seats, the Amhara National Democratic Movement 87 seats and the Tigray People's Liberation Front 38 seats. Opposition parties won 174 seats.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 448]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Protest\nProtests of the results, led by Coalition for Democracy and Unity, began on November 1, 2005, and have prompted more than 60,000 arrests. Live gunfire from government forces has been directed at protesters and bystanders, killing at least 42. A number of policemen were also killed suggesting that violence was not all on the side of the state.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 40], "content_span": [41, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Protest, Massacre claims and public inquiry\nOn October 18, 2006, the draft report of a 10-member public inquiry into election-related unrests was released to Associated Press (AP). It concludes that a total of 199 people (193 civilians and six policemen) were killed and 763 were injured, a significantly higher figure than the Ethiopian government's claim that 61 civilians and seven policemen were killed. The vice chairman of the inquiry, judge Wolde-Michael Meshesha, who fled Ethiopia a month prior after he had received anonymous death threats, told AP that \"this was a massacre ... these demonstrators were unarmed yet the majority died from shots to the head.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 701]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181435-0018-0001", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election, Protest, Massacre claims and public inquiry\nHe added that the government attempted to pressure and intimidate members of the inquiry after learning about its controversial finding. The Ethiopian government did not immediately comment on the leaked report, but the next day, it told BBC that its contents were \"hearsay.\" The European Union's chief observer during the elections, Ana Maria Gomes, stated that the draft report \"only confirms what we have said in our report on the elections,\" and \"that indeed there were massive human rights violations.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 76], "content_span": [77, 586]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence\nThe Ethiopian police massacre refers to the killing of civilians by government forces during June and November 2005 which led to the deaths of 193 protesters and injury of 763 others, mostly in the capital Addis Ababa, following the May 2005 elections in Ethiopia. More than 30,000 people were detained by security forces following the election, most released in 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 409]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence\nThe first violent incident was flashed on June 7,2005 at 11:20 when the police force had arrested one student , Mesafint Endalew , 4th year at the main campus. Following the arrest of that student many march to the police station in the camp. Though he was released , the students immediately escalate their question towards the election votes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 387]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence\nProtests of the results were supposedly led by the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD), began on November 1, 2005, and have prompted more than 60,000 arrests. Live gunfire from government forces has been directed at protesters and bystanders. All the top opposition leaders were arrested, as was the mayor-elect of Addis Ababa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Death toll\nOn October 18, 2006 an independent report said Ethiopian police massacred 193 protesters. The information was leaked before the official independent report was handed to the parliament. The leak made by Ethiopian judge Wolde-Michael Meshesha found that the government had concealed the true extent of deaths at the hands of the police. Gemechu Megerssa, a member of the independent Inquiry commission, whom Justice Meshesha once worked with, criticized Justice Wolde-Michael's act, stating that by taking the report \"out of context and presenting it to the public to sensationalise the situation for his political end is highly unethical\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 703]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Death toll\nThe official report described by the parliament and the government gave exactly the same details as the leaked inquiry. It said that 200 people had been killed, including 6 policemen. Some 763 people were also injured. Police records showed 20,000 people were initially arrested during the anti-government protests. The commission members living in Addis Ababa also criticised the government:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 456]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Death toll\nWe are not saying the government was totally clean. The government has a lot to be accountable for. The mentality of the police needs to be changed, and then we will be able to minimize those kinds of casualties in the future. Building of [democratic] institutions is required, but that is going to take time. [ So] The government was not prepared to tackle violence like that which took place last year. They could have brought an alternative way of dispersing rioting crowds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 541]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Death toll\nBut, the Independent Inquiry's members added, Wolde-Michael's trip to Europe and reporting of information out of context was \"dishonest\" politics as well as insensitive to the process of developing Ethiopia's young democracy. The Commission said Ethiopians need to solve their problems themselves so that this kind of violence wouldn't recur. It encouraged Ethiopians who respect authority to work together, and directed the government to \"think seriously\" about changing the mentality of the police.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 63], "content_span": [64, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Reactions\nDespite the post-election complications, the Carter Center, US Government and British MPs continued to praise the democratic process in Ethiopia, but have each demanded the release of CUD leaders. After meeting with some opposition parties, the British MPs stated that the Ethiopian government should stand firmly against those who try to use \"undemocratic and unconstitutional means\" to change government. The other top opposition parties, the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces (UEDF) and the United Ethiopian Democratic Party-Medhin Party (UEPD-Medhin), are working with the government for negotiations on the democratic process.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 695]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Reactions\nOpposition parties are still represented in the Ethiopian Parliament, where representatives from Oromia State hold most positions, and representatives from Amhara State hold the second most positions, in correlation with the comparative population of the corresponding states. Various opposition parties including the UEDF, UEPD-Medhin, Somali People's Democratic Party, EDL, Gambela People's Democratic Movement, All Ethiopian Unity Party, Oromo Federalist Democratic Movement and the Benishangul-Gumuz People's Democratic Unity Front hold positions in the parliament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181436-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Ethiopian general election violence, Aftermath, Prisoners\nUntil June 2007, many of the main opposition party's (CUD) leaders were detained for an alleged attempt to overthrow the government and initiating the post election violence. All of these charges are denied by CUD leadership both in Ethiopia and internationally, and the European Union advocated for the political prisoners to be released after a speedy trial. Some of these elected CUD officials endured very harsh conditions inside Ethiopia's poorly maintained prisons and they are at risk of various medical complications. As a result of the violence after the elections, many thousands were arrested and imprisoned. Even though the vast majority have been freed, some still remain in prison. Up to the end of 2005, around 8,000 Ethiopian rioters were freed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [42, 62], "content_span": [63, 824]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181437-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer Cup\nThe 2005 Euro Beach Soccer Cup was the seventh Euro Beach Soccer Cup, one of Europe's two major beach soccer championships at the time, held in December 2005, in Moscow, Russia. Switzerland won the championship for the first time, with hosts Russia finishing second. Portugal beat Ukraine in the third place play off to finish third and fourth respectively. This was the first time since the tournament's establishment that Portugal had failed to reach the final and the first time Spain had finished outside the top four.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 549]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181437-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer Cup\nEight teams participated in the tournament who played in a straightforward knockout tournament, starting with the quarter finals, with extra matches deciding the nations who finished in fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181437-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer Cup, Matches, Fifth to eighth place deciding matches\nThe following matches took place between the losing nations in the quarter finals to determine the final standings of the nations finishing in fifth to eighth place. The semi finals took place on the same day of the semi finals of the main tournament and the play offs took place on the day of the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 75], "content_span": [76, 380]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League\nThe 2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, was the eighth edition of the Euro Beach Soccer League (EBSL), originally known as the European Pro Beach Soccer League, the premier beach soccer competition contested between European men's national teams, occurring annually since its establishment in 1998. The league was organised by Beach Soccer Worldwide (BSWW) between July 8 and August 28, 2005 in five different nations across Europe.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League\nFollowing the preceding season, BSWW continued organising the nations of the EBSL across three divisions (A, B and C), with each team competing in their respective division to try and earn a place in the season-finale event, the Superfinal, in which the league title was then contested directly.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 325]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League\nItaly were ultimately crowned champions, coming back from 5\u20131 down in the last period of the final to win their first European title. France entered the league as defending champions but lost in the Superfinal semi-finals, finishing the league in third place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 289]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Teams\nThis season 16 nations took part in the Euro Beach Soccer League whom were and were distributed as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 36], "content_span": [37, 144]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Teams, Superfinal berths\nThere were eight berths available in this season's Superfinal. The table summarises in what positions nations needed to finish in their respective divisions in order to qualify to the Superfinal, what round of the Superfinal they would enter finishing in said positions, and the seeding they would receive.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 55], "content_span": [56, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A\nDivision A consisted of four rounds of fixtures known as stages, with one stage hosted in each of the four countries participating as shown. All four teams took part in each. In each stage, the teams played each other once. The nation who earned the most points at the end of the stage was crowned stage winners.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 354]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A\nAt the end of the four stages all results were tallied up in a final league table.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 1\nThe first stage took place in Tignes, France. Portugal won the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 120]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 2\nThe second stage took place in Figueira da Foz, Portugal. The hosts claimed their second stage win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 3\nThe third and penultimate stage took place in Cervia, Italy. The hosts earned their first stage victory. Portugal earned enough points during this stage to secure first place in the final division standings.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Stage 4\nThe fourth and final stage took place in Santa Ponsa, Mallorca, Spain. Portugal won their third stage title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Final Division A table\nAll four Division A teams automatically qualified to the Superfinal. Finishing top of the division table earned that team a bye straight into the semi-finals of the Superfinal, whilst the final positions of the other three nations determined seedings in the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 339]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division A, Final Division A table\nPortugal were crowned winners, earning the bye into the Superfinal semi finals. Spain, by finishing second, ensured the next highest seeding meaning they would be drawn against the worst ranked team to make the Superfinal (the play-off winners) in the quarters. On the other hand, France, finishing last, received the lowest seeding in Division A and hence suffered the consequences of having to play next best seed, the winners from Division B.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 511]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Results\nThis season Division B was played as a straight knockout tournament. The eight teams contesting the division started in the quarter-finals, playing one match per round until the final when the winner was crowned. The losers of the quarter-finals played in consolation matches to determine their final division placements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 372]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Final Division B standings\nThe top two nations qualified straight into the Superfinal quarter-finals alongside the three sides from Division A. The third placed team qualified to the Superfinal play-off round to play the winners of Division C to contest the sixth and final quarter-final spot. The remaining Division B nations exited this season's EBSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 396]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division B, Final Division B standings\nHungary won the Division B tournament title, whilst hosts Austria claimed the third and final spot in the Superfinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C\nThe nations comprising Division C contested one round of fixtures. The teams played each other once. The nation who earned the most points at the end of the matches was crowned winner the division.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 41], "content_span": [42, 239]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C, Matches\nThe fixtures were played in Santa Ponsa, Mallorca, Spain, alongside stage 4 of Division A.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Division C, Final Division C table\nThe winners of Division C solely qualified to the Superfinal play-off round to play the lowest ranked qualifier from Division B to contest the sixth and final quarter-final spot. The remaining Division C nations exited this season's EBSL.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 65], "content_span": [66, 304]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Qualified teams\nThis is a summary of the teams who qualified for the Superfinal.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 58], "content_span": [59, 123]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Results\nThis season the Superfinal was played as a straight knockout tournament. Six teams contesting the title started in the quarter-finals, with Portugal joining in the semi-finals, playing one match per round until the final when the winner of the 2005 Euro Beach Soccer League was crowned. The losers of the quarter-finals and play-off round played in consolation matches to determine their final league placements.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 463]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Results\nFirstly, the play-off round took place between the winners of Division C and the lowest ranked qualifiers from Division B for reasons explained earlier. The winners, Switzerland, moved on to the quarter-finals. The losers, Austria, retreated to the consolidation matches.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 322]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Results\nFollowing the play-off round, the main knockout stages and consolation matches of the Superfinal took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 50], "content_span": [51, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181438-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 Euro Beach Soccer League, Superfinal, Superfinal final standings\nItaly beat favourites Portugal in the final on penalties to win their first Euro Beach Soccer League title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 69], "content_span": [70, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181439-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0\nThe 2005 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season was the fifteenth Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season. The season began at Zolder on 30 April and finished at Monza on 22 October, after sixteen races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181439-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0\nJapanese driver Kamui Kobayashi scored six victories at Bugatti Circuit, Oschersleben, Donington Park, Estoril and Monza during the season, he took the championship at the wheel of his Prema Powerteam-run car. Red Bull-backed driver Michael Ammerm\u00fcller who competed with Jenzer Motorsport was the only Koboyashi's rival for championship title was not resolved until the final round, and Ammerm\u00fcller finished in series' standings just eight points behind Japanese driver, winning races at Zolder, Valencia, Bilbao and Oschersleben. SG Formula's Yann Clairay amassed three wins on his way to third place in the series standings. Motopark Academy's Filipe Albuquerque completed the top five, despite missing Le Mans round.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 753]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181440-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Eurocup M\u00e9gane Trophy\nThe 2005 Eurocup M\u00e9gane Trophy season was the inaugural season of the Renault\u2013supported touring car category, a one-make racing series that is part of the World Series by Renault. The season began at Circuit Ricardo Tormo on 4 June and finished at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza on 23 October, after seven rounds and fifteen races. Jan Heylen won the title, having battled Renaud Derlot for the entire campaign.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181441-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 Euroleague Final Four\nThe 2005 Euroleague Final Four was the concluding Euroleague Final Four tournament of the 2004\u201305 Euroleague season. The tournament was held on May 6 and on May 8, 2005. The event was held at Olimpiisky Arena in Moscow, Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181442-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European 10 m Events Championships\nThe 2005 European 10 m Events Championships were held in Tallinn, Estonia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181443-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European 10,000m Cup\nThe 2005 European 10,000m Cup was the 9th edition of the annual 10,000 metres competition between European athletes, which was held at San Vicente Stadium in Barakaldo, Spain on 2 April. A total of 37 athletes (22 men and 15 women) from 12 European nations entered the competition, plus three African pacemakers running as guests.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181443-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European 10,000m Cup\nSpain won the men's team event with a combined time of 1:23:53.88 hours, led by individual winner Juan Carlos de la Ossa. Portugal won the women's team race with a total time of 1:38:36.35, led by individual runner-up Fernanda Ribeiro. Sabrina Mockenhaupt (the sole German female entrant) won the women's individual race. Only three nations fielded enough athletes to qualify for the team section, and Germany only did so in the men's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181443-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European 10,000m Cup, Results, Men's team\nAthletes in italics did not score for their team but received medals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 46], "content_span": [47, 117]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181443-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European 10,000m Cup, Results, Women's team\nAthletes in italics did not score for their team but received medals", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 48], "content_span": [49, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe 2005 European Amateur Team Championship took place 28 June \u2013 2 July at Hillside Golf Club in Southport, 20 kilometres north of the city center of Liverpool, England. It was the 24th men's golf European Amateur Team Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe club was founded in 1911. The course is a links course, with all the holes being between and on mainly large dunes and local indigenous pinewoods, typical of the area. It is physically close to both the Royal Birkdale Golf Club, near its south-western boundaries, and to the Southport and Ainsdale Golf Club.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 352]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nEach team consisted of 6 players, playing two rounds of stroke-play over two days, counting the five best scores each day for each team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nHost nation and eight-time-winners team England won the opening 36-hole competition, with a 16-under-par score of 704, two strokes ahead of team Wales on 2nd place. Neither four-times-champions Ireland, with 16-year-old future professional major winner Rory McIlroy in the team, or two-times-champions Sweden did make it to the quarter finals, finishing tenth and eleventh respectively.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nThere was no official award for the lowest individual score, but individual leader were Edoardo Molinari, Italy, with a 6-under-par score of 138, one stroke ahead of Nigel Edwards, Wales, Julien Guerrier, France, Gary Lockerbie, England and Mike Lorenzo-Vera, France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 307]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe eight best teams formed flight A, in knock-out match-play over the next three days. The teams were seeded based on their positions after the stroke play. The first placed team were drawn to play the quarter final against the eight placed team, the second against the seventh, the third against the sixth and the fourth against the fifth. Teams were allowed to use six players during the team matches, selecting four of them in the two morning foursome games and five players in to the afternoon single games. Teams knocked out after the quarter finals played one foursome game and four single games in each of their remaining matches. Games all square at the 18th hole were declared halved, if the team match was already decided.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 773]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe eight teams placed 9\u201316 in the qualification stroke-play formed flight B, to play similar knock-out play, with one foursome game and four single games in each match, to decide their final positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 242]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nThe four teams placed 17\u201320 formed flight C, to play each other in a round-robin system, with one foursome game and four single games in each match, to decide their final positions.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nTeam England won the gold medal, earning their ninth title and first since 1991, beating team Germany in the final 6\u20131. The winning English team included 45-year-old Gary Wolstenholme and 16-year-old Oliver Fisher.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 254]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship\nTeam Switzerland, for the first time on the podium, earned the bronze on third place, after beating France 5\u20132 in the bronze match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship, Teams\n20 nation teams contested the event, the same nations as at the previous event two years earlier. Each team consisted of six players.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 46], "content_span": [47, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship, Results\n* Note: In the event of a tie the order was determined by the best total of the two non-counting scores of the two rounds.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181444-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 European Amateur Team Championship, Results\nNote: There was no official award for the lowest individual score.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 48], "content_span": [49, 115]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181445-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Artistic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 1st Individual European Artistic Gymnastics Championships (European Men's and Women's Artistic Gymnastics Individual Championships) were held in Debrecen, Hungary, on 2 June to 5 June 2005. It included both men's and women's events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 284]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181446-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships\nThe 28th European Athletics Indoor Championships were held at the Palacio de Deportes in Madrid, the capital city of Spain, from Friday, 4 March to Sunday, 6 March 2005. This was the first edition to be held in an odd year since switching to the biennial format, so as not to occur in the same as the outdoor European Athletics Championships and also recently moved IAAF World Indoor Championships. To accommodate this change, there was a two-year gap since the previous edition. It also marked the last time that the 200 metres were contested at the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 602]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181446-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships\nRussia finished on top of the medal table with 17 medals including 9 gold and a clear lead over Sweden and France. The host nation Spain lost only to Russia on the number of medals but won only one gold and finished fifth overall.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 275]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181447-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe Men's 1500 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181447-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181448-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe Men's 200 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136. This was the last time the 200 metres were contested at European Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 253]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181448-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe winner of each heat (Q) and the next 9 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181448-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) qualified directly for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 84], "content_span": [85, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181449-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres\nThe Men's 3000 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181449-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 4 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 157]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181450-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Men's 4 x 400 metres relay event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [73, 73], "content_span": [74, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181450-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results\nNote: Poland originally finished second but was disqualified for colliding with the Spanish team before the last change-over.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 73], "section_span": [75, 82], "content_span": [83, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181451-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe Men's 400 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181451-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nThe winner of each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181452-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres\nThe Men's 60 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181452-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Medalists\nNote: Mark Lewis-Francis originally finished second but was later stripped off his medal for the use of cannabis.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 73], "content_span": [74, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181452-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181452-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 4 of each semifinals qualified directly (Q) for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 83], "content_span": [84, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181453-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles\nThe Men's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181453-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181453-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 4 of each semifinals qualified directly (Q) for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 91], "content_span": [92, 156]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181454-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe Men's 800 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181454-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nThe winner of each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 79], "content_span": [80, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181455-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's heptathlon\nThe Men's heptathlon event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181456-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe Men's high jump event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181456-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 2.30 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 189]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181457-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe Men's long jump event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181457-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 8.05 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 86], "content_span": [87, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181458-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe Men's pole vault event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181458-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 5.75 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181459-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe Men's shot put event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181459-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 20.10 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 85], "content_span": [86, 160]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181460-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe Men's triple jump event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181460-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 16.90 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181461-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe Women's 1500 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181461-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181462-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe Women's 200 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships were held on March 5\u20136, 2005. This was the last time the 200 metres were contested at the European Indoor Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 268]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181462-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\nThe winner of each heat (Q) and the next 5 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181462-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) qualified directly for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181463-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres\nThe Women's 3000 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181463-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres, Medalists\nNote: Turkey's Tezeta Desalegn-Dengersa originally won the silver medal but was later disqualified for doping offence (metenolone).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 77], "content_span": [78, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181463-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 4 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 82], "content_span": [83, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181464-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe Women's 4 x 400 metres relay event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 6.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 75], "section_span": [75, 75], "content_span": [76, 188]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181465-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe Women's 400 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181465-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heats\nThe winner of each heat (Q) and the next 3 fastest (q) qualified for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181466-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres\nThe Women's 60 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181466-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 80], "content_span": [81, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181466-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 4 of each semifinals qualified directly (Q) for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 85], "content_span": [86, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181467-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles\nThe women's 60 metres hurdles event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 5\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 183]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181467-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\nFirst 4 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 88], "content_span": [89, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181467-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 60 metres hurdles, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 4 of each semifinals qualified directly (Q) for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 93], "content_span": [94, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181468-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe Women's 800 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181468-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats\nFirst 2 of each heat (Q) and the next 4 fastest (q) qualified for the semifinals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 81], "content_span": [82, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181468-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Semifinals\nFirst 3 of each heat (Q) qualified directly for the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 86], "content_span": [87, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181469-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe Women's high jump event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181469-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Results, Qualification\nQualification: Qualification Performance 1.95 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181470-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe Women's long jump event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181470-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Medalists\n(*) Bianca Kappler had originally won the competition with a jump measured as 6.96 metres. The measurement, however, was incorrect. Kappler pointed out the mistake and was awarded a bronze medal for fair play.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 75], "content_span": [76, 285]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181470-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 6.63 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 88], "content_span": [89, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181471-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pentathlon\nThe Women's pentathlon event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181472-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe Woen's pole vault event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181472-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Results\nQualification: Qualification performance 4.50 (Q) or at least 8 best performers advanced to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 74], "content_span": [75, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181473-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe Women's shot put event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20135.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181473-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 18.15 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 87], "content_span": [88, 162]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181474-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe Women's triple jump event at the 2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on March 4\u20136.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [66, 66], "content_span": [67, 172]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181474-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Indoor Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Results, Qualification\nQualifying perf. 14.30 (Q) or 8 best performers (q) advanced to the Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 66], "section_span": [68, 90], "content_span": [91, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181475-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics Junior Championships\nThe 2005 European Athletics Junior Championships was the 18th edition of the biennial athletics competition for European under-20 athletes, which was held in Kaunas, Lithuania on 21\u201324 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 235]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181476-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships\nThe 5th European Athletics U23 Championships were held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion between 14\u201317 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 163]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181476-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 748 athletes from 41 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 56], "content_span": [57, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181477-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres\nThe men's 10,000 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181477-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 10,000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181478-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres\nThe men's 100 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181478-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Results, Heats\n14 JulyQualified: first 3 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181478-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 100 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 8 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181479-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles\nThe men's 110 metres hurdles event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181479-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181479-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 110 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181480-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres\nThe men's 1500 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181480-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 4 in each heat and 4 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 77], "content_span": [78, 140]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181480-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 1500 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 21 athletes from 11 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181481-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk\nThe men's 20 kilometres race walk event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 198]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181481-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 20 kilometres walk, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 14 athletes from 9 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 173]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181482-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres\nThe men's 200 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181482-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181482-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 200 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 17 athletes from 11 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181483-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [74, 74], "content_span": [75, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181483-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats\n14 JulyQualified: first 4 in each heat and 4 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 90], "content_span": [91, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181483-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 3000 metres steeplechase, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 21 athletes from 12 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 74], "section_span": [76, 89], "content_span": [90, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181484-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe men's 4 x 100 metres relay event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 219]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181484-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 28 athletes from 7 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181485-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe men's 4 x 400 metres relay event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181485-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Results, Heats\n16 JulyQualified: first 3 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181485-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 55 athletes from 12 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181486-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres\nThe men's 400 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14, 15, and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181486-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Semifinals\n15 JulyQualified: first 4 in each heat to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 81], "content_span": [82, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181486-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Results, Heats\n14 JulyQualified: first 3 in each heat and 4 best to the Semifinal", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181486-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 26 athletes from 16 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181487-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles\nThe men's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [68, 68], "content_span": [69, 222]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181487-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 84], "content_span": [85, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181487-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 400 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 19 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 68], "section_span": [70, 83], "content_span": [84, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181488-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres\nThe men's 5000 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181488-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 5000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 21 athletes from 10 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181489-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres\nThe men's 800 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181489-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Results, Heats\n14 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 76], "content_span": [77, 139]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181489-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's 800 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181490-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon\nThe men's decathlon event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181490-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's decathlon, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181491-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw\nThe men's discus throw event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181491-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's discus throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 23 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181492-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw\nThe men's hammer throw event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181492-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's hammer throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 8 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181493-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump\nThe men's high jump event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181493-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Results, Qualifications\n15 JulyQualifying perf. 2.21 or 12 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 84], "content_span": [85, 137]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181493-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's high jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 29 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181494-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw\nThe men's javelin throw event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181494-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's javelin throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 15 athletes from 10 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181495-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump\nThe men's long jump event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [59, 59], "content_span": [60, 204]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181495-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's long jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 59], "section_span": [61, 74], "content_span": [75, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181496-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault\nThe men's pole vault event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181496-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's pole vault, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181497-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put\nThe men's shot put event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [58, 58], "content_span": [59, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181497-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's shot put, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 17 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 58], "section_span": [60, 73], "content_span": [74, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181498-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump\nThe men's triple jump event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 208]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181498-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Men's triple jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 10 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181499-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres\nThe women's 10,000 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181499-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 10,000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 7 athletes from 7 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181500-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres\nThe women's 100 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181500-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Results, Heats\n14 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181500-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 19 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181501-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles\nThe women's 100 metres hurdles event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181501-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181501-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 100 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 21 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181502-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres\nThe women's 1500 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181502-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 1500 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 9 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181503-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk\nThe women's 20 kilometres race walk event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, on 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 202]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181503-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 20 kilometres walk, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 18 athletes from 12 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 176]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181504-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres\nThe women's 200 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181504-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Results, Heats\n15 July 2005Qualified: first 3 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181504-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 200 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 10 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181505-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase\nThe women's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [76, 76], "content_span": [77, 238]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181505-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Results, Heats\n14 JulyQualified: first 4 in each heat and 4 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 92], "content_span": [93, 155]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181505-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 3000 metres steeplechase, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 17 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 76], "section_span": [78, 91], "content_span": [92, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181506-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay\nThe women's 4 x 100 metres relay event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181506-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 100 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 28 athletes from 7 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 87], "content_span": [88, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181507-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay\nThe women's 4 x 400 metres relay event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [72, 72], "content_span": [73, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181507-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 4 \u00d7 400 metres relay, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 24 athletes from 6 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 72], "section_span": [74, 87], "content_span": [88, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181508-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres\nThe women's 400 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181508-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181508-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 18 athletes from 11 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181509-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles\nThe women's 400 metres hurdles event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [70, 70], "content_span": [71, 226]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181509-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 3 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 86], "content_span": [87, 149]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181509-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 400 metres hurdles, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 8 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 70], "section_span": [72, 85], "content_span": [86, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181510-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres\nThe women's 5000 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 205]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181510-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 5000 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 9 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181511-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres\nThe women's 800 metres event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 15 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181511-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Results, Heats\n15 JulyQualified: first 2 in each heat and 2 best to the Final", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 78], "content_span": [79, 141]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181511-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's 800 metres, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 15 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181512-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw\nThe women's discus throw event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181512-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's discus throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 18 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181513-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw\nThe women's hammer throw event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 and 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [64, 64], "content_span": [65, 214]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181513-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's hammer throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 22 athletes from 13 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 64], "section_span": [66, 79], "content_span": [80, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181514-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon\nThe women's heptathlon event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 15 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 210]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181514-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's heptathlon, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 20 athletes from 14 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181515-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump\nThe women's high jump event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181515-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's high jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 11 athletes from 8 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181516-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw\nThe women's javelin throw event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [65, 65], "content_span": [66, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181516-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's javelin throw, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 11 athletes from 7 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 65], "section_span": [67, 80], "content_span": [81, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181517-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump\nThe women's long jump event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [61, 61], "content_span": [62, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181517-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's long jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 11 athletes from 9 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 61], "section_span": [63, 76], "content_span": [77, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181518-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault\nThe women's pole vault event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 17 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [62, 62], "content_span": [63, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181518-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's pole vault, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 16 athletes from 10 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 62], "section_span": [64, 77], "content_span": [78, 168]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181519-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put\nThe women's shot put event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [60, 60], "content_span": [61, 199]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181519-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's shot put, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 12 athletes from 9 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 60], "section_span": [62, 75], "content_span": [76, 165]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181520-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump\nThe women's triple jump event at the 2005 European Athletics U23 Championships was held in Erfurt, Germany, at Steigerwaldstadion on 14 and 16 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [63, 63], "content_span": [64, 212]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181520-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Athletics U23 Championships \u2013 Women's triple jump, Participation\nAccording to an unofficial count, 15 athletes from 11 countries participated in the event.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 63], "section_span": [65, 78], "content_span": [79, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181521-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Baseball Championship\nThe 2005 European Baseball Championship was won by the Netherlands. It was held in the Czech Republic. The top 4 qualified for the 2007 Baseball World Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181522-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2005 European Canoe Slalom Championships took place at the Tacen Whitewater Course in Tacen, Slovenia between 24 and 26 June 2005 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA). It was the 6th edition.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181523-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Championship of American football\nThe 2005 European Championship of American football was hosted by Sweden between 28 July to 30 July 2005. The tournament was played between the three nations from the A-pool and the champion from B-pool played on 2004. The tournament had round-robin qualification. The two top teams won the qualification for the 2007 IFAF World Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 390]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181524-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Championship of Ski Mountaineering\nThe 2005 European Championship of Ski Mountaineering (Catalan: Campionat d\u2019Europa d\u2019Esqu\u00ed de Muntanya 2005) was the sixth European Championship of ski mountaineering and was held in Andorra from March 1, 2005 to March 5, 2005. The competition was organized by the International Council for Ski Mountaineering Competitions (ISMC) of the Union Internationale des Associations d'Alpinisme (UIAA).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 442]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181524-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Championship of Ski Mountaineering, Results, Nation ranking and medals\nCompared to the 2003 European Championship a vertical race and a relay race event were held but were not added to the total ranking of the Federaci\u00f3 Andorrana de Muntanyisme (FAM).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 84], "content_span": [85, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181524-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Championship of Ski Mountaineering, Results, Team\nEvent held in the Gran Valira on March 2, 2005", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 63], "content_span": [64, 110]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181524-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Championship of Ski Mountaineering, Results, Combination ranking\ncombination ranking including the results of the individual and team races", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [50, 78], "content_span": [79, 153]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181525-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cross Country Championships\nThe 12th European Cross Country Championships were held at Tilburg in Netherlands on 11 December 2005. Serhiy Lebid won the men's competition for the sixth time and Lornah Kiplagat won the women's race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181526-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup (athletics)\nThe 2005 European Cup was the 26th edition of the European Cup of athletics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 106]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181526-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup (athletics)\nThe Super League Finals were held in Florence, Italy from 17 to 19 June, like two years before the 2003 European Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181527-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup Winter Throwing\nThe 2005 European Cup Winter Throwing was held on 12 and 13 March at Macit \u00d6zcan Sports Complex in Mersin, Turkey. It was the fifth edition of the athletics competition for throwing events organised by the European Athletics Association. A total of 174 athletes from 29 countries entered the competition. It was the first time that the competition was held with the Cup name, changing from the European Winter Throwing Challenge moniker it had since its initial edition in 2001.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 512]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181527-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup Winter Throwing\nThe competition featured men's and women's contests in shot put, discus throw, javelin throw and hammer throw. Athletes were seeded into \"A\" and \"B\" groups in each competition. Lada Chernova of Russia was the sole \"B\" seeded athlete to take a medal, finishing as runner-up in the women's javelin throw.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 336]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181527-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup Winter Throwing\nTwo national records were broken during the competition: men's shot put winner Rutger Smith of the Netherlands set a new Dutch record with his throw of 21.00\u00a0m (68\u00a0ft 10\u00a03\u20444\u00a0in) and women's hammer throw gold medallist Ivana Brklja\u010di\u0107 broke the Croatian record for the event with 71.00\u00a0m (232\u00a0ft 11\u00a01\u20444\u00a0in).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 340]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181527-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup Winter Throwing\nRussia was easily the best performing nation of the tournament, taking the men's and women's titles on points and having the most medals, with three of each colour. Germany was runner-up in both men's and women's divisions and had the next most medals with one gold medal and three bronze.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 323]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181527-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 European Cup Winter Throwing\nWomen's hammer bronze medallist Olga Kuzenkova was retrospectively found to be doping around 2004 to 2005, but due to limitations of retesting her disqualification was only for the period of August 2005 to 2007 and her mark in Mersin still stands.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 281]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181528-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Curling Championships\nThe 2005 European Curling Championships were held in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany from December 9 to 17.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181528-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Curling Championships, Men's, Challenge series\n(Best of Three. Winner gets a berth in the 2006 World Men's Curling Championship along with the top 7 A-tournament teams)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 60], "content_span": [61, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181528-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Curling Championships, Women's, Challenge series\n(Best of Three. Winner gets a berth in the 2006 Ford World Women's Curling Championship along with the top 7 A-tournament teams)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [37, 62], "content_span": [63, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181529-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Dressage Championships\nThe 2005 FEI European Dressage Championships, was the 24th edition of the European Dressage Championship. It was held at Hof Kasselmann in Hagen, Germany, from 28 July to 31 July 2005. The 2005 European Dressage Championships was previously allocated to Moscow, Russia but due financial problems of the organizer they were not able to organise the Championships and had to witdraw two weeks before the start. Ulrich Kasselmann jumped in as last minute organizer of the European Championships and organised the show at the same date as Moscow was supposed to organise.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 604]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181529-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Dressage Championships, Medal summary, Medalists\nSpainIgnacio Rambla on Distiguido 2Beatriz Ferrer-Salat on BeauvalaisJos\u00e9 Ignacio L\u00f3pez on Nevado Santa ClaraJuan Antonio Jimenez on Guizo", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 62], "content_span": [63, 201]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181530-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Fencing Championships\nThe 2005 European Seniors Fencing Championships were held in Zalaegerszeg, Hungary from 27 June to 3 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 35], "section_span": [35, 35], "content_span": [36, 147]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181531-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Figure Skating Championships\nThe 2005 European Figure Skating Championships was a senior international figure skating competition in the 2004\u201305 season. Medals were awarded in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. The event was held at the Palavela in Turin, Italy from 25 January through 30, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 356]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181531-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Figure Skating Championships\nThe Turin event was the official site-testing competition, or test event, for the 2006 Winter Olympics, which would be held in the same arena. It was the first European Championship to use the IJS which replaced the 6.0 system.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [42, 42], "content_span": [43, 270]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181531-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Figure Skating Championships, Qualifying\nThe competition was open to skaters from European ISU member nations who had reached the age of 15 before 1 July 2004. The corresponding competition for non-European skaters was the 2005 Four Continents Championships. National associations selected their entries based on their own criteria. Based on the results of the 2004 European Championships, each country was allowed between one and three entries per discipline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 54], "content_span": [55, 474]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181531-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Figure Skating Championships, Competition notes\nEvgeni Plushenko won his fourth European title, Irina Slutskaya her sixth, Tatiana Totmianina / Maxim Marinin their fourth, and Tatiana Navka / Roman Kostomarov their second. Susanna P\u00f6yki\u00f6 (silver) became the first Finn to medal in ladies' singles at the European Championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 61], "content_span": [62, 341]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181531-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 European Figure Skating Championships, Results, Pairs\nTotmianina / Marinin defended their European title three months after the 2004 Skate America accident.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 42], "section_span": [44, 58], "content_span": [59, 161]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix\nThe 2005 European Grand Prix (officially the 2005 Formula 1 Grand Prix of Europe) was a Formula One motor race held on 29 May 2005 at the N\u00fcrburgring in N\u00fcrburg, Germany. The 59-lap race was the seventh round of the 2005 Formula One season, the 49th running of the European Grand Prix, and the 15th European Grand Prix as a standalone event (i.e. not an honorific title awarded to an existing event). It was the second of a series of six races held within eight weeks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 493]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix\nThe race was won by championship leader Fernando Alonso for the Renault team. McLaren driver Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was leading the race at the start of the final lap, but crashed out with a suspension failure caused by a flat-spotted front tyre. Winner Alonso started in sixth position whilst Nick Heidfeld took the first and only pole position of his career for the Williams team. He eventually finished second in front of the Ferrari of Rubens Barrichello, who completed the podium in third position.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 520]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Background\nThe race saw the return of the BAR-Honda team, who had been suspended for two races following the San Marino Grand Prix, due to a fuel tank irregularity. However, due to the 2005 engine regulations, they had to use engines from the San Marino race, which had been untouched for five weeks. Red Bull Racing decided that Vitantonio Liuzzi would retain his race seat for one round, before Christian Klien would take over for the Canadian Grand Prix and onwards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 503]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Friday drivers\nThe bottom 6 teams in the 2004 Constructors' Championship were entitled to run a third car in free practice on Friday. These drivers drove on Friday but did not compete in qualifying or the race.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 48], "content_span": [49, 244]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Qualifying\nThe race marked yet another change in the qualifying system, with the aggregate system being discarded for a single session on Saturday, with cars in full race set-up (including fuel), and running in reverse order to the classification from the previous Grand Prix. This disadvantaged the BAR team significantly, as they were required to be the first two cars on the track. German Williams driver Nick Heidfeld took his only career pole position in front of his home fans, ahead of McLaren's Kimi R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Heidfeld's teammate Mark Webber.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nWith an ambient temperature of 25\u00a0\u00b0C (77\u00a0\u00b0F) and a track temperature of 45\u00a0\u00b0C (113\u00a0\u00b0F), the cars lined up for the start of the race. However, as the lights turned on to signal the start, Renault's Giancarlo Fisichella signalled that his car had stalled, and the start had to be aborted. As the field set off for another formation lap, Fisichella's car was pushed into the pitlane, and the race distance was reduced by 1 lap to 59.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAt the start, both Williams' got away from the line slowly, with Heidfeld beaten into the first corner by R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen, and Webber overtaken by both Jarno Trulli and Juan Pablo Montoya before the first turn. Desperate to keep Trulli behind, Webber braked very late for the corner, and locked his front-right brake. Montoya turned in towards the apex of the corner, but made contact with Webber, who was forced to retire with suspension damage. Montoya's car was undamaged, but he lost several places as a result of being forced off line, and finished the first lap in 13th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 615]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0005-0002", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nSeveral other cars were forced to take evasive action, with both Ferraris losing a large amount of time, and Ralf Schumacher breaking his front wing as he ran into the back of another car. During the first lap, Takuma Sato also damaged his front wing, and along with Schumacher, was forced to pit at the end of the lap, leaving both cars at the back of the field. Red Bull Racing's David Coulthard managed to avoid the confusion, and was in 4th place at the end of the first lap after starting 12th. Both Jordan drivers made good starts also, sitting in 10th and 11th. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen pushed away to a 1.9 second lead by the end of lap 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 671]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs the Jordans and Minardis were forced back down the field by faster cars, Toyota's Jarno Trulli was handed a drive-through penalty because his mechanics were still on the grid within 15 seconds of the race start. He dropped down from 3rd to 9th upon taking the penalty. On lap 6, Rubens Barrichello had an excellent battle with Jenson Button, taking 8th position after attempting to pass through 3 corners. Button lost a small amount of time as a result of the pass, which was enough for Montoya to close up behind and subsequently take 9th place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 588]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0006-0001", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nBarrichello, on a charge, overtook Vitantonio Liuzzi for 7th place on lap 8, but showed he was on light fuel, being the first driver to take their scheduled stop, which dropped him down to 12th position. On the very next lap, Heidfeld took his first stop, showing that his pole position was helped by having less fuel than several of the front-runners. The rest of the field began their pit stop sequences around lap 18, allowing Montoya to leapfrog Liuzzi for 8th place, while Barrichello put in some quick laps to move into an outright 4th position. David Coulthard, who led the race for 1 lap as the pit stop sequence unfolded, was given a drive-through penalty for exceeding the pitlane speed limit. With all the stops complete, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen retained a 2-second lead over Heidfeld, followed by Alonso, Barrichello, Coulthard, Felipe Massa, Michael Schumacher and Montoya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 911]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nOn lap 30, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen appeared to lose concentration, going wide through the Ford chicane, allowing Heidfeld into the lead for one lap before the German had to pit. As he ran off road, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen damaged his bargeboard. The mistake allowed Alonso to gain 4 seconds. Heidfeld rejoined in 3rd after his second pit stop, and Barrichello, also on a 3-stop strategy, retained 4th. A few laps later whilst lapping Jacques Villeneuve, who ignored blue flags, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen locked his front-right tyre and ran wide, causing a \"flat spot\" and losing a small amount of time to Alonso.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nDue to the 2005 regulations, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was unable to change the tyre and continue in the race, causing severe problems later in the race. Ralf Schumacher became only the second retirement of the race, losing his car at the Ford chicane, and spinning into the gravel trap. On lap 36, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen held a 15.2 second lead back to Alonso, who had an 8-second gap back to Heidfeld, followed by Barrichello, Coulthard, Massa, Michael Schumacher and Montoya.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 488]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nR\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen was able to continue posting competitive lap times and retain his lead over Alonso, but had to take his second pit stop on lap 43, handing Alonso the lead and a chance to decrease the gap. Alonso set the fastest lap of the race on lap 44, but then lost around 7 seconds after running off the road at the Dunlop hairpin. All of the front-runners pitted and held their positions, while Fisichella was able to move ahead of Montoya after some good laps.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nMeanwhile, Massa, in 6th position, ran off the road and lost a large amount of time, also damaging his tyres. With 8 laps remaining, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen held a 7.4 second lead over Alonso, and had victory in sight, but the tyre damage was causing major vibrations throughout the car and suspension, causing him trouble under braking and through corners. Alonso, with a clearly faster car at that stage, was able to close the gap quickly, and with 2 laps left, he had reduced it to just 2.7 seconds. R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's tyre began showing signs of imminent failure, and the vibrations in the car became increasingly severe. The McLaren team decided not to change the tyre, instead opting to go for the victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nAs R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen started the final lap of the race, he was 1.5 seconds ahead of Alonso, and there was a chance for Alonso to perhaps catch the Finnish driver. However, under braking for turn 1, R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen's suspension broke under the increasing pressure, sending him spinning narrowly past Jenson Button and into the gravel trap, ending his race. Alonso was able to take the last lap easily, winning the race ahead of Heidfeld and Barrichello. It was Alonso's fourth win for the season, increasing his championship lead to 32 points ahead of R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen and Trulli.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 597]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181532-0009-0001", "contents": "2005 European Grand Prix, Report, Race\nThe failure on the final lap had denied R\u00e4ikk\u00f6nen his third successive victory. Heidfeld's third podium for the year meant he moved into fourth place in the championship standings. David Coulthard picked up a valuable fourth place for Red Bull, followed by Michael Schumacher, Fisichella, Montoya and Trulli. Felipe Massa finished 14th after his front wing failed with four laps remaining, damaging his left-front tyre, forcing him to pit to change both. Trulli and Coulthard were not the only ones to receive penalties, as Tiago Monteiro and Christijan Albers were issued drive-through penalties for ignoring blue flags.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 38], "content_span": [39, 660]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181533-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Judo Championships\nThe 2005 European Judo Championships were the 16th edition of the European Judo Championships, and were held in Rotterdam, Netherlands from 20 May to 22 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181534-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Judo Open Championships\nThe 2005 European Judo Open Championships were the 2nd edition of the European Judo Open Championships, and were held in Moscow, Russia on 3 December 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181534-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Judo Open Championships\nThe European Judo Open Championships was staged because the open class event had been dropped from the European Judo Championships program from 2004. Unlike the regular European Judo Championships, several competitors from each country are allowed to enter.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 295]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181535-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Junior Badminton Championships\nThe 2005 European Junior Badminton Championships were held in Den Bosch, Netherlands, between March 19 and March 27, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 167]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181536-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Junior Swimming Championships\nThe 2005 European Junior Swimming Championships were held in Budapest, Hungary 14\u201317 July.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 134]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181537-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships\nThe 2005 European Junior and U23 Canoe Slalom Championships took place in Krak\u00f3w, Poland from 18 to 21 August 2005 under the auspices of the European Canoe Association (ECA) at the Krak\u00f3w-Kolna Canoe Slalom Course. It was the 7th edition of the competition for Juniors (U18) and the 3rd edition for the Under 23 category. A total of 16 medal events took place.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 55], "section_span": [55, 55], "content_span": [56, 416]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181538-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Karate Championships\nThe 2005 European Karate Championships, the 40th edition, were held in San Crist\u00f3bal de La Laguna, Spain from 13 to 15 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 164]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181539-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Mixed Curling Championship\nThe inaugural 2005 European Mixed Curling Championship was held from October 18 to 22, 2005 at the Canillo Ice Arena in Canillo, Andorra.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181539-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Mixed Curling Championship\nFinland, skipped by Markku Uusipaavalniemi, won its first title, defeating Sweden in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 40], "section_span": [40, 40], "content_span": [41, 136]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181540-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Mountain Running Championships\nThe 2005 European Mountain Running Championships were held in Heiligenblut am Gro\u00dfglockner, Austria,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 44], "section_span": [44, 44], "content_span": [45, 145]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181541-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Nations Cup\nThe 2005 European Nations Cup saw France secure their first win over Wales in 24 years, winning 38\u201316 and taking the European Nations Cup back to France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 179]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181541-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Nations Cup\nThe revamped competition involved six teams competing in two groups of three. Five of the teams: France, Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Russia qualified automatically for the tournament, whilst new entrant Georgia came through a qualifying tournament.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 272]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181542-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Pairs Speedway Championship\nThe 2005 European Pairs Speedway Championship was the second edition of the European Pairs Speedway Championship. The final was held in Gda\u0144sk, Poland on 12 June. Poland won their first title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 234]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181542-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Pairs Speedway Championship, Semifinal 1\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fellns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 54], "content_span": [55, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181542-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Pairs Speedway Championship, Final\nm - exclusion for exceeding two minute time allowance \u2022 t - exclusion for touching the tapes \u2022 x - other exclusion \u2022 e - retired or mechanical failure \u2022 f - fellns - non-starter \u2022 nc - non-classify", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 246]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181543-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Race Walking Cup\nThe 2005 European Race Walking Cup was held in Miskolc, Hungary, on May 21, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 112]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181543-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Race Walking Cup\nComplete results were published. The junior events are documented on the World Junior Athletics History webpages. Medal winners were published on the Athletics Weekly website,", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 206]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181543-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Race Walking Cup, Participation\nThe participation of 268 athletes ( men/ women) from 29 countries is reported.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 45], "content_span": [46, 124]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181544-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships\nThe 21st Rhythmic Gymnastics European Championships were held in Moscow, Russia, from 10 to 12 April 2005. Medals were contested in three disciplines\u00a0: team competition, junior groups and senior individual with four apparatus.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 47], "section_span": [47, 47], "content_span": [48, 274]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181545-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Road Championships\nThe 2005 European Road Championships were held in Moscow, Russia, between July 7 and July 10, 2005. Regulated by the European Cycling Union. The event consisted of a road race and a time trial for men and women under 23 and juniors.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181546-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Seniors Tour\nThe 2005 European Seniors Tour was the 14th season of the European Seniors Tour, the professional golf tour for men aged 50 and above operated by the PGA European Tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 195]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181546-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Seniors Tour, Tournament results\nThe numbers in brackets after the winners' names show the number of career wins they had on the European Seniors Tour up to and including that event. This is only shown for players who are members of the tour.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 256]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181546-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Seniors Tour, Tournament results\nFor the tour schedule on the European Senior Tour's website, including links to full results, click .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 46], "content_span": [47, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181546-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Seniors Tour, Leading money winners\nThere is a complete list on the official site .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 49], "content_span": [50, 97]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181547-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Sevens Championship\nThe 2005 European Sevens Championship was a rugby sevens competition, with the final held in Moscow, Russia. It was the fourth edition of the European Sevens championship. The event was organised by rugby's European governing body, the FIRA \u2013 Association of European Rugby (FIRA-AER).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 33], "section_span": [33, 33], "content_span": [34, 318]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181548-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Short Course Swimming Championships\nThe European Short Course Championships 2005 were held in Trieste, Italy, from 8\u201311 December.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 49], "section_span": [49, 49], "content_span": [50, 143]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181549-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2005 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships took place between 14 and 16 January 2005 in Turin, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 53], "section_span": [53, 53], "content_span": [54, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181550-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Speed Skating Championships\nThe 2005 European Speed Skating Championships were held at Thialf in Heerenveen, Netherlands, from 7 January until 9 January 2005. Jochem Uytdehaage and Anni Friesinger won the titles.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181550-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Speed Skating Championships, Men's championships, Allround results\nNQ = Not qualified for the 10000\u00a0m (only the best 12 are qualified)DNS = Did not startDQ = Disqualified", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 80], "content_span": [81, 184]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181550-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Speed Skating Championships, Rules\nAll participating skaters are allowed to skate the first three distances; 12 skaters may take part on the fourth distance. These 12 skaters are determined by taking the standings on the longest of the first three distances, as well as the samalog standings after three distances, and comparing these lists as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [43, 48], "content_span": [49, 366]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181552-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Team Judo Championships\nThe 2005 European Team Judo Championships were held in Debrecen, Hungary on 22-23 October. The men's competition won by Israel, and the women's by France.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181553-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour\nThe 2005 European Tour was the 34th golf season since the European Tour officially began in 1972.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 116]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181553-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour\nThe Order of Merit race came down to the final tournament, and was won by Colin Montgomerie for a record eighth time, and the first since 1999. The Player of the Year award was given to Order of Merit runner up and U.S. Open champion Michael Campbell of New Zealand. The Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year was Gonzalo Fern\u00e1ndez-Casta\u00f1o of Spain, who won his first title, the KLM Open during his d\u00e9but season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 428]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181553-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour, Major tournaments\nFor a summary of the major tournaments and events of 2005, including the major championships and the World Golf Championships, see 2005 in golf.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 37], "content_span": [38, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181553-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour, Schedule\nThe 2005 season began with three tournaments held in late 2004 and consisted of 47 official money events, which was a new record total. This included four major championships and three World Golf Championships, which were also sanctioned by the PGA Tour. 27 events took place in Europe, 10 in Asia, six in the United States, two in South Africa and one each in Australia and New Zealand. Total prize money exceeded \u20ac97 million, including nearly \u20ac40 million in the four major championships and three individual World Golf Championships events.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 571]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181553-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour, Schedule\nChanges from the 2004 season included five new tournaments: the Volvo China Open and TCL Classic in China, making a total of five events in the country, the Indonesia Open, the New Zealand Open and the Abama Open de Canarias, as the tour retained a stop in the Canary Islands. The ANZ Championship, Open de Sevilla and The Heritage were lost from the schedule.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 28], "content_span": [29, 389]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181553-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour, Order of Merit\nIn 2005, the European Tour's money list was known as the \"Order of Merit\". It was calculated in euro, although around half of the events had prize funds which were fixed in other currencies, mostly either British pounds or U.S. dollars. In these instances the amounts were converted into euro at the exchange rate for the week that the tournament was played. The top 10 golfers in 2005 were:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 34], "content_span": [35, 426]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181554-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour Qualifying School graduates\nThis is a list of the 32 players who earned their 2006 European Tour card through Q School in 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [46, 46], "content_span": [47, 146]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181554-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Tour Qualifying School graduates, 2006 results\n* European Tour rookie in 2006T = Tied \u00a0 The player retained his European Tour card for 2007 (finished inside the top 118). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2007, but retained conditional status (finished between 119\u2013150). The player did not retain his European Tour card for 2007 (finished outside the top 150).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 46], "section_span": [48, 60], "content_span": [61, 393]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181555-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Touring Car Cup\nThe 2005 FIA European Touring Car Cup was the first running of the FIA European Touring Car Cup. It was held on 16 October 2005 at the ACI Vallelunga Circuit near Rome in Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181556-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Union Amateur Boxing Championships\nThe Men's 2005 European Union Amateur Boxing Championships were held in Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy from June 4 to June 11. The 3rd edition of the annual competition was organised by the European governing body for amateur boxing, EABA. A total number of 92 fighters from across Europe competed at these championships.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 48], "section_span": [48, 48], "content_span": [49, 365]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181557-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Weightlifting Championships\nThe 2005 European Weightlifting Championships were held in Sofia, Bulgaria from April 19 to April 24, 2005. It was the 84th edition of the event. There were a total number of 185 athletes competing, from 30 nations.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 41], "section_span": [41, 41], "content_span": [42, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181558-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Weightlifting Championships \u2013 Women's 48 kg\nThe Women's Flyweight (\u2013 48\u00a0kg) Weightlifting Event is the lightest women's event at the weightlifting competition, limiting competitors to a maximum of 48 kilograms of body mass. The competition at the 2005 European Weightlifting Championships took place on 2005-04-22 in Sofia, Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 57], "section_span": [57, 57], "content_span": [58, 347]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181559-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Women Sevens Championship\nThe 2004 European Women Sevens Championship was the third edition of the European Women's Sevens Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [39, 39], "content_span": [40, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181559-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Women Sevens Championship, Qualification Tournament\nVenue/Date: Prague, 14\u201315 May 2005 Bosnia failed to appear and were replaced by Czech Republic II. .", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 39], "section_span": [41, 65], "content_span": [66, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181560-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Wrestling Championships\nThe 2005 European Wrestling Championships was held from 12 to 17 April 2005 in Varna, Bulgaria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 133]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181561-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival\nThe 2005 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival was held in Monthey, Switzerland, between 24 and 28 January 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 158]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181562-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival\nThe 2005 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival was held in Lignano Sabbiadoro, Italy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [43, 43], "content_span": [44, 130]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181562-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European Youth Summer Olympic Festival, Mascot\nThe mascot for the 2005 European Youth Olympic Festival is Coki, a seagull.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 43], "section_span": [45, 51], "content_span": [52, 127]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods\nThe 2005 European floods hit mainly Romania, Switzerland, Austria and Germany, as well as several other countries in Central Europe and Eastern Europe during August 2005. The disaster came at a time when Portugal was suffering from intense forest fires which left 15 dead and days before the powerful Hurricane Katrina hit the United States.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [20, 20], "content_span": [21, 362]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Death toll\nThe death toll was 62, with 31 dead in Romania, 20 in Bulgaria, 6 in Switzerland, and 5 in Austria and Germany. Thousands were evacuated from their homes; the rains were the worst flooding to hit Europe since the 2002 floods.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 32], "content_span": [33, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Romania\nRomania was the most affected by the 2005 floods, as it was faced with the most powerful and widespread floods and also the highest loss of life, with 31 dead. Total damages are estimated to be valued at more than 5\u00a0billion lei (\u20ac1.5\u00a0billion).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 291]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Romania\nIn mid August, the North-East region of Romania was heavily affected, with 1,473 evacuated from their homes in Ia\u015fi, Suceava and Boto\u015fani starting from August 16. In Suceava county, 555\u00a0km of roads were affected, while nearly 600 bridges were flooded, resulting in the flooding of 520 houses, 16 of which were significantly destroyed. Several communications networks, particularly electric cables and optical fibres, were also affected.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 484]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Romania\nBefore it had ended, on August 22, 2005, the Ministry of Interior was reported as saying that floods and landslides affected over 500 villages in 31 districts: 200 homes completely destroyed, 2,000+ other structures affected, 11,000 households flooded, 9,000 wells flooded with rainfall and groundwater displacement, 34,000+ hectares of farmland and 2,000+ hectares of forests and grasslands destroyed, 9 kilometers of highway, 265 kilometers of county roads and 906 other roads were all severely damaged, and 25 cities lost power.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 579]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Romania\nFloods were particularly acute in the central county of Harghita, where flooding hit the town of Odorheiu Secuiesc and surrounding localities in mid-to-late August. The flooding was most intense in the period from 24 to 25 August, when ten people were killed, a further five were declared missing and 1,400 households were flooded. Other counties significantly affected in late August were Mure\u0219, Prahova and Bistri\u0163a. The city of T\u00e2rgu Mure\u015f, an important regional centre, was also affected by the rising of waters on the T\u00e2rnava River, even though there wasn't a significant amount of damage caused to infrastructure.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 667]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Romania\nIn northwestern Romania, the counties of Bihor and Cluj were also affected, although on a smaller scale than Harghita. In Cluj county, over 100 houses were flooded, with the flooding centred on the town of Turda. Railway lines in the county were also closed. The localities of Pope\u015fti, Suplacu de Barc\u0103u and Valea lui Mihai were affected in Bihor county.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 47], "content_span": [48, 402]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Central Europe and the Alpine region\nThe Swiss capital of Bern was also heavily hit after the Aar burst its banks, and the town of Brienz saw 400 residents evacuated. The village of Lauterbrunnen in the Bernese Alps was completely cut off. The only exit from the town is by a very narrow gorge just wide enough to take the river, road and railway, and the river expanded to fill the entire gorge. This stranded thousands of tourists in the village, and the only way out was by helicopter or by crossing one of the high Alpine passes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 573]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Central Europe and the Alpine region\nThe Tyrol and Vorarlberg states of Austria saw many areas cut off by flooded roads. The lower part of the Rhine overflowed, affecting the Swiss Graub\u00fcnden Canton, as well as parts of Vorarlberg. The river Danube and its tributaries overflowed in many places, flooding parts of Germany, Bavaria in particular. Several floodings and landslides were reported in Lower Austria and Styria.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 461]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Central Europe and the Alpine region\nThe floods also meant the temporary closure of many mountain passes, amongst them the Gotthard in Switzerland, and the Arlberg in Austria. On a section of the Arlberg, the road and rail were washed away. Austrian Federal Railways have issued a that the rail line reconstruction will take at least a month. The main phone and data line between Vorarlberg and the rest of Austria was destroyed and had to be replaced by a radio communication. With rain and flood waters subsiding on August 27, people started to return to their homes, rail and road routes reopened and the cleanup began.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Central Europe and the Alpine region\nTown of Ja\u0161a Tomi\u0107 in Serbia was devastated by floods. Poland, where seven bridges collapsed, and Slovenia were was also affected by flooding in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 76], "content_span": [77, 229]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181563-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 European floods, Affected regions, Other countries\nBulgaria and Moldova were also affected, though to a lesser extent. In Bulgaria, three months of rain and flooding killed 20\u00a0people and left 14,000 homeless. The country was hit by further floods in August (normally a very dry month), though these did not cause such widespread damage, but caused damage to the year's crops, causing an increase in the price of fruit and vegetables. Moldova was also hit by torrential rains in August.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 55], "content_span": [56, 490]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181564-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 F1 Powerboat World Championship\nThe 2005 UIM F1 World Championship was the 22nd season of Formula 1 Powerboat racing. The calendar consisted of six events, beginning in Portim\u00e3o, Portugal on 22 May 2005, and ending in Sharjah, UAE on 16 December 2005. Guido Cappellini, driving for the Tamoil F1 Team, clinched his ninth world title, re-taking the championship from defending champion Scott Gillman.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 404]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181564-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Results and standings\nPoints were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers. A maximum of two boats per team were eligible for points in the teams' championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 59], "content_span": [60, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181564-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Results and standings, Drivers standings\n\u2020 Half points were awarded at the Grand Prix of Singapore as less than 70% of the race distance had been completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 78], "content_span": [79, 194]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181564-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Results and standings, Teams standings\nOnly boats with results eligible for points counting towards the teams' championship are shown here.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 177]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181564-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 F1 Powerboat World Championship, Results and standings, Teams standings\n\u2020 Half points were awarded at the Grand Prix of Singapore as less than 70% of the race distance had been completed.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 76], "content_span": [77, 192]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield\nThe 2005 FA Community Shield (also known as The FA Community Shield in partnership with McDonald's for sponsorship reasons) was the 83rd staging of the FA Community Shield, an annual football match contested by the reigning champions of the Premier League and the holders of the FA Cup. It was held at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff on 7 August 2005. The game was played between Chelsea, champions of the 2004\u201305 Premier League and Arsenal, who beat Manchester United on penalties to win the 2005 FA Cup Final. Chelsea won the match 2\u20131 in front of a crowd of 58,014.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 595]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield\nThis was Chelsea's fifth Community Shield appearance to Arsenal's 19th. Relations between the two clubs were hostile before the match, given Chelsea's illicit attempts to sign Arsenal defender Ashley Cole. In the game Chelsea took the lead when striker Didier Drogba scored in the eighth minute. He scored again in the second half, before Cesc F\u00e0bregas replied for Arsenal with a goal in the 64th minute. Jos\u00e9 Mourinho praised Chelsea in his post-match interview and felt the team looked comfortable in defence. Opposing manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger admitted Drogba had presented problems for Arsenal and likened his opponents to a long ball team, who on the day played \"very direct\".", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 702]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Background and pre-match\nFounded in 1908 as a successor to the Sheriff of London Charity Shield, the FA Community Shield began as a contest between the respective champions of the Football League and Southern League, although in 1913, it was played between an Amateurs XI and a Professionals XI. In 1921, it was played by the league champions of the top division and FA Cup winners for the first time. Cardiff's Millennium Stadium was hosting the Shield for the fifth time; it took over as the venue for the event while Wembley Stadium underwent a six-year renovation between 2001 and 2006.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 616]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Background and pre-match\nChelsea qualified for the 2005 FA Community Shield as winners of the 2004\u201305 FA Premier League. It was their first league title in 50 years, remembered for the records broken such as the most wins, fewest goals conceded in a league season and most points accumulated. The other Community Shield place went to Arsenal, who beat Manchester United on penalties to win the final of the 2004\u201305 FA Cup. Arsenal was making its 19th Community Shield appearance and held the Shield after beating Manchester United 3\u20131 a year previously. By contrast this was Chelsea's fifth appearance, their first since 2000. It was also the first meeting between both sides in the Shield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Background and pre-match\nChelsea manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho described relations between the two clubs as \"non-existent\", given his club's approach to sign (tapping up) Arsenal defender Ashley Cole. The player had met Mourinho and chief executive Peter Kenyon at a London hotel in January 2005, without Arsenal's consent. Chelsea, Mourinho and Cole were all later found guilty by an independent commission and fined accordingly; the club was charged the most amount \u2013 \u00a3300,000.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Background and pre-match\nThe ownership of Chelsea by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich also caused friction between both clubs. Arsenal manager Ars\u00e8ne Wenger said in May 2005: \"They are a financially doped club. They have enhancement of performances through financial resources which are unlimited. For me, it's a kind of doping because it's not in any way linked to their resources. It puts pressure on the market that is not very healthy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 469]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0005-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Background and pre-match\nThey can go to Steven Gerrard or Rio Ferdinand and 'say how much do you earn, we'll give you twice as much.'\" Wenger admitted this put Arsenal at a disadvantage in the transfer market; in the case of Shaun Wright-Phillips, a long-term target, Chelsea's interest meant Arsenal needed to wait before making a bid. The player eventually joined Chelsea from Manchester City for \u00a321 million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 437]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Team selection\nChelsea fielded a full-strength team, which lined up in a 4\u20133\u20133 formation; an attacking three of Didier Drogba, Damien Duff and Arjen Robben. Asier Del Horno was named as left back, which meant William Gallas moved to central defence. Wright-Phillips began the match on the substitute bench. Arsenal's line up by contrast was relatively inexperienced in midfield \u2013 Gilberto Silva was on the bench and Mathieu Flamini partnered Cesc F\u00e0bregas in the centre. Up front Dennis Bergkamp started alongside striker Thierry Henry. The team played in a 4\u20134\u20132 formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 47], "content_span": [48, 607]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nThe stadium observed a period of silence in memory of the victims of the July bombings in London, and a mark of respect to Arsenal fan Anthony Walker, killed on Merseyside the previous week. Arsenal in their away strip of yellow kicked off the match; they won a corner after four minutes, but their threat was averted by Chelsea. In the eighth minute Del Horno hit a long pass to the edge of Arsenal\u2019s right area. Drogba controlled the ball with his chest and went beyond his marker Philippe Senderos.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0007-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nHe shot the ball past goalkeeper Jens Lehmann in the Arsenal goal to give Chelsea a 1\u20130 lead. Arsenal began to dominate proceedings, but struggled to make use of their advantage. A slip by Senderos in the 20th minute invited Robben to make a run down the right side of the pitch, but the chance for Chelsea was brief as Senderos won the ball back. Four minutes later F\u00e0bregas and Claude Mak\u00e9l\u00e9l\u00e9 were each shown a yellow card for clashing with one another.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 497]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0007-0002", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nArsenal in the 36th minute fashioned their best chance of the game through Kolo Tour\u00e9, whose shot forced goalkeeper Petr \u010cech to save acrobatically. Six minutes before the interval Drogba was ruled offside, but continued to run in the direction of Arsenal\u2019s goal. He went down on a challenge from Lauren and proceeded to roll around Arsenal\u2019s penalty area once Lehmann got involved \u2013 the \"farce\" was brought to a close after words from the referee.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 489]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nArsenal made a host of changes before the match restarted \u2013 Gilberto, Robin van Persie and Alexander Hleb were substituted on for Bergkamp, Robert Pires and Flamini. Robben made a run down the right side of the pitch, but failed to get past Senderos in what was the first notable action of the second half. Moments after, Freddie Ljungberg's attempt on goal was cleared by the Chelsea defence following good play by Van Persie. In the 57th minute Chelsea increased their lead. A long pass found Drogba, who once more held off Senderos in pursuit of the ball.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 599]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0008-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nHe was forced wide by Lehmann, but on the turn shot the ball through the net to score his second goal of the game. Drogba was then replaced by Hern\u00e1n Crespo, and Tiago came on for Ei\u00f0ur Gu\u00f0johnsen. Arsenal scored in the 64th minute; Ljungberg crossed the ball from the left and F\u00e0bregas evaded the Chelsea defence to slot it past \u010cech in the goal. Both clubs made mass substitutions in the final third of the game, notably Wright-Phillips coming on for his Chelsea debut in place of Robben.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 531]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0008-0002", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Match, Summary\nArsenal continued to push for an equaliser the longer the match went on, which meant they were culpable to Chelsea countering. A free-kick by Van Persie was saved by \u010cech and it was not until the 86th minute that Henry fashioned his first chance of the half \u2013 it too was dealt with by \u010cech. Chelsea continued to withstand Arsenal\u2019s pressure in injury time and came close to scoring a third goal, but for Tour\u00e9\u2019s intervention.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 40], "content_span": [41, 466]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nMourinho believed his team deserved to win and said after scoring the first goal, \"we looked comfortable and solid in the defence and good on the counter-attack.\" He did not believe the result would have any consequences for either team, but said \"...it is better to win than to lose and we can go home happy and with a smile on our faces.\" John Terry described the victory as a \"perfect start\", and added it gave Chelsea a psychological edge over Arsenal. Drogba felt the result was good for the team's confidence, though confessed Chelsea did not play well \u2013 particularly in midfield.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 637]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181565-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Community Shield, Post-match and aftermath\nTwo weeks after the Community Shield match, both teams played each other in the league at Chelsea's home ground, Stamford Bridge. Drogba scored the only goal of the game, which marked Arsenal's first league defeat against their opponents in ten years. Chelsea also beat Arsenal away from home and went on to retain the Premier League. Whereas Arsenal's league form was indifferent and the team finished fourth (outside of the top two for the first time under Wenger), their performances in the UEFA Champions League were appreciable. They became the first London team to participate in a European Cup final, though lost 2\u20131 to Barcelona in the Stade de France, Paris.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 50], "content_span": [51, 718]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final\nThe 2005 FA Cup Final was a football match played between Arsenal and Manchester United on 21 May 2005 at the Millennium Stadium, Cardiff. It was the final match of the 2004\u201305 FA Cup, the 124th season of English football\u2019s primary cup competition, the FA Cup. Arsenal became the first team to win the FA Cup via a penalty shoot-out, despite being outplayed throughout the game, after neither side managed to score in the initial 90 minutes or in 30 minutes of extra time. The shoot-out finished 5\u20134 to Arsenal, with Patrick Vieira scoring the winning penalty after Paul Scholes' shot was saved by Arsenal goalkeeper Jens Lehmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final\nAs both teams were in the highest tier of English football, the Premier League, Arsenal and Manchester United entered the competition in the third round. Matches up to the semi-final were contested on a one-off basis, with a replay taking place if the match ended in a draw. Both clubs only needed one replay along the way to the final; Arsenal's tie against Sheffield United in the fifth round was decided by a penalty shootout, whereas Manchester United overcame non-league Exeter City in the third round, after the original tie ended goalless.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 564]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final\nProtests over the impending takeover of Manchester United by American businessman Malcolm Glazer had threatened to overshadow the final, though demonstrations in Cardiff required little intervention from the police. Both managers for the final made surprising changes to their team; Ars\u00e8ne Wenger unconventionally deployed a defensive formation, while Sir Alex Ferguson left midfielder Ryan Giggs on the bench. Manchester United dominated the match, creating four times as many shots as their opponents, but struggled to find the breakthrough. In extra time, Arsenal's Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes was sent off for a second bookable offence, becoming only the second player to be sent off in an FA Cup final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 716]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final\nThe British press unanimously agreed that Arsenal were fortunate to win; Wenger himself admitted so in his press conference afterwards. A television audience of over 480\u00a0million worldwide watched the final; in the United Kingdom, coverage of the match peaked at 12.8\u00a0million, making it the highest-rated game in Cup history since the 1996 final. The departures of captains Patrick Vieira and Roy Keane before the year end, coupled with the changing objectives of both clubs, meant the 2005 final is considered as the natural end point in the rivalry between Arsenal and Manchester United under Ferguson and Wenger.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [17, 17], "content_span": [18, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final\nThe FA Cup is English football's primary cup competition. Clubs in the Premier League enter the FA Cup in the third round and are drawn randomly with the remaining clubs. If a match is drawn, the tie is replayed at the ground of the away team from the original match. As with league fixtures, FA Cup matches are subject to change in the event of games being selected for television coverage and this often can be influenced by clashes with other competitions. In September 2004, it was announced that the Millennium Stadium was chosen as the venue for the semi-finals, in addition to the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 37], "content_span": [38, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nArsenal's cup run started with a home tie against Stoke City. The visitors took the lead just before the break, but goals from Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes and Robin van Persie in the second half meant Arsenal won 2\u20131. They then faced Wolverhampton Wanderers at home in the next round; a goal apiece from Patrick Vieira and Freddie Ljungberg secured a comfortable 2\u20130 victory.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nArsenal's opponent in the fifth round was Sheffield United. After 35 minutes Dennis Bergkamp was sent off for his apparent push on Danny Cullip. With eleven minutes of normal time remaining, Robert Pires scored for Arsenal, but the team conceded a late penalty which Andy Gray converted. The equaliser for Sheffield United meant the match was replayed at Bramall Lane on 1 March 2005. Both teams played out a goalless draw after full-time and throughout extra-time, so the tie was decided by a penalty shootout. Arsenal goalkeeper Manuel Almunia saved two penalties, which ensured progress into the quarter-finals.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 661]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nBolton Wanderers hosted Arsenal at the Reebok Stadium in the sixth round of the competition. Ljungberg scored the only goal of the tie after just three minutes; he had an opportunity to extend Arsenal's lead in stoppage time, but hit the ball over from six yards. It was described by BBC Sport as the \"most glaring miss of the match, if not the entire season.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 407]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Arsenal\nArsenal faced Blackburn Rovers in the semi-final which was played on 16 April 2005. Two goals from Van Persie and one from Pires gave Arsenal a 3\u20130 win, in a match marred by Blackburn's aggressive tactics.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 252]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester United\nManchester United, the holders of the FA Cup, began their defence of the trophy with a home tie against non-league Exeter City. United had made several first team changes and struggled to find a breakthrough in the tie. Even with the second half introductions of Paul Scholes and Cristiano Ronaldo, the visitors held on for a goalless draw. The match was replayed at Exeter's home ground, St James Park on 19 January 2005. Ronaldo scored the opening goal of the match in the ninth minute and Wayne Rooney added a second, three minutes from normal time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 609]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester United\nManchester United's opponents in the fourth round was Middlesbrough. Rooney scored twice in the team's 3\u20130 victory \u2013 he lobbed the ball over goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer for his first goal and volleyed it for his second. Middlesbrough manager Steve McClaren credited Rooney's performance afterwards and said he made the difference in the tie. Everton hosted Manchester United in the next round at Goodison Park. A goal apiece from Quinton Fortune and Ronaldo in either half ensured a 2\u20130 win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 546]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0011-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester United\nSouthampton was Manchester United's opponent in the sixth round. After two minutes at St Mary's United took the lead; a shot by Roy Keane near the penalty area hit Southampton's Peter Crouch and deflected into the goal. Ronaldo scored United's second and additional goals from Scholes meant they progressed into the last four of the competition; the final score was 4\u20130.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 427]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0012-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Route to the final, Manchester United\nIn the semi-final Manchester United faced Newcastle United at the Millennium Stadium. They took the lead in the 19th minute when Ruud van Nistelrooy scored, and Scholes extended the team's advantage just before half time. Van Nistelrooy made it 3\u20130 in the 58th minute, before Shola Ameobi scored what proved a mere consolation a minute later, as Ronaldo added United's fourth late on.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 56], "content_span": [57, 441]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0013-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match\nThe final marked the fifth meeting between the two clubs in the 2004\u201305 season. Despite finishing six points ahead of Manchester United in the league, Arsenal had lost both league fixtures between the clubs, as well as a League Cup fifth-round tie, which was played out by the clubs' fringe and reserve team players. Arsenal had won the season's first encounter in the FA Community Shield, also at the Millennium Stadium, by a 3\u20131 scoreline.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 470]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0014-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match\nThe clubs had met in an FA Cup final before \u2013 in 1979, when Arsenal won 3\u20132. Manchester United were appearing in their 17th FA Cup Final, their second in as many years, and had won the FA Cup on 11 of their previous 16 appearances (including beating Milwall in the 2004 final). Two of these victories had yielded a domestic double (in 1994 and 1996) and in 1999 they had won the FA Cup as part of a unique Treble, consisting of the cup, the Premier League and the UEFA Champions League. Arsenal were also appearing in their 17th Cup final \u2013 their fourth in five years. They had won the cup nine times previously, most recently in 2003, when they beat Southampton in the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 705]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0015-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match\nMeetings between Arsenal and Manchester United were keenly contested during the 2000s and highly publicised by the media; the cup final this season had added significance as neither club won the league after a decade of dominance, and it was their only chance of silverware. The emergence of Chelsea, who were crowned league champions in April, had presented a long-term threat to Arsenal and Manchester United's duopoly on English football, as they were financed by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich. Chelsea were accused of \"tapping-up\" Arsenal defender Ashley Cole in January, and were linked to Manchester United's Rio Ferdinand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 665]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0016-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match\nWenger welcomed Chelsea's emergence, describing them as the \"third force\" in English football, but he raised concerns over their conduct and what he perceived as artificial growth. Asked whether Chelsea could dominate for the foreseeable, Wenger said: \"I feel yes, because they are a financially doped club. They have enhancement of performances through financial resources which are unlimited. For me, it's a kind of doping because it's not in any way linked to their resources.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 509]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0016-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match\nDespite the absence of Thierry Henry, ruled out through injury, and Arsenal's poor recent record against Manchester United, Wenger believed his team were more than capable of winning the match: \"What is good in football is that it is not predictable. [ \u2026] You act now like it is a decade that we haven\u2019t beaten Manchester United \u2013 it's not true. It's two games.\" It was reported on the eve of the final that Philippe Senderos would start ahead of first-teamer Sol Campbell.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 502]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0017-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match\nManchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson dismissed suggestions that his team had been over physical in previous meetings against Arsenal. Referring back to the league fixture in October 2004, he told reporters: \"We committed three fouls on Reyes, for instance, but that hardly constitutes The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, does it? There were six by them on Cristiano Ronaldo.\" He questioned the character of Arsenal's players after they lost their unbeaten record, and likened their protest to propaganda, as a way to disguise their crisis \u2013 \"...it was convenient for them to say they were kicked off the park.\" United had struggled to score goals in the lead up to the final, and Ferguson stressed the importance of his team taking their chances. \"Big games are usually decided that way. They are so close so that whoever gets in front has an advantage,\" he said.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 28], "content_span": [29, 893]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0018-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Pre-match, Planned protests\nThe build-up to the final had focused upon many Manchester United fans' discontent at their takeover by American businessman and sports tycoon Malcolm Glazer, and large demonstrations were planned inside and outside the Millennium Stadium. Despite this, the final was played in the rain and only a small group of around 100 supporters held protests and sang anti-Glazer songs. The police were out in force but did not have any trouble to deal with.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0019-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nWenger opted for a 4\u20135\u20131 formation, with Bergkamp playing as a lone striker. The absence of Henry also opened a place in midfield for Gilberto Silva, while Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes and Pires were selected on the wings ahead of Ljungberg and Robin van Persie, who were both named as substitutes. As anticipated, Senderos's form saw him selected at centre-back ahead of Campbell, despite the England international's return from injury.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 468]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0020-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nFerguson had a defensive selection dilemma ahead of the final, with both of his starting full-backs, Gabriel Heinze (ankle) and Gary Neville (groin), having suffered injuries. Neville eventually recovered enough to make the substitutes' bench, despite only playing in one of the team's last five games, but Heinze missed the game entirely, Mika\u00ebl Silvestre taking his place at left-back. Neville's absence meant that John O'Shea started at right-back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 492]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0020-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nNeville was joined on the bench by winger Ryan Giggs and goalkeeper Tim Howard; Giggs' omission was a surprise, and it meant that Darren Fletcher started on the right wing, while Ronaldo played on the left. Howard, on the other hand, had been competing for the number 1 jersey with Roy Carroll all season, and it was ultimately the Northern Irishman who was picked.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 406]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0021-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Team selection\nRoy Keane was appearing in his seventh FA Cup Final having previously played in the 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1999 and 2004 finals. This was the most number of finals for a player in the post-war period; by 2010 however, Ashley Cole had reached his eighth final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 40], "content_span": [41, 301]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0022-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nManchester United kicked the game off, and also fashioned the first chance of the game; Ronaldo beat Lauren on the left wing to put over a cross, only for Scholes to head the ball over the crossbar after losing his marker. Two minutes later, a break from Jos\u00e9 Antonio Reyes had Carroll scampering across from his goal to meet the Spaniard, forcing Reyes wide enough to allow the United defence time to get back.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 457]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0023-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nManchester United had the ball in the back of the net on 27 minutes, when Ferdinand turned in the rebound after Jens Lehmann saved from Rooney, but the assistant referee ruled that Ferdinand was offside. After a brief Arsenal attack, Silvestre played a long, diagonal ball to Van Nistelrooy on the right wing. The Dutch forward controlled the ball and then outpaced Cole to the goal line; he then cut the ball back to Rooney, whose first-time shot was turned over the bar by Lehmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 529]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0023-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nThe consequent corner broke to Rooney on the edge of the penalty area, but his shot was deflected behind for another corner, which Scholes took. The England midfielder floated the ball over to the edge of the penalty area, where Rooney was waiting, only to volley it just over the bar.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 331]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0024-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, First half\nIn the closing stages of the first half, Van Nistelrooy got his first shot on goal, turning Senderos only to send the ball trickling along the floor for Lehmann to save comfortably. The first half finished with a foul on Rooney, who had done well to break free of challenges from Cole, Vieira and Senderos, who eventually brought Rooney down. The English forward took the free kick himself, but it went over the bar to cheers from the Arsenal fans and the sound of the referee's half-time whistle.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 543]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0025-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nManchester United fashioned the first chance of the second half after just three minutes, when Rooney cut inside from the right along the face of the penalty area, but his left-footed shot was blocked away for a corner kick. Soon after, Van Nistelrooy received the ball on the edge of the penalty area and held it up before playing a through-ball to Keane, but the Irishman's low cross was diverted behind by Kolo Tour\u00e9 before it reached Rooney. United then had their third chance in the space of five minutes when Ronaldo shot just wide from 25 yards, from the left corner of the penalty area.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 641]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0026-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nThroughout the match, Lauren committed several fouls on Ronaldo, and confronted the Portuguese winger early in the second half, before finally being booked for persistent fouling in the 62nd minute. Ronaldo took the free kick himself but put it just over the bar from 30 yards. In the 64th minute, Arsenal were awarded a free kick for an O'Shea foul on Reyes; Bergkamp took the kick, which was headed away by Ferdinand, but only as far as Pires, whose side-footed volley went over the bar. The free kick was to be Bergkamp's last contribution to the final, as he was then substituted by Ljungberg in the 65th minute.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 663]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0027-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nUnited then went back downfield and Ronaldo took on Lauren, who dared not dive in for a tackle and risk a second yellow card. Ronaldo got past the Cameroonian full-back and then chipped a cross into the penalty area, but Van Nistelrooy was unable to make enough contact with the ball to force his header on target. A minute later, Silvestre found Rooney with another diagonal pass; Rooney attempted to drive in a low cross, but it ended up heading towards goal and came back off the foot of the post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 547]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0027-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nFletcher was first to the ball but he fired a shot across the face of the goal and out for a goal kick. With their very next attack, United sent Ronaldo away down the left wing again; he sent over another cross, but it was again too far in front of Van Nistelrooy.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 311]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0028-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nReyes received his first yellow card in the 76th minute, when he was late in tackling Silvestre after the French defender had played a backpass to Carroll. The break in play allowed Manchester United to make their first substitution, bringing on Fortune for O'Shea, who appeared to be struggling with a calf injury. With six minutes left in normal time, United won a corner on the left hand side, which Ronaldo played short to Scholes. Scholes returned the ball to Ronaldo, who crossed it into the penalty area, where Keane was unmarked at the back post.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 601]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0028-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nThe ball eventually broke to the United captain, who shot, only to see four Arsenal players between him and the goal, ready to block his effort behind for another corner. Lehmann came to meet the second corner kick, but missed the ball, allowing it to go all the way through to Van Nistelrooy; the Dutchman headed the ball goalwards, but Ljungberg was on the line and headed it up onto the crossbar and away.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0029-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Second half\nArsenal then made their second substitution, bringing on Van Persie in place of Cesc F\u00e0bregas. As the match entered injury time at the end of the second half, Ronaldo made yet another run down the left wing, outpacing Lauren to Rooney's through-ball. The ball broke back to Rooney 30 yards from goal, but his shot went over the bar. The second half finished with a Wes Brown cross from the right wing that made its way across the penalty area to Ronaldo, but the Portuguese could only head the ball straight at Lehmann.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 46], "content_span": [47, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0030-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Extra time\nManchester United brought Giggs on at the start of extra time, the Welshman taking Fletcher's place in the midfield. They immediately tried to play him in down the left wing, but the pass was over-hit and went beyond Giggs. Arsenal finally got their first shot on target in the seventh minute of extra time, when a Van Persie free kick \u2013 awarded for a foul by Silvestre \u2013 forced a diving save from Carroll.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 452]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0030-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Extra time\nFour minutes later, Manchester United appealed for a penalty kick when a cross from Giggs struck Cole, but replays showed that the ball hit the Arsenal full-back in the midriff. United sustained their attack, and the ball came to Scholes in the penalty area, but his shot on the turn was well saved by Lehmann. The resultant corner was taken short by Scholes, before it was played back to him; his cross found Van Nistelrooy unmarked in the area, but the Dutchman headed over the bar from the edge of the goal area. United then had another penalty shout when Giggs volleyed a long ball from Scholes into Tour\u00e9's body and up onto the Ivorian's hand, but referee Rob Styles turned their claims down. Arsenal then brought on Edu to replace Pires for the remaining 15 minutes.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 818]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0031-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Extra time\nThe second half of extra time began with yet another chance for Manchester United, this time constructed from a Giggs break down the left wing, but Van Nistelrooy failed in his attempt to back-heel Giggs' cross into the goal and the opportunity was wasted. Five minutes into the second half, Reyes committed another late tackle on Silvestre, for which he received a final warning from referee Styles. Reyes himself was then the victim of a late tackle by Scholes, who was shown a yellow card.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 538]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0031-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Extra time\nThe match threatened to descend into a mass brawl soon after, when Fortune caught Ljungberg in the face with a flailing arm and then committed a high tackle on Edu, provoking a reaction from the Arsenal players. A shoulder-charge by Rooney on Cole resulted in an Arsenal free kick on the left wing; Van Persie swung the ball over and it was only cleared as far as Ljungberg, but the Swede struck a shot with his shin and the ball spun wide.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 486]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0031-0002", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Extra time\nWith a couple of minutes left in the extra period, Manchester United won a free kick on the left corner of the Arsenal penalty area when Vieira lazily tripped Ronaldo and received a booking, but Giggs' cross from the free kick was headed away. Meanwhile, Manchester United's substitute goalkeeper, Howard, was seen warming up behind the goal, suggesting that he was preparing to come on for Carroll in the event of a penalty shootout; however, no substitution was made.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 515]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0032-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Extra time\nThe referee added two minutes of injury time at the end of extra time, during which time Manchester United won another free kick, but Scholes' shot was straight at the Arsenal defensive wall. Then, with just seconds left in regulation time, Ronaldo made a break towards the Arsenal half, only to be cynically body-checked by Reyes. Referee Styles made no hesitation and showed Reyes a second yellow card, making the Spaniard the second player to be sent off in an FA Cup Final, after Manchester United's Kevin Moran in 1985. The full-time whistle went immediately after Reyes' dismissal, and the match finished at 0\u20130, making it the first FA Cup Final to result in a penalty shootout.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 45], "content_span": [46, 730]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0033-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Match, Summary, Penalty shootout\nVan Nistelrooy took the first penalty for Manchester United, in front of the United fans, and sent Lehmann the wrong way to give United the early advantage. Lauren then converted the next penalty for Arsenal, before Scholes stepped up to take United's second, only to see it saved by Lehmann, diving low to his right. The next six penalties were all scored \u2013 Ljungberg, Van Persie and Cole for Arsenal, Ronaldo, Rooney and Keane for Manchester United \u2013 leaving Vieira with the opportunity to win the FA Cup for his team. Although Carroll guessed the correct way to dive, Vieira's kick was just out of his reach, giving Arsenal their 10th FA Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 51], "content_span": [52, 697]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0034-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nAs the Arsenal players ran towards Vieira and Lehmann to celebrate, Ferguson and Keane were seen consoling various players and staff members. Mark Lawrenson, the BBC's co-commentator for the final, summarised to his counterpart John Motson: \"Well, we must congratulate Arsenal on the way they took the penalties \u2013 they were excellent [...] But I have to say over the course of the 120 minutes, Manchester United have been mugged.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 460]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0035-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nWenger conceded his opponents were the better side, but praised his team's resolve, telling reporters: \"It was important to score the first goal and with neither team scoring it remained tight for a long, long period. There were some times in the second half when we were a bit lucky but we defended very well and to keep a clean sheet is good.\" He admitted his players had practised taking penalties, but was quick to point out \"you don't score because of the practising \u2013 keeping your nerve is more important.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 542]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0035-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nLehmann, who had been side-lined by Wenger during the course of the season, credited his teammates for scoring all five penalties, and described it as a \"big mental achievement.\" Cole called Arsenal's win a \"\u2026great team performance, we didn't have too many chances but we defended really well and battled really hard.\" Henry, who sat out the final due to injury expressed sympathy for Manchester United, and recollected a similar experience from his early Arsenal career: \"I know how they feel because we lost against Liverpool and did not deserve to lose. If your name is on the cup you win it.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 626]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0036-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\n\"The coach decided to change the system to 4\u20135\u20131. It was different. We used to win by scoring lots of goals, but this time we won by being strong mentally and defensively. The only way we were going to win this final was on penalties.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 265]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0037-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nFerguson was proud of his team's performance, but admitted their failure throughout the season to convert chances into goals, had cost them once more. Of the game, he continued: \"In cup football, you need a break and we didn't get one. We've had luck in the past, so you understand it can happen. It's not a nice experience but it's one you have to accept.\" Ferguson criticised the referee for failing to send Vieira off during extra-time as he fouled Rooney, and labelled Arsenal as \"boring\" for deploying negative tactics. Keane, like his manager, rued the missed opportunities and said it was a small consolation: \"We dominated but I'm sure the Arsenal players won't be too bothered about that \u2013 they've got the winners' medals and the cup and we haven't.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 789]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0038-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nWriting for The Daily Telegraph, pundit Alan Hansen felt the ease in which Manchester United dominated the final and Arsenal's inability to vary tactics highlighted why Wenger needed to make changes in the close season. Hansen agreed with Ferguson that United's lack of goal threat cost them on the day, but felt their future was rosier than Arsenal's. Nonetheless, he was of the opinion that Chelsea manager Jos\u00e9 Mourinho had little to be concerned about, concluding his piece with the sentence: \"A London club did come away from Cardiff as big winners but it was not Arsenal, it was Chelsea.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 624]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0038-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nIn the same newspaper, Paul Hayward praised the performances of Rooney and Ronaldo \u2013 \"surely the best one-club pairing of under-21s in world football,\" while ex-Arsenal player Alan Smith noted his former club's win demonstrated how Wenger \"for the first time, practically, in his nine-year Highbury tenure, had set up his side with the opposition in mind.\" Capturing United's sombre mood, The Times football correspondent Matt Dickinson wrote: \"The black shirts turned out not to be in protest at Glazer but a reflection of their mood after the first FA Cup Final to be decided by a penalty shoot-out.\"", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 632]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0039-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Post-match\nThe match was broadcast live in the United Kingdom by both the BBC and Sky Sports, with BBC One providing the free-to-air coverage and Sky Sports 1 being the pay-TV alternative. BBC One held the majority of the viewership, with a peak audience of 12.8\u00a0million (67.1% viewing share), which made it the most-watched final in nine years. The match itself was watched by 10\u00a0million viewers (61%), and coverage of the final averaged at 7.3\u00a0million (50.5%). Viewing figures compiled by The Guardian showed the BBC's coverage was second only to ITV's broadcast of the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final between Liverpool and A.C. Milan, which amassed 13.9\u00a0million viewers. Global audience figures for the 2005 FA Cup Final totalled 484\u00a0million.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 29], "content_span": [30, 765]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0040-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Aftermath and legacy\nThe 2005 final was Vieira's last match as an Arsenal player; he joined Juventus in the close season for a combined total fee of \u20ac20\u00a0million. Wenger's decision to sell his captain was made so the team could benefit from F\u00e0bregas, who broke into the first eleven during the season. In later years, Wenger deviated from his usual counter-attacking style, and imposed a fluent system, with less emphasis on physicality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 455]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0040-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Aftermath and legacy\nThe immediate seasons after Arsenal relocated to the Emirates Stadium in 2006 saw Wenger sell several experienced players, and integrate more young talent, as a means of fostering an identity with the club. Financing for the stadium however meant Arsenal prioritised its expenditure instead of the squad and trophies. Though Wenger managed to solidify the club\u2019s position in the Premier League's top four and secure the necessary funds to pay back its debtors, the 2005 Cup win represented Arsenal's last silverware for nine years. In 2014, he led Arsenal to a record-equalling 11th FA Cup, and became the record equalling most successful manager in the competition's history a year later, as his side beat Aston Villa.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 759]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0041-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Aftermath and legacy\nLike Arsenal, Manchester United endured a period of transition after the final. The Glazer's takeover of the club resulted in disaffected fans setting up F.C. United of Manchester, which, as of 2016, has become the largest supporter-owned football club in the United Kingdom. On the pitch, Manchester United began the 2005\u201306 season poorly; they were eliminated in the group stages of the Champions League and the manager was booed at home after United lost to Blackburn Rovers.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 518]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0041-0001", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Aftermath and legacy\nJournalist Henry Winter in December 2005 opined that Ferguson needed to resign, writing in his column: \"Under Ferguson, United became football's answer to the Magic Circle. But the magic now drains away and so, next summer, must Ferguson.\" He stayed, however, and having already called time on Keane's career at United, he began reinvigorating his squad, by signing defenders Nemanja Vidi\u0107 and Patrice Evra. United returned to the Millennium Stadium eight months after the FA Cup loss, and beat Wigan Athletic to win the 2006 Football League Cup Final. Ferguson guided his team to their first League title in four years the following season, after stern competition from Chelsea, and won a further 13 competitive honours until his retirement in 2013.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 790]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181566-0042-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Cup Final, Aftermath and legacy\nKevin McCarra regards the final as a turning point in the rivalry between the two clubs: \"...Arsenal and United, who could barely be prised apart in 2005, have since gone their separate ways. The signs of divergence were already apparent that afternoon.\" The match is considered an example of Wenger setting his team up pragmatically and going against his ideals. Having later asserted he would never use the 4\u20135\u20131 system again, Wenger adopted the formation for Champions League matches and his approach resulted in Arsenal reaching the 2006 UEFA Champions League Final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 17], "section_span": [19, 39], "content_span": [40, 610]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181567-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Premier League Asia Trophy\nThe FA Premier League Asia Cup 2005 was the second edition of the Premier League Asia Trophy, a four-team football (soccer) tournament held every two years. The second edition was competed by Thailand national football team, Bolton Wanderers, Everton and Manchester City at the 49,749-capacity Rajamangala Stadium. The semi-finals took place on 20 July and both third-place play-off and final on 26 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 444]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181567-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Premier League Asia Trophy\nBoth semifinals were decided on spot kicks with the scores levelled on 1\u20131 at full-time. Thailand defeated Everton 5\u20133 while Bolton Wanderers edged Manchester City 5\u20134 on the spot-kicks.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 221]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181567-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Premier League Asia Trophy\nThe third place play-off was also decided via spot-kicks after a 1\u20131 stalemate. Manchester City beat Everton 4\u20132 on spot-kicks. The final was won through a penalty converted by Diouf on the 79th minute as Bolton Wanderers clinched the title with a slim 1\u20130 win over Thailand.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [34, 34], "content_span": [35, 310]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181567-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Premier League Asia Trophy, Competition format\nThe competition used a knock-out format. On 20 July 2005, Thailand played Everton while Bolton played Man. City. The winners competed in the final while the losers competed for 3rd place play-off, both on 23 July 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 34], "section_span": [36, 54], "content_span": [55, 273]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181568-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Women's Cup Final\nThe 2005 FA Women's Cup Final was the 35th final of the FA Women's Cup, England's primary cup competition for women's football teams. It was the 12th final to be held under the direct control of the Football Association (FA) and was known as the FA Women's Cup Final in partnership with Nationwide for sponsorship reasons. The final was contested between Charlton Athletic and Everton on 2 May 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 425]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181568-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Women's Cup Final\nCharlton Athletic entered their third consecutive final having lost the previous two. Everton reached the final for the first time, although an earlier incarnation of the club, known as Leasowe Pacific, had lost the 1988 final and won in 1989.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 269]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181568-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Women's Cup Final\nAs top-flight FA Women's Premier League clubs, both Charlton Athletic and Everton entered the competition at the fourth round stage. Charlton Athletic beat Wolverhampton Wanderers, West Ham United, Sunderland and Bristol Rovers to reach the final. Everton faced Bristol City, Leafield Athletic, Chelsea and Arsenal before reaching the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 367]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181568-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Women's Cup Final\nCharlton Athletic won the game 1\u20130, with a 58th-minute goal by Eniola Aluko.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [25, 25], "content_span": [26, 102]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181568-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Women's Cup Final, Media, Match programme\nThe match programme cover was designed by 15-year-old Gillian Prescott, whose illustration won a competition in the Sunday Express newspaper. From a family of noted women's football supporters in the North West, Sheila Parker was her godmother. Prescott, who had cerebral palsy, died in January 2010.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 49], "content_span": [50, 350]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181568-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 FA Women's Cup Final, Media, Details\nMatch officialsAssistant referees:Wayne Grunnill (East Riding)Oliver Langford (West Midlands)Fourth official:Bob Desmond (Gloucestershire)", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 25], "section_span": [27, 41], "content_span": [42, 180]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181569-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup\nThe FAI Cup 2005 was the 85th staging of The Football Association of Ireland Challenge Cup or FAI Cup. It officially kicked off in late April, when twenty clubs from the junior and intermediate leagues battled it out for the chance to face League of Ireland opposition in the second round. The ten winners of those ties were joined in the second round by the 22 eircom League of Ireland clubs. The competition ran until early December, with the final taking place on Sunday, December 4.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [12, 12], "content_span": [13, 499]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181569-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup, Second round\nMatches played on the weekend of Sunday, 12 June 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 26], "content_span": [27, 81]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181569-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup, Third round\nMatches played on the weekend of Sunday, 28 August 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 12], "section_span": [14, 25], "content_span": [26, 82]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final\nThe 2005 FAI Cup Final was the final match of the 2005 FAI Cup. The final took place on 4 December 2005 at Lansdowne Road, Dublin in front of a crowd of 24,521 and a television audience which peaked at 285,000. This was the largest attendance at an FAI Cup Final since 1990. The match was originally due to take place at Tolka Park, Dublin however the match was moved to Lansdowne Road in order to accommodate a larger crowd. Drogheda United and Cork City contested the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 495]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final\nDrogheda United were generally seen as underdogs coming into the game but they successfully claimed their first major trophy by winning the match. It was Cork City's first appearance in the final since 1998. Drogheda United last contested the final in 1976. Live coverage of the match was provided on RT\u00c9 Two and RT\u00c9 Radio 1.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [18, 18], "content_span": [19, 345]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Drogheda United\nDrogheda United entered the competition in the second round along with the other 21 League of Ireland clubs. They did not play against any junior/intermediate teams en route to the final. Their first match was against First Division Limerick FC. Drogheda won the match 2-0, despite threatening play by Limerick, with both goals coming in the second half. Drogheda were drawn away to Dundalk in the third round, however there was some uncertainty regarding the venue for the match.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 536]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0001-0001", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Drogheda United\nOriel Park, home of Dundalk, was under development leading up to the game and there was a possibility that the work would not be completed on time. Had this been the case, the match would have been switched to Drogheda's stadium. The match went ahead at Oriel Park, with Drogheda as victors after goals from Mark Leech and Damian Lynch either side of half-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 417]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Drogheda United\nAt the quarter-final stage, Drogheda were drawn against Bohemians. They won the game 2-1, and in doing so, reached the semi-finals of the competition for the second successive year. Paul Keegan opened the scoring after 2 minutes, with Damian Lynch adding a second after his initial penalty was saved. Bohemians pulled a goal back through Alan O'Keeffe after the goalscorer, Keegan, was sent off shortly after half-time, but it proved to only be a consolation. Bohemians also had a player sent off towards the end of the game.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 581]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0002-0001", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Drogheda United\nA 2-1 home semi-final victory over Bray Wanderers sent Drogheda into their first FAI Cup Final since 1976. Declan O'Brien opened the scoring in the first half. Jermaine Sandvliet put Drogheda 2-0 up in the second half, only for Bray Wanderers to score 2 minutes later. Despite this setback, Drogheda held on to reach the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 55], "content_span": [56, 383]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Cork City\nCork City also entered the competition at the second round and did not play against any junior/intermediate sides en route to the final. They required a replay to overcome Galway United in the second round. The first tie, despite finishing 0-0, was dominated by Galway United, who were in the league below Cork City. Cork City had home advantage in the replay and went on to win the game 1-0. The match did not pass without incident however, as the winning goal, a penalty, was deemed controversial by the away side.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 566]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Cork City\nDespite having home advantage, Cork City could only manage a 0-0 draw against Finn Harps in the third round. The required replay was not ideal for Cork City as they had qualified for the UEFA Cup, which meant that fixture congestion was a possible problem. Extra-time was required to separate the two sides in the replay. Cork City scored first through Liam Kearney but Finn Harps had taken the lead by the 72nd minute through goals from Eloka Asokuh and Chris Breen. John O'Flynn scored for Cork City in the final few minutes to force extra-time. Roy O'Donovan scored the decisive goal 2 minutes from the end of extra-time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 674]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Route to the final, Cork City\nCork City were drawn at home to Sligo Rovers in the quarter-finals. With the match standing at 1-1, Sligo Rovers forward Kupono Low was dismissed. Cork City capitalised on the dismissal by scoring two further goals. The final score was 3-1. This result set up a semi-final against Derry City. With 90 minutes played, the scoreline remained 0-0 and a replay seemed likely. However, in the second minute of injury time, Derry City substitute Stephen O'Flynn fouled Neale Fenn in the penalty area. The referee awarded a penalty, which was scored by George O'Callaghan to send Cork City into the final.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 49], "content_span": [50, 648]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0006-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Pre-match\nDrogheda United were appearing in the final for the 3rd time, having lost the previous two finals they had contested (in 1976 and 1971). Cork had won the competition once previously, in 1998 and had been runners-up on two occasions, (in 1992 and 1989). Cork City went into the game as League of Ireland champions so they were in contention for the double.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 385]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0007-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Pre-match\nThe venue for the 2005 final was changed leading up to the match. Initially, the match was due to be played at Tolka Park, a stadium with a 9,500 capacity. However, as demand for tickets was expected to exceed the capacity of the stadium after Drogheda United's win over Bray Wanderers, the Football Association of Ireland considered alternative venues. Lansdowne Road was announced as the venue for the final, although the north terrace of the stadium was closed due to fire damage.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 29], "content_span": [30, 513]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0008-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Match\nCork City players Danny Murphy and Roy O'Donovan were suspended for the final after both were booked in a league match against Waterford United. Alan Bennett also received a yellow card in the match, which meant he, too, was to be suspended for the cup final through receiving a one-match ban. Cork City appealed the decision on the grounds that the wrong player had been booked. Television footage appeared to confirm this, so the ban was overturned.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 25], "content_span": [26, 477]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0009-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Match, Report\nNeither side dominated a tense first half which included only one chance of note - John O'Flynn nearly gave Cork City the lead in the 17th minute when his low shot hit the post. Cold and windy weather had a negative impact on the quality of football played. Drogheda United did manage to gain a foothold in the game, however, as they took the lead in the 52nd minute. Declan O'Brien challenged for a cross from the right and the ball broke to Gavin Whelan who scored from close range. Both sides created further chances, but it was Drogheda who scored the next, and final, goal as O'Brien lobbed the Cork keeper from 18 yards to seal the win.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 33], "content_span": [34, 676]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181570-0010-0000", "contents": "2005 FAI Cup Final, Post-match\nIn an interview with the Irish Independent after the match, Cork City manager Damien Richardson was critical of the playing surface at Lansdowne Road, particularly as three rugby internationals had recently been played at the stadium. He added that he would like to see the cup final played earlier in the year.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 18], "section_span": [20, 30], "content_span": [31, 342]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181571-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Dallas season\nThe 2005 FC Dallas season was the ninth season of the Major League Soccer team. The season saw many changes from the previous season. In August, the team moved from their longtime home of the Cotton Bowl to the new soccer-specific Pizza Hut Park in Frisco. Coinciding with the move, the team was rebranded as FC Dallas. This included changing the jerseys from predominantly red to white with red stripes and changing the color scheme from red and black to red, white, and blue. The team also changed its logo. Overall, the season was deemed a success by some because the team returned to the playoffs for the first time in three years. The team also reached the Championship Game of the U.S. Open Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 723]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181572-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Moscow season\nThe 2005 FC Moscow season was the club's 2nd season in existence after taking over the licence of Torpedo-Metallurg in 2004. They finished the season in 5th place, qualifying for the UEFA Intertoto Cup for the first time. In the 2004\u201305 Russian Cup, Moscow reached the Round of 16, whilst in the 2005\u201306 Russian Cup they progressed to the Round of 16 which took place during the 2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [21, 21], "content_span": [22, 413]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181572-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Moscow season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 37], "content_span": [38, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181572-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Moscow season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 53], "content_span": [54, 182]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181572-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Moscow season, Competitions, Russian Cup, 2005\u201306\nThe Round of 16 games took place during the 2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 21], "section_span": [23, 57], "content_span": [58, 114]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181573-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Rubin Kazan season\nThe 2005 FC Rubin Kazan season was the club's 3rd season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the season in fourth position, qualifying for the Second Round of 2006\u201307 UEFA Cup and progressed to the Round 16 in the Russian Cup.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 314]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181573-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Rubin Kazan season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 42], "content_span": [43, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181573-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Rubin Kazan season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 58], "content_span": [59, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181573-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Rubin Kazan season, Competitions, Russian Cup, 2005-06\nThe Round of 16 games took place during the 2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 62], "content_span": [63, 119]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181574-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Seoul season, Players, Team squad\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 41], "content_span": [42, 170]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181574-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Seoul season, Players, Out on loan & military service\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181574-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Starting eleven and formation\nThis section shows the most used players for each position considering a 3-5-2 formation.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181574-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Starting eleven and formation\nSource: Squad stats and Start formations. Only competitive matches. Using the most used start formation. Ordered by position on pitch (from back right to front left).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 60], "content_span": [61, 227]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181574-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Seoul season, Tactics, Substitutes\nSource: Squad stats and Start formations. Only competitive matches. Using the most used start formation. Ordered by position on pitch (from back right to front left).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 20], "section_span": [22, 42], "content_span": [43, 209]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181575-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Spartak Moscow season\nThe 2005 FC Spartak Moscow season was the club's 14th season in the Russian Premier League season. Spartak finished the season in 2nd position, qualifying for the 2006\u201307 UEFA Champions League Second Qualifying Round. In the 2005\u201306 Russian Cup, Spartak progressed to the Quarterfinals of the Russian Cup which took place during the 2006 season.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 375]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181575-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Spartak Moscow season, Squad, On loan\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 45], "content_span": [46, 174]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181575-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Spartak Moscow season, Squad, Left club during season\nNote: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 61], "content_span": [62, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181576-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Terek Grozny season\nThe 2005 Terek Grozny season was the 1st season that the club played in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia. They finished the season bottom of the league, 16th, on 14 points after receiving a six-point deduction for failing to pay a transfer fee in time.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 27], "section_span": [27, 27], "content_span": [28, 326]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181577-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FC Zenit Saint Petersburg season\nThe 2005 Zenit St.Petersburg season was the club's eleventh season in the Russian Premier League, the highest tier of association football in Russia.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 187]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181578-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FCSL season\nThe 2005 FCSL season was the second season in the history of the Florida Collegiate Summer League, a wood bat collegiate summer baseball league operating in the southeastern United States region of central Florida. The league expanded to six franchises with the addition of the Zephyrhills Snappers of Zephyrhills, Florida and the Winter Haven Warthogs of Winter Haven, Florida.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 395]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181578-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FCSL season\nIn the championship game, played for the first time at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida, Zephyrhills defeated Sanford 2-1 to capture the franchise's first FCSL title.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [16, 16], "content_span": [17, 193]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181578-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FCSL season, Playoffs, Preliminary round\nIn 2005, the top four regular season finishers qualified for a double elimination tournament to qualify for the FCSL championship game at Tropicana Field.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 200]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181578-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FCSL season, Playoffs, Championship Game\nSunday, July 31, 2005 at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Florida", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 16], "section_span": [18, 45], "content_span": [46, 113]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181579-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Bahrain Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT Bahrain Supercar 500 was the eleventh and final race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Bahrain International Circuit, Bahrain, on November 25, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [32, 32], "content_span": [33, 225]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181579-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Bahrain Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 32], "section_span": [34, 50], "content_span": [51, 154]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181580-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Brno Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT RAC Brno Supercar 500 was the fifth race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 29 June 2005 at Brno.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [29, 29], "content_span": [30, 166]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181580-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Brno Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 29], "section_span": [31, 47], "content_span": [48, 151]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship\nThe 2005 FIA GT Championship season was the 9th season of FIA GT Championship motor racing. It featured a series of races for GT1 Grand Touring and GT2 Series Grand Touring cars, the former more powerful and highly developed and the latter remaining closer to the production models on which they were based. Additionally cars from National Championships (Group 2) andfrom Single-make Cups (Group 3) were permitted to participate in championship races but could not score points towards the various awards.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 530]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0000-0001", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship\nThe championship itself consisted of a GT1 Championship for Drivers, a GT1 Championship for Teams, a GT2 Cup for Drivers and a GT2 Cup for Teams. A Manufacturers Cup was also awarded in both classes. The championship season began on 10 April 2005 and ended on 25 November 2005 after 11 races.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [24, 24], "content_span": [25, 317]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship, Drivers Championship\nPoints were awarded at each round to the top eight finishers in both the GT1 & GT2 classes on a 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1 basis except for the Spa 24 Hour event were \u201cdouble points\u201d were awarded in three parts as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 46], "content_span": [47, 260]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship, Drivers Championship, GT1 Standings\nThe GT1 Championship for Drivers was awarded to Gabiele Gardel of Switzerland, who drove a Ferrari 550-GTS Maranello for the Larbre Competition team.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 211]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship, Drivers Championship, GT2 Standings\nThe GT2 Cup for Drivers was awarded jointly to German drivers Mike Rockenfeller and Marc Lieb who shared a Porsche 996 GT3 RSR entered by GruppeM Racing.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 61], "content_span": [62, 215]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0004-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship, Teams Championship\nPoints were awarded at each round to the top eight finishers in both the GT1 & GT2 classes on a 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1 basis except for the Spa 24 Hour event were \u201cdouble points\u201d were awarded in three parts as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 44], "content_span": [45, 258]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181581-0005-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Championship, Manufacturers Cup\nPoints were awarded at each round to the top eight finishers in both the GT1 & GT2 classes on a 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1 basis except for the Spa 24 Hour event were \u201cdouble points\u201d were awarded in three parts as follows:", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 24], "section_span": [26, 43], "content_span": [44, 257]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181582-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Imola Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT RAC Imola Supercar 500 was the fourth race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 29 May 2005 at Imola.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 169]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181582-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Imola Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181583-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Istanbul 2 Hours\nThe 2005 FIA GT Istanbul 2 Hours was the eighth race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 18 September 2005 at Istanbul Park.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 175]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181583-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Istanbul 2 Hours, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181584-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Magny-Cours Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT Magny-Cours Supercar 500 was the second race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 1 May 2005 at the Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours. It was also the second round of the 2005 British GT Championship, counting for the GT2 class only.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [36, 36], "content_span": [37, 303]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181584-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Magny-Cours Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC). Entries in italic scored points for the British GT Championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 36], "section_span": [38, 54], "content_span": [55, 223]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181585-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Monza Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT Monza Supercar 500 was the first race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 10 April 2005 at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [30, 30], "content_span": [31, 190]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181585-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Monza Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 30], "section_span": [32, 48], "content_span": [49, 152]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181586-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Motorcity GT 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT Motorcity GT 500 was the tenth race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place at the Dubai Autodrome, United Arab Emirates, on November 18, 2005.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [28, 28], "content_span": [29, 203]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181586-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Motorcity GT 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 28], "section_span": [30, 46], "content_span": [47, 150]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181587-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Oschersleben Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT RAC Brno Supercar 500 was the seventh race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 28 August 2005 at the Motorsport Arena Oschersleben.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [37, 37], "content_span": [38, 207]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181587-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Oschersleben Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 37], "section_span": [39, 55], "content_span": [56, 159]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181588-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Tourist Trophy\nThe 2005 FIA GT RAC Tourist Trophy was the third race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 15 May 2005 at the Silverstone Circuit.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 178]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181588-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Tourist Trophy\nThe Aston Martin DBR9 made its debut in the FIA GT Championship here. However, since both cars were entered by the factory, they were ineligible for scoring points.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [26, 26], "content_span": [27, 191]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181588-0002-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Tourist Trophy, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 148]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181588-0003-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Tourist Trophy, Official results\n\u2020 \u2013 These entries are considered factory teams and thus do not score points for the championship.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 26], "section_span": [28, 44], "content_span": [45, 142]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181589-0000-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Zhuhai Supercar 500\nThe 2005 FIA GT Zhuhai Supercar 500 was the ninth race for the 2005 FIA GT Championship season. It took place on 23 October 2005 at Zhuhai.", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [31, 31], "content_span": [32, 171]}} {"id": "enwiki-00181589-0001-0000", "contents": "2005 FIA GT Zhuhai Supercar 500, Official results\nClass winners in bold. Cars failing to complete 70% of winner's distance marked as Not Classified (NC).", "metadata": {"title_span": [0, 31], "section_span": [33, 49], "content_span": [50, 153]}}